Deaths in September 2005

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following is a list of notable people who died in September 2005.

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.

September 2005[]

1[]

  • Terry Albritton, 50, American shotputter.
  • Manuel Ausensi, 85, Spanish opera singer.
  • R. L. Burnside, 78, American blues musician.[1]
  • Uvedale Corbett, 95, British soldier, politician and businessman.
  • Barry Cowsill, 50, American pop-singer and writer, victim of Hurricane Katrina.[2]
  • Jacob A. Marinsky, 87, American chemist, co-discoverer of the element Promethium.[3]
  • Yang Kuan, 91, Chinese historian.
  • Zdobysław Stawczyk, 82, Polish Olympic sprinter.[4]

2[]

  • Tom Bailey, 56, American footballer.
  • Bob Denver, 70, American actor (Gilligan's Island), complications from cancer treatment.[5]
  • Adrian Karsten, 45, American ESPN announcer, suicide.[6]
  • Alexandru Paleologu, 86, Romanian diplomat.[7]
  • Warren Thomas, 47, American comedian.

3[]

  • Rudolf Bäcker, 91, German World War II soldier.
  • R. S. R. Fitter, 92, British natural historian.
  • Robert W. Funk, 79, American biblical scholar, founder of the Jesus Seminar, lung failure.[8]
  • Bernard S. Meyer, 89, American lawyer and politician.[9]
  • Jens Nygård, 71, Norwegian Olympic sports shooter.[10]
  • William Rehnquist, 80, American lawyer and jurist, Chief Justice of the United States, thyroid cancer.[11]
  • James Rossi, 69, American Olympic cyclist.[12]
  • Ekkehard Schall, 75, German actor.[13]

4[]

  • Lloyd Avery II, 36, American actor.
  • Dame Nancy Buttfield, 92, Australian politician.
  • Stanley Jennings, 84, American cartoonist, journalist.
  • Patricia McQueeney, 77, American actress and talent agent, died Santa Monica, California September 4, 2005) was an American actress, television personality,.
  • Roseli Ocampo-Friedmann, 67, Filipino-American microbiologist and botanist, Parkinson's disease.
  • Alan Truscott, 80, British bridge player, writer, and editor, one of the best known bridge columnists.[14]
  • Arnold Weinstein, 78, American poet, playwright, and librettist, liver cancer.[15]

5[]

  • Hank Anderson, 84, American basketball coach and athletics director.
  • Rizal Nurdin, 57, Indonesian politician, Governor of North Sumatra, Mandala Airlines Flight 091 crash.
  • Dhan Singh Thapa, 77, Indian Army officer and recipient of the Param Vir Chakra.
  • Raja Inal Siregar, 67, Indonesian politician, former Governor of North Sumatra, Indonesia, Mandala Airlines Flight 091 crash.

6[]

  • Hasan Abidi, 76, Pakistani journalist and poet.
  • Eugenia Charles, 86, Dominican politician, Prime Minister (1980–1995), after long illness.[16]
  • William John Kennedy, 86, Australian Aboriginal rights activist.
  • Mark Matthews, 111, American supercentenarian and Army first Sergeant, oldest living Buffalo Soldier.[17]
  • Perugu Siva Reddy, 84, Indian eye surgeon.

7[]

  • Omar Ali-Shah, 82/3, Afghan Sufi teacher.
  • Moussa Arafat, 65, Palestinian former head of general security in Gaza, cousin of Yasser Arafat, murdered.
  • Sergio Endrigo, 72, Italian singer and songwriter.
  • Hope Garber, 81, Canadian entertainer and television personality, Alzheimer's disease.
  • Nicolino Locche, 66, Argentine world boxing champion.
  • Gilbert Elliot-Murray-Kynynmound, 6th Earl of Minto, 77, Scottish aristocrat.
  • L. J. K. Setright, 74, British motoring journalist.
  • Norman Wylie, Lord Wylie, 81, Scottish politician, Lord Advocate (1970–1974).

8[]

  • Boris Bittker, 88, American legal academic.
  • Noel Cantwell, 73, Irish soccer player, former Manchester United captain, cancer.
  • Oswald Hoffmann, 91, American Lutheran evangelist.[18]
  • Donald Horne, 83, Australian academic, historian, philosopher and intellectual.
  • David Pearce, 63, British economist.
  • Lewis Platt, 64, American businessman and corporate director, former Hewlett Packard CEO.[19]
  • Perry Stephens, 47, American actor (Loving).[20]

9[]

  • Samim Bilgen, 95, Turkish lawyer and musician.
  • Giuliano Bonfante, 101, Italian linguistics expert and centenarian.
  • Stanley Dancer, 78, American record-setting harness racing driver.[21]
  • John Wayne Glover, 72, Australian convicted serial killer nicknamed "The Granny Killer", suicide by hanging
  • André Pousse, 85, French actor.
  • Tarzan Taborda, 70, Portuguese wrestling champion, heart attack.
  • Mel Wanzo, 74, American jazz trombonist.

10[]

  • Theodore X. Barber, 78, American psychologist renowned for his critical studies of hypnosis, ruptured aorta.[22]
  • Sir Hermann Bondi, 85, Austrian-born mathematician & cosmologist; co-advocate (with Gold & Hoyle) of the Steady State theory.
  • Ken Burgess, 77, Canadian politician.
  • Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown, 81, American blues musician.[23]
  • Lea Nikel, 86, Israeli abstract artist.[24]
  • Charlie Williams, 61, American former Major League Baseball umpire, complications of diabetes.[25]
  • E. Stewart Williams, 95, American architect, known for "Desert Modernism".[26]

11[]

  • Messias José Baptista, 37, Brazilian Olympic athlete.[27]
  • Odd Berg, 98, Norwegian ship owner.
  • Al Casey, 89, American jazz guitarist, colon cancer.[28]
  • Steve de Shazer, 65, American psychotherapist, founder of Brief Family Therapy Center in Milwaukee, Wisconsin and developer of solution focused brief therapy.
  • Chris Schenkel, 82, American sportscaster, emphysema.[29]
  • Joseph Smitherman, 75, American politician, longtime mayor of Selma, Alabama, reformed segregationist.[30]
  • Henryk Tomaszewski, 91, Polish internationally recognized graphic artist.[31]

12[]

  • Helmut Baierl, 78, German playwright.
  • Stephen Capen, 59, American radio presenter.
  • Serge Lang, 78, American mathematician and political activist.[32]
  • Ronald Leigh-Hunt, 88, British actor.
  • Alain Polaniok, 46, French footballer.
  • Katherine Sanford, 90, American cell biologist and cancer researcher, first to clone a mammal cell in vitro
  • Susan Anne Catherine Torres, 40 days, American baby born to Susan Torres, brain-dead woman, heart failure after intestinal surgery.[33]

13[]

  • Ann Barnes, 60, American actress and singer.
  • Toni Fritsch, 60, Austrian-born football player and American football placekicker with the Dallas Cowboys, San Diego Chargers, Houston Oilers, and New Orleans Saints.[34]
  • Jack Green, 83, Australian cricketer.
  • Helen Longley, 84, American politician, former First Lady of Maine, widow of former Governor James B. Longley.[35]
  • Julio César Turbay Ayala, 89, Colombian lawyer and politician, President of Colombia (1978–1982).[36]
  • Haydee Yorac, 64, Filipino lawyer and public servant.

14[]

  • Kent Bellows, 56, American painter.
  • William Berenberg, 89, American physician, leader in the treatment and rehabilitation of disabled children, professor of pediatrics, emeritis, at Harvard Medical School.[37]
  • Justin "Jud" Hurd, 92, American cartoonist, editor and founder of Cartoonist PROfiles magazine.[38]
  • Frances Newton, 40, American executed for murder in Texas, first African American woman executed there since 1858.
  • Kenneth Turpin, 90, English former Provost of Oriel College, Oxford and Vice-Chancellor of University of Oxford.
  • Vladimir Volkoff, 72, French-born Russian spy novelist.
  • Robert Wise, 91, American film director (The Sound of Music, West Side Story), heart failure.[39]

15[]

  • William S. Bartman, 58, American businessman and art patron, multiple organ failure.[40]
  • Samuel Azu Crabbe, 77, Ghanaian jurist, Chief Justice of Ghana (1973-1977).
  • Guy Green, 91, British film director and noted cinematographer.
  • Charles Nicholas Hales, 70, British biochemist and physician.
  • Jeronimas Kačinskas, 98, Lithuanian-born classical composer and conductor.
  • Sid Luft, 89, American film producer, Judy Garland's third and last surviving husband.

16[]

  • Stanley Burnshaw, 99, American renowned poet and literary figure.[41]
  • Arkadiusz Gołaś, 24, Polish volleyball player, member of Poland men's national volleyball team in 2001–2005, a participant of the Olympic Games 2004.
  • Gordon Gould, 85, American pioneer in laser technology.[42]
  • Jay M. Gould, 90, American epidemiologist and anti-nuclear activist, heart disease.[43]
  • Donald S. Harrington, 91, American politician and religious leader, unitarian minister and former chairman and spokesman of the Liberal Party of New York.[44]
  • Harold Q. Masur, 96, American novelist.[45]
  • John McMullen, 87, American businessman, naval architect and former owner of Major League Baseball's Houston Astros and the NHL's New Jersey Devils.[46]
  • Constance Moore, 85, American actress (Buck Rogers).
  • Mzukisi Sikali, 34, South African boxer, murdered during street robbery.

17[]

  • Donn Clendenon, 70, American baseball player, MVP of the 1969 World Series, leukemia.[47]
  • Joel Hirschhorn, 67, American Academy Award-winning songwriter.
  • Jacques Lacarrière, 79, French author and classical translator.
  • Jack Lesberg, 85, American jazz bassist.[48]
  • David E. Mark, 81, American former U.S. ambassador to Burundi, car accident.[49]
  • Alfred Reed, 84, American neo-classical composer.
  • Edward Stutman, 60, American senior trial attorney, retired lawyer and U.S. Justice Department official known for prosecution of alleged Nazi war criminals.[50]

18[]

  • Marta Bohn-Meyer, 48, American pilot and engineer for NASA.
  • Richard Britton, 34, Northern Ireland motorcycle racer, racing accident.
  • John Bromfield, 83, American television actor.
  • Richard E. Cunha, 83, American cinematographer and director
  • Sandra Feldman, 65, American advocate for disadvantaged students, teacher and labor leader, breast cancer.[51]
  • Marv Grissom, 87, American baseball player and coach.
  • Richard Holden, 74, Canadian lawyer and politician.
  • Noel Mander, 93, British organ maker and restorer.[52]
  • Michael Park, 39, British rally co-pilot, rally accident.
  • Rupert Riedl, 80, Austrian zoologist and advocate of evolutionary epistemology.
  • Chas Smit, 23, South African musician for acoustic rock band Plush, hit by car.
  • Clint C. Wilson, Sr., 90, African American editorial cartoonist, Los Angeles Sentinel.[53][54]
  • Yegor Yakovlev, 75, Russian journalist, leading opponent of press censorship.[55]
  • Roz Young, 92, American author, educator, historian, and columnist.[56]

19[]

  • John Bromfield, 83, American actor, renal failure.
  • Marv Grissom, 87, American baseball player and pitching coach.
  • Willie Hutch, 59, American record producer, singer and songwriter.[57]
  • Isao Nakauchi, 83, Japanese businessman, founder of Daiei, stroke.[58]
  • John Rayner, 81, German-born British rabbi.[59]
  • William Vacchiano, 93, American trumpeter and professor of music.[60]

20[]

  • Matest M. Agrest, 90, Russian ethnologist.
  • Joe Bauman, 83, American longtime minor league baseball record-holder (72 home runs in 1954), pneumonia.[61]
  • Franzi Groszmann, 100, Austrian-born last surviving Kindertransport mother, consultant on the film Into the Arms of Strangers.[62]
  • Tobias Schneebaum, 83, American writer, artist, and explorer.[63]
  • Simon Wiesenthal, 96, Austrian Holocaust survivor and Nazi hunter.

21[]

  • Patrick Alexander, 65, Irish-born Australian poet.
  • Lena Brogren, 76, Swedish actress.
  • Harry Heltzer, 94, American inventor, former CEO of 3M.[64]
  • Ramón Martín Huerta, 48, Mexican politician, minister of public security of the Mexican federal government, helicopter crash.[65]
  • Humphrey Kelleher, 59, Irish Gaelic footballer.
  • Félix Javier Pérez, 33, Puerto Rican basketball player and former member of the Puerto Rican National Basketball Team, murdered during robbery.[66]
  • Preben Philipsen, 95, Danish film producer.[67]
  • Joseph Smagorinsky, 81, American meteorologist and mathematician, pioneer in the use of mathematical modeling as a weather forecasting tool, complications of Parkinson's disease.[68]
  • Albert "Caesar" Tocco, 77, American convicted organized crime boss.[69]
  • Molly Yard, 93, American feminist, former president of the U.S. National Organization for Women.[70]

22[]

  • Monty Basgall, 83, American baseball coach.
  • Rolf Berntzen, 85, Norwegian actor.
  • Joop Doderer, 84, Dutch actor who played Swiebertje for 17 years.[71]
  • Bayaman Erkinbayev, 38, Kyrgyz former wrestler, businessman, and prominent parliamentarian, shot to death.[72]
  • Leavander Johnson, 35, American former International Boxing Federation lightweight champion boxer, brain injury suffered in bout.[73]
  • Hans Samelson, 89, German-born American mathematician, natural causes.[74]

23[]

  • Roger Brierley, 70, British actor.
  • Apolônio de Carvalho, 93, Brazilian founder of Brazil's ruling Workers' Party, leftist political icon.[75]
  • John Knatchbull, 7th Baron Brabourne, 80, British television producer.[76]
  • Betty Leslie-Melville, 78, American wildlife conservationist and giraffe expert, complications of dementia.[77]
  • Filiberto Ojeda Ríos, 72, Puerto Rican nationalist and leader of the Boricua Popular Army.[78]

24[]

  • Tommy Bond, 79, American actor known for playing Butch on Our Gang, heart disease.[79]
  • Betty Curnow, 93, New Zealand artist.
  • Leopold B. Felsen, 81, German leading physicist in the study of waves, Holocaust survivor, complications of surgery.[80]
  • Byron "Mex" Johnson, 94, American Negro league baseball player, prostate cancer.[81]
  • Rod Oliver, 83, Australian politician.
  • Daniel Podrzycki, 42, Polish left wing politician, presidential candidate.
  • Barry Ramachandra Rao, 82, Indian space physicist.
  • André Testut, 79, Monegasque Formula One driver.
  • Bala Usman, Nigerian academic, politician and historian.

25[]

  • Don Adams, 82, American actor (Get Smart, Inspector Gadget), lung infection while battling a bone lymphoma.[82]
  • George Archer, 65, American golfer and 1969 Masters winner, Burkitt's lymphoma.[83]
  • Georges Arvanitas, 74, French-born Greek jazz pianist and composer.
  • Abu Azzam, Iraqi Al-Qaeda's second-in-command in Iraq, shot to death by United States forces.[84]
  • Aquila al-Hashimi, Iraqi politician, member of the Governing Council.
  • Urie Bronfenbrenner, 88, Russian-born U.S. professor of psychology, among the founders of the Head Start program in the U.S., complications of diabetes.[85]
  • Lionel Kochan, 83, British historian.[86]
  • Steve Marcus, 66, American jazz saxophonist.[87]
  • M. Scott Peck, 69, American psychiatrist and author.[88]
  • Friedrich Peter, 84, Austrian politician (chairman of the Freedom Party of Austria 1958-1978), controversial as a former member of the Waffen-SS.

26[]

  • Eugen Ciucă, 92, Romanian-American artist.
  • Helen Cresswell, 71, British author of children's literature, ovarian cancer.[89]
  • Lowell E. English, 90, United States Marine Corps major general.
  • Heidi Genée, 66, German film editor, director and screenwriter.
  • Monty Gopallawa, 63, Sri Lankan politician, son of former Sri Lankan president William Gopallawa and governor of Central Province, Sri Lanka.
  • Jozef Karel, 83, Slovak football player and coach.
  • Shawntinice Polk, 22, American center on the University of Arizona's women's basketball team, pulmonary embolism.

27[]

  • Herman Ashworth, 32, American convicted murderer, executed in Ohio.
  • Karl Decker, 84, Austrian football player and manager.
  • Ronald Golias, 76, Brazilian comedian.
  • Jerry Juhl, 67, American writer and puppeteer for The Muppets.[90]
  • Brett Kebble, 41, South African mining magnate, murdered.
  • John McCabe, 84, American biographer of Laurel and Hardy.
  • Ronald Pearsall, 77, English author.[91]
  • Willem van de Sande Bakhuyzen, 47, Dutch film director, cancer.[92]
  • Mary Lee Settle, 87, American author (the Beulah Quintet), lung cancer.[93]

28[]

  • Ahmad Abdullah, 64, Malaysian accountant and politician.
  • Pol Bury, 83, Belgian sculptor.
  • Sir Mark Heath, 78, British diplomat, Ambassador to the Holy See.
  • Alan Matheney, 54, American convicted murderer, executed in Indiana.[94]
  • Constance Baker Motley, 84, American civil rights lawyer and the first female African American federal judge, congestive heart failure.[95]
  • Leo Sternbach, 97, Austrian-native chemist, known as the "Father of Valium".[96]

29[]

  • Olga de Alaketu, 80, Benin-born Brazilian Candomblé high priestess, complications of diabetes.[97]
  • Patrick Caulfield, 69, British artist.[98]
  • Benjamin DeMott, 81, American writer, scholar, and cultural critic, cardiac arrest.[99]
  • Robert Dorgebray, 89, French Olympic cyclist.[100]
  • Austin Leslie, 71, American famed New Orleans chef (also the inspiration for the television show Frank's Place), hospitalized with pneumonia since his evacuation several days after Hurricane Katrina.[101]
  • Gordon McKeag, 77, English solicitor and football club chairman (Newcastle United F.C.).[102]
  • Gennadi Sarafanov, 63, Soviet Soyuz 15 cosmonaut.
  • Mogens Schou, 86, Danish psychiatrist.
  • Ivar Karl Ugi, 75, German chemist.

30[]

  • Basil Glass, 79, Northern Irish politician.
  • Monika Hellwig, 74, German-born American theologian and Roman Catholic lay leader, cerebral hemorrhage.[103]
  • Andrew P. O'Meara, 98, United States Army general, stroke.
  • Sergei Starostin, 52, Russian linguist.

References[]

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