Machel Montano can now add doctorate to his long list of awards.
The soca king, who has been performing for 37 years, received an Honorary Doctorate of Arts from the University of Trinidad and Tobago on Thursday. Montano said he felt great, honoured and humbled to be a recipient of the Honorary degree. In the presence of his close friend Anthony Chow Lin On, girlfriend Renee Butcher, Manager Che Kothari and mother Elizabeth, who graduated from the University of the West Indies last month with a Masters in Cultural Studies, Montano performed an acoustic version of 'We Not Giving Up' and 'Too Young to Soca'. Also receiving similar honours from UTT was cultural activist, poet and playwright Pearl Eintou Springer. She received an Honorary Doctorate of Fine Arts. Source: The Loop Calypso Rose, 78, must find room again in her trophy cabinet for yet another international award. The holder of this country's highest award, the Order of the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago, is to be awarded the Grand Prize for World Music at the Sacem Grand Prix in France in December this year. She is among a list of awardees that includes English songwriter Ed Sheeran, in an event that will celebrate the outstanding in songwriting, music publishing, humour and classical contemporary music at Salle Pleyel on the evening of Monday 10 December. The Sacem Grands Prix are musical awards given annually to professionals in the world of music by the Society of Authors, Composers and Music Publishers (Sacem). They give rise to an annual awards ceremony, which has been held since 2006. Calypso Rose, whose real name is McCartha Linda Sandy-Lewis, is no stranger to winning top international awards. The veteran calypsonian won the World Album of the Year award at the Victoire de la Musique award ceremony in France in 2017. The award is considered the French equivalent of a Grammy award. Rose's album, Far from Home, competed against rock group Acid Arab with their album "Music of France" and Rokia Traore with her album "Born So." Far From home, the platinum-selling album was released on the Because Music label on June 3, 2016. Calypso Rose was also awarded the 2016 Artist Award by the World Music Expo (WOMEX). She topped artists from 95 countries in receiving the prestigious award. WOMEX is an international networking platform for the world music industry. The Artist Award is the top award given out at the WOMEX event. It had never been won by a Trinidad and Tobago citizen before. In 1975, the Tobago-born calypsonian won her first national award, the Public Service Medal of Merit (Silver). Some 15 years later in 2000, Rose won the Humming Bird Medal (Gold). In 2017 she won the highest award the nation can offer. Source: Trinidad Guardian 130 homes hit hard by floods in FyzabadSome 130 residents of Fyzabad were affected after flood waters gushed into their properties and homes yesterday.
Fed up of this situation, residents and Fyzabad MP Lackram Bodoe called on the authorities to fix the four of seven sluice gates which have been non-functional for several years. The areas affected were St John Trace, Avocat, Ackbar Trace and Chatter Avenue. Resident Rodney Ramjit, who owns a furniture factory at St John’s Trace, estimated his losses to be more than $75,000. He said, “The flood come up so fast I did not get time to move out everything. We save some things, but I lost a lot of fabric, foam and materials.” He said it began raining heavily on yesterday morning and by 4 pm the river had burst its banks and the flood waters started to rise. He called on the Government to dredge the river and fix the floodgates. “The main problem is that seven years now this river not clean and then four floodgates not working. And that is the main problem causing this flood,” Ramjit said. “We constantly complaining about it to the Ministry of Works but they doing absolutely nothing. The minister came and looked at it at the beginning of the year, but nothing was done. I fed up of this thing. I have a business and I losing a lot of money.” When the T&T Guardian called him later on in the day, he said the flood waters had risen again. “Look the water coming up again. I have to call for help,” Ramjit said. Bodoe and his staff were yesterday out in the floods rendering assistance to the residents and distributing water and food supplies. He expressed concern about “government’s reluctance” to repair the sluice gates at St John Trace. “As a result of this the flood water, flow to the Godineau River and Gulf of Paria has been delayed. I call on the Minister of Works again to effect repairs to those sluice gates.” Bodoe also complained that he had received no help from the government agencies. “So far, it’s just my staff and some members of the community who have been rendering help. The residents are indicating that the water is still rising and they are a little bit fearful about what will happen,” Bodoe said, adding he and his staff will be out in the field today again rendering aid. The Fyzabad Anglican Secondary School was closed yesterday. The Ministry of Education also said the North Oropouche Government Primary, North Oropouche RC and Debe Hindu SDMS Primary School were closed as a result of the deteriorating weather. “There were also early dismissals for several other primary and secondary schools and Early Childhood Care and Education (ECCE) Centres because students and teachers were not able to access the school compound due to flooding in the communities,” the ministry added. The Penal Quinam Government Primary School was opened as an emergency shelter for residents of Penal/Debe and Barrackpore who were hard hit by the floods. Source: Guardian This beautiful song celebrating the 50th anniversary of Barbados in 2016. A couple of years old but still very nice. From left, Sarah Louis , judicial delegate for the 42nd Assembly District, Councilman Jumaane Williams, Mathylde Frontas, Assemblywoman Rodneyse Bichotte, Mathylde’s sister. In an unusually very high voter-turnout in midterm elections in the United States that observers say illustrates strong opposition to President Donald J. Trump, several Caribbean Democratic candidates in New York romped to victory Tuesday night with overwhelming majorities.
Uninterrupted rain throughout Tuesday and problems with the voting machines did not prevent voters from casting ballots in an era of Trumpism. According to New York State Board of Elections results, popular Caribbean American Congresswoman Yvette D. Clarke, the daughter of Jamaican immigrants, won in a landslide, garnering 167,199 votes, or 87.59 percent, to her Republican Haitian-born challenger, Lutch Gayot, who received 10,336 votes, or 10.13 percent. Clarke, who represents the 9th Congressional District in Brooklyn, noted that her victory came on the 50th anniversary of the first Caribbean American woman, Shirley Chisholm, to run for the United States Congress. The late Chisholm, whose mother was Barbadian and father Guyanese, was also the first Black woman to run for the US Congress. She had represented the then 11th Congressional District in Brooklyn. “I’ve demonstrated to the people of this district (9th Congressional) that I am committed to them,” Clarke told Caribbean Life Tuesday night. “But I still have more work to do in the era of Trump — that this district has opportunities to sustain itself, that we use voter-strength to push for the goals of my community,” she added. With the Democratic Party regaining the US House of Representatives, Clarke, a senior member of the House Energy Committee, said she will be in a better position to help her constituents. “The victory will help to invest in infrastructure, health care, among a host of other things,” she said. In the New York State Senate, Democratic Senator Roxanne Persaud, a Guyanese-born immigrant, regained her seat in a landslide in the 19th Senatorial District in Brooklyn. Persaud received 64,940 votes, or 86,90 percent, to her Republican challenger, Jeffrey Ferretti, who received 7, 419 votes, or 9.93 percent. “By winning the seat, we can continue doing what we’re doing,” Persaud told Caribbean Life Tuesday night at the Democratic Party Club headquarters in the Canarsie, Brooklyn. “I’m not focusing on one group of people. When you do that, you’re polarizing people. “I do a lot of social issues in my community — foster care, senior care, etc.,” Persaud added. For just the third time in 50 years, the Democratic Party gained control of the New York State Senate Tuesday night in what pundits said was a clear repudiation of Trump’s policies. In the 20th Senatorial District in Brooklyn, Zellnor Myrie, a young lawyer of Costa Rican parentage and Jamaican-born grandmother, defeated the incumbent Jesse Hamilton, who ran for the Independent Party. Democrat Myrie had trounced Hamilton in the Democratic Primary. In Tuesday’s midterm, elections, Myrie received 67, 803 votes, or 88.06 percent, to Hamilton’s 5, 327 votes, or 6.92 percent. In New York State Assembly, Caribbean Democratic candidates were also triumphant. Assemblywoman Rodneyse Bichotte, the daughter of Haitian immigrants, who represents the 42nd Assembly District in Brooklyn, handsomely beat two challengers. Bichotte garnered 26, 817 votes, or 87.66 percent; Republican Matthew Williams received 2,173 votes, or 7.10 percent; and Jamaican Anthony Beckford, of the Green Party, received 631 votes, or 2.00 percent. “I feel good!” Bichotte exclaimed on Election Night. “I think, throughout the whole year, I’ve been working hard to fill all corners of my constituency.” Bichotte’s Assembly Democratic colleague, Diana Richardson, the daughter of St. Martin and Aruban immigrants, was unchallenged in the 43rd Assembly District in Brooklyn. Richardson received 33,345 votes, or 92.94 percent. In her first bid for elective office, Haitian Dr. Mathylde Frontas, a Columbia University professor, was victorious in the 46th Assembly District in Brooklyn. In a four-way race, Democrat Frontas received 14, 750 votes, or 51.84 percent; Republican Steven Saperstein received 11, 823 votes, or 41.55 percent; Ethan Lustig-Elgrably, of the Working Families Party, received 421 votes, or 1.48 percent; and Patrick Dwyer, of the Green Party, received 284 votes, or 1.00 percent. Trinidadian Jaime Williams was overwhelmingly re-elected in the 59th Assembly District in Brooklyn. Democrat Williams received 26, 229 votes, or 77.69 percent, to Republican Brandon Washington’s 6,306 votes, or 18.67 percent. Source: Caribbean Life, Nov. 2018 Presidents medal winner Sadhana Balladin THE GIRLS have done it again. THE President medal winners for 2018 are Sadhana Balladin of St Joseph’s Convent, San Fernando and Amrita Singh of Lakshmi Girls’ Hindu College.4 President medal winner Amrita Singh. They were among the pupils of girls high schools who took the lions’ share of 376 national scholarships in 2018. The list was announced by Ministry of Education Anthony Garcia on Thursday at the ministry’s office in Port of Spain, live on social media. The schools which took the most scholarships was St Joseph’s Convent in Port of Spain (41), St Augustine Girls’ High School (34), Naparima Girls’ High School (31), Lakshmi Girls’ High School (24) and St Joseph’s Convent (18) in San Fernando. The tops boys’ schools which were awarded scholarships were Hillview (35), Naparima Boys’ College (31), Presentation College Chaguanas (19), and Presentation College San Fernando (18) Also awarded scholarships were - Couva East Secondary school (four), Debe Secondary School (one), St Francois Girls’ College (one), St George’s College (one). Garcia identified St George’s College and Queen’s Royal College (QRC) as two schools which “normally do very well” but did not this year. “QRC is not among the schools which have been awarded scholarships but I am sure that in the future they are going to improve. It has been a school that has been one of the bastions of academic excellence in the past. These things happen. Sometimes we have a year does not do too well but I am sure that the principal and students are going to step up to the plate next year and when these scholarships are being awarded they will be among those. Some schools that did exceptionally well for example St Joseph’s Convent, Port of Spain”, said Garcia. He said overall that “most of our students have done well”. Garcia said: “While we glorify and we are very happy with the performance of our students and we are very happy to know that we can award substantial number of scholarships, Cabinet was also very concerned about the apparent imbalance in terms of the number of scholarships that are awarded in particular areas of Mathematics and Natural Sciences. In Natural Sciences 188 scholarships were awarded and Mathematics 103 students received scholarships. Garcia said that Cabinet decided to appoint an Inter-Ministerial committee that will do an in-depth analysis of the award of scholarships. In future scholarships should be closely tied to our developmental needs. “In other words there are some areas to the continued development of our country and every opportunity should be given to our students so that they can do further work in these areas and this can assist us in the development of our country", he said. |
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