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Carissa
08-12-03, 03:18 PM
An American tragedy
Tom Verducci, SI.com
http://sports.yahoo.com/mlb/news?slug=anamericantrage&prov=cnnsi&type=lgns

"Show me a hero," F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote, "and I will write you a tragedy."

Hero is a word thrown around all too loosely these days. Middle infielders who slap singles in the ninth inning of a game in April are called heroes. Ted Williams was the real deal. He flew fighter jets in wartime and in peacetime gave baseball fans the sublime measure of what it means to be a hitter. The tragedy to befall this hero is something Fitzgerald could never have imagined. It has occurred during Williams' post-mortem days.

The fighting among his children, the deep controversy surrounding his wishes and the questions over what has happened to his remains is a 21st-century American tragedy, something unthinkable to the men and women of The Greatest Generation and to Williams' many fans.

On Aug. 1, while I was reporting the Williams story for this week's issue of Sports Illustrated, a wire service item appeared in many major news outlets. Ted Williams, it said, "is stored upside down" and has "been frozen with care." That had been the story for 13 months. I knew it wasn't true, thanks largely to Larry Johnson, the former chief operating officer of Alcor Life Extension Foundation, a cryonics company in Scottsdale, Ariz.

Johnson, who has no allegiance to either side of the fractured Williams family, saw major injustices, and the easy thing would have been to stay quiet, do nothing and keep his job. Johnson did the hard thing. He spoke up, which he knew would mean losing his job. [Johnson resigned from his position this week in advance of the publication of the SI article.] But his sense of responsibility was worth more than his job. With a background in paramedic emergency care, Johnson is, at heart, a caregiver who feels the urge to respond when help is needed.

The idea of Ted blissfully suspended intact upside down was a myth that has been perpetuated largely by the media since the former Red Sox great entered Alcor on July 5, 2002. I knew he was in two pieces, and I knew his head had been damaged. I wondered what John Henry Williams, Ted's son, knew.

Last Friday, I encountered John Henry in the grass parking lot of creaky, timeworn Goldsby Field, home of the Baton Rouge River Bats, an independent league baseball team. John Henry, 34, plays for the River Bats. The otherwise insignificant league -- players sometime change into their uniforms in vans -- has gained some publicity from having him there. John Henry has been able to play out a little fantasy, even with only 100 or so people watching in the stands. Nobody got hurt, except the poor stiff whose at-bats went to John Henry.

John Henry is tall like his father and has the dark, haunting looks of his mother, the former Dolores Wettach. She was once named Miss Vermont and was a model. According to Ted Williams: The Seasons of the Kid by Richard Ben Cramer, Ted saw her across the aisle on an international flight. He wrote something on a piece of paper, crumpled it up and threw it to her.

"Who are you?" it said.

She tossed a paper back of her own.

"Who are you?" it said.

Ted tossed back another.

"Mr. Williams, a fisherman."

The fisherman, of course, had himself a successful cast. They later married and had a son. Ted named him John Henry -- "because I thought a name like that conveyed strength," Williams once said, as if fortitude could be acquired on a birth certificate.

John Henry politely refused to answer my questions several times over two overtures, before and after last Friday's game. He also declined to call a phone number I left with him. He was cordial, but firm.

"I've got no comment," he said. "It's nobody's business."

John Henry is a non-prospect. His arm is awful. He is slow. His swing is too long and he lacks bat speed. He is not bad to the extent of being a complete embarrassment. He makes enough contact at the plate to earn a small measure of respect. He would not be playing, however, but for his famous name, a name that has become fodder for late-night jokes.

And so the questions linger, none more haunting than why and how this was done to an American icon. Cryonics is not the tragedy. If people choose that option for their remains, hoping science will someday bring them back to life in some shape or form, more power to them. Me, I'm not ordering off that side of the menu. But that's a personal choice and one of the blessings of being human is having the wherewithal to make choices. And personal choices that do not harm others should be respected.

No, the shame of this situation is the doubt about Ted's wishes and how his remains have been treated -- his head with the multiple cracks and his body used as a bargaining chip by Alcor to force John Henry to pay the $111,000 he still owes the company (from the original bill of $136,000) to put his father into cryonic suspension.

The only known documentation that links Ted and cryonic suspension is a piece of motor oil-stained scrap paper signed by Ted, John Henry and John Henry's sister Claudia Williams a paper stating their desire to be put in "Bio-Stasis after we die" on the chance that the three of them could "be together in the future", and a paper whose authenticity is contested by Ted's 24-hour attendants and his first-born child, Bobby-Jo Ferrell. The note is dated Nov. 2, 2000. Williams lived another 20 months. Twenty months went by and he never signed a more official document than that scrap paper, nothing witnessed, nothing filed, nothing notarized. He never signed an agreement with Alcor to be suspended. Alcor people came into his house -- the convenience of a house call! -- and he never even met them, never mind signed any documents. He simply hollered from a back room, according to a taped conversation between Johnson and an Alco! r ! field representative.

And then, only after Ted died, was a consent form submitted to Alcor. The line for his signature -- the member's -- was blank, what with Ted being dead and all. John Henry filled out the rest of it.

Twenty months went by and John Henry and Claudia didn't bother signing up with Alcor, either; the scrap paper said they all wanted a chance to be together again, right? Why didn't John Henry pay the $111,000 he owed to have his father frozen? Why was Ted's body talked about as a gallows humor bargaining chip? Why was his head developing cracks?

Many questions remain. The last chapter of Ted Williams continues.

Sports Illustrated senior writer Tom Verducci covers baseball for the magazine and is a regular contributor to SI.com.

Updated on Tuesday, Aug 12, 2003 4:01 pm EDT

What happened to Ted?

Hall of Famer Ted Williams' head and body are being stored in separate containers at an Arizona cryonics lab that is still trying to collect a $111,000 bill from Williams' son, according to a story by Tom Verducci in the latest issue of Sports Illustrated.

But contrary to recent news reports, Williams' body is not resting upside down in a liquid nitrogen tank at Alcor. Instead, reports Verducci, his head sits on a shelf in a liquid nitrogen-filled steel can, while his body is in the same room, stored upright in a liquid nitrogen-filled, nine-foot-tall cylindrical steel tank.


===~~~~~~===~~~~~~===~~~~~~

SI Report: Williams' body decapitated; DNA missing
August 12, 2003
http://sports.yahoo.com/mlb/news?slug=ap-tedwilliams-body&prov=ap&type=lgns

NEW YORK (AP) -- Ted Williams was decapitated by surgeons at the cryonics company where his body is suspended in liquid nitrogen, and several samples of his DNA are missing, Sports Illustrated reported.

The magazine's report, appearing in the issue that hits newsstands Wednesday, is based on internal documents, e-mails, photographs and tape recordings supplied by a former employee of Alcor Life Extension Foundation.

After Williams died July 5, 2002, his body was taken by private jet to the company in Scottsdale, Ariz. There, Williams' body was separated from his head in a procedure called neuroseparation, according to the magazine.

The operation was completed and Williams' head and body were preserved separately. The head is stored in a steel can filled with liquid nitrogen. It has been shaved, drilled with holes and accidentally cracked 10 times, the magazine said. Williams' body stands upright in a 9-foot tall cylindrical steel tank, also filled with liquid nitrogen.

The procedure, approved by Williams' son, John Henry, and daughter, Claudia, carries a $136,000 bill. Alcor claims it is still owed $111,000.

The magazine said that according to a taped conversation between former Alcor chief operating officer Larry Johnson and a board adviser, eight DNA samples among 182 taken from Williams are missing without explanation.

Spokeswoman Paula Lemler, wife of Alcor chief executive officer Jerry Lemler, told The Associated Press on Tuesday that company officials had not seen the article and would have no comment.


Updated on Tuesday, Aug 12, 2003 4:14 pm EDT

YankeeFan00
08-12-03, 04:15 PM
I don't understand. If the goal is to make them alive again in the future when (if) we have the technology then why do they take off the head? Wouldn't that rule out any possible chance of the person being brought back to life?:confused:

Yankee Bulldawg
08-12-03, 06:13 PM
I dont understand who probably his sorry a** of an excuse for a step son is probably behind all of this. It's most likely all about money money and more money. I dont understand what he's hoping to achieve by all of this but it certainly was'nt in anyone's best interest but that of himself.

I suspect John Henry Williams is behind the missing DNA samples and if so i hope he gets what's coming to him. The greedy a** bastard

PinstripeFanatic
08-13-03, 09:54 AM
Originally posted by YankeeFan00
I don't understand. If the goal is to make them alive again in the future when (if) we have the technology then why do they take off the head? Wouldn't that rule out any possible chance of the person being brought back to life?:confused:

I don't understand either. I think the whole thing is ridiculous and sick.

YANKEE MAGIC
08-13-03, 10:00 AM
John Henry should be ashamed of himself...

yankeesnum1
08-13-03, 10:15 AM
John Henry should burn in hell for what he did :mad:

wexy
08-13-03, 10:34 AM
A horrible story about greed and idiocy.
The Yankee greats are memorialized in Monument Park
The greatest hitter and Red Sox player is decapitated and in two vats frozen upside down

His son is a useless human being.

Bern Baby Be
08-13-03, 01:47 PM
I've heard John Henry and people from that cryogenics (Or, whatever it is) company talking about what they do to the bodies and, they act as if the rest of the world is so unenlightened, like this is something only the smartest intellectuals would have done to themselves after death. Please! :barf: :rolleyes:

DkNNy79
08-13-03, 04:04 PM
Originally posted by wexy
His son is a useless human being.

ITA. I can't believe this was allowed to happen. It really disgusts me.

BroadwayBomber55
08-13-03, 04:43 PM
This is the most bizarre story that I have ever heard of.

First, the children of the greatest hitter, John Henry and Claudia tried to make a compromise to their half sister Bobby Jo Williams Ferrell for the Splendid Splinter to be cyrogenically frozen instead of him being cremated and spreading his ashes into the Florida Keys.

Then, they fought over baseball bats.

And now this?!

This is absurd.

penguin4
08-13-03, 09:50 PM
They should've just mummified his body and buried it on the beach and called it even.

What kind of sick ................ think's it's actually respectful to chop a body in two and suspend it in a metal container where no one can pay their respects? Not even a funeral!! I don't care if his name is Ted Williams or Billy Bob Joe Smith, NO ONE deserves this fate. What do John Henry and Claudia exactly plan to do now that the body has been "cryogenically preserved" (so to speak)? Cryogenically preserve themselves with it?

penguin4
08-13-03, 10:09 PM
http://sports.yahoo.com/mlb/news?slug=ap-tedwilliams&prov=ap&type=lgns
Cryonics company denies magazine report that Ted Williams' DNA is missing

By ANANDA SHOREY, Associated Press Writer
August 13, 2003

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) -- A director of a cryonics company storing the body of Ted Williams disputed claims by a former employee that some of the baseball legend's DNA is missing and that his remains have been treated poorly.

The former employee of the Alcor Life Extension Foundation told Sports Illustrated that Williams' body was decapitated by surgeons in a procedure called neuroseparation, and both parts were suspended in liquid nitrogen.

The article, which was on newsstands Wednesday, also said Williams' head was shaved, drilled with holes and accidentally cracked 10 times.

Alcor won't confirm that it is preserving Williams' body, but that was revealed in court documents when his oldest daughter challenged the decision to take his body to the company.

Paula Lemler, the wife of Alcor President Jerry Lemler, said Wednesday her husband is undergoing chemotherapy treatment and could not comment, but she said Alcor doesn't take DNA or blood samples.

``If there's something we don't store and don't keep, there's no way we can lose it,'' added Carlos Mondragon, an Alcor director.

Mondragon noted that decapitation and shaving can be parts of the normal preservation process used by the company, and that the process normally causes microscopic cracks. He said that drilling holes in a head that is being preserved is also normal, but that it would be limited to one or two holes.

``We're disputing that any patient was negligently handled,'' Mondragon said.

Mondragon described Larry Johnson, one of Sports Illustrated's main sources and Alcor's former chief operating officer, as a disgruntled employee.

The Associated Press was unable to contact Johnson for comment despite several attempts Wednesday. Several numbers listed under the same name had been temporarily disconnected; others were for unrelated people.

Cheryl Spain, a spokeswoman for Sports Illustrated, said the magazine stood by its story.

The article -- based on internal documents, e-mails, photographs and tape recordings supplied by Johnson -- was another twist in the strange saga that began after Williams died July 5, 2002, and his body was taken by private jet to Alcor, in the Phoenix suburb of Scottsdale.

His son John Henry and daughter Claudia maintained they signed a handwritten pact with their father in 2000 agreeing that their bodies would be frozen.

On Wednesday, investigators in Florida were examining whether the note was forged, and if so, whether a crime was committed, said Ric Ridgway, chief assistant state attorney in Ocala, Fla.

Daughter Bobby-Jo Ferrell fought bitterly to recover the frozen body, saying Williams wanted to be cremated and have his ashes spread in the ocean near Key West, Fla. She claimed that her brother planned to sell their father's DNA.

The cryonics procedure cost $136,000, according to Sports Illustrated, which said Alcor claims it is still owed $111,000.

Buzz Hamon, a former director of the Ted Williams Museum in Hernando, Fla., has asked Arizona's attorney general to investigate Alcor and the condition of Williams' body.

Dianna Jennings, a spokeswoman for the state's attorney general, said the office cannot comment on ongoing investigations.

Paula Lemler characterized Johnson as a disgruntled employee who made the allegations to make money on a Web site that includes an open letter -- purportedly from Johnson -- soliciting donations. The AP could not confirm whether Johnson was actually connected to the site.

Early Wednesday, the site offered to give people who donated $20 access to a private site where they could view ``extremely disturbing'' photographs documenting Ted Williams' fate. The offer was gone later in the day.

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