Saturday, December 7, 2013

Dylan's guitar sells for $965k

Bob Dylan's Fender Stratocaster goes under the hammer
The electric guitar played by Bob Dylan at the 1965 Newport Folk Festival has been sold at auction in New York for a record $965,000 (£591,000).

The Fender Stratocaster had been in the possession of a New Jersey family for 48 years after he left it on a plane.

The pilot's daughter had it authenticated on a television programme on US broadcaster PBS.

The festival in Newport, Rhode Island, is often cited as the performance where Dylan "went electric".

Dylan's move "changed the structure of folk music", Newport Folk Festival founder George Wein, 88, told the Associated Press news agency.

"The minute Dylan went electric, all these young people said, 'Bobby's going electric. We're going electric, too.'"

But at the time, the three-song set drew boos from the crowd, who had come expecting Dylan's traditional acoustic folk performance.

Dawn Peterson said on the PBS programme History Detectives that her father, the private plane's pilot, asked Dylan's management firm what to do with the guitar but nobody ever got back to him.

Experts matched the wood grain on the instrument with a close-up colour photo taken during Dylan's set at the festival.

Recently, Dylan and Ms Peterson quietly settled a legal dispute over the instrument. Details of the settlement are not known.

Auction house Christie's had estimated the guitar would sell for $300,000-$500,000. The buyer has not been identified.

The previous record for a guitar sold at auction was a Fender owned by Eric Clapton, nicknamed "Blackie" Which sold for $959,500.00 in 2004.

Those plastic cups and plates could ruin you

Phthalates (pronounced "thal - eights")
Phthalates are chemicals used in many plastics to make them soft or flexible, i.e. plasticizers. They are widely used in plastic products in the food and construction industries, plus they are used extensively in beauty products, pesticides, wood finishes, insect repellents, solvents and lubricants. There are a number of phthalates with differing though often overlapping health effects. Studies have linked various phthalates to abnormal male sexual development, male infertility, premature breast development, cancer, miscarriage, premature birth and asthma. Because phthalates are not chemically bound to the plastic polymer, they can easily migrate out. So mind how you handle them so as not to have them scratched. This also include knowing which category is suitable for you microwave since not all are meant to be safe when put under intense heat. Your children could also be on harm's way when their plastic toys are expose to intense heat. Please keep them under very safe and recommended condition.

Friday, December 6, 2013

FAVOURITE QUOTES FROM MANDIBA

Nelson Mandela quotes
“Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world.”
― Nelson Mandela

“When a man is denied the right to live the life he believes in, he has no choice but to become an outlaw.”
― Nelson Mandela

“I learned that courage was not the absence of fear, but the triumph over it. The brave man is not he who does not feel afraid, but he who conquers that fear.”
― Nelson Mandela

“I am fundamentally an optimist. Whether that comes from nature or nurture, I cannot say. Part of being optimistic is keeping one's head pointed toward the sun, one's feet moving forward. There were many dark moments when my faith in humanity was sorely tested, but I would not and could not give myself up to despair. That way lays defeat and death.”
― Nelson Mandela,

“A good head and good heart are always a formidable combination. But when you add to that a literate tongue or pen, then you have something very special.”
― Nelson Mandela

“It always seems impossible until it's done.”
― Nelson Mandela

“For to be free is not merely to cast off one's chains, but to live in a way that respects and enhances the freedom of others.”
― Nelson Mandela

“Resentment is like drinking poison and then hoping it will kill your enemies.”
― Nelson Mandela

“No one is born hating another person because of the color of his skin, or his background, or his religion. People must learn to hate, and if they can learn to hate, they can be taught to love, for love comes more naturally to the human heart than its opposite.”
― Nelson Mandela, Long Walk to Freedom

“There is nothing like returning to a place that remains unchanged to find the ways in which you yourself have altered.”
― Nelson Mandela

Thursday, December 5, 2013

EARTHLINGS MOURN

I  didn't want to be too quick to  write RIP to the  Man who has died countless times on the slab of social media. I wanted to be  careful so as not to embarrass myself, because  you never can tell  if the news of his death was another hoax. Lo and behold, it is true, that the great one has  finally bid the  world goodbye as he steps on to eternity . Words are not enough  to describe him.  A man who in spite of his frailty rose above all and stood tall. No doubt a colossus and his  departure must have induced a paradigm shift in the heavenly. Although we have wondered for long if this day would truly come when Madiba would be no more we knew he was yet a mortal whose nature has transcended the ordinary. NO doubt earth has been stripped of one of her greatest  commanders. We are grateful he lived well and has set a perfect example for our  leaders to follow . Our eulogies must not end on the pages of newspapers. we must strive to follow his leadership  style and thrive in the honour he gave Africa. Madiba, madiba rest on.
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BEGGARS GOT CHOICE

 Angered by the bill advocating for the ban of street begging, physically challenged persons embarked on a peaceful protest in Kano,Wednesday, demanding that the bill be squashed.The protesters who were seen, chanting Allahu Akbar, took over the street of Kano as they moved in group to the state High Court, from where they headed for the state House of Assembly.A bill banning street begging in Kano has been passed by the state Assembly due to several agitations by Islamist clerics in the state. The clerics believe that street begging was anti-Islam. If there is no last minutes change, Governor Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso will before the end of the week sign the bill into the state law. Violators are expected to pay 10,000 naira fine if it’s signed into law.A letter submitted by the protesting beggars to the State Assembly titled “Request for the reconsideration of the bill that bans street begging” had asked the government to make the state friendly for the disabled, requesting that, “there is a need for the establishment of a Disable Persons Commission in Kano to cater for the need of persons with disabilities”.The association in the letter also asked the Kano state Government to put their rights into serious consideration. They said their rights as stipulated by the United Nations, to include right to life, equality and non discrimination must be protected henceforth.

BREAKING NEWS...

A Saudi Arabian B747 cargo aircraft landed in Abuja last night and veered off at  the maneuvering area of the runway, ran into a maintenance area of the runway and stopped. No casualty recorded while plans are underway to move the air craft  away following a preliminary assessment visit by AIPB, NCAA, FAAN and other relevant agencies.
currently no aircraft is allowed to land at the abuja airport.

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Female-on-female rape in congo

In a secure darkened room, Marie, a 36-year-old mother of six, whispers and struggles to make eye contact. A shoe trader, she regularly travels by bus to sell her wares in remote parts of the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo. Last year, her bus broke down on the often impassable forest road to the town of Walikale. Her bags were too heavy for her to continue by foot, so she resorted to a bicycle taxi. Bandits pulled her off the road while she waited for one to arrive. “When I saw women, I thought I was saved,” she recalls. Not so. The women were armed and dressed in military uniform. They argued with the men in the group over who would “have” Marie. The women won.“They asked why I was here doing business while they were starving,” she remembers. “They told me I was fat, and that I’d stay with them in the forest until I become thin.” One started to push her fingers inside Marie. Another tried to introduce her hand. The women continued to psychologically and physically abuse Marie for four days. She was forced to imitate sexual pleasure as they assaulted her. By the fourth day she was bleeding so much that the women gave up. They wanted to kill her, but the men in the group argued with them. Finally, after nine days, the militia let her go.Rape in conflict zones has long been the subject of news reports and academic study and large amounts of donor funding is channeled to organizations that respond to it. But rape specifically perpetrated by women has received less attention. Recent studies suggest the problem is more widespread than many experts previously believed. In 2010, Harvard academic Lynn Lawry and a team of researchers conducted a survey of human-rights abuses in over 1,000 households in conflict-ridden eastern Congo. It was the same year that Margot Wallstrom, the U.N. special representative on sexual violence in conflict, dubbed Congo “the rape capital of the world.” Lawry’s study asked victims of sexual violence to specify their assailant’s gender. It found that 40% of the women — and 10% of the men — who said they were subjected to sexual violence were assaulted by a woman.(MORE: Congo’s ‘Mamas’ and Their Campaign Against Wartime Rape)Some human-rights professionals, surprised at the high numbers of women perpetrators of rape in Lawry’s study, have questioned the findings. But others believe that the phenomenon has not shown up in previous studies for a simple reason: no one was looking for it. “Researchers have simply not asked about the sex of perpetrators,” writes Dara Kay Cohen, assistant professor of public policy at Harvard University, in her article “Female combatants and the perpetration of violence,” published in World Politics in July.The subject is taboo in Congo; the victims who spoke to TIME were all sharing their stories for the first time. “That might be a contributing factor to why we don’t hear about it,” suggests a Goma-based advocate, who also asked not to be named. “By not giving space for female on female or male on male, it’s possible that we created that taboo.”A U.N. expert on armed groups — herself a victim of rape by a man — says women are in 90% of armed groups. They are wives, nurses and cooks, but also intelligence agents, honey traps and fighters. “Their minds have altered,” says the Congolese U.N. employee, requesting anonymity because she was speaking personally and did not want people to know about her own rape. “Women who were raped for years are now raping other women.”(MORE: History of Violence: Struggling With the Legacy of Rape in Liberia)How can a woman rape? “Some take sticks or a banana, others take a bottle or knives,” the U.N. employee explains. Her close friend’s daughter was violated repeatedly by a woman with a carrot who wanted “to spoil her body,” she says.Women have committed rape in previous conflicts, including during the Rwandan genocide. Rwanda’s former Minister for Family and Women Affairs, Pauline Nyiramasuhuko, is the first — and only — woman convicted by an international tribunal for being party to rape. Up to half a million women were raped during the Rwandan genocide, according to the U.N., and Nyiramasuhuko ordered women and girls to be raped. Women reportedly committed acts of sexual violence during conflicts in Liberia, Haiti, Sierra Leone, Northern Ireland and Sri Lanka, Cohen writes. Miranda Alison, a professor at Warwick University in England, has interviewed female combatants in Northern Ireland and Sri Lanka and contends that women in these conflicts were reputedly more violent than male peers, perhaps “to compete for status and recognition in a traditionally patriarchal context.”The attacks often leave the victims with permanent physical and psychological damage. In 2005, Valerie, who was then a 17-year-old girl, was going to farm her family’s land in Congo when she met a group of bandits on the edge of a forest stealing crops — two men, two women and a girl. While the men cut maize and dug out cassava roots, the women removed Valerie’s clothes and started to touch her. They used their hands and sticks “like animals,” Valerie recalls. The first time she was raped by an unidentified armed man, at age 15, she was left to bear her assailant’s child, but this time, her uterus was destroyed. Valerie will never give birth again and no man will marry her as a result.“It is an unforgettable wound,” Valerie says. “Male rape is everywhere, but when it’s women, it’s incomprehensible. It’s like a curse.