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Jim Hannan, 84, American baseball player (Washington Senators) and executive, founder, president, and chairman of the board for the MLBPAA. [287] Eva Harr, 72, Norwegian visual artist, cancer. [288] Frank Howson, 71, Australian theatre and film director, screenwriter, and singer. [289] Magdolna Komka, 74, Hungarian Olympic high jumper (1968 ...
McCaw was born on September 15, 1911, [1] to John M. and Freda McCaw [2] in Colfax in Whitman County, in eastern Washington. [3]While a student at Weatherwax High School in Aberdeen, he created a private telephone system that at one point connected the McCaw home, the high school, and downtown businesses; he broadcast recorded music and fed local radio station KXRO programs over his private ...
George Kinnell, 83, Scottish footballer (Aberdeen, Stoke City, Sunderland). [443] Viktor Kryzhanivsky, 59, Ukrainian diplomat, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary of Ukraine, fall. [444] Betty Lynn, 95, American actress (The Andy Griffith Show, Cheaper by the Dozen, Meet Me in Las Vegas). [445] Máire Mhac an tSaoi, 99, Irish poet and ...
Sara Coffenberry Anderson. Sara Coffenberry Anderson, 75, of Kennewick, died Oct. 28 in Kennewick. She was born in Danville, Ill., and lived in the Tri-Cities for 14 years.
Tri-City Herald death notices Oct. 10-12, 2024. Tri-City Herald staff. October 15, 2024 at 3:00 AM. Jordan C. Bernard. Jordan Chase Bernard, 27, of Kennewick, died Sept. 28 in Kennewick.
Nina and James, a boomer couple, face financial struggles after unexpected emergency expenses despite retiring with pensions in 2012.
Reston married Sarah Jane Fulton on December 24, 1935, after meeting her at the University of Illinois. [7] They had three sons: James, a journalist, non-fiction writer, and playwright; Thomas, formerly Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for public affairs and the deputy spokesman for the U.S. State Department; [8] and Richard, the retired publisher of the Vineyard Gazette, a newspaper on ...
Cohen worked for United Press International in New York. [6]He joined The Washington Post as a reporter in 1968 and later became the paper's chief Maryland correspondent. He covered the investigation of former vice president Spiro Agnew and wrote a book called A Heartbeat Away: The Investigation and Resignation of Vice President Spiro T. Agnew with fellow reporter Jules Witcover.