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Folk Art Museum Show for Venice Canceled by Stephanie Cash 04/25/11

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The expendables 4 African American Men in Venice

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Benetton and the American Folk Art Museum to Exhibit Works by Self-Taught African American Artists in Venice

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Kevin Writes about "Catching a Junkie

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28 Places to See Before You Die—the Taj Mahal, Grand Canyon and More | Life Lists | Smithsonian Magazine

4/28/10

Inside an Outsider’s Mind | The New York Observer

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Inside an Outsider’s Mind

Artist Henry Darger led an Ellison-esque existence, an invisible man until his death in 1973. Posthumously elected mascot for the Outsider Art movement, Darger lived in a one-room apartment in the Lincoln Park neighborhood of Chicago. For much of his life, he worked as a custodian in a Catholic hospital without even enough disposable income to keep a pet.

"Henry Darger had an art collection." That is the first sentence of curator Brooke Davis Anderson's introduction to the evocative exhibit devoted to the artist. She follows up in the second paragraph with the similar, but more challenging, "Henry Darger had an art collection?" The collector in questi
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4/27/10

Laura Bush Opens Up About Fatal Crash - NYTimes.com

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Laura Bush Opens Up About Fatal Crash

In her new book, “Spoken From the Heart,” Ms. Bush describes in vivid detail the circumstances surrounding the crash, which has haunted her for most of her adult life and which became the subject of questions and speculation when it was revealed during her husband’s first presidential run. A copy of the book, scheduled for release in early May, was obtained by The New York Times at a bookstore.

On several occasions in the book, Ms. Bush admonishes her husband’s political adversaries for “calling him names,” and she pointedly rebuts criticism of some of his key decisions. She suggested that his highly criticized fly-over of New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina was in the best interests of the victims and aid workers on the ground.

“He did not want one single life to be lost because someone was catering to the logistical requirements of a president,” she says about the Katrina fly-over. “He did not want his convoy of vehicles to block trucks delivering water or food or medical supplies, or to impede National Guardsmen from around the nation who were arriving to help.”

Ms. Bush also suggests, apparently for the first time, that she, Mr. Bush, and several members of their staff may have been poisoned during a visit to Germany for a G8 Summit. They all became mysteriously sick, and the president was bedridden for part of the trip. The Secret Service investigated the possibility they were poisoned, she writes, but doctors could only conclude that they all contracted a virus. After noting several high-profile poisonings, she wrote, “we never learned if any other delegations became ill, or if ours, mysteriously, was the only one.”

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Report details allegations of torture at Iraqi secret prison - CNN.com

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Report details allegations of torture at Iraqi secret prison

By the CNN Wire Staff
April 27, 2010 8:18 p.m. EDT
Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki has told The Los Angeles Times  that he was unaware of any abuse at the prison.
Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki has told The Los Angeles Times that he was unaware of any abuse at the prison.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Human rights group releases interviews with 42 men who'd been kept at secret prison
  • Iraqi prime minister closed prison this month; group says Iraqi army officers arrested
  • Closure came after Los Angeles Times reported on allegations of torture, abuse
  • Detainees say they were blindfolded, hung upside down, sexually abused
RELATED TOPICS
  • Iraq
  • Human Rights Watch
  • Nuri al-Maliki
  • Torture

Baghdad, Iraq (CNN) -- A report released Tuesday by a human rights group details allegations of horrific torture and abuse at a secret prison in Iraq where detainees say they were routinely beaten, shocked and sodomized by their interrogators.

The report by Human Rights Watch was based on interviews conducted Monday with 42 prisoners who had been held at a secret facility in west Baghdad's old Muthanna airport since late 2009.

The men were among 300 detainees who were transferred in recent weeks to another detention center after the existence of the Muthanna prison was revealed, Human Rights Watch said.

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Rosarno - 30 arrested | Rosarno | ITALY Magazine

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Rosarno - 30 arrested

Apr 27th, 2010 - Words by Pat Eggleton

Topics:
  • Rosarno
  • Immigration

Thirty people in Rosarno [Reggio Calabria] were arrested on Monday for exploitation of illegal immigrant workers.

An enquiry set up after the January Rosarno riots and headed by the Public Prosecutor of Palmi [Reggio Calabria] has uncovered an organised gangmaster system which operated in the area.

Under the gangmaster system illegal immigrants – mostly Africans – were hired to work on farms and in factories and then treated like slaves. Fruit-pickers were paid 1 euro for each crate of mandarins they filled and 50 centesimi for a crate of oranges, reports ANSA. They typically earned 22 euros [$29 or £19] for working a 15-hour day in inhumane conditions.

Of the 30 arrested, nine people have been imprisoned and the others have been placed under house arrest. Some of those involved are themselves immigrants. Illegal immigrants who have helped the officers conducting the enquiry have been granted permission to remain in Italy. Politicians from all parties have congratulated the Public Prosecutor of Palmi for his thoroughness and efficiency in carrying out the enquiry.

What kind of sentence do you think the gangmasters should receive?

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Malcolm X killer freed after 44 years - CNN.com

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Malcolm X killer freed after 44 years

By Wayne Drash, CNN
April 27, 2010 1:56 p.m. EDT
Thomas Hagan was captured shortly after the assassination of  Malcolm X on Feburary 21, 1965.
Thomas Hagan was captured shortly after the assassination of Malcolm X on Feburary 21, 1965.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • NEW: Thomas Hagan walks out of Lincoln Correctional Facility at 11 a.m.
  • Hagan set free a day earlier than expected; he's the only confessed killer of Malcolm X
  • Hagan, 69, has been in a work-release program the past two decades
  • Hagan told parole board he killed Malcolm X over his split with Nation of Islam

(CNN) -- Thomas Hagan, the only man who admitted his role in the 1965 assassination of iconic black leader Malcolm X, was paroled Tuesday.

Hagan was freed a day earlier than planned because his paperwork was processed more quickly than anticipated, according to the New York State Department of Correctional Services.

Hagan, 69, walked out of the minimum-security Lincoln Correctional Facility at 11 a.m. The facility is located at the intersection of West 110th Street and Malcolm X Boulevard.

Hagan had been in a full-time work-release program since March 1992 that allowed him to live at home with his family in Brooklyn five days a week while reporting to the prison just two days.

Last month, Hagan pleaded his case for freedom: To return to his family, to become a substance abuse counselor and to make his mark on what time he has left in this world.

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The curious tale of the wooden table that became an iPad book | Technology | Los Angeles Times

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Technology

The business and culture of our digital lives,
from the L.A. Times

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The curious tale of the wooden table that became an iPad book

April 27, 2010 | 4:44 pm

The Elements iPad Book

Chocked with interactive photos, animations, song and text, "The Elements: A Visual Exploration" for the iPad has been hailed as the future of digital books.

But to understand the future, sometimes it helps to look at the past. Though the app itself took six weeks to develop, its genesis began eight years ago. This is the story of how a wooden conference table in Champaign, Ill., turned into a iPad phenomenon.

As with many great ideas, this one was purely accidental, according to Theodore Gray, the co-writer of "The Elements." Three unrelated things happened to Gray in 2002.

One, he was momentarily confused while reading "Uncle Tungsten" by Oliver Sacks. In the book, Sacks said he liked to visit the periodic table in the Kensington Science Museum. Gray thought it was an actual table, but soon realized it wasn't. Two, his start-up company needed a conference table, and he was loathe to spend thousands on "one of those expensive ugly ones from the office supply catalogs." Three, he had just purchased for $50 a used industrial engraving machine.

Periodic Table Table
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Number of Foreign-Born Residents Hits 40 Year Low

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The number of foreign-born residents of the U.S. declined for the first time since at least 1970, according to the Census Bureau's annual American Community Survey.

For Mexican immigrants, a decline in construction jobs resulted in their reluctance to immigrate to the U.S. Yet for foreigners from other countries there’s a greater fear that the idea of a more leisurely life in America is a lot harder to come by.

As reported in the Wall Street Journal:

“In multiple ways -- falling homeownership, families moving in with others, couples putting off marriage -- the report illustrated that the recession has upended Americans' lives.”

If Americans are suffering, what sense of urgency do others have to come here?

Of course, there are other factors involved in these figures. For one the Bush administration tightened immigration laws – making it far more difficult for immigrants to come and go as they please (in theory, at least). And it’s still a task to properly tally just how many illegal immigrates are present.

Still, the American dream has lost some of its luster globally and as a result, some are thinking, “Why not just stay where I am?” It’s either that or, “Gee, I wonder how hard it would be to learn Mandarin?”

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How Illegal Immigration Hurts Black America

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Chris Hondros/Getty Images
How Illegal Immigration Hurts Black America
With national unemployment hovering around 10 percent and black male unemployment at a staggering 17.6 percent, it's just not true that undocumented workers are doing the jobs that we won't do.
cord.jefferson

With national unemployment hovering around 10 percent and black male unemployment at a staggering 17.6 percent, it's just not true that undocumented workers are doing the jobs that we won't do.

With national unemployment hovering around 10 percent and black male unemployment at a staggering 17.6 percent, it's just not true that undocumented workers are doing the jobs that we won't do.

02/10/2010 06:36

In October 2008, amidst claims that one of its subsidiaries was knowingly hiring illegal immigrants, North Carolina poultry producer House of Raeford Farms initiated a systematic conversion of its workforce.

Following a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement raid that nabbed 300 undocumented workers at a Columbia Farms processing plant in Columbia, S.C., a spooked House of Raeford quietly began replacing immigrants with native-born labor at all of its plants. Less than a year later, House of Raeford’s flagship production line in Raeford, N.C., had been transformed, going from more than 80 percent Latino to 70 percent African-American, according to a report by the Charlotte Observer.

For More About Immigration, Read: 'Since When Did Tijuana Become More Appealing Than Texas?'

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Immigration: The Italians

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The Italians


The burdens of Italian women, 1905.  (Harvard University Social  Ethics Collection)During the mass emigration from Italy during the century between 1876 to 1976, the U.S. was the largest single recipient of Italian immigrants in the world. However, their impact was not as great as countries like Argentina and Brazil. That was due to the fact that hundreds of thousands of immigrants from nations all over the world were migrating to the U.S. at the same time and American born natives already made up the majority ethnic group. The Italians did play a major role though, socially with individuals rising to national stature in many different fields.

In 1850, less than 4,000 Italians were reportedly in the U.S. However in 1880, merely four years after the influx of Italian immigrants migrated, the population skyrocketed to 44,000, and by 1900, 484,027. From 1880 to 1900, southern Italian immigrants became the predominant Italian immigrant and stayed that way throughout the mass migration. Despite the increase numbers, the Italians were not the largest foreign-origin group in American cities. Outnumbered by groups migrating for decades before them. Italians only made-up 1.5% of the U.S. population at its peak.

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World's 50 best restaurants list released - CNN.com

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World's 50 best restaurants list released

By Sarah LeTrent and Kat Kinsman, Special to CNN
April 27, 2010 10:15 a.m. EDT
This year's top-ranked restaurant, Denmark's Noma, helmed by chef  René Redzepi, ranked at No. 3 in 2009.
This year's top-ranked restaurant, Denmark's Noma, helmed by chef René Redzepi, ranked at No. 3 in 2009.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • No. 1 spot on annual list goes to Noma in Copenhagen, Denmark
  • After four years at No. 1, Spanish restaurant El Bulli takes No. 2 spot
  • Eight of the restaurants crowned this year are in the United States
RELATED TOPICS
  • Culinary Arts
  • Copenhagen
  • Food and Cooking

(CNN) -- Danish cuisine reigns supreme, according to the some of the planet's most prominent eaters.

S. Pellegrino's annual "World's 50 Best Restaurants" list was released on Monday at a celebrity-chef-studded event in London, England, marking the ninth edition of the much buzzed-about (and hotly debated) catalogue of the international culinary landscape.

The No. 1 spot goes to Noma in Copenhagen, Denmark. The restaurant, helmed by chef René Redzepi, ranked No. 3 in 2009. The Guardian newspaper's restaurant critic Jay Rayner -- better known to U.S. food fans as a judge on "Top Chef Masters" -- agrees with the judges' decision.

Writes Rayner on The Guardian's food blog, "Is that the right result? Allowing for the fact that I think the rankings are far less interesting than the list itself, I would say, yes. Redzepi, the 32-year-old chef at Noma, pursues a regional, seasonal agenda that is right on the cutting edge: if it isn't available in the Nordic region, he won't cook with it. The result is a very idiosyncratic style of food that speaks to concerns about the way a global food culture turns our eating experiences a uniform beige."

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China lifts ban barring entry to foreigners with HIV and AIDS - CNN.com

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China lifts ban barring entry to foreigners with HIV and AIDS

By the CNN Wire Staff
April 27, 2010 10:43 p.m. EDT
Migrant workers, with red ribbons, attend an event organized by  the local government to promote HIV/AIDS knowledge among migrant workers  on December 1, 2005 in Chengdu of Sichuan Province.
Migrant workers, with red ribbons, attend an event organized by the local government to promote HIV/AIDS knowledge among migrant workers on December 1, 2005 in Chengdu of Sichuan Province.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • China lifts ban on foreigners with HIV, AIDs, sexually transmitted diseases, leprosy
  • Entry ban lifted after it was realized it did little to prevent the spread of disease
  • Ban also caused problems when hosting international events in the country
  • Health ministry estimated by October 2009, 740,000 people were living with HIV in China
RELATED TOPICS
  • HIV and AIDS
  • China

(CNN) -- The Chinese government has lifted a 20-year-old rule that banned foreigners with HIV and AIDs, sexually transmitted diseases and leprosy from entering the country, according to the country's state news agency.

State-run news agency Xinhua reported Tuesday that China's State Council decided to repeal the ban after realizing it did little to prevent the spread of disease and caused problems when the country was hosting international events.

The revision came days before the opening of the six-month Shanghai World Expo, which organizers expect will draw 70 million people. The government had previously lifted the ban temporarily for other large-scale events, including the 2008 Olympics in Beijing.

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Thousands of N.J. high school students leave class, protest funding cuts | - NJ.com

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Thousands of N.J. high school students leave class, protest funding cuts

By The Star-Ledger Continuous News Desk

April 27, 2010, 12:39PM

SCHOOL_WALKOUT.JPGAndrew Mills/The Star-LedgerNewark police try to contain hundreds of students from University High School as they march down Clinton Avenue chanting 'Christie has to go.' One officer estimated the crowd of students to be 500.Thousands of high school students across New Jersey walked out of classes today to protest education cuts proposed by Gov. Chris Christie.

The students, galvanized by the Facebook page where the protest was first organized, flooded school football fields, parking lots and bordering streets, wielding "Protect Educations" signs and chanting slogans defending their teachers.

More coverage:

• High Tech students walk out to protest Christie budget cuts, elimination of sports programs

• N.J. students plan mass walkout to protest Gov. Christie's school cuts

• N.J. education chief warns legislators of voter wrath after school budget defeats

• N.J. voters send message of discontent by shooting down school budgets

• N.J. towns, schools are urged to consult unions on failed budget reviews

• Complete coverage of the 2010 New Jersey State Budget

According to the site, more than 16,000 students planned to leave school.

The New Jersey Education Association, the state’s largest teacher union, said the students are “engaging in civil disobedience” but shouldn’t walk out of classes.

“I think the best outcome would be for the students to be in school and find a way to protest outside of school hours,” said Steve Wollmer, a spokesman for the organization.

Thousands of students filled the streets of Newark in protest of Christie's budget cuts shortly before noon today as police struggled to corral them into Military Park.

The walkout was scheduled to start at 1 p.m., but when students at Weequahic High School walked out early, word spread like wildfire that the protest had begun.

"Phone calls, texts, Twitter, Facebook, everything," said Shabazz senior Donald Jackson, 17 who was leading a march of fellow students down Broad street. "We're protesting budget cuts, cuts in lunch, after school programs, it has to stop."

Mayoral Candiate Clifford Minor was on hand to support the students. He applauded the largely peaceful protest.

"This is the first time I've seen kids deal with civics in its true nature," Minor said. "I'm extremely proud of these kids."

Students said their teachers' response was largely mixed about the walkout, but said the protest was largely a result of text messages, Facebook, and Myspace.

Nah-Fee Hinton, an eighth grader at Oliver St. School said his teachers discouraged the students from participating.

"They said we were wasting our time," Hinton, 14, said. "But we don't believe that. We believe we can change."

The overall protests were initiated by Michelle Ryan Lauto, an 18-year-old college student who spent her high school years in Bergen County. Lauto, said she set up a Facebook event page about a month ago encouraging the walkouts.

“It’s insane,” she said of the interest, which was unexpected. “I mean, I’m very excited.”

Lauto said her frustration over deep cuts to state education aid had been building in recent months while she’s been living and working in New York, on leave from Pace University as she waits to hear about a transfer application. She finds it “disturbing” that her little sister may go through a school system far different than that one she did.

Newark students walk out of school, take City Hall

In West Orange, senior Robert Wilson led a crowd of about 200 West Orange High School students in an impassioned speech protesting the cuts.

"This is not our mistake and we will not suffer for it," Wilson said. "Enough cuts. Enough is enough."

West Orange's budget was slated to lay off 84 teachers because of the cuts to state aid.

It was voted down on April 20, and students fear that more cuts will be made in staff, arts and athletics.

About 200 students walked out of Montclair High School this morning with signs and musical instruments. They were protesting cuts to the school's staff and programs, including arts, ROTC, languages and athletics.

"I want to be a teacher when I grow up, but the way things are going it looks impossible," said junior Carolina Noguera. "There are barely even any books here anymore."

Montclair Mayor Jerry Fried stopped by early in the protest to express his support, students said.

"He said he supports what we say, but that we should go back to class," Noguera said. "We don't care. We're just going to get detention."

About 50 students at Gateway Regional High School in Woodbury Heights reportedly walked out of class this morning.

In southern New Jersey, Rancocas Valley High School in Mount Holly; Gateway Regional High School in Deptford; Cherry Hill High School East; Williamstown High School; and Eastern Regional High School in Voorhees have all reported student walkouts, according to the Courier-Post online.

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N.J. student protests showcase Facebook's role in mobilizing social movements | - NJ.com

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facebook-school-protest.jpgAP Photo/Alik KepliczA woman checks a Facebook page for the former Nazi death camp of Auschwitz, for the Auschwitz Museum, in Warsaw, Poland in this 2009 photo.
When Michelle Ryan Lauto decided to organize a statewide protest against school budget cuts, she didn't pass out fliers, make phone calls or attend meetings.

She just logged on to Facebook.

Lauto's Facebook page — "Protest NJ Education Cuts — State Wide School Walk Out" — drew nearly 18,000 members within a few weeks and sparked today’s mass budget protest in schools across New Jersey.

"You can use these social networking tools for very positive things — it’s not just about kids putting up photos from their weekend party," said Lauto, 18, a Pace University freshman who went to high school in Bergen County.

With 400 million members and growing, Facebook is becoming the leading forum for mobilizing protests, rallies, boycotts and other social movements. In the last few months, the social networking site has served as the rallying point for everything from pro-Democracy rallies in Egypt to Tea Party protests in the U.S. and efforts to get Betty White to host "Saturday Night Live."

michelle-ryan-lauto.jpg Michelle Ryan Lauto, the 18-year-old college student whose Facebook page stirred thousands of high school students across the state to protest state aid cuts to education said this afternoon she "couldn't be more proud."Today, students across the state used Facebook to urge each other to walk out of school to protest the proposed school funding cuts in Gov. Chris Christie’s budget. They also used Facebook to trade advice on contacting newspapers and television stations to publicize their rallies, while Lauto logged on to urge students to keep their protests peaceful.

Among the current high school generation — who are dubbed Millennials — Facebook is an obvious choice for the mass communication needed to organize a protest, said Richard Sweeney, university librarian at New Jersey Institute of Technology in Newark and a scholar who has spent years studying the traits of Millennials.

"They social network almost to the extreme," said Sweeney. "It doesn’t surprise me a bit."

In Newark, students also turned to Twitter and text messaging to coordinate a walkout of thousands of students at schools across the state’s largest city.

Nah-Fee Hinton, an 8th grader at Oliver Street Elementary School, showed a text message he received on his cell phone Monday night. "Walk out 2morrow at 1:15 ... who’s doin it?" the text read.

The Newark walkout was scheduled to start in the early afternoon, but when students at Weequahic High School walked out early, students said word spread quickly to the other schools that the protest had begun.

"Phone calls, texts, Twitter, Facebook, everything," said Malcolm X. Shabazz senior Donald Jackson, 17, who was leading a march of fellow students down Broad Street.

Staff writer David Giambusso and Ryan Hutchins of New Jersey Local News Service contributed to this report.

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Stuff Kevin Wrote: MY artist talk at West side High school, I will return

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Today i had the pleasure of giving a artist talk at West side high school for the city with out walls mentoring program.

3

As usual I got to the school a hour or so early, i love to walk around any place that i am talking, so i can see the neighborhood and run my mouth.

Before i left for the lecture I spoke to My brother, Jerry Gant, he yelled at me, document document document. Ok Jerry i got my camera.

1

I walked around stopping at different places and soon i found my self involved in several conversations with store owners and people just standing around on the street. The street was alive with the walk out that students staged all across new jersey to protest, our great governors, destruction of the school system and programs.

But i wont get started on the governor, who by the way just cut my job, because i want to have a pleasant conversation.

2

Having said that

after at least a hour of talking and talking i entered the school. It was not crowded as many of the kids walked out to protest.

Ok I thought just my luck.

I found the teacher, whose class i would be talking too, a wonderful, pretty woman originally from Nigeria.

And i was delighted that many of the students stayed behind to hear what this crazy artist had to say.

Preparation, I have taught in Newark since 1981, so these kids are my kids and i knew what i needed to do to reach them.

The night before i had a long conversation with my daughter Lauren and son-in law rich. Who told me in no uncertain terms that my generation has to update our reference material. And make it more relevant to the my space generation.

And if there is one thing i know how to do its adapt.

So I decided, to include pictures of people from Newark and this area as a way of being more inclusive and making the kids identify with people who are just  like them.

Kid like relate better to you if you are one of them and i am one of them

Having said that

I had a nice size class, of about 20 students which was great, because due to the walk out i could have been let standing in the cold

The kids were great, I joked with them right off the bat.

And This was a all black class, i mean all black.

It was marvelous.

I had just given a artist talk at Columbia, university’s teachers college the week before and that was wonderful too, but this was different.

So I started out showing  slides of a dear friend of Mines work, Manuel Acevedo, who is from this neighborhood and they were enchanted.

Then i showed them allot more slides of Jerry Gants work, every one knows Jerry and has seen his work. But many didn't know who he was. Their ears perked up, i had their attention.

The teacher at one point told the class that Kevin is from Newark, his kids graduated from Newark schools.

He is one of us, that was very important to these kids,  it was very important i was not a outsider.

My adopted sons, wife, lived just three blocks away, on west end ave so i had been up in the area for years

I went on showing my work, interspersed with slides of other artist.

Then  I showed them a slide of James Wilson, my daughters best friend in high school and a kid that i had raised as my own, since he was left by his mother when he first started college…….

James was from the spires………….1st ave, projects, i had been to and knew the spires pretty well

James is  one of the most talented young artist that i have ever met, I raised James as my own and he lived with my family and me, until just about last week. When he moved in with his girlfriend, ten years, praise the lord

In the mean time, three security guards came into the room and sat down with the kids to hear what i had to say, along with a few more teachers.

I continued talking about James

I mean this kid, is black and Puerto Rican,he is now thirty. His father died of a drug over dose when he was two. . But his mother is a devout museum who was married to a guy from Egypt until he was in high school.

James thought he was Egyptian until he was 16 when his mother finally told him that he was black and Puerto Rican.

I went on to tell the story of how I got James a full scholarship to the fashion institute of tech, he was a graduate of arts high school. And has worked in several major galleries in new York, …….this kids has had bit parts in three movies.

including being a associate producer on the Andy Warhol movie…….these kids got this.

And was the first skateboarder of color, serious one in Newark. When i mentioned this every one knew who he was.

The onto my daughter…………

He lived in Egypt for a time, has recently been to Paris and Dubai and is poor, but he wanted to do some thing and has done it..

Then i showed them this picture of my family that i took at a recent art opening of Mine at the American visionary Museum in Baltimore.

60d

these kids were listening, i was showing slides of my work in between and describing what i do, and they were asking questions. Lot of questions………

Who are the people in the picture

Thats my family, my daughter, my sister who is a nationally known project manager

my brother in law who is one of the top aids doctors in the world ………a guy that chose to work in the black community in Texas tending to aids patients, a Guy just like them, who now lectures all over the world

man they got that

Who is the Asian guy,

That my best friend raoul, a guy who came from the Philippines, with just the clothes on his back. A guy who is now and has been the creative director for Amfar……a brilliant down to earth, amazing man Just like you

what is Amfar.

These kids ate it up, hungry for the knowledge that simple people can do great things

that any one with a desire can achieve any thing

After i showed this slides of my work, one of the teachers, looked at the slide and said, is your daughters name Lauren.

I said yes

This teacher whose name was Michael had done a summer program with my daughter and had attended arts high school a few years ahead of her. In fact he had Graduated with James and was still a good friend of James.

Michaela  had gone through the city with out walls mentoring program him self. And he told the kids how this program exposed him to art and the art world

I called him up front and we began talking to the class together. Right, After i called my daughter on the phone and she and Michael who hadn't seen each other in ten years played catch up.

Some of the slides of my work dealt with Haiti…. and Michael is Haitian, so we wound up giving a short history lession of Haiti and Nigeria and the sameness of all of us……. I had done my homework and read up on Haiti and Nigeria thank God.

6

Now the class was entranced, the teacher jumped in, she saw the look in her students  eyes.

And we began speaking of my daughter the annual funds manager at cooper Union. She made me tell them more about my daughter…. I told them of this little black girl just like them, who tried really hard. Who survived after losing not just her baby brother but her mother at 11 years old. Of how i raised my kids alone, poor but of how art and the exposure to the art world had changed all of our lives and opened doors to worlds that we didn't even know existed.

The questions began flying……….. i had them, we three teachers stood side by side and let it fly

We spoke of how different your life can be if you just take a chance on yourself

 

This wonderful Nigerian teacher, and I explained what a artist was.

We explained the beauty of making art and the freedom of  living the artist life.

The girls kept saying how pretty my daughter was, how lucky she was. I told them that we as a family made our own luck and took advantage of what the world had to offer. I told them that I could never have imagined how rich my life would become, of how i had to claw my way back into living, and of how art became my salvation

those kids got me preaching.

I told them  of how my daughter life got off to a hard start, but that we stayed strong as a family, we endured, and we flowered,

My daughter lives just down the street from this school in south orange

and these kids were amazed.

The teacher kept stressing how i was one of them, no different than their grandfathers or uncles

and they got it.

the questions came and came, the tears flowed  from some

and boy did we break through

after the lecture, several of the young men came up and asked me could they make art with me

how could they help

I had showed them pictures of the murals that i had done in the city of Newark, and the teachers, both asked me to come back to this school to make a mural.

We don't have any money, but the kids are really relating to you,

will you come back

yes i will

and yes we can

I found a new way to speak to young people today, a new way to reach kids that some times just

cant see the possibilities.

and its restored my soul

Before i left i heard jerry Gant again yelling in my ear document document…..

67a

so i took some more pictures ever though allot of the class had left…to join the protest

but…….. better late than never.

As i looked out over their young faces i saw the smiles and the promise…….

and I felt like a grandfather who had come home……..

many of the kids stayed behind to continue talking to me and asking for my number, and making me promise to come back

don't forget us

don't forget about us

7

At the end of the class ,I got together with these wonderful teachers,  and I promised that I would return and help them do a mural.

we want Obama on our walls……….But We don't have any money to pay you

I told them …………you already have paid me

and we will do a mural,

we will find the money and I will hook in my daughter, jerry and more, because you deserve it

The governor cut the school budget……..

But he cant stop us,

he wont stop us

Ever time i give one of these talks, I am restored.

This High school is in one of the roughest parts of Newark

But it is so full of promise

and these teacher care so much and do so much, regardless of what the governor thinks…………….these teachers deserve our support and respect.

and no

I wont forget……….any of them

and like Gen MacArthur said

I will return

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Posted in: Stuff Kevin Wrote

4/26/10

Wooster CollectiveGraffiti: A new series from DIY America.

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Graffiti: A new series from DIY America.
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Wooster CollectiveBig Hunting From Laguna in Almagro

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Big Hunting From Laguna in Almagro

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Booker Rising

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Arizona's Illegal Immigration Law: Bookerista Perspectives

I've got to give the side-eye to Rev. Al Sharpton for his statement at yesterday's protest rally against Arizona's tougher law, claiming that just as Freedom Riders battled segregation in the South in the 1960s, he would organize "freedom walkers" to challenge the Arizona law. So now criminals - illegal immigrants - are comparable to black citizens seeking equality?! Negro, please! I guess that the fact that illegal immigration impacts black unemployment and black access to services is of no concern to him. However, apparently many (probably most) blacks in Arizona like the new law. Anyway, bookeristas have mixed opinion about Arizona's new illegal immigration law:

Faye Anderson: "Raising Arizona"

Asserts the moderate-liberal blogger says it's about time a state cracked down on illegal immigration, but has some concerns about the law: "On Friday, Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer signed SB 1070, 'Support Our Law Enforcement and Safe Neighborhoods Act,” the toughest anti-illegal immigration bill in the country. The law will take effect in August. Arizona has an estimated 460,000 illegal immigrants. The law makes it a state crime to be in the country illegally. Police are required to question people about their immigration status where reasonable suspicion exists a person is in the country illegally. It is now a state crime for immigrants not to have in their possession an alien registration document. BTW, federal law requires that every alien over age 18 have in his personal possession at all times documentation such as a permanent resident card, aka 'green card,' that shows proof of legal residency in the United States."
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Dorothy Height, godmother of the civil rights movement, dies at 98

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Dorothy Height, godmother of the civil rights movement, dies at 98

By Ronda Racha Penrice

7:34 AM on 04/20/2010

Read More: Civil Rights Movement, Dorothy Height, National Council of Negro Women, Women

Dorothy Height, godmother of the civil rights movement, dies at 98

African American leaders after a meeting with Mayor Wagner, June 4, 1965 in New York. From left: Morris Dosewell, American Labor Council; Dorothy Height, National Committee Negro Women; Alexander Allen, Urban League; Basil Paterson, NAACP and Bayard Rustin, director of the Philips Randolph Institute. (AP Photo)

Dorothy Height, a legend in civil rights leadership, died of natural causes this morning at Howard University Hospital, a spokesperson for the hospital confirmed. She was 98 years old.

"I am deeply saddened by the passing today of my dear frien
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Immigration fight could pit black against brown

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Immigration fight could pit black against brown

By Dr. Boyce Watkins

8:32 AM on 04/26/2010

Read More: Arizona, Crime, Discrimination, Immigration, Jobs, Law, Racial Profiling

Immigration fight could pit black against brown


Victor Magill, 15, of Phoenix, paints a sign in protest of immigration bill SB1070 Saturday, April 24, 2010 at the Capitol in Phoenix a day after Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer signed the bill into law.

Sometimes you find the greatest wisdom from the most unlikely sources. Years ago, I was getting my hair cut by a barber who considered himself to be the expert on all things socio-political. His sensitivity to the issues became especially heightened when I came in for a visit, since he knew that I had a bit of a platform to share my ideas. On the topic of immigration, he cited the manner by which many Americans describe immigrants, especially undocumented residents from Mexico. Many Americans, in jokes and emails, describe Hispanic immigrants as uncivilized, odd, and even less than human. The barber summed it up nicely when he said, "They've become the new niggers of America."

I agreed with his wisdom, especially since he cut my hair for free. What is sadly true in America is that our nation's reaction to those who are different from our selves is one that is laced with fear, snobbery and malevolent intent. That is the foundation of the new immigration law in Arizona.

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Rebbie Jackson reveals how Michael's kids are doing

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Rebbie Jackson reveals how Michael's kids are doing

By Justen Blaize

3:50 PM on 04/22/2010

Read More: Blanket, Children, Michael Jackson, Paris, Prince Michael, Rebbie Jackson

Rebbie Jackson reveals how Michael's kids are doing

In an interview with The Today Show's Matt Lauer, Rebbie Jackson, older sister to Michael Jackson, discuses the difficulty of dealing with her brother's death. For her, after the passing of her brother it has been difficult for her to function on her day-to-day tasks. With him the superstar that he is, after his death his music was all over the radio and that hasn't made it any easier for her.

"Right after he passed it was so hard. Everywhere you turned, everywhere you went, and I remember I went to a store to buy a light for my dinning room and they started playing his music and I was talking to the gentleman that I was buying the light from and I just started crying and I had to leave..."

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Black Arizonans on the fence about immigration law

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Black Arizonans on the fence about immigration law

By Todd Johnson

5:58 PM on 04/26/2010

Read More: Arizona, Illegal Immigrant, Immigration, Mexico, Racial Profiling

Black Arizonans on the fence about immigration law

Pastor Warren Stewart Sr. addresses the crowd at a rally at the Arizona Capitol in Phoenix Tuesday, April 20, 2010. (AP Photos/Amanda Lee Myers)

PHOENIX, AZ -- On Sundays, Pastor Warren Stewart of the First Institutional Baptist Church can usually expect to hear a chorus of 'amens' when he's delivering his sermon.

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Art review: Dorothy Iannone at Peres Projects | Culture Monster | Los Angeles Times

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400.DI8758-Welome To My Art-1983 Since the mid-1960s, Dorothy Iannone has depicted female sexuality as a force to be reckoned with. Her frank, colorful explorations of sex, love and desire are painted in a naive, graphic style, often accompanied by decorative patterns and handwritten narratives. Although laced with undercurrents of pain and tension that inevitably accompany such subject matter, they are for the most part ecstatic, delightfully direct celebrations of women’s sexual power.

A contemporary of early feminist artists such as Judy Chicago and Sylvia Sleigh who sought to counter sexism with a distinctly feminine aesthetic, Iannone has charted a different path. Her work is deeply personal and unmistakably feminine yet seems blissfully unconcerned with dismantling the trappings of patriarchy. Rather, in her world, women and men are both governed by the dictates of erotic passion.
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IPhone blogger says home searched by sheriff’s deputies - latimes.com

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Gizmodo iPhone blogger says home searched by sheriff’s deputies

Jason Chen, who had posted extensive information about a lost iPhone prototype, says San Mateo County sheriff’s deputies broke into his home Friday night. Gizmodo says they seized two dozen pieces of equipment.

la-fi-chen

Jason Chen's Gizmodo post with photos and a description of an alleged iPhone prototype became one of the site's most popular ever. Gizmodo contends that the warrant for the search of Chen's home was invalid because of legal protections for journalists. (April 25, 2010)

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Despite widespread claims, little proof for brain supplements - CNN.com

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Despite widespread claims, little proof for brain supplements

By Elizabeth Landau, CNN
April 26, 2010 8:20 a.m. EDT
In theory, fish oil could help cognition because it's rich in  omega-3 fatty acids.
In theory, fish oil could help cognition because it's rich in omega-3 fatty acids.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • As many as 2.4 million to 4.5 million Americans have Alzheimer's disease
  • New study found no cognitive benefit in fish oil; it also found no harm
  • People with bleeding problems should not take vitamin E
  • Always consult your doctor to find out what supplements are right for you
RELATED TOPICS
  • Alzheimer's Disease
  • Dementia
  • Diet and Nutrition
  • Geriatric Medicine

(CNN) -- In the fight against memory loss, nothing is certain, doctors say.

A seemingly steady stream of new research purports to show supplements' and vitamins' promise in preventing or slowing cognitive decline, but in reality no hard evidence supports taking any of them. At the same time, such supplements have been proved safe, barring drug interactions and other complications, so some doctors recommend trying them anyway.

With millions of aging Americans experiencing a decrease in cognitive function, the need for a natural prevention method is obvious.

As many as 2.4 million to 4.5 million Americans
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What we do matters more than labels - CNN.com

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What we do matters more than labels

By Anousheh Ansari, Special to CNN
April 26, 2010 4:06 p.m. EDT
tzleft.ansari_anousheh.jpg
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Anousheh Ansari: When I saw the world from space, human divisions didn't appear
  • She says people continually label each other, dividing the world
  • She says what people do is far more significant than how they're labeled

Editor's note: Anousheh Ansari is the first female commercial space flight participant and the first Muslim woman to travel to space. The co-founder and former CEO of Telecom Technologies, she also co-founded and heads Prodea Systems, a global consumer services company connecting people and technology, as well as the Ahoora Foundation, a nonprofit organization that enables social entrepreneurship. She is also the author of "My Dream of Stars: From Daughter of Iran to Space Pioneer," published by Palgrave Macmillan.

Who am I? That's the question that we ask ourselves from our early cognitive years to the day we die. The answer changes as we grow and live our lives, but we never stop asking the question.

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State's new immigration law worries Arizona soldier - CNN.com

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State's new immigration law worries Arizona soldier

By Paul Vercammen and Thelma Gutierrez, CNN
April 26, 2010 8:45 p.m. EDT
Click to play
Immigrant soldier reacts to Arizona law
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Pfc. Jose Medina expressed his concern over Arizona's new immigration law
  • Medina's friends and family talked about new law during his farewell feast
  • Medina wondered if some of his undocumented friends, family would leave the area

Phoenix, Arizona (CNN) -- At a vigil protesting the passage of Arizona's tough new illegal immigration law, a young man in Army fatigues and a beret lit a candle at a makeshift shrine.

Pfc. Jose Medina, an Army medic, came to the Arizona capitol while on leave, to express his sadness over the law, signed by Arizona's governor on Friday.

"I'm here because this is something that's close to my heart," said Medina. "I went off to protect this country, to protect my family. That's what hurts."

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Enemy Lurks in Briefings on Afghan War - PowerPoint - NYTimes.com

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We Have Met the Enemy and He Is PowerPoint

A PowerPoint diagram meant to portray the complexity of American strategy in Afghanistan certainly succeeded in that aim.

  • Read All Comments (8) »

“When we understand that slide, we’ll have won the war,” General McChrystal dryly remarked, one of his advisers recalled, as the room erupted in laughter.

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Privilege Pulls Qatar Toward Unhealthy Choices - NYTimes.com

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Privilege Pulls Qatar Toward Unhealthy Choices

Shawn Baldwin for The New York Times

Qataris eating fast food in Doha. According to the International Association for the Study of Obesity, Qatar ranks sixth globally for prevalence of obesity.

By MICHAEL SLACKMAN

It has the second highest per capita gross domestic product in the world and the third largest proven reserves of natural gas. But it also ranks high in some less enviable categories, having among the greatest prevalence of obesity, diabetes and genetic disorders in the world, according to international and local health experts.

Native Qataris, who number only about 250,000 in a nation of 1.6 million, are suffering serious health problems that relate directly to a privileged lifestyle paid for with the nation’s oil wealth, as well as a determination to hold onto social traditions, like having young people marry their cousins.

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What the hell is happening to America and please Black America, don’t buy into the non-sense. Arizona, immigration and my people

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3a

I made my rounds today, picking up materials for a piece of art work that I am doing. In the process as usual, I ran my mouth along the way.

I spoke to probably ten people, including a group of black folks that I know standing in front of my friend’s liquor store.

They were discussing stuff as usual, including the new immigration bill.

Many of them, most of them were saying that the bill is a good thing, send everyone back to Mexico.

They are taking our jobs.

I about lost what was left of my mind.

I snapped sorry.

You are fools, when our grandfathers grew up, when our relatives grew up

A common retrain that I even heard in my life, was "why don’t you go back to Africa".

How dare you support a bill that is inherently racist and immoral? That oppresses poor people who desire nothing more than bettering their lives.

How dare you

Arizona’s Effort to Bolster Local Immigration Authority Divides Law Enforcement

Members of the Law Enforcement Engagement Initiative, a group of police leaders pressing for a federal overhaul of immigration law, said they worried that other states would copy Arizona, despite the likelihood that the law will be challenged in federal court.

“Just because it is in Arizona doesn’t mean it’s likely to remain there,” said George Gascón, the chief of the San Francisco Police Department and a former chief in Mesa, a Phoenix suburb. “We are very concerned about what could happen to public safety.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/22/us/22immig.html

What the hell is wrong with black people?

We are becoming more conservative than those crazy right wingers

Those people

Those brown people in Arizona are my brothers and sisters

And if I were there……….

I be out in the streets singing my old slave songs and we shall over come

How dare you

Don’t you realize that if states were allowed to make their own laws that you probably wouldn’t be able to vote in certain parts of this country today?

That you still be sitting in the back of the bus

Why should these people be oppressed, when you know that business brought them into this country to exploit them and pay them substandard wages.

The are just following the exploitative jobs that big business made for them,

So they could pay them nothing and make a lot of money

I was talking so fast that I couldn’t breath

I can’t take this foolishness any more

And thank God that Al sharpton has the good sense to be behind these oppressed people and to put his money where his mouth is

Black folks, know the ropes better than any one, should be standing shoulder to shoulder with our brown brothers.

Not bitching about what we don’t have, if we don’t have it then it’s our fault

We have a black president now and our excuses are over

And by the way don’t start harassing Obama telling him to make a lot of new programs, that are a waste of money and time……..We knew the drill, we have to fix our own mess on the grass roots level,

Where was I

Get our there and help our fellow brown people

And maybe in the process we can be restored to the things we have forgotten.

Like family and church and the community

And while we are at it

How long do you think it would take before some one black is affected by this law?

What about Africans and Haitians, and Indians,

What about the other states I cant even imagine what some states might do after this……it’s a open door to hell……………

Fools fools

And while we are at it

And don’t just stop with people of color

Oppression is oppression and pain is pain

I watched that memorial service for the coal miners with the president

And it broke my heart

And when that country and western singer sang that song

I could feel every word he was singing

Yes that country and western song was rocking

And if you couldn’t understand its beauty

If you couldn’t feel the pain in that song as much as you could

In a Billy Holiday tune…………………

Then you are missing out on so much

If you can’t see that poor is poor and that even if that even if those coal miners

Don’t get you

You should get them…………….

Fools

You can’t be for black rights if you aren’t for brown rights

You can’t be for black rights if you aren’t for woman’s rights, and gay rights

And the rights of the oppressed around the world

And while we are at it,

You can’t love people if you don’t care about the planet

Black people, grow up

And remember

I have got to pull out the Rev. Doctor

King wanted freedom and help for all people

All people

That’s what we shall over come……………. means

We the people of the world

I left, out of breath

And hoping that I was heard

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Posted in: Stuff Kevin Wrote

4/25/10

North Korea Appears to Tap Leader’s Son as Enigmatic Heir - NYTimes.com

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ganda coming from North Korea: they show the supreme leader, Kim Jong-il, touring a steel plant in a fur cap and his trademark sunglasses.
Enlarge This Image
Korean Central News Agency, via European Pressphoto Agency

A North Korean photo released in March shows the North's leader, Kim Jong-il, right, with a man said to be Kim Jong-un, his son and presumed heir, at possibly his first public event.

Related

  • Tensions Rise Between the Koreas as Ship Is Raised (April 25, 2010)
It is the pudgy but stern-faced young man next to him, dressed in a snappy Western suit and dutifully scribbling in a notebook, who has spurred intense speculation. Could this unidentified man be just a plant manager? Or could this be the first public appearance of Kim Jong-un, the North Korean leader’s t
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Installation "there is a Ill wind ablowing across america by kevin Blythe Sampson

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ABOUT ME:

I am a child of the civil rights movement, a Widower who raised two kids.. A working Artist with a Gallery In NY. I am also a retired Police officer (Composite Sketch Artist) who has taught in the inner city for over 30 years.

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My Father Stephen Sampson

My Father Stephen Sampson
circa 1966

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