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Obituaries

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  1. #181
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    "A good fighter pilot, like a good boxer, should have a knockout punch..... You will find one attack you prefer to all others. Work on it till you can do it to perfection... then use it whenever possible."
    - Captain Reade Tilley, USAAF 7 Victories, WW-II -

  2. #182
    Senior Member pbfoot's Avatar
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    Arthur C Clarke his work in Radar in WW 2 , he was the lead man in GCA/PAR
    radar without which the Berlin Airlift would have failed, and the radar that guided millions of aircraft to safe landings prior to ILS


    COLOMBO, Sri Lanka–Arthur C. Clarke, a visionary science fiction writer who won worldwide acclaim with more than 100 books on space, science and the future, died yesterday in his adopted home of Sri Lanka, an aide said. He was 90.

    Clarke, who had battled post-polio syndrome since the 1960s and sometimes used a wheelchair, died after suffering breathing problems.

    Co-author with Stanley Kubrick of Kubrick's film 2001: A Space Odyssey, Clarke was regarded as far more than a science fiction writer.

    He was credited with the concept of communications satellites in 1945, decades before they became a reality. Geosynchronous orbits, which keep satellites in a fixed position relative to the ground, are called Clarke orbits. And he joined broadcaster Walter Cronkite as commentator on the U.S. Apollo moon shots in the late 1960s.

    Clarke's non-fiction volumes on space travel and his explorations of the Great Barrier Reef and Indian Ocean earned him respect in the world of science, and in 1976 he became an honorary fellow of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics.

    But it was his writing that shot him to his greatest fame and that gave him the greatest fulfillment.

    "Sometimes I am asked how I would like to be remembered," Clarke said recently. "I have had a diverse career as a writer, underwater explorer and space promoter. Of all these I would like to be remembered as a writer."

    From 1950, he began a prolific output of both fiction and non-fiction, sometimes publishing three books in a year. He published his bestselling 3001: The Final Odyssey when he was 79.

    Some of his best-known books are Childhood's End, 1953; The City and The Stars, 1956; The Nine Billion Names of God, 1967; Rendezvous with Rama, 1973; Imperial Earth, 1975; and The Songs of Distant Earth, 1986.

    When Clarke and Kubrick got together to develop a movie about space, they used as basic ideas several of Clarke's shorter pieces, including The Sentinel, written in 1948, and Encounter in the Dawn. As work progressed on the screenplay, Clarke also wrote a novel of the story. He followed it with 2010, 2061 and 3001: The Final Odyssey.

    In 1989, two decades after the Apollo 11 moon landings, Clarke wrote: "2001 was written in an age which now lies beyond one of the great divides in human history; we are sundered from it forever by the moment when Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin stepped out on to the Sea of Tranquility. Now history and fiction have become inexorably intertwined."

    Clarke won the Nebula Award of the Science Fiction Writers of America in 1972, 1974 and 1979; the Hugo Award of the World Science Fiction Convention in 1974 and 1980, and in 1986 became Grand Master of the Science Fiction Writers of America. He was awarded the CBE in 1989.

    Born in Minehead, western England, on Dec. 16, 1917, the son of a farmer, he became addicted to science fiction after buying his first copies of the pulp magazine Amazing Stories at Woolworth's. He began writing for his school magazine in his teens.

    Clarke went to work as a clerk in Her Majesty's Exchequer and Audit Department in London, where he joined the British Interplanetary Society and wrote his first short stories and scientific articles on space travel.

    In the wartime Royal Air Force, he was put in charge of a new radar blind-landing system. But it was an RAF memo he wrote in 1945 about the future of communications that led him to fame. It was about the possibility of using satellites to revolutionize communications.

    Clarke later sent it to a publication called Wireless World, which almost rejected it as too far-fetched.

    Clarke married in 1953 and was divorced in 1964. He had no children.

    Disabled by post-polio syndrome, the lingering effects of a disease that had paralyzed him for two months in 1959, Clarke rarely left his home in Sri Lanka. He moved there in 1956, lured by his interest in diving, which, he said, was as close as he could get to the weightless feeling of space.

    "I'm perfectly operational underwater," he once said.

  3. #183
    The Pop-Tart Whisperer Njaco's Avatar
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    WOW! Can't believe I missed this! One of my favorite authors. Used to watch a sci-fi/fact show in the early '80s where he went over things like the Bermuda triangle and such. Gonna miss him.


    "If you can read this, thank a teacher. If it's English, thank a soldier!"


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  4. #184
    2012 Forum Fantasy Football Champion Bernhart's Avatar
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    On a personal note my aunt recently passed at age 86. lived a long wonderful life, was as energetic as anyone I've ever met. She never drove her car under 100 KPH, stopped driving about 5 years ago as couldn't see very well. Reason I'm including her here is she was in the dutch East Indies in 1942 as a nurse/midwife. She didn't talk alot about the time there but did say she saw some awful stuff and some amazing courage and people during the 3 years she spent in the Japense camps.

  5. #185
    Senior Member trackend's Avatar
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    My condolances Bernhart

  6. #186
    The Pop-Tart Whisperer Njaco's Avatar
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    Same here Bernhart.


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  7. #187
    Senior Member Wayne Little's Avatar
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    Sorry to hear of your loss...

  8. #188
    Senior Member RabidAlien's Avatar
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    To all who've gone before, . I always get a little misty-eyed when I read about a vet passing away...this thread has got me all tied up.



    Pillage, then burn.

    Argue not with dragons, for thou art crunchy and go well on toast.

  9. #189
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    "A good fighter pilot, like a good boxer, should have a knockout punch..... You will find one attack you prefer to all others. Work on it till you can do it to perfection... then use it whenever possible."
    - Captain Reade Tilley, USAAF 7 Victories, WW-II -

  10. #190
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    Tadeusz Wieslaw “Ted“ Kotz, (1913- 2008 ) D.F.C., V.M., K.W., Colonel, W.C., 303 Squadron Leader Polish Division R.A.F., Ace and Hero of the Battle of Britain Passed away peacefully on Tuesday, June 3, 2008 at Sunset Manor Nursing Home, Collingwood, in his 95th year.

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    Last edited by v2; 07-06-2008 at 05:01 AM.

    "A good fighter pilot, like a good boxer, should have a knockout punch..... You will find one attack you prefer to all others. Work on it till you can do it to perfection... then use it whenever possible."
    - Captain Reade Tilley, USAAF 7 Victories, WW-II -

  11. #191
    "Shooter" evangilder's Avatar
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    > I Support Doug Gilliss <

    For once you have tasted flight you will walk the earth with your eyes turned skywards, for there you have been and there you will long to return. Leonardo Da Vinci

  12. #192
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    "If you can read this, thank a teacher. If it's English, thank a soldier!"


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  13. #193
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    TO


    “Let's get Enterprise and Hornet turned into the wind."

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  15. #195
    Senior Member Wayne Little's Avatar
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