Legends dropping like flies

:cry:
Bill Anders, the Apollo 8 astronaut who was one of the first humans to orbit the moon and who took the iconic first photo of Earth rising over the lunar surface, died Friday when a plane he was piloting crashed near the San Juan Islands off the coast of Washington state. He was 90.

His son Greg Anders confirmed the death to the Associated Press.

The plane, a Beechcraft T-34 Mentor, went into the water near Roche Harbor, Wash., about 11:40 a.m., the Federal Aviation Administration said.

The FAA said the pilot was thought to be the only person on board, though local authorities could not immediately confirm that.
 
Bill Anders [...] died Friday when a plane he was piloting crashed near the San Juan Islands off the coast of Washington state. He was 90.

Oh for cripes' sake. I'm sure there will be plenty of "he died doing what he loved", but for reals he died doing something no 90 year old has any business doing.
 
It's better than the nursing home, no?
It's just (relatively) lucky he went into Puget Sound and not a house, school, dry conditions forest or something worse yet.

Those among us who win the longevity lottery owe it to themselves and others to retire from dangerous machinery, including cars.
 
It may not have had anything to do with luck. His plane may have gone exactly where he wanted it to.
Oh for cripes' sake. I'm sure there will be plenty of "he died doing what he loved", but for reals he died doing something no 90 year old has any business doing.
Oh, I don't know. When one hits 90 and and realizes taking care of one's self is only going to keep getting harder, maybe one last thrill with a quick finish is the way to go.
 
Oh, I don't know. When one hits 90 and and realizes taking care of one's self is only going to keep getting harder, maybe one last thrill with a quick finish is the way to go.
There's a woman related to me somehow on my mother's side who is now 104. She has been saying that she wants to die for at least four years. I'm not close enough with her to even broach the subject, but when somebody says that at a Thanksgiving gathering, well -- people should probably take the sentiment more seriously than they'd like to.
 
There's a woman related to me somehow on my mother's side who is now 104. She has been saying that she wants to die for at least four years. I'm not close enough with her to even broach the subject, but when somebody says that at a Thanksgiving gathering, well -- people should probably take the sentiment more seriously than they'd like to.
One last Oregon vacation!
 
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