HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_013278.jpg
Extracted Text (OCR)
sport’s first fatality. Died Jan. 31, one week after crashing at
the Winter X Games in Aspen, Colorado.
February
Edward |. Koch, 88. As New York mayor from 1978 to 1989, he led
the city back from the brink of bankruptcy, turning a $1 billion
budget deficit into a $500 million surplus in five years. Died
Feb. 1 of heart failure.
Edith Lauterbach, 91. Last survivor of a quintet of U.S. women,
who in 1945 founded the Air Line Stewardesses Association, the
world’s first union for flight attendants. Died Feb. 4.
George Frazer, 86. Chairman of Toronto-based Leon Frazer &
Associates, who invested in companies with high dividends during
his seven decades as a fund manager. Died Feb. 6.
Rem Vyakhirev, 78. He was CEO of OAO Gazprom, the world’s
biggest natural-gas producer, from 1993 to 2001. Died Feb. 11.
Stokley Towles, 77. He spent his career at the Boston office of
New York-based Brown Brothers Harriman & Co., creating the
firm’s global custody service, which now accounts for more than
70 percent of the bank’s employees. Died Feb. 14.
Mindy McCready, 37. A U.S. country music singer whose hits
included “Guys Do It All the Time.” Died Feb. 17 of apparent
suicide.
Otto Beisheim, 89. German billionaire, who in 1964 co-founded
Metro AG, now Germany’s biggest retailer. Died Feb. 18 of
suicide after suffering from an incurable illness.
Jerry Buss, 80. After buying the Los Angeles Lakers in 1979, he
added marquee stars including Magic Johnson and Kobe Bryant,
winning 10 National Basketball Association championships between
1980 and 2010. Died Feb. 18 of kidney failure related to cancer
treatment.
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_013278