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Treasured Memory


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November 26, 2005

Sam

sam.jpgSam, a three-time winner of "The World's Ugliest Dog Contest," was put to sleep on Nov. 18 after being diagnosed with chronic heart disease. He was 14.

The mostly hairless pooch never let his unattractive appearance stop him from attaining stardom in a society where cute and fluffy puppies are prized. In fact, Sam's unsightly teeth, wrinkled brown skin, acne-covered face and milky-white eyes earned him numerous television appearances and a meeting with millionaire Donald Trump. Strangers even created fan Websites devoted to him.

At the time of his death, the 13-pound hound was scheduled to appear in an upcoming Discovery Channel series on the world's ugliest species. Sam's owner, Susie Lockheed, also marketed his visage on T-shirts, calendars, magnets and coffee mugs.

Lockheed rescued Sam in 1999 after his former owner moved to a place where dogs were not allowed, and an adoption agency rejected him for being too homely. Although she was also repulsed by his ugliness, Lockheed soon fell in love with the pedigreed Chinese Crested Hairless.

Lockheed's boyfriend at the time was not as charmed by her new pet, and soon broke up with her. Sam's appearance didn't deter Lockheed's next beau, Mark Tautrim, who responded to a profile posted on the online dating site Match.com that featured a picture of Susie and Sam.

"Sam owed his very life to Susie Lockheed, who fostered and then adopted him when no one else dared. In turn, Sam brought Susie untold joy and a fiancé, a perfect illustration of why people should consider adopting older, less attractive dogs," said Craig Schmitman, publisher of DogExplorer.com.

Sam's favorite toy was a stuffed bear he once found and carried home. He also enjoyed eating sirloin steak, cheese balls, roasted chicken and flan. Sam is survived by his owner and three adopted canine sisters: TatorTot, TinkerBell and PixieNoodle.

Read Sam and Susie's Blog

Posted at 12:10 AM | Tributes (0)

November 23, 2005

Alfred Anderson

Alfred Anderson was only 18 years old on Dec. 25, 1914, when the "eerie sound of silence" fell along the 500-mile Western Front. On that day, British and German troops stopped shooting each other long enough to share a moment of peace.

Anderson, who served with Britain's 5th Battalion - The Black Watch (Royal Highland Regiment), would eventually become the last known surviving Allied veteran to have experienced the spontaneous "Christmas Truce" of World War I. The unauthorized ceasefire spread along the Western Front as enemy troops shook hands, swapped cigarettes and food, sang Christmas carols and even played games with each other.

In some places, the impromptu truce lasted for several weeks, and actually alarmed army commanders who feared the fraternization between the troops would interfere with the need to resume fighting. For Anderson, however, peace lasted only a few hours.

"All I'd heard for two months in the trenches was the hissing, cracking and whining of bullets in flight, machinegun fire and distant German voices," he once said. "But there was a dead silence that morning, right across the land as far as you could see. We shouted 'Merry Christmas,' even though nobody felt merry. The silence ended early in the afternoon and the killing started again. It was a short peace in a terrible war."

The yule armistice was not repeated during the remaining years of the war, a global conflict that left 31 million people dead, wounded or missing.

Anderson was born June 25, 1896, in Dundee, Scotland. He and many of his classmates enlisted in the Territorial Army in 1912 and were among the first British soldiers to serve in France during the Great War. Anderson reached the rank of sergeant, and briefly served as the valet to Capt. Fergus Bowes-Lyon, brother of Queen Elizabeth.

He continued to serve until 1916 when a shell exploded, killing several of his friends and seriously wounding him in the back of the neck. Anderson lay in his trench all day, and only received medical attention after darkness fell. The injury ended his active service, but he still helped the Allies by working as an infantry instructor.

Anderson aided the Home Guard during World War II and also ran his family's building and joinery business. In 1998, he was awarded the Legion of Honor from the French government. Anderson's life was chronicled in the 2002 biography, "A Life in Three Centuries," and a bust of his visage is on display at the public library in Alyth, Scotland.

Anderson died in his sleep on Nov. 21 at the age of 109. His wife, Susan Iddison Anderson, died in 1979 at the age of 83. Alfred is survived by four children, 10 grandchildren, 18 great-grandchildren and two great-great-grandchildren.

Posted at 05:57 PM | Tributes (0)

November 22, 2005

Eddie Guerrero

eguerrero.jpgEddie Guerrero was beloved for playing a heel. A charismatic star on the World Wrestling Entertainment circuit, his "Lie, Cheat and Steal" anti-hero image found favor with millions of wrestling fans.

Eduardo Gory Guerrero Llanes was born into a wrestling family. All three of his older brothers (Chavo Guerrero, Hector Guerrero and Mando Guerrero) were professional wrestlers, as was his father, Gory Guerrero. The El Paso, Texas native attended the University of New Mexico and New Mexico Highlands University before moving to Mexico in 1987 to wrestle under the stage name Mascara Magica.

Guerrero wrestled with his brothers for a few years, then went solo in Japan as the Black Tiger II. He eventually returned to Mexico, where he and Art Barr formed the tag team La Pareja del Terror (The Pair of Terror). After Barr's death from substance abuse in 1994, Guerrero competed in the Extreme Championship Wrestling and the World Championship Wrestling circuits.

In 2000, Guerrero debuted on "Monday Night RAW" with former WCW wrestlers Chris Benoit, Dean Malenko and Perry Saturn as The Radicalz. The team won four titles and became popular with fans following a brutal face off with the New Age Outlaws. Guerrero parted ways with The Radicalz a few months later when he wooed female wrestler Chyna away from Benoit. Guerrero and Chyna broke up in 2001 after he was "caught" showering with two other female wrestlers.

Guerrero returned to the ring in 2002 and won the Intercontinental Championship, the WWE Tag Team Championship and the United States Championship. In 2004, the 5-foot-8 and 220-pound wrestler defeated Brock Lesnar for the WWE World Heavyweight Title and became the WWE's second Hispanic champion.

On Nov. 13, Guerrero was scheduled to film "Monday Night RAW" and "Friday Night Smackdown!" in Minneapolis. When he didn't respond to his ordered wake-up call, hotel security and Guerrero's nephew and fellow WWE wrestler, Chavo Guerrero, forced their way into his room and found him on the floor. Attempts to revive the 38-year-old wrestler were unsuccessful. Authorities later attributed his death to acute heart failure.

Guerrero's life, including his addictions to drugs and alcohol and an arrest for drunk driving, was chronicled in the 2004 documentary, "Cheating Death, Stealing Life: The Eddie Guerrero Story."

Complete Coverage From World Wrestling Entertainment

Posted at 07:58 AM | Tributes (2)

November 08, 2005

Bill Hootkins

bhootkins.jpgWilliam Michael Hootkins, a character actor who achieved cult status playing an ill-fated X-Wing pilot in the film "Star Wars IV: A New Hope," died on Oct. 23 of pancreatic cancer. He was 57.

The burly Texan developed an interest in acting as a teenager at the St. Mark's School of Texas. He studied astrophysics and Chinese linguistics at Princeton University before moving to England and training as an actor at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Arts.

One of Hootkins' first major roles in Hollywood was also his most memorable. In the 1977 science fiction classic, "Star Wars," he played Lt. Jek "Red Six" Porkins. Despite the fact that he had few lines and his character died during the rebel attack on the Death Star, Hootkins found fame with the saga's most ardent followers. These same fans created entire Websites in his honor, purchased Jek Porkins action figures and sought out his autograph at science fiction conventions.

Hootkins followed that role with more than 40 others on the big and small screens. He played Major Eaton in "Raiders of the Lost Ark," Chuck Malarek in "White Nights," Lt. Max Eckhardt in "Batman" and will appear as Frank Rich in the upcoming movie "Colour Me Kubrick." The multilingual actor also made guest appearances on numerous television shows, including "Taxi," "Valerie" and "The West Wing."

On stage, Hootkins earned rave reviews as Alfred Hitchcock in "Hitchcock Blonde" on London's West End. The show was scheduled to move to Broadway next year. In his spare time, Hootkins lent his vocal talents to audiobooks, video games and dozens of radio plays for the BBC.

Posted at 03:26 AM | Tributes (2)

November 01, 2005

Rosa Parks

A few courageous people stand up for what they believe in. Rosa Louise McCauley Parks made her point by sitting down.

In Dec. 1955, the 43-year-old black seamstress took a seat in the front of the "colored" section on a Montgomery, Ala., bus. Tired from a long day of work, she refused to give up her seat to a white passenger, even after the bus driver James Blake ordered her to do so. Parks refused to be inconvenienced by the city's discriminatory segregation laws and was arrested for her impertinence. Four days later, a judge convicted her of disorderly conduct and fined her $14.

Parks' arrest sparked a 381-day boycott of the Montgomery bus system by black riders, a peaceful protest that was organized by the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and led the Supreme Court to strike down Montgomery's segregated bus law (Browder v. Gayle). The rest of the country continued to abide by the "separate but equal" doctrine until 1964, when the Civil Rights Act required all public accommodations be desegregated.

Born in Tuskegee, Ala., Parks was the daughter of James McCauley, a carpenter, and Leona Edwards McCauley, a schoolteacher. She attended Alabama State Teachers College, earned a high school diploma and was married to Raymond Parks, a barber, from 1932 until his death in 1977. Prior to her arrest, Parks worked as a secretary for the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and was active in the voter registration movement. Her act of civil disobedience, however, cost Parks her job at the Montgomery Fair department store.

After receiving numerous death threats, Rosa and Raymond relocated to Detroit. She worked on the staff of U.S. Rep. John Conyers (D-Mich.) for 20 years, and later co-founded the Rosa and Raymond Parks Institute for Self Development, which helps young people pursue educational opportunities and work toward racial harmony.

Although friends described Parks as quiet, diplomatic and eloquent, the woman known as the "mother of the civil rights movement" could also be a powerful speaker. In fact, she remained active on the lecture circuit well into her 80s. Parks was the subject of the 2002 documentary, "Mighty Times: The Legacy of Rosa Parks," which received an Academy Award nomination for best documentary short. She was also honored with numerous awards, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom and the Congressional Gold Medal, and inducted into the Academy of Achievement in 1995.

Parks died on Oct. 24 of natural causes at the age of 92. Her body was flown to Montgomery and then to the Capitol Rotunda in Washington, D.C. A procession of city buses, including a vintage Metropolitan bus dressed in black bunting, followed her hearse to the Capitol, and a military honor guard served as her pallbearers. Over the course of two days, more than 30,000 people filed past her casket to pay their respects.

Watch an Interview With Parks

Listen to Tributes From NPR

Posted at 05:58 AM | Tributes (0)

October 30, 2005

William Evan Allan

William Evan Allan, the last Australian veteran to actively serve in World War I and World War II, died on Oct. 17. Cause of death was not released. He was 106.

Born in 1899, Allan enlisted in the Royal Australian Navy when he was only 14 years old. From 1915 to 1918, Allan served as an able seaman on the HMAS Encounter, escorting troop convoys and tracking German merchant boats and warships. Once the Great War ended, he remained in the service for more than three decades, rising through the ranks and serving on the Navy's Coronation Contingent for the coronation of King George VI in 1937.

Allan survived the Spanish flu pandemic, which killed more than two dozen of his shipmates, and nearly drowned in the North Atlantic in 1928 when he fell overboard during a storm. Although the captain of his ship was unwilling to lower a rowboat and possibly lose more of his men, he ordered the crew to save Allan by tossing a life preserver and a rope ladder into the water.

"I am like a cat," Allan once said. "I've had several lives."

The Melbourne resident met Ita "Gwen" Blakely in 1924 when his ship docked in Vancouver, Canada. The couple exchanged letters for 17 years before marrying on the SS Mariposa in 1941. They were honeymooning on Hawaii when the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor. Allan then served aboard the HMAS Australia during World War II.

Allan retired as a lieutenant in 1947 and returned to Australia. He spent the rest of his life raising a family on a small farm in Somerville, Victoria. Gwen died in 1981.

Last week, Allan was honored with a state funeral.

Listen to an Interview With Allan

Posted at 03:57 AM | Tributes (1)

October 19, 2005

Jason Collier

jcollier.jpgJason J. Collier, a professional basketball player who spent the last two years playing power forward and center for the Atlanta Hawks, died on Oct. 15 of a sudden heart rhythm disturbance caused by an abnormally enlarged heart, an autopsy showed. He was 28.

At Central Catholic High School in Springfield, Ohio, Collier was named "Mister Basketball Ohio." He played college-level basketball at Indiana before transferring to the Georgia Institute of Technology. His father, Jeff Collier, played at Georgia Tech from 1972 to 1976, and Jason initially wore No. 52 in his honor.

In 2000, the 7-foot, 260-pound center was drafted by the Milwaukee Bucks in the first round. He was traded to the Houston Rockets, where he played backup for three years, then signed as a free agent with the Minnesota Timberwolves in 2003.

Collier joined the Atlanta Hawks in 2004, and started 44 games -- averaging 5.7 points and 2.6 rebounds in 13.5 minutes. He scored a career-high 22 points against Washington last season and pulled down 11 rebounds against Toronto. Although he was not projected to start this season, Collier passed his preseason physical and was considered a top backup. In two preseason games, he averaged 3.5 points and 3 rebounds.

Early Saturday, Collier experienced breathing problems and collapsed. His wife Katie called 9-1-1 and performed CPR until the ambulance arrived, but he died on the way to the hospital. He is also survived by his two-year-old daughter, Ella.

The Hawks plan to wear black shoulder patches on their uniforms in remembrance of Collier. His uniform will also remain inside his locker through the season.

Complete Coverage From the Atlanta Hawks

Posted at 08:49 PM | Tributes (2)

October 18, 2005

Charles Rocket

crocket.jpgCharles Claverie, a comedic actor who appeared on the big and small screens, committed suicide on Oct. 7. He was 56.

Born in Bangor, Maine, Claverie studied filmmaking at the Rhode Island School of Design. A love of the limelight and an electrifying presence on-camera helped him to break into broadcast journalism -- even though he had no media experience.

Claverie spent the 1970s working as a reporter for WPRI-Channel 12 in Rhode Island, as a weekend anchor for WTVF-Channel 5 in Nashville and as an anchor/weatherman for KOAA-Channel 5 in Colorado Springs, Colo. He also hosted "Super Show," a daily afternoon program that featured reruns of classic TV shows from the 1950s.

Claverie's big break came in 1980 when he joined the cast of the NBC show "Saturday Night Live." He appeared in numerous skits during the 1980-1981 season and provided news commentary on "Weekend Update." His trademark sign-off was: "I'm Charles Rocket. Good night and watch out."

While performing in a spoof of the famous "Who Shot JR?" plotline from the soap opera "Dallas," Claverie uttered the phrase, "I'd like to know who the fuck did it" on the air. When viewers complained about the use of profanity on the show, NBC apologized for the incident. Claverie was also terminated the following week, though he did appear in one last telecast.

Claverie adopted several stage names during the course of his three-decade career in show business -- such as Charles Hamburger and Charles Kennedy -- but he was best known as Charles Rocket. Claverie acted in more than 30 TV shows, including "Moonlighting," "Max Headroom," "Touched by an Angel," "The X-Files," "Star Trek: Voyager" and "Law & Order: Criminal Intent." He also appeared in the films "Earth Girls Are Easy," "Dumb and Dumber" and "Dances With Wolves," and did voice work for the video games "Star Wars: Jedi Starfighter" and "Age of Mythology."

Claverie was found on Oct. 7 in a Canterbury, Conn., field. His throat was slit, and a knife was found next to the body. The state medical examiner determined the cause of death to be self-inflicted.

Posted at 08:13 AM | Tributes (6)

October 12, 2005

Jerry Juhl

Jerome Ravn Juhl was only 23 years old when he and his friend Frank Oz met Jim Henson at a puppeteer's convention. That fateful encounter in 1961 helped both young men land their dream jobs.

Juhl became the first full-time employee of the Jim Henson Co. He worked as a puppeteer on the TV show, "Sam and Friends," and spent six years writing for "Sesame Street" after it debuted in 1969. Juhl wrote scripts for Cookie Monster, Oscar the Grouch, Bert and Ernie, the Count and Big Bird, and created the character Super Grover. For his efforts, he won three Emmy Awards and two Writers Guild Awards.

Oz became Henson's closest collaborator, and for years provided the voices of Miss Piggy, Fozzie Bear, Bert, Animal, Grover and the Cookie Monster. He later gave a voice to Yoda ("Star Wars"), and directed numerous feature films, such as "The Dark Crystal," "In & Out" and "The Score."

From 1977 to 1981, Juhl served as the head writer for "The Muppet Show." He wrote or co-wrote the screenplays for every Muppet movie, including "The Muppet Christmas Carol," "Muppet Treasure Island" and "Muppets From Space." Then in 1983, Juhl co-created "Fraggle Rock," an idealistic puppet show that received critical acclaim for the four years it aired on HBO. Juhl's wife, Susan Doerr Juhl, also worked as a writer and script editor on the program.

Born in St. Paul, Minn., Juhl always had a passion for puppetry. As a child, he made his own puppets and performed plays for his family and friends. While earning his bachelor's degree in theater arts from San Jose State University in California, Juhl broke into show business by working on children's shows for local TV stations.

Juhl died on Sept. 27 of complications from pancreatic cancer. He was 67.

Posted at 08:23 AM | Tributes (1)

October 10, 2005

Carolyn Bell

cbell2.jpgCarolyn Bell, a star safety, wide receiver and fullback for the Connecticut Crush, died in a car accident on Sept. 30. She was 40.

Born in London and raised in Hartford, Conn., Bell played basketball on the University of New Haven's Division II national championship team in 1987. After graduation, she taught special education phys ed at Grace Webb School at the Institute of Living in Hartford.

An all-around athlete who played tennis, softball and was an avid swimmer, Bell joined the Connecticut Crush, a member of the National Women's Football Association (NWFA), in 2001. She was named the most valuable player (defensive) in 2003 and 2004, and served as the team's captain for three years. Bell also received the Crush 2002 Gridiron Award and was named an NWFA Defensive All-Star in 2004.

Bell had just parked her motorcycle near her home when a car driven by Eugenio River, of Hartford, struck and killed her. River, 24, was later charged with driving under the influence.

The Crush canceled a day of preseason training upon learning of No. 33's death.

Watch a Tribute From Front Row Photography

Posted at 12:18 AM | Tributes (0)

October 06, 2005

Robert Hanson

Robert Hanson, the last surviving crew member of the famed "Memphis Belle," died on Oct. 1 of congestive heart failure. He was 85.

The native of Walla Walla, Wash., joined the military in 1941. After completing his training, Hanson was assigned to be the radio operator on a Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress known as the "Memphis Belle." That aircraft made history for flying 148 hours and dropping more than 60 tons of bombs on the enemy.

Despite suffering some close calls in battle, the Belle was the first 8th Air Force World War II bomber to complete 25 combat missions -- many in daylight -- over Europe and still return to the United States intact. All of the Belle's major parts were replaced at least once during its two-year tour. Four of its crew died in combat.

Hanson, who kept the bomber's logbook, was almost killed on a mission. A bullet pierced the plane's walls and headed right for his head. At that exact moment, Hanson sneezed and the bullet hit the logbook instead. Hanson also wrote his girlfriend's name (Irene) on the wall of the Belle so the military would know who to contact in case he died. The couple later wed, and remained married for 63 years.

The Belle's final mission was completed on May 17, 1943. Upon its triumphant return to the U.S., the crew embarked on a 30-city tour to boost morale and help sell war bonds. The exploits of the Belle gained renewed attention in 1990 when Hollywood produced a feature film about the bomber and her crew. The preserved remains of the actual plane were declared a national historic treasure by the Air Force. They're currently in the process of being moved to the National Museum of the U.S. Air Force in Dayton, Ohio.

Hanson returned to Washington state after the war and worked as a salesman for a food distribution company. Friends say he would often end his phone conversations with the phrase "dit-dit-dit-dah-dit-dah," which is how radio operators sign off in Morse code.

Posted at 09:03 PM | Tributes (0)

October 05, 2005

Charles Williams

Charles Williams, the first black umpire to work behind home plate in a World Series game, died on Sept. 10 of complications from diabetes. He was 61.

The Denver native attended Long Beach City College in California, where he was an All-American football player. He was working the night shift at a factory in the 1960s when he began attending umpire school.

Williams worked as a minor-league umpire until 1982 when he joined the majors. He ump'd the 1985 and 1995 All-Star games, the 1989 National League championship series between the San Francisco Giants and Chicago Cubs, and the 1997 National League championship series between the Florida Marlins and the Atlanta Braves.

Williams was the home-plate umpire for Game Four of the 1993 World Series, which pitted the Philadelphia Phillies against the Toronto Blue Jays. That marathon match-up set several records, including the longest game (four hours, 14 minutes), the most runs by both teams (29) and the most runs scored by a losing team (14). Toronto beat Philly 15-14, and eventually took the series in game six.

A consummate professional, Williams often brought home videotapes of the games he worked, just to make sure his calls were accurate. Despite this dedication, baseball fans and players were not always happy with the calls he made. Some shouted racial epithets or spit at him. He even received death threats in 1986 for throwing Padres' first baseman Steve Garvey out of a game, but Williams refused to be swayed from his calls.

"People come to see their favorite players, to watch the game and to see the manager tell the umpire off. And it's part of my job to listen to him. When the crowd boos, I know I am probably doing something right," Williams once said.

Posted at 12:37 AM | Tributes (0)

September 21, 2005

Bob Denver

bdenver.jpgRobert Denver, the star of the classic TV show "Gilligan's Island," died on Sept. 2 of complications related to cancer treatment. He was 70.

A native of New Rochelle, N.Y., Denver studied law and political science at Loyola University. He taught private school in Pacific Palisades, Calif., and worked as a mailman for the U.S. Postal Service, but dreamed of becoming an actor.

Denver trained with the Del Ray Players in Los Angeles and made his first theatrical appearance in the play "The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial." He acted in the Jimmy Stewart/Sandra Dee vehicle, "A Private's Affair," then landed the role of Maynard G. Krebs, the bearded beatnik best friend of the lead character in the TV show, "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis."

Denver attained celebrity status in 1964 when he was tapped to lead an ensemble cast in "Gilligan's Island," a situational comedy about seven people shipwrecked on an uncharted tropical island. As the bumbling first mate of the S.S. Minnow, Denver served as the straight man to Alan Hale Jr., who played the ship's skipper, Jonas Grumby. The pair's slapstick interactions frequently drew comparisons to Fred Flintstone and Barney Rubble, and Laurel and Hardy.

Although "Gilligan's Island" was critically panned and canceled by CBS after its third season, the show's 98 episodes have been broadcast in nearly continuous reruns for the past 40 years. "Gilligan's Island" also spawned two animated series, with Denver providing his character's voice, and three made-for-TV movies.

Denver also appeared in the TV shows "The Good Guys," "Dusty's Trail" and "Far Out Space Nuts," but never quite managed to separate himself from his Gilligan persona. In later years, he starred in the Broadway production of "Play It Again, Sam," published an autobiography and co-hosted a syndicated radio show with his third wife, Dreama Perry. Denver's first two marriages ended in divorce. He also fathered four children.

"Bob was my greatest teacher, my everything. The tapestry of the life we created together will fill my heart forever. Everything good in my life is a result of living with this intelligent, gentle man. I am so proud to have been his wife," Dreama said, in a statement published on the Web.

Listen to a Tribute From NPR

Posted at 07:59 AM | Tributes (2)

September 14, 2005

William H. Rehnquist

wrehnquist.jpgWilliam Hubbs Rehnquist, the Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, died on Sept. 3. Cause of death was not released. He was 80.

Born in Milwaukee, Rehnquist attended Kenyon College in Ohio until 1942 when he was drafted. He served in the Army Air Corps as a weather observer in North Africa during World War II, then used the GI Bill to earn both a bachelor's and a master's degree in political science from Stanford University.

Rehnquist received another master's in government at Harvard University before returning to Stanford for his law degree. He graduated first in his class in 1952. One of his classmates was Sandra Day O'Connor, a jurist who would eventually become his colleague on the Supreme Court.

After clerking for Justice Robert Jackson and Justice Felix Frankfurter, Rehnquist moved to Phoenix, where he worked for a local law firm and became a Republican party official. The political connections he made in Arizona helped him land a coveted job as an assistant attorney general for the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel. In this position, he screened candidates for potential Supreme Court slots. When Justice John Marshall Harlan decided to retire in 1971, Rehnquist's boss Attorney General John Mitchell put forth his name for the job. Rehnquist was confirmed a few months later and joined the Court on Jan. 7, 1972.

Rehnquist spent three decades on the bench and 19 years presiding over the highest court in the land. Elevated to the chief justice position in 1986 by President Ronald Reagan, Rehnquist was known for his conservative ideology, for strongly supporting states' rights and for narrowly interpreting the U.S. Constitution. He affirmed use of the death penalty and was one of only two dissenters in the landmark Roe v. Wade case, which established a woman's right to have an abortion. The second-oldest man to preside over the Supreme Court, Rehnquist was also the second chief justice in U.S. history to preside over a presidential impeachment -- that of President Bill Clinton, who was acquitted.

Outside of the courtroom, Rehnquist painted, sang, collected stamps and enjoyed playing the occasional game of poker. He married Natalie "Nan" Cornell in 1953 and fathered three children; Nan died in 1991 of ovarian cancer. Rehnquist also published several books about the law, including "The Supreme Court" and "Grand Inquests: The Historic Impeachments of Justice Samuel Chase and President Andrew Johnson."

Despite suffering from thyroid cancer in recent years, Rehnquist refused to stop working. According to CNN, he was "in his office until a few weeks ago…and continued to work until the very end." President George W. Bush has nominated Judge John G. Roberts Jr. as Rehnquist's successor.

Read Recent Rehnquist Decisions

Listen to Tributes From NPR

Complete Coverage From The Washington Post

Complete Coverage From The New York Times

Posted at 07:33 PM | Tributes (0)

September 11, 2005

Victims of the Sept. 11th Terrorist Attacks

The World Trade Center (A-M)

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Gordon McCannel Aamoth • Edelmiro (Ed) Abad • Maria Rose Abad • Andrew Anthony Abate • Vincent Abate • Laurence Christopher Abel • William F. Abrahamson • Richard Anthony Aceto • Alicia Acevedo Carranza • Heinrich B. Ackermann • Paul Andrew Acquaviva • Donald L. Adams • Patrick Adams • Shannon Lewis Adams • Stephen Adams • Ignatius Adanga • Christy A. Addamo • Terence E. Adderley • Sophia B. Addo • Lee Adler • Daniel Thomas Afflitto • Emmanuel Afuakwah • Alok Agarwal • Mukul Agarwala • Joseph Agnello • David Scott Agnes • Joao A.D. Aguiar • Brian G. Ahearn • Jeremiah J. Ahern • Joanne Ahladiotis • Shabbir Ahmed • Terrance Andre Aiken • Godwin Ajala • Gertrude M. Alagero • Andrew Alameno • Margaret Ann (Peggy) Jezycki Alario • Gary Albero • Jon L. Albert • Peter Craig Alderman • Jacquelyn Delaine Aldridge • Grace Alegre-Cua • David D. Alger • Boutros al-Hashim • Ernest Alikakos • Edward L. Allegretto • Eric Allen • Joseph Ryan Allen • Richard Dennis Allen • Richard Lanard Allen • Christopher Edward Allingham • Janet M. Alonso • Anthony Alvarado • Antonio Javier Alvarez • Telmo Alvear • Cesar A. Alviar • Tariq Amanullah • Angelo Amaranto • James Amato • Joseph Amatuccio • Christopher Charles Amoroso • Kazuhiro Anai • Calixto Anaya • Joseph Peter Anchundia • Kermit Charles Anderson • Yvette Anderson • John Andreacchio • Michael Rourke Andrews • Jean A. Andrucki • Siew-Nya Ang • Joseph Angelini • Joseph Angelini • Laura Angilletta • Doreen J. Angrisani • Lorraine D. Antigua • Peter Paul Apollo • Faustino Apostol • Frank Thomas Aquilino • Patrick Michael Aranyos • David Gregory Arce • Michael G. Arczynski • Louis Arena • Adam Arias • Michael J. Armstrong • Jack Charles Aron • Joshua Aron • Richard Avery Aronow • Japhet J. Aryee • Carl Asaro • Michael A. Asciak • Michael Edward Asher • Janice Ashley • Thomas J. Ashton • Manuel O. Asitimbay • Gregg Arthur Atlas • Gerald Atwood • James Audiffred • Louis Frank Aversano • Ezra Aviles • Samuel (Sandy) Ayala

B
Arlene T. Babakitis • Eustace (Rudy) Bacchus • John James Badagliacca • Jane Ellen Baeszler • Robert J. Baierwalter • Andrew J. Bailey • Brett T. Bailey • Tatyana Bakalinskaya • Michael S. Baksh • Sharon Balkcom • Michael Andrew Bane • Kathy Bantis • Gerard Jean Baptiste • Walter Baran • Gerard A. Barbara • Paul V. Barbaro • James W. Barbella • Ivan Kyrillos Fairbanks Barbosa • Victor Daniel Barbosa • Colleen Ann Barkow • David Michael Barkway • Matthew Barnes • Sheila Patricia Barnes • Evan J. Baron • Renee Barrett-Arjune • Arthur T. Barry • Diane G. Barry • Maurice Vincent Barry • Scott D. Bart • Carlton W. Bartels • Guy Barzvi • Inna Basina • Alysia Basmajian • Kenneth William Basnicki • Steven J. Bates • Paul James Battaglia • W. David Bauer • Ivhan Luis Carpio Bautista • Marlyn C. Bautista • Jasper Baxter • Michele (Du Berry) Beale • Paul F. Beatini • Jane S. Beatty • Larry I. Beck • Manette Marie Beckles • Carl John Bedigian • Michael Beekman • Maria Behr • Yelena Belilovsky • Nina Patrice Bell • Andrea Della Bella • Debbie S. Bellows • Stephen Elliot Belson • Paul Michael Benedetti • Denise Lenore Benedetto • Bryan Craig Bennett • Eric L. Bennett • Oliver Duncan Bennett • Margaret L. Benson • Dominick J. Berardi • James Patrick Berger • Steven Howard Berger • John P. Bergin • Alvin Bergsohn • Daniel D. Bergstein • Michael J. Berkeley • Donna Bernaerts-Kearns • Dave Bernard • William Bernstein • David M. Berray • David S. Berry • Joseph J. Berry • William Reed Bethke • Timothy D. Betterly • Edward F. Beyea • Paul Michael Beyer • Anil T. Bharvaney • Bella Bhukhan • Shimmy D. Biegeleisen • Peter Alexander Bielfeld • William Biggart • Brian Bilcher • Carl Vincent Bini • Gary Bird • Joshua David Birnbaum • George Bishop • Jeffrey D. Bittner • Balewa Albert Blackman • Christopher Joseph Blackwell • Susan L. Blair • Harry Blanding • Janice L. Blaney • Craig Michael Blass • Rita Blau • Richard M. Blood • Michael A. Boccardi • John Paul Bocchi • Michael L. Bocchino • Susan Mary Bochino • Bruce Douglas (Chappy) Boehm • Mary Katherine Boffa • Nicholas A. Bogdan • Darren C. Bohan • Lawrence Francis Boisseau • Vincent M. Boland • Alan Bondarenko • Andre Bonheur • Colin Arthur Bonnett • Frank Bonomo • Yvonne L. Bonomo • Sean Booker • Juan Jose Borda Leyva • Sherry Ann Bordeaux • Krystine C. Bordenabe • Martin Boryczewski • Richard E. Bosco • John Howard Boulton • Francisco Bourdier • Thomas H. Bowden • Kimberly S. Bowers • Veronique (Bonnie) Nicole Bowers • Larry Bowman • Shawn Edward Bowman • Kevin L. Bowser • Gary R. Box • Gennady Boyarsky • Pamela Boyce • Michael Boyle • Alfred Braca • Sandra Conaty Brace • Kevin H. Bracken • David Brian Brady • Alexander Braginsky • Nicholas W. Brandemarti • Michelle Renee Bratton • Patrice Braut • Lydia Estelle Bravo • Ronald Michael Breitweiser • Edward A. Brennan • Frank H. Brennan • Michael Emmett Brennan • Peter Brennan • Thomas M. Brennan • Daniel Brethel • Gary L. Bright • Jonathan Eric Briley • Mark A. Brisman • Paul Gary Bristow • Victoria Alvarez Brito • Mark Francis Broderick • Herman C. Broghammer • Keith Broomfield • Janice J. Brown • Lloyd Brown • Patrick J. Brown • Bettina Browne • Mark Bruce • Richard Bruehert • Andrew Brunn • Vincent Brunton • Ronald Paul Bucca • Brandon J. Buchanan • Greg Joseph Buck • Dennis Buckley • Nancy Bueche • Patrick Joseph Buhse • John E. Bulaga • Stephen Bunin • Matthew J. Burke • Thomas Daniel Burke • William F. Burke • Donald James Burns • Kathleen A. Burns • Keith James Burns • John Patrick Burnside • Irina Buslo • Milton Bustillo • Thomas M. Butler • Patrick Byrne • Timothy G. Byrne

C
Jesus Cabezas • Lillian Caceres • Brian Joseph Cachia • Steven Cafiero • Richard M. Caggiano • Cecile M. Caguicla • Michael John Cahill • Scott W. Cahill • Thomas J. Cahill • George Cain • Salvatore B. Calabro • Joseph Calandrillo • Philip V. Calcagno • Edward Calderon • Kenneth Marcus Caldwell • Dominick E. Calia • Felix (Bobby) Calixte • Frank Callahan • Liam Callahan • Luigi Calvi • Roko Camaj • Michael Cammarata • David Otey Campbell • Geoffrey Thomas Campbell • Jill Marie Campbell • Robert Arthur Campbell • Sandra Patricia Campbell • Juan Ortega Campos • Sean Canavan • John A. Candela • Vincent Cangelosi • Stephen J. Cangialosi • Lisa B. Cannava • Brian Cannizzaro • Michael R. Canty • Louis A. Caporicci • Jonathan N. Cappello • James Christopher Cappers • Richard M. Caproni • Jose Cardona • Dennis M Carey • Edward Carlino • Michael Scott Carlo • David G. Carlone • Rosemarie C. Carlson • Mark Stephen Carney • Joyce Ann Carpeneto • Jeremy M. Carrington • Michael T. Carroll • Peter Carroll • James J. Carson • Christopher Newton Carter • James Marcel Cartier • Vivian Casalduc • John F. Casazza • Paul Cascio • Margarito Casillas • Thomas Anthony Casoria • William Otto Caspar • Alejandro Castano • German Castillo Galicia • Arcelia Castillo • Leonard M. Castrianno • Jose Ramon Castro • Richard G. Catarelli • Christopher Sean Caton • Robert J. Caufield • Mary Teresa Caulfield • Judson Cavalier • Michael Joseph Cawley • Jason D. Cayne • Juan Armando Ceballos • Marcia G. Cecil-Carter • Jason Cefalu • Thomas J. Celic • Ana M. Centeno • Joni Cesta • Jeffrey M. Chairnoff • Swarna Chalasini • William Chalcoff • Eli Chalouh • Charles Lawrence (Chip) Chan • Mandy Chang • Mark L. Charette • Gregorio Manuel Chavez • Pedro Francisco Checo • Douglas MacMillan Cherry • Stephen Patrick Cherry • Vernon Paul Cherry • Nestor Chevalier • Swede Joseph Chevalier • Alexander H. Chiang • Dorothy J. Chiarchiaro • Luis Alfonso Chimbo • Robert Chin • Wing Wai (Eddie) Ching • Nicholas P. Chiofalo • John Chipura • Peter A. Chirchirillo • Catherine E. Chirls • Kyung (Kaccy) Cho • Abdul K. Chowdhury • Mohammed Salahuddin Chowdhury • Kirsten L. Christophe • Pamela Chu • Steven Paul Chucknick • Wai-ching Chung • Christopher Ciafardini • Alex F. Ciccone • Frances Ann Cilente • Elaine Cillo • Edna Cintron • Nestor Andre Cintron • Robert Dominick Cirri • Juan Pablo Alvarez Cisneros • Benjamin Keefe Clark • Eugene Clark • Gregory A. Clark • Mannie Leroy Clark • Thomas R. Clark • Christopher Robert Clarke • Donna Clarke • Michael Clarke • Suria R.E. Clarke • Kevin Francis Cleary • James D. Cleere • Geoffrey W. Cloud • Susan M. Clyne • Steven Coakley • Jeffrey Coale • Patricia A. Cody • Daniel Michael Coffey • Jason Matthew Coffey • Florence Cohen • Kevin Sanford Cohen • Anthony Joseph Coladonato • Mark J. Colaio • Stephen J. Colaio • Christopher M. Colasanti • Kevin Nathaniel Colbert • Michel Paris Colbert • Keith Eugene Coleman • Scott Thomas Coleman • Tarel Coleman • Liam Joseph Colhoun • Robert D. Colin • Robert J. Coll • Jean Marie Collin • John Michael Collins • Michael L. Collins • Thomas J. Collins • Joseph Collison • Patricia Malia Colodner • Linda M. Colon • Soledi Colon • Ronald Comer • Jaime Concepcion • Albert Conde • Denease Conley • Susan Clancy Conlon • Margaret Mary Conner • Cynthia L. Connolly • John E. Connolly • James Lee Connor • Jonathan (J.C.) Connors • Kevin P. Connors • Kevin Francis Conroy • Brenda E. Conway • Dennis Michael Cook • Helen D. Cook • John A. Cooper • Joseph J. Coppo • Gerard J. Coppola • Joseph Albert Corbett • Alejandro Cordero • Robert Cordice • Danny A. Correa-Gutierrez • Ruben D. Correa • James Corrigan • Carlos Cortes • Kevin M. Cosgrove • Dolores Marie Costa • Digna Alexandra Rivera Costanza • Charles Gregory Costello • Michael S. Costello • Conrod K.H. Cottoy • Martin Coughlan • John Gerard Coughlin • Timothy John Coughlin • James E. Cove • Andre Cox • Frederick John Cox • Michelle Coyle-Eulau • James Raymond Coyle • Anne M. Cramer • Christopher Seton Cramer • Denise Crant • James L. Crawford • Robert James Crawford • Joanne Mary Cregan • Lucia Crifasi • John Crisci • Daniel Hal Crisman • Dennis A. Cross • Helen Crossin-Kittle • Kevin Raymond Crotty • Thomas G. Crotty • John Crowe • Welles Remy Crowther • Robert L. Cruikshank • Francisco Cruz • John Robert Cruz • Kenneth John Cubas • Francisco C. Cubero • Richard Joseph Cudina • Neil James Cudmore • Thomas Patrick Cullen • Joan McConnell Cullinan • Joyce Cummings • Brian Thomas Cummins • Nilton Albuquerque Fernao Cunha • Michael Joseph Cunningham • Robert Curatolo • Laurence Curia • Paul Dario Curioli • Beverly Curry • Michael Curtin • Gavin Cushny

D
John D'Allara • Vincent D'Amadeo • Jack L. D'Ambrosi • Mary D'Antonio • Edward Alexander D'Atri • Michael D. D'Auria • Michael Jude D'Esposito • Manuel Da Mota • Carlos S. DaCosta • Caleb Arron Dack • Thomas A. Damaskinos • Jeannine Marie Damiani-Jones • Patrick W. Danahy • Nana Kwuku Danso • Vincent G. Danz • Dwight Donald Darcy • Elizabeth Ann Darling • Annette Andrea Dataram • Lawrence Davidson • Michael Allen Davidson • Scott Matthew Davidson • Titus Davidson • Niurka Davila • Clinton Davis • Wayne Terrial Davis • Anthony Richard Dawson • Calvin Dawson • Edward James Day • Jayceryll M. de Chavez • Emerita (Emy) De La Pena • Azucena de la Torre • Cristina de Laura • Oscar de Laura • Francis (Frank) Albert De Martini • Robert J. DeAngelis • James V. DeBlase • Paul DeCola • Jason Christopher DeFazio • Jennifer DeJesus • Monique E. DeJesus • Nereida DeJesus • Martin DeMeo • Jean C. DePalma • Michael DeRienzo • David Paul DeRubbio • Jemal Legesse DeSantis • Christian D. DeSimone • Edward DeSimone • Melanie Louise DeVere • Jerry DeVito • William T. Dean • Thomas P. Deangelis • Tara Debek • Anna Debin • Simon Dedvukaj • David A. Defeo • Manuel Del Valle • Donald A. Delapenha • Vito Joseph Deleo • Danielle Delie • Joseph A. Della Pietra • Palmina Delli Gatti • Colleen Ann Deloughery • Anthony Demas • Francis X. Deming • Carol K. Demitz • Kevin Dennis • Thomas F. Dennis • Jose Nicholas Depena • Robert J. Deraney • Andrew Desperito • Cindy Ann Deuel • Robert P. Devitt • Dennis Lawrence Devlin • Gerard Dewan • Simon Suleman Ali Kassamali Dhanani • Michael L. DiAgostino • Patricia F. DiChiaro • John DiFato • Vincent F. DiFazio • Carl DiFranco • Donald J. DiFranco • Debra Ann DiMartino • Anthony DiOnisio • George DiPasquale • Joseph DiPilato • Douglas Frank DiStefano • Michael Diaz-Piedra • Judith Belguese Diaz-Sierra • Lourdes Galletti Diaz • Matthew Diaz • Nancy Diaz • Obdulio Ruiz Diaz • Joseph Dermot Dickey • Lawrence Patrick Dickinson • Michael David Diehl • Stephen P. Dimino • William J. Dimmling • Christopher Dincuff • Jeffrey M. Dingle • Ramzi A. Doany • John J. Doherty • Melissa C. Doi • Brendan Dolan • Neil Dollard • James Joseph Domanico • Benilda Pascua Domingo • Charles (Carlos) Dominguez • Geronimo (Jerome) Mark Patrick Dominguez • Kevin W. Donnelly • Jacqueline Donovan • Stephen Dorf • Thomas Dowd • Kevin Christopher Dowdell • Mary Yolanda Dowling • Raymond M. Downey • Frank Joseph Doyle • Joseph M. Doyle • Randy Drake • Stephen Patrick Driscoll • Mirna A. Duarte • Luke A. Dudek • Christopher Michael Duffy • Gerard Duffy • Michael Joseph Duffy • Thomas W. Duffy • Antoinette Duger • Sareve Dukat • Christopher Joseph Dunne • Richard A. Dunstan • Patrick Thomas Dwyer

E
Joseph Anthony Eacobacci • John Bruce Eagleson • Robert D. Eaton • Dean P. Eberling • Margaret Ruth Echtermann • Paul Robert Eckna • Constantine (Gus) Economos • Dennis Michael Edwards • Michael Hardy Edwards • Christine Egan • Lisa Egan • Martin Egan • Michael Egan • Samantha Egan • Carole Eggert • Lisa Caren Weinstein Ehrlich • John Ernst (Jack) Eichler • Eric Adam Eisenberg • Daphne F. Elder • Michael J. Elferis • Mark J. Ellis • Valerie Silver Ellis • Albert Alfy William Elmarry • Edgar H. Emery • Doris Suk-Yuen Eng • Christopher S. Epps • Ulf Ramm Ericson • Erwin L. Erker • William J. Erwin • Sarah (Ali) Escarcega • Jose Espinal • Fanny M. Espinoza • Brigette Ann Esposito • Francis Esposito • Michael Esposito • William Esposito • Ruben Esquilin • Sadie Ette • Barbara G. Etzold • Eric Brian Evans • Robert Edward Evans • Meredith Emily June Ewart

F
Catherine K. Fagan • Patricia M. Fagan • Keith G. Fairben • William F. Fallon • William Fallon • Anthony J. Fallone • Dolores B. Fanelli • John Joseph Fanning • Kathleen (Kit) Faragher • Thomas Farino • Nancy Carole Farley • Elizabeth Ann (Betty) Farmer • Douglas Farnum • John G. Farrell • John W. Farrell • Terrence Patrick Farrell • Joseph Farrelly • Thomas P. Farrelly • Syed Abdul Fatha • Christopher Faughnan • Wendy R. Faulkner • Shannon M. Fava • Bernard D. Favuzza • Robert Fazio • Ronald C. Fazio • William Feehan • Francis J. (Frank) Feely • Garth E. Feeney • Sean B. Fegan • Lee S. Fehling • Peter Feidelberg • Alan D. Feinberg • Rosa Maria Feliciano • Edward T. Fergus • George Ferguson • Henry Fernandez • Jose Manuel Contreras Fernandez • Judy H. Fernandez • Elisa Giselle Ferraina • Anne Marie Sallerin Ferreira • Robert John Ferris • David Francis Ferrugio • Louis V. Fersini • Michael David Ferugio • Bradley James Fetchet • Jennifer Louise Fialko • Kristen Fiedel • Samuel Fields • Michael Bradley Finnegan • Timothy J. Finnerty • Michael Curtis Fiore • Stephen J. Fiorelli • Paul M. Fiori • John Fiorito • John R. Fischer • Andrew Fisher • Bennett Lawson Fisher • John Roger Fisher • Thomas J. Fisher • Lucy Fishman • Ryan D. Fitzgerald • Thomas Fitzpatrick • Richard P. Fitzsimons • Salvatore A. Fiumefreddo • Christina Donovan Flannery • Eileen Flecha • Andre G. Fletcher • Carl Flickinger • John Joseph Florio • Joseph W. Flounders • David Fodor • Michael N. Fodor • Steven Mark Fogel • Thomas Foley • David Fontana • Chih Min (Dennis) Foo • Del Rose Forbes-Cheatham • Godwin Forde • Donald A. Foreman • Christopher Hugh Forsythe • Claudia Alicia Martinez Foster • Noel J. Foster • Ana Fosteris • Robert J. Foti • Jeffrey L. Fox • Virginia Fox • Joan Francis • Pauline Francis • Virgin (Lucy) Francis • Gary J. Frank • Morton Frank • Peter Christopher Frank • Richard K. Fraser • Kevin Joseph Frawley • Clyde Frazier • Lillian I. Frederick • Andrew Fredericks • Jamitha Freemen • Brett O. Freiman • Peter L. Freund • Arlene E. Fried • Alan Wayne Friedlander • Andrew K. Friedman • Gregg J. Froehner • Peter Christian Fry • Clement Fumando • Steven Elliot Furman • Paul James Furmato

G
Fredric Gabler • Richard S. Gabrielle • James Andrew Gadiel • Pamela Gaff • Ervin Vincent Gailliard • Deanna L. Galante • Grace Galante • Anthony Edward Gallagher • Daniel James Gallagher • John Patrick Gallagher • Tomas Gallegos Linares • Cono E. Gallo • Vincenzo Gallucci • Thomas Edward Galvin • Giovanna (Genni) Gambale • Thomas Gambino • Giann F. Gamboa • Peter J. Ganci • Claude Michael Gann • Charles William Garbarini • Cesar Garcia • David Garcia • Jorge Luis Morron Garcia • Juan Garcia • Marlyn C. Garcia • Christopher Gardner • Douglas B. Gardner • Harvey J. Gardner • Jeffrey B. Gardner • Thomas A. Gardner • William Arthur Gardner • Francesco Garfi • Rocco Gargano • James M. Gartenberg • Matthew David Garvey • Bruce Gary • Boyd A. Gatton • Donald Richard Gavagan • Terence D. Gazzani • Gary Geidel • Paul Hamilton Geier • Julie M. Geis • Peter Gelinas • Steven Paul Geller • Howard G. Gelling • Peter Victor Genco • Steven Gregory Genovese • Alayne F. Gentul • Edward F. Geraghty • Suzanne Geraty • Ralph Gerhardt • Robert J. Gerlich • Denis P. Germain • Marina R. Gertsberg • Susan M. Getzendanner • James Gerard Geyer • Joseph M. Giaccone • Vincent Francis Giammona • Debra L. Gibbon • James A. Giberson • Craig Neil Gibson • Ronnie Gies • Laura A. Giglio • Andrew Clive Gilbert • Timothy Paul Gilbert • Paul Stuart Gilbey • Paul John Gill • Mark Y. Gilles • Evan H. Gillette • Ronald Gilligan • Rodney C. Gillis • Laura Gilly • John F. Ginley • Donna Marie Giordano • Jeffrey Giordano • John Giordano • Steven A. Giorgetti • Martin Giovinazzo • Jinny Lady Giraldo • Kum-Kum Girolamo • Salvatore Gitto • Cynthia Giugliano • Mon Gjonbalaj • Dianne Gladstone • Keith Alexander Glascoe • Thomas I. Glasser • Harry Glenn • Barry H. Glick • Steven Lawrence Glick • John T. Gnazzo • William (Bill) Robert Godshalk • Michael Gogliormella • Brian Fredric Goldberg • Jeffrey Grant Goldflam • Michelle Herman Goldstein • Monica Goldstein • Steven Goldstein • Andrew H. Golkin • Dennis James Gomes • Enrique Antonio Gomez • Jose Bienvenido Gomez • Manuel Gomez • Wilder Gomez • Jenine Gonzalez • Joel Guevara Gonzalez • Mauricio Gonzalez • Rosa J. Gonzalez • Calvin J. Gooding • Harry Goody • Kiran Reddy Gopu • Catherine Carmen Gorayeb • Kerene Gordon • Sebastian Gorki • Kieran Gorman • Thomas E. Gorman • Michael Edward Gould • Yugi Goya • Jon Richard Grabowski • Christopher Michael Grady • Edwin John Graf • David M. Graifman • Gilbert Granados • Elvira Granitto • Winston Arthur Grant • Christopher Stewart Gray • James Michael Gray • Linda Mair Grayling • John Michael Grazioso • Timothy Grazioso • Derrick Arthur Green • Wade Brian Green • Elaine Myra Greenberg • Gayle R. Greene • James Arthur Greenleaf • Eileen Marsha Greenstein • Elizabeth (Lisa) Martin Gregg • Denise Gregory • Donald H. Gregory • Florence M. Gregory • Pedro (David) Grehan • John M. Griffin • Tawanna Griffin • Joan D. Griffith • Warren Grifka • Ramon Grijalvo • Joseph F. Grillo • David Grimner • Kenneth Grouzalis • Joseph Grzelak • Matthew J. Grzymalski • Robert Joseph Gschaar • Liming (Michael) Gu • Jose A. Guadalupe • Yan Zhu (Cindy) Guan • Geoffrey E. Guja • Joseph Gullickson • Babita Guman • Douglas B. Gurian • Janet H. Gustafson • Philip T. Guza • Barbara Guzzardo • Peter Gyulavary

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