Scott C. Dine, a fixture on the Post-Dispatch photo staff for 35 years until his retirement in 1999, died of cancer Tuesday at his home in Fairfax, Virginia. He was 91.
Scott C. Dine, longtime Post-Dispatch photographer and editor, dead at 91
Oct. 3, 1968---Cardinal speedster Lou Brock digs for second base in the sixth inning of Game 2 of the World Series against the Detroit Tigers. Tiger pitcher Mickey Lolich hurried his delivery because of Brock's quick start and thrheww a wild pitch. Brock had two stolen bases in the Cardinals 8-1 Game 2 loss. The Series went seven games, with the Cardinals losing 4-3. Scott Dine | Post-Dispatch
Hockey fans enjoy a Blues game in December 1970. Team owner Sidney Salomon Jr. added more than 4,000 seats to the Arena to accommodate the franchise's popularity. He had bought the Arena in 1966 and put the Blues on the ice for the 1967-68 National Hockey League season. The Arena had seats for 17,776 fans in 1970. (Scott C. Dine/Post-Dispatch)
A towboat grinds through ice above the Alton Lock and Dam on Feb. 12, 1966, to reach and clear some of the 16 barges that were set adrift and then locked by an ice jam. The helicopter resting on a barge in the foreground had delivered a pump to drain water from some of the barges, all of which held grain. (Scott C. Dine/Post-Dispatch)
Virgil and Toni Sickmann of Krakow, Mo., parents of Marine Corps Sgt. Rodney "Rocky" Sickmann, take part in a special Mass at their parish church on Nov. 19, 1979, for their son and 51 other Americans held hostage in Iran. The Mass was at St. Gertrude Catholic Church in Krakow, a community about five miles south of Washington, Mo. Iranians had stormed the embassy in Tehran on Nov. 4, 1979, and taken its American occupants hostage in an organized rage over President Jimmy Carter's design to allow Iran's deposed dictator, the Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, to obtain cancer treatment in New York. The hostages would remain captives for 444 days. (Scott Dine/Post-Dispatch)
Civil-rights leaders announce plans for a march in honor of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. to be held on Palm Sunday, April 7, 1968, four days after his assassination. The leaders made their announcement on April 5 after a stormy planning meeting at the Mid-City Community Congress, 4005 Delmar Boulevard. The meeting pitted older leaders against younger, often more radical activists, but they agreed upon an agenda for the march. Seated and speaking to reporters are, from left, Bill Bailey, president of Mid-City; Percy Green of ACTION; Morris Hatchett, president of the 最新杏吧原创 branch of the NAACP; and Solomon Rooks of the local chapter of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE). Among those in the background are (at left) Jacqueline Grennan, president of Webster College and a former nun; and (third from left) Thomas Eliot, chancellor of Washington University. Photo by Scott C. Dine of the Post-Dispatch

