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Sam Roberts

Articles written by the author

Kenya The New York Times world
19 Aug 2024
Ed Cray, a journalist and educator who explored a broad spectrum of Americana with well-regarded biographies of Woody Guthrie, Chief Justice Earl Warren, the California serial killer Juan Corona, George C. Marshall and the bluejeans maker Levi Strauss, died on Oct. 8 in Palo Alto, California. He was 86.
Ed Cray, Biographer of Woody Guthrie and Earl Warren, Dies at 86
Kenya The New York Times world
19 Aug 2024
Hildegard Bachert, who fled the Nazis as a teenager and joined a New York art gallery where, over a 78-year career, she helped introduce and popularize the works of German and Austrian expressionists and the folk art of Grandma Moses, died Oct. 17 in Brattleboro, Vermont. She was 98.
Hildegard Bachert, 98, Dies; Championed Klimt, Schiele and Grandma Moses
Kenya The New York Times world
19 Aug 2024
Michael F. Armstrong, whose dogged pursuit and exposure of crooked cops as chief counsel to the Knapp Commission in the early 1970s was credited with smothering an ingrained culture of corruption in the New York City Police Department, died on Thursday at his home in Manhattan. He was 86.
Michael Armstrong, Who Led Probe of N.Y. Police Corruption, Dies at 86
Kenya The New York Times world
19 Aug 2024
Leyna Gabriele, a lyric coloratura soprano who became a fan-club idol for playing the title role in the first production of the tragic rags-to-riches-to-rags opera “The Ballad of Baby Doe,” died Oct. 14 in Tarrytown, New York. She was 95.
Leyna Gabriele, 95, Dies; Soprano Who Sang in the First 'Baby Doe'
Kenya The New York Times world
18 Aug 2024
Samuel Hynes, a self-described Midwestern yokel who soared as a heroic fighter pilot in World War II and returned, sobered by combat, to flourish as a scholar, teacher, literary critic and popular author, died on Oct. 9 at his home in Princeton, New Jersey. He was 94.
Samuel Hynes, Professor Whose Books Taught Lessons of War, Dies at 94
Kenya The New York Times world
18 Aug 2024
Robert G. Goelet, a civic leader, naturalist and philanthropist whose marriage merged two families that date to 17th-century New Amsterdam and made the couple stewards of Gardiners Island, a storied sanctuary off the tip of Long Island, died on Tuesday at his home in Manhattan. He was 96.
Robert Goelet, New York Grandee and Naturalist, Dies at 96
Kenya The New York Times world
18 Aug 2024
Michael D. Coe, a Yale anthropologist who devoted his career to proving that the ancient Maya incubated an elaborate written language that had previously been undervalued by many scholars, died on Sept 25 in a hospital in New Haven, Connecticut. He was 90.
Michael Coe, Maya Scholar and Codebreaker, Is Dead at 90
Kenya The New York Times world
18 Aug 2024
Martin Weitzman, an inventive economist who argued that governments would see climate change as a more urgent matter to address if they took more seriously the small but real risks of the most catastrophic of outcomes, died Aug. 27 in Newton, Massachusetts. He was 77.
Martin Weitzman, Top Climate Change Economist, Dies at 77
Kenya The New York Times world
18 Aug 2024
Werner H. Kramarsky, who as a public official helped expand the delivery of health care in New York City and the scope of human rights protections statewide, and who in private life was a patron of artists and a prodigious collector of drawings, died Thursday at his home in Manhattan. He was 93.
Werner Kramarsky, Rights Official and Arts Patron, Dies at 93
Kenya The New York Times world
18 Aug 2024
Mark A.R. Kleiman, a prominent drug policy apostate who favored what he viewed as a sensible middle ground on marijuana — eliminate criminal sanctions for selling and using it but preclude full-blown commercial legalization — died Sunday in Manhattan. He was 68.
Kenya The New York Times world
18 Aug 2024
Mortimer Caplin, who as Internal Revenue commissioner in the early 1960s was credited with making taxpaying more tolerable for the majority of Americans who do so voluntarily and tougher for the rest to avoid or evade, died Monday at his home in Chevy Chase, Maryland. He was 103.
Kenya The New York Times world
18 Aug 2024
Verna Hart knew what she wanted to be when she was only 5. “My creative journey began in my kindergarten class,” she recalled. “I chose the easel as my daily activity, instead of the blocks, dolls and water table options.”
Kenya The New York Times world
18 Aug 2024
Robert Pear, a reporter whose understated demeanor belied a tenacious pursuit of sources and scoops during his 40 years at The New York Times covering health care and other critical national issues, died Tuesday in Rockville, Maryland. He was 69.
Kenya The New York Times world
18 Aug 2024
Robert Pear, a reporter whose understated demeanor belied a tenacious pursuit of sources and scoops during his 40 years at The New York Times covering health care and other critical national issues, died Tuesday in Rockville, Maryland. He was 69.
Kenya The New York Times world
17 Aug 2024
Jo Sullivan Loesser, the vivacious soprano who starred in Frank Loesser’s hit Broadway show “The Most Happy Fella,” married Loesser and, after he died, preserved his legacy with revivals, revues and recordings, died on Sunday at her home in New York. She was 91.
Jo Sullivan Loesser, Singer and Guardian of a Legacy, Dies at 91
Kenya The New York Times world
17 Aug 2024
Jo Sullivan Loesser, the vivacious soprano who starred in Frank Loesser’s hit Broadway show “The Most Happy Fella,” married Loesser and, after he died, preserved his legacy with revivals, revues and recordings, died on Sunday at her home in New York. She was 91.
Kenya The New York Times world
17 Aug 2024
Michael P. Koskoff, a renowned and dogged Connecticut litigator who defended Black Panthers, won record malpractice awards, mounted racial job-discrimination battles and sued gunmakers whose weapons were used in the Sandy Hook school massacre, died Wednesday in a Manhattan hospital. He was 77.
Kenya The New York Times world
17 Aug 2024
NEW YORK — There are 8.4 million people in the Naked City. This is the story of 40,000 of them — the number of people the Census Bureau estimates that New York City lost last year.
Did New York City's Population Fall? Yes. And No