User:W guice/sandbox/Deaths in November 2004
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Deaths in 2004 : ← - January - February - March - April - May - June - July - August - September - October - November - December- →
The following is a list of notable deaths in November 2004.
[edit] 30
- Pierre Berton, 84, Canadian author and journalist, complications of diabetes.[citation needed]
[edit] 29
- John Drew Barrymore, 72, American actor, member of the Barrymore family, father of Drew Barrymore.[citation needed]
- Harry Danning, 93, American MLB All-Star catcher (New York Giants).[citation needed]
- Irwin Donenfeld, 78, American DC Comics executive.[citation needed]
- Billy James Hargis, 78, American Christian minister, missionary and anti-Communist activist.[citation needed]
- John Monckton, 49, British city financier, murdered.[citation needed]
- Sister Anne Samson, 113, Canadian nun, oldest recognized living Canadian and oldest nun ever documented.[citation needed]
- Molly Weir, 94, British TV and radio actress.[citation needed]
[edit] 28
- Leroy F. Aarons, 70, American journalist, founder of the NLGJA.[citation needed]
[edit] 27
- John Dunn, 70, Scottish BBC Radio 2 disc jockey, cancer.[citation needed]
- Gunder Hägg, 85, Swedish athlete.[citation needed]
[edit] 26
- Bill Alley, 85, Anglo-Australian cricketer and cricket umpire in 10 tests.[citation needed]
- Philippe de Broca, 71, French film director, cancer.[citation needed]
- Tom Haller, 67, American MLB All-Star catcher (San Francisco Giants, Los Angeles Dodgers, Detroit Tigers) and manager (Giants).[citation needed]
- Hans Schaffner, 95, Swiss politician and Federal Councilor (1960s), President of the Confederation (1966).[citation needed]
[edit] 25
- David Bailey, 71, American actor (Passions), drowned.[citation needed]
- Bob Haney, 78, American comic book writer, co-creator of the Teen Titans and Doom Patrol.[citation needed]
- Ed Paschke, 65, American artist, heart attack.[citation needed]
[edit] 24
- Larry Brown, 53, American author, novelist.[citation needed]
- Arthur Hailey, 84, British-Canadian author, declining health following stroke. [1]
- Joseph Hansen, 81, American mystery author.[citation needed]
- James Wong, 64, Hong Kong lyricist, actor, director, talk show host and author.[citation needed]
[edit] 23
- Rafael Eitan, 75, Israeli politician and former chief of staff, drowned.[citation needed]
[edit] 22
- Arthur Hopcraft, 71, British author (The Football Man), sports journalist, and screenwriter. [2]
[edit] 21
[edit] 20
- Celso Furtado, 84, Brazilian economist.[citation needed]
- David Grierson, 49, Canadian CBC radio and television host.[citation needed]
- Janine Haines, 59, Australian politician, former leader of the Australian Democrats.[citation needed]
- Ancel Keys, 100, American scientist, co-inventor of the K-ration, natural causes. [3]
- Jimmy Tapp, 86, Canadian television personality.[citation needed]
[edit] 19
- Helmut Griem, 72, German film actor (Cabaret).[citation needed]
- Fred H. Hale, Sr., 113, American supercentenarian, oldest recognized living man.[citation needed]
- Trina Schart Hyman, 65, American illustrator of children's books, of cancer.[citation needed]
- Terry Melcher, 62, American musician, producer, son of Doris Day, melanoma.[citation needed]
- John Robert Vane, 77, British Nobel Prize-winning pharmacologist ([[Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine|Physiology or Medicine, 1982).[citation needed]
[edit] 18
- Juan Carlos Aramburu, 92, Argentinian Roman Catholic Archbishop of Buenos Aires (date–date), Cardinal since 1976.[citation needed]
- Robert Bacher, 99, American nuclear physicist, co-leader of the Manhattan Project.[citation needed]
- Bobby Frank Cherry, 74, American criminal, convicted in the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing.[citation needed]
- Cy Coleman, 75, American composer of Broadway musicals.[citation needed]
- Alfred Maseng, political figure in Vanuatu.[citation needed]
[edit] 17
- Mikael Ljungberg, 34, Swedish wrestler and Olympic gold medalist, suicide.[citation needed]
- Alexander Ragulin, 63, Soviet ice hockey player, 10-time IIHF World Champion and 3-time Olympic gold medalist.[citation needed]
- Lena Townsend, 93, former leader of the Inner London Education Authority.[citation needed]
[edit] 16
- Margaret Hassan, 59, chief of the humanitarian relief organization CARE International, killed by hostage takers in Iraq (unconfirmed, but presumed dead).[citation needed]
- Reed Irvine, 82, founder of Accuracy in Media.[citation needed]
[edit] 15
- Elmer Andersen, 95, former Minnesota governor.[citation needed]
- John Morgan, 74, comedian, former member of the Royal Canadian Air Force.[citation needed]
[edit] 14
- Michel Colombier, 65, composer, cancer.[citation needed]
- Langdon Brown Gilkey, 85, American Christian Protestant Ecumenical theologian.[citation needed]
- Evelyn West, 80, stripper and pin-up girl during the 1940s and 1950s.[citation needed]
[edit] 13
- John Balance, 42, member of Coil, accident.[citation needed]
- Ellen Fairclough, 99, first female Canadian cabinet minister.[citation needed]
- Russell "Ol' Dirty Bastard" Jones, 35, American rapper, overdose.[citation needed]
- Harry Lampert, 88, comic book and advertising artist, artistic co-creator of The Flash, author of instructional books on Contract bridge, cancer.[citation needed]
- Carlo Rustichelli, 87, Italian film composer.[citation needed]
[edit] 12
- Lelio Marino, 69, owner of Modern Continental group.[citation needed]
- Usko Meriläinen, 74, Finnish composer.[citation needed]
- Stanislaw Skalski, Polish pilot.[citation needed]
- Mike Smith, 62, English cricketer, heart attack.[citation needed]
[edit] 11
- Dayton Allen, 85, comedian and voice of the cartoon character Deputy Dawg and Mayor Phineas T. Bluster on The Howdy Doody Show.[citation needed]
- Yasser Arafat, 75, Palestine Liberation Organization leader, President of the Palestinian Authority, cirrhosis. [4]
- Richard Dembo, 56, César Award-winning French director.[citation needed]
[edit] 10
- Erna Rosenstein, 91, Polish surrealist painter and poet.[citation needed]
[edit] 9
- Iris Chang, 36, historian, author, suicide.[citation needed]
- Emlyn Hughes, 57, English footballer, brain tumour.[citation needed]
[edit] 8
- Eddie Charlton, 75, Australian snooker player.[citation needed]
- Lennox Miller, 58, Jamaican Olympic athlete, cancer.[citation needed]
- Melba Phillips, 97, American physicist & educator, coronary artery disease.[citation needed]
[edit] 7
- Howard Keel, 85, American actor and singer, colon cancer.[citation needed]
- Gibson Kente, 72, South African playwright, AIDS.[citation needed]
[edit] 6
- Fred Dibnah, 66, British steeplejack and television presenter.[citation needed]
- Pete Jolly, 72, Jazz pianist.[citation needed]
- Elizabeth Rogers, 70, American actress Lt. Palmer on Star Trek, multiple strokes and lung cancer.[citation needed]
- Johnny Warren, 61, Australian soccer player, coach, ethnic community advocate, lung cancer.[citation needed]
[edit] 5
- Donald Jones, 72, American-born Dutch comedian, singer, dancer and actor, first black Dutch celebrity.[citation needed]
[edit] 4
- Robert Heaton, 43, British composer and drummer of punk-rock band New Model Army, pancreatic cancer.[citation needed]
- Ellen Meloy, 58, American author.[citation needed]
[edit] 3
- Joe Bushkin, 87, Swing Era pianist. [5]
- Richard Hongisto, 67, former sheriff of San Francisco, California and Cleveland, Ohio, heart attack.[citation needed]
- Sergei Zholtok, 32, ice hockey player, heart failure due to cardiac arrhythmia.[citation needed]
[edit] 2
- Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan, 86, Emir of Abu Dhabi.[citation needed]
- Gustaaf Joos, 81, Belgian Cardinal.[citation needed]
- Gerrie Knetemann, 53, Dutch cyclist (World Champion in 1978), heart attack.[citation needed]
- Virginia Muise, 111, probably oldest living New Englander.[citation needed]
- Basil Thompson, 67, ballet master.[citation needed]
- Theo van Gogh, 47, Dutch filmmaker and writer, murdered.[citation needed]
[edit] 1
- Lord Hanson, 82, British industrialist.[citation needed]
- Hatem Kamil, Iraqi deputy governor of Baghdad.[citation needed]
- Terry Knight, 61, manager and producer to Grand Funk Railroad, murder.[citation needed]
- Marie Tehan, 64, former health minister for Victoria (Australia), Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease.[citation needed]