Saturday, August 30, 2008

Isabel Washington Powell (1909-2008)
Harlem & Martha's Vineyard Social Fixture
Belated Announcement of Death

Isabel Washington Powell, who gave up the nightclub and Broadway stage to marry Adam Clayton Powell Jr., and become a much-loved figure in uptown society, died on May 1. She would have turned 99 on May 23.The Powells divorced in 1945 after 12 years of marriage and she never remarried, saying no one could match the charismatic minister and political leader. "I so admire the things he did," she said in 2002. "And we had such fun. Those 12 years were the best anyone could have."Born in Savannah, Ga., Isabel and her sister Fredi became popular performers in New York, [with Fredi staring in the 1934 film, "Imitation of Life."] Isabel played the "other woman" in Bessie Smith's only film, "St. Louis Blues," and she was dancing at the Cotton Club when Powell first saw her. Powell's minister father objected to his marrying a showgirl. But their wedding at Abyssinian Baptist Church, where Powell Sr. was the pastor, drew 3,000 spectators. After the divorce, Isabel became a special education teacher, volunteered, did occasional performing and remained the center of a large social circle both in the city and on Martha's Vineyard. "My only problem is I don't have enough room on my calendar for everything I want to do," she said in 2002. Adam Clayton Powell Jr. died in 1972.

A memorial service for Isabel Powell was held on May 12th, from 10 am to noon, at Abyssinian Baptist Church, 132 W. 138th Street, New York, N.Y.

Isabel W. Powell's obituary was written by David Hinckley, staff writer for New York Daily News. It appeared on May 3, 2008.

Monday, August 11, 2008

Isaac Hayes (1942 - 2008)
Soul & Funk Singer-Songwriter
Performer, Producer






"A certain administration which
I won't call by name
took the arts
out of the schools, and that left the brothers out on the street with nothing, so they went to the turntables and started rhyming. Then they had a way
to express
themselves,
and that's the birth of hip-hop."











"They say this cat Shaft is a bad mother...

Shut Your Mouth!

I'm talkin' 'bout Shaft.

Then We Can Dig It!


He's a complicated man

But no one understands him but his
woman

John Shaft!"




Isaac Hayes Live at Wattstax, 1973
Performing "Shaft"

Saturday, August 02, 2008

Stanley Michels (1933-2008)
Former New Yok City Councilman

Washington Heights, Inwood, West Harlem
and Morningside












Funeral Services will be held
Sunday, August 3, at 10:30 a.m.

Riverside Memorial Chapel
76th Street and Amsterdam Avenue.

Stanley E. Michels, 75, a city councilmember
from upper Manhattan for 24 years, died this morning at Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center.
He had fought cancer for two years.










Michels, a longtime resident of Castle Village on Cabrini Boulevard, was elected seven times to the Council, serving from 1978 until term limits ended his tenure in 2001. His district was modified by reapportionment to include parts of Central and West Harlem, but he carried the new areas as well as Washington Heights and Inwood, his traditional bases of support.

On the Council, he took the liberal side on many issues, differing sometimes with Mayors Koch and Giuliani. He was ardently pro-tenant, and fought for very strict laws against lead poisoning. He chaired the Manhattan delegation in the Council and was its senior member. He also represented the borough in budget negotiations with the Council leadership.

Stanley graduated from P.S. 152, on Nagle Avenue in Inwood, in January 1945, where he was a classmate of another future councilmember, this blogger. They both then attended Junior High School 52 on Academy Street, until Stanley left to attend Peekskill Military Academy. He graduated from Hobart College in 1955 and Cornell Law School in 1958.

As a young lawyer, he was drawn to politics, and joined the local club, the Washington Heights Progressive (actually Regular) Democrats, at the time led by State Senator Joseph Zaretzki. He rose from the ranks, and eventually became chair of the New York County Law Committee, an important position because it dealt with ballot challenges.

When the local councilmember, David B. Friedland, died in 1976, Michels competed for the vacant seat with Arlene Stringer, then wife of Ronald Stringer, counsel to Mayor Beame, and mother of Scott Stringer, who was elected in 1992 to the assembly, and in 2005 as Manhattan borough president. The Zaretzki club supported Ms. Stringer, and she won the primary in 1976 for the year remaining in Friedland's term. However, in the 1977 election for the full four-year term, Michels, by then a political independent, defeated Ms. Stringer. He was subsequently re-elected six times by substantial majorities.











As a public figure, Michels was known for getting along with all kinds of people, some of whom disliked each other. He was a unifying figure on the Council and in the communities he served. He chaired the Committee on Environmental Protection, one of the more important Council committees.

Legislatively, he sponsored the Clean Indoor Air Act, which this blogger bequeathed to him when he left the Council in 1983 to become Parks Commissioner. The council efforts, which paralleled Assemblyman Pete Grannis' initiative in Albany, came before Mayor Bloomberg's election, which resulted in numerous anti-smoking measurses, which Michels strongly supported.










Michels secured, over the years, tens of millions of dollars in capital funds for the restoration of parks in north Manhattan, including the Moses-era Highbridge Pool. He was particularly involved with, and interested in the improvement of Fort Tryon Park, much of which was a gift to the city from John D. Rockefeller, Jr. Year after year, he amended the capital budget and sometimes the expense budget to help parks. He was a board member of the Friends of the Heather Garden, a formal garden which overlooks the Hudson.

On July 24, the main walkway in Fort Tryon Park, leading north from Margaret Corbin Circle and overlooking the Heather Garden, was named Stan Michels Promenade, in a ceremony led by Parks Commissioner Adrian Benepe, Supreme Court Justice Edward Lehner, Council colleagues Robert Jackson and Gale Brewer, and present and former local elected officials participated in the tribute.





Michels was the closing speaker, thanking his family, colleagues and friends, including longtime aide Steve Simon, for all they had done for him and for the park. The new promenade name was unveiled. The ceremony was attended by hundreds of neighborhood residents, who welcomed the opportunity to salute an old friend. To some of the older people who were there, the event evoked Lou Gehrig's farewell to the New York Yankees on July 4, 1939.





Michels is survived by his wife of 48 years, Molly, a retired teacher, two daughters, Judge Shari Michels and Karen Michels, a teacher, and a son, Jeffrey, a lawyer living in Israel, a sister, Ellen Grant, a granddaughter, Annabelle Buckvar, and two grandsons, Amir and Yonatan Michels.

By Henry J. Stern / August 1, 2008