Bass Class. Be the first to comment Leave a Reply Cancel reply You must be logged in to post a comment. The Fishing Edge Classifieds Forums. Copyright - Louisiana Sportsman, Inc. Chemotherapy and radiation shrunk the cancerous tumor, but it returned recently, convincing Davis to seek home hospice care. Anderson visited their house in Pembroke earlier this month, just days before Davis died.
Before hospice, Davis continued attending the traditional Saturday morning breakfasts with friends at the Windmill Restaurant, just like he had for two decades. We just joked and talked about old times. Ray Duckler , our intrepid columnist, focuses on the Suncook Valley. He floats from topic to topic, searching for the humor or sadness or humanity in each subject. A native New Yorker, he loves the Yankees and Giants. The Red Sox and Patriots?
Not so much. Beth McClure is feeling good these days. Not all charter schools are doing A jury is deciding whether Sarah Lynch staged a burglary at her Manchester home in , as prosecutors maintain, or whether she was attacked and During his teenage years, he was often forced to rely on his wits to have enough to eat.
At 19, he jumped at the chance to receive training in the experimental assembly department at Douglas Aircraft in California and went on to service fighter planes in North Africa, Europe, and the Middle East during World War II.
He was a naturally innovative thinker. Ann recalls her father telling her and her brother Paul about the time he met James Watson and Francis Crick, who would later go on to win the Nobel Prize for their discovery of DNA structure.
At Berkeley, Davis and his mentor, Dr. Frank Allen, discovered a previously unknown form of a nucleotide used in the cellular processing of nucleic acids. He felt we had a special and unique culture. He was the perfect TV guide to both the secret wetland fishing spots and the proper use of a cast iron skillet. He was also the on-air emissary for the characters who made life in New Orleans special.
Occasionally, Mr. Davis' interviews were poetic. Sometime in his long career, he interviewed a man who spent his days chipping the masonry from antique bricks for resale. The task seemed so ordinary, but Mr. Davis made it seem significant. WWL television anchorman Dennis Woltering said that it can be a challenge to get interview subjects to relax in front of the camera, but Mr. Davis had a knack for making people feel comfortable. Woltering said that he went fishing with Mr.
Davis from time to time. As much as he enjoyed the experience, he said that rising early and spending the day in the weather always exhausted him. But Davis seemed impervious. Woltering marveled that after each trip, Mr. Davis still found the energy to work up a news report. He did it so well. He made it look easy.
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