Terry graduated from Osseo Senior High School in 1971.
Terry entered the Army in January of 1972. He served active duty as a Medical Corpsman at the U.S. Army Hospital in Honshu, Japan near the end of the Vietnam War. He received an Honorable Discharge in February of 1975 as a Specialist (SP4).
Terry spent his civilian career in the biomedical telemetry and biomedical information technology (computer networking) field. Over the years, he worked with Norco Medical, ran his own company (Metro Medical Services), and United and Children's Hospitals in St. Paul, MN. Most recently, a road warrior with Dräger Medical servicing hospitals all over the country in their networking and biomedical information technology needs, including Abbott Northwestern Hospital in Minnesota.
Terry was proud of his service to his country and could often be found at the local American Legion in Brooklyn Center talking with other Veterans. Terry shared his love for computers and technology with everyone he encountered. He most recently enjoyed listening to music, flying drones, gaming on the XBox, and building Raspberry Pi computers. He instilled a love for our country and respect for the military, as well as a passion for music and technology in his 2 daughters and 4 granddaughters.
He was preceded in death by his wife, Karen Storts; father and mother, Earl and Bertha Storts; brother, Richard Storts; and nephew, Kimothy "Shane" Weber.
Terry graduated from Osseo Senior High School in 1971.
Terry entered the Army in January of 1972. He served active duty as a Medical Corpsman at the U.S. Army Hospital in Honshu, Japan near the end of the Vietnam War. He received an Honorable Discharge in February of 1975 as a Specialist (SP4).
Terry spent his civilian career in the biomedical telemetry and biomedical information technology (computer networking) field. Over the years, he worked with Norco Medical, ran his own company (Metro Medical Services), and United and Children's Hospitals in St. Paul, MN. Most recently, a road warrior with Dräger Medical servicing hospitals all over the country in their networking and biomedical information technology needs, including Abbott Northwestern Hospital in Minnesota.
Terry was proud of his service to his country and could often be found at the local American Legion in Brooklyn Center talking with other Veterans. Terry shared his love for computers and technology with everyone he encountered. He most recently enjoyed listening to music, flying drones, gaming on the XBox, and building Raspberry Pi computers. He instilled a love for our country and respect for the military, as well as a passion for music and technology in his 2 daughters and 4 granddaughters.
He was preceded in death by his wife, Karen Storts; father and mother, Earl and Bertha Storts; brother, Richard Storts; and nephew, Kimothy "Shane" Weber.
Gravesite Details
LOVED as a reminder that he was loved. JUST BE added by his youngest of 2 daughters.
BE STILL added by his oldest of 2 daughters. Each a reminder of him.
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