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Eleanor Virden Jackson Piel (September 22, 1920 – November 26, 2022) was an American civil rights lawyer. She entered civil rights law after United States v. Masaaki Kuwabara, a case where interned Japanese Americans were tried for declining to be drafted. She practiced law until she was in her early 90s.
Date of death Nationality Cause of death Known for Comments Bartholomew Sharp: 1702-10-29 England (detained by the Danish West Indies) Unknown Buccaneer and privateer: Giovanni Battista Sidotti: 1714-11-27 Sicily (detained by the Tokugawa shogunate) Unknown Priest, missionary of the Propaganda Fide: Alexei Petrovich, Tsarevich of Russia: 1718-06-26
He is the son of Gerard Piel and Mary Tapp Bird (both deceased) and the stepson of Eleanor Jackson Piel. Born in New York City, he attended the City & Country School, The Putney School in Putney, Vermont, and graduated from Harvard College in 1961.
A former Playboy model killed herself and her 7-year-old son after jumping from a hotel in Midtown New York City on Friday morning. The New York Post reports that 47-year-old Stephanie Adams ...
The cause of death was not disclosed.Eleanor gained notoriety after documenting her husband's exhausting effort to complete his 1979 war film, Apocalypse Now. In the award-winning 1991 documentar.
Names are reported under the date of death, in alphabetical order as set out in WP:NAMESORT. ... Eleanor Jackson Piel, 102, civil rights lawyer (b. 1920) [720]
And the remaining 40% was left to support Jackson’s mother Katherine Jackson until her death, at which point the balance of that 40% will go to his kids, giving them an 80% share of the estate.
Claude Piel, (1921–1982), French aircraft designer; Eleanor Jackson Piel)1920-2022), American lawyer; Gerard Piel (1915–2004), American science journalist and publisher of the new Scientific American; Jonathan Piel, (born 1938), American science journalist and editor; Monika Piel, (born 1951), German radio and television journalist