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Archive for February, 2012


Dallas Escorts: See me now: Group addresses teen homelessness in Collin County

According to National Runaway Switchboard trend data, family dynamics such as divorce, remarriage and problems with siblings, sexual orientation, and even the economy can cause children to run away from home. In many situations, family conflict has existed for a period of some time, causing them to run away or be thrown out.
The number of homeless children in Collin County ranging in age from 3 to 17 has experienced the most growth from previous years, with 14 percent of them coming from abusive homes and a little more than half of them being female, according to the 2011 Metro Dallas Homeless Alliance count.
These “runaway/throw away” kids are at much greater risk for substance abuse, physical and/or sexual abuse, prostitution and neglect once on the street, said Teresa Keenan, executive director for City House.

See the full article from “Plano Star Courier”

Dallas Adult Entertainment: Mississippi Rapper Big KRIT Touches Down In Deep Ellum

DALLAS (CBSDFW.COM) – In the days leading up to his sold-out performance at Trees Saturday, rapper Big K.R.I.T. spent a chunk of time chatting with local media outlets, making sure to sneak in enthusiastic praise in favor of performing in Dallas.
As a reader, it’s usually fair to shrug these comments off. When doing interviews before a show, especially, of course an artist is going to shower compliments on the town that’s hosting them. They’d be foolish not to.
But this 25-year-old is especially genuine. He meant what he said, and the stage was his pulpit.
On record, it’s readily apparent that K.R.I.T. has no interest in painting himself as something he isn’t. There’s no conspiratorial tales of cocaine trafficking or drug corner shootouts here.
He likes hanging out with his girlfriend and rotating the tires of his Cadillac. He likes listening to Pimp C and Organized Noize and tries to recreate that soulful sound for his audience.

See the full article from “CBS Local”

Dallas Escorts: See me now: Group addresses teen homelessness in Collin County

According to National Runaway Switchboard trend data, family dynamics such as divorce, remarriage and problems with siblings, sexual orientation, and even the economy can cause children to run away from home. In many situations, family conflict has existed for a period of some time, causing them to run away or be thrown out.
The number of homeless children in Collin County ranging in age from 3 to 17 has experienced the most growth from previous years, with 14 percent of them coming from abusive homes and a little more than half of them being female, according to the 2011 Metro Dallas Homeless Alliance count.
These “runaway/throw away” kids are at much greater risk for substance abuse, physical and/or sexual abuse, prostitution and neglect once on the street, said Teresa Keenan, executive director for City House.

See the full article from “Plano Star Courier”

Dallas Adult Entertainment: In Dallas As in Miami, It’s Time to Build Low-Income Housing Where the Jobs Are

City manager Mary Suhm has been whispering in the city council’s ear that these are just two disgruntled guys with an ax to grind because they lost their own deal. I wonder if she has also kept them abreast of the fact that their cause has been joined by a top Washington law firm that has already cleaned the clocks of other communities around the country on this very issue.
Here’s the deal, and you decide who’s the liberal here: The federal money is housing de-seg money. That’s the law. But Dallas has used it to build segregated communities, creating an environment in which South Dallas becomes more and more a kind of very polite, freshened-up, newly constructed concentration camp, while downtown draws a more affluent and whiter clientele.
In Florida, as here, you have all kinds of advocates and program-runners who are dependent on that money, and they are very unhappy to see cuts. I’m not going to call them poverty pimps. I believe their intentions are good. But how is it a good thing — or a liberal thing — to use public money to fund some kind of poverty factory in an already segregated area?

See the full article from “Dallas Observer (blog)”

Dallas Escorts: See me now: Group addresses teen homelessness in Collin County

According to National Runaway Switchboard trend data, family dynamics such as divorce, remarriage and problems with siblings, sexual orientation, and even the economy can cause children to run away from home. In many situations, family conflict has existed for a period of some time, causing them to run away or be thrown out.
The number of homeless children in Collin County ranging in age from 3 to 17 has experienced the most growth from previous years, with 14 percent of them coming from abusive homes and a little more than half of them being female, according to the 2011 Metro Dallas Homeless Alliance count.
These “runaway/throw away” kids are at much greater risk for substance abuse, physical and/or sexual abuse, prostitution and neglect once on the street, said Teresa Keenan, executive director for City House.

See the full article from “Star Community Newspapers”

Dallas Adult Entertainment: See me now: Group addresses teen homelessness in Collin County

According to National Runaway Switchboard trend data, family dynamics such as divorce, remarriage and problems with siblings, sexual orientation, and even the economy can cause children to run away from home. In many situations, family conflict has existed for a period of some time, causing them to run away or be thrown out.
The number of homeless children in Collin County ranging in age from 3 to 17 has experienced the most growth from previous years, with 14 percent of them coming from abusive homes and a little more than half of them being female, according to the 2011 Metro Dallas Homeless Alliance count.
These “runaway/throw away” kids are at much greater risk for substance abuse, physical and/or sexual abuse, prostitution and neglect once on the street, said Teresa Keenan, executive director for City House.

See the full article from “Lewisville Leader”

Dallas Adult Entertainment: Watercooler Stories

Videos taken with cell phones show women heaving shoes at each other and kicking and hitting as security guards try to restrain them. One video had gotten 20,000 hits by Tuesday and the other 12,000.
The photographers apparently knew where their video would end up. On one video someone can be heard saying “This is YouTube, in a heartbeat.”
Ad: ‘Escort Quality, Hooker Pricing’
NEW YORK, Feb. 23 (UPI) — Community leaders in New York’s Bronx borough said they want to get rid of a vodka billboard promising “Escort Quality, Hooker Pricing.”
Rafael Salamanca Jr., district manager for the Bronx’s Community Board 2, said he and his colleagues want to get rid of the Wodka vodka advertisement over the Bruckner Expressway, which board members said runs counter to their efforts to get rid of the Hunts Point area’s reputation as a hotbed of prostitution, the New York Daily News reported Wednesday.

See the full article from “Outcome Magazine”

Dallas Escorts: Watercooler Stories

Videos taken with cell phones show women heaving shoes at each other and kicking and hitting as security guards try to restrain them. One video had gotten 20,000 hits by Tuesday and the other 12,000.
The photographers apparently knew where their video would end up. On one video someone can be heard saying “This is YouTube, in a heartbeat.”
Ad: ‘Escort Quality, Hooker Pricing’
NEW YORK, Feb. 23 (UPI) — Community leaders in New York’s Bronx borough said they want to get rid of a vodka billboard promising “Escort Quality, Hooker Pricing.”
Rafael Salamanca Jr., district manager for the Bronx’s Community Board 2, said he and his colleagues want to get rid of the Wodka vodka advertisement over the Bruckner Expressway, which board members said runs counter to their efforts to get rid of the Hunts Point area’s reputation as a hotbed of prostitution, the New York Daily News reported Wednesday.

See the full article from “Dalje.com”

Dallas Escorts: Argyle residents worried about more than vandalism at meeting

… I guess I’ll start, but only if someone goes after me,” said the first person to open the discussion.
The Edgeworth Avenue resident spoke about her car being broken into and then burned. Her car caught fire along with three other vehicles in the area that same night on Jan. 29. Police believe the blazes are connected to an arsonist spree that also three other car fires in the early hours of Feb. 15 on Crystal Crescent, Admiral Drive and Southdale Road East. The owners of some of those vehicles were at the meeting as well.
It didn’t take long for others to share. Within 10 minutes, about a dozen other people stood up and spoke about incidents of car windows being smashed, teenagers partying in the woods, prostitutes and drug deals in the open and nails deliberately placed by people’s tires.

See the full article from “London Community News”

Dallas Adult Entertainment: OUT on the street

Ricky represents the type of youth that social workers such as Benjamin Williams and Jessica Amspoker want to meet and help before they get involved in self-destructive lifestyles. They are case managers involved in street outreach for Dallas-based Promise House.
Williams and Amspoker hit the streets on Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights looking for youth who need help. The pair regularly visits the Cedar Springs entertainment district in Oak Lawn, as well as places like the Greyhound and DART stations in downtown Dallas.
On the streets Williams and Amspoker offer youths protection at Promise House, which provides temporary emergency shelter for young homeless people to help them get back in school, get jobs or even join the military.  The social workers travel as a team because the work can be dangerous in that the youths they approach might be under observation by pimps or drug traffickers.

See the full article from “Dallas Voice”