Haughton and KC Chiefs Joe Delaney drowning while saving 3 boys from drowning. Joe was an up and coming star in his 2 season.
What about the LSU coach who was on a plane that diverted course and was never found. I think they determined it went out into the Gulf of Mexico. I can't remember his name or if anyone else besides the pilot was onboard. He had yet to develop a name for himself. I remembered because of the Payne Stewart comments.
Kurt Budke
There is a series on Smithsonian called Air Disasters - they profiled the Stewart crash in one of the episodes
The Air Force literally sent chase planes to follow the flight because they were not certain where the crash would occur at first and there was talk of taking down the flight with air-to-air missiles incase it threatened to crash in a populated area
They were are to deduce that all occupants were deceased shortly after reaching altitude
https://www.smithsonianchannel.com/s...ce/802/3439443
''Don't be a bad dagh..."
Following the 1979 season, Rein was hired away from NC State by Louisiana State University. In January 1980, Rein took a recruiting trip to Shreveport, Louisiana. On his January 10, 1980 return trip back to Baton Rouge, Louisiana, his private aircraft crashed, leaving no survivors.[3]Rein and experienced pilot Louis Benscotter left Shreveport in a Cessna 441 aircraft. The flight was planned to be a 40-minute trip, but when Benscotter rerouted east to avoid a storm, air traffic control lost contact with him. The aircraft climbed to 40,000 feet and kept heading due east. After being tracked on radar, the aircraft was eventually intercepted by U.S. Air National Guard Convair F-106 Delta Dart fighter aircraft over North Carolina, a thousand miles off-course and at an altitude of 41,600 ft (12,700 m), 6,600 ft (2,000 m) feet higher than its maximum certified ceiling. The military pilots could not see anyone in the cockpit and the aircraft continued on over the Atlantic Ocean, where it crashed after running out of fuel. A US Coast Guard crew spotted some debris, but no wreckage was ever recovered. The bodies of Rein and Benscotter have never been found.[4]The cause of the crash is undetermined but was most likely cabin depressurization causing hypoxia, a lack of oxygen,[5] resulting in the occupants losing consciousness.In 1982, Rein's widow, Suzanne Kay, reached an out-of-court settlement for an undisclosed amount after filing a $10 million damage suit against a number of defendants, including the Cessna Aircraft Company, Cruse Aviation Inc., who serviced the aircraft, and Nichols Construction Corporation, who owned it.[6] Out of respect, LSU paid for Rein's children's college educations at the universities of their choice. Former Ohio State coach Woody Hayes gave the eulogy at Rein's funeral in Niles, Ohio.
Saw that Kobe and his daughter went to mass and had communion shortly before boarding the helicopter...
OK...I remember which golfer died in a plane crash on a golf course....It was "Champagne" Tony Lema.
"The twin-engine plane, piloted by Doris Mullen, ran out of fuel and crashed into a water hazard short of the seventh green of the nine-hole Lansing Sportsman’s Club in Lansing about a half-mile northwest of their destination, Lansing Municipal Airport. During the fatal plunge, Mullen swerved left to avoid a group of people standing near the clubhouse. In addition to the Lemas and Mullen, a mother of four teenage children, Dr. George Bard, the co-pilot and a surgeon, was also killed."
I'm not a huge NBA fan or Kobe fan but I thought it was chicken shit that the sidewalk chalk murals honoring Kobe and Gigi were ordered to be power washed away -
Especially given the forecast for the next two days....
Sometimes we can't get out of our own way
''Don't be a bad dagh..."
I agree it should not have been washed off by campus staff. However, the worst part of this is the Twitter storm that is accusing us of being a racist institution. This is an instance where there should be a rule change to allow sidewalk chalk in a specific area of campus.