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TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
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TIME, Almanac of the 20th Century.ISO
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1990
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93
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jan_mar
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02159951.000
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<text>
<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>