From: Gregory Brown
To: undisclosed-recipients:;
Bcc: jeevacation@gmaitcom
Subject: Fwd: Greg Brown's Weekend Reading and Other Things.... 3/29/2015
Date: Sun, 29 Mar 2015 07:49:58 40000
Attachments: New_York_City_Could_See_Up_To_Six_Feet_Of Sea_Level_Rise_This_CentutyJames.docx;
India Air Pollution Cutting 660 Million Lives Short By 3 Years AP 02.19.15.docx;
docx;
No_Evoluuon_Demers_m_the_Whate_llouse_Charles_Reid_Huff Post_02.19.15.docx;
Deeper_Ties_to_Corporate_Cash_for_a_Doubtful_Climate_Scientist_Justin_Gillis Huff Post_02.21.15.docx;
Map,_These_willbe_Europe's_most_polluted_cities_by_2030_By_Rick_Noack_TWPFebruary_23,_2015.docx;
Why_We're_All_Becomingindependent_Contractors_Robert_Reich_Huff Post_02.22.I5.docx;
Sea_Levels_Along_The_Nonheast_Rose_Almost_4_Inchesinjust_2_Yearsjames_Gerken_Huff Post_02.27.15.docx;
Nat_King_Cole_bio.docx;
Pope_weighs_in_on_campaign_finance,_but_will_he_go_before_the_FEC_Al_Kamen_&_Colbyitkowitz_TWP_03_11_2015.doc
x
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DEAR FRIEND
Mike Huckabee, Scott Walker, Ted Cruz & Dr. Benjamin Carson
Are they just Scientific and socially Illiterate or Hypocrites.... and Can We Afford Them Becoming President?
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As someone who lives in Los Angeles but will always see myself as a New Yorker, I was drawn to an article in The Huffington Post by
James Gerken - New York City Could See Up To Six Feet OfSea Level Rise This Century: Report. From the recent Polar
Vortex that ushered in record level freezing temperatures and the most snow fall since records were first kept there is little dispute that
Climate Change is already impacting New York City with rising temperatures and sea levels, which will only worsen as the century
continues, according to a report released Tuesday from a panel of scientific experts. In its 2015 report, the New York City Panel on
Climate Change found that the most populous city in the United States is expected to see more frequent heat waves and extreme
precipitation events. This is in line with the national and international trends other leading scientific bodies have observed.
The city's average annual temperatures, measured from Central Park, have risen about 3.4 degrees Fahrenheit since 1900. From 1971 to
2000, the average annual temperature in the city was 54 degrees, and models predict a 4.1- to 5.7-degree increase by the middle of the
century. Temperatures are projected to rise 5.3 to 8.8 degrees Fahrenheit by the 2080s. Sea level rise, however, may pose an even greater
challenge for coastal New York. Average sea levels have risen about 1.2 inches per decade in the city since 1900, or about 1.1 feet overall,
according to the new report. This is almost twice the average global rate of 0.5 to 0.7 inches per decade. This trend is expected to
accelerate in the coming decades as greenhouse gas emissions generated by human activity continue to trap more of the sun's heat,
warming and expanding the oceans and melting land-based glaciers and ice caps, among other contributions.
The report's authors project sea levels around New York City will rise ii to 21 inches by the middle of the centurz, 18 to 39 inches by the
2080s, and up to 6 feet by 2100. The researchers noted that their projections are specific to New York Citybut projections based on
similar methods would not differ greatly throughout the coastal corridorfrom Boston to Washington, " "It is virtually certain that
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sea level rise alone will lead to an increasedfrequency and intensity ofcoastalflooding as the century progresses,"they wrote. If sea
levels rise to the higher end of current projections, twice as much of New York City will lie within the 100-year flood plain in 2100, as
compared to 2013.
At 6 feet of sea level rise in 2100, nearly 20 percent of New York City's 469-square-mile land area would have a r percent chance of
flooding in any given year. A little under a percent of the city's area is currently included in the 100-year flood plain, according to a
preliminary FEMA assessment released in December 2013. About 400,000 New Yorkers live within the current 100-year flood plain,
which is more than any other U.S. city, including New Orleans. "Sea level rise is an extremely challenging problem that requires both
greenhouse gas emissions reduction and adaptation measures to successfully protect vulnerable coastal areas," Princeton University
professor Michael Oppenheimer, who contributed to the report, told The Huffington Post. "This report is a model ofhow technical
information can support decision-making." "The report blends cutting-edge science with presentation of the information to policy
makers in a risk-basedframework so they are in a position to use it to make key judgments about how to protect a cityfrom climate
change," Oppenheimer said.
Hurricane Sandy in 2012 demonstrated some of the challenges New York will face this century, particularly when it comes to adapting the
city's aging infrastructure and transportation network. Flooding from Sandy knocked out power for part of Manhattan and the storm
caused unprecedented flooding in the city's train and vehicular tunnels under the Hudson and East rivers. This week's report
recommends that the city consider both mitigating climate change, through reducing emissions, and adapting to it. The authors advocate a
multifaceted adaptation approach that uses engineering and existing ecosystems. Experts have previously cautioned that manmade "gray"
infrastructure alone cannot solve New York City's resiliency challenges. "Adapting the cityfor the risks ofclimate change is one of the
great challenges ofour time," Daniel Zarrilli, director of the mayor's Office of Recovery and Resiliency, said in a press release.
The same day I read an article by AP — India Air Pollution Cutting 66o Million Lives Short By 3 Years — according to research
published Saturday that underlines the hidden costs of the country's heavy reliance on fossil fuels to power its economic growth with little
regard for the environment While New Delhi last year earned the dubious title of being the world's most polluted city, India's air
pollution problem is extensive, with 13 Indian cities now on the World Health Organization's list of the 20 most polluted. That nationwide
pollution burden is estimated to be costing more than half of India's population at least 3.2 years of their lives, according to the study, led
by Michael Greenstone of the University of Chicago and involving environmental economists from Harvard and Yale universities. It
estimates that 99.5 percent of India's 1.2 billion people are breathing in pollution levels above what the WHO deems as safe.
Added up, those lost years come to a staggering 2.1 billion for the entire nation, the study says. While "the conventional definition of
growth has ignored the health consequences of air pollution, this study demonstrates that air pollution retards growth by causing people
to die prematurely," Greenstone said in a statement. For the study, published in Economic & Political Weekly, the authors borrowed from
their previous work in China, where they determined that life expectancy dropped by three years for every 100 micrograms of fine
particulate matter, called PM2.5, above safe levels. PM2.5 is of especially great health concern because, with diameters no greater than 2.5
micrometers, the particles are small enough to penetrate deep into the lungs.
To counter this evidence conservatives and the fossil fuel industry directs millions of dollars to scientists who are willing to issue scientific
documents for politicians wanting to block legislation on climate change that greenhouse suggests residual gases pose little risk to
humanity. One of the names they invoke most often is WeiHock Soon, known as Willie, a scientist at the Harvard Smithsonian Center for
Astrophysics who claims that variations in the sun's energy, can largely explain recent global warming. He has often appeared on
conservative news programs, testified before Congress and in state capitals, and starred at conferences of people who deny the risks of
global warming.
But newly released documents show the extent to which Dr. Soon's work has been tied to funding he received from corporate interests. He
has accepted more than $1.2 million in money from the fossil fuel industry over the last decade while failing to disclose that conflict of
interest in most of his scientific papers. At least 11 papers he has published since 2008 omitted such a disclosure, and in at least eight of
those cases, he appears to have violated ethical guidelines of the journals that published his work.
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The documents show that Dr. Soon, in correspondence with his corporate funders described many of his scientific papers as "deliverables"
that he completed in exchange for their money. He used the same term to describe testimony he prepared for Congress.
Another example is the oil and gas industry enormous sponsoring and spinning a humongous amount of research to shape the scientific
debate over horizontal hydraulic fracturing, or fracldng. That's the conclusion of a watchdog group's analysis of more than 130 documents
distributed to policymakers by industry representatives. 'Research and statistics can be manipulated to say whatever the person using
them wants to say,"said Robert Galbraith, an analyst with the nonprofit Public Accountability Initiative and co-author of the report
recently released. Public Accountability Initiative, which describes itself as a non-partisan advocate of corporate and government
transparency, receives some financial support from groups opposed to fracldng. Energy in Depth, the oil and gas industry's education
and public outreach arm, presents its list of documents as evidence of the safety of a process that has been "closely regulated and
extensively studied." The industry used the documents to persuade the Allegheny County Council in Pittsburgh in May to lease
mineral rights under its Deer Lakes Park for gas drilling.
Public Accountability Initiative's analysis determined that only one of the industry studies was both peer-reviewed and explicitly
addressed public health concerns. That study was funded by the industry. Also on the industry's research list: retracted studies, industry
PowerPoint presentations and blog posts. Omitted were hundreds of peer-reviewed scientific studies of fracking and potential impacts to
the environment and public health. The oil and gas industry group responded to the Public Accountability Initiative accusations with an
attack, alleging that fracking opponents are responsible for their own share of deceit, denial and deflection in trying to align research with
their arguments. "This report comes just weeks after [Energy in DepthJ revealed that a research paper touted aspeer-reviewed science -
- and used to justify New 'York's ban on shale gas development — was actually written and peer-reviewed by anti-fracking activists,"
Katie Brown, a spokeswoman for Energy in Depth, told The Huffington Post.
So, who are the real liars and cheats? Teasing out the truth isn't easy for policymakers or the public. In fact, ifs a predicament common to
a range of public health issues going back more than 100 years. Experts noted that a small but vocal number of scientists as well as some
industry groups continue to borrow from a playbook first drafted by lead paint manufacturers in the early 20th century and expanded by
Big Tobacco in subsequent decades. The tactics are chock full of legal and public relations tactics designed to preserve profitability, they
say.
Manipulated science can pose serious public health harms. Manufactured data, concealed conflicts of interest and misleading conclusions
are evident in influential research on vaccination, organic food, secondhand smoke and industrial chemicals. And fracking apparently is
no exception. Miriam Rotkin-Ellman, a scientist with the Natural Resources Defense Council, highlighted a 2013 industry-funded study
that concluded living close to fracking wells did not increase the risk of childhood cancer. "'They used the wrong time interval to be
relevantfor how long it takes childhood cancers to develop. Of course, they weren't going tofind any cancer,"said Rotkin-Ellman. She
pointed to a rebuttal titled, "Obfuscation Does Not Provide Comfort," later published by two experts in the same journal that
contained the original article. "Tliis is a common symptom of industryfunded science -- a set of conclusions that are not supported by
the study as it was done," Rotkin-Ellman added.
Another example of potentially misleading misinformation came in November 2014, when University of Colorado researchers published a
paper outlining a technique to trace a subset of the components in fracking fluid so groundwater contamination could be identified in the
future. They did not actually test for toxicity. But the title of the institution's press release declared, "Major class of:frocking chemicals no
more toxic than common household substances." Media coverage followed the lead, and Energy in Depth declared that the research
supported fracking as a safe technology. A study held up by the New York state health commissioner on Dec. 17, as the state announced its
decision to ban shale gas development due to potential public health risks, has sparked controversy as well. The industry called the work a
"violation" of the ethics of scientific research. The "anti-fracking activists" behind the writing and reviewing of the study, said Energy in
Depth's Brown, "concealed their biasfrom the scientific community and the general public."
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But the real issue is the way this plays out in our politics and policies. With the 2016 Presidential campaign heating up over an
unexpected issue -- the theory of evolution the anti-science wing of the Republican Party continues to voice skepticism. Apologists for this
wing would dearly like to distract the media and the voting public from what is, frankly, a national if not a global embarrassment. In
truth, the President of the United States needs to be scientifically literate. For the federal government has an important role to play and it
is a role that will only grow larger and more complex in the next president's term. It has been a century since the theory of evolution has
become settled, incontrovertible science. To doubt evolution at this late date is to reveal oneself to be willfully, invincibly ignorant of basic
scientific principles. And there is no room in the Oval Office -- none -- for the scientifically illiterate.
Politicians in both parties have been playing fast and loose with the facts or the fact that they don't know the facts. One of the latest
examples of this former neurosurgeon Ben Carson who is currently weighing a Republican bid for the White House, who got a little
confused about foreign policy and the origins of Islam during a recent interview on the conservative Hugh Hewitt radio show. Asked
whether NATO should be willing to go to war if Russian President Vladimir Putin takes aggressive actions against the Baltic States, Carson
said, "We need to convince them to get involved in NATO and strengthen NATO." Except that the Baltic States (Estonia, Latvia and
Lithuania) are already in NATO. Hewitt also pressed Carson on his understanding of Islamic history. After Carson traced dips, utes in
Islam back to the biblical story of Jacob and Esau, Hewitt asked how that could be the case, when Mohammed lived in 632 MI. and the
biblical story took place in B.C. Carson's excuse is that he doesn't want to get bogged down in the details, but if Carson and the other
potential GOP candidates want to become President and Leader of the Free World, shouldn't the knowledge of nitty-gritty policy details be
a prerequisite?
Again, it is obvious: in a time of game-changing scientific breakthroughs, we do not want a scientific illiterate in the White House. We
don't necessarily need a computer scientist. But we need someone who respects what support for research can accomplish. Yet the anti-
science wing of the Republican Party continues to shout its opposition. This is not the place to review the science behind dimate change.
Instead, lets talk a language that the Republican right-wing understands -- money. According to a February, 2015, news story: "Citigroup
has set aside one hundred billion dollars tofund environmental projects over the next decade." The announcement added: '"The
investment in renewable energy and energy efficiency projects is meant to help reduce the effects of climate change."
Now, Citigroup is not some granola-eating hippie. It's a multinational investment bank strongly motivated by profit. And we are talking
about 100 billion dollars -- that's billion, with a "B." The management of Citigroup seems to take the science of climate change as so well-
established it is willing to invest many billions of dollars. This is not the time, in other words, to elect a science-denying right-winger to
the Presidency. And we should be clear: The Republican field has a number of anti-science candidates. It is easy to pick on Scott Walker,
the college-dropout Governor of Wisconsin who is busy degrading the capabilities of that State's once world-class university system. But
we must include in the mix Governor Mike Huckabee, Senator Ted Cruz, and Dr. Benjamin Carson who should know better than to hang
out with the anti-evolution crowd. Their defenders will say that they have to take the positions they do, that their base demands. And that
is the problem. It is time for the Republican Party to confront the pathologies of its base A great place to begin -- is scientific
illiteracy, as well as the hypocrisy of Politicians who refuse to acknowledge scientific fact.
This Is Crazy
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U.S. military vehicles being paraded in Nan...Estonia. on Feb. 24th.
When I was a kid we sometimes played a game called "chicken"where we would dart in and out of moving vehicular traffic and dare
another kid to follow. We stopped playing this game when an off-duty police officer shot and killed my friend Terry after a confrontation
because he pulled out a small pocket knife. The police officer was never charged for killing my eleven year-old friend, while several of us
received severe beatings from our mothers to make sure that we never "played chicken" again.
Knowing how dangerous and stupid the game of "chicken" is, we have to ask why on February 24, 2015 our military leadership and our
President allowed U.S. military combat vehicles to be paraded through an Estonian city that juts into Russia, a symbolic act that
highlighted the stakes for both sides amid the worst tensions between the West and Russia since the Cold War. In a parade no different
than "playing thicken" armored personnel carriers, tanks and other U.S. Army vehicles that rolled through the streets of Narva, a border
city separated by a narrow frontier from Russia, were a dramatic reminder of the new military confrontation in Eastern Europe. The
soldiers from the U.S. Army's Second Cavalry Regiment were taking part in a military parade to mark Estonia's Independence Day. Narva
is a vulnerable border city separated by a river from Russia. It has often been cited as a potential target for the Kremlin if it wanted to
escalate its conflict with the West onto NATO territory.
Russia has long complained bitterly about NATO expansion, saying that the Cold War defense alliance was a major security threat as it
drew closer to Russia's borders. The anger grew especially passionate after the Baltic states joined in 2004, and Russian President
Vladimir Putin cited fears that Ukraine would join NATO when he annexed the Crimean Peninsula in March last year. So why would we
play chicken with the Russians and Putin by parading U.S, military vehicles within a throw from their border... Imagine the
American outrage if Russian military vehicles were being paraded in the streets of Havana this week....
We Are Deceiving Ourselves If We Think That Americans Are Exceptional
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American millennials did not do well on this tat.
Conservatives like to think of America as a Country of ExceptionaLs. Yes we have had our Abe Lincoln, Thomas Edisons, Jonas Salks,
Muhammad Alis and Steve Jobs but there is a dangerous trend happening that says not only are we not exceptional, we may be mediocre.
In an exam give in 23 countries assessing the thinking abilities and workplace skills of adults. It focused on literacy, math and
technological problem-solving. The goal was to figure out how prepared people are to work in a complex, modern society. The U.S.
millennials performed horribly. That might even be an understatement, given the extent of the American shortcomings. No matter how
you sliced the data — by dass, by race, by education — young Americans were laggards compared to their international peers. In every
subject, U.S. millennials ranked at the bottom or very close to it, according to a new study by testing company ETS. "We were taken
aback,"said ETS researcher Anita Sands. "We tend to think millennials are really savvy in this area. But that's not what we are seeing."
The test is called the PIAAC test. It was developed by the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, better known as the
OECD. The test was meant to assess adult skill levels. It was administered worldwide to people ages 16 to 65. The results came out two
years ago and barely caused a ripple. But recently ETS went back and delved into the data to look at how millennia's did as a group. After
all, they're the future — and, in America, they're poised to claim the title of largest generation from the baby boomers. U.S. millennials,
defined as people 16 to 34 years old, were supposed to be different. They're digital natives. They get it. High achievement is part of their
makeup. But the ETS study found signs of trouble, with its authors warning that the nation was at a crossroads: "We can decide to accept
the current levels of mediocrity and inequality or we can decide to address the skills challenge head on."
• The challenge is that, in literacy, U.S. millennials scored higher than only three countries.
• In math, Americans ranked last.
• In technical problem-saving, they were second from the bottom.
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"Abysmal," noted ETS researcher Madeline Goodman. 'There was just no place where we performed well."
But surely America's brightest were on top? Nope. U.S. millennials with master's degrees and doctorates did better than their peers in
only three countries, Ireland, Poland and Spain. Those in Finland, Sweden and Japan seemed to be on a different planet. Top-scoring
U.S. millennials — the goth percentile on the PIAAC test — were at the bottom internationally, ranking higher only than their peers in
Spain. The bottom percentile (loth percentile) also lagged behind their peers. And the gap between America's best and worst was greater
than the gap in 14 other countries. This, the study authors said, signaled America's high degree of inequality.
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The study called into question America's educational credentialing system. While few American test-takers lacked a high school degree,
the United States didn't perform any better than countries with relatively high rates of failing to finish high school. And our college
graduates didn't perform well, either. ETS researchers tried looking for signs of promise — especially in math skills, which they considered
a good sign of labor market success. They singled out native-born Americans. Nope. They tried native-born Americans with at least one
college graduate parent — a big group when compared to other countries. That didn't work. They looked at race — white and Asian
Americans did better, but still fell behind similar top performers in other countries and below the OECD average. The ETS study noted
that a decade ago the skill level of American adults was judged mediocre. "Now it is below even that." So Millennia's are falling even
further behind. Most of all, getting angry because the President won't say that we Americans are exceptional is not going to raise our
children's test scores if we don't face the fact that we are losing in education and continue to stay on the road that we are on.
These Three Headlines Explain a Lot About What's Wrong With Politics Today
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Fox News, March 3,2015: Rubio dines with Republican mega-donor Adelson
Washington Post, March 4, 2015: GOP challenge: Cut taxes for wealthy, show concern for middle class
Washington Post, March 5, 2015: Wealthy fans could lift Marco Rubio in 2016 campaign
Earlier this month, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) had dinner with billionaire casino mogul Sheldon Adelson who was in town for a few days.
On March 4, 2015, Rubio and his colleague Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT) introduced a tax reform plan. Analysis of a previous, but similar, plan
found "that more than half the plan's benefits would go to the richest fifth of taxpayers, in terms of income. One-fifth of the benefits would
flow to the top t percent of taxpayers, the analysis said. In percentage terms, it found, the average federal tax rate would fall by about the
same amount for the top 1 percent as for the middle class."
On Thursday, the Washington Post reported that one Miami billionaire has pledged to give up to $10 million to a pro-Rubio super PAC to
help him secure the Republican nomination for president in 2016 and "among Rubio's supporters are a cadre of donors who participate in
the political network organized by industrialists Charles and David Koch..."
As Adam Smith wrote in his blog Early Voices: "It leaves voters with a depressing, real-life chicken or the egg riddle: which came first, the
tax plan to benefit wealthy donors or the promise of cash from wealthy donors for a tax plan that benefits them?"
Again Adam Smith: "These stories, as well as former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush's announcement that he will cap donations at a comically
large $1 million, come as a House committee moves legislation to end the broken presidential public financing system. Instead of giving
big donors more power, politicians should be working to fix that presidential system and pushing bills like the Government By the People
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Act that would give candidates for Congress the ability to run for office on a blend of small donations and matching funds. Until then,
voters won't care what came first, they'll just know it's not them."
To think that these mega-donors are not expecting something in return is naive especially when politicians like Rubio are already doing
everything they can to help these Fat Cats, in advance of formally announcing their own Presidential ambitions. So why not is there
outrage or at least concern?
Last Week Tonight with John Oliver: The NCAA
The NCAA doesn't pay athletes because they consider them amateurs. The NCAA considers them amateurs because they don't get paid.
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We are currently in the middle of March Madness (or The Big Dance) which is the National Collegiate Athletic Association ("NCAA")
men's tournament for Division i College Basketball, featuring 68 teams to determine a national champion. March Madness was created
in 1939 by the National Association of Basketball Coaches and was the the idea of Ohio State University coach Harold Olsen. Mostly paid
in the month of March it has become one of the most famous annual sporting events in the United States generating more money than
either The Super Bowl and the NBA championships. But the maddest thing about March Madness is that despite bringing in over
$1 billion in television ad revenue, student athletes aren't paid a penny because they're considered "amateurs"by NCAA standards. With
this past Tuesday marking the first round of the year's biggest college tournament, John Oliver revealed some of the dirty practices of the
NCAA on Sunday's "Last Week Tonight." What we learn: The NCAA has no intention of ever paying student athletes — despite
bringing in more ad revenue than the Super Bowl and almost the entire NFL post-season combined and despite a former NCAA athlete
letting it slip in an interview that "there (were] hungry nights where owl couldn't eat."
The idea that these student athletics are being compensated with an education is ludicrous especially when many never graduate and
those that do often have been given sham courses like the famed basket-weaving and Swahili, a language that they will never use, if in fact
they ever learn it. But then how much studying can a student athletic do when in addition to classes they often have six plus hours of
athletic training, in addition to traveling to games and meets. And is it fair that this same college athletic isn't allowed to receive any
compensation including transportation costs for parents to see them play, while a number of college coaches are being paid millions of
dollars a year, in addition to compensation from apparel manufactures, media companies, sport camps, speaking engagements and
personal appearances which can often add up to more money than their multi-million yearly coaching salaries. In many colleges, coaches
are the highest paid people at their their campuses, while student-athletics are forbidden any compensation whatsoever, including the use
of their images after leaving the institutions.
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Less than 2% of college football and basketball college athletics go pro and in other college sports that number is considerably less if at
all. The term student-athletic was crafted by the first Executive Director of the NCAA stated that "We crafted the term Student-Athletic in
the issos explicitly to avoid worker's compensation for injured athletics" and 6o years later that term is still working. The means that
when student athletics get injured which happens a lot and can't continue to play for their college, they often lose their scholarships and
many are saddled with huge medical bills for years and often for their entire lives. Whereas if they played under workmen's comp their
medical bills associated with their college injury would be taken care for the rest of their lives.
Without a doubt college sports are often about exploiting people, especially in the major universities with huge basketball and football
programs. As Oliver said, no one is saying that that they need to be paid millions, or hundreds of thousands or the same amount or even
that every school needs to pay every athletic. But to pay everyone zero when the kid selling their jersey at the campus bookstore is getting
Sic an hour seems a little bit strange." The truth is that college sports, especially in the major colleges and universities is not about the
romance of amateurism when these institutions are generating hundreds of millions of dollars, paying coaches and athletic administrators
hundreds of thousands and sometime millions of dollars a year, while the athletics receive no financial compensation and most likely will
lose their scholarship should they get injured or cut from the team. And as Oliver suggests, they should give up the sponsorships and the
TV deals, stop paying the coaches professional salaries and have teams run by professors. Most of all, lets stop the exploitation of our
young athletes and if they are student athletics please make sure that education is their top priority, if not then pay them.... and this is
nay rant of the week...
WEEK's READINGS
This Is Serious
Sc, Levels Along The Northeast Rose Almost q Inches In Just 2 Years: Study
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We have a problem.... Sea levels across the Northeast coast of the United States rose nearly 3.9 inches between 2009 and 2010, according
to a new study from researchers at the University of Arizona and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The waters near
Portland, Maine, saw an even greater rise — s inches — over the two-year period. While scientists have been observing higher sea levels
across the globe in recent decades, the study found a much more extreme rise than previous avenges. Such an event is "unprecedented"
in the history of the tide gauge record, according to the researchers, and represents a i-in-Sso year event.
The analysis relied on data from dozens of tide gauges along the eastern seaboard. The nearly 4-inch rise for the Northeast represents the
average of 14 tide gauges located between New York and Canada. Tide gauges farther south in the Mid-Atlantic and Southeast indicated a
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sea level rise far less extreme in 2009 and closer to average in some areas. The jump occurred most quickly between April 2009 and
March 2010.
The study found that the increase in the Northeast was caused by a 30 percent slowdown in a major ocean current system known as the
Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC) and a fluctuation in atmospheric pressure at sea level. The Gulf Steam is one
component of the AMOC, which moves warm water northward in the upper levels of the Atlantic. A 2014 study of the AMOC over that
period found the slowdown also contributed to severe winter conditions in northwestern Europe and the intensity of the 2010 Atlantic
hurricane season, which was the third-most active on record.
The M.'s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate wrote in its latest report that AMOC currents are "very likely" to weaken in the 21st
century. Models project that unusual rises in sea level, like that observed in the study, will be bigger and more frequent along the
Northeastern seaboard this century, study coauthor Jianjun Yin told The Huffington Post. And events like the one observed in the study,
combined with ongoing global sea level rise, "will pose an even higher coastal flooding risk," Yin told Mashable. A 2012 study determined
that sea levels between North Carolina and Boston are rising at a rate three to four times faster than the global average. Yet this only
represents a rise of 2 to 3.7 millimeters per year since 1980, far less than the 100 millimeters observed in the Northeast between 2009 and
2010.
This week's study, published in Nature Communications, follows a new report from the New York City Panel on Climate Change that
warns of significant sea level rise and coastal flooding threats for the city in coming decades. Sea levels in New York City have already
risen more than a foot since 1900, and the trend is very likely to accelerate: If greenhouse gas emissions from human activities are not
curtailed, the panel projects seas to rise by an additional 11 to 21 inches by the middle of the century, by IS to 39 inches by the 2080s, and
by as much as 6 feet by the end of the century. And if you don't see that this is a serious problem.... I can't help you....
An Israeli Election Turns Ugly
Israel's election has done a lot to reveal the challenges facing the country and the intentions of the men who seek to lead it. Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's outright rejection of a Palestinian state and his racist rant against Israeli Arab voters on Tuesday showed
that he has forfeited any claim to representing all Israelis.
Mr. Netanyahu, with two years to go in his current term, called the election in December for reasons that are still unclear. He expected to
win an easy victory and then ended up fighting for his political life in a bitter battle with Isaac Herzog, the leader of the new center-left
Zionist Union alliance and son of a former Israeli president. With 99.3 percent of the ballots counted, the YNet news site reported
Wednesday morning that Mr. Netanyahu's Likud Party had possibly won 30 seats in the Knesset and Mr. Herzog's Zionist Union had got
24 seats.
While Mr. Netanyahu ended up with more seats, it is Israel's president, Reuven Rivlin, who will decide which leader gets to cobble
together the next coalition government, the norm in a multiparty state where no one party has ever won an outright majority in the 120-
member Knesset The process could take six weeks, and religious parties are likely to hold the key to victory, an asset for Mr. Netanyahu.
Mr. Netanyahu showed that he was desperate, and craven, enough to pull out all the stops. On Monday, he promised that if his Likud
faction remained in power, he would never allow the creation of a Palestinian state, thus repudiating a position he had taken in 2009.
His behavior in the past six years — aggressively building Israeli homes on land that likely would be within the bounds of a Palestinian
state and never engaging seriously, in negotiations — has Ion; convinced many people that he has no interest in a peace agreement But his
statement this week laid bare his duplicity, confirmed Palestinian suspicions and will make it even harder for him to repair his poisoned
relations with President Obama, who has invested heavily in pushing a twostate solution.
Mr. Netanyahu added to the ugliness of the campaign when, during Tuesday's voting, he said in a video on social media: "Rightwing rule is
in danger. Arab voters are streaming in huge quantities to the polling stations."
This outrageous appeal to hardline voters implied that only he could save Israel from its enemies, including the country's Arab citizens,
who represent 20 percent of the population and have long been discriminated against. There were signs that Arab Israelis were turning
out in somewhat higher numbers, apparently to vote for the Joint Arab List, a coalition of four small parties.
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Mr. Netanyahu's demagogy further incites the rage that has torn the country apart. There were other inflammatory moments in recent
days. Mr. Netanyahu claimed that nefarious foreign sources were trying to overthrow him and also promised to build more settlements,
which most of the world considers to be illegal. Earlier this month, he made a subversive speech before Congress to castigate the Obama
administration for seeldng a nuclear deal with Iran, but that seems to have done little to enhance his support in Israel.
In his desperation, M r. Netanyahu resorted to fearmongering and antiArab attacks while failing to address the issues that Israelis said
they were most worried about, namely the high cost of housing and everyday living in Israel. Although the economy has grown, the
country has experienced widening income disparities and is now one of the most unequal societies in the advanced world.
Mr. Herzog made such domestic concerns a centerpiece of his campaign. While peace talks with the Palestinians were not a major focus of
the Zionist Union campaign, or the election generally, he made clear that if elected he would try to restart negotiations.
Late Tuesday, Mr. Rivlin said he would work for a national unity government with Likud and the Zionist Union. It is difficult to see how
Mr. Netanyahu could find enough common ground with any moderate faction to govern constructively.
NEW YORK TIMES EDITORIAL BOARD -MARCH 17.20$
Pope Weighs In On Campaign Finance
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I love this new Pope. As we know Pope Francis has made his opinion known on a variety of hot-button issues, including Cuba, gay rights
and climate change. Now he's sharing his thoughts on campaign finance. His belief? Separate special-interest money from politics. His
comments, reported by Crux, a publication covering the Roman Catholic Church, caught the attention of Ellen Weintraub, a commissioner
on the Federal Election Commission, who mentioned it before the panel's meeting Tuesday. They joked that maybe the pope would like to
come testify at an FEC hearing.
Discussing the general elections this fall in Argentina, his home country, he called for a "free, unfinanced campaign." "In thefinancing of
electoral campaigns, many interests get into the mix, and then they send you the bill,"Francis said in answering questions last month,
according to Crux. Perhaps publicfinancing would allowfor me, the citizen, to know that.financing each candidate with a given
amount ofmoney,"he said. Everything needs to be transparent and clean." The pope is planning a visit to Washington this fall and has
accepted an invitation to address Congress. Perhaps he'll share his thoughts on campaign finance with American politicians deep in the
throes of an expected multibillion-dollar presidential campaign?
For what it's worth, the CatholicVote.org super PAC, one of many Catholic-affiliated political committees, spent $293,335 in the 2012
campaign, according to OpenSecrets.org. Still, this is just another reason why I so love this new Pope and another voice that believes that
big money is corrupting the democratic process in spite of what the U.S. Supreme Court decrees.
Why We're All Becoming Independent Contractors
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Robert Reich: GM is worth around $60 billion, and has over 200,000 employees. Its front-line workers earn from $19 to $28.50 an hour,
with benefits. Uber is estimated to be worth some $40 billion, and has 8so employees. Uber also has over 163,000 drivers (as of
December -- the number is expected to double by June), who average $17 an hour in Los Angeles and Washington, •., and $23 an hour
in San Francisco and New York But Uber doesn't count these drivers as employees. Uber says they're "independent contractors."
What difference does it make?
For one thing, GM workers don't have to pay for the machines they use. But Uber drivers pay for their cars — not just buying them but also
their maintenance, insurance, gas, oil changes, tires, and cleaning. Subtract these costs and Uber drivers hourly pay drops considerably.
For another, GM's employees get all the nation's labor protections. These include Social Security, a 4o-hour workweek with time-and-a-
half for overtime, worker health and safety, worker's compensation if injured on the job, family and medical leave, minimum wage,
pension protection, unemployment insurance, protection against racial or gender discrimination, and the right to bargain collectively.
Not to forget Obamacare's mandate of employer-provided health care.
Uber workers don't get any of these things. They're outside the labor laws. Uber workers aren't alone. There are millions like just them,
also outside the labor laws -- and their ranks are growing. Most aren't even part of the new Uberized "sharing" economy. They're
franchisees, consultants, and free lancers. They're also construction workers, restaurant workers, truck drivers, office technicians, even
workers in hair salons. What they all have in common is they're not considered "employees" of the companies they work for. They're
"independent contractors"-- which puts all of them outside the labor laws, too.
The rise of "independent contractors" is the most significant legal trend in the American workforce -- contributing directly to low pay,
irregular hours, and job insecurity. What makes them "independent contractors" is the mainly that the companies they work for say they
are. So those companies don't have to pick up the costs of having full-time employees. But are they really "independent"? Companies can
manipulate their hours and expenses to make them seem so.
It's become a race to the bottom. Once one business cuts costs by making its workers "independent contractors," every other
business in that industry has to do the same -- or face shrinking profits and a dwindling share of the market. Some workers prefer to be
independent contractors because that way they get paid in cash. Or they like deciding what hours they'll work. Mostly, though, they take
these jobs because they can't find better ones. And as the race to the bottom accelerates, they have fewer and fewer alternatives.
Fortunately, there are laws against this. Unfortunately, the laws are way too vague and not well-enforced.
For example, FedEx calls its drivers independent contractors. Yet FedEx requires them to pay for the FedEx-branded trucks they drive, as
well as the FedEx uniforms they wear, and FedEx scanners they use — along with insurance, fuel, tires, oil changes, meals on the road,
maintenance, and workers compensation insurance. If they get sick or need a vacation, they have to hire their own replacements. They're
even required to groom themselves according to FedEx standards. FedEx doesn't tell its drivers what hours to work, but it tells them what
packages to deliver and organizes their workloads to ensure they work between 9.5 and it hours every working day. If this isn't
employment," I don't know what the word means.
In 2005, thousands of FedEx drivers in California sued the company, alleging they were in fact employees and that FedEx owed them the
money they shelled out, as well as wages for all the overtime work they put in. last summer, a federal appeals court agreed, finding that
under California law -- which looks at whether a company "controls" how a job is done along with a variety of other criteria to determine
the real employment relationship -- the FedEx drivers were indeed employees, not independent contractors.
Does that mean Uber drivers in California are also "employees"? That case is being considered right now.
What about FedEx drivers and Uber drivers in other states? Other truck drivers? Construction workers? Hair salon workers? The list
goes on. The law is still up in the air. Which means the race to the bottom is still on. It's absurd to wait for the courts to decide all this
case-by-case. We need a simpler test for determining who's an employer and employee.
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Robert Reich: Any corporation that accounts for at least 80 percent or more of the pay someone gets, or receives from that worker at least
20 percent of his or her earnings, should be presumed to be that person's "employer." Congress doesn't have to pass a new law to make
this the test of employment. Federal agencies such as the Labor Department and the IRS have the power to do this on their own, through
their rule making authority.
By the way there was a changing-of-the-guard moment this month in New York City that passed with little fanfare when figures released
by the city's Taxi and Limousine Commission showed that there are now 4,088 registered Uber cars compared with 13,587 yellow cabs.
Map: These will be Europe's most polluted cities by 2030
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When Europeans talk about air pollution, they often think of India or China, but rarely consider their own continent to be at risk. And
while levels of air pollution have decreased throughout Europe over the past decades, a new study by Austrian scientists concludes that
smog is far from being defeated on the continent.
Scientists with the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis predict that by 2030, many European cities will be faced with air
pollution levels far above limits set by the World Health Organization and the European Union. Whereas many Europeans already live in
polluted areas today, conditions will worsen in certain cities if no significant measures are taken to stop the deterioration.
"We show the potential and the need for further emission controls to achieve safe levels of air quality — current legislation will not do the
job," researcher Gregor Kiesewetter, who led the study, said on the Web site of his institute. "Air pollution has a major impact on human
health, contributing to lung and heart disease," the scientists warned.
What is surprising is that the cities which will suffer most are not necessarily the biggest ones. London, for instance, is expected to have
harmless levels of pollution, despite its current smog, which has led to an E.U. lawsuit against Britain for the country's failure to reduce
pollution levels. "By 2030, the introduction of diesel particle filters will have diminished the current impact from local traffic sources on
air quality in some European cities," Kiesewetter told The Washington Post.
An alarming presence of dangerous microparticles is primarily predicted for Eastern Europe. In the proximity of Krakow, one of Poland's
oldest cities, smog will be particularly widespread by 2030, according to the Austrian researchers. Warsaw and Sofia are also predicted to
have alarming levels of microparticles because these cities are expected to continue to burn solid fuels such as wood or coal to generate
heat.
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In western and northern Europe, the cities hardest hit will include the industrial Spanish port of Gijon, Sweden's capital, Stockholm,
southern Germany's Stuttgart, northern Italy's Milan and Turin, and the French capital.
Smog in Paris could have devastating consequences: As one of Europe's largest cities, air pollution would potentially endanger more than
12 million people in the French capital and its suburbs.
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Such high levels of air pollution would not come as a total surprise to most Parisians, though. On Mar. 17, 2014, Paris was plagued by thick
smog that was even worse than the one in Beijing that day. Back then, authorities responded with an unprecedented measure — banning
half of all cars and making public transport free for one week.
In January, the mayor of Paris announced that polluting trucks and buses would no longer be allowed to enter the city, starting in July. It's
only the latest measure taken to tackle the Parisian air pollution problem: In December, for instance, the city decided to prohibit the use of
open fireplaces.
The air pollution problem of Paris was widely reported internationally and has been used to mock the city, but as the Austrian study
shows, other cities are equally at risk.
Some consider the recent Parisian measures to be exaggerated, but supporters of a tough anti-smog stance have a strong counter-
argument: Outdoor air pollution is blamed for the deaths of at least 100,000 and, according to some estimates, even as many as 400,000
Europeans each year.
Most of these deaths could easily be prevented, according to the Austrian researchers. "If the most efficient air pollution control
technologies that are currently available were implemented across Europe, 99 percent of European monitoring stations would see air
pollution levels reduced below E.U. limits by 2030," they concluded.
Imagine President Ted Cruz
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Mine inane I
U.S. Senator Ted Can. a Republican Gan Texas. maths the start of his presidential campaign by giving the convocation address at Liberty University in Lynchburg. Virgkia. US.. on Monday. March 23.
2015. By kicking off his campsign at the Vegitea Christian cheep, hounded by the fate evangast Jerry Falwell. rather than a caner in his home state.
"Think just how different the world would be," said Senator Ted Cruz on Monday, in a speech so packed with visionspinning and the word
"imagine" that it seemed as if John Lennon had returned, as a Hispanic Texan running a hardright, antiestablishment, Christianthemed
campaign for the White House. Weird. But weird is the essence of Mr. Cruz, who is now the first major Republican in the 2016 race. Let
the fundraising begin. Commence the swelling of the Cruz coffers, and of Mr. public profile beyond the gated confines of CSpan and
Fox News.
The "imagines" that Mr. Cruz doled out were chosen for his audience, students at Liberty University in Lynchburg, Va. Robust cheers
greeted one of the first: "Imagine young people coming out of school with four, five, six job offers." He summoned many images that
would be hard to argue with. "Imagine instead of economic stagnation, booming economic growth." "Imagine innovation thriving on the
Internet." "Imaine America finally becoming energy selfsufficient" "Imagine a federal government that protected the privacy rights of
every American.
Of course, if you know Mr. Cruz, or are familiar with how government is supposed to work, or with reality in general, you'll find some of
his imaginanes problematic, like abolishing the Internal Revenue Service, sealing the border, or "repealing every word of Obamacare."
"Imagine a federal government that works to defend the sanctity of human life and to uphold the sacrament of marriage," he said. But Mr.
Cruz says he is a champion of personal libertytoo and gay people who love each other are demanding their liberty to many, just not in a
way he finds acceptable. No data support Mr. MIE claim that insurance premiums are "skyrocketing" under Obamacare. Immigrants,
legal and otherwise, are building this country, and efforts to vacuumseal the border would continue to fail, and the country would suffer
from its hostility to its immigrants no matter what Mr. Cruz says. The rest of the world, of course, is indifferent to one Republican's
oratorical dog whistles. The global climate will keep changing, and causing calamities, with or without the acknowledgment of Mr. Cruz
and his fellow climate know-nothings.
Mr. speech was an exercise in crowd pleasing dissonance; the contradictions slip by if you're not paying attention. America is great
but needs to be made great again. Privacy is sacrosanct, and government should not get between you and your doctor, unless you're a
woman who wants to avoid or end a pregnancy. Mr. Cruz wants to repeal programs that protect some immigrants from deportation, but
he has also said in the past that Republicans need to do better with Hispanic voters or risk extinction as a national party. His federalist
views are incoherent: he wants states to be free to experiment with marijuana legalization, but attacked Mr. Obama for not cracking down
on states that do so.
Mr. Cruz wants voters who sent him to Washington to keep him in Washington, with a promotion, though he says, "The answer will not
come from Washington."
A heated, crowded presidential primary can be wearying, but useful for sorting out differences and contradictions and determining where
a party stands on things. Mr. Cruz, whose oratory captures so many Republican paradoxes and idiocies, especially on immigration and
health care, has set a solid baseline for the messy job ahead.
THE EDITORIAL BOARD - MARCH 23.2015
Olive Oil Ingredient Leads Cancer Cells To Their Death
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A napes' in nub, . itgin olive a In Mn Skin in ark*, canner nil* million Inmanbon, nth
An ingredient found in extra-virgin olive oil called oleocanthal has been known as a compound capable of killing a variety of human
cancer cells, but how this process actually played out was not understood. Now, a team of researchers has uncovered not only how
oleocanthal destroys cancer cells, but that it is able to do so while leaving healthy cells unharmed.
Paul Breslin, a professor of nutritional sciences at Rutgers University, had thought that oleocanthal killed the cancer cells by targeting a
key protein in cancer cells that triggers apoptosis, a process that sees dangerous or damaged cells self-destruct by upsetting the balance of
ions in the cell membranes. In investigating this theory, he teamed up with David Foster and Onica LeGendre, two cancer biologists from
New York City's Hunter College to more closely examine the process. "We needed to determine if oleocanthal was targeting that protein
and causing the cells to die,"says Breslin.
What first surprised the scientists was how quickly the oleocanthal destroyed the cancer cells. While apoptosis requires between 16 and 24
hours to take effect, the oleocanthal was killing off the cancer cells within 30 minutes to one hour. This led the team to believe that there
were some other factors at play. What they discovered was that the oleocanthal was piercing the cancer cell's vesicles, the containers that
store the cell's waste. By puncturing these "dumpsters," as Breslin describes them, it creates an outpouring of enzymes that then cause the
cell to die. "Once you open one of those things, all hell breaks loose,"says Breslin.
And when it came to the healthy cells, the researchers found that they remain completely unharmed. While the application of oleocanthal
caused a temporary halt in their life cycles, after 24 hours they returned to normal. With the testing thus far carried out in the lab, the
researchers say that they will now look to establish the effects of oleocanthal on cancer cells in living animals. The findings were published
in the journal Molecular and Cellular Oncology.
Nkk 1.0An - Febreary 19. NHS - (kiwi
Quote of the Week...
Madonna is 55, her boyfriend is 22;
Tina Turner is 75, her boyfriend is 40;
J Low is 42, her boyfriend is 26;
Mariah Carey is 42 and her
husband is 32....
Still Single?
Relax, your boyfriend
hasn't been born
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What "Cool" really means...
These photos are amazing
6 dme Golden Globe winner Paul Newman boating in Venice during a film festival (1963)
Marlon Brando's screen test in "Rebel Without A Cause" (1955).
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Children of Chicago (1941)
The gorgeous necklines of the 1950s
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Audrey Hepburn at a premiere on September 14, 1953.
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Sigourney Weaver in a suit
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A young Harrison Ford
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A young boy stealing the show, back when middle school kids knew how to dance (1950)
L.11
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Clint Eastwood with actresses Olive Sturgess and Dani Crayne in San Francisco, 1954
The original way to 'text' in Class (1944)
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A gang of greasers in NYC, 1950
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Caroline Kennedy walks ahead while her father, the most powerful man in the world,
carries her doll. (1960)
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a
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'teenagers and their first ear ( I95Os)
Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau and his cabinet -1968.
These men knew how to wear a suit.
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Sophia Loren, one of the only actresses to win an Oscar, Grammy, and Golden Globe awards.
A famous quote of hers:
"Sex appeal is fifty percent what you ' ve got and fifty percent what people think you've got."
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Ellen O'Neal, the greatest woman freestyle skateboarder in the 1970s.
A man lee skating in a suit (1937)
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'this is how teenagers dated in the 1950s
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High school fashion feature in Life Magazine (1969)
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G:
Frank Sinatra stepping out of a helicopter with a drink
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Dean Martin & Angie Dickinson on the set of Rio Bravo, 1959
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Girl with typewriter and a smoke
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It
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A couple on Michigan Avenue in Chicago (1975)
A stylish couple in the rain in London (1963)
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Queen Elizabeth and Prince Phillip at the horse races (1968)
Muhammad Ali looking dapper
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lik
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Paul McCartney and Mick Jagger sit opposite each other on a train to Bangor. (1967)
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A salesman has his motorized roller skates refueled at a gas station (1961)
A young Michael Caine in 1959
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A couple dancing in a 1950's "Be Bop" theater as everyone looks on.
Girl on a scooter (1969)
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Ernest Hemingway's striking passport photo (1923)
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The definition of old school cool. Cary Grant in the 1950s
LC]
I hope that the above pies reminds you what "cod" used to be like!
BEST VIDEO OF THE WEEK
Real Time with Bill Maher: Weed the People (HBO)
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Web Link: hrrayouru.betliRgO0YK24I
700,000 Americans are arrested every year for non-violent drug possession. And as Bill Mayer pointed out that "kids, if you are going to
experiment make sure absolutely certain before hand that your parents are white and well connected." Maher reviled that when Jeb
Bush was at Prep School not only was he was a pothead but a dealer. He dismisses that by saying, "... f was a cynical little turd at a
cynical school." Yet when he became a Governor he insisted on Mandatory Sentences for Drug Crimes and a policy of Jail Only, No
Treatment for Drug Users, except when it was his daughter when he made an exception.
George Bush 41 was the last President who didn't smoke pot. Presidents Clinton, Bush 43 and Obama have fessed up that they all smoke
pot, so as Mather asked, "why are there 40,000 Americans currently in jail for the exact same crime?" Putting people in jail for non-
violent drug offenses is one of the worse mistakes ever and President Obama should pardon all. He then pointed out that there is plenty
of precedent; Lincoln a Republican pardoned the Southern Rebels after the Civil War, Ford a Republican pardoned Viet Nan draft
dodgers, Ronald Reagan signed an amnesty for 2.7 million Mexican illegals and if Republicans can forgive people for armed insurrection,
desertion and coming into the country illegally from Mexico then Maher "then a Democrat can forgive usfor getting high."
THIS WEEK's MUSIC
Nat King Cole
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When I was a pre-teen I remember my father introducing me to friend and fellow Freemason, Nat King Cole, who at the time was a huge
recording artist, radio, television and movie star.... Being a tureen I was struts by his lit cigrerette in long holder dangling between his
fingers, beautiful white silk scarf and the epitome of elgance who spoke with a cadence unfamilar in New York. Without a doubt, even as a
ten or eleven years old I recognized that this man was silky cool, as the three of us stood in the imposing humungous ornate lobby in the
"white only" world of New York City's most prestigious hotel, The Waldof Astoria. Somehow neither my father and Nat King Cole seemed
phased by the splendor surrounding us and the eyes of everyone passing. Yet, all that I could think was wow
Born as Nathaniel Adams Coles in Montgomery, Alabama on March 17, 1919, he and his family moved to Chicago, Illinois where his
father became a Baptist minister. Cole learned to play the organ from his mother, Perlina Coles, the church organist. His first
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performance was of 'Test We Have No Bananas" at age four. He began formal lessons at 12, eventually learning not only jazz and gospel
music, but also Western classical music, performing, as he said, 'from Johann Sebastian Bach to Sergei Rachmaninoff'. Inspired by the
performances of Earl Hines, Cole began his performing career in the mid-1930s while still a teenager, adopting the name Nat Cole. His
older brother, Eddie, a bass player, soon joined Cole's band, and they made their first recording in 1936 under Eddie's name. They also
were regular performers at dubs. Cole acquired his nickname, "King", performing at one jazz club, a nickname presumably reinforced by
the otherwise unrelated nursery rhyme about "Old King Cole". He also was a pianist in a national tour of Broadway theatre legend Eubie
Blake's revue Shuffle Along. When it suddenly failed in Long Beach, California, Cole decided to remain there.
Known for his smooth and well-articulated vocal style, Nat King Cole who started out as a piano man and first began singing when a
drunken patron demanded that he sang her favorite song and it was received well. The led to him adding vocal songs in his sets. This
resulted in Capital Records offering Nat King Cole a recording contract. At the time, Cole was considered a leading jazz pianist, appearing
in the first Jan at the Philharmonic concerts (credited on the Mercury Record label as "Shorty Nadine" — derived from his wife's name —
as he was under exclusive contract to Capitol Records at the time). His revolutionary lineup of piano, guitar, and bass in the time of the
big bands became a popular setup for a jazz trio. It was emulated by many musicians, among them Art Tatum, Oscar Peterson, Ahmad
Jamal, and blues pianists Charles Brown and Ray Charles.
On November s, 1956, The Nat King Cole Show debuted on NBC. The variety program was the first of its kind hosted by an African-
American, which created controversy at the time. Beginning as a 15-minute pops show on Monday night, the program was expanded to a
half hour in July 1957. Despite the efforts of NBC, as well as many of Cole's industry colleagues — many of whom, such as Ella Fitzgerald,
Harry Belafonte, Franlde fain, Mel Torme, Peggy Lee, Eartha Kitt, and backing vocal group The Cheerleaders worked for industry scale
(or even for no pay) in order to help the show save money — The Nat King Cole Show was ultimately done in by lack of a national
sponsorship. Companies such as Rheingold Beer assumed regional sponsorship of the show, but a national sponsor never appeared. The
last episode of The Nat King Cole Show aired December 17, 1957. Cole had survived for over a year, and it was he, not NBC, who
ultimately decided to pull the plug on the show. Commenting on the lack of sponsorship his show received, Cole quipped shortly after its
demise, "Madison Avenue is afraid of the dark."
After a string of hits in the late 194os through most of the 1960s, Nat King Cole's career began to lag but was resesatated with the country-
flavored hit "Ramblin' Rose" in August 1962. reaching the number two spot on the Billboard pop charts. The following spring, Cole won
over music fans with the light-hearted tune "Those Lazy-Hazy-Crazy Days of Summer." He made his last appearances on the pop charts
in his lifetime in 1964. Modest successes compared to his earlier hits, Cole delivered two ballads — "I Don't Want to Hurt Anymore" and
"I Don't Want to See Tomorrow" — in his signature smooth style. Since his death, Cole's music has endured. His rendition of "The
Christmas Song" has become a holiday classic and many of his other signature songs are frequently selected for film and television
soundtracks. His daughter Natalie has also carried on the family profession, becoming a successful singer in her own right. In 1991, she
helped her father achieve a posthumous hit. Natalie Cole recorded his hit "Unforgettable" and put their vocals together as a duet that
introduced him to a new younger audience.
A lifelong smoker, Nat King Cole die on February 15, 1965 of lung cancer at the age of 45, the same year that my Father who was also a
smoker died. Cole was inducted into both the Alabama Music Hall of Fame and the Alabama Jan Hall of Fame. In 1990, he was awarded
the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award, and in 1997 was inducted into the Down Beat Jazz Hall of Fame. In 2007, he was inducted
into the Hit Parade Hall of Fame. An official United States postage stamp featuring Cole's likeness was issued in 1994. In 2000, Cole was
inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as one of the major influences on early rock and roll. In 2013, he was inducted into the Latin
Songwriters Hall of Fame for his contribution to the Latin music genre. And my personal perennial favorite, The Christmas Song,
performed by Cole, which still receives a lot of airplay every holiday season, is the way I know that it is the Christmas season. With this I
invite you to enjoy the silky smooth voice and musical genius of Mr. Nat King Cole....
Nat King Cole — When I Fall in Love — Impattiatu gelEy.6s
Nat King Cole — Uriforgettabie — buiLaysawaely_agjathi
Nat King Cole - Mona Lisa -- httplivoutu.beikSuYpv9fIcxU
Nat King Cole - The Very Thought of You -- hug•//yaun hotaffl WSo4fYM
Nat King Cole - Autumn Leaves - hurAyoutu.be/6R4eg6SRdCw
Nat King Cole - Blue Moon -- lifixilyoutti he/21 scyhRP_Ill
Nat King Cole - I've Groum Accustomed To Her Face -- hunSyouiu bersOWIJvW02at
Nat King Cole — The Christmas Song -- Impl/youtu.be/ kQIPCP6B0
Nat King Cole - Love Me Tender -- IlimayounLbefl911pigalySE
Nat King Cole - Too Young -- hitayoutu.betKaFtsqU2V6U
Nat King Cole - Smile -- hup'llyoniv hell INRol GRNXpE
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Nat King Cole — L-O-V-E - sI p://youtu.benErVP6xLZwg
Nat King Cole — Love Is A Many Splendored Thing -- kupSy.ougag/4914STMII IR F
Nat King Cole — Lush We - l tp://youtu.b&INFAOBIz4yY8
Nat King Cole — Nature Boy -- Inip.:ilyoutn heillt2C101Siw
Nat King Cole — Stardust - Al p://youtu.be/DjU6ZjrOulc
Nat King Cole Trio & Frank Sinatra — Exactly Like You — hup://yountbeL3w7BVS0Tha
Nat King Cole & Sammy Davis Jr. -- In ayoutu.be/QH6t VunRI8
Nat & Natalie Cole — Unforgettable -- W:llyouns.befiNKCyUe4sytt
Nat King Cole — An Evening With Nat King - bgmayoutuldlighiB54og
I hope that you have enjoyed this week's offerings and wish you and the ones you love a
great week....
Sincerely,
Greg Brown
Cifepxy Mown
Outman & CEO
GletoMia Priam LLC
US:
Tel:
Fax:
EFTA00861177