A house fire but MSM and left might well say it was caused by Covidbug to gin up the numbers and make themselves happy. Hsieh lived in a trailer park in downtown Las Vegas where his company was located and where he regularly invested in its revitalization. A true entrepreneurial American success story. What a shame he died after previously selling his company for $1.2 billion and later stepping down as CEO in this past August.
Quote:Hanifan was an assistant coach and then head coach for the St. Louis Football Cardinals, segments that covered 12 seasons. Ten years later, following coaching stints in Washington and Atlanta, Hanifan returned as a coach for the Rams, helping St. Louis to its first and only Super Bowl title. He then became a color analyst on Rams broadcasts.
He was a tough ol' bird who outlasted 'em all. Godspeed, Chuck, you were a great American, back when America was proud of its heritage and accomplishments...
(12-08-2020 12:10 AM)GoodOwl Wrote: [ -> ]He was a tough ol' bird who outlasted 'em all. Godspeed, Chuck, you were a great American, back when America was proud of its heritage and accomplishments...
Great man, great fighter pilot, great test pilot, and a great American. I hope he had stick of Beeman's before this last adventure. Men like Gen. Yeager are few and far between. Thank you sir!
didn't know he was still around...thought he was way older. The old country stars were icons the likes of which today's more "modern" ones will never approach.
Ray Perkins (November 6, 1941 – December 9, 2020) was an American football coach and player. He played as a wide receiver for the University of Alabama and Baltimore Colts. He later worked as a football coach for 28 years, including stints as the head coach for the New York Giants, the University of Alabama, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, and Arkansas State University.
didn't know he was still around...thought he was way older. The old country stars were icons the likes of which today's more "modern" ones will never approach.
Only two black country artists of the 1970s to ever won any major country music awards in the 1970s. Charley Pride and The Pointer Sisters. Bonnie Pointer lost her life earlier this year as well.
You wonder why The Pointer Sisters? in 1973 when they were 4 sisters? The Pointer Sisters hit #37 with their cross over hir Fairytale. They won a Grammy for country vocal group and Bonnie won a Grammy for songwriter for the song along with her sister Anita. She left the group, and The Pointer Sisters also got another one of their songs hit country when Conway Twitty covered their song, Slow Hand. Anita Pointer hit the top 10 in 1987 as a duet on the late Earl Thomas Conley's hit.
Reminds me of one of my favorite trivia questions:
1) Played for Houston Buffs, Colt .45s, and Astros
2) Hit .400 for a season in the minor leagues
3) Officiated a Rose Bowl and and AFC championship game
4) My sisters are more famous than I am
They say that all good things must end someday,
Autumn leaves must fall
But don't you know that it hurts me so
To say goodbye to you
Wish you didn't have to go
Oh no, no, no...
Listened to their albums a lot. Sorry to see him go.
Artist: Chad & Jeremy
Album: Yesterday's Gone
Song: "A Summer Song"
July 1964 World Artists Records
Actually, I still have the "Yesterday's Gone" album on vinyl and it's a great album all around. I especially liked their version of the classic "Willow Weep For Me" as well as the title track.
(12-22-2020 07:47 AM)JRsec Wrote: [ -> ]What most people don't know about him was that he was a walk on at Auburn who earned a starting position. RIP Kevin. Well done!
I read that this morning on his Wiki page. What an amazing story.
“After graduating from high school, Greene enrolled at Auburn University and entered into the Reserve Officers' Training Corps (ROTC) basic training for the United States National Guard at Fort McClellan in Anniston, Alabama.[2] He attempted to walk-on to the Auburn Tigers in college football as a punter in 1980. He tried out again in 1983, and made the team.[4] In 1984 he won the Zeke Smith Award as Defensive Player of the Year. He had 69 career tackles as an outside linebacker and 11 sacks his senior year where he led the Southeastern Conference and won the Defensive Player of the Year Award in 1984.[5]
Greene earned a degree in criminal justice at Auburn. He completed ROTC while at Auburn and was commissioned a second lieutenant in the Alabama Army National Guard. After playing his first year in the NFL, during the off season, he graduated from the RC-1-86 Armor Officer Basic Course at Fort Knox. During his military career, he earned the rank of captain and completed airborne training at Fort Benning to become a paratrooper.”