More brains, less brawn
THE EDITOR, Sir: POOR RENETO,....my sympathies also to Mr. Forbes, and Minister Phillips. Jamaica has now discovered that the medicine is almost as painful as the sickness. Crime is a major growth sector in our economy as well as globally.
Sincere condolences
THE EDITOR, Sir: THANK YOU for allowing me to use this medium to express my most sincere condolences to Ms. Icilda Treasure on the untimely death of her three children. As the mother of four, I am numb from merely imagining the agony she must be go
Tired of the neglect
THE EDITOR, Sir: NOT ONLY does Cable & Wireless think no one lives in Cornwall Mountain (no phone lines after years of multiple applications by multiple persons), but the agency/agencies responsible for road works here think so too.
Barking up the wrong tree
THE EDITOR, Sir: I READ in a recent Gleaner report where the Jamaica Tourist Board is about to embark on yet again another of its 'innovative marketing blitzes', this time advertising Jamaica at the movies!
Legislators need to act quickly
THE EDITOR, Sir: I AM sure that all NIS pensioners strongly support and are grateful to Mr. Beresford Hay for the 'Letter of the Day', published in your newspaper on June 5, 2003.
Looking for my father
THE EDITOR, Sir: MY NAME is Claudia Gordon. I am 19 years of age. I am simply writing this letter asking you please to help me find my father. His name is Calvin Gordon and from what I heard his birthday is on the 11th or the 13th of December.
What about the fathers?
THE EDITOR, Sir: ON READING your editorial of today (June 15,2003) titled 'Fathers, A new Dawning' and the organisations you mentioned has prompted me to share this experience I had with my two kids at two different schools.
Calabash's Channer says thanks
THE EDITOR, Sir: ON TUESDAY, June 3, The New York Times published an article on Jamaica that didn't make us cringe. Instead it made us proud. Long and well reported, with an eye for all the things whose large proportions make Jamaicans unique...
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