: « This is my brother. He, my husband, and I were flying home from RSW, Florida back to NY when we discovered the suitcase making this noise. We laughed so hard and so did the people around us. Everyone was getting a kick out of it. I peed in my pants, literally, before a flight from laughing. My brother is in the car industry so it makes it even better! »
Paul Russell « Bud » Dagler, a resident of Fort Wayne, Indiana, was the most critically injured. While attempting to qualify for the 100-mile race over the 1-mile dirt oval, a steering knuckle on his stock car broke, causing it to overturn. He was taken to a hospital in Indiana Harbor in serious condition suffering from internal injuries. The next day, his family was called to his side as it was feared that he would not survive. He survived the day, only to develop double pneumonia. He died early in the morning on Wednesday, 09 October 1929.
Dagler was born in Rushville, Indiana, the son of William and Edna (Offutt) Dagler. His father died when Dagler was young, leaving his wife with Bud and his twin brothers, Lewis and Warren E. The widowed mother raised her family in Rushville with the help of relatives.
Two years earlier, in 1927, Bud Dagler had moved from Rushville to Fort Wayne. Unmarried, he lived at 327 W. Rudisill Boulevard, and was the owner and manager of the Fort Wayne Box Lunch Company on Broadway. He had gotten involved in racing only the past summer, and had raced stock cars at Winchester and Huntington Speedways.
Besides his mother and brothers, Dagler was survived by a grandmother, Mrs. Eva Offutt. Burial was in East Hill Cemetery in Rushville. The employees of his company made the trip to Rushville for the services. He shares a grave marker with his mother, who died three weeks after him.
R.I.P
Dans une enquête sur les fans de Elite, Le Point écrit cette semaine : « Les fans de la série sont essentiellement des ados fascinés par les interdits que la série explore. Du plan à trois à la consommation de GHB lors de soirées forcément débridées, les sources d’excitation pullulent. Une série cathartique pour certains collégiens qui n’ont de cesse de vanter les intrigues « de dingue » et… la beauté plastique des actrices. »
Élite prendra fin l’année prochaine a annoncé Netflix dans un tweet ce mercredi, sans donner vraiment de raison à cette décision alors que le programme reste un succès. La plateforme confirme tout de même le renouvellement d’Élite pour une saison 8, qui sera la dernière.
Elle sera marquée par le retour d’un autre personnage historique. Après Omar Ayuso de retour dans la peau d’Omar, on reverra l’année prochaine sa sœur Nadia (jouée par Mina El Hammani), partie à la fin de la saison 3, alors qu’elle quittait Guzmán (Miguel Bernardeau) pour aller à l’université à New York.