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Deaths in September 2001

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The following is a list of notable deaths in September 2001.

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 2001 edit

1 edit

  • Sil Austin, 71, American jazz saxophonist, prostate cancer.[1]
  • Daniel C. Drucker, 83, American engineer and academic, leukemia.[2]
  • Bobby Evans, 74, Scottish football player, pneumonia.[3]
  • Ruthild Hahne, German sculptor.
  • Budimir Metalnikov, 75, Soviet/Russian screenwriter and film director.
  • Ted Mulry, 53, English born Australian singer/songwriter, brain cancer.
  • Martin Pederson, 79, Canadian farmer and politician.
  • Julian Scheer, 75, American journalist, author, and conservationist.[4]
  • James Lopez Watson, 79, American jurist, cancer.[5]
  • Brian Moore, 69, Football Commentator, Heart Attack.[6]

2 edit

  • Christiaan Barnard, 78, South African heart surgeon, first to perform a human-to-human heart transplant, asthma.[7]
  • Troy Donahue, 65, American actor, (A Summer Place, Rome Adventure), heart attack.[8]
  • Sir Arthur Gilbert, 88, British-American real estate developer and philanthropist.[9]
  • Horace A. Jones, 94, American horse trainer.
  • Jay Migliori, 70, American saxophonist (Supersax), colorectal cancer.[10]
  • John Overall, 88, Australian architect.[11]

3 edit

  • Ferruccio Amendola, 71, Italian actor and voice actor, throat cancer.[12]
  • John Roy Chapman, 74, British actor and playwright (Dry Rot, Not Now, Darling, There Goes the Bride).[13]
  • Joyce Hemlow, 95, Canadian professor and writer.[14]
  • Pauline Kael, 82, American movie critic, Parkinson's disease.[15]
  • Carl Lindquist, 82, American baseball player.[16]
  • Thuy Trang, 27, Vietnamese-American actress (Mighty Morphin Power Rangers, The Crow: City of Angels), traffic collision.[17]

4 edit

  • Maria Alfero, 79, Italian sprinter.
  • Pete Brown, 70, American professional football player (Georgia Tech) (San Francisco 49ers: 1953–1954).[18]
  • Robert McAfee Brown, 81, American presbyterian minister, theologian, and activist.[19]
  • Sándor Simó, 67, Hungarian film producer, director and screenwriter.[20]

5 edit

  • Akinola Aguda, 78, Nigerian jurist and a Chief Justice of Botswana.
  • Heywood Hale Broun, 81, American sports writer and broadcaster.[21]
  • Jørgen Hviid, 85, Danish and Latvian multi-sport athlete.[22]
  • Numa Monnard, 82, Swiss footballer.[23]
  • Hemish Shah, 33, British poker player, cardiac arrest.
  • Tamara Smirnova, 65, Soviet/Russian astronomer and a discoverer of minor planets and comets.
  • Justin Wilson, 87, American Cajun chef and humorist.[24]
  • Vladimir Žerjavić, 89, Croatian economist and demographer, murdered.

6 edit

  • Frank Christensen, 91, American gridiron fotball player.[25]
  • Megan Connolly, 27, Australian actress, heroin overdose.
  • Carl Crack, 30, German musician (Atari Teenage Riot), suicide.[26]
  • Chantal Chaudé de Silans, 82, French chess player and Woman International Master.[27]
  • Víctor Mahana, 79, Chilean basketball player.
  • Wardell Pomeroy, 87, American sexologist, dementia.[28]
  • Van Rensselaer Potter, 90, an American biochemist, oncologist, and bioethicist.[29]

7 edit

  • Igor Buketoff, 86, American composer, conductor and teacher.[30]
  • Sergio Garavini, 75, Italian politician, writer and trade unionist.
  • Andrey Goncharov, 83, Soviet and Russian theater director, pedagogue and author.
  • Lou Grant, 81, American editorial cartoonist (Oakland Tribune, Los Angeles Times, Newsweek, Time).[31]
  • Bunny Lewis, 82, English music manager, record producer and composer.
  • Spede Pasanen, 71, Finnish television star, heart attack.[32]
  • Don Paul, 75, American gridiron football player.
  • Clark Thomas Rogerson, 82, American mycologist.
  • Billie Lou Watt, 77, American film and television actress (Search for Tomorrow), and voice actress (Astro Boy, Elsie the Cow), lung cancer.[33]

8 edit

  • Gregorio Agós, 88, Uruguayan basketball player.[34]
  • Eric Bullus, 94, British Conservative politician.[35]
  • Gabriel Green, 76, American early UFOlogist.
  • Bill Ricker, 93, Canadian entomologist.[36]
  • Govind Sawant, 65, Indian field hockey player and Olympic medalist.[37]

9 edit

  • William Sefton, Baron Sefton of Garston, 86, British politician.[38]
  • Tommy Hollis, 47, American actor, complications of diabetes.[39]
  • Ahmad Shah Massoud, 48, Afghan Northern Alliance military commander, murdered.[40]
  • Shinji Sōmai, 53, Japanese film director, cancer.

10 edit

  • DJ Uncle Al, 32, American disc jockey, homicide.[41]
  • Yevhen Drahunov, 37, Ukrainian football player, stroke.[42]
  • Magnar Ingebrigtsli, 68, Norwegian Olympic cross-country skier (men's 15 kilometre cross-country skiing at the 1956 Winter Olympics).[43]
  • Alexey Suetin, 74, Soviet and Russian chess player and chess writer, heart attack.[44]

11 edit

  • Clem Dreisewerd, 85, American baseball player.[45]
  • Aurelio Genghini, 93, Italian Olympic long-distance runner (men's marathon at the 1936 Summer Olympics).[46]
  • Henry Herbert, 7th Earl of Carnarvon, 77, British peer and racing manager to Queen Elizabeth II.
  • Henryk Siwiak, 46, Polish émigré to New York City, shot.
  • Alice Stewart Trillin, 63, American educator, author and film producer, heart failure.[47]
  • Vince Ventura, 84, American baseball player.[48]
  • Nearly 3,000 people were killed in the September 11 attacks, including:
    • David Angell, 55, American television producer and screenwriter (Frasier, Wings). Passenger of American Airlines Flight 11.[49]
    • Mohamed Atta, 33, Egyptian ringleader and terrorist, one of the hijackers of American Airlines Flight 11.
    • Garnet Bailey, 53, Canadian ice hockey player (Boston Bruins, Edmonton Oil Kings, Washington Capitals, Hershey Bears). Passenger of United Airlines Flight 175.[50]
    • Fayez Banihammad, 24, Emirati terrorist, one of the hijackers of United Airlines Flight 175.
    • Mark Bavis, 31, American ice hockey player (Providence Bruins, South Carolina Stingrays, Fredericton Canadiens). Passenger of United Airlines Flight 175. [51]
    • Todd Beamer, 32, American airline passenger United Airlines Flight 93.
    • Carolyn Beug, 48, American filmmaker, producer and music video director ('"Right Now", "Fast as You"). Passenger of American Airlines Flight 11.[52]
    • Bill Biggart, 54, American photojournalist.[53]
    • Mark Bingham, 31, American public relations executive. Passenger of United Airlines Flight 93.[54]
    • Patrick J. Brown, 48, American firefighter.
    • Ronald Paul Bucca, 47, American fire marshal.[55]
    • William Francis Burke Jr., 46, American firefighter.[56]
    • Charles Burlingame, 51, American airline pilot American Airlines Flight 77.[57]
    • Tom Burnett, 38, American executive. Passenger of United Airlines Flight 93.
    • William E. Caswell, 54, American physicist. Passenger of American Airlines Flight 77.
    • Kevin Cosgrove, 46, American business executive.
    • Welles Crowther, 24, American Investment banker. [58]
    • Frank De Martini, 49, American architect.
    • Melissa Doi, 32, American businesswoman. [59]
    • William M. Feehan, 71, American deputy fire commissioner, First Deputy Commissioner of the Fire Department New York.
    • Wilson Flagg, 62, United States Navy Rear Admiral. Passenger of American Airlines Flight 77.[60]
    • Peter Ganci, 54, American firefighter, Chief of the Fire Department New York.[61]
    • Keith A. Glascoe, 38, American actor (Léon: The Professional, 100 Centre Street, The Pirates of Central Park). and firefighter. [62]
    • Ahmed al-Ghamdi, 22, Saudi Arabian terrorist, one of the hijackers of United Airlines Flight 175.
    • Hamza al-Ghamdi, 20, Saudi Arabian terrorist, one of the hijackers of United Airlines Flight 175.
    • Saeed al-Ghamdi, 21, Saudi Arabian terrorist, one of the hijackers of United Airlines Flight 93.
    • Jeremy Glick, 31, American airline passenger United Airlines Flight 93.
    • Lauren Grandcolas, 38, American author. Passenger of United Airlines Flight 93.
    • Nezam Hafiz, 32, Guyanese-born American cricketer (national team). [63]
    • Mohammad Salman Hamdani, 23, Pakistani American research technician.
    • Hani Hanjour, 29, Saudi Arabian terrorist, one of the hijackers of American Airlines Flight 77.
    • Leonard Hatton, 45, American FBI agent.
    • Nawaf al-Hazmi, 25, Saudi Arabian terrorist, one of the hijackers of American Airlines Flight 77.
    • Salem al-Hazmi, 20, Saudi Arabian terrorist, one of the hijackers of American Airlines Flight 77.
    • Ahmed al-Haznawi, 20, Saudi Arabian terrorist, one of the hijackers of United Airlines Flight 93.
    • LeRoy Homer Jr., 36, American airline pilot United Airlines Flight 93.
    • Ziad Jarrah, 26, Lebanese terrorist, one of the hijackers of United Airlines Flight 93.
    • Charles Edward Jones, 48, American astronaut (Manned Spaceflight Engineer Program). Passenger of American Airlines Flight 11. [64]
    • Mychal Judge, 68, American Franciscan friar and Catholic priest, Chaplain of the Fire Department New York.[65]
    • Neil David Levin, 46, American politician, businessman and CEO of Port Authority of New York and New Jersey (since 2001). [66]
    • Daniel Lewin, 31, American-Israeli mathematician, entrepreneur and co-founder of Akamai Technologies. Passenger of American Airlines Flight 11.[67]
    • Eamon McEneaney, 46, American Hall of Fame lacrosse player (Cornell Big Red). [68]
    • Timothy Maude, 53, Lieutenant General United States Army officer. [69]
    • Khalid al-Mihdhar, 26, Saudi Arabian terrorist, one of the hijackers of American Airlines Flight 77.
    • Majed Moqed, 24, Saudi Arabian terrorist, one of the hijackers of American Airlines Flight 77.
    • Ahmed al-Nami, 24, Saudi Arabian terrorist, one of the hijackers of United Airlines Flight 93.
    • John Ogonowski, 50, American pilot American Airlines Flight 11.[70]
    • Barbara Olson, 45, American lawyer and television commentator (CNN, Fox News Channel). Passenger of American Airlines Flight 77.[71]
    • Abdulaziz al-Omari, 22, Saudi Arabian terrorist, one of the hijackers of American Airlines Flight 11.
    • John P. O'Neill, 49, American counter-terrorism expert and FBI agent.[72]
    • Betty Ong, 45, American flight attendant American Airlines Flight 11.
    • Pablo Ortiz, 49, American construction superintendent.
    • Orio Palmer, 45, American firefighter.
    • Berry Berenson Perkins, 53, American actress (Remember My Name, Cat People). and photographer. Passenger of American Airlines Flight 11.[73]
    • Dominick Pezzulo, 36, American-Italian police officer.
    • Sneha Anne Philip, 31, Indian-American physician, presumed to have been a victim of the attacks.
    • Rick Rescorla, 62, British-American soldier and police officer.
    • Michael Richards, 38, Jamaican-born American sculptor.
    • Marwan al-Shehhi, 23, Emirati terrorist, one of the hijackers of United Airlines Flight 175.
    • Mohand al-Shehri, 22, Saudi Arabian terrorist, one of the hijackers of United Airlines Flight 175.
    • Wail al-Shehri, 28, Saudi Arabian terrorist, one of the hijackers of American Airlines Flight 11.
    • Waleed al-Shehri, 22, Saudi Arabian terrorist, one of the hijackers of American Airlines Flight 11.
    • Mari-Rae Sopper, 35, American gymnastics coach and lawyer Judge Advocate General's Corps. Passenger of American Airlines Flight 77.
    • Satam al-Suqami, 25, Saudi Arabian terrorist, one of the hijackers of American Airlines Flight 11.
    • Madeline Amy Sweeney, 35, American flight attendant American Airlines Flight 11.
    • Dan Trant, 40, American basketball player (Boston Celtics).[74]
    • Abraham Zelmanowitz, 55, American computer programmer

12 edit

  • Carmen Rico Godoy, 62, Spanish writer, journalist and feminist, lung cancer.[75]
  • Jack Kolle, 83, Indonesian football player.
  • Marilyn Meseke, 84, American beauty queen.
  • Joseph Bruno Slowinski, 38, American herpetologist, snake bite[76]
  • Manaf Suleymanov, 89, Azerbaijani writer and historian.
  • Victor Wong, 74, American actor (The Joy Luck Club, The Last Emperor, The Golden Child), heart failure.[77]

13 edit

  • Jorge Comellas, 84, Cuban baseball player.[78]
  • Johnny Craig, 75, American comic book artist.[79]
  • Jaroslav Drobný, 79, Czechoslovakian tennis player (Wimbledon Championship) and Olympic ice hockey player (silver medal winner at the 1948 Winter Olympics).[80]
  • Dorothy McGuire, 85, American actress (nominated for Academy Award for Best Actress for Gentleman's Agreement), heart failure.[81]
  • Fayga Ostrower, 80, Polish-Brazilian visual artist.[82]
  • Charles Régnier, 87, German actor and director, stroke.
  • Alex Scott, 64, Scottish footballer.[83]
  • Irving S. Shapiro, 85, American lawyer and businessman.[84]

14 edit

  • Barbara Ansell, 78, British paediatric rheumatologist, ovarian cancer.[85]
  • George Ireland, 88, American basketball coach (Loyola of Chicago 1963 NCAA Championship).[86]
  • Stelios Kazantzidis, 70, Greek singer, brain cancer.[87]
  • Francisco Urcuyo, 86, Nicaraguan politician, vice president (1967-1972, 1979), heart attack.

15 edit

  • Herbert Burdenski, 79, German football player and coach.[88]
  • Fred de Cordova, 90, American stage, film and television director and producer (The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson).[89]
  • Richard Fegley, 64, American photographer, cancer.
  • Eliezer Preminger, 81, Israeli politician.
  • June Salter, 69, Australian actor.
  • Robert Louis Whelan, 89, American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church.
  • Paul "Tank" Younger, 73, American gridiron football player.[90]
  • Živojin Zdravković, 86, Serbian conductor.[91]

16 edit

  • Samuel Z. Arkoff, 83, American film producer (Futureworld, The Amityville Horror).[92]
  • François Bédarida, 75, French academic historian.[93]
  • Patrick Cosgrave, 59, Irish journalist and writer.
  • Neptali A. Gonzales, Sr., 78, Filipino politician and writer.
  • Jerry Harper, 67, American basketball player (University of Alabama from 1952 to 1956).[94]
  • Donald Hume, 86, American Olympic rower (gold medal winner in men's rowing eight at the 1936 Summer Olympics)(.[95]
  • Leonid Osyka, 61, Ukrainian movie director, producer, and screen writer.

17 edit

  • Hizgil Avshalumov, 88, Soviet novelist, poet and playwright.
  • Bubba Church, 77, American baseball player.[96]
  • Paul Cummings, 48, American middle and long-distance runner, drowning accident.[97]
  • Dalilah, 65, Egyptian-Spanish oriental dancer.
  • Dickie Dodds, 82, English cricket player.[98]
  • Samuel Epstein, 81, Canadian-American geochemist.[99]
  • Ray Gill, 76, English football player.[100]
  • David Kipiani, 49, Georgian football player and manager, car accident.

18 edit

  • Ernie Coombs, 73, American-Canadian actor (Mr. Dressup), stroke.[101]
  • Rachmat Kartolo, 63, Indonesian actor and singer.
  • Hank Levy, 73, American jazz composer and saxophonist, congestive heart failure.[102]
  • Jane du Pont Lunger, 87, American heiress and philanthropist.
  • Sandy Saddler, 75, American boxer.[103]
  • Barry Shepherd, 64, Australian cricket player.[104]
  • Amy Witting, 83, Australian novelist and poet.

19 edit

  • Jane Dudley, 89, American modern dancer, choreographer, and teacher.[105]
  • Nguyen Ton Hoan, 84, South Vietnamese politician, laeder of Đại Việt Quốc Dân Đảng (Nationalist Party of Greater Vietnam).[106]
  • Rhys Jones, 60, Welsh-Australian archaeologist.[107]
  • Raymond Alphonse Lucker, 74, American prelate of the Catholic Church, melanoma.
  • Nina Roscher, 62, American chemist and activist, breast cancer.[108]
  • Darryl Sambell, 55, Australian talent manager and music promoter, lung cancer.
  • Bill Stafford, 63, American baseball player.[109]

20 edit

  • Patsy Adam-Smith, 77, Australian author and historian.[110]
  • Victor Henry Anderson, 84, American priest and poet.
  • George Archie, 87, American baseball player.[111]
  • George Grosvenor, 91, American gridiron football player (Colorado, Chicago Bears, Chicago Cardinals).[112]
  • Bill Gunn, 81, Australian politician.
  • Billy Harris, 66, Canadian professional ice hockey player (Toronto Maple Leafs, Detroit Red Wings, Oakland Seals, Pittsburgh Penguins).[113]
  • Marcos Evangelista Pérez Jiménez, 87, Venezuelan military officer and President of Venezuela.[114]
  • Princess Cecylia Lubomirska, 94, Polish princess.
  • Abe Mickal, 89, American gridiron football player.
  • Lewis Rudin, 74, American real estate investor and developer.[115]
  • Joe Stephenson, 80, American baseball player.[116]
  • Karl-Eduard von Schnitzler, 83, German journalist and television show host, pneumonia.[117]

21 edit

  • Eleanor Bone, 90, English neopagan wiccan priestess.
  • David S. Dennison, Jr., 83, American politician (U.S. Representative for Ohio's 11th congressional district from 1957 to 1959).[118]
  • Daniel J. Murphy, 79, American four-star navy admiral, stomach aneurysm.
  • Dwayne O'Steen, 46, American football player, heart attack.
  • Ross Parker, 17, English victim of racially motivated crime, stabbed.[119]

22 edit

  • Germaine Brée, 93, French-American literary scholar.[120]
  • Hilde Holger, 95, Austrian-British expressionist dancer and choreographer, cough.
  • Leslie Howarth, 90, British mathematician.
  • Fikret Kızılok, 54, Turkish rock musician, heart attack.[121]
  • William Knox, 73, Australian politician.
  • Gordon Reece, 71, British journalist and political strategist, cancer.[122]
  • Isaac Stern, 81, Ukrainian-American violinist, congestive heart failure.[123]

23 edit

  • Robert Abel, 64, American pioneer in visual effects and computer animation, heart attack.[124]
  • Spencer Barrett, 87, British classical scholar.
  • Kevin Boland, 83, Irish politician.
  • Allen Curnow, 90, New Zealand poet and journalist.[125]
  • Elton Hayes, 86, British actor and guitarist.
  • Ron Hewitt, 73, Welsh footballer.[126]
  • Henryk Tomaszewski, 81, Polish mime artist and theatre director.[127]

24 edit

  • Peter Shore, 77, British politician.[128]
  • Shawn Walsh, 46, American ice hockey coach, kidney cancer.[129]
  • Eldon Woolliams, 85, Canadian politician and lawyer.
  • Arthur Wynn, 91, British civil servant and recruiter of Soviet spies.[130]

25 edit

  • Irving Bernstein, 84, American historian and professor of political science at the University of California, Los Angeles.[131]
  • Ritter Collett, 80, American sports editor and columnist.
  • Samar Das, 75, Bangladeshi musician and composer.
  • Robert W. Floyd, 65, American computer scientist (Floyd–Warshall algorithm, Floyd's cycle-finding algorithm, Floyd–Steinberg dithering, Hoare logic).[132]
  • Sepp Janko, 95, German SS Obersturmführer during World War II.
  • Herbert Klein, 78, German Olympic swimmer (bronze medal winner in the 200 meter breaststroke at the 1952 Summer Olympics).[133]
  • Evan A. Lottman, 70, American film editor, esophageal cancer.
  • Dolores Michaels, 68, American actress.[134]
  • Marc North, 35, English footballer, complications from lung cancer.
  • Lani O'Grady, 46, American actress (Eight Is Enough) and talent agent, mixed drug intoxication, drug overdose.[135]
  • John Powers, 72, American baseball player.[136]
  • Paul Seiler, 55, American football player, colon cancer.[137]

26 edit

  • Clarice Cross Bagwell, 86, American educator and activist.[138]
  • Helia Bravo Hollis, 99, Mexican botanist.[139]
  • Hannes Nikel, 70, German film editor.
  • Sagat Singh, 82, Indian Army officer.
  • Vaithilingam Sornalingam, 52, Sri Lankan rebel (Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam), homicide.

27 edit

  • Herman Berlinski, 91, German-American musician, heart attack.[140]
  • Helen Cherry, 85, English actress (Three Cases of Murder, The Naked Edge, The Charge of the Light Brigade).[141]
  • Linda Smith Dyer, 53, American lawyer and women's rights activist, cancer.
  • Kotla Vijaya Bhaskara Reddy, 81, Indian politician.
  • Philip Rosenthal, 84, German industrialist, socialite and politician.
  • Dick Rozek, 74, American baseball player.[142]

28 edit

  • Ernest Ačkun, 71, Yugoslav clarinetist.
  • James H. Brickley, 72, American judge and politician.[143]
  • R. J. Hollingdale, 70, British biographer and translator of German philosophy and literature.
  • Isao Inokuma, 63, Japanese Olympic judoka (gold medal winner in men's heavyweight judo at the 1964 Summer Olympics), seppuku, suicide.[144]
  • Ejner Johansson, 79, Danish art historian, writer, and documentary film director.
  • Jack Maguire, 76, American baseball player.[145]
  • Martin O'Hagan, 51, Irish investigative journalist, murdered.[146]
  • Irene von Meyendorff, 85, Russian-born German-British actress.[147]

29 edit

  • Viktor Belov, 76, Russian football player and manager.
  • Mabel Fairbanks, 85, American figure skater and coach.[148]
  • Gloria Foster, 67, American actress (The Matrix, The Comedians, City of Hope), diabetes.[149]
  • Frank Gasparro, 92, American Chief Engraver of the United States Mint (Susan B. Anthony dollar, Eisenhower Dollar, Lincoln cent reverse, Kennedy half dollar reverse).[150]
  • Shona McFarlane, 72, New Zealand artist, journalist and broadcaster.
  • Gellu Naum, 86, Romanian poet, novelist, and children's writer.
  • John Noriega, 57, American baseball player.[151]
  • Risto Orko, 102, Finnish film producer and director.[152]
  • Eleanor Phelps, 94, American actress.[153]
  • Helmut Roloff, 88, German pianist, teacher and resistance fighter during World War II.
  • Nguyễn Văn Thiệu, 78, South Vietnamese military officer and politician, 2nd President of South Vietnam, stroke.[154]

30 edit

  • Consuelo Araújo, 61, Colombian politician, writer and journalist, murdered by the FARC.
  • Luis Barboo, 74, Spanish actor.
  • Anatoly Bogdanov, 70, Soviet sport shooter and Olympic champion.[155]
  • Gerhard Ebeling, 89, German Lutheran theologian.[156]
  • George Gately, 72, American cartoonist (Heathcliff), cardiovascular disease.[157]
  • Calvin C. Hernton, 69, American sociologist, poet and author.[158]
  • Jenny Jugo, 96, Austrian actress.[159]
  • John C. Lilly, 86, American writer, inventor and counterculture scientist.[160]
  • Tage Lindbom, 91, Swedish mystic and conservative politician.
  • Giovanni Macchia, 88, Italian literary critic and essayist.[161]
  • Madhavrao Scindia, 56, Indian politician, royal family member, Maharaja of Gwalior.[162]
  • Dora M. Sweeney, 94, American secretary and politician.

References edit

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  2. ^ "Daniel C. Drucker - Social Networks and Archival Context". snaccooperative.org. Retrieved August 23, 2023.
  3. ^ "Bobby Evans". worldfootball.net. Retrieved August 23, 2023.
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  5. ^ "Watson, James Lopez". Federal Judicial Center. Retrieved December 30, 2018.
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  9. ^ Riding, Alan (September 5, 2001). "Sir Arthur Gilbert Dies at 88; Gave Art Objects for Museum". The New York Times. Retrieved January 26, 2019.
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  17. ^ The original Power Rangers share memories of Yellow Ranger Thuy Trang, who died at age 27
  18. ^ "Pete Brown". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved January 20, 2019.
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  30. ^ Allan Kozinn (September 11, 2001). "Igor Buketoff, 87, Conductor And Expert on Rachmaninoff". The New York Times. p. C 17. Retrieved January 10, 2019.
  31. ^ Oliver, Myrna (September 12, 2001). "Lou Grant, 81; Wry Cartoonist". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved January 28, 2019.
  32. ^ Speden dramaattiset viime hetket – ”Pertti pelkäsi lääkäreitä” Iltasanomat.fi 2016-09-03
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