Tuesday, July 8, 2014

NY Times Declares Minimum Wage is Dead!

This is an odd place to put a politcal ad supporting the minimum wage, don't you think?

Obituaries


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Eduard A. Shevardnadze, center, then the Soviet foreign minister, with President George Bush, left, and Secretary of State James A. Baker III in the White House Rose Garden in 1989.
Bob Daugherty/Associated Press
Eduard A. Shevardnadze, center, then the Soviet foreign minister, with President George Bush, left, and Secretary of State James A. Baker III in the White House Rose Garden in 1989.
Mr. Shevardnadze helped hone the “new thinking” that transformed the Soviet Union, and then led his native Georgia through its turbulent start as an independent state.

Alfredo Di Stéfano, Soccer Great for Real Madrid, Dies at 88

Di Stéfano, an Argentine, built a legendary career when he moved to Europe in the 1950s and led Real Madrid to five straight Continental club championships.

Alan J. Dixon, 86, Is Dead; U.S. Senator Who Championed Illinois

Mr. Dixon was a two-term United States senator from Illinois in the 1980s and early ’90s who was known for keen attention to constituents’ needs.

David Truong, Figure in U.S. Wiretap Case, Dies at 68

His conviction on espionage charges in 1978 raised alarms about the federal government’s use of wiretaps without court orders and spurred passage of the 1978 Federal Intelligence Surveillance Act.

Louis Brown Jr., Nicole Simpson’s Father, Dies at 90

Mr. Brown was a familiar presence at the murder trial of O.J. Simpson and became a public voice against domestic violence.

Jim Brosnan, Who Threw Literature a Curve, Dies at 84

Brosnan’s 1960 book, “The Long Season,” a candid account of his experience as a pitcher, helped change the way baseball was chronicled.

Frank M. Robinson Dies at 87; Author and Adviser to Harvey Milk

Mr. Robinson made his mark in science fiction, film and politics.

Bruno Zumino Dies at 91; Sought to Tie Together Laws of Universe

Mr. Zumino proposed a theory called supersymmetry that promised to help tie together the fundamental laws of the universe but that has yet to be borne out in experiments.

Emilio Álvarez Montalván, Nicaragua’s Pro-Democracy Sage, Dies at 94

Dr. Álvarez was an ophthalmologist, former guerrilla, political prisoner, diplomat and trenchant critic of dictatorship, and he was often called the wisest man in Nicaragua.

Richard Mellon Scaife, Influential U.S. Conservative, Dies at 82

Mr. Scaife, an heir to the Mellon banking fortune, laid the foundations for modern conservatism and fueled the impeachment of President Bill Clinton.

Gerald Robinson, Priest Convicted of Killing Ohio Nun, Dies at 76

Father Robinson was convicted in 2006 of murdering a nun more than 20 years earlier in the hospital where they worked together in Toledo, Ohio.

Louis Zamperini, Olympian and ‘Unbroken’ War Survivor, Dies at 97

Mr. Zamperini’s experiences as an airman who crashed into the Pacific and spent 47 days adrift before his capture by the Japanese were told in a best-selling biography.

Paul S. Amos, a Co-Founder of Aflac, Dies at 88

Mr. Amos pushed the company to market its insurance policies at companies, not door to door.

Walter Dean Myers Dies at 76; Wrote of Black Youth for the Young

Mr. Myers’s fiction for young readers often centered on African-Americans struggling in tough environments.

Bob Hastings, Actor on ‘McHale’s Navy,’ Dies at 89

Mr. Hastings played Lt. Elroy Carpenter, a bumbling yes-man on that 1960s sitcom, and he also had roles on many popular TV series of the ’60s, ’70s and ’80s.

Stephen Gaskin, Hippie Who Founded an Enduring Commune, Dies at 79

Mr. Gaskin was a Marine veteran and hippie leader who founded the Farm, an archetypical hippie commune that has lasted longer than its counterparts while accepting elements of capitalism.

Paul Mazursky Dies at 84; Director Showed ‘Me’ Era’s Strength and Foibles

Mr. Mazursky traced an era of moral shifts and uncertainties in films like “Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice” (1969) and “An Unmarried Woman” (1978).

Anatoly Kornukov, Who Led Russian Air Force, Dies at 72

Gen. Anatoly Kornukov ordered Korean Air Lines Flight 007, a commercial jet with 269 people aboard, shot down in 1983 after it strayed into Soviet airspace.

Lillian B. Rubin, 90, Dies; Wrote on Impact of Gender and Class Norms

Dr. Rubin explored identity crises of middle-aged women, life in a working-class family and why marriages often fail.

Christian Führer, East German Whose Prayers Inspired Protests, Dies at 71

Pastor Führer’s “prayers for peace” meetings in Leipzig grew into mass demonstrations that helped bring about the fall of Communism in East Germany.

Lloyd Garrison, 83, Journalist; Covered Africa for The Times

Mr. Garrison covered conflicts in Nigeria, Congo and Angola for The Times in the 1960s, and later taught African history.

Frank Cashen, Who Turned Lowly Mets Into Swaggering Champions, Dies at 88

Mr. Cashen assembled World Series champions in Baltimore and New York by nurturing farm systems and making shrewd trades.

Nancy Garden Dies at 76; Wrote Young-Adult Novel of Lesbians

In 2000, School Library Journal named “Annie on My Mind,” for which Ms. Garden remained best known, to its list of 100 books that shaped the 20th century.

Ana María Matute, Spanish Novelist Marked by Civil War, Dies at 88

Ms. Matute’s explorations of alienation and the loss of innocence that children experienced during and after the Spanish Civil War made her one of Spain’s most acclaimed writers.

Michael Brown, 93, Dies; Industrial Musicals Gave Wings to ‘Mockingbird’

Mr. Brown wrote industrial musicals for American corporations, which were meant to rally employees, and used some of his earnings to support Harper Lee while she wrote “To Kill a Mockingbird.”

Diana McLellan, Gossip Columnist With an Ear to Washington, Dies at 76

The British-born Mrs. McLellan, who wrote for three Washington papers, gained a devoted readership by skewering the powerful in the nation’s capital.
 
Interactive Notable Deaths of 2014
Remembering Philip Seymour Hoffman, Shirley Temple Black, Mickey Rooney, L’Wren Scott, Melba Hernandez, and others who died this year.
2013 | 2012 | 2011 | 2010 | 2009 | 2008 | 2007
Casey Kasem, Wholesome Voice of Pop Radio, Dies at 82
Mr. Kasem, the longtime host of “American Top 40,” was known for his homey sentiment and an optimism that ran headlong into the prevailing spirit of rebellion in 1970s music culture.
Tony Gwynn, Hall of Fame Batting Champion, Dies at 54 of Cancer
In his 20-year major league career, all with the San Diego Padres, Gwynn had a batting average of .338, including .394 in 1994. He was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2007.
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