_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Roger. . . I think you and I would have fun just about any place where there's women.
Rick Farris wrote:Thanks for putting that up. I know our pal Bennie might not see eye to eye with us,but if you can't find a good time in Paris I wouldn't know what to tell ya'.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Roger. . . I think you and I would have fun just about any place where there's women.
Have a good time, Bennie!bennie wrote:Rick Farris wrote:Thanks for putting that up. I know our pal Bennie might not see eye to eye with us,but if you can't find a good time in Paris I wouldn't know what to tell ya'.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Roger. . . I think you and I would have fun just about any place where there's women.
Lol. Hey, I'm off to a school reunion in my old hometown of Loughborough today (about 80 miles from where I live now). It is a 30-year reunion (we all left in 1979) and a long weekend job. By the time I get back on Monday this will all be a beautiful blur.


Roger...Some of the younger generation like to accuse us older guys of living in the past, and maybe we do but, anybody with an open mind can see these programs and see that boxing was better then, what is on those programs was boxing action for one week only!, I'm not saying that the fighters were better, only that boxing per se was.dagosd2000 wrote:Frankkikibalt wrote:
Looking at your old fight posters gives credence that the weekly boxing cards were not only exciting to watch for the sport itself,but gave the city an excitement and atmosphere that must have been a hell of a lot of fun.
Frankkikibalt wrote:Jazz guitarist sang with Ink Spots
Huey Long, 105, a jazz guitarist whose sprawling career included stints with musical giants Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker and as part of the famed Ink Spots vocal group, died Wednesday at a nursing home in Houston, according to his daughter, Anita Long.
Born in 1904, Long was first drawn to music as a teenager when a group of minstrels visited his hometown of Sealy, a small Texas town about 20 miles west of Houston. He began playing the banjo and joined the Frank Davis Louisiana Jazz Band in the mid-1920s.
In the 1930s, Long -- by then a guitarist -- went to Chicago, where he recorded with pianist Lil Armstrong and joined with Fletcher Henderson's orchestra, who brought him to New York in 1943.
There, Long joined Earl "Fatha" Hines, whose big band included Gillespie, Parker and Sarah Vaughn. In 1945, Long was leading his own trio when vocalist Bill Kenny invited him to join the Ink Spots, whose velvet harmonies and flashy performing style had helped them become one of the first black groups to gain acceptance among white listeners.
Long harmonized on the classics "If I Didn't Care" and "I'll Get By" for the Ink Spots, who were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1989. The group is often credited with having a direct influence on the evolution of doo-wop groups and rhythm and blues.
After his stint with the Ink Spots, Long went on to form his own combo and studied music in California.
Reunions . . .bennie wrote:Rick Farris wrote:Thanks for putting that up. I know our pal Bennie might not see eye to eye with us,but if you can't find a good time in Paris I wouldn't know what to tell ya'.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Roger. . . I think you and I would have fun just about any place where there's women.
Lol. Hey, I'm off to a school reunion in my old hometown of Loughborough today (about 80 miles from where I live now). It is a 30-year reunion (we all left in 1979) and a long weekend job. By the time I get back on Monday this will all be a beautiful blur.

Rog, I can't tell you how happy it makes me, seeing there with Mando Muniz. I wish you all the success in the world with your paintings and the exhibit at the upcoming WBHOF. It couldn't happen to a nicer and more deserving guy. Kudos to Rick for making it happen. That's what this great thread is all about. I'm proud to be a part of it.kikibalt wrote:
Roger Esty and Armando Muniz review photos of Roger's paintings at WBHOF Director's meeting today.
Rick Farris
Rick, I'm the same way. I have never been to my high school reunion. I'm still friends with the guys that I grew up with. I don't have a problem with seeing anyone but for whatever reason, I have never went. Someday maybe.Rick Farris wrote:Reunions . . .bennie wrote:Rick Farris wrote:Thanks for putting that up. I know our pal Bennie might not see eye to eye with us,but if you can't find a good time in Paris I wouldn't know what to tell ya'.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Roger. . . I think you and I would have fun just about any place where there's women.
Lol. Hey, I'm off to a school reunion in my old hometown of Loughborough today (about 80 miles from where I live now). It is a 30-year reunion (we all left in 1979) and a long weekend job. By the time I get back on Monday this will all be a beautiful blur.
Bennie . . . I finished high school in 1970. I've never gone to any reunions, most of my friends were boxers at the time and I wasn't socially connected to it.
However, I occasionally will run into somebody I haven't seen since school.
Yesterday, I'm with Monica at her doctors office. I see a guy that looks familiar, but I can't think from where.
He's got a full head of white hair, but in good shape, big guy, you could tell he was an athlete in his younger days.
We get talking, and we discover that we went to high school together.
We weren't close friends, but he remembered I was a boxer and I remembered he'd gotten a football scholarship to USC.
I told him I didn't go far in boxing but have some great memories, and know some great fighters.
He told me he washed out at SC after a season, and ended up playing at a smaller college.
He married his high school girlfriend, they were still married and had grandkids. I've married several girlfriends, still married to the last one, two grown daughters from marriage #2.
The nurse called his name. We shook hands, knowing we'd never see each other again.
It was a nice reunion.
-Rick Farris


kikibalt wrote:In the late 1940s-early 50s, we young teenagers used to wear WW II combat boots like the ones shown below.

Have fun Bennie. Let us know how it turned out.bennie wrote:Rick Farris wrote:Thanks for putting that up. I know our pal Bennie might not see eye to eye with us,but if you can't find a good time in Paris I wouldn't know what to tell ya'.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Roger. . . I think you and I would have fun just about any place where there's women.
Lol. Hey, I'm off to a school reunion in my old hometown of Loughborough today (about 80 miles from where I live now). It is a 30-year reunion (we all left in 1979) and a long weekend job. By the time I get back on Monday this will all be a beautiful blur.
Randy, I got a couple of pairs of the Nam jungle boots from my brother Mando who was in Nam.Randyman wrote:kikibalt wrote:In the late 1940s-early 50s, we young teenagers used to wear WW II combat boots like the ones shown below.
Frank, years later we would wear the Vietnam jungle boots. believe it or not, they made excellent running shoes.
Randy
I agree Frank. The fight programs and Knockout magazines that you post are evidence of the talent that was around back in the day. These were just fights that were put on weekly shows. Today fights like these would be on pay per view, or at least deserving of it. It was harder for a fighter to make it to the top because the competition was so thick. All the divisions had some depth. It was a different time.kikibalt wrote:Roger...Some of the younger generation like to accuse us older guys of living in the past, and maybe we do but, anybody with an open mind can see these programs and see that boxing was better then, what is on those programs was boxing action for one week only!, I'm not saying that the fighters were better, only that boxing per se was.dagosd2000 wrote:Frankkikibalt wrote:
Looking at your old fight posters gives credence that the weekly boxing cards were not only exciting to watch for the sport itself,but gave the city an excitement and atmosphere that must have been a hell of a lot of fun.
Frank, I had a pair that I bought at Circle Sales in Pico Rivera. I wore them for years. They were probably the single best pair of shoes I ever owned.kikibalt wrote:Randy, I got a couple of pairs of the Nam jungle boots from my brother Mando who was in Nam.Randyman wrote:kikibalt wrote:In the late 1940s-early 50s, we young teenagers used to wear WW II combat boots like the ones shown below.
Frank, years later we would wear the Vietnam jungle boots. believe it or not, they made excellent running shoes.
Randy
kikibalt wrote:
Keeny Teran stopped Billy Evans in three. There was still hope and promise in the Teran camp, as well as with the family. As good as Keeny was and however far his talent would have taken him (we can only wonder), it was a hope and promise that would remain unfulfilled. It's a heart breaker ain't it?kikibalt wrote:
"El Pintor De Los Campeones"kikibalt wrote:
Roger Esty and Armando Muniz review photos of Roger's paintings at WBHOF Director's meeting today.
Rick Farris
Amen to that Rick! By the way, the World Boxing Hall of Fame is lucky to have you and so are we!Rick Farris wrote:"El Pintor De Los Campeones"kikibalt wrote:
Roger Esty and Armando Muniz review photos of Roger's paintings at WBHOF Director's meeting today.
Rick Farris
The World Boxing Hall of Fame is very lucky to have Roger on it's team.
When you think of all the postive energy that flows thru a person when they experience the gratification of artistic recognition, well, it's a gift.
Lot's of people have receieved that gift thru Roger.
Now, the special fighters we respect will experience that feeling.
It may not be unique to them, but something they hadn't felt in ages.
It will rub off on fans, that energy. I've seen it happen.
All this from one man's hands & eyes.
We are all imperfect, but most of us have something that is perfect, if only the world could see it.
Something that defines our spirit.
You can see it in all of Roger's paintings. The fighters spirit, and the artists spirit.
Together they are a powerful force, that's what I see and feel.
Personally, I can't wait to see the cover of this year's World Boxing Hall of Fame banquet program.
That publication will be permanently kept at:
The United States Capitol Historical Society
200 Maryland Ave. Washington D.C. 20505
Los angeles County Museum of Natural History
900 Exposition Bvd. Los Angeles, Calif. 90007
Bancroft Library, University of California
Berkley, Calif. 94720
This is going to be the first historically correct program with regard to our "honor roll" in years.
If it's not, look in my direction because I'm responsible.
The first thing that people will notice is the cover. It has to be special.
We can rest easy on that one. This year we have Roger.
-Rick Farris
Yes, Keeny did stopped Billy Evans in three, and I was there to see it live...Randyman wrote:Keeny Teran stopped Billy Evans in three. There was still hope and promise in the Teran camp, as well as with the family. As good as Keeny was and however far his talent would have taken him (we can only wonder), it was a hope and promise that would remain unfulfilled. It's a heart breaker ain't it?kikibalt wrote:
Randy