Tuesday, August 18, 2009
Big Gipp Speaks on Goodie Mob Reunion
Cant wait for this!
The Goodie Mob Reunion Show is September 19th at the Masquerade. Get your ticket here before they sell out: http://www.ticketmaster.com/Goodie-Mob-tickets/artist/777709
Make Up Your Mind!
A television station reported today that Favre boarded a plane this morning at the Hattiesburg Laurel Regional Airport. The plane was headed for St. Paul. Sources said Favre boarded by himself and commented, "We may know something by dinner."
Favre is expected to land in the Twin Cities around 11.
Sneaker Lunchbox
KAWS x Complex Mag
Complex Magazine profiled 34-year-old, Brooklyn-based artist Brian Donnelly, A.K.A. KAWS for their August/September Style & Design issue.
Click here for the online interview http://www.complex.com/CELEBRITIES/shotcaller/KAWS
Mishka x Mad Decent New Era
Bape x G-Shock
UK's Hidden Gem
Now it looks like the UK staff might have found another hidden gem in sophomore Danny Trevathan.
Freshman Makes Good Impression
Despite all that depth and experience on the o-line, Warford not only has emerged as a candidate to play as a true freshman, he's also pushing Johnson and sophomore Stuart Hines at the guard positions.
UK Coach Rich Brooks said he's always thought that if a freshman was good enough to play, go ahead and play him.
"It's not a matter of need," Brooks said. "It's a matter of performance. I'm going to play the best players. I don't care what year they are. Physically, he's as good as we have. He's enormous with great feet, and he's pass-blocking better than some of the veterans right now."
http://www.kentucky.com/kentuckysports/football/story/898823.html for more on this story..CANT WAIT FOT THE SEASON TO START!
Schools Employee Faces Drug Trafficking Charges
Julie Buchanan, 30, has been charged with two counts of trafficking a controlled substance. She is a staff member at Bourbon Central Elementary School's after-school program.
Dirty Money
U.S. currency gets whisked into ATMs, clutched, touched and traded perhaps thousands of times at coffee shops, convenience stores and newsstands. And every touch to every bill brings specks of dirt, food, germs or even drug residue. Research presented this weekend reinforced previous findings that 90 percent of paper money circulating in U.S. cities contains traces of cocaine."When I was a young kid, my mom told me the dirtiest thing in the world is money," said the researcher, Yuegang Zuo, professor of chemistry and biochemistry at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth. "Mom is always right."Scientists say the amount of cocaine found on bills is not enough to cause health risks.Money can be contaminated with cocaine during drug deals or if a user snorts with a bill. But not all bills are involved in drug use; they can get contaminated inside currency-counting machines at the bank.
Compared with currency from Brazil, Canada, China and Japan, U.S. bills had the highest percentage of cocaine, with 90 percent of 234 bank notes contaminated. Canada followed with 85 percent and Brazil with 80 percent. China and Japan had the lowest, with 20 and 12 percent respectively.
I guess there really aint no money like drug money!