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PASSINGS: Sheik Mohammed Sayed Tantawi, Roger Newman, Andree Peel
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Matthew Kruk  
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 More options Mar 11, 12:17 am
Newsgroups: alt.obituaries
From: "Matthew Kruk" <nob...@home.com>
Date: Wed, 10 Mar 2010 21:17:59 -0700
Local: Thurs, Mar 11 2010 12:17 am
Subject: PASSINGS: Sheik Mohammed Sayed Tantawi, Roger Newman, Andree Peel
latimes.com/news/obituaries/la-me-passings11-2010mar11,0,7191858.story

latimes.com
PASSINGS: Sheik Mohammed Sayed Tantawi, Roger Newman, Andree Peel
Mohammed Sayed Tantawi, cleric, dies at 81; Roger Newman, actor, dies at
69; Andree Peel, Resistance heroine, dies at 105
6:51 PM PST, March 10, 2010

Mohammed Sayed Tantawi

Sheik was top cleric of Egypt

Sheik Mohammed Sayed Tantawi, 81, Egypt's top cleric who was known for
promoting the government agenda against female genital mutilation and
the face veil, died of a heart attack Wednesday during a visit to Saudi
Arabia, Egypt's state-owned Middle East News Agency reported. He was 81.

Tantawi was the grand sheik of Cairo's Al-Azhar, the pre-eminent
theological institute of Sunni Islam, the faith's mainstream sect.

Tantawi left a mixed legacy across the Muslim world, where he was touted
as a moderate scholar and supporter of women's rights but also
criticized as an appointed civil servant who merely followed the line of
Egypt's government.

The sheik angered radicals by supporting organ transplants, denouncing
female circumcision and ruling that women should be appointed to senior
judicial and administrative positions in government. At the same time,
he shocked many Muslims in 2004 by siding with France in its steps to
ban the hijab head covering from state schools. Late last year he also
barred women from wearing the full face veil known as the niqab at
Al-Azhar University.

Tantawi received a doctorate in interpretation of the Quran and Sunna,
Prophet Muhammad's teachings, from Al-Azhar University in 1966. He was a
religious teacher until 1986, when he was appointed Egypt's official
mufti.

Roger Newman

Soap opera actor and scriptwriter

Roger Newman, 69, an actor and Emmy-winning writer known for his work on
the long-running CBS soap opera "The Guiding Light," died March 4 at his
home in New York, said his wife, Frances Myers. He had cancer.

A child actor in his native London, Newman played Ken Norris on "The
Guiding Light" from 1970 to 1975. He also wrote scripts for the daytime
dramas "One Life to Live," " Another World," "Passions" and "The Guiding
Light." He was among a team of writers who received an Emmy Award in
1993 for their work on "The Guiding Light."

Newman was praised by critics for his supporting role in a 1972-73
Broadway production of "Butley," starring Alan Bates, that was also
staged at the Schubert Theater in Century City in 1973.

Born Aug. 31, 1940, Newman acted on stage and on radio in London as a
child, then moved with his family to Montreal after World War II. He
later moved to the United States, served in the U.S. Army and became a
naturalized citizen. He attended Columbia University before returning to
acting.

While working on "The Guiding Light," he met his future wife, an actress
who played Peggy Scott Fletcher for 15 years and who also turned to
writing soap scripts. They married in 1975.

Andree Peel

Resistance heroine

Andree Peel, 105, a member of the World War II Resistance who is
credited with saving the lives of more than 100 Allied airmen in
Nazi-occupied France, died Friday at a care home in Bristol, southwest
England, facility manager Sherry Kitchen said.

Born Andree Virot in France in 1905, Peel was running a beauty salon in
the port city of Brest when the Nazis invaded in 1940. She joined the
Resistance, initially distributing clandestine newspapers.

Under the code name Agent Rose, she helped dozens of British and
American pilots escape from Nazi-occupied territory onto submarines and
gunboats, and also guided Allied planes to secret landing strips.

Captured by the Nazis, she was imprisoned at the Ravensbruck and
Buchenwald concentration camps.

After the war, Virot met her future husband, British academic John Peel,
and moved to England.

Peel was much honored for her wartime bravery. She was thanked
personally by Winston Churchill and awarded the French Legion of Honor,
the King's Commendation for Brave Conduct and the Croix de Guerre.

She recorded her remarkable story in an autobiography, "Miracles Do
Happen."

-- times staff and wire reports

Copyright © 2010, The Los Angeles Times


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