BOF NEVER GABRIEL AND NEVER WAS MADE A BIRD A NEWBEC OR ANYTHING SHORTER THAN LESLIE AT 5′5 AND 3 QUARTERS INCHES TALL! AND FOR PEOPLE TRYIN TO BE ME AND INVADE ME THESE PEOPLE DIED, EVERY YEAR MORE AND MORE WILL DIE FOR TRYING TO STEAL MY STUFF OR HURT MY FAMILY OR KIDNAP MY KID(S) EVER OR HAVE ME LIVING MORE THAN ONE LIFE.
March 2002[edit source]
1 – David Mann, 85, American songwriter.
1 – Roger Plumpton Wilson, 96, British Anglican prelate.
3 – G. M. C. Balayogi, 61, Indian lawyer and politician.
3 – Calvin Carrière, 80, American fiddler.
3 – Harlan Howard, 74, American country music songwriter.
3 – Al Pollard, 73, NFL player and broadcaster, lymphoma. [1]
3 – Roy Porter, 55, British historian.
6 – Bryan Fogarty, 32, Canadian ice hockey player.
6 – David Jenkins, 89, Welsh librarian.
6 – Donald Wilson, 91, British television writer and producer.
7 – Franziska Rochat-Moser, 35, Swiss marathon runner.
8 – Bill Johnson, 85, American football player.
8 – Ellert Sölvason, 84, Icelandic football player.
9 – Jack Baer, 87, American baseball coach.
9 – Irene Worth, 85, American actress.
11 – Al Cowens, 50, American baseball player.
11 – Rudolf Hell, 100, German inventor and manufacturer.
12 – Steve Gromek, 82, American baseball player.
13 – Hans-Georg Gadamer, 102, German philosopher.
14 – Cherry Wilder, 71, New Zealand writer.
14 – Tan Yu, 75, Filipino entrepreneur.
15 – Sylvester Weaver, 93, American advertising executive, father of Sigourney Weaver.
16 – Sir Marcus Fox, 74, British politician.
17 – Rosetta LeNoire, 90, African-American stage and television actress.
17 – Bill Davis, 60, American football coach.
18 – Reginald Covill, 96, British cricketer.
18 – Maude Farris-Luse, 115, supercentenarian and one-time "Oldest Recognized Person in the World".
18 – Gösta Winbergh, 58, Swedish operatic tenor.
20 – John E. Gray, 95, American educational administrator, President of Lamar University.
20 – Ivan Novikoff, 102, Russian premier ballet master.
20 – Richard Robinson, 51, English cricketer.
21 – James F. Blake, 89, American bus driver, antagonist for the Montgomery Bus Boycott.
21 – Thomas Flanagan, 78, American novelist and academic.
22 – Sir Kingsford Dibela, 70, Governor-General of Papua New Guinea.
22 – Hugh R. Stephen, 88, Canadian politician.
23 – Ben Hollioake, 24, English cricketer.
24 – Dorothy DeLay, 84, American violin instructor.
24 – César Milstein, 74, Argentinian biochemist.
24 – Frank G. White, 92, American army general.
25 – Ken Traill, 75, British rugby league player.
25 – Kenneth Wolstenholme, 81, British football commentator.
26 – Roy Calvert, 88, New Zealand World War II air force officer.
27 – Milton Berle, 93, American comedian dubbed "Mr. Television".
27 – Sir Louis Matheson, 90, British university administrator, Vice Chancellor of Monash University.
27 – Dudley Moore, 66, British actor and writer.
27 – Billy Wilder, 95, Austrian-born American film director (Double Indemnity).
28 – Tikka Khan, 86, Pakistani army general.
29 – Rico Yan, 27, Filipino movie & TV actor.
30 – Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother, 101, British consort of King George VI.
31 – Lady Anne Brewis, 91, English botanist.
31 – Barry Took, 73, British comedian and writer.
April 2002[edit source]
1 – Umer Rashid, 26, English cricketer, drowning.
1 – John S. Samuel, 88, American Air Force general.
2 – John R. Pierce, 92, American engineer and author.
2 – Robert Lawson Vaught, 75, American mathematician.
3 – Frank Tovey, aka Fad Gadget, 45, English singer-songwriter.
4 – Don Allard, 66, American football player (New York Titans, New England Patriots) and coach.
5 – Arthur Ponsonby, 11th Earl of Bessborough, 89, British aristocrat.
5 – Layne Staley, 34, former Alice in Chains lead singer.
6 – Nobu McCarthy, 67, Canadian actress.
6 – William Patterson, 71, British Anglican priest, Dean of Ely.
6 – Margaret Wingfield, 90, British political activist.
7 – John Agar, 82, American actor.
8 – Sir Nigel Bagnell, 75, British field marshal.
8 – María Félix, 88, Mexican film star.
8 – Helen Gilbert, 80 American artist.
8 – Giacomo Mancini, 85, Italian politician.
9 – Leopold Vietoris, 110, Austrian mathematician.
10 – Géza Hofi, 75 Hungarian humorist.
11 – J. William Stanton, 78, American politician.
14 – Buck Baker, 83, American member of the NASCAR Hall of Fame
14 – John Boda, 79, American composer and music professor.
14 – Sir Michael Kerr, 81, British jurist.
15 – Will Reed, 91, British composer.
15 – Byron White, 84, United States Supreme Court justice.
16 – Billy Ayre, 49, English footballer.
16 – Franz Krienbühl, 73, Swiss speed skater.
16 – Robert Urich, 55, American TV actor.
18 – Thor Heyerdahl, 87, Norwegian anthropologist.
18 – Cy Laurie, 75, British musician.
18 – Sir Peter Proby, 90, British landowner, Lord-Lieutenant of Cambridgeshire.
20 – Vlastimil Brodský, 81, Czech actor.
21 – Sebastian Menke, 91, American Roman Catholic priest.
21 – Red O'Quinn, 76, American football player.
21 – Terry Walsh, 62, British stuntman.
22 – Albrecht Becker, 95, German production designer and actor.
22 – Allen Morris, 92, American historian.
23 – Linda Lovelace, 53, former porn star turned political activist, car crash.
23 – Ted Kroll, 82, American golfer.
25 – Michael Bryant, 74, British actor.
25 – Indra Devi, 102, Russian "yoga teacher to the stars".
25 – Lisa Lopes, 30, American singer, car crash.
26 – Alton Coleman, 46, convicted spree killer, execution by lethal injection.
27 – Ruth Handler, 85, inventor of the Barbie doll.
27 – Baron Hans Heinrich Thyssen-Bornemisza, 81, German Industrialist and art collector.
28 – Alexander Lebed, Russian general and politician.
28 – Sir Peter Parker, 77, British businessman.
28 – Lou Thesz, American professional wrestler.
28 – John Wilkinson, 82, American sound engineer.
29 – Liam O'Sullivan, Scottish footballer, drugs overdose. [2]
29 – Lor Tok, 88, Thai, comedian and actor Thailand National Artist.
May 2002[edit source]
1 – John Nathan-Turner, 54, British television producer.
2 – William Thomas Tutte, 84, Bletchley Park cryptographer and British, later Canadian, mathematician.
3 – Barbara Castle, Baroness Castle of Blackburn, 91, British Labour politician and female life peer.
3 – Mohamed Haji Ibrahim Egal, 73, president of Somaliland and formerly prime minister of Somalia and British Somaliland.
3 – Mohan Singh Oberoi, 103, Indian hotelier and retailer.
4 – Abu Turab al-Zahiri, 79, Saudi Arabian writer of Arab Indian descent
5 – Sir Clarence Seignoret 83, president of Dominica (1983–1993).
5 – Hugo Banzer Suárez, 75, president of Bolivia, as dictator 1971–1978 and democratic president 1997–2001.
5 – Mike Todd, Jr., 72, American film producer.
6 – Otis Blackwell, 71, American singer-songwriter and pianist.
6 – Harry George Drickamer, 83, American chemical engineer.
6 – Pim Fortuyn, 54, assassinated Dutch politician.
7 – Sir Bernard Burrows, 91, British diplomat.
7 – Sir Ewart Jones, 91, Welsh chemist.
7 – Seattle Slew, 28, last living triple crown winner on 25th anniversary of winning Kentucky Derby.
8 – Sir Edward Jackson, 76, English diplomat.
9 – Robert Layton, 76, Canadian politician.
9 – James Simpson, 90, British explorer.
10 – Lynda Lyon Block, 54, convicted murderer, executed by electric chair in Alabama.
10 – John Cunniff, 57, American hockey player and coach.
10 – Henry W. Hofstetter, 87, American optometrist.
10 – Leslie Dale Martin, 35, convicted murderer, executed by lethal injection in Louisiana.
10 – Tom Moore, 88, American athletics promoter.
11 – Joseph Bonanno, 97, Sicilian former Mafia boss.
12 – Richard Chorley, 74, English geographer.
13 – Morihiro Saito, 74, a teacher of the Japanese martial art of aikido.
13 – Ruth Cracknell, 76, redoubtable Australian actress most famous for the long-running role of Maggie Beare in the series "Mother and Son".
13 – Valery Lobanovsky, 63, former Ukrainian coach.
14 – Sir Derek Birley, 75, British educationist and writer.
15 – Bernard Benjamin, 92, British statistician.
15 – Bryan Pringle, 67, British actor.
15 – Nellie Shabalala, 49, South African singer and wife of leader/founder of Ladysmith Black Mambazo, Joseph Shabalala.
15 – Esko Tie, 73, Finnish ice hockey player.
16 – Edwin Alonzo Boyd, 88, Canadian bank-robber and prison escapee of the 1950s.
16 – Alec Campbell, 103, Australia's last surviving ANZAC died in a nursing home.
16 – Dorothy Van, 74, American actress.
17 – Peter Beck, 92, British schoolmaster.
17 – Joe Black, 78, American first Black baseball pitcher to win a World Series game.
17 – Earl Hammond, 80, American voice actor best known for voicing Mumm Ra and Jaga in the television series Thundercats.
17 – Bobby Robinson, 98, American baseball player.
17 – Little Johnny Taylor, 59, American singer.
18 – Davey Boy Smith, 39, 'British Bulldog' professional wrestler.
18 – Gordon Wharmby, 68, British actor (Last of the Summer Wine)
19 – John Gorton, 90, 19th Prime Minister of Australia.
19 – Otar Lordkipanidze, 72, Georgian archaeologist.
20 – Stephen Jay Gould, 60, paleontologist and popular science author.
21 – Niki de Saint Phalle, 71, French artist.
21 – Roy Paul, 82, Welsh footballer.
22 – Paul Giel, 69, American football player.
22 – Dick Hern, 81, British racehorse trainer.
22 – (remains discovered; actual death probably took place on or around May 1, 2001), Chandra Levy, 24, U.S. Congressional intern.
22 – Creighton Miller, 79, American football player and attorney.
23 – Sam Snead, 89, golfer.
25 – Pat Coombs, 75, English actress.
25 – Jack Pollard, 75, Australian sports journalist.
26 – John Alexander Moore, 86, American biologist.
26 – Mamo Wolde, 69, Ethiopian marathon runner.
28 – Napoleon Beazley, 25, convicted juvenile offender, executed by lethal injection in Texas.
28 – Mildred Benson, 96, American children's author.
June 2002[edit source]
1 – Hansie Cronje, 32, South African cricketer, air crash.
4 – Fernando Belaúnde Terry, 89, democratic president of Peru, 1963–1968 and 1980–1985.
4 – John W. Cunningham, 86, American author.
4 – Caroline Knapp, 42, author of Drinking: A Love Story.
5 – Dee Dee Ramone, 50, founding member of The Ramones.
5 – Alex Watson, 70, Australian rugby league player.
6 – Peter Cowan, 87, Australian writer.
6 – Hans Janmaat, 67, controversial far-right politician in the Netherlands.
7 – Rodney Hilton, 85, British historian.
7 – Lilian, Princess of Réthy, 85, British-born Belgian royal.
8 – George Mudie, 86, Jamaican cricketer.
9 – Paul Chubb, 53, Australian actor.
9 – Bryan Martyn, 71, Australian rules footballer.
10 – John Gotti, 61, imprisoned mobster.
11 – Robbin Crosby, 42, American guitarist of rock band Ratt.
11 – Margaret E. Lynn, 78, American theater director.
11 – Robert Roswell Palmer, 93, American historian and writer.
11 – Peter John Stephens, 89, British children's author.
12 – Bill Blass, 79, American fashion designer.
12 – George Shevelov, 93, Ukrainian scholar.
13 – John Hope, 83, American meteorologist.
14 – Jose Bonilla, 34, boxing former world champion, of asthma.
14 – June Jordan, 65, American writer and teacher, of breast cancer.
15 – Said Belqola, 45, Moroccan referee of the 1998 FIFA World Cup final.
17 – Willie Davenport, 59, American gold medal-winning Olympic hurdler.
17 – John C. Davies II, 82, American politician.
17 – Fritz Walter, 81, German football player, captain of 1954 World Cup winners.
18 – Nancy Addison, 54, soap actress, cancer.
18 – Jack Buck, 77, Major League Baseball announcer.
18 – Michael Coulson, 74, British lawyer and politician.
19 – Count Flemming Valdemar of Rosenborg, 80, Danish prince.
20 – Enrique Regüeiferos, 53, Cuban Olympic boxer.
21 – Henry Keith, Baron Keith of Kinkel, 80, British jurist.
21 – Patrick Kelly, 73, English cricketer.
22 – David O. Cooke, 81, American Department of Defense official.
22 – Darryl Kile, 33, Major League Baseball player.
22 – Ann Landers, 83, author & syndicated newspaper columnist.
23 – Pedro "El Rockero" Alcazar, 26, Panamanian boxer; died after losing his world Flyweight championship to Fernando Montiel in Las Vegas the night before.
23 – Arnold Weinstock, 77, British businessman.
24 – Lorna Lloyd-Green, 92, Australian gynaecologist.
24 – Miles Francis Stapleton Fitzalan-Howard, 86, 17th Duke of Norfolk.
24 – Pierre Werner, 88, former Prime Minister of Luxembourg, "father of the Euro".
25 – Gordon Park Baker, 64, Anglo-American philosopher.
25 – Jean Corbeil, 68, Canadian politician.
26 – Barbara G. Adams, 57, British Egyptologist.
26 – Clarence D. Bell, 88, American politician, member of the Pennsylvania State Senate.
26 – Jay Berwanger, 88, college football player, first winner of the Heisman Trophy.
26 – Arnold Brown, 88, British General of the Salvation Army.
26 – James Morgan, 63, British journalist.
27 – Sir Charles Carter, 82, British economist and academic administrator.
27 – John Entwistle, 57, English bassist (The Who), heart attack.
27 – Russ Freeman, 76, American pianist.
27 – Robert L. J. Long, 82, American admiral.
27 – Jack Webster, 78, Canadian police officer.
28 – Arthur "Spud" Melin, responsible for marketing hula-hoop and frisbee.
29 – Rosemary Clooney, 74, singer.
29 – Jan Tomasz Zamoyski, 90, Polish politician.
30 – Pete Gray, 87, American one-armed baseball player.
30 – Dave Wilson, 70, American television director.
3 notes
·
View notes