/ Stars that died in 2023

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Itamar Franco, Brazilian politician, President (1992–1995), died from leukemia he was , 81


Itamar Augusto Cautiero Franco was a Brazilian politician and the President of Brazil from December 29, 1992, to January 1, 1995 died from leukemia he was , 81. During his long political career, Franco was also a Senator, Mayor, Ambassador, Governor and Vice President. At the time of his death he was a Senator from Minas Gerais, having won the seat in the 2010 election.

( June 28, 1930 – July 2, 2011)

Early life and family background

Franco was born prematurely at sea,[2] aboard a ship traveling between Salvador and Rio de Janeiro. On his father's side he was of partial German descent (the Stiebler family from Minas Gerais), while on the mother's side he was of Italian descent, with both of his maternal grandparents having emigrated to Brazil from Italy. His mother's name was "Itália", which means "Italy" in Portuguese and Italian.[3] Franco's father died prior to his birth.
Franco was named Itamar because he was born on board the ship Ita, at sea (in Portuguese Mar). His family was from Juiz de Fora, Minas Gerais, where he grew up and became a civil engineer in 1955, graduating from the School of Engineering of Juiz de Fora.

Career before Vice Presidency

Entering politics in the mid-1950s, Franco first served as alderman and deputy mayor of Juiz de Fora, before getting elected as mayor (1967 to 1971 and again from 1973 to 1974). He resigned as mayor in 1974 and ran successfully for the Federal Senate as a representative of Minas Gerais.[4] He soon became a senior figure in the MDB (Movimento Democrático Brasileiro – Brazilian Democratic Movement he was deputy leader twice, in 1976 and 1977), the official opposition to the military regime that ruled Brazil from 1964 to 1985. Re-elected as a senator in 1982, he was defeated in an attempt to be elected governor of Minas Gerais in 1986 as a candidate of the Liberal Party (PL). During his tenure he was one of the key figures of (then failed) initiative to immediate restoration of the direct elections for President. During his Senate term, Franco served as PL leader in that chamber.
As a member of the National Constituent Assembly which began on February 1, 1987, Franco voted for severance of relations between Brazil and countries that develop a policy of racial discrimination (as was then the case of South Africa), the establishment of the writ of mandamus Collective; 50% more pay for overtime after a forty hour work-week, the legalization of abortion, the continuous shift of six hours of notice proportional to length of service, the union unity, popular sovereignty, the nationalization of subsoil, the nationalization of the financial system of a limiting the payment of external debt burden and creating a fund to support land reform.
Meanwhile, he voted against propositions to reintroduce the death penalty, confirming the presidential system and extension of President José Sarney's term, whom he opposed and called for removal for an alleged corruption. Ironically, when Franco became President, Sarney became one of his allies.

Vice Presidency

In 1989, Franco left PL and joined the small PRN (National Reconstruction Party) to be selected the running-mate of the presidential candidate Fernando Collor de Mello. A main reason behind Franco's selection was that he represented one of the largest states (in contrast to Collor, who was from small state of Alagoas), and publicly he gained during his call for impeachment against President José Sarney for an alleged corruption.[5]
Collor and Franco won a very narrow election against a man who would later become President (2002–2010), Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.
Once in office, Franco broke with Collor, threatening a resignation several times, as he disagreed with some of the President's policies, especially regarding privatization, voicing his opposition openly.[6]
In 1992, Collor was charged with corruption and was impeached by the Congress. Under the Brazilian Constitution, an impeached president's powers are suspended for 180 days. As such, Franco served as acting president from October 1992 until Collor resigned on December 29, at which point he formally took office as president.
When he became acting President, despite having been Vice President for nearly three years, polls showed that the majority of the population did not know who he was.[2]

Presidency


Domestic policy and presidential style

Franco took power as Brazil was in the midst of a severe economic crisis, with inflation reaching 1,110% in 1992 and rocketing to almost 2,400% in 1993. Franco developed a reputation as a mercurial leader, but he selected as his Finance Minister Fernando Henrique Cardoso, who launched the "Plano Real" that stabilized the economy and ended inflation.
In an unusual gesture,[citation needed] moments before taking office, Franco handed senators a piece of paper on which he had listed his personal net worth and properties. Initially his approval rating reached 60 percent.[7]
After the troubled Collor Presidency, Franco quickly installed a politically-balanced cabinet and sought broad support in Congress.[6]
During his Presidency, in April 1993, Brazil held a long-announced referendum to determine the political system (remaining a Republic or restoration of the Monarchy) and the form of government (presidential or parliamentary system).[8] The Republican slash presidential system prevailed by large majorities respectively.[9]
In 1993 Franco resisted a calls from various military and civilian offices to shut down the Congress, which was described by some sources as a "coup attempt".[10]
His administration is credited for restoring integrity and stability in government, particularly after the troubled Collor presidency. The President himself kept his reputation of honesty and his personal style was viewed as very different from Collor's, who practiced "an imperial and ceremonious presidential role". On the other hand Franco's own personal behavior was sometimes described as temperamental and eccentric.[11][12][13]
In late 1993, Franco offered a resignation in order to call an earlier election, but Congress turned it down.[14]
At the end of term, Franco's job approval rating soared to nearly 80–90 percent, a record unbeaten to date.[15][16]

Foreign policy

Despite being sometimes described as a "man with limited diplomatic skills", Franco is credited with launching of idea of a free trade zone covering the whole of South America, which was praised by such leaders as U.S. President Bill Clinton.[16]
Also during his Government, Brazil ratified important pacts (for example the Tlatelolco Treaty and a quadripartite agreement also involving Argentina and the International Atomic Energy Agency on full-scope safeguards), which set Brazil on the nonproliferation path.[16]

After the Presidency

Fernando Henrique Cardoso became the official (sometimes described as Franco's hand-picked) candidate to succeed Franco and was elected President in late 1994. Franco, however, soon became a severe critic of Cardoso's government and disagreed with the privatization program. Thereafter, he served as the Ambassador to Portugal in Lisbon and then as Ambassador to the Organization of American States in Washington, DC, until 1998.
Franco considered a presidential run in 1998, but ultimately backed off after constitution changes allowed Cardoso to run again. However, he was elected governor of Minas Gerais in 1998 against the Cardoso-supported incumbent in a landslide, and as soon as he took office, he enacted a moratorium on state debt payments, worsening the national economic crisis. Itamar Franco served in the govenor's seat until 2003 (declining to seek reelection and supporting the eventual winning candidate Aécio Neves) and was then has been the ambassador in Italy, until leaving the position in 2005. During the 2002 presidential election, Franco endorsed Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, who got elected,[17] even if he, again, declined to run himself.
Having unsuccessfully sought, at age 76, the PMDB presidential nomination in 2006, he backed Geraldo Alckmin against Lula, despite having been considered again, despite his advanced age, as a candidate for President in 2010.
Franco ran instead for to be a Senator from Minas, and won the race along with Neves.

Personal life

Franco was divorced in 1971 and had two daughters.[7][18] Before and during his presidency he had a reputation as a ladies' man and his personal life was a subject of huge public interest.[citation needed][18][19][20]
He authored some 19 published works, ranging from discussions on nuclear energy to short stories.[7]

Death

Having been diagnosed with leukemia, Franco was admitted to the Albert Einstein Hospital, in São Paulo, on May 21, 2011. On June 27, his condition worsened and he developed severe pneumonia, being taken to ICU and placed under mechanical ventilation. He died in the morning of Saturday July 2, 2011, after suffering a stroke.[21][22] Seven days of mourning were declared by President Dilma Rousseff. After lying in state in the town of Juiz de Fora, his political base, and in Belo Horizonte, the capital of Minas Gerais, his body was cremated on Monday, July 4, 2011, in Contagem, in the metropolitan area of that city.[23]

 

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Chaturanan Mishra Indian politician and trade union leader, died after a long illness he was , 86,.

Chaturanan Mishra  was an Indian politician and trade unionist. Mishra, who was born in Nahar, Madhubani District, was a key leader of the Communist Party of India in Bihar, and served as the Agriculture Minister of India in the United Front government died after a long illness he was , 86,..

(April 7, 1925 – July 2, 2011)

Quit India Movement

Mishra took part in the 1942 Quit India Movement.[2][3] Due to his pro-Independence activism, he had to go into exile in Nepal for a period. Back in India, he was imprisoned at Darbhanga jail.[2]

1962-1980

He contested the Giridih seat in the 1962 Bihar Legislative Assembly election, finishing second with 6,379 votes.[4]
Mishra joined the National Council of the Communist Party of India in 1964.[2] He became the president of the Bihar State Committee of the All India Trade Union Congress.[3]
Between 1969 and 1980 he was a Member of the Legislative Assembly of Bihar, representing the Giridih seat.[2][5] He led the CPI faction in the Legislative Assembly for ten years.[2] During this period he was referred to as 'the backbone of CPI in Bihar'.[6] Madhubani, Mishra's home turf, got the nickname 'Leningrad of Bihar.[7] Mishra also served as president of the World Miners Association for a period.[3]
Mishra contested the Hazaribagh seat in the 1977 Lok Sabha election. He finished third with 35,809 votes (12.45%).[8]

1981 election

He was defeated by Urmila Devi of the Congress (I) in a 1981 by-election (the 1980 election had been suspended following the death of Congress (I) candidate Randhir Prasad, Urmila Devi's husband).[9] Mishra's candidature had been supported by the CPI(M), RSP and Lok Dal.[10]

1980s

During the 1980s, Mishra became the president of the All India Trade Union Congress. In 1984 he was elected to the Rajya Sabha.[2]
In April 1989 he was included in the party secretariat of CPI.[2]
In 1990, he was again elected to the Rajya Sabha.[2]
Olivera Marković, 87, Serbian actress
Olivera Marković (3 May 1925 – 2 July 2011)[1] was a Serbian actress. She appeared in 170 films and television shows between 1946 and 2005. She won the Golden Arena for Best Actress in 1964 for her role in Službeni položaj.[2]

Selected filmography

 

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Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Sir Oliver Napier, Northern Irish politician, leader of the Alliance Party of Northern Ireland (1972–1984) died he was , 75

 Sir Oliver Napier was the first leader of the Alliance Party of Northern Ireland  died he was , 75. In 1974 he served as the first and only Legal Minister and head of the Office of Legal Reform in the Northern Ireland power-sharing executive set up by the Sunningdale Agreement.

(11 July 1935 – 2 July 2011

Early life

Napier was educated at St. Malachy's College, Belfast and the Queen's University of Belfast before starting work as a solicitor.

Political career

Napier joined the Ulster Liberal Party, rising to become Vice President by 1969. That year, he led a group of four party members who joined the New Ulster Movement, accepting the post of joint Chairman of its political committee. The Liberal Party promptly expelled him, but, working with Bob Cooper, he used his position to establish a new political party, the Alliance Party of Northern Ireland, which sought to become a political force that could command support from across the divided communities of the province.[2] This aimed to offer an alternative to what Napier described as the sectarianism of the Ulster Unionist Party.
He served as the party's joint leader from 1970 until 1972, then as its sole leader from 1973 to 1984.[3] Under his leadership Alliance participated in successive assemblies that sought to solve the debate on the province's position, including the Northern Ireland Assembly, 1973 in which Napier was a minister in the power-sharing Executive. In 1979 he came closer to winning a seat in the Westminster Parliament than any other Alliance candidate in history when he was less than a thousand votes behind Peter Robinson's winning total in Belfast East in a tight three-way marginal. When Napier stepped down as leader in 1984 he received many plaudits for his work. The following year he was knighted and in 1989 he stood down from Belfast City Council, seemingly to retire.
However, in 1995 he returned to the political fray when he contested the North Down by-election for the Alliance, standing again in the 1997 general election.
In 1996 he was elected to the Northern Ireland Peace Forum for North Down.
Prior to his death Oliver Napier was the last prominent member of the Ulster Liberal Party.

Public positions

Napier served on the Board of Governors of the first integrated school in Northern Ireland, Lagan College.

 

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Juno Stover-Irwin, American diver, Olympic silver (1956) and bronze (1952) medalist. died she was , 82

Juno Stover-Irwin was a four-time Olympic diver for the United States died she was , 82.Primarily a 10-meter platform performer, Irwin was a native of Los Angeles, California; she attended Hoover High School and Glendale Community College.

(November 22, 1928 – July 2, 2011)

Biography

As Juno Stover, she placed fifth at the 1948 Olympics in London. Four years later in Helsinki, as Juno Stover-Irwin, she captured a bronze medal. At the 1956 Olympics, in Melbourne, Australia, Stover-Irwin was the 10-meter platform silver medalist. Irwin would later become the first diver to compete in four Olympics, when she placed fourth at the 1960 Games in Rome.[2] Stover-Irwin was also a two-time USA National AAU champion and two-time Pan-American Games silver medalist.[3]
Upon retiring from active competition, Stover-Irwin coached the women’s diving team at California State University (Berkeley Campus). She was honored with induction to the International Swimming Hall of Fame in 1980.[4]

 

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Jane Baker, American community organizer and politician, first female Mayor of San Mateo, California died she was , 88.

Jane Elaine Baker was an American politician, community organizer and former cooking show host died she was , 88.. Baker on the city council of San Mateo, California, for twenty years.[1] She was appointed the Mayor of San Mateo on six occasions, becoming San Mateo's first female mayor.

(1922 or 1923 – July 1, 2011)





Biography

Early life

Baker was born in Ohio.[1] She received her bachelor's degree in nutrition and home economics from Purdue University.[1][3] She met her future husband, Bill Baker, in 1941 while both were participating in a Purdue University student debate called "Are Men Good Or Bad?"[1][2] Bill, who had attended the debate for a speech class, asked her out on a date the next day.[1] The couple married on the same day that Jane graduated from Purdue in 1946 and had two children.[2]
Baker moved with her husband to the San Francisco Bay area due to Bill Baker's job transfer with the U.S. federal government.[1] She worked as the host and television producer of a home cooking show, which was filmed in San Francisco, before relocating to the nearby city of San Mateo.[1][2]

Political career

Baker first became involved in politics and community activism during the early 1970s.[1] Developers had proposed development of open land on the city's Sugarloaf Mountain. Baker organized a group made up of predominantly women activists into the Save Sugarloaf Committee, which successfully fought off the developer and preserved Sugarloaf as one of the city's permanent open spaces.[1][2]
Her experience as an activist and organizer led her to seek elected office to the city council. She was elected to the San Mateo city council in 1973 on an environmental platform, defeating two incumbent members and seven other candidates for her seat.[2] In doing so, she became only the second woman ever elected to San Mateo's city council.[2] She remained on the city council for twenty years, until her retirement from office in 1993.[2][3] Baker campaigned to be called "councilwoman" while in office, noting that her male colleagues used the term "councilman".[2] The San Mateo County Times called her a "bridge-builder and peacemaker" during her tenure.[3]
Baker was appointed and reappointed Mayor of San Mateo on six occasions, becoming the first woman to hold the mayoral office in San Mateo.[2] A three-term limit for future mayors was instituted by city council while she was still in office after having served five of her terms.[1][2]
Baker retired from the city council and the mayor's office in 1993 after twenty years in office.[2] Baker would served on the board of the Metropolitan Transportation Commission (MTC) for sixteen years, including several years as the board's chairwoman.[1][3] Baker also served as the president of the American Association of University Women (AAUW) and the president of the League of California Cities.[1] San Mateo County honored her work in 1999 by naming her to the San Mateo County Women's Hall of Fame.[1] She and her husband also became licensed pilots.[1]
Jane Baker died on July 1, 2011, at the age of 88. Her health had been in decline during her later years.[2] She was survived by her husband of 66 years, Bill Baker; two children, Cindy Kuiper and Bruce Baker; four grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.[1][2]

 

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Edmund Snow Carpenter, American anthropologist died he was , 88.

Edmund "Ted" Snow Carpenter was an anthropologist best known for his work on tribal art and visual media died he was , 88.

(September 2, 1922 – July 1, 2011)

Early life

Born in Rochester, New York to the artist and educator Fletcher Hawthorne Carpenter (1879-1954) and Agnes "Barbara" Wight (1883-1981), he was one of four children.[3] He is a descendant of the immigrant William Carpenter (1605 England - 1658/1659 Rehoboth, Massachusetts) the founder of the Rehoboth Carpenter family who came to America in the mid-1630s.[4]
Edmund Carpenter began his anthropology studies under Dr. Frank G. Speck at the University of Pennsylvania in 1940. After completing his semester in early 1942, he volunteered to serve his country during World War II.

World War II

He joined the United States Marine Corps in early 1942, fighting in the Pacific Theater of Operations for the duration of the war especially in New Guinea, the Solomon Islands, the Marianas, and Iwo Jima. After the war ended, he was assigned to oversee hundreds of Japanese prisoners, putting them to work on an archaeological dig in Tumon Bay, Guam.[1]

Post war

Discharged as a captain in 1946, he returned to the University of Pennsylvania using his G.I. Bill, was awarded a Bachelors degree, and earned his doctorate four years later in 1950. His doctoral dissertation was on the pre-history of the Northeast.[1]
Carpenter began teaching anthropology at the University of Toronto in 1948, taking side jobs such as radio programming for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC). In 1950, he started fieldwork among the Aivilik, returning to these Inuit in Nunavut in the famine winter of 1951-52, and again in 1955.
When public television took off in Canada with the launching of CBC-TV in 1952, Carpenter began producing and hosting a series of shows.
Moving back and forth between Toronto’s broadcasting studios and Arctic hunting camps, Carpenter collaborated on the theoretical ideas in development by Harold Innis and Marshall McLuhan. Teaming up with McLuhan, they co-taught a course and together they hatched their core ideas about the agency of modern media in the process of culture change.
In 1953, after a well-received proposal written by Carpenter, they received a Ford Foundation grant for an interdisciplinary media research project, which funded both the Seminar on Culture and Communication (1953–1959) in addition to their co-edited periodical Explorations throughout the 1950s.[5] Together with Harold Innis, Eric A. Havelock, and Northrop Frye, McLuhan and Carpenter have been characterized as the Toronto School of communication theory.
Meanwhile, Carpenter continued his programs on CBC-TV, including a weekly show also titled “Explorations” (which started as a radio program). In his famous article "The New Languages" (1956) Carpenter offers a succinct analysis of modern media based on years of participant observation in different cultures, academic & popular print publishing, & radio and television broadcasting.

Visual media

In 1959 [6], Carpenter was appointed an assistant professor and founder of an experimental interdisciplinary program of Anthropology and Art at San Fernando Valley State College (California State University-Northridge) [7][8], where students were trained in visual media, including filming. As the only faculty member in the department, Carpenter went on to hire more faculty. In 1960, he was promoted to the rank of Associate Professor.[7] In 1961, he was made Chairman of the Anthropology Department.[9]
With award-winning filmmaker Robert Cannon, he made an innovative documentary about "surrealist" Kuskokwim Eskimo masks. Carpenter also co-authored Georgia Sea Island Singers (1964), a film documenting six traditional African-American songs and dances by Gullahs of St. Simon Island, based on fieldwork by Alan Lomax. And with Bess Lomax Hawes, he collaborated on Buck Dancer (1965), a short film featuring Ed Young, an African-American musician-dancer from Mississippi. In 1967, however, just when visual anthropology began to take institutional form as an academic enterprise, the program was closed.
During this period, Carpenter worked with McLuhan on the latter's book Understanding Media (1964).[1] In 1967 McLuhan was awarded the Schweitzer Chair at Fordham University, and he brought Carpenter (on a sabbatical from Northridge), Harley Parker, and Eric McLuhan to be on his research team. [10]
On leave from his faculty position at Northridge, Carpenter subsequently held the Carnegie Chair in anthropology at the University of California, Santa Cruz (1968–69), and then took a research professorship at the University of Papua New Guinea, officially having resigned his position at Northridge. Joined by photographer Adelaide de Menil (who later became his wife), he journeyed to remote mountain areas where indigenous Papua had “no acquaintance” yet with writing, radios, or cameras. They took numerous Polaroid and 35mm photographs, made sound recordings, and shot some 400,000 feet of 16mm film in black and white, as well as color and infrared film.
During the next dozen years, Carpenter taught at various universities, including Adelphi University (circa 1970-1980), Harvard, New School University, and New York University (circa 1980-1981). In addition to numerous other publications, he also completed art historian Carl Schuster's massive cross-cultural study on traditional art motifs. In 2008, he guest-curated an important Eskimo traditional and prehistoric art exhibit Upside Down: Les Arctiques at the Musée du quai Branly, the ethnographic art museum in Paris, France. This exhibit was re-installed in 2011 as Upside Down: Arctic Realities at The Menil Collection, an art museum in Houston, Texas, which, since 1999, also houses his permanent exhibit Witnesses to a Surrealist Vision.

Personal life

On June 14, 1946 Edmund Carpenter married a fellow student at the University of Pennsylvania, Florence Ofelia Camara, and eventually had two children with her, Stephen and Rhys.[4] Their marriage was the combination of one of the earliest English families to settle in the New World, the Carpenters, with one of the early Spanish Conquistador families to settle in the New World, in the Yucatán. They served under Francisco de Montejo, the Adelantado and Capitan General of Yucatán, and after that under his son, Francisco de Montejo (el Mozo), conqueror of the Yucatán.[11]
They divorced in the mid 1950s, and in the mid 1960s he married Virginia York Wilson, of Toronto, the daughter of the well known Canadian artist Ronald York Wilson. This marriage produced a third son, Ian Snow Carpenter. This marriage also ended in divorce.
In the mid 1960's he met Adelaide DeMenil, a professional photographer. Their subsequent marriage lasted until his death in 2011.

Selected publications

  • Intermediate Period Influences in the Northeast. (PhD Thesis, U Penn, 1950)
  • Eskimo. (with Robert Flaherty, 1959)
  • Explorations in Communication, An Anthology. (co-edited with Marshall McLuhan, 1960)
  • They Became What They Beheld. (1970)
  • Oh, What a Blow That Phantom Gave Me! (1972)
  • Eskimo Realities (1973)
  • "The Tribal Terror of Self-Awareness." Pp. 451–461. In: Paul Hockings, ed., Principles of Visual Anthropology. (1975a)
  • "Collecting Northwest Coast Art." pp. 8–27. In: Bill Holm & William Reid. Form and Freedom: A Dialogue on Northwest Coast Indian Art. (1975b)
  • In the Middle, Qitinganituk: The Eskimo Today. (with Stephen G. Williams, 1983)
  • Social Symbolism in Ancient and Tribal Art. (with Carl Schuster; 3 Parts, 12 vols., 1986–1988)
  • Patterns That Connect:Social Symbolism in Ancient & Tribal Art. (1996)
  • "19th Century Aivilik/Iglulik Drawings." pp. 71–92. In Fifty Years of Arctic Research: Anthropological Studies. Eds. R. Gillberg and H.C. Gullov. Copenhagen: The National Museum of Denmark. (1997)
  • "Arctic Witnesses." pp. 303–310. In Fifty Years of Arctic Research: Anthropological Studies. Eds. R. Gillberg and H.C. Gullov. Copenhagen: The National Museum of Denmark. (1997)
  • "That Not-So-Silent Sea." pp. 236–261. In: Donald Theall. The Virtual Marshall McLuhan. (2001)
  • "European Motifs in Protohistoric Iroquois Art." pp. 255–262. In: W.H. Merrill and I. Goddard, eds., Anthropology, History, and American Indians: Essays in Honor of William Curtis Sturtevant. (2002)
  • Norse Penny. (2003a)
  • Comock: The True Story of an Eskimo Hunter. (with Robert Flaherty, 2003b)
  • Two Essays: Chief & Greed. (2005)
  • "Marshall." pp. 179–184. Explorations in Media Ecology, Vol.5, No.3 (2006)
  • Upside Down: Arctic Realities. Ed. Edmund Carpenter. Houston: Menil Foundation/Yale U Press. (2011)

 

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Charlie Craig, American songwriter ("She's Single Again", "The Generation Gap"), died from lung cancer he was , 73.

Charlie Craig was a Grammy-nominated songwriter born and raised in Watts Mill, South Carolina died from lung cancer he was , 73.. He relocated to Nashville and spent over 40 years in the music industry. Some of his songs have been recorded by Dolly Parton, Kenny Rogers, Alan Jackson, Travis Tritt, Johnny Cash, Aaron Tippin and George Strait.[3] Craig died of lung cancer on July 1, 2011 in Nashville, Tennessee.

(September 30, 1938 – July 1, 2011)



Hit Songs recorded by other artists

 

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Dickey Betts died he was 80

Early Career Forrest Richard Betts was also known as Dickey Betts Betts collaborated with  Duane Allman , introducing melodic twin guitar ha...