Quests | Fishing simulator Wiki | Fandom Boat Cover Play Pen Cover Sylvan Pontoon S-3 Part w. $ Introduction to Literature by SYLVAN BARNET, WILLIAM BURTO, and WILLIAM E. CAIN. Aris Hidayatulloh. Download PDF. The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt is the third game in the video game trilogy of The Witcher; it was released May 19th, Unlike the previous two games, Wild Hunt is open-world with all areas accessible, rather than only one area per chapter. In the wake of Assassins of Kings, Geralt continues his work as a Witcher, hunting monsters that would prey on the innocent in a world filled with chaos and war.
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In her retired life, she attended and volunteered at Catholic churches. Willie Haywood Sr. He is survived by six children, 10 grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. Cynthia Hazzard-Hettinger spent decades of her life devoted to music and music education, especially for youth.

She founded a symphony orchestra for young New Englanders and ran it for a decade until retiring to Florida. Mary Ellen Hendrickson took pleasure in caring for her family, cooking meals and sewing clothes for her children. Before starting a family, Ms. Hendrickson worked as a secretary for Breyers Ice Cream.

She enjoyed golfing and going to casinos to play bingo. Bob Hepp hailed from Ohio but spent much of his adult life in Florida. He owned and was an architectural hardware consultant for Format Ten Inc. Hepp kept busy in retirement: member and Stephen Minister at St. But he also had his hobbies, including wood working and maintaining saltwater fish tanks, and enjoyed spending time with his family. He is survived by his wife of 62 years, Sandy; three daughters; two brothers; six grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren.

Adam Hergenreder was a huge sports fan � especially for Tampa Bay teams. He watched them play on TV and had a collection of jerseys and hats to show his support. His health prevented him from playing the sports he loved. He had diabetes, lifelong asthma and lung issues. He was loved by so many people, his family said, a testament to his kindness. Even while he was struggling with the virus, he was checking on friends and giving them words of encouragement.

When he was 20, he migrated to the United States with the hope of a better future for his family. He did construction labor and traveled across the country to work in orange, corn, blueberry and apple fields. Herrera finally settled in Dade City, where he raised his family of eight children and later, 23 grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.

He loved spending each weekend grilling for his family and playing dominoes with his brothers and sons. He savored his morning coffee and afternoon walks. Married 66 years to his love, Betty, Hal Hevel was a father of five, grandfather of 11 and great-grandfather of His family came first, and he worked to provide for them, first as a butcher, and then in Florida, as a meat manager at Publix. He retired to North Carolina, where he liked to carve wood, hike and listen to jazz � as a dancer, he had a groove.

His family loved his laugh. A Christian, mother and homemaker, Lillian Hives liked to cook, fish and, as was her talent, find creative ways to fix things. She found Christ at an early age and considered herself totally devoted, preaching her love for the Lord and speaking in tongues.

She often shared her conviction. Freda Holmes was born in Oklahoma City, Okla. According to her obituary, she loved her job immensely. Honoski worked as a carpenter, a craft he learned from his father after a day of schooling. He was a construction supervisor for a number of local projects, including the renovation of Pier 60 in Clearwater in the s.

A rabid sports fan, Mr. Honoski took up playing baseball as an adult and was an MVP. He loved Tampa Bay sports teams, especially the Lightning. Terry Hooper was part of the Teamsters Union as a truck delivery assistant. He was a huge fan of the Cleveland Browns and enjoyed horse racing. Whenever a family member or friend needed help, they could count on Hooper, according to his memorial page. People knew Roy Hosey as Stick Man, the wood-carving artist who etched faces and words into tree branches, crafting one-of-a-kind canes.

As a kid in the steel-mill towns of Pennsylvania, Mr. Hosey roughhoused with older siblings, pretending to be The Little Rascals. As an adult, Mr. Hosey sketched faces for the FBI, then worked in fast-food management. He became a father. He lost his way for a while, but in recent years, found his way home to family in St. He cooked creative dinners, cared diligently for his ailing father and caught up on years of missed sunsets with his youngest brother.

After living in Massapequa Park, N. Ihrig was a proud Air Force veteran and served in the Korean War. He leaves behind a daughter. Janet Israel loved to spend time around friends and family, and she had a number of birthday parties, family gatherings and other celebrations to bring people together. The two liked to travel in their motor home together. She also enjoyed softball and cooking. Donald Jack was born and raised in Chicago but moved to Florida in He worked in construction and maintenance and rose to the top of his field, as the global construction and facilities manager for Jabil Circuits, said his son, Michael Jack.

Back home, he was a member of the Seminole Jaycees, a volunteer organization. His two favorite things were golfing and the Chicago Cubs, his son said. He was such a Cubs fan that he wants his ashes spread at Wrigley Field. Before he could drive a car, Frank Jegen owned an airplane. His passion for flying led him to work as a pilot at Delta Airlines, where he retired as a senior captain. Family said Jegen never stood still his entire life. Along with flying, he loved motorcycles, RVs and taking long sailing trips.

Tango Jessee grew up in one-stoplight town in the Appalachian Mountains, her daughters said. At first a homemaker, Ms. Jessee became a widow at She went to community college in her 40s and joined the workforce. She never remarried, instead filling her life with friends, civic clubs and crossword puzzles. She came to the Sunshine State late in life to be closer to her daughters. She loved sand sculptures and fireworks on the beach. But soon, she was diagnosed with vascular dementia and moved into Freedom Square, a retirement community in Seminole that has become a hot spot for COVID In , he helped organize relief efforts after Hurricane Matthew decimated his home church in Haiti.

A parishioner remembered Mr. Petersburg resident who went to St. Petersburg High School and entertained people by playing the harmonica. Family and friends remember Gaynell Jubrey as a feisty personality. After years of declining health, she can return to that spirit in a new life, they said. She was charitable, quick-witted and liked bingo.

To her nieces and nephews, she was the aunt with all the answers; to her siblings, she was the sister always looking for a new adventure. Outside of work, he enjoyed history, traveling and cats. His greatest joy was his three grandchildren. On cruises and trips to Sanibel Island, Cape Cod and the Outer Banks, she relied on her favorite recipe for fun: Sun, water, family and friends. She fought cancer three times, demonstrating over and over her courage and grace.

At every appointment, she brought a smile, compliments and good spirits. As a devoted member of a Presbyterian church, Alyce Kinsella sang in the choir. She also volunteered with the Order of the Eastern Star for more than 60 years, often helping at the assisted living facility she would later call home.

Thomas Kirmayer Jr. He enjoyed hosting parties, like an annual Easter egg hunt, and made a famous Christmas punch. As an avid tennis player, he also enjoyed hosting tournaments and bringing people together for games. Kirmayer taught his daughter to sail, spent years working on a s Ford pickup and started a ham radio station from his home. Kathryn Koah and her husband, Clyde, whom she was married to for 55 years, used to raise Shetland Sheepdogs together.

Koah was also a pianist and organist at a variety of churches. A Tampa Bay Times editor for nearly 30 years, Mike Konrad was known for the little things: Birthday cards, airport rides and generous advice dispatched over long Friday lunches.

Growing up, his family had started each day with the local newspaper and ended it with the evening dispatch, and by mid-high school, he had decided on a career in journalism. Several newspapers later, he arrived at the St. Petersburg Times. The Hernando bureau became his domain.

His pants and shirts were always pressed. His office, neat. His relationships with locals were, for a journalist who oversaw hard-hitting stories, remarkably rosy. His calm, fair sensibility earned him respect from both his Brooksville community and his Times team.

With gentle writing guidance, in soft-spoken phone calls, he mentored a long line of reporters. He toured baseball stadiums, still favoring his St. Louis Cardinals, and played clarinet for the Hernando Symphony Orchestra. He wanted to be remembered as a musician and baseball fan. In Florida, he found his new path: Christianity, and a degree in theology. He went on to become pastor of the Jesus Amigo Fiel church, his obituary says, and served his Hispanic community through charity work. He was a father, a husband and a huge fan of the Peruvian national soccer team � which he finally got to watch in the World Cup, breaking a year drought.

Petersburg for years until she retired. As she got older, she moved into Cabot Cove, an assisted living facility in Largo. Robert took her to get her nails done or hair cut. They went out to eat once a week. She loved Cracker Barrel, where she usually ordered the daily special, except on fried fish Fridays. Over the last few months, she needed a higher level of care than assisted living, her son said.

She moved into Freedom Square at the end of March, just as the coronavirus was starting to spread across the state. The former ambulance driver was kind to everyone he met and a rock for his family, even offering them advice and words of support as his health declined from the virus. Lewis had been at Freedom Square of Seminole, a retirement community, for a two-week rehabilitation program ordered by his doctors. He was starting to turn a corner, his family said, until the virus hit.

Rose-Marie Lewis was an avid volunteer at her church, a passionate supporter of environmental preservation groups and a World War II movie buff. She loved to read and often took her dogs for long walks. Shortly after her family moved to Clearwater in , she met the love of her life, David Lewis, and they were married for 50 years until his death. She had a near-encyclopedic recall of books and trivia and had read seemingly every author.

After becoming a mother, she graduated as a registered nurse at age 35, focusing on geriatrics, as she was drawn to the vulnerable and lonely. She liked to put people at ease and listen to their stories. If she loved you, she was an unabashed fan, screaming to cheer you on from the stands � or creatively berating your opponent. A lifelong fan of the Patriots, Celtics and Red Sox, Richard Lisiewski loved watching sports and passed that passion onto his kids.

A doting dad and grandfather, he bought collectible teddy bears for his daughters and collectible Hess trucks for his grandchildren. In New Port Richey, Gary Lloyd worked as a police officer until his retirement as a detective sergeant after nearly 20 years on the job.

Before his police work, Lloyd served in the Marine Corps. The Plant City resident liked to spend time with her family, and she left behind her mother, four children, two grandchildren and several siblings. She attended Mana del Cielo Church in Riverview. As a longtime resident of upstate New York, John Love was a dedicated public servant. For 45 years, he served as a volunteer firefighter.

He also was elected to the Clarence Town Council, where he served four terms, focusing on a trails program, veterans' organizations, youth centers, conservation and more. He also taught arts and coached golf at the area schools. In between, he busked in Harlem, honing his own distinctive style. How do you associate blue with such a sad, slumped down state of unhappiness?

Those are the clouds. Marroquin was booked on federal drug charges. His lawyer said he had two teenage children and a loving wife. He loved nature and the outdoors and making others laugh with his stories. For many years, he had a hunting camp in the Ocala National Forest. Every year, Cheryl Massey started counting down to Christmas, at days to go. She was the glue of the family, and every birthday party, vacation and sleepover with her grandkids was owed to her planning.

Her faith in Jesus Christ was her most abiding passion, and she played an active role at St. Petersburg Presbyterian Church. She was such a good listener that she made it her career, as a family counselor. In September, the college will honor her by presenting her diploma to her husband, David, two children and six grandchildren. Bob Maxwell loved to tinker. First as a radio communications repairman in Germany with the U. Army, later as a computer repair technician with IBM.

He was always curious about how things worked. Writing and poetry were lifelong passions. He loved people and people-watching. In his spare time, he volunteered for a suicide awareness hotline. Army for two years, but in his spare time, he was passionate about coaching baseball.

In , the big league team he coached placed first in the nation and second in the world. He loved his grand-dog, Porky, and was devoted to family and God. Helen McClendon loved cultivating beauty. She tended carefully to her garden. Her true passion, though, was for antiques. She restored antique furniture and founded a chapter of The Questers, which helps to preserve historical buildings.

Her pride was a year-old log cabin that she restored with her husband until moving to Florida in For more than three decades, Gene McCaslin worked at St. Petersburg College. He also volunteered as a scoutmaster with the Boy Scouts for 17 years, keeping in touch with his Scouts for years after they left the program. McCalsin was a jack of all trades, family said, and loved teaching his sons all he could.

He enjoyed campfires and spending time in the woods. Gerry McCloskey excelled at bowling, played softball and then took up golf. She moved to Tampa Bay in , where she eventually became an assistant financial manager for Graybar Electric and met her life partner.

Together, they raised two children. She survived colon cancer 30 years ago and esophageal cancer five years ago. McGlone, known to be outgoing and charismatic, also loved baseball.

He coached his children in the sport and was a big fan of the Rays. For more than 20 years, Mr. McGlone ran his own business. In his spare time, he volunteered with LifePath Hospice. Edna McKinney was a Largo native who grew up to become a nursing assistant and a military wife. Her job took her from classrooms to hospitals, and she won many awards for her work ethic.

Rhonda McNeiece moved to Florida when she was around 20 and spent nearly three decades working for Hunter Douglas. She lived to see the birth of two grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. Joseph Means was intense in his work ethic but comfortable around people.

A decorated, retired colonel of the U. Air Force, where he served for nearly three decades, he moved to Wesley Chapel with his family in and was a vice president at the government services company Perspecta. He could make anyone laugh. His friends called him Maine. Terri Terzini-Minichillo was married to Thomas Minichillo for more than 50 years. Their evening routine for many years involved visiting the beach and watching the sunset.

He had longed to leave rehab and get back home. Lucinda Mondragon was a mother of six and the wife of Ramiero, the love of her life.

She had been attending Galen College to fulfill her dream of becoming a registered nurse. According to her obituary, Ms. Mondragon was the life of the party but always made sure everyone was having a great time. She loved margaritas. Dorothy Moore knew the name of almost every butterfly and flower found in Florida. Friends remembered her as passionate about sharing her love for gardening and always excited to show kids caterpillars and chrysalis at the butterfly exhibit at the annual fair.

The University of Florida Foundation launched a GoFundMe campaign to raise money for a scholarship in her name, to support Pasco Master Gardener continuing education opportunities. Originally from Illinois, Sharon Morten was a teacher who considered students and clients part of her extended family.

She began her career teaching at Largo High School and eventually served as a counselor and a child advocacy coordinator with the guardian ad litem program.

In Washington, Donna Mortensen ran the kitchen at the Wesley Foundation and was considered a mother to the student residents. In Florida, she volunteered at a number of hospitals.

Petersburg General Hospital gave her the Frist Humanitarian award. She also raised money for Southeastern Guide Dogs through the hospital gift shop. Rita Mosely was a cook and housekeeper at a Dade City nursing home and later studied to be a registered nurse. Her family wrote in her obituary that she marched with Martin Luther King Jr. She loved her big family, all the way down to her great-grandchildren.

She was a straight shooter, her relatives said, who told it like it was. Mae Mutimer married Bob, her high school sweetheart, in She liked to be part of the community, as a member of many groups, and was an outgoing face behind the concession stand at Dunedin Little League baseball games.

She liked to walk the local beaches, paint watercolor landscapes and escape to the Smoky Mountains in the fall. In Massachusetts, Craig Nakashian taught middle-schoolers math for more than three decades. In his spare time, he loved to water ski, garden and root on the New York Giants. He and his wife retired to Gulfport in Pete Beach for decades.

Narcisi and one of his sons, Bruce, at the healm. Another son, Todd Brusko, described a gentle but firm father, one who never spanked or yelled but instilled the importance of school and work ethic. Narcisi hung on for weeks in the hospital, a testament to his grit, Brusko said. After his death, Brusko took to Twitter. If you keep it up, chances are good that you will survive, but someone like my father will not. Harry Nash owned DoraLynn Books in Madeira Beach, where he sold used paperbacks to tourists and locals looking for a beach read.

Before that, he was a fixture at book fairs for years and kept two storage units full of books. As a child, he spent most of his time outdoors and loved to hunt for snakes, his sister said. Pete Beach and Massachusetts � which meant an endless summer.

Weeks later, the facility was hit with a major coronavirus outbreak. Near leaves behind his wife, Poppy, and two sons.

Throughout her life, she was active in Sarasota County and served as the chief legislative aide to a number of state representatives. Donald Noyes joined the Merchant Marines at 17, at least until his mother found out and put a stop to it. After high school, he served in the Army for two years. He spent 30 years at Hallmark Cards, traveled abroad and married three times, always to an independent woman.

After a massive stroke affected his ability to speak in , he figured out other ways to communicate. He was a founding member of the Treasure Island Curling Team and never stopped bragging about the fact that Bette Davis babysat him when she was in high school. Francey Oliva was a woman of many talents.

She moved to Tampa in and over the years, she worked as a dental assistant, bookkeeper, secretary and hairdresser � and finally opened her own salon, Francey Hair Design. She also made sure the couple never went to bed angry. The fourth of 13 children from a tiny town in Nebraska, Red Ostdiek served 29 years as a U.

Air Force officer, earning a Bronze Star. According to his obituary, his work touched three aircraft used by a former president, the cruise missile program � even the space shuttle Columbia. In retirement, he became president of the local chapter of the Military Officers Association of America. He and his wife were married 64 years. Lester Osteen lived many years in Lutz. Rob Pacchiarotti is the first law enforcement officer believed to have died from the coronavirus in the Tampa Bay area.

He eventually earned the title of master deputy. Pacchiarotti volunteered as a scoutmaster to help boys like his son Anthony advance through the Boy Scouts program. As senior adviser for Explorer Post , he helped guide many teens into law enforcement careers. In retirement, he spent time camping, boating, planning family vacations and riding his bike all around town. He started a business called Red Shirt Training to provide security guard training and concealed weapons classes.

Two months before he died, he was sworn in as a reserve deputy for the Port Richey Police Department. For years, Page worked as a copy editor for different area newspapers, including The Denver Post for more than two decades. Born on a farm, Page put himself through college in Detroit by working at an automobile plant. He was a Jeopardy wiz and loved the Broncos. One day, Franca Panettone would have her own home.

It would be painted purple, her favorite, and filled with furniture she picked herself. She loved her family. They were never apart, not until she went into the hospital. Before she died, her family video chatted with her. Her son wrote that she was the best mother he could ask for and stood up for him no matter what. She also loved to craft and read, friends said. He fell in love, married Charisse and, a few cities later, found St.

She had an ear for languages, though, and when her husband, Julio, died early, she took over his grocery with ease. She poured money into Calbayog City, sponsoring the hometown fiesta and, as a faithful Catholic, building a rural community chapel. She kept running the grocery even as she moved to the United States to help raise her grandchildren.

She loved karate thrillers and gardened fruits and vegetables, orchids and roses. He spent more than 30 years leading the choir at the Faith Independent Missionary Baptist Church and teaching adult Sunday school classes.

He and his wife would travel to different churches and sing in groups, including one where they sang with their daughter and granddaughter. She poured her creativity into scrapbooks, sewing projects and her famous pumpkin oatmeal raisin cookies. She was a generous friend and mother, up for early-morning phone calls. On beach trips and Disney cruises to Castaway Cay, she loved most of all to see the water. Deo Persaud was a well-known businessman and member of the Lions Club in his native Guyana.

He later brought his family to New Jersey, where he became a real estate investor before moving down to Florida. Ruby Weaver Pitt traveled across the United States for her work in the hospitality industry, and once she settled in Florida, she trained a number of young waitresses at St.

She farmed in her home state, MIssouri, for many years. There, she also volunteered with the Boy and Girl Scouts and served as den mother for a chapter of the Sylvan Fishing Boat Parts 10 Cub Scouts.

Getting worn out was not a concept she understood. She was the 23rd person born at Mease Hospital in Clearwater. She did it all: Teacher, vice principal, campus minister, even softball assistant. In the Philippines, Carlos Policarpio found God when he was young. He studied banking and finance, and when he moved to the U. Paul Catholic Church. His greatest love was his family, whose members know that Mr. Policarpio spent most of his time praying for others.

They believe his prayers surround them still. Poorman never missed a chance to volunteer. Later, she worked as a realtor associate in Jacksonville until moving to St. Petersburg in the s. She enjoyed painting and drawing, and was a devoted Methodist. Each night, Dick Preston prayed for his children � three that he fathered, three he adopted, two others he loved as his own and dozens of foster children that he took in over the years.

He worked as an IT manager before his recent retirement to Florida, the place where he met and married his wife of 42 years, Dena. Among Mr. You can see me again, too, if you follow Jesus! He also loved golf, maps and singing and dancing. Pugh was a resident at the Seminole nursing home with an outbreak of the coronavirus. Family members believe Sam contracted the virus then. They asked if he regretted his visit. The couple traveled the country in a Winnebago to attend bluegrass festivals, where Sam played banjo or guitar and JoAnn showcased her voice and autoharp.

Evelyn Reed graduated from nursing school in and, two years later, married the man who would become her partner in business, too. At first, she helped Thomas with his dental practice, store and family farm in Tennessee. After moving to Florida in , they launched a dental practice in Tarpon Springs, then Dunedin.

At home with family, she was revered for her Southern cooking. She loved dancing and playing the piano and organ. Mark Village, where she eventually moved. She is survived by a son and daughter, three brothers, five sisters, two grandchildren and many nieces and nephews.

Dorothy Reichert was a down to-earth homemaker, originally from Mount Kisko, N. After suffering a fall in February, Ms. Born in in Ohio, she became an executive secretary for 40 years.

It was at the M. They were married in Sheila Remley died at Morton Plant Hospital with a nurse holding her hand. She was popular at her mobile home park community, hosting parties and dinners. According to her daughter, she had just started dating a fellow resident, Jim Ayotte. He, too, died after contracting the virus. Lois Renz moved to Tampa in the late s after serving in the U.

Air Force, and quickly made it her home. Less than a year earlier, she had finished a long and perilous trip from Honduras to America, seeking asylum. An Ohio native, he and his wife of 55 years, Susan, moved to Florida in He took to playing euchre with friends and loved doing a crossword while roasting in the sun.

He had a lot of loves, including the Yankees and Ohio State football, but most of all spending time with his grandchildren and great-grandchildren. If he heard a song that moved him, Pierre Roche was known to get up and dance.

He loved music, singing and playing the drums. He also liked soccer and wrestling. His family said what they remember most fondly about Mr.

Roche was his devotion to Christ. Henry Rodriguez grew up in Tampa, eventually graduating from the University of Tampa. He went on to work as an event planner for Disney in both Florida and California, as well as Sandals Resorts. He suffered from health issues much of his life but was comforted by lots of family, his partner, Robert, and his faithful dog, Beau. Rodriguez loved to cook for them and often experimented with recipes and cuisines.

His children said he was an excellent father and a role model to them. Even while he was in the hospital, Mr. Rojas was taking calls and making sure things ran smoothly.

When Suzanne Ruley got good news, she often burst into song. And when someone cracked a joke, Ms. She also was an artist and loved to sing and act. Ruley met her husband, Matthew, during the first rehearsal for a production of Sweeney Todd at the St. Petersburg Little Theatre. He visited her in the hospital while she was sick with the coronavirus to celebrate their 25th wedding anniversary.

It was absolutely her. He would help anyone who needed it. With a degree in dietetics, Georjean Schubert Schueler spent her career running a preschool in Illinois with her husband, Bob, preparing nutritious meals for students. The couple enjoyed sailing together � one of her biggest passions. Later, they explored Florida and the Bahamas in a foot sailboat. Schueler liked to navigate and cook delicious meals below deck. She was fearless, even in the roughest of seas.

In her 60s, she was riding a motorcycle to work. In her 90s, she was crocheting lap robes and shawls for Veterans Affairs hospitals. Just before she got really sick, doctors helped her FaceTime with her family. Aside from running a busy medical practice in the Valrico-Brandon area for 48 years, he was one of the longest continuing staff members at Tampa General Hospital, the chief of staff of Tampa Osteopathic Hospital and a founding member of Brandon Hospital.

He also took great pride in teaching future physicians and advocating for aspiring nursing and medical students. He helped establish post-graduate intern and resident training and always had a student shadowing him to learn the ropes. Scolaro enjoyed sports, especially the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and the Tampa Bay Rays � he loved baseball so much he sponsored his local Little League team and could hear them play from his back porch.

Vilma Toledo Seber loved old western romance stories, evenings with friends at the original Seminole Bingo Hall and savoring a good meal. She enjoyed weekends at the beach or pool and could be known to bust out a few dance moves after a margarita.

Serra came to the U. Working in the pharmaceutical industry, he and his wife lived in New Jersey, Mexico and Puerto Rico and visited at least 70 countries before moving to Florida.

Bob Sempert spent four years in the U. Air Force, then worked for Tampa Electric Co. He retired in and loved traveling and tinkering in his workshop. She never stopped working in public media, her career taking her from Gainesville to Dallas.

At work, she was a mentor to other women, many of whom say they owe her a debt. She and her husband loved to travel. Seymour fell sick after the two returned from a trip to Egypt. As a military wife, Sarah Sherman lived all around the world. She returned to her home of London, Ky.

After the couple relocated to Florida to be closer to family, she became a member of First Baptist Church of New Tampa. Fran Shivers was a nurse and a U. Air Force lieutenant. She loved canoeing and listening to jazz and classical music with her husband, who died in Carole Shortz loved to dance and was an avid bowler.

Her favorite pastime was traveling the country by RV. An Army veteran who served in Vietnam, who moved on to a career in pharmaceuticals, he loved any and all Chicago sports, betting the horses � and of course, that car. Larry Smith grew up in Henry County, Ind. He met and married his high school sweetheart there, then moved to the northwest part of the state, where he founded a heating and ventilation company.

He was a Freemason and a Shriner, and with his church, he traveled widely to build churches and schools. President of two banks. An avid golfer and churchgoer. Stefan Solohub wanted to be a country musician.

Solohub was a proud Ukrainian American and was actively involved with cultural organizations. He worked most of his life as an electronics engineer and moved to Florida when he retired to live closer to his parents. Corene Southard raised her three children as a single parent, providing for them as the deputy superintendent of schools in Pittsburg County, Okla.

He grew up building models, so it was perhaps no surprise that Dick Spires became a successful electrical engineer. In three decades with Bell Labs, he even led key developments in long-haul telephone systems. He had plenty of other loves, too, from photography to rock climbing to the Phi Kappa Theta fraternity of which he was president in his final year at Ohio University. In his obituary, his family writes that he loved playing Bridge and Euchre. After retiring, he found Parts Of A Fishing Boat Diagram Javascript joy in traveling the American West and France, serving as usher at his Largo parish, and spending time with family.

After moving to Florida, Dennis Spoto fell in love with fishing. He participated in the Suncoast Tarpon Roundup and took third place on his first try. He built custom fishing rods for himself and friends, and eventually started building his own fishing boats. He also was a lifelong baseball fan, and as a kid, he collected candy wrappers to trade for tickets to Brooklyn Dodgers games. His mother helped him enlist in the Marines at age Once honorably discharged, he tried on jobs until landing a career as an industrial plumber.

To his wife of 32 years, Kristen, he was a rock. Sue Stephenson was a stay-at-home mother who loved to make her family smile with treats like apple pie, her daughter said. She grew up in Charleston, W. Stephenson enjoyed camping and visiting islands to hunt for seashells. At 50, she suffered an aneurysm and went through two brain surgeries but recovered and traveled to national parks all around the country with her husband. Wayne Sternberg spent his career in banking but was a woodworker at heart.

At 9, he built his first rabbit hutch and a dog house. Later, he progressed to model sailboats. When his two grandsons came along, he shared his passion for building with LEGO boat model projects. In retirement, he loved to golf, visit car and plane shows with his wife, or spend time riding bikes and hanging out by the pool with his grandsons. A Disney enthusiast since the s, Disney World was the go-to vacation spot for celebrations over the years.

He and his wife took the entire family on a three-day trip there earlier this year. Baltimore-born, Mr. Strible served in the U. Afterward, he spent his career at Union Carbide in Buffalo, N. Retired in Florida, he and his wife lived at Freedom Square in Seminole for many years, where they had a large social circle and loved to go out to eat.

He was most proud of his large family � four children, five grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren � and was particularly looking forward to celebrating his th birthday next year with all of them.

On the day of his death, a nurse helped organize a video call. Each family member told him they loved him. Emil Sudol, a Korean War veteran, loved nothing more than spending time with friends at his favorite St. Petersburg haunts, like the Casual Clam.

Sudol was born in New Jersey and moved to Florida in , where he worked over the years for Val-Pak and as a cook. He was an avid reader, piling up magazines and newspapers at his house, and especially enjoyed military history, his nephew said. Sudol was discharged to rehab at Seminole Pavilion at Freedom Square in early April after a fall sent him to the hospital. The facility has had a major coronavirus outbreak. Theresa Szubartwoski came from a big Polish family that had settled in Marinette, Wis.

She and her three stylish sisters moved to Chicago and started working as soon as they could. She and her husband retired to Florida about 40 years ago. They traveled the world and filled their house with souvenirs: brass plates from Egypt and golden statuettes from India. Relatives loved to come visit, to catch up on her stories, play card games or swim in her Fishing Boat Plans Pdf Question pool. She moved into Freedom Square, a retirement community in Seminole, earlier this year to recover from a surgery and caught COVID when the facility had an outbreak.

Wayne Tiggett was involved with a variety of churches and worship centers, and he served as the pastor for the United Christian Center in New Port Richey. After his career as a firefighter, he headed a program at Abe Brown Ministries that helped reacclimate people who had recently been released from prison. Master Sgt.

Brian K. Of 25 years in the Army, 13 were spent in the reserve. Tolliver, from Memphis, had been awarded for honorable service, including taking home the Meritorious Service Medal. After serving in the Army, Matthew Traskos went to work as a meat cutter. He enjoyed camping with his wife and traveling across the country, taking a camper to Alaska and stopping in the national parks along the way.

But over the course of his life, Mr. Trizis worked to open restaurant after restaurant, ending with a dozen between Chicago and Florida. He made sure his children knew their Greek heritage and would send the family to visit summer after summer. She loved to swim in the Gulf of Mexico and to read.

She was born in Boston and later moved to Florida. Her family remembers her as a caring mother. Booker Elementary School. Even after retiring from the Hillsborough County school district, Ms.

Underwood still wanted to help children and worked as a part-time reading tutor. Mickey Villano was born and raised in Fort Lee, N. He met his wife of 57 years, Barbara, in high school there. He started a plumbing business in his home state, then moved it to St. Petersburg in He was a kind, giving soul to anyone who was in need.

A great provider to his family, a loving husband and father, son and brother. He was an usher at St. Joseph Patrick Wall Sr. He moved to Florida in and enjoyed traveling, golfing, bowling and surfing YouTube.

An avid reader, Mr. Wall also savored his daily crossword puzzles. Wall was proud of his Irish heritage, his strong faith and deep love for his wife of 32 years, Denise. He is also survived by five children and 13 grandchildren. Michael Wanner was the first Hillsborough teacher known to have died of COVID, though the school district said his death was not work-related.

The Plant City High School teacher taught marine science, earth space science and forensics. Fellow science teacher Richard Dorton described Mr. Fellow scouting parent and co-worker Jennifer Hamilton described him as kind-hearted and thoughtful.

Douglas Werth worked as a Pinellas County schoolteacher for 35 years, including as a social studies teacher at Northeast High School in St. Petersburg, according to the Pinellas school district. He retired in He was a wonderful and challenging teacher. His humor kept my attention in class, and he was responsible for my love of world history. What was he thinking? He was a good man. As a Poughkeepsie police officer, Douglas Wolfe was known for handing out speeding tickets and for serving as the safety director of a bus company.

In Florida, he was a school bus driver for Pasco and Pinellas counties. He also served in the United States Army. Born and raised in St. Even after not playing, Wright loved football and rooted for his favorite team, the Seattle Seahawks. He also worked as a chef for Dan Marino. His love of cooking tied into his love of family, and he loved to host family cookouts. During his time in the U. Air Force, Charles Xiques gained a passion for playing baseball that he carried throughout the rest of his life.

He loved Jesus Christ and his church family. A devoted dad, Xiques' daughter recalled how he was always happy when she called, no matter how late it was. He was an All-American football star at his high school in Saltville, Va. NFL teams approached Mr. Yontz, but he turned them down in favor of raising a family, finishing school and focusing on a business career.

He worked for companies including DuPont before starting his own human resources and management consulting firm. Doris Yost had turned 97 just a few weeks before she died on July 3. After growing up in Lebanon, Penn. Yost became a longtime resident of Cocoa Beach and moved to Seminole in Nikolaos Zaharopoulos was born in Greece in the mids. His family said he always made sure the family stuck together and knew their bond could get them through anything.

They said he also was strong enough to brush things off, and he always provided for his family. The Aaronsons had met on the Jersey Shore. Born in Cuba, Adalberto Alfonso Jr. He also was an avid reader and tried to keep learning throughout his life.

But his family and friends will remember him most for his sense of humor, love of travel and good food, especially Spanish food. Luis Alpiste, a father of four, used to wake up his kids at midnight with a cake to celebrate their birthdays. Born in Peru as one of 18 children, Mr. Alpiste settled in Miami with his wife, Jenny, and worked as a construction worker. German Amaya, a native of El Salvador, worked as a banquet manager at the luxury hotel Fontainebleau to support his wife and two children, until he lost his job and health insurance in the pandemic.

He was an advocate for fellow workers in his union, often lending time to others' causes. Anderson had just celebrated his birthday on a video chat with family.

Felicia Andres, known as Flicka to those that loved her, met her husband at the hospital, where she was a nurse and he was an orthopedic surgeon. Together, they raised three children and traveled, collecting curiosities from around the world. She had many hobbies: music and the arts, gardening, cooking, entertaining. And she designed all sorts of clothing, from silk dresses to ultra suede suits and camel hair coats.

Andres sang in the choir at church, where she also served as a bereavement counselor, helping others through loss. Among the tight-knit Andujar family � parents, five siblings, in-laws � brother and sister Alex and Glorivi were best friends. After Alex got sick in March, six other family members, including both parents, followed.

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