| ctnow.com Terms of Service
Welcome to ctnow.com! We have developed these Terms of Service to govern your use of ctnow.com. Your use of our site tells us you have read and agreed to these Terms of Service and to our Privacy Policy. Please read both these documents carefully. If you do not agree with any of these terms, please exit ctnow.com. ctnow.com reserves the right to terminate Membership and deny access to the site to any person who violates this Terms of Service. Copyright. All information, content, services and software displayed on, transmitted through, or used in connection with ctnow.com, including for example news articles, reviews, directories, guides, text, photographs, images, illustrations, audio clips, video, html, source and object code, trademarks, logos, and the like (collectively, the "Content"), as well as its selection and arrangement, is owned by Tribune Interactive, Inc.
Street Runner - Hi-Definition
A former DJ and Terror Squad member, Street Runner is considered to be the next big thing in hip-hop production. Working with artists such as Lil Wayne, Juelz Santana, and LL Cool J, Street Runner is slowly but surely becoming the it producer. His credits teamed with his reputation for an unmatched work ethic, are gaining Street Runner the acclaim normally saved for mega stars. In the game for years, his work is finally starting to pay off and we should expect to see no signs of slowing down. Sixshot.com sat down with Street Runner to discuss music from his hometown, Terror Squad, and working with Lil Wayne. Sup man, what's good? I'm chillin' man, just been working on this music shit. So you're from Miami, did you ever think your town would get this big? I didn't think the South would ever get this big but we killing it right now.
Employers wary of policing immigration
Ed Cox, who employs 125 workers at his blinds and shades factory in Haltom City, said, "It is horrible timing. It wouldn't take very much to throw us into a recession, and this issue would do it." He added: "Our position as businesspeople is we are not in charge of enforcement." Mr. Krikorian says that the argument that employers don't want to be immigration cops is "silly." "It is kind of like saying that employers shouldn't be barred from hiring 12-year-olds in factories because that would make them child labor cops," said the executive director of the Center for Immigration Studies. .
|