POV-Ray : Newsgroups : povray.general : Tragic News in our Community : Re: Tragic News in our Community Server Time
10 Aug 2024 20:56:19 EDT (-0400)
  Re: Tragic News in our Community  
From: Fabian Brau
Date: 21 Dec 1999 04:52:27
Message: <385F4E7A.8A959A93@umh.ac.be>
Even if I don't "really know" anyone here because we never really 
meet anyone (I think almost everyone is in this case), I have learnt 
to appreciate everyone here. You are now, everyone, important in my 
live. Each day I come here. 
I am deeply affected by this cruel news. My english is too bad 
to better define what I am feeling but I am really sad. 
All my thoughts go to Ron and his wife. This is too unjust.

Fabian.

Ken wrote:
> 
> To: The POV-Ray Community,
> 
>   It is my very sad duty to share with you a tragedy that has happened
> to someone in our community and a member of the POV-Team.
> 
>   Ron Parker's 9 year old son Phillip was walking across an ice covered
> pond near his home Saturday afternoon which subsequently broke under his
> weight. It was 45 min. before divers were able to reach him and he died
> early Sunday morning as a result of this accident. I have attached an
> article from a local news paper that describes the event and the extent
> of how this tragedy is affecting Ron and his family.
> 
>   Because of this accident Ron will most likely be absent from the news
> groups for the next week or two. If you would like to discuss this here
> you are welcome to though Ron mentioned that he will likely not be reading
> the groups for a while. If you would prefer to extend your sympathies to
> Ron and his wife Julie personaly, through e-mail, he has informed me that
> it would be ok to do so.
> 
>   If you do send Ron an e-mail please use this e-mail address -
> ron### [at] povrayorg
> 
>  I wish I could say more, or somehow lessen the grief for Ron and his
> family, but for once I find myself speechless and would like Ron to
> know that our thoughts and our sympathies are with him.
> 
> -- Ken Tyler
> 
> Local News Article:
> 
>   Boy dies after falling through ice
> 
>  Grieving mother remembers happier times as she copes with the loss of her
> only child.
> 
> By Darnell J. Compton of The News@Sentinel
> 
>   Just last week, Julie Parker took her 9-year-old son, Phillip Parker,
> to Wendy's for a kid's meal and a toy "time capsule." Inside was a paper
> asking, "What do you want to be when you grow up?"
> 
>   That was when Julie Parker learned her son wanted to be an astronaut.
> 
>   Today, her only child is gone.
> 
>   Phillip Parker died Sunday, a day after he fell through the ice of a pond
> in a subdivision in northern Allen County. The boy was flown to Parkview
> Hospital by Samaritan Helicopter in critical condition -- he had been
> underwater at least 45 minutes before he was pulled from the water's bottom,
> said conservation officer Steve Gerber.
> 
>   A witness saw the boy fall through the ice about 3:20 p.m. and called 911
> from Lima Road, near Cook Road. The boy's head and an arm rose above the water,
> then he disappeared.
> 
>   Divers found the boy, and looked for others, but found no one, Gerber said,
> noting a group of children was playing on the pond earlier in the afternoon.
> 
>   The ice on the pond was about an inch thick, Gerber said.
> 
>   Phillip's mother wasn't certain it was her son until she was at Parkview
> Hospital and they showed her his clothes.
> 
>  "I knew exactly what he was wearing that day," she said.
> 
>   The boy was taken to intensive care before surgery, where his mother saw
> him lying there, unconscious. "I told him we loved him, and we were there
> for him."
> 
>   She still expects her son to return home, and knows it will be difficult
> to adjust to his absence.
> 
>   "This sort of thing happens to other people's kids," she said. "It's kind
> of quiet around here.
> 
>   Her son was quick-witted, funny and talkative. If he wasn't out in-line
> skating, or with other kids in their Mill Stone subdivision, he was playing
> checkers or was at a computer, playing "SimPark," or "Age of Empire,"
> challenging simulation games.
> 
>   The third-grader from Washington Elementary School was the class clown,
> she said.
> 
>   "He had a real witty sense of humor," she said.
> 
>   She laughs as she remembers him playing with his Legos. His last creation
> was a two-tailed elephant robot.
> 
>   "He had a vivid imagination," she said. "There's not a corner of this house
> that doesn't have a piece of him in it. Clothes, toys ... everything reminds
> me of him.
> 
>   "I feel like I am kind of still waiting for him to run around to the front
> door. I know that he won't."


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