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Just weeks after marriage, Marine killed in Iraq

Just weeks after marriage, Marine killed in Iraq
BY DIANA DILLABER MURRAY

The Oakland Press (Oakland County, Michigan)
Tuesday, October 24, 2006

LATHRUP VILLAGE – Marine Lance Cpl. Nicholas J. Manoukian 22, had been
back in Iraq only one month before he was killed in Anbar province
when the Humvee in which he was riding drove over an improvised
exploding device.

Manoukian, son of Mary Manoukian Calhoun of Lathrup Village, married
his junior high school sweetheart while he was home on leave.
The young couple had one month and one week together before he was
deployed to Iraq in September, said his wife, Danielle Manoukian, 22.

A radio operator, Manoukian was one of four Marines based at Camp
Lejeune, N.C., to die in the explosion Saturday and one of two from
southeastern Michigan, the Pentagon said Monday. The Defense Department
identified the others as Lance Cpl. Clifford R. Collinsworth, 20,
of Chelsea; Lance Cpl. Nathan R. Elrod, 20, of Salisbury, N.C.;
and Cpl. Joshua C. Watkins, 25, of Jacksonville, Fla.

"He was my only child," Calhoun said, describing how her son loved
to draw, loved playing drums, enjoyed ice hockey and snowboarding,
loved to cook and was a giving person.

The 2003 Royal Oak Kimball High School graduate was to come home on
leave in July. Shortly before that, he called his mother to let her
know he and Danielle, whom he met when they were 14, had decided to
get married while he was home.

"We had 10 days to plan a wedding, and her mother and I pulled it
off in 10 days," his mother said.

The two got married at Shrine of the Little Flower Catholic Church
in Royal Oak, and Manoukian was baptized and had his first Communion
that day, as well, she said.

"If there were two people meant for each other, it was Nick and
Danielle," his mother said. "They’d been together a long time. Then
they drifted apart. But they knew they’d end up together.

"I got to dance with my son at his wedding," she said, gratefully,
between sobs. "I was looking forward to having a granddaughter,"
Calhoun said. Manoukian had planned to adopt Danielle’s 2-year-old
son, Nico, and they planned to buy a house and have a child after he
came home from Iraq.

Then the doorbell rang Saturday.

"I never even questioned or imagined it would just be a month, and
that was it," said Danielle, who lives in Royal Oak.

"I’m happy that I got to live with him. He was a person who would give
and give. He was the first to volunteer. I just feel so privileged
that I got to love somebody so much and he loved me so much."

Growing up, "Nick was the love of his dad’s and my life," Calhoun
said. "He lost his dad (Isaac Manoukian) at 12 and after that several
other family members. He was a strong kid. I used to tell him we were
the survivors. I want people to know he was a vibrant young man. He
loved his family and was so giving," said Calhoun, who is now married
to Manoukian’s stepfather, Gary Calhoun.

The family also celebrated Manoukian’s 22nd birthday while he was
home. He spent his 20th birthday in boot camp and his 21st birthday
in Iraq. He and Danielle also celebrated all of the holidays he would
miss while in Iraq, including Halloween. He gave her an engagement ring
in an Easter basket she made for him when they were in high school.

Before Manoukian was recruited into the Marines, he took art classes
at Oakland Community College and worked part time at the Evergreen
Nursing Home, where he was the cook.

"He loved to cook," his mother said. "He was fabulous drummer. He
used to play from the time he was little.

He got a beautiful set of drums when he was 12.

"My dream for Nick was college," his mother said. "He had such a kind,
generous heart, and he gave the tightest, best hugs in world. I can’t
imagine living the rest of my life without him," Calhoun said.

Danielle said she and her new husband had met at 14 and started dating
at 15.

"We had always planned to marry. We would talk on the phone eight
hours and fall asleep while we were talking. Then we would talk while
we were getting ready for school in the morning."

Describing their love as like that portrayed in the movie "Notebook,"
she said, "He loved me like that. I loved him like that."

Manoukian called her when he could from Iraq and said it "was just
terrible there; it wasn’t getting any better.

"I always started to cry at the end of calls. I said, ‘You are coming
home.’ And he would say he was. I felt like he knew he was coming home,
and it made me feel like he was," she said.

Services for Manoukian are pending the return of his body to the
United States.

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http://www.theoaklandpress.com/stories/10
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