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TheZookie007

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Re: The R.I.P. Thread
« Reply #1740 on: September 10, 2018, 01:08:44 AM »
Bill Daily, known for his comedic characters on the classic sitcoms I Dream of Jeannie and The Bob Newhart Show, died Tuesday in Santa Fe, N.M., his family said. He was 91.

Daily died of natural causes, his son, J. Patrick Daily, told The Hollywood Reporter.

The actor starred as Maj. Roger Healey, the comical sidekick to Larry Hagman’s Air Force Capt. Anthony Nelson, in all five years of NBC’s I Dream of Jeannie, which starred Barbara Eden in the title role and ran from 1965-1970. Hagman died in 2012 at age 81.

Daily would go on to play Bob Newhart’s neighbor, divorced airline navigator Howard Borden, on CBS’ The Bob Newhart Show for six seasons, from 1972-1978.

His other TV credits include roles on Alf, Bewitched, The Mary Tyler Moore Show, Love American Style, Aloha, Paradise, and Starting from Scratch.

According to The Hollywood Reporter, Daily battled dyslexia and had to memorize all his lines.

After Daily’s own TV series, Small & Frye, lasted only three months in the 1980s, the longtime Albuquerque resident became director of the New Mexico Film Commission, Deadline reported.

Daily was born in Des Moines, Iowa, grew up in Chicago, and began his career as a standup comedian, according to Variety.

“He loved every sunset, he loved every meal — he just decided to be happy about everything,” his son told the outlet.

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solvegas

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Re: The R.I.P. Thread
« Reply #1741 on: September 11, 2018, 04:41:42 PM »
Just wish to say to the victims of the attacks of September 11, 2001 that their souls have peace and may God keep them in safety for all eternity.

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TheZookie007

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Re: The R.I.P. Thread
« Reply #1742 on: October 15, 2018, 09:32:19 PM »
Paul Allen, co-founder of Microsoft and owner of the NFL's Seattle Seahawks and the NBA's Portland Trail Blazers, has died from complications of non-Hodgkins lymphoma, his family announced. He was 65.

Allen had announced earlier this month that the disease, which he had been treated for in 2009, had returned.

Allen's sister, Jody Allen, wrote in a statement: "My brother was a remarkable individual on every level. While most knew Paul Allen as a technologist and philanthropist, for us he was a much loved brother and uncle, and an exceptional friend."

Allen, who co-founded Microsoft with his childhood friend Bill Gates, had owned the Seahawks since 1997 and the Blazers since 1988. He's also the co-owner of the MLS' Seattle Sounders FC.
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TheZookie007

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Re: The R.I.P. Thread
« Reply #1743 on: October 16, 2018, 11:45:32 PM »
Legal pimp and GOP Nevada legislature hopeful Dennis Hof died at his own brothel Tuesday, following a campaign rally whose guests included conservative kingmaker Grover Norquist and aging porn star Ron Jeremy, according to reports.

Hof, the 72-year-old owner of several legal bordellos in the Sagebrush State, “went to sl eep last night and didn’t wake up,” Nye County spokesman Arnold Knightly told the Reno Gazette Journal.

“I just confirmed with Nye County sheriff’s deputy that Dennis Hof passed away this morning. No other details at this point. I’m heading out to Love Ranch Vegas now,” tweeted his campaign manager Chuck Muth, referring to the house of ill repute where Hof expired. "Ron Jeremy found him this morning when he went to wake him to go to a meeting,” Muth added in another tweet. The body was discovered shortly before 11 a.m., and there were no signs of foul play, officials said.

The flesh-peddler was running for Nevada Assembly and seemed in good spirits during a Monday-night campaign rally, according to Muth. “We had a wonderful event last night. He was having the time of his life last night. Grover Norquist was there. Ron Jeremy was there. He was given a rescue dog as a birthday present. He was having the time of his life,” Muth told the Gazette Journal.

[The author of] The Art of the Pimp: One Man's Search for Love, Sex, and Money, No Business Like Ho Business ... shocked political observers over the summer when he bested a Republican incumbent in a state primary for the southern Nevada district.

Due to Nevada election law, he’ll still be listed on the ballot in November, but signs will be posted at polling places in the district alerting voters that he’s dead. If he manages to win from beyond the grave, the seat would be considered vacant, Nevada deputy secretary of state for elections Wayne Thorley told the Gazette Journal.

“I’m stunned. This is not the turn I would expect,” Hof’s Democratic opponent Lesia Romanov told the Las Vegas Review-Journal. “My heart goes out to those who care about him. All I can say is wow.”

Hof owned a handful of brothels in Nevada, where pro stit ution is legal in some counties and was catapulted to fame in the mid-aughts thanks to HBO’s Cathouse: The Series, which chronicled his Moonlite BunnyRanch.
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rtpoe

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Re: The R.I.P. Thread
« Reply #1744 on: October 24, 2018, 06:33:59 PM »
DORCAS REILLY (1926 - 2018)

A native of Camden, NJ, she would become one of the first members of her family to attend college, earning her bachelor’s degree in home economics (yes, the multidisciplinary field, combining chemistry, physics, engineering, financial management, design, etc. IS a legitimate one) from the Drexel Institute of Technology (now known as Drexel University) in 1947. She headed to Campbell’s in 1949, where she was one of two full-time employees developing recipes for the company’s home economics department.

With the economy booming in the early 50s, there was a demand for meals and foods that were easy to make, inexpensive, and hearty. Reilly found success creating a tuna noodle casserole, a tomato soup cake and a Sloppy Joe made from tomato soup.

In 1955, the AP, like other newspapers and magazines of the time, was running a feature of an easy-to-make Campbell’s Soup side. The question came with a caveat: the recipe had to be built around green beans and Campbell’s Cream of Mushroom Soup, two items most Americans regularly had in their homes in the ’50s.

The request fell to the Campbell’s Soup Co. test kitchen in Camden, NJ. Reilly, by now a supervisor, got the assignment. In November of that year, Reilly and her team settled on what would be first known as “the Green Bean Bake,” an easily adaptable six-ingredient recipe of green beans, cream of mushroom soup, milk, soy sauce, black pepper and French fried onions that takes 10 minutes to prep and 30 minutes to bake.

When Campbell’s started to put Reilly’s recipe on the cans of its cream of mushroom soup in 1960, the popularity of the dish hit new heights. More than 60 years since the dish was invented, green bean casserole is a Thanksgiving staple, with an estimated 20 million-plus American households expected to serve it this year, according to Campbell’s. Campbell’s has estimated that 40 percent of its cream of mushroom soup sold in the U.S. goes toward making Reilly’s green bean casserole.

“We all thought this is very nice, etc., and then when we got the feelings of the consumer, we were really kinda pleasantly shocked,” she said in a Campbell’s promotional video for the dish. “I’m very proud of this, and I was shocked when I realized how popular it had become.”

Here she is being honored by Drexel University:


“I loved to go to work every day,” she said at Drexel in 2009. “It was just another day’s work. " She added: “I hope you enjoy green bean casserole forever.”

Classic Green Bean Casserole

1 can (10 1/2 ounces) Campbell's® Condensed Cream of Mushroom Soup (or Campbell's® Condensed 98% Fat Free Cream of Mushroom Soup)
1/2 cup milk
1 teaspoon soy sauce
1 dash black pepper
4 cups cooked cut green beans
1 1/3 cups French's® French Fried Onions

Step 1
Stir the soup, milk, soy sauce, black pepper, beans and 2/3 cup onions in a 1 1/2-quart casserole.

Step 2
Bake at 350°F. for 25 minutes or until the bean mixture is hot and bubbling.  Stir the bean mixture.  Sprinkle with the remaining onions.

Step 3
Bake for 5 minutes or until the onions are golden brown.

Serves 6.
rtpoe

The last fling of winter is over ...  The earth, the soil itself, has a dreaming quality about it.  It is warm now to the touch; it has come alive; it hides secrets that in a moment, in a little while, it will tell.
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TheZookie007

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Re: The R.I.P. Thread
« Reply #1745 on: October 28, 2018, 10:15:06 PM »
Thailand is just waking up to the news that Leicester City owner Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha was one of five people killed – all onboard the helicopter – when the accident occurred around an hour after the club’s draw at home to West Ham United. The Thai owner’s helicopter crashed near a car park by the south-east corner of the stadium shortly after taking off from the pitch at around 8:20 pm on Saturday, Oct. 27. Leicestershire police have named the other four passengers as Nursara Suknamai and Kaveporn Punpare (both members of Vichai’s staff), pilot Eric Swaffer and passenger Izabela Roza Lechowicz.

Vichai, 60, was a hugely popular figure at Leicester, having bought the club for £39m in 2010. With his backing the club won the Premier League in 2016 for the first time in its history, defying the odds of 5,000-1.

The self-made billionaire and father of four was also respected locally for his charity work, having donated £2m to Leicester Chi!dren’s Hospital. His surname, meaning “light of progressive glory” in Thai, had been bestowed on him by King Bhumibol, the former monarch of Thailand, in recognition of his corporate and social responsibility programmes.

Vichai regularly left home matches in his Augusta AW169 helicopter and on Saturday he was due to travel in it to Luton Airport prior to taking his private jet to Thailand. Eyewitness reports indicated that the helicopter only just cleared the roof of the stands, stayed in the air briefly then spiralled down to earth after reportedly developing a fault with its tail rotor. The aircraft crashed and erupted into flames after impact where it lay on land owned by the club, near a car park used by Leicester’s staff, which was empty at the time. Emergency services rushed to the scene to tackle the fire and search the wreckage, with the area eventually cordoned off by Leicestershire police. Witnesses praised Swaffer, who was at the controls when the helicopter crashed, as a hero for guiding it away from crowds on the ground.

Vichai's ownership of Leicester City is a source of great national pride in the country and after their improbable league win in 2016, swathes of Thais switched their allegiances from the popular clubs Manchester United and Liverpool to become proud Leicester supporters. After winning the league, Vichai brought the team to Bangkok to show off their trophy to crowds of thousands of football-loving Thais.

Tributes are only just starting to come in. Anutin Charnvirakul, leader of the Bhumjai Thai political party, told local media last night that he considered Vichai to be like a “big brother.”

“He is a self-made man, worked hard and loved friends dearly,”
he said. “I told him that I loved riding horses and, the next day, a nice horse was sent to me... That’s the way he was.”

He added: “We just lost someone who made big contributions to the public. I am sure his legacy will live on.”
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TheZookie007

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Re: The R.I.P. Thread
« Reply #1746 on: October 30, 2018, 01:37:33 PM »
Just heard that the man Johnny Depp portrayed in the biopic Black Mass has died in prison.
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solvegas

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Re: The R.I.P. Thread
« Reply #1747 on: October 30, 2018, 10:44:33 PM »
" Whitey " Bulger was scum. The world is better without him. Good riddance and may he rot in Hell. >:(

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TheZookie007

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Re: The R.I.P. Thread
« Reply #1748 on: November 01, 2018, 11:15:14 AM »
That's part of the reason why I didn't refer to him by name.
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rtpoe

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Re: The R.I.P. Thread
« Reply #1749 on: November 01, 2018, 08:07:01 PM »
WILLIE MCCOVEY (1938-2018)


"When he belts a home run, he does it with such authority it seems like an act of God.” - Dodgers manager Walter Alston

If you pitch to him, he’ll ruin baseball." - Reds manager Sparky Anderson

"Strongest man in baseball" - Teammate Willie Mays

"I don't think I've ever seen a player hit the ball harder than McCovey" - His manager, Herman Franks

rtpoe

The last fling of winter is over ...  The earth, the soil itself, has a dreaming quality about it.  It is warm now to the touch; it has come alive; it hides secrets that in a moment, in a little while, it will tell.
-  Donald Culross Peattie

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rtpoe

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Re: The R.I.P. Thread
« Reply #1750 on: November 05, 2018, 07:58:39 PM »
KITTY O'NEILL (1946-2018)

Born in Corpus Christi TX, at the age of five months she came down with a simultaneous diagnosis of measles, mumps, AND smallpox. The fever destroyed her hearing. Her mother resisted teaching her sign language, and instead taught her to read lips and feel the sounds Kitty was making by placing her hand on her throat.

O'Neill took to platform diving, and seemed certain to medal at the Tokyo Olympics in 1964. But a broken wrist and a case of spinal meningitis ended that dream.  "I got sick, so I had to start all over again, and I got bored," she later told the Midco Sports Network, a regional broadcaster based in South Dakota. "I wanted to do something fast. Speed. Motorcycle. Water skiing. Boat. Anything."

Figuring that after that, there wasn't anything that could stop her, she became a stunt artist and daredevil. She raced motorcycles and speed boats, dove off hotel rooftops, leaped from helicopters, set herself on fire, water skied at more than 100 mph and earned the title "world’s fastest woman," reaching speeds of about 600 mph while piloting a rocket car across a dried lake bed in southeastern Oregon.

Her exploits earned her enough popularity to warrant her own action figure.

Ms. O’Neil credited her hearing impairment with helping her maintain focus, and she spoke and read lips well enough that some directors were unaware she was deaf, according to one Associated Press account. “I know I’m deaf. But I’m still normal. The way I look at it, being handicapped is not a defect. People say I can’t do anything. I say to people I can do anything I want."

Her land speed record (for women) of 512.71 mph (the average of two runs, set on Dec 6, 1976) still stands.

O'Neill in 2005

rtpoe

The last fling of winter is over ...  The earth, the soil itself, has a dreaming quality about it.  It is warm now to the touch; it has come alive; it hides secrets that in a moment, in a little while, it will tell.
-  Donald Culross Peattie

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Cutter

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Re: The R.I.P. Thread
« Reply #1751 on: November 12, 2018, 05:06:16 PM »
Stan Lee has passed at 95.

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Stan Lee, the creative dynamo who revolutionized the comic book and helped make billions for Hollywood by introducing human frailties in Marvel superheroes such as Spider-Man, the Fantastic Four and the Incredible Hulk, died Monday. He was 95.

Lee was declared dead at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, according to Kirk Schenck, an attorney for Lee's daughter, J.C. Lee.

As the top writer at Marvel Comics and later as its publisher, Lee was widely considered the architect of the contemporary comic book. He revived the industry in the 1960s by offering the costumes and action craved by younger readers while insisting on sophisticated plots, college-level dialogue, satire, science fiction, even philosophy.

Millions responded to the unlikely mix of realistic fantasy, and many of his characters, including Spider-Man, the Hulk and X-Men went on to become stars of blockbuster films. He won the National Medal of Arts in 2008.

Recent projects Lee helped make possible range from the films "Avengers: Infinity War," ''Black Panther" and "Guardians of the Galaxy" to such TV series as "Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D" and "Daredevil." Lee was recognizable to his fans, having had cameos in many Marvel films and TV projects, often delivering his trademark motto, "Excelsior!"

"Captain America" actor Chris Evans mourned the loss on Twitter: "There will never be another Stan Lee. For decades he provided both young and old with adventure, escape, comfort, confidence, inspiration, strength, friendship and joy. He exuded love and kindness and will leave an indelible mark on so, so, so many lives. Excelsior!!"

Lee considered the comic-book medium an art form and he was prolific: By some accounts, he came up with a new comic book every day for 10 years. "I wrote so many I don't even know. I wrote either hundreds or thousands of them," he told The Associated Press in 2006.

He hit his stride in the 1960s when he brought the Fantastic Four, the Hulk, Spider-Man, Iron Man and numerous others to life. "It was like there was something in the air. I couldn't do anything wrong," he said.

His heroes, meanwhile, were a far cry from virtuous do-gooders such as rival DC Comics' Superman.

The Fantastic Four fought with each other. Spider-Man was goaded into superhero work by his alter ego, Peter Parker, who suffered from unrequited crushes, money problems and dandruff. The Silver Surfer, an alien doomed to wander Earth's atmosphere, waxed about the woeful nature of man. The Hulk was marked by self-loathing. Daredevil was blind and Iron Man had a weak heart.

"The beauty of Stan Lee's characters is that they were characters first and superheroes next," Jeff Kline, executive producer of the "Men in Black" animated television series, told The Blade of Toledo, Ohio, in 1998.

Some of Lee's creations became symbols of social change — the inner turmoil of Spider-Man represented '60s America, for example, while The Black Panther and The Savage She-Hulk mirrored the travails of minorities and women.

"I think of them as fairy tales for grown-ups," he told The AP in 2006. "We all grew up with giants and ogres and witches. Well, you get a little bit older and you're too old to read fairy tales. But I don't think you ever outgrow your love for those kind of things, things that are bigger than life and magical and very imaginative."

Lee scripted most of Marvel's superhero comics himself during the '60s, including the Avengers and the X-Men, two of the most enduring. In 1972, he became Marvel's publisher and editorial director; four years later, 72 million copies of Spider-Man were sold.

"He's become our Mickey Mouse," he once said of the masked, web-crawling crusader.

Lee also published several books, including "The Superhero Women" in 1977 and "How to Draw Comics the Marvel Way" the following year, when he was named publisher of the year by the Periodical and Book Association of America.

CBS turned the Hulk into a successful TV series, with Bill Bixby and Lou Ferrigno portraying the doomed scientist from 1978-82. A Spider-Man series ran briefly in 1978. Both characters were featured in animated TV series as well.

The first big-budget movie based on Lee's characters, "X-Men," was a smash in 2000, earning more than $130 million at North American theaters. "Spider-Man" did even better, taking in more than $400 million in 2002. A Marvel movie empire would emerge after that, one of the most lucrative mega-franchises in cinema history, with the recent "Avengers: Infinity War" grossing more than $2 billion worldwide. In 10 years, the Marvel Cinematic Universe film shave netted over $17.6 billion in worldwide grosses.

"Black Panther" actor Winston Duke took to Twitter to pay his respects to Lee: "You gave us characters that continue to stand the test of time and evolve with our consciousness. You taught us that there are no limits to our future as long as we have access to our imagination. Rest in power!"

Stanley Martin Lieber was born Dec. 28, 1922, in New York. He grew up a fan of "Hardy Boys" adventure books and Errol Flynn movies, and got a job at Timely Comics after graduating from high school.

Within a few months, the editor and art director quit, leaving the 17-year-old Lee with creative control over the company, which grew and was renamed Atlas Comics and, finally, Marvel. Lieber changed his name, thinking Lee would be used for "silly little comics" and his real name would be reserved for novels.

His early work largely reflected popular movies — westerns, crime dramas, romance, whatever was the rage at the time. He worked for about 50 cents per page.

After a stint in the Army during World War II, writing for training films, he was back at Marvel to begin a long and admittedly boring run of assembly line comic book production.

Comics in the 1950s were the subject of Senate hearings pushed by the Comics Code Authority, which frowned on gore and characters that questioned authority. Major comic book companies adopted the code as a form of self-regulation to avoid sanctions.

Lee said he was also working for a publisher who considered comics as fare only for children.

"One day I said, 'This is insane,'" Lee told the Guardian in 1979. "I'm just doing the same type of stories as everybody else. I wasn't taking pride in my work and I wanted to quit. But my wife said, 'Look, why don't you do the kind of comics you want for a change?'"

The result was the first issue of "The Fantastic Four," in 1960, with the characters, plot and text from Lee and the illustrations by famed Marvel artist Jack Kirby.

The characters were normal people changed into reluctant superheroes through no fault of their own.

Writing in "Origins of Marvel Comics," Lee described the quartet this way: "The characters would be the kind of characters I could personally relate to; they'd be flesh and blood, they'd have their faults and foibles, they'd be fallible and feisty and — most important of all — inside their colorful, costumed booties they'd still have feet of clay."

"The Amazing Spider-Man" followed in 1962 and before long, Marvel Comics was an industry behemoth.

Lee knew his work was different, proudly noting that stories were drawn out over several issues not to make money but to better develop characters, situations and themes. He didn't neglect his villains, either. One, the Moleman, went bad when he was ostracized because of his appearance, Lee wrote, adding it was "almost unheard of in a comic book" to explain why a character was what he was.

Lee's direct influence faded in the 1970s as he gave up some of his editorial duties at Marvel. But with his trademark white mustache and tinted sunglasses, he was the industry's most recognizable figure. He lectured widely on popular culture.

Lee moved to Los Angeles in 1981 to head Marvel Productions, an animation studio that was later purchased, along with Marvel Comics, for $50 million by New World Entertainment.

As sales of comics declined, Marvel was forced into bankruptcy proceedings that meant it had to void a lifetime contract prohibiting Lee from working for anyone else. Lee later sued Marvel for $10 million, saying the company cheated him out of millions in profits from movies based on his characters.

In 2000, Lee agreed to write stories for DC Comics, reinventing Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman and other signature characters for Marvel's one-time rival. DC Vice President and Publisher Paul Levitz had nothing but praise when the agreement was made.

"With his artistic collaborators at Marvel, Stan co-created the richest imaginary universe a single comics writer has ever built," he said.

The dapper, friendly comic book genius continued to work into his 90s on numerous projects, including comics, films and DVDs.

In the late 1990s, he looked to capitalize on the Internet craze, offering animated "Webisodes" of comic-like action. Stan Lee Media also sought to reach out to Web-savvy youth through deals with pop artists the Backstreet Boys and Mary J. Blige.

The company went bankrupt, and three men were indicted for allegedly defrauding the business in a check kiting scam. Lee wasn't implicated.

After that initial failure, Lee formed the successful Pow! Entertainment company to launch animated Internet-based projects.

Lee's wife and partner in nearly everything, Joan Lee, died on July 6, 2017, leaving a void that made her husband, by then in mental and physical decline, vulnerable to hangers-on who began to surround him. Lawsuits, court fights and an elder abuse investigation all emerged in the fight over who spoke for the elderly Lee.

Lee is survived by his daughter, Joanie, and a younger brother who also worked in comics, Larry Lieber.
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TheZookie007

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Re: The R.I.P. Thread
« Reply #1752 on: November 12, 2018, 05:13:21 PM »
I had a feeling that his cameo in the Avengers film would be his last. This is so sad.
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salem

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Re: The R.I.P. Thread
« Reply #1753 on: November 12, 2018, 06:53:23 PM »
 :(

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rtpoe

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Re: The R.I.P. Thread
« Reply #1754 on: November 12, 2018, 07:11:51 PM »
"I remember asking Lee if he was a sports fan. He said that when he was young, he loved playing stickball. I asked him if he was any good, and he laughed and said that if he had been any good, he wouldn’t have dreamed of being a superhero." - Joe Posnanski
rtpoe

The last fling of winter is over ...  The earth, the soil itself, has a dreaming quality about it.  It is warm now to the touch; it has come alive; it hides secrets that in a moment, in a little while, it will tell.
-  Donald Culross Peattie