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❤️ Roger Wilson (actor) 🐽

"Roger W. Wilson (born October 8, 1956) is an American actor. He played as Mickey In "Porky's" and "Porky's 2: The Next Day" Career Wilson appeared in the first two Porky's movies as well as Thunder Alley and the TV series Seven Brides for Seven Brothers. Wilson wrote screenplays for producers including Steve Tisch, Penny Marshall, and Sharon Stone. and briefly taught screenwriting classes in New York City in the mid-2000s. Wilson was the lead singer in the New York-based band Num in the 1990s. Wilson was also a member of the New York-based band Born Again Baldwins from mid-2008 until the end of 2009. Early life and education He attended Woodberry Forest School and graduated in 1975 with Marvin Bush, brother of former President George W. Bush. Both of his parents died young and Roger inherited a considerable estate as a teenager. Personal life Wilson was married to Estée Lauder model Shaun Casey from 1978 to 1983. After his divorce, he became supermodel Christy Turlington's first serious boyfriend at age 18. They dated from 1987 to 1993. Turlington told Cosmopolitan magazine and Dennis Miller, when he had a brief, late-night talk show, that she and Wilson were married. However, it was a spiritual, and not a legal ceremony. Wilson is the one who introduced Turlington to yoga and she moved to California briefly to live with him. Turlington had his initials and a rose tattooed on her ankle, which she later removed. Turlington and Wilson broke up in 1993 and she began to date actor Christian Slater for a few weeks. Wilson later dated Elizabeth Berkley, best known from TV show Saved by the Bell, in the late 1990s. In 2000 Wilson filed a $40 million lawsuit against fellow actor Leonardo DiCaprio, claiming that DiCaprio encouraged his friends to physically assault Wilson after an argument relating to Berkley. Wilson claimed his larynx was badly damaged. DiCaprio was alleged to have pursued Berkley whilst she was in a relationship with Wilson and Wilson confronted DiCaprio over the accusation. In 2009, Page Six reported that he was working as a bartender in New York.. In 2018, he founded the club 7908 in Aspen. References External links * Category:1956 births Category:American male film actors Category:American male television actors Category:Living people Category:Woodberry Forest School alumni Category:Male actors from New Orleans "

❤️ Zvonimir Rogoz 🐽

"Zvonimir Rogoz (10 October 1887 - 6 February 1988) was a Croatian actor who played in German, Croatian, Slovenian, Czech and Slovakian, on stage and in cinema, during a career long 81 years. A native of Zagreb, Rogoz started his actor's career in Vienna in Wiener Theater. From 1919 to 1929 he was actor and director in Ljubljana. Rogoz became famous in Czechoslovakia as a guest in title roles when Ljubljana theater in 1927 played in Prague Shakespeare's Hamlet and Dostoevsky's Idiot. Rogoz remained in engagement in National Theatre in Prague from 1929 till 1949. In the prewar period he appeared in many Czechoslovak films of the 1930s, including the 1933 erotic drama Ecstasy, featuring young Hedy Lamarr. He then returned to Zagreb, playing in theater, cinema and television till his death. Younger generations of Croatia remember him even more for his private life: he fathered a child at the age of 96. This and other events became the subject of his autobiographical book Mojih prvih 100 godina (My First 100 Years). He died in Zagreb a few months after his 100th birthday. Filmography * The Glembays (1988) * Pet mrtvih adresa (1984) * Kiklop (1982) * Dobro jutro sine (1978) * Okupacija u 26 slika (1978) * Harmonika (1972) * Putovanje na mjesto nesreće (1971) * Starci (1971) * Slučajni život (1969) * Cintek (1967) * Rondo (1966) * Ključ (1965) * Banket (1965) * San (1965) * Doktor Knok (1964) * Vrapčić (1964) * Carevo novo ruho (1961) * Samsonov sin (1960) * Vlak bez voznog reda (1959) * Nije bilo uzalud (1957) * Opsada (1956) * The Beginning Was Sin (1954) * U početku bijaše grijeh (1954) * Koncert kao Pjaskovski (1954) * Revolucijski rok 1848 (1949) * Pripad Z-8 (1949) * Muzikant (1948) * Dok se vratiš (1948) * Tri kamaradi (1947) * Violina i san (1947) * Krakatit (1947) * Fourteen at the Table (1943) * Bila jahta u Splitu (1939) * Ecstasy (1933) TV roles * Dnevnik Očenašeka (1968) External links * Category:1887 births Category:1988 deaths Category:20th-century Croatian male actors Category:Croatian centenarians Category:Male actors from Zagreb Category:Croatian male film actors Category:Croatian male silent film actors Category:Croatian male television actors "

❤️ USS Lamson (DD-328) 🐽

"USS Lamson (DD-328) was a built for the United States Navy during World War I. Description The Clemson class was a repeat of the preceding although more fuel capacity was added.Gardiner & Gray, p. 125 The ships displaced at standard load and at deep load. They had an overall length of , a beam of and a draught of . They had a crew of 6 officers and 108 enlisted men.Friedman, pp. 402–03 Performance differed radically between the ships of the class, often due to poor workmanship. The Clemson class was powered by two steam turbines, each driving one propeller shaft, using steam provided by four water-tube boilers. The turbines were designed to produce a total of intended to reach a speed of . The ships carried a maximum of of fuel oil which was intended gave them a range of at .Friedman, pp. 39–42, 402–03 The ships were armed with four 4-inch (102 mm) guns in single mounts and were fitted with two 1-pounder guns for anti-aircraft defense. In many ships a shortage of 1-pounders caused them to be replaced by 3-inch (76 mm) guns. Their primary weapon, though, was their torpedo battery of a dozen 21 inch (533 mm) torpedo tubes in four triple mounts. They also carried a pair of depth charge rails. A "Y-gun" depth charge thrower was added to many ships.Friedman, pp. 44–45 Construction and career Lamson, named for American Civil War naval hero Roswell Lamson, was laid down 13 August 1919 by Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation, San Francisco, California; launched 1 September 1920; sponsored by Miss Annette Rolph; and commissioned 19 April 1921, Lieutenant Commander F. L. Johnston in command. After shakedown, Lamson was assigned to the Atlantic Fleet, arriving Charleston, South Carolina, 28 December 1921. From 1921 to 1925, the destroyer operated along the east coast and in the Caribbean, participating in fleet maneuvers, war games, and reserve training cruises. Assigned to the U.S. Naval Forces in Europe, Lamson departed Boston, Massachusetts 18 June 1925 for operations in European and Mediterranean waters. Returning to the United States 1 year later, Lamson rejoined the Scouting Fleet and resumed exercises and maneuvers along the Atlantic coast and in the Caribbean. USS Lamson moored near the "League Island Crane" at the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard Fate The destroyer continued these operations until she decommissioned at Philadelphia 1 May 1930. Lamson was sold 17 January 1931 to Boston Iron & Metal Company, Baltimore, and scrapped 18 October 1934. Notes References External links *http://www.navsource.org/archives/05/328.htm Category:Clemson-class destroyers Category:United States Navy Oregon-related ships Category:Ships built in San Francisco Category:1920 ships "

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