Friday, July 27, 2012

News; Pits In Fitch

http://www.sentinelandenterprise.com/topstory/ci_21172113/pit-bulls-deplorable-conditions
Page 1 of 2 27/07/2012 07:50 AM
Pit bulls in 'deplorable' conditions
Sentinel & Enterprise Sentinel & Enterprise
Posted: SentinelAndEnterprise.com
mdonelan@sentinelandenterprise.com @sentinelrisa on Twitter
FITCHBURG -- The last blue pit-bull terrier poked his head through the rear door at 444 Water St. Thursday
evening, his first whiff of fresh air in what must have felt like forever.
He took one tentative step forward before he started trotting, tail wagging in full circle like a propeller, greeting the
team of police, firefighters and animal-rescue officials who saved him and three others from cages in a filthy, baking
basement.
By 6:15 p.m., three hours after a utility worker called police about conditions in the storage building, all four animals
were on their way to shelters to begin their recovery.
"It appears they'd been down there a considerable amount of time," said police Sgt. Matthew Lemay. "It doesn't
appear that the cages, or the dogs, had ever been cleaned... There was no power, no food, no water."
Officers and firefighters had to make an emergency entry through the building -- which formerly housed the Registry
of Motor Vehicles but is now privately owned -- after smelling a foul odor and hearing the dogs' cries from inside.
Fitchburg Animal Control Officer Suzan Kowaleski and her assistant, Mike East, took care of the first of the four
male pit bulls, who escaped the basement as soon as he could. He was silent in the back of the department's
air-conditioned truck, except for his tail thumping on the side.
Lemay declined to name the building's owner, and it was unclear who was keeping the dogs in the basement. The
building is being used for storage. It contained car parts and broken-down motorcycles. Some beds on the second
level indicate people may have been squatting in it.
"It's the worst I've ever seen," Lemay said. "It's deplorable."
There were feces and urine throughout the building -- the waste was piled 8 inches high in some places. The Fire
Department provided breathing devices and fans, but the stench lingered hours after the doors were opened.
The dogs were kept in cages, about 4 feet by 4 feet, in the basement of the brick building. The only air came from a
single, foot-high window at ground level.
Lt. Alan Borgal, a state humane officer working in the Law Enforcement Department for the Animal Rescue League
of Boston, said the ammonia from the dogs' urine was the worst he'd ever smelled.
"This ammonia smell is horrible, and it can actually be very harmful to the lungs," he said. "Your eyes burn. Even
with a mask on, your throat starts to burn. In 32 years (of law enforcement) this is the most pungent, acrid odor I've
smelled."
The dogs' temperament despite their situation was positive. All of them had signs of past injury, especially to their
paws, Lemay said.
The person responsible for keeping the animals will face at least four counts of felony animal cruelty, he said.
Officers at the scene questioned a man who said he was walking and feeding the animals, then told him to leave the
property.
Because there were more than three dogs being kept there, Borgal explained, the site constitutes an illegal kennel
operation. None of the dogs was licensed with the city.
http://www.sentinelandenterprise.com/topstory/ci_21172113/pit-bulls-deplorable-conditions
Page 2 of 2 27/07/2012 07:50 AM
Officers declined to say where the animals are being sheltered.

News Story



Humane Society honors Lawrenceville dog for heroism




LAWRENCEVILLE, Ga. -

The Humane Society of the United States honored a Gwinnett County dog for heroism on Tuesday. Titan, a 6-year-old pit bull belonging to John and Gloria Benton of Lawrenceville, is credited with saving Gloria's life.

The Lawrenceville jewelry store owner and his wife have owned Titan since he was a puppy.

"He is so special. And you just can't give him enough love. He loves to be loved on," said Gloria.

Gloria admits she wasn't thrilled by the idea of having a pit bull around the house when her son brought him home. She did not realize then that the dog would one day save her life.

Last July, John was heading to work and sent Titan back upstairs to sit with Gloria, who was recovering from back surgery. But Titan was agitated, running back and forth between the couple's bedroom and the front door, alerting John that something was wrong. John went back upstairs, and found Gloria had suffered an aneurysm and fractured her skull.

"What the doctor said, had it not been for this dog, if he had let me leave that house, she would have either bled to death or the aneurysm would have killed her. And it's a, like I said, we owe a whole lot to this little rascal. It's not about the breed but the way they are raised," said John.

That good deed earned Titan recognition as second runner up for the 5th Annual Dogs of Valor Awards.

"Gloria is a testament of being here just the amazing effort animals can make to save humans," said Jessica DuBois of the Humane Society of the United States.

Eight weeks ago, Titan came to the rescue again, waking john early one morning after Gloria took a tumble in the bathroom and fractured her hip.

"He thinks his purpose in life is to watch after his grandmother, Gloria," said John Benton.

"And to think I was mad at him when my son brought it home five years ago," said Gloria Benton.

Titan has become a celebrity in the neighborhood, and also received an invitation from actress Ellen DeGeneres to be on her talk show. Unfortunately, the Benton family could not make it.

 http://www.myfoxatlanta.com/story/19097399/humane-society-honors-lawrenceville-dog-for-heroism?clienttype=printable

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Boston Globe Article

Desperate times

Ex-Celtic Williams, once a top scorer, is now looking for an assist

By Bob Hohler

·         Globe Staff / July 2, 2010

Text sizePOMPANO BEACH, Fla. — Every night at bedtime, former Celtic Ray Williams locks the doors of his home: a broken-down 1992 Buick, rusting on a back street where he ran out of everything.

The 10-year NBA veteran formerly known as "Sugar Ray'' leans back in the driver's seat, drapes his legs over the center console, and rests his head on a pillow of tattered towels. He tunes his boom box to gospel music, closes his eyes, and wonders.

Williams, a generation removed from staying in first-class hotels with Larry Bird and Co. in their drive to the 1985 NBA Finals, mostly wonders how much more he can bear. He is not new to poverty, illness, homelessness. Or quiet desperation.

In recent weeks, he has lived on bread and water.

"They say God won't give you more than you can handle,'' Williams said in his roadside sedan. "But this is wearing me out.''

A former top-10 NBA draft pick who once scored 52 points in a game, Williams is a face of big-time basketball's underclass. As the NBA employs players whose average annual salaries top $5 million, Williams is among scores of retired players for whom the good life vanished not long after the final whistle.

Dozens of NBA retirees, including Williams and his brother, Gus, a two-time All-Star, have sought bankruptcy protection.

"Ray is like many players who invested so much of their lives in basketball,'' said Mike Glenn, who played 10 years in the NBA, including three with Williams and the New York Knicks. "When the dividends stopped coming, the problems started escalating. It's a cold reality.''

Williams, 55 and diabetic, wants the titans of today's NBA to help take care of him and other retirees who have plenty of time to watch games but no televisions to do so. He needs food, shelter, cash for car repairs, and a job, and he believes the multibillion-dollar league and its players should treat him as if he were a teammate in distress.

One thing Williams especially wants them to know: Unlike many troubled ex-players, he has never fallen prey to drugs, alcohol, or gambling.

"When I played the game, they always talked about loyalty to the team,'' Williams said. "Well, where's the loyalty and compassion for ex-players who are hurting? We opened the door for these guys whose salaries are through the roof.''

Unfortunately for Williams, the NBA-related organizations best suited to help him have closed their checkbooks to him. The NBA Legends Foundation, which awarded him grants totaling more than $10,000 in 1996 and 2004, denied his recent request for help. So did the NBA Retired Players Association, which in the past year gave him two grants totaling $2,000.

Charles D. Smith, an NBA veteran who heads the retired players association, said Williams has not taken advantage of efforts to help him find work.

"You can only do so much for any one player because there are a lot of guys who need help,'' Smith said. "Ray needs to let us help him help himself.''

Problems in transition

Hall of Famer Bob Cousy, who helped create the Legends Foundation and serves as a director, understands the financial pressures squeezing many NBA retirees. Cousy himself auctioned his NBA memorabilia in 2003 to help support his daughters and grandchildren. As for Williams, Cousy said, the Legends Foundation generally limits former players to two financial grants.

"If a client comes back a third time, he needs to make a very compelling case,'' Cousy said. "Ray just hasn't done that.''

The rejections angered Williams. He said he wants to work but needs transportation to reach a workplace.

"I'm in the middle of an emergency, and they're going to turn their backs on me?'' he said. "How about all these [NBA] guys with big contracts? Are they going to help?''

Times have changed since Williams joined the NBA. As the 10th overall pick in 1977 out of the University of Minnesota — he played there with Kevin McHale — Williams signed a four-year, $500,000 contract with the Knicks. He received no significant endorsements.

By contrast, 19-year-old Brandon Jennings, the 10th pick last year, received a two-year, $4.5 million contract with the Bucks after landing a $2 million deal with Under Armour and playing a season in Italy for $1.65 million.

Jennings earned more in his first two years as a professional than Williams made over a decade. After Williams led the Knicks in scoring (16.8 points a game) over his first four years in the league, he signed his richest deal — a three-year, $1.5 million contract with the Nets in 1981. But his production declined after the deal expired, and he retired in '87 without a college degree or professional skill.

A generation later, Williams has little more than memories to show for running NBA floors with the likes of Bird, Magic Johnson, and Michael Jordan.

"Ray is like a lot of us who had trouble maintaining our pride and dignity in new environments after we left professional sports,'' said the Reverend Woody Bennett, a former NFL running back who has supported Williams.

Williams has needed help since he went from owning fine cars and comfortable homes — one for his mother in his hometown of Mount Vernon, N.Y., another for his family in Englewood Cliffs, N.J. — to seeking bankruptcy protection in 1994. No longer able to sustain his NBA lifestyle, he worked for a couple of years as a substitute teacher. He also delivered mail and tended bar, but he had trouble holding the jobs partly because he had spent his life training for little else but playing basketball.

"You have to adjust your identity and be a different person from who you were as a basketball star,'' Glenn said. "When you become the low man on the totem pole, it can be a very difficult transition.''

Fond Boston memories

Williams had never confronted serious professional failure. After struggling in high school, he led San Jacinto College in Texas to the junior college national tournament in 1974 and '75. Then he was an all-conference guard at Minnesota, playing with McHale (a future NBA Hall of Famer), Mychal Thompson (the NBA's top draft pick in 1978), and Flip Saunders (future NBA coach of the Timberwolves, Pistons, and Wizards).

In the 1976-77 season, Williams set the Big Ten record for assists in a season (118) and a University of Minnesota mark for assists per game (5.7). He averaged 18.9 points for the Gophers, and when the Knicks drafted him he was touted as the next Walt "Clyde'' Frazier, a Hall of Famer.

But Frazier's legacy was never in jeopardy. Though Williams enjoyed a long run in the league, he gained a reputation as a player sometimes more suited for street ball than structured NBA schemes. An explosive scorer, Williams also sparkled at times as a defender and playmaker. But he often lacked court discipline, which translated into turnovers (he led the league with 335 in the 1982-83 season), questionable shot selection, and headaches for his bosses.

When the Celtics signed Williams in February 1985 to back up guards Dennis Johnson and Danny Ainge, Knicks general manager Dave DeBusschere was quoted as saying, "Ray Williams will help Boston as long as they keep the ball out of his hands at the end of games. Otherwise, he'll try taking the last shot instead of Larry Bird, and [Celtics president] Red [Auerbach] will be out there with a gun.''

But Williams fared relatively well playing with four future Hall of Famers — Bird, McHale, Johnson, and Robert Parish. He said his best memories involved playing one-on-one in practice against Bird and harassing Ainge on defense in scrimmages.

"I enjoyed my time in Boston,'' he said. "I got along well with all the guys.''

He appeared in every playoff game that year for the Celtics, averaging 6.3 points and 3.2 assists, until he was ejected in Game 4 of the Finals for scuffling with LA's Kurt Rambis. Williams did not play again (coach's decision) as the Lakers went on to win the series in six games.

'I'm desperate, man'

Two years later, Williams was out of the NBA and hurtling toward financial ruin. By 1994, he was in a New Jersey bankruptcy court, having lost his home, his marriage, and nearly his life.

"I was so stressed out that I thought about suicide,'' he said.

Instead, he set out for Florida. Trying to start over, Williams secured a grant from the Legends Foundation. But he lost the money, court records indicate, when the widow of a condominium owner who agreed to a lease-to-own contract with Williams opted out of the contract after the owner died.

Broke again, Williams repeatedly tried in vain to hold jobs. Hindered by his diabetes, which was diagnosed three years ago, he lost or walked away from jobs as a cleaner, handyman, high school girls' basketball coach, bakery worker, and golf course groundskeeper. In 2005, he filed again for bankruptcy.

Transient since then, Williams has bounced from one friend's house to another's, from one shelter to another. He finally ran out of friends to stay with, soured on the shelter life, and settled a couple of months ago in his car. He also owns a '97 Chevy Tahoe but needs to pay a repair shop $550 to release it.

He has no health insurance or car insurance. And he already has tapped his NBA pension, he said.

"I'm desperate, man,'' said Williams, who as captain of the 1980-81 Knicks was at times the toast of Broadway. "I'm selling everything I have left just to survive.''

An avid fisherman, he has sold or pawned his best rods and reels. His golf clubs are for sale. But most of the rest of his belongings were auctioned off after he fell behind on a storage bill.

Williams also is running out of friends and relatives to ask for help. He said his brother, Gus, sometimes sends him food money. But he said Gus, who declined to be interviewed, is coping with his own financial problems.

Williams also is reluctant to turn again to Glenn, Bennett, and others who have supported him, including Mike Woodson, the former Hawks coach who played with Williams on the Knicks.

"It's hard to keep imposing on friends when you don't have some kind of solution to your problem,'' Williams said.

Nor can he turn to his former agent, Fred Slaughter, who once loaned him money.

"Ray was always a good person, a good player, and a good client,'' Slaughter said. "But was the loan repaid? No. So I just raised my eyebrows and moved on down the road.''

Williams has never been arrested. But the deeper he falls into despair, he said, the more he prays not to break the law to make ends meet.

"If I didn't have faith, I probably would have done something drastic by now, something I would regret for a long time,'' he said. "I know what the devil wants me to do, to turn to crime or drugs, or anything to destroy my faith.''

He said he needs to get back on his feet and become a productive NBA retiree, a man with a purpose.

"I'm not trying to sit on my butt,'' he said. "I just need someone to reach out and help me.''

Bob Hohler can be reached at hohler@globe.com.



--
Jay

NY Times Editorial


Editorial

6,000 Bullets

With the ease of downloading a song, anyone with a computer and a credit card can order thousands of bullets and shotgun shells on the Internet, along with tear-gas canisters and speed loaders. They can get the same high-capacity ammunition clips that infantry soldiers use. They can even get bulletproof vests and SWAT helmets. All without fear of a single background check.

No one is paying attention to whether buyers have criminal histories or mental-health records. No one is monitoring bulk sales of ammunition to see who might be building an arsenal. Even after a young man in Colorado buys 6,000 rounds by mail order and uses them to commit mass murder, it is the rare politician who proposes to make the tools of terror slightly harder to obtain.

When he was campaigning for office in 2008, Barack Obama vowed to reinstate the assault weapons ban that had expired in 2004. That would have prohibited the AR-15 rifle used in the Colorado theater shooting on Friday, along with the large 100-round magazine attached to it. But as president, Mr. Obama has made no attempt to do so. Mitt Romney banned assault weapons as governor of Massachusetts and undoubtedly saved many lives, but now he opposes all gun control measures. He never repeats what he said in 2004 when he signed the ban:

"Deadly assault weapons have no place in Massachusetts," he said. "They are instruments of destruction with the sole purpose of hunting down and killing people."

Both men fear the power of gun ideologues, particularly in swing states like Pennsylvania, Nevada and North Carolina, where many voters have fallen under the spell of a gun lobby that considers any restriction an unthinkable assault on the Constitution. Senator Ron Johnson, the Tea Party favorite from Wisconsin, spoke for the Republican Party (and many Democrats) when he said that limiting high-capacity magazines would infringe on a basic right. "When you try and do it, you restrict our freedom," he said on "Fox News Sunday."

Freedom to do what, precisely? To fire off 100 rounds without reloading? A few sport shooters may enjoy doing that on a firing range, but that's hardly sufficient reason to empower someone else to do it in a movie theater. It has nothing to do with the basic right of home protection and self-defense found by the Supreme Court in 2008.

A Democratic senator, Frank Lautenberg of New Jersey, is one of the few officials courageous enough to propose a better idea: A ban on clips that hold more than 10 bullets, which are not needed to hunt, practice or protect oneself. He first proposed this last year, after a gunman in Tucson used a 33-round magazine to shoot 18 people, including Representative Gabrielle Giffords, killing six. The shooter was tackled when he had to reload.

The ban went nowhere and will undoubtedly be laughed off by gun advocates this year, too. In 1993, they killed a proposal by Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan of New York to impose a heavy tax on handgun ammunition, especially the bullets that expand and cause heavy tissue damage. A few years ago, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger of California signed a law requiring identification to buy handgun ammunition and forbidding mail-order sales. A group of gun sellers sued and won a trial-court ruling that the law was too vague. (The state attorney general, Kamala Harris, appealed the ruling in February.)

But the gun lobby's legal and political victories can't obscure the facts. The assault weapons ban didn't clearly reduce crime, the best study of the measure found, but allowing high-capacity magazines would "result in more shots fired, more persons hit, and more wounds inflicted per victim than do attacks with other firearms." Sensible restrictions on ammunition and clips won't eliminate mass shootings; they may make them less likely and reduce their level of violence.

Many politicians of both parties know this. To overcome their fear of the gun lobby, they need only look at the faces of the victims in Aurora, Colo.

News Article

courant.com/features/sc-fam-0710-dating-mixed-20120710,0,449512.story

Courant.com

Interracial marriage: Mixing in matching

While there's more support for interracial relationships, apprehension remains, and studies show it's not as common as some might believe.

By Alexia Elejalde-Ruiz, Tribune Newspapers

July 11, 2012

Advertisement
 

In January 1999, at the dawn of the online dating era, BlkBeauT met SoCalGuy on a Yahoo! Chat room — she, hoping her username would let suitors know she's African-American; he, assuming he'd found a fellow admirer of a favorite childhood film.

Now married more than 10 years and raising four children in Southern California, Christelyn and Michael Karazin, who is white, don't turn heads as much as they might have a few short decades ago. But while Americans' support for interracial marriage has become nearly universal, according to a recent national poll, and mixed marriages are twice as common as they were 30 years ago, dating across ethnic lines still carries some apprehension.

For example, when, during their courtship, Michael picked up Christelyn at the hairdresser, a lively hub of black culture, Christelyn remembers all noise screeching to a halt at the sight of her white date, and she nervously hustled him out.

Acquaintances would scold her for dating "Mr. Charlie," slang for a white oppressor; a cousin warned her a white guy would never marry her.

"There were these constant guilt trips," said Christelyn Karazin, 38, who co-authored the new book "Swirling: How to Date, Mate and Relate Mixing Race, Culture and Creed" (Atria), with Janice Rhoshalle Littlejohn, to offer practical advice for navigating inter-ethnic romance.

Black women often feel pressure not to date out of race because they bear the onus to carry on African-American traditions, she said.

Michael Karazin, 39, said race was a non-issue to him until their kids were born and they decided to move — for a better school system — to the mostly white town of Temecula, near San Diego. Concerned the children might not feel comfortable, they contacted the local NAACP chapter to learn if there had been hate crimes in the area and scoped out the school and playgrounds to make sure theirs wouldn't be the only biracial kids (it turned out to be a very welcoming and open-minded community, the Karazins said).

Self-segregated dating

Such concerns may be reasons why, in practice, and despite talk of America entering a post-racial era, people still tend to pursue relationships in their own ethnic circles — even online, where the physical segregation that usually keeps different races from mingling doesn't exist.

A study out of the University of California at Berkeley examined more than a million profiles from a free online dating website and found that white people, in particular, kept to their own, even young people who tend to be more open-minded and said they were open to dating any race.

These young white men and women (ages 20 to 39) reached out to other whites 80 percent of the time, while white men reached out to blacks only 3 percent of the time and white women did so 8 percent of the time. Young black daters were much more open, reaching out to whites and blacks about equally (40 percent of the time for each; the rest of the messages went to other races).

The study, which has not been published, only analyzed white-black romance, where there seems to be the most resistance. Fewer than 2 percent of new marriages in the U.S. between 2008 and 2010 were between blacks and whites, according to a Pew Research study.

Though there were many more white people in the study, the fact that black people were 10 times more likely to contact a white person than vice-versa is significant, said Gerald Mendelsohn, the study's lead author and professor of graduate studies at Berkeley.

Among the potential reasons for the disparity, Mendelsohn said: People generally are attracted to those who are similar to them. They may worry about stares from strangers or family disapproval. Standards of beauty in the media tend to be white.

The macrosociological explanation is that minority populations seek to assimilate into the power structures, while the people in power want to stay there. Inter-ethnic dating and marriage are among the most important markers of assimilation, and an important step in doing away with inequalities, Mendelsohn said.

Encouragingly, the study found white people were almost as likely as blacks to respond to an overture from someone of another race, Mendelsohn said. It suggests people are receptive to interracial romance, it just helps if someone else makes the first move.

"There is progress, but we have to be reminded of the distance that has yet to be traveled," he said.

Another study that examined online dating patterns among various ethnicities found white men preferred Asian and Latina dating partners to African-Americans, while white women shied away from Asian men. The researchers, from University of California at Irvine, theorized that might stem from media-perpetuated stereotypes about masculinity and femininity.

Having conversations

Jen Chau, founder of Swirl, Inc., an organization that promotes cross-cultural understanding, said one positive development is that inter-ethnic couples today seem to place a bigger emphasis than previous generations on having conversations about their differences, in particular how they might affect their kids.

Growing up with a Chinese father and a mother who is an Ashkenazi Jew, Chau remembers her family rarely talking to her about race, which left her feeling isolated and confused when the kids at Hebrew school would call her "chicken chow mein." When the rabbi announced her father couldn't join her at the altar for a blessing during her bat mitzvah, because the synagogue didn't want to promote interfaith marriage, she was left without explanation.

"All I wanted was the ability to talk about it," said Chau, who lives in New York. "I wanted someone to say, 'This must make you feel sad.'"

Chau, 35, and her boyfriend, Gerry Fontan, 36, whose mother is Cuban and father is from Spain, make it a point to discuss how they plan to raise their kids with both their cultures, including teaching them Spanish and Chinese.

"That's something I'm concerned about," Fontan said, because it might be hard to get the kids to commit. The goal is to immerse them in the languages through travel and native-tongued friends.

Despite the challenges, venturing into new ethnic territory for romance expands horizons and, Christelyn Karazin says, "adds flavor." It's important to her that their kids understand the richness of their diverse heritage, including the fact that her husband comes from a Westport, Conn., family with its own crest and that her grandfather was a sharecropper and her father had an eighth-grade education.

The point isn't to focus on the differences, but to normalize them, Karazin said. Recently, her 3-year-old daughter cupped her face and said, "Mommy's chocolate," to which Karazin responded: "Yes, mommy is the color of chocolate, and daddy is the color of vanilla. And isn't that yummy?"

aelejalderuiz@tribune.com



--
Jay

Monday, July 23, 2012

NPR News:

Nas On Marvin Gaye's Marriage, Parenting And Rap GeniusListen
by NPR Staff, July 20, 2012
View and comment on NPR.org
The veteran rapper Nas, who released his 10th album, Life Is Good, this week, spoke to weekends on All Things Considered host Guy Raz about the breakup of his marriage to singer Kelis, parenting, his writing process and his search for inner peace. On Sunday you'll be able to hear the interview on your local station and this page.

GUY RAZ: I want to start by asking about the cover of this new record — you're wearing a white suit and there's a green wedding dress draped across your lap. What is the story of that picture?

NAS: I had a pretty public divorce. They're not easy — divorces — and it took me a long time to really get through. The album cover gives you that; it gives you what's been happening with me, what's been happening during my break from solo albums. I bring you up to speed with where I'm at. And there it is — actually not her entire dress because it probably would not have fit in the picture because it was so big but it was part of her dress, the part that she had left behind.

There is a theme reappearing throughout this album — it's about finding peace, inner peace. Of course this record was written with the backdrop of the crumbling of your marriage. What other things were happening in your life at this time?

Yeah, a lot, man. I had been through, of course, the divorce and I had been hit with some taxes that really showed me to be careful who's working with you and your money, and you have to be the one that is responsible for your money — you can't trust anyone and I did and I ran into a problem. A couple other things — trying to regroup, trying to figure out where I was going to live and being a single dude again. But I was good; I was good through all of these things. I'm not trying to make a pity party for me; I'm just simply stating what was happening.

I'm wondering why you decided to open up so much about your personal life on this record. You exposed yourself in ways that you haven't in the past.

In the past I had to deal with issues that hit me as a younger man. As a man who wasn't married who didn't really have the experience that I have now. Today I'm a different guy. Obviously, I'm older. I've been through a lot more. The strongest subject matter that I was writing about was more about me and growing up.

If every rap album is about how you came up in the hood and how you had to make it out of the hood — I'm 38 now; this is my 10th album. I wouldn't want to hear someone be around for a long time talking about the same thing. I want to get to know this person; I want to hear the artist. I want to hear them give me something that I can relate to, other than the fact that everything's about bragging. So today, if I made an album just to sell you a story about how I'm the man, it really doesn't show any human side to me. It's good to talk about what's real and what's relevant.

I read that you spent a lot of time listening to a record by Marvin Gaye, a seminal record, Here, My Dear, which is about the breakup of his marriage.

Yes, I'm a big fan of Marvin, and I guess about 12 years ago I heard this album, Here, My Dear. And I thought it was crazy that entertainers — it's hard to find that woman because there's so many women being thrown at us and there's that trust thing there, and of course we're artists and we need someone with compatible wit and finding that is not always easy.

Marvin was married to Berry Gordy's sister. She was older than him and she was sophisticated, she was fly. She had the diamonds, the pearls. She knew how to live and she taught him how to live. She was his love and it ended and he chose to do an album about that when other styles of music were becoming popular at the time. He could have took advantage of the new style of music that was hitting. Instead, what he had to do — he had his tax problems, all kinds of things — what he needed to do was give this record to her, the money from the record. But most of all, he turned the record into a record about her. I didn't want to do that. He inspired me, so I wanted to do it my way.

You have a song called "Daughters" and it's about something that actually happened. Your daughter posted a photo on a social media site and there was a box of condoms in the background. You wrote a song about this. What was happening at the time and how were you feeling when all of that came out?

I felt like I wasn't there enough. I felt like she is putting on an act to make it seem like she's hip. She's home doing these things and talking like she's out in the world and the streets and making moves — she's home tweeting these things. So, I saw that she needed some attention, and I felt like, "What kind of crappy dad am I that I didn't get to her beforehand?" Things like that really bother me and it bothered her mom, which is strange that when I put out the record "Daughters" and I say "Man, I should have drove her to school more; I should have been there more." I'm talking about myself, too. I wasn't the best, and her mom publicly talked out against it. I wrote a song about it to handle it.

You have a line there: "God gets us back. He makes us have precious little girls." It's almost like a self-deprecating line. It's kind of like, "Who am I to cast the first stone?"

Right. And it's also saying I know the world she's growing up in. I was a kid, too, and at some point I knew a lot of women. When you're a teenager, you want to meet a lot of girls — you want to get the most girls. You don't know anything about respect; you don't know anything about being faithful and loyal to your girlfriend. You just want to be a player. So I know what's out there. I know what she's going to run into. Look at this: the guy who thought he was Casanova, he has a daughter, who has to deal with the Casanovas out there.

You have a song on this record with the late Amy Winehouse. You collaborated with her in the past, and a lot has been written about her since her passing. What do you want people to know about her that hasn't been written about as much?

Amy was raw. Amy would tell you to your face whatever she felt, anytime, anywhere. Amy was about the music. Amy, who sold tons of records, was the biggest thing in the world and was turning down business opportunities left and right. She really just wanted to live her life and she had a lot of troubles, a lot of demons. We all do.

That song is about that elusive thing which is finding the perfect person, the perfect partner — something that has eluded you as well.

Well, I thought that I found one, and I don't know, bro. I'm messed up out here, man. I got the opportunity to meet people all over the world. Brilliant women, tall women, short women, slim women, thick women, you name it. But, I don't meet them. I have the opportunities to and it's a little bit — I'm a little shy, so I don't meet them and I don't know who's right for me. I looked at people like Harry Belafonte — he's been married like three times; Richard Pryor — he's been married like five times. So many affluent men are faced with finding love problems. I'm sure beautiful, affluent women are faced with the same things sometimes. Halle Berry can't seem to get a break, you know what I'm saying? So, it's just something that I don't know if we'll ever figure out. I hope I do while I'm here.

I want to ask you about the arc of your career. Your first record, Illmatic, wasn't just acclaimed by rap critics but is now widely considered to be one of the all-time greatest records of any genre ever made. What did you want to say through your words at that time?

I wanted to say what wasn't being said. I wanted to give people a real story. I wanted people to know people like me exist in the world. The big stars in rap, they were too big, so when my rap generation started, it was about bringing you inside my apartment. It wasn't about being a rap star; it was about anything other than.

I want you to know who I am: what the streets taste like, feel like, smell like. What the cops talk like, walk like, think like. What crackheads do — I wanted you to smell it, feel it. It was important to me that I told the story that way because I thought that it wouldn't be told if I didn't tell it. I thought this was a great point in time in the 1990s in [New York City] that needed to be documented and my life needed to be told.

Were you surprised at how that record was received? Do you ever go back and listen to Illmatic?

I go back and I say, "I was really young to be thinking like this. I was in the storm." I realized the reality for that kid — he didn't want to accept it, that reality. He told you about his reality, but at the same time he wanted more from life. He didn't know if he would live to see it but he knew there was more to life. I look at that kid, and I'm like, "Thank you. Thank you for doing what you did."

When did you sit down and put pen to paper and just start writing your ideas down?

Maybe around 9, 10.

Was that unusual? Did anybody in your family sort of say, "Oh there's Nasir again, sitting in his room writing words down?"

Yeah, all the time. I used to keep a dictionary and work with it and then I realized there are more words that exist in the English language than there are in this dictionary. I need a bigger dictionary. Why? How come they don't have every word? And then I was like, "Wait, it's impossible for one book to have every word." So that means you have to buy multiple dictionaries. I fell in love with words and I think that made my mom smile. I think that was cool for her.

When you sit down to think about rhyme schemes, how do you construct them?

I want to sound like an instrument. I want my voice and my words to marry the beat. I go with the rhythm of it and the words start to come to my mind and those words could be based on things that's been on my mind for the past year, the past month, the past week, whatever, I write it. And they just come. It comes to me.

There's a song on this record called "Reach Out" with Mary J. Blige. There's a lyric in there where you say, "When you're too hood to be in the Hollywood circles, you're too rich to be in the hood that birthed you." That struck me because I thought, "Man, it's almost like you don't really have a home anywhere."

Right, it's like, where do I go? What's a cool place for me? What's a safe spot? I didn't know the things I needed to be prepared for before arriving here, so now that I'm here, what do I do? If I can't be in the streets and I'm not Hollywood people, you know what I mean?

So, what do you do?

I do what I do. I just chill. I'm able to be in both circles, actually.

There's a whole website that I know you're aware of which is all about parsing hip-hop lyrics, and do you ever go on there and see how people interpret what you've written?

I think we're talking about Rap Genius. Yeah, I go on there and it's cool because it's a website that's just totally about lyrics and that is something that's real cool for kids all over. I went on there to see how people are interpreting the stuff I'm saying. People give me a better understanding on things that I said, or a different way to look at it. I'm glad that website exists so I can correct them about things because it helps them understand exactly what I mean.

I want to ask about the last track on this record, "Bye Baby." We hear you talking about all of the good that came from your marriage with Kelis, and one of the last lines is: "Watch me do it again. It's a beautiful life." What is that thing that you'll do again?

Get married at some point. At some point I'll do it again. It'd be great. I want to be better at it. I want to be the best at it. I want to have fun. It's a beautiful life. You learn, you win, you lose, but you get up.

I just wanted to make that one real record about that situation. I'm hearing artists, men, famous guys, cry when they heard that song and it just blows me away. For one, it means I nailed it and to me that is the greatest feeling of achievement. You don't want to disappoint. Especially someone like me who's been out of music for years and hasn't had an album in like, four years. I don't want to disappoint — that's a nightmare to me. So when I hear people love it or like it or even cry to it, it just says "Wow, I did something right. I got it; I got it done. I'm not falling off." That song, I had to. It was to me the most important record on the album.

You've written about people you've known who've died and people who haven't made it out of Queensbridge — and you did. You didn't just make it out; you became one of the greatest living rappers in the world. Could you ever have imagined that?

No. I imagined that people would think I was good. That was, by the way, that would be my goal just for people to say, "Nas is really dope. Nas is a dope rapper." I didn't see myself doing this many albums because the guys before me, they maxed out at like four albums and those were the greatest. They were before me and I looked up to them so I felt like if I could get one great album then my name would be out there a little bit amongst the greats. To see what's happened now to me, it's awesome, man. Yeah, it's awesome.

Where do you think the hip-hop world is right now?

Hip-hop is such an amazing thing that kids still want to do it. They're not saying, "Ugh, that's the old people's music." No, they're younger than they've ever been that want to get into hip-hop music. That means the music is still doing something to them in a major, major way. I think more people want to be rappers than anything else.

What about where it's going? We're talking now about something that's been around 40 years. We're talking one of the most important forms of American expression, cultural expression. Something that in 100 years, we'll look back on the way we look back on like jazz right now. What's the next turn in hip-hop?

Well, I don't know yet. That is a great question. I have no idea right now. I used to know, but now what's interesting is just the fact that my passion for it is still so good. I've been doing it since I was 16 — being on a record. My first record — it was 1991. I was 16 years old. My first album came out when I was 20. So, I've been here that long and I still have the passion to do it.

Copyright 2012 National Public Radio. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

 
 
 
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Jay
 

Thursday, July 19, 2012

Recipes: Drinks

Triple Sec cocktail recipes
  
Cointreau® (13)
  
African Breeze recipe
50 ml amarula cream liqueur
25 ml Cointreau® orange liqueur
Cover rim of glass with brown sugar. Fill glass with crushed ice. Pour cointreau over ice, followed by amarula cream. Add garnish.
Serve in: Cocktail Glass

Pit Pix



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Jay

News Article

Pit Bull owners speak out against common misconceptions

LEWISTON, ID - Pit Bulls are known for their intelligence and loyalty but are often associated as aggressive or malignant dogs.

"It all boils down to the owner," said Pit Bull owner Brett Cunnington.

Dog attacks are often only reported when larger breeds threaten or assault other animals or humans. Coincidentally, Pit Bulls are among those canines that many people are afraid of based on what they've seen or heard, however many Pit Bull enthusiasts contend that the breed is not human aggressive.

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Pit Pix



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Jay

Metro News Article




ASPCA saves the city's pitbulls

DANIELA BERNAL
NEW YORK
Published: July 17, 2012 2:56 p.m.
Last modified: July 17, 2012 5:44 p.m.
Monday was the second year anniversary of the ASPCA's "Operation Pit."

As part of "Operation Pit," all  New Yorkers are encouraged to bring their pits in to the ASPCA's Upper East Side animal hospital to be spayed and neutered — free of charge.

The program offers the free service to any healthy pitbull or pitbull mix between the ages of three months and six years, as experts say that's the breed most at risk to be euthanized.

Yahoo Sports Article

Jeremy Lin Merchandise Hits the Clearance Racks in New York: Fan's Reaction

Yahoo! Contributor Network
By Eric Holden | Yahoo! Contributor Network – Mon, Jul 16, 2012 12:03 PM EDT

Sporting goods outlets in the New York metro area seem to agree with Carmelo Anthony's assessment that the Houston Rockets' three-year, $25.1 million dollar deal to Jeremy Lin won't be matched, as Knicks jerseys and t-shirts bearing Lin's No. 17 were relegated to clearance racks by midday on July 16.
The "Lin-sanity" that captivated the imagination of the Big Apple seems like a lifetime ago now that Jeremy Lin t-shirts sit unassumingly beside the merchandise of former New York athletes like ex-Met shortstop Jose Reyes and former New York Jets wide receiver Plaxico Burress.

Boston Globe Article

Probe ends of Mass. cop's alleged slur of Crawford

July 18, 2012

LEOMINSTER, Mass.—Officials in Leominster plan to announce the findings of their probe into whether an off-duty city officer directed a racial slur at Red Sox outfielder Carl Crawford during a minor league game.

Mayor Dean Mazzarella told the Telegram & Gazette that he'll discuss the investigation Wednesday morning.

The officer, who is white and a five-year veteran of the force, was placed on desk duty after the alleged July 5 incident. He hasn't been named by police.

The officer is accused of calling Crawford a "monday" while Crawford was rehabilitating his wrist with a Red Sox minor league affiliate, the Portland Sea Dogs, in Manchester, N.H. The word, allegedly used while the man taunted Crawford from the stands, can be used as a derogatory term for blacks.

© Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

http://www.boston.com/news/local/new_hampshire/articles/2012/07/18/probe_ends_of_mass_cops_alleged_slur_of_crawford/?p1=Well_Local_Links
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Jay

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Recipes: Drinks

Apple Martini

The apple martini, otherwise known as the appletini, exploded on the mixologist scene in the late 1990s. It quickly replaced the Cosmopolitan as a favorite cocktail amongst women. Popular television shows and movies further commercialized this sweet and aromatic concoction, and in no time at all every upscale bar in Manhattan to Los Angeles was stirring up apple martinis and selling them for 12 dollars a pop.

NY Times Article

July 16, 2012
Cuba Hits Wall in 2-Year Push to Expand the Private Sector
By VICTORIA BURNETT




HAVANA — Nearly two years into the Cuban government's economic overhaul aimed at slashing public payrolls and bolstering private enterprise, the reforms have slowed so much that many Cuban entrepreneurs and intellectuals are questioning the aging leadership's ability — or will — to reshape one of the world's last Communist systems and shift nearly half of the island's output to private hands.
Those awaiting measures to create even more opportunity for private business got the opposite last week, when news spread of a little-advertised government decision to charge steep customs duties on the informal imports, from Miami and elsewhere, that are the lifeblood of many young businesses.

"This could have a huge impact," said Emilio Morales, president of the Miami-based Havana Consulting Group, who said state-owned shops in Cuba were losing business to street vendors. "It shows the state isn't ready to compete with the private sector."

Downloads- Hiphop R&B

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Jay

NY Times Article

Regulators and HSBC Faulted in Report on Money Laundering

8:55 p.m. | Updated
The global bank HSBC has been used by Mexican drug cartels looking to get cash back into the United States, by Saudi Arabian banks that needed access to dollars despite their terrorist ties and by Iranians who wanted to circumvent United States sanctions, a Senate report says.
The 335-page report released Monday also says that executives at HSBC and regulators at the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency ignored warning signs and failed to stop the illegal behavior at many points between 2001 and 2010.

NY Times Article

July 16, 2012, 9:43 pm

R.B.S. Fighting Bid for Data in Rate Case

Even as lawmakers in London hammered a top Barclays executive over the bank's role in a rate-rigging scandal, another financial firm that is largely owned by the British government is fighting an investigation into the vast scheme.
The Royal Bank of Scotland, one of more than 10 banks under scrutiny from authorities around the globe, is refusing to turn over crucial information to Canadian regulators, court documents from Ottawa show.
The bank, in which the British government holds an 82 percent stake, is an unlikely foe.
British lawmakers have taken the lead in publicly shaming executives and regulators who failed to curb interest rate manipulation before and after the 2008 financial crisis. And the pushback comes in contrast to the more conciliatory approach of several institutions ensnared by the global investigation.
Barclays, which last month agreed to pay $450 million to British and American authorities for improperly influencing interest rates, cooperated with the multiyear case, although it too dragged its heels on producing documents at first. Some European banks are now scrambling to strike deals with authorities, according to lawyers close to the case.

Downloads- Various Hiphop

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https://docs.google.com/open?id=0B1oumM0JiHFqeVhGTzk0ZXVNcFk--
Jay

NBA Pix



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Jay

Pit Pix


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Jay

Boston Herald Article

By Joe Fitzgerald  |   Monday, August 15, 2011  |  
http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Columnists
Photo by Kelvin Ma
Sometimes, while giving beginner piano lessons to little kids on the Lower East Side of New York, Tuffus Zimbabwe, the keyboard man on "Saturday Night Live," is reminded that all success stories had to begin somewhere, including his own.
"It's hard to get kids interested, and even harder to keep their attention because they get bored so fast," Zimbabwe said. "And that's when I remember that I have to be patient, because I used to be that little kid and a lot of great people had patience with me."

 

NY Times Article

ANNE BARNARD and DYLAN LOEB McCLAIN
The classroom at Intermediate School 318 in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, was filled on Tuesday with the thumping and clattering of a half-dozen high-speed chess matches, played with a rambunctious energy more reminiscent of a hockey game than of Garry Kasparov and Deep Blue. The school's conquering heroes — its chess players — were blowing off steam. On Sunday, in Minneapolis, they became the first middle school team to win the United States Chess Federation's national
The victory burnishes what is already a legend in the chess world. At I.S. 318, more than 60 percent of the students come from families with incomes below the federal poverty level. Yet each stairwell landing bristles with four-foot chess trophies, and the school celebrities are people like