/ Stars that died in 2023

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

Sir Roger Jowell, British social statistician, died he was 69.


Professor Sir Roger Mark Jowell, CBE  was a British social statistician and academic died he was 69.. He founded Social and Community Planning Research (SCPR, now the National Centre for Social Research) and the Centre for Comparative Studies at City University. He played a leading role in the establishment of several of the UK’s leading social surveys, most famously the British Social Attitudes and the British Election Study. He made a major contribution to the development of robust comparative research through the International Social Survey Programme and the European Social Survey.


(26 March 1942 – 25 December 2011)

Early life

Roger Mark Jowell was born on 26 March 1942 in South Africa, the second son of Emily Katzenellenbogen and Jack Jowell. In his youth, he was active in left-wing politics becoming President of Cape Town’s Student Representative Council and Vice President of the National Union of South African Students.
"As soon as I graduated from the University of Cape Town in 1964, I came to Britain - initially just to gain a broader perspective on my life. It wasn't that I had to leave, although as President of the Students’ Union I’d been heavily involved in student politics and anti-apartheid activities. At that time students were more or less immune from prosecution. But then things changed, and a few months after I arrived in Britain I got word that many of my close friends had been arrested. I realised then that I couldn’t go back - it wouldn’t have been safe. Once I got my British passport, I was able to go back fairly regularly." [2]

Research career

In Britain, Jowell was active in anti-apartheid activities and in the Labour Party, becoming Alderman in Camden. He began his research career at Research Services Limited (RSL), mentored by Mark Abrams. In 1969, with Gerald Hoinville he founded the London-based Social & Community Planning Research (SCPR), which became the National Centre for Social Research [3], He led the organisation for over 30 years.[1]
At SCPR, Jowell established the long-running survey series British Social Attitudes and was closely involved as author and editor in its first nineteen annual reports. He co-directed the British Election Study from 1983 to 2000 and was the founding chair of the International Social Survey Programme from 1984 to 1989. His interest in high quality comparative research grew and in 2002, he established the European Social Survey alongside a group of leading international experts.

Academic life

In 2003, Jowell became Research Professor and Founder Director of the Centre for Comparative Social Surveys at City University, London from where he continued to lead the Central Coordinating Team of the European Social Survey until his death. The success of this ambitious 34 nation comparative study was recognised in 2005 when it was awarded the Descartes Prize for excellence in collaborative scientific research, the first time a social science venture has won Europe’s top annual science award. Jowell lectured and published widely.

Social science community

He made significant contributions to the social science community. In 1978 he initiated the establishment of the Social Research Association. In the 1980s he played a key role in developing a professional code of ethics through the International Statistical Institute, insisting that it should be an educative rather than a prescriptive code. In 2008 he became Deputy Chair of the board of the The UK Statistics Authority advising on the promotion and safeguarding of the publication of official statistics.[2]

Recognition

Jowell was awarded the CBE in 2001 and was knighted in the 2008 New Year Honours for services to social science. He was recently the Vice President of the Royal Statistical Society and was awarded the Market Research Society Gold Medal.

Personal life

In 1970 he married psychiatric social worker and fellow Camden London Borough Councillor, Tessa Palmer (now Tessa Jowell) in Hampstead, London. She went on to become a minister in Tony Blair and Gordon Brown's cabinet. They divorced in 1977.
In 1979, he married Nighat Gilani in Camden. They have two sons and divorced in 1995.
In 1996 he married Sharon Witherspoon, now Deputy Director of the Nuffield Foundation, in the Forest of Dean in Gloucestershire.


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Monday, January 6, 2014

Khalil Ibrahim, Sudanese Darfuri rebel leader, died he was 54.

Dr. Khalil Ibrahim  was the leader of the Zaghawa-dominated Darfurian rebel group, the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) died he was 54.. [1]

(1957 – 25 December 2011)


Personal life

Ibrahim was born in Sudan in 1957.[2] Ibrahim was from the Koba branch of the Zaghawa ethnic group,[2] which is () located mainly in Sudan, with a minority on the Chad side of the border. He was an enthusiastic supporter of the National Islamic Front (NIF) seizure of power under the direction of Islamist Hassan al-Turabi in 1989. He also served as the state minister for education in Darfur between 1991 and 1994 in al-Fashir, North Darfur. A physician, Dr. Khalil spent four months in 1992 to fight Sudan People's Armed Forces. By Ibrahim's own account, he was disaffected with the Islamist movement by 2000 after seeing the economic neglect of the NIF, as well as its support to armed militias. At this time, he became part of a covert cell of Islamists who were seeking to change the NiF from inside. Dr. Ibrahim went on to serve as the state minister for social affairs in Blue Nile in 1997 before a post as advisor to the governor of Southern Sudan in Juba in 1998. However, others noted that he never received a national level appointment. Ibrahim's colleague in JEM, Ahmad Tugod, stated, "Khalil is not a first or even second class political leader. [...] He struggled all of his life to get a post in Khartoum."[3] He quit the post in August 1998, several months before the end of his appointment, and formed an NGO called "Fighting Poverty". In December 1999, when al-Bashir sidelined al-Turabi with the help of Ali Osman Taha, Dr. Ibrahim was in the Netherlands, studying for a Masters in Public Health at Universiteit Maastricht.
In the meantime, the structure of covert cells that Ibrahim had helped set up in 1994 had spread to Khartoum. The dissidents, dubbing themselves the "The Seekers of Truth and Justice" published the Black Book in 2000, claiming that riverine Arabs dominated political power and resources. Khalil Ibrahim sided with the breakaway Popular Congress party, who had split from President al-Bashir's party.[citation needed] In 2001, he was one of twenty people sent out of the country by the dissidents to go public. In August 2001, Ibrahim published a press release from the Netherlands, in which he announced the formation of the Justice and Equality Movement. The JEM has a relatively small ethnic base of support, being limited to the Kobe Zaghawa, including many kinsmen from across the Chadian border. Ibrahim received political and financial support from Libya and its leader Muammar Gaddafi. After the NTC's win in the 2011 Libyan civil war against the government of the Jamahiriya he was forced to flee back to Darfur.

Darfur conflict

On 5 March 2002, Dr. Ibrahim claimed credit for initiating a government revolt. This apparent claim of the landmark attack on Golo, actually carried out by the Sudan Liberation Army, was mocked by the SLA and the JEM was forced to back away from their announcement. Regardless, the JEM and the anti-government SLA formed a loose alliance in prosecuting the Darfur conflict.
In May 2006, the JEM rejected the Abuja peace process, which was accepted by the faction of the SLA led by Minni Minnawi, but rejected by the smaller SLA factions. On 30 June 2006, Ibrahim, Khamis Abdalla, the leader of an SLM faction, Dr Sharif Harir and Ahmed Ibrahim, co-leaders of the National Democratic Alliance (Sudan), founded the National Redemption Front rebel group in Asmara, Eritrea but which is based in Chad.
Ibrahim lived in exile in Libya from May 2010 to September 2011, when the Libyan civil war compelled him to flee across the Sahara and return to Darfur. The Sudanese government and diplomatic sources accused Ibrahim's group of rebels in Libya of fighting as mercenaries for Libyan strongman Muammar Gaddafi during the war, charges to which Ibrahim never responded.[4][5]

Death

The Sudan Armed Forces announced that it had killed Ibrahim with an air strike in North Kordofan on 25 December 2011.[2][6]



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Ferenc Schmidt, Hungarian politician, died he was 70.

Ferenc Schmidt was a Hungarian politician of German descent and was a member of the National Assembly (MP) from 1998 to 2010  died he was 70..


(November 6, 1941 – December 25, 2011)[

Career

He was born in MĆ³r, FejĆ©r County, on November 6, 1941. He finished DĆ³zsa Gyƶrgy Economical Secondary School in 1960.[2]
He served as a representative of the German minority in the Assembly of MĆ³r Local Government since 1994. He was also a member of the German Minority Municipality from that year. He served as chairman of the German Regional Minority Self-Government of FejĆ©r County between 2007 and 2011.
He was a candidate for position of mayor of MĆ³r in 2002. He was a deputy in the National Assembly as a Fidesz member from 1998 to 2010.[3]


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Andrew Geller, American architect, died from kidney failure he was 87.

Andrew Michael Geller  was an American architect, painter and graphic designer widely known for his uninhibited, sculptural beach houses in the coastal regions of New York, New Jersey and Connecticut during the 1950s and 60s—and for his indirect role in the 1959 Kitchen Debate between Richard Nixon (then Vice President) and Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev, which began at an exhibit Geller had helped design for the American National Exhibition in Moscow died from kidney failure he was 87..
Lord and Taylor.svg
Geller worked with the prominent firm of American industrial and graphic designer Raymond Loewy where his projects ranged widely—from the design of shopping centers and department stores across the United States, to the Windows on the World restaurant atop the World Trade Center[1] and the logo of New York-based department store Lord and Taylor[1][2]
After designing a beach house for Loewy's director of public relations,[3] Geller was featured in the New York Times and began receiving notoriety for his own work. Between 1955 and 1974,[4] Geller produced a series of modest but distinctive vacation homes, many published in popular magazines including Life, Sports Illustrated, and Esquire.[3]
On his death in 2011, the New York Times said Geller "helped bring modernism to the masses." [5]

Background

It’s one of the first
lessons I ever was taught.
The thing you produce ought
to be compatible with what’s there.
It should live with it both in
scale and some sort of human factor.
– Andrew Geller [6]

Geller was born in Brooklyn on April 17, 1924 to Olga and Joseph Geller, an artist and sign painter who had emigrated from Hungary in 1905.[7] Architectural historian Alastair Gordon reported that as a sign painter Joseph Geller designed the logo for Boar's Head Provision Company, still in use today.[3]
Geller studied drawing with his father,[3] and the attended art classes at the Brooklyn Museum. A 1938 painted self-portrait won him a scholarship to the New York High School of Art and Music (1939),[3] and he subsequently studied architecture at Cooper Union,[5] where he took drawing class with Robert Gwathmey, father of architect Charles Gwathmey.[3] Geller later worked as a naval architect for the United States Maritime Commission designing tanker hulls and interiors (1939–42).
During World War II, Geller served in the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (1942–45) and was inadvertently exposed to a toxic chemical agent, suffering medical consequences for the remainder of his life.[3] Geller married Shirley Morris (a painter)[8] in 1944. The couple lived in Northport, New York and together had a son, Gregg Geller (formerly catalog executive at RCA, CBS and Warner Bros.)[9] and a daughter, Jamie Geller Dutra[5] (formerly interior designer at Loewy/Snaith).[10]
Prior to his death in December 2011 in Syracuse, Geller lived in Spencer, New York.[5]

Career with Loewy

After reading in Life magazine of Raymond Loewy's diverse and comprehensive career,[3] Geller began what became a career (variously reported as 28[8] or 35[11] years) at Raymond Loewy Associates — later known as Raymond Loewy/William Snaith Inc. or simply Loewy/Snaith.
Geller went on to carry various titles at Loewy/Snaith, including 'head of the New York City architecture department', 'vice president' and 'director of design,'[8] — working on notable projects including the interiors and garden (with Isamu Noguchi) for the glass-and-metal Lever House.[7] At Loewy/Snaith, Geller also designed shopping centers and department stores across the United States,[7] notably for Macy's, Lord & Taylor, Wanamaker's, Bloomingdales, Apex Department Stores[12] and Daytons — as well as work for Bell Telephone, and the Worlds Fair Beirut U.S. Pavilion (year unknown).
See: Rendering for Apex Department Stores, Pawtucket, Rhode Island, Andrew Geller
Geller left Loewy/Snaith in 1976. It has been reported that at some point in his career, Geller designed the Quiet House for a Dallas, Texas consortium, the all-aluminum Easy Care Home for the Aluminum Association of America, and the Vacation House System.[3]
In 2009, the city of Stamford, Connecticut listed the 150,000 square foot Lord & Taylor at 110 High Ridge Road on the state's list of landmark buildings — after the building had been inadvertently made more prominent by the razing of adjacent trees.[13] Geller had designed the three-story building in 1969 while with Loewy/Snaith.[14] Richard Longstreth, director of the Graduate Program in Historic Preservation at George Washington University, said the store's case for preservation was “quite straightforward, based on the significance of the company it has housed, the nature of its siting, the firm that designed the building, and as a now rare survivor of its type."[15]
See: Lord & Taylor, Stamford, CT, 1969, Andrew Geller
See: Rendering, Lord & Taylor, Stamford, CT, Andrew Geller

Kitchen Debate and Leisurama

In 1959, as vice president of the Housing and Home Components department at Loewy/Snaith, Geller was the design supervisor for the exhibition, the "Typical American House," built at the American National Exhibition in Moscow. The exhibition home largely replicated a home previously built at 398 Townline Road[16] in Commack, New York, which had been originally designed by Stanley H. Klein for a Long Island-based firm, All-State Properties (later known as Sadkin enterprises),[17] headed by developer Herbert Sadkin.[18][19] To accommodate visitors to the exhibition, Sadkin hired Loewy's office to modify Klein's floor plan.[16] Geller supervised the work, which "split" the house, creating a way for large numbers of visitors to tour the small house[16] and giving rise to its nickname, Splitnik.[16]
See: Geller's "split" home at the American National Exhibition
See: 398 Townline Road, Commack, New York, designed by Stanley H. Klein
40°51′40.02″N 73°17′25.77″E
Subsequently, Richard Nixon (then Vice President) and Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev on July 24, 1959 began what became known as the Kitchen Debate — a debate over the merits of capitalism vs. socialism, with Khrushchev saying Americans could not afford the luxury represented by the "Typical American House".[7] Tass, the Soviet news agency said: "There is no more truth in showing this as the typical home of the American worker than, say, in showing the Taj Mahal as the typical home of a Bombay textile worker."[16]
The temporary 'Typical American House' exhibit was demolished, and the developer hired William Safire as the company's marketing agent.[16] All-State later hired Loewy and Geller to design Leisurama, homes marketed at Macy's and built on Long Island — leveraging the press coverage from the Russian exhibition.[16]

Solo career

Geller became known for a number of homes in New England that he designed while moonlighting at Loewy/Snaith,[3] with the encouragement of Loewy and Snaith.[8] The houses each had an abstract sculptural quality; a 1999 New York Times article called the homes "eccentrically free-form and eye-grabbing."[7] Another article called the homes "ingenious wooden spacecraft."[20] Another described the houses as "quirky, tiny, site-specific."[8] Geller himself gave the houses nicknames such as the Butterfly, the Box Kite, Milk Carton and Grasshopper.[3]
Geller's work met a varied reception. Mark Lamster, writing for Design Observer, described Geller's Long Island house designs as "inexpensive and modest homes with playful shapes that radiated a sense of post-war optimism."[21] His 1966 design for the Elkin House in Sagaponack, New York, which he called Reclining Picasso was described as "an angular mess" in a 2001 New York Times book review.[22]
See: Andrew Geller design sketch
See: Andrew Geller design sketch
Examples of Geller's idiosyncratic home designs include the 1955 Reese House for Elizabeth Reese in Sagaponack, New York[3] — an A-Frame house that popularized the construction method after it was featured appeared on the cover of the New York Times as well as in the newspaper's real estate section of the May 5, 1957 edition. Reese, the client, was at the time the director of public relations at Loewy's office, and she publicized Geller's work — with John Callahan of the New York Times writing several articles on his work.[3]
The Pearlroth House in Westhampton, of 1959, consists of a pair of diamond-shaped structures.[23] When the 600square foot Pearlroth home was slated for demolition in 2006, it was called an "icon of Modernism."[24] The house — which featured two boxes rotated 45 degrees in a distinctive shape — was eventually relocated to be restored as a public museum.[24] Architectural historian Alastair Gordon said the house "is one of the most important examples of experimental design built during the postwar period – not just on Long Island but anywhere in the United States. It is witty, bold and inventive."
In 1958, Geller designed a beach house for bachelors. The Esquire Weekend House could be delivered to any location to be constructed on stilts.[3] Alastair Gordan, architectural historian, called the one-room house a "reducto ad absurdum version of the post-war weekend aesthetic."[3]
See: The Esquire Weekend House, rendering by Andrew Geller

Publicity

Geller's architectural designs on Long Island were featured in a 1999 exhibition called Weekend Utopia: The Modern Beach House on Eastern Long Island, 1960–1973, at the Guild Hall Museum in East Hampton, New York[20] — and in 2005 at an exhibit entitled Imagination: The Art and Architecture of Andrew Geller at New York's Municipal Art Society.[25]
Geller's grandson, Jake Gorst, wrote, produced and directed a 2005[26] documentary about his grandfather's work on the Leisurama homes. Since 2011, Gorst has actively sought to preserve the archives of Geller's works, including drawings, models and film recordings[27] — having used Kickstarter to help finance the archival work.
Geller's Long Island Homes were subject of the 2003 book Beach Houses: Andrew Geller. The Macy's homes were the subject of the 2008 book Leisurama Now: The Beach House for Everyone, by Paul Sahre. In 2001, his Pearlroth house was named one of the "10 Best Houses in the Hamptons."[28]



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Jack Fulbeck, American poet and academic, died he was 95.

John Frederick "Jack" Fulbeck was an American poet and professor of comparative literature at the California State Polytechnic University, Pomona died he was 95.. [1] 
(December 19, 1916 – December 25, 2011) 
He served two terms as president of the California State Poetry Society. [2] His poems have won numerous awards, such as "Apostrophe to Amour" and "Introspection in the Cold" which won first prizes in California state level poetry contests, and "In Fuente Vaqueros" which won an international grand prize. His poem "Challengers" was read by Taylor Wang from the orbiting Space Shuttle Challenger in 1985 and is on record at the National Archives Building.[3] He authored three books of poetry: I Sleep With Strangers, Gilgamesh, and Sifted Ashes.
Fulbeck was born in New York City and raised in Bloomfield, New Jersey. He attended Tusculum College in Tennessee on a New Jersey State Scholarship. Following the bombing of Pearl Harbor, he enlisted in the United States Navy and was stationed as a fighter pilot in the South Pacific. After the end of World War II, he worked as a newspaper and magazine editor and a freelance writer. In 1960, Fulbeck received his Ph.D. in Comparative Literature from the University of Southern California and married Seckyue Mary Chan and adopted her two children, Josephine and David. His third child, Kip Fulbeck, was born in 1965.[3]



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Satyadev Dubey, Indian actor, playwright and director, died he was 75.

Satyadev Dubey was an Indian theatre director, actor, playwright, screenwriter, and film actor and director  died he was 75.. He was awarded the Sangeet Natak Akademi Award in 1971.[2]
He won the 1978 National Film Award for Best Screenplay for Shyam Benegal's Bhumika and 1980 Filmfare Best Dialogue Award for Junoon. In 2011, he was honoured with the Padma Bhushan by the Government of India.

(1936 –25 December 2011)

Biography

Satyadev Dubey was born in Bilaspur district of the then Madhya Pradesh in 1936. He moved to Mumbai with the aim of becoming a cricketer, but ended up joining the Theatre Unit, a theatre group run by Ebrahim Alkazi, which also ran a school for many budding artists. Later when Alkazi left for Delhi to head the National School of Drama, he took over the Theatre Unit, and went on to produce many important plays in the Indian theatre.
He produced Girish Karnad's first play Yayati, and also his noted play Hayavadana, Badal Sarkar's Ebang Indrajit and Pagla Ghoda, Chandrashekhara Kambara’s Aur Tota Bola (Jokumaraswamy in original Kannada), Mohan Rakesh’s Aadhe Adhure, Vijay Tendulkar’s Khamosh! Adalat Jaari Hai, and A Raincoat For All Occasions and Jean Anouilh's Antigone in 2007.
He is credited with the discovery of Dharmavir Bharati’s Andha Yug, a play that was written for radio; Dubey saw its potential, sent it across to Ebrahim Alkazi at National School of Drama, and the rest is history, in modern Indian theatre. Wwhen staged in 1962, Andha Yug brought in a new paradigm in Indian theatre of the times.[3][4]
He made two short films Aparichay ke Vindhachal (1965) and Tongue In Cheek (1968),[5] and directed a Marathi feature film, Shantata! Court Chalu Aahe (1971), based on Vijay Tendulkar's play, which in turn is based on Friedrich DĆ¼rrenmatt's story "Die Panne".

Filmography




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Adrienne Cooper, American klezmer and Yiddish vocalist, died from adrenal cancer she was 65.

Adrienne Khana Cooper  was a Yiddish singer, musician and activist[1][2] who was integral to the contemporary revival of klezmer music  died from adrenal cancer she was 65..[3][4]

 

(September 1, 1946 – December 25, 2011)


In addition to her work as a Yiddish singer she was the assistant director at the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research, program director for the Museum of Chinese in the Americas, and executive officer for programming and executive officer for external affairs for the Workmen's Circle.[5][6] She co-founded KlezKamp.[7] She was a member of Jews for Racial and Economic Justice's Board of Directors until the summer of 2011, when she was diagnosed with cancer. Cooper won the Rabbi Marshall T. Meyer Risk Taker Award from the Jews for Racial and Economic Justice in 2010, as well as KlezKanada's Lifetime Achievement Award in Yiddish Arts and Culture.[8][9]
She died of adrenal cancer[10][11] at Roosevelt Hospital in Manhattan on December 25, 2011, aged 65.[12][13] She had been diagnosed in July 2011[14] and underwent surgery in August 2011.
Cooper is survived by her daughter, Sarah Mina Gordon, a vocalist and co-leader of the band "Yiddish Princess", as well as her mother, two brothers, and her partner, Marilyn Lerner, a pianist-composer.[15]
A memorial service was held on the morning of December 28, 2011, at Congregation B'nai Shalom in Walnut Creek, California. The service was followed by a graveside funeral at Oakmont Cemetery in Lafayette, California. A memorial service in New York City was held[16] on January 1, 2012 at Congregation Ansche Chesed. Shiva was held at Cooper's daughter's apartment in New York City.[17][18]
A Kholem/Dreaming in Yiddish, A Concert in Tribute to Adrienne Cooper has been organized for December 22, 2012, at the Kaye Playhouse at Hunter College in New York CIty. More than 50 Yiddish and klezmer musicians and global colleagues are slated to perform songs that Adrienne taught, sang, and recorded – these include the Klezmatics, Michael Wex, Shura Lipovsky, Dan Kahn, Theresa Tova, Zalmen Mlotek, Eleanor Reissa, Wolf Krakowski, Michael Alpert, Michael Winograd, Sarah Gordon.[19]

Discography

Solo Recordings

  • Enchanted (2010)[20]
  • Ghetto Tango (2000)[21]
  • Dreaming in Yiddish (1995)[22]



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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...