Herman, Heyn, street-corner astronomer
Barbara Abelhauser, bridgetender
Sharon Long, forensic artist
Alton Yates, aeromedical field tester
Storm Reyes, library assistant
Dorothy Warburton, scientist
Dakalb Walcott, Jr. and Dekalb Walcott III, firefighters
Don and Mackenzie Byles, funeral directors
Anne Lucietto, mechanical engineer
Phil Kerner, tool and die maker
Barbara Moore, bricklayer
Noramay cadena, engineer and enterpreneur
Larry and Laura Michaelis, physicians
Ricardo Pitts-Wiley, actor
Red Lain, oil rig driller
Dana Viviano, oncology nurse
Issan Koyama, hospice chaplain
John Vigiano Jr. and Joe Vigiano, 9/11 first responders
Kerry Davis and Ken Hopper, ironworkers
Angelo Bruno and Eddie Nieves, sanitation workers
Rich Barham and Nelson Peck, veterans crisis hotline workers
Rowan Allen, emergency medical technician
Michelle Alore, ICU nurse
Vito de la Cruz, assistant federal public defender
Dawn Maestas, ink removal specialist
Barbara Butler, FMF corpsman
Ayodeji Ogunniyi, English teacher
Al Siedlecki, science teacher
Sol Aramendi, artist and educator
Leonard Berk, salmon slicer
Clarence Haskett, beer vendor
Arnie Knapp, entertainer coach operator
Paquita Williams, subway conductor
Darlene Lewis, employment counselor
Miranda Louise, waitress and blues singer
Jerry Lawson, video game inventor
Clela Rores, county clerk
Laura Martinez, chef and restaurateur
Dorothy Glinton, Ford seembly plant supervisor
Wendell Scott, NASCAR driver
Lyle Link, building contractor.