Toca fragmento de canción:
“I’ve been watching you
A lalalala long
A lalalala long long lee long long long,come on
A lalalala long
A lalalala long long lee long long long, hey-a
Standing across the room
i saw you smile,
Said i wanna talk to you-hoo-woo
for a little while,
but before i make my move
my emotions start running wi-hild,
My tongue gets tied
and that’s no lie
i look in your eye-ye-ye-ye-eyes,
i’m lookin’ in your big brown eye-yes,ooh ya
now got this to say to you, yeah
girl i want to make you sweat
sweat ’till you can’t sweat no more,
and if you cry out
i’m gonna push it sum more-ore-ore,
girl i want to make you sweat
sweat ’till you can’t sweat no more,
and if you cry out
i’m gonna push it push it push it some more
A lalalala long
A lalalala long long lee long long long,come on
A lalalala long
A lalalala long long lee long long long, ooh”

Una canción de Inner circle (Youtube)
“Caragol gol gol, treu le banyes que ix el sol”

Yo de tí no haría eso, muchacho.
Toca fragmento de canción:
“Stop the rock,
Stop the rock
Stop the rock,
Stop the rock
Stop the rock,
Can’t stop the rock
You can’t stop the rock,
stop the rock
Stop the rock,
can’t stop the rock
You can’s stop the rock,
Can’t stop the rock
(Repeat)
Shake that paranoia,
Can’t stop the rock
(Repeat) |
Come move me move me
Dancing like Madonna,
Into the groovy
Stop the rock,
Can’t stop the rock
You can’t stop the rock,
Can’t stop the rock
Let’s get down and dirty baby
Come get down and dirty babe
Down and dirty baby
Shape the rock
Like Henry Moore
Aphrodite at the waterhole,
Come on |
Stop the rock,
Can’t stop the rock
You can’t stop the rock,
Can’t stop the rock”

Foto de Tema Stauffer, letra de Apollo 440 (video)
A historical fact that is not really “common knowledge” is the fact that, during World War II, over 100,000 Japanese-American individuals, the vast majority of which were actually American citizens, were rounded up and shipped eventually to internment camps. These consisted of poorly-constructed barracks surrounded by barbed wire, sentry posts and armed guards.
The Japanese-American (Nisei) and the Japanese aliens (Issei) on the West Coast were rounded up and moved to assembly centers and then to internment camps. Few Japanese living in the East or Midwestern portions of the U.S., though, were treated the same way.
What is extremely interesting is that the Nisei and Issei living in Hawaii were not subject to a mass evacuation even though they formed a third of the population in Hawaii and were a lot closer to Japan than the Japanese-Americans on the West Coast of the U.S.
The reasons they weren’t rounded up were both cultural and economic.

“There was no mass relocation and internment in Hawaii, where the population was one-third Japanese American. It would have been impossible to transport that many people to the mainland, and the Hawaiian economy would have collapsed without Japanese American workers. ”
-from the book Japanese American Internment Camps by Gail Sakurai, 2002
More info