Obituaries in the news

Obituaries in the news

Staff
AP News

Oct 24, 2009 22:06 EDT

Bill "The Big Whistle" Chadwick

CUTCHOGUE, N.Y. (AP) — Bill "The Big Whistle" Chadwick, the first U.S.-born official in NHL history who was later a popular broadcaster for the New York Rangers, died Saturday. He was 94.

His death was announced by son Bill and confirmed by John Halligan, a family friend and hockey historian. Chadwick had been in declining health for a number of years and died while in hospice care.

For 16 seasons, from 1939 to 1955, Chadwick was one of the best officials the NHL, despite being blind in one eye. He invented and perfected the system of hand signals to signify penalties, and the system is now used throughout the world.

In 1935, playing for a Met League All-Star Team at Madison Square Garden, Chadwick was struck in the right eye by an errant puck as he stepped onto the ice to face a team from Boston. Doctors were unable to restore the vision in the eye, but he continued to play. Then, early in the 1936-37 season, he was hit in his left eye by an opposing player's stick. The injury wasn't nearly as serious as the earlier one, but Chadwick knew his hockey-playing days were finished.

In 1939, NHL president Frank Calder asked Chadwick to join the NHL as a linesman. He accepted and became the NHL's first U.S.-born official. A year later, he was promoted to referee.

In 1964, Chadwick was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame, only the fifth official, and the first American-born official, to be so honored. In 1974, he was inducted into the U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame.

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Shiloh Pepin

PORTLAND, Maine (AP) — Shiloh Pepin, a girl who was born with fused legs, a rare condition often called "mermaid syndrome," and gained a wide following on the Internet and national television, has died. She was 10.

Doctors had predicted she would only survive only for days after her birth at the most, but the girl, described by her mother as "a tough little thing," died at Maine Medical Center on Friday afternoon, hospital spokesman John Lamb said. She had been hospitalized in critical condition for nearly a week.

Being born with "mermaid syndrome," also known as sirenomelia, meant that the Kennebunkport girl had only one partially working kidney, no lower colon or genital organs and legs fused from the waist down.

Some children who have survived sirenomelia have had surgery to separate their legs, but Shiloh did not because blood vessels crossing from side to side in her circulatory system would have been severed. She had received two kidney transplants, the last one in 2007.

Her story was featured recently on "The Oprah Winfrey Show" and other national television programs.

Shiloh was a fifth-grader at Kennebunkport Consolidated School. Counselors will be available next week to talk to students.

Source: AP News