| Hip-Hop Rumors: Chingy Gets Mad! Is Lauryn Broke? Where is Wendy ...
All my Delaware, Philly and South Jersey people, I have the low down on where Wendy Williams and Charlamange went! From what I heard, there is a lot of corporate and business wrangling over Wendy in the city of Brotherly Love on Power 99 FM. I don't have specifics, but they are looking to return to Philly's airwaves asap. The only thing is, it might not be on Power 99. You know, where Wendy goes, the people go. I am pleased to announced that according to what I know, Wendy and C are going to be landing in Los Angeles later this month. That's what Beyonce calls a good look better yet a hood look. LAURYN BROKE? Damn, damn, damn! Laurun is possibly broke? Yes, says sources at Fox News Sources say Hill was living in the Caribbean for a while as the mother of four children by Rohan Marley, son of the late Bob Marley.
Humanitarian Aid in Kenya Threatened by Violence
United Nations aid agencies report sharply deteriorating security in Kenya is threatening their ability to provide humanitarian assistance to hundreds of thousands of vulnerable people. The World Food Program says it is neither able to distribute food within Kenya nor to hundreds of thousands of refugees in neighboring countries. Lisa Schlein reports for VOA from Geneva. .
Prejudice's story told in movie
As a high school student, Perry Wallace routinely would walk out the door of his north Nashville home, glance at North High School and then board a bus headed across the city to another school that African-American students could attend. Growing up in Nashville in the 1960s, Wallace thought he understood bigotry and social change. Yet, when he attended Vanderbilt as the Southeastern Conference's first African-American basketball player, he wasn't prepared for the biting racial slurs hurled at him in such settings as Starkville, Miss., and many other stops around the SEC. .
Steve Calvin: Bringing up baby
You are stupid and are going to lose your license!" But the patient had far more wisdom than the doctor and ended the affair before everyone's lives blew up. "Bella," the best-picture award winner at the Toronto Film Festival, was a warmly realistic indie debut made in New York City by Mexican filmmakers. It was the most overtly religious of the four, a characteristic that made it even more true to life. Even film producers have discovered that religion sells, sometimes even better than sex and violence. Millions of Americans with deep religious faith keep responding to well-crafted holistic film art by purchasing tickets. "Juno" is clearly the gem of the pregnancy films. It is drawing large crowds across America and is a deserved favorite for a number of Academy Awards.
Reviving the J-School
In a pair of breakout sessions, Lemann and other deans and journalism professors discussed how the Carnegie-Knight initiative’s goals worked in practice. At Syracuse University’s S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications, for example, a $250,000 grant funds an undergraduate minor in religion and media as well as the Carnegie Legal Reporting Program. Such collaborations, they suggested, could improve relations between journalism professors and their peers in other departments — but recruiting journalism students to fill the classes remains a problem. Lemann, summing up many of the participants’ concerns, said: "The question I keep asking myself as a dean is, What can we do for you that isn't irrelevant ... but that you can more easily acquire in a university" than in the work place? — Andy Guess Comments .
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