Born in Uniontown, Alabama, Lipscomb never knew his father, and moved to Detroit with his mother at the age of 3. When he was 11, his mother was murdered in the neighborhood where they lived and he moved in with his maternal grandparents.
Pro career
Lipscomb didn't attend college and was picked up as an undraftedfree agent by the Los Angeles Rams, who had first noticed Gene playing football in the Marines. He spent his service at Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton, California. He played for the Rams for three seasons from 1953-1955, before being traded to the Baltimore Colts for five seasons. In two of the seasons he played for the Colts, 1958 and 1959, he earned a spot in the Pro Bowl, and was instrumental in the Colts' two consecutive NFL Championships in 1958 and 1959. He then went on to play for the Pittsburgh Steelers for two seasons. During his '59-'60 & '60-'61 off-seasons, Lipscomb worked as a professional wrestler.
CHNO-FM is a Canadian radio station broadcasting at 103.9 on the FM dial in Sudbury, Ontario. The station is branded on-air as Rewind 103.9 with a classic hits format.
History of CHNO
The station began broadcasting on June 24, 1947 on AM 1440. It was a bilingual radio station, airing programming in both English and French, and was an affiliate of both CBC Radio's Dominion Network and Radio-Canada. It was operated by Sudbury Broadcasting, a company owned by F. Baxter Ricard and his wife Alma Ricard, and was the first bilingual radio station in Canada outside of Quebec. On November 9, 1954, CHNO moved to AM 900.
In 1957, Ricard opened CFBR on AM 550 as a full-time French-language station, and CHNO switched to full-time English. The licensing of CFBR, which took over the Radio-Canada affiliation from CHNO, made Sudbury Broadcasting the first commercial broadcaster in Canada licensed to operate two AM radio stations in the same city. On December 31, 1969, CFBR and CHNO swapped frequencies, CHNO moving to 550 and CFBR taking over the 900 slot. On May 14, 1976, the CRTC denied an application by Sudbury Broadcasting Co. Ltd. to change CHNO's frequency from 550kHz to 570kHz.
Big Daddy is a horror film directed, produced and written by Carl K. Hittleman. It was filmed in 1965 under the title Paradise Road, but not released until 1969.
Plot
A man (Reed Sherman) visiting the Florida Everglades falls for an illiterate girl, and competes with the mysterious A. Lincoln Beauregard (Victor Buono) for her affections. He also encounters vicious alligators and a voodoo witch doctor.
Eugene Allen "Gene" Lipscomb (August 9, 1931 – May 10, 1963) was an American football defensive tackle in the National Football League (NFL) and a professional wrestler. He was known by the nickname "Big Daddy".
Born in Uniontown, Alabama, Lipscomb never knew his father, and moved to Detroit, Michigan with his mother at the age of three. When he was 11, his mother was murdered in the neighborhood where they lived, and he moved in with his maternal grandparents.
After graduating from Miller High School, Lipscomb did not attend college and instead served in the United States Marine Corps, where he was stationed at Camp Pendleton and played on the camp's football team. He was signed as an undrafted free agent by the Los Angeles Rams. He player for the Rams for three seasons, from 1953 to 19...
published: 20 Apr 2022
NFL 1958 Special Baltimore Colts Defensive Line Big Daddy Lipscomb + Art Donovan + Don Joyce
published: 23 Mar 2019
Big Daddy
Gene "Big Daddy" Lipscomb
published: 19 Feb 2017
1981 BIG DADDY VS GIANT HAYSTACKS (BRITISH WRESTLING) HQ
1981 BIG DADDY VS GIANT HAYSTACKS (BRITISH WRESTLING)
published: 13 Aug 2009
NFL - 1958 - NFL Films - The Baltimore Colts Defensive Front Four - The Most Colorful Of Them All
http://www.imasportsphile.com has the largest and most diverse vintage NFL video library online
Jan. 6, 1963 - The passing of Milt Plum (pictured #16) and Ken Webb’s running swept the Detroit Lions to their third straight NFL Playoff Bowl victory today. The Western Conference runners-up beat the Pittsburgh Steelers, who finished second in the Eastern Conference, 17-10. Plum, voted most valuable in the game, set up the deciding touchdown with a pass to Dan Lewis that gained 74 yards to the Steeler 5-yard line. Webb plunged over on the second attempt as the crowd of 36,284 in Miami cheered. It was a head-knocking game in 72-degree temperature with Detroit’s Wayne Walker and Pittsburgh’s John Henry Johnson trading punches at one point and three players being knocked groggy on two successive plays. Webb once had to be helped from the field after being crunched by Big Daddy Lipscomb, and ...
published: 06 Jan 2023
The GREATEST Game Ever Played! (Colts vs. Giants, 1958 NFL Championship)
Check out the 1958 NFL Championship Game highlights between the Baltimore Colts and New York Giants!
#ClassicGameHighlights #Colts #Giants
The NFL Throwback is your home for all things NFL history.
Check out our other channels:
NFL Films - YouTube.com/NFLFilms
NFL Network- YouTube.com/NFLNetwork
NFL Rush - YouTube.com/NFLRush
NFL - YouTube.com/NFL
#NFL #NFLThrowback #NFLHistory #Football #AmericanFootball #NFLVault
published: 22 Feb 2019
Man Finds Shoes & A Questionable Scent At Girlfriends Home (Full Episode) | Paternity Court
Dupree v. Flagg: After coming home to find another man's shoes by his girlfriends bed, a Detroit, MI man comes to court with serious doubt that he is the father of her twin children.
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Man Finds Shoes & A Questionable Scent At Girlfriends Home (Full Episode) | Paternity Court
https://youtu.be/gglHpyLH_kg
Season 3, Episode 114
#PaternityCourt #LaurenLake
published: 15 Aug 2019
Wife Denies Mistress's Child Is Her Husband's (Full Episode) | Paternity Court
Jackson v. Lipscomb/Jackson: A North Carolina woman doesn't believe her husband is the father of his mistress's baby.
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Wife Denies Mistress's Child Is Her Husband's (Full Episode) | Paternity Court
https://youtu.be/hMDz7ONXaJA
Season 2, Episode 41
#PaternityCourt #LaurenLake
Eugene Allen "Gene" Lipscomb (August 9, 1931 – May 10, 1963) was an American football defensive tackle in the National Football League (NFL) and a professional ...
Eugene Allen "Gene" Lipscomb (August 9, 1931 – May 10, 1963) was an American football defensive tackle in the National Football League (NFL) and a professional wrestler. He was known by the nickname "Big Daddy".
Born in Uniontown, Alabama, Lipscomb never knew his father, and moved to Detroit, Michigan with his mother at the age of three. When he was 11, his mother was murdered in the neighborhood where they lived, and he moved in with his maternal grandparents.
After graduating from Miller High School, Lipscomb did not attend college and instead served in the United States Marine Corps, where he was stationed at Camp Pendleton and played on the camp's football team. He was signed as an undrafted free agent by the Los Angeles Rams. He player for the Rams for three seasons, from 1953 to 1955, before being traded to the Baltimore Colts for five seasons. In two of the seasons he played for the Colts, 1958 and 1959, he earned a spot in the Pro Bowl, and was instrumental in the Colts' two consecutive NFL Championships in 1958 and 1959. He then went on to play for the Pittsburgh Steelers for two seasons. During the 1959–60 and 1960–61 off-seasons, Lipscomb worked as a professional wrestler.
The Professional Football Researchers Association named Lipscomb to the PFRA Hall of Very Good Class of 2006.
In 2019, despite currently not being in the Pro Football Hall of Fame, he was chosen as a finalist for the NFL's 100th Anniversary Team
On May 10, 1963, Lipscomb died of an overdose of heroin on Brice Street in Baltimore, Maryland, at the apartment of Timothy Black.
Eugene Allen "Gene" Lipscomb (August 9, 1931 – May 10, 1963) was an American football defensive tackle in the National Football League (NFL) and a professional wrestler. He was known by the nickname "Big Daddy".
Born in Uniontown, Alabama, Lipscomb never knew his father, and moved to Detroit, Michigan with his mother at the age of three. When he was 11, his mother was murdered in the neighborhood where they lived, and he moved in with his maternal grandparents.
After graduating from Miller High School, Lipscomb did not attend college and instead served in the United States Marine Corps, where he was stationed at Camp Pendleton and played on the camp's football team. He was signed as an undrafted free agent by the Los Angeles Rams. He player for the Rams for three seasons, from 1953 to 1955, before being traded to the Baltimore Colts for five seasons. In two of the seasons he played for the Colts, 1958 and 1959, he earned a spot in the Pro Bowl, and was instrumental in the Colts' two consecutive NFL Championships in 1958 and 1959. He then went on to play for the Pittsburgh Steelers for two seasons. During the 1959–60 and 1960–61 off-seasons, Lipscomb worked as a professional wrestler.
The Professional Football Researchers Association named Lipscomb to the PFRA Hall of Very Good Class of 2006.
In 2019, despite currently not being in the Pro Football Hall of Fame, he was chosen as a finalist for the NFL's 100th Anniversary Team
On May 10, 1963, Lipscomb died of an overdose of heroin on Brice Street in Baltimore, Maryland, at the apartment of Timothy Black.
Jan. 6, 1963 - The passing of Milt Plum (pictured #16) and Ken Webb’s running swept the Detroit Lions to their third straight NFL Playoff Bowl victory today. Th...
Jan. 6, 1963 - The passing of Milt Plum (pictured #16) and Ken Webb’s running swept the Detroit Lions to their third straight NFL Playoff Bowl victory today. The Western Conference runners-up beat the Pittsburgh Steelers, who finished second in the Eastern Conference, 17-10. Plum, voted most valuable in the game, set up the deciding touchdown with a pass to Dan Lewis that gained 74 yards to the Steeler 5-yard line. Webb plunged over on the second attempt as the crowd of 36,284 in Miami cheered. It was a head-knocking game in 72-degree temperature with Detroit’s Wayne Walker and Pittsburgh’s John Henry Johnson trading punches at one point and three players being knocked groggy on two successive plays. Webb once had to be helped from the field after being crunched by Big Daddy Lipscomb, and Detroit’s Pat Studstill and Pittsburgh’s Willie Daniel were flattened when they collided head-on going up for a pass.
Please subscribe to this podcast here: https://www.realtime1960s.com/contact
Thanks for your support!
Jan. 6, 1963 - The passing of Milt Plum (pictured #16) and Ken Webb’s running swept the Detroit Lions to their third straight NFL Playoff Bowl victory today. The Western Conference runners-up beat the Pittsburgh Steelers, who finished second in the Eastern Conference, 17-10. Plum, voted most valuable in the game, set up the deciding touchdown with a pass to Dan Lewis that gained 74 yards to the Steeler 5-yard line. Webb plunged over on the second attempt as the crowd of 36,284 in Miami cheered. It was a head-knocking game in 72-degree temperature with Detroit’s Wayne Walker and Pittsburgh’s John Henry Johnson trading punches at one point and three players being knocked groggy on two successive plays. Webb once had to be helped from the field after being crunched by Big Daddy Lipscomb, and Detroit’s Pat Studstill and Pittsburgh’s Willie Daniel were flattened when they collided head-on going up for a pass.
Please subscribe to this podcast here: https://www.realtime1960s.com/contact
Thanks for your support!
Check out the 1958 NFL Championship Game highlights between the Baltimore Colts and New York Giants!
#ClassicGameHighlights #Colts #Giants
The NFL Throwback i...
Check out the 1958 NFL Championship Game highlights between the Baltimore Colts and New York Giants!
#ClassicGameHighlights #Colts #Giants
The NFL Throwback is your home for all things NFL history.
Check out our other channels:
NFL Films - YouTube.com/NFLFilms
NFL Network- YouTube.com/NFLNetwork
NFL Rush - YouTube.com/NFLRush
NFL - YouTube.com/NFL
#NFL #NFLThrowback #NFLHistory #Football #AmericanFootball #NFLVault
Check out the 1958 NFL Championship Game highlights between the Baltimore Colts and New York Giants!
#ClassicGameHighlights #Colts #Giants
The NFL Throwback is your home for all things NFL history.
Check out our other channels:
NFL Films - YouTube.com/NFLFilms
NFL Network- YouTube.com/NFLNetwork
NFL Rush - YouTube.com/NFLRush
NFL - YouTube.com/NFL
#NFL #NFLThrowback #NFLHistory #Football #AmericanFootball #NFLVault
Dupree v. Flagg: After coming home to find another man's shoes by his girlfriends bed, a Detroit, MI man comes to court with serious doubt that he is the father...
Dupree v. Flagg: After coming home to find another man's shoes by his girlfriends bed, a Detroit, MI man comes to court with serious doubt that he is the father of her twin children.
Subscribe: https://bit.ly/PaternityCourtYT
Follow Paternity Court on Social Media:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PaternityCourt/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/PaternityCourt
Instagram: @PaternityCourtTV
Follow MGM Television on Social Media:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MGMTelevision
Twitter: https://twitter.com/MGMTelevision
Instagram: @MGM_Television
Man Finds Shoes & A Questionable Scent At Girlfriends Home (Full Episode) | Paternity Court
https://youtu.be/gglHpyLH_kg
Season 3, Episode 114
#PaternityCourt #LaurenLake
Dupree v. Flagg: After coming home to find another man's shoes by his girlfriends bed, a Detroit, MI man comes to court with serious doubt that he is the father of her twin children.
Subscribe: https://bit.ly/PaternityCourtYT
Follow Paternity Court on Social Media:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PaternityCourt/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/PaternityCourt
Instagram: @PaternityCourtTV
Follow MGM Television on Social Media:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MGMTelevision
Twitter: https://twitter.com/MGMTelevision
Instagram: @MGM_Television
Man Finds Shoes & A Questionable Scent At Girlfriends Home (Full Episode) | Paternity Court
https://youtu.be/gglHpyLH_kg
Season 3, Episode 114
#PaternityCourt #LaurenLake
Jackson v. Lipscomb/Jackson: A North Carolina woman doesn't believe her husband is the father of his mistress's baby.
Subscribe: https://bit.ly/PaternityCourtY...
Jackson v. Lipscomb/Jackson: A North Carolina woman doesn't believe her husband is the father of his mistress's baby.
Subscribe: https://bit.ly/PaternityCourtYT
Follow Paternity Court on Social Media:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PaternityCourt/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/PaternityCourt
Instagram: @PaternityCourtTV
Follow MGM Television on Social Media:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MGMTelevision
Twitter: https://twitter.com/MGMTelevision
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Wife Denies Mistress's Child Is Her Husband's (Full Episode) | Paternity Court
https://youtu.be/hMDz7ONXaJA
Season 2, Episode 41
#PaternityCourt #LaurenLake
Jackson v. Lipscomb/Jackson: A North Carolina woman doesn't believe her husband is the father of his mistress's baby.
Subscribe: https://bit.ly/PaternityCourtYT
Follow Paternity Court on Social Media:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PaternityCourt/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/PaternityCourt
Instagram: @PaternityCourtTV
Follow MGM Television on Social Media:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MGMTelevision
Twitter: https://twitter.com/MGMTelevision
Instagram: @MGM_Television
Wife Denies Mistress's Child Is Her Husband's (Full Episode) | Paternity Court
https://youtu.be/hMDz7ONXaJA
Season 2, Episode 41
#PaternityCourt #LaurenLake
Eugene Allen "Gene" Lipscomb (August 9, 1931 – May 10, 1963) was an American football defensive tackle in the National Football League (NFL) and a professional wrestler. He was known by the nickname "Big Daddy".
Born in Uniontown, Alabama, Lipscomb never knew his father, and moved to Detroit, Michigan with his mother at the age of three. When he was 11, his mother was murdered in the neighborhood where they lived, and he moved in with his maternal grandparents.
After graduating from Miller High School, Lipscomb did not attend college and instead served in the United States Marine Corps, where he was stationed at Camp Pendleton and played on the camp's football team. He was signed as an undrafted free agent by the Los Angeles Rams. He player for the Rams for three seasons, from 1953 to 1955, before being traded to the Baltimore Colts for five seasons. In two of the seasons he played for the Colts, 1958 and 1959, he earned a spot in the Pro Bowl, and was instrumental in the Colts' two consecutive NFL Championships in 1958 and 1959. He then went on to play for the Pittsburgh Steelers for two seasons. During the 1959–60 and 1960–61 off-seasons, Lipscomb worked as a professional wrestler.
The Professional Football Researchers Association named Lipscomb to the PFRA Hall of Very Good Class of 2006.
In 2019, despite currently not being in the Pro Football Hall of Fame, he was chosen as a finalist for the NFL's 100th Anniversary Team
On May 10, 1963, Lipscomb died of an overdose of heroin on Brice Street in Baltimore, Maryland, at the apartment of Timothy Black.
Jan. 6, 1963 - The passing of Milt Plum (pictured #16) and Ken Webb’s running swept the Detroit Lions to their third straight NFL Playoff Bowl victory today. The Western Conference runners-up beat the Pittsburgh Steelers, who finished second in the Eastern Conference, 17-10. Plum, voted most valuable in the game, set up the deciding touchdown with a pass to Dan Lewis that gained 74 yards to the Steeler 5-yard line. Webb plunged over on the second attempt as the crowd of 36,284 in Miami cheered. It was a head-knocking game in 72-degree temperature with Detroit’s Wayne Walker and Pittsburgh’s John Henry Johnson trading punches at one point and three players being knocked groggy on two successive plays. Webb once had to be helped from the field after being crunched by Big Daddy Lipscomb, and Detroit’s Pat Studstill and Pittsburgh’s Willie Daniel were flattened when they collided head-on going up for a pass.
Please subscribe to this podcast here: https://www.realtime1960s.com/contact
Thanks for your support!
Check out the 1958 NFL Championship Game highlights between the Baltimore Colts and New York Giants!
#ClassicGameHighlights #Colts #Giants
The NFL Throwback is your home for all things NFL history.
Check out our other channels:
NFL Films - YouTube.com/NFLFilms
NFL Network- YouTube.com/NFLNetwork
NFL Rush - YouTube.com/NFLRush
NFL - YouTube.com/NFL
#NFL #NFLThrowback #NFLHistory #Football #AmericanFootball #NFLVault
Dupree v. Flagg: After coming home to find another man's shoes by his girlfriends bed, a Detroit, MI man comes to court with serious doubt that he is the father of her twin children.
Subscribe: https://bit.ly/PaternityCourtYT
Follow Paternity Court on Social Media:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PaternityCourt/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/PaternityCourt
Instagram: @PaternityCourtTV
Follow MGM Television on Social Media:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MGMTelevision
Twitter: https://twitter.com/MGMTelevision
Instagram: @MGM_Television
Man Finds Shoes & A Questionable Scent At Girlfriends Home (Full Episode) | Paternity Court
https://youtu.be/gglHpyLH_kg
Season 3, Episode 114
#PaternityCourt #LaurenLake
Jackson v. Lipscomb/Jackson: A North Carolina woman doesn't believe her husband is the father of his mistress's baby.
Subscribe: https://bit.ly/PaternityCourtYT
Follow Paternity Court on Social Media:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PaternityCourt/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/PaternityCourt
Instagram: @PaternityCourtTV
Follow MGM Television on Social Media:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MGMTelevision
Twitter: https://twitter.com/MGMTelevision
Instagram: @MGM_Television
Wife Denies Mistress's Child Is Her Husband's (Full Episode) | Paternity Court
https://youtu.be/hMDz7ONXaJA
Season 2, Episode 41
#PaternityCourt #LaurenLake
Born in Uniontown, Alabama, Lipscomb never knew his father, and moved to Detroit with his mother at the age of 3. When he was 11, his mother was murdered in the neighborhood where they lived and he moved in with his maternal grandparents.
Pro career
Lipscomb didn't attend college and was picked up as an undraftedfree agent by the Los Angeles Rams, who had first noticed Gene playing football in the Marines. He spent his service at Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton, California. He played for the Rams for three seasons from 1953-1955, before being traded to the Baltimore Colts for five seasons. In two of the seasons he played for the Colts, 1958 and 1959, he earned a spot in the Pro Bowl, and was instrumental in the Colts' two consecutive NFL Championships in 1958 and 1959. He then went on to play for the Pittsburgh Steelers for two seasons. During his '59-'60 & '60-'61 off-seasons, Lipscomb worked as a professional wrestler.
She had such tiny tears Just like a Barbie doll She likes to shop at Sears And visit shopping malls Now she's a big mamma Tell poppa Cry, cry, cry, cry Old Money Old money doesn't matter now Have mercy Mercy, mercy, daddy's going fishing now He put the bait onto his line And he's winding out his reel Fish are swimming in the pond Let 'em sail away He's got his eye on you He knows just what she wants The fish is gonna bite She is his latest catch 'Cause he's a Big Daddy Oh, mammy Cry, cry, cry, cry Big Daddy Oh, daddy's scraping bottom now Oh, momma Daddy, daddy, daddy does the talking now Mesmerized like horny toads By shiny things like jewels and gold Throwing all their pearls to swine Let 'em sail away You lucky dog You'll be on Easy Street Drinking champagne She gets all that she wants His heart's desire No more worries anymore Like a fairy tale Anything that she likes I seen you do the dog I seen you getting down A swimming back and forth When daddy's not around Big Daddy Oh, she's pretty as a picture now Oh, momma Oh, what a little martyr now He knows how to drive 'em wild What do you'd think she'd see Saying "This is mine and this is hers. Now take that stuff away" Best left unspoken One and one is two The velvet lies sing softly Each with a golden spoon And she passed her time in the wind and the rain Got a one way ticket on a Southbound train Said baby, baby, wants to have a good time And Big Daddy laughed And Big Daddy smiled Like dynamite One fine day she'll explode Who's laughing now? No one sees anymore Sneak in and out Don't get caught running 'round Swim back and forth
28, 1958... On the day of the big game, a watch party for the brothers-in-law had been planned to be held at Uncle Jack’s house ... “Raymond Berry. Number 82.” ... “Eugene ‘Big> Daddy’ Lipscomb!” ... I sampled a big potato chip and went back to my position ... .
I asked Weeb about some of the characters and he recalled Gene “Big> Daddy” Lipscomb, the Colts’ all-pro defensive tackle of the late 1950s... Teammate Jim Parker had a job selling cemetery lots and kept pestering Big Daddy about them.