Deaths in August 2002

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following is a list of notable deaths in August 2002.

Entries for each day are listed alphabetically by surname. A typical entry lists information 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.

August 2002[]

1[]

  • Hector Abdelnour, 80, Venezuelan Navy officer.
  • Francisco Arcellana, 85, Filipino writer, poet and journalist.
  • Navin Chandra Barot, 78, Indian politician.
  • Theo Bruce, 79, Australian long jumper (silver medal winner in men's long jump at the 1948 Summer Olympics).[1]
  • Adolf Glunz, 86, German Luftwaffe flying ace during World War II.
  • Henry Mazer, 84, American / Taiwanese conductor and recording artist.[2]
  • Moutlakgola P.K. Nwako, 79, Botswana politician and diplomat.
  • Don Owen, 90, American professional wrestling promoter.
  • Russ Rebholz, 93, American football player.
  • Jack Tighe, 88, American baseball coach.
  • Geoffrey Paulson Townsend, 91, English architect.

2[]

  • Joe Allison, 77, American songwriter, radio and television personality and record producer.[3]
  • Roberto Cobo, 72, Mexican actor (Los Olvidados, The Place Without Limits).[4]
  • Avraham Givelber, 92, Israeli politician.
  • Kevin Hardiman, 87, Australian rules footballer.
  • Ilona Kolonits, 80, Hungarian documentary film director and news correspondent.
  • Roy Kral, 80, American jazz pianist and vocalist, congestive heart failure.[5]
  • Magda László, 90, Hungarian operatic soprano.
  • Sammy Onyango, 41, Kenyan soccer player, traffic accident.

3[]

  • Edward Brodney, 92, American artist, known for his drawings and paintings of World War II.[6]
  • Kathleen Hughes-Hallett, 84, Canadian Olympic fencer.
  • Peter Miles, 64, American actor.
  • Carmen Silvera, 80, UK television and theatre actress (Dad's Army, 'Allo 'Allo!).
  • John G. Zimmerman, 74, American photographer, an innovator in sports photojournalism.[7]

4[]

  • William R. Crawford Jr., 74, American diplomat and ambassador (Yemen, Cyprus).
  • Millard Lang, 89, American soccer and lacrosse player.
  • Mike Payne, 40, American Major League Baseball pitcher (Atlanta Braves), EEE.[8]
  • Friedel Sellschop, 72, South African scientist.

5[]

  • Jes Peter Asmussen, 73, Danish Iranologist, his research focused on the religions of Iran.[9]
  • Peter Costigan, 67, Australian journalist and Lord Mayor of Melbourne from 1999 to 2001.[10]
  • Josh Ryan Evans, 20, American actor ("Timmy" on Passions).[11]
  • Chick Hearn, 85, television and radio announcer for the Los Angeles Lakers basketball team since 1960.[12]
  • Willis Hudlin, 96, American baseball player (Cleveland Indians, Washington Senators, St. Louis Browns, New York Giants).[13]
  • Franco Lucentini, 82, Italian writer (The Sunday Woman).
  • Darrell Porter, 50, American baseball player (Milwaukee Brewers, Kansas City Royals, St. Louis Cardinals, Texas Rangers).[14]
  • Junius Scales, 85, American activist and leader of the Communist Party of the United States of America.[15]
  • Winifred Watson, 95, English writer (Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day).[16]

6[]

  • Jim Crawford, 54, Scottish motor racing driver, liver failure.[17]
  • Edsger Dijkstra, 72, computer scientist.[18][19]
  • John Fage, 81, British historian.[20]
  • Justin Meyer, 63, American vintner and enologist, heart attack.[21]
  • Christopher Speer, 28, U.S. Army combat medic and an armed member of, K.I.A.

7[]

  • Dominick Browne, 4th Baron Oranmore and Browne, 100, British aristocrat.
  • Molly Harrison, 92, English museum curator and author, hypertension.
  • Roy LoPresti, 73, American aeronautical engineer.
  • Al Smith, 56, Canadian ice hockey player, pancreatic cancer.

8[]

  • Bernard Chidzero, 75, Zimbabwean politician, Finance Minister (1983–1995).
  • Bruce Johnston, 63, American criminal, cancer.
  • Chen Junsheng, 74, Chinese politician.
  • John N. McLaughlin, 83, American lieutenant general, heart attack.
  • Charles Poletti, 99, American lawyer and politician.[22]
  • Kapitolina Rumiantseva, 76, Russian Soviet realist painter and graphic artist.
  • Doris Buchanan Smith, 68, American author children's books, ALS.

9[]

  • George Alfred Barnard, 86, British statistician, known for his work on quality control and the likelihood principle.[23]
  • Don Chastain, 66, American actor and singer (Alfred Hitchcock Hour, Colt .45, The Rockford Files, Hawaii Five-O).[24]
  • Trần Độ, 78, Vietnamese politician and Lieutenant General of the People's Army of Vietnam.
  • Ruud van Feggelen, 78, Dutch water polo player and coach (bronze medal in water polo at the 1948 Summer Olympics).[25]
  • Jake Fendley, 73, American professional basketball player (Northwestern University, Fort Wayne Pistons).[26]
  • Ray D. Free, 92, Major General in the U.S. Army Reserves.
  • Erna Furman, 76, Austrian-American child psychoanalyst.[27]
  • Meredith Gardner, 89, American linguist and codebreaker.
  • Peter Matz, 73, American musician, composer, arranger and conductor, lung cancer.
  • Bruce McCaffrey, 63, Canadian politician.
  • Paul Samson, 49, English guitarist, cancer.

10[]

  • Robert Frank Borkenstein, 89, American police officer and inventor of the breathalyzer.[28]
  • Colin Eggleston, 60, Australian film and television director and writer (Long Weekend, Homicide).[29]
  • Michael Houser, 40, American guitarist, pancreatic cancer.[30]
  • Kristen Nygaard, 75, Norwegian computer scientist and politician, heart attack.[31]
  • Eugene Odum, 88, American biologist.
  • Mordecai Waxman, 85, American rabbi, prominent conservative, known for confronting Pope John Paul II.[32]
  • Doris Wishman, 90, American film director, screenwriter and producer, known for low-budget "B" movies.[33]

11[]

12[]

  • Michael De-la-Noy, 68, British journalist and author (The Queen Behind the Throne).[39]
  • Sir John Rennie, 85, British diplomat.[40]
  • Enos Slaughter, 86, American baseball player (St. Louis Cardinals, New York Yankees, Kansas City Athletics) and member of the MLB Hall of Fame.[41]
  • Étienne Trocmé, 77, French historian and theologian.
  • Dame Marjorie Williamson, 89, British educator, physicist and university administrator.[42]

13[]

14[]

  • Peter R. Hunt, 77, British film editor.[44]
  • Mary Pickford, 100, British neuroendocrinologist.
  • Larry Rivers, 78, American painter.[45]
  • Neal Travis, 62, New Zealand journalist and novelist.[46]
  • Dave Williams, 30, American singer of Drowning Pool, heart failure.[47]

15[]

  • Heinz Bauer, 74, German mathematician.[48]
  • Jesse Brown, 58, American United States Marine and United States Secretary of Veterans Affairs.[49]
  • George Agbazika Innih, 63, Nigerian army general and politician.
  • Arnie Moser, 87, American baseball player (Cincinnati Reds).[50]
  • Kyle Rote, 73, American gridiron football player.[51]
  • King-lui Wu, 84, Chinese-American architect, early advocate of the importance of daylight in architecture.[52]
  • Haim Yosef Zadok, 88, Israeli jurist and politician.

16[]

  • Edith Addams, 95, Belgian-American Olympic fencer (Belgium), costume designer for theater, ballet and film and a theatrical producer.[53]
  • Janusz Bardach, 83, Polish-American Siberian gulag survivor and renowned plastic surgeon.[54]
  • Allan George Bromley, 55, American computer scientist, historian of computing.[55]
  • Jeff Corey, 88, American actor (Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, In Cold Blood, Little Big Man).[56]
  • Martin Deutsch, 85, Austrian-American physicist and professor of physics at MIT, known as the discoverer of positronium.[57]
  • Morgan "Bill" Evans, 92, American horticulturalist and Disney landscape designer, transformed eighty acres of Anaheim into Disneyland.[58]
  • Abu Nidal, 65, Palestinian terrorist.[59][60]
  • Sergey Perets, 32, Russian police officer.
  • Ola Belle Reed, 85, American singer.
  • John Roseboro, 69, American baseball player (Brooklyn/Los Angeles Dodgers, Minnesota Twins, Washington Senators).[61]
  • Stephen Yokich, 66, American labor union activist and President of the United Auto Workers.[62]

17[]

18[]

19[]

  • Alastair Gordon, 6th Marquess of Aberdeen and Temair, 82, British botanical artist and art critic.[70]
  • Eduardo Chillida, 78, Spanish Basque sculptor.[71]
  • Irving Copi, 85, American philosopher, logician and textbook author (Introduction to Logic).[72]
  • Satchidananda Saraswati, 87, Indian religious teacher, spiritual master and yoga adept.[73]
  • Sunday Silence, 16, thoroughbred race horse, winner of the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness Stakes.

20[]

  • Wesley Bennett, 89, American basketball player.
  • Chris Columbus, 100, American jazz drummer.
  • Robert H. Dedman Sr., 76, American businessman and philanthropist.
  • Augustine Geve, Solomon Islands Cabinet Minister, assassinated.
  • John Willett, 85, British journalist and translator of the works of Bertolt Brecht into English.[74]

21[]

  • O. A. Bushnell, 89, American microbiologist, medical historian and writer.[75]
  • Bob Cristofani, 81, Australian cricketer.
  • Jimmy Deane, 81, British Trotskyist and one of the founders of the Revolutionary Socialist League.[76]
  • Pereji Solomon, 92, Indian bishop.
  • Joseph H. Wales, 94, American ichthyologist, professor and pathologist.[77]

22[]

23[]

  • Stafford Beer, 75, British theorist, consultant and author, known for his work in operational research and management cybernetics.[80]
  • Dennis Fimple, 61, American character actor (Petticoat Junction, Here Come the Brides, Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C., Green Acres).[81]
  • Emily Genauer, 91, American art critic.[82]
  • Robert van Scoyk, 74, American television writer, producer and story editor.[83]
  • Wayne Simmons, 32, American Football player, single-car crash.
  • Hoyt Wilhelm, 80, American baseball player (New York Giants, Baltimore Orioles, Chicago White Sox) and a member of the MLB Hall of Fame.[84]

24[]

  • Ted Ashley, 80, American film studio executive (chairman of Warner Bros) and talent agent, complications following heart surgery.[85]
  • Alan Brash, 89, New Zealand clergyman.
  • Hugh Cruttwell, 83, English teacher of drama and principal of the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art.[86]
  • Nikolay Guryanov, 93, Russian Orthodox priest.
  • Cornelis Johannes van Houten, 82, Dutch astronomer.
  • Johnny Wilson, 86, American professional football player (Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland Rams).[87]

25[]

  • Per Anger, 88, Swedish diplomat, known for shielding thousands of Hungarian Jews from Nazi death camps.[88]
  • Audrey Barker, 69, British artist.[89]
  • Raúl Chibás, 86, Cuban politician, military officer and close associate of Fidel Castro, defected to U.S. in 1960.[90]
  • Dorothy Hewett, 79, Australian poet, playwright and novelist.
  • Raju, 41, Sri Lankan member of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).
  • Åke Söderlund, 77, Swedish racewalking athlete.
  • William Warfield, 82, American concert bass-baritone singer and actor, complications following neck injuries from a fall.[91]

26[]

  • Aslambek Abdulkhadzhiev, 40, Chechen warlord, killed in action.
  • Walter J. D. Annand, 79, Scottish aeronautical engineer, academic and author.[92]
  • Thomas Gordon, 84, American clinical psychologist.
  • Vincent Massey, 75, Australian biochemist and enzymologist.
  • Georg Werner, 98, Swedish swimmer (bronze medal in men's 4 x 200 metre freestyle relay at the 1924 Summer Olympics).[93]
  • Harlow Wilcox, 59, American session musician from Norman, Oklahoma, heart attack.

27[]

  • Lawrence Batley, 91, English businessman and philanthropist, a pioneer in the wholesale cash and carry business in the U.K.[94]
  • Edwin Sill Fussell, 80, American scholar of English literature.[95]
  • A. S. Gnanasambandan, 85, Indian Tamil language writer, scholar and literary critic.
  • George Mitchell, 85, Scottish musician (The Black and White Minstrel Show).
  • John S. Wilson, 89, American music critic for The New York Times for four decades.[96]

28[]

  • David Bierk, 58, American-Canadian artist.[97]
  • Fritz Feldmann, 86, Swiss rower (men's coxed eights rowing at the 1936 Summer Olympics).[98]
  • Kay Gardner, 62, American musician, composer, author, and Dianic priestess, heart attack.
  • Jerri Mumford, 93, British-Canadian servicewoman during WWII.
  • George Riley, 79, Canadian politician.
  • Rudolf Schnackenburg, 88, German Catholic priest and New Testament scholar.

29[]

  • Betty Forbes, 85, New Zealand track and field athlete.
  • Phoebe Gilman, 62, Canadian-American author and illustrator, leukemia.
  • Lance Macklin, 82, British racing driver.
  • Paul Tripp, 91, children's musician, author, songwriter, and actor.[99]
  • Anatoliy Yulin, 73, Soviet (Belarusian) Olympic athlete (men's 400 metres hurdles: 1952, 1956, men's 4 × 400 metres relay: 1956).[100]

30[]

  • Thomas J. Anderson, 91, American publisher and politician.
  • Mariya Bayda, 80, Russian medical orderly during World War II.
  • Maia Berzina, 91, Russian geographer, cartographer and ethnologer.
  • Pepsi Bethel, 83, American jazz dancer, choreographer and dance troupe leader (Pepsi Bethel Authentic Jazz Dance Theater).[101]
  • Dave Dalby, 51, American professional football player (UCLA, Oakland/Los Angeles Raiders).[102]
  • J. Lee Thompson, 88, British film director, congestive heart failure.[103]
  • Horst Wendlandt, 80, German film producer.[104]
  • Zaid ibn Shaker, 67, Jordanian politician and soldier (Prime Minister of Jordan).[105]

31[]

  • Farhad, 58, Iranian pop, rock, and folk musician, hepatitis C.
  • Lionel Hampton, 94, American jazz musician.
  • Lucas Johnson, 61, American visual artist, heart failure.
  • Martin Kamen, 89, American scientist.[106]
  • George Porter, Baron Porter of Luddenham, 81, British Nobel Prize winner in chemistry.[107]

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