- Cryptocurrency: a tale of risk and regret
- Foods that help or harm your teeth
- Weight of expectations: The struggle of being a first-born
- Is making a friend better than dating them?
- Why are men often seen as less effective parents?
- UCU SJMC celebrates students
- How a cough syrup is derailing university dreams
- Prof. Peter Nyende gives first professorial lecture
Feature
People can earn money by trading cryptocurrencies. This involves purchasing coins like Bitcoin or Ethereum on platforms such as Binance or Coinbase when prices are low, then selling them when the value increases. “I usually wait for the prices to drop, although it’s not always easy to catch the lowest point. That’s why I constantly keep an eye on the market,” an anonymous student explains.
Let’s begin with the culprits. While sugary foods are widely known to be harmful, many people don’t realise how some common foods quietly cause tooth decay.
It began innocently. The student recounts how he was introduced to codeine through international students, particularly Nigerians, during his university years.
Maractho said the revised curriculum was influenced by discussions on “what kind of journalists and communication professionals we want to prepare.”
“As for me and my household, we shall serve the Lord” while for Anglicans chose “Conforming to the Truth of God’s Word and not the patterns of the World” as their theme.
Upon his father’s return from Libya, he sent his son away from home, protesting his change of faith.
Charles Muganga, a final-year student in the Bachelor of Computer Science program at Uganda Christian University (UCU), finds himself deep in agriculture some days. Misunderstanding about what soil nutrients can yield the best crops and how data can clarify that brought him and other peers there.
Led by Daniel Karibwije, a lecturer at the UCU School of Business and a patron of the Coffee Club, the organization is being launched more broadly in June. The launch of the club follows UCU’s signing of a memorandum of understanding with Uganda’s coffee agency, the Uganda Coffee Development Authority (UCDA). UCDA is mandated to regulate, promote and oversee the coffee industry in Uganda.
In 1984, as Boaz Mbagaya reported back to school, he was not at peace. His expecting mother was ill, and Mbagaya worried for the worse. That very week that the 18-year-old reported to school, he was called back home. His mother and the unborn baby had died.
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