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Raul Alfonsin, 82, former Argentine leader whose presidency has come to symbolize the return of democracy across Latin America; March 31, in Buenos Aires, of lung cancer.

Gus Cifelli, 84, star tackle who helped lead Notre Dame to three national championships and the Detroit Lions to the 1952 NFL title; March 26, in Royal Oak, Mich., of natural causes.

Paul Davis, 87, former Mississippi State head football coach who led the Bulldogs from 1962-66; March 31, in Auburn, Ala.

Herman Franks, 95, former Major League Baseball player and manager who coached greats like Willie Mays and Orlando Cepeda; March 30, in Salt Lake City, of congestive heart failure.

Frederic Gaynor, 73, Chicago-born child model who later went on to become a Foreign Service officer; March 29, in Sarasota, Fla., of cancer.

Gilda M. “Jill” Hale, 68, longtime clothing retailer in Wheaton; March 26, in Wheaton, of breast cancer.

Monte Hale, 89, one of the last of Hollywood’s celluloid “singing cowboys”; March 29, in Studio City, Calif.

Andy Hallett, 33, singer who portrayed a green-skinned demon on the vampire TV series “Angel”; March 29, in Los Angeles.

Helen Levitt, 95, a giant of 20th Century photography whose scenes of New York City street life provide a window into a vanished era; March 29, in New York.

Dr. Leon Love, 85, head of radiology at Loyola University Medical Center for 17 years; March 24, off Cozumel, Mexico, of a heart attack while snorkeling.

Walter Palmer, 87, one of Indiana’s last living members of the Tuskegee Airmen; March 28, in Indianapolis, of stomach cancer.

Earl Paulk, 81, former Georgia megachurch leader who rose to fame with his progressive evangelical ministry only to have it crumble after a series of sex scandals; March 29, in Atlanta, of cancer.

Lou Saban, 87, coached O.J. Simpson in the NFL and ran the New York Yankees during a well-traveled career; March 29, in North Myrtle Beach, S.C., after a recent fall.

Dr. William Schwartz, 86, renowned kidney disease specialist and researcher; March 15, in Los Angeles, of Alzheimer’s disease.