Deaths in March 2001
Appearance
(Redirected from March 2001 deaths)
The following is a list of notable deaths in March 2001.
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.
March 2001
[edit]1
[edit]- Joseph Cyril Bamford, 84, British businessman.[1]
- Ray Dorr, 59, American college football player (West Virginia Wesleyan) and coach (Southern Illinois, Kentucky, Texas A&M), ALS.[2]
- Albert Heschong, 82, American television, film and theater production designer (winner of Emmy Award for Art Direction for Requiem for a Heavyweight).[3]
- John Painter, 112, American supercentarian, world's oldest man.[4]
- Orlando Pantera, 33, Cape Verdean singer and composer, acute pancreatitis.
- Hannie Termeulen, 72, Dutch Olympic freestyle swimmer (1948, 1952).[5]
- Henry Wade, 86, American lawyer and district attorney of Dallas County, Parkinson's disease.
- Colin Webster, 68, Welsh international footballer, cancer.[6]
2
[edit]- John Diamond, 47, British Journalist, oesophageal cancer.[7]
- George F. D. Duff, 74, Canadian mathematician.
- Louis Faurer, 84, American street photographer.[8]
- Lonnie Glosson, 93, American country musician, songwriter, and radio personality.[9]
- Wallace D. Hayes, 82, American engineer and one of the world's leading theoretical aerodynamicists.[10]
- Mildred Brown Schrumpf, 98, American economist, food educator, and author.
- William Grant Stratton, 87, American politician, governor of Illinois (1953-1961).[11]
3
[edit]- Roger Buchonnet, 74, French cyclist.[12]
- Louis Edmonds, 77, American actor (Dark Shadows, All My Children), respiratory failure.[13]
- A. Maitland Emmet, 92, British amateur entomologist and schoolmaster.
- Maija Isola, 73, Finnish designer of printed textiles.
- Jean-Baptiste Leclerc, 80, French Olympic wrestler (1948, 1952).[14]
- Gabriel Lisette, 81, Chadian politician.
- Jay T. Robbins, 81, Career officer in the American Air Force.[15]
- Ruhi Sarıalp, 76, Turkish track and field athlete and Olympic medalist (1948).[16]
- Eugene Sledge, 77, American Marine and professor, stomach cancer.[17]
4
[edit]- Gerardo Barbero, 39, Argentine chess grandmaster, cancer.
- Jean René Bazaine, 96, French painter, designer of stained glass windows and writer.[18]
- Clyde Coffman, 89, American decathlon athlete and Olympian (1932).[19]
- Glenn Hughes, 50, American singer and member of pop group The Village People, lung cancer.[20]
- Brian Jones, 72, British motorcycle designer.[21]
- Fred Lasswell, 84, American cartoonist (Barney Google and Snuffy Smith).[22]
- Jim Rhodes, 91, American politician (61st and 63rd governor of the State of Ohio).[23]
- Harold Stassen, 93, American politician (25th governor of Minnesota).[24]
- Kalle Tuulos, 70, Finnish figure skater and Olympian (1952, 1956).[25]
- Shammai Zahn, 80, Polish-born British rabbi.[26]
5
[edit]- Rankin Britt, 85, American football player (Texas A&M, Philadelphia Eagles).[27]
- Frans De Mulder, 63, Belgian road racing cyclist.[28]
- Jacques Maloubier, 81, French painter.[29]
- Ian McHarg, 80, Scottish architect.[30]
- Leo Thomas, 77, American baseball player (St. Louis Browns, Chicago White Sox).[31]
6
[edit]- Mário Covas, 70, Brazilian engineer and politician, bladder cancer.[32]
- Doc Dennis, 83, American baseball player.[33]
- Luce d'Eramo, 75, Italian author and critic.[34]
- Nane Germon, 91, French actress.[35]
- Balla Moussa Keïta, Malian actor and comedian, pulmonary emphysema.[36]
- Ngọc Lan, 44, Vietnamese singer-lyricist, multiple sclerosis.
- Kathleen Le Rossignol, 92, British Olympic diver (1928).[37]
- Portia Nelson, 80, American cabaret singer, songwriter, actress (The Sound of Music, Doctor Dolittle, All My Children), and author, cancer.[38]
- Roderic O'Connor, 93, American painter.[39]
- Darrell A. Posey, 53, American anthropologist and biologist, brain tumor.[40]
- Jim Taylor, 83, English footballer.[41]
- Kim Walker, 32, American actress (Heathers, Say Anything..., The Outsiders), brain tumor.
7
[edit]- Frankie Carle, 97, American pianist, bandleader and composer ("Sunrise Serenade").[42]
- Inge Edler, 89, Swedish cardiologist.
- Hank Foldberg, 77, American gridiron football player (Brooklyn Dodgers, Chicago Hornets) and coach.[43]
- Ebbe Nielsen, 50, Danish entomologist and lepidoptera researcher, heart attack.
- Marian Norkowski, 65, Polish football player and Olympian (1960).[44]
- Janice O'Hara, 82, American baseball player.[45]
- Al Palladini, 57, Canadian politician, heart attack.
8
[edit]- Frances Adaskin, 100, Canadian pianist.[46]
- Abe Cohen, 67, American gridiron football player (Boston Patriots).[47]
- Ninette de Valois, 102, British ballet dancer, teacher, choreographer and director of classical ballet.[48]
- Robert Ealey, 75, American electric blues singer.
- Bent Hansen, 67, Danish Olympic football player (1960).[49]
- Hugh Malone, 57, American surveyor and politician, accidental death.
- Takashige Matsumoto, 92, Japanese Olympic water polo player (1932).[50]
- Luís Rocha, 63, Brazilian politician and lawyer, diabetes.
- Bazaryn Shirendev, 88, Mongolian historian and politician.
- Edward Winter, 63, American actor (Cabaret, Promises, Promises, M*A*S*H), Parkinson's disease.[51]
9
[edit]- Vincent Alo, 96, American mobster (Genovese crime family).
- Spencer Bernard, 83, American politician.
- Soemitro Djojohadikoesoemo, 83, Indonesian economist and politician and the father of Prabowo Subianto, heart failure.[52]
- Henry Jonsson, 88, Swedish Olympic runner (1936).[53]
- Hermann Kugelstadt, 89, German screenwriter and film director.
- Poldek Pfefferberg, 87, Polish-American Holocaust survivor.[54]
- Giancarlo Prete, 58, Italian actor, brain cancer.
- Diane Sommerfield, 51, American actress (Days of Our Lives).
- Richard Stone, 47, American composer and songwriter (Animaniacs, Pinky and the Brain, Freakazoid!), pancreatic cancer.[55]
10
[edit]- Arturo Alcaraz, 84, Filipino volcanologist.
- Algodão, 76, Brazilian basketball player and Olympic medalist (1948, 1952, 1956, 1960).[56]
- Henri Brasseur, 94, Belgian Olympic fencer (1928, 1936).[57]
- Ab Conway, 86, Canadian Olympic middle-distance runner (1936).[58]
- Michael Elkins, 84, American broadcaster and journalist (CBS, Newsweek, BBC).[59]
- Nikos Georgiadis, 77, Greek-British set designer for ballet, stage and film.[60]
- Frank Marsh, 76, American politician.
- Massimo Morsello, 42, Italian fascist and political singer-songwriter, cancer.
- Jorge Recalde, 49, Argentine rally driver, heart attack while racing.
- Valdemar de Silveira, 85, Brazilian Olympic weightlifter (1952).[61]
- Vladimir Voroshilov, 70, Soviet and Russian author, producer and television anchorman, heart attack.
- Sir Michael Woodruff, 89, British surgeon and scientist, and a pioneer in organ transplant surgery.[62]
11
[edit]- Finn Ferner, 81, Norwegian Olympic sailor (1952, 1960).[63]
- Kaj Jørgensen, 75, Danish footballer.[64]
- Rafaela Chacón Nardi, 75, Cuban poet and educator.[65]
- Jørn Ording, 85, Norwegian actor and screenwriter.
- Miloslav Ošmera, 77, Czech Olympic ice hockey player (1952).[66]
- Ted Schmitt, 84, American gridiron football player (Philadelphia Eagles).[67]
12
[edit]- Alina Cichecka, 84, Polish Olympic gymnast (1936).[68]
- Morton Downey Jr., 67, American television personality (The Morton Downey Jr. Show) and actor (Predator 2), lung cancer.[69]
- Dave Dunaway, 56, American NFL football player (Green Bay Packers, Atlanta Falcons, New York Giants).[70]
- Alan Greene, 89, American Olympic diver (1936).[71]
- Sai Gwa-Pau, 82, Hong Kong film actor, diabetes.[72]
- Sir Lancelot, 98, Trinidadian-American singer ("Rum and Coca-Cola") and actor.[73]
- Henry Lee Lucas, 64, American convicted killer, natural causes, heart failure.[74]
- Robert Ludlum, 73, American author of spy novels (The Bourne Identity), burn.[75]
- Bill Reeder, 79, American baseball player (St. Louis Cardinals).[76]
- Sidney Dillon Ripley, 87, American ornithologist and conservationist.[77]
- Victor Westhoff, 84, Dutch botanist.[78]
13
[edit]- John A. Alonzo, 66, American cinematographer (Chinatown, Scarface, Norma Rae).[79]
- Encarnacion Alzona, 105, Filipino historian, and suffragist.[80]
- Bill Bland, 84, British communist.[81]
- Jean Bretonnière, 76, French actor and singer.[82]
- Vincent Dantzer, 77, Canadian politician (member of the House of Commons of Canada, mayor of Edmonton, Alberta), heart attack.[83]
- Walter Dukes, 70, American professional basketball player (New York Knicks, Minneapolis Lakers, Detroit Pistons).[84]
- Benny Martin, 72, American bluegrass fiddler.
- Cord Meyer, 80, American Central Intelligence Agency official, lymphoma.[85]
- Cranley Onslow, 74, British politician.[86]
- Antonia Palacios, 96, Venezuelan poet, novelist and essayist.
- Norman Rodway, 72, Irish actor (Royal Shakespeare Company).[87]
- Jutta Rüdiger, 90, German psychologist and head of the Nazi Party League of German Girls (Bund Deutscher Mädel) during World War II.
14
[edit]- Rosine Deréan, 91, French actress.[88]
- Arthur Deremer, 83, American football player (Brooklyn Dodgers).[89]
- Anne George, 73, American author and poet, complications during heart surgery.
- Lawrence Clark Powell, 94, American librarian, literary critic, and author.[90]
- Paul Rémy, 78, French tennis player.[91]
- Della Sehorn, 73, American competition swimmer and Olympian (1952).[92]
15
[edit]- John Anderson, 76, American Olympic canoeist (1952).[93]
- Gaetano Cozzi, 78, Italian historian.[94]
- Durward Gorham Hall, 90, American politician (U.S. Representative for Missouri's 7th congressional district from 1961 to 1973).[95]
- Ryszard Koncewicz, 89, Polish soccer player and coach.[96]
- Gunnar Lundqvist, 85, Swedish Olympic canoeist (1936).[97]
- Henrik Schildt, 86, Finnish-Swedish film actor.[98]
- Ann Sothern, 92, American actress (The Ann Sothern Show, Maisie, The Whales of August), stroke.[99]
16
[edit]- Johannes Benzing, 88, German nazi diplomat and linguist during World War II.[100]
- Otfried Deubner, 92, German classical archaeologist and diplomat.
- Juliette Huot, 89, Canadian actress (The Plouffe Family, 14, rue de Galais, Amanita Pestilens, The Luck of Ginger Coffey), cancer.[101]
- Norma MacMillan, 79, Canadian cartoon voice actress (The New Casper Cartoon Show, The Gumby Show, Davey and Goliath).[102]
- Isao Okawa, 74, Japanese businessman and chairman of Sega, heart disease.[103]
- Maria von Tasnady, 89, Hungarian singer and stage and film actress.[104]
- Bob Wollek, 57, French race car driver, bicycle accident.[105]
17
[edit]- Michiyo Aratama, 71, Japanese actress, heart attack.[106]
- Ingrid Borthen, 87, Norwegian-Swedish stage and film actress.
- Grace Cole, 78, American politician.[107]
- Arthur Covington, 87, Canadian physicist and radio astronomer.[108]
- Viktor Krivulin, 56, Russian poet, novelist and essayist.[109]
- Maynard Mack, 91, American literary critic and English professor.[110]
- Abraham Lincoln Marovitz, 95, American district judge (United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois).[111]
- Kaarto Rask, 72, Finnish Olympic shot putter (1952).[112]
- Sherwin Rosen, 62, American labor economist.[113]
- Richard Steere, 92, American Olympic fencer (1932).[114]
- Anthony Storr, 80, English psychiatrist, psychoanalyst, and author.[115]
- Ralph Thomas, 85, English film director.[116]
- Zinaida Voronina, 53, Soviet Olympic gymnast (1968).[117]
18
[edit]- Vasily Abaev, 100, Ethnically Ossetian Soviet linguist specializing in Iranian.[118]
- John Ardoin, 66, American music critic and author.[119]
- Teófilo Borunda, 89, Mexican politician.
- John Phillips, 65, American singer, promoter and co-founder of The Mamas & the Papas, heart failure.[120]
- Dirk Polder, 81, Dutch physicist.[121]
- Gyula Tóth, 73, Hungarian wrestler and Olympian (1956, 1960).[122]
- Antoine Uyterhoeven, 70, Belgian Olympic sprinter (1952).[123]
19
[edit]- Gordon Brown, 53, Scottish rugby union player, non-Hodgkin lymphoma.[124]
- Boris Gregorka, 94, Yugoslavian Olympic gymnast (1928, 1936).[125]
- Charles K. Johnson, 76, American flat-earther (President of the International Flat Earth Research Society).[126]
- Walter Ian Harewood Johnston, 71, Australian pioneer of reproductive medicine, laryngeal cancer.[127]
- Herbie Jones, 75, American jazz trumpeter and arranger.[128]
- Jacob Kainen, 91, American painter and printmaker.[129]
- Norman Mitchell, 82, English actor (It Ain't Half Hot Mum, Oliver!, Beryl's Lot).[130]
20
[edit]- Luis Alvarado, 52, Puerto Rican baseball player, heart attack.[131]
- Jay Cameron, 72, American jazz musician.
- Henry Carpenter, 75, British boxer and Olympian (1948).[132]
- Ronald Chetwynd-Hayes, 81, British author, bronchial pneumonia.[133]
- Doreen Gorsky, 88, British politician, feminist and television producer and executive (BBC Television).[134]
- John J. Hennessey, 79, United States Army general, stroke.
- Frank O'Reilly, 76, Irish Olympic racewalker (1960).[135]
- Frank Reynolds, 83, British and English field hockey player and Olympian (1948).[136]
- William Kernahan Thomas, 90, American district judge (United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio).[137]
- Ilie Verdeț, 75, Romanian communist politician, heart attack.[138]
21
[edit]- Dora Alonso, 90, Cuban journalist and writer.
- Maurice Arreckx, 83, French politician, cancer.[139]
- Claus Bork Hansen, 37, Danish organized crime figure, shot.
- Virgil Hnat, 65, Romanian handball player and coach, heart failure.
- Bill Johansen, 72, Canadian professional ice hockey player (Toronto Maple Leafs).[140]
- Jeong Ju-yung, 85, South Korean entrepreneur, businessman and founder of the Hyundai Group, pneumonia.[141]
- Wim van der Kroft, 84, Dutch canoeist and Olympic medalist (1936, 1948, 1952).[142]
- Luigi Pennacchio, 68, Italian Olympic ski jumper (1956, 1960).[143]
- Billy Ray Smith, Sr., 66, American football player (Los Angeles Rams, Pittsburgh Steelers, Baltimore Colts).[144]
- Anthony Steel, 80, British actor and singer (The Wooden Horse, Malta Story, West of Zanzibar, Checkpoint), heart failure.[145]
- Joe Winkler, 79, American gridiron football player (Cleveland Rams).[146]
22
[edit]- Stepas Butautas, 75, Lithuanian basketball player and Olympian (1952).[147]
- Sabiha Gökçen, 88, Turkish female aviator and the first female combat pilot of the world.[148]
- William Hanna, 90, American animator (Tom & Jerry, The Flintstones, Scooby-Doo), co-founder of Hanna-Barbera, throat cancer.[149]
- Newt Kimball, 85, American baseball player.[150]
- George Knott, 90, Australian politician and Olympic racewalker (1948).[151]
- Barry Maxwell, 12th Baron Farnham, 69, British aristocrat.[152]
- Rolf Birger Pedersen, 61, Norwegian footballer and football coach.[153]
- Edward Samuel Smith, 81, American federal judge.[154]
- Camp Wilson, 78, American football player (Detroit Lions).[155]
- Toby Wing, 85, American actress and pin-up star (Palmy Days, True Confession).[156]
23
[edit]- Anthony Bevins, 58, British journalist, pneumonia.[157]
- Sully Boyar, 77, American actor (Dog Day Afternoon, Car Wash, Prizzi's Honor).[158]
- Louis Dudek, 83, Canadian poet, academic, and publisher.[159]
- Rowland Evans, 79, American journalist and television host (Evans, Novak, Hunt, & Shields), esophageal cancer.[160]
- Arthur D. Hasler, 93, American ecologist, known for explaining salmon's homing instinct.[161]
- Willie Horne, 79, British rugby league player.[162]
- Margaret Ursula Jones, 84, British archaeologist, known for directing excavations at Mucking, Essex.[163]
- Robert Laxalt, Basque-American writer.[164]
- David McTaggart, 68, Canadian environmentalist and co-founder of Greenpeace International, car accident.
- Karlis Ozols, 88, Latvian SS officer during World War II and chess champion.
- Mischa Richter, 91, American cartoonist and illustrator.[165]
24
[edit]- Debabrata Basu, 76, Indian statistician.[166]
- Boris Berlin, 93, Russian-Canadian pianist, teacher and composer.[167]
- N. G. L. Hammond, 93, British classical scholar.[168]
- Tambi Larsen, 86, Danish-American set designer.
- Kazuyoshi Oimatsu, 89, Japanese figure skater, coach and Olympian (1932, 1936).[169]
- Karl Schönböck, 92, Austrian actor, stroke.
- Brian Trubshaw, 77, British test pilot (Concorde).[170]
- Muriel Young, 77, British television announcer, presenter and producer.[171]
- Birgit Åkesson, 93, Swedish choreographer, dancer and dance researcher.
25
[edit]- Dominick Basso, 63, American mobster (Chicago Outfit) and bookmaker.
- Terry C. Johnston, 54, American writer of the Old West, colorectal cancer.[172]
- Larry Lansburgh, 89, American producer, director, and screenwriter.[173]
- Barney McGarry, 83, American football player (Cleveland Rams).[174]
- Ray Mitchell, 79, Australian wrestler and Olympian (1956, 1960).[175]
- Tiger Prabhakar, 53, Indian film actor, multiple organ dysfunction syndrome.
- Mattheus Pronk, 53, Dutch racing cyclist.[176]
- Roy Staley, 85, American hurdler and Olympian (1936).[177]
26
[edit]- Antoni Adamski, 68, Polish Olympic field hockey player (1952).[178]
- Mary Grace Baloyo, 27, Filipino military pilot, plane crash.[179]
- Michael Cocks, 71, British politician.[180]
- Brenda Helser, 76, American Olympic swimmer (1948).[181]
- Suzanne Raeth, 96, French Olympic diver (1924).[182]
- Piotr Sobociński, 43, Polish cinematographer (Three Colours: Red, Ransom, Marvin's Room), heart attack.
- Bill Yates, 79, American cartoonist and comic strip editor, complications from pneumonia and Alzheimer's disease.[183]
27
[edit]- Jan Erik Adolfsen, 70, Norwegian Olympic ice hockey player (1952).[184]
- Jim Ailinger, 99, American football player.[185]
- Sir Kenneth Alexander, 79, Scottish economist.[186]
- Erik Aschehoug, 74, French Olympic rower (1948).[187]
- Anthony Dexter, 88, American actor (Valentino, Captain John Smith and Pocahontas, The Black Pirates), stroke.[188]
- Robert Lee Massie, 59, American convicted murderer, execution by lethal injection.[189]
- Boris Rauschenbach, 86, Soviet physicist and rocket engineer.
- Giorgio Zuccoli, 43, Italian yacht racer and Olympian (1988, 1992).[190]
- Tereza Štadler, 64, Serbian and Yugoslav chess player.
28
[edit]- Jim Benton, 84, American football player (Cleveland/Los Angeles Rams, Chicago Bears), cancer.[191]
- George Connor, 94, American racecar driver.
- Moe Koffman, 72, Canadian flautist and saxophonist, cancer.[192]
- Constantin von Liechtenstein, 89, Liechtenstein prince and Olympic alpine skier (1948).[193]
- Lillian Palmer, 87, Canadian athlete and Olympic silver medalist (1932).[194]
- Vulo Radev, 78, Bulgarian film director, writer, and cinematographer.[195]
- Jørgen Skov, 75, Danish cinematographer.
- James Warren, 88, American film actor and artist.
- Tenny Wyss, 84, Swiss Olympic swimmer (1936).[196]
29
[edit]- Edward Frederick Anderson, 69, American botanist.
- Malani Bulathsinhala, 51, Sri Lankan singer.
- Gordon Hahn, 81, American politician (Los Angeles City Council, California State Assembly).[197]
- Rolando Hernández, 86, Mexican professional wrestler and wrestling trainer, heart attack.
- Helge Ingstad, 101, Norwegian writer and explorer, and discoverer of a North American Viking landing site.[198]
- John Lewis, 80, American jazz pianist (Modern Jazz Quartet), cancer.[199]
- Hollis Sigler, 53, American artist and painter, breast cancer.[200]
- Norman Sisisky, 73, American politician, lung cancer.[201]
- Paul Uellendahl, 81, German Olympic water polo player (1952).[202]
- Kōji Yamamoto, 48, Japanese Olympic basketball player (1976).[203]
30
[edit]- Fatiu Ademola Akesode, 61, Nigerian professor of paediatrics.
- Cyrus Herzl Gordon, 92, American scholar.[204]
- Jeffrey Mass, 60, American academic, historian, author and japanologist.[205]
- Maxie McCullagh, 78, Irish Olympic boxer (1948).[206]
- George Mutch, 88, Scottish football player.[207]
- Bert Smith, 75, British Olympic ice hockey player (1948).[208]
31
[edit]- Jean-Marc Bory, 67, Swiss actor.[209]
- Brian Cole, 22, American baseball player.[210]
- Diego García, 39, Spanish long-distance runner and Olympian (1992, 1996), heart attack.[211]
- Edward Jewesbury, 83, English actor (Henry V, Crown Court, Dungeons & Dragons).
- Naum Meiman, 88, Soviet mathematician, and dissident.
- David Rocastle, 33, English professional footballer, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma.[212]
- Clifford Shull, 85, American Nobel Prize-winning physicist.[213]
- Colette Thomas, 72, French swimmer and Olympian (1948, 1952, 1956).[214]
- Nakamura Utaemon VI, 84, Japanese kabuki performer.
- Arthur Geoffrey Walker, 91, British mathematician.[215]
- Tochiōyama Yūki, 58, Japanese sumo wrestler.[216]
References
[edit]- ^ "Joseph Bamford". The Daily Telegraph. March 2, 2001. Retrieved July 3, 2023.
- ^ Hohlfeld, Neil (March 2, 2001). "A&M's Dorr dead at age 59". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved January 21, 2019.
- ^ "Albert Heschong; Won Emmy for Set Design". Los Angeles Times. March 11, 2001. Retrieved January 30, 2019.
- ^ Young, Robert Douglas (April 10, 2018). "Table M - World's Oldest Men (WOM) Titleholders Since 1972". Gerontology Research Group. Archived from the original on September 16, 2018. Retrieved January 4, 2019.
- ^ "Olympedia – Hannie Termeulen". Olympedia. OlyMADMen. Retrieved July 3, 2023.
- ^ Glanville, Brian (March 5, 2001). "Colin Webster". The Guardian. Retrieved January 4, 2019.
- ^ Rayner, Jay; Greenslade, Roy (March 3, 2001). "John Diamond: Gifted writer and journalist whose insight produced a moving commentary on life with cancer". The Guardian. Retrieved January 4, 2019.
- ^ Margarett Loke (March 12, 2001). "Louis Faurer, Photographer Who Captured Compelling Images of the Street, Dies at 84". The New York Times. p. B 6. Retrieved January 16, 2021.
- ^ Russell, Tony (April 9, 2001). "Lonnie Glosson". The Guardian. Retrieved January 27, 2019.
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- ^ "Leo Thomas". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved January 2, 2019.
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- ^ "Olympedia – Bent Hansen". Olympedia. OlyMADMen. Retrieved July 3, 2023.
- ^ "Olympedia – Takashige Matsumoto". www.olympedia.org. Retrieved May 18, 2026.
- ^ "Edward Winter -- Actor, 63". The New York Times. March 16, 2001. p. A 17. Retrieved January 6, 2019.
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