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ASK YOUR DOCTOR: GRIEF AND TEENAGERS
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Recently, many teenagers here in Anguilla have experienced the death of a loved one. Sudden or traumatic death can create an unstable environment for teenagers and cause much turmoil in their lives. The grieving process can be very difficult for adults and even more difficult for teenagers. Caring adults, whether parents, teachers, counselors or friends, can help teenagers during this difficult time.
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ASHES TO ASHES, DUST TO DUST - By Colville Petty
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There is very little that I could add to the glowing tributes already paid to Mitchell Harrigan (Mitch) who bade farewell as Commissioner of Police on Thursday 27th February at a most impressive ceremony on the grounds of the Police Headquarters. His contribution to the development of our Police Force has been phenomenal and his award of the Queen’s Police Medal (QPM) in 2002 was a most fitting recognition.
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HEARTICALLY YOURS - THE POWER OF LOVE
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I know that some people are going to scoff and think of this as being wishy-washy but because I know and experience on a daily basis the enduring power of love and the power of love to change things, I want to invite us to consider using this gift in a really deliberate way as we seek to address the needs of our young people in the search for solutions to our social ills. |
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ASK YOUR DOCTOR - ATTENTION DEFICIT HYPERACTIVE DISORDER
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This disorder affects many children and young adults and can have devastating effects for the individual, family, school and indeed the entire community.
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YES, WHAT ABOUT PARTNERSHIP?
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Please allow me to reply to the article, "What about Partnership?" written
by Mr. James Harrigan in the March 7th issue. In his article, Mr. Harrigan spoke in depth about the March 1999 document entitled, Partnership for
Progress and Prosperity, which outlines the new relationship that England wants to forge for its colonies, the latter now referred to as Overseas
Territories (OTs).
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WHY WE CHOSE ANGUILLA
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Since Sylvia and I were both attracted to beaches and warm sunshine, we began looking to the Caribbean for our winter vacations. We had tried Florida in the winter, the Sanibel Island area, but found it to be crowded and the weather often “iffy”.
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VIEWPOINT: WHAT ABOUT PARTNERSHIP?
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The article entitled, “We Can Shape Anguilla’s Political Future”, written by Hayden Hughes and featured in the February 28th issue of The Anguillan, is worthy of commendation. Apart from making his readers aware of the prospects of national independence, Mr. Hughes referred to the spate of criticisms that have been leveled against the Anguilla Independence Movement (AIM) since its inception. Besides, he has been careful to outline the circumstances surrounding past efforts which noteworthy patriots of Anguilla have made in attempting to chart our course towards prospective self-determination.
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GOD COULD NOT BE EVERYWHERE - By Colville Petty
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The plan to raise a section of the main road bordering the East End Pond, by some two feet, was recently the cause of much concern to the residents of the area. They felt that raising the road would interrupt the natural flow of water, from the surrounding hills and slopes, into the pond and that the backup water would flood the nearby homes.
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HEARTICALLY YOURS: MAN OF THE HOUR
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The immaculate white, epaulet-adorned shirt, crisp black trousers, highly shined shoes and completely shaved head of Anguilla’s newest Police Commissioner, Keithly Benjamin, contrasts starkly with the three-quarter length jeans, rude boy shirt and dreadlocks hat ensemble of Shatta Ranks, the character portrayed by Commissioner Benjamin in the play staged by the Royal Anguilla Police Force during Police Week 2003. If you know him well, you know that amateur theatre is the new Commissioner’s passion. However, the cup awarded to him for Most Outstanding Domino Player, the guitar, the newly acquired golf club that are present in his office and the earphones ready to check the cricket score are to some of his other interests. Adorning his office walls and right where he can reflect on them on a daily basis are the framed mission, motto, objectives and vision statements of the Force that he now heads.
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ASK YOUR DOCTOR: MENORRHAGIA
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Menorrhagia or heavy menstrual bleeding is one of the commonest causes of concern for health in women. This disorder is a common reason for women seeing their gynaecologist and is a source of tremendous discomfort and inconvenience.
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VIEWPOINT: AGONIZING PITIES AND THE MEDIA By: James Harrigan
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One does not have to be qualified as a conscientious rocket scientist, nor exercise the solemn duties of a priest in a long white robe, to understand that this world is facing some really pitiful times. And for those who are so relaxed and naïve enough not to be shaken or alert about these troubling, awful perils, they themselves may deserve to be the object of our discriminating pity for being so oblivious to the significance of increasing global dilemmas. Evidences of tragic events inundate the media: CNN, CBS, ABC, BBC,The Times and The Herald all serve as agents which provide us with discomforting reports of gruesome real-life tales.
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WE CAN SHAPE ANGUILLA'S POLITICAL FUTURE By: Haydn Hughes
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The Anguillian Independence Movement has endured more criticism than any of
the political leaders and political parties on the island. This we endure, though we are not seeking political office. For those who forgot why we came into existence, we would like to reiterate the reasons. As you all know, we are a non-partisan movement geared towards the social, political and economic advancement of Anguilla.
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HEARTICALLY YOURS - Partnering With Europe
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The one-day information seminar for Caribbean media professionals held by the European Commission in Barbados on Tuesday 19th can be aptly described as a crash course on the European Union and its operations in the Eastern Caribbean. |
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The Rainbow Island
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In my story “Becoming A Belonger In Anguilla,” published in this newspaper last June, I explained that since islanders relied upon their cisterns for water, it was very important that rains come along periodically so that they have enough water for personal use.
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CONCERN OVER GASTROENTERITIS
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Health sector officials in Anguilla remain concerned about the increasing number of cases of gastroenteritis in recent weeks. |
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VOODOO ECONOMICS - By Colville Petty
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At the 29th January opening of the first meeting of the House of Assembly for 2003, the Honourable Chief Minister, Osbourne Fleming, pledged to set the moral tone for its debates. He refused to be drawn into any dog fight with the Honourable Leader of the Opposition, Hubert Hughes, who now seems bent on picking fight with the Honourable Eric Reid. When the Speaker (Roy Rogers) asked him why he was annoying Eric he replied: “Mr Speaker, I do not like to see his face!” Hubert then went on to remind Eric about August 1986 when he (Eric) floored him, with a left, in the House. Eric shot back: “This time you will get a kick right in your mouth!”
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HEARTICALLY YOURS - The Caribbean Diaspora
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The largest number of black people I have ever seen in one place was during the carnival parade on Eastern Parkway on Labour Day in Brooklyn several years ago. The crowd that year was estimated at over two million and it was the first time that I thought seriously about the impact that Caribbean people in diaspora can have on their adopted countries. The Labour Day carnival was dominated by the Trinidadians and the Guyanese but everybody was there. That year, North Sound Brass was part of the parade and since Anguilla did not have its own booth on the Parkway, there we were hanging around the St. Kitts booth, seeming oblivious of the historical relations between our islands. That made laugh.
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ASK YOUR DOCTOR - The Diabetic Foot
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The number of people diagnosed with Diabetes Mellitus in Anguilla has alarmingly increased in the last twenty years. Diabetic foot problems are common complications in uncontrolled diabetes. Diabetic foot problems are the cause of considerable sickness and even death here in Anguilla.
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De Masses Keep On Getting Licks - By Colville Petty
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In a small society like ours when anybody dies, everybody feels the loss. This is especially so when one of our young people is suddenly snatched from us. I refer in this instance to the sad passing of Loraine Brooks on 13th January while in the service of her country. She was a truly remarkable and wonderful young lady who was always radiant and happy and in so doing made everyone who came into contact with her happy. May she rest in peace. To the members of the bereaved family, including my friend Kimi, I extend heartfelt sympathy.
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HEARTICALLY YOURS - Hand To Mouth
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These days I have been giving thanks and Ises to JAH more than ever for those years of poverty in Jamaica. They have prepared me very well for these days in Anguilla and those to come when more and more of us will be living han’ to mout, buying food as we get a little money and having bills mount as they’ve never mounted before. In a meeting held on Tuesday to discuss youth policy, when I learned that inmates at Her Majesty’s Prison receive free medical attention, I immediately asked the other participants to tell the police where to meet me burning a spliff that afternoon.
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