LIKKLE DAINJAH in DANGER? Dancehall Artist Held on Murder Suspicion Charges in JAMAICA....Listen to Interview with his Dad and Rula Brown on RBN

AT press time last night, singjay Likkle Dainjah was still in police custody, four days after being arrested following his performance at Reggae Sumfest in Montego Bay.
He was taken away in handcuffs shortly after performing on Dancehall Night, held at Catherine Hall.
Likkle Dainjah
The entertainer, whose given name is Dwayne Ford, is being probed by the police as a person of interest in a murder that took place in St Mary in 2013.
In an interview with the Jamaica Observer yesterday, Ford's manager and CEO of True Loyal Records, Vaughn Wint, said Likkle Dainjah is yet to be charged.
"We are really frustrated as he was supposed to go on an ID parade today (yesterday) but this was postponed until today. He has been in custody for more than 72 hours, so we will be getting an attorney involved," Wint said.
Wint said he and Likkle Dainjah are surprised by the police's actions.
"We are told that somebody with a name similar to his stage name was connected to a murder that happened in St Mary about two years ago. They wanted to clear his name so he was taken and placed into custody to face an ID parade."
Wint is confident his protégé will be released after the identification parade. more
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IN JAMAICA: Sandals Foundation brightens summer for Hanover children ....Over 50 children benefited from the community service initiative,

The kids smile- Sandals Foundation
Tuesday, July 21, 2015
Sandals Foundation volunteer and student of Hampton School, Alexie Harding, spent much of last Friday assisting children at the Hanover Parish Library with bracelet-making, during an outreach led by the Sandals Foundation team and guests from Beaches Negril. Over 50 children benefited from the community service initiative, which also included 'story time', puppet making, basic computer lessons, and an introduction to the culture of Colombia as well as the US states of Georgia and South Carolina, from which the resort's guests hail. Hundreds of books, stationery and other items were also donated to the library and its summer programme participants.

Volunteers Helping Out in Hanover

Sandals Regional Public Relations Manager
 Kendra Johnson (standing, foreground) 
Beaches Negril multi-repeat guest Tom Vooris had the rapt attention of six-toeight-year-olds at the Hanover Parish Library, as he engaged them with 'story time' during a visit to the facility through the Sandals Foundation. Vooris and his friends also introduced the approximately 50 students to aspects of US and Colombian culture, joined the Sandals Foundation team in leading puppet and jewellery-making exercises, facilitated computer lessons, and gifted participants as well as the library with books, stationery and other supplies. The Hanover Parish Library Network also benefited from an additional 67 books, donated by another Beaches repeat family and long-standing donors, the Franks.
Sandals Foundation volunteers, Beaches Negril Resort & Spa guests and children, and staff at the Hanover Parish Library are all smiles following a successful 'voluntourism' activity last Friday. more

Strong Tests Await Bolt, Thompson...The six-time Olympic champion is set to make his European 100m debut this Friday, at the Sainsbury-sponsored London Diamond League meet

LONDON, England:
Usain Bolt is back; or he will be; or so we hope anyway.
The six-time Olympic champion is set to make his European 100m debut this Friday, at the Sainsbury-sponsored London Diamond League meet inside a place that he holds fond memories of - London's Olympic Stadium.
Bolt
But despite the positive reports coming out of Bolt's training camp - located some 24 miles away at Brunel University - his recent withdrawals from meets in Paris and Lausanne have left some degree of reservations or even muted optimism.
However, this weekend's assignment gives the world 100m and 200m champion and double sprint world record holder an opportunity to test his level of preparation ahead of next month's IAAF World Championships in Beijing, China, after a few injury setbacks derailed his preparation. The preliminary entry list for Friday's 100m heats suggests that Bolt, who has only contested one 100m race to date - a largely promotional outing in Brazil where he ran 10.12 in April - will face a strong test in the England capital with countrymen Nesta Carter and Kemar Bailey-Cole, as well as Frenchman Jimmy Vicaut - who recently posted a European record 9.86 - as well as American Mike Rodgers and veteran Kim Collins all registered to compete.

Getting Better

The last time Bolt ran inside the Olympic Stadium, he clocked 9.85 to win the 100m at this very meet in 2013. Anything close to that on Friday, and not even the bravest man will bet against him getting even better and going on to win gold at the World Cham-pionships which get under way a full month from now. more

IN JAMAICA: Public health sector lost 200 nurses last year —Nurses' Association of Jamaica (NAJ).

Tuesday, July 21, 2015    
JAMAICA'S public health system took a blow last year with the migration or resignation of 200 specialist nurses.
"In 2014, 200 specialist nurses migrated to other countries or resigned from the public sector to work in the private sector," said Janet Coore-Farr, president of the Nurses' Association of Jamaica (NAJ).
Protests are nothing new... here nurses protest for higher
wages back in 2006
Coore-Farr made the announcement during Sunday's service at Eastwood Park New Testament Church in Kingston to mark the start of Nurses' Week.
She said the "extreme shortage" of nurses in the public health care system has contributed to an increase in workload.
That is certain to bring with it stresses to the individual nurses, which could affect patient care. Jamaicans have long complained about harsh treatment out by nurses in public health care facilities.
On the other hand, Coore-Farr said that the NAJ would focus on filling he gap with nurses who are trained but currently unemployed.
Dr Andrei Cooke, chairman of the South Eastern Regional Health Authority, told attendees to the service that nurses are the backbone of health care in Jamaica.
"Since the beginning of time, the nursing profession has been one of much honour and importance to Jamaica, as to the world," Cooke said, and lauded the nurses "for their service across Jamaica". more

IN JAMAICA: 'It can be done' . Ensom City Primary explains strategy behind unprecedented GSAT success....Forty of the 196 students who sat the exam this year got averages of 90 per cent and above. One girl got a perfect 100 across the board.

Sunday, July 19, 2015    
'DEDICATION' was the one word that surfaced again and again when the Jamaica Observer spoke with teachers and administrative staff at Ensom City Primary School in Spanish Town about the reason behind the school's phenomenal Grade Six Achievement Test (GSAT) scores this year.
Eighteen of the 40 students at Ensom City Primary who
 scored GSAT averages of 90 and above in this year’s
sitting of the high school entrance exam.
Forty of the 196 students who sat the exam this year got averages of 90 per cent and above, with 21 of those being 95 per cent and higher. One girl got a perfect 100 across the board.
That's no mean feat for a school which has struggled over the years to shake off the poor regard of society in general for all-age schools. It opened in 1976 as Ensom City All-age and has gone through the paces of the Ministry of Education's upgrading process. In 1998 it got the Primary and Junior High nomenclature, and two years later, got its current style.
Added to that challenge, the majority of the students live in volatile communities, some of which are a stone's throw from the school. But the fight is being won one battle at a time, according to principal Pauline Banton, and this year's GSAT is the latest in a growing number of accomplishments that prove it.
Banton spoke about gold, silver and bronze medals the school has won at the Miami Classic Invitational Competition, as well as in drumming. She also mentioned its participation in Junior Schools' Challenge Quiz and various clubs and societies internally.
The level of success brought about by the GSAT grades has given some amount of hope to current students and alumni, some of whom include "doctors and professionals right across the world". Two of the more well-known names on the Jamaican landscape are Scotia Foundation's Joylene Griffiths-Irving and real estate developer and wife of the Leader of the Opposition, Juliet Holness. more

IN JAMAICA (CONGRATULATION- BITTERSWEET) : Slain cop graduates Crystal Thomas’ mom accepts associate’s degree on her behalf

Monday, July 20, 2015   
01
The ceremony
IT was a bittersweet afternoon for Jacqueline Brown yesterday as she walked up the podium at the National Indoor Sports Centre in Kingston to receive an Associate of Science Degree in Business Administration from the University College of the Caribbean (UCC) on behalf of her daughter, woman Constable Crystal Thomas.
Thomas, 24, was fatally shot while on her way home from work last Tuesday by hijackers of the Coaster bus on which she was a passenger on Spanish Town Road in Kingston.
“Mi feel proud, you see! Mi proud a mi baby, man,” Brown said of the younger of her two children. She may have seemed brave, but Brown confessed that she was a bag of nerves. “Sometimes mi feel weak,” she said. “When mi did fi go up mi feel like mi did ago cry, mi haffi squeeze it back.”
As she walked up the aisle, Brown was greeted with a standing ovation and cheers of encouragement. She was escorted by Sergeant Raymond Wilson, head of the Central Executive of the Police Federation.
UCC President Dr Winston Adams presented her with the certificate, shortly before the moment of silence in Thomas’ honour was observed. “I applaud her because, as a parent, she must have made a lot of sacrifices for her daughter,” Adams said.
Woman Constable Crystal Thomas’ graduation portrait
“I had to encourage her to keep the faith and let her know that we share the grief with her and extend my condolence on behalf of the university,” the president continued. Had womanconstable Thomas been alive, she would have graduated with her cousin, Amanda Walker, who received her bachelor’s degree in business administration yesterday. She told the Jamaica Observer how proud she was of her cousin.
“She always get some excellent grades, and she would call me and say ‘mi cousin, mi get A inna dis or dat’, Walker said. “Sometimes she study so hard she will say ‘mi nuh sleep last night’ or 5:00 o’clock inna di morning she just a go har bed,” a remorseful Walker stated.
“She is more than just a cousin, she’s my close friend, somebody I can talk to when I have any problems. She’s always there for me,” she continued. Sergeant Wilson added that Constable Thomas’ colleagues describe her as a polite, hardworking, sensitive, brave, and ambitious individual. more

IN JAMAICA (CONGRATULATIONS) : Two Top Grade Six Achievement Test (GSAT) Scholars Head To Wolmer’s - Manning's Also Welcomes Shining Star....All three have been awarded the Scotiabank Foundation Shining Star Excellence Scholarship.

The Wolmer's schools will in September welcome two of the nation's three top Grade Six Achievement Test (GSAT) scholars, with Tariq Wright heading the list of boys and Darielle Edwards sharing the spotlight for girls with Candice, who will be at Manning's School.
All three have been awarded the Scotiabank Foundation Shining Star Excellence Scholarship.
The Ministry of Education yesterday published a list of 17 girls and 14 boys who will be awarded Government Scholarships. Among these awardees are Stania McIntosh, Hannah Farr, and Timothy-Mark Hay, who are among a list of 21 students who received perfect scores in the GSAT.
Wright has been described as a shy but self-assured student. He has said that he chose Wolmer's Boys School because of the balance that is maintained between sports and extra-curricular activities. Edwards, who will be attending Wolmer's High School for Girls, has long been identified as a trailblazer in academics, particularly in the area of science.
When she was just in grade three, she won the first prize for her school's Young Innovators and Inventors Competition. She later went on to win the competition again in grade five with her hydroelectric power supply solution.
Another standout scholarship recipient is Farr. Her father has described her as strong-willed and determined. more

CONGRATULATIONS : 22 y-o JAMAICAN Lavois Cruickshank is the recipient of the 2015 University of Birmingham, UK and Jamaica National Foundation Legacy Scholarship....His grade point average has never fallen below 4.0 while at UWI

Sunday, July 19, 2015    
TWENTY-TWO year old Lavois Cruickshank is the recipient of the 2015 University of Birmingham and Jamaica National Foundation Legacy Scholarship.
He recently completed an undergraduate double major degree in economics and finance and will head to Birmingham Business School this fall to pursue a Masters in Financial Economics.
"It is still surreal to me," Cruickshank said. "I am still in amazement. I was really surprised when I saw the scholarship offer in my email, because I personally knew some of the other shortlisted candidates and their capabilities."
Lavois Cruickshank is the second recipient of the University of
Birmingham and Jamaica National Foundation Legacy Scholarship.
The scholarship covers tuition for the duration of a master’s
 programme at Birmingham Business School.
 (PHOTO COURTESY OF JN)
The Calabar past student is the second recipient of the Legacy Scholarship, which was introduced in February 2014 for a three-year period, offering one scholarship annually for a Jamaican undergraduate to study at the Birmingham Business School.
The pending transition is causing mixed emotions for the young man, who is the last of four children and who has never been away from home.
"I am anxious to experience life away from home, as it would be my first time travelling to and residing in England, as well as, being away from home. However, I will embrace this learning experience, not only for my educational development, but on a personal level. I am excited about this new experience and I am ready to soak it all in," he said.
Cruickshank is a high academic achiever. His grade point average has never fallen below 4.0 while at University of the West Indies and, needless to say, he has consistently made the Dean's List. He credits this to planning and having a good support system.
"It may sound strange, but, I do like exams and it is simply because I am always prepared. It also helped that I enjoyed what I was studying. I create study plans well in advance of my exams, and I assign a course or topic to a specific day. It is really structured so that I cover all my subjects. And, through all of this, I have had major support from my parents and siblings, who help to keep me grounded," he said.
While still unsure what his ideal job is likely to be upon completion of his master's, Cruickshank is trusting the "ordained" path.
"What I do know is that the experience and the master's certification will put me in good stead to contribute to the economic development of my country, either in the public or private sector. For now, I am leaving everything to God as this whole thing is because of him. Before I went to the scholarship interview, I said to myself that if I am to get the scholarship, I will, and I did because it was destined to happen," said the young man, who is a devoted member of the Church of the Open Bible. more

BALTIMORE, Maryland -- Jamaica's Reggae Boyz clip Haiti 1-0 to book date with defending champs USA. Jamaica 1 & Haiti 0 on course for the hunt for their first CONCACAF Gold Cup title.

by SEAN WILLIAMS Assistant Sport Editor  Sunday, July 19, 2015
BALTIMORE, Maryland -- Jamaica's Reggae Boyz have set up a semi-final showdown with the USA after clipping Caribbean rivals Haiti 1-0 in a quarter-final match-up at the M&T Bank Stadium here last night.
Houston Dynamo's Giles Barnes got the priceless goal in the seventh minute to ensure the Boyz stayed on course for the hunt for their first CONCACAF Gold Cup title.
Giles Barnes (#9) of Jamaica celebrates after scoring a first-half
goal against Haiti during the 2015 CONCACAF Gold Cup
quarter-final match at M&T Bank Stadium yesterday in
Baltimore, Maryland. (PHOTO: AFP)
The last time the Jamaicans played in this tournament in 2011, they were knocked out at the quarter-final stage 2-0 by nemesis USA, who propelled themselves to the semis after crushing Cuba 6-0 in the earlier quarter-final fixture, also at the M&T Bank Stadium.
The stage for that battle will be at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta on Wednesday.
In a contest where Jamaica had to be defensively compact, Haiti were the first to create on the Jamaican end with a quick give-and-go that put Jean Sony Alcenat through on goal. But under no pressure from the edge of the area, he skied the ball.
But at the other end, Jamaica showed Haiti how it's done.
In the seventh minute, Captain Rodolph Austin's visionary pass picked out Crystal Palace's Adrian Mariappa breaking free down the right side. The latter then quickly put the ball under control, crossed inside for Giles Barnes, who sped ahead of his marker to blast off the legs of goalkeeper Johny Placide to give the Boyz the lead.
Falling behind did not seem to shaken the resolve of the Haitians, as they immediately went about searching for the equalising goal.
In the 15th minute, they came close after scheming their way into the Jamaica 18-yard box, but James Marcelin's harmless poke to goalkeeper Ryan Thompson was a disappointing end to a promising move.
Players for Haiti and Jamaica go for the ball in the first half
during the 2015 CONCACAF Gold Cup quarter-final
match at M&T Bank Stadium yesterday in
Baltimore, Maryland. (PHOTO: AFP)
And the Haitians, Jamaica's Caribbean neighbours to the east, kept up the pressure, and in the 22nd minute, Wilde-Donald Guerrier, had a chance denied.
Three minutes later they were at it again, conspiring around the Jamaica danger area, and were unlucky not have equalised as Dukens Nazon's low shot zipped by Jamaican legs to hit the upright.
But Jamaica slowly came into their passing game and looked dangerous each time they brought the ball forward, but the finesse required to deliver the killer blow deserted them. more

ST.CATHERINE, JAMAICA (A POWERFUL INSPIRATIONAL STORY) : No hands and one foot but 64 y-o Marie Holt is a winner. Disabled woman defies logic but now stricken with glaucoma, arthritis... Driven by an unfettered enthusiasm, she mastered writing with the toes of her single foot.

BY MARSHALYN ROSE Staff writer  Sunday, July 19, 2015   
As a little girl, she had often manoeuvred her small frame under the bed. This was the space to escape the discomfiture brought on by the curious stares of family members and others.
01
No Hands- Marie Holt
It was where Marie Holt determinedly pushed back against the limitations of being born with no hands and one foot. Driven by an unfettered enthusiasm, she mastered writing with the toes of her single foot.
"I didn't go to school because I never had a wheelchair. I always wanted to go to school but because I have no hands, they feel I couldn't use my foot to write. The reason I hide under the bed where I always have a pencil is because when people hear about me, a crowd pack up the place," the retired 64-year-old seamstress from Lafe Street in Old Harbour told the Jamaica Observer.
Marie's mom, apparently unable to deal with the overwhelming demands of a disabled child, abandoned her at just a few months old at her paternal grandmother's house. Her mom, she said, severed ties with the family and never entered her life again. "Mi grandmother said one morning, she woke up and she heard when someone said, 'Unuh come tek unuh invalid baby', and from that nobody hear from her again," she explained.
HOLT... the reason I hide under the bed where I always have
a pencil is because when people hear about me, a crowd
pack up the place
But the abandonment and the severe physical disability did not destroy her yearning to read and write, Marie said. Though she was unable to attend school or to frolic like other children, Marie's zeal for literacy prompted her aunt to teach her the skills at home. During one of those lessons, Marie used her toes to retrieve a pencil from the floor. Her aunt stood gaping at the physical skill Marie had perfected. "One day when a pencil fell off the table and mi use mi toes to take it up, my aunt was so frightened that I could do it," she shared.
Eventually, she used her toes to write a letter to the Lions Club, making a plea for a wheelchair so she could attend school. At roughly 15 years old, an elated Marie began classes at JAMAL in Church Pen St Catherine. The transition to formal classes, she said, also marked an incredible sense of relief for her. "You know when you just want to come out of the house? You know when you just want to go to school?" she asked rhetorically.
After four years in those classes, she progressed to the point where she was requested to work as a teacher's aide for school for about a year, where she also taught able-bodied students. "Some of them were very slow in their spelling, reading and writing, so the teacher invited me back to assist. She thought I was very good," she proudly admitted to the Sunday Observer.
According to Marie, the JAMAL experience further helped to widen her social interaction and improved her self-image which made her more sociable. Equally memorable, she said, was the level of interaction she enjoyed with other people who were not disabled. "It was a wonderful experience. I used to think that I was the only one with a disability, but at school I made friends and it stopped bothering me."
A sample of what Holt, though disabled, is capable of doing.
That confidence was the spur to a greater effort at self-reliance.
So when Marie secured a job at the St Catherine Parent Association for Handicapped Children, she poured her energy into working with the disabled youngsters. Defying her birth abnormality once again, she also taught sewing skills, in particular the sewing of teddy bears and dish towels. Her efforts were recognised with four certificates of merit from the association. more

IN HIS OWN WORDS : Bill Cosby Deposition Reveals Calculated Pursuit of Young Women, Using Fame, Drugs and Deceit....He admitted to all of this and more over four days of intense questioning 10 years ago

He was not above seducing a young model by showing interest in her father’s cancer. He promised other women his mentorship and career advice before pushing them for sex acts. And he tried to use financial sleight of hand to keep his wife from finding out about his serial philandering.
Bill Cosby
Bill Cosby admitted to all of this and more over four days of intense questioning 10 years ago at a Philadelphia hotel, where he defended himself in a deposition for a lawsuit filed by a young woman who accused him of drugging and molesting her.
Even as Mr. Cosby denied he was a sexual predator who assaulted many women, he presented himself in the deposition as an unapologetic, cavalier playboy, someone who used a combination of fame, apparent concern and powerful sedatives in a calculated pursuit of young women — a profile at odds with the popular image he so long enjoyed, that of father figure and public moralist.
In the deposition, which Mr. Cosby has for years managed to keep privatebut was obtained by The New York Times, the entertainer comes across as alternately annoyed, mocking, occasionally charming and sometimes boastful, often blithely describing sexual encounters in graphic detail. more