Deaths in December 2003
The following is a list of notable deaths in December 2003.
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← November | December | January → |
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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.
December 2003
1
- Hamza Alvi, 82, Pakistani-British sociologist and activist (Campaign Against Racial Discrimination).[1]
- Barbara Galdonik, 69, American baseball player (AAGPBL).[2]
- Clark Kerr, 92, first Chancellor of the University of California, Berkeley (1952–58) and President of the University of California (1958–67), complications from a fall.
- Eugenio Monti, 75, Italian bobsledder (six Olympic bobsledding medals: 1956 two silver, 1964 two bronze, 1968 two gold).[3]
- Carl Schenkel, 55, Swiss film director.
2
- Ruth Nanda Anshen, 103, American philosopher, author and editor.[4]
- John Brimhall, 75, American composer, music arranger and author of more than 500 music instruction books.[5]
- Alan Davidson, 79, British food writer and diplomat.
- Fernando Di Leo, 71, Italian film director and script writer.
- Ignaz Kiechle, 73, German politician and minister for agriculture (1983–93).
- Rudolph A. Peterson, 98, American banker.
- Jim Sheehan, 90, American baseball player (New York Giants).[6]
3
- Dulce Chacón, 49, Spanish poet, novelist and playwright, Pancreatic cancer.
- Jim Conway, 78, Australian rules football player and coach.
- Jay Difani, 80, American baseball player (Washington Senators).[7]
- Ellen Drew, 88, American film actress, Liver ailment.
- David Hemmings, 62, British actor and director, heart attack.
- John Randal McDonald, 81, American architect.
4
- Jace Bugg, 27, American professional golfer (Nationwide Tour, Canadian Tour).[8]
- John H. Hannah Jr., 64, American judge (U.S. District Judge of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas), heart attack.[9]
- Iggy Katona, 87, American stock car racer.
- Jonathan Luna, 38, United States Assistant Attorney.
- David Vaughan, 59, English psychedelic artist.[10]
- Jacques Viau, 84, Canadian lawyer.
5
- Paul Busby, 85, American baseball player (Philadelphia Phillies).[11]
- Felix Kaspar, 88, Austrian figure skater (bronze medal in men's singles figure skating at the 1936 Winter Olympics).[12]
- Jack Keller, 61, American poker player.
- Bert Templeton, 63, Scottish-born Canadian ice hockey coach, kidney cancer.
- Julius Waring Walker Jr., 76, American diplomat, United States Ambassador to Upper Volta.[13]
6
- Haddis Alemayehu, 93, Ethiopian Foreign Minister and novelist.
- Carlos Manuel Arana Osorio, 85, Guatemalan military ruler, President of Guatemala who murdered thousands of adversaries.[14]
- John Bingham, 61, British classical pianist.[15]
- Frank J. Breth, 66, American Marine Corps brigadier general.[16]
- John Ronald Henderson, 83, British army officer.
- Barry Long, 77, Australian spiritual teacher and writer.
- Jerry Tuite, 36, American wrestler, heart attack.
7
- Roland Asselin, 86, Canadian fencer (1948 Olympic fencing, 1952 Olympic fencing, 1956 Olympic fencing).[17]
- Johnny Bulla, 89, American golfer.
- Carl F. H. Henry, 90, American Evangelical theologian and founder of Christianity Today magazine.
- Azie Taylor Morton, 67, American public servant (Treasurer of the United States), complications from a stroke.[18]
8
- Lewis M. Allen, 81, American film and Broadway producer, nominated for seven Tony Awards and won three.[19]
- Margaret Jean Anderson, 84, Canadian businesswoman and senator (representing Northumberland--Miramichi, New Brunswick).[20]
- Nikolay Binev, 69, Bulgarian theater and film actor.
- Nelson Bobb, 79, American professional basketball player (Temple University, Philadelphia Warriors).[21]
- Rubén González, 84, Cuban pianist.
- Chuck Noe, 79, American basketball coach (VMI, Virginia Tech, South Carolina, VCU) and broadcaster.[22]
- Sir Stephen Tumim, 73, British lawyer, Her Majesty's Chief Inspector of Prisons.
- Francine Weisweiller, 87, French socialite and patron of Jean Cocteau.[23]
9
- Margaret Quass, 77, British educationalist.
- Paul Simon, 75, American author and politician, United States Senator from Illinois from 1985 to 1997.[24]
- Norm Sloan, 77, American college basketball player and coach (The Citadel, University of Florida, North Carolina State).[25]
- David P. Weikart, 72, American psychologist and child education expert, his findings are widely cited to promote Head Start.[26]
10
- Robert Bartley, 66, American newspaper editor (The Wall Street Journal editorial page), won a Pulitzer Prize.[27]
- Sir Oswald Cheung, 81, Hong Kong lawyer and politician.
- Ettore Perazzoli, 29, Italian free software developer.
- Sir John Watts, 73, British army general.[28]
- Don Wheeler, 81, American baseball player (Chicago White Sox).[29]
11
- Shah Ahmad Noorani, 77, Pakistani Islamic scholar, mystic, philosopher, revivalist and an ultra–conservative politician.[30]
- Malcolm Clarke, 60, British composer.
- Ahmadou Kourouma, 76, Ivorian novelist.
- Ram Kishore Shukla, 80, Indian politician.
- John W. Sidgmore, 52, former head of Worldcom and UUNet, acute pancreatitis.
12
- Heydar Aliyev, 80, Azerbaijani politician, served as the third president of Azerbaijan.[31]
- Ross Belsher, 70, Canadian politician (member of Parliament of Canada for Fraser Valley East, British Columbia).[32]
- Michael Casson, 78, British potter.
- Joseph Anthony Ferrario, 77, American Roman Catholic prelate, Bishop of Honolulu (1982–1993).
- Earl Gillespie, 81, American sportscaster, voice of the Milwaukee Braves.
- Keiko, 27, orca of Reino Aventura and Free Willy fame, pneumonia.
- Fadwa Toukan, 86, Palestinian poet.
13
- Elizabeth Bates, 56, American professor of cognitive science, pioneering work in child language acquisition, pancreatic cancer.[33]
- Elizabeth Bunce, 88, American geophysicist, oceanographer (Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution) and author.[34]
- Māris Čaklais, 63, Latvian poet and writer.
- Mollie Hardwick, 87, British writer.
- William V. Roth, Jr., 82, American lawyer and politician United States Senator from Delaware from 1971 to 2001.[35]
- Webster Young, 71, American jazz trumpeter (Miles Davis, John Coltrane, Dizzy Gillespie).[36]
14
- Jeanne Crain, 78, American actress, heart attack.
- Blas Ople, 75, Filipino journalist and politician.
- Frank Sheeran, 83, American labor union leader and mobster, "The Irishman"[37]
15
- Abram Salmon Benenson, 89, American medical doctor and author on preventive medicine, epidemiology and communicable diseases.[38]
- Johnny Cunningham, 46, British folk musician.
- George Fisher, 80, American political cartoonist.
- Jack Gregory, 80, British athlete.
- Garvin Hamner, 79, American baseball player (Philadelphia Phillies).[39]
- David S. Lewis, 86, American aerospace engineer.
- Keith Magnuson, 56, Canadian ice hockey player (Chicago Black Hawks), road accident.[40]
- Sergio Vergara, 76, Chilean fencer (men's individual épée fencing at the 1964 Summer Olympics).[41]
- Dora Wasserman, 84, Russian-Canadian actress, playwright, theater director.[42]
16
- Willis Adcock, 81, Canadian-American inventor, physicist, electrical engineer and educator.[43]
- Glynn Boyd Harte, 55, English painter, illustrator and author.[44]
- Robert Stanfield, 89, Canadian politician (member of Parliament representing Colchester—Hants and Halifax, Nova Scotia).[45]
- Gary Stewart, 58, American country music singer: "She's Actin' Single (I'm Drinkin' Doubles)", suicide.[46]
17
- Bonnie Baker, 85, Canadian baseball player (AAGPBL)[47]
- Ed Devereaux, 78, Australian actor.
- Otto Graham, 82, American professional football (Cleveland Browns) and member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame, heart aneurysm.[48]
- David Smith, 69, English cricketer.
- Alan Tilvern, 86, English actor and voice artist (Bhowani Junction, The Lord of the Rings (1978 film), Who Framed Roger Rabbit).[49]
- Lloyd Weier, 65, Australian rugby league player.
- Jim Wolf, 51, American professional football player (Prairie View A&M, Pittsburgh Steelers, Kansas City Chiefs).[50]
- Gordon Wood, 89, American high school football coach, retired in 1985 as the winningest high school football coach in the nation.[51]
18
- Daniel Amneus, 84, American literary scholar.
- Charles Berlitz, 90, American linguist, spoke 32 languages, wrote world-wide language curriculum.[52]
- Jack Dormand, Baron Dormand of Easington, 84, British politician.
- Susan Travers, 94, only English woman to serve in the French Foreign Legion.
- Richard Wahlstrom, 72, American Olympic rower (bronze medal in men's coxed four at the 1952 Summer Olympics).[53]
19
- Peter Carter-Ruck, 89, British libel lawyer.
- Roger Conant, 94, American herpetologist.
- Hope Lange, 72, American actress, ischemic colitis.
- Carmen Mauro, 77, American baseball player (Chicago Cubs, Brooklyn Dodgers, Washington Senators, Philadelphia Athletics).[54]
20
- Denis Barry, 74, American chess player and official, president of the United States Chess Federation.[55]
- Grigore Grigoriu, 62, Moldovan actor, car accident.
- Herbert Kutscha, 86, German Luftwaffe fighter ace and recipient of the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross during World War II.
- Alan Magee, 84, American World War II airman, survived 22,000 ft. fall.
- Gil Reece, 61, Welsh footballer.
21
- Prince Alfonso of Hohenlohe-Langenburg, 79, Spanish businessman and playboy.[56]
- Antony Allen, 90, English cricketer.
- Gawaine Baillie, 69, British amateur racing driver, engineer, industrialist, stamp collector and estate owner.[57]
- Robert Boutilier, 50, Canadian biologist and professor (Royal Society of Canada).[58]
- M. J. Gopalan, 94, Indian sportsman.
- G. V. Iyer, 86, Indian film director and actor.
- Wanda Włodarczyk, 78, Polish Olympic fencer (women's foil at the 1952 Summer Olympics).[59]
22
- Mikhail Borodulin, 36, Kazakhstani ice hockey player (men's ice hockey at the 1998 Winter Olympics).[60]
- Wah Chang, 86, Chinese-American designer, sculptor, and artist.
- Dave Dudley, 75, American country music singer, heart attack.
- Rose Hill, 89, English actress and operatic soprano.
- Chandu Sarwate, 83, Indian cricketer and fingerprint expert.
- Doris Shadbolt, 85, Canadian art curator and writer.
- Alvan Williams, 71, British footballer and manager.
23
- Charlie Bowles, 86, American baseball player (Philadelphia Athletics).[61]
- John Newlove, 65, Canadian poet and editor.[62]
- John Sanders, 70, British organist, pneumonia.
- Basil Wells, 91, American writer.
24
- David Hobman, 76, English social activist.
- Herman Keiser, 89, American golfer.[63]
- Eugene Maltsev, 74, Soviet Russian painter.
- Nigel Moore, 73, English cricketer.
- Lois Barclay Murphy, 101, American developmental psychologist, congestive heart failure.
- Noel Toy, 84, American burlesque performer.
25
- Frédéric Berthet, 49, French writer.
- Charles Concordia, 95, American electrical engineer and computer pioneer.
- Foggy Lyttle, 59, Irish guitarist.
- Nicola Paone, 88, American singer, songwriter, and restaurateur.
- George Zambelli, 79, American businessman, long-time president and manager of Zambelli Fireworks.[64]
26
- Hugh Bean, 74, English violinist, teacher and leader of the Philharmonia Orchestra.[65]
- Gale Bishop, 81, American professional basketball player (Washington State, Philadelphia Warriors).[66]
- Redfern Froggatt, 79, English footballer.
- Phil Goldman, 39, American engineer and entrepreneur, heart failure.
- Yoshio Shirai, 80, first Japanese world boxing champion, pneumonia.
27
- Pete Alvarado, 83, American animation and comic book artist (Disney Studios, Warner Bros. Animation, Western Publishing).[67]
- Sir Alan Bates, 69, British actor (The Fixer, Zorba the Greek, Georgy Girl, Women in Love), pancreatic cancer.[68]
- Enric Bernat, 80, Spanish businessman, founder of Chupa Chups.[69]
- Iván Calderón, 41, Puerto Rican baseball player (Seattle Mariners, Chicago White Sox, Montreal Expos), homicide by gunshot.[70]
- Gerhard Doerfer, 83, German philologist.
- Vestal Goodman, 74, American Southern Gospel singer, complications from influenza.
- Nagavally R. S. Kurup, 86, Indian writer and broadcaster.
- Richie Niemiera, 82, American professional basketball player and coach (Notre Dame, Fort Wayne Pistons, Anderson Packers).[71]
- Patrick J. Reynolds, 83, Irish politician.
- Polly Rosenbaum, 104, American politician and teacher.
- Ying Ruocheng, 74, Chinese actor (Marco Polo, The Last Emperor, Little Buddha), director, translator and China's vice-minister of culture.[72]
- Alex Sakula, 86, British respiratory physician.
28
- Lawrence Bogorad, 82, Soviet-American botanist, a pioneer in photosynthesis and chloroplast biology.[73]
- Benjamin Thurman Hacker, 68, first American Naval Flight Officer to achieve the "Flag" rank.
- Frank Parr, 85, British chess player.[74]
- Thomas Pearsall, 83, Australian politician.
- John Terraine, 82, British military historian.
29
- Charles E. Beatley, 87, American politician, mayor of Alexandria, Virginia.[75]
- Dickie Davis, 37, English cricketer, brain cancer.
- Earl Hindman, 61, American actor (Home Improvement), lung cancer.
- Dinsdale Landen, 71, British actor, pneumonia.[76]
- Don Lawrence, 75, British comic book artist.
- Bob Monkhouse, 75, British comedian and game show host, prostate cancer.
- Ersa Siregar, 52, Indonesian reporter and journalist, shot dead in a shootout between TNI and GAM.
- Michel Zanoli, 35, Dutch road cyclist (men's individual road race, men's team time trial at 1988 Summer Olympics).[77]
30
- David Bale, 62, South African businessman and activist, husband of Gloria Steinem.[78]
- Vladimir Bogomolov, 77, Soviet writer (The Moment of Truth, 1973).[79]
- John Gregory Dunne, 71, American novelist and screenwriter, heart attack.[80]
- Anita Mui, 40, Hong Kong pop queen.
- Samuel M. Nabrit, 98, American marine biologist and educator, president of Texas Southern University.[81]
- Hukwe Zawose, 65, Tanzanian musician.[82]
31
- Renata Babak, 69, Ukrainian-American mezzo-soprano who defected from the Bolshoi Opera in 1973.[83]
- Sophie Daumier, 69, French actress, comedian, Huntington's disease.
- Sir David Scott-Barrett, 81, British army general.
- Arthur R. von Hippel, 105, German-American scientist and MIT professor who made critical contributions to the development of radar.[84]
- Valentin Vdovichenko, 75, Soviet fencer (men's team épée fencing at the 1956 Summer Olympics).[85]
- Sieglinde Wagner, 82, Austrian operatic contralto.[86]
- Max West, 87, American baseball player (Boston Bees/Braves, Cincinnati Reds, Pittsburgh Pirates).[87]
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