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1994


Year 1994 (MCMXCIV) was a common year starting on Saturday (link will display full 1994 Gregorian calendar).

The year 1994 was designated as the "International Year of the Family" and the "International Year of Sport and the Olympic Ideal" by the United Nations.

Events of 1994






January



January 1 – The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) goes into effect.
January 1Florida State University beat the University Of Nebraska in the Orange Bowl for the national championship
January 1 – The Zapatista Army of National Liberation begins their war in Chiapas, Mexico.
January 6 – In Detroit, Michigan, Nancy Kerrigan is clubbed on the right leg by an assailant under orders from figure skating rival Tonya Harding's ex-husband.
January 8Soyuz TM-18: Valeri Polyakov begins his 437.7 day orbit, eventually setting the world record for days spent in orbit.
January 11 – The Irish government announces the end of a 15-year broadcasting ban on the Provisional Irish Republican Army and its political arm Sinn Féin.
January 11The Superhighway Summit is held at UCLA's Royce Hall. It was the first conference to discuss the growing information superhighway and was presided over by U.S. Vice President Al Gore.
January 14 – U.S. President Bill Clinton and Russian President Boris Yeltsin sign the Kremlin Accords, which stop the preprogrammed aiming of nuclear missiles toward each country's targets, and also provide for the dismantling of the nuclear arsenal in Ukraine.
January 15SS American Star breaks tow in the Atlantic Ocean and is beached at Fuerteventura in the Canary Islands a few days later.
January 17 – The 1994 Northridge Earthquake, magnitude 6.7, hits the San Fernando Valley of Los Angeles at 4:31 AM killing 72 and leaving 26,029 homeless.
January 18 – The Cando event, a possible bolide impact in Cando, Spain. Witnesses claim to have seen a fireball in the sky lasting for almost one minute.
January 19Record cold temperatures hit the eastern United States. The coldest temperature ever measured in Indiana state history, -36°F (-38°C), is recorded in New Whiteland, Indiana.
January 20 – In South Carolina, Shannon Faulkner becomes the first female cadet to attend The Citadel, but soon drops out.
January 21Lorena Bobbitt is found not guilty by reason of insanity on charges of mutilating her husband John.
January 25 – U.S. President Bill Clinton delivers his first State of the Union address, calling for health care reform, a ban on assault weapons, and welfare reform.
January 26 – A man fires 2 blank shots at Charles, Prince of Wales in Sydney, Australia.
January 28 – The first trial of accused murderer Lyle Menendez ends in a mistrial. He and his brother Erik are later found guilty and sentenced to life in prison without parole.
January 30 – In Super Bowl XXVIII, the Dallas Cowboys hand the Buffalo Bills their fourth consecutive Super Bowl loss, 30-13.

February




February 1 – In Portland, Oregon, Tonya Harding's ex-husband Jeff Gillooly pleads guilty for his role in attacking figure skater Nancy Kerrigan. He accepts a plea bargain, admitting to racketeering charges in exchange for testimony against Harding.
February 3William J. Perry is sworn in as the United States Secretary of Defense.
February 4 – The Federal Open Market Committee raises the Fed Funds target rate for the first time since May 1989. The rate is raised by 25 basis points to 3¼ percent .
February 5Byron De La Beckwith is convicted of the 1963 murder of civil rights leader Medgar Evers.
February 6Markale massacres: A Bosnian Serb Army mortar shell kills 68 civilians and wounds about 200 in a Sarajevo marketplace.
February 9 – The Vance-Owen Peace plan for Bosnia and Herzegovina is announced.
February 12Edvard Munch's painting "The Scream" is stolen in Oslo (and is recovered on May 7).
February 12February 27 – The 1994 Winter Olympics were held in Lillehammer.
February 22Aldrich Ames and his wife are charged with spying for the Soviet Union by the United States Department of Justice. Ames will later be convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment and his wife will receive 5 years in prison.
February 24 – In Gloucester, local police begins excavations at 25 Cromwell Street, the home of Fred West, suspected of multiple murders. On February 28, he and his wife are arrested.
February 25 – Israeli Kahanist Baruch Goldstein opens fire inside the Cave of the Patriarchs in the West Bank. He kills 29 Muslims before worshippers beat him to death.
February 27Australian Federal Sports & Environment Minister Ros Kelly resigns over "The Sports Rorts Affair", where it was alleged that she apportioned money for community sporting projects in a pork barreling fashion.
February 28United States F-16 pilots shoot down 4 Serbian fighter aircraft over Bosnia and Herzegovina for violation of the Operation Deny Flight and its no-fly zone.

March




March 1 – A lone terrorist kills Ari Halberstam during an attack on 14 Jewish students on the Brooklyn Bridge in New York City.
March 1South Africa cedes Walvis Bay to Namibia.
March 1Mary Ellen Withrow begins her term of office as Treasurer of the United States, serving under President Bill Clinton.
March 4 – Four terrorists are convicted for their roles in the World Trade Center bombing, which killed 6 and injured more than 1,000.
March 5 – A gunman takes 8 people hostage in the Salt Lake City Public Library Hostage Incident.
March 6 – A referendum in Moldova results in the electorate voting against possible reunification with Romania.
March 7Campbell v. Acuff-Rose Music, Inc.: The Supreme Court of the United States rules that parodies of an original work are generally covered by the doctrine of fair use.
March 12 – A photo by Marmaduke Wetherell, previously touted as 'proof' of the Loch Ness monster, is confirmed to be a hoax.
March 12 – The Church of England ordains its first female priests.
March 14 – Apple Computer, Inc. releases the first Macintosh computers to use the new PowerPC Microprocessors. This is considered to be a major leap in personal computer, as well as Macintosh history.
March 15 – U.S. troops are withdrawn from Somalia.
March 16 – In Portland, Oregon, Tonya Harding pleads guilty to conspiracy to hinder prosecution for trying to cover-up an attack on figure skating rival Nancy Kerrigan. She is fined $100,000 and banned from the sport.
March 20 - Italian journalist Ilaria Alpi and TV cameraman Miran Hrovatin are assassinated in Somalia.
March 21 – The 66th Academy Awards, hosted by Whoopi Goldberg, are held at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion in Los Angeles, California. Steven Spielberg's Holocaust drama, Schindler's List wins seven Oscars including Best Picture and Best Director (Spielberg).
March 23 – Two military aircraft collide over Pope Air Force Base, North Carolina causing dozens of fatalities known as the Green Ramp disaster
March 27 – TV tycoon Silvio Berlusconi's right-wing coalition wins the Italian general election.
March 27 - The biggest tornado outbreak in 1994 occurs in the southeastern United States. One tornado hits a United Methodist Church in Piedmont, Alabama, killing 22.
March 27 – The Eurofighter takes its first flight in Manching, Germany.
March 28Shell House Massacre: Inkatha Freedom Party and ANC supporters battle in central Johannesburg South Africa.
March 31 – The journal Nature reports the finding in Ethiopia of the first complete Australopithecus afarensis skull (see Human evolution).

April



April 6Rwandan President Juvénal Habyarimana and Burundi President Cyprien Ntaryamira die when a missile shoots down their jet near Kigali, Rwanda. This is taken as a pretext to begin the Rwandan Genocide.
April 7 – The Rwandan Genocide begins in Kigali, Rwanda.
April 8 - Michelangelo's Universal Judgement is reopened to public after 10 years of restorations.
April 8Kurt Cobain, lead singer of Nirvana, is found dead in Seattle, Washington. He was last seen alive by family and friends 3 days prior, but was seen at various locations around Seattle by others. His death is believed to have been a suicide.
April 16 – Voters in Finland decide to join the European Union in a referendum.
April 20Paul Touvier is found guilty of ordering the execution of 7 Jews when he served in the Vichy France Milice.
April 21 – The Red Cross estimates that hundreds of thousands of Tutsi have been killed in Rwanda.
April 22 – Former United States President Richard M. Nixon dies in New York City.
April 25 – End of term for Sultan Azlan Muhibbudin Shah ibni Almarhum Sultan Yusuff Izzudin Shah Ghafarullahu-lahu as 9th Yang di-Pertuan Agong of Malaysia.
April 25 – The largest high school arson ever in the United States is started at Burnsville High School, in Burnsville, Minnesota, resulting in over 15 million dollars in damages. The same arsonist also goes on to set arsons at: Edina High School and Minnetonka High School.
April 26Tuanku Jaafar ibni Almarhum Tuanku Abdul Rahman, Yang di-Pertuan Besar of Negeri Sembilan, becomes the 10th Yang di-Pertuan Agong of Malaysia.
April 27South Africa holds its first fully multiracial elections.
April 29Commodore International declares bankruptcy.
April 30Austrian Formula One pilot Roland Ratzenberger is killed in an accident during the qualifying session for the 1994 San Marino Grand Prix.

May



May 1 – Three-time Formula 1 world champion Ayrton Senna is killed in an accident during the San Marino Grand Prix in Imola, Italy.
May 6 – The Channel Tunnel, which took 15,000 workers over 7 years to complete, opens between England and France, enabling passengers to travel between the 2 countries in 35 minutes.
May 10Nelson Mandela is inaugurated as South Africa's first Black president.
May 10Illinois executes serial killer John Wayne Gacy by lethal injection for the murder of 33 young men and boys.
May 10 – An annular eclipse of the sun is visible across much of North America.
May 12Ice hockey becomes Canada's official winter sport.
May 12 – U.K. Labour Party leader John Smith, 55, dies of a heart attack. Deputy leader Margaret Beckett stands in until an election can be held. Smith is succeeded by Tony Blair, the 41-year-old Scottish-born Member of Parliament for Sedgefield in County Durham.
May 17Malawi holds its first multiparty elections.
May 21 - Italian former minister and Christian Democrat leader Giulio Andreotti is accused of mafia allegiance by the court of Palermo.

June



June 6June 8Ceasefire negotiations for the Yugoslav War begin in Geneva; they agree to a 1-month cessation of hostilities (which does not last more than a few days).
June 12Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman are murdered outside the Simpson home in Los Angeles, California. O.J. Simpson is later acquitted of the killings, but is held liable in a civil suit.
June 14Hacker Kevin Poulsen pleads guilty to 7 counts of mail fraud, wire and computer fraud, money laundering, and obstruction of justice.
June 14 – The New York Rangers defeat the Vancouver Canucks at Madison Square Garden in New York in Game 7 of the 1994 Stanley Cup Finals to win their first Stanley Cup Championship in 54 years and ending the Curse of 1940.
June 15Israel and the Vatican establish full diplomatic relations.
June 17 – NFL star O.J. Simpson and his friend Al Cowlings flee from police in his white Ford Bronco. The low-speed chase ends at Simpson's Brentwood, Los Angeles, California mansion, where he surrenders.
June 17 – The 1994 FIFA World Cup begins in the United States.
June 23 – The International Olympic Committee celebrates their first centennial.
June 28 – Members of the Aum Shinrikyo cult release sarin gas attack at Matsumoto, Japan, 7 persons killed, 660 injured.

July




July 2Colombian footballer Andrés Escobar, 27, is shot dead in Bogotá. His murder is commonly attributed as retaliation for the own goal Escobar scored in the 1994 FIFA World Cup against the United States.
July 6 – Fourteen firefighters die in the South Canyon wildfire on Storm King Mountain in Colorado. The event inspires the 1999 book Fire on the Mountain.
July 7Aden is occupied by troops from North Yemen. (1994 civil war in Yemen)
July 15July 21 – The planet Jupiter is hit by 21 large fragments of Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 over the course of 6 days.
July 17 – Brazil wins the 1994 FIFA World Cup, defeating Italy by 3-2 in penalties (Full time 0-0).
July 18 – In Buenos Aires, a terrorist attack destroys a building housing several Jewish organizations, killing 85 and injuring many more (see AMIA Bombing).

July 19 Four 26-pound ceiling tiles fall from the roof of the Kingdome in Seattle, Washington, just hours before a scheduled Seattle Mariners game.
July 25Israel and Jordan sign the Israel-Jordan Treaty of Peace, which formally ends the state of war that has existed between the nations since 1948.

August



August – Wollemia nobilis, a "fossil tree" is discovered by bushwalker David Noble only 150 km from the largest city in Australia.
August 1 – Fire destroys Norwich Central Library in the United Kingdom, including most of its historical records.
August 1 – The University of London founds the School of Advanced Study, a group of postgraduate research institutes.
August 5 – Groups of protesters spread from Havana, Cuba's Castillo de la Punta ("Point Castle"), creating the first protests against Fidel Castro's government since 1959.
August 12Woodstock '94 begins in Saugerties, New York. It is the 25 year anniversary of Woodstock in 1969.
August 12Major League Baseball players go on strike, eventually causing the cancellation of the World Series.
August 20 – In Honolulu, Hawaii, during a circus international performance, a female elephant named Tyke crushes her trainer Allen Campbell to death before hundreds of horrified spectators, at the Neal Blaisdell Arena.
August 23Eugene Bullard was posthumously commissioned as a Second Lieutenant in the United States Air Force, 33 years after his death, and 77 years to the day after his rejection for U.S. military service in 1917.
August 31 – The Provisional Irish Republican Army announces a "complete cessation of military operations."
August 31Russian army leaves Estonia.

September



September 3Cold War: Russia and the People's Republic of China agree to de-target their nuclear weapons against each other.
September 4Kansai International Airport in Osaka, Japan opens. All international services are transferred from Itami to Kansai.
September 5New South Wales State MP for Cabramatta John Newman is shot outside his home in Australia's first political assassination since 1977.
September 8USAir Flight 427, a Boeing 737 with 132 people on board, crashes on approach to Pittsburgh International Airport; there are no survivors.
September 13 – President Bill Clinton signs the Assault Weapons Ban, which bans the manufacture of new weapons with certain features for a period of 10 years.
September 16 – Danish tour guide Louise Jensen is abducted, raped and murdered by British soldiers.
September 19 – American troops stage a bloodless invasion of Haiti in order to restore the legitimate elected leader, Jean-Bertrand Aristide, to power.
September 22 – The long-running American sitcom Friends premieres on NBC, eventually becoming part of NBC's Must See TV comedy blocks on Thursdays.
September 28 – The car ferry MS Estonia sinks in the Baltic Sea, killing 852.
September 28Jose Francisco Ruiz Massieu, Mexican politician, is assassinated on the orders of the president's brother.
September-October – Iraq disarmament crisis: Iraq threatens to stop cooperating with UNSCOM inspectors and begins to once again deploy troops near its border with Kuwait. In response, the U.S. begins to deploy troops to Kuwait.
Religious radio personality Harold Camping once predicted that September 1994 would see the second coming of Jesus Christ.

October



October 1 - In Slovakia, populist leader Vladimir Meciar wins the general election.
October 5 – In Switzerland, 23 members of the Order of the Solar Temple cult are found dead, a day after 25 of their fellow cultists are similarly discovered in Morin Heights, Quebec.
October 5UNESCO inaugurates World Teachers' Day to celebrate and commemorate the signing of the Recommendation Concerning the Status of Teachers on October 5, 1966.
October 8Iraq disarmament crisis: The President of the UN Security Council says that Iraq must withdraw its troops from the Kuwait border and immediately cooperate with weapons inspectors.
October 12NASA loses radio contact with the Magellan spacecraft as the probe descends into the thick atmosphere of Venus (the spacecraft presumably burned up in the atmosphere either October 13 or October 14).
October 15 – After 3 years of U.S. exile, Haiti's president Aristide returns to his country.
October 15Iraq disarmament crisis: Following threats by the U.N. Security Council and the U.S., Iraq withdraws troops from its border with Kuwait.
October 29Francisco Martin Duran fires over 2 dozen shots at the White House; he is later convicted of trying to kill President Bill Clinton.
October 31 – An American Eagle ATR-72 crashes in Roselawn, Indiana, after circling in icy weather, killing 64 passengers.
October 31The Duke of Edinburgh attends a ceremony in Israel, where his late mother, Princess Alice of Battenberg, is honoured as "Righteous among the Nations" for sheltering Jewish families from the Nazis in Athens, during World War II

November



november 3 - A French magazine publishes photo of President François Mitterand's secret daughter.
November 4San Francisco: The first conference devoted entirely to the subject of the commercial potential of the World Wide Web opens. Featured speakers include Marc Andreessen of Netscape, Mark Graham of Pandora Systems, and Ken McCarthy of E-Media.
November 4Sydney's third runway opens, ensuring protests about noise levels.
November 5 – A letter by former U.S. President Ronald Reagan, announcing that he has Alzheimer's disease, is released.
November 5George Foreman wins the WBA and IBF World Heavyweight Championships by KO'ing Michael Moorer becoming the oldest heavyweight champion in history.
November 5Johan Heyns, an influential Afrikaner theologian and critic of Apartheid, is assassinated.
November 6 - A flood in Piedmont, Italy, kills dozen of people.
November 7 - WXYC, the student radio station of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, provided the world's first internet radio broadcast.
November 8Georgia Representative Newt Gingrich leads the United States Republican Party in taking control of both the House of Representatives and the Senate in midterm congressional elections, the first time in 40 years the Republicans secured control of both houses of U.S. Congress. George W. Bush is elected Governor of Texas.
November 13 – Voters in Sweden decide to join the European Union in a referendum.
November 13 – The first passengers travel through the Channel Tunnel.
November 13 - Michael Schumacher wins his first Formula 1 World Championship.
November 16 – A Federal judge issues a temporary restraining order, prohibiting the State of California from implementing Proposition 187, that would have denied most public services to illegal aliens.
November 20 – The Angolan government and UNITA rebels sign the Lusaka Protocol.
November 28 – Voters in Norway decide not to join the European Union in a referendum.

December



December 2 – The Australian government agrees to pay reparations to indigenous Australians who were displaced during the nuclear tests at Maralinga in the 1950s and 1960s.
December 11 – Russian president Boris Yeltsin orders troops into Chechnya.
December 11 – A small bomb explodes on Philippine Airlines Flight 434, killing a Japanese businessman. The bombing was a field test done by Ramzi Yousef to test explosives that would have been used in Project Bojinka.
December 13 - Trial against former President Menghistu begins in Ethiopia.
December 13Fred West, 53, a builder living in Gloucester, is remanded in custody, charged with murdering 12 people (including two of his own daughters) whose bodies were mostly found buried at his house in Cromwell Street. His wife Rose West, 41, is charged with 10 murders. Police believe that the murders took place between 1967 and 1987, and suspect that they may have killed up to 30 people.
December 14 – A Learjet piloted by Richard Anderson and Brad Sexton misses an elementary school and crashes into an apartment complex in Fresno, California, killing both pilots and injuring several apartment residents.
December 14British Home Secretary Michael Howard announces that Myra Hindley is to serve a whole life tariff for the Moors Murders of the 1960s. The decision was made in private by Mr Howard's predecessor David Waddington in 1990, but Hindley is only informed of the decision today after the House of Lords ruled that the Home Secretary must inform all life sentence prisoners of the minimum term that they should serve before parole can be considered. Hindley, 52, can appeal against the decision but now knows that she may well spend the rest of her life in prison.
December 15 – The first version of web browser Netscape Navigator is released.
December 19 – A planned exchange rate correction of the Mexican Peso to the US Dollar, becomes a massive financial meltdown in Mexico, unleashing the 'Tequila' effect on global financial markets. This will prompt a US$ 50 billion 'bailout' by the Clinton administration.
December 19 – The Whitewater scandal investigation begins in Washington, DC.
December 19Civil unions between homosexuals are legalized in Sweden.
December 21 – A homemade bomb explodes on the # 4 train on Fulton Street in New York City.
December 26 – French anti-terrorist police storm a hijacked jet at Marseille and kill 4 Islamist terrorists.
December 31 is skipped by the Phoenix Islands to switch from the UTC-11 time zone to UTC+13, and by the Line Islands to switch from UTC-10 to UTC+14. The latter becomes the earliest time zone in the world, one full day ahead of Hawaii.


Undated


Tropical Storms Alberto & Gordon cause very damaging floods, intense winds and extensive problems directly over the Southeastern United States and the Caribbean Islands. The death tolls are unusually severe and damages are extreme in both tropical storms.

Fictional


The following are references to year 1994 in fiction:

Thundarr the Barbarian (1980-1982): A large asteroid passes between Earth and the Moon, causing the Moon to split into two large fragments. The event also causes major upheavals in Earth's climate and geography, as well as severe alterations in tidal forces, due to the gravitational effects of both the asteroid and the shattered Moon. This catastrophe results in the disruption of modern human civilization. Two thousand years later, civilization will re-emerge in a semi-barbaric state, where magic has been rediscovered, but co-exists alongside remnants of technology from previous civilizations, as well as science advanced far beyond that of the 1990s.

The character Faye Valentine from Cowboy Bebop is born in 1994
The Blair Witch Project (1999): Three student filmmakers disappear in the woods near the town of Burkittsville, Maryland in October whilst filming a documentary named The Blair Witch Project. A year later, their footage is recovered.

In Godzilla vs SpaceGodzilla, godzilla cells fly through a black hole in 1994.

Births




January – June




January 14Samir Patel, American spelling prodigy
January 21Marny Kennedy, Australian actress
February 5Saki Nakajima, Japanese singer
February 10Makenzie Vega, American actress
February 14Paul Butcher Jr., American actor
February 14Allie Grant, American actress
February 23Dakota Fanning, American actress
March 12Tanveer K. Atwal, American actress
March 14Louis Spencer, Viscount Althorp
March 14Frankie Ryan Manriquez, American actor
March 16Sierra McClain, American actress and singer
March 31Caden Waidyatilleka, American actor
April 4Risako Sugaya, Japanese singer
April 11Dakota Blue Richards, English actress
April 12Moises Arias, American actor
April 12Saoirse Ronan, Irish actress
April 12Airi Suzuki, Japanese singer
April 14Skyler Samuels, American actress
April 16Liliana Mumy, American actress
May 4Alexander Gould, American actor
May 4Pauline Ducruet, Monaco heir
May 12Drew Mikuska, American actor
May 24Cayden Boyd, American actor
June 11Ivana Baquero, Spanish actress
June 17Jiordan Anna Tolli, Australian actress
June 21Chisato Okai, Japanese singer
June 28Sophia Lorentzen, British heiress
June 28Prince Hussein bin Al Abdullah II, prince of Jordan
June 28Madeline Duggan, English actress

July – December




July 6Camilla and Rebecca Rosso, English twin actresses
July 9Akiane Kramarik, American poet and painter
July 13Ridge Canipe, American actor
July 16Mark Indelicato, American actor
July 27Princess Mafalda-Ceceilia of Bulgaria
August 9Forrest Landis, American actor
August 25Jetseta Gage, American kidnapping victim (d. 2005)
August 25Josh Flitter, American actor
August 28Jessie Flower, American actress
September 1Bianca Ryan, American singer
September 17Taylor Ware, American singer and yodeler
September 19Alexander Nathan Etel, British actor
September 22Danielle Van Dam, American murder victim (d. 2002)
September 25Jansen Panettiere, American actor
October 9Jodelle Ferland, Canadian actress
October 20Morgan Featherstone, Australian model
November 11Connor Price, Canadian actor
November 17Raquel Castro, American actress
November 30Nyjah Huston, American skateboarder
December 3Jake T. Austin, American actor
December 15Flora Ogilvy, British heiress
December 15Toby Linz, American actor
December 15Emma Lockhart, American actress
December 17Nathaniel Marvin Wolff, American actor, Singer-songwriter, and keyboardist

Deaths




January – June



January 1Arthur Espie Porritt, New Zealand politician and athlete (b. 1900)
January 1Cesar Romero, Cuban-American actor (b. 1907)
January 5Thomas P. 'Tip' O'Neill, Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives (b. 1912)
January 5Elmar Lipping, Estonian statesman and soldier (b. 1906)
January 5Brian Johnston, British cricket commentator (b. 1912)
January 8Pat Buttram, American actor sidekick (b. 1915)
January 9Johnny Temple, baseball player (b. 1927)
January 15Harry Nilsson, American musician (b. 1941)
January 17Helen Stephens, American runner (b. 1918)
January 20Matt Busby, Scottish football manager (Manchester United) (b. 1909)
January 22Telly Savalas, American actor (b. 1924)
January 23Brian Redhead, British journalist and broadcaster (b. 1929)
January 25Stephen Cole Kleene, American mathematician (b. 1909)
January 27Claude Akins, American actor (b. 1914)
January 28Hal Smith, American character actor and voice-over artist {b. 1916)
January 30Pierre Boulle, French author (b. 1912)
February 1Olan Soule, Character actor (b. 1909)
February 6Joseph Cotten, American actor (b. 1905)
February 6Jack Kirby, American comic book writer and illustrator (b. 1917)
February 7Witold Lutoslawski, Polish composer (b. 1913)
February 9Howard Martin Temin, American geneticist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (b. 1934)
February 11Sorrell Booke, American actor (b. 1930)
February 11William Conrad, American actor (b. 1920)
February 11Neil Bonnett, American race car driver (b. 1946)
February 14Andrei Chikatilo, Russian serial killer (executed) (b. 1936)
February 17Randy Shilts, American author and activist (b. 1951)
February 22Papa John Creech, American fiddler (b. 1917)
February 24Jean Sablon, French singer (b. 1906)
February 24Dinah Shore, American actress and singer (b. 1916)
February 25Baruch Goldstein, American-born mass murderer (b. 1956)
February 25Jersey Joe Walcott, American boxer (b. 1914)
February 26Bill Hicks, American comedian (b. 1961)
March 4John Candy, Canadian comedian and actor (b. 1950)
March 6Ray Arcel, American boxing trainer, was active from the 1920s through the 1980s (b. 1899)
March 9Charles Bukowski, American writer (b. 1920)
March 21MacDonald Carey, American actor (b. 1913)
March 22Walter Lantz, American cartoonist (b. 1899)
March 23Luis Donaldo Colosio, Mexican politician (b. 1950)
March 25Max Petitpierre, member of the Swiss Federal Council (b. 1899)
March 28Eugène Ionesco, Romanian-born playwright (b. 1909)
March 29Bill Travers, English actor and co-founder of the Born Free Foundation (b. 1922)
April 1Léon Degrelle, Belgian Nazi (b. 1906)
April 2Betty Furness, American actress, author, and consumer advocate (b. 1916)
ca. April 5Kurt Cobain, American musician (Nirvana) (b. 1967)
April 6Juvénal Habyarimana, President of Rwanda (b. 1937)
April 6Cyprien Ntaryamira, President of Burundi (b. 1956)
April 7Albert Guðmundsson, Icelandic footballer and politician (b. 1923)
April 7Golo Mann, German historian (b. 1909)
April 10Sam B. Hall, American politician (b. 1924)
April 15John Curry, British ice skater (b. 1949)
April 16Ralph Ellison, American writer (b. 1914)
April 17Roger Wolcott Sperry, American neurobiologist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (b. 1913)
April 22Richard M. Nixon, 37th President of the United States (b. 1913)
April 30Roland Ratzenberger, Austrian Formula One driver (b. 1960)
Unknown date – Francis Bell, Australian actor (b. 1944)
May 1Ayrton Senna, Brazilian Formula One driver (b. 1960)
May 7Clement Greenberg, American art critic (b. 1909)
May 8George Peppard, American actor (b. 1928)
May 10John Wayne Gacy, American serial killer (executed) (b. 1942)
May 12John Smith, Scottish politician (b. 1938)
May 15Gilbert Roland, Mexican-born actor (b. 1905)
May 19Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis, First Lady of the United States (b. 1929)
May 21Johan Hendrik Weidner, Belgian World War II resistance fighter (b. 1912)
May 29Erich Honecker, leader of East Germany (b. 1912)
June 2 - David Stove, Australian philosopher (b. 1927)
June 4 - Peter Thorneycroft, British politician (b. 1909)
June 9Jan Tinbergen, Dutch economist, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1903)
June 12Menachem Mendel Schneerson, the Lubavitcher Rebbe (b. 1902)
June 12Nicole Brown Simpson, ex-wife of O.J. Simpson (b. 1959)
June 12Ronald Goldman, friend of Nicole Brown Simpson (b. 1968)
June 14Henry Mancini, American composer and arranger (b. 1924)
June 15Kristen Pfaff, American bassist (Hole) (b. 1967)
June 20Jay Miner, American computer pioneer (b. 1932)
June 29Kurt Eichhorn, German conductor (b. 1908)

July – December



July 7Friedrich August Freiherr von der Heydte, German Luftwaffe Officer (b. 1907)
July 8Dick Sargent, American actor (b. 1930)
July 8Kim Il-sung, President of North Korea (b. 1912)
July 11Gary Kildall, American computer inventor (b. 1942)
July 14César Tovar, Venezuelan Major League Baseball player (b. 1940)
July 29Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin, British chemist, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1910)
August 7Larry Martyn, comedy actor (b. 1934)
August 13Elias Canetti, Bulgarian-born writer, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1905)
August 18Richard Laurence Millington Synge, English chemist, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1914)
August 19Linus Pauling, American chemist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry and Peace (b. 1901)
September 6Nicky Hopkins, British musician (b. 1944)
September 11Jessica Tandy, English actress (b. 1909)
September 12Boris Yegorov, cosmonaut (b. 1937)
September 15Moana Pozzi, Italian porn actress (b. 1961)
September 17Karl Popper, Austrian and British philosopher (b. 1902)
September 20Abioseh Nicol, Sierra Leonean diplomat, UN official and author (b. 1924)
September 30Andre Michael Lwoff, French microbiologist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (b. 1902)
October 3Tim Asch, Anthropologist, photographer and ethnographic filmmaker
October 3Dub Taylor, American actor (b. 1907)
October 7Niels Kaj Jerne, English immunologist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (b. 1911)
October 14Emil Gilels, Russian pianist (b. 1916)
October 19Martha Raye, American actress (b. 1916)
October 20Burt Lancaster, American actor (b. 1913)
October 21Benoît Régent, French actor (b. 1953)
October 24Raul Julia, Puerto Rican actor (b. 1940)
November 4Fred "Sonic" Smith, guitarist (b. 1949)
November 5Johan Heyns, Afrikaner theologian and critic of Apartheid assassinated (b. 1928)
November 10Carmen McRae, American jazz singer (b. 1920)
November 12Wilma Rudolph, American athlete (b. 1940)
November 13Motoo Kimura, Japanese geneticist (b. 1924)
November 14Tom Villard, American actor (b. 1953)
November 16Doris Speed, English actress (b. 1899)
November 16Dino Valente, American musician (b. 1943)
November 20John Lucarotti, TV writer (b. 1926)
November 22Charles Upham, New Zealand soldier, double Victoria Cross winner (b. 1908)
November 23Art Barr, American professional wrestler (b. 1966)
November 28Jeffrey Dahmer, American serial killer (murdered in prison) (b. 1960)
November 28Buster Edwards, Great train robber (suicide) (b. 1932)
December 8Antonio Carlos Jobim, Brazilian composer (b. 1927)
December 10Alexander Wilson, Canadian and Notre Dame athlete (b. 1905)
December 11Philip Phillips, American archaeologist (b. 1900)
December 11Carl Marzani, American political documentary filmmaker, author, editor and publisher (b. 1912)
December 12Stuart Roosa, astronaut (b. 1933)
December 23Sebastian Shaw, English actor (b. 1905)
December 24John Boswell, American historian (b. 1947)
December 27Fanny Craddock, British TV chef and restaurant critic (b. 1909)
December 27J. B. L. Reyes, Filipino jurist (b. 1902)

Nobel prizes


PhysicsBertram N. Brockhouse, Clifford Glenwood Shull
ChemistryGeorge Andrew Olah
MedicineAlfred G. Gilman, Martin Rodbell
LiteratureKenzaburo Oe
PeaceYasser Arafat, Shimon Peres, Yitzhak Rabin
Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel|EconomicsReinhard Selten, John Forbes Nash, John Harsanyi

Templeton Prize


Michael Novak

Fields Medal


Efim Isakovich Zelmanov, Pierre-Louis Lions, Jean Bourgain, Jean-Christophe Yoccoz

Right Livelihood Award


Astrid Lindgren, SERVOL (Service Volunteered for All), H. Sudarshan / VGKK (Vivekananda Girijana Kalyana Kendra), Ken Saro-Wiwa / MOSOP (Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People)

See also


20th century

External links


   
   
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