Deaths in December 1998

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following is a list of notable deaths in December 1998.

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.

December 1998[]

1[]

  • Delila (Richards) Abbott, 90, American politician, feminist and writer.[1]
  • Aisha Abd al-Rahman, 85, Egyptian author and professor of literature, heart attack.[2]
  • Bertil Nordahl, 81, Swedish football player and manager.
  • Freddie Young, 96, British cinematographer.

2[]

  • Theodora Mead Abel, 99, American clinical psychologist.[3]
  • Ben Guintini, 79, American baseball player.
  • Bob Haggart, 84, American dixieland jazz musician.[4]
  • Mikio Oda, 93, Japanese athlete and the first Japanese Olympic gold medalist.
  • Brian Stonehouse, 80, British painter and SEO agent during World War II.[5]

3[]

  • Wayland Drew, 66, Canadian writer.
  • Mohammad Mokhtari, 56, Iranian writer, poet and activist, murdered.
  • George Murcell, 73, British actor.
  • Bernice Shackleton, 97, New Zealand journalist and writer.
  • Graham Townsend, 56, Canadian musician, cancer.
  • Ed Widseth, 88, American football player.[6]

4[]

  • Percy Ames, 66, English footballer.
  • Druie Bowett, English artist.
  • Egil Johansen, 64, Norwegian-Swedish jazz musician.
  • Suzanne Jovin, 21, German-born American student, murdered.[7]
  • Sir Harold Kent, 95, British lawyer and public servant, HM Procurator General and Treasury Solicitor.

5[]

  • Hazel Bishop, 92, American chemist.[8]
  • Jack Connor, 78, English footballer.
  • Jean Fenwick, 91, Trinidad-born American actress.
  • Albert Gore Sr., 90, American politician and father of Al Gore.[9]
  • Boris Kabishev, 76, Soviet Air Defence Forces officer and World War II veteran.
  • Cheung Tze-keung, 43, Chinese criminal, execution by firing squad.[10]

6[]

  • César Baldaccini, 77, French sculptor.
  • Peg Leg Bates, 91, American entertainer.[11]
  • Hoshiar Singh Dahiya, 61, Indian Army officer.
  • Robert Marasco, 62, American horror novelist and playwright, lung cancer.[12]
  • Michael Zaslow, 56, American actor, cancer.[13]

7[]

  • John Addison, 78, British composer.[14]
  • Daniel Lee Corwin, 40, American serial killer, execution by lethal injection.[15]
  • Martin Rodbell, 73, American scientist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, multiple organ failure.[16]

8[]

  • Michael Craze, 56, British actor, heart attack.
  • Aaron Hopa, 27, New Zealand rugby union player, diving accident.
  • Hamilton H. Howze, 89, American general and commander of the 82nd Airborne Division.[17]
  • Aeneas Mackintosh, 71, Scottish Anglican priest.
  • Odo Josef Struger, 67, Austrian automation pioneer.[18]
  • George Roden, 60, American leader of the Branch Davidian sect, heart attack.[19]

9[]

  • Paul Lewis Hancock, 61, British geologist, bone cancer.
  • Bill Looby, 67, American soccer player.
  • Phillip Abbott Luce, 63, American author, lecturer and communist.
  • Archie Moore, 81, American boxer and World Light Heavyweight Champion, heart failure.[20]
  • Mohammad-Ja'far Pouyandeh, 44, Iranian writer and activist, murdered.

10[]

  • Wim Hora Adema, 84, Dutch children's author and feminist.[21]
  • Buddy Feyne, 86, American lyricist.
  • Wang Ganchang, 91, Chinese nuclear physicist.
  • Ray Goossens, 74, Belgian artist, animator, writer and film director.
  • Kamel Messaoudi, 37, Algerian Chaabi musician.
  • Charles D. Mize, 77, United States Marine Corps officer, complications following pneumonia and leukemia.[22]
  • Swami Satyabhakta, 99, Indian scholar, philosopher and reformer.
  • Vida Tomšič, 85, Slovenian communist and World War II partisan fighter.

11[]

  • Jack Coleman, 74, American basketball player.
  • André Lichnerowicz, 83, French differential geometer and mathematical physicist.
  • Kavi Pradeep, 83, Indian poet and songwriter.[23]
  • Lynn Strait, 30, American singer and vocalist of band Snot, car accident.
  • Max Streibl, 66, German politician.

12[]

  • Lawton Chiles, 68, American Senator from Florida and Governor of Florida.[24]
  • Tito Díaz, 28, Salvadoran footballer, murdered.
  • Jimmy "Orion" Ellis, 53, American singer, murdered during robbery.
  • Willis J. Gertsch, 92, American arachnologist.
  • Colin Minton, 53, English darts player.
  • Mo Udall, 76, American politician.[25]

13[]

  • Helen Adolf, 102, Austrian–American linguist and literature scholar.
  • Dean Fausett, 85, American painter.[26]
  • Lew Grade, 91, British impresario.[27][28]
  • Sir Richard Thomas, 66, British admiral and Black Rod.
  • Wade Watts, 79, African-American gospel preacher and civil rights activist.
  • Ariadna Welter, 68, Mexican movie actress.
  • Norbert Zongo, 49, Burkinabé investigative journalist, murdered.

14[]

  • Norman Fell, 74, American actor, bone marrow cancer.
  • A. Leon Higginbotham Jr., 70, African-American civil rights advocate, author and judge, stroke.[29]
  • Brian Lewis, 55, English footballer.[30]
  • Annette Strauss, 74, American philanthropist and mayor of Dallas.

15[]

  • Brady Boone, 40, American professional wrestler and referee, car accident.
  • Dame Unity Lister, 85, British politician.
  • Jan Meyerowitz, 85, American composer, conductor, pianist and writer.[31]
  • Rowena Moore, 88, African-American union and civic activist.
  • Ján Podhradský, 82, Slovak footballer.
  • Johnny Riddle, 93, American baseball player and coach.

16[]

  • Clay Blair, 73, American journalist and author, heart attack.[32]
  • Jocelyn Crane, 89, American carcinologist.
  • William Gaddis, 75, American novelist.[33]
  • Jack Gallagher, 82, Canadian oilman.
  • Johnny Gorsica, 83, American baseball player.
  • Jean de Montrémy, 85, French industrialist, racing driver, and race car designer.
  • Paul Rivière, 86, French Resistance fighter and politician.
  • Maneklal Sankalchand Thacker, 94, Indian engineer and academic.
  • Philip True, 50, American foreign correspondent, murdered.[34]

17[]

18[]

  • Agustín Barboza, 85, Paraguayan singer and composer.
  • C. S. Chellappa, 86, Indian writer, journalist and political activist.
  • Sohel Chowdhury, 35, Bangladeshi film actor, murdered.[36]
  • Lev Demin, 72, Soviet cosmonaut.[37]
  • Harry Haddock, 73, Scottish footballer.[38]
  • Abdurajak Abubakar Janjalani, 38-39, Filipino militant, founder of Abu Sayyaf, shot.
  • Vinod Mishra, 51, Indian communist politician, heart attack.
  • Edwin E. Moise, 79, American mathematician.[39]
  • Dorothy Nyswander, 104, American health educator.
  • Basil Travers, 79, Australian sportsman and educator.

19[]

20[]

  • Irene Hervey, 89, American actress, heart failure.[44]
  • Alan Lloyd Hodgkin, 84, British scientist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.[45]
  • Bindy Johal, 27, Canadian gangster, shot.
  • C. P. Lyons, Canadian outdoorsman and natural historian.
  • B. V. Raman, 86, Indian astrologer.[46]

21[]

  • Roger Avon, 84, British actor.
  • Karl Denver, 67, Scottish singer, brain tumor.[47]
  • André Dewavrin, 87, French officer during World War II.
  • Anne Ferguson, 57, Scottish physician and clinical researcher, pancreatic cancer.[48]
  • Clifford Inniss, 88, Barbadian cricketer and lawyer.
  • Ernst-Günther Schenck, 94, German doctor and member of the SS.
  • Richard Turnbull, 89, British colonial governor.

22[]

  • Leif Erickson, 92, American attorney and politician.
  • Virginia Graham, 86, American talk show host, heart attack.[49]
  • Charlie Hill, 80, Welsh footballer.
  • Subhashis Nag, 43, Indian mathematician.
  • Donald Soper, Baron Soper, 95, British Methodist minister, socialist and pacifist.

23[]

  • Tony Bartl, Czech artist.
  • Mark Chatfield, 45, American breaststroke swimmer, lymphoma.
  • Giulio Cesare Graziani, 83, Italian aviator.
  • Jack Hilton, 77, English rugby player.
  • Peggy Kelman, 89, Australian aviation pioneer.
  • David Manners, 98, Canadian-American actor.[50]
  • Joe Orlando, 71, Italian American illustrator, writer and cartoonist.[51]
  • Anatoly Rybakov, 87, Soviet and Russian writer.[52]
  • Michelle Thomas, 30, American actress and comedian, cancer.[53]
  • Pierre Vallières, 60, Québécois journalist and writer, heart failure.[54]

24[]

  • Syl Apps, 83, Canadian ice hockey player, heart attack.[55]
  • Ester Carloni, 101, Italian actress.
  • Viola Farber, 67, American choreographer and dancer.[56]
  • Matt Gillies, 77, Scottish football player and manager.[57]
  • Peter Janssens, 64, German musician and composer.
  • Daan Kagchelland, 84, Dutch sailor and Olympic champion.
  • William R. Perl, 92, American lawyer and psychologist.[58]
  • Raemer Schreiber, 88, American physicist.[59]

25[]

  • Bryan MacLean, 52, American singer, guitarist and songwriter, heart attack.[60]
  • Hugh Martell, 86, British Royal Navy officer.
  • John McGrath, 60, English footballer and manager in the Football League.
  • Richard Paul, 58, American actor, cancer.[61]
  • John Pulman, 75, English snooker player, domestic accident.[62]
  • Marcella Rabwin, 90, Hollywood figure and civic leader.

26[]

  • Ron Chismar, 64, American football coach.
  • Cathal Goulding, 75, Chief of Staff of the IRA and the Official IRA, cancer.
  • Hurd Hatfield, 81, American actor, heart attack.[63]
  • Helmut Mahlke, 85, German Oberstleutnant in the Luftwaffe during World War II.
  • Nell McLarty, 86, Australian cricketer.
  • Michael Sherard, 88, British fashion designer.[64]

27[]

  • Kevork Ajemian, 66, Lebanese-Armenian writer, journalist, novelist and activist.
  • Dany Bustros, 39, Lebanese belly dancer, socialite and stage actress, suicide.[65]
  • Clara Heyn, 74, Israeli botanist and professor, cancer.
  • Anne Holm, 76, Danish journalist and children's writer.
  • Robert S. Johnson, 78, American fighter pilot during World War II.[66]
  • Roy Powell, English rugby league player, heart attack.[67]
  • Ralegh Radford, 98, English archaeologist and historian.[68]

28[]

  • Wang Dezhao, 93, Chinese physicist.
  • Tyisha Miller, 19, African-American victim, shot by police.
  • Shorty Rollins, 69, American racing driver.
  • Robert Rosen, 64, American theoretical biologist.[69]
  • Mary Ann Unger, 53, American abstract sculpor, breast cancer.[70]

29[]

  • Geoff Crawford, 82, Australian politician.
  • Jean-Claude Forest, 68, French writer and illustrator of comics, asthma.
  • Phyllis Kennedy, 84, American film actress.
  • Don Taylor, 78, American actor and film director, heart failure.[71]
  • Patras Yusaf, 62, Pakistani Roman Catholic bishop.

30[]

  • Joan Brossa, 79, Catalan poet, playwright and visual artist.
  • Abbas Guliyev, 82, Azerbaijani Red Army captain and Hero of the Soviet Union.
  • Keisuke Kinoshita, 86, Japanese film director, stroke.
  • Johnny Moore, 64, American R&B singer with The Drifters, pneumonia.[72]
  • George Webb, 86, British actor.

31[]

  • Kirsty Bentley, 15, New Zealand teenage murder victim, blunt force trauma.[73]
  • George Lynn Cross, 93, American botanist and author.
  • H. Dunlop Dawbarn, 83, American businessman, philanthropist and politician.[74]
  • Ted Glossop, Australian rugby player and coach, cancer.
  • Gene Harlow, 79, American football player and coach.
  • Alan Morris, 44, English footballer, murdered.
  • Arnold Stickley, 72, English golfer.

References[]

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  2. ^ "Obituary: Aisha Abdul-Rahman". The Independent. December 15, 1998. Retrieved May 21, 2019.
  3. ^ Ford Burkhart (December 13, 1998). "Theodora Abel, 99, Psychologist Who Reached Across Cultures". The New York Times. p. 1 67. Retrieved November 18, 2020.
  4. ^ Peter Watrous (December 4, 1998). "Bob Haggart, 84, Jazz Bassist and Arranger". The New York Times. p. A 29. Retrieved November 18, 2020.
  5. ^ The Independent (January 20, 1999). "Obituary: Brian Stonehouse". London, UK. Retrieved May 21, 2019.
  6. ^ "College football loses member of Hall of Fame". The Post-Standard (Syracuse, NY). December 5, 1998.
  7. ^ Beach, Randall (December 8, 2012). "Tips in 1998 slaying of Yale student Suzanne Jovin focus on mentally disturbed grad student". New Haven Register. Retrieved May 23, 2019.
  8. ^ Mary Tannen (December 10, 1998). "Hazel Bishop, 92, an Innovator Who Made Lipstick Kissproof". The New York Times. p. B 16. Retrieved November 18, 2020.
  9. ^ Irvin Molotsky (December 7, 1998). "Albert Gore Sr., Veteran Politician, Dies at 90". The New York Times. p. B 9. Retrieved May 23, 2019.
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  74. ^ H. Dunlop Dawbarn '37
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