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Deaths in September 2002

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The following is a list of notable deaths in September 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.

September 2002 Edit

1 Edit

  • Dale E. Hamilton, 93, American athlete and coach.
  • Yuji Ichioka, 66, American historian and civil rights activist, cancer.[1]
  • B. V. Karanth, 72, Indian actor and director.[2]
  • Peter Ramsden, 68, British rugby league player.
  • Rodney Taylor, 62, senior officer in the Royal Australian Navy, lung cancer.

2 Edit

  • Leon Campbell, 75, American professional football player (University of Arkansas, Chicago Bears, Pittsburgh Steelers).[3]
  • Abe Lemons, 79, American college basketball player and coach, complications from Parkinson's disease.[4]
  • Rodica Ojog-Brașoveanu, 63, Romanian writer, severe lung problems.[5]
  • Dick Reynolds, 87, Australian rules footballer.
  • Sir Robert Wilson, 75, British astrophysicist, known for his research in optical and solar plasma spectroscopy.[6]

3 Edit

  • Kenneth Hare, 83, Canadian scientist.
  • Clinton A. Puckett, 76, United States Marine and recipient of the Navy Cross.
  • Ted Ross, 68, American actor (The Wiz, Arthur, Police Academy).
  • W. Clement Stone, 100, American businessman, philanthropist and self-help book author.[7]
  • Len Wilkinson, 85, British cricketer.
  • Eugene Allen Wright, 89, American judge (U.S. circuit judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit).[8]

4 Edit

  • Frankie Albert, 82, American professional football player (Stanford, San Francisco 49ers).[9]
  • Dave Baker, 65, American professional football player (University of Oklahoma, San Francisco 49ers).[10]
  • Jerome Biffle, 74, American Olympic long jumper (gold medalist 1952).[11]
  • Jim Constable, 69, American baseball player (New York/San Francisco Giants, Cleveland Indians, Washington Senators, Milwaukee Braves).[12]
  • Andrew Forge, 78, American painter, art critic and teacher, Professor of Painting at Yale University.[13]
  • Vlado Perlemuter, 98, Lithuanian-French pianist and teacher.[14]

5 Edit

  • Robert W. Brooks, 49, American mathematics professor, known for his work in spectral geometry and fractals.[15]
  • William Cooper, 92, English novelist.[16]
  • Cliff Gorman, 65, American actor (The Boys in the Band, All That Jazz, Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai), Tony winner (1972).[17]
  • Jackie Kelk, 79, American actor and stand-up comedian, lung infection.
  • Amon Nikoi, 72, Ghanaian economist and diplomat.
  • David Todd Wilkinson, 67, American cosmologist, known for his measurements of thermal cosmic background radiation.[18]

6 Edit

  • Michael Argyle, 77, British psychologist, a pioneer of social psychology in Britain.[19]
  • Roxy Atkins, 90, Canadian track and field athlete (women's 80 metres hurdles at the 1936 Summer Olympics).[20]
  • Bobby Clancy, 75, Irish singer and musician.
  • Peter Donaldson, 67, British economist, author, and radio and television broadcaster.[21]
  • Rafael Druian, 79, American violinist and conductor (New York Philharmonic, Cleveland Orchestra).[22]
  • Orvan Hess, 96, American physician.[23]
  • Janet Young, Baroness Young, 75, British politician (Leader of the House of Lords).[24]

7 Edit

  • Gabriel Camps, 75, French historian.[25]
  • Katrin Cartlidge, 41, English actress (Brookside, Before the Rain, Breaking the Waves), complications from pneumonia and sepsis.[26]
  • Eugenio Coșeriu, 81, linguist specialized in Romance languages.
  • Gene Donaldson, 59, American professional football player (Purdue University, Buffalo Bills).[27]
  • Michael Elphick, 55, English actor (Boon, EastEnders, Gorky Park, Private Schulz).[28]
  • John Paul Frank, 84, American lawyer and scholar, helped shape U.S. Supreme Court cases (Brown v. Board of Education, Miranda v. Arizona).[29]
  • Erma Franklin, 64, American gospel and soul singer ("Piece of My Heart"), older sister of Aretha Franklin.[30]
  • Uziel Gal, 78, designer of the Uzi submachine gun.
  • Don Smith, 73, Canadian ice hockey player.

8 Edit

  • Ken Ashton, 76, British journalist and trade union leader (general secretary of the National Union of Journalists).[31]
  • Carmen Garayalde, 89, Uruguayan exiled political activist and artist.
  • Marco Siffredi, 23, French snowboarder (last seen on this date).
  • Laurie Williams, 33, West Indian cricketer, car accident.
  • Kenneth Yablonski, 68, American attorney.[32]

9 Edit

  • Joan Bartlett, 91, British convert to the Roman Catholic Church.
  • Tom Bradley, 76, British politician (member of Parliament representing Leicester North East and Leicester East).[33]
  • Geoffrey Dummer, 92, English electronics engineer, built the first prototype of the integrated circuit.[34]
  • Gerald W. Johnson, 83, lieutenant general in the US Air Force and WW II flying ace.
  • Graham Kennedy, 63, New Zealand rugby footballer and coach.
  • José Luis Massera, 87, Uruguayan mathematician.
  • Mikail Nersès Sétian, 83, American bishop.

10 Edit

  • René Cousineau, 72, Canadian politician (member of Parliament representing Gatineau, Quebec).[35]
  • Sandor Elès, 66, Hungarian actor.
  • Alexander Farrelly, 78, American politician, governor of the United States Virgin Islands from 1987 to 1995.[36]
  • David Grene, 89, Irish-American professor of classics.[37]
  • Kuo Pao Kun, 63, Chinese playwright, theatre director, and arts activist, kidney and liver cancer.
  • Žarana Papić, 53, Serbian social anthropologist and feminist theorist.

11 Edit

  • Kim Hunter, 79, American actress (A Streetcar Named Desire, Planet of the Apes, The Edge of Night), Oscar winner (1952).[38]
  • Howard Levi, 85, American mathematician.
  • Howard T. Odum, 78, American ecologist.
  • Claude Saint-Cyr, French milliner.
  • Johnny Unitas, 69, American professional football player and a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame, cardiovascular renal disease.[39]
  • Philippe Wamba, 31, American author, journalist and son of a Congolese professor who became a rebel leader.[40]
  • David Wisniewski, 49, American writer and illustrator of children's books.[41]

12 Edit

  • Lloyd Biggle Jr., 79, American musician and author, leukemia and cancer.
  • L. J. Foret, 72, American Cajun musician.
  • Mitsuo Ikeda, 67, Japanese freestyle wrestler and Olympic gold medalist.
  • Neil Shields, 83, British politician and businessman.[42]

13 Edit

  • Sir Douglas Black, 89, British physician, played a key role in the development of the National Health Service.[43]
  • Richard Foster, 83, American modernist architect.[44]
  • George Hills, 84, British journalist and historian.
  • Charles Herbert Lowe, 82, American biologist.
  • Sir Brooks Richards, 84, British diplomat and SOE operative.
  • George Stanley, 95, Canadian historian and public servant.

14 Edit

  • Jim "Bad News" Barnes, 61, American basketball player (gold medal at the 1964 Summer Olympics, Los Angeles Lakers, Boston Celtics), heart problems.[45]
  • Frederic Bennett, 83, British journalist, barrister politician (member of Parliament for Torbay, Torquay and Reading North).[46]
  • Donald L. Campbell, 98, American chemical engineer, revolutionized the petroleum industry through fluid catalytic cracking.[47]
  • Henri Joseph Fenet, 83, French collaborator during World War II.
  • Michael Greer, 64, American actor, comedian and cabaret performer.
  • Jim McKee, 55, American baseball player (Pittsburgh Pirates).[48]
  • LaWanda Page, 81, American actress (Sanford and Son).[49]
  • Brian Rossiter, Irish victim, blunt force trauma to the head.
  • Eddie Shokes, 82, American baseball player (Cincinnati Reds).[50]
  • Paul Williams, 87, African American jazz and blues saxophonist, bandleader, and songwriter ("The Huckle-Buck").[51]

15 Edit

  • Roberto Cavanagh, 87, Argentine Olympic polo player (gold medal winner in polo at the 1936 Summer Olympics).[52]
  • John Linsley, 77, American physicist.
  • George Maina, 28, Kenyan Olympic boxer [1]
  • Arnolds Mazitis, 89, Latvian artist.
  • Robert William Pope, 86, British Anglican prelate, Dean of Gibraltar.
  • Dwight Whylie, 66, Jamaican-Canadian radio announcer, journalist and media manager (BBC, CBC).[53]

16 Edit

  • James Gregory, 90, American actor (Barney Miller, The Manchurian Candidate, The Lawless Years).[54]
  • Archibald Hall, 78, British criminal.
  • Karl Huber, 86, Swiss politician, Chancellor.
  • Rodger Mack, 63, American sculptor, painter, and ceramic artist.
  • Mary Stott, 95, British journalist and feminist.
  • Nguyễn Văn Thuận, 74, Vietnamese Roman Catholic prelate.

17 Edit

  • Vasant Bapat, 80, Indian poet.
  • Eileen Colwell, 98, British author and librarian, one of the founders of the children's library movement.[55]
  • Jack Ferguson, 78, Australian politician (Deputy Premier of New South Wales), mesothelioma.[56]
  • Denys Fisher, 84, British inventor of the Spirograph.
  • James Macdonald, 83, Scottish-born Australian ornithologist.
  • Dodo Marmarosa, 76, American jazz pianist, composer, and arranger.[57]
  • André Rousseau, 91, Canadian entrepreneur and politician.
  • Mollie Wilmot, 79, American philanthropist and socialite, rose to celebrity when a freighter ran aground on her beachfront.[58]
  • Mun Charn Wong, 84, American business executive (Transamerica Corporation).[59]

18 Edit

  • Andreas Burnier, 71, Dutch writer, focus on homosexuality, transsexuality and discrimination.[60]
  • Bob Hayes, 59, American football player Dallas Cowboys and a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame.[61]
  • Mauro Ramos, 72, Brazilian football player, intestinal cancer.
  • Margita Stefanović, 43, Serbian musician, complications from HIV.
  • Siobhán Vernon, 70, Irish mathematician.

19 Edit

  • John Arundel, 74, Canadian professional ice hockey player (Toronto Maple Leafs).[62]
  • Roy Fowler, 82, Australian Paralympic competitor.
  • Robert Guéï, 61, military ruler of the Ivory Coast, murdered along with his family.[63]
  • Rose Doudou Guéï, wife of Robert Guéï, murdered along with her family.
  • Cosmo Nevill, 95, British Army officer.
  • Tatyana Velikanova, 70, Soviet dissident and mathematician.

20 Edit

  • Les Auge, 49, American professional ice hockey player (Colorado Rockies).[64]
  • Sergei Bodrov Jr., 30, Russian movie star, Kolka-Karmadon rock ice slide.[65]
  • Necdet Kent, 91, Turkish diplomat and humanitarian.
  • Joan Littlewood, 87, English theatre director.[66]
  • Bob Wallace, 53, American computer scientist, helped invent "shareware" software marketing.[67]

21 Edit

  • Henry Pybus Bell-Irving, 89, Canadian World War II commander and Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia.[68]
  • Nils Bohlin, 82, Swedish mechanical engineer, invented the three-point car safety belt.[69]
  • Angelo Buono, Jr., 67, American serial killer, kidnapper and rapist (the "Hillside Strangler").
  • Robert L. Forward, 70, American physicist and science fiction author, founded Tethers Unlimited to manufacture tethers for NASA.[70]
  • Robert White, 81, American sculptor, professor and poet.[71]

22 Edit

  • Don Carlsen, 75, American baseball player (Chicago Cubs, Pittsburgh Pirates).[72]
  • Jan de Hartog, 88, Dutch novelist and playwright.
  • Joseph Nathan Kane, 103, American historian and author.[73]
  • Anthony Milner, 77, British musician.
  • William Rosenberg, 86, American entrepreneur, bladder cancer.

23 Edit

  • James Scarlett, 8th Baron Abinger, 87, British peer.[74]
  • Vernon Corea, 75, Sri Lankan-born British radio broadcaster.[75]
  • George Georges, 82, Australian politician.
  • Odd Chr. Gøthe, 82, Norwegian civil servant and politician.
  • Eduard Gufeld, 66, Soviet/Russian International Grandmaster of chess and chess author.[76]
  • Nangolo Ithete, 61, Namibian politician.
  • Jule Rivlin, 85, American basketball player and coach.
  • John Baptist Wu, 77, Hong Kong fifth Catholic bishop, member of the College of Cardinals, first Hong Kong cardinal.[77]
  • James G. Zimmerly, 61, American physician and lawyer, Chief of Legal Medicine at AFIP, co-discovered the vaccine for meningitis.

24 Edit

  • Hobbs Adams, 99, American football player and coach (USC, Kansas State).[78]
  • Tetsuya Ayukawa, 83, Japanese literary critic and novelist.
  • Leon Hart, 73, American football player.[79]
  • Tim Rose, 62, American singer and songwriter, heart attack.
  • Ludwig Warnemünde, 85, German long-distance runner (men's marathon at the 1952 Summer Olympics).[80]
  • Mike Webster, 50, American football player (Pittsburgh Steelers) and a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame, heart attack.[81]
  • George Wilson, 86, British cricketer.

25 Edit

  • Bailey Aldrich, 95, American judge (United States circuit judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit).[82]
  • Robert Anthony Buell, 62, American serial killer, execution by lethal injection.
  • Ray Hayworth, 98, American baseball player (Detroit Tigers, Brooklyn Dodgers, New York Giants, St. Louis Browns).[83]
  • Roman Pucinski, 83, American Democratic politician.
  • Arnold Ross, 96, American mathematician.
  • Naeem Siddiqui, 86, Pakistani Islamic scholar, writer and politician.

26 Edit

  • Marem Arapkhanova, 39, Ingush school teacher and heroine, shot.
  • Ricardo Calvo, 58, Spanish chess International Master, doctor, chess historian, author and reporter.[84]
  • Willie Davies, 86, Welsh rugby player.
  • Zakaria Erzinçlioğlu, 50, British forensic entomologist, used his expertise in insect biology to solve more than 200 murders.[85]
  • Al Kvasnak, 81, American baseball player (Washington Senators).[86]
  • Thomas S. Smith, 84, American politician, member of the New Jersey General Assembly.
  • Zerach Warhaftig, 96, Israeli politician, lawyer and rabbi, helped draft and signed Israel's Declaration of Independence.[87]

27 Edit

  • Lidia Chmielnicka-Żmuda, 63, Polish volleyball player (bronze medal in women's volleyball at the 1968 Summer Olympics).[88]
  • Jo-Anne L. Coe, 69, American political staffer, longtime aide to Bob Dole and the first woman to serve as Secretary of the United States Senate.[89]
  • Wally Dreyer, 79, American professional football player (Chicago Bears, Green Bay Packers) and college football coach.[90]
  • Charles Henri Ford, 94, American poet, novelist, artist, editor and filmmaker.[91]
  • David Granger, 99, American bobsledder.[92]
  • Bill Pearson, 80, New Zealand writer.
  • Glen Rounds, 96, American author and illustrator.[93]

28 Edit

  • Alicia Barrié, 86, Chilean actress.
  • Whitney Blake, 76, American actress (Hazel), director and producer (One Day at a Time).[94]
  • Jack Burghardt, 73, Canadian television news broadcaster, politician and a member of Parliament (House of Commons representing London West, Ontario).[95]
  • John Cannady, 79, American professional football player (Indiana University, New York Giants).[96]
  • Patsy Mink, 74, American lawyer and politician, viral pneumonia.[97]
  • Harvey Silbert, 90, American entertainment lawyer, casino executive and philanthropist.

29 Edit

  • Bob Cobbing, 82, British poet, a major exponent of concrete, visual and sound poetry in Britain.[98]
  • Ine ter Laak-Spijk, 71, Dutch short and middle distance runner.
  • Mickey Newbury, 62, American songwriter and recording artist, emphysema.
  • Giuliana Tesoro, 81, American organic chemist.

30 Edit

  • Robert Battersby, 77, British businessman and politician, member of the European Parliament representing Humberside.[99]
  • Len Casanova, 97, American college football coach and athletic director, coached Oregon Ducks from 1951 to 1966.[100]
  • Ron Duhamel, 64, Canadian politician (member of Parliament representing Saint Boniface, Manitoba, Senator for Manitoba).[101]
  • Arthur Hazlerigg, 2nd Baron Hazlerigg, 92, British cricketer and soldier.
  • Ellis Larkins, 79, American jazz pianist, pneumonia.[102]
  • Eddie McGah, 81, American baseball player (Boston Red Sox).[103]
  • Meinhard Michael Moser, 78, Swiss mycologist.
  • Ewart Oakeshott, 86, British illustrator.
  • Sir Jock Taylor, 78, British diplomat.

References Edit

  1. ^ "Yuji Ichioka, 66; Led Way in Studying Lives of Asian Americans". The Los Angeles Times. September 7, 2002. Retrieved August 11, 2021.
  2. ^ "rediff.com: Theatre personality B V Karanth is dead". www.rediff.com. Retrieved October 3, 2022.
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  5. ^ Ojog-Pascu, Mădălina (2003). A fost Agatha Christie a României [She was the Agatha Christie of Romania] (in Romanian). Bucharest: Kullusys. ISBN 973-86421-2-4.
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  70. ^ Oliver, Myrna (September 24, 2002). "Robert L. Forward, 70; Physicist Wrote 11 Science Fiction Novels". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved April 18, 2019.
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  75. ^ Massey, Reginald (October 15, 2002). "Vernon Corea". The Guardian. Retrieved April 2, 2019.
  76. ^ Dylan Loeb McClain (September 27, 2002). "Eduard Gufeld, 66, Chess Grandmaster and Writer". The New York Times. p. A 29. Retrieved August 11, 2021.
  77. ^ Stanford, Peter (September 26, 2002). "Cardinal John Baptist Wu". The Guardian. Retrieved May 3, 2019.
  78. ^ The Associated Press (October 3, 2002). "Adams played at USC, coached at Kansas State". ESPN. Retrieved March 9, 2019.
  79. ^ Richard Goldstein (September 25, 2002). "Leon Hart, 73, Massive End And Heisman Trophy Winner". The New York Times. p. C 19. Retrieved August 11, 2021.
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  81. ^ Frank Litsky (September 25, 2002). "Mike Webster, 50, Dies; Troubled Football Hall of Famer". The New York Times. p. C 19. Retrieved April 30, 2019.
  82. ^ "Aldrich, Bailey". Federal Judicial Center. Retrieved March 10, 2019.
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  90. ^ "Wally Dreyer". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved April 7, 2019.
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