US Lauds Nigeria Over Credible & Peaceful Election.

…Says Jonathan Deserves Commendation.

Mrs. Sheila Jackson-Lee

Mrs. Sheila Jackson-Lee

The United of America has congratulated Nigerians over the peaceful conduct of the recent general elections. The US government said President Goodluck Jonathan deserves commendation for not only setting up a dependable electoral mechanism that promoted credible and acceptable elections throughout the country but offered to concede defeat to the opposition party candidate, General Muhammadu Buhari,  for democracy and peace to thrive in the country.  Speaking during the Akwa Ibom State Association of Nigeria, USA INC. (AKISAN) Convention in Houston Texas, a Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Texas’s 18th Congressional District, Mrs. Sheila  Jackson-Lee said Nigeria’s steps towards enshrining democracy was undoubtedly, exemplary.

“The whole world agrees that though there are growing concerns about Nigeria being portrayed in the negative light due to the actions and inactions of a few selfish individuals, Nigeria has proven to the world that it is leading by example, promoting peace and tolerance in Africa. The United States of America is very proud to see the democratic progress in Nigeria under the leadership of President Goodluck Jonathan. The recent election was adjudged by President Barack Obama and other world leaders as fair, peaceful and credible.” Mrs. Jackson-Lee asserts.

The Congress woman urged Nigeria to continue to lead by example even as she described Nigerians as peace-loving people and urge the coming leader, General Muhammadu Buhari to promote education, establish good health facilities for the country and tackle the terrorist activities by Boko Haram. She said the kidnapping of over 200 girls and by the terrorist group was a stigma to human conscience and urge Nigeria leaders to do everything to ensure the release of the girls.

Ms. Jackson-Lee used the occasion to praise President of United States of America Mr. Barack Obama for  ensuring freedom, equality and justice for all Americans and the immigrants living the United States, urging Nigeria and America to work together to promote justice and freedom.

One of the high points of the occasion was the award of certificate of recognition given to the Akwa Ibom People of Nigeria under the umbrella of AKISAN by the United States House of Representatives.

Sheila Jackson-Lee and AKISAN Executives

Sheila Jackson-Lee and AKISAN Executives

Nigerian Medical Doctor Shot Dead By Her Husband In US.

Tall,elegant and brilliant Nigerian medical doctor Isioma Ebegbodi was murdered in cold blood by her Nigerian husband in Texas state of America on Saturday March 22, 2014.She attended Queen’s College Yaba Lagos and later proceeded to University of Lagos to study Medicine.

She was until her gruesome murder a medical resident physician at Marshfield clinic in Texas.

What really went wrong between a 36 year old wife and her 63 year old husband?Was she suffering in silence until the tragedy happened?So many questions with limited answers.

A 63-year-old Nigerian man was later charged with murder after he confessed to the shooting to death of his wife around 3 a.m on Saturday March 22,2014 in west Harris County, Texas USA.

Martin Ebegbodi went to a neighbour’s house and asked him to call police after getting into a fight over argument and then shot his wife, 36-year-old Isioma Ebegbodi.
The Harris County Sheriff’s Department arrived at the house in the 19700 block of Youpon Leaf Way and arrested Ebegbodi.

Gbemisola Boyede,former schoolmate to Isioma wrote this tribute for her on Facebook

Here I am just as I was breathing the sigh of relief that justice was done in the case of Titi Arowolo murdered by her husband in a grotesque act in their own home here in Nigeria
And watching with bated breath the ongoing trial of Oscar Pistorius who shot dead his girlfriend in his luxury house in Pretoria on Valentine day
I got the rudest shock of my life that a colleague, friend, former classmate in medical school was shot dead at 3am on Saturday in Texas, United States by her own husband! This is too close home for comfort!
Someone tell me what’s going on?
Why are people who professed to love forever and who vowed before God and man pulling the trigger to abruptly cut short the lives they are to protect?
How do we explain this to the innocent children who are going to be deprived for life of parental love and care? Mum is dead but dad isn’t available because he’s serving terms for killing mum?
How? How?? How???

Medical doctor killed

Medical doctor killed

Please if you’re in an abusive relationship riddled with domestic violence, this is the time to get out!
Please stop keeping the front of happiness when you’re dying inside!
The society may not understand, we may even condemn ignorantly
But you owe it a responsibility to those innocent children to be ALIVE!
Please get out NOW to a safe house
I don’t want to ever mourn another victim of spousal or domestic abuse
I can’t begin to describe all the emotions I’m going through
So you can only imagine what her parents, sister and children will be going through!
This is so sad and how many times I’ve wished in the last 48 hours, we can turn back the hand of the clock!
Rest in peace Isioma, Issy Awele Ebegbodi and I pray God comfort your children and family and us all mourning you!
It shall be well!
With deep sadness, We announce the untimely passing of our dear friend and Colleague OGQC (93, “Z” set) Dr Isioma Ebegbodi Nee Unokanjo on Saturday 22nd March,2014 in Texas in the most tragic circumstances.

 

From a confirmed source,Isioma’s friends and colleagues from Medilag(Unilag medical school) and concerned Nigerians are presently collecting funds together towards her three children’s education.

May God grant her family and friends the fortitude to bear this immense loss.

God bless and replenish you as you contribute to this worthy cause.

For further details please email: yemikeks@yahoo.co.uk, funmi_g@yahoo.com

Breaking News: Ambassador Assam Arrives Houston To Dialogue With Diaspora.

By Our Reporter.Image
The Nigerian Ambassador to Russia and Belarus, His Excellency, Chief Assam E. Assam, SAN, has just arrived Houston, Texas for a Town Hall Meeting where he is to begin dialogue with Akwa Ibom people and friends, Globalville News can confirm to you.
Details soon.

 

40-Year-Old Fetus Found Inside Elderly Woman

X-ray showing 40 years old fetus in an 80 year old woman

X-ray showing 40 years old fetus in an 80 year old woman

A Colombian woman who went to a hospital in Bogota, complaining of stomach pains, got the surprise of her life when doctors saw an X-ray and discovered a 40-year-old calcified fetus — or lithopaedian — inside her 82-year-old body.

Lithopaedian, also known as stone baby, is a very rare syndrome that happens when the fetus grows outside the uterus and inside the abdomen. Indeed, the phenomenon occurs only once in every 11,000 pregnancies. If the fetus becomes so large that it cannot be absorbed back into the body, it mummifies, with a layer of calcium protecting the mother’s body from the dead tissue of the baby. Usually the woman has no idea a calcified fetus is inside her.

The Colombian woman will now undergo surgery so that the fetus can be removed.

In another case, in 2009, Huang Yijun, 92, of southern China, delivered a child which she’d been carrying for more than half a century.

At the time, Dr Natalie Burger, an endocrinologist and fertility specialist in Texas, explained that lithopaedions began as ectopic pregnancies -– a condition where the fertilized egg becomes stuck as it travels to the womb and develops outside of the uterus.

She told NBC News: “Usually an ectopic pregnancy will mean a [fallopian] tubal pregnancy, but in a small percentage of cases, the pregnancy can actually occur in the abdominal cavity — in places like the bowel, the ovary, or even on the aorta.

“These are very rare locations and they can be very dangerous.”

For more information, watch the video above.

A Case for Strong Institutions

 

Hon Dakuku Peterside

Hon Dakuku Peterside

 

By Dakuku Peterside

All men of goodwill who look forward to a more progressive and equitable world appreciate the tremendous good Transparency International, TI does with its periodic verdict on nations and institutions across the globe. Sometimes I just wonder what our world would look like without watchdogs like Transparency International that continually reminds us about the way we are.

Recently, TI released the 2013 Global Corruption Barometer, GCB and rated political parties and the Nigeria Police as the most corrupt institutions in Nigeria. TI’s 2013 GCB is a product of interviews with a total number of 114,000 respondents across 107 countries between September 2012 and March 2013. The Berlin-based organisation said the primary aim of the 2013 GCB report was to explore respondents’ personal experiences of paying bribes for government services on one hand and on the other, to gauge perception of the integrity of major public institutions. There is also TI’s desire towards a better understanding of the willingness and disposition of citizens in countries under review to fight corruption.

From TI’s investigation, Nigeria is among the 88 countries where anti-corruption effort is ineffectual. This verdict is ominous. Yet it has not provided leads or talking points in our media. This important issue was merely reported and left alone. I am sure I did not see follow-ups. So why are we not paying the needed attention to this uncomplimentary report which has the capacity of stalling our investment drive and growth efforts?

If corruption is any abuse of a position of trust, either by an individual or an institution to gain an unfair advantage, then this report by TI is incontrovertible. I know corruption has many layers but this report reminds me again of some of our nation’s recent experiences that are not only irritating but reprehensible and regrettable.

Two institutions that characterise the existence and flourishing of democracy in any country are the party system and the institution of parliament. If one of the institutions, political parties carry the moral burden of being the den of corruption, then it is right to conclude that our democracy is sick. The other institution that shapes the growth of democracy is the police which help primarily in the maintenance of law and order in a purely democratic setting. This institution has been described in the TI report as the bastion of corruption with no ray of hope.

If these two institutions (political parties and the Police) that I consider most critical to the growth and survival of democracy and our country Nigeria has been described in such very uncomplimentary terms by TI GCB report, then where lies our hope?

Have our political parties derailed from its lofty objective of seeking to influence or entirely control government course of action, usually by putting forward candidates with aligned political views? Your guess is as good as mine. But I hate to think like a few of our compatriots who are of the opinion that Nigeria is in reverse gear. Of late, I just noticed that some us are becoming more romantic about our past republics, particularly the Second Republic politics. Despite the shortcomings of that era, it still remains one of the most colourful and vibrant republics, that is if the focus is on political parties.

Many still remember principal characters of that era like Augustus Meredith Adisa Akinloye, national chairman of National Party of Nigeria, NPN and how he and his colleagues at the commanding height of NPN leadership held sway on every party issue. At the time, Alhaji Shehu Shagari was a member of NPN and president of Nigeria, yet he submitted himself to party rules and regulations. All that changed with the emergence of Chief Olusegun Obasanjo in 1999 and as they say, the rest is history.

Today, political parties are extensions of individuals’ or group’s personal estates. There is complete absence of principles, discipline, solidarity, group interest and camaraderie. A party member could be sanctioned at the flimsiest of excuses. While some have been suspended for their perceived popularity, others have suffered similar fates either for fraternizing with members of other parties or for holding a different view. At the bottom of the scramble we see in our parties is the desire to highjack party machinery for personal and selfish gains, and corruption is always the destination.

Yes, abuse of position of trust is corruption and this is prevalent in our parties. Nigeria’s political parties must therefore look inwards and seek ways of ensuring that there is a level playing ground for every member. And to avoid a repeat of such an unflattering report in future like this one from TI, our parties must return to their traditional roles of seeking to influence government through their members with aligned political views. They must also stop forthwith, all forms of witch-hunt and intimidation against vocal members and perceived enemies.

For the Nigeria Police, I am not under any illusions, it is a long walk. TI’s verdict therefore is something that is already known to Nigerian people.

The police force represents everything but the same purpose it is meant to serve. The problem of Nigeria Police is not all about the quality of persons that populate it or the culture but also of funding which is a creation of the Nigerian state. The state that does not fund its police and yet still expects optimal policing is a misnomer or a fallacy.

For instance, for 2013, the budget of the Nigeria Police is N311, 148, 387,311($1.6bn). This budget is meant to police a population of over 160 million with a force strength of 330,000 officers and men. This contrasts sharply with the budget of Austin, a county in the state of Texas with a population of 843,162 people. The Austin Police Department has a budget of $284.4m which is about N45, 504,000,000 with staff strength of 2,300.

Whereas it cost an average of $123,478 to keep a policeman in Austin, Texas, it cost $5,893 to train and maintain a Nigerian policeman within the same period. It cost 21 times the same amount used for an average Nigerian policeman to train and equip a policeman in Austin, Texas. The implication of this comparative poor funding can be seen in training, moral, conduct, equipment and skill of the average Nigerian policeman. Worse still, an ill-equipped policeman in Nigeria is expected to police about 500 persons whereas a policeman in Austin who is well equipped and has access to modern technology will be policing about 366 persons. Thus it will be sheer madness to expect similar level of performance between a local Austin police and his counterpart federal police in Nigeria.

Every day, one is confronted with a plethora of woes of officers and men of the force. I am aware that more often than not, the individual police officer sources his or her kits from boots to uniforms and other accessories. It is also common knowledge that their take-home pay cannot really take them home in the real sense of that word. In barracks and duty posts, issues of low morale, welfare, training, lack of modern equipment and more echo. I acknowledge the fact that some state governments have done well for the police yet it is not anywhere near the ideal or what our expectation is from the force.

Under these circumstances, corruption will naturally grow and fester. Officers and men of the Nigeria Police live among us and are part of us, with needs and aspirations like any of us. They say every society deserves its police, perhaps our police is a reflection of our reality. But we must halt this reality if we hope to build a virile nation where safety of lives and property, law and order is a national priority.

The political crisis in Rivers State today is direct fallout from failure of the police which is predicated on the many challenges facing the force. We are all witnesses to the flagrant disregard and disrespect of Governor Chibuike Amaechi, an elected public officer by Mbu Joseph Mbu, Rivers State Commissioner of Police. Mbu as confirmed by the Nigerian Senate and House of Representatives has consistently worked at cross-purposes with the governor, thereby compromising the security situation in the state. This is explainable. Mbu and the police he represents will prefer to serve those who have the power to appoint or remove them instead of the Nigerian people as contemplated by the Nigerian constitution. Nigerians also watched the theatre of absurd that played out in Rivers State when five out 32 members attempted to impeach the Speaker of Rivers State House of Assembly. Sadly, while the assembly was on fire, the commissioner of police, like Emperor Nero, fiddled. Nigerians also saw how four Northern governors who were on reconciliatory mission to Rivers State were pelted and held hostage by hired thugs at the Port Harcourt Airport under the watchful eyes of the police. And in Rivers State, most people are of the view that the police high command is exacerbating the crisis in the state because of certain interests that must be protected at all costs.

Corruption therefore is at the root of institutional decadence, dereliction of duty, deficit of professionalism and political meddlesomeness that has characterised the Nigeria Police of today as can be seen in the case of Commissioner Mbu in Rivers State, a classic case of a political policeman who does not know his bounds.

As we consolidate our democratic experience, let me say that we must strengthen our institutions. The police for instance, must be structured to serve the interest of Nigerians and not the selfish and narrow desires of a few. It is a sad commentary that our political parties and the police emerged as TI’s most corrupt institutions in Nigeria. This without doubt, calls for deep reflection. Nigerians therefore must work towards building strong institutions; this is the only way to guarantee justice, fairness, equity, peace and the rule of law.

Hon. Dakuku Peterside, member of House of Representatives and Chairman, House Committee on Petroleum Resources, Downstream represents Andoni-Opobo/Nkoro Federal Constituency

Governor Akpabio Purchases Million-Dollar Bullet Proof Luxury Vans

Governor Akpabio Purchases Million-Dollar Bullet Proof Luxury Vans

Interior of luxury van customized by Texas Armoring Corporation-Facebook photo

Sprinter van -Facebook photo
Godswill Akpabio, the Most Corrupt Governor in Nigeria

Godswill Akpabio, the Most Corrupt Governor in Nigeria

Just months after purchasing a $45 million dollar jet, and a few days after recklessly doling out several thousands of dollars to Nigerian music star, 2Face and his wife, Akwa Ibom State Governor Godswill Akpabio has taken possession of several bulletproof sprinter luxury vans from US based Texas Armoring Corporation (TAC).

A source told Saharareporters that the governor took delivery of the Mercedes Benz made vans recently after they were customized to his specifications by TAC in Texas.

The vans will join a remarkable fleet of top-of-the-line bulletproof luxury Sport Utility Vehicles (SUV) Akpabio already has in his official convoy, making the latest purchase superfluous and insensitive, insiders in the government told SaharaReporters.

The Texas Armoring Company has displayed the luxurious interior of Mr. Akpabio’s latest toy on its Facebook page.

The Akwa Ibom governor, who intends to run for the Senate when his second term ends, has emerged as one of Nigeria’s hardest-spending governors, with a taste for the finest things, while most of his State remains undeveloped.   He is also one of President Goodluck Jonathan’s closest confidants, and recently emerged chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party Governors’ Forum, with a mandate to help Jonathan win re-election in 2015.

Insiders say some governors convert some of the luxury possessions into personal items they take with them when they leave office, or give away as presents to friends.
–Saharareporters

Drilling deep with Stanford Rose Bowl Game Defensive MVP and Energy Resources Engineering major Usua Amanam

Usua Amanam

Usua Amanam Jr

 

 

 

 

By Bruce Anderson

STANFORD, Calif. – Usua Amanam, the Stanford senior whose interception with two minutes left in the 2013 Rose Bowl Game sealed Stanford’s 20-14 victory over Wisconsin, earned hardware as the Defensive Player of the game. Here’s the scouting report on Amanam:

-Always sits near the front of the classroom to ensure that his focus stays on the instructor.
-Makes a point of introducing himself to his professors early each quarter.
-Is deeply thoughtful and brings a measured consideration to both the questions he asks as well as the ones he answers on exams.
-Is quietly charismatic.

Amanam is one of a dozen or so undergraduates majoring in Energy Resources Engineering, a department in the School of Earth Sciences that examines energy production and conservation. He not only knows how to read a quarterback’s eyes, he knows how to infer the makeup of the subsurface by drilling an exploration well.

The curse of black gold

Amanam, whose first name is pronounced OOS wah, has a passion for football, and he dreams of playing in the NFL. “I’d love to make millions of dollars running around with a football in my hands,” he laughed.

Amanam says he has been one of the smallest players on every one of his teams since the fourth grade, and at 5’10’ and 178 pounds he’s a realist.

“There’s a low probability that an NFL career is going to happen for most college football players,” he said. “That’s the reason I chose Stanford. If the football route doesn’t work out, I’ll have a Stanford degree to fall back on.”

His sheepskin from ERE will leave him well positioned for a job in the oil and gas industry, which doesn’t typically draw much interest from undergraduates, particularly ones with their eyes on a career in professional football. How is it that it calls to Amanam?

“My family is originally from Nigeria,” explained Amanam, who said his interest in oil was piqued by a 2007 article in National Geographic called “The Curse of Black Gold.”

“Oil was found in Nigeria in the late 1950s and the 1960s,” Amanam said, “and it was a way for a developing country like Nigeria to become truly relevant in the world today. The National Geographic writer basically detailed what Nigeria has gone through in terms of the oil industry and how it has caused more trouble and more strife than the good it was supposed to. Reading that article and understanding how much a properly working petroleum industry could really jump-start a country economically and socially is what attracted me to ERE.”Amanam’s father, who is also named Usua, is the CEO of Amakpe International Refineries, a company that has built a “prefabricated” oil refinery in Pasadena, Texas, with the intention of shipping it to Nigeria and reassembling it there. But the politics of the federal and state governments in Africa’s most populous nation may derail the project before the refinery ever leaves Texas.

“Nigeria doesn’t have many working refineries,” says the younger Amanam, “and it’s very interesting that a country with so many resources has to ship its crude oil somewhere else to be refined and then imported back.”

A rock star

Richard Nevle is the director of undergraduate programs for the School of Earth Sciences. He has known Amanam since both were at Bellarmine Prep in San Jose, Nevle as a science teacher and Amanam as an honors student.

“Usua was a rock star as a high school football player, a superstar,” Nevle said. “He has legs that are steel springs and he’s a very gifted sprinter.”

As a high school senior, Amanam was named All-Metro Player of the Year by the San Francisco Chronicle. He ran for 1,828 yards on 221 carries–8.3 yards a carry–and scored 36 touchdowns. He led the Bells to a 12-1 record and the school’s first Central Coast Section title in 18 years.

Stanford head coach David Shaw, the Bradford M. Freeman Director of Football, was the team’s offensive coordinator when the Cardinal recruited Amanam.

“We get lots of mail and email about high school players, but we got a lot about Usua in particular,” Shaw says, “that he was bright and engaging as a student and that he was a dynamic football player as well. Everyone said he was the kind of kid who should go to Stanford.”

Truth be told, Amanam said, that enthusiasm wasn’t reciprocated. At least initially. “I always tell people it was my dream to come to Stanford,” he said, “but growing up, I wanted to play football at a big-time college, a Michigan or an SC.”

Amanam had a check-in with his father while he was being recruited. “I told him I was interested in Stanford, but it wasn’t at the top of my list,” Amanam says. “He talked about how my late mother had a dream that one of her kids would go to Stanford. After he told me that, I was sold on Stanford.” (The Cardinal has beaten USC all four of Amanam’s years at Stanford.)

Amanam redshirted his freshman year at Stanford and then saw limited action in a number of roles–running the ball, receiving passes, returning kickoffs–in his first collegiate campaign.

Shaw then approached Amanam with a transformative proposition: Move to defensive back for spring football and there might be more opportunity to play. Amanam was reluctant. But Shaw and defensive coordinator Derek Mason saw a player with the quickness, leaping ability, and aggressiveness to make the move work. “He also changes directions as well as anyone,” Shaw said.

A year and a half later, when Stanford opened the 2012 season last August against San Jose State, Amanam was the starting nickelback, coming into the game whenever the Stanford defense went from four defensive backs to five. He came up big in the Cardinal’s 20-17 win over the Spartans with six tackles and a fumble recovery that set up the deciding field goal. He had four tackles for a loss, including two sacks.

“He’s a very good blitzer,” Shaw said, “which you don’t necessarily expect from someone his size, but he comes off the edges very well.”

For the season, he had 59 tackles, recovered a team-leading three fumbles (including one for a touchdown in Stanford’s first win over UCLA), and was named honorable mention All-Pac-12. The team won 12 games, which matched a school record, gave Stanford its first Rose Bowl Game victory in 41 years, and finished the season as the No. 7 team in the country. For the 2013 season, he’ll be a fifth-year senior.

The linchpin to the world we live in

As surprising as it may be for those who watched Amanam shred staunch high school defenses see him now roam the defensive backfield, it is, in many ways, even more surprising to see him roam the Green Earth Sciences Building and the Energy Resources Engineering Department. Roland Horne, the Thomas Davies Barrow Professor of Earth Sciences, says that after a sharp drop in oil prices in the mid-1980s and the massive Exxon Valdez oil spill in Prince William Sound in 1989, undergraduate interest in petroleum engineering evaporated. Over one ten-year stretch, Stanford did not award a single bachelor’s degree in petroleum engineering.

In 2006, the School of Earth Sciences changed the name of its Department of Petroleum Engineering to Energy Resources Engineering, reflecting its expansion into research and teaching embracing additional forms of energy, such as geothermal and renewables, a changing energy landscape, and society’s changing energy needs and environmental concerns.

“It sounds cliché,” Amanam said, “but what really interested me about ERE is I’ve always wanted to do something that carried a lot of weight and meant something, to do something that could change the world. My sophomore year, I took a class called Energy 101 from my current adviser, associate professor of Energy Resources Engineering Tony Kovscek. It sparked my interest in understanding how the oil and gas industry affects everything we do in our life, socially, economically, and culturally. It’s the linchpin to the world we live in today.”

Amanam’s passion for his academic calling is not lost on others. “I go to a lot of events to which I bring students as emissaries,” Nevle said. “Usua is very effective at communicating what the ERE major has to offer students in a personal and compelling way. He has a charisma about him, a stage presence. When he speaks, people want to listen.”

One of the things that Amanam touts about ERE is its size. And who better to champion the undersized than Stanford’s bantam defensive back?

“With a really small department like ERE, you can get a good feel for the teacher-student relationships that are vital to college students,” Amanam said. “I’ve made it a goal to introduce myself to most of my professor at the beginning of each quarter. Having a good relationship with your professor, I feel like you’re more motivated to learn and do well in the course. I’ve met some amazing professors, and it’s so peculiar to me that these individuals who are so bright, so intelligent, are doing groundbreaking work, make the time to have a great relationship with a 20-year-old student. It’s awesome.”

Amanam has taken two courses–Energy 120, Introduction to Petroleum Engineering, and Energy 175, Well Test Analysis–from Horne, and he also had him as an interim undergraduate adviser for one year. Amanam found Horne’s stature, academically and physically (he’s 6’1′), intimidating at first.

“He turned out to be a very down-to-earth guy,” said Amanam. Horne recalled, “The year I was the undergraduate adviser, Usua came by to see me more often than any other undergraduate. But not to the point of excess.” They would talk about classes in the department, football, and life at Stanford. “I’m glad I sought out a relationship with him,” Amanam said.

What next?

Amanam and Horne would also talk about jobs in the field. There are lots. “In North America and Western Europe, industry statistics show that more than 50 percent of the oil and gas industry’s engineers will reach retirement age by 2015,” according to a report published by Deloitte. On the other hand, the NFL Players Association says that of the 9,000 athletes playing college football, only 310 will be invited to the league’s scouting combine, the pool of players who will be drafted.

If the NFL doesn’t beckon after his final college season next fall, Amanam is leaning toward the downstream portion of the oil and gas industry, supplying consumers with refined crude-oil products. Like a lot of other seniors, Amanam isn’t entirely certain what he wants to do after college.

“At this juncture in my life, I don’t honestly know what I want to do,” he conceded. “At times, it can be stressful.”

Perhaps Amanam can take comfort in David Shaw’s double-edged observation–“Usua changes direction as well as anyone.” Whichever direction Amanam heads, one has to imagine he will hit the ground running and find an opening.

Bruce Anderson has extensive ties to both Stanford and the world of sports. As an undergraduate, he was sports editor of The Stanford Daily before graduating with a degree in communications in 1979. He spent 10 years as a writer-reporter at Sports Illustrated and was later the editor of Stanford magazine.