I originally posted on the vegetarian forum and was trying to find it so thought it would be better posted in other forums too. Vegetarian bodybuilders have a lot of good role models and Joe Rollino at 104 is one of them, and it is just sad that he died in an accident and was still active, strong, healthy and a vegetarian. http://curezone.com/forums/fm.asp?i=1553652#i
(AP Photo/Charles Denson)
NEW YORK (CBS/AP) Joe Rollino was strong enough to lift 635 pounds with one finger and 475 pounds with his teeth, but the Coney Island strongman, couldn't beat a swerving minivan.
Joe Rollino - once dubbed the "World's Strongest Man" - died Monday at 104.
Rollino was struck as he crossed a major street in Brooklyn, and suffered a broken pelvis, head trauma and broken ribs. He died a few hours later at an area hospital.
Police said the driver was going the speed limit and had not been drinking. No criminality is suspected, but the driver was issued a summons for a defective horn.
During his storied life, Rollino hobnobbed with Harry Houdini, watched Jack Dempsey knock out Jess Willard and was friendly with Mario Lanza. He even had a bit part in "On the Waterfront."
Rollino would have been 105 on March 19, and was the model of health, according to friends. A vegetarian for life, he didn't drink or smoke, his friends said, and he exercised every day. He was a lifetime boxer and was part of the
Oldetime Barbell and Strongmen, an organization of men who can still rip book binders at the seam.
Retired New York Police Department detective Arthur Perry, who boxed in the New York City Golden Gloves in the mid-1960s, met Rollino at his birthday party in 2008 and didn't believe Rollino was the celebrant; he looked too good for a centenarian.
"It was astonishing, how he was smiled upon by nature," Perry said. "If you would've said to me he was 80, I'd have said he looked younger."
A decorated World War II veteran, Rollino got his start as a strongman in the 1920s during the high point of the Coney Island carnival, and he billed himself as the "Strongest Man in the World." At one point, he could lift 3200 pounds.
He later made a living as a traveling boxer under the name Kid Dundee and fought in armories in cities around the country where boxing was forbidden.
Rollino said in 2008 that he was just simply born strong.
"Fighters would hit me in the jaw and I'd just look at them. You couldn't knock me out," he told writer Robert Mladinich in an interview for the boxing Web site The Sweet Science.
Mladinich said Rollino had a slew of followers who worshipped him. "He was instrumental in their positive development," he said. "He was an athletic mentor and a father figure to them."
One is 10-time Golden Glove winner Peter Spanakos, whose twin brother, Nick, roomed with Cassius Clay during the 1960 Olympics in Rome. The two met in the 1950s on the beach.
"He's a hero's hero. We should celebrate him," Spanakos said. "A true patriot, an athlete's athlete."
At Rollino's birthday party last year, Spanakos gave him a quarter, and Rollino bent it between his fingers.
"And you know what, he apologized. He said he used to be able to do it with a dime."