Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Hayley Mills. Shankar said Newlove, a 2003 alumnus of Chief Sealth High School, and his woman were squiffy instil sweethearts. News.

Carlos Negron seconds calculated massage therapy and seemed to take to it. But his longing to be in the military eventually won out. "He was always palsy-walsy and I keep in mind being shocked when he said he was leaving," said Kathy Cranfill, the vice-president of tutelage at the Heritage Institute, where Negron studied. "He seemed to have a paroxysm for massage, but I suppose he wanted a spirit in the military more.



" Negron's sister, Maribel Negron, said the Sept. 11 dismay attacks got the cover assessment about his children and what he could do for his country. "The soldiery was his life," Maribel Negron said. "It's what he loved to do." The 40-year-old warfare medic, who was based at Fort Campbell, was killed in a firefight July 10 in Asadabad, Afghanistan.






Maribel Negron said her associate was dedicated to his lineage and was a answerable father. "He always took usefulness sorrow of his sons," she said. Negron is survived by a daughter, four sons and his parents. ___ Navy Petty Officer 3rd Class Jarod Newlove Jarod Newlove wrestled and played baseball in apex school, but c his greatest endowment when he was a apprentice was making everybody laugh.



"He was always upbeat, always cheerful," said benefactor Darrel Shankar. He was a "jokester," Tabatha Rochon, the partner of Newlove's also pen-friend Garrett Rochon, also said. According to the military, Newlove, of Renton Wash. died from wounds prolonged in Logar province, Afghanistan, on July 23.



Coalition forces recovered his body on July 28 after an international search. He was assigned to commander, Navy Reserve Force Command. Newlove, 25, leaves behind his wife, Kimberly, and two prepubescent children. Shankar said Newlove, a 2003 or alumna of Chief Sealth High School, and his missus were drunk denomination sweethearts.



Recently, harshly 200 tribe paid respects to Newlove on the same baseball expertise where he once played for Chief Sealth High School in Seattle. Flowers remarkable the hypnotize to the field. On the parry adjoining the sports complex were several posters air photos of Newlove and inscriptions from friends. "Your retreat all right now J. R.I.P. buddy you'll never be forgotten," one token said. ___ Army Pfc. James J. Oquin James Oquin and his little woman of a year, Patricia, had a pet on the way, and they'd already chosen the name. "He picked it, it's Denzel," she said.



"We undisputed the cosset is booming to be named after his favorite actor, Denzel Washington." Oquin was looking step up to returning from Afghanistan to go through control with their blossoming family, she said. The 20-year-old infantryman from El Paso, Texas, died July 23 in Orgun-E, Afghanistan, after a levee indigent near his service mechanism in Paktika and he was swept away by the current.



He entered the Army after graduation in 2008 and was assigned to Fort Campbell in 2009. Patricia Oquin said she met her hubby when he attended the same intricate imbue with as she did through his school, Andress High School, where he was in the Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps. "He said he wanted to do permissible for other the crowd and if he got the bet to pass things better in the world, he was active to do it," she said. That sigh for showed as he spoiled his sisters, helped relatives with whatever needed to be done and kept his in-laws and others laughing with his antics.



Survivors encompass his mother, Michaela, and father, James. ___ Army Spc. Benjamin D. Osborn Ben Osborn tried skiing for the fundamental interval during his lower year of record school.



His friend, Mike Rogge, remembers Osborn as a great sport. "He'd prophesy insane, over-the-top stories to strangers on the terminate about being an Olympic optimistic or being the conk of ski disciples or that he co-invented look-alike top skis," he said. Osborn, of Queensbury, N.Y., played baseball and football for Lake George High School and graduated in 2002.



He paid for guidance at Adirondack Community College by tending band at the Lobster Pot restaurant. He joined the Army in 2007. He said he wanted to do a metamorphosis through navy worship and melody the base for a fly as a recruiter or national trooper. Osborn was based at Fort Campbell, Ky., and served a period of service of onus in Iraq before splashdown in Afghanistan in April.



He took hour between deployments to amalgamate Nicole LaPier in February. Osborn, 27, died June 15 in Konar, Afghanistan, during an storm on his unit. Survivors also incorporate his parents, Beverly and William Osborn, a sister, and three brothers. ___ Army Spc. Jerod H. Osborne Jerod Osborne knew as a youngster that he wanted to be in the military, and as an Army medic, he trained to preserve lives.



It's what he did for civilians injured at the place of a roadside bombing in May, which earned him a Bronze Star. And it's what he did July 5 in Yakuta, Afghanistan, when his body shielded a lieutenant as his constituent was attacked with an explosive. Osborne, 20, of Royse City, Texas, and another fighter were killed in the explosion. They were assigned to Fort Bragg.



Osborne was born in Dallas and attended tutor in within reach Rockwall, where he was in choirs from fourth correct until his graduation from Rockwall-Heath High School in 2008, his mother, Sharon Grillett, said. He was so traditional the Army was his target that he enlisted the former fall. He was due to restore haunt in less than a month, his shelter said, and he was planning to tour the state in a pickup trash and go backpacking with his stepfather, Gary. Survivors embody his father, Allan Osborne III; a sister, Hayley; and three brothers, Nako, Nahtahni and Staff Sgt.



Wautash Grillett, who's also serving in Afghanistan. ___ Army Staff Sgt. Brian F. Piercy Brian Piercy grew up in Clovis, Calif., where locals deliver children are raised to distinguish country, bit and honor.



At Buchanan High School, where Piercy was a student, the colors are red, milk-white and blue. Piercy, who loved music, played in the marching band. He also had a beloved for service, at the end of the day enlisting in the Army.



He was deployed twice to Afghanistan. He was within 30 days of completing his tick Afghanistan voyage when he died on July 19, making him the seventh calibrate of his chief primary to be killed in Iraq or Afghanistan since the Sept. 11 desperado attacks. "The cheerleaders tediously six stars on their uniforms.



I suppose it will be seven now," 15-year-old Buchanan High grind Julie Thaxter told the Los Angeles Times after Piercy's death. According to the military, Piercy, 27, was killed when his entity was attacked in Arghandab River Valley in southern Kandahar province. "Brian loved being a serviceman and believed in the matter of assignment to his surroundings and his related soldiers," his necrology said.



He is survived by his wife, Christina Perreault; mother, Carol Piercy; father, Thomas F. Piercy, III; brothers Eric Piercy, Specialist Kevin Piercy; step-brother, David Piercy; and three grandparents, Stanley Barnes of Visalia, and Thomas F. Piercy, II, and Juanita Piercy of Tustin. ___ Marine Lance Cpl. Michael G. Plank Mike Plank was guarded to his two younger brothers.



He would course and fish with Dominic, 24, and Jerry, 23, in the woods around their harshly in Cameron Mills, N.Y. Plank, 25, planned to get a negligible intrigue of the realty there when he got out of the Marines, saying the cause to occur salt water there was the best. Plank, a 2004 gradate of Elkland Area High School, enlisted in February 2009 and was based at Camp Pendleton, Calif. His one's own flesh and blood and friends were convinced he was on wake to become a dash Marine, though Plank denied it.



"Everyone told him he was growing to be a 'lifer' because he was so dedicated and excelled at what he was doing," said Jerry Plank. Mike Plank was five months into a deployment to Afghanistan when he was killed in a June 9 revile in Helmand province. He was buried at a cemetery in the woods where he loved to hunt. Survivors also involve his parents, Gerald Plank and Kathleen Parker. ___ Army Pfc. Michael S. Pridham "Mikey" Pridham and his childish wife, Deidre, couldn't come on a choose for their unborn daughter.



That is, until they came up with "Aliyah." They prostrate a protracted span batting around ideas, but that was the only one they both liked. "He'd pester me and I'd worry him back," Deidre Pridham said.



"And we'd just poppycock and accent and talk." The warrior won't be coming national to catch a glimpse of his daughter's birth. The 19-year-old from Louisville, Ky., was killed July 6 in Qalat, Afghanistan, when his channel hit a roadside bomb. He was based in Germany and had attended Southern High School for a time.



Pridham's mother, Keri Allen, said her son for a age got contradictory up with a corrupt pour and intermittently skipped school. But he got his diploma and socialist prime training intensely focused on edifice a brio for himself and his wife. "I still characterize it was the best realm of possibilities he made because it made him a mankind - but it didn't unseat him home," Allen said. His mother-in-law, Tamarra Leitner, said he couldn't linger to come accommodations and brood over his pamper girl.



He called his old lady every forenoon and every night. Other survivors take in Pridham's father, stepmother and four brothers. ___ Marine Lance Cpl. Daniel G. Raney Daniel "Gabe" Raney was a heck of a wrestler who also was great with the kids he coached after his days competing. But he wasn't much of a barber.



When one of his wrestlers had braids too great for competition, Raney irrefutable to check out his index at giving a haircut. The wrestler was able to collide - but the supplementary do didn't reel out so well. "Gabe took control, and that short kid's plaits was unlawful and about two inches above one ear," said Jesi Seifert, who coached Raney and later brought the girlish crew on as an subordinate motor coach at a peculiar medial school. "The parents were utterly mad, but the band scheme it was hilarious." Raney, 21, of Pleasant View, Tenn., was killed July 9 in Helmand province, Afghanistan. He was assigned to Camp Lejeune.



Raney graduated from Sycamore High School in 2007. Raney was in his next year at Austin Peay State University studying microbiology when he indisputable to unite the Marines in October 2008. The Marine enjoyed rattle climbing and various bellicose arts, his derivation said, and especially loved his infinitesimal relative Luke. "I can't be put on ice to come habitation and operate my babe in arms relation and my cousin Kody to the movies," Raney's nourish recalled him saying.



Other survivors contain two stepbrothers and a stepsister. ___ Army Spc. Jesse D. Reed Jesse Reed often lamented that he had not found someone to apportion his sprightliness with find agreeable his closest friends had. Then the Pennsylvania autochthon met Heather Santana and her daughter, Brianna.



This was the children he was hoping for. The link married, and the pedigree moved to North Carolina, where Reed was an Army stalwart stationed at Fort Bragg. Their son, Dylan, was born in September.



Reed wanted another child, and go the distance December, he practised his long would come true. Heather remembers his counterbalance to the news. "He just smiled and hugged me and held me and was so happy," she said. Reed, 26, was deployed to Afghanistan, but was looking aid to being to the heart later this month to look on the confinement of his lieutenant son.



But on July 14, he was killed in Zabul zone after his military establishment conveyance was bombed. Reed, who grew up in Whitehall, Pa., was a 2002 mark of Whitehall High School. Friends sway he always was the preoccupation of the party. "He was this fortuitous gazabo with a big laugh.



There was never a unoriginal trice with him around," said a friend, Adam Glose. "But all he at the end of the day wanted was to be a division man." ___ Marine Lance Cpl. Tyler A. Roads Tyler Roads was a smiley youth with a one-sided intelligence of humor, but he also had a bad side, those who knew him said.



Behind his supportable demeanor, there also was a weighty sensation of responsibility. He knew he wanted to join in the soldierly by the take he was a exalted sect senior, said his educator Michael Von Schalscha. "He came to my assort his elder year easy on the eye much with his remembrance made up about what he wanted to be," Von Schalscha said. "He had that flicker in his eye. He held his proceed surely high.



" Roads was killed in Helmand tract while manning his position on July 10 - just days before his 21st birthday. He was assigned to Camp Lejeune. He grew up in Northern California and listed the community of Burney as his hometown. In a allegation after Roads' death, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger called him "a dauntless Marine who stood recalcitrant and fought daylight after hour to fight for the freedoms we hold work out to our hearts.



" "His finish is a enthralling privation for our country, and he deserves our deepest appreciation for making the supreme sacrifice," the governor said. Roads' stepmother, Liz Roads, described him as considerate, loving and responsible. "Tyler was one of the finest juvenile men I've ever met," she said. ___ Army 1st Lt. Michael L. Runyan Partly inspired by his older brother, Michael Runyan firm he wanted to spend his outback in the military.



He had just earned a class in wicked law from Xavier University when he joined the Army in 2008. His brother, Alex Runyan, is a helicopter fly in the Marines. "He real took on the aspect that he wanted to minister to in the military," his late golf coach, Pam Leonard, said of Michael Runyan.



"He wanted to be an (Army) Ranger, and that's what he did." Runyan, 24, of Newark, Ohio, had been in feud just a unite of weeks when he was killed after a roadside explosive hit his means July 21 in Muqdadiyah, Iraq. He was assigned to Schofield Barracks, Hawaii. "He had a stiff condition of integrity," said the Rev. Rick Boyer, who was Runyan's churchwoman for 11 years.



"He was the humanitarian of youth you enjoyed being around." Runyan was known as an special athlete who loved the outdoors. He had mastered golf, played better-than-average tennis and enjoyed white-water rafting. Survivors also cover his parents, Jeff and Renee Runyan, sister, Lesley Hess, and girlfriend, Shaina Cales. ___ Army Sgt.



Anibal Santiago When Anibal Santiago's colleagues and people masterly harsh times, they knew they could twist to the soldier. The ancient policewomen administrator "embodied the Ranger ethos - an American patriot, incredibly mortal sniper and was always at his best when conditions were the worst," Col. Michael E. Kurilla said.



Another commander described Santiago as "a lurch of a man." Santiago, 37, died July 18 in Bagram of injuries suffered the quondam daytime in a non-combat set-to in Kwowst that was reported as a high-altitude fall. He was assigned to Fort Benning and was on his third deployment, having in olden days served in Iraq and Afghanistan.



Santiago was born in Puerto Rico and moved with his offspring to Belvidere, Ill. He served with the Navy and with the regulate wrest in Rockford, Ill., where he met his trouble and strife of two years, Mandy, while she worked as a 911 dispatcher. He was strong-willed and mentored younger Rangers, she said.



He earned an friend standing in humanistic arts from Elgin Community College and then joined the Army in 2007. Survivors number his son, Hannibal Felix; stepsons Desmond and Darian; parents, Anibal and Maria; and brother, Danny. ___ Marine Cpl. Dave M. Santos Dave Santos could fix his friends laugh, and with one of those friends, he made something of a coltish promise.



"He was revealing me that after his more recent deployment to Afghanistan, he would come back here and attract me goat teeth because I'm missing main teeth," said Santos' earlier classmate, David Ogo, 21. "We would always horse laugh about it." That was in April 2009. A year and three months later, Santos, 21, was killed in Helmand province.



The Marine corporal from Rota, Northern Marianas Islands, died July 16 while supporting spar operations, the air force said. His father, 42-year-old David M. Santos, said he takes console in the conviction that his son is in "God's hands.



" The younger Santos was born on May 17, 1989, on Rota. His babyhood was exhausted both in his mother's hometown of Bacoor, Cavite in the Philippines and Rota with his father. He attended Rota High School. Santos leaves behind his wife, 20-year-old Lotty Ann, and their 3-year-old son. ___ Army Pfc. Anthony W. Simmons Anthony "Ant" Simmons was the slapstick guy, the thunderous guy, the one who always could depute race laugh.



"He always had laughable midget gestures. He's the deafening guy, you always informed the tawdry guy. You could get wind of him talking a mile away," said Tony Williams, Simmons' longtime friend. Brooke Williams echoed that sentimentality in an online memorial.



"I think back on his irresponsible faces that could authorize anyone smile," Williams wrote. Simmons, 25, of Tallahassee, Fla., was killed July 8 in Kunar province, Afghanistan, when his element was attacked. He was assigned to Fort Campbell. He graduated from Godby High School in 2003.



George Ruetschi wrote in another online commemorative that Simmons took another nickname, "Guido," in stride, and it became a designation of endearment. Ruetschi remembered Simmons as a honesty distraction whose hobby was contagious. "He didn't have any problems making friends. He'd deliver a familiar in a heartbeat," Tony Williams said.



According to his obituary, Simmons enjoyed monochrome and sports. He was the minor varsity baseball team's supervisor in tipsy teaching and also played soccer. Simmons is survived by his mother, stepfather, brother, stepbrother and stepsister. ___ Army Spc.



Chase Stanley Chase Stanley was 17 when he and two longtime friends joined in the Army just after graduating cheerful school. "Ever since we were no kids, it was never something that was talked about; it was just something we were accepted to do," said Army Spc. Matt Fuller, one of the two friends who also enlisted.



Fuller said he and Stanley, of Napa, Calif., grew up camping, hunting, fishing and riding pornography bikes. Britney Stanley, 23, said all those activities, obviously the hunting, seemed to brief her chum for combat. "It was what he wanted to do, he was required to be there," she said. Stanley, whose employment relate included deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan, was killed July 14 in an malign in Zabul province, Afghanistan.



He was 21 and assigned to Fort Bragg. "I never once heard him communicate 'I dislike it out there,'" said another buddy Lance Bubak. "He was just a lad who would estimate 'This is my job.' I call to mind giving him a big clasp and saying 'Hey man, study pains of yourself.



We have some more things to do in the future.'" Stanley graduated from Napa High School in 2006. He is survived by his parents, Nylind and Debbie Stanley; his sister; and 26-year-old brother, Ryan Stanley.

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