<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?><oembed><version><![CDATA[1.0]]></version><provider_name><![CDATA[BEAUTIFUL, ALSO, ARE THE SOULS OF MY BLACK SISTERS]]></provider_name><provider_url><![CDATA[https://kathmanduk2.wordpress.com]]></provider_url><author_name><![CDATA[Ann]]></author_name><author_url><![CDATA[https://kathmanduk2.wordpress.com/author/kathmanduk2/]]></author_url><title><![CDATA[IN REMEMBRANCE: 9-7-2014]]></title><type><![CDATA[link]]></type><html><![CDATA[<p><strong>JOAN RIVERS, A COMIC STILETTO QUICK TO SKEWER</strong></p>
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<p class="byline-dateline"><span class="byline">By <a title="More Articles by ROBERT D. McFADDEN" href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/m/robert_d_jr_mcfadden/index.html" rel="author"><span class="byline-author">ROBERT D. McFADDEN</span></a></span></p>
<p class="byline-dateline">SEPT. 4, 2014</p>
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<p><!-- close image --><figcaption class="caption"></figcaption><h4 class="headline">Joan Rivers, Comic With a Caustic Wit</h4>
<p class="credit"><span class="visually-hidden">Credit</span>Ruth Fremson/The New York Times</p>
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<li class="sharetool email-sharetool login-modal-trigger"><a title="More articles about Joan Rivers." href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/r/joan_rivers/index.html?inline=nyt-per">Joan Rivers</a>, the raspy loudmouth who pounced on America’s obsessions with flab, face-lifts, body hair and other blemishes of neurotic life, including her own, in five decades of caustic comedy that propelled her from nightclubs to television to international stardom, died on Thursday in Manhattan. She was 81.</li>
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<p class="story-body-text story-content">Her daughter, Melissa Rivers, confirmed her death. A spokeswoman, Judy Katz, said the cause had not yet been determined.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Ms. Rivers died at Mount Sinai Hospital, where she had been taken last Thursday from an outpatient surgery clinic after going into <a title="The investigation." href="http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/05/nyregion/new-york-state-to-investigate-joan-riverss-death.html?_r=0">cardiac arrest </a>and losing consciousness, the authorities said. The State Health Department is investigating the circumstances that led to her death, a state official said Thursday.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Ms. Rivers had been in the clinic for a minor procedure on her vocal cords, according to a spokesman. Her daughter said Tuesday that her mother was on life support and Wednesday that she was out of intensive care.</p>
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<h2 class="story-heading"><span class="story-heading-text">An Appraisal: Joan Rivers Could Never Stop Working</span></h2>
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<h2 class="story-heading"><span class="story-heading-text">ArtsBeat: Joan Rivers Overcame the ‘Handicap of a Woman Comic’</span></h2>
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<div class="thumb"><img src="https://i2.wp.com/static01.nyt.com/images/2014/09/05/arts/rivers-comedy/rivers-comedy-thumbStandard.jpg" alt="Joan Rivers in 1965." /></p>
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<h2 class="story-heading"><span class="story-heading-text">ArtsBeat: What Was Your Favorite Joan Rivers Joke?</span></h2>
<h2 class="story-heading">SEPT. 4, 2014</h2>
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<h2 class="story-heading"><span class="story-heading-text">Joan Rivers’s Death Under Investigation by New York State Health Department</span></h2>
<h2 class="story-heading">SEPT. 4, 2014</h2>
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<h2 class="story-heading"><span class="story-heading-text">City Room: Joan Rivers, as Remembered by Nocturnalist</span></h2>
<h2 class="story-heading">SEPT. 5, 2014</h2>
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<p id="story-continues-2" class="story-body-text story-content">Ms. Rivers was one of America’s first successful female stand-up comics in an aggressive tradition that had been almost exclusively the province of men, from Don Rickles to Lenny Bruce. She was a role model and an inspiration for tough-talking comedians like Roseanne Barr, Sarah Silverman and countless others.</p>
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<h4 class="headline">Joan Rivers: 50 Years of Funny</h4>
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<p class="summary">Moments from the groundbreaking career of Joan Rivers.</p>
<p><span class="credit video-credit"><span class="visually-hidden">Video Credit</span> By Colin Archdeacon and Adam Freelander on <span class="visually-hidden">Publish Date </span>September 4, 2014. </span> <span class="credit photo-credit"><span class="visually-hidden">Image Credit</span>CBS Photo Archive, via Getty Images </span></p>
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<p id="story-continues-3" class="story-body-text story-content">Vivacious even as a nipped-and-tucked octogenarian, flitting from coast to coast and stage to studio in a whirl of live and taped shows, publicity stunts and cosmetic surgery visits, Ms. Rivers evolved from a sassy, self-deprecating performer early in her career into a coarser assassin, slashing at celebrities and others with a rapier wit that some critics called comic genius in the bloodletting vein of Mr. Bruce. Others called it downright vicious. But if she turned off the scowlers, she left millions in stitches.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">“Can we talk?” she demanded in her signature call to gossip and skewer — the brassy Jewish-American princess from Flatbush, Brooklyn, and Larchmont, in Westchester County, leveling with the world.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">She would take the stage in a demure black sheath and ladylike pearls, a tiny bouffant blonde with a genteel air of sorority decorum. Then she’d stick her finger down her throat and regurgitate the dirt on the rich and famous, the stream-of-consciousness take on national heroes and sacrosanct cultural idols.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">On Nancy Reagan’s hairdo: “Bulletproof. If they ever combed it, they’d find Jimmy Hoffa.”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">On Charlton Heston: “He told us, ‘I got Alzheimer’s.’ Surprise! He’s been wearing his wig sideways for 19 years.”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">On Donatella Versace: “That skin! She looks like something you’d hang off your door in Africa.”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">On Sandra Bullock’s Bottega Veneta gown at the <a title="More articles about the Golden Globes." href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/g/golden_globes_awards/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier">Golden Globes</a>: “It looked like Prince’s old prom dress.” (And Tina Fey’s Zac Posen: “A decorative toilet seat cover.”)</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">On Queen Elizabeth II: “Gowns by Helen Keller.” “Nice looking. Not at all like her stamp. Wears her watch over the glove, though — tacky.”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">On herself, desperate for a man: “My parents had a sign, ‘Last girl before thruway.’ I’d get an obscene phone call. I’d say, ‘Hold on a minute, let me get a cigarette.’ ”</p>
<p id="story-continues-5" class="story-body-text story-content">On her husband’s suicide: “After Edgar killed himself, I went out to dinner with Melissa. I looked at the menu and said, ‘If Daddy were here to see these prices, he’d kill himself all over again.’ ”</p>
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</div><figcaption class="caption"><span class="caption-text">With Johnny Carson in 1976. Eventually she became his regular vacation replacement as host of “The Tonight Show” for several years.</span> <span class="credit"><span class="visually-hidden">Credit</span> Ron Tom/NBC Photo Bank, via Getty Images </span> </figcaption></figure>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Even the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center were not off limits. “A few days after 9/11,” Jonathan Van Meter recalled in a <a title="The article " href="http://nymag.com/movies/features/66181/">2010 New York magazine article</a>, “she called and asked me if I wanted to meet her for lunch at Windows on the Ground.”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Mr. Van Meter wrote: “She pushes as far as she can as soon as she can. It’s compulsive.”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Shocked? Offended?</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">“Oh, grow up!” she advised.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content"><strong>Successes and Setbacks</strong></p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">A contemporary of Woody Allen and Bill Cosby, she began doing stand-up routines in nightclubs in the late 1950s, and broke through as a guest on <a title="Video of her reminiscing of that show with Carson" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-lEX6HI4Mew">“The Tonight Show”</a> with Johnny Carson in 1965. Over the next two decades she became a regular guest host on the show, a Las Vegas headliner and a television star. In 1986, she hit the big time with a $10 million contract as host of the new Fox network’s weeknight entry, “The Late Show Starring Joan Rivers,” competing directly with her old benefactor.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Then came a series of devastating professional and personal setbacks. She was shunned by Carson, who said that she had never informed him of the Fox offer and who apparently considered her disloyal for accepting it. She insisted that it had had nothing to do with loyalty, and that Fox had wanted her because her ratings were higher and her demographics younger than his.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">After less than a year on the air, she was fired by Fox when her ratings slumped. Her husband and manager, Edgar Rosenberg, fell into depression after a heart attack and committed suicide in 1987. Ms. Rivers became estranged from her daughter, Melissa. Bookings dried up, and her career seemed to be on the rocks.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">But, struggling with grief, Ms. Rivers traveled for a time, then fell back on the resilience of laughter and revived her comedy career. As she told widows at a lecture billed as a “grief seminar” some years later: Think positive. Make a list. “One, I don’t live in Bosnia. Two, I never dated O. J.”</p>
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<p id="story-continues-6" class="story-body-text story-content">“There are two kinds of friends, and both mean very well,” she added. “One group doesn’t want you to grieve at all — ‘Come on, come on. It has been a week and a half since you lost Joe. Get out. Enough!’ The other kind never want to see you be anything but grieving. ‘Your husband is dead only eight years, and you’re wearing a red dress?’ ”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Joan Alexandra Molinsky was born in Brooklyn on June 8, 1933, to Meyer and Beatrice Grushman Molinsky, immigrants from Russia. Her father, a doctor, did comic impersonations of patients. Her mother insisted on piano lessons and private schools for Joan and her sister, Barbara, who grew up in Brooklyn and Larchmont. Joan attended Adelphi Academy in Brooklyn, Connecticut College for Women and Barnard College. A member of Phi Beta Kappa, she graduated in 1954 with a degree in English. Dreaming of an acting career, she worked in the publicity department at Lord &amp; Taylor and was a fashion coordinator for the Bond clothing stores. Her marriage to James Sanger, the son of the Bond stores’ merchandiser, was annulled after six months in the 1950s. She married Mr. Rosenberg in 1965. Melissa was their only child. She survives Ms. Rivers along with a grandson, Cooper.</p>
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</div><figcaption class="caption"><span class="caption-text">Ms. Rivers and her daughter, Melissa, arriving together on the red carpet at the 79th Academy Awards in 2007 in Los Angeles.</span> <span class="credit"><span class="visually-hidden">Credit</span> Kevork Djansezian/Associated Press</span></figcaption></figure>
<p id="story-continues-7" class="story-body-text story-content">Her parents refused to support her acting ambitions, and she struggled for years as an office temp while taking small parts off Off Broadway. She went into stand-up to support her acting, working in grimy cafes and small clubs, and was fired often. But she liked comedy and was good at it. She developed fresh routines based on her experiences and observations, changed her name to Rivers and got a few breaks.</p>
<p id="story-continues-8" class="story-body-text story-content">In <a title="About the book" href="http://www.avclub.com/review/gerald-nachman-iseriously-funny-the-rebel-comedian-5598">“Seriously Funny: The Rebel Comedians of the 1950s and 1960s”</a> (2003), Gerald Nachman wrote, “Rivers is actually the well-groomed comic granddaughter of Yiddishe mamas like <a title="Belle Barth" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JZCsnTnWm3Q">Belle Barth</a> and Pearl Williams, female titans who roamed the Catskills and Miami Beach and who reveled in subversive humor at the expense of both men and themselves.” He added, “When that wore out and she became a star, she turned her death ray on others, verbally abusing women who were thinner, richer and more famous while serving audiences as their new bitchy role model, styled by Oscar de la Yenta.”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">There were risks and reversals in her more aggressive style. Her appearance on Jack Paar’s “Tonight Show” gave her national exposure, but audiences and Mr. Paar himself were appalled at her off-color ethnic jokes. Far from a springboard to success, it was a setback.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">In the early ’60s, she joined the Chicago-based Second City troupe, whose improvisational approach, she said, reinforced her confidence, although she preferred stand-up solos to its ensemble work. She had gigs in Greenwich Village and performed with a musical-comedy trio, Jim, Jake and Joan. She also wrote for CBS’s “Candid Camera,” and in 1966 began a series of appearances on “The Ed Sullivan Show.”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content"><strong>A Big Breakthrough</strong></p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">She broke through on Carson’s show in 1965. They had an immediate rapport. She told gags about her mother’s struggle to marry her off, and about a motorist who ran over her wig and apologized for killing her dog. She soon had engagements at choice nightclubs in Chicago, New York and San Francisco.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">As a frequent guest host on “The Tonight Show” in the ‘70s, she toned down her acidity for the national audience and often relied on the self-deprecation theme: “A peeping Tom looked in my window and pulled down the shade.” She was so fat as a child that “I was my own buddy at camp; I began to retreat into myselves.”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Her ratings as host sometimes surpassed Carson’s, and NBC signed her as the sole regular replacement during his eight or nine annual vacation weeks in the ’80s. The exposure made her a superstar in demand for awards shows, conventions and TV specials. She was on magazine covers and commanded $200,000 for five nights in Las Vegas.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Besides appearing in Hollywood films, she directed one: “Rabbit Test,” a 1978 comedy about the world’s first pregnant man, starring Billy Crystal, with Ms. Rivers in a cameo as a nurse. Critics hated it. But her volume of madcap fiction, “The Life and Hard Times of Heidi Abromowitz” (1984), sold a half-million hardcover copies.</p>
<p id="story-continues-9" class="story-body-text story-content">After being dismissed by Fox, she reinvented herself as a writer, producer and entrepreneur. She and her daughter reconciled and made a film, “Tears and Laughter: The Joan and Melissa Rivers Story” (1994). In 2011 their own reality show, <a title="Times review" href="http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/25/arts/television/25rivers.html?_r=0">“Joan &amp; Melissa: Joan Knows Best?”</a> began on the WE cable channel.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">For years Ms. Rivers marketed her lines of jewelry and fashion on shopping channels. In the mid-1990s, she turned up at the <a title="More articles about the Grammy Awards." href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/g/grammy_awards/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier">Grammys</a>, Golden Globes and Academy Awards, first for E! Entertainment network and then for the TV Guide Channel, poking a microphone into freshly Botoxed faces on red carpets and asking, “Who are you wearing?” In 2010 she became star of the E! show “Fashion Police,” where she and a panel gleefully critiqued celebrities’ wardrobes.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">In the late 1980s and early ’90s, she had her own daytime talk show, “The Joan Rivers Show”, and in 1990 she won a Daytime Emmy in that category. She was nominated for Drama Desk and <a title="More articles about the Tony Awards." href="http://www.nytimes.com/pages/theater/theaterspecial/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier">Tony awards</a> for her performance in the title role of “Sally Marr  &#8230; and Her Escorts,” a 1994 <a title="Times review" href="http://www.nytimes.com/mem/theater/treview.html?res=9B07EED81639F935A35756C0A962958260&amp;_r=0">Broadway play</a> based on the life of Lenny Bruce’s mother.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">A documentary, <a title="Website, with trailer" href="http://www.joanriversapieceofwork.com/">“Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work,”</a> directed by Ricki Stern and Annie Sundberg, came out in 2010. By then she had weathered 50 years in show business, appeared in thousands of TV shows, more than a dozen films and many nightclubs; written 11 books (now 12, with “Diary of a Mad Diva,” issued this year); raised millions for causes including AIDS, Guide Dogs for the Blind and cystic fibrosis; and amassed about $290 million.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">She lived in a triplex penthouse just off Fifth Avenue overlooking Central Park that had a ballroom with gilded columns and 23-foot ceilings. It was on the market for $29.5 million in 2011, when she told The New York Times: “Qaddafi wanted to rent it for that whole U.N. thing. People said it’s blood money. I said, ‘Oh, I can easily wash blood off dollar bills.’ But they didn’t like it. It was too close to a synagogue.”</p>
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<div class="story-addendum story-content theme-correction"><em><strong>Correction: September 4, 2014 </strong> </em><br />
<em>An earlier version of a label that appeared with this obituary on the home page of NYTimes.com misstated the year of Ms. Rivers’s death. It was 2014, of course, not 1914.</em></div>
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<p><em>Dave Itzkoff contributed reporting.</em></p>
<p><strong><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/05/arts/television/joan-rivers-dies.html?_r=0">SOURCE</a></strong></p>
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<p><strong>BRUCE MORTON, VETERAN CBS NEWS REPORTER</strong></p>
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<p class="byline-dateline"><span class="byline">By <a title="More Articles by BILL CARTER" href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/c/bill_carter/index.html" rel="author"><span class="byline-author">BILL CARTER</span></a></span></p>
<p class="byline-dateline">SEPT. 5, 2014</p>
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<li class="sharetool email-sharetool login-modal-trigger">Bruce Morton, an award-winning reporter during what CBS News veterans considered the organization’s glory days, from the 1960s through the 1980s, died on Friday at his home in Washington. He was 83.</li>
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<p class="story-body-text story-content">The cause was complications of cancer, his daughter, Sarah Morton, said.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Mr. Morton, who later worked at CNN, gained a reputation as a solid reporter of expansive breadth and expertise, with special gifts as a writer. He covered most of the major news events of the era, including the Vietnam War, the space program, racial unrest, the assassinations of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert F. Kennedy and the Watergate scandal.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">He won six Emmy Awards for his work at CBS News, including one for his coverage of the trial of Lt. William Calley for crimes related to the massacre at My Lai in Vietnam. He also won a Peabody Award in 1976 for his “incisive writing” on “The CBS Morning News” and shared a Polk Award for CBS’s coverage of the protests at Tiananmen Square in Beijing in 1989.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">“Bruce was a big part of CBS News when it was the best it ever was,” the veteran CBS newsman Bob Schieffer, who now anchors “Face the Nation,” said in an interview on Friday.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Mr. Morton was born in Norwalk, Conn., on Oct. 28, 1930, and spent his youth in Chicago. He developed an interest in news early, his daughter said, which may have begun when, as an 11-year-old, he was the first in his family to hear of the attack on Pearl Harbor, which he breathlessly reported to his parents — only to have them dismiss the account as surely made up.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">In retelling that childhood story, Sarah Morton said, he seemed to be underscoring his determination from that day forward always to be heard.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Mr. Morton graduated from Harvard and served in the Army.</p>
<p id="story-continues-2" class="story-body-text story-content">In addition to his daughter, he is survived by a son, Alec Morton.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Mr. Morton began his career in radio. After working for various organizations, the last job in his radio career was a stint at ABC, which he quit after he was told he would never make it in television.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">He joined CBS in 1964 and remained until 1993, when he left over his unhappiness with new management directives that sought to cut costs by scaling back original reporting. He then joined CNN, where he was a national correspondent until 2006.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Mr. Schieffer said that Mr. Morton was “the fastest writer I have ever seen in my life,” a talent he noticed when they both covered presidential campaigns. He was also, Mr. Schieffer added, “a political reporter at heart.”</p>
<p id="story-continues-3" class="story-body-text story-content">His daughter concurred, noting that once Mr. Morton moved to Washington his residence never changed: “His home was right there, near Capitol Hill.”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content"><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/06/business/media/bruce-morton-veteran-cbs-news-reporter-dies-at-83.html"><strong>SOURCE</strong></a></p>
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<p class="story-body-text story-content"><strong>MICHAEL KATZ, WHO CHALLENGED VIEW OF POVERTY</strong></p>
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<p class="byline-dateline"><span class="byline">By <a title="More Articles by PAUL VITELLO" href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/v/paul_vitello/index.html" rel="author"><span class="byline-author">PAUL VITELLO</span></a></span></p>
<p class="byline-dateline">SEPT. 4, 2014</p>
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<li class="sharetool facebook-sharetool ">Michael B. Katz, an influential historian and social theorist who challenged the prevailing view in the 1980s and ’90s that poverty stemmed from the bad habits of the poor, marshaling the case that its deeper roots lay in the actions of the powerful, died on Aug. 23 in Philadelphia. He was 75.</li>
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<p class="story-body-text story-content">His wife, Edda Katz, said the cause was cancer.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Professor Katz, who taught history at the <a class="meta-org" title="More articles about University of Pennsylvania" href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/u/university_of_pennsylvania/index.html?inline=nyt-org">University of Pennsylvania</a> for the last 36 years and was a founder of its urban studies program, wrote more than a dozen books chronicling public welfare policies in the United States from the start of the republic through the 20th century.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">The limited success of those efforts, he said, argued for adoption of a universal minimum-standard-of-living policy, sometimes known as the <a title="Economix blog post" href="http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/.../rethinking-the-idea-of-a-basic-income-for-all/">guaranteed minimum income.</a> (Its supporters, on both sides of the political spectrum, included President Richard M. Nixon.)</p>
<p id="story-continues-2" class="story-body-text story-content">Professor Katz’s best-known books, “In the Shadow of the Poorhouse: A Social History of Welfare in America” (1986) and “The Undeserving Poor: From the War on Poverty to the War on Welfare” (1990), examined American policy as it evolved from the poorhouses of the 18th century to the humanitarian reforms of the Progressive era; from the heavy-handed 1920s prescriptions for curing “behavioral dysfunction” in the poor (inspired by Freud) to the broad-based social safety-net measures of the New Deal.</p>
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</div><figcaption class="caption"><span class="caption-text">Michael B. Katz marshaled the case that poverty&#8217;s deeper roots lay in the actions of the powerful.</span> <span class="credit"><span class="visually-hidden">Credit</span> University of Pennsylvania </span> </figcaption></figure>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Throughout American history, Professor Katz wrote, there was a fundamental tension between the micro and macro views of poverty. In the micro view, individuals were the authors of their lives and impoverishment proof of their moral failing. In the macro analysis, large historic forces and economic trends — war and peace, the shifting interests of capital — favored some people and disadvantaged others.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Professor Katz saw the predominant thinking in the Reagan and Clinton administrations as updated versions of the micro view. In the work requirements and eligibility restrictions imposed on welfare recipients in those years, he saw traces of 18th-century notions that divided the poor into two classes: the “deserving” poor (disabled war veterans, widows with children and others with Anglo-Saxon forebears) and the “undeserving” (everyone else).</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Welfare did not create the entrenched poverty of the American urban ghetto, he wrote, and the welfare reforms enacted by President Bill Clinton in 1996 would not end it.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">That, he said, would require an unflinching look at the history of racism and its effects in the United States: centuries of slavery followed by the failures of Reconstruction, including  federal policies that hurt black farmers and forced them into low-wage work in the North; another hundred years of racial discrimination at every level of the law, including access to New Deal programs and the G.I. Bill of Rights; federally sanctioned banking rules that denied loans to blacks; the exodus of manufacturing jobs from American cities in the postwar years; and machine politics that undercut the power of the urban poor, especially the African-American poor. In a 1992 essay, “The Underclass as Metaphor,” Professor Katz said the causes of entrenched poverty had been long established. He quoted  the Rev. Stephen Humphreys Gurteen, a 19th-century leader of charitable groups, who wrote in a 1882 article: “A terrible chasm already exists between the rich and the poor, for the existence of which the well-to-do of the country are largely responsible.”</p>
<p id="story-continues-3" class="story-body-text story-content">Alice O’Connor, a professor of history and urban affairs at the University of California, Santa Barbara, said in an interview that Professor Katz’s influence in the field of social science research was “immense,” particularly since the 1990s, when the welfare reform consensus threatened to shut down debate on the problem of poverty.</p>
<p id="story-continues-4" class="story-body-text story-content">“He helped a generation to rediscover the tools of social science,” Professor O’Connor said, and “reintroduced them to a language — a counternarrative — for discussing poverty.”</p>
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</div><figcaption class="caption"><span class="caption-text">One of Professor Katz’s best-known books, published in 1990.</span> <span class="credit"><span class="visually-hidden">Credit</span> Pantheon Books </span> </figcaption></figure>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Michael Barry Katz was born in Wilmington, Del., on April 13, 1939, the only child of George Katz and the former Beatrice Goldstein. His father was an industrial chemist and his mother a homemaker. He received his bachelor’s degree from Harvard in 1961, a master’s in social studies there in 1962 and a doctorate in the history of education, also from Harvard, in 1966.</p>
<p id="story-continues-5" class="story-body-text story-content">He wrote his first books on the history of education and school reform movements. In “The Irony of Early School Reform” (1968), he looked at the efforts of 19th-century industrial barons to tailor educational programs to suit their needs while cutting costs.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Professor Katz taught history at the University of Toronto from 1974 to 1978 before joining the faculty at the University of Pennsylvania, where he was the Walter H. Annenberg professor of history from 2001 until his death.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">He is survived by his wife, Edda Katz; their daughter, Sarah; two children from a previous marriage, Paul and Rebecca; seven grandchildren; and a great-grandchild.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">In the 1990s, Professor Katz joined a heated debate about a segment of the poor referred to as “the underclass” — drug addicts, dropouts, unwed mothers, long-term welfare recipients and others who formed a “culture of poverty” supposedly beyond help.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">In the introduction to an anthology he edited in 1992, “The Underclass Debate: Views From History,” Professor Katz said the idea of poverty as an “underclass” problem was misguided.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">“The processes creating an underclass degrade all our lives,” he wrote, adding, “We will flourish or sink together.”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content"><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/05/us/michael-b-katz-historian-who-challenged-views-on-poverty-dies-at-75.html"><strong>SOURCE</strong></a></p>
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<p class="story-body-text story-content"><strong>STAN GOLDBERG, WHO DREW ARCHIE FOR DECADES</strong></p>
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<p class="byline-dateline"><span class="byline">By <span class="byline-author">DANIEL E. SLOTNIK</span></span></p>
<p class="byline-dateline">SEPT. 4, 2014</p>
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</div><figcaption class="caption"><span class="caption-text">Stan Goldberg worked for Marvel on series for teenagers and helped devise the distinctive color schemes for superheroes.</span> </figcaption></figure>
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<li class="sharetool email-sharetool login-modal-trigger">Stan Goldberg, who drew Archie comics for more than 40 years, notably a series beginning in 2009 in which an adult Archie finally marries — both Betty and Veronica, in alternate timelines — died on Sunday at a hospice in the Bronx. He was 82.</li>
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<p class="story-body-text story-content">He had a stroke on July 24, said his son Bennett, who confirmed the death.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Mr. Goldberg was a freelancer for Marvel Comics during the 1960s, working closely with giants of the field like Steve Ditko, Jack Kirby and Stan Lee.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">“His artwork was always top quality, always handed in on time and always made my stories look even better than they should have,” Mr. Lee wrote in an introduction to the 2010 collection “Archie: The Best of Stan Goldberg.”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">At Marvel he drew comics for teenagers, like Kathy (The Teen-Age Tornado!) and Millie the Model, and he colored many other titles. He devised the distinctive color schemes for superheroes like Spider-Man and the Fantastic Four.</p>
<p id="story-continues-2" class="story-body-text story-content">“The reds and blues were very important for the superheroes,” he said in an <a title="Link to Comic Book Resources interview" href="http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&amp;id=36516">interview</a> with the website Comic Book Resources in 2012. “You really wanted them to pop out.”</p>
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</div><figcaption class="caption"><span class="caption-text">Millie the Model No. 144, a Marvel comic for teenagers.</span> <span class="credit"><span class="visually-hidden">Credit</span> Stan Goldberg </span> </figcaption></figure>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">The transition to Archie came naturally when Marvel dropped its teenage titles in the late 1960s. “I worked on all their imitators,” he said in an <a href="http://www.adelaidecomicsandbooks.com/goldberg.html">interview</a> posted on the website of the Australian comic book store Adelaide Comics and Books.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Mr. Goldberg’s longevity and dependability distinguished him from other artists who have drawn Archie comics since the character was introduced in 1941. He regularly drew the dozen or so Archie titles, including Everything’s Archie and Betty and Me. He also drew the newspaper comic strip by himself from 1975 until 1980 and was a lead artist for the flagship series during the 1980s and ’90s.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">Some of his contributions were unusual. In 1994 he drew the Archie characters in an improbable Marvel crossover with the homicidal vigilante the Punisher; in 2003 he illustrated a comic strip written by Patricia Marx for The New York Times’s Fashions of The Times magazine in which Betty departs for a short-lived modeling career in Manhattan.</p>
<p id="story-continues-3" class="story-body-text story-content">Mr. Goldberg was born in the Bronx on May 5, 1932. He graduated from the School of Industrial Art in Manhattan (now the High School of Art and Design).</p>
<p id="story-continues-4" class="story-body-text story-content">He was still a teenager when he began working in the color department at Timely Comics, which later became Marvel, in 1949. He was running the department by the early 1950s and turned to freelancing in 1958.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">He married Pauline Mirsky in 1962. They had homes in Queens and Hampton Bays, on Long Island. She survives him. Besides his son Bennett, he is survived by another son, Stephen, and four grandchildren.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">A daughter, Heidi, was <a title="Link to story about her murder" href="http://www.nytimes.com/1984/06/12/nyregion/ex-campus-employee-held-in-woman-s-slaying-on-li.html?module=Search&amp;mabReward=relbias%3Aw%2C{%221%22%3A%22RI%3A7%22}">murdered</a> in 1984, while a 19-year-old student at Nassau Community College on Long Island. Her killer was <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/1985/07/12/nyregion/woman-s-slayer-sentenced.html?module=Search&amp;mabReward=relbias%3Ar%2C{%221%22%3A%22RI%3A11%22}">convicted</a> in 1985. Mr. and Mrs. Goldberg became active with the national support organization <a href="http://www.pomc.com/index.html">Parents of Murdered Children</a>.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">In 2012 Mr. Goldberg received the<a title="The society’s website." href="http://www.reuben.org/"> National Cartoonists Society</a>’s Gold Key Award, which inducted him into the society’s hall of fame.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">His last work on Archie was the marriage series. Mr. Goldberg relished the fact that many readers were incensed when Archie first chose the patrician Veronica over the good-hearted Betty.</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">“I’m glad we did it, doing the Veronica wedding first, because that sets the stage for people being very upset with Archie,” he said in 2012. “People took it to heart.”</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content"><strong><a href="pop%20out.”">SOURCE</a></strong></p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content">~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~</p>
<p class="story-body-text story-content"><strong>FROM THE ARCHIVES</strong></p>
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<h5><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/learning/general/onthisday/bday/0519.html">Ho Chi Minh, Vietnamese Nationalist Leader, Dies at 79</a></h5>
<p class="summary">(Sept. 2, 1969)</p>
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<h5><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/learning/general/onthisday/bday/0518.html">Frank Capra, Academy Award-Winning Director, Dies at 94</a></h5>
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<h5><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/learning/general/onthisday/bday/0114.html">Albert Schweitzer, Doctor Who Won Nobel Peace Prize, Dies at 90</a></h5>
<p class="summary">(Sept. 4, 1965)</p>
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<h5><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/learning/general/onthisday/bday/0914.html">Margaret Sanger, Leader of Campaign for Birth Control, Dies at 86</a></h5>
<p class="summary">(Sept. 6, 1966)</p>
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<h5><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/learning/general/onthisday/bday/0104.html">Everett McKinley Dirksen, Political Phenomenon, Dies at 73</a></h5>
<p class="summary">(Sept. 7, 1969)</p>
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<h5><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/learning/general/onthisday/bday/1226.html">Mao Tse-tung, Communist Ruler of China, Dies at 82</a></h5>
<p class="summary">(Sept. 9, 1976)</p>
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<div class="story">
<h5><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/learning/general/onthisday/bday/0417.html">Nikita S. Khrushchev, Communist Ruler of Soviet Union, Dies at 76</a></h5>
<p class="summary">(Sept. 11, 1971)</p>
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<h5><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/learning/general/onthisday/bday/0129.html">William McKinley, 25th U.S. President, Dies at 58</a></h5>
<p class="summary">(Sept. 14, 1901)</p>
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<h5><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/learning/general/onthisday/bday/0424.html">Robert Penn Warren, Poet and Author, Dies at 84</a></h5>
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<h5><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/learning/general/onthisday/bday/0809.html">Jean Piaget, Swiss Psychologist, Dies at 84</a></h5>
<p class="summary">(Sept. 17, 1980)</p>
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<h5><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/learning/general/onthisday/bday/0330.html">Sean O&#8217;Casey, Irish Playwright, Dies at 84</a></h5>
<p class="summary">(Sept. 18, 1964)</p>
</div>
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<h5><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/learning/general/onthisday/bday/1211.html">Fiorello H. La Guardia, Three-Time Mayor of New York, Dies at 64</a></h5>
<p class="summary">(Sept. 20, 1947)</p>
</div>
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<h5><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/learning/general/onthisday/bday/0306.html">Ring Lardner, Sports Writer, Author and Playwright, Dies at 48</a></h5>
<p class="summary">(Sept. 25, 1933)</p>
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<h5><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/learning/general/onthisday/bday/1003.html">Emily Post, Writer and Arbiter of Etiquette, Dies at 86</a></h5>
<p class="summary">(Sept. 25, 1960)</p>
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<h5><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/learning/general/onthisday/bday/0626.html">Babe Zaharias, Famed Woman Athlete, Dies at 42</a></h5>
<p class="summary">(Sept. 27, 1956)</p>
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<h5><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/learning/general/onthisday/bday/0525.html">Miles Davis, Jazz Genius, Dies at 65</a></h5>
<p class="summary">(Sept. 28, 1991)</p>
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<h5><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/learning/general/onthisday/bday/1018.html">Pierre Elliott Trudeau, Dashing Fighter for Canada, Dies at 80</a></h5>
<p class="summary">(Sept. 28, 2000)</p>
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<h5><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/learning/general/onthisday/bday/0113.html">Ross Granville Harrison, Yale Zoologist, Dies at 89</a></h5>
<p class="summary">(Sept. 30 , 1959)</p>
</div>
</div>
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