He was interred in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery in East Orange, New Jersey.
He was buried in the Holy Sepulchre Cemetery in East Orange.
East Germany | Middle East | Holy See | Holy Roman Empire | Orange | Orange County | East India Company | University of East Anglia | Dutch East Indies | Orange Bowl | East Prussia | East Africa | Lower East Side | East Sussex | Holy Roman Emperor | East Riding of Yorkshire | Far East | East Berlin | Dutch East India Company | Joseph II, Holy Roman Emperor | East Java | East Coast of the United States | East Coast Main Line | Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor | Holy Week | Orange Free State | East Anglia | Holy Land | East End of London | A Clockwork Orange |
He started working as a WFMU volunteer DJ during the 1980s when the station was located at Upsala College in East Orange, New Jersey.
Warwick was born in East Orange, New Jersey, to Mancel Warwick (1911–1977), who began his career as a Pullman porter and subsequently became a chef, a gospel record promoter for Chess Records and later a Certified Public Accountant; and Lee Drinkard Warwick (1920–2005), manager of The Drinkard Singers.
He died in Trouville, France three years later and, his body being returned to the United States, later buried in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery in Omaha, Nebraska.
In 1959, Hobby left Pfizer to specialized in chronic infectious diseases as chief of research at the Veterans Administration Hospital in East Orange, New Jersey.
Henry Randall Waite (born Copenhagen, New York, 16 December 1845; died East Orange, New Jersey, 8 May 1909) was a United States editor and clergyman.
He resided in East Orange, New Jersey in his final years, and died in nearby Montclair, New Jersey.
Edison's batteries were made from about 1903 to 1972 by the Edison Storage Battery Company in East Orange, NJ.
Hathaway was born in East Orange, New Jersey, the third of four sons of the Wall Street banker Charles Hathaway and his wife Cora (née Southworth Rountree).
Born in Temple, Texas, Walter Iooss moved at the age of five from Temple to East Orange, New Jersey.
Born Eugene Melvin Turk, Yictove was a proponent of rhymed poetry, who mentored high school students in New Jersey, including those at East Orange High School, performed as a poet in the schools courtesy of the Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation, taught creative writing in public libraries and in the Safe Haven program/YMCA in East Orange, New Jersey, and directed poetry series in New York City's Knitting Factory.