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...also picked up a first name, in place of the M. “I just wanted to have a first name like all the other kids,” he says. Doughty laughs about the significance of these changes. “Stopped shooting dope, have a first name,” he jokes, “your basic rites of passage.” In his mind, he says he’s still the same guy, but his music appears to be changing...

Author: By Matthew S. Rozen, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Doughty Likes It Warm and Fuzzy | 2/15/2002 | See Source »

Crisis is averted and the once-belligerent trooper’s mood mellows, perhaps as the prospect of a racial profiling suit enters his mind. A moment later, the trooper returns to the Mercedes—with the straight dope from Jesse that we are to take the car once around the block...

Author: By Lauren R. Dorgan and David H. Gellis, CRIMSON STAFF WRITERSS | Title: Ride Wit' Me | 2/7/2002 | See Source »

President Bush, in his wisdom, wants to improve schools by making them accountable. He's doing this in the same way you might make your dope-smoking teen daughter accountable: testing her all the time. Let's leave aside for the moment questions of whether testing really helps, whether schools just end up teaching how to do a test, or whether schools can actually get appropriate testing programs ready on time. Let's turn instead to the underexplored question of what effect the testing will have on parents...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Mom at Work: When Exams Test Parents | 1/29/2002 | See Source »

...ring in Maputo, Smith floats like Ali. He backs into the ropes, practicing his now famous rope-a-dope. Punches slam into his thick torso and off his protector-covered head. "He's made himself into a boxer," says Mann. "We box. We don't do stuntmen. We don't do false punches...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Making "Ali:" Will Smith Inhabits the Role | 12/15/2001 | See Source »

...M.C.s (the guys with the microphones) -- Kit, Yan, Phat and Wah -- rap about fat girls, absent fathers, uncool triad gangsters, smoking dope and creating an authentic, home-grown pop culture. "So many kids in Hong Kong try to imitate the Japanese," says Yan, sitting in the LMF band room, meticulously rolling a Rizla cigarette paper around a line of weed. "It's not about nationalism or anything," he insists, "but no one should want to be a fake Japanese person." The group rarely uses English in their songs and resent accusations that they're just copying American hip-hop fashions...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hip-Hop Goes Canto | 10/15/2001 | See Source »

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