September 25, 2016

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Golfer Arnold Palmer, Who Gave New Life To A Staid Game, Dies At 87

Arnold Palmer acknowledges the crowd after hitting the ceremonial first tee shot at the 2007 Masters tournament. David J. Phillip/ASSOCIATED PRESS hide caption

toggle caption David J. Phillip/ASSOCIATED PRESS

Golfing legend Arnold Palmer has died at 87.

He died Sunday evening at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Shadyside, a tertiary care hospital in Pittsburgh. NPR confirmed his death with UPMC’s media relations manager, Stephanie Stanley. The United States Golf Association announced Palmer’s death via Twitter.

Palmer won 62 PGA Tour events, fifth on the all-time list. He won golf’s biggest titles: the Masters, the U.S. Open, the British Open. He won seven majors in all.

We are deeply saddened by the death of Arnold Palmer, golf’s greatest ambassador, at age 87. pic.twitter.com/iQmGtseNN1

— USGA (@USGA) September 26, 2016

But it wasn’t just the numbers that made Palmer an iconic sports figure.

He wasn’t the greatest male golfer of all time. That title usually prompts a debate about Jack Nicklaus or Tiger Woods or Ben Hogan, maybe Sam Snead. But the most important player? It’s fairly unanimous that Arnold Palmer was, true to his nickname, the King.

Palmer strapped a moldy, staid game on his back and gave it new life. He ignited golf’s popularity in the 1960s as he became the sport’s first TV star.

“He was someone who looked like an NFL halfback,” says ESPN.com senior writer Ian O’Connor. “He had arms like a blacksmith and giant hands, and he had those rugged good looks. And he was just a different golfer. Nobody had ever really seen anything like him in that sport.”

Palmer’s arrival as a champion pro in the late 1950s dovetailed with the emerging medium of television.

Whether he was winning tournaments or pitching products, Palmer’s looks, athleticism and talent made him a natural for TV.

Arnold Palmer, left, and his friend and often-rival Jack Nicklaus, after winning a team event in 1966 in West Palm Beach, Fla. Toby Massey/ASSOCIATED PRESS hide caption

toggle caption Toby Massey/ASSOCIATED PRESS

But that was only part of what transformed admiring fans into a devoted following that became known as Arnie’s Army.

The Working-Class Kid Who Popularized An Upper-Class Sport

Palmer grew up in a working-class home in Latrobe, Pa., and ultimately he brought the game to the same kinds of people.

“Golf was always considered a blue blood, country club, elitist sport,” says O’Connor. “Arnold Palmer gave the sport to people who worked for members of the country club set.”

He’d play with his shirt tail hanging out. He’d flick away a cigarette before hitting, then swing for the fences and grimace like an average duffer if the result was bad. O’Connor says the class conflict was a motivating factor in Palmer’s career.

Palmer hangs his head after a double bogey on the ninth hole during the third round of the PGA Championship in Ligonier, Pa., in 1965. wfa/AP hide caption

toggle caption wfa/AP

So was Palmer’s dad, known as Deacon.

Milfred J. “Deacon” Palmer was a greenskeeper, golf pro and, Arnold often said, the man who taught him everything he knew. Deacon was known for his honesty, and toughness. Especially with his son.

“He was tough on me. He never backed off,” Palmer said in a 2015 interview. “He played tough, worked hard, and he died a tough guy. He played 27 holes of golf the day he passed.”

It was Deacon who introduced Arnold to golf, with the instructions, “Hit it hard, boy. Go find it and hit it again.”

Palmer’s mom Doris softened the hard edges. A friendly woman, golf historians say Doris Palmer gave Arnold his people skills, which were a critical part of his legacy.

A Genuinely Nice Guy

“I’ve often said that Arnold puts up with people that neither you or I would put up with,” says Doc Giffin.

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He was Palmer’s personal assistant for more than 50 years. Giffin remembers the many moments of Palmer walking among throngs of fans as he strode down fairways – the King and his army. Or Palmer talking to people in the gallery, joking with them, making paying customers feel like he wanted them there at the course.

Palmer would also take great care when signing autographs. One of his pet peeves was modern day athletes scribbling their names. Illegible autographs, Palmer thought, cheapened the fan’s experience.

But judging by his golfing success, Palmer knew when to tune out the adoring masses and focus on himself.

Most of the time.

There was that final hole of the final round of the 1961 Masters. Palmer had a one-stroke lead.

“And [he] had the ball in the fairway at the 18th hole,” Giffin says, “and he saw a friend of his over at the ropes who waved him over. And he walked over there instead of staying with his golf ball. And the man congratulated him on winning his second straight Masters [Palmer won in 1960]. He said, ‘Thank you,’ went back to his ball, and knocked it in the trap.”

Palmer, center, signs autographs at the Texas Open in 1962. Ted Powers/ASSOCIATED PRESS hide caption

toggle caption Ted Powers/ASSOCIATED PRESS

Palmer ended up with a six on the par four, and he walked off the final green one stroke behind.

“And lost the Masters that it looked like he had it in the bag,” Giffin says. “And he said, ‘I’ll never let that happen again.’ And he learned his lesson.”

Palmer made amends a year later at the same tournament. In a playoff, he made a back-nine charge to win the 1962 Masters.

Arnie And Jack

Our greatest sports heroes often have a foil. In Palmer’s case, it was Jack Nicklaus.

In his book Arnie and Jack, Ian O’Connor chronicles a 50-year duel on golf courses and boardrooms, as the two men competed in the business world as well. Personality-wise, they were, at least in the early years of their rivalry, polar opposites. Palmer was the people’s champ — gregarious, comfortable in crowds, a go-for-broke style of player. Nicklaus, about 10 years younger, was reserved, some say aloof and more scientific about the game.

Nicklaus easily beat Palmer in the record books. His 18 major titles still are the most anyone’s won. Palmer had seven. But Palmer had the adoring fans.

For all their battles through the 1960s, O’Connor says it was a moment in the early 2000s that prompted him to write his book.

Palmer and Nicklaus were well past their primes. O’Connor figures Arnie was in his early 70s and Jack, early 60s. They were paired together for a round at the Masters.

“They were putting on a green and Arnold finished,” O’Connor remembers, “and he picked up his ball and he walked over to the fans circling the green, and he sat down in a guy’s chair. Everyone got a big laugh. Meanwhile, Jack is standing over a putt and he’s grinding. He’s trying to make the cut, trying to contend, trying to win despite his age!”

Palmer, right, with Jack Nicklaus at the Masters in 2016. Charlie Riedel/AP hide caption

toggle caption Charlie Riedel/AP

“And he looked up and he shot Arnold a really angry stare. If looks could kill! And I happened to be there and it struck me that these guys have been battling, on and off the course, for so long. It’s probably the greatest rivalry in the sport’s history. That was the first seed [of the book].”

O’Connor says the two men competed on golf course design projects; they even competed for status as the top ambassador of the game.

But O’Connor says there’s no question the rivalry was tempered by friendship.

“I think deep down,” says O’Connor, “Jack knows he couldn’t have been Jack without Arnie and Arnie knows he couldn’t have been Arnie without Jack. There is respect and affection there.”

Touched By A King

Palmer was a friend of presidents, but a man who never forgot his roots. He lived half the year in his native Latrobe. His dual appeal — charisma and humility — didn’t organically turn Palmer into a global, celebrity athlete. That happened with the help of Mark McCormack, whose IMG became the biggest sports marketing company in the world. Palmer was McCormack’s first major client.

While the two of them spread Palmer’s fame, golf started to boom. The number of players and courses increased dramatically in the 1960s. By some accounts, in the early part of the decade, Palmer’s heyday, 350 to 400 new courses were built each year.

It wasn’t all Palmer’s doing. But he lit a fuse. With equal parts swagger and humility when he played.

And a smile for strangers who came to the course to watch a golfer, and left feeling like they’d been touched by a King.

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'Rolling Stone' Sells Minority Share Of Magazine To Singapore Entrepreneur

Rolling Stone founder Jann Wenner speaks during the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony in April 2013. Danny Moloshok/Invision/AP hide caption

toggle caption Danny Moloshok/Invision/AP

The founder of Rolling Stone is selling a minority share of the fabled magazine to a Singapore-based social media entrepreneur, the first time an outside investor has been allowed to buy into the property.

Several media reports say Jann Wenner has decided to sell 49 percent of the magazine, as well as its digital assets, to BandLab Technologies, a social-networking site for musicians and fans.

The sale will not involve Rolling Stone‘s parent company, Wenner Media LLC, and Wenner will retain control of the magazine, The Wall Street Journal reports. Instead, BandLab “will oversee a new Rolling Stone International subsidiary, which will develop live events, merchandising and hospitality,” Bloomberg reports.

The sale comes at a time when Rolling Stone, like virtually every publication, has seen its revenues slip and its subscriber base shrink. It also suffered a major blow to its reputation when it published an article about a purported gang rape at a University of Virginia fraternity that turned out to be a hoax.

Under Wenner’s son, Gus, the magazine has pursued an aggressive digital strategy, Bloomberg reports:

“Rolling Stone currently reaches a global audience of 65 million people, according to the company. That includes 22 million domestic digital monthly users, almost 18 million social fans and followers, and nearly 12 million readers of the U.S. print publication. The average monthly unique visitors to its website rose almost 40 percent in the first half of this year from a year earlier. It publishes 12 international editions in countries including Australia, Indonesia and Japan.”

“Everyone is trying to figure out the new business model,” said Gus Wenner, in an interview with the Wall Street Journal. He runs digital operations at Wenner Media and also oversees ad sales, marketing and digital editorial across the company.

“We have the quality that most matters, a brand that means something to people and elicits an emotional response,” said Wenner, the son of Jann Wenner, who founded the magazine in 1967.

BandLab was founded by Kuok Meng Ru, the son of agribusiness billionaire Kuok Khoon Hong. It is funded by private investors, including Kuok’s father.

“What has happened last 49 years has already shown that Rolling Stone is more than a brand to people,” Kuok said in a Bloomberg interview. “It is now our shared responsibility to take it into the future.”

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King County In Seattle Wants To Open Legal Heroin Clinics To Combat Epidemic

A Washington state county is floating the idea of supervised clinics where people can inject heroin. King County’s health officer Jeff Duchin tells NPR’s Rachel Martin why he thinks it’s a good idea.

RACHEL MARTIN, HOST:

Officials in Seattle and the surrounding areas are considering a controversial proposal to tackle heroin addiction there. A task force has recommended opening clinics where people can take the drug legally and under medical supervision. Dr. Jeff Duchin is the health officer for King County in Washington state, and he joins us on the line.

Welcome to the program.

JEFF DUCHIN: Good morning.

MARTIN: How would this work?

DUCHIN: This particular feature, what we’re calling safe consumption sites or community health engagement locations, where users can come and use their heroin or their opioid drug under supervision of a medical professional – in a nutshell, the idea is not really to give people a place to inject drugs and then go about their lives but really a way that they can inject safely off the street, out of doorways, out of alleyways – hygienic conditions to minimize their risk of infection, such as HIV; to minimize their risk of overdose and to minimize the stigmatization and social rejection that keeps a lot of these people out of the health care system in the first place.

MARTIN: I understand a lot of the implementation of this will be worked out as you move forward with this proposal. But at this point, can you tell me if the clinics would provide the heroin or this is just a safe space for people to come in and use the drugs that they have on them?

DUCHIN: These locations would not provide any drugs. These locations would only provide health care providers that would give clean injection equipment so that people don’t pass infections from one person to the next. There is no provision of drugs at all. It’s just a safe space and a doorway to access other necessary health care.

MARTIN: So is the goal, then, to get these people off of heroin ultimately?

DUCHIN: Yeah, the goal is really access to treatment. So treatment is really the main bottom line that we’re trying to promote as the most effective, you know, population-wide intervention. We want people getting in long-term treatment. And this is just one doorway that we can use to get people into treatment.

MARTIN: How do you make this legal? I mean, you can’t, as it is now, just shoot up with heroin on the street. What makes it different being in your space?

DUCHIN: We are not making this legal. That is a misperception. We are going to give people with substance abuse disorders a safe, medically supervised place where they can use their drugs and not fear being arrested, beaten up or attacked…

MARTIN: That means you have to have support from law enforcement and the courts.

DUCHIN: Exactly. We have support from our local law enforcement community. And we’re optimistic that this is going to work here. But ultimately, we cannot make this legal.

MARTIN: Dr. Jeff Duchin is the health officer for King County in Washington state.

Thanks so much for talking with us.

DUCHIN: Thanks very much for doing the story.

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