From: Gregory Brown
Sent: Sunday, April 19,111.1
To: undisclosed-recipients:
Subject: Greg Brown's Weekend Reading and Other Things.... 04/19/2015
Attachments: Untitled attachment 00202.docx; Untitled attachment 00205.docx; Untitled attachment
00208.docx; Ohio Players bio.docx
DEAR FRIEND
The End of White Christian Am=rica is Approaching
In the on-line news magazine Alternet, Brooklyn writer and journalist Amanda Mancotte recently wrote — The a=d of
white Christian America is nigh: Why the country's youth are abandoning religious conservatism=— As White Christians
are now a minority in 19 states and America's growi=g racial diversity only tells part of the story. New data from the
American Values Atlas shows that while Caucasians continue to be the maj=rity in all but 4 states in the country, white
Christians are the minority in a whopping 19 states. And, nationwide, Ameri=ans who identify as Protestant are now in
the minority for the first time ever, clocking in at a mere 47 percent of Americans and falling.
The most obvious reason for this change is growing racial diversity. Most Americans still identify =s Christian, but
"Christian" is a group that is less white and less Protestant than it has been at any time in hist=ry. The massive growth in
Hispanic Catholics, in particular, has been a major factor in this shift in the ethnic and religious identity of this country.
White Catholics used to outnumber Hispanic Catholics 3 to 1 in the 2000s, b=t now it's only by a 2 to 1 margin.
=span style="font-size:12pt;line-height:107%;font-family:Georgia,serif"><=r>
But another major reason religious diversity is outpa=ing the growth of racial/ethnic diversity is largely due to the
explosive growth in non-belief among Americans. One in five Americans now identifies as religio=sly unaffiliated. In 13
states, the "nones" are the largest religious group. Non-religious people now equal Catholics i= number, and their
proportion is likely to grow dramatically, as young peopl= are by far the most non-religious group in the country. This
isn't =ome kind of side effect of their youth, either. As Adam Lee has noted, the millennial generation is becoming less
religious as they age.
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These changes explain the modern political landscape =s well as any economic indicator. While not all white Christians
are conservative, these changing numbers definitely suggest that conservative Christians are rapidly losing their grip on
power. And while some non-white Christians are conservative, their numbers are not mak=ng up for what the Christian
right is losing. And whether conservative l=aders are aware of the exact numbers or not, it's clear that they sense that
change is=in the air. Just by speaking to young people, turning on your TV, or reading the Intern=t, you can sense the
way the country is lurching away from conservative Christ=an values and towards a more liberal, secular outlook. And
conservative =hristians aren't taking these changes well at all.
To look at the Christian right now is to see a people=who know they are losing power and are desperately trying to
reassert dominance befo=e it's lost altogether. The most obvious example of this is the frenzy of anti-abortion activity in
recent years.Q=A0 Anti-choice forces have controlled the Republican Party since the late '70s, but only in the past few
year= have they concentrated so singlemindedly on trying to destroy legal abortion in wide swaths of the country. In
2011 alone, states passed nearly three times as many abortion restrictions as they had =n any previous year.
None of this is a reaction to any changes in people=E2.4es sexual behavior or reproductive choices. It's not like there
was a spike i= abortions causing this panic. In fact, the abortion rate has been declining. And despite continuing media
panic over adolescent sexuality the fact is that teenagers=are waiting longer to have sex, on average, than in the past.
Despite thi=, not only are you seeing a dramatic increase in attacks on legal abortion, the Christian right has expanded its
attacks to contraception access, suggesting that something has worked them into a panic they believe can only be
resolved by trying to reassert their religious and sexual values.
The fact that these changes in attitude are rising al=ngside the growth of irreligiosity is not a coincidence. More perhaps
even t=an the 1960s, Americans are in a period of questioning rigid sexual and religious mores, and concluding, in
increasing numbers, that they are not down with guilt-trippi=g people for victimless behavior and demanding conformity
for its own sake.=C20 Some of them-now a whopping 22% of Americans! — are leaving religion entirely. Some are
continuing in their faith but choos=ng to interpret their values differently than Christian conservatives would li=e.
And so we see Christian conservatives cracking down i= a desperate bid to regain control. They claim that they're being
oppressed by increasing tolerance for reli=ious diversity. They have latched onto, with some success, the claim that
"religious freedom" requires giving Christians the right to oppress others= The Republican Party is in complete thrall to
the religious right, to the point where giving the Christian right one go-nowhere symbolic bill instead of another one
created a major political crisis.
The irony is that this panic-based overreach is just =aking the situation worse for the Christian right. One of the biggest
reaso=s the secularization trend has accelerated in recent years is that young people see the victim complex and the sex
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policing of the Christian right and it's turnin= them off. And they're not just rejecting conservative Christianity but the
entire idea of organized religion altogether. In=other words, the past few years have created a self-perpetuating cycle:
Christian conservatives, in a panic over changing demographics, start cracking down. In reaction, more people =ive up
on religion. That causes the Christian right to panic more and crack down more. In the end, Christian conservatives are
going to haste= their own demise by trying to save themselves. And as Mancotte says, =i>"not that any of us should be
crying for them."
<= class="MsoNormal" style="text-align:center">
=span style="font-size:18pt;line-height:107%;font-family:Georgia,serif">T=e Myth of the Mutual Fund
How Many Mutual Funds Routinely Rout the Market? Zero
New York Times writer and podcast editor Jeff Sommer made a startlin= discovery based initially on a study last summer
called "Does=Past Performance Matter? The Persistence Scorecard," conducted by S&P Dow Jones l=dices twice a year.
The edition of the study that he focused on began in March 2009, the start of the bull market. The bull market in=stocks
turned six last month, and despite some rocky stretches — it has generally been a v=ry pleasant time for money
managers, who have often posted good numbers. <=p>
The study in=luded 2,862 broad, actively managed domestic stock mutual funds that were in operation for the 12
months through 2010.=C2* The S&P Dow Jones team winnowed the funds based on performance. It selected the 25
percent of funds with the best returns over those 12 months — and t=en asked how many of those funds actually
remained in the top quarter in each of the four succeeding 12-month periods through March 2014. The answer =as
remarkably low: two.
Just two funds — the Hodges Small Cap fund and t=e AMG SouthernSun Small Cap fund — managed to hold on to their
berths in =he top quarter every year for five years running. And for the 2,862 funds as a who=e, that record is even a
little worse than you would have expected from random chance alone. In other words, if all of the managers of the
2,862 funds hadn't bothered to try to pick stoc=s at all — if they had merely flipped coins — they would, as a group,
probably=have produced better numbers. Instead of two funds at the end of five years.Q=A0 Basic probability theory
tells us there should have been at least three.
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The study seemed to support the considerable=body of evidence suggesting that most people sshouldn'teven try to beat
the market: Just pick low-cost index funds, assemble a balanced and appropriate portfolio fo= your specific needs, and
give up on active fund management. The data in th= study didn't prove that the mutual fund managers lacked talent or
that you couldn't beat the market. But, as =eith Loggie, the senior director of global research and design at S&P Dow
Jones Indices, said in an intervi=w last week, the evidence certainly ddidn'tbolster the case for investing with active fund
managers. "Looking at the numbers, you =an't tell whether there is skill involved in what they do or whether their
performanc= is just a matter of luck," Mr. Loggie said. "= believe that many of them do have skill. But even if they do
have it, based on how they've done in the past you really can't =redict how they will perform in the future."
And although those two funds had manage to perf=rm splendidly during the last study — at the time of the article we
were two weeks away from the completion of another 12 months since the end of that last study, and up to then it had
been a mediocre for those two mutual funds, leaving Mr. Sommer to conclude that at the end ther= would be none.
Here are the dismal statistics: The SouthernSun Small Cap fund has actually lost money for investors over the 12 months
through Thursday. It was down 3.2 percen=, according to Morningstar, and for the nine months through December, it
was in the bottom=quartile of funds in the S&P. Dow Jones study. The Hodges Small Cap fund h=s done better, gaining
almost 6 percent through the middle of March. S.&.P Dow J=nes Indices says that put it in the third quartile — or
second-to•worst one — =trough December. While it's mathematically possible, it is highly unlikely that either will climb
to th= top quartile in the next few weeks, Mr. Loggie said.
This is an i=dication that one can never use past performance to predict future returns. Yes It is always possible that any
one of these funds will beat the market over the l=ng term and some of them will. But the problem is that we don't
know which of them will do that in advance= And that, in a nutshell, is the kernel of the argument for buying index
funds. As much as mutual funds will tell you that their strategies employ science, it is a science that is less predictable
than the weather forecast on your local television station's news program. So why are so many Americans not realizing
that almost all Mutual Funds underp=rforms the market and continue to pay them millions and billions of =ollars in
fees?
A Tale of Two States
=/p>
It's hard to compare states so I found Ra=di Weingarten recent article in The Washington Post — It's a tal= of two states —
as both sit side by side along sharing the shoreline with Lake Superior =heir economies both grew from foundations in
manufacturing, farming and mining, and they each boast a strong history of organized labor. And in 2010, still reeling
from the recession, they electe= new governors. Except that the governors took these two states -- Minnesota and
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Wisconsin -- have gone down two very different paths. Today, Minnesota's unemployment rate is 3.6 percent -- far
below the nationwide rate of 5.7 percent - while Wisconsin's job growth has been among the worst in the =egion and its
income growth has been among the worst in the nation.
Since his election,=Minnesota Governor Mark Dayton turned his state's budget deficit into a projected surplus of nearly
$2 billion..C2* While Republican front-runner for the 2016 Presidential election, Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker has
swollen his stat='s budget deficit to a projected $2 billion. Meanwhile, Dayton has boost=d the minimum wage, invested
in public education and supported workers' rights. (A=d Minnesota has the most union members of any state in the
Midwest.) And Walker has slashed funding to public schools, and is dismantling the state&=39;s public university
system. On March 9, he signed a bill that makes Wisconsin the 25th so-called right to work state, which, research
shows, contrary to the hype, drives down wages and destroys good jobs. Why? All in an effort to eviscerate Wisconsin's
labor unions.
<=pan style="font-size:12ptline-height:107%;font-family:Georgia,serir>
Hasn't someone told Governor Wal=er that Trickle-Down Economics doesn't work and frankly and it =ever has.
Therefore if we want to restore a healthy middle class, we need a different approach. If we want a stro=g middle class,
which both Governors say that they want, then you can't take out the unions that b=ilt it. If you want good jobs with
higher wages, then workers need a voice. If we want to restore a healthy middle class, we need a different approach, a
virtuous cy=le that begins with a high-quality public education that gives students the sk=lls they need to get good jobs
with fair wages, helping each generation climb t=e ladder of opportunity. Another crucial step is to enable more workers
to fo=m and join unions.
As Hillary Clinton recently noted, "The American middle =lass was built, in part, by the right for people to organize and
bargain." And at Weingarten pointed o=t in her article Secretary Clinton is right. When unions were at their peak, more
workers -- upwards of 50 percent -- were in the mi=dle class. Conversely, a decline in union membership - spurred on by
trickle-down economics, ideological attacks and globalization -- is directly linked to the rise in income inequality. =At a
time when only the wealthiest 10 percent have reaped the benefits of any gains in productivity, workers once again
n=ed a voice on the job. Collective bargaining can lift all boats, even those boats that aren't carrying a =nion card.
look at wages. In the heyday of the American labor movement, non-managerial workers' wages went up 75 percent. As
unions have been o= the decline, these workers have only seen a four percent bump. Still, even toda=, union workers
earn 28 percent more than nonunion workers. When two-thirds o= our economic activity is driven by consumer
spending, it's critical tha= working families have more money in their pockets to spend. Broadly shared prosperity will
remain elusive as long as workers' buying power is limi=ed.
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And then there is retirement security. Eighty-six percent of Americans believe our nation faces a retirement security
crisis. Unions bar=ain a secure retirement on behalf of workers, often in the form of pensions. Pensions both ensure that
workers can retire with financial dignity and are important investors in our economy. For every dollar paid in pension
benefi=s, there's $2.37 in economic output. Plus, long-term capital funds create =undreds of thousands of jobs in asset
classes like infrastructure, venture capital =nd real estate.
Collective bargaining has a multiplier effect. So do laws meant to take collective bargaining away. Workers in so-called
right-to-work states make about $1,500 less per year. When wages are lower, workers leave the state, depressing job
creatio=, and there's a sizable economic loss to the state. Marquette University economist Abdur Chowdhury estimates
the impact of right-to-work on Wisconsi= will be "a net loss of direct and indirect income of at least $5.8 billion
annually."
Governors and state policymakers have a clear cho=ce. They can push ideological policies to break the backs of unions
and further disempow=r workers, have their deficit grow, workers' wages sink and their state r=nked at the bottom for
business and economic climate, as Walker's Wisconsin is.=Or they can -- like Minnesota, which is ranked in the top ten in
the nation for its business and economic climate -- strengthen unions and workers' rights,=invest in public education and
infrastructure, and create more good jobs. An= as Weingarten also pointed out, "It's a clear choice, and =f we care
about working families accessing the American dream -- it's not a hard one.=E244
=br>
* ***** </=ont>
America's Mass Incarceration Habit Needs a Serious Fix
c=span>
Michael K. Williams is the ACLU ambassador for ending mass incarceration. He is an act=r living in Williamsburg,
Brooklyn
When Michael Williams was growing up in East Flatbush, one of the toughest neighborhoods in Brooklyn, one of his very
best friends was something else. He, let's call him MZ, could have had Hollywood on a st=ing. He was actually William's
inspiration for becoming an actor. MZ, however, suffered from bipolar disorder. Too poor to get the mental health care
he needed, he ended up behind bars, and it wrecked h=m. He was no longer the friend and brother I knew. Between the
disorder =nd what he experienced in prison, he's never been the same — a shell of his former sel=.
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Sto=ies like MZ's are all too common. Our society has been using jails and prisons as a dumping ground for the mentally
ill and those addicted to drugs. These human beings don't belong in prison, they belong in treatment, yet we've pushed
=hem into cages and denied them their humanity. Is it shocking that these same valuable citizens, like my friend MZ,
emerge wo=se off than when they went in? Let's face it: America is addicted to mass incarceration, and it's making our
society sick.
Our habit of lock=ng away human beings is a particularly unseemly kind of addiction for a country that prides itself on
freedom, especially when the United States incarcerates more of its citizens than Ch=na, Russia, or Iran. Right now
America has about 5 percent of the world's population but is responsible for 25 per=ent of the world's incarcerated
population. In other words, one out of four people in prison today are inside U.S. jails a=d penitentiaries. That is nearly
2.4 million human beings — an obscene number.
In America, it is black men, mo=e than anyone else, who suffer from our dependence on mass incarceration. Currently,
black men are six tim=s more likely to be imprisoned in federal and state prisons and local jails t=an white men. This
horrifying racial disparity comes in part from the war on drugs, which has been devastating communities of color for the
past four decades. Although blacks and w=ites use illegal drugs at roughly the same rates, African-Americans make up
nearly 40 percent of t=ose put away for drug offenses in state or federal prison, even though we only =ake up 13 percent
of the U.S. population.
<=span>
We need to realize that these statistics re=resent human beings. These men are someone's child, someone's parent.
Someone loves them and still wants the best for them.=These men have dreams of being great, too. Ruining people's
lives for small, nonviolent offenses tied to drug use, drug ad=iction, or mental illness is not the way to go. Health
problems are health problems= not criminal justice problems. It's by the grace of God that I didn'=t get into more serious
trouble. If I had, there's no way I'd be where I am to=ay.
=span style="font-size:12ptline-height:107%;font-family:Georgia,serif">T=ere are far too many people of color with
bright futures that have been relegated to our prison systems. However, instead of being =rovided with opportunities to
express themselves or their creativity safely or getting t=e right support, they make mistakes which cost them dearly.
The costs of thos= mistakes are high and these men pay with their futures. Once people h=ve done hard time, the world
closes in on them. It's damn near impossible to get a job. Depend=ng on where you live, you likely can't vote. The
possibility of becoming a productive citizen is foreclosed on by a system that denies those who have served their time
with another chance. Instead, they're forever seen as ex-cons.
And don't forget the huge cost of confinement= The U.S. spent $80 billion in 2010 on locking up people on the local,
state, and federal level, which could be better spent on education, health care, or simply get=ing at-risk people the
counseling they need so they don't fall back into ad=iction and petty crime. We have spent the last 40 years stuffing our
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prisons, most=y with black and brown men, and for what? This isn't who we are. America,=we can do better. We have
to, for all people. Because MZ deserved better, and there are hundreds of thousands more like him.
Unbelievable GOP Statements on Voter Suppression
Gov. Chris Christie during a campaign stop in Connecticut for Republican gubernatorial candidat= Tom Foley.
You would think that making it e=sier for citizens to vote would be something for everyone in a democracy to celebrate.
But the shocki=g remarks by these six government officials — some of whom will be on=the November ballot — tell a
different story.
Governor Chris Christie: Same-Day Voter Registration Is a "Trick" and GOP Needs to Win Gubernatorial Races So They
Control "Voting Mechani=ms"
In early March, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie spoke at a US Chamber of Commerce gathering in Washington, DC. In his
comments, The Re=ord reports that Christie "pushed further into the contentious debate o=er voting rights than ever
before, saying Tuesday that Republicans need to win gubernatorial races this year so that they're the ones controlling
=E2.0voting mechanisms' going into the next presidential election."
This isn=E2$4t the first time Christie's come clean about GOP intentions at the ballot box. In August, while
campaigning in Chicago for B=uce Rauner, the GOP candidate challenging Gov. Pat Quinn, Christie complained t=at
Illinois would become the 11th state to permit same-day voter registration =his November — a move supporters say will
increase turnout and improve =ccess. Christie didn't see it that way, calling it an underhanded Democrat=c get-out-the-
vote tactic. Christie said of Quinn: "I see the stuf= that's going on. Same-day registration all of a sudden this year comes
to Illinois. Shocking," he added sarcastically.= "I'm sure it was all based upon public policy, good public policy to get
same-da= registration here in Illinois just this year, when the governor is in the toilet and needs as much help as he can
get." He added that the=voter registration program is designed to be a major "obstacle*=9D for Republican
gubernatorial candidates.
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Fran Millar: Georgia Senator Complains About Polling Place Being Too Convenient for Black Voters
Georgia state Senator Fr=n Millar (R-Dunwoody) wrote an angry op-ed following the news that DeKalb County, part of
which he represents, w=ll permit early voting on the last Sunday in October. The voting will ta=e place at the Gallery at
South DeKalb mall. Here's what Millar wrote in The Atlanta-Journal Constitution: "Mhis location is dominated by
African-American shoppers and it is near several large African=American mega churches such as New Birth Missionary
Baptist... Is it possible =hurch buses will be used to transport people directly to the mall since the poll will o=en when the
mall opens? If this happens, so much for the accepted principle of separation of church and state." Millar, who is senior
deputy whip for the Georgia Senate Republicans, promised to p=t an end to Sunday balloting in DeKalb County when
state lawmakers assemble i= the Capitol in January.
Doug Preis: An Ohio GOP Chair Says We Shouldn't Accommodate the "Urban — Read African-American — Voter-
Turnout Machine"
In 2012, Republ=can officials in Ohio were limiting early voting hours in Democratic-majority counties, while expanding
them on night= and weekends in Republican counties. In response to public outcry, Ohio Secretary of State Jon Husted
mandated the =ame early voting hours in all 88 Ohio counties. He kept early voting hour= from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. on
weekdays from October 2 to 19 and broadened hours from 8 a.m. to 7 =.m. from October 22 to November 2. But he
refused to expand voting hours beyond 7 p.m. during the week, on weekends o= three days prior to the election —
which is when voting is most con=enient for many working-class Ohioans. Here's what the Franklin Party (Columbus)
Ohio GOP chair, Doug Preis, and close adviser=to Ohio Gov. John Kasich, said about limiting early voting. "= guess I really
actually feel we shouldn't contort the voting process to accommodate the urb=n — read African-American — voter-
turnout machine." (And y=s, he actually said "read African-American," that w=sn't inserted.)
Greg Abbott: Texas AG Says Partisan Districting Decisions Are Legal, Even if There Are "Incidental Effe=ts" on Minority
Voters
The 2010 Census results showed that 89 percent of the population growth in Texas came from minorities, but "when it
ca=e to fitting those new seats in the map, Republican lawmakers made sure three of them favored Republicans, who
tend to be white=" according to the Associated Press. The Justice Department claims that Texas lawmakers intentionally
redrew the sta=e's congressional districts in order to dilute the Hispanic vote. Attorne= General Greg Abbott, who is
running for governor of Texas, wrote the following in a letter to the Department of Justice defending the state's voting
maps:
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"Dal's accusat=ons of racial discrimination are baseless. In 2011, both houses of t=e Texas Legislature were controlled
by large Republican majorities, and their redistricting decisions were designed to increase the Republican Party's
electora= prospects at the expense of the Democrats. It is perfectly constitutional for a Republican-controlled
legislature to make partisan districting decisions, even if there are incidental effects on minority voters who support
Democratic candidates."
Ted Yoho: Only Property Owners Should Vote
=br>
While running for a Florida congressio=al seat in 2012, Ted Yoho suggested that only property owners should have the
right to vote, as =ou can watch in this video. Here's what he said: "I've had some radical ideas about voting and it's
probably not a good time to tell them, but you used=to have to be a property owner to vote." He also called early voting
by ab=entee ballots "a travesty." And yes, Yoho won the election, and i= now a member of Congress.
Don Yelton: North Carolina GOP Precinct Chair: Voter ID Law Will "Kick Democrats in the Butt" and Hurt "Lazy Blacks"
In an =nterview last year with The Daily Show, Don Yelton, a GOP precinct chair in Buncombe County, North Carolina,
defended the state=E244ks new voter ID law, saying so many offensive things, he was asked to resign the d=y after it
aired. Yelton admits at the start of the segment that the number o= Buncombe County residents who commit voter
fraud is one or two out of 60,00= a year. The interview correspondent, Aasif Mandvi, replies that those numbers show
"there's enough vot=r fraud to sway zero elections," and then Yelton replies, "Mmmm...=hat's not the point." He goes
on to say that "if it hurts a bunch of lazy blacks that want the government to give them everything, so be it." an= then
adds, "The law is going to kick the Democrats in the butt." After the segment aired, the Buncombe County GOP Chair
issued a statement on Yelton's=comments, calling them "offensive, uniformed and unacceptable of any member within
the Republican Party" and cal=ed for Yelton's resignation. He obliged.
Voter suppression is both.=A0app=lling and un•A=erican. But this is what Republicans really think and it's u=ly.... It
would be one thing if these were aberrations but they aren't. The Republican Party leadership not only doesn't see this
type of language =nd accompanied actions as a problem, because of their partisan distain of Democrats, minor=ties and
especially our first Black President, they truly believe that anything =hat they do, no matter how vile and despicable is
okay to do even if this includes s=bverting the democratic process and this is my rant of the week....<=b>
WEEK's READINGS
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The Incredibly Shrinking American Middle Class
Although the e=onomy has pretty much recovered with company profits soaring, fina=cial markets at all-time highs,
unemployment at a low of 5.5% and inflation at historic lows it is apparent that the Middle Cla=s has been left out of this
largess. Even though most have done what would have been called doing the right thing all=of their lives — raising
children and taking care of their families do=to good paying jobs, for millions of Americans all gone now, including for
many families the house. And although many have found jobs, they are working at jobs making a third of what they
used =o. And unlike Wall Street there was no bail out for the middle class.
<=p>
A typical American household made about $51,017 in=2012, according to new figures out from the Census Bureau. That
number may =ound familiar to anyone who remembers George H. W. Bush's first year as president or Michael Ja=kson
in his prime. That's because household income in 2012 is similar to what i= was in 1989 (but back then it was actually
higher: you had an extra $600 or so to spend compared to today). =hat sobering statistic gives an indication of where
the American middle class appears to be headed. Take a look below =t a snapshot of where the middle class is now, the
problems they face and what =ur Facebook audience has to say about squeaking out a living these days.
A note on t=e term "middle class": There is no single, universal definition so we turned to economic analyst Robert Reich
Q=93 who spoke to us this week — for some direction. Reich suggested defining midd=e class as those with income
levels 50 percent above and below the median income.Q=A0 Median is a term that means the "middle of the
middle.Q=9D Median earnings are a key indicator of how the middle class is doing.
A Snapshot
=he income range to be considered middle class:$25,500— $76,500
The median middle class household income in 2012: $51,017 and in 1989: $51,681
Year inflation-adjusted median household income peaked at $56,080: 1999
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Income needed in a two parent, two child home in St. Louis for an adequate living standard: $64,67= and in New York
City: $94,676
The Problem
=/P>
Share of self-described middle-class adults who say it's more difficult now than a decade a=o for middle-class people to
maintain their standard of living: 85
Percentage of Americans that consider themselves to be "lower class" (the highest p=rcentage ever): 8.4
Percentage increase in salary growth for the median worker from 1979 to 2012: 5
Percentage drop in average real income per family since 2007: 8.3
The median net worth of a family in 2010: $77,300 and in 2007: $126,400
Percentage of Americans that are unemployed/underemployed rate: 14
=umber of states in which poverty rates rose between 2007 and 2010:46
Approximate poverty rate from 2009 to 2012: 15
The last time it remained at or above 15 percent for three years running: 1965
The Work
=p class="MsoNormal">
Average number o= hours U.S. workers put in annually: 1,790 what the Norwegians work: 1,420 and the French: 1,479
Percent increase in productivity from 1979 to 2012: 75
What the=median middle-class income ($51,017) would be if wages grew at the same rate: $77,=31
Number of guaranteed days of paid vacation given to U.S. workers: 0
Number of vacation days U.S. workers are entitled to, but don't take, in a typical year: 17= million
Number of paid maternity days in Germany: 98 (100% pay)
<=pan style="font-size:12ptline-height:107%;font-family:Georgia,serif">Nu=ber of paid maternity days in France: 112
(100% pay)
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<=pan style="font-size:12ptline-height:107%;font-family:Georgia,serir>Nu=ber of paid maternity days in U.S.: 0
Number of industrialized countries that do not mandate paid maternity leave: 1=/p>
(yes, the U.S. is the only one that does not require paid leave.)
The Costs
Average out-of-pocket health care expenses per household in 2012: $3,600 and in 2011: $3,280 and =n 2005: $2,035
Average amount needed to send a child to an in-state college for the 2012-13 academic year: 4>=A0$22,261 and for a
private college: $43,289
Percentage of Americans near retirement with less than $30,000 in their retirement accounts: 75
Percentage increase in housing prices since 1990: 56
Share of Ame=icans that do not have enough money saved to pay their bills for six months: 3/4
The Inequality
What Ha=pen To The American Dream
<=mg src="cid:ii_14c06e7cfla9ca83" alt="lnline image 5" width="472" he=ght="255">
"'Seriously thin=ing of moving overseas. Economically, many countries are struggling, but they seem to still have better
quality of lif=. Not everything is perfect, there is still crime, there are still rich stupi= idiots, but there is less of the
government being the evil empire as much a= here in the U.S. and more support for smaller less, global corporations.
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Environmental concerns are evident in legislation and policies. Healthcare =s a right which supersedes any right to carry
a gun in public. Someone once wro=e, 'Americans have rights to protection; Europeans have rights to be p=otected
from.—
=span style="font-size:9pt;line-height:107%;font-family:Georgia,serir>=E24$04, Saundra Hopkins
=/b>
Although economist may disagree, I view the e=onomy as a zero sum game and if this is true we have to ask why since
1970 to the Top=1%'s income grew by 181% while the bottom 99%'s income only grew by 2.6% and worker'
productiv=ty grew by almost 90%. It is obvious who is getting the short end. And unless Wall Street, stockholders and
management decide=that it is important to share the wealth with workers the Middle Class squ=eze is only going to get
worse.
NCAA
The Hypocrisy in College Sports
In a second installmen= of my weekly readings, as you know the NCAA which offers scholarships to =ts student athletes
refuses to pay them like typical employees but what you ma= not know, the true cost of that arrangement is staggering.
Often stud=nt athletes injured while playing can sometimes become so debilitated from their injuries that even after
recovery they can be classified as disabled, enabled to play sports or concentrate in the classroom and after leaving
school can't hold a job.=C241These injured student athletes learn something ugly. Once you are done with college,
college is typically done w=th you and not only are they stuck with the injuries they sustain, they are al=o stuck with the
medical bills. Career ending injuries almost always means medical bills with no end in sight. Eve= with medical insurance
thanks to Obamacare the co-pays and deductibles can =ost these injured ex-student athletes tens of thousands of
dollars a year.
The NCAA s=ys that it is always looking out for its student athletes which is why they consider them student athletes to
begin with... =o protect them by keeping them as amateurs and not as paid employees who coul= be exploited by an
overly aggressive sports program. But it turns out that not being an employee is the very thing that puts student athletes
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at risk beca=se it deprives them of the benefit that virtually every worker in all 50 Unite= States is guaranteed by law,
Worker's Compensation Insurance which pays=for all medical care if they get hurt on the job. Worker's compensation
pays 10=%, just like the coaches and the guys selling peanuts in the grandstands. So why no= the student athletes who
have the most dangerous jobs or are the most likel= to get injured?
Many student athletes end up paying the universities that they played for as a result of the injuries sustained while
playing for their sa=e university. This truly seems a little odd but no accident because the term student athlete was
created by the NCAA in the 1950s in an effort to not ha=e to pay Worker's Compensation after a football player in
Colorado was ac=ually killed during a game, and when his family pressed the school for the same survivor benefits that
they gave their employees, the NCAA said that he was='t an employee at all. And invented a new term, student athlete.
A term that helped give them the control of an employer without the obligations. This m=ve saved the NCAA an untold
fortune because new research shows that former NCA= athletes often suffer physical ailments for the rest of their lives.
An Indiana =niversity study last year found that half of them will have chronic injuries by their early 50s, a rate twice that
of non-athletes. When you suffers spine, back or neck injury you are not just going to be out for the rest of the season.
You are potentially going to be debilitated for the rest of your life. You are going to be restricted in your career
opportunities. It can resul= in a catastrophic illnesses that you will carry for the rest of your life. Some injured student
athlet=s are so debilitated (especially in football but also includes soccer, diving, swimming, water p=1o, hockey, track &
field, eitc.) that they are prohibited from working by their doctors or even driving. They are often in such bad shape that
the Federal Government labels them as 'leg=lly disabled' and a ward of the state with their medical bills and living
e=penses paid by taxpayers.
More disturbing is that because schools don't cover injur=es a number of critics believe that they are not doing the
things normal employe=s would do to prevent injuries, which means that athletes are not just on the hook for their
medical bills but are more likely to get injured to begin with. The whole point of Workman's Comp was to recognize that
we want employers who are benefiting from the activit=es of their employees to bare the costs of their injuries and to
try to take s=eps to reduce the risk of injuries. The biggest problem here is that they don&#=93 have very much
incentive to reduce those injuries.
These student athletes go to =allege hoping to enhance their earning potential and instead for far too many it has been
just the opposit=. Many of these injured athletes are unable to sit or work on their feet for sustained periods making it
impossible for th=m to do office work, work as drivers or become police officers or firemen...AO When actual
employees get hurt on the job and lose earning potential Workmen Comp makes up most of the difference so they don't
lose money. But since student athletes are not considered employees, they are on their own. And to add in=ult to injury
the schools seen to not care. Few injured student athletes ever hear from their coaches or schools after leav=ng.
Something is wrong.
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And for those who argue that changing the rules could bankru=t some sports programs.... I say malarkey. With billions
of dollars in college sports, why not set aside some money dedicated to the athletes and this can=be a piece of the TV
revenues and maybe you don't have to pay the coach $6=million and pay him $5 million. It is not implausible that that a
system can be created that funnels at least some of=the money that goes to pay everybody else, making some very rich
in the system except the players to at least at a minimum to provide healthcare. Gu=ranteed medical coverage should
be the be the number one priority in college sports.
=br>
The other dirty secret in college spor=s is mental abuse because being a student athlete can be hazard to one's mental
health. F=om day one student athletes are told that if they don't thrive in their meets =r games they can kiss their
dreams goodbye. Most college coaches make it absolutely clear to their athletes that if they don't perform they will be
fired, =osing their scholarship and sent home. And if they die they will be replaced in a nanosecond. This type of 'tough
coaching' which is common in college sports oft=n borders on abuse and at a much higher rate than in health services,
manufacturing, financial institutions, education and the military according=to the Ohio State Tepper Scale of Industry
Differences in Abuse. Dr. Ben=ett J. Tepper blames the NCAA system. One that makes it very hard fo= athletes to
transfer schools and punishes coaches who don't deliver wins. They have created a system where you have bosses who
are under tremendous strain= The pressure to win is really high. Their job insecurity is r=ally high. That combined with
students who have very little power, who can't get away, =an't escape and completely vulnerable and even when the
NCAA knows of the abuse =hey more often take little action... leads to a pattern of continued abuse.
Rebuild Gaza, and avert the next war
A Pa=estinian schoolgirl walks though the rubble of destroyed buildings in the northern Gaza Strip on March 11.<=span>
Nearly seven months after the end of the la=est war in Gaza, none of the underlying causes of the conflict have been
addressed. In the meantime, the people of Gaza are experiencing unprecedented levels of deprivation, and the prospect
for renewed armed conflict is very real.
In June 20=4, the Hamas-backed government in Gaza was dissolved, and a reunified Palestinian Authority cabinet was
created under =he leadership of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. The international commun=ty reached a
consensus, with tacit support from Israel, to empower this govern=ent to lead reconstruction in Gaza and, together with
the United Nations, to tr=ck the delivery and use of building materials to address fears that cement and other supplies
could be diverted to build tunnels into Israel.
The $5.4 billion p=edged for rebuilding was predicated on the Palestinian Authority asserting itself in Gaza. However,
relations between Hamas and its political rivals, Abbas's Fatah party, remain fraught= The authority has proven unwilling
or unable to govern in Gaza. As a result, th= promised reconstruction money has not been delivered.
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The shortage of funds is th= most immediate problem, but it is not the only one: Israel has restricted access to Gaza,
with three of four commercial crossing points closed. There is not enough money to buy buildin= materials or support
needy families. The Shelter Cluster, which coordinates housing construction between the United Nations and
nongovernmental organizations, estimates that Gaza needs at least 16,000 new units to repla=e homes destroyed or
rendered uninhabitable during the war. In January, 16 truckloads of construction material were permitted into Gaza per
day, compa=ed with a need for 735 loads daily for three years to build the necessary home=. These numbers do not
account for the additional 5,000 homes that still need=to be rebuilt from previous wars or another 80,000 homes
necessary to accommod=te population growth.
The international community, including the Obama administration, should be given credit for recognizing the need to
unify th= Palestinian political system in order to address the humanitarian crisis in Gaza and stabilize the security
situation. However, this consensus must now=be backed by sustained pressure to implement reconciliation agreements
between Fatah and Hamas and to end Israel's closure of Gaza. It is incumben= on the world to engage at the highest
levels with the Palestinians, Egypt and Isra=l to push this process forward.
<=p>
If there is no reconciliation, the international c=mmunity must be willing to promote new arrangements for rebuilding
Gaza and ending =ts isolation. Donors will have to coordinate directly with local and internati=nal NGOs, as well as the
de facto Hamas authorities, while continuing to urge t=at the current Palestinian government of national consensus
deploy in Gaza.
In addit=on, Western governments should push Israel to drop its insistence on tracking every bag of cement. The
evidence suggests that =uch fine-grained monitoring may be impossible, but tunneling can be prevented w=th a
supervised peace agreement. Further, by insisting on such oversight, Isra=I may be compromising its security in the short
term, given the misery and volatility in Gaza. Instead, Israel should align the import-export regime f=r Gaza with that of
the West Bank, and Gaza crossing points should be reopene=. More generally, Israel should integrate the economy of
Gaza with that of th= West Bank to allow for more normal development.
Ultimately, only a peace agreemen= that grants freedom to self-governed Palestinians can bring the security that both
the Israeli and Palestinian people deserve. As long as Palestinians remain divided, it will=be difficult for any leader to sell
to the Palestinian people a peace agreemen= with Israel. Absent such an agreement, lifting the closure and jump-
startin= Gaza's reconstruction can do much to avert the next war.
=p class="MsoNormal" align="center" style="text-align:center">
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Jimmy Carter (39th president of the United States) — The Washington Post — March 27, 2015
How Ukraine became Ukr=ine
=p class="MsoNormal" styleemargin-bottom:0.0O01ptbackground-image:inHal;background-repeat:initial">One of my
father's favorite sayings is that "history is always rewritten by the winners" and so are the boundarie= of countries.
Nowhere is this truer than in Europe and especially with the Ukraine where for the past year, Ukraine has been plunged
into chaos. Mass protests against pro-Moscow President Viktor Yanukovych led to his ouster in Februar= 2014. That
sparked a spiraling crisis: a fledgling interim government in Kiev looked on as Russia first seized and t=en annexed the
territory of Crimea, a strategic Black Sea peninsula. A pro-Rus=ian separatist insurgency in eastern Ukraine, believed to
have direct backing f=om Moscow, has led to the deaths of thousands since.
To some, Ukraine has become the geopolitical faultline between the liberal democratic West and authoritarian, neo-
imperial Russia under President Vlad=mir Putin. Foreign policy luminaries in Washington openly discuss the current
state of affairs as a new Cold War.=C24> Beneath the political divisions of the present lies a country's deep, complex
past. The land that's now Uk=aine has long been dear to Russian nationalists. But it has also been home to a host of
other peoples and empires. ItQ=80Qs shifting borders and overlapping histories all have echoes in the current heated
moment.
=span style="font-size:12ptfont-family:Georgia,seritcolorrgb(27,27,27)=>Recently Ishaan Tharoor wrote an interesting
article in The Washington Post =C2Q— Maps: How Ukraine became Ukraine Q=93 that follows is a sketch of how
Ukraine became Ukraine over 1,300 years of history. Ukraine's modern borders are=outlined in green throughout.
8th century to 13th century
The "Rus" -- the people whose name got tacked on to Russia -- were originally Scandinavian traders and settlers who
made their way from the Baltic Sea through the marshes and for=sts of Eastern Europe down toward the fertile
riverlands of what's now Ukra=ne. Other Viking adventurers journeyed to Constantinople, the great capital of the
Byzantine Empire, to find their fortune -- sometimes as hired muscle.
The first major center of the "Rus" was at Kiev, established in the 9th century. In 988, Vladimir, a prince of =he Kievan
Rus, was baptized by a Byzantine priest in the old Greek colony of Khersonesos on the Crimean coast. His conversion
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marked the advent of Orthodox Christianity among the Rus and remains=a moment of great nationalist symbolism for
Russians. Putin invoked this older Vladimir in a speech last December when justifying his annexation of Crimea=
Successive Mongol invasions beginning in the 13th century subdued Kiev's influence= and led eventually to the rise of
other Russian centers to the north, including Moscow. The Turkic descendants of the Mongol Golden Horde formed
their own Khanate along the northern rim of the Black Sea.
1650 to 1812
40=A0
Fast forward a few centuries, and you see how the land that's now Ukraine la= on the margins of competing empires. It
was a region of permanent contest and shifting borders. The Polish-lithuani=n Commonwealth -- which, at its peak,
encompassed a huge swath of Europe -- had dominated much of th= land, but Ukraine would also see the incursions of
Hungarians, Ottomans, Swedes, bands of Cossacks and the armies of successive Russian czars.
In the 17th century, Russia and Poland split much of the territory of what'=s now Ukraine along the Dnierper river.
Russia's advance continued a century later, during the rule of Catherine the Great, =ho imagined her domains along the
Black Sea constituted "Novorossiya,&=uot; or "new Russia" -- a term revived by the pro-Russian separatists in easter=
Ukraine. Back then, the Russian court harbored dreams of collapsing the Ott=man Empire and extending Moscow's
reach to Istanbul (formerly Constantinopl=) and even Jerusalem.
"Believe me, you will acquire immortal fame such as no other sovereign of Russia eve= had," said Grigoriy Potemkin, a
prominent adviser to Catherine the=Great, when offering the empress counsel in 1780 on plans to wrest Crimea away
fro= Ottoman suzerainty. "This glory will open the way to still further and greater glory."
Meanwhile, the partitions of Poland in the late 18th century led to the city of Lviv -= once a major regional hub and a
center of Jewish culture in Eastern Europe =- falling under the rule of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. It was there i= the
mid-19th century where Ukrainian nationalism began to take hold, rooted in the traditions and dial=cts of the region's
peasants and the aspirations of intellectuals who had f=ed the stifling rule of Russia rule further to the east.
1914 to 1918
40=A0
World War I and the Bolshevik revolution in 1917 triggered more traumas and uphea=al in the areas that now constitute
Ukraine. The new Bolshevik governmen= was desperate to end hostilities with Germany and its allies and signed a
treaty in the town=of Brest-Litovsk in 1918 ceding some of Russia's domains to the Central po=ers and recognizing the
independence of others, including Ukraine.
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The terms of the treaty were nullified by Germany's defeat later in the yea=, but the genie of Ukrainian nationalism was
out of the bottle. Independenc= movements of various stripes sprung up in cities like Lviv, Kiev and Kharkiv, but were
eventually all sw=pt away amid the wider struggle for power in Russia.
1919 to 1922
4>=A0
At the end of World War I, a revived Poland reclaimed Lviv and a chunk of what=#39;s now western Ukraine. The
country was one of the key battlegrounds of the Russian Civil War, pitting Bolshevik forces against an array of armies,
led by loyalists to the old czarist regime as w=ll as other political opportunists. After a lot of bloodshed -- and other
battles with Poland -- the Bolsheviks emerged triumphant, and officially declared the Ukrainian Socialist Soviet
Republic=in 1922.
The years that followed would be even more traumatic: in the late 1920s and ear=y 1930s, Ukraine suffered heavily
under the rule of Soviet despot Josef Stali=. A vast segment of Ukraine's rural population was displaced and
dispossessed by Stalin's aggressive collectivization policies. A man-made famine in 1932-3 led to the deaths of some
three million people.
To make up the numbers, Russian speakers from elsewhere immigrated to Ukraine&=39;s hollowed out towns and
cities, leaving a demographic footprint that defines Ukraine's divisive politics to this day.
1945 to 1954
4>=A0
After the end of World War II, the Soviet Union claimed Lviv and its surrounding lands in Ukraine's west. The Crimean
peninsula, whose population was majority Russian (after the mass deporta=ion of Crimea's Tatars), was formally ceded
from Russia to the Ukrainian socialist republic in 1954 by Soviet leader Ni=ita Khruschev.
After the fall of the U.S.S.R.
=span style="font-size:12ptfont-family:Georgia,serif;color:rgb(27,27,27)=>With the collapse of the Soviet Union,
Ukraine emerged as one many new independe=t post-Soviet states in 1991. Its politics were riven by regional divides
bet=een the country's west and the Russian-leaning east. Russia chose to =aintain a naval base in Sevastopol, the main
port city in Crimea's southern tip.
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Present day
And so here we are. Russian troops, many based in Sevastopol, fanned out across=the peninsula last March to aid what
was ultimately Russia's annexation of =he territory. A pro-Russian insurgency in the east by the cities of Donetsk and
Luhansk, Ukraine's industrial hea=tland, is ongoing, despite numerous attempts at ceasefires.
K=ev is seeking greater Western military assistance in what many consider to be = fight against Moscow. There are fears
Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko may institute martial law in a bid to subdue the separatists, threatening the
country's already fledgling dem=cracy. Ukraine is at a proverbial crossroads, as it has been for centuries.=/p>
<=pan style="font-size:12ptfont-family:Georgia,seritcolor:rgb(27,27,27)"-
=/P>
5 Vitamins Packed With Age-Fighting Power
<= class="MsoNormal" align="center" style="text-align:center">
"I'm sort of a whole food p=rson myself," Farris, 61, said. "I always tell people, the best way to get any phytonutrient=
vitamin or antioxidant, is in the foods it's been grown in." While=taking supplements is a hot trend, Farris says there's no
guarantee vitamins w=ll have the same effect in supplement form as they do in their natural form. =quot;l you start
beefing up your diet with heavy loads of fruits, veggie and antioxidants, you certainly could thwart =ome of the damages
of aging," Farris said. "Just because you're o=er 50 doesn't mean you can't make a difference now. Clean up your diet
an= put in the good food no matter what age."
Here are five vitamins and their natural food=sources that you might want to add to your diet to battle aging:
1. Vitamin C
4>=A0
Oranges
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=p class="MsoNormal">Found in abundance in citrus fruits, vitamin C is ess=ntial for collagen production, skin repair and
also for keeping your bones and te=th strong. Vitamin C not only protects against sun damage, it also can repair =he
existing damage which results in lines and wrinkles. "Vitamin C can ch=nge the way your skin ages," Farris says.
=C2*
2. Vitamin A
Sweet Potatoes
Load up on foods like sweet po=atoes, kale, mangoes and carrots to get the antioxidant benefits of vitamin A. Retinol,
one of the o=ly FDA-approved wrinkle treatments, is a form of this vitamin, which works ins=de cells, hitting receptors
which helps them function as if they were younger.=It also slows the breakdown of collagen, Farris says, which is
important in gi=ing skin its youthful appearance and elasticity. While it's important to ge= your vitamin A in your diet to
keep a strong immune system and keep our skin and eyes healthy, it can also be applied topically for anti-aging benefits.
3. =C2* Vitamin D
Sunlight
When it comes to anti=aging, don't neglect your bone health. Bone loss can be one of the more powerful effects of aging
to consider, especially for women, Farris says. Vitamin D works with calcium to keep you= bones strong and dense. "One
of the things that makes your face look s=ggy is loss of bone. We focused for years on collagen, and now we understand
th=t you lose fat, collagen and bones in aging," she said. "The better your bone health, the better your bone structure is
and the more youthful y=u will appear."
Foods like fatty fish, some dairy products and egg yolks are good sources also. According to the NIH, most Americans get
the majority of their vitamin D from fortified foods, like most milk and some orange juices=
Whil= vitamin D synthesis also occurs from our daily sun exposure, sunscreen with SPF 8 and higher can block that
effect. The Americ=n Academy of Dermatology recommends getting vitamin D from your diet, as unprotected sun
exposure can damage your skin and cause premature aging.
4.=C21> Vitamin K
Kale
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Load up on leafy greens to get=your vitamin K, especially if you complain about bruising. Farris says one of the most
common complaints =he gets from her post-50 patients is of bruising, commonly on the arms. Vitami= K helps keep
collagen in your skin intact and keeps your skin thick, reducing=the appearance of bruises, veins and, as some suggest,
even dark circles.
5.40=A0 Vitamin E
Sunflower Oil
Vitamin E is great, especially when combined with=vitamin C, in keeping your cells healthy. Vitamin E helps fight
damaging free radicals=on a cellular level, which protects your cells from vulnerability. Farris says it's one of the most
potent antioxidants out there. It can help provide=sun protection to the skin and may have anti-inflammatory benefits.
It is fat-soluble and can be found in many oils, such as sunflower oil and soybea= oil, as well as in nuts and seeds.
<=div>
THIS WEEK's QUOTE
</=iv>
<=iv style="text-align:center">
As m=st of you know language is important.
Case in Point
<= class="MsoNormal" align="center">Do you know what the difference is between the letter A and TH=?
=ancaster, CA
THIS WEEK's VIDEO
</=iv>
=/span>
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Why People From India Don't Rob Banks
This is seriously hilarious... Indian guy robbing a bank
It is short, clean, and funny! Click video below....
<=p>
Web Link: https://yo=tu.be/B6APh7ov4rM <https://youtu.be/B6APh7ov4rM>
<=p>
SOMETHING SPECIAL
BEFORE TELEVISION, THERE WA= ... THE RADIO
=/div>
Here's an huge co=lection of all the old time radio shows.
Find your favorite, click on it and listen to all t=e episodes.
</=iv>
4>=A0
Comedy
Al Jolson Show <http://www.dumb.co=toldtimeradio/radio/1/Comedy/Al_Jolson_Show.html>
Alan Young Show <http:=/www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/2/Comedy/Alan_Young_Show.html> =u>
Aldrich Family<=a> <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/3/Comedy/Aldrich_Family.htm=>
Alka =eltzer Time <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/4/Comedy/Alka_Se=tzer_Time.html>
A=os & Andy <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/ra=io/S/Comedy/Amos_Andy.html>
<=u>Avalon Time <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/=adio/6/Comedy/Avalon_Time.html>
Baby Snooks chttp://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradi=/radio/7/Comedy/Baby_Snooks.html>
Bergen & McCarthy <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimera=io/radio/8/Comedy/Bergen_McCarthy.html>
Bickersons, The <http://w=w.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/9/Comedy/Bickersons_The.html>
Bing Crosby <=>
Bob & Ray
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Breakf=st In Hollywood
Bright Star <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradi=/radio/13/Comedy/Bright_Star.html>
</=pan>Burns & Allen <http://www.dumb.com/oldtime=adio/radio/14/Comedy/Burns_Allen.html>
Cavalcade Of America <http://www.dumb.c=m/oldtimeradio/radio/15/Comedy/Cavalcade_Of_America.html> </=pan>
Comma=d Performance <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/16/Comedy/Command_Perf=rmance.html>
<=u>Couple Next Door <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/=adio/17/Comedy/Couple_Next_Door.html>
=span style="color:purple">Curtain Time chttp://www.durb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/18/Comedy/Curtain_Time.html>
Danny Kaye Show <http:=/www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/19/Comedy/Danny_Kaye_Show.html>
=a href="http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/20/Comedy/Dennis_Day_Show=html"
title="http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/20/Comedy/Dennis_Day=Show.html" target="_blank">Dennis Day
Show<=span>
D=ffy's Tavern <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/21/Comed=/Duffy_s_Tavern.html>
Easy Aces <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimerad=o/radio/22/Comedy/Easy_Aces.html>
=/u>Father Knows Best <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradiorradio/23/Comedy/Father_Knows_Best.html>
Fibber McGee & Molly=/a> <http://www=dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/24/Comedy/Fibber_McGee_Molly.html>
First Nighter Program <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/25/Comedy/First=Nighter_Program.html>
Frances Langford Show <http://www.dumb.com/rldtimeradio/radio/26/Comedy/Frances_Langford_Show.html>
<=span>
Fred Allen S=ow <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/27/Comedy/Fred_Allen_=how.html>
Fred Waring Show <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/28/Co=edy/Fred_Waring_Show.html>
=/span>Gasoline Alley <http://www.dumb.com/oldti=eradio/radio/30/Comedy/Gasoline_Alley.html>
GI Journal <http://www.d=mb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/29/Comedy/GI_Journal.html>
Glenn Miller <http://www.=umb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/31/Comedy/Glenn_Miller.html>
Goldbergs
Great Gildersleeve=/a> <http:=/www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/33/Comedy/Great_Gildersleeve.html>
Guest Star <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/34/Comedy/Guest=Star.html>
Halls Of Iv= <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/3S/Comedy/Hall=_Of_lvy.html>
Haro=d Peary <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/36/Come=y/Harold_Peary.html>
Harry James Show <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/=7/Comedy/Harryjames_Show.html>
Mail Call <http://www.dumb.com/=Idtimeradio/radio/38/Comedy/Hollywood_Barn_Dance.html>
Mayor of the Town</=> <http:=/www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/44/Comedy/Mayor_of_the_Town.html>
Mel Blanc <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/45/Comedy/Mel_Bla=chtmi>
Milton Berle <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/46/Comedy/Milton_Be=le.html>
Misadventures Of Si and Elmer
<http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/47/Comedy/Mi=adventures_Of_Si_and_Elmer.html>
My Favorite =usband
My Friend Irma <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/4./Comedy/My_Friend_Irma.html>
</=pan>Our Miss Brooks <http://www.dumb.com/oldtime=adio/radio/50/Comedy/Our_Miss_Brooks.html>
American Trail <http://www.=umb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/51/Comedy/Phil_Harris_Alice_Faye.html>
Cisco Kid, The <=span>
Fort Laramie=/span> <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/202/Westerns/Fort_Lar=mie.html>
Frontier Fighters <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/203/West=rns/Frontier_Fighters.html>
Frontier Gentleman <http://www.dumb.com=oldtimeradio/radio/204/Westerns/Frontier_Gentleman.html>
Frontier Town=/span> <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/205/Westerns/Frontier_To=n.html>
Gen= Autry <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/206/West=rns/Gene_Autry.html>
=unsmoke <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/2=7/Westerns/Gunsmoke.html>
Have Gun Will Travel <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/=08/Westerns/Have_Gun_Will_Travel.html>
Hopalong Cassidy
Ho=izons West <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/210/Westerns/=orizons_West.html>
=span style="color:black">Lone Ranger A
<http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/rad=o/211/Westerns/Lone_Ranger_A.html>
Lone Ranger B <http://www.dumb.com/=Idtimeradio/radio/212/Westerns/Lone_Ranger_B.html>
25
EFTA_R1_02175170
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Roy Rogers Show, =he
Barry Craig <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/214/W=sterns/Six_Shooter.html>
=a href="http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/55/Detective/Boston_Black=e.html"
title="http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/55/Detective/Bosto=_Blackie.html" target="_blank">Boston Black=e
Broadway Is My Beat <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/56/Det=ctive/Broadway_Is_My_Beat.html>
Casey, Crime =hotographer
<http://www=dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/57/Detective/Casey_Crime_Photographer.html>
Chase, The <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/ra=io/S8/Detective/Chase_The.html>
Crime Classics <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimerad=o/radio/59/Detective/Crime_Classics.html>
Crime Club <http://www.=umb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/60/Detective/Crime_Club.html>
Crime Does Not Pay<=span>
Danger, Dr. Danfield <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/62/Detec=ive/Danger_Dr_Danfield.html>
Dick Tracy <http://www.dum=.com/oldtimeradio/radio/63/Detective/Dick_Tracy.html>
Dragnet <http:=/www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/64/Detective/Dragnet.html>
Falcon, The <http:=/www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/66/Detective/Falcon_The.html> <=pan style="color:blue">
FBI In War And Peace, The
Federal Agent <http://www.dumb.com/=Idtimeradio/radio/67/Detective/Federal_Agent.html>
Frank Race
Gangbusters </=pan>
Guilty Party<=span> <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/70/Detective/Guilty_Pa=ty.html>
I Was A Communist For The FBI
<http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/71/Detecrive/I_Was_A_Communist_For_The_FBI.html> =
Jeff Regan <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/72/Detective/Jeff_R=gan.html>
Let George Do It <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/73/Detective=Let_George_Do_lt.html>
<=span>lineup <http://www.dumb.com/oldtim=radio/radio/74/Detective/Lineup.html>
Mr. District Attorney <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradi=/radio/75/Detective/Mr_District_Attorney.html>
Mr. Keene, Tracer of Lost Person
Nero Wolfe
=a href="http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/78/Detective/Night_Beat.h=ml"
title="http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/78/Detective/Night_Bea=.html" target="_blank">Night Beat
Pat Novak <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/79/Detective/Pat_N=vak.html>
P=ilip Marlowe <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/80/Detective/P=ilip_Marlowe.html>
</=>Saint, The <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/r=dio/81/Detective/SaintThe.html>
Secrets Of Scotland Yard<=a>
<http://www.dumb.com/oldtimera=io/radio/82/Detective/Secrets_Of_Scotland_Yard.html>
S=erlock Holmes <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/83/Detective/She=lock_Holmes.html>
<=u>This Is Your F.B.I <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/=adio/84/Detective/This_ls_Your_F_B_Lhtml>
You=s Truly Johnny Dollar
Mystery <=r> <http://www.dumb.com/o1=timeradio/radio/160/Mystery/Adventures_By_Morse.html> Cr=aking Door
<http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/166/Mystery=Creaking_Door.html>
=span style="color:black">Dangerous Assignment
<http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/rad=o/167/Mystery/Dangerous_Assignment.html>
Dark Fantasy
=a href="http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/169/Mystery/Dark_Venture.=tml"
title="http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/169/Mystery/Dark_Vent=re.html" targete_blank">Dark Venture
Darkness=/a> <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/170/Mystery/Da=kness.html>
David Harding Counter Spy
<http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/171/Mystery/Dav=d_Harding_Counter_Spy.html>
Diary of Fate
<= href="http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/173/Mystery/Dimension_X.ht=1"
title="http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/173/Mystery/Dimension_X=html" target="_blank">Dimension X
26
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Escape <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/174/Mystery/Escape=html>
=a href="http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/175/Mystery/Five_Minute_M=steries.html"
title="http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/175/Mystery/=ive_Minute_Mysteries.html" target="_blank">=ive
Minute Mysteries
<=span>Frankenstein <http://www.dumb.com/oldtim=radio/radio/176/Mystery/Frankenstein.html>
=span style="color:purple">Ghost Corps <http://www.dumb=com/oldtimeradio/radio/177/Mystery/Ghost_Corps.html>
Green Valley Line=/a> <http:=/www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/178/Mystery/Green_Valley_Line.html>
Hari Of Fantasy chttp://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/179/Mystery/Hal=_Of_Fantasy.html>
</=>Haunting Hour, The <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/r=dio/180/Mystery/Haunting_Hour_The.html>
Hermits Cave <http:=/www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/181/Mystery/Hermits_Cave.html> =span
style="color:blue">
I Love A Myster=
Incredible, But True <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/183/Mys=ery/Incredible_But_True.html>
Inner Sanctum, The <http://www.du=b.com/oldtimeradio/radio/184/Mystery/Inner_Sanctum_The.html> </=pan>
Lights Out</=> <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/185/Mystery/Lights_Out=html>
Macabre <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/186/Mystery/Macab=e.html> <=span>
Man Ca=led X, The <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/187/Mystery/Man_Calle=_X_The.html>
=span style="color:black"><=pan style="color:purple">Molle Mystery Theater
<http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/rad=o/188/Mystery/Molle_Mystery_Theater.html>
Mysterious =raveler
Mystery In The Air <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/=90/Mystery/Mystery_ln_The_Air.html>
Quiet Please <http://www=dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/191/Mystery/Quiet_Please.html>
Shadow, The <=span>
Strang= Dr. Weird <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/194/Mystery/Strange_D=_Weird.html>
=span style="color:black">X Minus One <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/rad=o/195/Mystery/Suspense.html>
<=b>
=/td>Drama
Academy Award Theater <http://www=dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/86/Drama/Academy_Award_Theater.html>
Adv=nture Theater chttp://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/87/Drama/Adven=ure_Theater.html>
<=u>Adventures By Morse <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/=adio/88/Drama/Adventures_By_Morse.html>
Air Ad=entures Of Jimmy Allen
<http:=/www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/89/Drama/Air_Adventures_Of_Jimmy_Allen.ht=l>
Archie Andrews <http://www.dumb.com/oldt=meradio/radio/90/Drama/Archie_Andrews.html>
=span style="color:purple">Audio History <http://www.du=b.com/oldtimeradio/radio/91/Drama/Audio_History.html>
Avenger <http:=/www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/92/Drama/Avenger.html>
Avengers <http://www.dumb=com/oldtimeradio/radio/93/Drama/Avengers.html> =br>Big John & Sparky
<http://www.dumb.com/o=dtimeradio/radio/94/Drama/BigJohn_Sparky.html>
Bill Sterns Sports Re=l <http://w=w.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/96/Drama/Bill_Sterns_Sports_Reel.html>
Birdseye Open House <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/97/Dra=a/Birdseye_Open_House.html>
Blackstone, The Ma=ic Detective
<http://www.dumb.com=oldtimeradio/radio/98/Drama/Blackstone_The_Magic_Detective.html>
</=>Blue Beetle <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/r=dio/99/Drama/Blue_Beetle.html>
=/u>Bo= 13 <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio=radio/100/Drama/Box_13.html>
British Shows 1 <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/101/=rama/British_Shows_l.html>
</=pan>British Shows 2 <http://www.dumb.com/oldtime=adio/radio/102/Drama/British_Shows_2.html>
Campbell Playhouse <http://www.=umb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/103/Drama/Campbell_Playhouse.html> </=pan>
Captain Mid=ight <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/104/Drama/Captain_Midn=ght.html>
Chandu The Magician <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/105=Drama/Chandu_The_Magician.html>
Chesterfi=ld Chicago Theater Of
<http://www.dum=.com/oldtimeradio/radio/106/Drama/Chesterfield_Chicago_Theater_Othtml>
27
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=/span>Cinnamon Bear <http://www.dumb.com/oldti=eradio/radio/107/Drama/Cinnamon_Bear.html>
Columbia Workshop <http://www.dumb=com/oldtimeradio/radio/108/Drama/Columbia_Workshop.html>
Commercials
=a href="http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/110/Drama/Corsican_Brothe=s.html"
title="http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/110/Drama/Corsican=Brothers.html" targete_blank">Corsican
Bro=hers
Damon Runyon Theater <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/111=Drama/Damon_Runyon_Theater.html>
Dangerously Yours <http://ww=.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/112/Drama/Dangerously_Yours.html>
Frank Merriwell
Future Tense <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimerad=o/radio/120/Drama/Future_Tense.html> Goon Show, The
chttp://www.dumb.com/old=imeradio/radio/121/Drama/Goon_Show_The.html>
Grand Hotel Grand =arquee
<http://www.d=mb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/122/Drama/Grand_Hotel_Grand_Marquee.html>
Hallmark Playhouse <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/12=/Drama/Hallmark_Playhouse.html>
Heartbeat Theater <http://www.dumb.=om/oldtimeradio/radio/124/Drama/Heartbeat_Theater.html> =span
style="color:blue">
Hol=ywood Star Playhouse
<=sparnHop Harrigan <http://www.dumb.com/oldtim=radio/radio/126/Drama/Hop_Harrigan.html>
Horizons West <http://www.dumb.c=m/oldtimeradio/radio/127/Drama/Horizons_West.html>
Humphrey Bogart <http:=/www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/128/Drama/Humphrey_Bogart.html>
=a href="http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/129/Drama/I_Love_Adventur=.html"
title="http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/129/Drama/I_Love_Ad=enture.html" target="_blank">l Love
Adventu=e
Information Please <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/130/Dr=ma/Information_Please.html>
Jungle Jim <http://www.dumb.com/=Idtimeradio/radio/131/Drama/Jungle_Jim.html> Magic Isrand
<http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/135/Drama/M=gicisland.html>
Matinee Theater <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/136/=rama/Matinee_Theater.html>
</=pan>Mercury Summer Theater
<http://www.dumb.com/oldtime=adio/radio/137/Drama/Mercury_Summer_Theater.html>
<= href="http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/138/Drama/Mercury_Theater.=tml"
title="http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/138/Drama/Mercury_The=ter.html" target="_blank">Mercury
Theater</=pan>
M=chael Shayne <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/139/Dram=/Michael_Shayne.html>
</=>Miscellaneous Music <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/r=dio/140/Drama/Miscellaneous_Music.html>
Moon Over Africa <http:=/www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/141/Drama/Moon_Over_Africa.html> </=pan>
Moon River <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/142/Drama/Moon_River.h=ml> <=span>
Mr. President <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/143/Drama/Mr_Presiden..html>
Railroad=Hour <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/144/Drama/Rai=road_Hour.html>
Sears Radio Theater <http://www.dumb.com/oldtimeradio/radio/145=Drama/Sears_Radio_Theater.html>
Smilin Ed'=s Buster Brown Gang
<http://www.dum=.com/oldtimeradio/radio/146/Drama/Smilin_Ed_s_Buster_Brown_Gang.html>
</=pan>Soap Operas <http://www.dumb.com/oldtime=adio/radio/147/Drama/Soap_Operas.html> =u>
=/table>
=div>
<=td>
28
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THIS WEEK's MUSIC
=/div>
The Ohio Players
This week I would like to share with you the music of=the masters of 1970s R&B funk The Ohio Players. With their slinky,
horn-powered grooves, impeccable musicianship, and eye-poppin= album covers, the Ohio Players were among the top
funk bands of the mid- L=;70s. Emerging from the musical hotbed of Dayton in 1959, the group was originally dubbed
the Ohio Untouchables, and initially comprised singer/guitarist Robert Ward, bassist Marshall "Rock" Jones,
saxophonist/guitarist Clarence "Satch" Satchell, drummer Cornelius Johnson, and trumpeter/trombonist Ralph "Pee
Wee" Middlebrooks. In late 1961, a relative of Ward's founded the Detroit-based Lupine Records, and the group
trave=ed north to the Motor City to back the Falcons on their hit "I Found a Love"; the Ohio Untouchables soon made
their headlining debut with "Love Is Amazing," but when Ward subsequently exited for a solo c=reer, the group
essentially disbanded.
At that point, the nucleus of Middlebrooks, Jones, an= newly added guitarist Leroy "Sugarfoot" Bonner returned to
Dayton; ther= they recruited saxophonist Andrew Noland and drummer Gary Webster, the latt=r a somewhat elusive
figure whose true involvement in the group's convolute= history has never been definitively answered -- some sources
credit him as = founding Untouchable, others even as the band's early leader. In =ny case, by 1967, with the subsequent
addition of singers Bobby Lee Fears and Dutch Robinson, the newly rechriste=ed Ohio Players were signed as the house
band for the New York-based Compass Records, backing singer Helena Ferguson on her lone hit, "Where Is =he Party,"
before issuing their solo debut, "Trespassin'," which hit the R&B charts in early 1968.
Observations in Time Although the Players' trademark bottom-heavy, horn-driven sound was already blossoming, their
follow-up, "It'= a Cryin' Shame," flopped, and as Compass teetered on the brink of bankruptcy they exited the label.
(Their early Compass side= were later packaged as First Impressions.) The Players then landed on Capit=l, where 1969's
"Here Today, Gone Tomorrow" was a minor hit; an LP, Observations in Time, soon followed, with covers of
"Summertime" an= "Over the Rainbow" offering a strong hint of the stylistic detours to follow. In 1970 the group
dis=anded, however; Fears and Robinson both mounted solo careers, while the remaining members again decamped to
Dayton, eventually re-forming with keyboardist, vocalist, and songwriter Walter "Junie" Morrison, trumpeter Bruce
Napier, and trombonist Marvin Pierce.
Pain influenced by the groundbreaking funk of =ly & the Family Stone -- and with the nasal, cartoon-voiced Bonner
assuming vocal duties --=the new Ohio Players lineup made their debut with the single "Pain,&quo=; issued on the small
29
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EFTA02719153
local label Rubber Town Sounds; it was soon picked up for distribution by the Detroit-based Westbound label= reaching
the R&B Top 40 in late 1971. An LP, also titled Pa=n, appeared that same year, and was followed in 1972 by Pleasure,
which launched the absur=ist smash "Funky Worm." Ecstasy appea=ed in 1973, and after 1974's Climax, the Players
signed to Mercury; the label c=ange also heralded yet more lineup changes, with keyboardist Billy Beck replacing
Morrison (who later signed on with Parliament) and drummer Jimmy "Diamond" Williams taking over for Webster.
At Mercury, the Ohio Players enjoyed their greatest s=ccess; not only did their sound coalesce, but they became
notorious for their sexu=lly provocative LP covers, a tradition begun during their Westbound tenure.Q=A0 Their 1974
Mercury debut, Skin Tight, was their first unequivocal classic, launching the hit title track as well as &quo=;Jive Turkey."
Its follow-up, Fire, remains t=e Players' masterpiece, topping the pop charts on the strength of its bone-rattling title cut,
itself a number one hit; "I Want to Be Fre=," one of the band's few attempts at social commentary, was also highly
successful. 1975's Honey=/i> -- which featured perhaps the Players' most controversial and erotic cover to date -- was
another mon=ter, generating the chart-topping masterpiece "Love Rollercoaster" in addition to the hits "Sweet Sticky
Thing=quot; and "Fopp."
=br>
The insistent "Who'd She Coo?" from 1976's Contradiction, was the Pla=ers' last number one R&B hit; "O-H-I-O," from
1977's Angel, was their last major hit on any chart, and as the &#=9;70s drew to a close, the band's fortunes continued
to decline. 1979's =ass-Ay-Lay-Dee was their final Mercury effort, and upon signing to Arista, the Players returned with
Everybo=y Up, followed by a pair of dismal releases on BoardwalkTenderness and 1982's Ouch! After 198='s
Graduation, four years passed prior to the release of their next effort, Back. No new mater=al was forthcoming, although
various lineups continued performing live well into t=e following decades. Despite the deaths of core members Satchell
(December 1995), Middlebrooks (November 1997), Ward (December 2008), Johnson (February 2009), and Bonner
(January 2013), the ba=d continued to sporadically record and extensively tour.
In the 1970s if you didn't own one of the above albums you =efinitely weren'tMasters of Funk*-80... The Ohio
Players And for those of you who want to reminisce please=play a special attention to the Bump It, Roller Coaster, O-
H-I-O and Fire medley from the 1995 Sinbad Funk Festival because it is a good as it gets
The Ohio Players — Fire --<=i> https://youtu.be/Y47G-Wa4qfs
The Ohio Players — I Want T= Be Free -- https://youtu.be/9CJMoXIlm4o <https://youtu.be/9OMoXl=m4o>
The Ohio Players —=b> Skin Tight -- https://youtu.be/d-z2Kyiu0Nk <https://youtu.be/d-z2Kyiu0Nk= target=> and live
https:/=youtu.be/27UX12PW6ZE <https://youtu.be/27UX12PW6ZE>
The Ohio Players — Heaven m=st be like this -- https://youtu.be/AAxseklovkA <https://youtu.be/=AxseklovkA>
The Ohio Players — Sweet St=cky Thing -- https://youtu.be/Ta-F4NAVURs <https://youtu.be/Ta-F4N=VURs>
The Ohio Players — Let'= Do It -- https://youtu.be/x0ELdjG8O28
The Ohio Players — Angel40.=A0 https://youtu.be/2Jmc7PCP7jw
30
EFTA_R1_02175175
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The Ohio Players — Pressure=C2*-- https://youtu.be/kO11ONn5QFo <https://youtu.be/kO11ONn5Q=o>
The Ohio Players — Honey4,=A0 https://youtu.be/Uol0yzdxbh4
The Ohio Players — Jive Tur=ey https://youtu.be/dNZ5zVW76uo and live https://youtu.be/sOFHhs2d8VM
<https://=outu.be/sOFHhs2d8VM>
The Ohio Players — Who D Sh= Coo -- https://youtu.be/MVwaa2BKk6k
The Ohio Players — Pain.=A0 https://youtu.be/jTstTWSGnEs
The Ohio Players — O-H-I-O=C2* https://youtusbe/W0lur6liGQA
The Ohio Players — Bump It = Roller Coaster . O-H-I-O . Fire live medley -- https://youtu.be/jS8WZICJeZs
The Ohio Players — It's=All Over -- https://youtu.be/ToifIVYcBIQ
The Ohio Players — The Funk= Worm -- https://youtu.be/nI5gS8NR_Ic
The Ohio Players — Ecstasy:=Do or Die -- https://=outu.be/8hgVe6NxsDs <https://youtu.be/8hgVe6NxsDs>
The Ohio Players — RIP SUGG=FOOT ahttps://youtu.be/HQSVBId2qH0>
Fax: +1-310-861-0927 <tel:%2B1=310-861-0927> =
31
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