James Hoyt
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) _ James Hoyt, one of four U.S. soldiers who discovered the Buchenwald concentration camp as World War II neared its end, died Monday. He was 83.
Hoyt's wife, Doris, said he died in his sleep at home in rural Oxford. The cause of death was not immediately determined.
Hoyt served in the Army's 6th Armored Division during World War II, earning a Bronze Star. He fought in the Battle of the Bulge, the bloodiest battle fought by American troops in World War II.
Buchenwald, one of the largest concentration camps established by Nazi Germany, was liberated in April 1945. It is estimated that 56,000 prisoners died at Buchenwald between 1937 and 1945.
"There were thousands of bodies piled high," Hoyt said in a 2005 interview. "I saw hearts that had been taken from live people in medical experiments. ... Seeing these things, it changes you."
He said he had "horrific dreams" and received therapy at a Veterans Affairs hospital. He was interviewed as part of The Oxford Project, in which citizens of Oxford were photographed and interviewed about their lives.
Hoyt had returned to Oxford after the war and later worked more than 30 years with the U.S. Postal Service there. He retired in 1992.
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Jerry Krupnick
NEWARK, N.J. (AP) _ Jerry Krupnick, a longtime editor and television writer for The Star-Ledger of Newark, died Thursday. He was 82.
Krupnick died of complications from congestive heart failure, the newspaper reported in a story posted on its Web site.
Krupnick started working for the Star-Ledger in 1950, covering television as the medium was in its infancy. He created TV Time of the Week, one of the nation's first Sunday TV magazines, and wrote about television up to, and even after, his retirement from the newspaper in 1998.
Krupnick also served as the Star-Ledger's Sunday editor for almost 15 years.
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Jacob "Jack" Landau
WASHINGTON (AP) _ Jacob "Jack" Landau, a reporter who dubbed himself a "First Amendment guerrilla" and helped organize a journalism advocacy group, died Sunday. He was 74.
Landau died at an Arlington, Va., hospital after a long illness, said his daughter Ariel Landau of Greenbelt, Md. He had been living in Falls Church, Va.
The journalist began his career with newspapers in New York and went on to work for The Associated Press and The Washington Post in the 1960s before establishing himself as a U.S. Supreme Court reporter for Newhouse Newspapers.
He served as a spokesman for Attorney General John Mitchell early in the Nixon administration, helping to come up with new rules requiring the attorney general's approval for a media subpoena.
He returned to Newhouse in 1970. In the same year he helped launch the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, later serving as its executive director from 1974 to 1985.
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Bill Stulla
LOS ANGELES (AP) _ Bill Stulla, who as the star of local TV's "Cartoon Express with Engineer Bill" entertained young baby boomers with the "red light, green light" milk game and model trains, died Tuesday. He was 97.
Stulla died at his home in Westlake Village, said Kathryn Stulla Mackensen, his daughter. She did not give a cause of death.
A New York City native, Stulla worked in radio and television before he and his wife, radio producer Ruth Franzen, created the KHJ-TV Channel 9 program "Cartoon Express with Engineer Bill."
Decked out in an engineer's cap and overalls, Stulla played Engineer Bill on the series from 1955 to 1966, showcasing cartoons and train sets.
The milk game was a trademark of the show. An announcer would give young viewers and Engineer Bill the "green light" cue to slurp their milk and "red light" to stop, sometimes tripping up Bill and the kids with playful miscues.
Stulla, a World War II veteran who was awarded the Bronze Star for his work with the Army Signal Corps in India and Burma, became a stockbroker after leaving TV, his daughter said.
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Jerry Wexler
NEW YORK (AP) _ Jerry Wexler, who not only coined the phrase rhythm and blues, but was also one of the key architects of the genre, died Friday. He was 91.
His son Paul said the record producer died at home Friday of heart disease.
He revolutionized popular music with seminal, superstar-making recordings of acts such as Aretha Franklin, Ray Charles and others.
Over his decades-long career, Wexler created varied soundscapes that touched just about every kind of listener, from his work with Bob Dylan and Willie Nelson, to his masterful recording of Dusty Springfield, to his work with pop and rock acts like George Michael and Dire Straits.
He also helped build one of the most influential labels in pop, Atlantic Records, which was the home of Franklin, Charles, Led Zeppelin and the Rolling Stones. He was named to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1987.



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