Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Office of the Chief Medical Examiner will determine the three victims' cause of death, police said. The scene of a house fire in Queens, New York that killed three people, including a 90-year ...
Steve Brown, 66, British composer, lyricist and record producer, pulmonary fibrosis. [40] Rich Caster, 75, American football player (New York Jets, Houston Oilers, Washington Redskins), complications from Parkinson's disease. [41] Dean Dohrman, 64, American politician, member of the Missouri House of Representatives (2013–2021). [42]
[439] (death announced on this date) Mike Lude, 101, American football coach (Colorado State Rams) and baseball coach (Maine Black Bears). [440] Jean-Pierre Marty, 91, French pianist and conductor. [441] Jim McAndrew, 80, American professional baseball player (New York Mets, San Diego Padres), World Series champion . [442]
Bernard Kalb, 100, American journalist (Reliable Sources, The New York Times) and civil servant, assistant secretary of state for public affairs (1985–1986), complications from a fall. [268] Siegfried Kurz, 92, German conductor and composer. [269] Michel Laurencin, 78, French academic and historian. [270]
(Reuters) -New York's attorney general on Wednesday accused nursing home operator Centers Health Care and its owners of stealing $83 million in government funds while understaffing its facilities ...
Pages in category "Deaths from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease" The following 88 pages are in this category, out of 88 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The Booth Memorial Hospital in Flushing, Queens, New York City was "the largest voluntary hospital in Queens." [1] The hospital began in 1892 as a non-profit hospital in Manhattan. [4] The hospital moved to two other Manhattan locations in subsequent years. [5] The campus in Queens was dedicated and opened on February 5, 1957.
James Robinson (1851–1921), He was the coroner for nine years, a process server with the Queens County District Attorney, and at the time of his death he was a Deputy Sheriff of Queens County, New York. He took his own life by stepping in front of on oncoming train in Manhattan on May 31, 1921 at the Wall Street Station.