/ Stars that died in 2023

Thursday, May 24, 2012

Antonio M. Diaz, Filipino politician, Representative from Zambales (1969–1972, 1992–2001, 2004–2011) died he was , 83.

 Antonio Magsaysay-Diaz was a politician and lawyer died he was , 83. He served in the House of Representatives of the Philippines representing Zambales for three separate tenures - 1969 to 1972, 1992 to 2001, and 2004 until his death on August 3, 2011.

Diaz's mother, Mercedes, was the sister for former Philippine President Ramon Magsaysay.[1]

Early life

Diaz, a member of the Magsaysay political clan of Zambales, served the province variously as vice governor and representative since the 1960s. A lawyer, he was one of the longest-serving politicians in the province and was known for supporting the education of students from poor families in his district.[citation needed]
Diaz obtained a law degree from the Ateneo de Manila University in 1954.[1]
According to a statement from the family, Diaz gave the bulk of his pork barrel funds to his scholarship program which included the provision of tuition money and stipends to some 500,000 high school and college students not only in his district but in the entire province. In the last 10 years, Diaz allocated approximately P500,000 million for this program alone.[citation needed]
Records from Diaz's office showed that public school students in the district receive at least P1,000 each a year while those in private schools get at least P4,000 each. Camat said the funds given to students are supplemented by bonuses and other forms of assistance given to the scholars and their families. He said the scholarship program was the key to Diaz’s political clout with voters in the province.[citation needed]
He made his career in government service, starting out as deputy customs commissioner (1963–1964), head of the legal department of the Land Reform Commission (1964–1965), and was subsequently elected vice governor of Zambales (1967–1969), before winning the first of many congressional terms in 1969. He was also a member of the Batasang Pambansa in 1984. Diaz’s mother, Mercedes, is a sister of the late President Ramon Magsaysay.[citation needed]

Personal life

He was married by Felmida V. Diaz with four children: Ramon Victor, Roderick Albert, Roberto Carlos and Rica Victoria, daughters-in-law Anna, Carla and Maria, son-in-law Ronald Arambulo and grandchildren Regina, Marianna Antonia, Bianca Alberta, Ricardo, Rafael, Sabrina Victoria and Sidney Louise.

Education

  • Elementary: Castillejos Elementary School (1934–1940)
  • High School: Letran College (1940–1950)
  • College: Ateneo de Manila University; Associate in Arts, graduated Magna Cum Laude (1952) and Bachelor of Laws (1954)

Career history

Death

He died on August 3, 2011 (Wednesday) cause of multiple organ failure secondary to sepsis and pneumonia at St. Luke’s Medical Center in Quezon City.[1] He was 83. Teodoro Camat, who heads Diaz’s office in Zambales’ 2nd congressional district, said the lawmaker died at 6:20 a.m. Camat said Diaz’s body will be taken to the Iba Cathedral here on Saturday after necrological services at the House of Representatives. The body will then be transferred for the wake in his hometown at San Marcelino, Zambales.

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Annette Charles, American actress (Grease), diedf from complications from lung cancer she was , 63.

Annette Charles  was an American actress best known for her role as Charlene "Cha Cha" DiGregorio in Grease. She made several appearances on television as well.
Charles was born Annette Cardona in Los Angeles, California. Under that name, she was a speech professor at California State University, Northridge.[2][3]
She died on August 3, 2011, in Los Angeles due to complications from cancer.

(March 5, 1948 – August 3, 2011)




Credits

 

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Rudolf Brazda, German concentration camp prisoner, last known survivor of pink triangle homosexual deportation died he was , 98

Rudolf Brazda  was the last known concentration camp survivor deported by Nazi Germany on charges of homosexuality died he was , 98. Brazda spent nearly three years at the Buchenwald concentration camp, where his prisoner uniform was branded with the distinctive pink triangle that the Nazis used to mark men interned as homosexuals. After the liberation of Buchenwald, Brazda settled in Alsace, northeastern France, in May 1945 and lived there for the rest of his life.
Although other gay men who survived the Holocaust are still alive, they were not known to the Nazis as homosexuals and were not deported as pink triangle internees. At least two gay men who were interned as Jews, for instance, have spoken publicly of their experiences.

(June 26, 1913 – August 3, 2011)

Life

1913–1937: Caught in interwar upheaval

Brazda was born in Brossen (now part of Meuselwitz, Thuringia, Germany), the last of eight siblings, born to parents originating in Bohemia and who had emigrated to Saxony to earn a living (his father worked at the local brown coal mines). After World War I, he became a Czechoslovak citizen, owing to his parents' origins in that newly established country. His father, who was demobilised only in 1919, died in 1922 following a work accident.
Brazda grew up in Brossen, later in nearby Meuselwitz where he started training as a roofer, failing to get an apprenticeship as a sales assistant with a gentlemen's outfitter. In the early 1930s, prior to the Nazis' accession to power, he was able to live his sexuality openly, thanks to the climate of relative tolerance which prevailed in the last days of the Weimar Republic. In the summer of 1933, he met Werner, his first companion. Together they shared a sublease in the house of a Jehovah's Witness landlady, who was fully aware and tolerant of the bond existing between them. In the following two years, despite the Nazi accession to power and the subsequent reinforcement of Paragraph 175, they led a happy life, befriending other male and female homosexuals, and would often take trips locally, or further away, to visit gay meeting places, such as the "New York" Café in Leipzig.[6]
In 1936, Werner was enlisted to do his military service and Brazda took up a position as bellhop at a hotel in Leipzig. As of 1935, the Nazis extension of legal provisions criminalizing homosexuality generated a dramatic increase of lawsuits against homosexuals. Thus, in 1937, following police investigations into the lives of his gay friends, Brazda was suspected and remanded in custody pending further enquiries. In Altenburg, he was eventually tried and sentenced to six months in prison for breaching the terms of Paragraph 175. Werner was tried and sentenced elsewhere and circumstances led to them losing sight of each other in the ensuing months. Werner is rumoured to have died in 1940 while on military duty on the French front, in the battles raging against Britain.

1938–1941: Exiled in Sudetenland

Having served his sentence, Brazda was soon to be expelled from Germany, shortly after his release from prison in October 1937. From a legal and technical point of view, he was considered a Czechoslovak citizen with a criminal record and, as such, treated as persona non grata in Nazi Germany, and made to leave the country. Because his parents had not taught him Czech, he left for what was technically his country, but opted to settle in the German-speaking region of Sudetenland, the western-most province of Czechoslovakia, bordering on Germany. There, he went to live in Karlsbad (today Karlovy Vary in the Czech Republic).
Despite the province's annexation by Nazi Germany less than a year later, Brazda managed to find work as a roofer and settled in with a new friend by the name of Anton. Unfortunately, Brazda's name came up again in police enquiries led against distant gay acquaintances. In April 1941, he was imprisoned again on suspicion of homosexual activities, and later charged by a court in the town of Eger (today Cheb in the Czech Republic), following a new trial. In June 1942, instead of being released at the end of his second prison term, he was remanded in "Schutzhaft", or protective custody, the first measure leading to his deportation to a KL (Konzentrationslager).

1942–1945: Buchenwald

Brazda was deported to the Buchenwald concentration camp on August 8, 1942, and remained there until its liberation, on April 11, 1945. He was prisoner number 7952 and started with forced labour at the stone quarry, prior to being posted to a lighter task in the quarry's infirmary. Several months later, he joined the roofers unit, part of the "Bauhof" kommando, in charge of maintaining the numerous buildings that constituted the camp (dormitories, barracks, administrative buildings, armament factories, etc.). On many occasions, Brazda was a witness of Nazi cruelty towards homosexuals as well as other detainees, aware of the fate awaiting a lot of them at the camp's revier: it was not uncommon for sick prisoners or cripples to be executed by lethal injection at the sick bay.[7]
With the help of a kapo who hid him in the early days of April 1945, shortly before the camp's evacuation, Brazda was able to avoid being sent away with thousands of prisoners. These forced evacuation measures turned into death marches for nearly half of them, who were shot on the spot if they were too weak to sustain the pace.[8]
Within the roofers' kommando, Brazda had been able to make friends with other deportees, mostly communists, and in particular with Fernand, a Frenchman from Mulhouse, in the Alsace province. After the camp's liberation, instead of returning to his place of birth and his family who had stayed in Germany, Brazda decided to follow the Frenchman to the latter's home country. Fernand had been deported on political grounds, having been involved in the International Brigades and fought between 1936 and 1938 in the Spanish Civil War. In May 1945, both eventually arrived in Mulhouse, shortly after VE Day. Brazda soon found employment again, still as a roofer.

After 1945: Life in France

Brazda decided to settle in southern Alsace and started visiting local gay cruising grounds, noticeably the Steinbach public garden where Pierre Seel, another homosexual deportee, had been identified by the French police shortly before the outbreak of World War II.
In the early 1950s, at a costume ball, Brazda met Edouard "Edi" Mayer, who became his life companion. In the early 1960s, they moved into a house they built in the suburbs of Mulhouse, where Brazda resided until not long before his death. He tended to Edi for over 30 years after Edi was crippled by a severe work accident, until his death in 2003.[9]

As of 2008: Public recognition of his life story

In spite of old age, he remained a keen observer and follower of the news. Thus, in 2008, when he heard on German TV of the impending unveiling of a memorial to homosexual victims of Nazism in Berlin, he decided to make himself known. Although he was not present at the monument's inauguration on May 27, 2008, an invitation was extended to him to attend a ceremony a month later, on the morning of the Berlin CSD gay pride march. Brazda subsequently was invited to attend a number of gay events, including Europride Zurich in 2009 and some smaller scaled events in France, Switzerland and Germany.
In 2010, Rudolf Brazda took part in Mulhouse in the unveiling of a plaque in memory of Pierre Seel and others who were deported because of their homosexuality[10] and was a guest of honour at a remembrance ceremony at Buchenwald.[11]
On Saturday, September 25, 2010, Brazda was symbolically present on the site of the former Natzweiler-Struthof concentration camp on the occasion of a plaque unveiling ceremony. The plaque reads, "In Memory of the Victims of Nazi Barbarity, Deported Because of Their Homosexuality."[12]
In 2010, Brazda also received the gold medals of the cities of Toulouse and Nancy in recognition of his commitment to bear witness locally and nationally in France. Brazda was determined to continue speaking out about his past,[13] in the hope that younger generations remain vigilant in the face of present day behaviour and thought patterns similar to those which led to the persecutions endured by homosexuals during the Nazi era.
In recognition of his numerous contributions to public debates, media interviews and research articles, nationally and internationally, not least his involvement in a citizens group promoting awareness of homosexual deportation in France, Brazda was appointed Knight in the National order of the Legion of Honour, in the 2011 Easter honours list.[14] He received his Knight insigna four days later from Marie-José Chombart de Lauwe, president of the French Foundation for the Remembrance of Deportation, in Puteaux (the city whose gold medal he also received on that occasion), in the presence, among others, of Raymond Aubrac, a well-known French Resistance figure.[15]
Brazda supported research work by the French citizens group Les « Oublié(e)s » de la Mémoire who made him an honorary member on October 3, 2008.
His original biography, Itinéraire d'un Triangle rose (A Pink Triangle's life journey; currently available in French, Portuguese, Spanish and Czech) is the only book he personally verified and authorised. It is the testimony of the likely last survivor of those men who were marked by a pink triangle and shows how Nazi repression of homosexuality directly impacted his life path. For the first time a book discloses the details of minute police investigations led to convict him and other homosexuals who had come under scrutiny. It also deals with issues such a human sexuality in concentration camps.
A German-language biography of Brazda also has been published: "Das Glück kam immer zu mir": Rudolf Brazda—Das Überleben eines Homosexuellen im Dritten Reich by Alexander Zinn (Campus Verlag, 2011). The book is currently available only in the original language.

Death

Brazda died on August 3, 2011, at the age of 98, at Les Molènes, an assisted living facility in the town of Bantzenheim in northeastern France.[16][17] His death was first announced by Yagg.com, a French gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender news and online community site, quoting his French biographer and last will's executor.[18] Brazda's funeral was held on August 8, 2011, in Mulhouse, France. After a remembrance service attended by approximately 40 people, his body was cremated, and his ashes interred alongside those of his late partner Edouard Mayer, in the Cemetery of Mulhouse.[19]

Tributes and memorials

Immediately following Rudolf Brazda's death, numerous organizations and officials in France paid tribute to his memory. Among those releasing statements were Marc Laffineur, secretary of state for the Ministry of Defense and Veterans Affairs; the Socialist Party (France); Ian Brossat, president of the French Communist Party/Left Party (France) caucus of the Paris City Council; Jean-Luc Romero, president of Elus Locaux Contre le Sida (Local Elected Officials Against AIDS); the AIDS activist organization ACT UP–Paris; Les Oubli-é-es de la Mémoire; and the Mémorial de la Déportation Homosexuelle, a national French association that commemorates the homosexual victims of Nazi persecution.[17][20]
Obituaries of Rudolf Brazda appeared in publications and on websites worldwide. English-language obituaries based on original reporting and analysis were published by the Associated Press (United States); Czech Position (Prague); the Los Angeles Times; The New York Times; RFI (France); The Telegraph ; The Independent (London); UPI (United States); and numerous other media outlets.
On September 28, 2011, a national tribute ceremony to Rudolf was organised by Les « Oublié(e)s » de la Mémoire and patroned by Mr. Marc Laffineur, Secretary of State for Defence and Veterans. It was held at Saint-Roch's Church, Paris, which houses a memorial chapel to victims of Deportation. Officials, diplomacy representatives, as well as militants and association representatives were in attendance. It was yet another opportunity to recall that in the last three years of his life, Rudolf had become a unique witness, and that remembering homosexual deportation today remains essential in the struggle against discriminations.[21]

Bibliography

Biographies

  • Jean-Luc Schwab, Rudolf Brazda (2010). Itinéraire d'un Triangle rose (1st ed.). Éditions Florent Massot. ISBN 978-2-916546-48-3.
  • Zinn, Alexander (2011). "Das Glück kam immer zu mir": Rudolf Brazda—Das Überleben eines Homosexuellen im Dritten Reich (1st ed.). Campus Verlag. ISBN 978-3-593-39435-0.
  • Jean-Luc Schwab, Rudolf Brazda (2011). Triângulo rosa - Um homossexual no campo de concentração nazista (1st ed.). Mescla Editorial. ISBN 978-85-88641-13-6.
  • Schwab, Jean-Luc (2011). Rudolf Brazda. Itinerario de un triángulo rosa (1st ed.). Alianza Editorial. ISBN 978-84-206-6433-0.

 

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Sherman White, American basketball player (Long Island University) died he was , 82.

Sherman White was an American college basketball player at Long Island University (LIU) who is best remembered for being indicted in a point shaving scandal that resulted in him being stripped of numerous honors and awards, having to serve an 8-month jail sentence, and being prohibited from ever playing in the National Basketball Association (NBA) died he was , 82. As a college senior in 1950–51, White was the nation's leading scorer at 27.7 points per game and was only 77 total points shy of becoming the National Collegiate Athletic Association's (NCAA) all-time single season leading scorer when he was caught,[3] thus forcing him to prematurely quit and never getting to finish his college basketball career.

(December 16, 1928 – August 4, 2011)

Early life

White was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania but moved to and grew up in Englewood, New Jersey.[4] His father was a certified refrigeration engineer who supported the family while also taking night classes.[4] In the fall of 1943, White began entered Lincoln High School as a freshman.[5] After one year, however, he transferred to Dwight Morrow High School as a 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) sophomore and immediately became the star basketball player under coach Tom Morgan.[4] He felt close to Morgan, would follow his directions well and always heeded his advice.[4] As a senior in 1946–47, White guided Morrow High to an undefeated season (28–0) and a Northeastern High School championship, scored a then-New Jersey prep record of 49 points in a single game, and was a unanimous first team all-state selection.[4]
Academically, Sherman White was a rather poor student and graduated 230th in a class of 263 students.[4] However, he had an innate ability to recall the names and statistics of the leading college basketball players in the country.[4] Although athletic scholarships were being offered, some of the schools that showed initial interest became weary of his grades and rescinded their offers, such as Duquesne University.[4]

College

When White was deciding on which college to attend, he sought advice from Morgan. As a Villanova University graduate, Morgan pushed White to attend because he felt that the Wildcats were a good fit. Not wanting to displease his coach, a man White both respected and trusted, he agreed.[4]

Villanova

In the fall of 1947, Sherman White matriculated at Villanova University. It did not take long for him to rethink his decision to attend. Villanova was a Catholic school, and at the time no other African Americans were in attendance.[4] White did not feel comfortable. Additionally, the physical education major that he had been promised was not even an option. In his six months at the school, White received two Cs, two Ds and one F before dropping out and moving back to Englewood.[4]

Long Island

Shortly after returning home, Long Island University (LIU) head coach Clair Bee contacted White for a second time. He asked him if he was still interested in playing, and after a conversation Bee "permitted" White to play in a scrimmage with the LIU varsity team.[4] Despite having never competed against such a group of accomplished players, White stood out as the best player among them.[4] He was offered a scholarship, and in February 1948 he joined the LIU freshman team for the remainder of the near-to-end season.

Bee saw to it that White, his future star, was provided the comfort and special assistance he needed. He would tip the local YMCA's janitor to make sure that the courts were open all night, for example. White, who deferred socially to his older, more street-wise teammates, became friendly with a guard, coincidentally named Eddie Gard. White liked him for his personable nature and sense of style.[4] Gard, however, was also thievish, and it was he who ultimately got White involved in the point shaving scandal that followed.
White's varsity career started inauspiciously, and it was not until the ninth game of his sophomore season that he earned the starting job.[4] His playing time increased and so did his productivity. Although he deferred to teammates more than should have, White still managed to average 9.4 points per game (ppg) for the season. The following year as a junior (1949–50), White exploded onto the national scene. He averaged over 22 ppg, was named a Consensus Second Team All-American, was named the New York Metropolitan Area's top player by receiving the coveted Haggerty Award, and led the Blackbirds to a berth in the 1950 National Invitation Tournament. On February 28, 1950, White set still-standing LIU single game records of 63 points and 27 field goals made against John Marshall College.[6]
Midway through his junior season, White began to notice that several of his teammates, especially Gard, had been having consistently "off" games.[2] On January 17, 1950, in a 55–52 loss to N.C. State, White had noticed Gard was "giving me some bad passes."[2] At the time, White did not know about, nor was participating in, the point shaving scandal. Only three players—Gard, Adolph Bigos and Dick Fuertado—were purposely trying to lose games.[2]
By the time White's senior season rolled around in 1950–51, he knew about and was participating in the scandal.[2] In a March 22, 1998 interview with The New York Times, White said,
"After that N.C. State game, Eddie Gard befriends me. We sat down and started talking. He brought in Bigos and Fuertado. He gave me the same old story: 'We control the game. We're good enough to beat these guys anyway and we can make some money. They ain't giving you no money here at L.I.U.' The same old story. We can control the game and nobody will get hurt except the gamblers. Now I'm one of the guys. Peer pressure."[2]
Not wanting to be the odd man out and having succumbed to peer pressure, in addition to wanting to provide money for his poor family, White agreed to either mess up point spreads while winning, or lose games outright, during his senior year.[2][7]

Point shaving scandal

Eddie Gard had been contacted by Salvatore Sollazzo, the man responsible for operating the point shaving scandals at several New York City schools between the late 1940s and 1951 (City College of New York, Manhattan College, New York University and Long Island University).[2][7] Sollazzo was a 45-year old jeweler and gambler who had spent five years in prison during the 1930s.[2] Gard's family was poor and he did not want to give up a steady income of cash, which amounted to $1,000 per player per thrown game.[7] The original LIU players involved were Gard, Bigos and Feurtado. Eventually White and LeRoy Smith joined.
Toward the end of White's junior season he had participated in two fixes. The first was an 83–65 loss to Cincinnati, and the other was the first round in the 1950 NIT. Syracuse beat LIU 80–52, although White admitted that they were beaten soundly enough that the fix did little to decide the outcome.[2]
In the early stages of the 1950–51 season, LIU players won several games that were kept close on purpose to mess up the point spreads:[2]
  1. December 2 – Favored by 7½ points over Kansas State (won by one, 60–59)
  2. December 7 – Favored by 4 over Denver (won by two, 58–56, in double overtime)
  3. December 25 – Favored by 11 over Idaho (won by two, 59–57)
  4. January 4 – Favored by 8 over Bowling Green (won by six, 69–63)
Suspicions slowly began to arise that something awry was going on, not only with the Long Island Blackbirds men's basketball team, but also with the other prominent New York City programs. CCNY were losing games they were supposed to win, as were NYU and Manhattan. The public did not speak outwardly about their suspicions, although police were already undergoing an investigation.
Sherman White, along with teammates Bigos and Smith, disregarded Sollazzo's intended fix for a game played on January 16 against Duquesne. The three combined for 64 points as the Blackbirds downed the Dukes, 84–52.[2] Sollazzo supposedly lost a $30,000 bet because of it and threatened White for it to never happen again.[2]

Getting caught

On February 18, several CCNY players that had just gotten off of a train at Penn Station after playing in Philadelphia that night were arrested. Police and detectives had researched and followed the previous several years' games and the CCNY players, respectively, that led to their arrests.[2] Two days later, police arrested Sherman White at the Carlton YMCA in Brooklyn. White later said, "I knew it was a matter of time. I was in a fog. As far as I was concerned, my life was shot."[2] Bigos and Smith were also arrested that day.[3]

Aftermath


White being led through felony court by a detective.
As soon as White was arrested, he gave back the $5,500 he had saved in an envelope that he kept in his room. He was forced to miss the last few games of the season, and at that time he was averaging 27.7 points per game and was the nation's leading scorer. He was only 77 total points from setting the new NCAA single season scoring record. When his career came to an abrupt halt, White had scored 1,435 points.[6] On February 19, 1951—the day before his arrest—White was named the The Sporting News' Player of the Year.[3] The only reason that he was still able to accept the honor was because The Sporting News had already mailed out their newest issue and it was too late to recall the magazine.[4] Although he had been a Consensus Second Team All-American the year before, and was on track to be named a Consensus First Team All-American (and, probably, the Consensus National Player of the Year) as a senior, the NCAA refused to allow any awards or recognition to be bestowed upon any of the schools, players and coaches found to be involved in the match-fixing scandal that rocked college basketball in the late 1940s into 1951.[4] LIU shut down its entire athletic program from 1951 to 1957 as a result of the scandal.[6][8]
Judge Saul Streit presided over the entire case involving all of the schools.[3] When deciding all of the players' fates, Streit was noticeably hard on White.[2][4] Although Eddie Gard was the primary catalyst for LIU's involvement in the gambling and point shaving, White was the only player from Long Island University to be handed more than a suspended sentence.[3] While five other players indicted from LIU got off relatively easily, White was handed a 12-month sentence to serve in Rikers Island, the main prison in New York City typically used for rehabilitation of hardened criminals (he ended up serving 8 months and 24 days).[2][4][9] Additionally, he and all of the other players involved in the scandal were banned from ever playing in the NBA. White recalled his feelings of the stiff sentence handed down by Judge Streit:
"To this day, I believe there was some kind of collaboration between my lawyer and the prosecution. Riker's [sic] Island was supposed to have been built for rehabilitation, but it was the worst place in the world for a kid to try and straighten out his life. I often wonder why I never came out of there a criminal. With all the characters and perverts I met, it certainly would have been the easy way to go."[4]
Years later, White, along with others, wondered if racism played a role in the harsh punishment. However, White admitted that he did not possess the necessary respect or humility in the courtroom that was probably necessary for the situation.[2][4][9]
The man who started the whole gambling scandal, Salvatore Sollazzo, served 12 years in prison and was handed a $1,128,493 lien for evasion of taxes.[10] One positive thing to come of the scandal, a journalist for TIME wrote in the March 5, 1951 issue, was the awareness of how much influence the game had over gambling and illicit money-making ventures, which got the ball rolling to clean not just college basketball, but all college sports across the country.[10]

Career statistics

Sherman White played during the era before many of the basketball statistics that are kept today were recorded, such as rebounds, assists, blocks, steals and turnovers.
Sherman White Statistics at LIU[6][9][11]
Year G FG FGA PCT FT FTA PCT REB AVG A TO B S MIN PTS AVG
1947–48

Freshman stats not available
1948–49 30





N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
281 9.4
1949–50 25 204 465 .438

.692 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
551 22.0
1950–51 22





N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
603 27.7
Totals 77





N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
1,435 19.8

Legacy

Sherman White was a can't-miss pick in the upcoming 1951 NBA Draft[9] and the New York Knicks were going to select him as their territorial pick.[9] They were ready to pay him approximately $12,000 to $13,000, a very large amount in 1951. However, shortly after he was sent to prison, he was banned from ever playing in the NBA, along with all of the other players involved in the scandal.[2]
Due to the lifelong ban from playing in the NBA, White will mostly be remembered as one of the best players in college basketball history whom no one ever saw play professionally. In 2007, TheDraftReview named him as its first "Honorable Draftee," acclaiming him as "the best basketball player you never knew" and "perhaps the best (college) player in New York history."[9] It can only be speculated that if White had been allowed to play in the NBA, he may have been the piece needed for the Knicks to win the 1952 and 1953 NBA Finals rather than lose them both to the Minneapolis Lakers.[2] In 1984, Madison Square Garden named White to its all-time college basketball team.[12]

Later life

After White served his sentence at Rikers Island he played in the Eastern Professional Basketball League on the weekends. He played for the Wilkes-Barre Barons and Hazleton Mountaineers for nine years while simultaneously selling storm windows, automobiles and liquor.[2] Sherman married twice, and with his second wife Ellen they raised six children.[2] He also coached basketball at the Newark and East Orange YMCAs in New Jersey.
Home Box Office (HBO) wanted to interview him for a feature length documentary on the college basketball scandal of 1951 called City Dump: The Story of the 1951 CCNY Basketball Scandal, but he refused.[2] White was upset that HBO had also wrongly claimed that part of the reason for his harsher punishment compared to the other players was that he had a juvenile criminal record, which he claimed was not true.[2]
White died on August 4, 2011 in Piscataway, New Jersey of congestive heart failure.[1][12]

 

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Nikolai Arnoldovich Petrov, Russian pianist, People's Artist of the USSR, died from a stroke he was , 68.

Nikolai Arnoldovich Petrov was a Russian pianist died from a stroke he was , 68.

14 April 1943 – 3 August 2011)
Petrov was born in Moscow, the son of the cellist Arnold Ferkelman and the grandson of the operatic bass Vasily Rodionovich Petrov,[1][2] and began learning the piano at the age of three. At the Central Music School of the Moscow Conservatory his teacher was Tatyana Kestner and in 1961 Petrov entered the class of Yakov Zak at the Conservatory itself.[1][2] He subsequently won second prize at the Van Cliburn International Piano Competition in Fort Worth, Texas and won second prize at the Queen Elisabeth International Music Competition in Brussels.[2]
Petrov gave regular performances in the Great Hall of the Moscow Conservatory as well as touring widely and appearing at major world venues such as Carnegie Hall, the Concertgebouw, the Royal Festival Hall (London) and the Teatro Colón. Petrov's large repertoire included more than fifty concertos and he worked with many prominent conductors, including Mariss Jansons, Kirill Kondrashin, Gennady Rozhdestvensky, Yevgeny Svetlanov and Yuri Temirkanov.[2]
His awards included the Grande Médaille d'Or of the Académie Balzac, People's Artist of the USSR and the Russian State Prize.[2] In 1998, he founded the Nikolai Petrov International Philanthropic Foundation.[2]
He served on the jury at the 2007 International Tchaikovsky Piano Competition.[3]
Nikolay Petrov died in August 2011, aged 68. He was survived by his widow Larissa and daughter Evgeniya.[4][5]
In a telegram to his family, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev stated:
“An outstanding musician, teacher and public figure has left us. Mr Petrov performed at the world’s great concert halls and won the public’s hearts with the depth and expressiveness of his playing. He lovingly preserved the traditions of Russia’s performance school and nurtured young talent on its professional road. His colleagues appreciated his great enthusiasm and creative energy. Nikolai Petrov gave us an example of worthy service to the arts and was open and always well disposed towards all around him. He has left us, but his rich legacy and the good memory of this exceptional man remain with us.”
[6]

Honours and awards

This article incorporates information from the equivalent article on the Russian Wikipedia.

 

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Conrad Schnitzler, German musician (Tangerine Dream, Kluster, Eruption, Berlin Express), died from stomach cancer he was , 74.

Conrad ("Conny") Schnitzler  was a prolific German experimental musician. Schnitzler's father was German, his mother was Italian. He had a wife and they had three children,[1] one of whom is son Gregor Schnitzler, who was born in 1964 in Berlin and who is a film director.

(17 March 1937 – 4 August 2011)



Life

Schnitzler was born in Düsseldorf. He was an early member of Tangerine Dream (1969–1970) and a founder of the band Kluster. He left Kluster in 1971, first working with his group Eruption and then focusing on solo works. Schnitzler participated in several collaborations with other electronic musicians.[3]
Conrad Schnitzler died from stomach cancer on 4 August 2011 in Berlin.[4]

Discography

Note: Schnitzler's full discography would be difficult to catalog, as he had many private, limited and one-off releases.
1970
1971
1973
  • Rot
  • Slowmotion
1974
  • Blau
  • Work in Progress
  • The Red Cassette
  • The Black Cassette
1978
  • Con
1980
  • Auf Dem Schwarzen Kanal (EP)
  • Consequenz (with Wolfgang Seidel)
  • Die Wandelnde Klangwolke Aus Berlin
1981
  • Contempora
  • Con 3
  • Conrad & Sohn (with Gregor Schnitzler)
  • Conal
  • Control
  • Gelb (reissue of The Black Cassette as an LP)
  • Grün
  • Context
1982
  • Convex
  • The Russians Are Coming (EP)
  • Container
1983
  • Con 3.3.83
1984
  • Con '84
1985
  • Con '85
1986
  • Concert
  • Consequenz II (with Wolfgang Seidel)
  • Micon in Italia (with Michael Otto)
  • Face On Radio (with Wolfgang Hertz)
  • Con '86
  • GenCon Productions (with Gen Ken Montgomery)
  • Conversion Day
1987
  • Congratulacion
  • Contrasts (with Wolfgang Hertz)
  • Black Box 1987
  • Contra-Terrene
  • Conditions of the Gas Giant
1988
  • ConGen: New Dramatic Electronic Music (with Gen Ken Montgomery)
  • CS 1 – CS 13: January 1988 – December 1988
  • Concho (with Michael Chocholak)
  • GenCon Dramatic (GenCon Live) (with Gen Ken Montgomery)
1989
  • Constellations
  • CS 89/1 – CS 89/12: January 1989 – December 1989
  • The Cassette Concert (with Gen Ken Montgomery)
1990
  • Kynak (Camma) (with Giancarlo Toniutti)
  • CS 90/1 – CS 90/12: January 1990 – December 1990
  • Confidential Tapes
  • 00/001 – 00/004: Confidential Tapes
1991
  • Contempora 00/014 – 00/031
1992
  • Tolling Toggle (with Jorg Thomasius)
  • Tonart Eins (with Tonart)
  • Ballet Statique (reissue of Con)
  • Contempora 00/032 – 00/039
1993
  • Clock Face (with Jorg Thomasius)
  • Tonart Zwei (with Tonart)
  • Con Brio
  • Contempora 00/040 – 00/044
1994
  • Blue Glow
  • Con Repetizione
  • Contempora 00/045 – 00/053
1995
  • Charred Machinery
  • Electronegativity
1997
  • 00/106
  • The Piano Works 1
  • 00/44
1999
  • Construction
  • 00/071: Piano
  • 00/063: Piano
  • Con/Solo/1
  • 00/121: Piano
  • 00/139: Concert
  • Con/Solo/2
  • Computer Jazz
2000
  • The 88 Game
  • 5.5.85 (Concert)
2001
2002
  • Con '72
2003
  • Live Action 1997
  • Gold
  • Contakt
2004
  • Con '72 Part II
2005
  • Mi.T.-Con 04 (with Michael Thomas Roe)
2006
  • Moon Mummy
  • Zug
  • Aquatic Vine Music (with Michael Thomas Roe)
  • Conviction
  • Con 2+
  • ElectroCon
  • Klavierhelm
  • Trigger Trilogy
2007
  • Mic + Con 07 (with Michael Thomas Roe)
2008
  • Kluster 2007 (with Michael Thomas Roe and Masato Ooyama)
  • rare tracks 1979–1982 (with Remixes by Dompteur Mooner) Erkrankung durch Musique Records
  • 20070709 (with Bernhard Woestheinrich)
2009
  • Aquafit (with Big Robot) – Karisma. Norway
  • Kluster 2008: Three Olympic Cities Mix (with Michael Thomas Roe and Masato Ooyama)
  • Horror Odyssee (with Big Robot) – TIBProd. Italy
2010
  • Kluster 2009: Three Voices (with Michael Thomas Roe and Masato Ooyama)
2011
  • Consequenz 010B (with Wolfgang Seidel) – Mirror Tapes
  • Kluster CMO 2010 (with Michael Thomas Roe and Masato Ooyama)
  • Against The Grain (with Håvard Tveito, Ole Christensen, Kjetil Manheim, Johannes Stockhausen Hektoen, Fredrik Owesen, Tord Litleskare, Nils Martin Haugfoss, Marius Håndlykken, Shawn Ytterland and Vigleik Skogerbø)

References

 

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