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USA! USA! USA! - R_P - Apr 29, 2025 - 9:46pm
 
April 2025 Photo Theme - Red - NoEnzLefttoSplit - Apr 29, 2025 - 9:12pm
 
Trump - kurtster - Apr 29, 2025 - 9:09pm
 
Wordle - daily game - NoEnzLefttoSplit - Apr 29, 2025 - 8:54pm
 
Seriously AMAZING Magician - Steely_D - Apr 29, 2025 - 7:38pm
 
Derplahoma! - Red_Dragon - Apr 29, 2025 - 6:42pm
 
Artificial Intelligence - R_P - Apr 29, 2025 - 5:16pm
 
Israel - R_P - Apr 29, 2025 - 5:00pm
 
Democratic Party - R_P - Apr 29, 2025 - 3:58pm
 
Radio Paradise Comments - oldviolin - Apr 29, 2025 - 3:22pm
 
Things You Thought Today - oldviolin - Apr 29, 2025 - 2:46pm
 
Immigration - R_P - Apr 29, 2025 - 2:42pm
 
The Obituary Page - Alexandra - Apr 29, 2025 - 2:28pm
 
Lyrics that strike a chord today... - newwavegurly - Apr 29, 2025 - 1:57pm
 
Economix - R_P - Apr 29, 2025 - 1:29pm
 
NY Times Strands - ptooey - Apr 29, 2025 - 12:06pm
 
Canada - R_P - Apr 29, 2025 - 11:58am
 
Regarding cats - Proclivities - Apr 29, 2025 - 11:25am
 
Sweet horrible irony. - DaveInSaoMiguel - Apr 29, 2025 - 11:15am
 
NYTimes Connections - GeneP59 - Apr 29, 2025 - 9:48am
 
Baseball, anyone? - ScottFromWyoming - Apr 29, 2025 - 8:21am
 
TV shows you watch - islander - Apr 28, 2025 - 8:10pm
 
Ukraine - GeneP59 - Apr 28, 2025 - 7:35pm
 
Photography Forum - Your Own Photos - fractalv - Apr 28, 2025 - 5:36pm
 
Talk Behind Their Backs Forum - winter - Apr 28, 2025 - 3:07pm
 
Birthday wishes - triskele - Apr 28, 2025 - 9:15am
 
Mixtape Culture Club - ColdMiser - Apr 28, 2025 - 8:08am
 
Today in History - Red_Dragon - Apr 28, 2025 - 6:36am
 
Live Music - oldviolin - Apr 27, 2025 - 11:37pm
 
New Music - R_P - Apr 27, 2025 - 5:14pm
 
Dialing 1-800-Manbird - oldviolin - Apr 27, 2025 - 4:18pm
 
One Partying State - Wyoming News - ptooey - Apr 27, 2025 - 3:07pm
 
RP app for LG OLED TV - tmarko - Apr 27, 2025 - 5:48am
 
NASA & other news from space - ScottFromWyoming - Apr 26, 2025 - 9:32pm
 
Song of the Day - oldviolin - Apr 26, 2025 - 8:44pm
 
• • • The Once-a-Day • • •  - oldviolin - Apr 26, 2025 - 10:37am
 
M.A.G.A. - Red_Dragon - Apr 26, 2025 - 9:27am
 
DQ (as in 'Daily Quote') - Isabeau - Apr 26, 2025 - 5:22am
 
Graphs, Charts & Maps - KurtfromLaQuinta - Apr 25, 2025 - 6:42pm
 
Musky Mythology - R_P - Apr 25, 2025 - 4:13pm
 
Anti-War - R_P - Apr 25, 2025 - 4:04pm
 
Who is singing? - ledzeplisa - Apr 25, 2025 - 2:08pm
 
Bug Reports & Feature Requests - R567 - Apr 25, 2025 - 1:54pm
 
Got a Good (True) Ghost Story? - Isabeau - Apr 25, 2025 - 1:27pm
 
President(s) Musk/Trump - Red_Dragon - Apr 24, 2025 - 5:44pm
 
Recommended devices - bluewolverine - Apr 24, 2025 - 5:17pm
 
RightWingNutZ - R_P - Apr 24, 2025 - 4:11pm
 
China - R_P - Apr 24, 2025 - 3:18pm
 
Republican Party - Red_Dragon - Apr 24, 2025 - 3:17pm
 
Freedom of speech? - R_P - Apr 24, 2025 - 1:00pm
 
Russia - Red_Dragon - Apr 24, 2025 - 9:36am
 
Breaking News - Red_Dragon - Apr 24, 2025 - 8:15am
 
YouTube: Music-Videos - Steely_D - Apr 24, 2025 - 7:28am
 
Commercializing Facebook - R_P - Apr 23, 2025 - 2:29pm
 
• • • BRING OUT YOUR DEAD • • •  - Isabeau - Apr 23, 2025 - 2:22pm
 
Business as Usual - R_P - Apr 23, 2025 - 1:05pm
 
Vinyl Only Spin List - Steely_D - Apr 23, 2025 - 9:38am
 
Radio Paradise Staion Break - geoff_morphini - Apr 23, 2025 - 8:16am
 
Geeky funny - Proclivities - Apr 23, 2025 - 7:42am
 
Hockey + Fantasy Hockey - dischuckin - Apr 23, 2025 - 7:13am
 
Real Time with Bill Maher - R_P - Apr 22, 2025 - 1:51pm
 
260,000 Posts in one thread? - Lazy8 - Apr 22, 2025 - 12:27pm
 
Happy Earth Day - R_P - Apr 22, 2025 - 12:26pm
 
Tesla (motors, batteries, etc) - islander - Apr 22, 2025 - 10:03am
 
Thimerosal Vaccines linked to neurological disorders - islander - Apr 21, 2025 - 8:48pm
 
Cryptic Posts - Leave Them Guessing - GeneP59 - Apr 21, 2025 - 8:40am
 
Name My Band - GeneP59 - Apr 20, 2025 - 7:45pm
 
::yesterday:: - Red_Dragon - Apr 20, 2025 - 3:35pm
 
Poetry Forum - oldviolin - Apr 20, 2025 - 8:43am
 
Favourite Scriptures - black321 - Apr 20, 2025 - 8:30am
 
Museum Of Bad Album Covers - Proclivities - Apr 20, 2025 - 7:55am
 
I Thought Earth Had Only One Moon - Red_Dragon - Apr 19, 2025 - 5:06pm
 
The war on funk is over! - R_P - Apr 19, 2025 - 4:02pm
 
Other Medical Stuff - kurtster - Apr 19, 2025 - 1:43pm
 
Quick! I need a chicken... - Isabeau - Apr 19, 2025 - 1:00pm
 
Index » Radio Paradise/General » General Discussion » The Obituary Page Page: Previous  1, 2, 3 ... 140, 141, 142, 143  Next
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Antigone

Antigone Avatar

Location: A house, in a Virginian Valley
Gender: Female


Posted: Dec 27, 2015 - 1:57pm

Haskell Wexler.

Dang.



R_P

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Gender: Male


Posted: Aug 9, 2015 - 10:49pm

Frances Kelsey, FDA Officer Who Blocked Thalidomide, Dies at 101

ScottFromWyoming

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Location: Powell
Gender: Male


Posted: Mar 2, 2015 - 11:41am

From 2009:

Sir Dai Llewellyn

Notorious Lothario known as the 'Conquistador of the Canapé Circuit’ — or simply 'Dirty Dai’ 

Stories of Llewellyn’s priapic exploits, mostly gleefully retailed by the Don Juan himself, proved irresistible to the tabloid press. The journalist Peter McKay, who became a friend, was once having lunch with him at San Lorenzo when Llewellyn suddenly leapt from the table and disappeared for half an hour. “What happened?” asked McKay when his host returned, looking flushed. “Oh, I just remembered,” said Llewellyn. “I left my secretary tied up in the bath.”
aflanigan

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Location: At Sea
Gender: Male


Posted: Feb 13, 2015 - 9:00am

David Carr, Times Critic and Champion of Media, Dies at 58


2cats

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Location: Oklahoma
Gender: Female


Posted: Feb 12, 2015 - 3:52pm

 K_Love wrote:

I was sad to hear about that on Today this morning. :(

 
What a loss. I will miss his stories.
K_Love

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Gender: Female


Posted: Feb 12, 2015 - 2:48pm

 kurtster wrote: 
I was sad to hear about that on Today this morning. :(
kurtster

kurtster Avatar

Location: where fear is not a virtue
Gender: Male


Posted: Feb 12, 2015 - 2:41pm

CBS News correspondent Bob Simon, 1941-2015
aflanigan

aflanigan Avatar

Location: At Sea
Gender: Male


Posted: Feb 12, 2015 - 1:40pm

 RichardPrins wrote:
Japanese designer of soy-sauce bottle dies at 85

The Japanese designer responsible for both the classic soy sauce bottle and the train connecting Tokyo to its major international airport has died, his company said Monday.

Kenji Ekuan, who was 85, was the brains behind the sauce dispenser first used by Kikkoman in Japan in 1961.

The upside-down funnel shape with a red cap was subsequently exported around the globe and became visual shorthand for soy sauce as the craze for Japanese food swept abroad.

Ekuan, who was also a Buddhist monk, was credited with numerous corporate logos during Japan’s industrial boom era, as well as creating the look of Yamaha’s VMAX motorcycles and the Narita Express train that ferries passengers to and from Tokyo’s main international gateway.

A former president of the International Council of Societies of Industrial Design, and a recipient of the council’s Colin King Grand Prix, Ekuan was also made officier de L’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by France and awarded the Order of the Rising Sun by Japan.

The company he founded, GK Design Group, said he died on Sunday after suffering from sinus problems.



 
Sounds like he was the Japanese counterpart of Raymond Loewy.


R_P

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Gender: Male


Posted: Feb 12, 2015 - 1:38pm

Steve Strange, Visage frontman and New Romantic figure, 1959-2015
R_P

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Gender: Male


Posted: Feb 9, 2015 - 3:37pm

Japanese designer of soy-sauce bottle dies at 85

The Japanese designer responsible for both the classic soy sauce bottle and the train connecting Tokyo to its major international airport has died, his company said Monday.

Kenji Ekuan, who was 85, was the brains behind the sauce dispenser first used by Kikkoman in Japan in 1961.

The upside-down funnel shape with a red cap was subsequently exported around the globe and became visual shorthand for soy sauce as the craze for Japanese food swept abroad.

Ekuan, who was also a Buddhist monk, was credited with numerous corporate logos during Japan’s industrial boom era, as well as creating the look of Yamaha’s VMAX motorcycles and the Narita Express train that ferries passengers to and from Tokyo’s main international gateway.

A former president of the International Council of Societies of Industrial Design, and a recipient of the council’s Colin King Grand Prix, Ekuan was also made officier de L’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by France and awarded the Order of the Rising Sun by Japan.

The company he founded, GK Design Group, said he died on Sunday after suffering from sinus problems.


Lazy8

Lazy8 Avatar

Location: The Gallatin Valley of Montana
Gender: Male


Posted: Aug 24, 2014 - 5:33pm

Jean Redpath, Prolific Scottish Folk Singer, Dies at 77

Photo
 
Jean Redpath, shown in 1986, drew on a deep historical knowledge to record some 40 albums. Credit Ruby Washington/The New York Times

Jean Redpath, an esteemed Scottish folk singer whose arresting repertoire of ancient ballads, Robert Burns poems and contemporary tunes helped energize a genre she described as a “brew of pure flavor and pure emotion,” died on Thursday at a hospice in Arizona. She was 77.


Jean Redpath was a force of nature in traditional music. The voice of an angel and the memory of a library, she recorded and celebrated the music of her native Scotland, especially the works of Robert Burns.

Here's a taste of what the world will be missing:

DaveInSaoMiguel

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Location: No longer in a hovel in effluent Damnville, VA
Gender: Male


Posted: Jul 29, 2014 - 7:03pm

Last living crew member of Enola Gay dies in Georgia at age 93


helenofjoy

helenofjoy Avatar

Location: Lincoln, Nebraska
Gender: Female


Posted: Jul 28, 2014 - 5:28am

 RichardPrins wrote:
Peter Marler, Graphic Decoder of Birdsong, Dies at 86 - NYTimes.com
The conventional wisdom among animal scientists in the 1950s was that birds were genetically programmed to sing, that monkeys made noise to vent their emotions, and that animal communication, in general, was less like human conversation than like a bodily function.

Then Peter Marler, a British-born animal behaviorist, showed that certain songbirds not only learned their songs, but also learned to sing in a dialect peculiar to the region in which they were born. And that a vervet monkey made one noise to warn its troop of an approaching leopard, another to report the sighting of an eagle, and a third to alert the group to a python on the forest floor.

These and other discoveries by Dr. Marler, who died July 5 in Winters, Calif., at 86, heralded a sea change in the study of animal intelligence. At a time when animal behavior was seen as a set of instinctive, almost robotic responses to environmental stimuli, he was one of the first scientists to embrace the possibility that some animals, like humans, were capable of learning and transmitting their knowledge to other members of their species. His hypothesis attracted a legion of new researchers in ethology, as animal behavior research is also known, and continues to influence thinking about cognition.

Dr. Marler, who made his most enduring contributions in the field of birdsong, wrote more than a hundred papers during a long career that began at Cambridge University, where he received his Ph.D. in zoology in 1954 (the second of his two Ph.D.s.), and that took him around the world conducting field research while teaching at a succession of American universities.

Dr. Marler taught at the University of California, Berkeley, from 1957 to 1966; at Rockefeller University in New York from 1966 to 1989; and at the University of California, Davis, where he led animal behavior research, from 1989 to 1994. He was an emeritus professor there at his death.

Two technological breakthroughs were central to his field research — the portable tape recorder and the sonic spectrograph, a device developed in World War II for recording and graphing the signature sounds of enemy ships’ propellers.

Using both, Dr. Marler was one of the first ethologists to produce graphic snapshots of birdsong — streaks of ink on paper, like an electrocardiogram, showing the wave-frequency, modulation and pitch of various calls and songs.

From that data, Dr. Marler and his colleagues discovered that some species had repertoires of only a few songs while others had as many as 100. They found they could analyze and differentiate calls within the same species — calls for roosting, seeking food, mating, territory-marking, warning of danger and summoning help, known as mobbing, to ward off an intruder. (...)


  Huge loss for the world.  Certainly for the animals.


R_P

R_P Avatar

Gender: Male


Posted: Jul 27, 2014 - 11:57pm

Peter Marler, Graphic Decoder of Birdsong, Dies at 86 - NYTimes.com
The conventional wisdom among animal scientists in the 1950s was that birds were genetically programmed to sing, that monkeys made noise to vent their emotions, and that animal communication, in general, was less like human conversation than like a bodily function.

Then Peter Marler, a British-born animal behaviorist, showed that certain songbirds not only learned their songs, but also learned to sing in a dialect peculiar to the region in which they were born. And that a vervet monkey made one noise to warn its troop of an approaching leopard, another to report the sighting of an eagle, and a third to alert the group to a python on the forest floor.

These and other discoveries by Dr. Marler, who died July 5 in Winters, Calif., at 86, heralded a sea change in the study of animal intelligence. At a time when animal behavior was seen as a set of instinctive, almost robotic responses to environmental stimuli, he was one of the first scientists to embrace the possibility that some animals, like humans, were capable of learning and transmitting their knowledge to other members of their species. His hypothesis attracted a legion of new researchers in ethology, as animal behavior research is also known, and continues to influence thinking about cognition.

Dr. Marler, who made his most enduring contributions in the field of birdsong, wrote more than a hundred papers during a long career that began at Cambridge University, where he received his Ph.D. in zoology in 1954 (the second of his two Ph.D.s.), and that took him around the world conducting field research while teaching at a succession of American universities.

Dr. Marler taught at the University of California, Berkeley, from 1957 to 1966; at Rockefeller University in New York from 1966 to 1989; and at the University of California, Davis, where he led animal behavior research, from 1989 to 1994. He was an emeritus professor there at his death.

Two technological breakthroughs were central to his field research — the portable tape recorder and the sonic spectrograph, a device developed in World War II for recording and graphing the signature sounds of enemy ships’ propellers.

Using both, Dr. Marler was one of the first ethologists to produce graphic snapshots of birdsong — streaks of ink on paper, like an electrocardiogram, showing the wave-frequency, modulation and pitch of various calls and songs.

From that data, Dr. Marler and his colleagues discovered that some species had repertoires of only a few songs while others had as many as 100. They found they could analyze and differentiate calls within the same species — calls for roosting, seeking food, mating, territory-marking, warning of danger and summoning help, known as mobbing, to ward off an intruder. (...)

hobiejoe

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Location: Still in the tunnel, looking for the light.
Gender: Male


Posted: Mar 29, 2013 - 4:47pm

RIP Richard Griffiths, from Uncle Monty to Vernon Dursley.
pigtail

pigtail Avatar

Location: Southern California
Gender: Female


Posted: Mar 18, 2013 - 12:33pm

 Lazy8 wrote:
Songs: Ohia - Farewell Transmission




Jason Molina RIP
Monday, 10AM. Not the time you expect to get a telephone call from an old friend. But sadly, I'm accustomed to it. Far too much.

On Saturday night, March 16, 2013, Jason Molina, the songwriting force behind Songs:Ohia and Magnolia Electric Company died from a body that had been drowned in alcohol for years on end. He was far too young to die and his friends and fans have experienced a massive loss.
 
Sorry to hear of another senseless death due to alcohol.{#Hug}


miamizsun

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Location: (3283.1 Miles SE of RP)
Gender: Male


Posted: Mar 18, 2013 - 10:59am

 Lazy8 wrote:
Songs: Ohia - Farewell Transmission




Jason Molina RIP
Monday, 10AM. Not the time you expect to get a telephone call from an old friend. But sadly, I'm accustomed to it. Far too much.

On Saturday night, March 16, 2013, Jason Molina, the songwriting force behind Songs:Ohia and Magnolia Electric Company died from a body that had been drowned in alcohol for years on end. He was far too young to die and his friends and fans have experienced a massive loss.


 
my condolences {#Hug}
Lazy8

Lazy8 Avatar

Location: The Gallatin Valley of Montana
Gender: Male


Posted: Mar 18, 2013 - 10:51am

Songs: Ohia - Farewell Transmission




Jason Molina RIP
Monday, 10AM. Not the time you expect to get a telephone call from an old friend. But sadly, I'm accustomed to it. Far too much.

On Saturday night, March 16, 2013, Jason Molina, the songwriting force behind Songs:Ohia and Magnolia Electric Company died from a body that had been drowned in alcohol for years on end. He was far too young to die and his friends and fans have experienced a massive loss.



Manbird

Manbird Avatar

Location: La Villa Toscana
Gender: Male


Posted: Mar 14, 2013 - 10:13am

 DaveInVA wrote:

There are no commercially made breads that don't have things I am allergic to in them so I have to make my own. Got pretty good at it too. The biggest killers are corn syrup, corn oil, milk and egg products are in all of them in some variation. Was fun making a pizza with no onions, cow cheese etc. I made a whole wheat and rice flour crust and used goat cheese as I am ok for Goat dairy stuff. I am trying to find a source for goat milk locally so I can go back to making my own yogurt. Most all the commercial "goat" yogurts and cheeses are really made mostly from cow milk with tapioca added to make it taste like goat. Most have no goat products in them at all ... 

 
Mag has to make her own bread as well. It's actually not too bad, I have a little every now and then. Like you, there is very little in this world that she can eat without getting sick. 
Proclivities

Proclivities Avatar

Location: Paris of the Piedmont
Gender: Male


Posted: Mar 14, 2013 - 9:42am

 DaveInVA wrote:

There are no commercially made breads that don't have things I am allergic to in them so I have to make my own. Got pretty good at it too. The biggest killers are corn syrup, corn oil, milk and egg products are in all of them in some variation. Was fun making a pizza with no onions, cow cheese etc. I made a whole wheat and rice flour crust and used goat cheese as I am ok for Goat dairy stuff. I am trying to find a source for goat milk locally so I can go back to making my own yogurt. Most all the commercial "goat" yogurts and cheeses are really made mostly from cow milk with tapioca added to make it taste like goat. Most have no goat products in them at all ... 

 
Years ago, I was the dairy buyer at a Whole Foods in Chapel Hill; we used to get fresh goat milk and yogurt from a guy whose farm was somewhere around Roanoke.  I can't remember the name, and that's probably about 90 miles from you anyhow.

*edit: There is a goat farm called Sleepy Goat, pretty close to you, across the NC border, off of Route 86, but it looks like they may only sell the cheeses, not the milk.


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