Deaths in March 2002

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following is a list of notable deaths in March 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.

March 2002[]

1[]

  • John Blume, 92, American structural engineer, known as "the father of earthquake engineering".[1]
  • C. Farris Bryant, 87, American Governor (34th Governor of Florida from 1961 to 1965).[2]
  • Dino Casanova, 35, American professional wrestler, heart attack.
  • John Challens, 86, British scientist and civil servant, helped develop Britain's first atomic bomb.[3]
  • Barbara Davies, 46, English teacher and peace campaigner (Christian Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament).[4]
  • Marion Flanagan, 77, American football player.
  • David Mann, 85, American songwriter.
  • Henry H. "Hank" Price, 86, American politician.
  • Bob Smith, 76, American professional football player (Brooklyn Dodgers, Detroit Lions).[5]
  • Hocine Soltani, 29, Algerian boxer, murdered.
  • Doreen Waddell, 36, British soul singer (Soul II Soul).[6]
  • Roger Plumpton Wilson, 96, British Anglican prelate.[7]

2[]

  • Andrés Archila, 88, Guatemalan violinist and music conductor.[8]
  • Jeanne Burbank, 86, American scientist in the field of electrochemistry.
  • Alvin Eicoff, 80, American advertising executive, widely recognized as a founder of direct response television advertising.[9]
  • Friedrich Gorenstein, 69, Russian-Jewish author and screenwriter.
  • Don Haig, 68, Canadian filmmaker, editor, and producer.
  • Ellis L. Perry, 82, American vice admiral.
  • Fritz-Rudolf Schultz, 85, German World War II army officer and politician.
  • Alexei Yegorov, 26, Russian professional ice hockey player (San Jose Sharks).[10]

3[]

  • Henry Nathaniel Andrews, 91, American paleobotanist, recognized as an expert on the Devonian and Carboniferous periods.[11]
  • G. M. C. Balayogi, 50, Indian lawyer and politician.
  • Calvin Carrière, 80, American fiddler.
  • Marvin E. Frankel, 81, American judge (United States District Judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York).[12]
  • Harlan Howard, 74, American country music songwriter ("I Fall to Pieces", "Busted", "Heartaches By The Number", "Why Not Me").[13]
  • Al Pollard, 73, American professional football player (Army, New York Yanks, Philadelphia Eagles) and broadcaster, lymphoma.[14]
  • Roy Porter, 55, British historian and writer, known for his work on the history of medicine.[15]

4[]

  • Eric Flynn, 62, British actor and singer (Ivanhoe, The Caesars, Freewheelers).[16]
  • Bernard Matemera, 56, Zimbabwean sculptor.
  • Ernest Mercier, 88, Canadian agronomist and deputy minister.
  • Elyne Mitchell, 88, Australian author
  • Prunella Ransome, 59, English actress.
  • Velibor Vasović, 62, Serbian footballer and manager, heart attack.
  • Thomas Michael Whalen III, 68, American attorney and politician (three-term mayor of Albany), car accident.[17]

5[]

  • Howard Cannon, 90, American politician (U.S. Senator from Nevada from 1959 to 1983).[18]
  • Péter Kiss, 65, Hungarian mathematician.
  • Frances Macdonald, 87, English painter.
  • William Nagle, 54, Australian soldier, author, actor, and screenwriter.
  • Huang Shun-hsing, 78, Taiwanese politician, heart attack.
  • Clay Smith, 87, American baseball player (Cleveland Indians, Detroit Tigers).[19]
  • Surendra Jha 'Suman', 91, Indian poet, writer, publisher and politician, heart failure.
  • Harry Wingfield, 91, English illustrator, known for his drawings for the Key Words Reading Scheme.[20]

6[]

  • Piet Bannenberg, 91, Dutch Olympic swimmer (men's 4 × 200 metre freestyle relay at the 1928 Summer Olympics).[21]
  • Alice Bauer, 74, American professional golfer, one of the founders of the LPGA.[22]
  • Chuck Chapman, 90, Canadian Olympic basketball player (silver medal winner in basketball at the 1936 Summer Olympics).[23]
  • Eddie Flynn, 82, Irish football player.
  • Bryan Fogarty, 32, Canadian professional ice hockey player (Quebec Nordiques, Pittsburgh Penguins, Montreal Canadiens).[24]
  • David Jenkins, 89, Welsh librarian.
  • Dietrich Schmidt, 82, German Luftwaffe night fighter ace during World War II.
  • Donald Wilson, 91, British television writer and producer (The Forsyte Saga, Doctor Who).[25]
  • Ernie Williamson, 79, American professional football player (Washington Redskins, New York Giants, Los Angeles Dons).[26]

7[]

  • Geoff Charles, 93, Welsh photojournalist.[27]
  • Troy Graham, 52, American professional wrestler, heart attack.
  • Mickey Haslin, 92, American baseball player (Philadelphia Phillies, Boston Bees, New York Giants).[28]
  • Mati Klarwein, 69, German painter, cancer.
  • Franziska Rochat-Moser, 35, Swiss marathon runner (1997 New York City Marathon winner, Olympic women's marathon: 1992, 1996).[29]
  • Shelley Smith Mydans, 86, American novelist, journalist and prisoner of war.[30]
  • Charles H. Wright, 83, American physician, founder of the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History.[31]

8[]

9[]

  • Jack Baer, 87, American baseball coach.
  • Mary Elmes, Irish aid worker credited who saved over 200 Jewish children during World War II.
  • Hamish Henderson, 82, Scottish poet.
  • Vinko Kandija, 67, Croatian handball player and coach.
  • Bora Spužić Kvaka, 67, Serbian vocalist and recording artist.
  • Carlos Casares Mouriño, 60, Spanish Galician language writer, cardiac arrest.
  • Irene Worth, 85, American actress, three-time Tony Award winner: Tiny Alice, Sweet Bird of Youth, Lost in Yonkers.[36]

10[]

  • Irán Eory, 64, Iranian-Mexican actress, Intracerebral hemorrhage.
  • George Fix, 62, American mathematician, considered one of the world's pre-eminent applied mathematicians, cancer.[37]
  • Genevieve Fiore, 90, American women's rights and peace activist.
  • Gilmore Schjeldahl, 89, American businessman.[38]
  • Shirley Scott, 67, American jazz organist, heart failure.[39]
  • Howard Thompson, 82, American journalist and film critic, pneumonia.[40]

11[]

  • Al Cowens, 50, American baseball player (Kansas City Royals, California Angels, Detroit Tigers, Seattle Mariners), heart attack.[41]
  • Marion Dönhoff, 92, German journalist and publisher of Die Zeit, known as a leading journalist opposed to Hitler.[42]
  • Genevieve George, 74, American baseball player (AAGPBL).[43]
  • Rudolf Hell, 100, German inventor and manufacturer.
  • Pervez Iqbal, 26, Pakistani cricketer, pollen allergy.
  • Willibald Jentschke, 90, Austrian-German nuclear physicist.
  • Franjo Kuharić, 82, Croatian Catholic cardinal, cardiac arrest.
  • Herbert Spencer, 77, British designer, writer and photographer.
  • James Tobin, 84, American economist.[44]

12[]

  • Peter Blau, 84, American sociologist.[45]
  • Steve Gromek, 82, American baseball player (Cleveland Indians, Detroit Tigers).[46]
  • Spyros Kyprianou, 69, 2nd President of Cyprus.[47]
  • Rose Mandel, 91, Polish-born American photographer.
  • Jean-Paul Riopelle, 78, Canadian painter and sculptor.

13[]

  • Rovshan Aliyev, Azerbaijani criminalist, murdered.
  • Hans-Georg Gadamer, 102, German philosopher.
  • Lou Kahn, 86, American baseball player, manager, scout and coach.
  • Alice du Pont Mills, 89, American aviator.
  • Hubert Wagner, 61, Polish volleyball player and coach (men's volleyball at the 1968 Summer Olympics).[48]

14[]

  • Kevin Danaher, 89, Irish folklorist and author on Irish traditional customs and beliefs.[49]
  • M. J. Perera, 87, Sri Lankan civil servant.
  • Leon L. Van Autreve, 82, US Army Sergeant Major.
  • Cherry Wilder, 71, New Zealand writer.
  • Thomas Winship, 81, American newspaper editor of the Boston Globe from 1965 until 1984.[50]
  • Henry Woods, 83, American judge (U.S. District Judge of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas).[51]

15[]

  • Tamala Krishna Goswami, 55, member of this body since its beginnings, car accident.
  • Rand Holmes, 60, Canadian artist and illustrator, Hodgkin's lymphoma.
  • Marshall Leib, 63, American singer, heart attack.
  • Pat Weaver, 93, American television executive, credited with creating Today, Tonight, Home, Wide Wide World.[52]
  • Jairo Zulbarán, 32, Colombian football player, murdered.

16[]

  • Carmelo Bene, 64, Italian actor, director and screenwriter.[53]
  • Isaías Duarte Cancino, 63, Colombian Catholic priest and archbishop, killed by the FARC.
  • Sir Marcus Fox, 74, British politician (Member of Parliament for Shipley).[54]
  • Umar Kayam, 69, Indonesian sociologist and writer.
  • Kid Azteca, 88, Mexican boxer.
  • Danilo Stojković, 67, Serbian actor.

17[]

  • Arthur Altschul, 81, American banker.[55]
  • Lefty Bertrand, 93, American baseball player (Philadelphia Phillies).[56]
  • Elizabeth Cadbury-Brown, 79, American-British architect (Royal College of Art, World's End housing development).[57]
  • Bill Davis, 60, American football coach.
  • Ernest E. Debs, 98, American politician, California State Assembly (1942–1947), L.A. County Supervisor (1958–1974).[58]
  • Rajammal P. Devadas, 82, Indian nutritionist and educator.
  • Văn Tiến Dũng, 84, Vietnamese general in the People's Army of Vietnam (PAVN).
  • Rosetta LeNoire, 90, African-American stage and television actress.[59]
  • Luise Rinser, 90, German writer.[60]
  • Paul Runyan, 93, American professional golfer (two-time PGA Championship winner and a member of the World Golf Hall of Fame).[61]
  • William Witney, 86, American film and television director, known as a "B" movie action director.[62]

18[]

  • Don Betourne, 87, American professional basketball player and coach (Kankakee Gallagher Trojans).[63]
  • Reginald Covill, 96, British cricketer.
  • Marcel Denis, 79, Belgian comic artist (Hultrasson, Les Frères Clips, Tif et Tondu).[64]
  • Maude Farris-Luse, 115, American supercentenarian.
  • R. A. Lafferty, 87, American science fiction writer.
  • Gösta Winbergh, 58, Swedish operatic tenor.[65]

19[]

  • Anne-Lisa Amadou, 72, Norwegian writer and translator.
  • John Patton, 66, American jazz, blues and R&B musician, complications from diabetes.
  • Erkki Salmenhaara, 61, Finnish composer and musicologist.
  • Nelson Ikon Wu, 82, Chinese and American professor of Asian art history, cancer.

20[]

  • Samuel Warren Carey, 90, Australian geologist, an early advocate of continental drift.[66]
  • Eugene Figg, 65, American structural engineer, award-winning designer of dozens of bridges (Sunshine Skyway Bridge).[67]
  • John E. Gray, 95, American educational administrator, President of Lamar University.
  • Ivan Novikoff, 102, Russian-American premier ballet master (among his students were Robert Joffrey and Gerald Arpino).[68]
  • Richard Robinson, 51, English cricketer.

21[]

22[]

  • Sir Kingsford Dibela, 70, Governor-General of Papua New Guinea.
  • Hugh R. Stephen, 88, Canadian politician.
  • Josef von Stroheim, 79, American sound editor, lung cancer.
  • Harry Worton, 81, Canadian politician.

23[]

  • John Biby, 90, American Olympic sailor (gold medal winner in 8 metre sailing at the 1932 Summer Olympics).[74]
  • Richard Bradford, 69, American novelist (Red Sky at Morning, So Far from Heaven).[75]
  • Jack Doolan, 82, American professional football player (Georgetown, New York Giants, Chicago Cardinals).[76]
  • Eileen Farrell, 82, American soprano, performed both classical and popular music.[77]
  • Piara Singh Gill, 90, Indian nuclear physicist.
  • Ben Hollioake, 24, Australian cricketer, car crash.
  • Marcel Kint, 87, Belgian bicycle racer.
  • Neal E. Miller, 92, American psychologist.
  • Minnie Rojas, 68, Cuban-American baseball player (California Angels).[78]
  • Richard Sylbert, 73, film production designer and art director, cancer.[79]

24[]

  • Dick Bittner, 80, American professional ice hockey player (Boston Bruins).[80]
  • Beverly Bower, 76, American operatic soprano (New York City Opera, Metropolitan Opera).[81]
  • Mace Brown, 92, American baseball player (Pittsburgh Pirates, Brooklyn Dodgers, Boston Red Sox).[82]
  • Dorothy DeLay, 84, American violin instructor, teacher of many of the world's leading violinists.[83]
  • Doug Demmings, 50, American middleweight professional boxer.[84]
  • César Milstein, 74, Argentinian biochemist.[85]
  • Frank G. White, 92, American army general.

25[]

  • James E. Bolin, 87, American jurist and politician.
  • Maurice Braverman, 86, American civil rights lawyer, pneumonia.
  • Ronald Verlin Cassill, 82, American writer, editor, painter and lithographer.[86]
  • Ken Traill, 75, British rugby league player.
  • Kenneth Wolstenholme, 81, British football commentator.[87]
  • Hilde Zimmermann, 81, member of the Austrian Resistance during WWII.

26[]

27[]

  • Milton Berle, 93, American comedian dubbed "Uncle Miltie" and "Mr. Television" (Texaco Star Theater, The Milton Berle Show).[93]
  • Sir Louis Matheson, 90, British university administrator, Vice Chancellor of Monash University.
  • Dudley Moore, 66, British actor and writer (Foul Play, 10, Arthur).[94]
  • Tadeusz Rut, 70, Polish Olympic hammer thrower.[95]
  • Billy Wilder, 95, Austrian-born American film director and winner of six Academy Awards (Double Indemnity, The Apartment, Some Like It Hot).[96]

28[]

  • Clarence B. Craft, 80, U.S. Army soldier and a recipient of the Medal of Honor.[97]
  • Clark Jones, 81, American television director.[98]
  • Tikka Khan, 86, Pakistani army general.
  • F. N. Souza, 77, British artist.
  • Albert Whitford, 96, American physicist and astronomer, dean of modern photoelectric photometry.[99]

29[]

  • John Cameron, 84, Australian baritone opera singer, became known for his portrayal of characters in modern operas.[100]
  • James T. Cushing, 65, American professor of physics, philosophy, and the history and philosophy of science.[101]
  • Difang Duana, 81, Taiwanese farmer and folk musician, sepsis.
  • Franklin S. Forsberg, 96, American publisher and diplomat (U.S. Ambassador to Sweden).[102]
  • John Thomas Idlet, 71, American Beat poet, congestive heart failure.
  • Yuliya Kolosovskaya, 81, Russian historian.
  • Rico Yan, 27, Filipino model, film and television actor, acute pancreatitis.[103]

30[]

  • Anand Bakshi, 71, Indian poet and lyricist.
  • Yara Bernette, 82, Brazilian classical pianist, heart attack.[104]
  • John Brennan Crutchley, 55, American kidnapper and rapist, autoerotic asphyxiation.
  • Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother, 101, British consort of King George VI.[105]
  • Alfie Stokes, 69, British footballer.

31[]

  • Lady Anne Brewis, 91, English botanist.
  • William F. Cassidy, 93, commanding officer in the US Army.
  • David Holt, 76, British psychotherapist.
  • Laren Renee Sims, 36, American criminal, suicide by hanging.
  • Lucio San Pedro, 89, Filipino composer and teacher, cardiac arrest.
  • Barry Took, 73, English writer, television presenter and comedian.[106]

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