Obituaries Related to "Travis" from New York Times Archive
Travis Bean, Aluminum Guitar Maker, Dies at 63
Mr. Bean, a machinist and musician, created unadorned electric guitars and basses that had an uncanny ability to sustain notes.
Travis Roy, Who Inspired Millions After a Hockey Tragedy, Dies at 45
After an awkward fall 11 seconds into his first Boston University game left him a quadriplegic, he dedicated his life to advocacy for similarly disabled people.
Travis Roy, Who Inspired Millions After a Hockey Tragedy, Dies at 45
After an awkward fall 11 seconds into his first Boston University game left him a quadriplegic, he dedicated his life to advocacy for similarly disabled people.
James D. Travis, Whose TV Ad Helped Re-elect Reagan, Dies at 83
Under Mr. Travis’s direction, the highly successful 1984 “Morning in America” commercial served up apple-pie slices of Middle American prosperity.
‘Fear the Walking Dead’ Recap: Wake Up, Travis
The military occupation intensified and people started disappearing on Sunday.
Travis Bean, Aluminum Guitar Maker, Dies at 63
Mr. Bean, a machinist and musician, created unadorned electric guitars and basses that had an uncanny ability to sustain notes.
Doris E. Travis, Last of the Ziegfeld Girls, Dies at 106
Mrs. Travis, who may have been the youngest Ziegfeld Girl ever, went on to perform in stage productions and films.
Travis Edmonson, Influential Folk Singer, Dies at 76
Mr. Edmonson brought a Mexican flavor to the fertile San Francisco folk music scene of the 1950s and with the duo Bud and Travis influenced Bay Area groups.
Cecil Travis, 93, All-Star Infielder and a Top Hitter in the 1930s, Is Dead
Cecil Travis, infielder who was one of baseball's leading hitters of 1930's, dies at age 93; photo (M)
Cecil Travis, 93, All-Star Infielder and a Top Hitter in the 1930s, Is Dead
Cecil Travis was a Washington Senators infielder who was one of baseball’s leading hitters of the 1930s and early ’40s.
Latest NY Times Obituaries

Mike Greenwell, All-Star Outfielder for the Red Sox, Dies at 62
Roaming the same grass as Ted Williams, he played for Boston for his entire 12-year major league career and came in second in the 1988 M.V.P. voting.

Toby Talbot, Impassioned Promoter of Art Films, Dies at 96
With her husband, Dan, she ran four theaters in Manhattan and a company that distributed foreign and independent classics.

Alfa-Betty Olsen, Behind-the-Scenes ‘Comic Conspirator,’ Dies at 88
After quietly helping Mel Brooks set the irreverent tone on “Get Smart” and “The Producers,” she had a long collaboration as a writer with the actor and humorist Marshall Efron.

Milton Esterow, Who Reported on Art Stolen in World War II, Dies at 97
At The New York Times and then ARTnews, which he bought, he brought an investigative edge to stories about artwork looted by the Germans during World War II and the Soviets afterward.

Danny Thompson, Bassist Who Defied Folk Conventions, Dies at 86
A bedrock of the idiosyncratic British group Pentangle, he went on to play with a host of luminaries, including Roy Orbison, Eric Clapton and Kate Bush.

John Searle, Philosopher Who Wrestled With A.I., Dies at 93
His blunt debating and imaginative theorizing about artificial intelligence and the human mind made him a leading scholar. But sexual-harassment allegations ended his career.
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