Jamaica Gleaner News

Published: Monday Sunday | February 7, 2010

No middle ground
THERE IS Big Lane and Little Lane. Both are located in Central Village, St Catherine. They are neighbours, but between them there is no middle ground. Read More...

Slain, gangster style, Cousins killed because they 'foolishly' crossed the borderline
Western Bureau: THEY DARED to enter enemy territory and paid for it with their lives. Three young men were shot dead while attending a wake for their cousin at Meggie Top in Salt Spring, St James. Read More...

Lives, livelihoods affected
MR JENKINS hurriedly locks up his grocery shop. The guns are barking and he is taking no chances. Read More...

Two hundred metres into death
FOR MANY Jamaicans, the four-lane carriageway, Washington Boulevard, is the quickest and easiest way into and out of the Corporate Area.But for residents of Maverley and Drewsland, Washington Boulevard represents a border that they cross at their own... Read More...

'Women, bodies and borders'
"NO INVADERS. If you cross deh so (pointing to an invisible line in the road) yu dead, just dead," is how a 67-year-old woman from the Lyndhurst/Greenwich area describes the repercussions of crossing the 'border' in her war-torn community. Read More...

'Rotten society, rotten cops'
RETIRED CRIME fighter Reneto Adams has lashed out at Jamaicans for failing to be more active citizens, arguing that many have retreated from the front lines, which has resulted in the creation of space for illegal... Read More...

Call for national building code
THE FAILURE of successive governments to pass legislation to introduce a national building code could put the lives of many Jamaicans at risk if the country gets hit by a major earthquake.The concern was raised on Tuesday... Read More...

Lessons from Haiti
A critical structural review of health facilities is needed. If nothing else is standing we need to ensure that there is critical intervention to ensure that these facilities are standing after the event. Read More...

Do you need a CAR to succeed at work?
"Having a credit card can have its drawbacks, but it was what saved me last week," said an office assistant and mother of two to me recently. Read More...

DOWN MEMORY LINE: JRC rumblings
The Gleaner's 'Pieces of the Past' tells us that the Jamaica Railway Corporation (JRC) opened on November 21, 1845, with a 10-carriage train running from Kingston to Spanish Town, to the sounds of the 1st West India Regiment. Read More...

Porus still mourns loss of rail service, Tracks now used by pedestrians
PORUS, MANCHESTER, is one of those extended towns typical of communities caught between the hills and the highway, finding room in elongation at either end of its bulge somewhere in the middle. Read More...

'It was good time', Linesman forced into farm work
THERE WAS a time when Keith 'John' Edwards travelled parts of the train line Breadnut Hill to Rocky Point every day on the bauxite line, but not sightseeing or finding other ways to pass the time as... Read More...