Whatever happened to Zack Summage?
Whatever happened to Zack Summage?
http://www.ragefootball.com/playerPage.php?141/
Shawn Piper was the Indoor Football League player of the year in 08.
Candy cigarettes?
''Don't be a bad dagh..."
That QB from TN that Max Emfinger basically forced Bick to sign
Farright30?
Summage didn't stick around long from what I understand.
They still make candy cigarettes
What ever happened to...
the golden Mack truck bulldog statue that sat on top of the hill at JAS? Where did he go?
Fizzies?
good ole brett weyman. the "raw and athletic qb from connecticut" that scout.com and max emfinger raved and raved (and raved and raved) about. max actually said weyman "may become the next john elway." weyman ended up back at tennessee and never saw the field, either at qb or eventually at tight end
http://www.oxfordamericanmag.com/con...m?ArticleID=56
The most eligible bachelor at the evening meeting at Waveland Elementary was a twenty-two-year-old named Brett Weyman, who graduated from an exclusive prep school in Virginia and went on to study architecture at the University of Tennessee, where he was a backup quarterback for the football team. Weyman wore a jacket and the only tie in the room. His employer, InterSouth Properties of Charleston, South Carolina, controls real estate all over the Southeast, he told me, and has become very interested in New Urbanism. InterSouth had seen the plans from the charrette, and sent Weyman down to Mississippi to acquire property. He had just bought the lot at 220 Coleman Avenue in Waveland. An awesome place, he thought, for a luxury inn, with suites on the upper floors and maybe a rooftop restaurant where you could look out over the trees to the ocean.
After Orr’s presentation, Weyman introduced himself to Kathy Pinn, the gregarious president of the Coleman Avenue Coalition. Pinn and her husband, Ron, had lived at 237 Coleman, above their store, That Cute Little Shoppe, which sold antiques, furniture, jewelry, kites, chocolate rum balls, and whatnot. She was delighted to meet her new neighbor, and tickled by the thought that her little community was already attracting the confidence of real-estate investors.
“You hold onto a quarter-acre lot,” Weyman said, “and before too long, you’ll have a million-and-a-half-dollar property.”
the bold, the beautiful, theprofessor
The Brothers Johnson?
I've always wondered what happened to the poster named "Guppy". He was a member at the original Delphi site, but I don't remember him making the transition to the new site. As I recall, he was the first liberal and political voice of opposition. I got the impression he was from Houston.