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The following is a list of notable deaths in July 2007.


Video Deaths in July 2007



July 2007

1

  • Joerg Kalt, 40, Austrian cinematographer, suicide.
  • Sándor Krebs, 80, Hungarian Olympic cyclist.
  • Colleen McCrory, 57, Canadian environmental activist, brain cancer.
  • David Ritcheson, 18, American hate crime victim, suicide by jumping.
  • Gerhard Skrobek, 85, German sculptor of Hummel figurines, complications of heart surgery.

2

  • Philip Booth, 81, American poet and educator, complications from Alzheimer's disease.
  • Robert "Buck" Brown, 71, American cartoonist, created Playboy's "Granny" character, stroke.
  • Brahim Déby, 27, Chadian son of the national President and former presidential advisor, chemical asphyxiation.
  • Howell M. Estes II, 92, American Air Force general during the Vietnam War, heart ailment.
  • Ray Goins, 71, American bluegrass musician.
  • Robert Keeton, 88, American District Court judge, professor at Harvard Law School, complications from pulmonary embolism.
  • Peter Lyman, 66, American information researcher, brain cancer.
  • Pete Mead, 83, American middleweight boxer.
  • John Pinches, 91, British rower and soldier.
  • Dilip Sardesai, 66, Indian cricketer, multiple organ failure.
  • Beverly Sills, 78, American opera singer, lung cancer.
  • Jimmy Walker, 63, American basketball player (Detroit Pistons, Houston Rockets, Kansas City Kings), lung cancer.
  • Al Williams, 60, American basketball player, liver cancer.
  • Kevin Woodcock, 64, British cartoonist.
  • Hy Zaret, 99, American lyricist ("Unchained Melody").

3

  • Anne Dreydel, 89, British educationalist, co-founder of the Oxford English Centre.
  • Beppie Noyes, 87, American author, stroke.
  • Claude Pompidou, 94, French widow of former Prime Minister and President Georges Pompidou.
  • Boots Randolph, 80, American saxophonist ("Yakety Sax"), cerebral hemorrhage.

4

  • Bar?? Akarsu, 28, Turkish rock musician, car accident. (Turkish)
  • Liane Bahler, 25, German cyclist, car accident. (Dutch)
  • José Roberto Espinosa, 59, Mexican footballer, coach and journalist, pneumonia and cancer. (Spanish)
  • Johnny Frigo, 90, American jazz violinist and bass player, complications from a fall.
  • Ken MacAfee, 77, American football player, heart attack.
  • Vivienne Nearing, 81, American lawyer involved in quiz show scandals, adrenal cancer.
  • Bill Pinkney, 81, American singer who was the last original member of The Drifters, probable heart attack.
  • Osvaldo Romo, 70, Chilean security agent jailed for human rights abuses under Pinochet, heart and respiratory problems.
  • Ted Row, 84, Australian politician.
  • Eleanor Stewart, 94, American film and voice actor, Alzheimer's disease.
  • Henrique Viana, 71, Portuguese actor and singer, cancer.

5

  • Régine Crespin, 80, French operatic soprano, liver cancer.
  • Odile Crick, 86, British-born artist, widow of Francis Crick, cancer.
  • Kerwin Mathews, 81, American actor.
  • George Melly, 80, British jazz and blues musician, lung cancer.
  • Sylvan Shemitz, 82, United States lighting designer for Jefferson Memorial, Grand Central Terminal, heart attack.

6

  • Don Mumford, 53, American jazz drummer.
  • Marguerite Vogt, 94, American polio and cancer researcher.
  • Eileen Wearne, 95, Australian athlete at the 1932 Summer Olympics and Australia's oldest surviving Olympian.
  • Kathleen Woodiwiss, 68, American romance writer, cancer.
  • Lois Wyse, 80, American advertising executive, author and columnist, stomach cancer.

7

  • Ion Calvocoressi, 88, British soldier and stockbroker.
  • Dame Anne McLaren, 80, British geneticist and developmental biologist, ex-wife of Donald Michie, car accident.
  • Donald Michie, 83, British researcher in artificial intelligence, ex-husband of Dame Anne McLaren, car accident.
  • John G. Mitchell, 75, American environment editor and author, National Geographic (1994-2004), heart attack.
  • Jack Odell, 87, British engineer and co-founder of Matchbox Toys.
  • John Szarkowski, 81, American photography curator, complications of a stroke.

8

  • Jind?ich Feld, 82, Czech composer.
  • Haroon-ul-Islam, Pakistan Army Lieutenant-Colonel, shot.
  • Itzik Kol, 75, Israeli film producer, pneumonia.
  • Chandra Shekhar, 80, Indian Prime Minister (1990-1991) and Member of Lok Sabha, multiple myeloma.
  • Jack B. Sowards, 78, American screenwriter (Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan), amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.

9

  • Esteban Areta, 75, Spanish international footballer and coach. (Spanish)
  • John Baker, 71, Australian general, Chief of the Australian Defence Force (1995-1998).
  • Sean Collins, 13, Canadian son of politician Chris Collins, cancer.
  • Hans Eschenbrenner, 96, German Olympic shooter.
  • John Fogarty, 78, Australian rugby union winger, played two tests for the Wallabies.
  • John Hill, 83, American lawyer and politician, Texas Attorney General, Texas Supreme Court Chief Justice, heart condition.
  • Jerry Ito, 79, Japanese-American actor, pneumonia.
  • Charles Lane, 102, American character actor (It's a Wonderful Life, I Love Lucy), founding member of SAG.
  • Ralph Paffenbarger, 84, American doctor who performed an early study on the importance of exercise, heart failure.
  • Penny Thomson, 56, British film producer, cancer.
  • Peter Tuddenham, 88, British voice actor (Blake's 7).
  • John P. Wilson, 84, Irish politician, Tánaiste (1990-1993).

10

  • Theresa Duncan, 40, Americn video game designer, suicide.
  • Tibor Feheregyhazi, 75, Hungarian-Canadian actor and theatre director, prostate cancer.
  • Devin Gaines, 22, American graduate, awarded five undergraduate degrees, drowned.
  • Abdul Rashid Ghazi, 43, Pakistani cleric at the Red Mosque in Islamabad, shot.
  • Corbin Harney, 87, American Western Shoshone leader and environmental activist, complications from cancer.
  • Frank Kilroy, 86, American football player, scout and general manager for the New England Patriots.
  • Doug Marlette, 57, American Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist (Kudzu), car accident.
  • Marjorie Morgan, 92, Canadian author, Alzheimer's disease.
  • Mireya Rodríguez, 70, Cuban Olympic fencer.
  • William Seegers, 106, German-American last veteran of World War I and California's last World War I veteran.
  • Zheng Xiaoyu, 62, Chinese official, former head of the State Food and Drug Administration, executed.

11

  • Glenda Adams, 68, Australian writer, ovarian cancer.
  • Shag Crawford, 90, American baseball umpire (1956-1975).
  • Bill Flynn, 58, South African actor, heart attack.
  • Livio Fongaro, 69, Italian footballer and coach.
  • Richard Franklin, 58, Australian film director (Roadgames), prostate cancer.
  • Ove Grahn, 64, Swedish footballer.
  • Nana Gualdi, 75, German singer and actress.
  • Lady Bird Johnson, 94, American First Lady of the United States (1963-1969), natural causes.
  • Rod Lauren, 67, American actor, suicide by jumping.
  • Alfonso López Michelsen, 94, Colombian President (1974-1978) and Foreign Minister (1968-1970), heart attack.
  • Ed Mirvish, 92, Canadian retail pioneer, natural causes.
  • Jimmy Skinner, 90, Canadian ice hockey coach (Detroit Red Wings).
  • Timothy Sprigge, 75, British idealist philosopher.
  • Larry Staverman, 70, American basketball player and first head coach for the Indiana Pacers (1967-1968).
  • Medha Yodh, 79, Indian dancer and dance teacher.

12

  • Marc Behm, 82, American writer. (French)
  • Robert Burås, 31, Norwegian guitarist for Madrugada and My Midnight Creeps.
  • Mr. Butch, 56, American homeless person and local celebrity in Boston, scooter accident.
  • Allen Clarke, 96, British educationalist.
  • Nigel Dempster, 65, British journalist, progressive supranuclear palsy.
  • Pat Fordice, 71, American broadcaster and First Lady of Mississippi (1992-2000), cancer.
  • José Iglesias Fernández, 80, Spanish football player (Real Madrid), stroke.
  • Forbes Johnston, 35, British football player (Falkirk, Airdrieonians).
  • Jim Mitchell, 63, American porn producer (Behind the Green Door), heart attack.
  • James Shen, 98, Taiwanese diplomat, last ambassador of Taiwan to the United States.
  • Kesha Wizzart, 18, British singer and television show contestant, murdered.
  • Stan Zemanek, 60, Australian radio presenter, brain cancer.

13

  • Harry Fain, 88, American family lawyer, pneumonia.
  • Otto von der Gablentz, 76, German diplomat. (Dutch)
  • Khalid Hassan, 23, Iraqi reporter for The New York Times, shot.
  • Frank Maher, 78, British stuntman.
  • Albert Putt, 80, New Zealand cricketer.

14

  • Edward Boyse, 83, American physician, pneumonia.
  • Nan Cross, 79, South African anti-apartheid activist.
  • John Ferguson, Sr., 68, Canadian hockey player, general manager, coach and scout, prostate cancer.
  • Bernard Pagel, British astrophysicist, cancer.
  • John Warrender, 2nd Baron Bruntisfield, 86, British soldier and aristocrat.

15

  • Bluma Appel, 86, Canadian philanthropist and patron of the arts, lung cancer.
  • Alberto Romão Dias, Portuguese organometallic chemist, professor at the IST. (Portuguese)
  • Kelly Johnson, 49, British guitarist (Girlschool), cancer of the spine.
  • Kieron Moore, 82, Irish actor (The League of Gentlemen, The Day of the Triffids).
  • Schelto Patijn, 70, Dutch politician, mayor of Amsterdam (1994-2001). (Dutch)
  • Tsang Tsou Choi, 85, Hong Kong-based graffiti artist whose works were included in the 2003 Venice Biennale, heart disease.

16

  • Angus Allan, 70, British comic strip writer.
  • Tom Brooks, 88, Australian cricketer (New South Wales) and international umpire.
  • Mikhail Kononov, 67, Russian actor (Guest from the Future, Siberiade, A Railway Station for Two), after long illness.
  • Skinny McNabb, 90, American Major League Baseball player for the Detroit Tigers.
  • Dmitri Prigov, 66, Russian poet, heart attack.
  • Alan Shepherd, 71, British motorcycle racer.
  • Kurt Steyrer, 87, Austrian health minister and Socialist presidential candidate, after short illness.

17

  • Jeremy Blake, 35, American video artist, suicide by drowning.
  • Peter Denning, 57, British cricketer (Somerset), cancer.
  • Júlio Redecker, 51, Brazilian leader of the Social Democracy Party, plane crash. (Portuguese)
  • Paulo Rogério Amoretty Souza, 60, Brazilian chairman of SCI, attorney for Corinthians, plane crash. (Portuguese)
  • Teresa Stich-Randall, 79, American opera singer.

18

  • Wayne Downing, 67, American retired army general, meningitis.
  • Jerry Hadley, 55, American opera singer, suicide by gunshot.
  • Charles Jauncey, Baron Jauncey of Tullichettle, 82, British Law Lord.
  • John Kronus, 38, American professional wrestler, four-time ECW tag team champion.
  • Gary Lupul, 48, Canadian hockey player (Vancouver Canucks).
  • Sir Gordon MacWhinnie, 85, British-born Hong Kong accountant and public servant.
  • Orlando McFarlane, 69, Cuban Major League Baseball player.
  • Kenji Miyamoto, 98, Japanese politician, leader of the Japanese Communist Party for 40 years, old age.
  • Sekou Sundiata, 58, American poet, musician and performance artist, heart failure.
  • Charles Wylie, 87, British army officer and mountain climber.

19

  • Glen Angus, 36, Canadian game artist, heart failure.
  • Ivor Emmanuel, 79, British singer and actor (Zulu), stroke.
  • A. K. Faezul Huq, 62, Bangladeshi politician, lawyer, and freelance journalist due to sudden heart failure.
  • Roberto Fontanarrosa, 62, Argentine cartoonist and writer, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. (Spanish)
  • Howard Judd, 71, American women's health researcher, congestive heart failure. [57]
  • Shirley Slesinger Lasswell, 84, American marketing pioneer, sued Disney over Winnie the Pooh royalties, respiratory failure.
  • Hector MacLean, 93, British World War II fighter pilot.
  • Roger Nathan, 2nd Baron Nathan, 84, British solicitor and aristocrat.
  • Alanah Woody, 51, American archaeologist, executive director of the Nevada Rock Art Foundation.

20

  • Ollie Bridewell, 21, British motorcycle racer, crash during race practice for the British Superbike Championship.
  • Golde Flami, 89, Argentine actress.
  • Tammy Faye Messner, 65, American evangelist, metastatic colon cancer.
  • David Preece, 44, British footballer (Luton Town), throat cancer.
  • Maurice Riel, 85, Canadian Senator.
  • Kai Siegbahn, 89, Swedish physicist at Uppsala University, won Nobel Prize in Physics in 1981.
  • Geoff Taylor, 84, English footballer.
  • Pete Wilson, 62, American broadcaster, heart attack.

21

  • Don Arden, 81, British rock manager, father of Sharon Osbourne.
  • René Deceja, 73, Uruguayan Olympic cyclist.
  • Jack Fearey, 84, American television pioneer, Bumbershoot festival founder.
  • Jesús de Polanco, 77, Spanish media entrepreneur and publisher (El País), complications of arthritic disease.
  • Sherwin Wine, 79, American rabbi, founder of Birmingham Temple and Humanistic Judaism movement, car accident.
  • Yang Xizong, 79, Chinese politician, Governor of Sichuan province and Communist Party Chief of Henan province.

22

  • John Harrison Burnett, 85, British academic, Principal of Edinburgh University (1979-1987).
  • Carmelo Camet, 102, Argentine 1928 Olympic bronze medalist in fencing and oldest living former Olympian.
  • Mike Coolbaugh, 35, American baseball first base coach for the Tulsa Drillers, head injury.
  • Jarrod Cunningham, 38, New Zealand rugby union footballer for London Irish, motor neurone disease.
  • Norma Gabler, 84, American textbook campaigner, Parkinson's disease.
  • Walter Jona, 81, Australian politician, member of the Victorian Legislative Assembly (1964-1985).
  • László Kovács, 74, Hungarian-born cinematographer (Easy Rider, Ghostbusters, Five Easy Pieces).
  • André Milongo, 71, Congolese Prime Minister (1991-1992).
  • Ulrich Mühe, 54, German actor (The Lives of Others), stomach cancer.
  • Jean Stablinski, 75, French cyclist.
  • Rollie Stiles, 100, American oldest living former Major League Baseball player.
  • Gerhard Thielcke, 76, German conservationist, BUND co-founder, head injury. (German)

23

  • Franco Cuomo, 69, Italian writer. [181]
  • Sir Tom Davis, 90, Cook Islander Prime Minister of the Cook Islands (1978-1987).
  • Otis Davis, 86, American Major League Baseball player for the Brooklyn Dodgers.
  • Ernst Otto Fischer, 88, German Nobel Prize-winning chemist. (German)
  • Tor Kamata, 70, American professional wrestler (Stampede Wrestling), heart disease.
  • Daniel E. Koshland, Jr., 87, American scientist, editor of Science magazine (1985-1995), stroke.
  • Benjamin Libet, 91, American pioneering scientist in the field of human consciousness.
  • Ron Miller, 74, American songwriter ("Touch Me in the Morning", "For Once in My Life"), cardiac arrest.
  • Gyani Nand, 64, Fijian politician (FLP, 2001-2006), Minister for Agriculture (2006).
  • Joan O'Hara, 76, Irish actress, heart disease.
  • Mary Anne Scoles, 110, Canadian and Manitoban oldest verified person.
  • Mirsha Serrano, 28, Mexican footballer for Tecos UAG, car accident.
  • George Tabori, 93, Hungarian-born British theater director.
  • Mohammed Zahir Shah, 92, Afghan royal, last king of Afghanistan.

24

  • Giorgio Anglesio, 85, Italian Olympic fencer.
  • Eric Davis, 75, English footballer (Plymouth Argyle).
  • Albert Ellis, 93, American pioneer in cognitive-behavioral therapy, kidney and heart failure.
  • Abdullah Mehsud, 31, Pakistani Taliban commander, suicide by hand grenade.
  • Geoffrey Nuttall, 95, British historian and Nonconformist minister.
  • Edward J. Sullivan, 86, American Clerk of Courts for Middlesex County, Massachusetts.
  • Charles Whiting, 80, British author and military historian.
  • William Young, 107, British airman, last known remaining World War I veteran of the Royal Flying Corps.
  • Nicola Zaccaria, 84, Greek operatic bass, Alzheimer's disease.

25

  • Bae Hyung-kyu, 42, South Korean pastor, Taliban hostage, shot.
  • Danny Bergara, 64, Uruguayan football manager of Stockport County and Brunei, stroke.
  • Raymond Bristow, 98, British priest, longest-serving Anglican minister.
  • Jake, 12, American search and rescue dog for September 11, 2001 attacks and Hurricane Katrina, cancer.
  • Bernd Jakubowski, 54, German footballer (East Germany), after short illness. (German)
  • Jesse Marunde, 27, American strongman, heart attack.

26

  • George Brown, 65, Belizean Chief Justice (1990-1998), illness.
  • Lars Forssell, 79, Swedish author and member of the Swedish Academy.
  • Eleanor Josephine Macdonald, 101, American cancer researcher.
  • John Normington, 70, British actor (Atonement, Doctor Who, Rollerball), pancreatic cancer.
  • Skip Prosser, 56, American college basketball coach for Wake Forest University, heart attack.
  • Shambo, 6, British Hindu sacred bull, lethal injection due to bovine tuberculosis.
  • Alberto Villamizar, 62, Colombian politician (NL) and diplomat, complications of lung surgery.

27

  • Gabriel Cisneros, 66, Spanish politician (PP), co-author of the 1978 Constitution, complications from stroke. (Spanish)
  • Lucky Grills, 79, Australian comedian and actor (Bluey).
  • Fannie Hillsmith, 96, American Cubist painter.
  • Abdullah Kurshumi, 75, Yemeni politician, Prime Minister of the Yemen Arab Republic (1969-1970).
  • James Oyebola, 46, British heavyweight boxer, shot.
  • Alan Pottasch, 79, American advertising executive for Pepsi, developed Pepsi Generation ad campaign.
  • Christophe Ruer, 42, French Olympic modern pentathlete (1988, 1992, 1996), motorcycle accident.
  • William J. Tuttle, 95, American Oscar-winning make-up artist (North by Northwest, Singin' in the Rain, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof).

28

  • Crown Prince B?o Long, 71, Vietnamese son of the last Emperor B?o ??i.
  • Kazi Lhendup Dorjee, 103, Indian first Chief Minister of Sikkim (SNC, 1974-1978), heart attack.
  • Karl Gotch, 82, German-born professional wrestler.
  • Jim LeRoy, 46, American stunt pilot, air crash.
  • Sal Mosca, 80, American jazz pianist and educator.

29

  • Ian Anstruther, 85, British diplomat, baronet, writer and literary patron.
  • Jack Cole, 87, American publisher (Cole Directory), cancer.
  • James David, 79, American football player (Detroit Lions), after long illness.
  • Art Davis, 73, American jazz double-bassist, heart attack.
  • Phil Drabble, 93, British television presenter (One Man and His Dog).
  • Mike Reid, 67, British comedian and actor (EastEnders, Snatch), heart attack.
  • Bill Robinson, 64, American baseball player (Braves, Yankees, Phillies and Pirates) and coach.
  • Michel Serrault, 79, French actor (La Cage aux Folles), cancer.
  • Tom Snyder, 71, American talk show host and journalist, complications of leukemia.
  • Marvin Zindler, 85, American reporter, pancreatic cancer.

30

  • Michelangelo Antonioni, 94, Italian film director (L'avventura, Blowup, Zabriskie Point).
  • Teoctist Ar?pa?u, 92, Romanian Patriarch of the Romanian Orthodox Church, heart attack.
  • Ingmar Bergman, 89, Swedish stage and film director (The Seventh Seal, Wild Strawberries, Fanny and Alexander).
  • Thomas McGraw, 54, British mobster, heart attack.
  • Ali-Akbar Meshkini, 86, Iranian Chairman of the Assembly of Experts, respiratory and kidney complications.
  • Anne O'Brien, 95, American Olympic athlete.
  • Makoto Oda, 75, Japanese writer and anti-war activist, cancer.
  • Shim Sung-Min, 29, South Korean Taliban hostage, shot.
  • Richard Stott, 63, British newspaper editor and author, pancreatic cancer.
  • Bill Walsh, 75, American three-time Super Bowl-winning football coach of the San Francisco 49ers and member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame, leukemia.
  • Wen Xingyu, 65, Chinese comedian, lung cancer.
  • Eric Wishnie, 44, American former television producer for NBC News, fall from building.

31

  • Margaret Avison, 89, Canadian poet.
  • J. Esmonde Barry, 83, Canadian healthcare activist and political commentator, complications from a heart attack.
  • Norman Cohn, 92, British historian, degenerative heart condition.
  • Oliver Morgan, 74, American rhythm & blues vocalist, heart attack.
  • R. D. Wingfield, 79, British writer and radio dramatist.

Maps Deaths in July 2007



References

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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