/ Stars that died in 2023

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Wally Yonamine, American baseball (Yomiuri Giants, Chunichi Dragons) and football player (San Francisco 49ers), died from prostate cancer he was , 85.

Wallace Kaname Yonamine , also known as Wally Yonamine, was a former multi-sport American athlete who played in the All-America Football Conference (AAFC) and Japan's Nippon Professional Baseball.

Yonamine, a Nisei Japanese American, was born in Hawaii to parents Matsusai (September 1, 1890–July 31, 1988) and Kikue (February 14, 1901–February 26, 1999)  died from prostate cancer he was , 85..

(June 24, 1925 – February 28, 2011)

A two-sport star, he played running back on the San Francisco 49ers in their second season (1947), becoming the first football player of Asian ancestry to play professional football.[1] In his one season with the team, he had 19 carries for 74 yards and caught 3 passes for 40 yards. His football career ended during the off-season, when he broke his wrist playing in an amateur baseball league in Hawaii.[1]
In baseball, Yonamine was the first American to play professional baseball in Japan after World War II. A multi-skilled outfielder, Yonamine was also noted for his flexible batting style and aggressive baserunning during his career with the Yomiuri Giants and Chunichi Dragons.
In Japan, Yonamine was a member of four Japan Series Championship teams, the Central League MVP in 1957, a consecutive seven-time Best Nine Award winner (1952–58), an eleven-time All-Star, a three-time batting champion, and the first foreigner to be a manager (Dragons, 1972–77).
Wally Kaname Yonamine was inducted into the Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame in 1994 for his achievements during his 12-year career with the Giants and Dragons.[1] He is the only American yet admitted into the Hall as a player.
Wally Yonamine operated a highly successful pearl store—Wally Yonamine Pearls—in Roppongi, Tokyo, Japan, with his wife Jane. They also had a branch of their store in California run by their children.
In 2008, Wally Kaname Yonamine joined Master League team Nagoya 80 D'sers as a coach/part time player.[1]
After an extended battle with prostate cancer, Yonamine died on February 28, 2011 in Honolulu.[2] He was 85.

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Doyald Young, American logotype designer, died from complications of heart surgery he was , 84.

Doyald Young  was an American typeface designer and teacher who specialized in the design of logotypes, corporate alphabets, and typefaces died from complications of heart surgery he was , 84..
 

(September 12, 1926 – February 28, 2011)

Work

The typefaces designed by Doyald Young include Young Baroque, ITC Éclat, Home Run, and the formal script Young Gallant.
Commissions for logotypes and trademarks include the industrial design firm of Henry Dreyfuss Associates, California Institute of Technology, University of California at Los Angeles, exhibition catalogs for UCLA’s Clark Memorial Library, The Music Center of Los Angeles County, Mattel Toys, Max Factor, Vidal Sassoon and Prudential Insurance. With Don Bartels, designed the font for General Electric Company’s corporate identity program.[1] His life story and working method is profiled in the Lynda.com "Creative Inspirations" video Doyald Young: Logotype Designer.[2]
His entertainment credits include: Liza Minnelli and Frank Sinatra specials, Disney’s 30th Anniversary Celebration, Harry Connick Jr., k.d. lang, Bette Midler, Prince, The Grand Reopening of Carnegie Hall, The Grammy Awards, The Annual Academy of Country Music Awards, The Golden Globe Awards, and The Tony Awards, and most recently, the Art Directors Guild logo.

Teaching

Young was a teacher at Art Center College of Design, where he taught lettering, logo design, and typographic basics from 1955 to 1978, and again from 1998 until his passing in 2011.

Honors

His book Fonts and Logos was awarded a Silver Medal by the Western Art Directors Club, November 2000. In 2001 Art Center College of Design named him Inaugural Master of the School for teaching and his contribution to the field of art and design. In 2009 AIGA awarded him the prestigious AIGA Medal[3] for his contributions to the field of graphic design.[1] On December 18, 2010 Art Center College of Design bestowed on him an honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters.[4]

Death

Young died on February 28, 2011 following complications from cardiac surgery.

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Monday, April 18, 2011

Frank Alesia, American actor (Pajama Party, Riot on Sunset Strip, C'mon, Let's Live a Little), died from natural causes he was , 65.

Frank Alesia  was an American actor and television director died from natural causes he was , 65.. Alesia was best known for his work in the beach party film genre during the 1960s, including Pajama Party in 1964 and Riot on Sunset Strip in 1967.[1] He later directed episodes of the American childrens' show, Captain Kangaroo, and other television series.[1]

(January 4, 1944 - February 27, 2011)

Alesia, who was born in Chicago, Illinois,[2] moved from Chicago to Los Angeles in 1964.[1] According to the Hollywood Reporter, Alesia became one of the last character actors in the film industry to work under the studio system, which was declining at the time.[1] He appeared in several beach party films of the 1960s, including Pajama Party, Bikini Beach, which starred Frankie Avalon and Annette Funicello, Riot on Sunset Strip and Beach Blanket Bingo.[1] His television credits as an actor also included appearances in The Flying Nun, The Odd Couple, Gomer Pyle, That Girl, Room 222 and Laverne & Shirley.[1]
Alesia later directed episodes of Captain Kangaroo, which earned him a Daytime Emmy nomination in 1979.[1] He also joined the crew of Laverne & Shirley beginning in 1980 as both a screenwriter and television director.[2] Ultimately, Alesia directed three episodes of Laverne & Shirley, wrote one episode, and served as an executive consultant for eight episodes of the show.[2]
Alesia left the entertainment industry. He raced and bred thoroughbred horses during his later life.[1]
Frank Alesia died of natural causes at his home in Carlsbad, California, on February 27, 2011, at the age of 65.[1][2] He was survived by his wife, Sharon, and two children, Dore and Eden Alpert.[1]

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Frank Buckles, , American supercentenarian soldier, last living U.S. World War I veteran, died from natural causes he was 110.

Frank Woodruff Buckles (born Wood Buckles;) was one of the last three surviving World War I veterans, and the last American veteran of that conflict. Buckles enlisted in the United States Army in 1917 and went through basic training at Fort Riley in Kansas died from natural causes he was 110.. Serving in the Army's 1st Fort Riley Casual Detachment, he drove ambulances and motorcycles near the front lines.

February 1, 1901 – February 27, 2011) 

Given an honorable discharge in 1919, Buckles continued to serve with the New York National Guard from 1922 to 1923. During World War II, he spent the majority of the conflict as a civilian prisoner of war after being captured by the Japanese while working in the shipping business. Following the Second World War, Buckles married in San Francisco in 1946 and moved to Gap View Farm in Charles Town, West Virginia. His wife, Audrey, gave birth to their daughter Susannah in 1955. A widower at age 98, he worked on his farm until the age of 105.
In his last years, he was Honorary Chairman of the World War I Memorial Foundation, campaigning to have the District of Columbia War Memorial renamed the National World War I Memorial, including meeting with President George W. Bush and testifying to Congress. He was awarded the World War I Victory Medal at the conclusion of the First World War, and the Army of Occupation of Germany Medal retroactively after the medal was created in 1941, as well as the French Legion of Honor in his later years.
At the time of his death, Buckles was the oldest verified World War I veteran in the world and the last field veteran of the war. He was buried on March 15, 2011 at Arlington National Cemetery, with full military honors and President Barack Obama in attendance.

Early life and education

Buckles was born to James C. Buckles, a farmer,[4] and Theresa J. Buckles,[5][6] in Bethany, Missouri on February 1, 1901.[7] William McKinley, a veteran of the Civil War, was President.[7]
Buckles had two brothers, Ashman and Roy, and two sisters, Grace and Gladys.[8][9] Several family-members lived very long lives; he remembered speaking with his grandmother who was born in 1817, and his father lived to be 97.[10]
In 1702, the first American ancestor named Buckles arrived at Philadelphia from England, and in 1732 the family settled near Charles Town, West Virginia, which was part of Virginia until the Civil War (and which was Frank Buckles' home town later in life).[10] Seven of Buckles' ancestors were soldiers in the Revolutionary War including one of his great-grandparents, and he was also descended from a Civil War soldier.[11][12]
In 1903, Frank—then known as Wood—and his brother Ashman contracted scarlet fever.[7] Frank survived, while Ashman died from the disease, at the age of four.[7] Between 1911 and 1916, Frank attended school in Nevada, Missouri,[13] after which the family moved to the town of Oakwood in Dewey County, Oklahoma.[14][15]

World War I and interwar years


When America entered World War I, Buckles sought to enlist in the armed forces. He was turned down by the Marine Corps because of his slight weight and for being under 21, and by the Navy,[16] who incorrectly diagnosed him with flat feet.[1] He was successful in enlisting in the Army in August 1917, at 16 years of age.[17] He did not look any older than 16, but the Army was persuaded to accept that he was an adult.[18]
Buckles enlisted on August 14, 1917 and went through basic training at Fort Riley in Kansas.[19] Later that year, he embarked for Europe aboard the RMS Carpathia, which was being used as a troop ship.[19] During the war, Buckles served in England and France, driving ambulances and motorcycles for the Army's 1st Fort Riley Casual Detachment.[16] Buckles later recalled his service as a doughboy:
There was never a shortage of blown-up bodies that needed to be rushed to the nearest medical care. The British and French troops were in bad shape – even guys about my age looked old and tired. After three years of living and dying inside a dirt trench, you know the Brits and French were happy to see us "doughboys." Every last one of us Yanks believed we’d wrap this thing up in a month or two and head back home before harvest. In other words, we were the typical, cocky Americans no one wants around, until they need help winning a war.[7][18]
He was particularly saddened by the war's impact on children in France, and helped to alleviate their hunger by providing food.[15] After the Armistice in 1918, Buckles escorted prisoners of war back to Germany.[20] One German prisoner gave him a belt buckle inscribed, "Gott mit uns" (meaning God with us), which he kept as a souvenir for the rest of his life.[7]
Buckles was promoted to Corporal on September 22, 1919.[20] Following his honorable discharge in November 1919,[1] he attended the dedication of the Liberty Memorial in Kansas City, Missouri, in honor of the Americans who died in World War I, and met General of the Armies John Pershing, who commanded the American Expeditionary Forces in Europe during the war.[21] As the interwar period began, Buckles attended business school in Oklahoma City, and subsequently served with the Seventh Regiment of the New York National Guard from 1922 to 1923, while he lived in New York City and worked there in financial services.[22][23][24]
Next came a career as Chief Purser for steamship lines in South America, Europe, and Asia.[23] In the 1930s, he listened as German and British passengers expressed fear about the Nazis, and military officers told him that Germany was equipping for war; Buckles witnessed antisemitism and its effects firsthand while ashore in Germany, and he warned acquaintances in Germany that their country would be brought down by Adolf Hitler, whom he encountered at a German hotel.[25][26] Also during the 1930s, he received an Army bonus of $800, and gave it to his father who was struggling as a farmer in the Oklahoma Dust Bowl.[27]

World War II and married years

By 1942, Buckles had worked for the White Star, American President, and W.R. Grace shipping companies, and shipping business took him to Manila in the Philippines.[23][28][29] He was captured there by the Japanese on December 8, 1941 and spent the next three years and two months in the Los Baños prison camp.[30][18] He battled starvation, receiving only a small meal of mush served in a tin cup — a utensil he still had at the time of his death.[31] With a weight below 100 pounds, Buckles developed beriberi, yet led his fellow prisoners in calisthenics.[4] Their captors showed little mercy, but Buckles was allowed to grow a small garden, which he often used to help feed children who were imprisoned with him.[26]
They were freed by Allied forces on February 23, 1945.[32] Buckles learned some Japanese during his captivity,[33] and was also fluent in German, Spanish, Portuguese, and French.[33][24]
After World War II, he moved to San Francisco, and married Audrey Mayo in 1946.[11] In January 1954, retired from steamship work, the couple bought the 330-acre (1.3 km2) Gap View Farm in West Virginia where they raised cattle.[15][34] Audrey gave birth to their only child, a daughter named Susannah, in 1955.[34] Audrey Buckles died in 1999, and their daughter moved back to the farm to care for him.[7]
Much of Frank Buckles' military service record was lost in a fire, and the rest has been classified as a high profile record by the Military Personnel Records Center.[35]

[edit] Active centenarian



An old man in a wheel chair is talking to a middle-aged man sitting to the right. In the background, above their heads are a plant decoration and a portrait of some historical person.After the turn of the century, Buckles continued living near Charles Town, West Virginia and was still driving a tractor on his farm at age 103.[23] He stated in an interview with The Washington Post on Veterans' Day 2007 that he believed the United States should not go to war "unless it's an emergency".[28] When asked about the secret of his long life, Buckles replied: "Hope", adding, "When you start to die... don't". He also said the reason he had lived so long was that he "never got in a hurry".[36] In another interview at age 110, Buckles explained the secret of long life: "Genetics, healthy eating and exercise are vital for a long life", but "the will to survive is what's most important."[12]
Buckles' life was featured on the Memorial Day 2007 episode of NBC Nightly News. With the death of 108-year-old Harry Richard Landis in February 2008, Buckles became the last surviving American World War I veteran.[37] Buckles said of his place in history, "I never thought I'd be the last one."[25] The following month, he met with United States President George W. Bush at the White House.[38][39] The same day, he attended the opening of a Pentagon exhibit featuring photos of nine centenarian World War I veterans arranged by historian and photographer (and later family spokesman) David DeJonge.[40] That summer, the old veteran visited young wounded soldiers at Walter Reed Army Medical Center.[23]
Buckles was the Honorary Chairman of the World War I Memorial Foundation,[41] which seeks refurbishment of the District of Columbia War Memorial and its establishment as the National World War I Memorial on the National Mall. He was named ABC's World News Tonight's "Person of the Week" on March 22, 2009 in recognition of his efforts to set up the memorial.[40] Those efforts continued, as Buckles appeared before Congress on December 3, 2009, advocating on behalf of such legislation.[42][43][44] He was the oldest person who ever testified before Congress.[25] On Armistice Day (i.e. Veterans Day) of 2010, he made a further appeal:

The legislation remained in doubt, because opponents sought relocation of the proposed monument, or alternatively some benefit in return for the District of Columbia's loss of its exclusively local monument.[47][48]
A lifelong Shriner, Buckles was given a plaque in December 2009 for being a "famous Shriner".[49] He was part of the Osiris Shriners of Wheeling, West Virginia, and also a Freemason.[50] Buckles became "the oldest Shriner in Shrinedom".[50] Other interests of his included genealogy; he had been a member of the West Virginia Society of the Sons of the American Revolution since 1935,[12] and was active for many years in the Sons of Confederate Veterans.[51][52]
On February 1, 2010—Buckles' 109th birthday—his official biographer, David DeJonge, announced that he was completing a documentary, entitled "Pershing's Last Patriot", on Buckles' life. The film is a cumulative work of interviews and intimate moments.[53][54][55] DeJonge estimates a 2011 release for the documentary,[55] and actor Richard Thomas is expected to narrate the film.[56]
In late 2010, Buckles was still giving media interviews[57] and reached supercentenarian status upon his 110th birthday, on February 1, 2011. On February 27, 2011, Buckles died of natural causes at his home.[58] There were then only two surviving World War I veterans in the world, Florence Green and Claude Choules, who both served in the military of Great Britain.[59]

Honors and awards

For his service during World War I, Buckles received, from the United States government, the World War I Victory Medal, and he qualified for four Overseas Service Bars. Buckles also qualified for the Army of Occupation of Germany Medal due to his post-war service in Europe during the year 1919, and received that medal retroactively after it was created in 1941.[60] He did not qualify for the Prisoner of War Medal for his World War II incarceration, because at the time of his imprisonment by the Japanese he was a civilian.[61] In 1999, French president Jacques Chirac awarded him France's Legion of Honour.[62]
In 2007, the United States Library of Congress included Buckles in its Veterans History Project, which includes audio, video, and pictorial information on Buckles' experiences in both world wars, including a 148-minute video interview.[63] In April 2008, a section of West Virginia Route 9, which passes by his Gap View Farm home, was named and dedicated in his honor by then-West Virginia Governor Joe Manchin.[14] The following month, on May 25, 2008, Buckles received the Veterans of Foreign Wars’ Gold Medal of Merit at the Liberty Memorial. He sat for a portrait taken by David DeJonge that will hang in the National World War I Museum, as "the last surviving link."[64] The portrait was unveiled at the Pentagon in 2008, with Defense Secretary Robert Gates in attendance.[65]
Buckles received the Scottish Rite of Freemasonry's Knight Commander of the Court of Honour (KCCH) on September 24, 2008. The KCCH is the last honor bestowed by the Southern Jurisdiction prior to the thirty-third degree, the highest honor in Freemasonry. The ceremony was hosted by Ronald Seale, the Grand Commander of the Scottish Rite of Freemasonry for the Southern Jurisdiction.[66]

Commemoration and funeral

Buckles did not meet the criteria for burial at Arlington National Cemetery as he had never been in combat, but special permission was secured on March 19, 2008.[67] That was accomplished with the help of Ross Perot, who had met Buckles at a history seminar in 2001, and who intervened in 2008 with the White House regarding a final resting place.[68]
Upon Buckles' death three years later on February 27, 2011, President Barack Obama ordered that the American flag be flown at half-staff on all government buildings, U.S. embassies, and at the White House on March 15, 2011 when Buckles would be buried at Arlington.[69] In the days leading up to Buckles' funeral, the governors of 16 states likewise called for the lowering of their states' flags to half-staff on March 15.[nb 1]
The United States Senate passed a resolution honoring Buckles as "the last veteran to represent the extraordinary legacy of the World War I veterans" on March 3, 2011.[86] Statements were made by representatives and senators paying tribute to Buckles and the World War I veterans, and concurrent resolutions were proposed in both the Senate and the House of Representatives to allow Buckles to lie in honor in the United States Capitol rotunda. The resolution, however, was reported as being blocked by the Speaker of the House John Boehner and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, who sought permission instead for a ceremony to be held in the Amphitheater of Arlington National Cemetery.[87] Various people had supported a Rotunda ceremony, including Buckles' daughter,[88] a great-grandson of Sir Winston Churchill,[89] and former Republican Party presidential nominee Bob Dole.[90]
Northeast Vernon County High School in Nevada, Missouri, where Buckles went to school, held a service honoring his life and service, on March 8, 2011.[13][91] Buckles' home church, Zion Episcopal Church in Charles Town, West Virginia held a memorial service on March 16, 2011 featuring the Episcopal bishop of West Virginia, the local pastor, Buckles' son-in-law, his nephew, and others.[33]
On March 12, 2011, a ceremony was held at the Liberty Memorial in Kansas City, Missouri, to honor Buckles and the "passing of the generation that fought World War I".[92] The keynote speaker was retired United States Air Force general and former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Richard Myers.[93] The ceremony included a reading of poems, one of which was In Flanders Fields.[93] On March 13 and 14, 2011, a visitation was held at a Washington, D.C. funeral home.[94]
A special ceremony at Arlington National Cemetery's Memorial Amphitheater Chapel and interment were held on March 15; Buckles was buried with full military honors in plot 34, near his former commander, General of the Armies John J. Pershing.[94][95] During the ceremony prior to burial, President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden paid their respects and met with Buckles' family.[96] Buckles' flag-draped coffin was borne to the burial plot on a caisson drawn by seven horses, and the folded flag was handed to his daughter by United States Army Vice Chief of Staff General Peter W. Chiarelli.[97] The honor guard for Buckles' funeral included five members of the Blackfeet Warrior Society of Browning, Montana.[24][27][33] Reporter Paul Duggan of The Washington Post summed up the occasion:
The hallowed ritual at grave No. 34-581 was not a farewell to one man alone. A reverent crowd of the powerful and the ordinary — President Obama and Vice President Biden, laborers and store clerks, heads bowed — came to salute Buckles’s deceased generation, the vanished millions of soldiers and sailors he came to symbolize in the end.[27]
In Martinsburg, West Virginia, on March 26, 2011, a candlelight vigil was held in memory of Buckles.[98] Donations were taken at the time of the vigil to pay for a planned statue of Buckles holding the reins of General Pershing's horse.[98][99] The statue will be placed in his hometown of Charles Town, West Virginia.[98] Buckles had become the oldest surviving World War I veteran in the world, as well as the last field veteran of the war.[100]

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Margaret Eliot, British music teacher and musician died she was , 97.

Margaret Augusta Eliot  was a retired English music teacher and musician  died she was , 97.. She was a professor of oboe at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama; her best known student was George Martin. She was an honorary member of the Royal Academy of Music.

 

(26 February 1914 — 27 February 2011)

Family

Margaret Eliot was born to Edward Granville Eliot - a younger brother of both 7th and 8th Earls of St Germans - and his wife Clare Louise née Phelips. She was a great granddaughter of Edward Granville Eliot, 3rd Earl of St Germans (1798-1877).
On 27 July, 1943,[3] she married Dr Richard Asher (1912-1969); the couple had three children:
  1. Peter Asher (born 1944), who was one half of the pop duo Peter & Gordon and successful music producer;
  2. Jane Asher (born 1946), the film and TV actress, novelist
  3. Clare Asher (born 1948), the radio actress.

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Necmettin Erbakan, Turkish politician, Prime Minister (1996–1997) died he was , 84

Necmettin Erbakan  was a Turkish engineer, academic, politician (eventually political party leader), who was the Prime Minister of Turkey from 1996 until 1997 died he was , 84. He was Turkey's first Islamist Prime Minister. In 1997 he was pressured by the military to step down as prime minister and later banned from politics by the constitutional court.[1][2]
 

(29 October 1926 – 27 February 2011)

Early life and education

Erbakan was born in Sinop, at the coast of Black Sea in northern Turkey.[3] His father was Mehmet Sabri, a judge from the prestigious KozanoÄŸlu clan of Cilicia and his mother Kamer was a native of Sinop and second wife of Mehmet Sabri.[4]
After the high school education in İstanbul Lisesi, he graduated from the Mechanical Engineering Faculty at the Istanbul Technical University in 1948 with a GPA of 4.00/4.00, and received a PhD degree from the RWTH Aachen University, Germany.[3] After returning to Turkey, Erbakan became lecturer at the İTÜ and was appointed professor in 1965 at the same university.[3] After working some time in leading position in the industry, he switched over to politics, and was elected deputy of Konya in 1969.[3]
As well as his political career, Erbakan had his success in mechanical engineering and has invented several devices. He was the chief engineer in the team that designed German Leopard 1A tanks.

Political activities

Erbakan's ideology is set forth in a manifesto, entitled Millî Görüş (National View), which he published in 1969.[3] The Islamist organisation of the same name, which he founded and of which he is the leader,[5] upholds nowadays that the word "national" is to be understood in the sense of monotheistic ecumenism.[6][7]
A mainstay of the religious wing of Turkish politics since the 1970s, Erbakan has been the leader of a series of Islamist political parties that he founded or inspired that have risen to prominence only to be banned by Turkey's secular authorities. In the 1970s, Erbakan was chairman of the National Salvation Party which, at its peak, served in coalition with the Republican People's Party of Prime Minister Bülent Ecevit during the Cyprus crisis of 1974.[3]
In the wake of the 1980 military coup, Erbakan and his party were banned from politics.[3] He reemerged following a referendum to lift the ban in 1987 and became the leader of Refah Partisi (Welfare Party).[3] His party benefited in the 1990s from the acrimony between the leaders of Turkey's two most prominent conservative parties, Mesut Yılmaz and Tansu Çiller. He led his party to a surprise success in the general elections of 1995.

Prime Ministership

He became Prime Minister in 1996 in coalition with Çiller's Doğru Yol Partisi (Correct Path Party), becoming the first devout Muslim to hold the office in modern Turkey[citation needed]. As prime minister, he attempted to further Turkey's relations with the Arab nations.[3] In addition to trying to follow an economic welfare program, which was supposedly intended to increase welfare among Turkish citizens, the government tried to implement multi-dimensional political approach to relations with the neighboring countries.
Erbakan's image was damaged by his famous speech making fun of the nightly demonstrations against the Susurluk scandal. Even though his government had no responsibility for the scandal[citation needed], he was nevertheless widely[weasel words]blamed at the time for his indifference. The Turkish military gradually increased the harshness[clarification needed] and frequency of its public warnings to Erbakan's government, eventually prompting Erbakan to step down 1997[citation needed].
At the time there was a formal deal between Prime Minister Erbakan, and the leader of Doğru Yol, Tansu Ciller, for a "period based premiership"[citation needed]. According to this, Erbakan was to act as the Prime Minister for a certain period (a fixed amount of time, which was not publicized), then he would step down in favour of Tansu Ciller. However, Ciller's party was the third in the parliament, and when Erbakan stepped down, President Süleyman Demirel asked Mesut Yılmaz, leader of the second-biggest party, to form a new government. Since this whole act was after the infamous 28 February 1997 National Security Council meeting orchestrated by the military[citation needed](who was against the Erbakan government), this has been claimed as a "postmodern coup" by some[who?].

Post-PM

Erbakan's ruling Welfare Party was subsequently banned by the courts, who judged that the party had an agenda to promote Islamic fundamentalism in the state, and Erbakan was barred once again from active politics.[8]
Despite often being under political ban, Erbakan nonetheless acted as a mentor and informal advisor to former Refah members who founded the Virtue Party in 1997. The Virtue Party was found unconstitutional in 2001 and banned; by that time Erbakan's ban on political activities had ended and he founded the Felicity Party, of which he was the leader in 2003–2004 and again from 2010[9] till his death.
Erbakan died at Güven Hospital at 11:40 (UTC+2) in Çankaya, Ankara on 27 February 2011 of heart failure.[10]

Views

His foreign policy had two main pillars: Close cooperation and unity among Muslim countries and struggle against Zionism. He created "D-8" or The Developing Eight, to achieve a strong economic and political unity among Muslim countries. It has eight members including Turkey, Iran, Malaysia, Indonesia, Egypt, Bangladesh, Pakistan and Nigeria. These countries constitute around 14% of the world's population, with a total of more than 800 million people.[11][12][13]

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James Gruber, American teacher and early gay rights activist, last surviving member of the Mattachine Society died he was , 82.

James "John" Finley Gruber  was an American teacher and early LGBT rights activist died he was , 82.

(August 21, 1928 – February 27, 2011)

Biography

James Gruber was born August 21, 1928 in Des Moines, Iowa. Growing up he considered himself bisexual and was involved with both men and women. His father, a former vaudevillian turned music teacher, relocated the family to Los Angeles in 1936. Gruber enlisted in the United States Marine Corps in 1946 at the age of 18 and was honorably discharged in 1949. Using his G.I. Bill benefits, Gruber studied English literature at Occidental College in Los Angeles.[1]
Gruber met and began a relationship with photographer Konrad Stevens. The couple attended a meeting of an early homophile organization then called the "Society of Fools". Gruber and Stevens joined the group in April 1951 and became part of the "Fifth Order", the group's central leadership.[2] Both men were eager to join despite not having been previously politically involved and not having backgrounds in the Marxist philosophy that informed the group.[3] That lack of familiarity led the group to restate its ideas in ways that those without a Marxist background could understand.[4] Founding member Chuck Rowland recalled the energy the two brought to the group. "It was like magic when they joined. Suddenly everything started to happen."[5] Following a conversation with co-founder Harry Hay about Medieval masque troops known as "mattachines", Gruber suggested changing the group's name from "Society of Fools" to Mattachine Society.[6] Gruber attributed Mattachine's success to the feeling of acceptance that it fostered. "All of us had known a whole lifetime of not talking, of repression. Just the freedom to open up...really, that's what it was all about. We had found a sense of belonging, of camaraderie, of openness in an atmosphere of tension and distrust....Such a great deal of it was a social climate. A family feeling came out of it, a great nonsexual emphasis....It was a brand new idea."[7] In 1953, the Communist ties of several of the Fifth Order led the leadership, including Gruber, to resign.[8]
Through his studies at Occidental, Gruber met the author Christopher Isherwood, who in turn introduced him to W. H. Auden. Isherwood also introduced Gruber to his landlady, Evelyn Hooker. Hooker, a psychologist, pioneered research into sexual orientation that contributed to the removal of homosexuality as a mental illness from the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders.[1]
Gruber and Stevens co-founded the Satyrs Motorcycle Club in Los Angeles in 1954.
Growing increasingly disillusioned with life in Los Angeles, Gruber moved to Palo Alto in 1960 and changed his first name to John. He pursued a teaching career at Foothill College and San Francisco State University and also taught or tutored at Cubberly High School, Milpitas High School and de Anza College.[1]
Gruber helped to document the early LGBT movement through interviews with historians, participating in a panel discussion in San Francisco in 2000 commemorating the 50th anniversary of the founding of Mattachine and appearing in the 2001 documentary film Hope Along the Wind about the life of Harry Hay. Gruber suffered increasingly ill health for several years before his death on February 27, 2011, at his home in Santa Clara.[1]

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Dickey Betts died he was 80

Early Career Forrest Richard Betts was also known as Dickey Betts Betts collaborated with  Duane Allman , introducing melodic twin guitar ha...