Monthly Archives: November 2011

Feds arrest Boyland on new bribery charges

State Assemblyman William Boyland Jr. is accused of soliciting more than $250,000 in bribes from undercover federal agents in exchange for his influence in securing state funding.

A Brooklyn state assemblyman who just beat a corruption rap was busted Tuesday on new charges of soliciting more than $250,000 in bribes from undercover FBI agents, authorities said.

William Boyland Jr. sought bribes from undercover agents who posed as associates of a carnival operator scouting locations in his district, and a real estate investor looking to break into the Brooklyn market, the new federal complaint says.

The timing of the alleged shakedown makes Boyland’s actions more brazen: The feds say he and a member of his staff asked an undercover agent for $7,000 in March — shortly after Manhattan federal prosecutors charged him with soliciting bribes from a health care organization.

Boyland, whose district includes Brownsville and Bed-Stuy, told the undercover that he needed money “to solidify some attorneys.”

In a meeting secretly recorded in his office on March 25, the undercover passed the cash to Boyland in exchange for state funding to finance development projects, the complaint says. Boyland said his support was a “no brainer” and gave the undercover agent the thumb’s up sign.

Last April, Boyland allegedly solicited the $250,000 bribe from the agents in which they would purchase shuttered St. Mary’s Hospital in his district and obtain state funding to renovate the site, then re-sell it to a nonprofit he claimed to control.

“I got a middle guy by the way…  I gotta stay clean… I got a bag man,” Boyland told them in an Atlantic City hotel room, according to the complaint. Boyland, the scion of a political dynasty in Brooklyn, boasted he could easily deliver on the schemes through his contacts in city government and with other pols.

He also claimed to have the city Department of Housing Preservation and Development “locked up” and the ability to set up meetings with a “commissioner” and “deputy mayor,”  the complaint says.

The feds also refer to another unidentified elected official who was under investigation for soliciting a bribe from a carnival operator in the past. The FBI’s carnival investigation snared operator Lawrence Carr last summer for allegedly bribing former State Sen. Hiram  Monserrate in 2006 for help in securing permits. Monserrate has not been charged.

Boyland rebuffed a chance to cooperate with the feds after he was arrested.

He appeared in Brooklyn Federal Court Tuesday wearing a blue warmup suit and was released on $100,000 bond.

He said nothing as an FBI agent returned his wallet, cell phone and car keys. “We’re sorry we have to be here but we intend to vigorously fight these charges,” said defense lawyer Michael Bachrach.

“The extent of the charged corruption is staggering,” said Brooklyn U.S. Attorney Loretta Lynch. “The defendant had a strong political legacy, the trust of his community, and the privilege of serving it.”

World AIDS Day – December 1st, 2011

Started on 1st December 1988, World AIDS Day is about raising money, increasing awareness, fighting prejudice and improving education. World AIDS Day is important for reminding people that HIV has not gone away, and that there are many things still to be done.

According to UNAIDS estimates, there are now 33.3 million people living with HIV, including 2.5 million children. During 2009 some 2.6 million people became newly infected with the virus and an estimated 1.8 million people died from AIDS.

The vast majority of people with HIV and AIDS live in lower- and middle-income countries. But HIV today is a threat to men, women and children on all continents around the world.

Even though African Americans account for about 13% of the United States population, they account for about half of the people who contract HIV and AIDS. HIV/AIDS is also the leading cause of death for black women ages 25-34.  But detecting the disease early can greatly prolong life.

This World AIDS Day – December 1, 2011 – take action to tackle HIV prejudice and to protect yourself and others from HIV transmission.

There are now 33.4 million people living with HIV, according to 2008 figures released by the World Health Organization. An estimated 2.7 million were newly infected with the virus  and 2 million died of AIDS the same year. Tragically, much of the conversation about HIV/AIDS in the  United States have stopped. African Americans are disproportionately affected and bear the burden of the disease.

For more information about HIV & AIDS, we invite you to explore “Edwin’s Place“, a project of the African American Planning Commission, Inc (AAPCI).

Please make a donation ($10 suggested minimum) if you are able. All donations will go to the development of Edwin’s Place, a permanent supportive residence for those living with the disease. AAPCI is a registered 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization. All cash donations are tax-deductible to the extent permissible by US laws.

Thank you for your generosity.

In Memoriam: Those We Have Lost to AIDS

December 1st, 2011 is World AIDS Day. In commemoration of this very important day, the African American Planning Commission has compiled a list of some of the most talented persons of our time, who happened to have died from AIDS. In honoring them and their legacy — whether they dazzled you with their songs, awed you with their prowess on the court, or inspired you with their true courage — we must continue to fight against the disease that took them from us far too soon.

For World AIDS Day 2011, AAPCI presents those stars whose light was snuffed out way too soon.

The struggle continues…

View AAPCI AIDS Memorial Wall

Legal Services NYC Launches Veterans Justice Project

Legal Services NYC (LSNYC) has just launched the Veterans Justice Project, which will provide a broad range of civil legal services for veterans, service members, and their families in all five boroughs. The initiative is made possible through a major grant from the Robin Hood Foundation.

LSNYC’s services will avert homelessness by preventing evictions and foreclosures; build and preserve economic security by helping clients qualify for federal and state benefits and reduce debt; protect income and benefits from abusive debt collection practices; and strengthen families by solving child support problems and stabilizing immigration status.  The Veterans Justice Project will leverage LSNYC’s nearly 45 years of experience to identify systemic barriers that prevent housing stability, economic security and basic survival, and challenge them through coordinated advocacy.

“LSNYC is pleased to partner with organizations already providing a range of services to veterans in every borough, and to supplement their important work by providing access to justice to a population that has historically been underserved,” said LSNYC Executive Director Raun Rasmussen.

Partner organizations include the VA NY Harbor Healthcare System Homeless Programs (including the VA’s PROJECT TORCH), the James J. Peters VA Medical Center, the Bronx Veterans Center, Volunteers of America, the City Bar Justice Program’s Veterans Assistance Project, and the Urban Justice Center.

“We look forward to continuing the valuable linkages between the VA NY Harbor Healthcare system homeless programs and Legal Services NYC’s new Veterans Justice Project,” said Karen Fuller, Homeless Programs Director at NY Harbor Healthcare System. “This new project will target services to veterans who need legal assistance to help them achieve greater housing stability and an improved socio-economic outlook.”

Veterans, service members, or the family members of a veteran or service member can get information through the Veteran’s Justice Project Hotline at (347) 592-2409.

Spirit Awakening Foundation Presents 4th Annual Voices of the Unheard: Epiphany

Akuyoe Graham

LOS ANGELES – The Spirit Awakening Foundation will present its 4th Annual Voices of the Unheard: Epiphany benefit performance at 3 p.m., Sat., Dec. 3, at The Lost Studio Theatre, 130 S. La Brea Ave, 2nd floor in Los Angeles.

The show will highlight inspiring works written by 30 current or former young people who live or formerly resided in probation camps within the juvenile justice system.

Spirit Awakening Foundation, founded by actress/author and activist Akuyoe Graham, is a non-profit designed to work with young people, inspiring them to find their voice and awaken their spirit.

The mission of the organization is to assist teens and youth in the fulfillment of their spiritual identity, and to generate and produce inspirational stories of transformation for the screen, stage and television.

The program is the brainchild of Graham who also went through challenging times as a teen trying to find her own voice. To work through her issues, she wrote the highly-acclaimed, one woman play, “Spirit Awakening.”

“That was the vehicle I used to come back to center, come back to myself,” says Graham. “During my teenage years my challenge was more internalized about liking myself.”

After performing “Spirit Awakening” at various venues, Graham, who is working to bring her one-woman show to the big screen, said young people began to take notice.

“Children and teens responded to the piece,” says Graham, a tribal princess in her native Ghana. “They would ask if they could write their stories. I wanted to use the power of story, the power of reflecting on themselves. I wanted them to have a more powerful and authentic self.  I was just like them. It was about my own self-discovery and query into who I was. I wanted to find my place in the world and be comfortable in my own skin. I didn’t want to apologize for who I was. Working through it lead to a great spiritual understanding. I’m committed to having the voices of these students heard.”

Proceeds from the fundraiser will go towards satellite writing programs in Culver City, East LA, South Central and Lancaster beginning January 2012.

“Formerly detained youth or foster youth in the juvenile and justice system – will have a place to go for mentoring, self growth and self awareness, writing courses, job referrals, peer mentorships,” says Graham, who will soon be seen in the upcoming independent films Switchboard, Faith and Dreams, and Guardian of Eden.

The evening’s special guests include: Rev. Michael Bernard Beckwith (Founder and Spiritual Director of Agape International Spiritual Center), Frances Fisher (Titanic), Stephani Victor (actress/athlete) and Debra Wilson (Mad TV).

“I will be forever committed to Akuyoe Graham, the young men and women who struggle in the journey towards a newer self and the Spirit Awakening Foundation,” said Wilson. “I am humbly grateful to, once again, host “Voices Of The Unheard” so that these sacred voices and messages may be heard in 2011 and beyond.”

“I am deeply moved by the writers in the Spirit Awakening program and their willingness to explore, heal and express in their own unique way,” said Victor.  It affirms my belief that with love and the guidance of a committed and loving teacher like Akuyoe, extraordinary transformations can unfold and in this case lives are changed forever.”

Tickets are $25 (for children, teens, students & seniors with ID); $50 general seating and $100 (pre-event reception with artists at 2 p.m.)

For tickets: www.brownpapertickets.com or 800 838 3006 ext.1. For information: www.Spiritawakening.org  or 310 570-8190.

Akuyoe Graham is available for interviews. For information contact Darlene Donloe 248-631-8161.

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ABOUT SPIRIT AWAKENING

Spirit Awakening has reached hundreds of people across the country and has a huge diverse following of young and old alike. It touches the heart and shows that only within will someone find all that they are seeking – a sense of place in the totality of life and a heightened sense of their own unique expression.

Inspired by this experience, Graham created the award-winning writing program “Writes of Passage-Unmasking Your Authentic Voice” and founded the public benefit 501(c)(3) arts organization Spirit Awakening Foundation. The Foundation oversees the implementation of her writing program for teens and incarcerated youth.

California’s state Department of Justice has recognized “Writes of Passage”™ as “innovative and effective” in the areas of youth gang violence prevention.

ABOUT AKUYOE GRAHAM

Award-winning actor/author/educator Akuyoe Graham possesses the ability to sit with society’s outcasts and rapidly guide them to a life-changing, self-discovery experience.

She has widely performed her highly acclaimed one-woman play, Spirit Awakening.  Graham takes audiences on her odyssey of self-discovery – from tribal princess in her native Ghana, to British schoolgirl, to socialite-wannabe in New York, and finally back to her original African heritage and deeper spiritual self.

Whether in a prison classroom with a dozen inmates – or on stage before hundreds of students or regular playgoers – Graham’s archetypal journey electrifies audiences and inspires them to look beneath their own social masks to their unchanging inner essence.

Graham is planning to take a group of her graduates to Ghana to share their love and faith in the future with the country’s orphaned children. The trip will be financed by her Spirit Awakening Foundation, through the generosity of individual donors and private organizations.

Graham has appeared in numerous television shows including: God Bless The Child, Taken Away, The Doctor, Picket Fences, Chicago Hope, General Hospital, City of Angels and more. She also appeared in the film, American Pie.

Graham is the author of the best-selling book, “The Little Book of Transformation/7 days to a brand new you.”

From the Front Lines to the Bread Lines

A new report released by the Food Bank For New York City, the city’s major hunger-relief organization working to end food poverty throughout the five boroughs, shows that 25 percent of all households with a military veteran in New York City are experiencing difficulty affording food. The report, From the Front Lines to the Bread Lines: Food Poverty Among Veterans, reveals that veterans’ households are making a range of sacrifices in order to make ends meet: more than one in ten are unable to buy food because of rent or utilities; many more are reducing the quantity and quality of food they are purchasing. Further, the data show more than one third of veteran households would not be able to afford food for their families within three months of losing their household income.

“This report presents an unexpected and grim picture of returning military personnel and retired veterans losing the battle against unemployment, low and/or stagnant incomes and spiraling costs for food and other basic necessities. It is unacceptable on all fronts,” said Margarette Purvis, President and CEO of the Food Bank For New York City. “Veterans are returning home from Iraq and Afghanistan to high unemployment and threats to nutrition assistance programs in the current federal budget. We’re calling on Congress protect these programs against cuts that would drastically reduce vital food support for those who need our assistance the most, including the men and women who fought on the front lines.”

“I commend the Food Bank for highlighting the important issue of veteran hunger,” said Council Speaker Christine C. Quinn. “The Council has a long history of fighting hunger and supporting our veterans, and with this new data, we’ll be able to better identify and help those in need. We will continue to aid veterans by connecting them to vital benefits and programs to prevent hunger and homelessness, as well as to quality medical care and counseling services. The brave men and women who have sacrificed so much for our country deserve nothing less.”

The findings in this report are consistent with recent studies by various organizations representing military veterans, as well as data tracked by the Census Bureau and the Bureau of Labor Statistics. For example, the 2010 unemployment rate among veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan was almost 12 percent, in contrast to the approximately 9 percent national average.[1] Similarly, rates of homelessness are higher among veterans than the general population.  Additional findings indicate that female veterans and veterans of color are disproportionately impacted by food poverty and mirror secondary data showing disproportionate rates of homelessness among the same population[2]

A number of veterans’ organizations anticipate that employment and poverty among veterans will be exacerbated by the expected return of troops from Iraq and Afghanistan before the end of the year, and are calling on Congress to expedite the passage of legislation focused on helping veterans find jobs. Although the House passed its employment bill, the Veterans Opportunity to Work Act (H.R.2433), in October 2011, the Senate has yet to pass the Hiring Heroes Act of 2011.

The findings in this special report demonstrate that veterans are not expecting their circumstances to improve soon. Almost one third are concerned about needing food assistance, including food stamps (also known as Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program or SNAP) or emergency food from soup kitchens and/or food pantries within the next twelve months. Threats to nutrition assistance programs in the current federal budget and deficit reduction negotiations are giving rise to concern among hunger and poverty organizations that even basic food assistance may not be available when needed, and veterans and nonveterans alike may find themselves left without even the lifeline of a soup kitchen or food pantry.

ATLIS Study Uncovers ‘Positive’ Side Of Living With HIV/AIDS

In its 30 year history, few (if any) positive aspects of the HIV/AIDS epidemic have made the spotlight, but advances in treatment and a new study are aiming to turn that around and to demonstrate to HIV/AIDS patients that they can still have a high quality of life while undergoing treatment.

The AIDS Treatment for Life International Study (ATLIS) collected information about  treatment awareness from more than 2,000 patients across 12 countries, the largest patient survey of its kind.

“We were able to, for the first time … garner an understanding of what that patient goes through from a treatment perspective, but also from a personal perspective,” says Lindsay Deefholts of Cohn & Wolfe, one of the companies involved in the research.

“We didn’t want to just uncover the negatives associated with this disease. There are a whole lot of positives that we were able to learn about with these findings,” Deefholts says. “It actually gave a lot of hope and it was something to celebrate … there’s a lot of good that’s also happening.”

One result of the findings is the first-ever set of treatment guidelines for HIV, which have yet to be released by the National Institutes of Health. Researchers from the International Association of Physicians in AIDS Care, or IAPAC, which sponsored the study, also cited new treatment options with fewer side effects, in an effort to strengthen communication between doctors and patients when it comes to adherence to medication and the long-term benefits patients can experience as a result.

The findings also revealed the need for more individualized treatment and greater focus on co-morbidities, which refer to the other health conditions that can be exacerbated by HIV or its treatments, such as heart disease, stroke or kidney failure.

“It’s great that HIV clinicians are focusing on antiretroviral therapies and patients are doing so much better,” Renslow Sherer, professor of medicine at the University of Chicago and member of the ATLIS team, told the Chicago Tribune when the study findings were presented last year. “But people are now dying from heart disease, liver disease, kidney disease and stroke … We just want to make sure that both patients and doctors treating people with HIV don’t just focus on the T-cells,” he says.

WATCH VIDEO: Inside Communications with Mike Bako: Lindsay Deefholts

Lil’ B Releases Song Called ‘I Got AIDS’ to Raise Awareness

Lil B - I Got AIDS (AIDS Awareness Song)

Click here to watch video

Earlier this year rapper Lil’ B released an album called “I’m Gay.” The album, he said, was meant to raise gay rights awareness in hip-hop. Now, in an effort to encourage his fans to get tested for HIVAIDS, he’s released a song titled “I Got AIDS.”

The song is part of his recently released “BasedGod Belli” mixtape. “I have a lot of songs that have sexual lyrics, and I want to tell people the truth about sexuality and to make sure that they get tested if they’re sexually active,” Lil’ B said in an interview with MTV News.

“I wanted to paint a picture that’s very realistic, nothing sugar-coated that the streets to Wall Street could feel—I wanted people to understand what these young guys are thinking,” Lil B continued.

While Lil’ B offers a refreshing non-homophobic rap encouraging his fans to get  tested, his song “I Got AIDS” starts out by unfairly pointing fingers at women for the increase an HIV rates.

I  got AIDS, God damn, I can’t believe this shit

The last time I f-cked was my girl, I can’t believe that

I let me think “Goddamn, it was another girl”

Got a lot of things in my life, but now I’m in the swirl

No protection, I should’ve used a condom

Instead of trusting these women.

The song quickly transitions to a poignant and much needed public service  announcement:

I wanna tell everybody, make sure y’all get tested, man

This is not a game

A lot of people have STDs right now and don’t even know it

You look perfectly fine and you feel fine

It takes a few months a few months for something to form in your body

But you can have it and be perfectly fine

Make sure you’re not transferring these STDs to other people

I know it hurts, sometimes you don’t even want to know

But to protect the world and be fair to everybody else, make sure you get tested

And don’t trust nobody because a lot of people are lying

A lot of people don’t even really know

And don’t think cause a person looks good that they “free”

Cause there’s a lot of people that got HIV

Lil’  B says he’s very gay but that he loves women. “I’m not attracted to men in any  way. I’ve never been attracted to a man in my life. But yes I am gay, I’m so happy. I’m a gay, heterosexual male,” he told MTV shortly after he released his album “I’m Gay.” “I got major love for the gay and lesbian community, and I just want to push less separation and that’s why I’m doing it.”

The rapper continued:

“A lot of guys think it’s cool to have sex with a lot of women. I’m not having sex with all these women. I lie about it a lot; I lie about having sex with 40 girls. I’m not doing that, and I want people to know, if you are doing that, you are at high risk of getting AIDS or other STDs and you need to make sure you get tested. This is me paying back to the world and just being truthful, honest, and doing something that I feel is right.”

Legendary boxer Joe Frazier looses battle with cancer. RIPP Champ!

Smokin’ Joe Frazier (January 12, 1944 – November 7, 2011)

PHILADELPHIA — He beat Muhammad Ali in the Fight of the Century, battled him nearly to the death in the Thrilla in Manila. Then Joe Frazier spent the rest of his life trying to fight his way out of Ali’s shadow.

That was one fight Frazier never could win.

He was once a heavyweight champion, and a great one at that. Ali would say as much after Frazier knocked him down in the 15th round en route to becoming the first man to beat Ali at Madison Square Garden in March 1971.

But he bore the burden of being Ali’s foil, and he paid the price. Bitter for years about the taunts his former nemesis once threw his way, Frazier only in recent times came to terms with what happened in the past and said he had forgiven Ali for everything he said.

Frazier, who died Monday night after a brief battle with liver cancer at the age of 67, will forever be linked to Ali. But no one in boxing would ever dream of anointing Ali as The Greatest unless he, too, was linked to Smokin’ Joe.

“You can’t mention Ali without mentioning Joe Frazier,” said former AP boxing writer Ed Schuyler Jr. “He beat Ali, don’t forget that.”

They fought three times, twice in the heart of New York City and once in the morning in a steamy arena in the Philippines. They went 41 rounds together, with neither giving an inch and both giving it their all.

In their last fight in Manila in 1975, they traded punches with a fervor that seemed unimaginable among heavyweights. Frazier gave almost as good as he got for 14 rounds, then had to be held back by trainer Eddie Futch as he tried to go out for the final round, unable to see.

“Closest thing to dying that I know of,” Ali said afterward.

Ali was as merciless with Frazier out of the ring as he was inside it. He called him a gorilla, and mocked him as an Uncle Tom. But he respected him as a fighter, especially after Frazier won a decision to defend his heavyweight title against the then-unbeaten Ali in a fight that was so big Frank Sinatra was shooting pictures at ringside and both fighters earned an astonishing $2.5 million.

The night at the Garden 40 years ago remained fresh in Frazier’s mind as he talked about his life, career and relationship with Ali a few months before he died.

“I can’t go nowhere where it’s not mentioned,” he told The Associated Press.

“That was the greatest thing that ever happened in my life.”

Bob Arum, who once promoted Ali, said he was saddened by Frazier’s passing.

“He was such an inspirational guy. A decent guy. A man of his word,” Arum said. “I’m torn up by Joe dying at this relatively young age. I can’t say enought about Joe.”

Frazier’s death was announced in a statement by his family, who asked to be able to grieve privately and said they would announce “our father’s homecoming celebration” as soon as possible.

Though slowed in his later years and his speech slurred by the toll of punches taken in the ring, Frazier was still active on the autograph circuit in the months before he died. In September he went to Las Vegas, where he signed autographs in the lobby of the MGM Grand hotel-casino shortly before Floyd Mayweather Jr.’s fight against Victor Ortiz.

An old friend, Gene Kilroy, visited with him and watched Frazier work the crowd.

“He was so nice to everybody,” Kilroy said. “He would say to each of them, “Joe Frazier, sharp as a razor, what’s your name?”

Frazier was small for a heavyweight, weighing just 205 pounds when he won the title by stopping Jimmy Ellis in the fifth round of their 1970 fight at Madison Square Garden. But he fought every minute of every round going forward behind a vicious left hook, and there were few fighters who could withstand his constant pressure.

His reign as heavyweight champion lasted only four fights – including the win over Ali – before he ran into an even more fearsome slugger than himself. George Foreman responded to Frazier’s constant attack by dropping him three times in the first round and three more in the second before their 1973 fight in Jamaica was waved to a close and the world had a new heavyweight champion.

Two fights later, he met Ali in a rematch of their first fight, only this time the outcome was different. Ali won a 12-round decision, and later that year stopped George Foreman in the Rumble in the Jungle in Zaire.

There had to be a third fight, though, and what a fight it was. With Ali’s heavyweight title at stake, the two met in Manila in a fight that will long be seared in boxing history.

Frazier went after Ali round after round, landing his left hook with regularity as he made Ali backpedal around the ring. But Ali responded with left jabs and right hands that found their mark again and again. Even the intense heat inside the arena couldn’t stop the two as they fought every minute of every round with neither willing to concede the other one second of the round.

“They told me Joe Frazier was through,” Ali told Frazier at one point during the fight.

“They lied,” Frazier said, before hitting Ali with a left hook.

Finally, though, Frazier simply couldn’t see and Futch would not let him go out for the 15th round. Ali won the fight while on his stool, exhausted and contemplating himself whether to go on.

It was one of the greatest fights ever, but it took a toll. Frazier would fight only two more times, getting knocked out in a rematch with Foreman eight months later before coming back in 1981 for an ill advised fight with Jumbo Cummings.

“They should have both retired after the Manila fight,” Schuyler said. “They left every bit of talent they had in the ring that day.”

Born in Beaufort, S.C., on Jan 12, 1944, Frazier took up boxing early after watching weekly fights on the black and white television on his family’s small farm. He was a top amateur for several years, and became the only American fighter to win a gold medal in the 1964 Olympics in Tokyo despite fighting in the final bout with an injured left thumb.

“Joe Frazier should be remembered as one of the greatest fighters of all time and a real man,” Arum told the AP in a telephone interview Monday night. “He’s a guy that stood up for himself. He didn’t compromise and always gave 100 percent in the ring. There was never a fight in the ring where Joe didn’t give 100 percent.”

After turning pro in 1965, Frazier quickly became known for his punching power, stopping his first 11 opponents. Within three years he was fighting world-class opposition and, in 1970, beat Ellis to win the heavyweight title that he would hold for more than two years.

It was his fights with Ali, though, that would define Frazier. Though Ali was gracious in defeat in the first fight, he was as vicious with his words as he was with his punches in promoting all three fights – and he never missed a chance to get a jab in at Frazier.

Frazier, who in his later years would have financial trouble and end up running a gym in his adopted hometown of Philadelphia, took the jabs personally. He felt Ali made fun of him by calling him names and said things that were not true just to get under his skin. Those feelings were only magnified as Ali went from being an icon in the ring to one of the most beloved people in the world.

After a trembling Ali it the Olympic torch in 1996 in Atlanta, Frazier was asked by a reporter what he thought about it.

“They should have thrown him in,” Frazier responded.

He mellowed, though, in recent years, preferring to remember the good from his fights with Ali rather than the bad. Just before the 40th anniversary of his win over Ali earlier this year – a day Frazier celebrated with parties in New York – he said he no longer felt any bitterness toward Ali.

“I forgive him,” Frazier said. “He’s in a bad way.”

Read Joe Frazier’s bio from Wikipedia.

VIDEO

Twenty years later, Magic Johnson is ‘living proof’ of surviving HIV

When the Lakers star guard told the world on Nov. 7, 1991, that he was HIV-positive, many thought they would watch him quickly wither away. Instead, Magic became a major face in the fight against AIDS.

Bob Costas, the television sports analyst widely considered one of the best in the country, was no different from many athletes, sports fans and basketball experts 20 years ago Monday when Magic Johnson held a news conference to tell the world he was HIV-positive.

“I was stunned,” Costas said, “and my immediate thought was, knowing what we thought we knew about HIV, we would watch Magic Johnson die a public death, that he would waste away. This was what we thought we understood about the virus, that his days were numbered.”

Read more in the LA Times.