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John Hefin, 71, Welsh television director and producer (Pobol y Cwm, The Life and Times of David Lloyd George), cancer. [355] Viter Juste, 87, Haitian-born American community leader, coined the term "Little Haiti", dementia and diabetes. [356] Hannie Lips, 88, Dutch television announcer. [357] Shiro Miya, 69, Japanese enka singer. [358]
Glenys Kinnock, Baroness Kinnock of Holyhead, 79, British politician, MEP (1994–2009), member of the House of Lords (2009–2021), and minister of state for Europe (2009), complications from Alzheimer's disease. [70] Ma Sen, 91, Taiwanese playwright and literary critic. [71]
Glenys Elizabeth Parry was born in Roade, Northamptonshire, and educated at Holyhead Comprehensive School, Anglesey. [1] She graduated in 1965 from University College, Cardiff in education and history. [2] Parry worked at Moorland Primary School, in Splott, in 1966. [3] She met Neil Kinnock at university [4] and married him in 1967. [5]
Born Glenys Elizabeth Parry on July 7, 1944, in England, she graduated from high school on the Welsh island of Anglesey and went to University College, Cardiff, where she met her future husband.
Bob Ford (1862–1892), outlaw who gunned down Jesse James; Tom Pendergast (1873–1945), long-time political boss of Kansas City and western Missouri; responsible for the political rise of Harry S. Truman; imprisoned for tax evasion; Belle Starr (1848–1889), female outlaw of the Old West; St. Louis crime family
The St. Joseph Gazette was a newspaper in St. Joseph, Missouri from October 1845 until June 30, 1988, when its morning position was taken over by its sister paper, the St. Joseph News-Press. [ 1 ] It was the only newspaper delivered to the West Coast on the first ride of the Pony Express in 1860.
Welsh, of Plainfield, Illinois, was a senior who was majoring in business management. She won the individual national title on vault at the NCAA Division III championships last year.
James is a surname in the French language, [1] and in the English language originating from the given name, itself derived from Old French James, variant form of Jacme, Jame, from Late Latin Jacomus, variant form of Latin Jacobus, itself from Hebrew Yaʿaqōḇ. [2]