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Thursday 23 October 2014

The Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) has explained that fire outbreak in the top floor at the departures hall of the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos, on Thursday was caused by an electrical fault.

According to Premium Time, the fire outbreak, which reportedly covered the second floor of the terminal of MMIA, was quickly extinguished by fire fighters.
Yakubu Dati, FAAN’s General Manager, Corporate Communications, described it as a “minor smoke incident.”
“The smoke was quickly traced to the electric panel room on the second floor of the terminal by a combined team of FAAN’s electrical engineers and fire officers,” said Mr. Dati.
According to Mr. Dati, preliminary investigation revealed that the incident was caused by a short circuit at the panel room which was arrested by the engineers on duty.
“The Authority wishes to assure the travelling public and other airport users that there was no immediate danger to anyone as a result of the incident neither did it affect flight operations at the terminal.”
“The Authority has directed the Directorate of Engineering and Maintenance to commence immediate investigation into the immediate and remote causes of the said short-circuiting of the cables,” Mr. Dati said.
Two years ago, a similar incident, also caused by an electrical spark caused a blackout at the airport’s international terminal.

Photos From N3.3 Billion Ekiti ‘Luxury’ Govt Lodge

The Ekiti State Government released the images to demonstrate the opulence in which former Governor Kayode Fayemi and his family lived while he was an Ekiti governor, a state in debt and which had difficulty paying its workers their salaries. Photo - Photos From The N3.3Billion Ekiti Government House Reflect Staggering Opulence According to Ayodele Fayose,  Reportedly, it was firstly given for N2.3 billion and later increased to N2.7 billion. N640 million was used to obtain fittings and furniture. Photo - Photos From The N3.3Billion Ekiti Government House Reflect Staggering Opulence Photo - Photos From The N3.3Billion Ekiti Government House Reflect Staggering Opulence Photo - Photos From The N3.3Billion Ekiti Government House Reflect Staggering Opulence Photo - Photos From The N3.3Billion Ekiti Government House Reflect Staggering Opulence Photo - Photos From The N3.3Billion Ekiti Government House Reflect Staggering Opulence Photo - Photos From The N3.3Billion Ekiti Government House Reflect Staggering Opulence Photo - Photos From The N3.3Billion Ekiti Government House Reflect Staggering Opulence Photo - Photos From The N3.3Billion Ekiti Government House Reflect Staggering Opulence
Photo - Photos From The N3.3Billion Ekiti Government House Reflect Staggering Opulence
Photo - Photos From The N3.3Billion Ekiti Government House Reflect Staggering Opulence

The former Manchester United star was so good even the Liverpool fans applauded him off after his wonderful goal in Real Madrid’s 3-0 win. James Rodriguez played his part, too






 

Cristiano Ronaldo scores spectacular goals with explosive shots and headers from all angles. There was nothing explosive about his first goal in six matches at Anfield, but the build-up and finish were sheer class. 

It was a masterpiece of elegance, a delight to watch – unless you’re a Liverpool fan. The lofted pass by James Rodriguez and the first-time finish by Ronaldo were both moments of pure genius. 

Ronaldo needs only two more goals to become the all-time top scorer in the UEFA Champions League, and he may well get them in the return match against Liverpool at the Bernabeu in two weeks’ time. On current form it would be no surprise.



If he does do it, it is unlikely he will score a better goal than this one. After a brisk opening by Liverpool, Real Madrid began to dominate in midfield. Toni Kroos was involved in helping the ball to the feet of Ronaldo about 40 yards from goal. 

He took three touches, headed towards the penalty area and laid the ball off to Rodriguez, clearly confident that it would come back to him. Rodriguez controlled the ball with his right foot and hoisted it with his left over the Liverpool back line. 

So fast were Ronaldo's reactions, it seemed as though he did it all in one movement. Dejan Lovren tried to connect but kicked only fresh air. Ronaldo left Martin Skrtel in his wake and, first time, hooked the ball beyond Simon Mignolet and into the net, right in front of the Real Madrid fans. 

His manager, Carlo Ancelotti, says Ronaldo is “the best in the world” and it seems that even Liverpool fans agree with him. When Ronaldo was substituted a quarter of an hour before the finish, thousands of them applauded him off the field. That was a special moment.

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Three US teens 'lured by online predator'

THREE teenage girls from suburban Denver being investigated for possibly trying to join Islamic State militants in Syria aren't radicalised jihadis but rather victims of an online predator, a school official says.
AT least one of the girls was communicating with someone online who encouraged the three to travel to Syria, said Tustin Amole, a spokesman for the Cherry Creek School District where the girls attend high school.
The three were detained at an airport in Germany before being sent home over the weekend and returned to their parents. "There's no indication they had been radicalised in a way that they wanted to fight for ISIS," Amole said, adding that the students had no prior problems aside from unexcused absences on Friday. He did not elaborate. They didn't return to school on Wednesday. "Our biggest concern is for the safety and well-being of these girls," Amole said. A US official said the evidence gathered so far made it clear that the girls - two sisters, ages 17 and 15, and their 16-year-old friend - were headed to Syria, though the official said investigators were still trying to determine what sort of contacts they had in that country. The official said investigators would be trying to figure out whether there were "like-minded" friends and acquaintances in the girls' social circle. Another US official said the girls were headed toward Turkey en route to Syria and that investigators were reviewing evidence, including the girls' computers. Fellow high school students told school officials on Monday that the girls had been discussing travel plans over Twitter, Amole said. The sisters are of Somali descent, and their friend is of Sudanese descent, community leaders said. The girls' parents reported them missing on Friday after they skipped classes and left home with their passports and $US2000 ($A2000) in cash. Police said their families had no idea where they went. The girls were stopped at the Frankfurt airport over the weekend.

How to use your blackberry Bis on your android phones rooting your phone to change your IMEL


I’m pretty sure changing the imei of your Android phone is not something that is new to each and everyone of us again… but tonight tutorial will take another dimension. Though this has been online for the past 5days and I just decided to keep mute to watch how long it will last before I unveil it here. All thanks to Mickey for this.You are all aware that thosein possession of the latest Infinix Zero are entitle to 500MB every months. I’m going to show you how to tweak your imei to be entitle to this 500MB too regardless of the kind of Android phone you are using so long you can tweak your imei.Steps Involved
==>Generate your imei
==>Tweak your imei
==>Get your MB
How Can I Get 500MB + Extra 1GB Every Month From Etisalat?
==>The first thing we need
here is the first 8 digits of the Infinix Zero IMEI which is 35585906
==>Remaining 7digits. You can put any 6 digits you like remaining the last digit. E.g 011227 making it looks like this 35585906011227x ==>To get the last digits, go to this site here
==>And click on IMEI Number Analyser
==>Enter the 14 digit IMEI and click on check, it will provide you with the last digit. ==>Copy it and tweak it to your MTK Android device. If you are new to tweaking IMEI, Click here or use the mobile uncle  method.
==>Once your IMEI has been successfully changed, Send MID to 8186 and 500MB will be given to you.
Mind you, you’ll be receiving this 500MB every month for good 12months. Not all ooooo, still follow me
carefully. Once you’ve receive the 500MB, you can do the below:
==>Look for Tecno P3 IMEI, Tecno R7 IMEI, Tecno F7 or IMEI or Phantom Z IMEI, get the first 8digits of the IMEI and repeat the steps above for the Infinix Zero,
==>For Tecno F7 and R7 the first 8digits IMEI is 86115502 & For Nokia X IMEI, the first 8digits is 35304606
==>Send NokiaX to 8186 and more MB will be given to you. With this, you have no reason to complain of any data zapping. Take your straw and suck MB from Etisalat Data base while it last.

Evolution What you need to know

Evolution is the unifying force in modern biology, but it remains a source of misunderstanding and controversy. Start finding out why it is so important with our beginner's guide

There are all sorts of ways to reconstruct the history of life on Earth. Pinning down when specific events occurred is often tricky, though. For this, biologists depend mainly on dating the rocks in which fossils are found, and by looking at the "molecular clocks" in the DNA of living organisms.
There are problems with each of these methods. The fossil record is like a movie with most of the frames cut out. Because it is so incomplete, it can be difficult to establish exactly when particular evolutionary changes 



happened.A male peacock displaying his fanned tail feathers  (Image: Tom Chance / WestEnd61/Rex Features)                Galapagos tortoises are the product of over 3 billion years of evolution (Image: Andy Rouse / Getty)
Modern genetics allows scientists to measure how different species are from each other at a molecular level, and thus to estimate how much time has passed since a single lineage split into different species. Confounding factors rack up for species that are very distantly related, making the earlier dates more uncertain.
These difficulties mean that the dates in the timeline should be taken as approximate. As a general rule, they become more uncertain the further back along the geological timescale we look. Dates that are very uncertain are marked with a question mark.

In 1859 Charles Darwin published his theory of natural selection amid an explosion of controversy. Like the work of Copernicus in the 16th century revealing the movement of the Earth, Darwin's idea shook the foundations of the establishment and profoundly altered humanity's view of its place in the universe.
Today evolution is the unifying force in modern biology; it ties together fields as disparate as genetics, microbiology and palaeontology. It is an elegant and convincing explanation for the staggering diversity of Earth's five million or more living species.
Evolution has several facets. The first is the theory that all living species are the modified descendents of earlier species, and that we all share a common ancestor in the distant past. All species are therefore related via a vast tree of life. The second is that this evolution is driven by a process of natural selection or the - "survival of the fittest".
Darwin argued that all individuals struggle to survive on limited resourses, but some have small, heritable differences that give them a greater chance of surviving or reproducing, than individuals lacking these beneficial traits. Such individuals have a higher evolutionary fitness, and the useful traits they possess become more common in the population because more of their offspring survive.
Eventually these advantageous traits become the norm. Conversely, harmful traits are quickly eradicated as individuals that possess them are less likely to reproduce. Natural selection therefore works to create a population that is highly suited to its environment, and can adapt to changes.

Sex wars

When individuals compete for limited resources in their environment they are subject to ecological selection. However, useful traits are not only those that give a survival advantage, but also those that increase a plant or animal's chance of reproducing. These traits are subject to sexual selection.
Sexually selected traits can make a male organism more attractive to females, the peacock's tail for example. These are sometimes correlated to the health of an individual, and are therefore an honest badge of fitness. Another type of sexually selected trait gives males a physical advantage in out-competing other males for mates, the stag's antlers for example. Sexual selection can even act at a molecular level.
Birds are particularly known for showy ornaments that attract mates, but also increase the chances of being spotted by predators. Other sexually selected traits include: lion's manes, great tit's or budgie's plumage, grouse mating rituals, insect love tokens, the height of human males and human hair, intelligence and facial features.

Species spawning

Over eons, and many generations, the process of slow evolutionary change, called anagenesis, can cause one species to evolve into another. But most new species form in a speciation event, when one species splits into two; a process Darwin called the "mystery of mysteries".
Allopatric speciation happens when a geographical change - a river changing course for example or a new mountain range - splits a species in two. Once separated, as happened to antelope squirrels on either side of the Grand Canyon in the US, the populations evolve independently, eventually becoming distinct and reproductively isolated.
Sympatric speciation occurs when new species emerge without separation, such as the 13 species of Galapagos finch or Africa's cichlid fish. These species adapt to different opportunities in the environment, and then cease to interbreed - perhaps due to some isolating mechanism. Rarely new species can also form through hybridisation, such as sunflowers.
Darwinian evolution is a slow, gradual process. But much of the fossil record hints at puzzling long periods of stasis, with scarcely any change. In 1972, evolutionary biologists Niles Eldredge and Stephen J Gould argued instead that species, perhaps even communities, form suddenly in fits and starts of change. They called the theory punctuated equilibrium.
Like individuals in a population, species also struggle amongst themselves to survive, and most become extinct over time. Species can also die out in mass extinctions, such as the one that caused the demise of the dinosaurs. Today we may be in the throes of another mass extinction, caused by human overexploitation of habitats.
Galapagos tortoises are the product of over 3 billion years of evolution (Image: Andy Rouse / Getty)

Evolutionary scenarios

During his voyage on the HMS Beagle and throughout his life, Darwin gathered evidence that contributed to his theory of natural selection. In Origin of Species he presented support from the fields of embryology, geography, palaeontology and comparative anatomy (see interactive graphic). Darwin also found evidence for his theory in examples of convergent evolution, co-evolution and adaptive radiation.
Convergent evolution, is when the same adaptations have evolved independently in different lineages of species under similar selection pressures. Today we see convergent evolution in species as diverse as: shark and camels, shrimps and grasshoppers, flamingos and spoonbills, marsupial and placental mammals and bioluminescent sea creatures. We also see it in the ears and teeth of mammals.
Co-evolution is when the evolutionary history of two species or groups of species is intimately intertwined. Examples include: the co-evolution of flowering plants and pollinators such as bees, lizards and moths; pocket gophers and their lice; humans and intestinal microbes; and the war our immune systems wage with the pathogens that attack us.
Adaptive radiation is the rapid speciation of one ancestral species to fill many empty ecological niches. Adaptive radiations are most common when animals and plants arrive at previously uninhabited islands. Examples of adaptive radiation can be found in: the Galapagos finches, Australia's marsupials, Hawaii's honeycreepers and fruit flies, Madagascar's carnivores and other mammals, New Zealand's birds and the prehistoric flying pterosaurs.

Secret code

Darwin was able to establish natural selection, without any understanding of the genetic mechanisms of inheritance, or the source of novel variation in a population. His own theory on the transmission of traits, called pangenesis, was completely wrong.
It was not until Gregor Mendel and the start of the 20th century that the genetic mechanism of inheritance began to be revealed. We now know that most traits, such as skin colour, eye colour and blood group are determined by our DNA and genes. During the 20th century, evolutionary biologists such as Ernst Mayr, J.B.S. Haldane, Julian Huxley, and Theodosius Dobzhansky combined Darwinian evolution with our emerging knowledge of genetics to produce the "modern synthesis" that we call evolutionary biology today.
Most genes come in a variety of forms, one inherited from each parent. The varieties are known as alleles, and encode slightly different traits. The incidence of different traits, or alleles, in a population is driven by natural selection and genetic drift, which can randomly reduce genetic variation. Today, evolution is defined as the change in the frequency of alleles in populations over time.
New traits are introduced into populations by gene flow from other populations or by mutation. Mutation is a change in the structure of a gene and can be caused by errors in copying DNA, carcinogenic chemicals, viruses, UV-light and radiation. Most mutations are neutral, having no effect on gene function; others are harmful, such as the ones that cause inherited diseases like cystic fibrosis. Rarely mutations can lead to beneficial new traits, such as increased resistance to malaria.
Today evolutionary biologists are largely divided into two camps. The pro-selectionists such as Richard Dawkins, Stephen Pinker, Edward O Wilson, Matt Ridley, Mark Ridley and Jared Diamond believe in the primacy of natural selection as the principle guiding evolution. Others such as Niles Eldredge, Stephen J. Gould, Brian Goodwin, Stuart Kauffman and Steven Rose argue that we are still missing something big, and that natural selection does not explain the full complexity of evolution.

Updated national war memorial opening the house with a moment of silence to mark Cirillo's shooting death Wednesday. 2:21 PM

 

  Harper, MPs honour soldier killed in Ottawa shooting, security official


PM's Commons speech 13:32
Members of Parliament honoured Cpl. Nathan Cirillo and Sergeant-at-Arms Kevin Vickers, visiting the National War Memorial and opening the House sitting with a moment of silence to mark Cirillo's shooting death Wednesday. 2:21 PM









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