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SeaBreeze
07-08-2002, 03:00 PM
Calendar tribute to Trade Centre heroes

By DAMON JOHNSTON in New York

26may02

THREE of the hero firefighters who gave their lives on September 11 are appearing as you have never seen them before.

Robert Cordice, Thomas Foley and Angel Juarbe were snapped bare-chested just weeks before the tragedy for the New York Fire Department's beefcake calendar.

The department was moving to scrap the popular calendars of their brawniest and best looking men out of respect for the trio and their 340 colleagues who died in the attack on the World Trade Centre.

But to its surprise, loved ones called for tradition that raises money for charity to be saved and the calendar – spanning July 2002 to December 2003 – goes on sale soon.

There have been a few modifications.

The cover photo of firefighter Danny Keane in front of the gleaming twin towers was dumped and replaced by a shot of the same hunk before the Empire State Building.

"This was the last great memory of their sons," Keane said yesterday.

Robert Cordice was just 28 when he died on September 11.

He had transferred to a downtown fire house two weeks earlier to get closer to the action.

"It is no surprise that he was in the building when it collapsed," said friend and fellow firefighter John Deliso. "He was the type of guy who wasn't worried about himself."

Caroline Cordice, his mother, also paid tribute to her son.

"All his friends loved him very much. He was a very funny, very positive, very honest and loving son," she said.

Thomas Foley's aunt said the photo of her nephew captured him perfectly.

"It showed him as he was – a hero, and a great-looking one," she said.

Foley had taken bit-roles in TV shows.

Angel Juarbe, 35, was coming off a lucky streak when he died trying to save another fireman on September 11. He had recently won $500,000 and a jeep on a TV game show.

But he wasn't about to spend the money on himself – he was going to give the car to his father and set up scholarships for his four nieces and nephews.

"My son wanted to buy us a brownstone in Manhattan, but we wanted him to buy it for himself. He was always thinking of other people," his mother Miriam Juarbe said.

"I think the calendar is fine, and the photographer who took the picture of Angel sent me the original picture he took, and it's in a frame on a table in my living room."

Former New York fire commissioner Thomas Von Essen summed it up: "It raised money for charity, it was never tasteless, it's nothing we're ashamed of . . . besides the women love it."

In another recognition of a September 11 hero yesterday, a string of commercial airliners lifted into the sky from a nearby airport as the Minnesota man who led an assault on the hijackers aboard United Flight 93 was buried with military honours at Fort Snelling National Cemetery.

Thomas Burnett Jr, 38, was among 44 people – including four hijackers – who were aboard the flight that crashed in a Pennsylvania field.

Government officials during the week said they had strong indications that the al-Qaeda hijackers intended to crash into the White House.

CIA Director George Tenet yesterday said the al-Qaeda in Afghanistan was "dispersed" thanks to US and allied action.



Sunday Herald Sun




http://finance.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,4057,4387314%255E401,00.html

SeaBreeze
07-09-2002, 03:03 PM
N E W Y O R K, July 1 —

As it has nearly every year since 1996, the New York City Fire Department has released its 2003 calendar, featuring the city's bravest and brawniest. But this year's calendar is unlike any other.

"The Firehouse Hunks" calendar for 2002, with the World Trade Center towers in the background, was never issued because of the lives lost in the Sept. 11 terrorist attack.

The calendar was revived 10 months later, when families of the fallen firefighters endorsed a revised version for 2003, titled "Calendar of Heroes," which includes three firefighters who died in the line of duty.

Firefighter Rob Pavis, who appears in the 2003 calendar, says he supports the addition of the fallen firefighters because their families wanted it.

"If they wanted it, it should be out," Pavis told ABCNEWS' Good Morning America. "If they didn't want it, that would be fine, too. But they all really pushed for it, so I felt that if they pushed for it, then it should be out."

Each of the pictures of the three firefighters who lost their lives — Angel Jaurbe, Tommy Foley and Rob Cordice — includes the image of a black ribbon and a message from the fireman's mother.

Pavis said most of the guys ended up in the calendar because they liked to joke around.

"Me and Rob Cordice, when it first came out, decided to do it and just have a good time with it," Pavis said. "It was at a bar, an audition, and you know, whoever the girls cheer the loudest for wins."

The calendar is on sale around the country for $15. Part of the proceeds will go to the department's Fire Safety Education Fund, which finances community outreach programs. The initial print run is 100,000 copies.

The calendars are available at book stores and online at www.fdnyfirezone.com.





http://abcnews.go.com/sections/GMA/GoodMorningAmerica/GMA020701NYCFFCalendar.html