-Caveat Lector-

http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2001/11/30/70706.shtml

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Peace at any cost is a Prelude to War!

George Harrison, Former Beatle, Dies
NewsMax.com Wires
Friday, Nov. 30, 2001
LOS ANGELES -- George Harrison, the quiet, reflective member of the Beatles,
played lead guitar and sang with the "Fab Four" from their 1960 beginnings in
England through a dizzying decade as perhaps the most influential rock band
in history.
He was his own man and went his own way off the bandstand, content to let
John Lennon and Paul McCartney take the spotlight. He was probably the least
affected when the enormously successful group broke up but he was very
cognizant of the vast sums of money the Beatles were earning and became a
quiet philanthropist.

Harrison developed a deep interest in Eastern religion and music, gave the
Hare Krishna sect a mansion and had a small temple on the grounds of his
estate for meditation.

It was perhaps this calmness that helped him as his health deteriorated in
the summer of 2001. He had undergone treatment for a brain tumor and lung
cancer, and according to news reports, stunned friends by revealing he
expected to die soon.

"George is very philosophical," said George Martin, the Beatles' longtime
producer and a friend of Harrison. "He is taking it easy and hoping that the
thing will go away. He has an indomitable spirit -- but he knows that he is
going to die soon and he is accepting that." McCartney and Ringo Starr, the
Beatles' drummer, reportedly were keeping in touch. Lennon died in a shooting
in 1980.

Martin told London's Mail that Harrison "has been near death many times and
he's been rescued many times as well." He had been nearly killed in early
2000 when a deranged fan broke into his home in England and stabbed the
musician repeatedly.

He was treated for a brain tumor at a clinic in Switzerland. Later, in May of
2001, he had surgery at the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota to remove a cancerous
growth from one of his lungs. But, at least one of the cancers had spread. He
also fought throat cancer in 1998, blaming his illness on his lifelong
smoking habit and urged teens to steer clear of cigarettes.

Harrison and McCartney were schoolmates and occasionally met on the bus
taking them to the Liverpool Institute where they discovered a mutual
interest in skiffle and early Bill Haley rock 'n' roll. They compared notes
on how to learn the guitar and one day McCartney said he had a new friend,
John Lennon, who had formed a group called The Quarrymen and there was a
place in it for Harrison if he wanted to audition.

Harrison played a few riffs for Lennon and the rest is intertwined with the
history of the Beatles.

Harrison was the youngest of the famous quartet. In his own way he was the
most strongly individual of the group and although Lennon and McCartney were
the obvious leaders, Harrison was his own man when they left the bandstand.

"I know Ringo said that when the Beatles broke up it was like losing a steady
job," Harrison once said. "I didn't agree. I said, thank God. People tell me
the Beatles saved the world in the '60s. What rubbish. We couldn't even save
ourselves. I'm glad that little factory burned down. Now I can deal with my
life on a happier level."

Harrison was born Feb. 25, 1943, and was precocious in his dress. He was the
first among his friends to wear tight trousers, blue suede shoes and to allow
his hair to grow long. At 14 he asked his parents for three pounds -- $7 --
to buy an old guitar from a boy at school. He practiced until his fingers
bled and then asked his parents for a $70 guitar. He and a friend played for
$2 a night at a British war veterans club.

This stood him in good stead when he discussed music with McCartney and he
became one of the group. Harrison was only 17 when he went to Hamburg with
the Beatles and it was his youth -- 18 was the minimum age to play in German
nightclubs -- that got him sent home with the rest of the group following. He
was the best guitarist of the group and a big selling recording artist and
songwriter in his own right when the Beatles dissolved.

In 1966, at the height of the Beatles craze, he married Pattie Boyd, a model
and actress he had met on the set of the Beatles film, "A Hard Day's Night."
They were divorced in 1977. They had no children.

A year later Harrison married Olivia Arias, a beautiful Mexican woman who had
worked for his record company. They had lived together for some time and had
a son, Dhani.

Lennon and McCartney were the major songwriters of the Beatles but it was
sometimes forgotten that Harrison had songs of his own on many of their
albums including the hits, "Something," and "Here Comes the Sun." Following
the break-up of the Beatles in 1969, Harrison made a solo album, "All Things
Must Pass" (1970), which included the gospelly hit "My Sweet Lord," later the
subject of an expensive plagiarism suit.

Later solo albums included Living in the Material World (1973), Dark Horse
(1974), and Somewhere in England (1981), and he joined with other artists in
the "super-group' The Traveling Wilburys (1988-90), and with Starr and
McCartney to produce the Beatles anthology (1995).

He formed Dark Horse Records in 1974, and a film company, HandMade Films, in
1978, producing a number of feature films, such as "Monty Python's Life of
Brian" (1979), "Time Bandits" (1981, also writing the music and lyrics), "A
Private Function" (1984), and "Withnail and I" (1987). He was the first of
the Beatles to publish an autobiography, a remarkable coffee table tome
titled "I Me Mine" and retailing at $330. Despite the price the limited
edition of 2,000 sold well. It contained facsimiles of lyrics and other
memorabilia.

Harrison was a vegetarian with a fanatical interest in motor racing. He wrote
a song, "Faster," for motor racers and assigned the proceeds to ailing racing
driver Gunnar Nilsson who later died. His other benefactions were many and
always anonymous.

He lived on a magnificent estate outside London valued at $4.2 million. There
were seven gardeners for its 33 acres, studded with man-made lakes and an
alpine garden made of 20,000 tons of rock brought in by train.




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