Paul Allenthe Initials Game



Paul Allen has played Initials twice. He has lost the game twice and $20 to Meatsauce once. After his first game, he said he wasn’t going to play again because it was too hard.

Paul Allenthe Initials Game

It would appear as if Cory has 'Meatsauce Proofed' the Initials Game because poor Paul cannot win anymore. Today, after another loss, Chris Hawkey got the Pe. The Premier League is the top tier of professional football in England.The league was formed in 1992 as a replacement for the original Football League First Division.More than 240 managers have taken charge of the 49 clubs which have played in the Premier League.

P.A. has had some classic incorrect answers. He guessed “Peter Ran” for Peter Rabbit and “Paul Revere” after the clue “Once wanted to be called Crap Bag.” P.A. also sparked the infamous chain of incorrect “Don Cheadle” guesses.

DateGPWL2nd3rd4th5thBF1C2C3CTBSO
1/9/15111111
2/13/1511113
TOTAL222241

[Stats legend]

Paul Allen The Initials Game On

Allen, who died Oct. 15 at the age of 65, lived a life that embodied the spirit of the UW through his relentless quest for learning and drive to innovate. He saw possibility everywhere, which is why he and the UW were so intertwined and why he became one of the University’s most ardent supporters with generous gifts and big ideas that have touched the lives of just about all of us. And why he transformed the world in so many ways.

Paul Allen The Initials Game Of Thrones

Cancer robbed us of this incredible individual, an innovator with insatiable curiosity, a big thinker who possessed equally powerful drives to help humankind and build community. In her eulogy, UW President Ana Mari Cauce said: “Paul defined himself as a seeker of the next Big Idea, and one can only wonder what big ideas he would have brought to fruition if given more time. He understood the power of the arts and sports to heal, renew and build community and it’s hard to imagine our world or our city without him—he was truly Seattle’s 12th man. But I’m grateful for what he created during his 65 years and for the legacy that those of us inspired by his drive and generosity will continue to build upon.”

His legacy started innocently enough, when Allen and Gates were high school students who came to campus to use the UW computer lab. They spent so much time in the computer lab that in 1971, Allen received a letter from Hellmut Golde, then-director of the computer science laboratory, telling him, “In view of … a number of complaints from the regular users of the Laboratory, I must ask you to turn in your keys and terminate your activities in the laboratory immediately.” He and Gates had overstayed their welcome. But being asked to leave the computer lab did nothing to tamp down their innovative spirit.