Friday, November 28, 2008

William Gibson Counted on a Miracle

Scoring Update! The points change, death remains the same...

Playwright William Gibson, whose "The Miracle Worker" has thrilled audiences for nearly a half-century with the true story of the deaf-blind Helen Keller's rescue from a world of ignorance, has died. He was 94.

"The act of writing makes everything possible to me," Gibson said in a 2003 interview with The Associated Press at his home in Stockbridge, Mass. "I've always found the business of writing has helped me to live."
Congratulations and 24 points awarded to Extended Weekend at Bernie's. The Rosters and Standings have been updated.

[AP]

Saturday, November 1, 2008

Studs Terkel's Active Life Comes to a Close

Scoring Update! The points change, death remains the same...

Studs Terkel captured the essence of Chicago in the pages of his best-selling oral histories, chronicling common people and celebrities alike. Along the way he became an ageless master of listening and speaking, a broadcaster, activist and Pulitzer Prize-winning author. Terkel died Friday at age 96.

"He found his home in Chicago and he found it in the gritty aspect of Chicago life," said Russell Lewis, chief historian at the Chicago History Museum. "The ne'er-do-wells, the outcasts, the bums, all these people were people he was curious about. They intrigued him."
Congratulations and 24 points awarded to Go To Hell. The Rosters and Standings have been updated.

[AP]