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Name Age Date Location Cause of death Larry Reinhardt Iron Butterfly, Captain Beyond: 63: January 2, 2012: Bradenton, Florida, U.S.: Complications from cirrhosis [1]: Bob Weston ...
Several African-American-owned newspapers are published in Houston. Allan Turner of the Houston Chronicle said that the papers "are both journalistic throwbacks — papers whose content directly reflects their owners' views — and cutting-edge, hyper-local publications targeting the concerns of the city's roughly half-million African-Americans."
Pence Dacus, 87, American football player (Texas State Bobcats) and coach (Pepperdine Waves). [395] Siegfried Engelmann, 87, American educationist, co-developer of Direct Instruction. [396] Sir Charles Farr, 59, British civil servant, Chair of Joint Intelligence Committee (since 2015), cancer. [397] Jens Feder, 80, Norwegian physicist. [398]
The Leader is a weekly newspaper published in the Houston Heights, Houston, Texas. It is delivered to residences in the community. [ 1 ] In addition to the Houston Heights it is distributed to other northwest Houston communities, including Garden Oaks and Oak Forest .
Eleanor Searle Whitney McCollum (c. 1908 – August 12, 2002) was an independent woman of means who was married to two important American men, Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney and Leonard Franklin "Mac" McCollum. She achieved a unique and separable identity as a philanthropist and community organizer in Houston, Texas.
Lucy Hood, 56, American television executive (News Corporation), President of the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences (since 2013), cancer. [31] Glyn Jones, 82, South African writer and actor. [32] Mamoon Kazi, 78, Pakistani judge, member of the Supreme Court (1997–2000) and Sindh High Court (1985–1997). [33] Willi Kafel, 83, Austrian ...
Two men face murder charges in a May 2021 shooting death on a Fort Worth street, according to court records.
Cornelius Vanderbilt Wood was born in Waynoka, Oklahoma.Throughout his early life, Wood was referred to as Junior and “Woodsy.” Later on, friends and business colleagues called him “C.V. Wood” or “C.V.” or “Woody.” [citation needed] The family moved to Amarillo, TX following Wood’s father's promotion within the Santa Fe Railway.