Deaths in July 2003

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following is a list of notable deaths in July 2003.

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.

July 2003[]

1[]

  • John Bissell Carroll, 87, American psychologist.
  • Herbie Mann, 73, American crossover jazz and bossa nova flutist.[1]
  • Bill Miller, 75, American baseball player (New York Yankees, Baltimore Orioles).[2]
  • Wesley Mouzon, 75, American professional boxer, beat Bob Montgomery.
  • N!xau, 58, Namibian actor and bushman (The Gods Must Be Crazy).
  • George Roper, 69, English comedian.[3]

2[]

  • Ivan Allen Jr., 92, American businessman and 52nd mayor of Atlanta.[4]
  • Franklin Farrell, 95, American ice hockey player (silver medal in men's ice hockey at the 1932 Winter Olympics).[5]
  • Antonio Fortich, 89, Catholic bishop and social activist.
  • Najeeb Halaby, 87, American businessman, aviator, and the father of Queen Noor of Jordan.
  • Julia Montgomery Walsh, 80, American businesswoman and stockbroker.[6]

3[]

4[]

5[]

  • George Ibrahim, 38, Pakistani Roman Catholic priest.
  • Isabelle, Countess of Paris, 91, widow of Henri, Count of Paris, pretender to the French throne.
  • Roman Lyashenko, 24, Russian ice hockey player (Dallas Stars, New York Rangers), suicide.[12]
  • Yoshio Sakurauchi, 91, Japanese politician.
  • Bebu Silvetti, 59, Argentine musician, songwriter and arranger.
  • Zhang Aiping, 93, Chinese military leader, defense minister under Deng Xiaoping, managed China's nuclear bomb program.

6[]

7[]

  • Raphael I Bidawid, 81, Iraqi Patriarch of the Chaldean Catholic Church from 1989 to 2003.[19]
  • Warren L. Carpenter, 71, American military surgeon.
  • Lee Francis, 58, Native American poet, and educator, cancer.
  • Izhak Graziani, 78, conductor.
  • Antonio Iranzo, 73, Spanish film actor.
  • Charles P. Kindleberger, 92, American economic historian and author, stroke.[20]
  • Ribs Raney, 80, American baseball player (St. Louis Browns).[21]
  • Bob Rose, 74, Australian rules footballer and coach, cancer.

8[]

9[]

  • Eberhard Blum, 84, German civil servant, head of the German Federal Intelligence Bureau (BND).[25]
  • Joe Cobbold, 76, English greyhound trainer.
  • Valerie Gearon, 65, British actress.
  • Josephine Jacobsen, 94, American poet, short story writer and essayist.[26]
  • Riley Dobi Noel, 31, American convicted murderer, execution by lethal injection.
  • Gregg Wenzel, 33, American Directorate of Operations officer for the CIA stationed in Ethiopia, traffic accident.[27]

10[]

  • Alvin Alcorn, 90, American New Orleans jazz trumpeter.[28]
  • Winston Graham, 95, English novelist.[29]
  • John Purdell, 44, American musician and record producer, cancer.
  • Hartley Shawcross, Baron Shawcross, 101, Britain's chief prosecutor at the Nuremberg Trials.
  • Manuel Vasques, 76, Portuguese footballer.

11[]

  • Mickey Deans, 68, American discoteque manager and (last) husband of actress and singer Judy Garland.
  • Zahra Kazemi, 55, Iran-born Canadian journalist, death by torture.
  • Dorothy Canning Miller, 99, American art curator.[30]
  • Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, 6th Marquess of Salisbury, 86, British aristocrat and politician.
  • Ray Whitrod, 88, Australian police officer and Queensland Police Commissioner.[31]
  • Ken Whyld, 77, British chess author (The Oxford Companion to Chess), historian and columnist.[32]
  • Teddy Yip, 96, Indonesian businessman and race car driver and team owner (Formula One, IndyCar).[33]

12[]

  • Benny Carter, 95, American jazz pioneer.[34]
  • Patricia Courtney, 71, American baseball player (AAGPBL)[35]
  • Roger Freeman, 51, British rally driver, motor race accident.
  • Mark Lovell, 43, British rally driver, motor race accident.
  • Eliot Wald, 57, American comedy writer for theater, television and movies (The Second City, Saturday Night Live, Camp Nowhere).[36]

13[]

  • Alpha L. Bowser, 92, American U.S. Marine Corps lieutenant general (Battle of Iwo Jima, Battle of Chosin Reservoir).[37]
  • Kadawedduwe Jinavamsa Mahathera, 96, Sri Lankan Buddhist monk.
  • Jim Quinlan, 81, American professional basketball player (Rochester Royals).[38]
  • Eileen Rodgers, 73, American singer and Broadway performer, lung cancer.[39]
  • Compay Segundo, 95, Cuban musician and star of the Buena Vista Social Club, kidney failure.[40]

14[]

15[]

  • Roberto Bolaño, 50, Chilean-Spanish writer (The Savage Detectives, 2666), liver failure.[44]
  • John Richard Hyde, 90, Canadian soldier and politician.
  • Judith Hare, Countess of Listowel, 100, Hungarian-born British writer and aristocrat.
  • Tex Schramm, 83, American president and general manager of the Dallas Cowboys professional football team.[45]
  • Alexander Walker, 73, Northern Irish film critic (London Evening Standard) and author.[46]
  • Elisabeth Welch, 99, American singer and actress.[47]

16[]

17[]

  • Pat Fillingham, 89, English test pilot for the de Havilland company.
  • Ferenc Gömbös, 59, Hungarian politician, car accident.
  • Dr. David Kelly, 59, British scientist and weapons expert, suicide.
  • Rosalyn Tureck, 89, American pianist and harpsichordist.[52]
  • Walter Zapp, 97, Baltic German inventor (Minox subminiature camera).[53]

18[]

  • Jane Barbe, 74, American voice actress (phone company "Time Lady") and singer, cancer.[54]
  • Luther L. Bohanon, 100, American judge (U.S. Dist. Judge of the U.S. Dist. Court of Eastern, Northern, Western Districts of Oklahoma).[55]
  • Marc Camoletti, 79, French playwright.
  • Norman Rasmussen, 75, American physicist.[56]
  • Brad Rone, 35, American boxer, injuries sustained in boxing.[57]

19[]

  • Bill Bright, 81, American evangelical Christian and founder of Campus Crusade for Christ.[58]
  • Elena Caffarena, 100, Chilean lawyer and politician.
  • Pierre Graber, 94, Swiss politician and member of the Swiss Federal Council (1970–1978).
  • Vic Vargas, 64, Filipino actor.
  • Jessica Grace Wing, 31, American theatrical composer and filmmaker.[59]

20[]

  • Lauri Aus, 32, Estonian Olympic racing cyclist (1992, 1996, 2000, 2000), struck on bicycle by drunk driver.[60]
  • Nicolas Freeling, 76, British crime writer.[61]
  • Elliot Norton, 100, American Boston-based theater critic, "The Dean of American Theatre Critics".[62]
  • Ángel Felicísimo Rojas, 93, Ecuadorian writer.
  • William Woolfolk, 86, American writer, wrote novels, non-fiction, television scripts, comic books.[63]

21[]

  • Walter M. "Matt" Jefferies, 81, American art director (Star Trek series); designer of the Starship Enterprise.
  • John Davies, 65, New Zealand olympian (track) and president of the New Zealand Olympic Committee.
  • Tim Hemensley, 31, Australian singer & bass guitarist, heroin overdose.[64]

22[]

  • Arthur W. Adamson, 83, American chemist, made contributions to inorganic photochemistry.[65]
  • Norma Elaine Brown, 77, American U.S. Air Force major general.[66]
  • Hamer H. Budge, 92, American politician (16th Chairman of the SEC, U.S. Representative for Idaho's 2nd congressional district).[67]
  • Uday Hussein, 39, Iraqi politician and eldest son of Saddam Hussein, killed by US troops.
  • Qusay Hussein, 37, Iraqi politician and second son of Saddam Hussein, killed by US troops.
  • Norman Lewis, 95, British travel writer.[68]
  • Serge Silberman, 86, French film producer.
  • Richard L. Walker, 81, American diplomat (U.S. Ambassador to South Korea) and professor.[69]

23[]

24[]

  • James Alesia, 89, American judge (U.S. District Judge of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois).[74]
  • Henri Attal, 67, French actor.
  • Dame Ella Campbell, 92, New Zealand botanist.[75]
  • Božidar Drenovac, 81, Serbian football player and manager.
  • Heinz Knobloch, 77, German writer and journalist.
  • Dan Smoot, 89, American FBI agent and political activist.

25[]

  • Ludwig Bölkow, 91, German aeronautical engineer, designed the world's first jet fighter, Nazi Germany's Me262.[76]
  • Erik Brann, 52, American Iron Butterfly guitarist.[77]
  • Ken Ellis, 75, Welsh footballer.[78]
  • Norm McRae, 55, American baseball player (Detroit Tigers).[79]
  • Thomas Savage (novelist), 88, American novelist.[80]
  • John Schlesinger, 77, English film director (Midnight Cowboy, Marathon Man, Sunday Bloody Sunday).[81]

26[]

  • William Dargie, 91, Australian painter.
  • Robert Favart, 92, French actor.
  • Richard Wayne Dirksen, 82, American composer and organist-choirmaster Washington National Cathedral.
  • John Higham, 82, American historian.[82]
  • Harold C. Schonberg, 87, American music critic and journalist.[83]

27[]

28[]

  • Gladys Edgerly Bates, 107, American sculptor, member of the Philadelphia Ten, founding member of the Mystic Museum of Art.[88]
  • Emily Bavar, 88, American journalist, broke the story that Walt Disney was buying land near Orlando for Disney World.[89]
  • Aaron Bell, 82, American jazz bassist, composer and teacher, bassist for Duke Ellington.[90]
  • True Eames Boardman, 93, American actor and scriptwriter (Gunsmoke, Perry Mason, The Virginian, Bonanza).[91]
  • Adrian Burk, 75, American professional football player (Baylor, Baltimore Colts, Philadelphia Eagles).[92]
  • Valerie, Lady Goulding, 84, Irish Senator & disability rights campaigner.
  • Greg Guidry, 49, American singer-songwriter, suicide.
  • Noite Ilustrada, 75, Brazilian singer-songwriter and guitarist.
  • Samuel Oschin, 89, Los Angeles entrepreneur and philanthropist.

29[]

  • E.B. Cox, 89, Canadian sculptor.
  • Luther Henderson, 84, American arranger, composer, and pianist.[93]
  • Tex McCrary, 92, American journalist and public relations specialist.
  • Jim Pruett, 85, American baseball player (Philadelphia Athletics).[94]
  • Foday Sankoh, 65, Sierra Leonean rebel leader, complications following a stroke.
  • Sir Gerard Vaughan, 80, British psychiatrist and politician.[95]
  • Johnny Walker, 82, Indian comic actor, appeared in more than 300 films.[96]

30[]

  • Howard Armstrong, 94, American string band fiddler and mandolinist and country blues musician.[97]
  • Will Atkinson, 95, English shepherd and musician, known for playing the accordion and harmonica.[98]
  • Fred Cherry, 77, American activist.
  • Gene Hasson, 88, American baseball player (Philadelphia Athletics).[99]
  • Steve Hislop, 41, Scottish motorcycle racer, helicopter accident.
  • Mendel L. Peterson, 85, American archeologist and former curator at the Smithsonian Institution.
  • Sam Phillips, 80, American record producer.[100]

31[]

  • Edward P. Alexander, 96, American historian and author, an authority on museums, heart ailment.[101]
  • Bigode, 81, Brazilian footballer, respiratory problems.
  • Guido Crepax, 70, Italian comics artist.
  • Cyril Foray, 69, Sierra Leonean educator, politician, diplomat and historian.
  • Patricia Goldman-Rakic, 66, American professor neuroscience, neurology, psychiatry and psychology, struck by a car.[102]
  • Sardar Muhammad Ibrahim Khan, 88, Pakistani politician, first President of Azad Kashmir.
  • Vernon Prins, 79, Sri Lankan cricketer.
  • Fergie Semple, 81, British Army officer.
  • Roland Svensson, 93, Swedish painter, writer, and artist.

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