Wednesday, April 6, 2011
DOES ZIMBABWE STILL HAVE SANE, RESPECTFUL,POLITE OR CONSIDERATE BUS CONDUCTORS....
We have all come across disrespectful people in our lives but public transport conductors take the cup. Zimbabweans can support me on this one. We have come across rude conductors once or twice in our lives others even more times than others & each time is worse than the last time but a few still act like they come from people.Emphasis on a "few". Rude rowdy behavior does not begin to explain the level of INHUMANITY that has engulfed this species. To think we came from the same creator , let alone the same procedure of birth makes it even worse and scarier. Is it even the case? Did we really come from the same place or is it the job that has turned them into raving lunatics, disasters waiting to occur. Don't get me wrong l don't loathe their choice of profession nor do l despise them as a group of people l just happen to think they too should consider, respect and make a journey worthwhile considering that if those people were not there, if everyone had their own means of transport they would be unemployed. Yes sometimes civilians have a way of provoking conductors but that doest mean they should disrespect them besides the customer is king inst it? So in a business a customer is always right right? Bus commuting is a business right? If only there was some sort of qualification for this type of job were these people are taught manners and register and not forgetting the importance of the customer. l don't know maybe all they need is divine training who knows. Those people have a mind that does not work in a way normal peoples do. I am not saying they are not normal but sometimes l just wonder. Different days, different times and different buses mean different conductors and different experiences. Being subject to such torture makes you rethink twice about boarding a bus but what else will you do, what else can you do....
Monday, April 4, 2011
"She was just sunshine, and she had an ability to touch people and hearts very quickly. Doctor Ottilia Chareka may your soul rest in peace....
Ottilia Chareka, the 42-year-old St. Francis Xavier University professor was killed on Wednesday March 16 by her husband, Patrick Ms. Chareka’s life story has been about jumping over obstacles, proving men wrong, doing the impossible.
She was the first woman in her clan to finish high school, the first to go to university (against her father’s wishes), the first to get a master’s degree and the first to complete her doctorate.
Ms. Chareka came to Canada in the early 1990s and discovered her teaching credentials were worthless. So she enrolled in the University of New Brunswick, and worked as a maid at the Lord Beaverbrook Hotel to pay the bills.
When she arrived, she learned her teaching degree was not recognized. She retrained at the University of New Brunswick, working as a hotel maid in Fredericton to pay for her tuition.
In a documentary about her life called Familiar Stranger, she said it was a big change for her — in Zimbabwe she had owned a house and employed a maid.
She got her master’s degree in 1994, returned to Zimbabwe in 2001, then went back to the University of New Brunswick to get her PhD in 2005.
Hundreds attended services for Ottilia Chareka the weekend following her death and last weekend two benefits were held with proceeds going to her five daughters.
May her soul rest in peace and may Patrick Chareka pay for his atrocities
At the time of her death she was an assistant professor at the Nova Scotia university.
Police say Ottilia Chareka, 42, died from injuries sustained in the family home Wednesday morning.
RCMP found her with life-threatening injuries after responding to a 911 call about a disturbance at 27 Centennial Dr. She died two hours later at St. Martha's Regional Hospital.
Patrick Chareka was arrested at the scene.
She was the first woman in her clan to finish high school, the first to go to university (against her father’s wishes), the first to get a master’s degree and the first to complete her doctorate.
Ms. Chareka came to Canada in the early 1990s and discovered her teaching credentials were worthless. So she enrolled in the University of New Brunswick, and worked as a maid at the Lord Beaverbrook Hotel to pay the bills.
When she arrived, she learned her teaching degree was not recognized. She retrained at the University of New Brunswick, working as a hotel maid in Fredericton to pay for her tuition.
In a documentary about her life called Familiar Stranger, she said it was a big change for her — in Zimbabwe she had owned a house and employed a maid.
She got her master’s degree in 1994, returned to Zimbabwe in 2001, then went back to the University of New Brunswick to get her PhD in 2005.
Hundreds attended services for Ottilia Chareka the weekend following her death and last weekend two benefits were held with proceeds going to her five daughters.
May her soul rest in peace and may Patrick Chareka pay for his atrocities
At the time of her death she was an assistant professor at the Nova Scotia university.
Police say Ottilia Chareka, 42, died from injuries sustained in the family home Wednesday morning.
RCMP found her with life-threatening injuries after responding to a 911 call about a disturbance at 27 Centennial Dr. She died two hours later at St. Martha's Regional Hospital.
Patrick Chareka was arrested at the scene.
Friday, April 1, 2011
Thursday, March 31, 2011
title search
Guys l am writing a novel but l have not found a title yet. Below l am gonna write a summary about what the book is all about and you can help me with a title. Regina Hall had a secret she had kept for 10 years. Now a charming rival Denzel Montgomery knows her secret and threatens to reveal it. What does he want and is she willing to give in to his demands.. here are some titles: a handsome disaster, an unexpected ultimatum, his demands,her fortune, complications...... your suggestions will be appreciated....
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