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Total matches for July 2010: 19

Norman Grindley/Chief Photographer
Some of the skulls which littered the grounds of May Pen Cemetery when The Gleaner visited on Wednesday.

As the May Pen cemetery in Kingston are getting a well needed clean-up, human bones are now visible. The bones are scattered all over the paupers section of the cemetery.
Norman Grindley/Chief Photographer
As the May Pen cemetery in Kingston are getting a well needed clean-up, human bones are now visible. The bones are scattered all over the paupers section of the cemetery.
Norman Grindley/Chief Photographer
As the May Pen cemetery in Kingston are getting a well needed clean-up, human bones are now visible. The bones are scattered all over the paupers section of the cemetery.
Norman Grindley/Chief Photographer
As the May Pen cemetery in Kingston are getting a well needed clean-up, human bones are now visible. The bones are scattered all over the paupers section of the cemetery.
Norman Grindley/Chief Photographer
As the May Pen cemetery in Kingston are getting a well needed clean-up, human bones are now visible. The bones are scattered all over the paupers section of the cemetery.
Norman Grindley/Chief Photographer
As the May Pen cemetery in Kingston are getting a well needed clean-up, human bones are now visible. The bones are scattered all over the paupers section of the cemetery.
Norman Grindley/Chief Photographer
Human bones lie near the tombstone of Mary Pollock in the May Pen Cemetery, Kingston. Born 1866, Pollock is reputed to have spent 42 years as a missionary in China. 

As the May Pen cemetery in Kingston are getting a well needed clean-up, human bones are now visible. The bones are scattered all over the paupers section of the cemetery.
Norman Grindley/Chief Photographer
As the May Pen cemetery in Kingston are getting a well needed clean-up, human bones are now visible. The bones are scattered all over the paupers section of the cemetery.
Norman Grindley/Chief Photographer
As the May Pen cemetery in Kingston are getting a well needed clean-up, human bones are now visible. The bones are scattered all over the paupers section of the cemetery.
Norman Grindley/Chief Photographer
As the May Pen cemetery in Kingston are getting a well needed clean-up, human bones are now visible. The bones are scattered all over the paupers section of the cemetery.
Norman Grindley/Chief Photographer
Wayne Gayle uses a power saw to clear overgrowth from the May Pen Cemetery in Kingston. Bones are scattered all over a section of the burial ground. 

 paupesection of the cemetery.

during the well needed clean-up, human bones are now visible. The bones are scattered all over the paupers section of the cemetery.
Norman Grindley/Chief Photographer
Jamaica Defence Force personnel drive survey the May Pen Cemetery as clean-up work continues on the 200-acre property.

As the May Pen cemetery in Kingston are getting a well needed clean-up, human bones are now visible. The bones are scattered all over the paupers section of the cemetery.
Norman Grindley/Chief Photographer
A skull lies in a shallow grave, a foot or so from the surface.

As the May Pen cemetery in Kingston are getting a well needed clean-up, human bones are now visible. The bones are scattered all over the paupers section of the cemetery.
Dr Christopher Tufton (left), former Minister of Agriculture & Fisheries; Senator Norman Grant (second left), first vice president/chairman, Denbigh Committee; Glendon Harris (right), president, Jamaica Agricultural Society and (in background) Dr Marc Panton, chief technical director, Ministry of Agriculture & Fisheries and Lenworth Fulton, executive director, Jamaica 4H Clubs.
FILE                                                           
Former Minister of Agriculture and Fisheries, Dr Christopher Tufton (left); President of the Jamaica Agricultural Society (JAS), Glendon Harris (centre) and director general of the Inter-American Institute for Co-operation on Agriculture, V?ctor Villalobos, examine hot peppers on display, at the opening day of the Denbigh Agri- Industrial Show in Clarendon last year.
Gladstone Taylor / Photographer
Caught between two posts? Patrice Henry is loving every minute in this Face Forward swimsuit.

******************************************************************Swimsuit photoshoot for flair as seen at boonhall oasis on July 22, 2010
Contributed
Jeanette Lewis PR Manager and Beverley Thompson Director, Residential Sales at Flow show off beautiful gowns and charming smiles the JCC's Charity Ball held at the Jamaica Pegasus Hotel on Saturday November 5, 2011.
Contributed
Davon Crump of Montego Bay Chamber of Commerce, Andrew Fazio Director of Business Solutions at Columbus Business Solutions, part of the Flow network, Jeanette Lewis PR Manager at Flow and Michael McMorris Chairman VMBS are all smiles at the Jamaica Chamber of Commerce's Charity Ball. The event was held at the Jamaica Pegasus Hotel on Saturday November 5, 2011.

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