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- John Treul was born on 6 April 1928 in Wisconsin, USA. He was an actor, known for Street Corner (1948). He died on 27 September 1988 in Los Angeles, California, USA.
- Tony Currie was born on 7 April 1922 in Edinburgh, Scotland, UK. He was an actor, known for Close to Home (1975), The Longest Winter (1974) and Richard John Seddon: Premier (1973). He died on 27 September 1988 in Wellington, New Zealand.
- Actor
Son of a grape farmer, he and his family settled in Turlock. Ca, in 1910 after emigrating from Persia. Known for his operatic voice and love of family, he was cast mostly, as the villain in early Hollywood. Among some of his closest friends were Randolph Scott, Mario Lanza and Ezio Pinza.- George Grant was born on 13 November 1918 in Toronto. He was married to Sheila. He died on 27 September 1988 in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.
- Paul Joseph Reinmann (1910-1988) was a German-born American comics artist, active during both the "Golden" and the "Silver" ages of comic books. He entered comics in the 1940s and worked on many early superheroes for MLJ Comics (Black Hood, the Hangman and the Wizard), and for All-American Publications (which later merged into DC Comics) working on such characters as the Golden Age Green Lantern, Wildcat, The Atom, Starman and Wonder Woman.
Then he drew for many of the religious, war, western and mystery titles of Stan Lee's Atlas Comics line. Golden Age work for Timely Comics included Human Torch and Sub-Mariner stories in Captain America comics and elsewhere. Reinman worked in other genres for Marvel's 1950s predecessor, Atlas Comics.
While most of his comics work was of a commercial nature, he did create one notable and very personal comic story about his outrage over Nazism and Communism named "Atrocity Story" (1952).
In the late-1950s, he became a frequent inker of Jack Kirby's work in Strange Tales and Journey into Mystery, as well as on the espionage series Yellow Claw and on early issues of Marvel's X-Men and The Incredible Hulk. In 1965, Reinman and Jerry Siegel created The Mighty Crusaders for Archie Comics' short-lived superhero line. He also produced work for the American Comics Group, and remained active through at least the mid 1970s.