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- Michael Hossack was born on 17 October 1946 in Paterson, New Jersey, USA. He was an actor, known for The Doobie Brothers: The Doctor (1989), Listen to the Music (1994) and Home from the War: The Voices of Vietnam (2009). He died on 12 March 2012 in Dubois, Wyoming, USA.
- Named one of NASCAR's 50 greatest drivers in 1998, Curtis Turner was perhaps the hardest charger ever to drive a race car. Turner was there from NASCAR's beginning. He finished sixth in the championship standings during NASCAR's first season in 1949 and won 18 races in NASCAR's top division in his career. He was also an entrepeneur; he owned a lumber business, owned and flew his own plane, and along with Bruton Smith built the Charlotte Motor Speedway (now Lowe's Motor Speedway). Though it was his dream, the Charlotte Motor Speedway project caused an unexpected interruption in Turner's driving career in 1961. Strapped for cash after numerous cost overruns, Turner turned to the Teamsters Union for help. In exchange for the money he needed to pay the debt on the speedway, Turner agreed to help organize NASCAR's drivers into the Federation of Professional Athletes. When Bill France, Sr. got wind of Turner's efforts, he called a meeting of the drivers and, with pistol in hand, declared that none of NASCAR's drivers would be involved with a union. He then banned Turner and fellow driver Tim Flock for life from NASCAR. From 1961-64, Turner raced in various non-NASCAR events winning, among other events, the Pikes Peak Hill Climb. France and Turner eventually settled their differences and Turner was reinstated in late 1965. In his comeback, Turner won the American 500, the first race held at the North Carolina Motor Speedway in Rockingham, NC. He retired from racing in 1967 after a crash at the Atlanta International Raceway but was planning a comeback when he died. On October 4, 1970, Curtis Turner was flying his Aerocommander with professional golfer Clarence King when the plane crashed into a mountainside near Punxsutawney, PA. Turner was inducted into the National Motorsports Press Association (NMPA) Hall of Fame in 1971, and the International Motorsports Hall of Fame in 1992.