Results for: baby huey listen to me
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Asia Cruz / Cruise ft Huey - Luv N Ya Life (Lyrics) www.whoisasiacruise.com
Lyrics:
*Chorus*
Hey baby waitin on u to come my way baby
ain't (More) www.whoisasiacruise.com
Lyrics:
*Chorus*
Hey baby waitin on u to come my way baby
ain't afraid to say me
say baby ya lookin tight
ya need to come tonight cause I need some love in my life
love in my life
hey baby waiteing on you to come my way baby
ain't afraid to say me
say baby ya lookin tight
ya need to come tonight cause I need some love in my life
Mommy I could be the thug in your love
play my part with the fifty fifty love in our life
by the way I'm Huey I know how to treat a women
never raised my hand don't know how to beat a women
tell ya what
lets go out up on a date
I'm knowen this perfect place
put a smile on your face
won't touch until your comfortable
even though I'm want'n you
by the looks of things girl it seems you want me to
take you on a ride
and the five fifty A.M.G a
I head outta town
first class
yea im makin money an no tha money aint makin me
know that i wouldn't hurt you
I want you to feel safe with me
baby girl ya beautiful, your like a model
not the skin you in ya curve like a bottle
lil mama now listen
I know you sayin you want a thug in your life
but ya say u gotta be able to put...
*(chorus)x2*
I don't care about ya thuging
all i need is your lovin
you can t-pain if you want to
i dont have to ask that question
I know your a blessing baby
come on lil daddy whatcha gone do
say let me iron your pants
for ya
late night do a little dance for ya
how you appreciate the finer things
and now you appreciate your tryin
(chorus)x2
now when we hit this thang
you automatically look good
off of my apperiance I automatically look good
make my way to ya door
Open It they like a gentlemen
take you by the arm
a kodak flashes While entering
take you to the bar
buy ya your favorite drink or two
and all aint gettin it
so I can try to sleep with you
what person in their right mind wouldn't wanna be wit you
you da type i take home and show to my peoples boo
I aint gonna lie
i hate women who sensitive
for real
be lettin the littlest things get to them
lil mamma listen
I'm able to be the thug in your life
most of all i gotta be able to put...
*(chorus)x2* (Less)
All We Ask Is That U Listen (courtesy of Kia Gregory and Philadelphia Weekly)
All they ask is that you listen.
That's (More) (courtesy of Kia Gregory and Philadelphia Weekly)
All they ask is that you listen.
That's the title and plea of the documentary the Young Legends debuted last Thursday at West Oak Lane's Ogontz Grill to explore the whys of school violence.
The Young Legends is a group of about 30 students, a peer-mentoring program that connects Roosevelt and Fulton sixth- and seventh-graders—the at-risk mentees—with Germantown High 10th-graders—the mentors.
Their conversation, told in their 30-minute film, stemmed from the Feb. 23 beating of beloved longtime Germantown High School teacher Frank Burd. The math teacher confiscated an iPod from one of his 11th-grade students who'd ignored repeated requests to turn it down. After class the student demanded it back, a ninth-grader joined his case, and Burd ended up on the hallway floor with a broken neck that left him in critical condition.
The two students were suspended immediately, and later expelled. They were also charged with aggravated assault, simple assault and reckless endangerment.
After the incident we heard from Burd. We heard from the School District. We heard from the police. The only group we didn't hear from—the one voice the Young Legends students say has been missing from the discussion—is theirs.
The students' documentary All We Ask Is That U Listen is part debut and part celebration as the program, which runs from October to June, draws to a close.
About 40 parents and students fill the main dining room, sitting at round tables as servers bring out salads, sodas and water.
The students wear Young Legends T-shirts they designed. Through the program, held at the Education Works Germantown Beacon Center, and funded by United Way and the Greenfield Family Foundation, the older students guide the younger ones in exercises on mediation, conflict resolution and leadership. They meet three days a week for about three hours a day to talk about how to avoid being victims and perpetrators of violence.
With the documentary, they hope other students will join their collective stand against violence.
"This program has done a lot for me," mentor Danielle Smith tells those gathered. "I was on the road to destroying myself, and I got myself together."
The program offers the basics of homework help and class trips. It also provides students a safe haven for talking about their problems, and for learning that violence is never the solution.
While waiting for the film to start, Carolyn describes her son Tony as stuck between being a baby boy and a high schooler. He's handsome and tall, with green eyes. His good looks, she says, are part of the problem. And he's constantly looking for respect—which before the program led to constant fights.
"He was trying to impress, trying to be cool," says his mother. She remembers how he'd boast to her that 50 Cent got shot nine times. She'd respond that the shooter obviously had bad aim. But through the Young Legends Tony's been exposed to other heroes, like Malcolm X, and at one point walked around with Huey Newton's tattered biography under his arm.
"He's not allowed to ride his bike in the neighborhood or go to his friends' houses," says his mother. "This program allows him to hang out with his peers in a safe environment."
Another mother at another table echoes the sentiment.
"It's hard and nerve-wracking to keep your boys off the street," says Penny, mother of 17-year-old James. "This program is a Godsend."
If anything, the Young Legends are hope personified. They're smart, witty, talented and motivated. They're also serious about their education, their neighborhood, their lives and the violence that threatens it all—as well as the hope of a solution.
We learn from them that violence starts with a lack of respect, a lack of love, a lack of history.
"We're the first people and the smartest," says Germantown student Terrell, speaking of the history of African-Americans. "We don't know where we come from. We don't know what we can do."
Some of the students also blame a broken school system that provides them with old books or none at all; bad teachers; and dirty, crumbling buildings—problems that have festered for years. One student laments he's never seen his principal.
Read the rest of the article here:
http://www.philadelphiaweekly.com/view.php?id=14659 (Less)
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