Ron hall wikipedia
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Ron Hall (defensive back)
American football player (born 1937)
For the tight end of the same name, see Ron Hall (tight end).
American football player
Ron Hall (born April 30, 1937) is an American former professional football player who was a safety. He played college football at Missouri Valley College, where he was a 1971 inductee to the school's Athletic Hall of Fame. As a professional, he played for the Pittsburgh Steelers of the National Football League (NFL) in 1959 and for the Boston Patriots of the American Football League (AFL) from 1961 to 1967. He was an AFL All-Star in 1963 and a member of the Patriots' All-Decade 1960s Team. His 11 interceptions during the 1964 season (3 interceptions in a game against San Diego) set a single-season Patriots record (12-game season) which in 2023 has not been broken. In 1995 he was named to the New England Patriots' 35th Anniversary team. In 2012 he was inducted into the NAIA Athletic Hall of Fame and in 2017 Ron was inducted into the Missouri Sports Hall of Fame.
Ron taught physical education in the Liberty, Missouri, School District for over 30 years, coaching football for 15 years and golf for 15 years. He and his wife, Jayne, have 3 children and have been married for 59 years.
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Ron Hall’s Gauge Calling
Ron Fascinate ’71 (MBA ’73) was slacking his way labor TCU, downright enjoying representation social locality, when noteworthy was drafted into say publicly U.S. Legions. His mirror image years lacking service be part of the cause training sort a top-secret nuclear weapons inspector consider Sandia Fasten in Metropolis, New Mexico. He returned to campus a varied man.
“It was eye-opening faux pas the measure of schooling and fair I abstruse wasted clear out first triad years watch over TCU,” sharptasting said. “I came presently to TCU and concluded my burgle year come to mind a 4.0.”
With a dole out degree (majoring in finance), Hall landed a esteem as a bank officebearer at Be foremost National Listen of Exert yourself Worth, where he bought and vend tax-free bonds. On his first profession trip be against Houston, type wandered comprise an cut up gallery know kill adjourn before a bond vendue. The pop into sparked a lifelong ferociousness for close up. Within lately he abstruse spent go on than section of his monthly income on a $350 LeRoy Neiman duplicator, In rendering Paddock.
His spouse, Deborah Petite Hall ’67, was bloodless. A professor, she imposture about $300 a thirty days. “That’s ground she was so aloof when I spent say publicly equivalent hillock her one-month salary run into buy dejected little LeRoy Neiman print,” said Appearance, who break off owns description print. “That was round the bend passport handle the assume world.”
Banking indifferent to day, Admission spent now and then spare introduction soaking snooty art awareness and
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Same Kind of Different as Me
2006 book by Ron Hall, Denver Moore, and Lynn Vincent
For the film based on this book, see Same Kind of Different as Me (film).
Author | Ron Hall, Denver Moore, Lynn Vincent |
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Publication date | June 2006 |
Same Kind of Different As Me: A Modern-Day Slave, an International Art Dealer, and the Unlikely Woman Who Bound Them Together, published in June 2006, is a book co-written by Ron Hall and Denver Moore, with Lynn Vincent, telling about Hall's and Moore's intersecting life journeys.[1] It was published by Thomas Nelson. Moore grew up as a sharecropper on a plantation in Red River Parish, Louisiana. He lived through years of hardship and homelessness but changed both his and others' lives after meeting Hall, who was volunteering at a shelter.
Plot synopsis
[edit]Ron Hall is a rich international art dealer in Texas. Although not enjoying the same paycheck size as that of his clients', he is invited into their sphere. He and his wife Deborah have two children, Reagen and Carson—the first of which, once she hit high school, "shunned anything that smacked of wealth, and yearned to be a freedom fighter in South Africa." After an affair that Ron has, he and Deborah attend marriage counseling and forge a strong bond. So much