The following is a list of last words uttered by notable individuals during the 20th century (1901-2000). A typical entry will report information in the following order:
("Pas le temps, non.")
According to Ormon, he first realized that the aviator was in trouble when he heard him shout, "Here I go." This shout, he says, was repeated three times as the biplane crashed sideways to the ground.
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: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)Usually, by choice, the doomed man is strapped into a scarred old chair facing the firing-squad enclosure 23 feet away. His head is hooded, and a white cloth heart, trimmed in red, is pinned to his chest. Precisely at sunup, five .30-30 rifles-one loaded with a blank—do the job. Utah's unique tradition has its own gallows humor. Just before he was shot in 1960 for killing a uranium miner, James W. Rodgers made a last request: a bulletproof vest
騒然とした中、社会党委員長・浅沼稲次郎(1898~1960年)が演説していた。聴衆に右翼が紛れ込み、「アカの手先だ!」とやじが飛ぶ。浅沼の大声がかき消されるほどのうるささに、いったん中断。再開して「選挙の際、国民に評判の悪い政策はすべて伏せておいて、選挙が済むと…」と言った時だった。舞台右手から壇上に上がった小柄な少年が、体重100キロ近い浅沼に体当たりするようにぶつかった。半回転して演壇横に逃れた浅沼に、回り込んでもう一度突進する。当時26歳の渡部は、反射的に壇上に上った。
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: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)"The last two words I ever heard Ruppert Sargent say, and I still hear them nightly now, and that's 'grenades.' He said it twice," Watty Smith told...[ permanent dead link ]