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POW…MR VEGAS NEW TUNE

Lyrics

INTRO. HORNS SECTION FROM HARRY TODLER “BAD MAN NUH DRESS LIKE GIRL”
CHO
AS A MAN YUH HAFFI KNOW CERTAIN LAW, HIPSTERS AND BELLY SKIN A NUH FI GANGSTA
AS A MAN YUH HAFFI KNOW CERTAIN LAW, WEAVE ON AND FALSE HAIR A FI LADY SAW
AS A MAN YUH HAFFI KNOW CERTAIN LAW, YUH CAAN GET YUH LIQUOR AND A DRINK OUTTA STRAW
EVERY GANGSTA WEH KNOW BOUT THE LAW, IF YUH NEVER WEAR A PANTY SWEAR TO JAH JAH
VERSE
WELL MI SAY HAND UP, FROM YUH KNOW SAY YUH LIFE STYLE, IT NUH WRONG UP
FROM YUH SWITCH YUH CAAN COME BOUT YAH COME DON UP
WI NUH ACT GIRLIE THIS A BADMAN STAND UP
THIS YAH ONE YAH HOT, DUTTY TUN THE DOLLAR VAN UP
MAN A TUGGY TUGGY CAUSE MAN NUFFI PRETTY
SOME MAN A WEAR GAL CLOTHES AND LOOK LIKE NICKI
THE BLOUSE DEM SELL OUT A JC PENNY
AND THE GIRLS DEM NEVA GET ANY {SING}
{HORNS}
CHORUS
VERSE 2ND
SO WHY YOU DOING IT, TELL ME WHY YOU DOING IT
YUH FATHER GROW YUH GOOD SO TELL MI WHY YUH DOING IT
SO WHY YOU DOING IT,TELL ME WHY YOU DOING IT
THE GAL CLOTHES IT LOOK LIKE YUH PLAY 2 IN IT
WELL YUH KNOW SAY YUH CAAN COME A Q WID IT
MI HAVE A FIRE YAH FI BUN ALL YUH CREW WID IT
DIAMOND TELL MI SAY YUH GONE LUU WID IT
ENNIS TELL MI SAY YUH MUSS GET SLEW WID IT
[HORNS]
CHORUS

HAIR TEEFIN??

Costly Hairstyle Is a Beauty Trend That Draws Thieves’ Notice

Michael Stravato for The New York Times

“Whoever did it knew exactly what they wanted,” said Lisa Amosu, whose salon was burglarized.

By 
Published: May 16, 2011

The thieves pulled the iron bars out of the windows, outsmarted the motion detector that would have triggered a burglar alarm and did not give the safe or cash register a second look.

Michael Stravato for The New York Times

Lisa Amosu, a Houston salon owner, gluing hair onto a client. She valued human hair recently taken from the salon at $150,000.

Readers’ Comments

Instead they went straight for what was most valuable: human hair. By the time the bandits at the My Trendy Place salon in Houston were finished, they had stolen $150,000 worth of the shop’s most prized type, used for silky extensions.

The break-in was part of a recent trend of thefts, some involving violence, of a seemingly plentiful material. During the past two months alone, robbers in quest of human hair have killed a beauty shop supplier in Michigan and carried out heists nationwide in which they have made off with tens of thousands of dollars of hair at a time.

“I heard about it from a couple of different supply companies and customers who said: ‘Guard your inventory. There’s a rash of this going on,’ ” said Lisa Amosu, the owner of My Trendy Place. “Whoever did it knew exactly what they wanted. They didn’t even bother with the synthetic hair.”

Once stolen, the hair is typically sold on the street or on the Internet, including eBay, shop owners and the police say.

The most expensive hair type — and the one in highest demand by thieves and paying customers alike — is remy hair, which unlike most other varieties is sold with its outermost cuticle layer intact. This allows it to look more natural and to last longer without tangling. Remy hair from Indian women is the most popular.

But remy hair extensions can cost as much as $200 per package and the average person requires at least two packages. Hundreds of dollars more, and at times thousands, are spent at hair salons to have the extensions attached, often by sewing.

In addition to the $150,000 Houston robbery this month, thieves have recently taken $10,000 in hair from a San Diego shop; $85,000 from a business in Missouri City, Tex.; $10,000 from a shop in Dearborn, Mich.; and $60,000 from a business in San Leandro, Calif. All the values were provided by the storeowners.

Law enforcement officials have been perplexed by the sudden increase in the thefts of hair and the violence that has accompanied some. Some agencies say they had been unaware of the trend before, and others are still learning about it.

“That’s the first I’ve heard of it,” said Denise Ballew, a spokeswoman for the F.B.I., who oversees data related to property crimes.

One indication of how quickly the focus of some thieves has shifted to high-end hair is the experience of the Beauty One hair supply store in Chicago: two years ago, thieves went after the store’s cash, but last month, they bypassed the register altogether and took just the hair, which was valued at $90,000.

Detective Vito Ferro of the Chicago Police Department, who is investigating the April 24 robbery, said some recent hair thefts in the city appeared to be the work of people sophisticated enough to have taken custom orders.

“It’s like someone says, ‘I’m looking for a 1992 Cadillac Eldorado,’ and so you go out looking for that car,” Detective Ferro said.

Surveillance cameras outside the Beauty One shop showed bandits using a crowbar and sledgehammer to pry open dead bolts and then loading boxes of hair into a van.

In recent weeks, packages of hair that may have sold for $80 or $100 retail have sold for as little as $25 out of car trunks in the Bay Area, Los Angeles, Philadelphia and Houston, the authorities said. Hair can be sold at the same types of beauty salons and supply shops that are being robbed.

“They’re selling it to stylists who work out of their house, they’re selling it on the street, they’re selling it out of the car,” said Ms. Amosu of My Trendy Place. “People who don’t want to pay the prices will buy it from the hustle man. It’s like the bootleg DVDs and the fake purses. But this is a quality product.”

Costly Hairstyle Is a Beauty Trend That Draws Thieves’ Notice

Published: May 16, 2011

(Page 2 of 2)

 

 

Not long ago, hip-hop songs and black comedians belittled women who wore extensions and weaves. No longer. It is a style grown in popularity that transcends race and celebrity adherence. The market for human hair also includes cancer patients.

Michael Stravato for The New York Times

In a video made by a store security camera, one of the thieves can be seen crawling on the floor to avoid motion detectors.

Readers’ Comments

Prices have risen substantially as the quality of hair and the rarity of the most popular hair has increased. Remy hair from India usually comes from women who have their heads shaved as a sign of having mastered their egos.

Neal Lester, an English professor at Arizona State University who has written on the race and gender politics of hair, said the growing demand for human hair extensions and the high prices had made thefts inevitable.

“It’s sort of a sign of the times,” Dr. Lester said. “Folks are being entrepreneurial, and weaves and hair extensions are expensive, so it’s not surprising that people sell hair the way they sell things on Canal Street, like knock-off purses.”

But with the increased profits has come violence, the police say.

In Dearborn, Mich., Jay Shin, the owner of Sunrise Beauty Supply, was killed during a holdup on March 15 by gunmen who stole 80 packages of hair extensions worth about $10,000. Two young men have been arrested.

Assaults have been reported even when only a small amount of hair is involved. In West Palm Beach, Fla., a 16-year-old girl sprayed a clerk with pepper spray last year as she made off with extensions. And in Lawton, Okla., the police said a customer who ran out of a store with extensions tried to escape with the store owner clinging to the hood of her car.

The threat of theft has prompted salons and beauty supply shops to hire security guards, install bulletproof glass partitions and even require patrons to show identification before they are allowed into back rooms to choose their hair.

But surveillance cameras and an expensive alarm system did not prevent thieves from snatching the inventory at Hair Divas Distributors, a beauty shop in San Leandro, Calif., that was robbed of $60,000 in hair last month.

Thieves skipped flat-screen televisions, a digital camera and the cash register, said Ann Davis, the owner. “They went for all my longer pieces, my most expensive stuff,” Ms. Davis said.

She said illegal hair was being sold everywhere, including by people who have come to her shop offering it to customers and by people who have tried to sell it to her on the street.

“ ‘Yo, I got some hair,’ ” Ms. Davis said, imitating the come-on.

“This is not O.K.,” she added. “I’m a little fearful.

 

MI SURE GOD NAH SLEEP!

Out of Politics and Closet, McGreevey Pursues Dream to Join Clergy

Matt Rainey for The New York Times

James E. McGreevey, who resigned as New Jersey’s governor in 2004, now works for Integrity House in Newark helping people deal with drug problems.

By 

NEWARK — The man once known as “robo-candidate” still acts like a campaigner in the thick of a close race. He does not enter rooms of people so much as plunge into them, hugging and hand-clasping his way from wall to wall. His smile is outsize, and almost as indelible as a campaign poster.

Related

Matt Rainey for The New York Times

After leading a group session, he was greeted by Eunice Berry of Jersey City, who was recently freed from jail. Mr. McGreevey wants to become an Episcopal minister.

In one sense, James E. McGreevey, the former New Jersey governor, is again campaigning for office: He hopes to be accepted as a candidate for the priesthood in the Episcopal Church, which has begun ordaining openly gay men and women. He has already earned a divinity degree, but his application to proceed with the next step, to become a postulant,was rejected in May 2010. He says he plans to keep trying, and his current work is a kind of test ground of his commitment.

Mr. McGreevey is the newest recovery specialist at a residential drug treatment center in Newark called Integrity House, and one recent morning he zigzagged buoyantly down the street, like the perennial political office-seeker he used to be. Everyone he saw received a holler, a handshake or a lingering moment of schmoozing.

Like a mantra, after each encounter he said, “Life is good!”

That simple declaration is, of course, remarkable for Mr. McGreevey, who resigned as governor of New Jersey in 2004 with an unforgettable speech — his wife by his side — announcing that he was “a gay American.” He had been married twice, had two children and had led a double life, including an affair with a man who precipitated the resignation, Mr. McGreevey said, by trying to blackmail him.

Mr. McGreevey, 53, is out of politics now, divorced from his second wife and living with a new partner, Mark O’Donnell, a business executive. Most of the people he greets at work these days are recovering addicts and prison parolees.

Neither he nor the Episcopal Diocese of Newark would discuss the status of his application for the priesthood. But two people told about the process said that a diocesan committee, after reviewing his qualifications, concluded that too little time had passed since Mr. McGreevey’s dramatic life changes — from secretly to openly gay, from Roman Catholic to Episcopalian, from politician to aspiring clergyman — for anyone, including him, to know if he was ready to be a priest.

Delays in the path to Episcopal ordination are not unusual, and Mr. McGreevey said in an interview that he hoped over time to demonstrate to the diocese that his calling was real. He expects eventually to again seek the church’s approval to begin ordination training, which takes two to four years.

His decision to seek a career in Episcopal ministry came, he says, in the dark days after his resignation. He sought comfort in Catholicism, the faith of his childhood, but at the same time sensed that his previously closeted existence, and what he calls “the total mess of my life,” was at least partly caused by Catholic teaching that condemns homosexual behavior as sinful. The man who once admitted to having sold his soul to his ambition (his own phrase) decided that his true calling was to minister to people he knew best, from personal experience: people who hated themselves.

“I realized that my truest passion was for helping people change through faith in a higher power,” he said. “That meant, for me, belonging to the church. Using my abilities to bring Christian doctrine to a postmodern world.”

He has pursued that idea with the same single-mindedness that propelled him in a decade from a small-town mayoralty to the governorship. After graduating last year with a master of divinity degree from General Theological Seminary of the Episcopal Church in Manhattan, which says a significant number of its students and staff members are gay or lesbian, he started his job at Integrity House.

“He has such internal drive,” said David H. Kerr, director and founder of Integrity House. “He pursues people who most would consider unreachable. Jim reaches them somehow.”

After leaving office, Mr. McGreevey followed the well-worn path of many people, famous and not, who take a big fall and live to tell about it.

He had what he calls a “nervous breakdown.” He entered rehab. He began to tally the cruelties he had committed against his wives and others. He penned a tell-all autobiography, “The Confession,” in which he confessed to many things, including a lifelong addiction to “having a public,” and described his new ambition as attaining “a life organized in harmony with my heart.”

This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: May 18, 2011

 

An article on Tuesday about a desire by James E. McGreevey, the former New Jersey governor, to be accepted as a candidate for the priesthood in the Episcopal Church misstated the timing of the rejection of his application to become a postulant, the next step following his graduation from divinity school. It was in May 2010, not last month.

 

BAM!

TEEFIN ROSHAWN SHAW

Credit card fraudster pleads guilty

A Jamaican man said to be a major player in an international credit card racket, pleaded guilty on Monday when he appeared before the Corporate Area Criminal Court.

Twenty-nine-year-old Roshan Shaw is to be sentenced on Tuesday, on six counts of money laundering and conspiracy to defraud.

Mr. Shaw, who has been in and out of prison over the past couple of years on credit card racket and cyber crimes charges, was arrested earlier this month during a major investigation launched by the US Department of Homeland Security and the Organised Crime Investigation Division (OCID).

US Homeland Security personnel, who flew into the island on May 2, assisted the local police to execute a warrant and conduct a search of Mr. Shaw’s Green Acres residence in Spanish Town, St. Catherine.

The cops seized from him a fraudulent credit card issued by Chase Bank of America.

The investigators reported that since November last year, Mr. Shaw used the fraudulent US credit card to purchase items over the internet, valued at US$21,855 from the US company, Florida Builders Appliance.

Items seized at his house include a sub-zero refrigerator valued at US$9,540; a Viking Professional six burner stove valued at US$9,500; one Bosch dishwasher, and a Whirlpool washer and dryer.

The cops say the items were shipped to Jamaica by the Florida-based company to Mr. Shaw.

 

 

MURDAH PAN DI BOOKS

Cross Keys Student Killed At School

Ralph Nelson, principal of Cross Keys High, yesterday said his school is “violence-prone” and does not have the necessary resources to deal with the indiscipline.

Nelson’s comments came amid the backdrop of the killing of one student by one of three schoolmates who attacked and stabbed him on the school grounds yesterday.

The principal said many of the students come from the “volatile communities of Mandeville” and are rejected by the schools in the town, which are closer to their homes, because they are “violent and undisciplined”.

Commenting on the killing yesterday, Nelson said the boys, who are from New Green district, two miles north of Mandeville, had a dispute in their community the day before. He said during the lunch period, 16-year-old Haig Williams was attacked by three other students, one of whom used a knife to stab him. Williams died while being treated at hospital.

Nelson told The Gleaner that “the writing was on the wall” for quite a while that such an incident was likely to take place at the school.

At the same time, a parent told The Gleaner that two weeks ago, her son had to be locked away in the school’s tuck shop before being rescued by the police. She said an 18-year-old boy wanted to hurt him.

 

 

DIRTY…IT

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