
Barry Feinstein, 87
Once a labor union power in New York

Drew Griffin, 60
CNN investigative journalist

Frank Shakespeare, 97
TV executive behind a new Nixon

Frances Hesselbein, 107
Progressive leader of the Girl Scouts

Dorothy Pitman Hughes, 84
Activist who brought Black issues to feminism

Jiang Zemin, 96
Leader who guided China into global market

Hiroshi Miyamura, 97
Medal of Honor winner in Korean War

Eleanor Jackson Piel, 102
Lawyer who fought capital convictions

John Y. Brown Jr., 88
KFC mogul and Kentucky governor

Hebe de Bonafini, 93
Activist who rallied mothers of “the disappeared”

Bao Tong, 90
Chinese official imprisoned after Tiananmen

Dr. Mitchell Rosenthal, 87
Founder of Phoenix House

Michael J. Gerson, 58
Presidential speechwriter and columnist

Mehran Karimi Nasseri, Late 70s
Iranian refugee who inspired “The Terminal”

Samuel Folsom, 102
Marine fighter pilot who fought over Guadalcanal

Lois Curtis, 55
Activist whose lawsuit secured disability rights

Ela Bhatt, 89
Advocate for women workers in India

The Rev. Calvin O. Butts III, 73
Dynamic Harlem pastor

Lucianne Goldberg, 87
Conservative operator in exposure of Clinton’s affair

Ashton B. Carter, 68
Defense secretary under Obama

Ngo Vinh Long, 78
Lightning rod for opposing the Vietnam War

Louis Gigante, 90
Priest who led the revival of the South Bronx

Benjamin Civiletti, 87
Attorney general in Iranian hostage crisis

James A. McDivitt, 93
Commander in early NASA triumphs

Grace Glueck, 96
Arts writer who fought for equality at The Times

Laurence Silberman, 86
Conservative touchstone on the bench

Sacheen Littlefeather, 75
Activist who rejected Brando’s Oscar

Yusuf al-Qaradawi, 96
Influential cleric in the Muslim Brotherhood

Bill Plante, 84
CBS News’s man at the White House

Jim Florio, 85
New Jersey governor undone by tax hike

Ruth Siegler, 95
Half of a remarkable duo of Holocaust-survivor sisters

Ilse Nathan, 98
Half of a remarkable duo of Holocaust-surviving sisters

Ken Starr, 76
Independent counsel in Clinton investigation

Bernard Shaw, 82
CNN’s lead anchor for 20 years

Queen Elizabeth II, 96
Britain’s longest-reigning monarch

Anne Garrels, 71
Fearless NPR correspondent

Moon Landrieu, 92
New Orleans mayor who championed integration

Mikhail S. Gorbachev, 91
Reformist Soviet leader

Rick Reed, 69
G.O.P. adman of “Swift Boat” campaign

David A. Kay, 82
Inspector who searched for nuclear weapons in Iraq

Archbishop Rembert Weakland, 95
Critic of Vatican orthodoxy

Andrew J. Maloney, 90
Prosecutor who took down John Gotti

Gary Schroen, 80
Veteran operative who led the C.I.A. into Afghanistan

Ayman al-Zawahri, 71
Leader of Al Qaeda after bin Laden’s killing

Fidel Ramos, 94
Philippine president who broke with Marcos

Tim Giago, 88
Native American newspaperman

David Trimble, 77
Nobel Peace Prize winner in Ulster strife

Lily Safra, 87
Star-crossed socialite and philanthropist

Gloria Allen, 76
Transgender activist who ran a charm school

Andrée Geulen, 100
Savior of Jewish children in wartime

David C. MacMichael, 95
C.I.A. whistleblower

E. Robert Wallach, 88
Lawyer linked to Reagan-era scandal

Cardinal Angelo Sodano, 94
Vatican power broker

Margot Heuman, 94
Holocaust survivor who spoke of gay relationship

Julie Beckett, 72
Fighter for disabled children

John L. Canley, 84
Belated Medal of Honor recipient

Urvashi Vaid, 63
Leading progressive activist

Randy Weaver, 74
Reluctant hero of the anti-government far right

Sheikh Khalifa, 73
Influential ruler of the U.A.E.

Robert C. McFarlane, 84
Top Reagan aide in Iran-Contra affair

John Leo, 86
Columnist who took aim at liberal pieties

Leonid Kravchuk, 88
First president of an independent Ukraine

Norman Y. Mineta, 90
First Japanese American cabinet member

Kathy Boudin, 78
Radical imprisoned in a fatal robbery

Jim Hartz, 82
NBC newsman and former “Today” co-host

Orrin Hatch, 88
Seven-term senator and Republican force

Rosario Ibarra de Piedra, 95
Defiant leader of Mexico’s embattled left

Peng Ming-min, 98
Fighter for Taiwanese autonomy and democracy

Mimi Reinhard, 107
Typist of Schindler’s list

Madeleine Albright, 84
First woman to serve as secretary of state

Victor Fazio, 79
Longtime Democratic leader in the House

Don Young, 88
Alaska congressman and dean of the House

Lauro Cavazos, 95
First Hispanic cabinet member

Brent Renaud, 50
American journalist killed reporting on Ukraine war

Alice von Hildebrand, 98
Conservative Catholic philosopher

Ken Duberstein, 77
“Reality therapist” at end of Reagan presidency

Autherine Lucy Foster, 92
First Black student at University of Alabama

Bob Beckel, 73
Liberal operative who became a fixture on Fox

Dr. Paul Farmer, 62
Pioneer of global health

Gail Halvorsen, 101
“Candy Bomber” in Berlin airlift

Gloria Rojas, 82
Trailblazing Latina broadcaster

Marie-Claire Chevalier, 66
Catalyst for French abortion law

Todd Gitlin, 79
Voice and critic of the New Left

John K. Singlaub, 100
General who clashed with Jimmy Carter

Sheldon Silver, 77
New York power broker convicted of corruption

Thich Nhat Hanh, 95
Zen master monk and peace activist

Charles E. McGee, 102
Honored Tuskegee Airman

Clyde Bellecourt, 85
A founder of the American Indian Movement

Robert Durst, 78
Real estate scion convicted as a killer

Lani Guinier, 71
Legal scholar at the center of controversy

