Deaths in January 2002
Appearance
	
	
The following is a list of notable deaths in January 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.
 
January 2002
[edit]1
[edit]- Rolando Del Bello, 76, Italian tennis player.
 - Mohand Arav Bessaoud, 77, Algerian writer and activist.
 - Daulat Bikram Bista, 76, Nepali writer and poet.
 - Bonnie Mealing, 89, Australian swimmer (silver medal in women's 100 metre backstroke at the 1932 Summer Olympics).[1]
 - Eugene Nickerson, 83, American county executive and judge, complications from ulcer surgery.[2]
 - Carol Ohmart, 74, American actress (House on Haunted Hill, The Wild Party, The Scarlet Hour) and model.
 - Julia Phillips, 57, American film producer (The Sting, Taxi Driver, Close Encounters of the Third Kind) and author, Oscar winner (1974), cancer.[3]
 - Patrick Kwame Kusi Quaidoo, 77, Ghanaian politician and businessman.
 - Nuchhungi Renthlei, 88, Indian poet and singer.
 - Astrid Sampe, 92, Swedish textile designer.
 - Catya Sassoon, 33, American actress, singer and model, heart attack after drug overdose.[4]
 - Meg Wyllie, 84, American actress (The Twilight Zone, Perry Mason, Star Trek, The Fugitive).[5]
 
2
[edit]- Armi Aavikko, 43, Finnish beauty queen and singer, pneumonia.
 - Anil Agarwal, 55, Indian environmentalist and science correspondent.[6]
 - Rui Campos, 79, Brazilian football player.
 - Pablo Antonio Cuadra, 89, Nicaraguan essayist, playwright, and graphic artist.[7]
 - Ahmed Dawood, 96, Pakistani industrialist and philanthropist.
 - Ian Grist, 63, British Conservative politician, stroke.
 - Heath MacQuarrie, 82, Canadian politician, scholar, and writer.
 - Charlie Mitten, 80, English football player and manager.[8]
 - Chester Nimitz Jr., 86, American submarine commander.[9]
 - Bibi Osterwald, 81, American actress.[10]
 - Bob Stevens, 85, American sportswriter.
 
3
[edit]- Donald Martin Carroll, 92, American Roman Catholic priest.
 - Satish Dhawan, 81, Indian aerospace engineer.
 - Miki Dora, 67, American surfer, stunt double and actor (Beach Blanket Bingo, How to Stuff a Wild Bikini), pancreatic cancer.[11]
 - Juan García Esquivel, 83, Mexican bandleader and composer for film and television.[12]
 - Freddy Heineken, 78, Dutch beer magnate, pneumonia.[13]
 - Martin Ruby, 79, American gridiron football player.[14]
 - Al Smith, 73, American baseball player (Cleveland Indians, Chicago White Sox, Baltimore Orioles, Boston Red Sox).[15]
 - Baldur R. Stefansson, 84, Canadian agricultural scientist.
 
4
[edit]- Nathan Chapman, 31, U.S. Army soldier, first American soldier killed in combat in the war in Afghanistan.[16]
 - Georg Ericson, 82, Swedish football (soccer) player and coach.[17]
 - Ada Falcón, 96, Argentine tango dancer, singer and film actress.
 - Michael Howard, 79, English choral conductor, organist and composer.[18]
 - Douglas Jung, 74, Canadian politician and a member of Parliament (House of Commons), heart attack.[19]
 - Mustafa Krantja, 80, Albanian classical music conductor and composer.
 - Grace Mera Molisa, 55, Ni-Vanuatu politician, poet and feminist.
 - Jim Sears, 70, American gridiron football player.[20]
 - Adrián Zabala, 85, Cuban-American baseball player (New York Giants).[21]
 
5
[edit]- Charles J. Bishop, 15, American high school student, suicide by plane crash.[22]
 - Igor Cassini, 86, American syndicated gossip columnist (Cholly Knickerbocker) for the Hearst newspaper.[23]
 - Valentin Chernikov, 64, Soviet Olympic fencer (1956 men's team épée, bronze medal at 1960 men's team épée).[24]
 - Fielding Dawson, 71, American author, poet and artist.[25]
 - Roger Gyselinck, 81, Belgian racing cyclist.[26]
 - Astrid Henning-Jensen, 87, Danish film director, actress, and screenwriter.
 - Kamel Maghur, 67, Libyan lawyer and diplomat.
 - Graham Ryder, 52, English geologist and lunar scientist, cancer of the esophagus.[27]
 - Vadim Shefner, 86, Soviet and Russian poet and writer.
 - Bryan Thurlow, 65, English football player.
 
6
[edit]- Bobby Austin, 68, American country musician ("Apartment No. 9", "For Your Love").[28]
 - Per-Arne Berglund, 74, Swedish Olympic javelin thrower (1948 men's javelin throw, 1952 men's javelin throw).[29]
 - Serge Brignoni, 98, Swiss avant-garde painter and sculptor.
 - Sanya Dharmasakti, 94, Thai jurist, university professor and politician, Prime Minister of Thailand from 1973 to 1975.[30]
 - Kunjandi, 82, Indian actor.
 - Johnnie Mae Matthews, 79, American blues and R&B singer, songwriter, and record producer, cancer.
 - Mario Nascimbene, 88, Italian film soundtrack composer.
 - John W. Reynolds, 80, American politician and jurist, Governor of Wisconsin (1963–1965).[31]
 - Fred Taylor, 77, American basketball coach (Ohio State University) and baseball player (Washington Senators).[32]
 - Marian Wenzel, 69, British artist and art historian, leading authority on the art of medieval Bosnia and Herzegovina, cancer.[33]
 - Christa Worthington, 45, American fashion writer (Women's Wear Daily, Cosmopolitan, ELLE, Harper's Bazaar), homicide.[34]
 
7
[edit]- Frank Cave, 59, British trade unionist and political activist (National Union of Mineworkers), brain cancer.[35]
 - Geoff Crompton, 46, American basketball player (Denver Nuggets, Portland Trail Blazers, Milwaukee Bucks, San Antonio Spurs, Cleveland Cavaliers), leukemia.[36]
 - Geoffrey Crossley, 80, British Formula One race car driver, stroke.[37]
 - René Etiemble, 92, French essayist, scholar, and novelist.[38]
 - Mighty Igor, 70, American professional wrestler, heart attack.
 - Björn Landström, 84, Finnish-Swedish artist, writer, and illustrator.[39]
 - Jon Lee, 33, British drummer (Feeder), suicide.[40]
 - Bill Lenny, 78, British film editor.[41]
 - Hal Marnie, 83, American baseball player (Philadelphia Phillies).[42]
 - Raúl Mazorra, 73, Cuban sprinter and Olympian.[43]
 - Avery Schreiber, 66, American comedian and actor, heart attack.[44]
 - Lev Zaykov, 78, Soviet politician and statesman.
 
8
[edit]- M. S. Bartlett, 91, English statistician.[45]
 - Romeo Cascarino, 79, American composer of classical music.[46]
 - David McWilliams, 56, Northern Irish singer-songwriter ("Days of Pearly Spencer"), heart attack.
 - Alexander Prokhorov, 85, Soviet physicist, winner of 1964 Nobel Prize in Physics.[47]
 - Dave Thomas, 69, American entrepreneur, founder of Wendy's, liver cancer, liver tumor.[48]
 - Glayde Whitney, 62, American behavioral geneticist and psychologist, promoted controversial race based genetics.[49]
 - Viggo Widerøe, 97, Norwegian aviator and entrepreneur.
 
9
[edit]- Mush March, 93, Canadian ice hockey player (Chicago Black Hawks).[50]
 - Bill McCutcheon, 77, American actor (Sesame Street, Anything Goes, Steel Magnolias), Tony winner (1988), Alzheimer's disease.[51]
 - Wang Ruoshui, 75, Chinese journalist, political theorists and philosopher, lung cancer.[52]
 - K. William Stinson, 71, U.S. Representative from Washington.[53]
 
10
[edit]- Olga Biglieri, 86, Italian futurist painter and aviator.
 - John Buscema, 74, American comic book artist (Marvel Comics), cancer.[54]
 - Wallie Amos Criswell, 92, American pastor, author and two-term president of the Southern Baptist Convention from 1968 to 1970.[55]
 - Philip Drazin, 67, British mathematician, university teacher and author, an international expert in fluid dynamics.[56]
 - Andrés Hammersley, 82, Chilean tennis player.
 - Günther Ortmann, 85, German field handball player.[57]
 - Cedric Smith, 84, British statistician.[58]
 - Ikkō Tanaka, 71, Japanese graphic designer, heart attack.[59]
 - C. R. Vyas, 77, Indian classical singer.
 
11
[edit]- Gerrit Brokx, 68, Dutch politician.[60]
 - Gene Dinwiddie, 65, American blues saxophonist.
 - Ajay Mitra Shastri, 67, Indian academic, historian and numismatist.[61]
 - Christer Strömholm, 83, Swedish photographer.[62]
 - Henri Verneuil, 81, French filmmaker and playwright.[63]
 
12
[edit]- Bernard Bennett, 70, English snooker and billiards player.
 - John Berger, 92, Swedish Olympic cross-country skier (bronze medal winner in the men's 4 × 10 kilometre relay at the 1936 Winter Olympics).[64]
 - Moss Evans, 76, British union leader, general secretary of the Transport and General Workers Union.[65]
 - Edwin M. Martin, 93, American diplomat and ambassador, pneumonia.[66]
 - Harold B. McSween, 75, American politician (U.S. Representative for Louisiana's 8th congressional district) and businessman.[67]
 - Ernest Pintoff, 70, American film and television director and animator (Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film for The Critic), stroke.[68]
 - Henry S. Reuss, 89, American politician.[69]
 - Neville Sandelson, 78, British politician.[70]
 - Stanley Unwin, 90, South African-born English comedian.[71]
 - Cyrus Vance, 84, United States Secretary of State, international peacemaker, pneumonia.[72]
 
13
[edit]- Richard Bolt, 90, American physicist, specializing in acoustics, founded Bolt, Beranek and Newman.[73]
 - Ted Demme, 38, American film and television director (Blow, The Ref, Yo! MTV Raps, Beautiful Girls), heart attack.[74]
 - Samuel Dolin, 84, Canadian composer and music educator.[75]
 - Guadalupe Dueñas, Mexican short story writer and essayist.
 - Charity Adams Earley, 83, United States Army officer.[76]
 - Paul Fannin, 94, American politician and businessman, Governor of Arizona (1959–1965), U.S. Senator from Arizona (1965–1977), cerebrovascular disease.[77]
 - Gregorio Fuentes, 104, Cuban sailor and Ernest Hemingway's first mate, fishing companion and confidant.[78]
 - Georges Glasser, 94, French tennis player and president of the Tennis Club de Paris.[79]
 - Antonije Isaković, 78, Serbian writer.[80]
 - Pierre Joubert, 91, French illustrator and comics artist.
 - Frank Shuster, 85, Canadian comedian.[81]
 - José María Sánchez-Silva, 90, Spanish writer.[82]
 - Christian von Bülow, 84, Danish Olympic sailor (silver medal in 1956 Dragon sailing, gold medal in 1964 Dragon sailing).[83]
 
14
[edit]- Edith Bouvier Beale, 84, American socialite, fashion model and cabaret performer, known as "Little Edie", heart attack.[84]
 - Michael Young, Baron Young of Dartington, 86, British sociologist, social activist and politician, coined the term "meritocracy".[85]
 - David John Hamer, 78, Australian politician.
 - Rachel Bubar Kelly, 79, American politician for the Prohibition Party.
 - Cele Goldsmith Lalli, 68, American editor, accidental death.
 - Antonio Sbardella, 76, Italian football player, referee and sports official.[86]
 - Olav Selvaag, 89, Norwegian engineer and residential contractor.
 
15
[edit]- Michael Anthony Bilandic, 78, American politician (39th Mayor of Chicago), heart failure.[87]
 - Eugène Brands, 89, Dutch painter, an early member of the COBRA avant-garde art movement.[88]
 - Jean Dockx, 60, Belgian football player and manager.[89]
 - David Epstein, 71, American composer, conductor, and music scientist.
 - Miguel Flores, 81, Chilean football player.[90]
 - John M. Gaver, Jr., 61, American trainer of thoroughbred racehorses.
 - Jeremy Hawk, 83, British actor (Elizabeth).[91]
 - Tomislav Kaloperović, 69, Yugoslav and Serbian football player and coach.
 - Vithabai Bhau Mang Narayangaonkar, Indian artist.
 - Michel Poniatowski, 79, French politician.[92]
 
16
[edit]- John Boulos, 80, Haitian soccer player.
 - Robert Hanbury Brown, 85, British astronomer and astrophysicist, pioneered the development of radar and radio astronomy.[93]
 - Jean Elleinstein, 74, French historian specializing in communism.[94]
 - Henry E. Erwin, 80, American U.S. Army Air Forces airman and recipient of the Medal of Honor for his actions in World War II.[95]
 - Ivan Foxwell, 87, British film producer and screenwriter (Colditz Story, A Touch of Larceny, The Quiller Memorandum).[96]
 - Ralph Jacobi, 73, Australian politician.
 - Milutin Kukanjac, 67, Yugoslav military officer.
 - Bobo Olson, 73, American boxer, Alzheimer's disease.[97]
 - Ron Taylor, 49, American actor (The Wiz, The Simpsons, Rover Dangerfield), heart attack.[98]
 - Jim Tunney, 78, Irish Fianna Fáil politician.
 - Michael Walford, 86, British field hockey, rugby and cricket player (silver medal in field hockey at the 1948 Summer Olympics).[99]
 
17
[edit]- Peter Adamson, 71, British actor (Coronation Street), stomach cancer.[100]
 - Camilo José Cela, 85, Spanish novelist, poet, and essayist, 1989 Nobel Prize in Literature, cardiovascular disease.[101]
 - Queenie Leonard, 96, British character actress and singer.[102]
 - Harvey Matusow, 75, American artist, communist and Federal Bureau of Investigation informer, car accident.[103]
 - Eddie Meduza, 53, Swedish rockabilly composer and musician, heart attack.
 - Bus Mertes, 80, American gridiron football player and coach, stroke.[104]
 - Brian Simon, 86, British educationalist and historian.[105]
 - Héctor Tosar, 78, Uruguayan pianist and classical composer.
 
18
[edit]- Celso Daniel, 50, Brazilian politician and mayor, murdered.[106]
 - Michel Fleury, 78, French historian, archivist and archaeologist, specialising in the history and archaeology of Paris.[107]
 - Jovdat Hajiyev, 84, Azerbaijani composers of the Soviet period.
 - Alex Hannum, 78, American basketball coach.[108]
 - Yasmeen Ismail, 51, Pakistani television actress and theater director.
 - Jorma Karhunen, 88, Finnish Air Force ace.
 
19
[edit]- Jeff Astle, 59, English footballer, degenerative brain disease.[109]
 - Jim Cameron, 71, Australian politician (Speaker of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly).[110]
 - Martti Miettunen, 94, Finnish politician.
 - Vavá, 67, Brazilian football player, heart attack.
 - Ricky Womack, 40, American professional boxer (1982 U.S. amateur heavyweight champion), suicide.[111]
 
20
[edit]- John Aveni, 66, American gridiron football player (Indiana University, Chicago Bears, Washington Redskins).[112]
 - Walter Carter, 72, Canadian politician and a member of Parliament (House of Commons).[113]
 - Jean-Toussaint Desanti, 87, French educator and philosopher.[114]
 - Moti Lal Dhar, 87, India drug chemist and academic.
 - Carrie Hamilton, 38, American actress (Cool World, Fame), lung cancer.[115]
 - John Jackson, 77, American blues musician, liver cancer.[116]
 - R. N. Kao, 83, Indian spy and the first chief of India's intelligence agency.
 - Ivan Karabyts, 57, Ukrainian composer and conductor.
 - Harold Kasket, 75, English actor.
 - Rudolf Staffel, 90, American ceramic artist and educator.
 - Luule Viilma, 51, Estonian doctor, esotericist and practitioner of alternative medicine, car crash.
 
21
[edit]- Max Angst, 80, Swiss Olympic bobsledder (1956 Winter Olympics: two-man bobsleigh bronze medal, four-man bobsleigh).[117]
 - Rolando Barral, 62, Cuban actor and talk show host (El Show de Rolando Barral), often called "the Latino Johnny Carson", stroke.[118]
 - Peggy Lee, 81, American singer & actress (Lady and the Tramp, Pete Kelly's Blues, The Jazz Singer), diabetes, heart attack.[119]
 - John Arthur Love, 85, American attorney and Republican politician (36th Governor of Colorado, first "Energy Czar").[120]
 - Adolfo Marsillach, 73, Spanish actor, playwright and theatre director, prostate cancer.[121]
 - Charlie Puckett, 90, Australian sportsman.[122]
 - Zenon Snylyk, 68, Ukrainian-American soccer player.[123]
 - George Trapp, 53, American basketball player (Atlanta Hawks, Detroit Pistons), stabbed.[124]
 
22
[edit]- Sheldon Allman, 77, Canadian-American singer, actor (Hud, In Cold Blood), songwriter and voice actor.[125]
 - Kenneth Armitage, 85, British sculptor.[126]
 - Peter Bardens, 56, English keyboardist and a founding member of the British progressive rock group Camel, lung cancer.[127]
 - Guido Bernardi, 80, Italian cyclist (silver medal in men's team pursuit cycling at the 1948 Summer Olympics).[128]
 - Henry Cosby, 73, American songwriter ("My Cherie Amour", "The Tears of a Clown", "Uptight (Everything's Alright)").[129]
 - Eric de Maré, 91, British architectural photographer and writer.[130]
 - George W. Dickerson, 88, American college football coach, interim head coach at UCLA for three games in 1958.[131]
 - Stanley Marcus, 96, American businessman.[132]
 - John McGrath, 66, British playwright and theatre theorist.[133]
 - Jean Patchett, 75, American fashion model.[134]
 - Salomon Tandeng Muna, 89, Cameroonian politician.
 - Jack Shea, 91, American speed skater (gold medalist: 500 metres and 1500 metres at the 1932 Winter Olympics), traffic collision.[135]
 - A. H. Weiler, 93, American writer, editor and film critic for The New York Times.[136]
 - John Andrew Young, 85, American politician (U.S. Representative for Texas's 14th congressional district).[137]
 
23
[edit]- Louis T. Benezet, 86, American educator and president of multiple colleges.[138]
 - Pierre Bourdieu, 71, French sociologist and philosopher (Distinction: A Social Critique of the Judgment of Taste), cancer.[139]
 - Charlie Bradshaw, 65, American gridiron football player (Baylor, Los Angeles Rams, Pittsburgh Steelers, Detroit Lions), cancer.[140]
 - Thomas Carey, 70, American operatic baritone, pancreatic cancer.[141]
 - Domingo Drummond, 44, Honduran football player, heart attack.
 - Igor Kipnis, 71, American harpsichordist, pianist and conductor, cancer.[142]
 - Vittorio Mero, 27, Italian football player, traffic collision.[143]
 - Robert Nozick, 63, American philosopher, lung cancer.[144]
 - Pier Giorgio Perotto, 71, Italian electrical engineer and inventor.
 - Gerhard Prokop, 62, German football player and manager.[145]
 - John Symank, 66, American gridiron football player.[146]
 - Johannes E. Vecchi, 70, Argentine Roman Catholic priest, Rector Major of the Salesians.
 - Phil Warren, 63, New Zealand music promoter and politician, chairman of Auckland Regional Council.[147]
 
24
[edit]- Stuart Burge, 84, British film director, producer and actor (Nottingham Playhouse, Royal Court Theatre).[148]
 - Paul B. Carpenter, 73, American politician (California State Assembly, California State Senate), convicted of corruption.[149]
 - Nunzio Filogamo, 99, Italian television and radio presenter, actor and singer.
 - Peter Gzowski, 67, Canadian broadcaster, writer and reporter, emphysema.[150]
 - Elie Hobeika, 45, Lebanese militia commander and politician, murdered.[151]
 - Upendra Kumar, 60, Indian composer.
 - Andrei Mercea, 76, Romanian football player.
 - Edgar Ritchie, 85, Canadian diplomat.
 - Kurt Schaffenberger, 81, American comic book artist (Captain Marvel, Superman, Superman's Girl Friend, Lois Lane).[152]
 - Gregorio Walerstein, 88, Mexican film producer and screenwriter.[153]
 
25
[edit]- J. Clifford Baxter, 43, American executive (Enron Corporation), suicide by gunshot.[154]
 - Willard Estey, 82, Canadian justice of the Supreme Court of Canada.[155]
 - Chris Perry, 73, Indian musician, composer, songwriter and film producer.
 - Winston Place, 87, English cricketer.[156]
 
26
[edit]- Phyllis Bartholomew, 87, English track and field athlete.
 - Francisco Cabañas, 90, Mexican Olympic flyweight boxer (silver medal winner in flyweight boxing at the 1932 Summer Olympics).[157]
 - Dorothy Carrington, 91, British writer, one of the leading scholars on Corsican culture and history.[158]
 - Rudolph B. Davila, 85, United States Army officer, World War II Medal of Honor recipient.[159]
 - Loonis McGlohon, 80, American songwriter and jazz pianist.[160]
 - Ray Yochim, 79, American baseball player (St. Louis Cardinals).[161]
 
27
[edit]- Robert L. Chapman, 81, American professor, dictionary editor and thesaurus editor (Roget's Thesaurus).[162]
 - Yelena Gorchakova, 68, Russian javelin thrower and Olympic medalist.[163]
 - John James, 87, British racing driver.
 - Edgar Manske, 89, American gridiron football player.[164]
 - Franz Meyers, 93, German politician and Minister President of North Rhine-Westphalia.
 - Reggie Sanders, 52, American baseball player (Detroit Tigers).[165]
 - Pierre Vago, 91, French architect.[166]
 - Alain Vanzo, 73, French opera singer and composer, stroke.[167]
 
28
[edit]- Hilda Carrero, 50, Venezuelan model and actress, cancer.
 - Andrew W. Cooper, 74, American activist, journalist, and editor-in-chief of The City Sun, stroke.[168]
 - Gustaaf Deloor, 88, Belgian road racing cyclist.[169]
 - Herbert Hirche, 91, German architect and furniture and product designer.
 - Hennie Keetelaar, 75, Dutch Olympic water polo player.[170]
 - Andy Kulberg, 57, American musician, lymphoma.[171]
 - Astrid Lindgren, 94, Swedish writer of fiction and screenplays, viral infection.[172]
 - Jack Witikka, 85, Finnish film director and screenwriter.
 - Ayşenur Zarakolu, 55, Turkish publisher and human rights activist, cancer.[173]
 
29
[edit]- Stephen Wayne Anderson, 48, American murderer, execution by lethal injection.
 - Suzanne Bloch, 94, Swiss-American musician, teacher and early music specialist.[174]
 - Florian Côté, 72, Canadian politician (member of Parliament representing Nicolet—Yamaska, Quebec and Richelieu, Quebec).[175]
 - Daniel De Luce, 90, American journalist for Associated Press from 1929 to 1976.
 - Richard Grenier, 68, American columnist and film critic, heart attack.[176]
 - Sarla Grewal, 74, Indian State Governor.
 - Haim Haberfeld, 70, Israeli trade union leader and the chairman of the Israel Football Association.
 - R. M. Hare, 82, English moral philosopher, series of strokes.[177]
 - Heinz Hennig, 74, German choral conductor and an academic teacher.[178]
 - Stratford Johns, 76, South African-born British actor (Z Cars, Softly, Softly, Cromwell), heart disease.[179]
 - Dick Lane, 73, American football player, heart attack.[180]
 - Phil McCall, 76, British actor.
 - John R. McGann, 77, American prelate of the Catholic Church.
 - Berto Pisano, 73, Italian composer, conductor, arranger and jazz musician.[181]
 - Harold Russell, 88, Canadian-American actor (The Best Years of Our Lives), Oscar winner (1947), heart attack.[182]
 
30
[edit]- Carlo Karges, 50, German musician, liver disease.
 - Inge Morath, 78, Austrian-born American photographer, cancer.[183]
 - Jeanne Robert, 91, French historian and epigrapher.[184]
 - Louis Salica, 89, American boxer (bronze medal in flyweight boxing at the 1932 Summer Olympics, 1935 and 1940 world bantamweight title).[185]
 
31
[edit]- Francis Acharya, 82, Belgian Roman Catholic monk.[186]
 - Ernest Butler, 82, English football player.
 - Jim Camp, 77, American gridiron football player (Brooklyn Dodgers) and college football head coach (George Washington University).[187]
 - Harry Chiti, 69, American baseball player (Chicago Cubs, Kansas City Athletics, Detroit Tigers, New York Mets).[188]
 - Gabby Gabreski, 83, Polish-American World War II and Korean War fighter pilot, heart attack.[189]
 - Ad Hermes, 72, Dutch politician.[190]
 - Henry Kloss, 72, American audio engineer and entrepreneur.[191]
 - Jim Letsinger, 90, American gridiron football player.[192]
 - Evelyn Scott, 86, American film and television actress (The Untouchables, Bonanza, Bachelor Father, Peyton Place).[193]
 - Ger Stroker, 85, Dutch football player.
 - Karel Voous, 81, Dutch ornithologist and author.
 - Predrag Vranicki, 80, Yugoslav and Croatian philosopher and Marxist humanist.[194]
 
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