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The New York Jets All-Time Best Players, Part 2 ganggreennation.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from ganggreennation.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Story of Standards Joy Spring Linda Hillshafer Share Tune in weekday mornings to hear our favorite versions of “Joy Spring.” Rodney Franks presents Stories of Standards Monday through Friday at 7:50 and 8:50 am! Stories of Standards is sponsored by ListenUp. Clifford Brown wrote “Joy Spring” in 1954, naming it for his wife, Larue, as “Joy Spring” was his nickname for her. He first recorded the song on August 6, 1954, in two takes, with Harold Land on tenor saxophone, George Morrow on bass, and Max Roach on drums. Nicknamed Brownie, Clifford Benjamin Brown (Oct 30, 1930 – Jun 26, 1956) won Down Beat magazine’s New Star of the Year poll in 1954 and was inducted into the ....
The mystery surrounding the death of Baltimore Colts rising star Jim Duncan s has become the subject of a powerful podcast. Duncan was a key player on the Super Bowl champion Baltimore Colts of the 1970 season. He was young, strong, likable, a great teammate and had a future to envy. But 22 months after celebrating a championship, Duncan was dead.The podcast, “Return Man,” launched in January and has quite a story to tell.Podcast host Bret McCormick, who accidentally stumbled on to the story of Duncan, couldn t pull himself away. He investigated Duncan s death for three years. And one of the things, you know, without giving away the ending is that there was a, I would say, cursory investigation. Cursory is the nice word I can use,” McCormick said. And there are things that they did not do that they easily could have done that really just left it very open. And maybe, brain injuries suffered while playing the game, led Duncan down a terrible path.But as he came to know ....
Skip to main content Currently Reading Gloria Richardson pushed aside a bayonet as a 60s civil rights activist. Now 98, she wants the new generation to fight on. Keith L. Alexander, The Washington Post Dec. 11, 2020 FacebookTwitterEmail More than five decades after she faced off with armed National Guardsmen during protests over segregation, Gloria Richardson watched as outrage over the death of George Floyd prompted thousands to take to the streets. The civil rights fighter was angry the nation had not made more progress since she helped lead a racial justice uprising on Maryland s Eastern Shore in the 1960s. But the news images from across the country also sparked hope: While the protesters who had joined her were predominantly Black, she watched a mix of races, all marching together to continue their work. ....
Gloria Richardson fought for civil rights in the 1960s. Now 98, she's pushing protesters to keep up the fight. washingtonpost.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from washingtonpost.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.