PropertyValue
rdfs:label
  • Bill Bennett
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  • Bill Bennett is a former NASCAR driver from Rehoboth Beach, NJ. He competed in one Sprint Cup event in his career, coming in NASCAR's inagural year of 1949. That came at Langhorne, where Bennett started 43rd in the forty-five car field. Bennett drove well, and ended up 11th place in the race, just outside of a top-ten. He was nineteen laps down. Stats
  • Bill Bennett was the anti-intellectual Secretary of Education for Ronald Reagan
  • Bill Bennett is a character on DEXTER. He is the father of Paul Bennett and the paternal grandfather of Astor and Cody Bennett
  • William Bennett (born May 31, 1953 in Warwick, Rhode Island) is a retired American ice hockey left winger. He played for the Boston Bruins and Hartford Whalers. He played 7 games for the Bruins in 1978-79, scoring a goal and 2 assists. The next season Bennett played 24 games for the Whalers, scoring 3 goals and 3 assists. He retired in 1982 after playing in the minor pros.
  • Bill Bennett was a co-anchor for Interplanetary Broadcasting Company's coverage of the events of the Sixty-sixth Winter Games on Mimas, a moon of Saturn. He was an open-faced light brown American in his early 30s. He wore burnsides, which had come back in fashion after fifty years, that complemented his face. After the three dead men tumbled like a rag dolls to the ground in the landing zone, there was a faint radio transmission. Someone claimed to be with the Second Irgun and also claimed responsibility for the atrocity.
dcterms:subject
type of appearance
  • Direct POV
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Relatives
Eyes
  • Brown
Full Name
  • Bill Bennett
Age
  • 60.0
Status
  • Alive
First Appearance
  • The Getaway
Spouse
Hair
  • Gray
Actor
  • Steve Eastin
Name
  • Bill Bennett
Marital Status
  • Married
Affiliations
Last Appearance
  • The Big One
Occupation
  • Broadcaster
Gender
  • Male
Nationality
abstract
  • Bill Bennett is a former NASCAR driver from Rehoboth Beach, NJ. He competed in one Sprint Cup event in his career, coming in NASCAR's inagural year of 1949. That came at Langhorne, where Bennett started 43rd in the forty-five car field. Bennett drove well, and ended up 11th place in the race, just outside of a top-ten. He was nineteen laps down. Stats
  • Bill Bennett was the anti-intellectual Secretary of Education for Ronald Reagan
  • Bill Bennett is a character on DEXTER. He is the father of Paul Bennett and the paternal grandfather of Astor and Cody Bennett
  • Bill Bennett was a co-anchor for Interplanetary Broadcasting Company's coverage of the events of the Sixty-sixth Winter Games on Mimas, a moon of Saturn. He was an open-faced light brown American in his early 30s. He wore burnsides, which had come back in fashion after fifty years, that complemented his face. Bennett shared anchoring duties with Rannveig Aasen. The two had developed a sexual dalliance on the trip to Mimas, more out of boredom than anything else, and so neither viewed it as a serious romance. Even though an American, he smugly considered his French accent superior to that of Aasen who was Norwegian. Bennett and Aasen made their first broadcast covering the opening ceremonies on Mimas from a studio in the Olympic Village. As the torch bearer climbed the improbably steep slope to light the Olympic flame, the two filled the audio portion of the broadcast with chatter that informed their viewers of the conditions on Mimas and the unusual modes of motion required in its .008g gravity. After the first day transmission ended, the two went to a lounge in the complex that contained a bar. Bennett had a rum and Coke which came in a free-fall squeeze bulb with a nipple for drinking. The gravity was low enough to require it. As the athletes began to arrive via a monorail from the parade ground, Bennett observed their interactions. He watched as the coaches for Moscow and Siberia challenged each other to a vodka drinking competition as they argued, more or less amiably. The Siberian eventually won although he too passed out shortly afterwards. Bennett decided to mingle and struck up a conversation with a skier from Luna. She had trouble placing him at first, since his conservative green velvet doublet, tunic and Paisley neck scarf, did not match the tight pullovers and hose the athletes had on which they wore under their space suits. She then recognized him as a broadcaster for IBC and insisted on buying him a drink. He reciprocated and was in deep conversation when he glanced at Aasen. She was talking as intently with a big blonde man wearing the colors of Eastern Europe. A promising evening all the way around. The next day, Bennett and Aasen broadcast the first round of competition in the five-kilometer ski jump. Assisting them was their expert analyst, Angus Cavendish, who had won a bronze medal in the event during the 2192 Games. Prior to the competition beginning, they explained how the event differed from the 90-meter jump in Klagenfurt. Cavendish explained that while in both events the competitors would be traveling about 100 kph when they jumped, they would reached an altitude of two and a half kilometers above the end of the runway and travel over ten kilometers. They would be airborne for ten minutes and would, at the peak, see for thirty-five kilometers. The first athlete was Marge Olbert of the Anzac Federation. Her form was excellent and she reached a launch velocity of 97.43 kph which resulted in a jump of 10,290 meters. The next jumper was Jozef Jablonski, a skier for Eastern Europe. Bennett recognized him as the blonde man Aasen had been talking to the previous night. He started his run five minutes after Olbert, when she was at the peak of her jump and reached the velocity of 101.74 kph which resulted in a jump of 11,149 meters. The competitors continued to jump in five minute intervals resulting in one landing while the next was in mid-flight and the third starting his or her run. Towards the end of the first day's trials, it was the turn of Shukri al-Kuwatly for the Arab World, who was the favorite. He reached the velocity of 103.81 kph and an expected distance of 11,580 meters. However, while still a half a kilometer up and two minutes away from landing, a misty globe formed around al-Kuwatly's head. At first it was thought to be a suit failure but with al-Kuwatly remaining motionless, Cavendish realized he was dead and must have been murdered. Almost immediately after, Dmitri Shepilov, a jumper for Moscow who was the next in line and at the top of his trajectory, appeared to raise his right arm to point when his helmet also became surrounded by mist. He too had been murdered. Louis-Philippe Guizot of United Europe was next and had just cleared the ramp by making his jump when he was murdered after Shepilov. After the three dead men tumbled like a rag dolls to the ground in the landing zone, there was a faint radio transmission. Someone claimed to be with the Second Irgun and also claimed responsibility for the atrocity.
  • William Bennett (born May 31, 1953 in Warwick, Rhode Island) is a retired American ice hockey left winger. He played for the Boston Bruins and Hartford Whalers. He played 7 games for the Bruins in 1978-79, scoring a goal and 2 assists. The next season Bennett played 24 games for the Whalers, scoring 3 goals and 3 assists. He retired in 1982 after playing in the minor pros.
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