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We are saddened and heartbroken to share the news of the passing of Kyle Busch, a two-time Cup champion and one of our sport's greatest and fiercest drivers. He was 41 years old.
We extend our deepest condolences to the Busch family, Richard Childress Racing and the entire motorsports community.

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Ronald Reagan was alive when the Sinking of the RMS Titanic happened, and lived long enough to see LeBron James begin his NBA career.
Let’s put time into perspective. Ronald Reagan was born in 1911, just a year before the Sinking of the RMS Titanic in 1912. The disaster feels impossibly distant, trapped in grainy photographs and early twentieth-century history, yet it existed within Reagan’s lifetime.
Reagan lived until 2004, witnessing the rise of television, the Apollo 11 Moon Landing, the Cold War, the collapse of the Soviet Union, the birth of the internet, and the beginning of modern digital culture. If he had lived only slightly longer, he could have watched LeBron James play in the NBA. LeBron entered the league in 2003, only months before Reagan’s death.
The same generation that remembered the Titanic also lived through nuclear weapons, jet travel, civil rights movements, personal computers, and globalized sports. A century feels enormous until you realize how much history can fit inside a single human lifetime.
Even more striking, Harriet Tubman was still alive when Reagan was born, creating a direct human link between the Civil War era and the modern American presidency.

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