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- <text id=93TT2532>
- <title>
- Feb. 15, 1993: Arthur Ashe 1943-1993
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Feb. 15, 1993 The Chemistry of Love
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- APPRECIATION, Page 70
- A Man of Fire and Grace
- Arthur Ashe 1943-1993
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By PAUL A. WITTEMAN
- </p>
- <p> There were so many long odds and so many graceful
- triumphs in the lifetime of Arthur Ashe. More than seem
- plausible for a black youngster from segregated Richmond,
- Virginia, whose ticket to worldwide renown and recognition was
- punched in a sport that was almost the definition of a game for
- whites. More than seem reasonable for a man who suffered the
- first of several heart attacks at age 36, while at the peak of
- his considerable game. More than seemed attainable to stunned
- observers who wept with him in April of last year when he
- announced (under the pressure of a pending newspaper story) that
- he had AIDS--probably the result of a blood transfusion after
- a second bypass operation, in 1983.
- </p>
- <p> The tears did not last. Ashe, the pragmatist, wiped them
- away and set out to teach the ignorant lessons about ourselves.
- He set up an AIDS foundation. He became active in AIDS research
- at Harvard and at his alma mater, the University of California,
- Los Angeles. He spoke to scores of gatherings on the nature of
- his disease, on race relations, on the lessons of life lived in
- the shadow of mortality. Along the way, he hugged his wife
- Jeanne and daughter Camera. The hugs and dignified discourse
- ended prematurely last week as Ashe, 49, succumbed to the
- disease in New York City.
- </p>
- <p> Of the protean figures responsible for the integration of
- sports in America, Ashe stood in the first rank. Jesse Owens
- proved that white men do not run faster or jump farther than
- blacks. Jackie Robinson disproved with a fiery passion that
- whites have a stronger desire to win. Muhammad Ali demonstrated
- in the ring that speed and power were only the obvious ways in
- which a black athlete could be agile and courageous. There have
- been other pathfinders: decathlete Milt Campbell, golfer Charlie
- Sifford, and in Ashe's own sport the lithe and graceful Althea
- Gibson.
- </p>
- <p> But none of them possessed the combination of attributes
- that made Ashe a paradigm of understated reason and elegance.
- In 1973 Ashe went off to play in the South African Open to see
- if he could chip away at the foundation of apartheid. Militants
- in the African National Congress did not welcome the visit,
- castigating him as an Uncle Tom and telling him he should go
- home. Ashe listened and replied evenly, "Small concessions
- incline toward larger ones."
- </p>
- <p> He could demonstrate that was so. Postwar Richmond was a
- city where African Americans still knew their place and kept to
- it. In 1955 Ashe was turned away from the Richmond city tennis
- tournament because of his color. But that merely presented an
- opportunity to turn the other cheek: "Drummed into me above all,
- by my dad, by the whole family, was that without your good name,
- you would be nothing."
- </p>
- <p> It helped if the good name was accompanied by a serve that
- sprayed aces and by ground strokes that delivered tennis balls
- with laser-like precision deep into his opponent's backhand. In
- fact, his game was the antithesis of his public persona. It was
- the fire that flowed out from behind an impassive mask and
- through his fingertips. In John McPhee's 1969 book Levels of the
- Game, Davis Cup teammate and occasional opponent Clark Graebner
- described Ashe's game: "He comes out on the court and he's tight
- for a while, then he hits a few good shots and he feels the
- power to surge ahead. He gets looser and more liberal with the
- shots he tries, and pretty soon he is hitting shots everywhere.
- He does not play percentage tennis." That unorthodox brilliance
- was never better displayed than on Centre Court at Wimbledon in
- 1975 when Ashe faced the enfant terrible of tennis, Jimmy
- Connors. Connors swaggered onto the court as the bookmakers'
- darling. Ashe turned him into an unexpected runner-up with a
- four-set lesson in pinpoint placement.
- </p>
- <p> Tantrums took over tennis after that. Connors, John
- McEnroe and others transformed the courts into arenas where
- invective upstaged the delicacy of a drop shot, where insulting
- the umpire became more important than applauding an opponent's
- cross-court backhand. Ashe would have none of it. The game, like
- life, of course had to be conducted with passion, but dignity
- had to be maintained.
- </p>
- <p> The restraint was less apparent in recent years, perhaps
- because Ashe knew that so much needed to be done in so little
- time. Referring to the violence that shattered Los Angeles after
- the Rodney King verdict, he preferred to call it a "revolt,"
- knowing full well that the word expressed a more powerful image
- of response to racial repression than the term most commonly
- used, "riot." On the other hand, he earned the outrage of many
- black coaches and educators by supporting a proposition that
- requires minimum standards of academic performance in exchange
- for athletic eligibility. Many African-American athletes fell
- below that threshold. But Ashe also realized the role in which
- numerous black college athletes are cast. "You really don't care
- about us as students," he told white administrators. "You care
- about us as athletes to fill your stadiums and arenas."
- </p>
- <p> In recent months the great champion seemed driven to
- ensure that his many ventures and works would be tidy when he
- left them. "I'm getting my life in order, so if something
- should happen now or five years from now, it won't cause
- disruption." Unfairly to him and everyone else he touched, it
- had to be now. Five more years or five more months would have
- been a gift we all could have cherished.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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