Friday, July 26, 2013

Emile Griffith, Champion Boxer

Emile Griffith, Boxer Who Unleashed a Fatal Barrage, Dies at 75


Associated Press
Emile Griffith pummeled Benny Paret in a fight at Madison Square Garden on March 24, 1962.


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It was the night of March 24, 1962, a nationally televised welterweight title fight at Madison Square Garden between Emile Griffith and Benny Paret, known as Kid. Griffith was seeking to recapture the crown he had once taken from Paret and then lost back to him.


Larry Morris/The New York Times
Emile Griffith, shown in 1966, won numerous titles.
John Lindsay/Associated Press
Paret, in white trunks, had referred to Griffith as gay at the weigh-in. Griffith wanted to fight him then.
Robert Maxwell/USA Network
Later in life, Griffith, said he liked both men and women.

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But this was more than a third encounter for a boxing title. A different kind of tension hung in the Garden air, fed by whispered rumors and an open taunt by Paret, a brash Cuban who at the weigh-in had referred to Griffith as gay, using the Spanish epithet “maricón.”
Fighters squaring off always challenge each other’s boxing prowess, but in the macho world of the ring, and in the taboo-laden world of 1962, Paret had made it personal, challenging Griffith’s manhood.
On a Saturday night about 7,500 fans — not a bad crowd for a televised bout in those years — had trooped to the Garden, then at Eighth Avenue and 49th Street, to watch the fight through a haze of cigarette and cigar smoke. By the 12th round of a scheduled 15, Griffith and Paret were still standing. But in the 12th, Griffith pinned Paret into a corner and let fly a whirlwind of blows to the head.
“The right hand whipping like a piston rod which has broken through the crankcase, or like a baseball bat demolishing a pumpkin,” Norman Mailer, a ringside witness, recalled in an essay.
Griffith delivered 17 punches in five seconds with no response from Paret, according to Griffith’s trainer, Gil Clancy, who counted them up from television replays. Griffith may have punched Paret at least two dozen times in that salvo.
At last the referee stepped in, and Paret collapsed with blood clots in his brain.
“I hope he isn’t hurt,” Griffith was quoted saying in his dressing room afterward. “I pray to God — I say from my heart — he’s all right.”
Paret died 10 days later at Roosevelt Hospital in Manhattan.
Griffith, who had batted away rumors about his sexual orientation for years, survived a beating outside a gay bar in Times Square in 1992 and later acknowledged an attraction to men, died on Tuesday in Hempstead, N.Y., his boxing earnings and his memory long gone. He was 75.
The cause was kidney failure and complications of dementia, said Ron Ross, the author of “Nine ... Ten ... and Out! The Two Worlds of Emile Griffith,” published in 2008.
Griffith won the welterweight title three times and the middleweight title twice and briefly held the newly created junior middleweight title. He was inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame in 1990. But he was most remembered for the death of Paret. It followed him for the rest of his life.
Emile Alphonse Griffith was born on Feb. 3, 1938, one of eight children, on St. Thomas in the Virgin Islands. His father left the family when Griffith was a child, and his mother came to New York to work after sending the children to live with relatives.
When Griffith was a teenager, his mother sent for him, and he worked as a stock boy at a Manhattan factory that manufactured women’s hats. When the owner, Howard Albert, a former amateur boxer, noticed his physique — a slim waist with broad shoulders — he sent Griffith to Clancy, who developed him into a national Golden Gloves champion. Griffith turned pro in 1958, with Clancy remaining as his trainer.
Griffith won the welterweight title with a knockout of Paret in April 1961, but then lost the crown to Paret on a decision that September.
In boxing circles, Griffith had been rumored to be gay, and Paret seized on that to needle him at the weigh-in for their third fight.
“He called me maricón,” Griffith told Peter Heller in 1972 for “In This Corner: Great Boxing Trainers Talk About Their Art,” a book of interviews with boxing champions. “Maricón in English means faggot.”
Griffith wanted to attack Paret on the spot, but Clancy held him back and told him to save it for the ring. “Anytime you’re inside with this guy, you’ve got to punch until he either falls or grabs you or the referee stops you,” Clancy recalled telling him, as quoted in the book “In the Corner” by Dave Anderson, a former sports columnist for The New York Times.
But Clancy did not believe that Griffith had gone into the fight looking to make Paret pay for his slur. “I’ve always thought that what happened at the weigh-in had absolutely nothing to do with what happened in the Garden that night,” he said.
Paret’s death brought an inquiry by the New York State Athletic Commission, which absolved the referee, Ruby Goldstein, for his delay in stopping the fight.
Griffith lost his welterweight title to Luis Rodriguez in March 1963, then regained it in a rematch that year. He won the middleweight championship by a decision over Dick Tiger in April 1966, but that required him to give up his welterweight crown.
He lost the middleweight title to Nino Benvenuti of Italy in April 1967, won it back from him, then lost it again in their third bout. He briefly held the new junior middleweight title in the early 1960s.
After losing three consecutive fights, Griffith retired in 1977 with 85 victories, 24 losses and 2 draws. He later worked occasionally as a boxing trainer and lived in Hempstead, on Long Island.
In 1992, Griffith was severely beaten after leaving a gay bar in the Times Square area, his kidneys damaged so badly that he was near death. The assailants were never caught.
“That really started a sharp decline in his health,” Ross, his biographer, said on Tuesday.
Over the years, the questions concerning Griffith’s long-rumored homosexuality kept surfacing.
“I will dance with anybody,” Griffith told Sports Illustrated in 2005. “I’ve chased men and women. I like men and women both.”
He added: “I don’t know what I am. I love men and women the same, but if you ask me which is better ... I like women.”
That same year, he spoke to Bob Herbert, then a columnist for The Times.
“I asked Mr. Griffith if he was gay, and he told me no,” Mr. Herbert wrote. “But he looked as if he wanted to say more. He told me he had struggled his entire life with his sexuality, and agonized over what he could say about it. He said he knew it was impossible in the early 1960s for an athlete in an ultramacho sport like boxing to say, ‘Oh, yeah, I’m gay.’
“But after all these years, he wanted to tell the truth,” Mr. Herbert went on. “He’d had relations, he said, with men and women. He no longer wanted to hide.”
Griffith’s marriage to Mercedes Donastorg ended in divorce. Survivors include three brothers, Franklin, Tony and Guillermo; four sisters, Eleanor, Joyce, Karen and Gloria; and his longtime companion and caretaker, Luis Griffith, whom Ross described as Emile Griffith’s adopted son.
Griffith said he was tentative in the ring after the death of Paret.
“After Paret, I never wanted to hurt a guy again,” Sports Illustrated quoted him saying in 2005. “I was so scared to hit someone, I was always holding back.”
In “Ring of Fire: The Emile Griffith Story,” a 2005 Dan Klores-Ron Berger documentary film about his life, Griffith embraces Paret’s son, Benny Jr.
“I didn’t want to kill no one,” Griffith told him. “But things happen.”

http://www.npr.org/2013/07/26/205866037/opponent-who-died-after-fight-weighed-on-boxer-emile-griffith-for-life

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Samuel Anderson, Cuban Hurdler


Samuel Anderson (September 25, 1929 – August 18, 2012) was a Cuban hurdler who competed in the 1952 Summer Olympics. 

Anderson was born in Havana, Cuba. He was an active member of the Seventh Day Adventist Church. He was a member of the 1952 Olympic Cuban Team, and competed in the 110-High Hurdles.  Anderson was nicknamed "The Cuban Comet". He graduated from the National Institute of Physical Education in Cuba and received a Scholarship from the University of Illinois, where he was a member of the track and field team. He also competed in the 1954 Pan American Games, where he won Gold. He was also drafted by the Chicago White Sox. He retired after a long career as a receiving clerk. He was survived by his wife, Maria; a daughter; two sons; a sister; two daughters-in-law; and six grandchildren. 

Friday, July 19, 2013

Frank Crosswaith, Founder of Negro Labor Committee

Frank Rudolph Crosswaith (1892-1965) was a longtime socialist politician and activist and trade union organizer in New York City. Crosswaith is best remembered as the founder and chairman of the Negro Labor Committee, which was established on July 20, 1935, by the Negro Labor Conference.


Frank Crosswaith was born on July 16, 1892, in Frederiksted, St. Croix, Danish West Indies (the island was sold to the United States in 1917 and became part of the United States Virgin Islands), and emigrated to the United States in his teens. While finishing high school, he worked as an elevator operator, porter and garment worker. He joined the elevator operators' union and when he finished high school, he won a scholarship from the socialist Jewish Daily Forward to attend the Rand School of Social Science, an educational institute in New York City associated with the Socialist Party of America.


Crosswaith founded an organization called the Trade Union Committee for Organizing Negro Workers in 1925, but this work went by the wayside when Crosswaith accepted a position as an organizer for the fledgling Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters. Crosswaith maintained a long association with union head A. Phillip Randolph, serving with him as officers of the Negro Labor Committee in the 1930s and 1940s.


In the early 1930s Crosswaith worked as an organizer for the International Ladies Garment Workers Union, which became one of the major supporters of the Negro Labor Committee.

In 1924, he ran on the Socialist ticket for Secretary of State of New York, and in 1936 for Congressman-at-large. He ran also for the New York City Council in 1939 on the American Labor ticket.


Crosswaith was elected to the governing executive committee of the American Labor Party in New York in 1924, and later ran for Governor of New York on the ALP ticket.

Crosswaith was an anti-communist and believed that the best hope for black workers in the United States was to join bona fide labor unions just as the best hope for the American labor movement was to welcome black workers into unions in order to promote solidarity and eliminate the use of black workers as strike breakers. He believed strongly that "separation of workers by race would only work to undermine the strength of the entire labor movement." Crosswaith spent much of his energy in the late 1930s and early 1940s battling a rival labor organization called the Harlem Labor Union, Inc., which was run by Ira Kemp and had a black nationalist philosophy. He accused Kemp of undermining the interests of black workers by signing agreements with employers that offered them labor at wages below union rates.


Crosswaith also worked with A. Philip Randolph during World War II in organizing the March on Washington Movement, which was called off when President Franklin D. Roosevelt agreed to sign Executive Order 8802, which prohibited racial discrimination in defense industries.

Abdelkader Alloula, Algerian playwright

Abdelkader Alloula (Arabic: ‎عبد القادر علولة) (b. 1929 in Ghazaouet, Algeria - d. March 10, 1994 in Oran, Algeria) was an Algerian playwright. He was assassinated by Islamists. 
Alloula was born in Ghazaouet in western Algeria, and studied drama in France. He joined the Algerian National Theatre upon its creation in 1963 following independence. His works, typically in vernacular Algerian Arabic, included:
  • El-Aaleg (1969) - "The Leech", a satire of corrupt administration
  • El-Khobza (1970) - "Bread"
  • Homq Salim (1972) - "Salim's Madness", a monologue based on Nikolai Gogol's Diary of a Madman
  • Hammam Rabbi (1975) - "The Lord's Bath", based on Gogol's The Government Inspector
  • The Generous Trilogy:
    • El-Agoual (1980) - "The Sayings"
    • El-Adjouad (1984) - "The Generous"
    • El-Litham (1989) - "The Veil"
He was working on an Arabic version of Tartuffe when he was assassinated by two members of FIDA (Islamic Front for Armed Jihad) during Ramadan on March 10, 1994, as he left his house in Oran. His widow, Radja Alloula, and friends set up the Abdelkader Alloula Foundation in his memory.
His brother, Malek Alloula, was also a noted Algerian writer.

Thursday, July 18, 2013

Jerry Buss, Lakers Owner

Jerry Buss, Lakers Owner and Innovator, Dies at 80




Associated Press
Jerry Buss at a victory parade in Los Angeles after the Lakers won the 1980 N.B.A. championship. The team won 10 titles under Buss's leadership.



Jerry Buss, who bought the Los Angeles Lakers in 1979 and turned them into the N.B.A.’s glamour team, winners of 10 league championships and the cornerstone of his Southern California sports empire, died on Monday in Los Angeles. He was 80.


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Mr. Buss gave Magic Johnson, left, a 25-year, $25 million contract, in part to gain notice for the team. “Anybody who makes an outlandish salary obviously attracts attention,” Buss said.

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His death was announced by the Lakers. He had been hospitalized with cancer for much of the last 18 months.
A child of the Depression, Mr. Buss obtained a doctorate in physical chemistry and later prospered in real estate ventures, enabling him to pursue his love of sports.
He paid $67.5 million to buy the Lakers from Jack Kent Cooke in a deal that included the Los Angeles Kings of the National Hockey League, the Forum sports arena in Los Angeles and Mr. Cooke’s California ranch.
In January, his Lakers were valued at $1 billion by Forbes magazine, second in the National Basketball Association to the Knicks’ $1.1 billion valuation.
Mr. Buss spent heavily for marquee lineups headed by Magic Johnson, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Kobe Bryant and Shaquille O’Neal. Jerry West, the Lakers’ former star guard, orchestrated their success as the general manager together with two of professional basketball’s most renowned coaches, first Pat Riley and then Phil Jackson.
Mr. Buss made it clear he was a big spender when he gave the charismatic Mr. Johnson a 25-year, $25 million contract after his second season.
“Anybody who makes an outlandish salary obviously attracts attention,” Mr. Buss told The Los Angeles Times Magazine in 2009. “That was what was behind my contract with Magic. I think it created a lot of attention for the Lakers.”
As Mr. Johnson told the magazine: “He has put the Lakers right up there with the New York Yankees as the top brands in sports.”
Mr. Buss was an innovator in melding basketball brilliance with show-business dazzle. His 1980s teams, known as the Showtime Lakers, thrilled the crowds with their fast-paced style. His Laker Girls provided high-octane dancing. Hollywood stars, most notably Jack Nicholson, held courtside seats that went for thousands of dollars a game.
Mr. Buss was elected to the Basketball Hall of Fame in 2010.
Affecting a Western style with his customary jeans and an open-neck shirt, dancing at discos, and being known for his eye for beautiful women, Mr. Buss was a celebrity in his own right. He once owned Pickfair, the Mary Pickford-Douglas Fairbanks mansion in Beverly Hills, and he loved to hold parties for the Hollywood crowd.
Mr. Buss did not attend any Lakers games this season, presumably because of his failing health, as the Lakers struggled despite a lineup filled with star power.
But he had set in motion his family’s continued operation of the Lakers. His daughter Jeanie, who became engaged to Mr. Jackson in December 2012, runs the business operations. His son Jim oversees basketball decisions together with General Manager Mitch Kupchak.
Gerald Hatten Buss was born on Jan. 27, 1933, in Salt Lake City but grew up in Kemmerer, Wyo., raised by his mother, Jessie, who was divorced and worked as a waitress. At times, the boy waited for food in Depression bread lines.
“I can remember standing in a W.P.A. line with a gunny sack, and I remember having to buy chocolate milk instead of white because it was one cent cheaper,” Mr. Buss told The Boston Globe in 1987.
He was a good student and obtained a scholarship to the University of Wyoming, then earned a chemistry doctorate from the University of Southern California. Through his years in the sports world, he liked to be called Dr. Buss.
He worked in aerospace technology for Douglas Aircraft in California as a young man. But his life changed in the wake of a small investment he made in 1959 to buy a West Los Angeles apartment building with a former college friend, Frank Mariani. Profiting from a Los Angeles real estate boom, their company eventually owned hotels, office buildings, apartments and one-family homes.
Mr. Buss was the founding owner of the Los Angeles Strings of World TeamTennis in 1974, then stepped up to the N.B.A. and N.H.L. when he bought Mr. Cooke’s sports holdings five years later. Mr. Buss had also owned the Los Angeles Sparks of the Women’s National Basketball Association and the Los Angeles Lazers of the Major Indoor Soccer League.      

Jerry Buss, Lakers Owner and Innovator, Dies at 80

(Page 2 of 2)
“In big-time sports, the day of individual owners like Jerry is fading fast,” David Stern, the N.B.A. commissioner, told Sports Illustrated in 1998 as the Lakers prepared to leave the Forum for Staples Center, which opened the next year.


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“He’s sort of wealthy, but he’s not extraordinarily wealthy like some of our owners,” Mr. Stern said. “Given the size and risk of the asset, we are moving toward a combination of the Forbes 400 and the Fortune 500,” he said, envisioning the club ownership of the future.
On Monday, Mr. Stern called Mr. Buss a “visionary owner whose influence on our league is incalculable.”
Mr. Buss’s Lakers became the N.B.A.’s most thrilling team when Mr. Johnson and Mr. Abdul-Jabbar starred for the Showtime clubs that won five championships in the 1980s, the first under Coach Paul Westhead and the others under Mr. Riley.
The Lakers went without a league championship in the 1990s, but another stretch of brilliance lay ahead.
The team captured three consecutive N.B.A. titles from 2000 to 2002, led by Mr. Bryant and Mr. O’Neal in Mr. Jackson’s first coaching stint in Los Angeles. They captured their last two titles under Mr. Buss’s ownership in 2009 and 2010, during Mr. Jackson’s second stint, this time behind Mr. Bryant and Pau Gasol.
In addition to his daughter Jeanie and his son Jim, survivors include another son, Johnny, and another daughter, Janie Drexel, all from his marriage to the former JoAnn Mueller, which ended in divorce in 1972; his sons Joey and Jesse from a former girlfriend, Karen Demel; a half sister, Susan Hall; a half brother, Micky Brown; a stepbrother, Jim Brown; and eight grandchildren.
When Mr. Buss was a neophyte club owner, he saw himself as a fan — but only to a point. As for running hockey’s Kings, money losers in sunny Southern California, he told People magazine in February 1980 that “I think you can buy one ball club for fun.”
But he viewed his purchase of the Lakers and the Forum “as clearly a business deal.”
And as he put it: “I don’t just want winners. I want champions."

Leland Mitchell, Basketball Star Who Defied Racism

Leland Mitchell, Who Defied Racism on the Basketball Court, Dies at 72

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In 1963, Leland Mitchell and his Mississippi State teammates had to sneak out of their state to compete in the N.C.A.A. basketball tournament. Gov. Ross Barnett and other hard-core segregationists were worried that their all-white team might compete against blacks, a step the governor said he feared “might lead to integration across the land.”
Mississippi State University
Leland Mitchell (44) in the 1963 N.C.A.A. tournament. A state judge had barred Mississippi State from playing against blacks.

In a tense if peculiar moment in the civil rights movement, a state court had enjoined Mississippi State University from going to Michigan to play Loyola University of Chicago in the Midwest Regional of the prestigious tournament. Mississippi State had won the right to advance to national play by winning the championship of the Southeastern Conference. It was the fourth time in five years that the university earned a berth but seemingly would again be unable to play.
But the team did play. The game between Mississippi State and Loyola on March 15, 1963 — contested at the height of the civil rights struggle — is widely seen as the beginning of the end of segregation in college sports.
In explaining his opposition to integrated sports in 1960, Governor Barnett had said: “If there were a half-dozen Negroes on the team, where are they going to eat? Are they going to want to go to the dance later and want to dance with our girls?”
But by the spring of 1963, pride in Mississippi State’s superb basketball team was challenging old racial attitudes, which were already starting to soften. Reacting to pressure from students and the public, the university president and the board governing state universities agreed to let the team compete. The governor and a handful of state legislators fumed but realized that they had no legal power to stop the team.
Then a chancery court judge stepped in and issued an injunction to keep the university from violating “the public policies of the state of Mississippi.”
Mitchell, a star player and team leader who died at age 72 on Saturday at his home in Starkville, Miss., had an immediate and sharp reaction.
“We need to head out tonight,” he said. “Who all else has a car?”
The actual escape was more complicated. The university president decided the officials named in the injunction should get out of town. He left for a speaking engagement in Atlanta. The coach, Babe McCarthy, along with the athletic director and his assistant, drove on back roads to Memphis and flew to Nashville. The next morning, the team’s second-stringers were sent to the local airport in Starkville.
They encountered no interference, so the rest of the team was summoned to the airport. The players all flew to Nashville, where they joined McCarthy for a chartered flight to East Lansing, Mich., the site of the regional.
“It was cloak-and-dagger stuff,” Mitchell once said. “It was almost like cops and robbers.”
In the game, all-white Mississippi State took on a Loyola team with four black starters. The Mississippi team was named the Maroons, an old Southern term for runaway slaves, which eventually gave way to Bulldogs.
In the first five minutes the Maroons took a 7-0 lead, and could have had 11 points had they not missed four free throws.
Loyola ultimately won, 61-51, and the play was gentlemanly.
“There wasn’t one incident,” Mitchell said, “and not because we weren’t trying or trying to be nice.”
As for playing an integrated team, Mitchell saw no difference: “They just seem harder to keep up with.”
But he acknowledged that his team “didn’t know the significance of what we did.”
“It didn’t hit us until later,” he said in an interview with Newsday in 1996.
Mitchell had 14 points and 11 rebounds before fouling out with over six minutes left. The Chicago Tribune attributed Loyola’s victory to his absence, calling him “a great performer and the only Southerner who could rebound” against Loyola.
The game was played five months after James Meredith became the first black student admitted to the University of Mississippi, amid rioting in which two people were shot and killed. Two years later, Richard Holmes was peacefully admitted as the first black student at Mississippi State.
Leland Noyal Mitchell was born on Feb. 22, 1941, in Kiln, Miss., one of 10 children of a carpenter. He lied about his age to get a job at a shrimp stand as an eighth grader, and was painting radio towers by his senior year of high school. He made the all-state basketball team and was one of an outstanding group of freshman players admitted to Mississippi State in 1959.
Mitchell was 6 feet 4 inches, 210 pounds and played both guard and forward. He was chosen by the St. Louis Hawks in the second round of the 1963 N.B.A. draft, but was cut. He played for the New Orleans Buccaneers of the American Basketball Association, coached by McCarthy in the 1967-68 season.
He later worked in real estate until sustaining a severe spinal cord injury in 2001. His daughter, Melanie Sparrow, who confirmed his death, did not specify a cause.
In addition to his daughter, he is survived by his wife, Mary Carolyn Tranum; his sons, Leland Jr., David and Michael; his sister, Muriel Necaise; his brothers, Russell and Melvin; and three grandchildren.
After losing to Loyola, Mississippi State defeated Bowling Green in a consolation game. After the final buzzer, Mitchell shook hands with Nate Thurmond, Bowling Green’s star player, who later excelled in the N.B.A. — and who is black.
That interracial handshake drew considerable attention. Today such handshakes are an accepted part of the game’s mosaic.

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Ambrose Folorunsho Alli, Govenor of Nigeria's Bendel State

Ambrose Folorunsho Alli (September 22, 1929 – September 22, 1989) was a Nigerian medical professor who served as Executive Governor of Bendel State between 1979 and 1983.

Ambrose Folorunsho Alli was born in Idoani, Ondo state on September 22, 1929. In his childhood, he moved between Oka-Odo, Ekpoma, Owo, Efon-Alaye, Benin City and Asaba, where he completed his secondary education in 1948. He attended the School of Agriculture Ibadan (1948) and the School of Medical Technology, Adeoyo Hospital Ibadan (1953–1960) where he gained an MBBS. He served as a house officer at the Adeoyo hospital from 1960 to 1961. He went to the United Kingdom for a post-graduate course in neuropathology at the University of London (1961–1966), gaining a D.C. Pathology degree. Later he studied at the University of Birmingham from 1971 to 1974.

He was a lecturer at the University of Ibadan (1966–1969) and was senior lecturer at the Ahmadu Bello University (1969–1974). From 1974 to 1979, Professor Alli was head of the department of pathology at the University of Benin, Benin City. 

Ambrose Alli was a member of the constituent assembly that drafted the 1978 Nigeria constitution. He joined the Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN) and ran successfully as UPN candidate in the Bendel State governorship election of 1979. His main thrust as governor was to increase educational opportunities. He established over 600 new secondary schools, and abolished secondary school fees. He also established four teachers training colleges to supply staff to the new schools, as well as several other higher educational institutions. In 1981, he laid the foundation of the Bendel State University, which is now named the Ambrose Alli University, Ekpoma. Other reforms included abolishing charges for services and drugs at state-owned hospitals and eliminating the flat-rate tax. His administration carried out massive construction of roads to open up the rural areas.

As Governor, Ambrose Alli always wore sandals, joking that he was so busy working in Government House that he never had time to buy shoes for himself.

When Ambrose Alli left office in 1983, he retired to his family house. After the military government of Major-General Muhammadu Buhari took power, he was sentenced to 100 years in prison by a military tribunal for allegedly misappropriating N983,000 in funds for a road project. He was later freed when the Esama of Benin, Chief Gabriel Igbinedion, paid a fine to the government.

Ambrose Folorunsho Alli died on his birthday on September 22, 1989, at the Lagos University Teaching Hospital in Lagos. An annual Distinguished Leadership Lecture was later established in his honor.

Friday, July 12, 2013

Paul Smith, Jazz Pianist and Fitzgerald Collaborator

Paul Smith, Jazz Pianist, Is Dead at 91

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Paul Smith playing at home with the bassist Jim De Julio in 2009.
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Paul Smith, a jazz pianist who accompanied singers like Bing Crosby, Doris Day, Sammy Davis Jr. and Rosemary Clooney but who was best known for his long association, both on record and on concert stages worldwide, with Ella Fitzgerald, died on Saturday in Torrance, Calif. He was 91.
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His death was announced by his publicist, Alan Eichler.
Tall, lanky and rugged-looking, Mr. Smith did not fit most people’s image of a jazz musician. When he was the musical director on the comedian Steve Allen’s television show in the 1960s, Mr. Allen told him that he looked more like “a Nebraska cornhusker.” At concerts, Mr. Smith would sometimes walk onto the stage and ask the audience, “Where is the piano you want moved?”
He didn’t entirely see himself as a jazz musician either. Early in his career, he told The San Diego Union-Tribune in 1991, “I could see there was more money to be made in studio work than playing a jazz joint.” And studio work took up much of his time: he worked as a staff musician for NBC and Warner Brothers, and for many years he was the musical director for Dinah Shore’s daytime talk show.
But he was at home in the jazz joints, too, and after gaining early experience with Tommy Dorsey’s big band and the guitarist Les Paul’s small group in the late 1940s, he went on to record dozens of jazz albums under his own name, gaining a following for his prodigious technique and his lighthearted approach.
He made his most lasting mark through his work with singers, most notably Fitzgerald, with whom he worked on and off from the late 1950s until the early 1990s. In addition to leading the trio that backed her in concert, he was part of the ensemble on her celebrated “Song Book” albums of the ’50s and ’60s and the sole musician on her 1960 album featuring selections from “Let No Man Write My Epitaph,” one of the few movies in which she acted.
Paul Thatcher Smith was born in San Diego on April 17, 1922. His parents, Lon Smith and Constance Farmer, were vaudeville performers and encouraged his interest in music. (His father later became a newspaper editor.)
He began studying piano at age 8, led a jazz band in high school and became a professional musician at 19 with the Johnny Richards band. From 1943 to 1945 he served in the Army, where he played in a band led by the trumpeter Ziggy Elman.
Mr. Smith performed in Southern California nightclubs until his death, mostly with his wife of 54 years, the singer and pianist Annette Warren. She survives him, as does his daughter, the actress Lauri Johnson; two sons, Gary and Paul; eight grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren.
Critics sometimes accused Mr. Smith of emphasizing flash over substance, and some were put off by his pianistic playfulness. “They don’t seem to realize we ain’t doin’ ‘Hamlet’ up here,” he said in 1991. “So when I toss in a shot of ‘Santa Claus Is Comin’ to Town’ in the middle of ‘Take the A Train’ or a few bars of ‘School Days’ in ‘Jumping at the Woodside,’ that’s my way of saying, ‘Stay loose.’ ”

Monday, July 8, 2013

Norman Eddy, A White Minister in East Harlem

The Rev. Norman Eddy, a Minister in East Harlem, Dies at 93

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The Rev. Norman Eddy, a Yale-educated minister from Connecticut who settled in a blighted East Harlem neighborhood in 1951 and helped start a pioneering drug treatment program, a tenants’ group, a housing project, a credit union and the myriad self-help organizations that have sustained his work there for over 60 years, died on June 21 in Manhattan. He was 93.
The Rev. Norman Eddy

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His daughter Martha Eddy confirmed his death.
Mr. Eddy and his wife, Margaret Ruth Eddy, who was known as Peg and was also a minister, moved to the area as co-pastors of the East Harlem Protestant Parish, an assembly of four storefront churches that they had helped establish while attending Union Theological Seminary in Manhattan.
They raised their three children in a walk-up at 330 East 100th Street, staying put as narcotics trafficking, arson and gang violence swept the area. An article in The New York Times Magazine in 1962 called their street, between First and Second Avenues, the city’s “worst block.” When they moved, in 1970, to accommodate a housing renewal project initiated by one of Mr. Eddy’s neighborhood groups, they settled in a brownstone on East 105th Street. The Rev. Ruth Eddy died in 1990.
Mr. Eddy, a tall, soft-spoken, prematurely white-haired man who insisted on being called Norm, became a fixture in the area during its worst decades, a white man who plied the streets un-self-consciously in a predominantly black and Hispanic neighborhood, stopping to talk to addicts and churchgoers alike, inviting people to meetings on the parish calendar, helping tenants in disputes with landlords, sometimes mediating gang rivalries.
An early advocate of narcotics treatment at a time when addiction was essentially a crime in itself, he helped establish one of the city’s first counseling centers for addicts, a storefront walk-in on 100th Street that offered mental health services, job placement and application forms for the few drug detoxification and rehabilitation programs that existed.
But his ultimate goal was never to be East Harlem’s rescuer, Mr. Eddy told interviewers in later years; rather, it was to help East Harlem rescue itself. In his preferred role as “spiritual coordinator,” he helped organize citizens’ committees:
■ The East Harlem Credit Union Committee, which in 1956 persuaded the National Credit Union Administration to charter a citizens’ credit bank. The bank provided small loans to businesses and individuals in a community eschewed by savings banks and preyed on by loan sharks.
■ The East Harlem Narcotics Committee, whose hundreds of members became the volunteer power behind the counseling center and lobbied for changes in state drug laws.
■ The Metro North Citizens’ Committee, which began pressuring city officials in 1962 to build affordable housing and, when nothing happened, got a $1 million grant from a philanthropic foundation in Chicago to seed a federally subsidized, privately financed project. One of the first deals of its kind, it yielded 200 apartments by the mid-1960s, a block of renovated Section 8 subsidized rental units that anchored a gradual neighborhood revival.
The writer James Baldwin, curious about the pastor’s work, went to meet him in 1959. The encounter was arranged by a mutual friend, Dan Wakefield, who had featured Mr. Eddy in his book “Island in the City: The World of Spanish Harlem.”
“Baldwin asked why he had come to live in that neighborhood,” Mr. Wakefield wrote in a recent article for the online journal Image. “Norm leaned forward with intense concentration and said it had nothing to do with ‘doing good’ or ‘saving souls,’ ” Mr. Wakefield wrote.
Rather, he told Mr. Baldwin, he wanted to help build a self-sustaining community. “I want to create Plymouth Colony in East Harlem,” Mr. Wakefield quoted him as saying.
Norman Cooley Eddy was born in New Britain, Conn., on Feb. 9, 1920, to Stanley and Alice Hart Eddy, who were both from prosperous New England families. His father was a stockbroker. His mother’s family owned a summer retreat on Martha’s Vineyard, which later became the Eddys’.
After graduating from Yale in 1942, Mr. Eddy joined the volunteer ambulance corps of the American Field Service. He experienced what he described as a spiritual awakening in 1943 while serving in Syria, leading him to enroll in Union Theological Seminary after the war. In 1951, he was ordained a minister in the Congregational Church.
Besides his daughter Martha, he is survived by another daughter, Rebecca Eddy Feuerstein, and a son, Tim.
“It didn’t occur to us that there was anything unusual about our living where there were muggings, fires, gunshots, that sort of thing,” Martha Eddy said in an interview on Friday. “We had so many friends in the neighborhood. We felt protected” — though certain adjustments were required.
“We spent August at Martha’s Vineyard,” she said. “That was always a culture shock.”