Baseball
great Willie Mays, 16 others, receive honors from Obama
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[November 25, 2015]
By Roberta Rampton
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Baseball Hall of
Famer Willie Mays, sporting running shoes with his suit and tie, rose
slowly from his chair and waved his baseball cap as President Barack
Obama decorated him on Tuesday with the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
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Mays, 84, one of the first black players in Major League Baseball
and considered among the game's all-time greats in a career spent
mostly with the New York and San Francisco Giants, was among 17
people given the highest U.S. civilian honor.
"It's because of giants like Willie that someone like me could even
think about running for president," Obama said during the White
House ceremony.
Obama clearly relished the celebration honoring accomplishments in
sports, the arts and public service after spending much of his day
in meetings with French President Francois Hollande over the fight
against Islamic State.
Before giving singer/actress Barbra Streisand her medal, Obama noted
her "chutzpah" as a young Jewish-American Broadway star and for
selling more albums in the United States than any other woman.
"I'm getting all verkempt just thinking about it," he said, using
the Yiddish expression for "choked up."
Obama recounted how Grammy Award-winning Cuban-American singer
Gloria Estefan, and her producer/songwriter husband, Emilio Estefan,
both honorees, first met.
"He was playing 'Do the Hustle' - on an accordion. She said she
found this 'sexy and brave.' I mean, the brave part I understand,"
Obama said.
Other winners from the arts included Broadway composer Stephen
Sondheim, conductor Itzhak Perlman and singer James Taylor.
Obama recounted how NASA pioneer Katherine Johnson, 97, graduated
from college with math and French when she was only 18 and faced
limited job options as a black woman.
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Johnson became a mathematician at the space agency, calculating the
flight path for the first space mission.
"She was even asked to double-check the computer's math on John
Glenn's orbit around the earth. So if you think your job is
pressure-packed, hers meant that forgetting to carry the one might
send somebody floating off into the solar system," Obama said.
Also honored were Bonnie Carroll for her work with military
families, Maryland Democratic Senator Barbara Mikulski, former
Indiana Democratic Representative Lee Hamilton and former
Environmental Protection Agency head William Ruckelshaus.
Obama also gave medals to relatives of four honorees who have died:
baseball catcher Yogi Berra, U.S. Representative Shirley Chisholm,
Indian treaty rights advocate Billy Frank Jr., and Japanese-American
civil rights activist Minoru Yasui.
(Reporting by Roberta Rampton; Editing by Peter Cooney)
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