Tuesday, July 30, 2024

Jeffrey Lance Horwath

    Jeffrey Lance Horwath, known affectionately as Jefferson, passed away on July 14, 2024, at the age of 45 in Orlando, Florida. Born on April 13, 1979, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Jeff lived a life marked by his vibrant personality and boundless energy.

A graduate of Elkhorn High School, Jeff attended UW-LaCrosse before furthering his education and was a graduate of Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, where he honed his passion for aviation. Although he worked in the service industry, his heart never left the cockpit, frequently taking friends and family on spontaneous flights.

Jefferson served proudly in the U.S. Air Force National Guard, 128th Air Refueling

Wing, Milwaukee, a testament to his love for his country and commitment to service. His time in the military was marked by the same zeal and dedication that characterized his personal ventures.

With an outgoing, charismatic personality Jefferson was always the life of the party, known for his ability to charm anyone he met with his infectious, thousand-watt smile. He embraced life with full force, guided by love and positive intentions. A devoted family man, he cherished his relationships, especially with his son, Tristan, with whom he hoped to reconnect.

Jefferson's hobbies included cooking, flying, running marathons, watching sunrises and enjoying a good cigar, each reflecting his zest for life and personal freedoms. He also loved India and the wonderful people he meant there when he served as an assistant team leader with Teen Missions International, exactly 20 years ago.  He was a devout lover of God, and spoke openly of his faith with those around him. His passion was developing relationships with everyone he encountered. Jefferson had countless friends whom he had met at work, school, in the neighborhood or during one of his many adventures.

Jefferson is survived by his mother, Lynnette Horwath; siblings Erik Horwath, Kurt (Sarah) Horwath, Pamela Lappke, Kimberly (Jason Boekelheide) Horwath; his son, Tristan Horwath; nieces and nephews, Kristopher Bellrichard, Oliver Horwath, Mackenzie Horwath, Noah Horwath, Reagan Horwath, and Caleb Horwath; and countless other family and friends from Florida to Wisconsin and many places in between. He was preceded in death by his father, Lance Horwath.

Jefferson's passing leaves a profound void in the hearts of his loved ones. His legacy of joy, generosity, and unwavering positivity will forever be cherished and remembered by all who had the pleasure of knowing him.

Memorial Service – All are welcome

Monday, August 12th, 2:00 p.m.

Christ Community Church      329 N. Williamson Blvd., Daytona Beach, FL 32114

Jefferson would have loved to see friends dressed in bright, vibrant colors!

Jack Dempsey Calhoun


Jack Dempsey Calhoun, age 66 passed away July 14, 2024. He was born October 23, 1957 in Orlando, FL. Jack was preceded in death by his dearest mother, Carlynn York Calhoun, whom he is believed to be dancing with in Heaven right now. Jack is the beloved brother of Juli Annette Kessler (Mike- deceased), Karen Jill Koontz, and Jennifer Anne Tschetter (William). Cherished nieces and nephews, Andrew York Koontz  (Rachel), Amanda Alice Koontz and Adam Michael Koontz, Stori Shields (Nick), William Tschetter j.r., Ellie Tschetter and great nephew Nolan Koontz. Dear nephew of Lynda York, Kathy Dodd (Buddy) and Lance Roberts. Also leaves many loving cousins, and treasured friends. Patsy Divine, his chihuahua, is adjusting well in her new home and new fur sister.

We will have a fun filled Celebration of Life for Jack on Saturday, August 3, 2024 at 1:30 p.m. at Kinneret Apartments, 515 Delaney Ave. 32801. Please park next door behind KGB Architects (yellow house) 539 Delaney or on the street.

Jack worked at Orlando Regional Medical Center for 38 years and was passionate about his job and caring for others. To know him was to love him. He was generous to a fault, funny, vibrant and larger than life. If you needed anything Jack would move mountains to help. Jack always had a smile and a quick wit that lit up a room! Please come and celebrate a life he well lived. He cared for, defended and protected us all of his life and it’s his time now to brighten up the heavens.

The stars are going to twinkle brighter and the sun will sparkle stronger and the rain will fall like glitter with you there. We sure are going to miss you here. Love you to the moon Jackie Bear. We will have several knick knacks, chachkies, the things he treasured and filled his space with- for you to have and take and remember him by 

In lieu of flowers, Memorial Contributions or volunteer opportunities may be made to SAGE, The Center or HRC in his name.


https://www.sageusa.org             https://give.sageusa.org/give  

https://orlando.hrc.org               https://give.hrc.org 

https://thecenterorlando.org       https://thecenterorlando.org/ways-to-give/



Wednesday, July 24, 2024

Richard Lee Praytor

 

Rich Praytor passed away on July 21, 2024 at the age of 69. He was born in Birmingham, Alabama but was a lifelong resident of Central Florida. Rich retired from Lockheed Martin in 2020 after 39 years. He was active in Boy Scouts of America. Rich had many hobbies which included working in the yard, boating, scuba diving, fishing, going to car and motorcycle races and camping. He was proud of his collection of cars and motorcycles. Rich leaves behind his wife of 38 years, Diana and his 2 children that he loved with all his heart, Jacob (Page) and Grace (Tristan).

A funeral service will be held in the Dobbs Funeral Home Chapel on Tuesday, July 30th, 2024. A viewing will take place at 10:00am, with the funeral service to follow at 11:00. The service will be officiated by Pastor Thomas Hensley.


Ronnie Theresa Winningham

 

Terrie Winningham was born January 24, 1954. A lifelong resident of Orlo Vista, she is survived by her daughters Angie Preston (Jerry) and Patricia Winningham, and sons Robert (Missy) and John Fitzgerald, 2 brothers, Mike (Robbin) and Eddie Anderson. She was nana to 15 grandkids, and Aunt Terrie to many more. She is preceded in death by her husband Ronnie Winningham, parents, Robert and Betty Anderson, and two brothers Chuck and Ricky Anderson.

Her service will be at Lake Hill Baptist Church Friday July 26th with visitation at 1:00 and the service starting at 2:00. We will have fellowship at the church after.

Friday, July 19, 2024

Patrick Livingston Murphy Williams

 

Pat Williams

1940 - 2024



Pat Williams, who for 51 years was a charismatic executive with National Basketball Association teams in Chicago, Philadelphia, Atlanta and Orlando, Fla., and who was also a prolific author, motivational speaker, devoted husband, father, grandfather and brother, died on Wednesday in Orlando surrounded by his family. He was 84.


The Orlando Magic, which he helped found and where he spent more than 30 years of his career, said the cause of his death, in a hospital, was complications from viral pneumonia. Mr. Williams was also diagnosed in 2011 with multiple myeloma, a cancer of plasma cells.


Known for his unorthodox marketing practices, Mr. Williams was sometimes called the P.T. Barnum of professional basketball. He began his front-office career not in the N.B.A. but in baseball’s minor leagues. He considered himself a protégé of Bill Veeck, the maverick owner of the Cleveland Indians, the St. Louis Browns and the Chicago White Sox.

Having read Mr. Veeck’s 1962 autobiography, “Veeck as in Wreck,” Mr. Williams sought a meeting with him while working for the minor league Miami Marlins, where he had been named business manager after two seasons as a catcher.


Bill Durney, Miami’s general manager, had worked for Mr. Veeck in St. Louis, where in 1951 the team sent Eddie Gaedel, who at 3 feet 7 inches was the smallest player ever to hit in a major league game, to the plate for one celebrated at-bat. (He walked.)


“I had devoured Veeck’s book and then, with Bill Durney connecting us, built a relationship with him for almost 25 years,” Mr. Williams said in an interview for this obituary in 2022. “He convinced me that you can’t guarantee wins, but you can guarantee fun.”

During a three-year stint running a minor league team in Spartanburg, S.C., Mr. Williams forged a reputation for increasing attendance with eccentric promotions and halftime shows — a practice he continued in the N.B.A., which he joined in 1968.


He created team mascots. In Chicago, he wrestled a trained bear. He was accessible to fans and reporters, often pacing in the rear of the news media work area during games.


Mr. Williams also fielded formidable teams. In Chicago, where the Bulls were founded in 1966 although they soon began playing some home games in Kansas City, Mo., Mr. Williams helped to stabilize the franchise while producing its first winning season in 1970-71.


In 1974, after one year in Atlanta — where he is remembered for trading the team’s star player, Pete Maravich — Mr. Williams returned to the Philadelphia 76ers, where he had served as business manager before joining the Bulls. Inheriting a team that finished with nine wins and 73 losses, the worst record in N.B.A. history, in the 1972-73 season, he steered the 76ers into the playoffs within three years.

In 1976, he sold the team’s new owner, Fitz Eugene Dixon Jr., on the acquisition of Julius Erving, for roughly $6 million, from the financially struggling New York Nets. Startled by what at that time was a staggering figure, Mr. Dixon asked, “Tell me, who is Julius Erving?” Mr. Williams, realizing that he needed a great promotional pitch, answered, “He’s the Babe Ruth of basketball.”


Erving, along with the center Moses Malone, led the 76ers to the 1983 N.B.A. title — but not before Mr. Williams’s star-laden team lost in the league finals three times, including to the Portland Trail Blazers in 1977, despite having a 2-0 lead in the best-of-seven series. That prompted Mr. Williams to embrace an audacious advertising pitch — “We owe you one” — to the fan base for the next season.


“I thought it was quite clever,” he said. “Except that when we got knocked out by Washington the next year, all we heard was, ‘You owe us two.’”

After leaving the 76ers in 1986, Mr. Williams worked with Jim Hewitt, an Orlando businessman, to land an expansion team. He guaranteed the league that 10,000 season tickets would be sold for its inaugural season in 1989-90. He was the team’s general manager until he was promoted to senior vice president in 1996.


“Pat was at every rotary club and city and county commerce meeting, touting the benefits of major professional sports in Central Florida,” Alex Martins, who was the Magic’s media relations director and later became the team’s chief executive, said in an interview. “He was the ultimate promoter, though he would admit there was always some self-promotion involved, too.”


Mr. Williams’s personal life was nationally publicized in 1993, when Sports Illustrated devoted a feature to the 14 children that he and his first wife, Jill (Paige) Williams, who already had four children together, had adopted in an effort to save their foundering marriage. The children came from South Korea, Romania, Brazil and the Philippines.


“I have never sensed resentment on the part of our natural kids,” Mr. Williams told the magazine. “This thing would’ve been impossible if they hadn’t bought into the process completely.” He estimated that the family’s weekly food bill was $1,500.


When the couple divorced in 1996, it was front-page news in The Orlando Sentinel. Mr. Williams remarried soon after, to Ruth Hanchey, whom he had met when she conducted a time-management seminar for the Magic. He recalled in 2022 that when they were dating, she lamented having had only one child, a daughter.


“I can fix that,” he told her.


Mr. Williams’s visibility was further enhanced by his books, which in 2022 he said numbered more than 100. Many focused on leaders in sports whom he admired, Mr. Veeck included. He also wrote “How to Be Like Jackie Robinson,” “How to Be Like Michael Jordan” and even “How to Be Like Pat Williams.” His speaking engagements were mixed with humor and references to his strong Christian faith.


With uncommon luck in the N.B.A.’s annual college draft lottery, Mr. Williams landed Shaquille O’Neal, a center, for the Magic with the first pick in 1992. He used the same good fortune a year later to trade one touted collegian, Chris Webber, for another, the point guard Anfernee Hardaway, known as Penny.


The Magic reached the 1995 league finals against the Houston Rockets but lost in a four-game sweep. The future nonetheless appeared bright until O’Neal signed with the Los Angeles Lakers in 1996, where, aligned with Kobe Bryant, he won three titles.


“He was an unrestricted free agent at 24,” Mr. Williams said of O’Neal. “Not long after, the league changed the rule, with a provision to match an offer on that second contract. Too late for us.”


Patrick Livingston Murphy Williams was born on May 3, 1940, in Philadelphia to Jim and Ellen (Parsons) Williams. His father taught and coached baseball at the high school Pat attended, Tower Hill, in Wilmington, Del., and died in a car crash days before Pat signed a contract with the Philadelphia Phillies organization. He was one of four children, and was the only son.


Mr. Williams attended Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, N.C., where he played baseball and graduated in 1962 with a degree in physical education.


Mr. Williams’s early career in baseball can be traced to his childhood friendship with Robert Carpenter III, known as Ruly, whose family owned the Phillies. They remained close until Mr. Carpenter died in 2021.


When Mr. Williams, an avid runner who completed 13 Boston Marathons, learned he had multiple myeloma, the Sentinel columnist Mike Bianchi called him “a civic treasure” and wrote that without him, “there would be no Orlando Magic.” Mr. Williams stopped his long-distance running, but he didn’t retire from his role as the Magic’s senior vice president until 2019.


Mr. Williams is survived by his wife and 19 children.


In his 2022 interview with The Times, Mr. Williams said that he had long been in remission and remained active in Orlando’s attempt to land a Major League Baseball franchise, which he hoped would be named the Dreamers.


“The older you get, the longer-range goals you need,” he said. “Because when you stop setting long-range goals, that’s when the dying begins.”


Celebration of Life service for Pat Williams will be held at First Baptist Orlando, 3000 S John Young Pkwy, Orlando, FL 32805 on Friday, July 26th at 3:00 pm.  A live stream link will also be made available. 


In recognition of Pat’s love for sports and his passion for the work of The First Academy, the Williams family wishes to designate gifts, in lieu of flowers, to the athletics program at The First Academy. Gifts may be mailed to The First Academy, 2667 Bruton Blvd, Orlando, Fl, 32805. Online gifts can be made at https://thefirstacademy.org/giving/ or you may also contact Brian Rose at (407) 489-6071

Monday, July 8, 2024

Gloria Lee Ching

    Gloria Bernardo Lee Ching, a loving mother, grandmother, great-grandmother, great-great-grandmother, aunt, friend, and greatly loved by many, gained her wings on July 1, 2024.

Gloria was born on August 23, 1928, in Zamboanga, Philippines. She later moved to Florida with her son, Danilo. Gloria loved visiting family and friends, going for long drives with her son, and traveling everywhere. She was happiest when eating at different restaurants with families, but she was also an exceptional cook.

She is preceded in death by her husband and son. She is survived by his two sons, four grandchildren, eight great-grandchildren, and one great-great-grandchild.

Please join us in remembering Gloria's extraordinary life on Tuesday, July 9, 2024. Her Celebration of Life will be held at Dobbs Funeral Home, 430 North Kirkman Road, Orlando, FL, 32811, from 6 PM to 8 PM.

The mass service will be held at St. John Vianney Catholic Church, 6200 S Orange Blossom Trl, Orlando, FL 32809, on Wednesday, July 10, 2024, at 10:30 AM.

In lieu of flowers, the family would welcome donations toward the funeral cost.

Monday, July 1, 2024

Rosemarie Golowatyi

Rosemarie Golowatyi, 75, of Orlando, FL passed away Saturday, June 29th, at her residence. Rosemarie was born in Bronx, NY on September 10, 1948, a daughter of the late Mary Gerlando and Ferdinand Costantino. 

Rosemarie is survived by two sisters, Anna Monge, of Winter Garden, FL; Linda Flick, of Vermont; and two brothers, Jimmy Costantino, of Brooklyn, NY; and Albert Costantino of Orlando, FL.

The family has invited friends and family to join them for an open viewing time being held from 4:00 PM to 8:00 PM on Monday, July 8th at Dobbs Funeral Home located at 430 N Kirkman Rd Orlando, FL 32811; with a catholic religious service taking place at 6:00 PM, officiated by Deacon Armand of St. Andrews Catholic Church.