/ Stars that died in 2023

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Walter Haeussermann, German-born American rocket scientist, died from complications from a fall he was , 96

Walter Haeussermann[1] was a German-American aerospace engineer and member of the "von Braun rocket group", both at Peenemünde and later at Marshall Space Flight Center, where he was the director of the guidance and control laboratory died from complications from a fall he was , 96.[2] He was awarded the Decoration for Exceptional Civilian Service in 1959 for his contributions to the US rocket program.[2]



( March 2, 1914 – December 8, 2010)

Biography

Haeussermann was born in Germany shortly before the beginning of World War I. He eventually matriculated at the Darmstadt University of Technology, where he earned a doctorate in physics.[2] He was drafted into the German army for World War II and taken to the rocket development center at Peenemünde on December 1, 1939.[3] In a 2008 interview, he recalled seeing a rocket engine test upon his arrival there, saying, "I was flabbergasted, because on the first day I was shown a rocket test ... I was astonished that something like this was already existing." Asked about meeting von Braun, he enthusiastically replied, "I met him the second day. I was very interested about him." He worked on the V-2 guidance and simulations by means of analog computers.[1]
He stayed at Peenemünde 3 years, then returned to Darmstadt where he worked for Kreiselgeraete and Siemens to develop a gyroscopic guidance platform. After the war, he was invited to join von Braun's team in Fort Bliss, Texas, but initially declined because his wife was ill.[1][3]
Helmut Hölzer and Ernst Steinhoff accepted the Operation Paperclip invitation to the United States, traveled there in late 1945, and maintained contact with Haeussermann. Haeussermann came to the United States in 1947 to rejoin von Braun's team, working on ballistic missile guidance and control engineering at Fort Bliss. In 1951, the group moved to Redstone Arsenal.[1]
In 1954, Haeussermann became a naturalized US citizen.[1] At that time he was the director of the Guidance and Control Laboratory and head of the Astrionics Division of what is now Marshall Space Flight Center.
NASA was formed in 1958, and Haeussermann was on the initial roster. There, he led electrical, computer systems, guidance, and navigation systems for the Saturn V. He took his responsibility for the astronauts safe transport seriously. He said, "I refused any congratulation before Apollo 11 astronauts were safely back. Of course, we were very proud."[1]
His contributions to the space program were recognized with the Decoration for Exceptional Civilian Service in 1959.

Work in guidance and control

Haeussermann's main area of work was in automatic guidance and control for missiles. For example, he was instrumental in the design of the Saturn V system.[5] He also conducted research more broadly, for instance in 3-axis attitude control[6] and the use of Hall devices in aerospace control devices.[7] In his late career, he examined control issues related to experiments on board the Space Shuttle.[8]

Arthur Rudolph

Haeussermann was a colleague of Arthur Rudolph, who in the 1980s had become the subject of harassment from the OSI and Eli Rosenbaum over alleged Nazi war crimes. Haeussermann was at one time part of Rudolph's defense team tasked with proving his innocence.[9] Haeussermann remained an enthusiastic supporter of the space program and attended reunions and public events regularly until his death.[4]

Works


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Elizabeth Edwards, American author, lawyer and political activist, died from breast cancer she was , 61

Elizabeth Anania Edwards (she was born Mary Elizabeth Anania) she was an American attorney, author and a health care activist died from breast cancer she was , 61. She was married to John Edwards, the former U.S. Senator from North Carolina who was the 2004 United States Democratic vice-presidential nominee.
Edwards lived a private life until her husband's rise as senator and ultimately unsuccessful vice presidential and presidential campaigns. She was his chief policy advisor during his presidential bid,[1] and was instrumental in pushing him towards more liberal stances on subjects such as universal health care.[1] She was also an advocate of gay marriage[2] and was against the war in Iraq,[1] both topics about which she and her husband disagreed.[1]
In the final years of her life, Edwards publicly dealt with her husband's admission of an extramarital affair and her breast cancer, writing two books and making numerous media appearances.[3][4] She separated from John Edwards in early 2010.[5] On December 6, 2010, her family announced that her cancer had spread and her doctors had recommended that further treatment would be unproductive. She died the following day.[6]


(July 3, 1949 – December 7, 2010)

Family and early life

Elizabeth Anania, the daughter of Mary Elizabeth Thweatt Anania (born 1923) and Vincent Anania (1920–2008),[7] grew up in a military family, moving many times and never having a hometown. Her father, a United States Navy pilot, was transferred from military base to military base during her childhood and adolescence; for part of her childhood, she lived in Japan, where her father was stationed. She relates in her book Saving Graces that one of the difficult relocations that she went through was moving during her senior year of high school.[8] Some of her childhood friends' fathers were killed in war and Edwards relates childhood memories of attending their funerals.[9] She also relates the stress of living at a military base with hospital facilities that handled a constant stream of wounded soldiers while her father was away fighting in Vietnam.[10]
Edwards had two younger siblings;[11] a brother, Jay Anania, a professor of film at New York University[12] and a sister, Nancy Anania.[13] Edwards graduated from the Francis C. Hammond High School in Alexandria, Virginia, then attended Mary Washington College in Fredericksburg, Virginia. She transferred to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC), where she earned a Bachelor's degree. After three years of postgraduate studies in English, she entered UNC's School of Law and earned a Juris Doctor. She met John Edwards when they were both law students, and they married on July 30, 1977.[14]
The couple had four children: Wade (1979–1996), Cate (b. 1982), Emma Claire (b. 1998), and Jack (b. 2000). Wade was killed in April 1996 when he lost control of his Jeep while driving from their home in Raleigh to the family's beach house near Wilmington.[15] Three weeks before his death, Wade Edwards was honored by First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton at the White House as one of ten finalists in an essay contest sponsored by the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Voice of America. Wade, accompanied by his parents and his sister, met North Carolina Senator Jesse Helms. After Wade died, Helms entered his essay and his obituary into the Congressional Record.[16]
Following Wade's death, the Edwardses decided to have more children, and she underwent fertility treatments;[17] Emma Claire was born when Elizabeth was 48, and Jack was born when she was 50. She was pregnant with Emma Claire during her husband's 1998 Senate race. After John's January 21, 2010, public admission that he fathered a child with Rielle Hunter, Elizabeth legally separated from him, intending to file for divorce after North Carolina's mandatory one-year separation.[18][19][20][21]

Professional life

Edwards began her career as a law clerk for a federal judge, then moved to Nashville, Tennessee, in 1978 to become an associate at the law firm of Harwell Barr Martin & Sloan. In 1981, she and her husband moved their family to Raleigh, where she worked in the Office of the Attorney General, and at the law firm Merriman, Nicholls, and Crampton. She used her maiden name professionally until 1996,[22] when she retired from legal practice upon the death of her son and changed her name to Elizabeth Edwards. Much of her time since leaving legal practice was devoted to the administration of the Wade Edwards Foundation.[23] She taught legal writing as an adjunct instructor at the University of North Carolina School of Law and worked as a substitute teacher in the Wake County Public Schools. In August 2009, she opened a furniture store in Chapel Hill.[24]
In September 2006, Random House published her first book, Saving Graces: Finding Solace and Strength from Friends and Strangers,[3] focusing on the ways in which various communities have helped her through the trials of her life, from her itinerant military childhood to the death of her son and her early bout with breast cancer. In May 2009, they published her second book, Resilience: Reflections on the Burdens and Gifts of Facing Life's Adversities,[4] further discussing the return of her illness, the deaths of her father and son, the effect of these events on her marriage, her husband's infidelity, and the general state of health care in America.[25][26] Both books are best-sellers.

Political activity

During much of 2004, Edwards joined her husband and United States Democratic Presidential nominee Senator John Kerry on the nationwide campaign trail. She took a similar role in her husband's 2008 presidential bid and was considered one of his closest advisers.
Edwards disagreed with her husband on the topic of same-sex marriage. She became a vocal advocate in 2007 when she stated: "I don't know why someone else’s marriage has anything to do with me. I'm completely comfortable with gay marriage."[27]
On June 10, 2008, it was revealed that Edwards would be advising her husband's former rival, and eventual Democratic nominee, Barack Obama, on healthcare issues.[28] Her husband also endorsed Obama during the later stages of the 2008 primary season.
Edwards became a senior fellow at the American Progress Action Fund and testified to Congress about health care reform on their behalf.[29]

Illness and death

On November 3, 2004, the day Kerry conceded defeat in the 2004 U.S. presidential election, Edwards was diagnosed with breast cancer. She later revealed that she discovered a lump in her breast while on a campaign stop in Kenosha, Wisconsin, a few weeks earlier, in the midst of the campaign. Edwards became an activist for women's health and cancer patients, and underwent oncology treatments. In a November 2006 comment on the Daily Kos website, Edwards stated that on her last visit, her oncologist said that cancer was not one of the things going on in her life.[30]
At a March 22, 2007, press conference,[31] John and Elizabeth Edwards announced that her cancer had returned, and that his campaign for the Presidency would continue as before. The announcement included the information that she was asymptomatic, and therefore that she expected to be an active part of the campaign.[32] Her doctor, Dr. Lisa Carey of the University of North Carolina's Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, described the diagnosis as stage IV (metastatic) breast cancer with a spot in her rib and possibly her lung. In a March 25 interview on 60 Minutes, Edwards said that there was also a spot in her hip found on her bone scan.[33] The Edwardses and Dr. Carey stressed that the cancer was not curable, but was treatable.[31][34] In early April 2007, Edwards was informed that her cancer might be treatable with anti-estrogen drugs. "I consider that a good sign. It means there are more medications to which I can expect to be responsive," she told the Associated Press during a campaign stop with her husband in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.[35] In a 2007 Interview with Newsweek's Jonathan Alter, she said, "When I was first diagnosed, I was going to beat this. I was going to be the champion of cancer. And I don't have that feeling now. The cancer will eventually kill me. It's going to win this fight."[36]
On December 6, 2010, Edwards' family announced that she had stopped cancer treatment after her doctors advised her that further treatment would be unproductive, the cancer having metastasized to her liver. She had been advised she had several weeks to live. Her family members, including her estranged husband John, were with her. She posted her last message on Facebook:
"You all know that I have been sustained throughout my life by three saving graces – my family, my friends, and a faith in the power of resilience and hope. These graces have carried me through difficult times and they have brought more joy to the good times than I ever could have imagined. The days of our lives, for all of us, are numbered. We know that. And, yes, there are certainly times when we aren't able to muster as much strength and patience as we would like. It's called being human. But I have found that in the simple act of living with hope, and in the daily effort to have a positive impact in the world, the days I do have are made all the more meaningful and precious. And for that I am grateful. It isn't possible to put into words the love and gratitude I feel to everyone who has and continues to support and inspire me every day. To you I simply say: you know."[37]
Edwards died of metastatic breast cancer on December 7, 2010, at home in Chapel Hill, surrounded by her family and friends.[38] Her funeral, held at Edenton Street United Methodist Church in Raleigh, was open to the public and was attended by over 1,200 people, including North Carolina Governor Beverly Perdue, Senators John Kerry and Kay Hagan,[39] and Victoria Reggie Kennedy.[40] Threats of protests by the anti-gay hate-group[41] Westboro Baptist Church attracted at least 300 local Raleigh residents prepared to counterprotest in support of the Edwards family, but only five Westboro protesters showed up and were kept blocks away.[40][41] Edwards was buried in Historic Oakwood Cemetery next to her son Wade.[40]

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Fan Yew Teng, Malaysian politician and human rights activist died he was 68

 Fan Yew Teng  was former Acting Secretary-General of the Democratic Action Party, Malaysia, former Member of Parliament for Kampar (elected in 1969) and Menglembu (elected in 1974), and former Selangor State Assemblyman for Petaling Jaya. In 1975 died he was 68, he was charged with and convicted for sedition for publishing, as editor of DAP's The Rocket, a speech by Dr. Ooi Kee Saik, then Penang DAP Chairman. Fan was then disqualified from Parliament and denied all MP privileges, including his pension. He left DAP over differences in 1978 to join Social Democratic Party (SDP)[2].

(范俊登 12 May 1942[1] – 7 December 2010)

He rejoined the DAP in 1998, during the transformative period of Reformasi in Malaysia. Prior to his involvement in party politics, Fan had been actively engaged in the National Union of Teachers. He was the co-organiser of the 1967 nationwide teachers' strike, which helped to bring about equal pay for women, as well as pension, housing and health benefits for all teachers. He was also the editor of 'The Educator', the official organ of the NUT. Throughout his life, he continued to write prolifically on political and social issues and campaign for human rights and the cause of justice. His books include 'If We Love This Country' (1988), 'Oppressors and Apologists' (1988), 'The UMNO Drama: Power Struggles in Malaysia' (1989), 'The Rape of Law' (1990), and 'Anwar Saga: Malaysia on Trial' (1999). He also co-authored, with A. Rajaguru, 'The Neverending Quest: The teachers' struggle for dignity and excellence' (1994).
Fan's political career was marred by many trials and tribulations, including his infamous conviction under the Sedition Act in 1975 and subsequent disqualification from the Menglembu parliamentary seat. Fan was disqualified after he was fined RM2,000 in default six months’ jail for publishing a seditious speech by the then Penang DAP chairman Dr Ooi Kee Siak the in party organ The Rocket. A two-term MP and a sterling leader of society, he was denied even his basic right to an MP pension. To make ends meet, Fan became a freelance writer and would occasionally conduct lectures for students.

Fan graduated from Brinsford Lodge teacher training college in the UK. He held a Masters in Education from the University of Sussex, and was a Parvin Fellow at the Woordrow Wilson School of Public Policy and International Affairs at Princeton University. In the late 1960s, he was appointed as the editor of the NUTP’s (National Union of the Teaching Profession) organ 'The Educator', where he launched staunch and oftentimes sharp criticism against the government, particularly against the then Education Minister. He also co-organised the 1967 nationwide teacher's strike. Due to his leadership in the NUTP he was sent off from Kuala Lumpur to schools in rural areas like in Kuala Lipis and Temerloh, Pahang and Tanah Merah, Kelantan.
He contested on a DAP ticket in Kampar in 1969 and in the 1974 general election, he daringly took on PPP founding president SP Seenivasagam in Menglembu parliamentary seat and unionist and former MTUC secretary-general, the late V. David in the Petaling Jaya state seat. Fan won both seats, and came to be known as a 'giant slayer'. Fan was also famed for his firebrand oratory style.
Fan Yew Teng was known as 'a man who would part with his last dollar to help the needy', dedicating his life to serving the poor and unfortunate. He lived frugally renting a house in the city of Ipoh, Malaysia and also stayed with his wife who works for the United Nations office in Bangkok, Thailand. Fan lived out the final days of his life close to his wife, Dr. Noeleen Heyzer and twin daughters in Bangkok. Fan passed away after a year-long battle with cancer at 1.40pm on December 07, 2010[3] in the Bumrungrad International Hospital in Bangkok.

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Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Gus Mercurio, American-born Australian boxer and actor.died he was , 82

 Augustino Eugenio "Gus" Mercurio was an American-born Australian character actor who appeared on both film and television died he was , 82.

(10 August 1928 – 7 December 2010)


Early life

Mercurio, the eldest child of Vincent A. Mercurio and Cecilia W. "Mickey" Miller, was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He had two sisters, Gerie and Connie, and a brother, Tony.[1] His parents were divorced when he was seven.
He visited Australia during 1956 Melbourne Olympics and decided to stay.[2]

Boxer

His father had boxed professionally under the name of Vince McGurk, and one of his uncles had boxed professionally under the name of Ray Miller. He was a professional boxer, had served in the United States Marine Corps and was a qualified chiropractor.[3]
He was also an international boxing judge. He refereed a world title fight. He was also a well-known boxing promoter, who later became the president of the Australian Boxing Hall of Fame.

Radio, TV and film

Having successfully auditioned for consideration to be included in the cast of an ABC radio play, and selected at his first audition, his raspy voice, energetic personality and natural talents quickly came to the attention of Australian television production houses such as Crawford Productions.[3]
He also worked as a commentator for Channel 7's World of Sport, as well as acting as the movie host for Channel 10's Saturday Night with Gus Mercurio.[4]
Mercurio appeared in several Australian TV series, including Cash and Company (1975), its follow-up Tandarra (1976) and the miniseries Power Without Glory (1976). Additionally, he played many guest roles in Australian TV police series, including Homicide (1964), Division 4 (1969) and Matlock Police (1971). His film appearances include The Blue Lagoon (1980), The Man from Snowy River (1982), Turkey Shoot (1982), "Crocodile" Dundee II (1988), Return to the Blue Lagoon (1991) and Doing Time for Patsy Cline (1997).

Family

Mercurio was the father of dancer and actor Paul Mercurio, the star of the film Strictly Ballroom (1992).

Death

He died on 7 December 2010 during surgery for a chest aneurism.[5]

Selected filmography


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Kari Tapio,, Finnish schlager singer, died from a heart attack.he was 65

 Kari Tapio [1] was a Finnish schlager singer died from a heart attack.he was  65. He was one of the most popular singers in Finland for decades.
Tapio was born in Suonenjoki, Finland. In the 1960s Tapio performed in his home town Pieksämäki with the local bands ER-Quartet and Jami & The Noisemakers.[2] In 1966 he took singing lessons from Ture Ara.

(born  November 22, 1945 – December 7, 2010)

After his first single "Tuuli kääntyköön"/"Niskavuoren nuorimmainen" in 1972 Kari Tapio performed in Ilkka "Danny" Lipsanen's show. In the beginning his role was to take care of the snake that was used in the show. Before music became a job for him Kari Tapio worked as a typesetter in a printing house.
In 1976 Tapio finally broke through with his single "Laula kanssain" ("Sing With Me") which was followed by "Viisitoista kesää" (a Finnish cover of Living Next Door to Alice) and "Kaipuu" ("Desire"). In later years "Olen suomalainen" ("I am Finnish", a finnish cover of Toto Cutugno's "L'Italiano"), "Myrskyn jälkeen" ("After the Storm"), "En pyydä paljon" ("I Don't Ask For Much") and the newest "Paalupaikka" ("Pole Position"), among others, have been his most popular songs. In 2003 the Iskelmä-Finlandia award was given to him.
Many of Tapio's songs have influences from country music. He has done lots of Finnish versions of the songs of Johnny Cash, Waylon Jennings and Kris Kristoffersson.
Tapio was one of the candidates to represent Finland in the Eurovision Song Contest 2008 with the song "Valaise yö". In the finals, he was placed second, and Teräsbetoni was chosen to represent Finland.
Tapio died of a heart attack in Espoo, Finland.

Contents

[hide]

[edit] Discography

[edit] Albums

  • Aikapommi (1974) (with Erkki Liikanen)
  • Nostalgiaa (1976)
  • Klabbi (1976)
  • Kaipuu (1977)
  • Kari Tapio (1979)
  • Jää vierellein (1981)
  • Olen suomalainen (1983)
  • Ovi elämään (1984)
  • Osa minusta (1986)
  • Elämän viulut (1987)
  • Tää kaipuu (1988)
  • Aikaan täysikuun (1990)
  • Yön tuuli vain (1992)
  • Sinitaikaa (1993)
  • Laulaja (1994)
  • Myrskyn jälkeen (1995) #23
  • Meren kuisketta (1997) #9
  • Sinut tulen aina muistamaan (1998) #7
  • Valoon päin (1999) #5
  • Bella Capri (2000) #6
  • Kari Tapio konserttilavalla (2001) #30
  • Joulun tarina (2001)
  • Juna kulkee (2003) #4
  • Toiset on luotuja kulkemaan (2004) #5
  • Paalupaikka (2005) #5
  • Kuin taivaisiin (2007) #1
  • Kaksi maailmaa (March 26, 2008)

[edit] Compilations

  • 28 suosituinta levytystä (1987)
  • Toivotut (1992)
  • Viisitoista kesää (1995)
  • 20 suosikkia – Olen suomalainen (1995)
  • 20 suosikkia – Luoksesi Tukholmaan (1997)
  • Parhaat (1997)
  • Kaikki parhaat (1999) #2
  • 20 suosikkia – Kulkurin kyyneleet (2001)
  • 20 suosikkia – Sanoit liian paljon (2001)
  • Kaikkien aikojen parhaat – 40 klassikkoa (2002) #17
  • Nostalgia (2005)
  • Lauluja rakkaudesta (2006) #13
  • Laulaja 1945-2010 (2011) #1

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Federico Vairo, Argentine footballer and coach, died from stomach cancer he was , 80

Federico Vairo  was a Argentine football defender who won three consecutive league titles with River Plate and represented Argentina at the 1958 World Cup died from stomach cancer he was , 80.[1]
His younger brother Juan Vairo also played football professionally, including one season for Juventus F.C..


(January 27, 1930 – December 7, 2010)

 Early life

Federico Vairo was born in Rosario, Argentina.

 Club career

Vairo started his career at Rosario Central in his home city in 1947, he played for the club for 8 seasons before moving to Buenos Aires to play for River Plate. River won three consecutive league titles between 1955 and 1957.
Vairo played for the Argentine National team at the World Cup held in Sweden in 1958. At onetime he was the player with the most games played for the national team. His record was not broken until the 1990s.
In 1960 Vairo joined Chilean O'Higgins. His first three seasons with the club resulted in mid-table finishes, but the 1963 campaign saw the club relegated, finishing 18th and last in the table.
1964 saw O'Higgins successful return to the Primera División de Chile by winning the Chilean Second Division title, the only title in the club's history. In 1965 Vairo dedicated his life in the little leagues as coach with Club Atlético River Plate, where he was in charge of training and turning amateurs to professionals which later played first division football.
1999–2010, Club Atlético River Plate hired him to scout junior players from the Santa Fe Province.
In 2005, he was given an award at the 50th Anniversary party of O'Higgins. [2]
Season Club Title
1955 Argentina River Plate Primera Division Argentina
1956 Argentina River Plate Primera Division Argentina
1957 Argentina River Plate Primera Division Argentina
1964 Chile O'Higgins Chilean Second Division
1967 Colombia Deportivo Cali Copa Mustang

International career

Between 1955 and 1958 Vairo played 41 games for the Argentina national football team, he helped Argentina to win the 1957 Copa America championship and represented Argentina at the 1958 World Cup.
Season Club Title
1957 Argentina Argentina Copa America

Death

On December 7, 2010, Federico Vairo died in a hospital in Buenos Aires, Argentina, in a battle against stomach cancer. He is survived by his brother Juan Vairo, his wife Marta, and his three children, Graciela, Daniel, and Claudia. [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8]

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Mark Dailey, American-born Canadian television journalist and announcer, died from cancer he was , 57

Mark Dailey[1] was an American-born Canadian television journalist and announcer died from cancer he was , 57. He was the host of 11 p.m. weeknight CityNews newscasts in Toronto, Ontario, and a prominent continuity announcer voicing interstitial program announcements on CITY-TV.

 (August 1, 1953 – December 6, 2010)


Dailey was born and raised in Youngstown, Ohio to parents John and Rose-Marie (Genetta) Dailey and was one of three children (sisters Kathleen and Colleen).[2] Dailey graduated from Ursuline High 
School and then studied law enforcement at Youngstown State University, in Ohio, worked as a state trooper (Ohio State Highway Patrol),[3] and became a crime reporter for stations in Ohio (first at WNIO 1540-AM - now known as WYCL - and then ABC affiliate WYTV in the late 1960s) and at radio station CKLW in Windsor, Ontario before moving to Toronto in 1974.[2] Prior to CityTV, Dailey worked at Q-107 and CHUM Radio. Dailey worked at Citytv for 31 years. Mark's famous line was "This is Citytv, everywhere".
As a voice actor, Dailey voiced characters in the animated series Medabots, The Ripping Friends, Beyblade, Grossology, My Dad the Rock Star, Spliced, and others.

He also appeared (as a news reporter) in several Canadian films including Nicholas Campbell's Boozecan (1994), Claire's Hat, The Life Before This, and Childstar.
Dailey is widely credited with delivering the title line during the chorus of the 1982 Rush song "Subdivisions", although he denies this.[4] Neil Peart, who is the drummer of Rush, is actually the person who voices "Subdivisions" in the chorus of the song.[5]
Dailey survived prostate cancer but announced on September 9, 2010, on his 11 o'clock newscast, that he had been diagnosed with kidney cancer.[6] The cancer spread to his lungs, and he died on December 6, 2010 at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre.[7][1]

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Dickey Betts died he was 80

Early Career Forrest Richard Betts was also known as Dickey Betts Betts collaborated with  Duane Allman , introducing melodic twin guitar ha...