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DEATHS ; Notable Passings; The Thread to Pay Last Respects

In his first at bat with the Sox, but it wasn't his first Major League at bat. He'd had a cup of coffee with the Indians in 1949 and started the '51 season with the Indians.

A great player, though, one who would have had more support for the HOF if he'd had a longer career, which was shortened by his race, and possibly his oft-disputed age.

Minnie moved around so much it was hard to track not only how old he was but where and who he was playing for. :p
We need to make a push to get him in the HOF. If there was ever a player who deserves that kind of recognition for all he had been through---it was Minnie. :D
 

LizzieMaine

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Claude Brenner, one of radio's original "Quiz Kids" who went on to a distinguished career at MIT, has died at the age of 86. Brenner, with a childhood IQ of 149 and a distinctive South African accent, was one of the first group of child prodigies on the popular radio program starting in 1940, and remained part of the panel until 1944, when he entered MIT at the age of 15. In interviews later in life he admitted that while he was appearing on the program, he felt like something of "a freak," but in later years he came to terms with the experience, and credited it with paving the way for much of the success he enjoyed in his adult life.
 

AmateisGal

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We just lost James Best, perhaps best known as Rosco P. Coltrane from the Dukes of Hazzard. He was also on the Andy Griffith Show.
rosco.jpg
 
We just lost James Best, perhaps best known as Rosco P. Coltrane from the Dukes of Hazzard. He was also on the Andy Griffith Show.
View attachment 27518

And he was in dozens of westerns through the years----even a Twilight Zone episode. Yet he was never too proud or snooty to put on the hat and uniform to play Roscoe P. Coltrane for kids, fans and TV.
Flash the dog was actually his dog in real life as well.
First Uncle Jesse then Boss Hogg.I’ll miss you Mr. Best.You gave us many of the best years of your life in film and on the small screen.Many laughs and some tears.RIPYou will be missed.
 

AmateisGal

I'll Lock Up
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Geoffrey Lewis, perhaps best known for playing with Clint Eastwood in many of his films, like Every Which Way But Loose and Any Which Way You Can, passed away at his home. He was 79.

lewis.jpg
 

LizzieMaine

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One of the pioneering figures of early television has died at the age of 96. Milton DeLugg -- a skinny, professorial-looking fellow who played swing accordion -- was active on the dance band and radio circuits before and after the war, but made his mark for all time in 1950 as the bandleader for "Broadway Open House," the first late-night comedy-talk-variety program on network television. His career in television extended well into the 1970s, with his last major on-camera role leading the band on Chuck Barris's infamous "The Gong Show."
 
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One of the pioneering figures of early television has died at the age of 96. Milton DeLugg -- a skinny, professorial-looking fellow who played swing accordion -- was active on the dance band and radio circuits before and after the war, but made his mark for all time in 1950 as the bandleader for "Broadway Open House," the first late-night comedy-talk-variety program on network television. His career in television extended well into the 1970s, with his last major on-camera role leading the band on Chuck Barris's infamous "The Gong Show."

Milton DeLugg and the Band with a Thug
 

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