• U.S.

Milestones Mar. 27, 2000

2 minute read
Melissa August, Val Castronovo, Matthew Cooper, Lisa Mclaughlin, Julie Rawe, Alain Sanders, Flora Tartakovsky, Chris Taylor and Josh Tyrangiel

RETIRED. DAN MARINO, 38, Miami Dolphins quarterback who holds NFL records for the most touchdown passes, passing yards and completions; after 17 years and six knee operations; in Davie, Fla. (see Appreciation below).

RETURNED. SEAN ELLIOTT, 32, two-time NBA All-Star and the first pro athlete competing in a major sport with a kidney transplant; to the court, seven months after the operation; in San Antonio, Texas.

CHARGED. JAMIL ABDULLAH AL-AMIN, 56, Muslim cleric and onetime Black Panther formerly known as H. Rap Brown; with murder and aggravated battery after he allegedly shot at two sheriff’s deputies, one of whom died of his wounds; in Atlanta. The officers were trying to serve Al-Amin with an arrest warrant. He is being sought nationwide.

DIED. FRED KELLY, 83, Broadway dancer and choreographer who taught his brother Gene to tap dance, gave ballroom-dancing lessons to Queen Elizabeth and helped a young John Travolta learn how to swivel his hips and improve his strut; in Tucson, Ariz.

DIED. MORRIS ABRAM, 81, civil-rights lawyer, Jewish leader and former Brandeis University president who shepherded a landmark 1962 voting-rights case to the Supreme Court, which overturned a Georgia law that gave more weight to votes from mostly white rural areas; in Geneva, Switzerland. A former United Negro College Fund chairman, Abram served as the first general counsel of the Peace Corps and co-founded UN Watch to monitor the United Nations.

DIED. THOMAS FEREBEE, 81, Enola Gay bombardier who dropped the atom bomb on Hiroshima in World War II; in Windermere, Fla. The colonel retired from the Air Force in 1970, after acting as an observer in Vietnam.

DIED. MACK ROBINSON, 85, silver medalist who finished a step behind Jesse Owens in the 1936 Olympics 200 m, but whose success was overshadowed by his brother, baseball legend Jackie; in Pasadena, Calif.

DIED. IGNATIUS KUNG, 98, exiled Shanghai bishop who spent 30 years in prison for promoting Roman Catholicism in communist China and who was secretly named a Cardinal in 1979 while jailed; in Stamford, Conn.

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