|
Post by jimsteel on May 26, 2022 16:22:40 GMT -5
Yes drummer Alan White dead at 72
|
|
|
Post by jimsteel on May 26, 2022 16:23:57 GMT -5
Depeche Mode’s Andrew Fletcher dies aged 60
|
|
|
Post by neilybob on May 26, 2022 17:54:54 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by TTX on May 26, 2022 17:56:40 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by jimsteel on May 28, 2022 9:15:27 GMT -5
Arlene Kotil, a former infielder who played in the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League, passed away at the age of 88 on May 27th. Born in Chicago, Illinois, Arlene Kotil started playing organized softball at age 16 for the Blue Island Stars, one of four teams in the defunct All-American Girls minor league in Chicago. Kotil joined the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League in 1949 while still attending high school. She was assigned to the Chicago Colleens/Springfield Sallies rookie touring teams in order to develop her skills. Basically, a line drive hitter, she covered first base for her hometown team, playing in over 50 cities across 16 states from New York City south through Florida throughout the Midwest and south into Texas. The Colleens and the Sallies played over 75 exhibition games against each other between June and September of that year. One of her highlights during the trip was hitting an inside-the-park home run against Springfield to tie a game at 7–7 in the eighth inning. Kotil was promoted to the Muskegon Lassies in 1950.[1] During the midseason, the league was losing money and fans, and the teams and host cities were changing almost every year. By that time, baseball was booming in Kalamazoo, Michigan. This was a good fact for Kalamazoo, as the city was granted the Lassies franchise on a trial basis when the city of Muskegon could no longer support them.[6] Then, Kotil was sent to the South Bend Blue Sox in the same transaction that brought pitcher Lillian Faralla to the Kalamazoo Lassies. The next year she was a member of the 1951 Blue Sox championship team, even though she did not play during the postseason. Arlene Kotil is part of Women in Baseball, a permanent display based at the Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum in Cooperstown, New York, which was unveiled in 1988 to honor the entire All-American Girls Professional Baseball
|
|
|
Post by jimsteel on May 28, 2022 15:31:02 GMT -5
AMERICAN GRAFFITI'S' BO HOPKINS DEAD AT 80
|
|
|
Post by neilybob on May 28, 2022 18:13:52 GMT -5
RIP EVERYBODY.
|
|
|
Post by TTX on May 28, 2022 18:33:43 GMT -5
according to Neil, we're all dead....about time this was known.
|
|
|
Post by on_the_edge on May 28, 2022 18:39:47 GMT -5
What? This is news to some? They did not know we have been dead and in Hell for a long, long time? Huh.
|
|
|
Post by neilybob on May 28, 2022 20:55:01 GMT -5
What? This is news to some? They did not know we have been dead and in Hell for a long, long time? Huh. dude i was being respectful to these guys. troy is being a ass is all.
|
|