Nigeria Entertainment News11 months ago Reps To Secure Mohbad’s Compensation, Royalties From Music Works The House of Representatives, on Wednesday, expressed commitment to secure proper compensation and royalties for the late Nigerian singer, Ilerioluwa Aloba, popularly known as Mohbad, from...
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May 1, 2014 9:45 AM EDT
Minecraft renditions of BioShock Infinite‘s cloud-cruisin’ Columbia are a dime a dozen nowadays, but I’ve never seen one as embellished as this. Just look at the colors in that skybox, at the arcing sky rails, at the towering statuary, and at all the fussy little details like flower boxes beneath windows — and those windows with their exquisite tracery, and the way the designers used subtly different colors to block-texture the buildings and walkways.
The Assistant General Secretary of the Christian Association of Nigeria, Apostle Biodun Sanyaolu, has reacted to his inclusion of his name in the Presidential Campaign Council of the All Progressives Congress (APC). Sanyaolu was reacting to a report done by Naija News that eight CAN members who are opposed to the Muslim-Muslim presidential ticket of the ruling party were named as members of the APC campaign council.
Following the development, the inclusion of the CAN officials in the Bola Tinubu campaign team had generated a lot of controversies and remained the topic of discussion on several forums.
Compared with the delightful, sexy and wildly inventive miniseries "Viva Blackpool," this movie follow-up is a significant letdown -- a broader spoof that's more over the top than its predecessor, much to its detriment.
Compared with the delightful, sexy and wildly inventive miniseries “Viva Blackpool,” this movie follow-up is a significant letdown — a broader spoof that’s more over the top than its predecessor, much to its detriment.
In the debate over which is the stronger sex, the so-called “man flu” inevitably comes up. It’s a popular theory that men get sicker—or at least act sicker—when they contract the virus, while women soldier on with work, childcare and life.
The scientific evidence for this is far from conclusive, but some research has shown that male and female immune cells do react differently to invading viruses. Now, a recent study in mice adds more fuel to the fire, suggesting that the male sex really does get hit harder by certain illnesses—and that physiology, not psychology, may be at least partially to blame.