Deaths in June 2006
The following is a list of notable deaths in June 2006.
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, reason for notability, cause of death, and reference.
June 2006
1
- Radu Bălescu, 73, Romanian scientist.
- Frederick S. Billig, 73, American aerospace engineer.
- Shokichi Iyanaga, 100, Japanese mathematician.
- Rocío Jurado, 61, Spanish singer and actress, pancreatic cancer.
- Allan Prior, 84, British television scriptwriter, father of folk singer Maddy Prior.
- Abdul Latif Sharif, 59, Egyptian chemist, suspect in the femicides in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico, officially of natural causes, rumored poisoning.
- Jack Shelton, 82, Australian cricketer.
- William D. Winn, 59, American professor of education at the University of Washington.
2
- Ronald Cass, 83, British film score composer.
- Roy Farran, 85, British army officer.
- Bernard Loomis, 82, American toymaker responsible for Strawberry Shortcake and Star Wars action figures, heart disease.
- Leon Pownall, 63, Canadian actor, cancer.
- Vince Welnick, 55, American keyboardist, member of The Grateful Dead, suicide by exsanguination.
- Edward Yates, 87, American television director, director of American Bandstand.
- Vyacheslav Klykov, 66, Russian sculptor and nationalist politician.
3
- Leo Clarke, 82, Australian Roman Catholic Bishop of Maitland-Newcastle, Australia, 1976-1995.
- Brian Duke, 79, Ugandan-born tropical disease expert who helped to save millions from river blindness.
- Johnny Grande, 76, American pianist, member of Bill Haley's backing band, The Comets. Complications arising from cancer.
- George Kashdan, 78, American comic book writer and editor.
- Doug Serrurier, 85, South African former Grand Prix racing driver and constructor.
4
- Alec Bregonzi, 76, British actor.
- Bill Fleming, 92, American MLB pitcher for the Boston Red Sox and Chicago Cubs
- Ron Jones, 41, American Major League Baseball player, brain hemorrhage.
- Richard Kapp, 69, American conductor and founder of the Philharmonia Virtuosi.
- John Kerr, 46, British footballer.
- Fulvia Mammi, 79, Italian actress.
- Anthony Marreco, 90, British barrister, junior Counsel at the Nuremberg Trials and founding member of Amnesty International.
- Sir John Rowlands, 90, British air marshal and George Cross recipient.
- William M. Steger, 85, United States district court judge and Republican candidate for Governor of Texas in 1960.
5
- Frederick Franck, 97, Dutch artist, author, and dentist.
- Elizabeth Fretwell, 85, Australian opera singer best known for her performances with the Sadler's Wells company.
- Eric Gregg, 55, American former Major League Baseball umpire, stroke.
- Edward L. Moyers, 77, American railroad executive.
- Robert Ross, 86, American leader of the Muscular Dystrophy Association for 44 years and persuaded Jerry Lewis to undertake a yearly telethon to raise money for muscular dystrophy, complications of broken hip.
- Harley Rutledge, 80, American physicist and ufologist.
- Huda Sultan, 80, Egyptian actress, cancer.
6
- Leslie Alcock, 81, British pioneer of Dark Age archaeology, led the team that excavated Cadbury Castle.
- María Teresa López Boegeholz, 78, Chilean oceanographer.
- Arnold Newman, 88, American photographer who pioneered "environmental portraiture".
- Billy Preston, 59, American musician known for his work with the Beatles, malignant hypertension leading to kidney failure.
- Hilton Ruiz, 54, American jazz pianist, injuries from a fall.
- Léon Weil, 109, French World War I veteran.
- Jason Moss, 31, American attorney and author of the book "The Last Victim"
7
- Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, 39, Jordanian leader of Al-Qaeda in Iraq, US military strike.
- Sheik Abd-Al-Rahman, spiritual adviser for Al-Qaeda in Iraq, US military strike.
- Roy Brain, 79, Australian cricketer.
- Terry McCann, 74, American wrestler, olympic gold medalist in freestyle wrestling and helped found USA Wrestling, and retired Executive Director of Toastmasters International, cancer.
- Ingo Preminger, 95, Austrian-born American Hollywood talent agent and producer, brother of Otto Preminger.
- Mickey Sims, 51, American football defensive tackle, former player with the Cleveland Browns, heart attack.
- Louis B. Sohn, 92, Ukrainian-born scholar of international law, helped draft the UN Charter.
- John Tenta, 42, Canadian professional wrestler for the World Wrestling Federation, bladder cancer.
8
- Jake Copass, 86, American cowboy poet, leukemia.
- Robert Donner, 75, American actor, aneurysm.
- Jack Jackson, 65, American comic book artist and co-founder of Rip Off Press.
- Mykola Kolessa, 102, Ukrainian composer and conductor.
- Abouna Matta El Meskeen, 87, Egyptian Coptic Orthodox monk, Spiritual Father of St. Macarius' Monastery in the Wilderness of Scetis, Egypt.
- John Roberts, 72, Australian businessman, founder of Australian construction company Multiplex, Complications of diabetes.
- Jamal Abu Samhadana, Palestinian leader of PA / Hamas forces in Gaza Strip and PRC. Killed by Israeli air strike.
- Talcott Seelye, 84, United States Foreign Service Officer and ambassador to Tunisia and Syria.
- Sir Peter Smithers, 92, British politician, MP for Winchester and Secretary General of the Council of Europe.
9
- Kinga Choszcz aka "Freespirit", 33, Polish author, cerebral malaria.
- Drafi Deutscher, 60, German singer.
- Michael Forrestall, 73, Canadian senator, died following hospitalization for breathing problems.
- Patricia Janus, 74, American poet, heart attack brought on by liver cancer.
- Enzo Siciliano, 72, Italian writer, diabetes mellitus.
- Vern Williams, 76, American bluegrass mandolin player and singer.
10
- Qadi Abdul Karim Abdullah Al-Arashi, 72, Yemeni politician, former President of North Yemen.
- Hubertus Czernin, 50, Austrian journalist who helped return paintings looted by the Nazis, mastocytosis.
- Moe Drabowsky, 70, Polish-born American Major League Baseball player, multiple myeloma.
- German Goldenshteyn, 71, Bessarabian-born clarinetist and klezmer musician.
- Wulff-Dieter Heintz, 76, German astronomer at Swarthmore College.
- Kenneth Jack, 81, Australian artist.
- Charles Johnson, 96, American Negro league baseball player for the Chicago American Giants, complications of prostate cancer.
- Peter Douglas Kennedy, 83, British folklorist.
- Philip Merrill, 72, American publisher and diplomat, suicide by gunshot.
- Ruddy Thomas, 54, Jamaican singer, heart attack.
11
- Michael Bartosh, 28, American Mac OS X Server expert, injuries from a fall.
- Ernest Arthur Bell, 79, British biochemist, Director of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.
- James Cameron, 92, American civil rights activist, founder of America's Black Holocaust Museum, lymphoma.
- Neroli Fairhall, 61, New Zealand paraplegic archer and Olympic competitor.
- Rolande Falcinelli, 86, French organist and composer.
- Tim Hildebrandt, 67, American artist, complications of diabetes.
- Hugh Latimer, 93, English actor and toy maker.
- Mike Quarry, 55, American light heavyweight boxer, who challenged Bob Foster for the title, pugilistic dementia.
- Bruce Shand, 89, British Army officer, father of Camilla, The Duchess of Cornwall, and father-in-law of Charles, Prince of Wales, cancer.
12
- Anna Lee Aldred, 85, American jockey and first woman in US to receive a jockey's licence, member of the National Cowgirl Hall of Fame.
- Andrew William "Nicky" Barr, 90, Australian rugby union player and World War II fighter pilot
- Chakufwa Chihana, 67, Malawian politician, opposition figure who ran unsuccessfully for President losing to Bakili Muluzi, brain tumour.
- György Ligeti, 83, Hungarian composer.
- José Leite Lopes, 87, Brazilian physicist.
- Kenneth Thomson, 2nd Baron Thomson of Fleet, 82, Canadian billionaire, media mogul and art collector. Possible heart attack.
13
- Freddie Gorman, 67, US songwriter.
- Charles Haughey, 80, Irish politician, Taoiseach, prostate cancer.
- Hiroyuki Iwaki, 73, Japanese conductor, congestive heart failure.
- Luis Jiménez, 65, American sculptor, crushed by a statue.
- Burke Riley, 92, American lawyer and politician, Alzheimer's disease.
- Dennis Shepherd, 79, South African Olympic boxer.
14
- Monty Berman, 94, British B-movie producer.
- Surinder Kaur, 77, Indian Punjabi folk and classical singer known as the "nightingale of Punjab".
- Edward Craig Morris, 66, American archaeologist.
- Jean Roba, 75, Belgian comics writer
- James Davis Speed, 91, American politician.
15
- Betty Curtis, 70, Italian singer, winner of Sanremo Music Festival in 1961 with Luciano Tajoli.
- Raymond Devos, 83, French humorist.
- Ján Langoš, 59, Slovak politician, head of the National Memory Institute of Slovakia.
- Carlos Tovar, 92, Peruvian football player.
16
- Roland Boyes, 69, British Labour politician and photographer, Alzheimer's disease.
- Barbara Epstein, 76, American literary editor, co-founder of the New York Review of Books, lung cancer.
- Arthur Malvin, 83, American Emmy award-winning composer and lyricist, after a long illness.
- Scott Manning, 48, Canadian athlete, builder and pilot of the world's smallest jet, crash landing.
- Daphne Osborne, 76, British botanist.
- Igor Śmiałowski, 88, Polish actor.
17
- Norma Becker, 76, American anti-war activist, former chair of the War Resisters League.
- Cláudio Besserman Vianna, 43, Brazilian comedian, member of Casseta & Planeta, heart attack
- Arthur Franz, 86, American character actor, emphysema and heart disease.
- Mikhail Lapshin, 71, Russian politician, leader of the Agrarian Party and former president of the Altai Republic, cause unknown.
- Charles Older, 88, American Los Angeles Superior Court judge who presided over the Charles Manson trial, complications of a fall.
- Abdul-Khalim Saydullayev, 38 or 39, Chechen separatist rebel leader.
- Hiroaki Shukuzawa, 55, Japanese rugby union coach, heart attack.
- Julian Slade, 76, English composer and lyricist of Salad Days, cancer.
- Bob Weaver, 77, American TV Florida-based weatherman known as "Weaver the Weatherman" on WTVJ, cancer.
18
- Luke Belton, 87, Irish politician.
- Hubert Cornfield, 77, Turkish film director in Hollywood.
- Nathaniel Neiman Craley, Jr., 78, American politician, former Democratic member of the United States House of Representatives from Pennsylvania.
- Jesus Fuertes, 68, Spanish painter and protégé of Pablo Picasso, heart attack.
- Chris and Cru Kahui, 3-months, New Zealand child homicide victims.
- Gică Petrescu, 91, Romanian singer.
- Sir David Poole, 68, British judge.
- Donald Reilly, 72, American cartoonist, cancer.
- René Renou, 54, French vintner, president of INAO.
- Netta Rheinberg, 94, English cricketer.
- Vincent Sherman, 99, American film director, natural causes.
- Richard Stahl, 74, American actor, Parkinson's disease.
- Madeleine St John, 64, Australian novelist who wrote a book shortlisted for the Booker Prize in 1997, emphysema.
19
- Hugh Baird, 76, Scottish footballer for Leeds United, Aberdeen, Airdrieonians and Scotland.
- Priit Kolbre, 50, Estonian diplomat, ambassador to Finland.
- Duane Roland, 53, American guitarist and a founder of rock band Molly Hatchet.
- Howard Shanet, 87, US conductor and composer.
- Arthur Yap, 64, Singaporean poet, artist, and lecturer, English Department, University of Singapore, throat cancer.
20
- Maurice Bevan, 85, British bass-baritone.
- Bill Daniel, 90, American politician, former Governor of Guam.
- Evelyn Dubrow, 95, US women and labor advocate awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1999.
- Billy Johnson, 87, American professional baseball player, former New York Yankee and All-Star third baseman, cause not given.
- E. Pierce Marshall, 67, American businessman, son of J. Howard Marshall and Anna Nicole Smith's stepson and plaintiff in their inheritance feud, aggressive infection.
- William Shurcliff, 97, American physicist, who helped develop the atomic bomb.
- Claydes Charles Smith, 57, American musician, co-founder and lead guitarist of Kool and the Gang.
21
- Theo Bell, 52, American National Football League header with the Pittsburgh Steelers and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, kidney disease and scleroderma.
- Vern Leroy Bullough, 77, American medical historian, known for his history of nursing, cancer.
- Denis Faul, 73, Irish Roman Catholic priest, former chaplain at the Maze Prison, outspoken critic of The Troubles and a key figure in attempts to end the 1981 Irish Hunger Strike in Northern Ireland, cancer.
- Jacques Lanzmann, 79, French author, editor and songwriter.
- Khamis al-Obeidi, 39, Iraqi defense lawyer for Saddam Hussein, kidnapped and shot.
- David Walton, 43, British economist, member of the Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee
- Jonathan Wordsworth, 73, English academic, scholar of Romanticism and chair of the Wordsworth Trust.
22
- Heinz Ansbacher, 101, German-born psychologist and expert in the work of Alfred Adler.
- Back Alley John, 51, Canadian musician.
- Gilbert Monckton, 2nd Viscount Monckton of Brenchley, 90, British army general.
- Moose, 15, American canine actor.
- Chanel Petro Nixon, 16, American student, murder victim in Brooklyn, New York.
- Sir Peter Russell, 92, British historian.
- Sir Michael Weir, 81, British diplomat, Ambassador to Egypt.
23
- Martin Adler, 47, Swedish journalist. Shot by unknown assailant in Mogadishu, Somalia.
- Harriet, 176, Galápagos tortoise believed to be the third oldest animal in the world and allegedly owned by Charles Darwin, heart failure.
- Grady Johnson, 66, American WWF wrestler, known as "Crazy" Luke Graham; heart failure.
- Budhi Kunderan, 66, Indian cricketer, wicketkeeper/batsman, lung cancer.
- Basil O'Ferrall, 81, Irish Anglican priest, Dean of Jersey.
- Tom Pelly, 70, Australian rules footballer.
- Aaron Spelling, 83, American television producer '', complications of stroke.
24
- Denice Denton, 46, American professor, chancellor of the University of California at Santa Cruz, suicide by jumping.
- Tichaona Jokonya, 67, Zimbabwean politician, Information & Publicity Minister, cardiac arrest.
- Patsy Ramsey, 49, American beauty pageant winner, mother of JonBenét Ramsey, ovarian cancer.
- Lyle Stuart, 83, American journalist and publisher.
- Gerald Tomlinson, 73, American mystery and baseball writer.
- Ric Weiland, 53, American Microsoft pioneer, developed BASIC, COBOL and Microsoft Works, suicide by gunshot.
25
- Elkan Allan, 83, British television producer, created Ready Steady Go! and developed the first television listings for the UK in the Sunday Times.
- Eliyahu Asheri, 18, Israeli civilian kidnapped and murdered by militants in the West Bank city of Ramallah.
- Charles Barrow, 84, American justice of the Texas Supreme Court.
- George W. Clarke, 100, American politician.
- Richard DeVore, 73, American ceramicist, lung cancer.
- Kenneth Griffith, 84, Welsh actor and documentary maker, Parkinson's disease.
- Akbar Hossain, 65, Bangladeshi Minister for Shipping and hero of 1971 Bangladesh Liberation War, heart attack.
- Irving Kaplansky, 89, American mathematician at the University of Chicago.
- Dibya Khaling, 54, Nepali musician, composer and lyricist, responsible for 1,000 songs, cardiac arrest.
- Arif Mardin, 74, Turkish-American Grammy Award winning music producer, pancreatic cancer.
- Sophie Maslow, 95, American choreographer.
- Gad Navon, 84, Moroccan-born Former Chief Israeli Military Rabbi, cancer.
- Jaap Penraat, 88, Dutch architect and member of Dutch resistance in World War II.
- Seema Aissen Weatherwax, 100, Ukrainian photographer.
26
- Bear JJ1, the first wild bear in Germany in 170 years, shot to death.
- Paulino Díaz, 71, Mexican sports shooter.
- Johnny Jenkins, 67, American blues guitarist who influenced Otis Redding and Jimi Hendrix, stroke.
- Parami Kulatunga, Sri Lankan military officer, Deputy Chief of Staff of the Sri Lankan Army, bomb blast.
- Frederick Mayer, 84, German educational philosopher, creativity expert, author of "History of Educational Thought".
- Eric Rofes, 51, American author and AIDS educator, heart attack.
- Stan Torgerson, 82, American radio announcer for Ole Miss football and basketball games.
- Jeff Winkless, 65, American voice actor, brain tumor.
27
- Eileen Barton, 81, American singer, actress, ovarian cancer
- Robert Carrier, 82, American celebrity chef.
- J. Robert Elliott, 96, US Federal District Judge who overturned the conviction of Lt. William Calley.
- Sir Gerard Mansfield, 84, British admiral.
- Marta Mata, 80, Spanish politician and pedagogue.
- Ángel Maturino Reséndiz, 45, Mexican convicted serial killer, execution by lethal injection.
28
- Jim Baen, 62, American science fiction editor and publisher.
- Vikram Dharma, 44/45, Indian film stunt director.
- Theodore Levitt, 81, German-born former editor of the Harvard Business Review and author of books on marketing, coined the term globalization.
- June Lloyd, Baroness Lloyd of Highbury, 78, British paediatrician and life peer.
- Mahmoud Mestiri, 77, Tunisian diplomat and politician, former foreign minister.
- George Page, 71, American television host, creator and narrator of the PBS series Nature.
- Peter Rawlinson, Baron Rawlinson of Ewell, 87, English barrister, politician and author.
- Fernando Sanchez, 70, Belgian-born fashion designer.
- George Unwin, 93, British pilot and RAF officer, Battle of Britain flying ace.
- Lennie Weinrib, 71, American voice actor.
29
- Fabián Bielinsky, 47, Argentine film director, heart attack.
- Joseph Edamaruku, 71, Indian journalist, heart attack.
- Joyce Hatto, 77, English classical pianist, who plagiarized more than 100 albums, cancer.
- Ed Hugus, 82, American racing driver.
- Stanley Moskowitz, 68, American CIA liaison to Congress, heart attack.
- Wallace Potts, 59, American film archivist for the Rudolf Nureyev Foundation, lymphoma.
- Lloyd Richards, 87, Canadian-American theatre director, first black Broadway director, Tony Award winner, heart failure.
- Pierre Rinfret, 82, Canadian-born economist and Republican candidate for Governor of New York in 1990.
- Randy Walker, 52, American Northwestern University football coach, apparent heart attack
- F. Mark Wyatt, 86, American CIA officer, who delivered bags of money to swing the 1948 Italy election.
30
- Robert Gernhardt, 68, German satirist.
- Edward S. Hamilton, 89, American Army officer, highly decorated Army veteran during World War II, pneumonia.
- Harold Olmo, 96, American grape breeder and geneticist.
- Richard Streeton, 75, English sports journalist
- Ross Tompkins, 68, American The Tonight Show pianist.