Obituaries Related to "Tran" from New York Times Archive
Tran Dai Quang, Hard-Line Vietnamese President, Dies at 61
Mr. Quang, whose role was largely ceremonial, was a former chief of the country’s powerful Ministry of Public Security.
Is the Trans-Atlantic Relationship Dead?
If it is, Germans can’t decide what comes after.
Fred A. Kummerow, an Early Opponent of Trans Fats, Dies at 102
Artificial trans fats were ruled unsafe by the Food and Drug Administration partly in response to a lawsuit that Professor Kummerow filed against the agency.
U.S. Ambassadors in Asia Make Final Plea for Dead Trans-Pacific Trade Pact
Max Baucus, the ambassador to China, and five others told Congress in an open letter that the United States should not cede its position in Asia-Pacific trade to China.
Trans Deaths, White Privilege
A string of transgender women of color have been killed this year.
The Slow Death of Trans Fats
The F.D.A.’s order to cut these fats from the final holdouts — like margarine and ready-made frosting — will save thousands of lives.
Poppa Neutrino, Trans-Atlantic Adventurer, Dies at 77
Poppa Neutrino, whose life was chronicled by a New Yorker writer, founded his own church and crossed the Atlantic on a raft made from scrap.
Paid Notice: Deaths TRAN, ALLEN
TRAN--Allen, 79, died November 9, 2003 at Cabrini Hospice. The cause was lung cancer. Born outside Pittsburgh, PA on February 7, 1924, he earned a purple heart during the invasion of Italy in World War II. Allen was a longtime staff member at the Museum of Modern Art and he lived more than fifty years in downtown New York City. Faithful forever and big hearted, he will be missed by his many friends.
Charles A. Levine, 94, Is Dead; First Trans-Atlantic Air Passenger
Charles A. Levine, who became aviation's first trans-Atlantic passenger in 1927 when he sponsored an attempt to beat Col. Charles A. Lindbergh to Europe, died Dec. 6 at Sibley Memorial Hospital in Washington. He was 94 years old and had moved to Washington from New York City this fall. His family said he died after a brief illness.
VIETNAM CHIEF FROM 1950-1952
Tran Van Huu, Prime Minister of Vietnam from 1950 to 1952, died Tuesday at the Val de Grace military hospital in Paris. He was 87 years old and had lived in exile in France for 29 years. It was under Mr. Huu that Vietnam began assuming limited prerogatives of self-rule prescribed in agreements reached with France in 1949. Vietnam was torn by internal strife at the time and Mr. Huu tried to seek outside help to fight the Communist Vietminh forces while at the same time pressing for fuller in ...
Latest NY Times Obituaries
Dorothy Vogel, Librarian With a Vast Art Collection, Dies at 90
On modest civil servants’ salaries, she and her husband amassed a trove of some 4,000 works by art-world luminaries, storing them in their one-bedroom Manhattan apartment.
Terry Martin Hekker, a Happy Housewife Scorned, Dies at 92
She wrote two popular memoirs: the first about the joys of married life, the second about her husband serving her divorce papers on their 40th anniversary.
Burt Meyer, 99, Dies; Made Lite-Brite and Rock ’Em Sock ’Em Robots
Starting in the 1960s, he collaborated on the designs of classic toys like Mouse Trap, Toss Across and Mr. Machine.
Mark Mellman, 70, Dies; Helped Democrats Understand Their Voters
A pollster and political strategist, he was a key figure in John Kerry’s 2004 presidential campaign and used his prominence to speak out in defense of Israel.
Ward Landrigan, Jeweler to the Stars, Dies at 84
At Sotheby’s, he provided famous diamonds to Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton before reviving Verdura, a venerable jewelry company founded by a Sicilian duke.
Robert L. Stirm, Returning P.O.W. in Pulitzer-Winning Photo, Dies at 92
The image immortalized a Vietnam veteran’s joyous homecoming to his beaming family, but it hid the truth about his unraveling marriage.
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