Yes, he was. I had a huge crush on him back in the day....until the Auburn game.He was a Rhodes Scholar finalist, if I recall correctly. https://www.panhandleortho.com/staff-DoctorGilmore.php
Yes, he was. I had a huge crush on him back in the day....until the Auburn game.He was a Rhodes Scholar finalist, if I recall correctly. https://www.panhandleortho.com/staff-DoctorGilmore.php
It's never the fuse, 90 percent of fuse sales are people hoping it is the fuse.More like fuel infected. Its an 05 Dodge with the big 6 cylinder.............brother is coming over. Spray the starter fuel in and it catches and then dies. Brother says maybe the brain or fuel pump another guys says maybe a fuse (fingers crossed).
That was funny,..........cruel but funny. I taught with a lady that was good friends with his mom.Yes, he was. I had a huge crush on him back in the day....until the Auburn game.
We towed it to ,my mechanic guy across from my other school. I hope he can knock it out by Wed, when work there.Helped a friend change a fuel pump on his car once, pain in the a$$. I heard a truck is easier cause you can just unbolt the bed instead of having to drop the gas tank. Either way, not how I would want to spend my Saturday.
Interestingly enough another Rolle from Florida, Gary, is the team orthopedic surgeon for FAMU. Pretty smart dude.So who's our smartest former Gator player?
Bill Kynes is the senior pastor of Cornerstone Evangelical Free Church in Annandale, VA, where he has served since 1986. He and his wife Susan have four sons—Will, Matthew, Cameron, and Cason, and eight grandchildren.So who's our smartest former Gator player?
No. 91 - JIMMY KYNES SR.
By Robbie Andreu/Pat Dooley
Published: Sunday, June 4, 2006 at 1:56 p.m.
Last Modified: Sunday, June 4, 2006 at 1:56 p.m.
Position: Center and linebacker.
Years he played: 1946-49.
Top 100 credentials: Kynes was one of the best players in what is known as The Golden Era at Florida — the four years under coach Ray Wolf that saw the Gators go 13-24-2 and endure a school-record 13-game losing streak.
He was Florida's first All-SEC lineman and the last Gator to play 60 minutes in a game. During the 1949 season, Kynes rarely came off the field, playing an average of 55 minutes a game.
How he shined: His finest performance came in 1949 in Florida's 28-7 victory over Georgia that broke a seven-game losing streak against the Bulldogs.
Kynes played all 60 minutes of the game.
Afterward, Wolf said of Kynes: "He was exactly at the right spot at exactly the right time on every play. He reached the peak and stayed there all afternoon."
Making his mark: Kynes left Florida with a law degree and, in 1964, became the youngest Attorney General of Florida.
Two sons — Jimmy Kynes Jr. (center) and Billy Kynes (quarterback) followed in their father's footsteps and lettered at UF in the 1970s.
Billy Kynes went on to become a Rhodes Scholar.
Bill Kynes is the senior pastor of Cornerstone Evangelical Free Church in Annandale, VA, where he has served since 1986. He and his wife Susan have four sons—Will, Matthew, Cameron, and Cason, and eight grandchildren.
Bill grew up in Tampa, FL, and graduated from H.B. Plant High School. He received the Thom McAn Trophy as the nation’s top high school scholar-athlete. He was an undergraduate at the University of Florida with a major in philosophy. There he also played quarterback on the football team and was later inducted into the university’s Athletic Hall of Fame. He attended Oxford University as a Rhodes Scholar, receiving an M.A. in theology. He received an M.Div. from Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, in Deerfield, IL, before returning to England for a Ph.D. in New Testament from Cambridge University.
More about these Kynes.