Obituaries - The New York Times

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Obituaries

Highlights

  1. Roman Gabriel, Star Quarterback of the 1960s and ’70s, Dies at 83

    In 16 seasons with the Los Angeles Rams and the Philadelphia Eagles, he played in four Pro Bowl games and was voted Most Valuable Player in 1969.

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    The quarterback Roman Gabriel in 1975, when he was with the Philadelphia Eagles. In 11 seasons with the Los Angeles Rams and five with the Eagles he established himself as one of the leading passers of his era.
    CreditAssociated Press
  2. David H. Pryor, Arkansas Senator and Clinton Ally, Dies at 89

    During his 34 years as an elected official, Mr. Pryor was sometimes said to be more liberal, especially on racial issues, than the people who elected him.

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    The former senator and governor David H. Pryor in 2006, when he was the founding dean of the University of Arkansas Clinton School of Public Service.
    CreditDanny Johnston/Associated Press
  3. Ellen Ash Peters, Pioneer on the Connecticut Bench, Dies at 94

    The first woman on the faculty of Yale Law School, she was named to the State Supreme Court in 1978 and became its first female chief justice six years later.

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    Ellen Ash Peters in 1975, when she was a professor at Yale Law School. As chief justice of Connecticut’s highest court, she wrote a landmark ruling on school desegregation.
    CreditWilliam B. Carter/Yale Law School
  4. Martin Wygod, a Winner on Wall Street and the Racetrack, Dies at 84

    After he made a fortune selling prescription drugs and providing medical information online, he and his wife became leading breeders of thoroughbred horses.

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    Martin J. Wygod at his home in California in 2000. He was known not only for his success in business but also for his success in breeding and training racehorses.
    CreditThom Vollenweider
  5. Beverly LaHaye, Soldier of the Christian Right, Dies at 94

    A pastor’s wife, she formed Concerned Women for America to oppose the Equal Rights Amendment. Ronald Reagan called her “one of the powerhouses on the political scene.”

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    Beverly LaHaye with President Ronald Reagan in 1987, shortly before he addressed a meeting of her organization, Concerned Women for America.
    CreditScott Stewart/Associated Press

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Overlooked

More in Overlooked ›
  1. Overlooked No More: Lizzie Magie, the Unknown Inventor Behind Monopoly

    Magie’s creation, The Landlord’s Game, inspired the spinoff we know today. But credit for the idea long went to someone else.

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    Lizzie Magie in 1892. She conceived of The Landlord’s Game as an ideological tool about political economics.
    CreditThe Brodix Publishing Company
  2. Overlooked No More: Henrietta Leavitt, Who Unraveled Mysteries of the Stars

    The portrait that emerged from her discovery, called Leavitt’s Law, showed that the universe was hundreds of times bigger than astronomers had imagined.

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    Henrietta Leavitt in an undated photo. Her discovery, often referred to as Leavitt’s Law, underpinned the research of other pioneering astronomers.
    CreditPopular Astronomy, via Library of Congress
  3. Overlooked No More: Yvonne Barr, Who Helped Discover a Cancer-Causing Virus

    A virologist, she worked with the pathologist Anthony Epstein, who died last month, in finding for the first time that a virus that could cause cancer. It’s known as the Epstein-Barr virus.

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    Yvonne Barr in 1962. Her techniques in growing cell cultures in a controlled environment aided in the discovery of the Epstein-Barr virus.
    CreditGregory Morgan
  4. Overlooked No More: Miriam Solovieff, Lauded Violinist Who Suffered Tragedy

    She led a successful career despite coping with a horrific event that she witnessed at 18: the killing of her mother and sister at the hands of her father.

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    Miriam Solovieff in the 1960s. After the deaths of her family members, the violin became her sole emotional and financial means of coping.
    CreditMark B. Anstendig
  5. Overlooked No More: Betty Fiechter, Pioneer in the World of Watches

    She started out at Blancpain as an apprentice and eventually took over as an owner, a move that one industry insider noted was “totally unprecedented” for a woman.

     By

    Betty Fiechter in 1935, two years after she became the owner of the watch company Blancpain.
    CreditBlancpain
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