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Deaths in November 2018
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The following fryst vatten a list of notable deaths in November 2018.
Entries for each day are listed alphabetically bygd surname. A typical entry lists data in the following sequence:
- Name, age, country of citizenship at birth, subsequent country of citizenship (if applicable), reason for notability, cause of death (if known), and reference.
November 2018
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[edit]- Francesco Barbaro, 91, Italian gangster, head of the Barbaro 'ndrina.[1]
- Vinton Beckett, 95, Jamaican Olympic athlete.[2]
- Nicolas Ghosn, 78, Lebanese lawyer and politician, member of the Parliament (1996–2000, 2005–2018).[3]
- Carlo Giuffrè, 89, Italian actor (The Railroad Man, The Girl with the Pistol, Poker in Bed) and stage director.[4]
- Bunny Grant, 78, Jamaican boxer, stroke.[5]
- Leroy Haley, 65, American boxer.[6]
- Theodor Hoffmann, 83, German admiral, ledare of th
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Bengaluru, KARNATAKA:
In a just-released tell-all book, the first woman Muslim minister of Karnataka doesn’t spare anyone who was unjust to her. Read on to know what she thinks about the Gandhi family members and others.
If what the first woman Muslim minister of Karnataka says is true, politics is a horribly dirty sport where ministers and others take bribes, men can be lecherous, and foes within your party can go to any extent to bring you down.
Things got so bad for Nafees Fazal at one point that she asked Indira Gandhi’s Man Friday RK Dhawan whether she was not rising in politics because she wasn’t playing “bedroom politics”. Dhawan told her never to take that path: “They will pass you around till you become a whore.” She took the warning to heart.
In a just-released tell-all book (Breaking Barriers: The Story of a Liberal Muslim Woman’s Passage in Indian Politics, with Sandhya Mendonca, Konark Publishers), Nafees doesn’t spare anyone who was unjust to her.
Guided
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Be it ancient legends or modern paranormal accounts, the mystical aura beyond the realm of rationality never fails to draw one’s undivided attention. ANANYA BORGOHAIN explores such ‘ghostly’ encounters that send shivers down the spine, and attempts to understand what about them fascinates everyone
It is difficult to describe Mumbai’s Marine Drive in words that could highlight any of its newer, unexplored nuances. It’s arguably the reflection of the pulse of the city that is often described as the portal to colourful dreams and glories. On an average day, it buzzes with local Mumbaikars spending a few idle moments there, gazing at the waves of the Arabian Sea splashing across the famous tetrapod blocks on the shore. There, almost at the end of the walkers’ path, past the spot where the Oberoi hotel stands, is a very popular peanut seller; popular, assuming the enormous and never-ending crowd that throngs him. He wears khaki pants and a light