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         My Afternoon With Red A VIDEO VETERAN NOTE: It is with great sadness that I must add Red's name to the roster of great Chicago television pioneers that have passed on to a higher existence. Sterling "Red" Quinlan passed away on March 11, 2007. He had been in declining health for the last several months. I had the honor of offering a eulogy at his wake and meeting many friends and family members. Knowing Red by reputation was awe-inspiring in itself. Knowing him personally was a treasured honor I will not soon forget.  | 
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    If a
      casting director needed a kindly grandfather type, he wouldn't have to
      look far if the first door he knocked on was Red Quinlan's.  Red, 85
      years young, still sports an infectious smile that beams outwards from
      beneath a snow-white head of hair.  Many of us, reaching this point
      in our lives, have retired and hopefully are enjoying the twilight time of
      life.  But not Red.  Oh he enjoys life all right, but not
      rocking away in a chair or some other mundane thing.  Red still gets
      up everyday and drives to his job as a consultant at Travel Technology
      Group, a corporate travel and video production company with offices just
      outside the Loop.  Sterling Carroll Quinlan was born in 1916 in
      Maquoketa Iowa, a small town of thirt Red was raised in a modest household.  His
      father was a real estate agent and although not rich, was able to provide
      a comfortable living for his family.  After graduating St. Catherine
      of Genoa Catholic elementary school, Red moved on to Fenger High School,
      also on Chicago's south side.  That same year, 1930, Red's father
      would die from injuries he sustained in an automobile accident the
      previous year.  The sudden loss of his father devastated the young
      man.   Red was angry.  Angry with his father, his mother,
      his family.  Angry with the world.   But these were the years of The Great
      Depression and with the loss of husband and father; the Quinlan family
      witnessed hard times.  Red, emotions still reeling over his father's
      death left home in 1935 and hopped the first freight out of town. 
      For the next three years, off and on, Red lived the life of an
      American hobo, riding boxcars across the continental USA.  It
      would be during this time that he would contract tuberculosis.  Years
      later Red would recall his days on the rails where the boxcars were not
      just the rolling homes of transients but whole families, sometimes packed
      ninety to a car.  They were heading west or southwest, like the
      covered wagons of a hundred years past, with dreams of a better
      life.   
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