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...weren't going into this to discuss the material realities of gang culture, although there is a lot of overlap between it and hip-hop," he added...

Author: By Rodrigo Cruz, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Purported Discussion On Asian Gangs Provokes Cultural Debate | 3/17/1998 | See Source »

...understand the purpose of this discussion," said one participant, who asked to remain anonymous. "In fact, I'm kind of offended that hip-hop culture was associated with gang culture...

Author: By Rodrigo Cruz, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Purported Discussion On Asian Gangs Provokes Cultural Debate | 3/17/1998 | See Source »

WASHINGTON: On the Internet, Goliath crushed David. But when Bill Gates went head-to-head with Netscape CEO Jim Barksdale before the Senate Judiciary Committee, the little guy -- aided by a gang of sympatico senators -- was finally able to get a slingshot in. Kicking off the hearings in a basketball-court-sized room, Sen. Orrin Hatch called for a fair fight. "Neither this hearing, nor any aspect of this committee's inquiry, are intended to serve as an arena for attacking any single company," he said...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Barbarians at the Gates | 3/3/1998 | See Source »

Saddam Hussein is simple. Villains are often simple. Alone in the desert, thumbing his nose at the world. Armed, dangerous, easy to hate. But so hard to catch. Why? In the westerns, the hero rode alone. The villains always had a gang. Think Gary Cooper. High Noon (1952). The hero always won. In international politics, though, that elegance disappears. Too many cooks? Try too many allies. The common enemy suddenly gets complicated. The Third Man (1949) knows this. A film noir with real profundity, the movie is home to one of moviedom's great villains: Harry Lime. Yet Orson Welles...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Third Potato | 2/27/1998 | See Source »

...debate rages on. Is "90210" as kitsch and cliche was some partisans claim, will the trashy plots of "Melrose" doom it to the TV junk heap, and can Bailey and the gang provide enough melodrama to sustain Harvard's "`Party' parties?" Only time will tell...

Author: By Shara R. Kay, | Title: The Nighttime Drama Debate | 2/26/1998 | See Source »

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