HANOVER, Pa. – Pac-Man keeps popping up.
His yellow face is on a Nintendo Entertainment System cartridgefor sale at TownMall of Westminster.
The ghosts he chases are decaled on an arcade room wall at theNorth Hanover Mall in Hanover, Pa.
HANOVER, Pa. – Pac-Man keeps popping up.
His yellow face is on a Nintendo Entertainment System cartridgefor sale at TownMall of Westminster.
The ghosts he chases are decaled on an arcade room wall at theNorth Hanover Mall in Hanover, Pa.
By Jeff Rosenthal November 4, 2011 11:20 AM ET
Young Jeezy attends his listening party at Quad Studios in new York. Johnny Nunez/WireImage
Young Jeezy walked into the lounge of Quad Studios in Manhattan, the black-on-black cover to his new album TM103: Hustlaz Ambition (out December 20th) posted on an easel in the corner, low key. The room was small, dark and smelled vaguely of vanilla-scented candles. Def Jam staffers greeted writers, and Irv Gotti (who is very publicly lobbying to be president of the label) walked in with a winter cap and a smile, shook hands and then left. It was a friendly atmosphere, and Jeezy seemed in a good mood, despite the journey: “It took a little time, but more on that later.” he laughed, everyone laughed, though it wasn't really a joke. “It's been a long time coming.” TM103, his fourth album but the third in a series, has been less pushed-back than shoved, a tortured process of try-try-againing. The album's lead single, “Lose my Mind,” a wall-puncher with Plies, hit the streets over eighteen months ago. three other songs have been released to radio since; none will make the final master. An official tracklisting, released six weeks ago through Jeezy's Twitter, is unrecognizable from the album today. When asked what happened to “Shake Life,” he shrugged, his voice more gravelly than usual: “It's just one of those things, man.”
Everyone needs a “home office”— whether it’s a kitchen table with a laptop and a pile of bills or a spare bedroom wired to run a business. Enter Kat Jacoby, a professional organizer who, from her own home office in Fredericksburg, helps clients set up an efficient space to get their work done.
Born and raised in Germany, but a Los Angeles resident for years, Elke Madler has an ass so distinct, it birthed her nickname: Elke the Stallion. here, Elke talks all about her thoroughbred of a bumper, her first video with OutKast, chicks with ass implants and why LA dudes just don’t do it for her. Saddle up, patna!
Although the Heritage High School Patriots and the Rockdale County High School Bulldogs will be battling each other on the football field Thursday night, the two will be somewhat unified this week. The schools are joining forces at the game to raise awareness for breast cancer and money for the American Cancer Society and the Atlanta 2-Day Walk for Breast Cancer, The game begins at 7 p.m. Thursday at RCHS. At 6:15 p.m., survivors, fighters and others who have been affected by cancer are asked to participate in a special walk before the game. Shown here are the two squads working on a combined cheer Monday afternoon at Reid Stadium: (l-r) first row, Kat Anderson, Daijza Miller, Radicea Davis, Mary Bills, Jabria Luddley, Kenzie Webb, Desma Drummon; second row, Camaria Welch, Vansah Bautista, Hunter Grady, Onjesha Walker, Taylor Sanderson, Za Zahand, Lauren Baldwin, Illah Weimann; third row, Tiffany Stacks, Abby Dunlop, Kayla Whitmire, Ashley Jones, Ciana Munford, Rebekah Raudebaugh, Annie Sibley, Jessie Thomas, Kaitlyn Peterson; fourth rown, Kelsey McCarty, Crystal Brockington, Sydni Moore, Heather Horetz, Taylor Conner Ronnise Owens, Nicole Lee, and Cheyanne Draper.
Trainer Ian Glading is confident King Kool Kat's big frame and never-say-die attitude will carry him through two big barriers in history when he runs in Saturday's Farnley Stakes (1400m) and the Goldfields Mining Expo Hannan's Handicap (1400m) on September 14.
getting ready for a new school year can be a challenge even for the most organized child wranglers.
“I’ve had the opportunity to learn patience,” says Tod Swormstedt, founder of the American Sign Museum. He’s talking about a problem that other Cincinnati arts organizations and supporters of planned festivals, theater renovations and other projects have to share — how to raise money as the Great Recession grinds on.
Funding for the Sign Museum to renovate a building in Camp Washington bought four years ago has sometimes faltered, but a recent anonymous grant nearly completes the $2.5 million project and will allow the museum to move from its Walnut Hills location on Essex Avenue location to more commodious quarters at 1330 Monmouth St.
The Minnesota Vikings got seven years younger at quarterback by signing 34-year-old Donovan McNabb.
After he signed with the team, McNabb was able to work out a deal for the no. 5 jersey previously owned by punter Chris Kluwe.
Chris Kluwe sells no. 5 to McNabb for mentions of his band. JUMPKICKMAN