He said today in his speech when he concluded the race of Mwenge this year in conjunction with the 18-year-old death of the National Father at a ceremony held at the Zanzibar Stadium.
President Magufuli said in his phase he would never run the race as it helped to open up various development projects in the country as well as to call on the State Father Hayati Teacher Nyerere, the founder of the Uhuru River.
"I know there are people who want Torch race to be deleted at the expense of the cost but forget that the Torch supports the establishment and completion of development projects in the country. I want to assure you that in my leadership with Dr. Shein will not seek the Freedom of Freedom ", said President Magufuli.
Many committed singles have watched as their married friends became insufferable and boring. But is this really true?
“Why is it there are so many unmarried women in their thirties these days, Bridget?” – the dinner party scene in Bridget Jones’s Diary is excruciatingly familiar to anyone who has ever found themselves, alone, surrounded by a room full of married friends.

While psychologists may not have fully resolved the question of whether marriage makes people self-satisfied like Bridget’s paired-up friends, or if instead smug people are just more likely to get married, research suggests the experience of committing to and settling down with another person really does change our personalities for better and for worse… until death do us part.
It makes sense that it might – after all, publicly binding yourself to another person takes loyalty and forward thinking, not to mention a radical change of lifestyle for some, and of course living day in, day out with the same person requires a certain degree of patience and diplomacy.
Whatever the personality changing effects of marriage might be, you’d think the question would be a research priority – around the world, millions of us tie the knot every year.

In fact, research into this question is surprisingly thin on the ground. Probably the best evidence we have comes from a recent German study, in which researchers looked at personality changes among nearly 15,000 people over a period of four years.
Importantly, 664 of the participants tied the knot in the course of the study, allowing Jule Specht at the University of Münster and her colleagues to see how their personalities changed as compared with the rest of the sample who did not get married. The researchers found that wedded participants showed decreases in the traits of extroversion and openness to experience as compared with the others.
This difference was relatively modest, but still, it perhaps provides some concrete evidence to back up the suspicions of single people up and down the land – that their married friends aren’t quite as much fun as they used to be.
SOURCE:BBC


Emoticon Emoticon

Copyright © 2017 BONGO UPDATES - Thank . You For . Visting .