N.Y. firefighter confronts aggressive cancer with courage
7/10/2007 Albany, NY Cathleen F. Crowley FireRescue1.com High school photos of Greg Burgoon on the basketball court show a young man with muscular legs who stood a head shorter than any player on the court. Though only 5 feet 6 inches tall, he had a 34-inch vertical leap and a gutsy spirit that won him a starting position on the 1967 Voorheesville varsity team in his sophomore year. Burgoon always was a fighter. So, when his mouth cancer came back in May 2003, just three months after surgery to remove it, he geared up for a battle. Burgoon broke the news to his family and they hugged, all of them crying. Then he jumped up on the couch and punched the air like Rocky Balboa. "I'm going to beat this! I'm going to beat this!" he repeated with each jab, tears streaming down his face. "It's the only time I saw him cry," said his sister, Sherry Burgoon, a school teacher who helped care for him. Burgoon was 49 and a volunteer firefighter for the Voorheesville Fire Department. He had risen through the ranks at Albany Truck Sales since he began working there at age 18, to become parts manager. A hard worker with a vast knowledge of obscure parts for old Mack trucks, Burgoon was loved and respected by his co-workers. His boss told him he'd have a job, no matter what. Burgoon lived alone in Voorheesville, down the road from two of his sisters. His son, Matthew, 18, [...]