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  • Bob Dole, who overcame disabling war wounds to become a...

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    Bob Dole, who overcame disabling war wounds to become a sharp-tongued Senate leader from Kansas, a Republican presidential candidate and then a symbol and celebrant of his dwindling generation of World War II veterans, died at age 98 on Dec. 5, 2021.

  • Betty White, Hollywood's "Golden Girl," died Friday, Dec. 31, 2021....

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    Doug Mills/The New York Times

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  • U.S. Rep. Alcee Hastings, a longtime Democratic Florida congressman who...

    Patrick Semansky / AP

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    Vianney Le Caer/AP

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    Dave Pickoff/AP

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  • Roland Hemond was the general manager of the Chicago White...

    Scott Strazzante, Chicago Tribune

    Roland Hemond was the general manager of the Chicago White Sox from 1970-85. He died Dec. 12, 2021 at the age of 92.

  • George Segal, whose long career included playing Albert "Pops" Solomon...

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    George Segal, whose long career included playing Albert "Pops" Solomon on "The Goldbergs," and garnering an Oscar nom for supporting actor for "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf," died on March 24, 2021. He was 87.

  • George Shultz, President Ronald Reagan's longtime secretary of state who...

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    George Shultz, President Ronald Reagan's longtime secretary of state who focused on improving relations with the Soviet Union and seeking peace in the Middle East, died on Feb. 6, 2021. He was 100.

  • James Hampton, "Teen Wolf," "F Troop" and "Longest Yard," star...

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  • Olympia Dukakis, best known for her Oscar-winning supporting turn in...

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  • John Chaney, one of the nation's leading basketball coaches and...

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  • Vernon Jordan, a champion of civil rights and former advisor...

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    Vernon Jordan, a champion of civil rights and former advisor to President Bill Clinton died on March 1, 2021. He was 85.

  • Beloved children's author Beverly Cleary, whose characters Ramona Quimby and...

    Vern Fisher / Monterey Herald / AP

    Beloved children's author Beverly Cleary, whose characters Ramona Quimby and Henry Huggins enthralled generations of youngsters, has died. She was 104.

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    Chicago Tribune

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  • Irv Cross, a former NFL player who gained fame on...

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  • Eric Jerome Dickey, the bestselling novelist who blended crime, romance...

    Yola Monakhov / The New York Times

    Eric Jerome Dickey, the bestselling novelist who blended crime, romance and eroticism in "Sister, Sister," "Waking With Enemies" and other stories about contemporary Black life, died on Jan. 3, 2021, after a long illness. He was 59.

  • Lloyd Price, known for such hits as "Lawdy Miss Clawdy"...

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    Lloyd Price, known for such hits as "Lawdy Miss Clawdy" and "Stagger Lee" died May 3, 2021. He was 88.

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  • Joan Didion, the author and essayist whose provocative social commentary...

    Kathy Willens / AP/AP

    Joan Didion, the author and essayist whose provocative social commentary and detached, methodical literary voice made her a uniquely clear-eyed critic of a uniquely turbulent time, died Dec. 23, 2021. She was 87.

  • Siegfried Fischbacher, of the magic duo Siegfried & Roy who...

    Neil Jacobs / AP

    Siegfried Fischbacher, of the magic duo Siegfried & Roy who entertained millions with illusions using rare animals, died of pancreatic cancer on Jan. 13, 2021. He was 81.

  • Former Sen. John Warner of Virginia, a former Navy secretary...

    Pablo Martinez Monsivais/AP

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  • Former Vice President Walter F. Mondale, a liberal icon who...

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    Patrick Semansky / AP

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  • Suzzanne Douglas, best known for starring in the WB sitcom...

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    Suzzanne Douglas, best known for starring in the WB sitcom "The Parent 'Hood" and in the 1989 dance drama "Tap," died July 6, 2021. She was 64.

  • Four-time winner of the Indianapolis 500, Al Unser, died Dec....

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    Four-time winner of the Indianapolis 500, Al Unser, died Dec. 9, 2021, following years of health issues. He was 82.

  • Helmut Jahn, the famous German architect behind some of Chicago's...

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    Helmut Jahn, the famous German architect behind some of Chicago's most impressive buildings, including the Thompson Center, died when he was struck by two vehicles while riding his bicycle on May 8, 2021. He was 81.

  • Cicely Tyson, a groundbreaking Tony award-winning and Oscar-nominated actress died...

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  • Former Secretary of State Gen. Colin Powell died Oct. 18,...

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  • In this Tuesday Oct. 30, 2012 file photo, Tom T....

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    In this Tuesday Oct. 30, 2012 file photo, Tom T. Hall accepts the Icon Award at the 60th Annual BMI Country Awards in Nashville, Tenn.

  • Jason Matthews, an award-winning spy novelist who drew upon his...

    Jacquelyn Martin/AP

    Jason Matthews, an award-winning spy novelist who drew upon his long career in espionage and his admiration for John le Carre among others in crafting his popular "Red Sparrow" thrillers, has died, Wednesday, April 28, 2021.

  • Ned Beatty, an actor known for roles in "Deliverance" and...

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    Ned Beatty, an actor known for roles in "Deliverance" and "Network," died June 13, 2021. He was 83.

  • G. Gordon Liddy, a mastermind of the Watergate burglary and...

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    G. Gordon Liddy, a mastermind of the Watergate burglary and a radio talk show host after emerging from prison, died March 30, 2021. He was 90.

  • Charles "Chuck" Geschke — the co-founder of the major software...

    Richard Drew / AP

    Charles "Chuck" Geschke — the co-founder of the major software company Adobe Inc. who helped develop Portable Document Format technology, or PDFs — died on April 16, 2021. He was 81.

  • Roger Mudd, a longtime political correspondent and anchor for NBC...

    Frederick M. Brown / Getty

    Roger Mudd, a longtime political correspondent and anchor for NBC and CBS, died on March 9, 2021, of complications from kidney failure. He was 93.

  • Bernie Madoff, the financier who pleaded guilty to orchestrating the...

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  • Larry Flynt, who turned Hustler magazine into an adult entertainment...

    Damian Dovarganes/AP

    Larry Flynt, who turned Hustler magazine into an adult entertainment empire while championing First Amendment rights, died on Feb. 10, 2021. He was 78.

  • Chicago comedian and actor Erica Watson, best known for playing...

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    Chicago comedian and actor Erica Watson, best known for playing Miss Tiny on Season 1 of "The Chi," died Feb. 27, 2021, in Jamaica due to complications from COVID-19. She was 48. Watson also appeared in the 2015 Spike Lee movie "Chi-Raq" and the Oscar nominated film "Precious."

  • Midwin Charles, defense attorney and legal analyst for MSNBC, CNN...

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    Midwin Charles, defense attorney and legal analyst for MSNBC, CNN and other cable outlets, died April 6. She was 47.

  • Singer Don Everly (right) of The Everly Brothers died August...

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    Singer Don Everly (right) of The Everly Brothers died August 21, 2021 at age 84.

  • Gavin MacLeod, a sitcom veteran who played seaman "Happy" Haines...

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    Gavin MacLeod, a sitcom veteran who played seaman "Happy" Haines on "McHale's Navy," Murray on "Mary Tyler Moore" and Captain Stubing on "The Love Boat," died on May 29, 2021. He was 90.

  • Legendary actor Ed Asner, who played Lou Grant on the...

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    Legendary actor Ed Asner, who played Lou Grant on the "Mary Tyler Moore Show," died on Sunday, Aug. 29, 2021. He was 91.

  • Tommy Lasorda, the fiery and lovable Hall of Fame manager...

    Richard Drew / AP

    Tommy Lasorda, the fiery and lovable Hall of Fame manager who led the Los Angeles Dodgers to 2 World Series titles, died on Jan. 7, 2021. He was 93.

  • Donald Rumsfeld, the two-time defense secretary and one-time presidential candidate...

    Wally Santana/AP

    Donald Rumsfeld, the two-time defense secretary and one-time presidential candidate whose reputation as a skilled bureaucrat and visionary of a modern U.S. military was soiled by the long and costly Iraq war, died June 29, 2021. He was 88.

  • Larry King, the suspenders-wearing broadcaster who interviewed world leaders, movie...

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  • Hank Aaron, who broke Babe Ruth's all-time home run record...

    Harry Harris / AP

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  • British actor Paul Ritter, whose credits include HBO drama "Chernobyl"...

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    British actor Paul Ritter, whose credits include HBO drama "Chernobyl" and the wizard Eldred Worple in "Harry Potter And The Half Blood Prince," died of a brain tumor on April 5, 2021. He was 54.

  • Biz Markie, a hip-hop staple known for his beatboxing prowess,...

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  • Oscar winner and multiple Emmy winner Cloris Leachman, best remembered...

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    Oscar winner and multiple Emmy winner Cloris Leachman, best remembered as the delightfully neurotic Phyllis Lindstrom on "The Mary Tyler Moore Show" and her own subsequent sitcom, died of natural causes on Jan. 27, 2021. She was 94.

  • British actress Helen McCrory, who starred in the television show...

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    British actress Helen McCrory, who starred in the television show "Peaky Blinders" and the "Harry Potter" movies, has died, her husband said. She was 52 and had been suffering from cancer.

  • Norm Macdonald, comedian and former cast member on "Saturday Night...

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    Norm Macdonald, comedian and former cast member on "Saturday Night Live," died Tuesday, Sept. 14, 2021, after a nine-year battle with cancer that he kept private. He was 61.

  • Sen. Harry Reid, the former Senate majority leader and Nevada's...

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    Sen. Harry Reid, the former Senate majority leader and Nevada's longest-serving member of Congress, died Dec. 28, 2021. He was 82.

  • South African Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu, the Nobel Peace Prize-winning...

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    South African Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu, the Nobel Peace Prize-winning activist for racial justice and LGBT rights and retired Anglican Archbishop of Cape Town, died Dec. 26, 2021. He was 90.

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    Evan Agostini/AP

    Melvin Van Peebles, the groundbreaking filmmaker best known for writing, co-producing, scoring, editing and starring in the 1971 film "Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song," died Sept. 22, 2021. He was 89.

  • Clarence Williams III, an actor known for portraying Linc Hayes...

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    Clarence Williams III, an actor known for portraying Linc Hayes on "The Mod Squad" and Prince's father in "Purple Rain," died on June 4, 2021, of colon cancer. He was 81.

  • Dianne Durham was the first Black woman to win a...

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    Dianne Durham was the first Black woman to win a USA Gymnastics national championship and a Gary, Indiana native.

  • Don Sutton, a Hall of Fame pitcher who won 324...

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  • Marty Schottenheimer, who won 200 regular-season NFL games as coach...

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    Marty Schottenheimer, who won 200 regular-season NFL games as coach of the Chiefs, Chargers, Browns and Redskins, died on Feb. 8, 2021. He was 77.

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    AP

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  • Actor/comedian Jackie Mason died July 24, 2021. He was 93.

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    Actor/comedian Jackie Mason died July 24, 2021. He was 93.

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Jason Matthews, an award-winning spy novelist who drew upon his long career in espionage and his admiration for John le Carre among others in crafting his popular “Red Sparrow” thrillers, has died at age 69.

Matthews died Wednesday from Corticobasal Degeneration (CBD), a rare, untreatable neurodegenerative disease, according to his publisher, Scribner.

“How a bestselling, critically-acclaimed spy novelist sprung from the head of a quiet CIA operations officer appeared to be a great mystery,” Colin Harrison, Matthews’ editor at Scribner, said in a statement. “But when you learned Jason Matthews spoke six languages, had read widely for decades, was an astute observer of human behavior, and was adept at composing long classified narratives, it all made sense. His books were not only sophisticated masterpieces of plot and spy craft, but investigations into human nature, especially desire in all its forms.”

Matthews worked 33 years in the CIA’s highly secretive Operations Directorate before retiring a decade ago and following the path of such authors as le Carre and Charles McCarry in fictionalizing their time in intelligence. “Red Sparrow,” published in 2013, was a neo-Cold War tale that introduced readers to CIA man Nathaniel Nash and to the former Russian ballerina Dominika Egorova, recruited by her uncle as a “sparrow,” trained in the art of “sexpionage – sexual entrapment, carnal black-mail, moral compromise.”

As an author, Matthews was an immediate, late-life success. “Red Sparrow” won an Edgar for best debut American thriller and was adapted into a film starring Jennifer Lawrence and Joel Edgerton. Critics praised the book for its detail, insight, plot twists and candid portrait of the more tedious parts of the spy trade, and cited it as a model for how the CIA man’s skills in observation can be employed by a fiction writer.

“Lord knows how he got the manuscript of “Red Sparrow” past the redacting committee at Langley, but he has turned his considerable knowledge of espionage into a startling debut,” novelist Charles Cumming wrote in The New York Times.

“I have rarely encountered a nonfiction title, much less a novel, so rich in what would once have been regarded as classified information. From dead drops to honey traps, trunk escapes to burst transmissions, Matthews offers the reader a primer in 21st-century spying. His former foes in Moscow will be choking on their blinis when they read how much has been revealed about their trade-craft.”

Matthews wrote two more “Sparrow” novels, “Palace of Treason” and “The Kremlin’s Candidate,” which came out in 2018. The year before, he told The Associated Press that he had an idea for a thriller he once considered highly improbable — until Donald Trump became president.

“The plot line was an American presidential candidate who has a secret that’s so bad it would ensure his or her impeachment, and the only person who would know the secret is Vladimir Putin,” Matthews said.

Nate Nash was his stand-in, but Matthews would call Putin his muse, and joke that every day he would wake up and think, “Thank heavens for Vladimir Putin.” His novels captured a “New Russia,” presided over by Putin the “blue-eyed tsar” and his cronies (siloviki), that has revived the oppression and corruption of the former Soviet Union without even the pretense of being a worker’s state.

“These weasels purloined the patrimony of Russia, and spread a blanket of corruption so completely over the land that if you were not a billionaire running the energy monopoly Gazprom out of your pocket, then you were a Muscovite who could not order meat more than three days a week,” Matthews wrote in “The Kremlin’s Candidate,” in which Nash and Egorova pursue a Russian agent in the U.S. government.

“The siloviki were the inheritors of the Gray Cardinals, the sclerotic members of the old Soviet politburo, who had starved Soviet Russians for 70 years with their ineptitude as implacably as this new crowd had been starving modern Russians for the last 20 years with their avarice.”

After retiring, Matthews settled in Rancho Mirage, California. He is survived by his wife and fellow intelligence veteran, Suzanne Moran Matthews, and their two daughters.

Born in Wethersfield, Connecticut, Matthews grew up in a Greek-speaking household, majored in foreign languages at Washington & Lee University, studied journalism at the University of Missouri and eventually learned French, Spanish, Italian, Turkish, and Hungarian. His career choice was unplanned: Through a relative in the State Department, he was interviewed by a government agency that turned out to be the CIA and asked to join because they were seeking Greek-language speakers.

“I was a junior guy,” he told Men’s Journal in 2015, “and my job was to shut up and make sure the safe house had beer in the fridge. But that was the first time you got the sense that there were people in these dangerous little corners of the globe doing the same thing you were. As a young person, that was really cool. Obviously you couldn’t say anything. But there was a self-sustaining pride: ‘We’re actually in the CIA!'”

He was an unimposing man whom Men’s Journal would describe as “the last person you’d peg as a spy — until you find out he was one.” Recipient of a CIA Medal of Merit among other honors, he was reluctant to say too much about where he worked, and what he did. But he would indicate that he specialized in dangerous, “denied operations,” turned up on a terrorist hit list in the Middle East; and had to flee the U.S. embassy during the Kosovo War in the late 1990s, He also oversaw U.S. intelligence support for the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy.

“Being in the Agency is a very experiential career, like being a policeman or a fireman or a jet pilot, and when it stops, it really stops,” he told The New York Times in 2015. “There are retiree groups that get together, mostly in Washington, and sit around and swap war stories, but I was living in California, and it was either write something or go fishing.”