The World needs an army of writers who believe in the power of the pen, who can use both their creative ingenuity and intellectual ascendancy to correct the anomalies that plague our world today. Do you consider yourself one of such people? Then come on and let's tell the whole world that 'the pen is, indeed, mightier than the sword'.
Friday, 8 November 2013
RAPE CONVICTS DESERVE DEATH PENALTY - Joshua Oyeniyi (Published by THE NATION and DAILY INDEPENDENT Newspapers on 6th November, 2013)
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ASUU STRIKE: JUST FOR MR PRESIDENT'S EARS - Joshua Oyeniyi ( Published by Several topnotch Nigerian Newspapers and newsportals including THE PUNCH NEWSPAPER (Sept. 9th), THE NATION, INFORMATION NIGERIA et al)
Mr. President, please do not mistake this piece for an attack on your person because it is not. Neither would I want you to see me as one of those attention-seeking people because I am not. Of course, Sir, I am also not the son of any governor, senator, local government chairman or any political office holder, otherwise, I would have no business writing such an open letter to you because it is against my family’s ethics to ‘talk while eating’. I am the voice of one crying in the wilderness of educational misery, saying, “Prepare the way for either a future of political stability and economic boom or prepare for worse than what religious extremists are meting out to our country now”.
As I write on this sultry day, I am completely at a loss to know what to make of my future from here. If this were just the case, it would, probably, be an insignificant reason to go on the rampage with the sword of the pen. But, I write on behalf of the millions of dreams that are getting squashed by the day as the total shut-down of our universities persists. I write on behalf of the future of the several hundreds of thousands who have been privileged, amidst the stiff competition for admission, to grasp tertiary education but may end up worse than their disadvantaged counterparts, since they may never finish, much less finish on schedule their educational pursuits. The handwriting on the wall, clearly now, more than ever before foretells a dangerous twist to the continuing imbroglio between your administration and the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU). I do not know if the public keeps the date as much as we do but it is well over 65 days already and I cannot help but wonder if anyone really cares what becomes of our street-wandering undergraduates. If I had a next life, I hope to never be a Nigerian or be born with a silver spoon because the poor are really just ‘on their own’ as long as our government is concerned. Mr President, in three simple words, “We are tired”. We, the students in the federal universities, are always at the receiving end of every impasse between ASUU and the government and all I can ask for now is that you and your think tank reconsider your stand on the matter. We can only bear this much!
I am not ASUU’s spokesman but it is only logical that I expect your administration to honour the 2009 agreement with the Union so normalcy can return to our campuses and of course, our disenchanted academic lives. Personally, I have spent more years than is required to have my first and second degrees and yet I am grappling to take a Bachelor’s degree out of an institution that only recently had an internal strike because you would have our name ‘rebranded’. Mr President, every day this strike continues, more dreams die and more future riff -raff are born. It is my firm belief that children still do bear the sins of their fathers and even when you are no more, posterity will remember your progenitors for good or ill based on how you handle this national educational crisis we suffer now. It goes without saying that for 14 years that your party has held sway over the affairs of this nation, we cannot boast of a Nigerian university (not a single one) amongst the first 2000 in the world. This is more than enough reason to release the requisite fund for the upgrade of our educational infrastructure as well as the welfare of the future’s moulders. It will only be emphatic to say that we can get out of our educational system as much as we invest in it and though investment in educational is long term, it is also long-rewarding. Your administration will only be breeding poor intellectuals, who will, in turn, produce another generation of mediocre graduates and in 10 years, what do we have, sir? A national carnage! Our unborn children are in jeopardy of being societal scum even before their conception. But you can change all of this!
The greatest weapon of mass destruction is to put a teacher who knows nothing before the students. This will be the case if your administration does not honour the 2009 agreement with ASUU such that lecturers’ welfare gets taken care of.
Mr President, the one second of your time which I asked for is almost up but I am optimistic that if you give utmost diligence to putting an end to the incessant strikes that have been plaguing our tertiary educational system as much as you do to security matters or party issues and conventions, we would not be where we are today: struggling to maintain peace in our land.
I reiterate my advice, sir. Honour the 2009 agreement with ASUU so we may return to our lecture rooms and pick up the pieces of our scattered semesters. So I can round off my first degree programme and go on to patriotically serve my fatherland. So, I can focus on growing my baby company to maturity and provide jobs for the teeming unemployed youths. So, I can get married, give my mother her first grandchild and keep my late father’s name as his only son. So, I can fulfil my dreams of helping young people reach the zenith of their potential through my writing, public speaking and role-modelling. Mr President, help me and my fellow undergraduates live decent lives even if our parents are not among the top one per cent who squander our national earnings in the name of political office holders. Would you do this for me, for us, for Nigeria’s future? I hope you do. Thank you, sir, for giving me a second of your time.
TRENDS ON NIGERIAN CAMPUSES - Joshua Oyeniyi (Published by THE PUNCH NEWSPAPER on 14th October, 2013)
I recall vividly a debating competition I won during my 200 level days. During the competition, all the contestants had to speak impromptu on randomly selected topics and I was asked to speak briefly on “Social activities on campus as a major source of distraction for undergraduates”. I did my best in supporting the motion but my opponent made some punchlines in his retaliatory response. “The university”, he said, “is a place for self-discovery and not necessarily for sitting tight with books”. He went on to make allusions to the possibility of students finding out who they really are and what they were born to do. This, therefore, threw up the mind-boggling question: Are the social activities on campus doing more harm than good?
Having spent over four years in a federal university, I have attended a series of events cutting across the academics, career development, human capital development, music shows, talent hunts and so on. Truth be told, these activities are designed to bring to the fore the innate potential of our undergraduates and the organisers deserve lots of kudos. But how much is too much? One particular type of social events is the talent hunt shows now trending on our campuses nationwide. This is spreading like wildfire throughout the length and breadth of Nigerian institutions of higher learning due to the generous acceptance that greeted their introduction. Whether it is a musical talent show, where the new Tufaces, DBanjs are expected to rise from, or beauty pageants where another Agbani Darego will spring from or a comedy talent hunt from which another Ali Baba, Basket Mouth or Seyi Law could emerge, is another matter entirely.
There has always been an ever-increasing excitement amongst undergraduates about the above-mentioned social activities. Does it not pose a concern that so many Nigerian students in tertiary institutions are turning to these shows and events as a means of escaping academic rigours and finding quick fame and riches?
The thrills and frills that fill the air during such shows speak volumes for how much of an attraction they are. The other day, I got talking with Allen Ekwuru, an undergraduate of the University of Lagos, who won a Macho contest on campus and eventually went on to win the Mr. Universe Nigeria Pageant. He said, “I have been receiving calls from fellow students as to how they can get to where I am.” He even bared his mind on the challenges he has had to confront, one of which that is his receipt of anonymous calls from women asking to be visited with promises to pay for his return tickets.
This writer once attended a musical and theatre art talent show on campus and was mesmerised by the confusion that many undergraduates have about what really their talents are. It is absolute futility to try to be what you are not or venture into a career because someone else has made it via the same route. It was obvious that many of these contestants had no business with music, singing or acting but only wanted the fast lane to stardom.
However, many beautiful talents are being discovered by the day at these shows and the bearers of these talents were born to use them to get to their point of greatness. Another Nigerian undergraduate only recently made Nigeria proud by clinching the spot of World Miss University Africa in far away South Korea. Your guess is right – Tobi Phillips was discovered at a social event competition on campus and the list is endless.
The fact remains that this trend has been a distraction for many undergraduate students who have nothing in common with talent hunt shows. Perhaps, those in this category need be reminded that their primary responsibility on the campus still remains their academic work and full concentration must be given to this. Each one needs to know what his/her talent is and work diligently towards developing same for their benefit other than blindly attending one campus event after another to the sore detriment of their studies. There is no worse path to frustration.
Wednesday, 22 May 2013
EXCELLING IN UNDERGRADUATE SCHOLARSHIP APTITUDE TESTS: MY EXPERIENCE (Part 1) - By Joshua Oyeniyi
Wow!
It has been a while I featured in this segment, I have been down with many
responsibilities of late. However, I am back with something good for the
readership of this column. It is very intriguing to discover the high number
organizations and corporations who now offer scholarship opportunities to
undergraduate students in higher institutions of learning across Nigeria. For
many a student, it has been a major lifeline for him to maintain a fair
equilibrium between needs and surplus. No soonerhad I gained admission into the
University than I discovered that it can be pretty easy to apply for several
scholarships and not get one. Reason being that many undergraduates mistake
mere application for the real deal and forget that securing an undergraduate
scholarship requires adequate preparation. Much more, the list of credentials
requested by these organizations might be burdensomefor students and they
eventually end up fumbling with the style and documentation of presentation.
Worse still, when asked to write an accompanying letter to back up an
application, many undergraduates end up writing out of context and hence, lose
out in the race.
Over
the years, brands have strengthened efforts in their corporate social
responsibility towards supporting undergraduates in higher institutions of
learning by granting annual scholarships which can be maintained throughout the
undergraduate programme upon meeting laid-down requirements. But while all the
applicants, perhaps, meet up with requirements, some seem to eventually be
clinching two, three or more scholarships from different companies while others
do not even get invited to write the aptitude test. What could be the secret
these few have? You might ask. That is why I have taken time out to write this
so you could help yourself, that first year student or the sophomore
undergraduate to clinch the next scholarship opportunity that comes his way.
Here
we go. First, take quality time to read the adverts of such scholarship
opportunities. A real story was told of an aptitude test conducted by an
organization. Sixty questions were given and only five minutes allotted. It was
practically impossible to finish. Many who did not take enough time to read the
instructions rushed into the questions. At the end of the test, only one person
passed. The instruction was: Write your full name, answer questions One and
Sixty and submit. You see why you must read and understand instructions. The
company giving out scholarships might have restricted the courses to some
faculties and departments and would adhere strictly to that guideline. Applying
as a student outside those selected courses automatically disqualifies the
applicant.
Also,
the scholarship-giving organization or company could have specified the number
of distinction grades required to apply for the award. Distinctions, in this
sense, are grades in the A’s and B’s categories of ordinary level examinations
(SSCE/GCE O’levels). Most times, it could be a stipulated number of five
distinctions. Applying with four distinctions is a waste of time. In addition,
when asked to submit Curriculum Vitae, it is important to note that there is a
slight difference from the type that is submitted for job application. In the
case of application for a scholarship grant, you do not need to include job
experiences as these are not necessary. Give your full bio-data including phone
number and email address. Also, give your home address (if specifically requested)
as a letter mail might be dispatched to your home, inviting you for the
aptitude test. I got one of such letter posts inviting me to an aptitude test and
if had not carefully supplied that information; I would have lost that golden
opportunity since it was the only means through whichI got the invitation.
Along
with your application letter, you would be asked to submit documents like a
stipulated number of passport photographs, photocopy of your 0’level result, school
statement of result, jamb result slip, birth certificate and certificate of
origin from your local government area in your home state. It is pertinent for
me to state here that you might lose your slot in the aptitude testlist if you
go ahead to submit a certificate of origin from a liaison office and not from
your local government in your home state. The later bears the original
signature of your local government chairman and his seal, hence, is more valid
when claiming to be an indigene of that state. Every one of these information
is to be supplied painstakingly before final submission is made in order to increase
your chances of winning a slot in the call-up list for the aptitude test. For
students in their second year of study, the scholarship-granting body could
request for your first year cumulative grade point average, with attestation by
your head of department or registrar. Ensuring your transcripts are correct and
duly signed gives you yet an improved chance of getting a call-up for the
scholarship test.
I
will be focusing on preparing for the aptitude test in the next edition of ‘My
Campus My Life’. You will need to know what you are required to have learnt and
how smartly you need to work in order to beat the examiners to it. Mind you,
aptitude tests of this type are quite different from what you have been used to
in conventional examinations.
Monday, 8 April 2013
American Top Speaker, Wille Jolley, adopts Prince Joshua Oyeniyi as First Nigerian Protege
Wiilie Jolley adopting Prince Oyeniyi as his first Nigerian student protege at Unilag recently. |
After his powerful motivational talk in the Capacity-filled Main Auditorium of the University of Lagos, he had to answer three questions from students. Prince Joshua was one of them. Moved by what he believed to be a show of persistent courage and self-drive, Willey Jolley congratulated me on stage with a warm handshake. He asked me, "Do you want to be successful?".I said "yes". He asked again, "Do you want to be rich?" And one again, I replied affirmatively. "This is what I'm gonna do. Here's my card - it is your direct link to me. Contact me because you are now my PROTÉGÉ." That was it!!! me? First Nigerian student protégé of American speaker, Willie Jolley. I couldn't have asked for a better day. All Glory to God and Thanks to the FirstBank Brand for this innovation.(See Pics Attached)
#A protégé is a younger person who is mentored, guided and trained to be successful by an older, influential and accomplished person# CU@DTop.
Friday, 5 April 2013
A PANACEA TO NIGERIAN GRADUATES' GLOBAL IRRELEVANCE - By Joshua Oyeniyi (Published in the The Nation and Businessday Newspapers on 1st and 2nd, April, 2013 respectively).
Robert
Kiyosaki in his book, “Rich Dad, Poor Dad” asked the question, “Does school
prepare children for the real world?” “Study hard and get good grades and you
will find a high-paying job with great benefits”, parents used to say. But gone
are those days! There has been a paradigm shift from focus on paper
qualification to skills acquisition in the last couple of decades. But rather
unfortunately, Nigeria and other African nations are awaking to these realities
rather too late. It is absolute disillusionment for a twenty first century student
to have a mind-set that a first class degree is sufficient to land him that
plum job when he knows next to nothing about how real corporations are run. It
is a saddening reality that prompts me to address this anomaly as leaving the
status quo spells doom for the Nigerian future.
The
University of Lagos only recently had its convocation ceremony where over six
thousand graduates received degrees in different categories. This writer could
not but wonder what these graduates would be doing as jobs. In a discussion
with one graduate, Bisi Gbadegeshin, she pointed out that she would be resuming
work barely a week after her convocation but how about the 5, 999 graduates. Every
year, our ivory towers of higher learning churn out tens of thousands of graduates
into the labour market which is already heavily saturated. It is no news that
job availability is a mirage but even if there were more jobs than job seekers,
the quality of these job applicants leaves more to be desired, constituting one
of the main challenges of employers. According to a recent publication by a
newspaper, the rate of incompetency displayed by a fearsome number of Nigerian
graduates is an outcry against the poor quality being delivered by our dismal
educational system. A yearly event, PLATFORM, organized by the Covenant
Christian Centre in Lagos, features eminent Nigerians who are worried about the
spate and are taking it upon them to arrest the imminent doom that awaits a
nation with a crippled and ineffectively trained labour force as ours. In one of such events, startling statistics
were revealed by Adetoun Ogwo, a human resource professional and social
advocate on the quest to build Impactful solution to Nigeria’s huge skill gap
and employability challenges. She pointed that a huge portion of Nigerian graduates
are simply not employable. As embarrassing as these revelations might appear,
they are a wakeup call to the relevant stakeholders to arrest this surge. How
does one explain away an interview scenario where an economics graduate cannot
give the basic definition of economics? If the human factor of economic drive
is defective, then our fate might just have been sealed as a nation. We must
reposition our educational system for global relevance and competitiveness if
vision 20:2020 is anything to talk about; assuming it is a realistic goal.
So
much noise has been made to have our educational policies reviewed. The
ministry of education has been incessantly called upon to embark on a comprehensive
overhaul of our curricula and make them relevant to the real world of work. Our
students in higher institutions cannot see the gap between what our lecturers
teach and what prospective employers would require from them. Hence, they just
sit tight with books of the 1950s and ‘60s with no bearing on post-recession
economy. The quality of academic staff in these ivory towers is another
conglomerate of disturbing issues. As a public speaker put it, “the most destructive weapon of mass
destruction is to put a teacher who knows nothing in front of a class”. It
is a pathetic situation!
So
much as I concur that the bulk of the restructuring lies on the government, we
cannot sit put and wait for a government that it took over a decade to come any
close to the UNESCO’s prescribed twenty six per cent education budget
allocation. The private sector has got to come to the rescue because standing
aloof would only be to the detriment of their future business concerns. Many
thanks to corporations and organizations which have invested relentlessly to
salvage the menace of skill gap existing in our graduate set. It is high time
we shifted to a sixty-per cent-practical, forty-percent-theory system of
teaching. This would avail our students in higher institutions the exposure to
application of learnt theories to real life situations. It is my belief that
the present administration is aware of the defects in the educational system
more than any before and should be better poised to living up to its
responsibility. And this responsibility involves the upgrading of the
theory-focussed system to one with a healthy balance between theory and
practical applications. This cannot be overstressed if we are serious about
curbing the out-bound tendencies of Nigerians to foreign schools as well as
reducing the flight of skilled labour from Nigeria.
Moreover, more emphasis should be laid on
making the average Nigerian graduate a potential job creator on his exit from
the university. He should be armed to think creatively and progressively rather
than walking the streets in search of non-existent white collar jobs. Need I
mention that the agricultural sector awaits an entry of skilful graduates who
can transform it into our pride once gain as it was before the discovery of oil
wealth? With the right mechanism in place, these would be achieved in record
time and when we have done our home-work, we would be rubbing shoulders with
world economic powers in the international performance test come year 2020. I
rest my case for now!
Tuesday, 12 February 2013
A LETTER TO MY UNBORN KIDS
A LETTER TO MY UNBORN KIDS - By Prince Joshua Oyeniyi
Please, my dear unborn babies, you have
to be patient with me. It’s not been easy down here. I have been doing all I
can; praying, observing, et al. But getting you the best mum, one good enough
to pilot you to this world is not as easy as it seems. It’s not that there have
not been prospective mothers. Fact is, there have been a number who have caught
my fancy but I wouldn’t choose one who would fail to lead you aright after you
are brought in (since you are going to be spending more time with her than with
me in your growing up years). I wouldn’t get you a mum who I am not sure has
the fear of the Lord and a love for family. I am convinced there is a deep
connection between my desire to get you a best mum and to get me the best life
partner.
Dear unborns, you know daddy has got to
be your role model, a father who can meet all your needs; a spiritual leader, a
successful career dad, a blazing light in the society and a family head par
excellence. One who would have enough experience to guide you properly through
the dangerous paths of life. You must believe me when I tell you that it’s
really evil down here. People even kill babies right before they are born and
others throw them away into canals, bushes and water right after they are born.
Infact, only recently did I read online that a mother dropped her new born baby
in a latrine but the baby miraculously survived. It is that wicked down here! Your dad-to-be earlier in life, wished he was
never born too and now he wishes he never has to bring innocent little souls
like yours into this terrible place to go through all he has gone through. But like it is said, “man proposes, but God
disposes”, I am leaving Him to lead my paths. But if and when I do eventually
have all three of you down here with me, I want to be very happy everyday of
your lives. I want to give you the best any man can give his kids. I want to be
able to give you good food so you wouldn’t long for another man’s meal. I want
to be able to put the best clothes on your bodies and put a homely shelter over
your heads to protect you from the harsh elements of this part. I want you, my
sons, to be as plants grown up in their youths and you, dear daughter, to be as
a cornerstone, polished after the similitude of a palace.
You know what, dearies? My parents
walked so I could run, but now, I have to run so you can fly. It’s highly
competitive down. I hear of many children who are out of school, others attend
poor schools, while those from privileged homes attend the best schools in town.
Many go through school and are unable to find jobs but if I do my part, I
believe and am convinced that I can give you the edge to go very far in life. I
believe you would see my achievements and be challenged to break the records I
would have already set. I know if only other parents thought about these, I
wouldn’t be hearing about mindless abortions. Oh, your returnee baby friends
who were terminated from their mothers’ wombs would have given you an insight
into the cruel world they paid a short visit to. My world down here is terribly
sick and needs its Creator to help heal it but they wouldn’t just let Him. These are the reasons for imploring you to
wish me the best in preparations for your future arrival.
For a mum, you need one who would
respect your daddy in everything as the head of the home. A mum who would help
him further the course of his divine purpose as much he’d do hers. One who
would love his family, live at peace with them and not attempt to severe him
from God or from his friends. One who would fan his spiritual coals and help
him to keep the kingdom of God as top priority. One who would not be enticed by
the transient things of life as to push him to spend our family resource on
unnecessary commodities because other women are buying same. You deserve a mum
who knows the importance of prayer over you right from conception and would
ensure you are taught to know, love and serve your Creator right from cradle.
You deserve a virtuous mum who would not condone your excesses or breed a Jezebel
for a daughter. But would be an exemplary Christian wife to daddy as well as a caring
mum to her children.
In the meantime, boys and girl, your
dad is still in college and in no hurry to get you over here even though his
world believes in marriage in the twenty-somethingth years. Be rest assured
that daddy would take that step when God says it’s time and would go for the
woman God chooses for him.. But for now, he remains married to purpose. You
know he has to fulfil God’s plan for him and best the best bachelor any man can
ever be and when you do eventually become his kids, you would be so proud of
him and mum. Till then, please bear with me!
Saturday, 19 January 2013
Professor M.A. Kenku @70: A Worthy Model for Young People
PROFESSOR
M.A. KENKU @ 70: A WORTHY MODEL FOR YOUNG PEOPLE – By Prince Joshua Oyeniyi (As
published in the BusinessDay Newspaper on Tuesday, 15th January,
2012)
If there is a hall of fame for academics who have made their
mark in the field of learning and research, professor Monsuru Akangbe Kenku is
unarguably a distinguished member of that caste. This celebrated mathematician
and administrator, who recently clocked seventy years, is a quintessence of
value and excellence. He is one who has proved his mettle in the ivory towers
as well as in government circle.
Born on the fourteenth of December, 1942 to Alhaji Nojiu
Buraimoh Kenku and Alhaja Nimota Aduke Kenku, Professor Kenku briefly attended
Ireti Primary School, then went on to Lagos Government School in 1953. In 1956,
he was admitted into Ahmadiyyah College, Agege before taking his school
certificate examination in 1960. He later gained admission into the premier
university in 1961, where four years later, he graduated with a first class
degree in mathematics. That same year, Kenku got admitted into Balloil College,
Oxford for his doctorate degree which he completed three years later and then
joined the payroll of the University of Ibadan. He rose through the hierarchies
to become an associate professor in1981. He was, however, appointed a full
professor of mathematics in 1983 in the University of Lagos.
In a chat
with this soft spoken man, he reminisced that studying mathematics was one of
the most beautiful decisions he ever made. In his words, “I was lucky to have
passed through some very good teachers in secondary school and then,
mathematics was my best subject. These factors motivated me to go into
mathematics as a career in the university.” This goes to underscore the
all-important role of competent teachers in the early stages of education. Our
educational institutions are long bereft of astute a professionals whose
calling is teaching and who have got the content to deliver.
In 1983, Professor Kenku was appointed commissioner of works
and transport in Lagos, serving for three and half years before returning to
lecturing. He recounts, “When I was a commissioner with Lagos state, I am sure
that the government realised that with my mathematical background, I could help
in solving problems that would not have been so without the luxury of that background.
I remember a particular incident when there scarcity of essential commodities
such as food items and the federal government started the distribution of
essential commodities to the populace. I, as one of the commissioners of Lagos
state at that time, had the duty of supervising the distribution in some of the
local governments. So we paid visits to various centres where the distribution
was being carried out. When I got to one particular place at Somolu, I realised that the queuing system was problematic
and there was no way that enough people would be served through the system that
was in operation. So, I quickly changed the system such that we had more
service points and outlets and things improved rapidly.” From his experience,
it is an obvious fact that the imperativeness of developing creative ingenuity
by students cannot be overemphasized as this would transform them from being
victims to being problem solvers when they get into the workforce.
Besides these, Professor Kenku had some stints in Berkeley,
California and the Institute of Advanced Studies, Princeton, where he made
contributions to the field of number theory, particularly arithmetic of
elliptic curves. He became an associate fellow of the Institute in ‘80s which
led him to participate in sponsoring an insurance company, a group that
invested in Crusaders Insurance. The group eventually made him the chairman of
Crusaders Insurance, a position he has held from 1993 till date whilst working
as a lecturer in the University of Lagos. As a mathematician, ‘Baba’, as his
students fondly call him, is a man of intellectual ascendancy and mental
immensity. In fact, he did his doctoral research in an area that is cut-off
from International world of research and was still able to make an impact owing
largely to tenacity of purpose.
One striking
virtue that you would leave with from a visit to this iconic mathematician is
the humility. He is a man of lowliness despite his many national and
international achievements. Professor Kenku would never raise his shoulders
neither use his position to intimidate his colleagues and juniors. What a
lesson to our current generation of young people. The holy book says “A man’s life does not
consist in the abundance of the things which he possesses” but by imparting
lives positively.
Academically,
administratively and morally, this septuagenarian professor is an embodiment of
values and virtue is as well as a worthy model for those who aspire to be
great. Remember, “If you are too big to serve, then you are too big smaller.
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