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Postby 112-1077774096 » Wed Jul 12, 2006 10:35 am

..........on a jet plane, dont know when i'll be back again

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:D
112-1077774096
 

Postby Paul C » Wed Jul 12, 2006 10:56 am

peewee wrote:..........on a jet plane, dont know when i'll be back again

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:D

Great song, Mos Def cover it  :bowdown
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Postby shanks72 » Wed Jul 12, 2006 10:52 pm

peewee wrote:..........on a jet plane, dont know when i'll be back again

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:D



:D

Always liked this song.  (Great pic btw.)
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REST IN PEACE DRUMMERPHIL, YNWA

underneath are the everlasting arms
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Postby Woollyback » Wed Jul 12, 2006 11:08 pm

just a little tip peewee; never get on a plane with john denver :D
b*ll*c*ks and s*i*e
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Postby anti-hero » Thu Jul 13, 2006 2:26 am

peewee wrote:..........on a jet plane, dont know when i'll be back again

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:D

:D  Woolyback.

----

OH BABE! I HATE TO GO...  :D
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Postby Lando_Griffin » Thu Jul 13, 2006 2:29 am

Woollyback wrote:just a little tip peewee; never get on a plane with john denver :D

:wwww
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Rafa Benitez - An unfinished Legend.
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Postby Ciggy » Thu Jul 13, 2006 7:55 am

Woollyback wrote:just a little tip peewee; never get on a plane with john denver :D

:laugh:  :D  :laugh:
There is no-one anywhere in the world at any stage who is any bigger or any better than this football club.

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REST IN PEACE PHIL, YOU WILL NEVER BE FORGOTTEN.
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Postby anfieldadorer » Thu Jul 13, 2006 8:09 am

:D

yeah, and don't listen to what he says:

follow me where i go, what i do who i know
make it part of you to be a part of me
follow me up and down all the way and all around
take my hand and say you'll follow me

:D
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Postby Judge » Thu Jul 13, 2006 10:04 am

Ciggy wrote:
Woollyback wrote:just a little tip peewee; never get on a plane with john denver :D

:laugh:  :D  :laugh:

or any of these:

January 2, 1945: British admiral Sir Bertram Ramsey were among those who died when a Lockheed Hudson climbed, banked, and dived into the ground on taking off from Toussus-le-Noble en route to Brussels, Belgium.

January 4, 1910: French aviation pioneer Leon Délagrange (36), who made the first passenger-carrying flight in January 1908, was killed when the port wing of his Blériot XI collapsed and folded.

January 5, 1941: English aviatrix Amy Johnson was killed during World War II when her transport plane crashed into the River Thames. It was never determined whether her plane was shot down or simply developed engine trouble. Her body was never recovered. In 1930, she flew solo from Great Britain to Australia.

January 6, 1977:Natalie "Dolly" Sinatra (82), mother of Frank Sinatra, was one of four people who died in the crash of a Gates Learjet which flew into a mountain shortly after taking off from Palm Springs Municipal Airport in California.

January 8, 2000: Former Grinderswitch bassist Joe Dan Petty (52) was killed in the crash of his private plane near Macon, Georgia. Petty had also worked as a guitar tech for the Allman Brothers Band.


January 8, 2003: A US Airways Express Beech 1900 turboprop commuter plane crashed and exploded shortly after taking off from Charlotte Douglas Airport in North Carolina. All 21 people aboard were killed. The plane had trouble with guidance equipment in the tail, causing it to flip over, and dive to the ground where it clipped a hangar and burst into flames. The crash was the first to involve deaths aboard a passenger or cargo airliner in the U.S. in more than a year. According to the Federal Aviation Administration, it was the third time in a decade that a year went by without a fatality on a commercial plane. Four of the people killed were Ralph Sylvia (62), a retired nuclear power executive; Keith Coyner, vice president of product development for General Nutrition Companies; Michael Otto Sullivan (44), vice president of sales for Cape Software; and Steven Krassas, a Fannie Mae financial services consultant.

January 9, 1998: Richard Graff, co-founder of the American Food and Wine Institute, died when his Cessna crashed into a power pole and greenhouse as he was attempting to land at the Salinas Airport. The plane burst into flames upon crashing.

January 11, 1938: Pan American's first pilot, Captain Edwin Musick, was among the six people killed when a Pan Am Sikorsky S-42 seaplane exploded in mid-air as the crew was attempting to dump fuel in preparing for an emergency landing at the Pango Pango airport in American Samoa.

January 11, 1980: Lousiana State University football coach Robert "Bo" Rein died when his Cessna Conquest plane veered off course, flew over the Atlantic, ran out of fuel, and crashed into the sea. The cause of the incident was never explained.

January 12, 1937: Explorer Martin Johnson was one of five killed (out of 13 aboard) when a Western Air Express Boeing 247 crashed into Stone Mountain while attempting to land at Burbank Airport in rain and fog.

January 15, 2000: Former CIA director Stansfield Turner (76) was seriously injured and his wife, Eli Karen Gilbert, killed in the crash of a tourist plane in Costa Rica. Three other passengers died and 13 others were injured when their Taxis Aereos Czech-made twin-engine plane crashed shortly after taking off from the Tobias Bolanos airport west of San Jose, Costa Rica. The plane fell on a house but did not injure the people inside.

January 15, 1943: Major Eric Mowbray Knight, author of Lassie, Come Home, was one of 35 people killed when their Douglas C-54 Skymaster blew up over Dutch Guiana (now Suriname) and crashed in the jungle 30 miles from Paramaribo. The plane, on a secret mission to the Casablanca Conference, may have been the victim of war-time intrigue. For a more details and a list of the people killed in the crash, see http://hometown.aol.com/swenolga/crash.html.

January 16, 1942: Actress Carole Lombard (33), her mother, her press agent, and 19 other people were killed when their Trans Continental & Western DC-3 airplane crashed near Las Vegas, Nevada, as they were returning from a war-bond promotion tour. Carole's death was the first war-related female casualty that the U.S. suffered during World War II. Off course because the captain of the plane was in the back talking to Lombard and the first officer was up front flying all alone in instrument conditions, the plane clipped a rocky ledge on Mt. Potosi, flipped into the face of a cliff, and exploded. Carole, best known for such comedies as Nothing Sacred, was married to Clark Gable. The Red Rock Ranch, where her plane crashed, was owned by Chet Lauck and Norris Goff, who played “Lum and Abner” on radio. It is now a state park.

January 17, 1996: Ibrahim Abacha, the eldest son of Nigeria's military ruler, and 14 others were killed when their HS-125 jet crashed in Nigeria.

January 20, 2002: Staff Sgt. Dwight J. Morgan (24) of California died in a helicopter crash in Afghanistan. His death was the focus of the May 6, 2002 episode of the WB Network's 7th Heaven, where the Reverend Camden of the TV show officiates at a memorial service attended by his real family.

January 22, 1973: Alexander Onassis, son of Ari Onassis, died the day after being critically wounded when his Piaggio airplane crashed shortly after taking off from the Athens Airport. As it took off, it inclined to the right, spun around in circles, and then smashed its nose, tail, and wing before stopping.

January 25, 1962: Montana governor Donald Nutter (47) was killed when his plane crashed during a snow storm.

January 26, 1928: Actor Earl Metcalfe (38) died when he fell from an airplane over Burbank, California.

January 26, 1947: Opera singer and actress Grace Moore (46) was one of 22 people killed when a KLM Royal Dutch DC-3 stalled and crashed while taking off from the Copenhagen, Denmark airport.

January 27, 1952: Former secretary of war Robert Patterson as well 29 others were killed when an airliner hit apartments at Elizabeth, New Jersey. Seven people died on the ground.

January 27, 1967: Astronauts Virgil "Gus" Grissom (41), Edward White (37), and Roger Chaffee (32) were killed when a fire broke out during a simulation launch of their Apollo 1 spacecraft. The fire was caused by a short circuit in a 100% oxygen atmosphere.

January 27, 2001: Ten people associated with the Oklahoma State University basketball team were killed when their twin-engine King Air 200 plane took off, banked hard right, and crashed in snowy weather near Byers, Colorado. Two basketball players, Daniel Lawson and Nate Fleming, and six staffers and broadcasters were among those killed.

January 28, 1986: Astronauts Ronald McNair, Ellison Onizuka, Judith Resnik, Michael Smith, Gregory Jarvis, and Francis Scobee were killed when the Space Shuttle Challenger exploded within seconds after its launch. Also killed was Christa McAuliffe (38), a teacher who was going aboard as a civilian. The explosion was caused by a defective O ring which allowed fuel to leak and ignite.

January 29, 1948: British air marshal Sir Arthur Cunningham, commander of the Royal Air Force in the Western Desert during World War II, was one of 31 who died when a British South American Airways Avro Tudo IV crashed into the Atlantic Ocean while approaching Bermuda while en route to Havana, Cuba. There was some controversy about this crash because BSAA's founder, ex-RAF air vice-marshall Bennett, claimed that a known wartime saboteur was seen standing near the plane shortly before take-off but prime minister Atlee blocked further investigation.

January 31, 1957: During the final test flight of the new Douglas DC-7B airliner over the San Fernando Valley, the plane ran almost head-on into a U.S. Air Force F-89J Scorpion jet fighter which was on a similar test flight. The pilot of the Air Force jet died as the aircraft plummeted into La Tuna Canyon in the Verdugo Mountains. Having lost its left wing, the DC-7B went into a high speed dive, began breaking up about 700 feet about the ground, and crashed into a Pacoima, California churchyard, killing all four crew members. The plane exploded into hundreds of flaming pieces that flew across the adjacent junior high school playground where three students were killed and 74 more injured. Among those killed were Roland Owen, the pilot of the Air Force jet, and Archie R. Twitchell (50), co-pilot of the DC-7B and an actor who appeared in 70 films, including Sunset Boulevard, I Wanted Wings, and Among the Living. One of the three students killed in the accident was the best friend of singer Richie Valens, who died in an airplane crash two years later.

January 31, 2000: An Alaska Airlines MD-80 jet carrying 88 people crashed on its way from Puerto Vallarta, Mexico to San Francisco, California. It went down near Anacapa Island 20 miles off shore of Los Angeles. No one survived the crash. Pilots reported problems with the stabilizer trim and asked to be diverted to Los Angeles shortly before the plane plummeted into the ocean. Among the dead were the following: Financial talk show host, Cynthia Oti, of San Francisco's KSFO-AM radio; guitarist Dean Forshee; Jean Gandesbery, author of Seven Mile Lake, and her husband Robert; missionaries Joe and Linda Knight, founders of Mission to Mexico; Seattle Times wine columnist Tom Stockley and his wife Margaret; Morris Thompson, retired president of Doyon Ltd., the U.S.'s largest private landowner, and former commissioner of the Bureau of Indian Affairs. He also hosted “Dialogue with Doyon” on Alaska Public Radio. His wife, Thelma, also died.

February 1, 1966: Nicholas Piantanida died during his descent after setting a new balloon flight record.

February 1, 2003: All seven astronauts were killed with the space shuttle Columbia broke apart as it re-entered the earth's atmosphere. The seven astronauts were Col. Rick D. Husband (45); Dr. Laurel Salton Clark (41); Col. Ilan Ramon (48), the first Israeli in space; Dr. Kalpana Chawla (41), the first India-born woman in space; Capt. David M. Brown (46); Lt. Col. Michael P. Anderson (43); and Cmdr. William C. McCool (41).

February 3, 1959: The Day The Music Died. Rock Hall of Famers Buddy Holly (22), the Big Bopper (J.P. Richardson) (29), and Ritchie Valens (17) as well as the pilot Roger Peterson died when their Beechcraft Bonanza plane crashed just outside Clear Lake, Iowa, during a stormy winter night. Holly was famous for many hits including “Peggy Sue.” The Big Bopper had one big hit, “Chantilly Lace.” And Valens was best known for his hit, “La Bamba.”

February 3, 2004: Saxophonist Cornelius Bumpus (58), who played for the Doobie Brothers and Steely Dan, died of a heart attack during an airplane flight too California.

February 6, 1958: Eight members of the Manchester United soccer team were among 23 people (out of 44 aboard) who were killed when a British European Airways Airspeed Ambassador airliner crashed while taking off from the Munich, Germany airport during a snowstorm. A German inquiry laid the blame on ice accumulation on the wings, while an English inquiry laid the blame on drag due to slush on the runway.

February 8, 2000: Popular radio host Bob Collins of WGN in Chicago died when two small aircraft collided over Zion, Illinois. Collins' plane, a two-seat Zlin aerobatic plane, crashed into the roof of the Midwestern Regional Medical Center blowing out windows in the top floor and injuring two people while the other plane, a four-seat Cessna 172, cracked down on a nearby street. Collins and his passenger as well as the student pilot in the other plane were killed in the crash.

February 11, 1985: Ben Abruzzo, a crew member on the Double Eagle II, the first balloon to cross the Atlantic Ocean nonstop, was killed along with several passengers when his twin-engine plane crashed shortly after taking off from the Albuquerque, New Mexico airport. An investigation showed that the probable cause of the crash was an external luggage compartment door which had been left open. The best idea from aircraft data was that he had pulled back on the gas of the closest prop to the door and then inadvertently feathered the wrong prop, thus rendering both engines inoperative. Before his death, Abruzzo was also a member of the first team to fly a balloon nonstop across the Pacific Ocean.

February 13, 1964: Ken Hubbs (23), Chicago Cubs 2nd baseman and 1962 Rookie of the Year, was killed in an airplane crash near Provo, Utah.

February 14, 1975: U.S. representative Jerry Pettis (59) of California died in a private plane crash near Banning, California.

February 14, 1998: Minor Judson "Buddy" Ward, former president of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, died when his single-engine Piper struck power lines and crashed in a grapefruit grove west of St. Lucie, Florida.

February 14, 2000: Former Indy car driver and CART team owner Tony Lee Bettenhausen Jr. (48), youngest son of a famous auto racing family, his wife Shirley, and two associates died in a private plane crash on a Kentucky farm 30 miles from Lexington. The likely cause of the accident was ice on the wings and the inexperience of the pilot. The plane plunged thousands of feet, crashed, and burned.

February 15, 1918: Dancer Vernon Castle (30) died is a plane accident in Fort Worth, Texas.

February 15, 1961: The entire U.S. Olympic figure skating team of 18 died when a Belgian Sabena Boeing 707 crashed near Brussels, Belgium. 72 passengers were killed as well as a farmer on the ground. Among the Olympians killed were figure skaters Dona Lee, William Hickox, Laurie Hickox, Laurence Richon Owen, Maribel Vinson Owen, Maribel Y. Owen, Dudly Richards, Diane Carol Sherbloom, and Stephanie Westerfield.

February 20, 2003: Pakistan's air force commander, Air Chief Marshal Mushaf Ali (55), his wife and four top officers were killed when an air force F-27 twin turboprop Fokker plane crashed in foggy weather in mountains near Kohat, Pakistan (near Pakistan's northwest border with Afghanistan), killing all 17 aboard. It was later rumored that Ali was an arms supplier and protector of Osama Bin Laden and the al-Qaeda network.

February 21, 1941: Sir Frederick Banting (49), co-discoverer of insulin, was killed in a plane crash.

February 22, 1943: Novelist Ben Robertson was killed and singer-actress Jane Froman injured when their Pan Am Boeing 314 flying boat crashed while attempting to land at Lisbon, Portugal. Froman's leg was so severely broken that doctors wanted to amputate it. She never walked right again after the accident. During the flight a woman changed seats with her and that woman was killed.

February 24, 1989: Nine passengers were sucked out of the back of a United Airlines Boeing 747 and fell to their deaths in the Pacific Ocean when a 40 foot hole blew open in the fuselage while the plane was flying 100 miles south of Hawaii (en route to New Zealand). 27 other passengers were injured in the accident resulting from a cargo door separation. Amazingly, the pilot was able to land the plane despite the aerodynamically impared fuselage. Months after the incident, passengers, crew and the captain started talking about a strange occurrence. Apparently they all felt the presence of angels who helped to hold the plane in the air. Some describe looking out the window and seeing a hand holding up the wing. [While this incident doesn't really fit under celebrities, it was interesting enough to include here because of the reported presence of angels.]

February 24, 2003: Juma Mohammed Mohammedi, Afghanistan's minister of mines and industry; Sun Changshen of the China Metallurgical Construction Company; four other Afghan officials, and the two-member crew were killed when their Cessna 402 plane crashed in the Arabian Sea shortly after taking off from the Karachi, Pakistan airport.

February 26, 2004: Macedonia president Boris Trajkovski was killed in a plane crash over Bosnia.

February 27, 1941: U.S. representative William Byron of Maryland was killed in a private plane crash near Jonesboro, Georgia.

February 28, 1966: Two astronauts, Charles Bassett II (35) and Elliot See, Jr. (39), died when their T-38 jet crashed while attempting an instrument landing at the McDonnell Aircraft field near St. Louis, Missouri.

March 1, 1962: Johnny Dieckman, world fly-casting champion, died in a plane crash near Chicago, Illinois.

March 2, 1996: All five members of the Brazilian rock group Mamonas Assassinas were killed when their plane crashed near Sao Paolo, Brazil.

March 2, 1997: Sailor Lars Bergstrom (62), a leading innovator in sailing, died in a plane crash.

March 5, 1963: Patsy Cline (30), Cowboy Copas (49), Hawkshaw Hawkins (41), and Cline's manager Randy Hughes were killed when their Piper PA-24 Comanche plane crashed near Camden, Tennessee, in adverse weather condisions. Cline was famous for her country hit, “Crazy.” Copas and Hawkins were Grand Ole Opry stars. They had been in Kansas City for a benefit for the widow of a country disc jockey who had died in a car crash. Country star Jack Anglin of the Johnny and Jack duo, was killed on the way to Cline's funeral.

March 9, 2000: Artyom Borovik, a well-known Moscow journalist, and Ziya Bazhayev, president of the Russian Oil Alliance, were among nine people killed when their Yak-40 jetliner crashed shortly after taking off from the Moscow airport.

March 14, 1915: Pioneer aviator Lincoln Beachey (28) died in a crash during an exhibition flight at the Panama-Pacific International Exposition in San Francisco, California.

March 14, 1980: Polish singer Anna Jantar, 22 members of the U.S. Olympic boxing team, and 64 others were killed when a Polskie Linie Lotnicze IIyushin IL-62 airplane crashed while attempting to land at the Warsaw, Poland airport. The plane's #2 engine disintegrated, causing severe damage to two other engines as well as the rudder and elevator control lines.

March 14, 1995: Argentine race car driver Silvio Oltra and Carlos Menem Jr., son of Argentina's president, were killed in a helicopter crash.

March 15, 1998: Israeli air force general Tal Shmuel Eldar (45) was killed in a helicopter crash.

March 16, 1991: Seven members of the Reba McEntire band were among ten people killed when their Hawker-Siddeley plane failed to clear a mountain top and crashed near San Diego, California.

March 17, 1957: Ramon Magsaysay (50), president of the Philippines; Gregorio Hernandez Jr., Secretary of Education; and Jesus Paredes Jr., Executive-Secretary of the Catholic Educational Association of the Philippines, and four others died when their converted army airplane (C-47 class) crashed into a tree at the top of Mt. Manunggal while returning to Manila after a campaign trip to Cebu City. Nestor Mata, a newspaper reporter, was the sole survivor.

March 18, 1939: Boeing's chief engineer Jack Kylstra and 12 others (including a KLM delegation) were killed when their Boeing 307 Stratoliner production prototype broke up after failing to recover from a spin near Adler, Washington.

March 19, 1977: Formula One driver Jose Carlos Pace (32) died in a plane crash.

March 19, 1982: When their Beechcraft Bonanza F35 plane buzzed the tour bus of heavy metal star Ozzy Osbourne, lead guitarist Randy Rhoads (25), Rachel Youngblood, and the pilot were killed as the plane crashed into a house in Leesburg, Florida.

March 20, 1998: John Bauer (47), chief executive officer of Dynaweld Inc., died in a plane crash.

March 21, 1942: Carl August Freiherr von Gablenz (48), founder of Lufthansa Airlines, was killed in an airplane crash.

March 21, 1987: Dino Martin (35), son of singer Dean Martin and a member of the Dino, Desi, and Billy pop group, was killed in the crash of an Air National Guard F-4C Phantom fighter jet in the San Bernardino Mountains of California. While flying inverted at 560 mph, his plane hit a wall of granite after entering a cloud. His pop group had one hit, “I'm a Fool.” His WSO (weapons systems operator) was also killed in the crash.

March 22, 1958: Mike Todd, his biographer Art Cohn, the pilot, and co-pilot were killed when his Lockheed Lodestar private plane, “The Lucky Liz,” named after Todd's wife, Elizabeth Taylor, crashed in bad weather in the Zuni Mountains of New Mexico. During their flight, ice had developed on their wings. The ice put too heavy a load on the engines, thus causing the crash. Todd had been on his way from Burbank to New York City to attend a Friars Club award meeting to receive the Showman of the Year award.

March 22, 1996: Col. Robert Overmyer, an astronaut who commanded one of the last successful flights of the space shuttle Challenger, died when the small plane he was test flying went into a spin and crashed near the Duluth, Minnesota airport. He was not able to free himself from the plane, a small-engine VK30 prototype, in time to use his parachute.

March 23, 1994: St. Louis weatherman Bob Richards of KDSK-TV died in a plane crash. He committed suicide after being publically humiliated on the Steve & D.C. radio show when they played tapes of his phone conversations with his girlfriend (he was married at the time).\

March 27, 1977: When a KLM Boeing 747 and a Pan American Boeing 747 jet collided on the runway of the Tenerife airport in the Canary Islands, 582 people were killed, including 249 on the KLM jet and 333 of 394 on board the Pan American jet. It was the deadliest air crash in aviation history. The collision was caused by the confusion in the airport after a terrorist's bomb exploded inside the airport terminal. Among those killed was Playboy playmate, actress, and producer Eve Meyer.

March 27, 1968: The first man in space, Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, was killed in the crash of his MiG-15UTI while on a training mission east of Moscow, Russia. His body apparently was found two hours later frozen and reeking of alcohol.

March 29, 1959: The president and founder of the Central African Republic, Barthelemy Boganda (49), died when his plane exploded in mid-flight. Foul play was likely.

March 29, 2001: Eighteen people were killed when a Gulfstream corporate jet owned by Hollywood producer Andrew Vajna (Die Hard with a Vengeance, Total Recall, Rambo) crashed as it attempted an instrument landing at the Aspen, Colorado airport on a misty snowy night. The plane crashed into a small hillside, jumped a culvert, and smashed through a fence. Among the 18 dead were Mirwais "Mir" Tukhi, an assignment editor at Fox 11 TV station in Los Angeles; Marissa Witham (22), an assignment desk researcher at the same station; Robert New (mid-30s), who had been president of UniCapital Corporation before it went bankrupt; Mario Aguilar, a businessman and aspiring actor; and Ori Greenberg (23), an aspiring director who won a directing award at the Moxie!/Santa Monica International Film Festival.

March 31, 1931: Notre Dame football coach Knute Rockne (43) was one of eight killed when a Trans Continental & Western Airways Fokker F10A plane crashed during a heavy storm near Bazaar, Kansas. One of the aircraft's wings separated in mid flight. In his 13 years of coaching the Notre Dame football team, they won 105 games, lost 12, tied 5, and won 6 national championships.

April 1, 1993: Winston Cup champion and NASCAR driver Alan Kulwicki (38) as well as three others were killed when the Hooters corporate Fairchild SA227-TT jet went down near Tri-City Airport at Bristol, Tennessee. Kulwicki had been enroute from a PR appearance in Knoxville to his next race in Bristol. The crash was caused by the pilot's failure to follow appropriate procedures when dealing with icing conditions. Kulwicki had been the 1992 NASCAR Winston Cup champion.

April 2, 1999: New Zealand boxer Michael Bell (33) died in a helicopter crash near Tuatapere, New Zealand.

April 3, 1961: Green Cross, a first-division Chilean soccer team, died in the crash of a Douglas DC-3 aircraft in the Las Lastimas Mountains near Llico, Chile. All 24 people aboard the plane were killed.

April 3, 1994: Walt Disney president Frank Wells (62), documentary filmmaker Beverly Johnson (46), and pilot Dave Walton (46) were killed when their helicopter crashed during a ski trip to the remote Ruby Mountains in Nevada. Another passenger, Paul Scannell, died nine days later from massive head injuries. Johnson's husband and partner Michael Hoover (50) was seriously injured but survived. Approximately 40 people have been killed in heli-skiing accidents since helicopter skiing caught on in 1975.

sorry for the length of list, but i wanted perspective  :D
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Postby NiftyNeil » Thu Jul 13, 2006 11:12 am

Add to that - Lynryd Skynryd, Stevie Ray Vaughn, Jonty Rhodes, Payne Stewart etc
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Postby Judge » Thu Jul 13, 2006 11:44 am

NiftyNeil wrote:Add to that - Lynryd Skynryd, Stevie Ray Vaughn, Jonty Rhodes, Payne Stewart etc

i copied the list off google, its actually 30 times longer, which also includes those youve mentioned nifty

  :rasp
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Postby 112-1077774096 » Thu Jul 13, 2006 1:26 pm

it will be hard to get on a plane with any of them now, the warning should have come before they flew

:D
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Postby Judge » Thu Jul 13, 2006 3:05 pm

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Postby account deleted by request » Thu Jul 13, 2006 3:13 pm

Judge wrote:ciggy adventures

I had always pictured Ciggy with dark hair. (Looking strangely like Morientes)  :D
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Postby Judge » Thu Jul 13, 2006 3:26 pm

s@int wrote:
Judge wrote:ciggy adventures

I had always pictured Ciggy with dark hair. (Looking strangely like Worzul gummidge)  :D

very harsh  :laugh:
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