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Bakari Kitwana, hip-hop expert and former editor of The Source, came to Nazareth College last fall and announced hip-hop is becoming a political movement. I was more than a bit skeptical. It's a seductive idea --- tethering good causes to pop-culture phenoms --- but does it work?
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Most people who see Arthur Miller's masterpiece Death of A Salesman feel that they know a Willy Loman in real life, though each knows a different Willy Loman. That great character is so richly conceived that he seems painfully real and right, even in completely varied castings.
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A SUNY Geneseo student by day and a mentor by weekend, Adam Devitt watches movies, eats burgers, goes swimming, and plays arcade games with a second-grader named Skyler (both pictured). Last year, they spent one Saturday hiking through Stony Brook Park, and another at a Halloween party where Skyler picked up a prize for best
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The first car is just a warning, but the cop means business. The garage-employee vehicle cruised by, blasted a rude reveille, and moved on --- a signal to the sleeping men that it's time to hit the road.
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Amid a swirl of popular images --- The L Word on many lips, queer eyes locking onto straight guys, Rosie not finding but proclaiming her heart in San Francisco --- gay and lesbian issues are all over the map. But the top gay
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It's no secret that mothering young children can be isolating, exhausting, and demoralizing. Mothers have been (guiltily) exploring these feelings since the women's movement first shed light on them decades ago. And for all the advances women have made since the feminist
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Amendment would deny rights Supporters of President George Bush's proposal for a constitutional amendment banning gay marriages should carefully consider the full ramifications of that proposal --- if they also support the freedom of religion safeguarded by our Constitutional Bill of Rights. While there are
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"'Resurrected eyesore in Henrietta,' yeah, say that," Mike Infantino tells me. Infantino's Market Restaurant now occupies the former Friendly's on East Henrietta Road, which stood empty for a couple of years. It did surprisingly well on Mushroom Boulevard for nine years before the move --- "A dead-end street!" Infantino interjects, "And we had waiting lines!
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A recent City article has created understandable concern among readers and non-profit organizations. In our cover article "Need to Feed," published February 18 and placed on our website that week, we included several quotes containing false statements and unfair accusations about local non-profit
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The US Labor Department might soon have to create a public service announcement for pro sports. It would warn of the disastrous economic impact that could occur when teams purposely play a procrastinating, chew-up-the-clock style of offense. The ad would be based
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After 40 years, we should all be ready to forgive and, ah, remember. But Robert S. McNamara probably never will win this critic's heart or mind. And Errol Morris's polished documentary, even with the dual bonus of an Oscar and Philip Glass's primordially
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A child is left alone for the weekend in a grand apartment with only the servants to pester in The Fallen Idol (1948). The film could probably coast along entirely on the banter between the young boy, Phillipe, and Baines the butler, or by following Phillipe about on the miscellaneous adventures he busies himself with,
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You can romanticize all you want, but the blues has been gentrified. It's been homogenized and castrated. Hell, it's for everybody now. It's practically Disney in some parts. That is unless you travel deep, deep into the Delta. There're cats down there that
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Same-sex marriage has become an issue, at least for the moment, in the presidential campaign. We may never know what George Bush, John Edwards, and John Kerry really think: The topic is so emotional that its mere mention forces a political stance. Attitudes
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Does art have to have meaning? Does it need to be spiritually uplifting, morally challenging, and politically provocative? Does art have to have a purpose? It's an age-old debate, but a new exhibition at the Memorial Art Gallery, highlighting the work of American sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens, offers a response to the schism between beautiful
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It will not be a pretty campaign. President Bush is already seeing to that. And the people who analyze this stuff say the election will be decided by 8 to 10 percent of voters --- the folks who haven't already lined up ardently behind Bush or Kerry.
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You might be forgiven for thinking, from the posters, that the titular hero of Hidalgo is played by Viggo Mortensen (Lord of the Rings). But Hidalgo is a mustang. The marketing folks at Disney can't seem to decide between pushing Viggo, a sudden commodity, or the horse, not coincidentally possessor of the second-worst horse name
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Runoff voting Ralph Nader may have cost Gore the 2000 presidential election. Nader's candidacy in 2004 underscores the need for Instant Runoff Voting. In IRV, voters rank the candidates when there are more than two. If one candidate is first choice of most voters,
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The Suicide Girls have brought bump 'n' grind one step closer to rock 'n' roll. Pushing the standards of traditional burlesque and augmenting it with punk rock, this troupe of punk pop tarts stripped and teased and copped heaps of attitude to a capacity crowd at Buffalo's Soundlab two weeks ago. Black electrical tape pasties,
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Change the present A friend sent us a copy of the February 10 City article on the revelations of Nathaniel Rochester's activities as a slave trader. It is appropriate that a complete history of significant people of the past should be made known.