T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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696.1 | ex | MKOTS3::ROY_C | | Wed Apr 03 1996 17:38 | 3 |
| I agree, Valvano was an inspiration. BTW, he coached the Wolfpack from
NC State hence the connection to the nausea-creating Duran Duran ditty.
|
696.2 | not as good as Jim Valvano | CSLALL::SECURITY | LUNCHBOX | Wed Apr 03 1996 19:56 | 26 |
| I wish I could come up with a dramatic quote like you did, Chris. I
remember that speech, not a dry eye in the place. My hero will pale in
comparison, but, here goes:
My all time hero is Robert Kneivel, otherwise known as Evel Kneivel. He
got his nickname in little league baseball, "Evil Kneivel", but changed
the spelling due to his religeous beliefs. He saw a stunt show with his
grandfather around age 12, and when he came home he set up 2 doors and
attempted to jump his bicycle from one to the other (rather
unsuccessfully!!). He began his stunt career with Triumph motorcycles,
but changed to Harley Davidson midway through his career. I was
fascinated with him as early as I can remember. I still have 2 of his
toys; the stunt cycle and the exploding funny car. I have scars on my
body from trying to imitate him on my Huffy as a child. He remains in
my mind as the ultimate living/dying god. His worst accident occurred
when he attempted to jump the fountains at Caesar's Palace. His bike
was way too heavy, and he was thrust over the handlebars and run over
by the motorcycle. I think he broke 70+ bones that time. His son,
Robbie successfully jumped the fountains in the '80's. I was really
hurt when he was arrested for beating up a prostitute a few years ago.
He has an informercial out for a painkiller. It's too bad. I've been
looking for a videotape, "Evel Kneivel's greatest hits", but with no
luck, since it has been out of circulation for quite a few years.
Anyway, he was always a big hero to me.
lunchbox
|
696.3 | | BSS::E_WALKER | | Wed Apr 03 1996 20:16 | 4 |
| Evel Knievel was the man! I also tried to imitate his stunts on my
bike. I used to worship this guy when I was about 8 or 9. I still have
his action figure and bike, although both were severely damaged during
re-enactments of his most famous stunts.
|
696.4 | | CSLALL::SECURITY | LUNCHBOX | Wed Apr 03 1996 20:23 | 7 |
| That bike is great!!!! The one with the ramp that you rev up to about a
million RPM, and he takes off, right?! Mine is a little beat, too, but
still usable. I used to set up about 20 plastic cars and rev him up
until the whole neighborhood heard the flippin' thing and he would take
off, eventually hitting a wall at some brutal speed. I have him
displayed on a shelf in my room, but every now and then I take him down
and let him do his thing!!!!
|
696.5 | | BSS::SMITH_S | lycanthrope | Wed Apr 03 1996 20:27 | 1 |
| I liked watching him crash.
|
696.6 | | CSLALL::SECURITY | LUNCHBOX | Wed Apr 03 1996 20:29 | 8 |
| re.5
>I liked watching him crash.
I can't remember him doing much else...
|
696.7 | only one choice for me, really... | ACISS2::LEECH | extremist | Thu Apr 04 1996 10:47 | 44 |
| Heroes...hmmm...
I guess it depends on what you are talking about. Sports heroes-
those in your sport you try to model yourself after (at least in
ability and perhaps attitude); spiritual heroes- those who may not make
the newspapers, yet are living examples of how to live for God;
financial heroes- those who you would like to pattern yourself after
to be successful in this aspect of life. Rarely can you find this in
one person alone.
My hero? This may sound corny (and perhaps obvious to those who know
me), but there can be only one choice for me. There is only one aspect
of life that truly matters, that really can make a lasting difference in
this world- an aspect that has meaning after you pass on to the next world.
My hero is Jesus. I did not know Him when he walked this earth, but
walk this earth He did, and he changed it forever. People can rightly
claim that religion has caused many problems in the world, but these
problems are man's own fault, not the fault of the ideals, the example,
or the life the Jesus lead while he was here. He lived the life he
espoused under difficult times and circumstances and didn't falter.
His sacrifice and example- whether you believe Him to have been God as
well as man or not- live on to this day, to benefit all who believe in
Him.
The body will wither and die...sooner or later. How we live our lives
is all that really matters- not wealth, fame or popularity. What we
own forever is our spirit, and it is in this aspect of our existence
that we can really make a positive, eternal difference in ourselves and
others. Jesus laid the foundation and set the example of how to live
life spiritually to the fullest, in a way that benefits those around
us; and by following this example, we end up helping ourselves in the
process.
I am not a prime (or even a good) example of how to live as Jesus did.
Hopefully, I will grow as time goes on, using the example that was left
by Jesus. By doing so, even *I* can make a difference that matters.
NOTE: This note is not meant in any way, shape or form to be a
"thumper" or proslytizing note.
-steve
|
696.8 | | SCASS1::EDITEX::MOORE | GetOuttaMyChair | Thu Apr 04 1996 16:04 | 2 |
|
Godzilla.
|
696.9 | | USAT05::HALLR | God loves even you! | Thu Apr 04 1996 17:51 | 1 |
| amen, Steve.
|
696.10 | | CSLALL::SECURITY | LUNCHBOX | Thu Apr 04 1996 18:01 | 9 |
| It's too bad that this topic has been around a whole day and only 3
heroes (4 if you include Godzilla) have been registered. I agree with
Steve on Jesus, but he is my savior, sadly, not my hero. I guess I
should learn to put the two together. Anyway, my point is, are there no
more heroes, do 'boxers not have heroes, why are Jimmy V, Evel Kneivel,
Godzilla and Jesus the only ones people have taken the time to mention?
lunchbox
|
696.11 | | SMURF::BINDER | Uva uvam vivendo variat | Thu Apr 04 1996 19:07 | 58 |
| .10
You want a hero? Here, take this one: Paul L. Anderson (PLA)
PLA was my grandfather, my mother's father. He was a bigoted SOB who
ridiculed organized religion and actually thought blacks are
genetically inferior, but he continues to be an inspiration to me
because it was he whose life showed me that you can do anything you
want if you're willing to persevere.
In college, he wanted to go out for football. His parents forbade it,
saying it was too rough and dangerous. But they had never heard of
lacrosse... He was also an excellent gymnast, specializing in the
flying rings. His athleticism stood him in good stead when he later
lost first one leg, then the other, to diabetes. Even without his legs
he was active; he was a woodworker, and he built himself a scooter for
getting around the house. Outside, he used strap-on stumps and forearm
crutches.
He took a degree from Lehigh in chemical engineering, but he never
worked a day in his life as a chemical engineer. He became one of the
foremost pictorial photographers of his time, ranking with Struss and
Steiglitz. For years he carried on a feud with Paul Weston; Weston
insisted that wire-sharp focus was the crucial essential of a good
picture. (Like G. B. Shaw's famous remark, "Of course it's a good
play; he's a good playwright," Weston argued that any picture taken by
any good photographer could not fail to be excellent if only he'd use
wire-sharp focus.) PLA and many like him preferred the softer, more
artistic focus of the Struss Pictorial Lens (a single meniscus). Once,
just to twit Weston, PLA made a picture of a dead fish on a plate.
Perfectly composed, meticulously executed, wire-sharp focus and all, it
was still an awful picture.
PLA hand-sensitized all his own printing papers. He was a master of
multiple-gum work; I have a seven-exposure multiple gum that is so
velvety you could almost wear it. He was also a master of bromoil, a
technique that involves bleaching out the silver from a bromide print
such that the gelatin is left absorbent and then, with s stagfoot
brush, stippling ink on the surface. Where the silver image was
darker, there's more gelatin, so more ink gets absorbed there than in
lighter areas. It's devilishly painstaking.
PLA wrote three books on pictorial photography and photographic
technique; two of them are still in print. He also wrote dozens of
short stories for various outdoor magazines and for Boy's Life. And he
wrote seven novels, five of them about ancient Rome and the other two a
pair of coming-of-age tales about boys in a New England private prep
school. All of the Roman novels are still in print.
PLA's numerous photography prizes and awards showed me that it's worth
it to bust your buns to get something perfect.
His writings showed me that you can pick up a career for which you have
no ostensible qualifications and make a go of it.
His bigotry showed me that even a brilliant person can make a serious
mistake by judging other people by who their fathers and mothers were
instead of by what they do.
|
696.12 | | CSLALL::SECURITY | LUNCHBOX | Thu Apr 04 1996 19:16 | 7 |
| Were you lucky enough to know him, or is this based on reading his
works and from what relatives have told you? Anyway, you're lucky to
have such strong blood in your veins. Again, my pathetic paragraph
about Evel Kneivel seems insignifigant compared to Jim Valvano, Jesus
and Paul L. Anderson.
dave
|
696.13 | Here're mine | MARIN::WANNOOR | | Thu Apr 04 1996 21:10 | 12 |
|
OK...for me:
Anwar Sadat
Ishak Rabin
Mary, the Queen of the Scotts
Steve Callahan (adrift at sea for 76 days alone and survived
to tell)
My cat, Wellie. He wakedd me up at 3am, resulting in my surprising
and stopping a thief on deck, who was ready to take off with
my outboard 2 weeks ago.
|
696.14 | oops | MARIN::WANNOOR | | Thu Apr 04 1996 21:17 | 6 |
|
preemptive strike here before the linguistic and grammar
police attack.....
I meant Wellie "woke or had awakened me", no such word as waked or
wakedd!
|
696.15 | Richard Feynman | SHRCTR::PJOHNSON | aut disce, aut discede | Fri Apr 05 1996 08:18 | 0 |
696.16 | | SMURF::BINDER | Uva uvam vivendo variat | Fri Apr 05 1996 11:58 | 14 |
| .12
I knew him a little. He died when I was 10, but I'd spent a few weeks
with him over the years. When I was 8, he gave me an autographed copy
of one of the prep-school novels. It was great.
I have some of his photographic equipment, including his cameras. I'm
still using some of it, but not the cameras.
I have many of the letters he wrote to my mother; he was an inveterate
letter-writer, and - as it turns out - an amazing father.
Knievel isn't insignificant, just different. We find our heroes where
we may, and everyone's take on what makes a hero is unique.
|
696.17 | Talliesin Reese | DECLNE::REESE | My REALITY check bounced | Fri Apr 05 1996 14:33 | 14 |
| My father. A gentle, yet funny man; son of Welsh immigrants.
He never learned to read a note of music, yet he could play the
piano and sing better than most professionals.
He taught me not to hate.
He taught me to enjoy and appreciate the differences of all our
neighbors and friends in an ethnically mixed melting pot called
Wyoming Valley, PA.
He taught me to laugh at myself and NOT to laugh at others; laughing
WITH was OK, laughing AT was not.
He taught me that money was not the measure of success; love of
family and friends was the true measure of success.
|
696.18 | | ACISS1::BATTIS | Chicago Bulls-1996 world champs | Fri Apr 05 1996 15:18 | 2 |
|
My hero is mz_debra. I want to be just like her when I grow up.
|
696.19 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | Madison...5'2'' 95 lbs. | Fri Apr 05 1996 15:24 | 3 |
| You better start smoking alot of pot!
Didn't your mom tell you what becomes endowed when you smoke weed?
|
696.20 | munchie city | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | put the opening in back | Fri Apr 05 1996 15:26 | 1 |
| Yeah, your stomach.
|
696.21 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Mr. Logo | Fri Apr 05 1996 15:36 | 4 |
|
Jack, the key there is Battis said when he grows up. That ain't
happenin! Besides, can there really be more than 1 Mz_Debra?
|
696.22 | | POWDML::HANGGELI | Little Chamber of Full Body Frisks | Fri Apr 05 1996 15:40 | 3 |
|
Mark: start drinking buttermilk.
|
696.23 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Mr. Logo | Fri Apr 05 1996 15:41 | 4 |
|
You're gonna need to get a couple of cats as well, Mark. And then give
them cool names.
|
696.24 | | BUSY::SLABOUNTY | Don't like my p_n? 1-800-328-7448 | Fri Apr 05 1996 16:10 | 5 |
|
RE: -1
Or name them Fargas and Othello.
|
696.25 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Mr. Logo | Fri Apr 05 1996 16:23 | 3 |
|
I sense that shawn will never reach infinity.....
|
696.26 | | POWDML::HANGGELI | Little Chamber of Full Body Frisks | Fri Apr 05 1996 16:25 | 7 |
|
HEY!!!
<glare>
|
696.27 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Mr. Logo | Fri Apr 05 1996 16:41 | 3 |
|
Wow.... she gave shawn a glare..... he is screwed now.
|
696.28 | | ACISS1::BATTIS | Chicago Bulls-1996 world champs | Fri Apr 05 1996 16:45 | 3 |
|
I sense a strange disturbance in the force. something I've not felt
in a very long time....... shawn is about to be smacked, but good.
|
696.29 | | BUSY::SLABOUNTY | Don't like my p_n? 1-800-328-7448 | Fri Apr 05 1996 16:59 | 7 |
|
> Wow.... she gave shawn a glare..... he is screwed now.
Hmmm, you mean all my 'BOX hoovering might have finally paid
off?
|
696.30 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Mr. Logo | Fri Apr 05 1996 17:07 | 3 |
|
The type of screwed I was talking about is closer to being neutered.
|
696.31 | | BUSY::SLABOUNTY | Don't like my p_n? 1-800-328-7448 | Fri Apr 05 1996 17:09 | 4 |
|
Oh, wonderful ... nobody told me her bite was worse than her
bark.
|
696.32 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Mr. Logo | Fri Apr 05 1996 17:12 | 4 |
|
Deb would never dirty her hands over trash like that. I think she has a
friend named Lorena.....
|
696.33 | | SUBPAC::SADIN | Freedom isn't free. | Sun Apr 07 1996 12:02 | 39 |
|
Heroes eh? Here goes:
My parents (they survived my teenage years...that'd make anyone a
hero!) :) My mother has recently completed her masters degree in
counseling psychology and my father is working on his bachelors in
electrical engineering (he has his associates). My dad will be taking
early retirement this year and may start doing some consulting. In the
midst of all this they run a small farm and do many projects for the
church.
My first boss. He owned a christmas tree farm as well as a couple
of apartment buildings. I started working for him when I was 12yrs old
and didn't leave the tree farm until he died in Dec 1989 (cancer). He
instilled in me a sense of dignity and pride....he showed me what it
was like to work for a living and that nobody owed you anything. You
made yourself whatever you are and there was no one to blame for your
place in life but you. When I was out of high-school and working a full
time job plus the tree farm in the mornings and on weekends (my full
time job was midnight until 8am...I work the tree farm from 9am-1pm
weekdays), he'd call me on saturday night and say "You coming to work
early tomorrow?". If I suggested I might like to sleep in a bit Sunday
morning and go to church he'd say, "What? You don't like money?". :*)
Chester T. Oliver Jr. WWII vet, self made millionaire (with only a
high-school education and a lot of hard work), shrewd investor.
My grandfather. Never graduated high-school but managed to build
his own home (he wasn't a carpenter...he learned as he went), served in
the Coast Guard during WWII (cook), put his two daughters through 4yr
colleges while working 3 jobs 60+hrs a week, and managed to save enough
to retire comfortably on. He thinks the social security system is silly
and doesn't even count the check as part of his income. :)
there are other people, but dems da biggees....:)
jim
|
696.34 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Mr. Logo | Sun Apr 07 1996 16:10 | 7 |
| | <<< Note 696.33 by SUBPAC::SADIN "Freedom isn't free." >>>
| there are other people, but dems da biggees....:)
See, Jim??? The Dems are better! :-)
|
696.35 | | SUBPAC::SADIN | Freedom isn't free. | Sun Apr 07 1996 18:04 | 5 |
|
ah shaddup....
|
696.36 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Mr. Logo | Mon Apr 08 1996 09:53 | 3 |
|
:-)
|
696.37 | | CHEFS::COOKS | Half Man,Half Biscuit | Thu Apr 11 1996 11:42 | 13 |
| George Best
Eric Cantona
Pele
Sir Bobby Charlton
Jimmy Greaves
Bobby Moore
Shaka Hislop
The Queen Mother
Billy the Fish
etc,etc.
|
696.38 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | DBTC Palo Alto | Thu Apr 11 1996 15:15 | 4 |
| Eric Cantona? spare us. the man's gifted, but hero caliber, NOT.
Assaulting a fan rather disqualifies him.
DougO
|
696.39 | | CHEFS::COOKS | Half Man,Half Biscuit | Fri Apr 12 1996 08:47 | 10 |
| Whilst I take your point,DougO, the "fan" in question was a paid up
member of the National Front and a racist thug,so frankly he deserved
a right good kicking.
Not that Eric knew that when he did his kung-fu kick into the crowd.
However,since that incident he has been as good as gold. And helped
in a big way Manchester Utd to go to top of the Premier League.
|
696.40 | | ACISS1::BATTIS | Chicago Bulls-1996 world champs | Fri Apr 12 1996 17:34 | 4 |
|
Billy the Fish?????
let me guess, he's a seafood enforcer.
|
696.41 | | CHEFS::COOKS | Half Man,Half Biscuit | Mon Apr 15 1996 08:51 | 10 |
| "Billy the Fish" is a charachter from a cult English comic called "Viz".
He was a fish who played in goal for Fulchester Utd,and said things
like "Boss,we`ve got a hill to climb,but the lads are behind you 100%
at the end of the day. It`s early doors,but if we get a result,we`ll
be over the moon"etc.
You`d have to be into to football to appreciate the humour.
|
696.42 | | CBHVAX::CBH | Mr. Creosote | Tue Apr 16 1996 16:36 | 4 |
| The `fan' in question is a known tw@. Good on the Froggie for trying to give
him a good slap.
Chris.
|
696.43 | | MOLAR::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dogface) | Wed Apr 17 1996 13:25 | 2 |
| Billy Manz sounds like my kinda hero.
|
696.44 | | USAT02::HALLR | God loves even you! | Thu Apr 25 1996 15:55 | 1 |
| anyone giving up his/her life for someone else
|