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Lewis, 68, New Orleans, preserver of the city’s performance traditions. JoAnn Stokes-Smith, 87, Charleston, S.C., loved to travel and covered much of the globe. Fred Walter Gray, 75, Benton County, Wash., liked his bacon and hash browns crispy. John Cofrancesco, 52, New Jersey, administrator at a nursing facility. Alan Lund, 81, Washington, conductor with “the most amazing ear”. Donald Raymond Haws, 88, Jacksonville, Fla., administered Holy Eucharist to hospital patients. Black N Mild, 44, New Orleans, bounce D.J. Michael Mika, 73, Chicago, Vietnam veteran. Luis Juarez, 54, Romeoville, Ill., traveled often in the United States and Mexico. Dry, 55, Tulsa, Okla., ordained minister. Patricia Frieson, 61, Chicago, former nurse. Loretta Mendoza Dionisio, 68, Los Angeles, cancer survivor born in the Philippines. Cornelius Lawyer, 84, Bellevue, Wash., sharecropper’s son. Jermaine Ferro, 77, Lee County, Fla., wife with little time to enjoy a new marriage. Marion Krueger, 85, Kirkland, Wash., great-grandmother with an easy laugh. Patricia Dowd, 57, San Jose, Calif., auditor in Silicon Valley. The 1,000 names listed here reflect just 1% of the toll. As the country nears a grim milestone of 100,000 deaths attributed to the virus, The New York Times scoured obituaries and death notices honoring those who died. Numbers alone cannot possibly measure the impact of the coronavirus on America, whether it is the number of patients treated, jobs interrupted or lives cut short.