Murder of former Jamaican policeman Courtney Manning, who was vacationing in the island, has left his family in the United States in shock

Thursday, July 03, 2014    
MONDAY night's murder of former Jamaican policeman Courtney Manning, who was vacationing in the island, has left his family in the United States in shock, according to a family friend.
The 45-year-old former narcotics policeman was found dead in a Nissan Tiida motor car at Caymanas Bay, located off the Mandela Highway in St Catherine. He had a bullet wound to the head, police said.
The car was reportedly seen parked for a long time by residents who called the cops and upon their arrival Manning's body was found inside the vehicle.
Manning, 45, was said to be a dedicated policeman during his time at the Narcotics Branch.
"His death has really come as a shock and has hurt us hard. He was a good man," one of his former colleagues told the Jamaica Observer yesterday.
Detectives from the St Catherine South Division are probing the murder of the ex-policeman but were yesterday unable to say what leads they were following.
Yesterday, a family friend who resides in the United States said he knew the ex-policeman for about 15 years before he emigrated to the United States with his family, started the Ebenezer Church in the Bronx, New York, before relocating to Altanta, Georgia where he worked as a schoolteacher.
The family friend, who spoke highly of the former Jamaican policeman, said it was usual for him to visit Jamaica at this time of year.

Southwest makes inaugural flight to Jamaica...... Island is first international destination for US carrier....entry of Southwest into Jamaica will provide a "tremendous boost for our tourism".

Thursday, July 03, 2014  
MINISTER of Tourism Dr Wykeham McNeill led a team of tourism officials and several representatives from the Montego Bay business community in welcoming the inaugural non-stop international flight from America's largest carrier, Southwest Airlines, to the Sangster International Airport in Montego Bay.
Minister of Tourism and Entertainment Dr Wykeham McNeill (right)
 is presented with a replica of a Southwest Airlines airplane by
 Captain Mark Schultz, during a welcome reception held on
Tuesday at the Sangster International Airport in Montego Bay to
 welcome the carrier’s inaugural flight to Jamaica.
The flight, from Baltimore/Washington International Airport, which touched down at about 1:00 pm on Tuesday, was the first of three for the day and ushered in the start of daily non-stop service from three major hubs in the United States to Jamaica.
There will be two flights daily from Baltimore/Washington into Montego Bay. The airline will also operate daily service out of Atlanta's Hartsfield-Jackson International and Orlando's International airports.
McNeill said the entry of Southwest into Jamaica will provide a "tremendous boost for our tourism".
"Southwest is an airline that has had tremendous success. It's the largest domestic airline in the United States and goes to almost every nook and cranny ...to almost every state in the US...so you are able to get persons out of all parts of the United States. Coming to Jamaica is a tremendous boost for our tourism because it opens up the entire US to their fantastic service and their airlines rewards programmes," McNeill said.
He noted that Southwest's entry into Jamaica is a "huge accomplishment" which spoke to the island's amazing attractions and strategic positioning in world tourism today. more

IN JAMAICA: School bag $1.8 million in Petroleum Corporation of Jamaica’s (PCJ) energy competition....winners of its 2014 Schools Energy Programme Competition. Westwood High are winners of the 13-15 age category

 Wednesday, July 02, 2014    
THE Petroleum Corporation of Jamaica (PCJ) has awarded cash prizes valued at $1.8 million to the winners of its 2014 Schools Energy Programme Competition.
The initiative, which is the PCJ's major vehicle for promoting energy education among Jamaica's youth, attracted primary and high school students from 75 institutions across the country for the 2013-14 school year.
GIRL POWER: Westwood High, winners of the 13-15 age
group category of the Petroleum Corporation of Jamaica’s
(PCJ) Schools Energy Programme Science Competition
accept their trophy from the Minister of State in the Ministry
 of Science, Technology, Energy & Mining, Julian Robinson.
The winning team of (from left) Makalia McBean, Deena Dunkley,
 Ashe-Monique Lewis and Mishka Chung (absent) won
$200,000 cash from Wigton Windfarm. Sharing in the
 moment is Abigail Cannigan, the team’s teacher.
They were exposed to a variety of energy-related issues including energy efficiency, conservation and alternative energy sources as well as the use of energy efficient products, technologies and practices.
In addition, they participated in guided tours of local entities involved in energy production including the Petrojam Refinery in Kingston, Wigton Windfarm in Manchester and the JPS hydro plant in St Ann.
"As the government entity with responsibility for public education on energy issues, the PCJ places special emphasis on reaching the nation's youth," said Winston Watson, the PCJ's acting group managing director.
"We have adopted this strategy in order to help our young people to develop an understanding of the challenges our country faces because of high energy costs. This, in turn, should help them to develop lifetime habits and practices that involve energy conservation," he added.
Students from participating schools were invited to submit entries in the PCJ's essay, science and poster competitions. In each of the categories, entrants were challenged to offer solutions to some of the critical energy issues currently confronting the country's decision-makers. more
ENTER CHAT, LISTEN & WATCH BROADCAST LIVE 24/7
               FOR AUDIO ONLY (No Commercials) - CLICK PLAYER ABOVE on RIGHT
                                                                              OR
                  FOR USTREAM VIEWING & RBN CHATROOM CLICK ON PLAYER BELOW    



To listen, click PLAY icon above then unmute speaker icon at bottom left on player after a brief commercial. You may also listen commercial FREE by clicking ON AIR-Listen LIVE AUDIO BOX above or TUNE-IN LINK or call in on Tele at 213-401-0061. Enjoy the sweet music.To chat below, please sign in with your RBN account.Please support the scholarship program by considering to donate at least $10.00 at www.PALAS1.org. Thank you very much.

IN JAMAICA: Tickets Available Islandwide....Catherine Hall, Montego Bay, comes alive from July 13 to 19 for the 22nd staging of Reggae Sumfest....Sean Paul, songbird Tessanne Chin, reggae crooner Freddie McGregor, Sanchez, Chronixx, Jah Cure and many others..

Published: Tuesday | July 1, 2014
Ticket locations to the 'Greatest Reggae Show on Earth' are open islandwide. Reggae Sumfest offers tickets based on considerations of your budget, so you can choose from daily admission (general or VIP) presold, to a season band which includes all the days or just the weekend of the event.
Jah Cure
Jah Cure
The outlets include Pier 1 and Fontana Pharmacy in Montego Bay, Heaven's Texaco in Mandeville, Rubicon Investments Limited in Christiana and the Texaco at Mary Brown's Corner and York Pharmacy in Kingston.
Catherine Hall, Montego Bay, comes alive from July 13 to 19 for the 22nd staging of Reggae Sumfest. There will be performances by rapper Wiz Khalifa, hip-hop artistes Future and Jason Derulo, dancehall superstar Sean Paul, songbird Tessanne Chin, reggae crooner Freddie McGregor, Sanchez, Chronixx, Jah Cure and many others.

THINGS CARIBBEAN PEOPLE SAY WHEN THEY GO TO COURT (VERY FUNNY)

It Took Studying 25 Million Kids To Begin To Undo The Damage Caused By 1 Doctor.....Dr. Andrew Wakefield claims link between autism and vaccines

Dr. Andrew Wakefield
Once upon a time, a scientist named Dr. Andrew Wakefield published in the medical journal The Lancet that he had discovered a link between autism and vaccines. After years of controversy and making parents mistrust vaccines, along with collecting $674,000 from lawyers who would benefit from suing vaccine makers, it was discovered he had made the whole thing up. The Lancet publicly apologized and reported that further investigation led to the discovery that he had fabricatedeverything.
In the intervening years, millions have been spent on studying this further to see if there was anything that could connect autism and vaccines. This is what they found. more

Global megatrends and why education needs vision.....Studies have shown that it buys longer life expectancy; better health; improved quality of life over generations; better decision-making skills; improved personal status; higher lifetime average salaries; higher employment rates....Economies like China, India, South Korea and Singapore that are thriving today built their growth agenda on education.

by Grace VIRTUE  Tuesday, July 01, 2014 
The importance of education to human development, and, by extension, economic growth and prosperity, cannot be overstated. More people worldwide will climb out of poverty through education than the combined numbers who will do so through sports, entertainment, drug dealing, the lottery scam or fly-by-night business ventures.
BROWN… globalisation dictates that the nations that
 succeed will be those that bring out the best in people
and their potential
Higher education is particularly important. Studies have shown that it buys longer life expectancy; better health; improved quality of life over generations; better decision-making skills; improved personal status; higher lifetime average salaries; higher employment rates; greater job consistency; higher savings levels; and improved working conditions and mobility.
Overall, society benefits from higher contributions made by the educated population to tax revenues, greater productivity, higher consumption, less reliance on social welfare, reduced crime rates, greater ability to adapt to technology, more charitable giving, more social cohesion and greater appreciation of diversity.
Education is also the principal way in which the state passes on the norms, values and mores of a culture and builds social cohesion, which is critical to high-functioning societies. Eighteenth-century German philosopher Immanuel Kant argues that a good education is planned and it references humanity as a whole since good conduct, when understood at the level of principle, transfers across time and space. Education, which is well-planned, meets the needs of the society; education that is unplanned is defective and will fall short of societal needs, expectations and goals.
Beyond transmitting a society's values, a good education should unlock innovation and creativity, thereby advancing human development, economic growth and prosperity. Economies like China, India, South Korea and Singapore that are thriving today built their growth agenda on education. more

IN JAMAICA: Our children are not only at risk they are in dire danger....It's estimated the world has lost approximately two million children in wars and armed conflicts in the last decade, with 250,000 forced to bear arms and thousands more killed or maimed.

Tuesday, July 01, 2014    
An edited version of remarks by Youth and Culture Minister Lisa Hanna at the Opening Session of UN Cross Regional Meeting on the Prevention and Elimination of Violence against Children at the Jamaica Pegasus hotel in Kingston yesterday.
Lisa Hanna
AT this moment, in every country, children are enduring the horrific impact of violence. Children who live in upscale neighbourhoods in North American or European countries suffer just as much as those children who live in their inner-cities. Equally, they suffer just as much as those children living in towns and villages in the Middle East, Africa, South and Central America and the Caribbean.
Both boys and girls are affected; and there is also no distinction among race, ethnic origin, education and family income. In short violence affects children everywhere.
The awful and inescapable truth is that the absolute horror and devastating effects on children are on many levels. For some countries while we grapple with the dreadful acts perpetrated at a local level, in many other parts of the world the gruesome acts of violence against our children are horrendous.
Almost on a nightly basis our global news network shows us in graphic detail, the ugly truth that there is always a war or armed conflict taking place somewhere in the world.
But what is often overlooked is the devastating impact these disastrous events have on children. more

Hon. LISA HANNA, Minister of Youth & Culture & ATTORNEY PATRICK CAMPBELL TO DELIVER KEYNOTE ADDRESSES AT PALAS 4th ANNUAL AWARDS PRESENTATION AT UWI-MONA CAMPUS ON SAT, AUG. 23, 2014.....2014 PALAS RECIPIENTS TOP 5 STORIES COMING SOON....SCHOLARSHIP RECIPIENTS LIST OF NAMES TO BE RELEASED JULY 15.


PALAS1.org
by R.Brown Mon, June 20, 2014


Peace and Love Academic Scholarship, Inc. (PALAS) will present stories of the top 5 scholarship recipients in 2014. One-hundred forty applications were evaluated and the scholarship recipients names will be released by July 15, 2014.

PALAS will hold it's 4th annual awards presentation on Saturday, August 23, 2014 at the University of the West Indies-Mona Campus in Kingston, Jamaica. The event will start at 5:00pm. The keynote speakers will be Hon. Lisa Hanna, Minister of Youth & Culture in Jamaica. Mr. Patrick Campbell, Attorney & PALAS advisor of Washington DC will be the other guest speaker. PALAS motto is "Preserving Young Minds for Posterity."

Attorney Patrick Campbell,
 PALAS advisor
Hon. Lisa Hanna,
 Minister of Youth & Culture
PALAS awarded 115 scholarships over the past 3 years valued at JA$5.2 Million (US$50,300.00). Goal is to award 100 scholarships/computers in 2014/15. You may Partner with PALAS (PWP) by donating a minimum of $350.00 to have a scholarship in your name, loved one or your company each year. We are seeking donations urgently.

Please donate online at www.PALAS1.org or Send check to : 
PALAS, PO Box 5461, Alpharetta GA 30023 USA. PALAS is a non-profit, 501 (c)  (3) organization, headquartered in Alpharetta, GA. 

IN JAMAICA: WHAT A WICKED ACT! A shocking divorce petition....What do you think about this story?

By Margarette Macaulay Monday, June 30, 2014  

Dear Mrs Macaulay,
My sister who lives in Jamaica was married to her husband for 18 years. That union produced one daughter who is now 14. The husband left the island on a working programme in Canada with promises that the employer would file for the entire family to come to Canada. But after two years he returned, only to serve her with divorce papers.
He is the owner of a business, has two taxis on the road and bank accounts. He has left nothing for her or any access to any money to take care of herself or their child.
My sister had to move out of the matrimonial house because the electricity was disconnected because of unpaid bills. During the marriage he did not want her to work, but insisted that she stay home and take care of their daughter. How can my sister file for alimony and child support since he is not in the country?
From the way you have related the story, the husband's actions seem to have been 'out of the blue' for your sister. There is no suggestion that your sister was aware of any breakdown in their marriage or that her husband had at any time before the service on her told her that for whatever reason he had concluded that their marriage was over.
If my understanding of the facts are correct, then your sister should and could successfully defend the divorce on the ground that they have not in fact been living separate and apart after any breakdown of their marriage (as there was no mention of one) for 12 months immediately preceding the filing of the divorce papers. I am assuming that the divorce proceedings were filed here in Jamaica on his behalf and were served on her after his return.
You see, while he was in Canada on the work programme with the plans for the filing for his family still intact, and this was never directly or indirectly withdrawn, and then without any hint on his part that as far as he was concerned the marriage was over, they cannot be said to have been living separate and apart. In order to live separate and apart, the parties must each know or one must have been informed by the other that their marriage was over for certain reasons. Then based on this, they ceased to cohabit or to have any intent to do so and live separately and apart from each other. more

IN JAMAICA: 15 schools to benefit from PCJ's $62-m solar project...." This will result in savings of more than $16 million per year on the public sector energy bill,".....The systems should provide 232 kilowatts peak power which equates to about 344,000 Kilowatt hours per year.

Monday, June 30, 2014    
FIFTEEN schools and three Government agencies should soon see considerable reductions in their energy bills as the Petroleum Corporation of Jamaica (PCJ) will be installing Solar PV Systems at public sector buildings at a cost of more than $62 million.
An aerial view of of a 1.6 MW solar PV roof system at
 Grand Palladium Hotel & Spa in Hanover.
 (OBSERVER FILE PHOTO)
Minister of State in the Ministry of Science, Technology, Energy and Mining (MSTEM), Julian Robinson has announced that Cabinet has approved the projects and contracts should be signed soon.
"Collectively, the 18 Solar PV Systems which will be installed should provide 232 kilowatts peak power which equates to about 344,000 Kilowatt hours per year. This will result in savings of more than $16 million per year on the public sector energy bill," Robinson stated.
"In addition, the systems are grid-tied, allowing the benefiting institutions to earn revenue by generating electricity to sell back to the grid," he added.
Robinson also stated that the Public Sector Solar PV Project is the latest in a series of energy efficiency projects that the PCJ has executed as part of the Government's drive to reduce the public sector's energy bill.
"In the last 10 years the PCJ has carried out more than 100 energy-efficiency projects at government hospitals, schools, health centres and other public sector facilities. These projects represent a total investment of more than $116 million and have resulted in more than $43 million in savings on Jamaica's annual energy bill," he said.
The benefiting institutions are:
*Ardenne High School
* Clarendon College
*Dinthill Technical High School
*Glenmuir High School
*Hampton School for Girls
*Kingston High School
*Munro College
*Norman Manley High School
*Old Harbour High School
*Rose Hill Primary School
*St Catherine High School
*St Elizabeth Technical High School
*St Hugh's High School
*Vere Technical High School
*Wolmer's Girls' School
*The Scientific Research Council
*The Office of Disaster Preparedness and Emergency Management (ODPEM)
*The Petroleum Corporation of Jamaica. more

IN JAMAICA: 25,000 Jamaicans in Half-Way-Tree to rally against tossing out buggery act; shout out for clean, righteous living Stand up for families, fight against greed, selfishness, speakers urge....the rally to resist the homosexual agenda

A section of the large crowd which gathered in
 Half-Way-Tree for the mass rally yesterday.
 See report on Page 4. (PHOTO: MICHAEL GORDON)
BY JAVENE SKYERS Observer writer skyersj@jamaicaobserver.com  Monday, June 30, 2014    
POLICE last night estimated that around 25,000 Jamaicans turned out in their black, green and gold to support the Jamaica CAUSE (Churches Action Uniting Society for Emancipation) mass rally in Half-Way-Tree, St Andrew.
The rally called on Jamaicans to stand up for strong and healthy families, righteousness and justice as well as to resist the homosexual agenda and the repealing of the buggery act.
"I think this initiative is very good because it is important that we have a voice, because a lot of different things have been happening in Jamaica and we have to stand up," said Camille Morrison, while adding that it not just goes against God's will but against humanity, and in terms of homosexuality, biologically "di ting don't mek sense and as such it should not be imposed upon people as if it is something right."
After a short praise and worship session, the chairman of the rally, Alvin Bailey spoke to uniting every Jamaican, church, temple, and other institutions.
"We will do all that is righteous and Godly to accomplish the cause", said Bailey, highlighting that Jamaica is a society that demands respect and recognition of sovereignty.
"Our emancipation means standing up for strong families, our emancipation means standing against the homosexuality agenda, emancipation for us means standing up against the repealing of the buggery law," Bailey told the crowd, much to shouts of agreement.
This supporter of the rally shouts out some of the
 sentiments expressed on the placards in front.
(PHOTO: MICHAEL GORDON)
Organisers said that there would be a series of talks and prayers throughout the evening to make people aware of what is happening.
"The seeds of greed and selfishness have been sown in the soil of corruption in public and private sector," said Rev Donald Cole, in commenting on the state of the nation.
"As a people, we have compromised to crime, violence, immorality, abuse of the weak and disrespect of authority. When young people rape and kill each other we should take a serious look at what they're watching and hearing," said Cole, insisting that the church has faced and is still facing a challenge to be part of the solution in this crisis. more

Teenager's life hangs in the balance.... Girl, Anna-Kay Spurgon 17, needs US$20,000 to stay alive.....SPURGON in need of corrective surgery for knotted blood vessels in her head

BY DANIEL GORDON Sunday Observer writer
ANNA-KAY Spurgon's life is on the line and she is in desperate need of help.
The 17-year-old suffers from severe headaches as she has been diagnosed with a condition known as arteriovenous malformation (AVM) which is a tangled knot of blood vessels in her head.
If she is not able to raise US$20,000 (about J$2.2 million) to pay for corrective surgery overseas, the consequences could spell disaster and even end in death.
SPURGON... in need of corrective surgery for knotted
 blood vessels in her head
As the teenager sat on a chair in her yard at Sandy Bay in Clarendon last week, the pain was etched across her face.
"My head's blood vessels are not as usual as they used to be. The blood vessels are knotted and it tends to make my head hurt me as the blood is not flowing as it should," Spurgon told the Jamaica Observer.
To combat the searing headaches, Spurgon said that she has to take a painkiller, Metamisol, up to three times daily.
"I take it every day, at least three times a day or when my head is hurting me," she said.
Her mother Glasmin Banton, was a picture of worry as she peered helplessly at her eldest daughter.
The cost of the surgery has been a mental burden and after trying to raise funds in a variety of ways she is now at her wits' end trying to find a way to save her daughter's life and give her at least a reprieve from the constant pain that she bears.
The surgery is US$20,000 and it can only be done in the US. She also needs a passport and a visa to travel.
"I need assistance to help save my daughter," Banton said.
Anna-Kay is well-spoken and has a good command of the English language but, unfortunately, her condition results in her forgetting simple things and as such she was forced to drop out of school and was unable to complete her Caribbean Secondary Examinations Council (CSEC) examinations at the Bustamante High School.
"I tend to forget things easily. I could not even sit my exams," she said.
When asked if she knew the cost of the surgery, Spurgon replied: "I can't remember because I'm actually forgetting things." more 

Mangoes: edible sunshine.... Your Health Your Wealth ....From East Indian, Julie (St Julian) and Bombay mangoes to Black Mango, Tommy Atkins, Hairy or Stringy, Common, Number 11, Hayden, Sweety, Beefy, and Longy or Long Mango. They are great sources of vitamins A, C, E, and B-complex, as well as health-promoting flavonoids such as beta-carotene and alpha-carotene.

Sunday, June 29, 2014 Bena Nakawuki     
IF there were ever a food that tasted so good that it reminded me of summer, sunshine and feeling good, it would definitely be mangoes.
Everybody loves a good mango; in fact, I have yet to meet someone who doesn't like or eat mangoes, except for health reasons. Mangoes are juicy, sweet, creamy, colourful, alive, nutritious, filling, ready-to-eat and comforting. With so many varieties to choose from, how can one ever get bored?
EAST INDIAN MANGO
From East Indian, Julie (St Julian) and Bombay mangoes to Black Mango, Tommy Atkins, Hairy or Stringy, Common, Number 11, Hayden, Sweety, Beefy, and Longy or Long Mango. There are many more, each with their unique flavour.
So now that we are in one of the best seasons - and no, I'm not talking about the World Cup season - mango season, let's ditch the myth about mangoes being fattening and enjoy this fruity gift.
Too good to be true
* Mangoes are one of the most delicious and nutritionally rich fruits in the Caribbean. They are great sources of vitamins A, C, E, and B-complex, as well as health-promoting flavonoids such as beta-carotene and alpha-carotene.
* Mangoes help to alkalinise the body by helping to flush out toxic acids and rebuild the alkali reserves in the body.
* Mangoes are packed with enzymes and are a prebiotic food, meaning they contain compounds that stimulate and feed the good bacteria in the intestines which greatly aids in digestion and assimilation.
* Mangoes have been found to be a powerful anti-cancer food and are specifically known to help prevent lung, breast, colon, prostate, blood, and oral cancers.
* Mangoes are highly beneficial in the prevention of strokes, heart disease, arthritis, cognitive disorders, respiratory diseases, and kidney disease.
* Mangoes are known to help lower LDL (bad) cholesterol due to the significant fibre, pectin and vitamin C content.
 * Mangoes are also wonderful for skin health and can be used both internally and externally to help clear clogged pores, eliminate pimples and add a natural glow to the skin.
* Mangoes are excellent for promoting good eyesight and helping to prevent night blindness and dry eyes.
* Mangoes contain a significant amount of pyridoxine (B-6), which is vital for the synthesis of serotonin and dopamine in the brain. Pyridoxine is also essential in maintaining hormonal balance and proper immune function as well as for helping the body break down sugars, fats and proteins.
Mangoes are so versatile and can be used in your smoothies, juices, salads, salsas, desserts, chutneys/sauces, and many other savoury dishes. Surprisingly, spices also pair well with mango - try experimenting with cinnamon, turmeric, curry, cloves, and chili pepper.  
 more

IN JAMAICA: Richie Spice teams with Food For the Poor (FFP) to refurbish basic school....Food for the Poor launched a school furniture campaign with the aim of distributing at least 15,000 desks and chairs to schools in need

Sunday, June 29, 2014    
REGGAE artiste Richie Spice has collaborated with Food for the Poor to refurbish Galilee Early Childhood Education Centre located in the Maxfield Park community in St Andrew.
Spice, whose real name is Richell Bonner, has already helped with a refrigerator.
Richie Spice (right) greets Food for the Poor Chairman
Andrew Mahfood. (PHOTO: COLLIN REID)
"I think with collaboration much more positive interventions will be made for the school," he said at Food for the Poor's 30th anniversary media and celebrity appreciation luncheon at Tracks & Records on June 18.
"The school approached me some time ago and stated their needs. I helped with what I could, and I will continue to help the school and others as best as I can."
He said an assessment will be done to find the cost of providing help for the school, which needs, among other things, classrooms renovated, appliances, and desks and chairs.
Meanwhile, Chairman of Food for the Poor Jamaica, Andrew Mahfood, said he is elated at the partnership.
"It is our mission to link churches, civic and other charity organisations already operating in areas of need in a manner that helps both the materially poor and the poor in spirit. There is certainly room for many more persons who wish to share our vision," Mahfood said.
And Principal Ferron Morgan-Howell is also looking forward to the future.
"I am excited about the partnership. We have many needs and I am happy to know that Richie Spice and Food for the Poor have both committed to assisting us in every possible way they can," she said.
For its 30th anniversary, Food for the Poor launched a school furniture campaign with the aim of distributing at least 15,000 desks and chairs to schools in need before the end of the current academic year. Galilee Early Childhood Education Centre will be one of the beneficiaries. FFP has also surpassed its target of building or upgrading 50 basic schools under the Jamaica 50 programme launched in 2012. more

IN JAMAICA: Perfect Grade Six Achievement Test (GSAT) score for St John the Baptist student, Rianna Blake....She gained an average of 100 per cent in the exams, earning her a place at Immaculate Conception High

BY KIMBERLEY HIBBERT Career and Education writer  Sunday, June 29, 2014    
THOUGH small in number, the outgoing grade six students from St John the Baptist Preparatory School have performed exceptionally well in the Grade Six Achievement Test (GSAT), with one of the candidates gaining a perfect average.
When Career & Education visited the Harrad Crescent, St Andrew school last week, little or no noise was heard, as the school has a population of roughly 80 students.
BLAKE... when I saw I got perfect scores in everything
 I was happy. (PHOTOS: BRYAN CUMMINGS)
The grade six cohort has eight students who were all placed in traditional high schools.
But one girl, Rianna Blake, surprised herself and her teachers when she gained an average of 100 per cent in the exams, earning her a place at Immaculate Conception High -- her first choice.
Blake, who is also the head girl, said when she saw her results, words could not describe what she felt as she had worked towards it for the entire school year.
"I feel elated. The day before GSAT I told myself I was going to be the top girl. I had my rosary with me and I prayed and asked for God's guidance in the exam, so when I saw that I got perfect scores in everything, I was happy and thankful," Blake said.
For Blake, her greatest motivation was her family as she said they helped her to be more confident.
"My mom and dad always motivate me and tell me not to let anyone put me down. They usually say, 'do what you have to do and if you set your dreams now, you achieve it when you get older'," she said.
From left, Dana Williams, Briana Stephenson,
 Keymel Walcott, Rianna Blake, Janelle Cooper,
 Zoya White and Nikaya Horne stand around their
teacher Julian Gregory. Missing is Chris- Anthony Brown.
Class teacher Julian Gregory described the set as a unique and disciplined group who would set goals and work together to accomplish them without her having to dictate to them.
"We try our best to build their confidence and it's a disciplined group, and for a set of children they work with me and I have the support from their parents. Whatever they tell you they're going to do, they do it, and as their facilitator I don't have to tell them do this, do that. They come with their ideas, we have discussions, and we work towards goals," Gregory said.
Gregory said the students foster a sense of team spirit and help each other to grow.
"The stronger ones help the weaker ones. Selfishness is not displayed and they all want to learn," she said. more

9-year-old girl, Jaden Newman recruited by University of Miami (VIDEO)


Visit NBCNews.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

TODAY — Jaden Newman spent three hours taking a tour of the University of Miami last week, where the women’s basketball coaching staff urged her to keep the Hurricanes in mind when it came time to make her college choice.Basketball Prodigy
Jaden also happens to be 9 years old.
The fourth-grader, who has already played two seasons on the girls high school varsity team at Downey Christian School, a 300-student private school in Orlando, is now being actively recruited by Miami. She is believed to be the youngest girls player ever to get recruited by a Division I program.
“It did surprise me a little bit,” Jamie Newman, Jaden’s father and the coach of her basketball team, told TODAY.com. “When I first got the call [from Miami assistant coach Derrick Gibbs], I thought it was for my son. I understand why, though, because she has an amazing skill set at 9 years old, and her potential is through the roof.”
Jaden, who averaged 14.5 points and 7.5 assists per game this past season while playing against teenagers, is a 4-foot-7 point guard who has gained national prominence for her performance. The family is no stranger to attention for basketball precocity, as her older brother, Julian, 12, played on the Downey Christian varsity boys team this winter as a sixth-grader. Source: Grio.com

RASTAWIZDOM (SOHS) w/ ORIEL PON DI ZIGGY MARLEY FLY RASTA TOUR SHOW IN PITTSBURGH, PA....MASHING UP DA DRUMS. GWAAN MY BIG DRUMMER

IN JAMAICA: Ganja: ‘Too little too late’..... Bunny Wailer scolds Gov’t for slow pace on decriminalisation

BY RICHARD JOHNSON Observer senior reporter johnsonr@jamaicaobserver.com  Saturday, June 28, 2014    
VETERAN reggae artiste and ganja legalisation advocate Bunny Wailer is describing the Government’s recent move to facilitate the decriminalisation of small amounts of marijuana as “too little, too late”.
According to Wailer, Rastafari has already done the job that the Government is tip-toeing around and, therefore, efforts must be made to expedite the process.
Bunny Wailer
“For I and I, ganja has always been legal. My father was a distributor since I was born — the biggest in western Kingston in the 1940s and ’50s, up till his passing in the ’90s.
I grew up in the ganja trade, from it was donkey weed. It put us all in school as a family,” said Wailer, who is presently in Stockholm, Sweden on a European tour.
Earlier this month, Justice Minister Mark Golding announced that Cabinet approved certain changes to the law relating to the possession of ganja for personal use.
With the proposed changes, people caught in possession of ganja weighing two ounces or less will not be arrested, but will be ticketed and required to pay a fine.
These offenders will not be brought before a criminal court or attract a criminal record.
“In my life as a Wailer, I was unlawfully arrested and jailed — even though the charge was dismissed — which I only found out in my career as Bunny Wailer [when] applying for a US visa.
That matter is currently before the Public Defender’s office,” he said. Wailer, whose given name is Neville O’Riley Livingston, is the only living member of the famous Wailing Wailers that included reggae greats Bob Marley and Peter Tosh. more

Speedy striker Arjen Robben, Bayern Munich winger starring at World Cup Lightning Dutchman

 Saturday, June 28, 2014    
FORTALEZA, Brazil (AP) — Arjen Robben just seems to get quicker and quicker. The 30-year-old Bayern Munich winger has out-sprinted every defender he has faced at the World Cup so far and is scoring goals, too.
It is a far cry from the final four years ago, when he couldn't find the net and possibly win the tournament for the Netherlands.
SAO PAULO, Brazil — Netherlands forward Arjen Robben
 (left) vies with Chile defender Gary Medel during a Group B
World Cup match at the Corinthians Arena here on Monday.
 Netherlands won 2-0. (PHOTO: AFP)
Robben seemed doomed to be remembered at World Cups for the second-half chance he squandered against Spain in the final in Johannesburg, when Iker Casillas stuck out a boot and deflected his shot away from goal with the score still 0-0.
The Bayern Munich forward still gets asked about that miss, but he has silenced critics at this World Cup with three goals in as many matches and a perfect assist to set up the team's second goal against Chile as the Dutch topped Group B with three straight wins, scoring 10 goals in the process.
"I think Arjen has done a great job so far and at the moment I wouldn't change him with any other player in the tournament," said Dirk Kuyt as the Dutch prepared for Sunday's round of 16 clash with Mexico in Fortaleza. "He's scored great goals ... hopefully he can give this performance until the end."
Robben is one of the old guard in the Dutch team -- along with strike partner Robin van Persie, he's scored at three successive World Cups -- and he has earned the respect of the youngsters snapping at his heels to get into the starting line-up.
"Robben is fantastic," said Memphis Depay. "It's fantastic to train with him every day. I can't believe my eyes what he can do with the ball. It's unbelievable how fast he is with the ball. He's a great player."
Depay should know.
In the Netherlands' final group match against Chile, he had to sprint toward goal as Robben set off on a lightning-fast counterattack down the left wing. The 20-year-old PSV Eindhoven striker managed to catch up with him -- just -- and was on hand at the far post to tap in an inch-perfect cross.
Robben had been on the pitch more than 90 minutes at the time of his dash, Depay was a second-half substitute. more