Deaths in October 2007
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The following is a list of notable deaths in October 2007.
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.
October 2007
1
- Bernard Delaire, 108, French Naval veteran of World War I, one of the last six identified.[1]
- Bruce Hay, 57, British rugby player for Britain and Scotland, brain tumour.[2]
- Ronnie Hazlehurst, 79, British theme song composer (Are You Being Served?) and jazz musician, stroke.[3]
- Israel Kugler, 90, American labor leader and professor, pneumonia.[4]
- Harry Lee, 75, American politician, Sheriff of Jefferson Parish, Louisiana, leukemia.[5]
- Chris Mainwaring, 41, Australian footballer (West Coast Eagles), television and radio sports journalist.[6]
- Peggy Maley, 84, American actress.[7]
- James A. Martin, 105, American Roman Catholic Jesuit priest, world's oldest Jesuit, pneumonia.[8]
- Al Oerter, 71, American athlete and Olympic gold medallist in discus (1956, 1960, 1964 and 1968), heart failure.[9]
- Tetsuo Okamoto, 75, Brazilian swimmer and Brazil's first Olympic swimming medallist (1952), respiratory failure.[10]
- Pedro Saúl Pérez, 54, Dominican advocate for the rights of Dominican immigrants in Puerto Rico, heart attack.[11]
- Ned Sherrin, 76, British broadcaster and theatre producer, throat cancer.[12]
- Ralph W. Sturges, 88, American Mohegan tribal chief.[13]
- Henry Wells, 92, American expert on Latin American politics, professor and author, complications from Alzheimer's disease.[14]
2
- Frederick Bayer, 85, American emeritus curator at the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of Natural History, heart failure.[15]
- DeWitt "Tex" Coulter, 82, American National and Canadian Football League player.[16]
- Gianni Danzi, 67, Italian Archbishop of the Territorial Prelature of Loreto.[17]
- Elfi von Dassanowsky, 83, Austrian opera singer, actress and film producer.[18]
- Christopher Derrick, 86, British writer.[19]
- Šime Đodan, 79, Croatian parliamentarian, defence minister (1991).[20]
- Gary Franklin, 79, American film critic, KABC-TV (Los Angeles).[21]
- Richard Goldwater, 71, American president of Archie Comics, creator of Josie and the Pussycats, cancer.[22]
- George Grizzard, 79, American actor, lung cancer.[23]
- Princess Katherine of Greece and Denmark, 94, Greek former Princess of Greece, last surviving great-granddaughter of Queen Victoria.[24]
- Dan Keating, 105, Irish republican activist, last surviving veteran of the Irish War of Independence.[25]
- J. Edward Lundy, 92, American automobile executive (Ford Motor Co.).[26]
- Tawn Mastrey, 53, American radio disc jockey (KNAC), hepatitis C.[27]
- James Michaels, 86, American editor of Forbes (1961–1999), pneumonia.[28]
- José Antonio Ríos Granados, 48, Mexican politician, mayor of Tultitlán (2000–2003), air crash.[29]
- Willi Rössler, 83, German Olympic fencer.[30]
- Alec Spalding, 84, British scout leader.[31]
3
- John Buxton, 73, New Zealand rugby union player.[32]
- Violet Kazue de Cristoforo, 90, American poet, held in Japanese-American internment camps during WWII, stroke.[33]
- Kenneth R. Harding, 93, American Sergeant at Arms of the United States House of Representatives (1972–1980), pneumonia.[34]
- Wyn Harness, 47, British journalist.[35]
- Herbert Muschamp, 59, American architecture critic for The New York Times, lung cancer.[36]
- Pablo Palazuelo, 90, Spanish artist.[37]
- Tony Ryan, 71, Irish entrepreneur and joint founder of Ryanair, after long illness.[38]
- Rogelio Salmona, 78, Colombian architect, Alvar Aalto Medal and Prince Claus Award winner, cancer.[39]
- Sir Richard Trant, 79, British Army general.[40]
- Giuseppe Valdengo, 93, Italian operatic baritone.[41]
- M. N. Vijayan, 77, Indian academic, writer and journalist, heart attack.[42]
4
- Bob Burdick, 70, American NASCAR driver.[43]
- Chen Chi-li, 64, Chinese-born Taiwanese gangster, killer of dissident journalist Henry Liu, pancreatic cancer.[44]
- Antonie Iorgovan, 59, Romanian politician, main author of the Constitution of Romania, heart attack.[45]
- Kim Min-woo, 21, South Korean ice dancer, traffic collision.[46]
- Don Nottebart, 71, American Major League Baseball player, stroke.[47]
5
- John Atchison, 53, American federal prosecutor and alleged child sex offender, suicide by hanging.[48]
- Alexandra Boulat, 45, French photojournalist, aneurysm.[49]
- Walter Kempowski, 78, German author and archivist, intestinal cancer.[50]
- Władysław Kopaliński, 99, Polish lexicographer.[51]
- Vladimir Kuzin, 77, Russian 1956 Winter Olympics gold medallist, long illness.[52]
- Steven Massarsky, 59, American attorney and businessman, complications related to cancer.[53]
- Edwyn Owen, 71, American ice hockey player, gold medallist at the 1960 Winter Olympics, car fire.[54]
- Matilde Salvador i Segarra, 89, Spanish composer, stroke.[55]
- Justin Tuveri, 109, Italian-French World War I veteran.[56]
6
- Babasaheb Bhosale, 86, Indian politician, Chief Minister of Maharashtra (1982–1983).[57]
- Robert W. Bussard, 79, American physicist, researcher of nuclear fusion, cancer.[58]
- Jo Ann Davis, 57, American member of the US House of Representatives from Virginia since 2001, breast cancer.[59]
- Nancy DeShone, 75, American baseball player (AAGPBL)[60]
- Rodney Diak, 83, British stage and film actor, cancer.[61]
- Phil Dodds, 56, American audio engineer, cancer.[62]
- Bud Ekins, 77, American motorcycle racer and stunt performer (The Great Escape), natural causes.[63]
- Terence Wilmot Hutchison, 95, British economist.[64]
- Tom Murphy, 39, Irish Tony Award-winning actor of stage and screen (The Beauty Queen of Leenane), lymphatic cancer.[65]
- Laza Ristovski, 51, Serbian keyboardist (Smak, Bijelo dugme), multiple sclerosis.[66]
- George F. Senner, Jr., 85, American member of the US House of Representatives from Arizona (1963–1967).[67]
7
- Norifumi Abe, 32, Japanese MotoGP racer, traffic accident.[68]
- Stéphane Maurice Bongho-Nouarra, 70, Congolese Prime Minister (1992).[69]
- Sir Alan Campbell, 88, British diplomat.[70]
- Sisi Chen, 68, Chinese actress, pancreatic cancer.[71]
- Paul Cullen, 98, Australian army general.[72]
- Luciana Frassati Gawronska, 105, Polish-Italian writer and anti-Nazi activist, mother of Jas Gawronski.[73]
- Herb Parker, 86, American educator and football coach.
- George E. Sangmeister, 76, American member of the US House of Representatives from Illinois (1989–1995), leukemia.[74]
- Jiřina Steimarová, 91, Czech actress.[75]
- Lilis Suryani, 59, Indonesian singer, uterine cancer.[76]
- Joe Waggonner, 89, American member of the US House of Representatives from Louisiana (1961–1979).[77]
8
- Constantine Andreou, 90, Brazilian-born Greek-French painter and sculptor.[78]
- Milan Đukić, 61, Serbian-Croatian politician, leader of the Serb People's Party.[79]
- John Henry, 32, American Hall of Fame thoroughbred racehorse, euthanized after kidney failure.[80]
- Nicky James, 64, British pop singer (The Moody Blues), brain tumour.[81]
- Zdzisław Peszkowski, 89, Polish Roman Catholic priest, advocate for the families of Katyn victims.[82]
- Salem Sabah Al-Salem Al-Sabah, 69, Kuwaiti politician, member of the ruling family, after long illness.[83]
- Francis Schewetta, 88, French Olympic silver medal-winning (1948) athlete.[84]
- Jean-François Van Der Motte, 93, Belgian Olympic cyclist.[85]
- Chick Zamick, 81, Canadian ice hockey player.[86]
9
- Enrico Banducci, 85, American nightclub impresario (North Beach, San Francisco).[87]
- Carol Bruce, 87, American actress (WKRP in Cincinnati, Planes, Trains & Automobiles, American Gigolo), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.[88]
- Henk van Brussel, 72, Dutch footballer and football manager, heart attack.[89]
- Fausto Correia, 55, Portuguese politician, heart attack.[90]
- Belinda Dann, 107, Australian centenarian, longest-lived member of the Stolen Generation.[91]
- Mary Louise Kolanko, 75, American baseball player (All-American Girls Professional Baseball League).[92]
- Robert McGehee, 64, American Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Progress Energy Inc, stroke.[93]
- Dudley Ryder, 7th Earl of Harrowby, 84, British aristocrat and banker.[94]
- Kurt Schwaen, 98, German composer, natural causes.[95]
- Bram Zeegers, 58, Dutch lawyer and key witness in the trial of Willem Holleeder.[96]
10
- S. R. Bommai, 83, Indian politician. [97]
- Ambrose De Paoli, 73, American-born Roman Catholic Archbishop, nuncio to Australia, leukemia.[98]
- Ken Fry, 86, Australian politician, MP for Fraser (1974–1984).[99]
- Francis García, 49, Mexican transvestite actress and designer, pulmonary thrombosis.[100]
- Len Keogh, 76, Australian politician, MP for Bowman (1969–1975, 1983–1987).[101]
- Norman Mashabane, 51, South African politician, former ambassador to Indonesia, car accident.[102]
- Mehmed Uzun, 54, Turkish novelist, stomach cancer.[103]
11
- Sri Chinmoy, 76, Indian-born philosopher and guru, heart attack.[104]
- Ignatius D'Cunha, 83, Indian Bishop Emeritus of Aurangabad.[105]
- John H. Edwards, 79, British geneticist.[106]
- David Lee "Tex" Hill, 92, American fighter pilot and flying ace, member of the Flying Tigers.[107]
- Juca, 78, Portuguese footballer and coach (Sporting, national team).[108]
- Rauni Mollberg, 78, Finnish film director, leukemia.[109]
- Pat "Gravy" Patterson, 73, American baseball and football coach at Louisiana Tech, suicide by gunshot.[110]
- Roy Rosenzweig, 57, American historian, lung cancer.[111]
- Carlos Salgado, 67, Honduran journalist and comedian, shot.[112]
- David Salmon, 95, American Athabascan tribal chief, cancer.[113]
- Werner von Trapp, 91, Austrian-born musician and singer, member of the Trapp Family Singers who inspired The Sound of Music.[114]
12
- Paulo Autran, 85, Brazilian actor, lung cancer.[115]
- Kim Beazley Sr., 90, Australian politician, former government minister.[116]
- Lonny Chapman, 87, American actor (The Birds, Norma Rae, The Hunted), heart disease.[117]
- Noel Coleman, 87, British actor.[118]
- Ruby Hooper, 83, American first female major party candidate to run for Governor of North Carolina, 1993 North Carolina Mother of the Year.[119]
- Kisho Kurokawa, 73, Japanese architect, heart failure.[120]
- Judy Mazel, 63, American cookbook author (The Beverly Hills Diet), complications from peripheral vascular disease.[121]
- Rajinder Singh Sarkaria, 91, Indian Supreme Court judge (1973–1981), head of the Sarkaria Commission.[122]
- Soe Win, 59, Burmese Prime Minister (2004–2007), leukemia.[123]
13
- Vernon Bellecourt, 75, Native American activist, pneumonia.[124]
- Andrée de Jongh, 90, Belgian Resistance member, organized the Comet Line POW escape network.[125]
- Bob Denard, 78, French mercenary.[126]
- Obaidul Huq, 95, Bangladeshi journalist and filmmaker.[127]
- Alec Kessler, 40, American basketball player (Georgia Bulldogs, Miami Heat), heart attack.[128]
- Kribensis, 23, Irish racehorse.[129]
- Marion Michael, 66, German actress and singer, heart failure.[130]
- James L. Oakes, 83, American federal judge.[131]
- Jim Poston, 63, British diplomat, Governor of the Turks & Caicos Islands (2002–2005).[132][133]
14
- Salih Saif Aldin, 32, Iraqi correspondent for The Washington Post, shot.[134]
- Big Moe, 33, American rapper, heart attack.[135]
- Judy Crichton, 77, American television producer, leukemia.[136]
- George Neil Jenkins, 92, British scientist.[137]
- Philippe Malaud, 82, French diplomat and politician.[138]
- André Maréchal, 90, French optics researcher.[139]
- Raymond Pellegrin, 82, French actor.[140]
- Frances Rich, 97, American actress and sculptor, heart attack.[141]
- Slew o' Gold, 27, American thoroughbred racehorse and Hall of Fame inductee, euthanized.[142]
- Pentti Snellman, 81, Finnish Olympic athlete.[143]
- Sigrid Valdis, 72, American actress (Hogan's Heroes), lung cancer.[144]
15
- Jackie Little, 95, British footballer (Ipswich Town).[145]
- Bobby Mauch, 86, American child actor and film editor.[146]
- Bernard Scudder, 53, British poet and translator of Icelandic literature.[147]
- Robert Shields, 89, American Protestant minister and diarist.[148]
- Vito Taccone, 67, Italian cyclist, heart attack.[149]
- Lucius Theus, 85, American US Air Force major-general, Tuskegee Airman.[150]
- Ernest Withers, 85, American photographer, stroke.[151]
16
- Rosalio José Castillo Lara, 85, Venezuelan Roman Catholic cardinal.[152]
- Barbara West Dainton, 96, British Titanic survivor.[153]
- Ignacy Jeż, 93, Polish Roman Catholic bishop.[154]
- Deborah Kerr, 86, British actress (From Here to Eternity, Black Narcissus, The King and I), complications of Parkinson's disease.[155]
- Arbab Jehangir Khan, 72, Pakistani politician, former NWFP Chief Minister, cardiac arrest.[156]
- Jerzy Markuszewski, 76, Polish theatre director and dissident.[157]
- Ragnar Pedersen, 65, Norwegian illustrator.[158]
- Toše Proeski, 26, Macedonian singer, car accident.[159]
- Steve J. Spears, 56, Australian author, playwright and television writer, cancer.[160]
- M. A. Hadi, 68, Bangladeshi academic, Vice Chancellor of Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib Medical University, brain haemorrhage.[161]
17
- Billy Berroa, 79, Dominican Spanish broadcaster for New York Mets on WADO, prostate cancer.[162]
- Joey Bishop, 89, American entertainer, last surviving member of the Rat Pack.[163]
- Teresa Brewer, 76, American pop and jazz singer, supranuclear palsy.[164]
- Sammy Duddy, 62, British political activist, member of the Northern Irish loyalist UPRG, heart attack.[165]
- Germán Espinosa, 69, Colombian writer, cancer.[166]
- Delphia Hankins, 111, American supercentenarian who was Mississippi's oldest person.[167]
- Maria Kwaśniewska, 94, Polish javelin thrower, 1936 Olympic bronze medallist.[168]
- Peter Oliver, Baron Oliver of Aylmerton, 86, British law lord (1986–1992).[169]
- Aminu Safana, 46, Nigerian MP, heart attack.[170]
- Taku, 14, American orca at SeaWorld San Antonio.[171]
- Rüdiger von Wechmar, 83, German diplomat and politician.[172]
- Robert A. Young, 83, American member of the US House of Representatives from Missouri (1977–1987), liver disease.[173]
18
- Alan Coren, 69, British writer and satirist, editor of Punch (1978–1987), cancer.[174]
- William J. Crowe, 82, American Ambassador to UK (1994–1997), Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (1985–1989), cardiac arrest.[175]
- Vincent DeDomenico, 92, American inventor of Rice-a-Roni.[176]
- Lucky Dube, 43, South African reggae musician, shot during carjacking.[177]
- Anthony R. Michaelis, 91, German science journalist.[178]
- Nino Rešić, 43, Bosnian singer.
- Joe Sellwood, 96, Australian who was oldest living AFL/VFL footballer.[179]
- Mark Tavener, 53, British novelist and comedy writer, cancer.[180]
19
- Anton Bodem, 82, German Catholic theologian.[181]
- Yolanda Brown, 21, American R&B singer.
- Randall Forsberg, 64, American nuclear arms control advocate, cancer.[182]
- Michael Maidens, 20, British footballer for Hartlepool United, car accident.[183]
- Jan Wolkers, 81, Dutch writer and artist.[184]
20
- Peg Bracken, 89, American cookbook writer.[185]
- Ivo Cappo, 55, Papua New Guinean magistrate, stoning.[186]
- Max McGee, 75, American professional football player (Green Bay Packers), fall from roof.[187]
- Jim Mitchell, 60, American professional football player (Atlanta Falcons), heart attack.[188]
- Helend Peep, 97, Estonian actor.[189]
- Josep Pintat-Solans, 82, Andorran politician and businessman, Mayor of Sant Julià de Lòria (1960-1963) and Prime Minister (1984-1990).[190]
- Paul Raven, 46, British rock bassist (Ministry, Killing Joke), heart attack.[191]
- Stine Rossel, 32, Danish archaeologist, hiking accident.[192]
- Yemi Tella, 56, Nigerian coach of the World Cup–winning under-17 football team, cancer.[193]
21
- Surinder Singh Bajwa, 52, Indian politician, Deputy Mayor of Delhi, fall after rhesus macaque attack.[194]
- Ernst Ehrlich, 86, Swiss Jewish philosopher.[195]
- Don Fellows, 84, American actor.[196]
- Paul Fox, 56, British guitarist (The Ruts), lung cancer.[197]
- Lance Hahn, 40, American musician (J Church, Cringer) and journalist, kidney disease.[198]
- Peter Howard, 81, British Air Vice Marshal, Royal Air Force.[199]
- Siddiq Khan, 60, Pakistani cricket umpire.[200]
- R. B. Kitaj, 74, American-born British-based pop artist.[201]
- Peter Moffatt, 84, British television director (All Creatures Great and Small, Doctor Who).[202]
- Ileana Sonnabend, 92, Romanian-born American founder of Sonnabend Gallery.[203]
- Lloyd Wendt, 99, American newspaper editor and publisher.[204]
22
- Sargon Boulus, 63, Iraqi poet.[205]
- Ève Curie, 102, French author, daughter of Pierre and Marie Curie.[206]
- Billy Ray Hamilton, 57, American death row inmate, natural causes.[207]
- Brendan McWilliams, 63, Irish meteorologist and writer.[208]
- Soedarpo Sastrosatomo, 87, Indonesian businessman.[209]
23
- John Ilhan, 42, Australian founder of Crazy John's mobile phone retail chain, suspected heart attack.[210]
- David Kendall, 89, British mathematician.[211]
- Lim Goh Tong, 90, Malaysian Chinese billionaire, founder of the Genting Group.[212]
- Ursula Vaughan Williams, 96, British author and poet, wife of Ralph Vaughan Williams.[213]
24
- David Adams, 78, Canadian ballet dancer, after long illness.[214]
- Petr Eben, 78, Czech composer.[215]
- Peter Harding, 82, British rock climber.[216]
- Alisher Saipov, 26, Kyrgyz journalist, shot.[217]
- Masakazu Yoshizawa, 57, Japanese-born American flutist (Memoirs of a Geisha, Jurassic Park), stomach cancer.[218]
25
- Michael England, 89, English cricketer.[219]
- Carole Hillard, 71, American politician, Lieutenant Governor of South Dakota (1995–2003), pneumonia.[220]
- Puntsagiin Jasrai, 73, Mongolian Prime Minister (1992–1996).[221]
- Matthew Locke, 33, Australian soldier.
- Sir Richard Rougier, 75, British judge, lung cancer.[222]
- Harvey Shapiro, 97, American cellist.[223]
26
- Jacinta Balbela, 88, Uruguayan judge and jurist, member of the Supreme Court of Justice (1985–1989).[224]
- Jim Cummins, 62, American correspondent for NBC News, cancer.[225]
- Nicolae Dobrin, 60, Romanian footballer, lung cancer.[226]
- Friedman Paul Erhardt, 63, German-born pioneering television chef, "Chef Tell," inspiration for the Swedish Chef, heart failure.[227]
- Alexandre Feklisov, 93, Russian KGB spymaster.[228]
- John L. Gaunt, 83, American Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer, congestive heart failure.[229]
- Arthur Kornberg, 89, American recipient of the 1959 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, respiratory failure.[230]
- Lisa Richette, 79, American lawyer, judge of the Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas, lung cancer.[231]
- Khun Sa, 73, Burmese warlord.[232]
- Hans Stern, 85, Brazilian jeweler, founder of the company H.Stern.[233]
27
- Charles Batt, 78, Australian politician.[234]
- George Washington, 4, Irish race horse, euthanized.[235]
- Satyen Kappu, 76, Indian Bollywood character actor, cardiac arrest.[236]
- Moira Lister, 84, South African-born British-based actress.[237]
- Leslie Orgel, 80, British chemist.[238]
- Othman Saat, 80, Malaysian politician, former Chief Minister of Johor state.[239]
- Henk Vredeling, 82, Dutch politician, minister and European Commissioner.[240]
28
- Bao Zunxin, 70, Chinese intellectual and jailed Tiananmen Square democracy activist, brain hemorrhage.[241]
- Graham Chadwick, 84, British bishop and anti-apartheid campaigner.[242]
- Arnold Wilson Cowen, 101, American judge.[243]
- Takao Fujinami, 74, Japanese politician convicted of accepting bribes.[244]
- Evelyn Hamann, 65, German actress.[245]
- Jimmy Makulis, 72, Greek singer.[246]
- Guido Nicheli, 73, Italian actor, stroke.[247]
- Stuart Sidey, 99, New Zealand politician, Mayor of Dunedin (1959–1965).[248]
- Josef Stawinoga, 87, Polish hermit, lived nearly 40 years in tent next to Wolverhampton Ring Road.[249]
- Porter Wagoner, 80, American country music singer, lung cancer.[250]
- William George Wilson, 90, American cinematographer.[251]
29
- Eloise Baza, 54, Guamanian president of the Guam Chamber of Commerce (1984–2007).[252]
- Jan Borkus, 87, Dutch radio actor.[253]
- Anthony Clare, 64, Irish psychiatrist and broadcaster.[254]
- Sam Dana, 104, American football player, complications of infection.[255]
- Kenneth Franzheim II, 82, American oilman and philanthropist.[256]
- Jarmila Loukotková, 84, Czech author.[257]
- Frane Matošić, 89, Croatian football player.[258]
- Jesse J. McCrary, Jr., 70, American politician, Secretary of State of Florida, (1978–1979), lung cancer.[259]
- Thomas Joseph Meskill, 79, American politician and federal judge, Governor of Connecticut (1971–1975).[260]
- David Morris, 83, British painter and actor.[261]
- Christian d'Oriola, 79, French fencer.[262]
- La Sa Ra, 91, Indian Tamil novelist.[263]
- Savo Radusinović, 53, Serbian folk singer.[264]
- Carrie Rozelle, 69, Canadian-born education activist, wife of Pete Rozelle, cancer.[265][266]
- Senkichi Taniguchi, 95, Japanese film director, pneumonia.[267]
30
- Robert Goulet, 73, American singer and actor (Camelot, Beetlejuice), idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis.[268][269]
- Peter Hoagland, 66, American member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Nebraska (1989–1995), Parkinson's disease.[270]
- Izzy Katzman, 90, American sportswriter.[271]
- Norbert Lynton, 80, German-born British art historian.[272]
- Srđan Mrkušić, 92, Serbian football goalkeeper.[273]
- Yisrael Poliakov, 66, Israeli actor, member of comedy group HaGashash HaHiver, liver cancer.[274]
- Dina Rabinovitch, 44, British journalist, breast cancer.[275]
- Paul Roche, 91, British poet and translator.[276]
- Linda S. Stein, 62, American former manager of the Ramones, real estate agent, beaten.[277]
- Washoe, 42, American-trained African-born chimpanzee believed to be first non-human to acquire human language, influenza.[278]
- John Woodruff, 92, American Olympic gold medalist in 800m (1936), atrial fibrillation and chronic renal failure.[279]
31
- Alderbrook, 18, British racehorse, winner of the 1995 Champion Hurdle.[280]
- John Baker, Jr., 72, American football player and county sheriff.[281]
- Sir Kenneth Bradshaw, 85, British constitutionalist, Clerk of the House of Commons (1983–1987).[282]
- Ray Gravell, 56, British rugby union player for Wales.[283]
- Erdal İnönü, 81, Turkish physicist and politician, Deputy Prime Minister (1991–1993), leukemia.[284]
- Bradford Kelleher, 87, American former vice president of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, founder of the Met Store.[285]
References
External links
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