Wikipedia:Requested articles/Biography/By profession
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Academics
Please request articles about scientists at Wikipedia:Requested articles/Natural sciences#Scientists and people in science, not here. |
- Alaric Naudé Professor of Linguistics, Suwon Science College, University of Suwon in the Republic of Korea, Linguist and Social Scientist his work covers various aspects of sociolinguistics, neurolinguistics and Human Rights issues. [1][self-published source] [1] [2] [3]
- David G. Acker - Associate Dean of Academic and Global Programs, Iowa State University; researcher and consultant with Food and Agriculture Organization, Fulbright Research Fellow, has served as the president of the Association for International Agricultural and Extension Education, past consultant with the United States Agency for International Development, numerous books, including Education for rural people: What have we learned? [2][press release][3][self-published source]
- Jens Alber (requested on 18 May 2018), German sociologist and political scientist who won the prestigious Stein Rokkan Prize for Comparative Social Science Research in 1983.[4] For more information see his university webpage[5] (and the article about him in the German Wikipedia[6]).
- Victor Anderson - Oberlin Theological School Professor of Ethics and Society [7]
- Gloria Barczak - head of achool of marketing at Northeastern University; leader in new product development[8][self-published source]
- Stefano Bartolini (requested on 18 May 2018), Italian political scientist who won the prestigious Stein Rokkan Prize for Comparative Social Science Research in 1990.[9] For more information see his university webpage[10] (and the article about him in the German Wikipedia[11]).
- Manu Bhagavan Professor of History and Human Rights at Hunter College and the Graduate Center, The City University of New York.[4][self-published source] [5][self-published source] [6][self-published source] A specialist on the history and politics of modern India, with an emphasis on internationalism and human rights. Received critical acclaim for his book The Peacemakers: India and the Quest for One World.[7] Was a Fellow of the American Council of Learned Societies, President of the Society for Advancing the History of South Asia, and Chair of the Human Rights Program at the Roosevelt House Public Policy Institute.[8][9][10].[self-published source] Regularly appears in the media to discuss issues related to India, human rights, and international affairs.[11] [12][13] His essay on the rise of global authoritarianism went viral internationally and was translated into German as the lead cover article of the Berliner Republik magazine.[14]
- Dorothee Bohle (requested on 18 May 2018), German political scientist who won the prestigious Stein Rokkan Prize for Comparative Social Science Research in 2013.[12] For more information see her university webpage[13] (and the article about her in the German Wikipedia[14]).
- Andrew Calcutt, lecturer in journalism at the University of East London,[15][self-published source] author of several books including White noise : an A-Z of the contradictions in cyberculture.[16][original research?]
- Daniele Caramani (requested on 18 May 2018), Swiss-Italian political scientist who won the prestigious Stein Rokkan Prize for Comparative Social Science Research in 2004.[15] For more information see his university webpage[16] (as well as the article about him in the Norwegian Wikipedia[17]).
- Garga Chatterjee - cognitive scientist and political commentator; researcher on rare disorder prosopagnosia at Harvard University and Massachusetts Institute of Technology; South Asianist political commentator and human-rights activist, newspaper columnist [18][original research?]
- Jason Corburn, Ph.D., M.C.P. - Associate Professor of City & Regional Planning and Public Health at UC Berkeley [19].[self-published source] He also directs the Center for Global Healthy Cities at Berkeley [20]. Professor Corburn is a global expert on the connections between city planning and public health, how cities can become more healthy and equitable and how to improve urban informal settlements. He has published three books and numerous journal articles.[citation needed] His books include: Street Science: Community Knowledge and Environmental Health Justice, published by the MIT Press [21]; Toward the Healthy City: People, Places and the Politics of Urban Planning [22]; Toward the Healthy City, Korean edition [23] Healthy City Planning: From Neighbourhood to National Health Equity, [24]. He is a 2013 recipient of the United Nations Association Global Citizen Award [25][press release]
- Nicolaus Correll, PhD, Assistant Professor at the University of Colorado at Boulder [26], research on swarm robotics, smart materials, recipient of NSF CAREER award, NASA Early Career Faculty Fellowship, author of an open-source textbook on robotics.
- Benjamin Crowell - Author of online textbooks on physics and mathematics that are under Share and Share Alike license. Chapters from the books are linked to from various wiki articles. For example Work (physics) page links to Work – a chapter from an online textbook. The textbooks can be found at [27]
- Tammie Cumming - Director, Office of Assessment and Institutional Research, New York City College of Technology; assessment expert and consultant with ABET, MSCHE, and OECD and has served as an advisory board member of the Middle East North African Association for Institutional Research, numerous presentations and publications, including Enhancing Assessment in Higher Education: Putting Psychometrics to Work [28][29]
- Martin Dickson - Highly influential, deceased Princeton University scholar of Iran and Central Asia; educated a generation of scholars who are today at the top of their field, including Wheeler Thackston, John E. Woods (historian), Kathryn Babayan, and Cornell Fleischer. [30][31]
- G. Sumdany Don (G. Sumdany Don is a Bangladeshi trainer, writer and educator who is also the Chief Inspirational Officer at Don Sumdany Facilitation & Consultancy. He is a "Neuro Linguistic Programming (NLP)" Trainer, NLP One-to-One Coach, and Timeline Therapist certified under the American Board of NLP.) (SOURCES 1 [press release] 2[press release] 3 more[press release]) [self-published source]
- Jean Donaldon - Dog trainer and behaviourist, Director of The SF/SPCA Academy for Dog Trainers, author of (among others) The Culture Clash: A Revolutionary New Way to Understanding the Relationship Between Humans and Domestic Dogs 1993, which was revolutionary [32] [33]
- Alexander Doty - queer theorist, author of Making Things Perfectly Queer: Interpreting Mass Culture (Minnesota, 1993). [34]
- Tom F. Driver - theologian, preacher, lecturer, author, and peace activist, is the Paul J. Tillich Professor of Theology and Culture Emeritus at Union Theological Seminary in New York. He is best known for his combined interest in theology, theater, and ritual studies. He is equally known for his many publications and speeches in these areas and their intersection; these range from academic and popular articles, books, and lectures to sermons, and culminate in works and speeches denouncing war and advocating justice that stand alongside his activism. [35]
- Peter Druschel (1959) computer scientist, director of the Max Planck Institute for Software Systems, has Wiki entry in German. [36] [37]
- Michael Peter Edson - Director of Web and New Media Strategy, Smithsonian Institution [38]
- Maud Ellmann - Randy L. & Melvin R. Berlin professor of the development of the novel in English, Department of English, the University of Chicago; literary critic whose work focuses on British and European modernism and critical theory, particularly psychoanalysis and feminism; [39]
- Allan Flanders - considered a founding father of postwar British academic Industrial Relations [40]; SSRN 963794
- Edwin Gerow - Sanskritist, Emeritus Professor of Religion and the Humanities at Reed College [41], formerly Frank L. Sulzberger Professor at the University of Chicago[42]. Was president of the American Oriental Society[43], as well as editor of the Journal of the American Oriental Society[44] (so passes WP:NACADEMIC). Author of A Glossary of Indian Figures of Speech and Indian Poetics. Received honorary doctorate from the Sorbonne. ([45], [46])
- Kevin Glasheen - Personal Injury Lawyer who successfully lobbied for legislation increasing state payments to exonerees, from $50,000 to $80,000 for every year served in prison. In his first civil jury trial, Kevin won a million dollar verdict against Ethicon in San Angelo, Texas - a record for Tom Green County. He was lead counsel in the two largest railroad crossing accident cases in Texas, one resulting in a 65 million dollar verdict and one resulting in a 46 million dollar verdict. [47] [48] [49] [50]
- Barbara Gordon-Lickey, Professor Emeritus at the Institute of Neuroscience - University of Oregon, Department of Psychology B.A., 1963, Radcliffe College Ph.D., 1966, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; https://psychology.uoregon.edu/profile/barbgl/;
- Marvin Gordon-Lickey, Professor Emeritus at University of Oregon; https://psychology.uoregon.edu/profile/mglickey/; https://www.linkedin.com/in/marvin-gordon-lickey-a6244128;
- Hanno Hahn, de, son of Otto Hahn and Edith Junghans, art historian and architecture scientist.
- Michael Hames-García - professor of ethnic studies and director of the Center for the Study of Women in Society at the University of Oregon; see [51] and [52]; author of several books [53]; winner of a Lambda literary award [54]; his work is cited by a few Wikipedia entries, including Prison.
- Russell Hardin - political scientist [55]
- P J Johnson - pj johnson, Yukon poet laureate. First officially invested Yukon Poet Laureate. First officially invested poet laureate in Canada. Author, composer, producer, performance artist, public personality. [56] [57][58] [59]
- Chet Jordan - An American academic and author. Jordan is a member of the faculty at the Stella and Charles Guttman Community College of the City University of New York. He is co-author of CUNY's First Fifty Years: Triumphs and Ordeals of a People's University. [60]
- Moises Lino e Silva - ISSC World Social Science Fellow [61]
- George Malaty - professor of math education of University of Joensuu who argues that math education in the Third World is a hope for the world math education development in the 21st century [62]
- Jennifer Mercieca (Associate Professor of Communication, Texas A&M University, Founding Director of the Aggie Agora, Chair, Public Address Division, National Communication Association, Founder Citizen Critics, regular news/opinion contributor, TedX speaker, author of Founding Fictions, forthcoming The Rhetorical Brilliance of Donald Trump, Demagogue for President, and co-editor of The Rhetoric of Heroic Expectations: Establishing the Obama Presidency, 2016 recipient of the Texas A&M Association of Former Students Distinguished Achievement in Teaching Award). (http://www.jennifermercieca.com/) (http://www.aggieagora.org/) (http://citizencritics.org/editors/) (https://comm.tamu.edu/jennifer-mercieca/) (https://ncapad.com/about/) (https://www.amazon.com/Founding-Fictions-Albma-Rhetoric-Cult/dp/0817357343) (https://www.amazon.com/Rhetoric-Heroic-Expectations-Establishing-Communication/dp/162349043X/ref=la_B003DGMA06_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1499272903&sr=1-2) (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/the-conversation-us/the-rhetorical-brilliance_b_8792452.html) (http://today.tamu.edu/2016/03/22/2016-distinguished-achievement-award-recipients-announced/) (https://www.google.com/search?q=jennifer+mercieca&rlz=1C1VFKB_enUS629US629&oq=jennifer+mercieca&aqs=chrome..69i57j69i60j69i61j69i65l3.3023j0j4&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8#q=jennifer+mercieca&newwindow=1&tbm=nws) (http://www.shesource.org/experts/profile/jennifer-mercieca)
- Michael P M Mhlanga - Author and religious writer. Published books at Amazon [63] [self-published source]
- Stephen S. Mulkey President, Unity College. His leadership and forward-looking vision resulted in Unity College being the first college in the U.S. to divest its endowment from the top 200 fossil fuel companies, and the first college in the U.S. to adopt sustainability science as the framework for all academic programming. Mulkey believes that higher education has an ethical duty to prepare generations of graduates for the extreme sustainability and climate change challenges of this century. After taking his PhD at the University of Pennsylvania, he has spent most of his career as a forest ecologist affiliated with the Smithsonian and as tenured faculty at three research-one universities. Mulkey has dedicated recent years of his career to developing undergraduate and graduate programming to build society's capacity for environmental mitigation, adaptation, and resilience. [64], [65], [66]
- Kurt Pätzold, German Historian de:Kurt Pätzold
- Ronald G. Prinn (TEPCO Professor of Atmospheric Science, Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences (EAPS). Director, Center for Global Change Science. Ex Head of the MIT Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences. Ex Professor at MIT Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences. Author of Planets and Their Atmospheres: Origin and Evolution. Principal Investigator on the Advanced Global Atmospheric Gases Experiment) [67] [68] [69] [70]
- Kelly M. Quintanilla (11th President of Texas A&M University Corpus Christi) [71]
- Diane L. Rosenfeld, lecturer on law at Harvard Law School, gender violence activist, speaker, founding director of the gender violence program. Everipedia, Harvard Law School Profile, Diane Rosenfeld's Website. Likely to be included in the category:Harvard Law School faculty.
- Robert A. Rupen (1922-2015), Professor of Political Science at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, expert on Mongolia and minorities under Communist rule, author of How Mongolia is Really Ruled [72], Mongols of the Twentieth Century [73], and many articles on Mongolia and sino-soviet relations. See his obituary [74] for further information.
- Ramzi Salti - Lecturer in Arabic at Stanford University [75], author of The Native Informant: Six Tales of Defiance from the Arab World [76] [amazon.com/author/ramzisalti] [77], Radio DJ at KZSU [78] [79], creator of Arabology Blog [80] [81]
- Stephen Schulhofer - Robert B. McKay Professor of Law at New York University School of Law. Famous scholar of criminal law with multiple influential articles and books on topics ranging from sexual autonomy and rape law to national security in the wake of 9/11.[82]
- David E. Spiro - Professor of International Political Economy. Cited as "notable scholar" in article on International Political Economy.
- Roy Sorensen https://philosophy.artsci.wustl.edu/people/roy-sorensen known for doi:10.1093/mind/101.403.541 13 citations
- Gary Stager - pioneer of 1:1 laptop, school education programs [83]
- Faye S. Taxman - Criminologist and University Professor at George Mason University top grant getter according to [17] Director of Center for Advancing Correctional Excellence!. [18] Founding editor Springer Health & Justice [19]
- Neil D. Theobald - President of Temple University, [84]
- Richard H. Ullman - Professor of International Affairs at Princeton University. Author of Anglo-Soviet Relations and other works.[85]
- Michele Vincenti Ph.D., MBA, M.A. (HOS), CIM, FCSI, STI, CMC, C.I.M., F.CIM, CMgr (UK), F.CMI (UK), University Canada West (UCW) Professor.[citation needed] He is also Associate Faculty at the Faculty of Management at Royal Roads University[self-published source] (RRU) and Adjunct Faculty at Fairleigh Dickinson University[self-published source] (FDU. He is Certified Management Consultant[self-published source] (CMC), Chartered Investment Manager (CIM), Fellow of the Canadian Securities Institute (FCSI),[self-published source] Fellow Chartered Institute of Management, UK, (FCIM).[citation needed]
- Professor Wim de Waele Professor at the Soete Laboratory of Ghent University since 2003 and has published numerous articles on mechanical and electrical engineering. [86][self-published source] [87][self-published source]
- Lawrence Ziring (1928–2015) was the Arnold E. Schneider Professor of Political Science at Western Michigan University. He authored or co-authored a dozen widely-cited books about Pakistan and fifteen Encyclopædia Britannica articles on the subject.[88][89][90][91][92][93][94][95]
Activists
- Zdeněk Adamec (activist) - Czech demonstrator; cs:Zdeněk Adamec
- Frank Barat - French human-rights activist, based in London; coordinator of the Russell Tribunal on Palestine; edited book Gaza in Crisis: Reflections on Israel's War Against the Palestinians by Noam Chomsky and Ilan Pappe; [96]
- Dominic Buxton - Liberal Democrat political activist from the United Kingdom. He speaks at protests and political party conferences, and is also a film director. [97], [98], [99], [100], [101], [102], [103], [104]
- Brutus (antifederalist author) - believed to be Robert Yates but because it is not certain; there should be a separate page dealing with his writings
- Kooper Caraway (2/12/2018, activist-Labor Leader, At 27 was the youngest elected AFL-CIO central labor council president in the nation.[105][106][107][108][109][110][111][112][113][114][115]
- Kimberly Carter Gamble Co-Founder of Clear Compass Media; Producer, Director, and Co-Write of THRIVE [116]
- Angel Clark - American talk radio host, syndicated writer, and political activist. Her work focuses on exposing the brutalities perpetrated by governments, police, and politicians. In 2014 Angel departed the US for Acapulco, Mexico, with "no desire to return", and has been invited to speak at the first 'Anarchapulco' international convention in February 2015. [117] [118] [119] [120] [121] [122] [123] [124] [125] [126] [127] [128] [129]
- Glenn Crawford (Ottawa) is a GLBT activist and businessperson, chair of Village Committee from 2006 to 2012, which lobbied successfully for a gay-friendly Village designation on Bank Street in Ottawa, Canada.[20][21][22][23]. Self-employed graphic designer/entrepreneur at Jack Of All Trades Design.[24]
- Michael Doherty (civil rights campaigner) - Civil Liberties and Director of JusticeNOW. [130]; [131] ; [132] ; [133] ; [134];[135];[136];[137];[138]
- Foster Gamble Co-Founder of Clear Compass Media; Creator of THRIVE [139]
- Ella E. Gibson (Ella Elvira Gibson) - see [140]
- Shafeeq Gigyani - Education and Peace Activist / founder Poha[25][26][27][28][29][30][31][32][33][34][35][36]
- Maranda Holmes - advocate for the poor and humanitarian activist in Charleston SC [141]
- Izsák Rita (Rita Izsak) - minority rights advocate, [142]
- Khara Jabola-Carolus - prominent Hawaiian activist, lawyer, author of numerous articles on civil and human rights. Involved in numerous groups including Hawaii Coalition for Immigrant and AF3IRM Hawai'i. Advocate for Filipino rights and Native Hawaiians; [[143]] [[144]] [[145]]
- Kevin Johnson (activist) - bicycling for breast cancer [146] (moved from Newark, California, as cleanup)
- Christopher Karas (Human Rights activist; barred from using Harvey Milk quote; critical of Catholic School System; barred from donating blood; critical of MSM blood and organ donation policy in Canada.) See User_talk:InternetFriend#Karas for multiple sources.
- Lane Murdock (Youth Activist, Founder of the National School Walkout. Founded grass roots movement, advocate for gun control and youth empowerment. April 20th and March 14th walkouts[147][148][149][150][151][152][153][154][155][156]
- Nzansu (Guerilla tribesman against King Leopold II's regime in the Congo Free State). See [157]
- Edith Ramsay (died 1983) - Labour, independent, then Liberal councillor (Stepney, East End of London); involved in work with the "poor, of deprived children, alcoholics and immigrants. She pioneered education for working women, adult literacy and English for successive waves of immigrants." Subject of a biography "Edith and Stepney". Named in Parliament as "Florence Nightingale of the brothels". Head of the London County Council's Women's Evening Institute. [158] [159]
- Fay Jackson Robinson (1902-1988) African-American woman activist and lover of writer Alice Dunbar Nelson [160], [161]
- Nasser Al-Saeed - Saudi Arabian dissident
- Nidal Sakr - American-born activist for human rights, organizer of the Egyptian Revolution; chairman of The March for Justice [162] [163]
- Lavina Saltonstall - Yorkshire suffragette. Milltown Memories. Calderdale suffragettes.
- Mehsim Abid Samir - CE of D-Study Organization (working for the education of students both rural and urban using digital internet and sms means), Medical Student (at Allama Iqbal Medical College), Director Operations at StepUP Organization and a Biology Teacher. see [164] [165] [166] [167] [168][169] [170]
- Marian Noel Sherman (Marian Sherman) - doctor and atheist missionary; see [171] [172]
- Bertha Sokoloff, Communist councillor in the East End of London. Involved in the Stepney Tenants' Defence League and the rent strike of the 1930s. [173] [174] [175]
- Shari Steele, 15-year exec director of the Electronic Frontier Foundation and now leading The Tor Project, Inc. There is plenty of good content at EFF bio, her goodbye blogpost, EFF staff's goodbye-to-her post, TOR's welcome post and Wired's coverage of TOR's hire, but the EFF bio has been deleted from here for copyvio 3 times now (as the former CC-NC licence is not GFDL-compatible). It looks like EFF have relicensed it CC-BY (which is compatible here), but we don't want a single-source bio from an organisation that has a clear conflict of interest in any case.
- Karen Straughan aka GirlWritesWhat - Men's Rights activist and anti-feminist; requested for interviews and/or speeches multiple times within that community; member of "Honey Badger Brigade"; part of a documentary currently in post-production [176] [177] [178] [179] [180] [181]
- Arden Tewksbury - political activist for the American dairy farmer; lost his hand in a farming accident at age three; manager of Progressive Agriculture Organization [182]
- Xiuhtezcatl Tonatiuh (Environmental Activist, Youth Director of the nonprofit Earth Guardians) (http://www.earthguardians.org/xiuhtezcatl/; http://www.cnn.com/videos/world/2015/11/30/xiuhtezcatl-tonatiuh-cop21-paris-climate-change-sutter.cnn/video/playlists/climate-change/)
Adventurers, explorers and pioneers
- Christopher Altman, Commercial astronaut (Guinness World Records, RSA Awards, Fulbright fellow, quantum technologist) ([183], [184], [185]
- Clark Carter - Australian adventurer. (Victoria Island, North Pole, Southern Ocean, Sepik River, Bass Strait) [186][187][188][189][190][191]
- Xavier Rosset - French adventurer recreating Robinson Crusoe [192]
- Vernon Starr Smith - world travel journalist [193]
- Marie Robinson Wright - American author and historian who made record trip across the Andes; listed in [194]; [195]; "Occupations for women", Frances Elizabeth Willard, 1897, pp. 330−332 [196]
- Ermanno Stradelli (1852 – 1926), Italian explorer, geographer and photographer (it)
Ambassadors and other diplomatic personnel
To distinguish the professions listed here from e.g. political figures read the article Diplomatic rank explaining their official status.
- Jolly Amatya, Chair of UN Youth Assembly, youngest UN job holder from Nepal[197]
- Nasser Haji Al-Muzayen - Kuwaiti ambassador to Russia - Bio
- A. Gopinathan - Current permanent Indian representative to UN offices in Geneva. Elected to serve in United Nations Joint Inspection Unit from January 2013. [198]
- Noureddine Sefiani - Moroccan ambassador to Russia - Bio
- Yogeshwar Varma - High Commissioner of India to Nairobi, Kenya, concurrently Ambassador of India to the Federal Republic of Somalia [199] [200] [201]
Anthropologists
Please request articles about anthropologists at Wikipedia:Requested articles/Biographies/Anthropologists, not here. |
Archaeologists
- Orfali Gaudentius (1889–1926) - Franciscan priest, archaeologist, distinguished professor Studium Biblicum Franciscanum; excavated Capharnaum; [202]
- Lawrence H. Keeley (1948–2017) - author of the book War Before Civilization [203]
- George E. Stuart III http://www.warren-wilson.edu/~arch/maya/
- Toshio Hayashi (林 俊雄) - Japanese archeologist, maybe the most famous Japanbese archealogist abroad, famous for his inner-asian research; I translate his biography because maybe it is not available in English: Cahired professor at the Sōka University, born 03.03.1949, in 1972 graduated from the University of Tokyo and in 1979 did a PhD there - requested on December 9th 2016; see http://researchmap.jp/read0031172/?lang=english
Architects
- Ayssar Arida (born 1971) - architect, urbanist and author; [204]
- Mario Asnago - [205]
- Dante N. Bini (or Dante Bini) - architect, automated building construction systems; [206]
- Roberto Einaudi - American-Italian architect; [207]
- Dan Hogman - American architect and artist, known for his high-rise residential and commercial work in San Francisco and China, as well as architectural illustration and sketching; [208] [209] [210][211]
- John Evans Junkin IV owner and architect of PJB Architects in Miami, Florida; [212]; [213]
- Norman Raab - bridge architect; [214]; [215]; possibly related to the Norman Raab Foundation (I think it would be an uncommon name, so probably(?)
- Roy Stout (born 1928) Founding partner in the renowned Stout & Litchfield partnership, whose works include the listed Somerton Erleigh, Somerton. [216] & Shipton-under-Wychwood [217]
- Jeremy Sturgess (born 1949) - Canadian architect; [218]
Artists
- Marc Ippon de Ronda (Born June 22nd 1987) Born and raised in Paris, Marc Ippon de Ronda lives between France and Japan. He is the creative director of ATO Designs since 2014. He is a minimalist sculptor and uses light as a main medium. He finds inspiration in artists such as Jeppe Hein, Anne Veronica Janssens, Dan Flavin, Francois Morellet, and Richard Serra. His work has been featured in private collections, as well as galleries, and major art museums such as Centre Pompidou in Paris. [219] [220]
- Carrie Able Former fashion model and Duke University graduate, Carrie Able specializes in oil on linen paintings and commissioned portraits. Able has exhibited extensively from the Honolulu Museum of Art and the Toledo Musuem of art to gallery shows in NYC and has been printed in several publications including the National Geographic Traveler. Private collections in the US and abroad exhibit Able's paintings. [221] [222] [223]
- Ignasi Mallol Casanovas (born Tarragona,Spain 1892−1940 Bogota,Colombia) Artist, teacher, cultural activist and savior of cultural heritage during the Civil War.[224][225] ca:Ignasi Mallol i Casanovas
- Ruji Chapnik (born Rebecca Chapnik on September 18, 1985, USA) - Author and multimedia artist living in Portland, Oregon. Most noted for her "Don Depresso" comics, which use dark humor to tackle controversial issues such as mental illness, drug addiction, and LGBT topics. She is also known for writing instructional articles on the Linux operating system for various blogs and magazines. Graduated with a BA in art from the University of California, Santa Cruz in 2007. She has published two comics anthologies and one novel. [226]; [227]; [228]; [229]; [230]; [231]; [232]
- Luca Clabot (born 1966) - venetian conceptual artist [233]; [234]; [235]
- John Cole (painter) (1936−2007) - Born in London, Bellingham WA painter was noted for his NW landscapes [236]
- Lauren Tracy Curtis (born August 1967) - fine artist and illustrator from new jersey noted for her eclectic style [237]; [238]; [239]; [240]; [241]; [242];
- Vic Dabao (Born in The Philippines, July 1949) Filipino painter, artist and designer, currently producing 3D art from re-purposed materials. Known for using various methods and medias to create art such as 'bottle art'. Known for his adaptability Vic has also had a diverse career in the film industry as a set production designer and producing artwork for film posters. Known for being Art Director in the Zombi series during production of Zombi 3 (released 29 July 1988) directed by Lucio Fulci (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucio_Fulci). More information on Vic's career can be found on the official Vic Dabao website at (http://www.vicdabao.com) and IMDB (http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0196373/).
- Jimmy Dahlberg (born April 3, 1981, Östersund, Sweden) - Swedish artist; [243]; [244]; [245]; [246]; [247]; [248]; [249]
- Hollister J. David - Hop David - artist primarily known for his tessellations and other math art; [250]; [251]; [252]
- Herndon Richard Davis (born in 1901 in Wynnewood, Oklahoma to rancher parents) – He was a cousin to Confederate President Jefferson Davis. At fourteen he left home to go to Kansas City, Missouri, working at menial jobs and taking art lessons. He later worked in Chicago as an engraver's apprentice and a commercial artist. Herndon came to Denver in 1920, while in the army. The army recognized his artistic talent, and he was stationed in Washington, D.C. at the War College to work on maps of Japan and China. He later studied briefly at Yale, and by the mid 1920s was living in Greenwich Village. He attended classes at the Art Students League and the National Academy, and earned a living producing drawings for the New York Herald-Tribune. In Denver he working at the Denver Post he moonlighted by painting life-sized murals. The Face on the Barroom Floor (painting); [253]; [254]; [255]
- Jesse Draxler active artist with notable clients such as Elle, Target and Vogue. His work can be viewed on his site (http://jessedraxler.com/) as well as forthcoming exhibitions. Jesse's unique collage form of art is modern and appealing especially to adolescent audiences. A positive response of his work can be found at (http://beautifuldecay.com/2013/09/09/the-manual-cut-and-paste-world-of-jesse-draxler/).
- William Ekgren (born in Sweden, July 1918) Swedish beatnik painter and artist active in the US, South America and Europe. Known for a distinct visual style and three rare psychedelic comic book covers painted in the 1950s (http://scandinavian-museum.org/artcraft_ekgren.html), (http://thecomicsdetective.blogspot.se/2010/02/who-is-william-ekgren.html).
- Tom Fong - American watercolor artist [256][257][258][259][260][261]
- Ridge Gallagher Hollywood Makeup Artist and Performance Artist. Most popular makeup work with photographer Austin Young for Diamanda Galas, Margaret Cho, and Deven Green; Multiple episodes of Transformation with James St James, and Willam's "Paint Me Bitch" sources- http://www.imdb.com/name/nm7536990/ ridgegallaghermua.com http://worldofwonder.net/tag/ridge-gallagher/
- John S. Gibb - renowned and award-winning British pencil artist; [262]; [263]
- John C. Gonzalez (born 1980, Providence, RI) is an American artist working in painting, sculpture, performance and video. Gonzalez's work often takes the form of extended collaborative projects where he embeds himself within institutions and exchange relationships to explore systems of creativity and expression.[http://www.artnet.com/artists/john%20c.-gonzalez/ [264] [265] [266][267] [268][269]http://www.bostonglobe.com/arts/theater-art/2013/07/23/what-boston-area-art-galleries-this-week/x6jtm2S0C8GTFP8hOZmi6I/story.html][270][271]
- Lennart Grebelius (Nils Lennart Grebelius, born 1953 in Sätila, Sweden) Contemporary artist. Creator of so-called dialogic art, which is primarily aimed at social change. Artistic career: First exhibition in 1992 in the Natural History Museum in Gothenburg. One-man shows: Swedish Exhibition Agency 1994, the Phatory Gallery, New York, in 2004, the Museum of Modern Art in Borås in 2007 and the Wetterling Gallery, Stockholm, in 2015. Business career: Started work in the family firm in Sätila in 1974, took over as CEO in 1985. Then since the start of the 1990s, has built up property holdings in Gothenburg, Stockholm and London and a venture capital business with about 500 million Swedish crowns in managed capital.; [272]; [273] [274]
- Maya Green (born Maria Greenblat; March 11, 1957) - Ukrainian-Jewish contemporary painter, graphic artist, illustrator and sculptor; [275]
- Frank Macoy Harshberger (1900−1975) Born in Tacoma, Washington, Harshberger studied art in Paris in 1921, settled in New York in the '20s, where he taught for many years at the Pratt Institute. Though he worked in many styles and media in his career, some of his more striking images are his stylish black & white illustrations, sort of an American Art Deco equivalent to Aubrey Beardsley. (source: http://learning2share.blogspot.com/2013/09/mac-harshberger-illustrations-from.html) Other sources: (http://www.thomasreynolds.com/www_mac.html) (http://www.victoriachick.com/prints/Frank-Harshberger.htm)
- Bob Jones (artist) (born September 24, 1975) - American artist; Contemporary painter and sculptor; born in Phoenix, Arizona. Studied at Illinois State University; Lives in Chicago; Minimalist influence[276]; [277]; [278]
- Richard Kamler (born November 1, 1935) - American artist. San Francisco Bay Area. Associated with conceptual art, installation art, political activist art, social practice art, intervention art, prison reform, restorative justice. Major works include The Table of Voices (1996), Maximum Security (1981–1984), The Waiting Room (1999-2000), Seeing Peace: The Billboard Project (2008), Out of Holocaust (1976), The Last Supper (1988), The Desert Project (1977–1979), The Sound of Lions Roaring (intervention, 1992). Selected solo and group exhibitions: San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Alcatraz Island, Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, Oakland Museum of Art, Crocker Museum (Sacramento, CA), McMullen Museum of Art (Boston), Sam Houston Memorial Museum (Huntsville, TX), Magnes Museum (Berkeley, CA). Education: apprentice of Frederick Kiesler (1960–1965); B. Architecture, UC Berkeley 1963; M. Architecture, UC Berkeley 1974. Teaching: Professor of Visual and Performing Arts, co-founder and director of Artist as Citizen in Contemporary Society (arts outreach program), University of San Francisco, 2004–2012; San Francisco State University, 1994−96; San Francisco Art Institute, 1996-99; California College of Arts & Crafts, 1999; University of California, Davis, 1990−94; UC Berkeley Extension, 1988−93; San Quentin Prison and San Francisco County Jail, 1978−98. Selected sources: Seeking Engagement: The Art of Richard Kamler, Steven Zahavi Schwartz (editor; Common Ground Publications, 2015); The Last Meals, Jesse Hamelton, San Francisco Chronicle, January 2012; Art of Engagement, Peter Selz (UC Press, 2008); "Last Chance: Seeing Peace," Mary Eisenhart, San Francisco Chronicle, May 2008; "Reflections on September 11", Terri Cohn, Artweek, February 2002; "Waiting For Time to Pass", Barbara Karkabi, Houston Chronicle, June 2, 2000; After Homicide: Practical and Political Responses to Bereavement, Paul Rock (Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1998); "Connecting With the Rock", Rebecca Solnit, Artweek (October 1988). Website: http://www.richardkamler.org/
- Krikor Khandjian - Soviet-Armenian artist known for historical and religios painings, murals and etches. Holds highest soviet honors, e.g. Member of Academia of Sciences, and People's Artist of USSR. Alternative spellings for name: Grigor Khanjyan, Grigor Khadzhyan and others. Russian Wiki: ru:Ханджян, Григор Сепухович, Armenian Wiki hy:Գրիգոր Խանջյան, WIKIArt: [279], Artprice [280], Museum [281] & [282]
- Justin Curtis Ermer Lacche 1974 - Present, American mixed-media artist. Gallery: [283] Public Art Archive [284] News article: [285] News article (see "fifth floor": [286] News article: [287] LinkedIn profile: [288] Artist in Residence: [289] Artist in Residence: [290]
- Sabe Lewellyn (born 1977) (req. pre-2018-03-20) - artist and environmental activist exhibited at Center on Contemporary Art and recieved a BFA at Memphis College of Art and his MFA at Glasgow School of Art; ([291]; [292];[293]; [294]; [295]; [296]; [297]; [298]; [299]; [300]; [301])
- Jordan Liberty is an American Makeup Artist and Photographer who became notable as a YouTube personality. In 2015, he was the first and only male recipient of a Best of Beauty Award from Allure magazine; recognizing his voice within the beauty industry through social media. Liberty is a noted educator within the professional makeup industry (IMATS and PHAMExpo), and his influential work has earned him two cover features in Make-Up Artist magazine. [302] / [303] / [304] / [305]
- Alexander Rose-Innes (1915 – 1996) - South African Artist [306];[307]
- Dmitry Samarov (born in Moscow, USSR in 1970) (Painter and writer, living in Chicago) (http://dmitrysamarov.com)(author of Hack: Stories from a Chicago Cab http://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/H/bo11074174.html and Where To? A Hack Memoir http://www.curbsidesplendor.com/books/where-to-a-hack-memoir)
- Dietmar Scherf (born in Graz, Austria, June 1961) Austrian-American contemporary artist (http://www.saatchiart.com/scherf), author (http://www.amazon.com/Love-Me-Avoiding-Overcoming-Depression/dp/1887603034/), minister (http://www.youtube.com/user/GIADONI ... http://giadoni.com/megapuregrace.htm) and entrepreneur (http://www.linkedin.com/pub/dietmar-scherf/18/628/a09) living in Las Vegas, Nevada, USA. He works with mixed media and since 2013 primarily with art photography. He was born into a poverty-stricken family (Book, I Love Me: Avoiding & Overcoming Depression by Dietmar Scherf, ISBN 1887603034, Scherf Books, 1998, p. 213) has four children, Alexander, Deborah, Daniel, David (Book, I Love Me: Avoiding & Overcoming Depression';' by Dietmar Scherf, ISBN 1887603034, Scherf Books, 1998, p. 5). As a novelist he also uses the pen name Alec Donzi (The Consultant by Alec Donzi, ISBN 1887603042, Scherf Books, 2000, http://www.amazon.com/The-Consultant-Alec-Donzi/dp/1887603042/)
- Kemal Seyhan (born June, 1960, Kayseri, Turkey) artist; master in applied arts,University of applied arts Vienna, Austria ; works with oil on canvas, graphite on paper, mixed media, woodcuts and also sculptures [308]; [309]; [310]; [311]; [312]; [313]
- Bela Silva (born March 26, 1966, Lisbon, Portugal) artist; masters in the fine arts, School of the Art Institute of Chicago; worked with paint, sculpurs, titles and other art formats; [314]; [315]; [316]; [317] (Portuguese)
- Lisa Solberg - American (Los Angeles) artist; [318]; [319]; [320]
- Chip Southworth (One of Florida's top talents emerging artist from Jacksonville, FL) ([321] [322][323] [324] [325][326] [327] [328] [329])
- Timm Ulrichs de:Timm Ulrichs
- Randy Walker (b. 1970 - American born public artist); [330]; [331]; [332]; [333]; [334]; [335]; [336]; [337]; [338]; [339]
- Kelly D. Williams - American contemporary artist and conceptual designer; founding member of the Rolf Contemporary Gallery of Art; [340]; [341]
Designers
- Riccardo Giraldi - is one of the top UX and HCI experts in the world. Inventor, designer, creative leader. Now Creative Director at Microsoft working on HoloLens [342]. Focus on user Experience to inspire and enable desirable futures with the goal to invent and design innovative solutions that improve people's lives. Worked on several projects exploring the intersection between physical and digital world. Award winner designer shaping the future of human computer interaction. Invented Escape Flight [343],[344],[345],[346],[347], Mind Controlled Scalextric (first mind controlled race game) [348],[349],[350], Creative Director of Google Web Lab[351],[352],[353], Honda The Experiment, EELs [354], and numerous other award winning projects [355],[356],[357]. Speaker at FITC [358], Digital Design Days [359], Cannes, Imagination Day, Kikk [360], Glugg[361][362]. [363],[364],[365],[366],[367],[368],[369],[370]
- Traci Kochendorfer Traci K Collection Fitness Fashion Designer, has been featured in Mercedes Fashion Week, Trendevous and New & Now Fashion Shows. [371] [372]
- Zoa Martinez - American graphic designer; creator of many iconic logos for the television industry and others; recipient of numerous awards; [373]; GraphicDesign:USA 2005 People to Watch; American Latino TV 2008
- Brodie McAllister - chartered landscape architect; fellow and former vice president, Landscape Institute; member, Design SouthWest panel; external examiner, UEL; delegate, European Federation for Landscape Architecture; notable for his award-winning international projects, design of the Jo Yeates memorial garden in Hampshire and inclusion in books; [374]
- Jenny Odell - San Francisco based artist and designer who works in digital and Internet art, frequently incorporating satellite imagery. Her work has been written up by the East Bay Express, Gizmodo (twice), The Economist, Wired, and elsewhere.
- Harrison Pink - Game Designer at Telltale Games; Designer of The Walking Dead Game: Episode 3 - Long Road Ahead, the Walking Dead Game: 400 Days and Lead Designer and Co-Story Lead of the upcoming Tales from the Borderlands [375]
- Amrita Singh (designer) - Indian-American entrepreneur; jewelry and accessories designer, ; [376], [377], [378], [379], [380], [381], [382], [383], [384]
- Budd Steinhilber, 1924- http://library.syr.edu/digital/guides/s/steinhilber_b.htm
- Scott Stowell - proprietor of Open (a design studio in New York City); former art director, Colors; design director, Good; winner, 2008 National Design Award for communication design [385]; author, Design for People [386]
- Marc de Vinck - director of product development, Make; invented the MakerShield, Kitty Twitty, Learn to Solder Skill Badge, [387]; Nonogram
- George Vuitton - son of Louis Vuitton (designer); took over Louis Vuitton company after father's death; [388]
- Bilal Zahid - Pakistani textile and fashion designer; gold medalist in textile and fashion designing from the SDC Skills Development Council, ISD Pakistan and the Nimls Institute of Textile Sahiwal (Punjab Pakistan); [389]
- Kyle Holbrook: Kyle Holbrook is the founder of MLK Community Mural Project, and has helped complete several murals with the company and independently. These murals are located all around the world, in London, Haiti, The US, Bahamas, and Brazil, as well as other locations. MLK Community Mural Project About Page Sources for Research
Graphic artists
- Dick Kramer (drawer and photographer) - a man who makes a lot of artworks about police, US military, UK military and firefighters [390]
- Christian Weston Chandler (cartoonist) - a transwoman who created Sonichu.
Illustrators
- Drew Christie (born 1984) American animator, illustrator and filmmaker; [391] Best known for The New York Times animation Hi! I'm a Nutria [392] Caused a fair amount of controversy pertaining to invasive species and was called a "pioneer of the opinion pages" by the Nieman Journalism Lab at Harvard University [393]. Also known for the short animated film Song of the Spindle, which premiered at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival [394].
- Laurent Coderre - Canadian animator, winner of the Vulcan Award at the Cannes Film Festival for his 70s-era cut out animation, Zikkaron.[395], also see this book cite
- Jay Fosgitt - American comic book illustrator (b. 7 Oct 1974), currently working for Marvel, IDW, and Source Point. Known for his work on My Little Pony, Sesame Street, Betty and Veronica, Avengers, and Deadpool as well as his original creations Dead Duck and Zombie Chick, and Bodie Troll. [396], [397], [398], [399], [400], [401], [402]
- Alana Dee Haynes - a mixed media artist from Brooklyn, usually working with illustrations on photographs, but dabbling with fashion, sculpture, photography, and murals.[403] [404]
- Elsie Herbold Froeschner — medical and biologial illustrator at the Smithsonian, vice president of the Guild of Natural Science Illustrators, wife of Richard Froeschner. [405], [406], Nicholson, T. 2006. Elsie Froeschner, founding member of Guild, passes away. Guild of Natural Science Illustrators Newsletter 38: 14., Photos: [407] [408]
- Ola Liola (born 7 August 1979) birth name Olga Kushnir is a contemporary illustrator, artist, storyteller, designer. Olga was born in Ukraine, Poltava in 1996 moved to Israel with family. Current residence Berlin, Germany. Graduated form industrial design facility Shenkar College of Engineering and Design. Main motive in her creations is animal world, which appear in vivid colours layered with dense patterns. Medium: watercolour, ink. [409][410][411]
- Master of Rolin - 15th-century French illuminator; creator of many medieval manuscripts; employed by Jean Rolin, predecessor of the Maitre Francois; [412]
Painters
- Steven Alexander (painter) - American contemporary abstract painter; [413]; [414]; [415]; [416]; [417]
- Alex Andreyev - Russian or Ukrainian surrealist painter; lives in St. Petersburg; [418]; [419]
- Andrew Atroshenko Russian painter. Born in 1965, in the City of Pokrovsk, Russia. [420]
- Marion Boddy-Evans - contemporary South African-born Scottish painter and art teacher/writer; [421], [422], [423]
- Bryce Brown (artist) (Requested June 09, 2015) New Zealand exhibiting artist, international, born march 1971. Painting since 1999 with many solo exhibitions, work in the John Deere International Art Collection. References; [424] [425]
- Johnna Bush Alabama Portrait, Wildlife and Landscape Artist. Currently resides in Grove Hill, Alabama. [426] [427]
- Jane Cartney (born 1951) - contemporary Scottish expressionist painter and musician; based in Weston-super-Mare, near Bristol, England; [428], [429]
- Sue Coleman - Canadian wildlife painter; lives in Duncan, British Columbia; one of the first artists to visually translate First Nations art; [430]; [431];[dead link] [432]; [433]; [434]; [435]; comment at 2012-02-10, all links belong to subject or sites closely affiliated with subject; needs mainstream reliable sources (WP:RS)[436];[437];[438]; Summerwild Productions; comment at 2012-02-14, new links and resources added
- Matt Dangler (born 1984) - Painter and Illustrator; [439]; [440]; [441]
- Peter Dean (artist) (born in Berlin 1934, Died Elizaville, NY 1993) Socially conscious expressionist artist known for his colorful, aggressively painted works that tended to be crowded with figures and often depicted allegorical or political themes [442]. In 1969 Dean co-founded another group, the iconoclastic Rhino Horn, which included Peter Pasuntino, Nick Sperakis, Benny Andrews, Leonel Gongora Ken Bowman. , Mike Feuerbach, and sometimes, Jay Milder and Red Grooms. This socially critical expressionist outpost, with its unashamedly phallic intentions (the rhinoceros horn) considered an aphrodisiac, did not succeed in penetrating the Minimal/Conceptual strongholds, but it did raise the temperature of the art against the Vietnam war [443]
- Pierre Dubreuil (painter) fr:Pierre Dubreuil (peintre)
- Reg Gadney - British portrait artist and author; [444]; [445]; [446]; [447]; [448]
- Carne Griffiths British watercolour painter - autobiography found at http://www.carnegriffiths.com/about/
- H. Helmick - Genre Painter; Etcher; Illustrator 1845–1907. alias Heinz Helmick. Specialized in figure painting, was active in exhibiting between 1880 and 1889. Born: Zanesville, Ohio, 1845; Died: Washington, District of Columbia 1907 Active in: Paris, France and London, England <http://americanart.si.edu/collections/search/artist/?id=6434>< http://www.trocadero.com/stores/studio/items/1135928/item1135928.html><http://www.arcadja.com/auctions/en/helmick_howard/artist/35053/ef>
- Kyle Holbrook: Kyle Holbrook is the founder of MLK Community Mural Project, and has helped complete several murals with the company and independently. These murals are located all around the world, in London, Haiti, The US, Bahamas, and Brazil, as well as other locations. MLK Community Mural Project About Page Sources for Research
- Alan Lachman American born painter. Contemporary Expressionist Artist. Born 1936 in New York City. Has been painting for 60 years.Alan Lachman studied at Syracuse University, the School of Visual Arts and the Art Students League in New York City. Parents: Irving Lachman & Molly Lachman (ne: Applebaum). Siblings: Diane Lachman Calmis & Andrea Lachman Wasser. Two children: April Lachman Vassaro (born 1961, now deceased) and Lawrence Lachman. [449], [450][451]
- Chau-Chin Lee (born 1941) – Kaohsiung-based abstract painter;[452]
- Ling Jian – Chinese oil painter [453]
- Master of the Blue Jeans – newly discovered painter who is thought to have been active in 17th-century Italy (1650s) [454][455][456][457][458] (and fr | de)
- Winston Megoran – English artist of maritime and naval themes; noted for book-jacket illustrations of the Mariners Library series (1948–1963); [459]
- Harden Sidney Melville (1824–1894) – English painter and draughtsman; had three paintings hung in the Royal Academy’s summer show between 1837 and 1841; conducted the first official hydrographic survey of the north-east coast of Australia in 1842–1846 on board H.M.S Fly[460] [461]
- Leo Mes Start Source: https://www.facebook.com/Leo-Mes-1928-1974-186513854717348/ Inventor, Painter, Etcher. Born in the Nederlands, Died in Kingston, ON: (1928-1974)
- Vincenzo Molaroni (1859–1912) – Italian pottery painter; [462]; [italianpotterymarks.freeforums.org/molaroni-pesaro-t530.html]
- John Pelham Napper (1916–2001) – English experimental artist; known for radiance of colour and precision; wide variety of styles; [463][464]
- Patrick Gorman Pettis – Italian American Fine Arts Modern Impressionist from Saratoga NY [465]; collections (not authoritative): [466]
- Paul Plaschke (1878–1954) – cartoonist and painter; notable works: Nocturnes, Ohio River Shanty Boats, Southern Indiana Hllsides and Fishing Craft at Biloxi; [467]
- Tana Powell – Canadian graphic artist living in San Francisco, former art director for San Diego newspaper; won a Grammy Award for Best Music Festival Poster (2001); Jammin poster is one of the largest sellers ever; [468] [469]
- Angelo Romano - Spanish painter; known for his angels, small protective talismans and for his murals that decorate many public spaces in Europe and the U.S.; [470]
- Gene Speck American landscape painter. Born 1936 in South Dakota. [471]
- Germain Van Der Steen Germain was a surrealist painter from France who only became famous in his last 20-years of life. According to an archived New York Times write up, he spent his life before fame teaching and "... was gassed in World War I, ran a drugstore with his wife, and worked for the French Government." Requested 1/5/2018([472] [473])
- Eric Waugh (painter) Born in Montreal, November 21, 1963. Resides in Austin, Texas. Eric Waugh is one of the most recognizable and collected artists throughout North America, selling more than over 45,000 original works in the past 27 years. Charitable work is an integral part of Eric Waugh the artist. Waugh created Hero, the Guinness Book of World's Records holder for the world's largest painting on canvas (41,400 square feet) by a single artist; proceeds benefit Camp Heartland and the Starlight Children's Foundation. [474], Eric Waugh at Nan Miller Gallery. Eric Waugh at Peabody Fine Art Gallery. Eric Waugh Art Gallery at Prints.com.
- Nancy Woland (Requested April 9, 2015) Christina (Christie) Botkoveli (Georgian: ქრისტინა (ქრისტი) ბოტკოველი), more commonly known as Nancy Woland, is a Georgian surrealist painter and graphic designer, born in October 27, 1991, Tbilisi. She is known for her cosmic themed paintings, that give you a sense of tranquility. Her first exhibition was on March 1, 2015, named Second Star to the Right, which took place in the Saakashvili Presidential Library. It was televised on Imedi TV [475]. You can see her artwork on her Facebook page: [476], and a short video biography: [477], [478] [479].
- Liz Kelly Zook (Liz Kelly Zook is a Pop artist from Murfreesboro, TN who is known for her bold line and her fun subject matter. She has been featured in magazines and news articles in Middle Tennessee. She has been accredited as one of the strong female artists of the area who has inspired many of the collage students to pursue their dreams as artists. Requested 4/24/2017) ([480][481][482])
- Pierre-Louis Delaval, French artist, French Wikipedia.
Photographers
- Please read the Notability Criteria for Photographers before submitting a request.
- Ruven Afanador - Colombian-born American photographer with three books and many international exhibitions; es:Ruven Afanador
- Douglas Barkey - American-born photographer, raised in Argentina, multiple international exhibitions, originated intentional camera movement as mode of photographic expession; [483][484] [485]
- Andrew Brooks - (born July 25, 1977) British photographer and artist based in Manchester, uses digital post production to create detailed landscapes and imagined views. Exhibited in Museum Het Domein, Sittard [486]Stads Museum Zoetermeer [487] URBIS Manchester [488]; Interviewed for Wired Raw File [489] The Atlantic [490] Fast Company Design [491] Creative Review [492] Published in the Guardian, NCR.nl ; graduated from Stockport collage in 1996 ; [493] ; [494] ; [495] ; [496]
- River Clark - fashion photographer; in permanent photography collection at the Guggenheim; numerous books and publications including Vogue, Elle, Marie Claire, Sports Illustrated, Cosmopolitan, Bazaar, Playboy; [497]; [498]
- Richard K. Dean American Photographer, world traveled and most well-known for his photography work in the Glens Falls and Lake George New York area. His photographs from the ground and air are the largest collection of photos of the Adirondack Mountains. [499]
- Bryan Denton - photojournalist based in Beirut, Lebanon; notable for his extensive coverage of the Libyan Revolution for The New York Times; first solo exhibition will be at New York University's Gulf and Western Gallery ([500]); [501]; [502]
- Benjamin Donaldson - American fine-art photographer; work has been exhibited nationally and internationally, including at Jen Bekman Gallery; [503]; work featured in The New Yorker, Details, Nylon and Sueddeutsche Zeitung magazines; photography lecturer, Yale School of Art; ([504])
- Trevor Godinho (born December 18, 1982) - Indian-born Canadian celebrity and fashion photographer; published in many international magazines including Maxim, Playboy (French and U.S. editions); Alfa Norway, Elle Canada, Zoo Weekly Australia, Che Belgium, UMM Canada; has photographed celebrities including Michael Douglas, Nicolas Cage, Edward North, Jeff Bidges, Clive Owen, et al.; interviewed for ROOM100 ([505]) interviewed for PRUVOLOGY.com ([506]) interviewed for Woman.ca ([507])and Fashion One TV in Los Angeles; graduated from Sheridan College and University of Toronto (2008); [508]; works internationally out of New York City and other locations
- John Kippin - [509]; [510]
- Udit Kulshrestha (1977-) - Indian Photographer and Photography based artist. website [511], Author at Wire [512], Interview on dodge & Burn [513], Bloomberg Contributor [514], work on the Taj Mahal using a mobile phone camera, [515], published book [516], Interview [517], [518], Interview with a terrorist [519], Photo essay in guardian [520], Talk at a Photography Foundation [521], interview related to book [522], [523], [524], [525], [526], [527], [528] a talk on Times Now, [529],Published editorial work [530], feature about his work on tribes [531], [532], exhibit coverage [533], Photo feature [534]
- Troy Lilly - nature photographer; author of ForestWander Nature Photography; File:Elakala_Waterfalls_Swirling_Pool_Mossy_Rocks.jpg; [535]; [536]; [537]; [538]; [539]; [540]
- Marc McAndrews American Photographer, most known for his book 'Nevada Rose' with large format photographs from 33 legal Nevada brothels; [www.marcmcandrews.com]; [541]; [542]
- Vijat Mohindra (born August 8, 1985) - American Photographer and Artist based in Los Angeles, he graduated Art Center College of Design in 2007 already having defined his ultra modernist and hyper synthetic aesthetic. The dazzling anti-vérité style of his work has culminated in various collaborations between high-profile talent and brands. [543] and [544]; featured in high-profile magazines like Paper, Complex, and Plastik to name a few [545]; [546]; [547]; [548]; featured at Mars Gallery for photography exhibition [549]
- Bertil Nilsson (artist) (born 1981) - Swedish art photographer living in England [550]; Known for unique work with dance and circus; First monograph Undisclosed: Images of the Contemporary Circus Artist [551] published in 2011; exhibited internationally in both galleries and public institutions including museums; extensive coverage of work online and in international press [552]
- Ron O'Donnell (born 1952) - Scottish photographic artist; [553]
- Kenneth Parker - American fine-art landscape photographer; represented in multiple galleries nationally including the Weston Gallery ([554]); assistant to Eliot Porter; praise by Paul Caponigro; [555]; [556]; [557]
- Stuart Pilkington - British photographer and curator. Street portrait photographer documenting the people of Cheshire, Lancashire, Merseyside and Manchester. Photographed film directors such as Terry Gilliam, Alan Parker and Peter Greenaway for the BFI, London. A member of Documenting Britain and Fèis, his work is to be exhibited at Street Level Photoworks, Glasgow and French Institute for Scotland in 2015. Known as a curator in the photography community bringing together the unknown with the well known. His projects have been featured by the BBC, Esquire, National Public Radio, PDN, Huck Magazine, Professional Photographer and many more; [558];[559];[560];[561];[562]
- George Pitts - American photographer, painter and writer. Founding Director of Photography at Vibe Magazine (1993-2004)[563] His writing and photography has appeared in numerous publications, including the New York Times Magazine, Vice and The Paris Review.[564][565][566][567]
- Rosamond Wolff Purcell — artful photographer of decayed animals and technological artifacts; published several books [568]
- Jake Rajs (born 1952) - landscape and architectural photographer; published 16 coffee table books by Rizzoli, Monacelli Press and Random House; [569]; [570]
- Mike Rosenthal (photographer) - American director and photographer, has been featured on numerous seasons of America's Next Top Model as a photographer and guest judge (cycles 9, 11, 5, 7, 13, 8, 16, 12, 10, 17), and is the resident photographer and judge of Asia's Next Top Model [571] Asia's Next Top Model (cycle 2)
- Rukes (Drew Ressler) - Worldwide EDM photographer for artists such as Zedd, Deadmau5, Swedish House Mafia, Avicii, Martin Garrix and festivals around the world like Ultra Music Festival [572]; multiple exhibitions including W Hotel New York, covered by Wall Street Journal [573]; Named #1 in top 50 music photographers right now by Complex [574]; Large social media following including Twitter verification [575];[576];[577]
- Allen Russ - landscape and architectural photographer; [578]; [579]; [580]; [581]; publications/reviews: [582]; [583]; [584]
- Rainer W. Schlegelmilch (born 1941) - Formula 1, sports car and automobile photographer; 50 years of consistent motorsport archive since 1962; 42 editorial books published by 2012; international exhibitions; [585]; [586]; [587]; [588]; [589]
- Percy Loomis Sperr - better known as P.L. Sperr - awarded the honorary title of official photographer for the city of New York; took 17,815 of the photos in the New York Public Library's photography collection; shot decades' worth of street scenes and buildings throughout NYC to document the City's physical evolution. E.g.,[590]; [591]
- Guy Tal - landscape photographer and author; [592], Ultimate Guide to Digital Nature Photography; [593]; [594]; published articles including in Outdoor Photographer, Popular Photography
- Waldemar Titzenthaler - German photographer; de:Waldemar Titzenthaler; [595]
- A.D. Wheeler, New York-based photographer and writer. Notable for photos of historically significant abandoned and non-abandoned sites, for example [596], Official Website, [597], PBS feature video, [598], Magazine article
- Alice Wheeler, Seattle-based photographer. Notable for photos of musicians, the countercultural scene, street protests, etc. See, for example Art Zone: Alice Wheeler, Seattle Channel
- Erik Almas A Norwegian photographer and cinematographer. Usually known for his surrealistic and panoramic-styled photos that are whimsical and unusual. Won many awards throughout the years since he was around 22 and has created photos used in ads made by big brands like Toyota, Nike, Hyatt, Microsoft, etc. Also featured in "Luerzers Archive's 200 Best Advertising photographers Worldwide, 2007-2008, 2010-2011, 2012-2013, 2014-2015 & 2016-2017" (All information used above was contained in his Official Website About Section) (A few Photography Samples, and a Feature in a interview hosted by a Photographer-managed magazine based around other photographers are also included here)
Sculptors
- William E. Ehrich (1897–1960) - Western New York sculptor; born Königsberg, East Prussia; instructor, Art Institute of Buffalo; instructor, Memorial Art Gallery; assistant professor, University of Rochester; [599]; [600]
- Heinz Hoyer (de:Heinz Hoyer)
- Andrew Kromelow - American (New York) sculptor; creator of "Poor Boy's Country Club" and "Casino" [601]; Knoll (verb); [602]
- Paul Mount - British (Newton Abbot); [603]
- Jacques Terzian (1921–2016) Armenian-American sculptor; founder of Hunters Point Artist Colony, San Francisco California); ([604], [605], [606], [607], [608], [609])
- Victor Teva (French sculptor born in 1971. Grew up on the island of Bora Bora in French Polynesia. Son of the explorer Paul-Emile VICTOR. His work can be seen in Public places like the "Assemblée Territoriale de Polynésie Française", or the "Grand Theatre de la Maison de la Culture") (References: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul-%C3%89mile_Victor , http://www.tntv.pf/Video-Le-visage-de-la-reine-Pomare-IV-immortalise-dans-la-pierre_a21169.html , http://www.tahiti-infos.com/Exposition-Pomare-IV-Marcel-Tuihani-salue-un-evenement-consensuel_a164664.html , http://www.tahiti-infos.com/La-nouvelle-sculpture-de-Teva-Victor-trone-devant-la-Maison-de-la-Culture_a143450.html , http://www.tahitinews.co/?s=Teva+Victor , https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assembly_of_French_Polynesia) External links: http://www.tevavictor.com , http://www.artistes.pf/artiste/teva-victor-2/
- Andrew Wielawski ( born 1955) American sculptor; http://www.ekathimerini.com/60024/article/ekathimerini/life/american-sculptor-takes-up-artistic-residence-at-luxurious-myconos-hotel, http://www.art-quotes.com/auth_search.php?http://zuccheronero.blogspot.com/2013/05/ophelia-sotto-al-tavolo-neoclassicismo.html=3270, http://www.askart.com/artist_bio/Andrew_Richard_Wielawski/128904/Andrew_Richard_Wielawski.aspx, https://books.google.com/books?id=kmFkUMLcnlYC&pg=PA359&lpg=PA359&dq=andrew+wielawski&source=bl&ots=sooMUDtQgN&sig=eurvo-wuHnjV1V_8R3km10402Lc&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwi_jurA-qXQAhXCLSYKHXWkAyE4FBDoAQhGMAk#v=onepage&q=andrew%20wielawski&f=falsehttp://artists.robertgenn.com/artlisting.php?id=3543
- Laura Meakin ( born 10th July 1983) is a British actress, dancer and singer; http://www.imdb.com/name/nm3320577/, http://laurameakin.com/, https://celebrities.wiki/celebrity/laura-meakin, http://www.dailymail.co.uk/columnists/article-356424/Churchs-rising-star-lavish-refit-palace.html, http://one4review.co.uk/2005/08/crimes-of-passion/, https://celebritypictures.wiki/celebrity/3320577, http://www2.ljworld.com/news/2008/jun/20/hats_ascots_ladies_day/, http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/other_sports/horse_racing/7463658.stm
- Eric Nubbe (Artist and sculptor based in the southeastern United States, notable for his work with metal.) (http://www.timesdaily.com/news/local/sculpture-model-unveiled-work-to-begin-soon/article_f9e38368-f84f-5f6b-849c-7eb5ad57c870.html , http://quadcitiesdaily.com/?p=431756 , https://art.ua.edu/news/arts-council-gallery-hosts-solo-show-by-ua-alumnus-eric-nubbe/ , http://www.tuscaloosanews.com/news/20170205/aliceville-eagle-sculpture-by-german-pow-restored)
Astronomers
Please request articles about astronomers at Wikipedia:Requested articles/Natural sciences#Astronomers, not here. |
Authors
Fiction writers, dramatists and poets
Please request articles about poets, dramatists and fiction writers at Wikipedia:Requested articles/Culture and fine arts/Literature#Authors (poets, dramatists and fiction writers), not here. |
- Ashley Dioses (Ashley Dioses is a speculative genre writer and poet from southern California. She is the author of Diary of a Sorceress, her first collection of dark formal poetry.) (fiendlover.blogspot.com) (https://www.hippocampuspress.com/mythos-and-other-authors/poetry/diary-of-a-sorceress-by-ashley-dioses?zenid=41u6qk895mo81d151ce7rvl4o3)
- K. A. Opperman (K. A. Opperman is a horror writer and poet from southern California. He is the author of the Crimson Tome, his first collection of horror formal poetry.) (https://www.hippocampuspress.com/mythos-and-other-authors/poetry/the-crimson-tome-by-k.-a.-opperman?zenid=41u6qk895mo81d151ce7rvl4o3) (kaopperman1.blogspot.com)
Non-fiction writers
A–B
- Imtiyaz 'Ali Khan 'Arshi – Urdu scholar; commonly read when studying Urdu poet Ghalib; Template:Worldcat id
- Mikhail Davidovich Baitalsky (1908–1978) - Trotskyist journalist, writer, and publisher in Samizdat, author of Notebooks for the Grandchildren - Recollections of a Trotskyist Who Survived the Stalin; [610]; Template:Worldcat id
- Kevin Barbieux - author of The Homeless Guy, a blog he began writing in 2002; chronically homeless; featured in media including USA Today, Associated Press, Salon.com [611]; [612]
- J. M. Berger - Author of Jihad Joe: Americans Who Go to War in the Name of Islam (Potomac Books, 2011), the only definitive history of American involvement in jihadist movements, and co-author of ISIS: The State of Terror (Ecco, 2015), with Jessica Stern. J. M. Berger is a nonresident fellow in the Project on U.S. Relations with the Islamic World in the Center for Middle East Policy. With roots in newspaper journalism, Berger is an author and analyst studying extremism. http://www.brookings.edu/experts/bergerjm?view=bio http://www.intelwire.com/ (request made 08-25-2015)
- Kurt W. Beyer - author of best seller Grace Hopper and the Invention of the Information Age (MIT Press; 2009); Brigade Commander and distinguished graduate, United States Naval Academy ([613]
- Robert M. Blevins - Science fiction author and managing editor for Adventure Books of Seattle. ([614]) Author of The 13th Day of Christmas, Say Goodbye to the Sun, and The Corona Incident. Published the controversial book Into The Blast, which names Kenneth Christiansen and Bernard Geestman from Washington state as the men who pulled off the DB Cooper hijacking. He later appeared on the Christiansen episode of History Channel's Brad Meltzer's Decoded in January 2011 to defend his findings and to cooperate in the investigation by the show. He has edited over fifty books for other authors and is the secretary for the nonprofit Washington Literacy Organization. ([615] Born: March 17, 1954. Age: 61.
- Zoë Boccabella (Author) - Italian-Australian author of Mezza Italiana: An Enchanting Story About Love, Family, La Dolce Vita and Finding Your Place in the World and Joe's Fruit Shop & Milk Bar published by ABC Books/ HarperCollins; [616]; [617]; [618]; [619]; [620]; [621]; [622]; [623]; [https://bellaink.files.wordpress.com/2015/02/courier-mail-article-7-2-15.pdf
- Lee Brickley - Paranormal investigator and author of UFO's Werewolves & The Pig-Man; born in Staffordshire, England, and shot to fame after making headlines all over the world due to numerous sightings of black-eyed children on Cannock Chase in September and October 2014; has been interviewed on hundreds of radio stations and television shows including ITV's This Morning with Eamonn Holmes. 2.221.164.19 (talk) 00:07, 23 October 2014 (UTC) [624]; 2.221.164.19 (talk) 00:07, 23 October 2014 (UTC) [625]; 2.221.164.19 (talk) 00:07, 23 October 2014 (UTC) [626]; 2.221.164.19 (talk) 00:07, 23 October 2014 (UTC) [627]; [628]
- Robert Buccellato - Author, Historian; [629],[630], [631], [632], [633], [634]
- Henry Burton (clergyman) (1840–1930) - English Methodist clergyman and author; wrote poem "Pass It On" ([635]) as well as several books[636]. Short bio here.
C–D
- Montgomery Carmichael (1856–1936), author of In Tuscany: Tuscan towns, Tuscan types and the Tuscan tongue (1902), The Life of John William Walshe, F. S.; translator, Rosmersholm: a play in four acts / by Henrik Ibsen (1890), Francia's masterpiece; an essay on the beginnings of the Immaculate conception in art (1909); editor and translator, The Lady Poverty: a XIII. century allegory (1901); co-author, Sketches on the old road through France to Florence (1905); [637]
- Sheldon Charrett - author of several Paladin Press titles, including several in their New ID category ([638]) with titles going back all the way to 1997.
- Onur Cinar - Author of several books on application development on Android platform, such as Android Quick APIs Reference, Pro Android C++ with the NDK, Android Apps with Eclipse, Android Best Practices, by Apress. [639] Onur Cinar also works for Skype. [www.linkedin.com/in/cinar].
- Elliot D. Cohen - philosopher and author [640]; co-founder, in 1992, of the Society for Philosophy, Counseling and Psychotherapy (ASPCP), the first association of philosophical counseling in the U.S. ([641]); inventor of logic-based therapy (LBT), a philosophical counseling variant of rational emotive behavior therapy ([642]); founder and editor-in-chief of the International Journal of Applied Philosophy; blogger for Psychology Today ([643]); ethics editor of Free Inquiry ([644]); contributing writer and freelance journalist for political news sites ([645]); inventor of artificial-intelligence technology for checking reasoning for fallacies ([646])
- Danielle Corcione - freelance writer; contributor to Teen Vogue (www.teenvogue.com/contributor/danielle-corcione), "Esquire" (http://www.esquire.com/author/16664/danielle-corcione/) and "Paste Magazine" (https://www.pastemagazine.com/writers?name=danielle+corcione) ; founder of the Millennial Freelancer ([647]);
- Armand V. Cucciniello III - Former U.S. diplomat and press officer for the Department of State. Iraq veteran. Media personality, writer, political commentator, policy specialist. Wrote for Time magazine, http://time.com/author/armand-v-cucciniello-iii/ Also on CNN, here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wKVxyxSlm8A
- Dave Cullen - author of Columbine and TV/radio analyst. Now redirects to the book he wrote [648]
- Subhorup Dasgupta (req. 2014-11-30) - DOB: November 2, 1965. Hyderabad-based writer, educator and activist, social media evangelist, creator of SoCh, a platform for connecting local changemakers with needed support, part of several community based initiatives like Our Sacred Space, a cultural center in Secunderabad, Writers' Carnival, a bi-annual training workshop for writers, and the annual Hyderabad Bloggers' Meet, now in its fourth edition. Writes on simplicity, responsibility and frugality as the key components of preserving what is good about societal development. Tea and Jazz educator, conducts tea appreciation programs and jazz listening sessions. Heads Eight Winds, a business solution suite that aims to correct the imbalanced approach to consumption based economies. Personal philosophy appears to a mix of Buddhism and atheism. Popular blogger, among topranked Indian bloggers in several categories (Source: www.indiblogger.com.),; [649]; [650]; [651]; [652]; [653]; [654]
- Maria Dismondy - award-winning children's book author and public speaker, Spaghetti in a Hot Dog Bun, The Juice Box Bully, Pink Tiara Cookies for Three and The Potato Chip Champ; [655]
E–G
- Jon Ebel - Author, Historian, Politician; served as a naval intelligence officer from 1993-1997, and remained in the naval reserves until 2005; author of “Faith in the Fight: Religion and the American Soldier in the Great War” [656] and “G.I. Messiahs: Soldiering, War, and American Civil Religion” [657]; co-edited “From Jeremiad to Jihad: Religion, Violence, and America” [658]; writes a blog on the Huffington Post [659]; awarded a John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship, in 2017 [660]; currently running for United States Congress in the Illinois 13th District [661]; currently associate professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign in the Department of Religion [662].
- Sidney Theodore Felstead - British(?) author; wrote books on the topic of German spies such as "Germany and Her Spies" and "German Spies At Bay". Basic overview of his careers as an author: [663] German Spies At Bay: [664]
- Barbara Fischkin - author of Muddy Cup: A Dominican Family Comes of Age in a New America, a book expanded from a Newsday series, which won the Livingston Award for International Reporting (1996) (Livingston Award); [665]; (search The New York Times, The New Yorker ("Letter from Mexico City"))
- Jamie Flook - Writer and journalist [666]; [667]; [668]; [669]; [670]
- Mary Barelli Gallagher (or Mary Gallagher) - biographer, secretary of Jackie Kennedy, author of Kennedy biography; [671]
- Philip A. Goduti, Jr. - American author of Kennedy's Kitchen Cabinet and the Pursuit of Peace: The Shaping of American Foreign Policy, 1961–1963 Jefferson, NC, McFarland and Co., Inc, 2009 and Robert F. Kennedy and the Shaping of Civil Rights, 1960–1964 Jefferson, NC. McFarland and Co., Inc, 2013. His books are used as references in the following Wikipedia articles: Baldwin–Kennedy meeting, Foreign policy of the John F. Kennedy administration, Coretta Scott King, October 1962, June 1963; [672]; [673]
- Edmund Gordon - prolific literary critic, biographer of Angela Carter, and winner of Jerwood Award for non-fiction.[37][38][39][40][41][42][43][44][45]
- Robert Govers - author, speaker, scholar and advisor on the reputation of cities, regions and countries. Mentioned on Wikipedia here (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Good_Country_Index) and here (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Place_branding). [46][47][48][49][50]
- Carol Hurd Green - author of biographies, especially on women's writers; English professor at Boston College (http://www.bc.edu/schools/cas/capstone/faculty/green.html)
H–M
- Ryan Hampton (author) (Ryan Hampton is the author of “American Fix: Inside the American Opioid Addiction Crisis – and How to End It” published by St. Martin’s Press.[51] He is also a national opioid addiction recovery activist.[52] Hampton was a White House assistant during the Clinton administration and became addicted to opioids shortly after leaving the White House in 2001. He was homeless and entered treatment for his addiction in 2015.[53] He works with the addiction advocacy group Facing Addiction. Hampton’s rise to prominence is attributed to his social media presence and political views. He was a delegate to the 2016 Democratic National Convention.[54] Hampton identifies as a Democrat but has worked with Republicans like Jeb Bush and celebrities such as Dr. Mehmet Oz to urge action by Donald Trump on the opioid crisis.[55] Hampton is an outspoken critic of Donald Trump. He lives in Pasadena, California.[56] In 2017, Hampton was named a William J. Clinton distinguished lecturer at the University of Arkansas School of Public Policy for his work and activism on the opioid crisis.[57] [58]) ([674] [675] [676] [677] [678] [679] [680] [681] [682])
- George William Helon - (born 1965) Polish, Australian and Aboriginal author, etymologist, ethnographer, historian, genealogist and political aspirant. Lives Toowoomba, Queensland, Australia. Refer: People with the name Helon for reference links; also Arnold, et al., John (2004). The Bibliography of Australian Literature: F-J. St Lucia: University of Queensland Press. p. 401. ISBN 0-7022-3500-8; AUSTLIT [683]; National Library of Australia [684]; TROVE - National Library of Australia [685]; Polish Genealogical Society of America [686]; RootsWeb [687] ; Wikipedia Candidates of the Australian federal election, 1990; Constitutional Convention Candidate: Australia [688]; [689]; Who's Who Australian Writers and Who's Who Australian Childrens' Writers; search Google
- Nancy Grass Hemmert - author of Public Speaking in American English, (Allyn & Bacon, 2008) and co-author of Relationships Inside Out (Kendell Hunt, 2014). Foremost expert in training non-native English speakers in the art of public speaking for American English speaking audiences. Also, an expert in intercultural communication training and education. Santa Monica College (http://www.smc.edu) Los Angeles County Training Academy (www.losangelescountyacademy.org/Bios/NancyHemmert.html). Also known for her service work she conducts with students. (http://santamonica.patch.com/articles/smc-class-taps-into-5000-for-water-well-in-africa) (http://santamonicacloseup.com/photo-du-jour/2009/5/23/governor-arnold-schwarzenegger.html)
- Booton Herndon (1915–1995) - writer; wrote histories of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, the Junior Chamber of Commerce, the Ford empire, wrote biographies on Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pickford, Guy Lombardo, Fulton Lewis, Desmond Doss, Bergdorf Goodman, and a work on The Humor of JFK; [690]; [691]
- Amanda Howard - (born 1973) Australian true crime author of fifteen books. Works include Murder on the Mind: An Insight into the Minds of Serial Killers and Their Crimes, A Killer in the Family: When Murder Waits at Home, Predator: Killers Without A Conscience, Innocence Lost: Crimes that Shocked a Nation, published by New Holland Publishers. Lives Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. Has appeared in international documentaries including: Prime Suspect: Jack the Ripper, Crimes that Shook the World: The Backpacker Killer. Refer: National Library of Australia [692]; Amazon: [693]; imdb: [694]
- Gregory Paul Johnson - author of Put Your Life on a Diet: Lessons Learned Living in 140 Square Feet ([695]), published by Gibbs-Smith ([696]); interviewed by numerous international media outlets; [697]
- A. C. Kermode (Alfred Cotterill Kermode) - books include Mechanics of Flight (1932) and Flight Without Formulae (1940); Template:Worldcat id
- Simon Kingsnorth - (Requested October 2015) Author of Digital Marketing Strategy: An integrated approach to online marketing and contributing author to the books Understanding Digital Marketing and Understanding Social Media by Damian Ryan. Brother of award-winning author Paul Kingsnorth. Also a senior digital marketing businessman and speaker. [698]
- Carlos Malvar - author of Not Quite Unreal; toured with a speechless project for the British Council Literature Department ([699]); Korea Literature Translation Institute's writer-in-residence (a one-week program);[700]; [701]; [702]
- Danine Manette - author of Ultimate Betrayal-Recognizing, Uncovering and Dealing with Infidelity; media pundit on HLN's Dr Drew On-Call; professional model; criminal investigator; [703]; [704]; [705]; [706]; [707]
- Drew Manning - American fitness and diet author. Wrote book titled Fit2Fat2Fit. Drew voluntarily decided to stop eating correctly and working out in an attempt to gain so that he may better understand the psyche of his overweight/obese clientele. Drew also has a website that tracked his journey of gaining and losing weight.[708] and [709] and [710]
- Steve Maraboli - American author, behavioral science academic. Wrote, Unapologetically You (ISBN:0979575087), Life, the Truth, and Being Free (ISBN: 1496086244), The Power of One (ISBN: 097957501X), La Vida, La Verdad, y Ser Libre (ISBN: 0979575044) He is the creator of Psycho-Neuro-Actualization™; a counseling/coaching methodology. [711] [712]
- Ron Martinsen - (Requested August 19, 2015) Ronald Robert Martinsen (born May 6, 1970 Baton Rouge, Louisiana) co-author of Using Visual Basic 4, Special Edition (ISBN: 1-56529-998-1), Using Visual Basic 5, Special Edition (ISBN: 0-7897-0922-8) [713], and Printing 101 Notebook: An Introduction to Fine Art Photography Printing [714]. Ron is also an internationally renown photographer with images published in magazines around the world including GQ France, Robb Report Russia and more [715] and blogger [716]. Ron's also contributed articles on photography [717] and data protection [718] on Scott Kelby's blog Scott Kelby. Ron is also a featured photographer for NEC [719] and is a successful engineer / inventor at Microsoft for 21 years who has six patents issued by the US [720]] Finally Ron is mentioned in MSDE and referenced in Noiseware.
- D.J. MacLennan - Writer and cryonicist. Featured in New Scientist magazine, June 2016 - 'Why I signed up to have my head cryogenically frozen'. Author of cryonics book Frozen to Life: A Personal Mortality Experiment (Anatta Books, 2015). Contributor of chapters 'The Wonder of Indeterminacy' and 'Buddhism and Cryonics' to cryonics anthology The Prospect of Immortality - Fifty Years Later (Ria University Press, 2014).
- Dave Martin (author) - Dr. Dave Martin is known by many around the world as America's #1 Christian Success Coach. He is the Founder and President of Dave Martin International, which exists to serve the local church and business organizations. He is also a member of the advisory board of Joel Osteen's Champions Network. He's a frequent guest on Fox and TBN[[721]] He is best known for his book The 12 Traits of the Greats, a popular book about common qualities found in great achievers.
- Danielle McLaughlin - New Zealand born, U.S.-based lawyer [722] and author of The Federalist Society: How Conservatives Took The Law Back From Liberals (2013), with Michael Avery. Her published work has been reviewed by The New York Times [723], the Washington Independent Review of Books [724], the L.A. Review of Books [725], and The Daily Beast [726] among others, and examines the strategies employed by conservative and libertarian lawyers, academics, judges and policy makers, grounded in theories of constitutional originalism and small government, in various areas including international law and policy, privacy rights, and economic and property rights. Danielle has appeared as a guest on the Sean Hannity Show, discussing the IRS 501(c)(4) ideological profiling scandal [727], as well as various radio outlets including This Is Hell! with Chuck Merz [728], the Jim Bohannon Show and David Alpern's For Your Ears Only. Danielle has co-authored articles on the federal courts and marriage equality for the Chronicle of Higher Education [729] and Truthout [730] with Michael Avery. Danielle honed her writing skills early in her career as a public relations consultant and marketing manager in London, England and in Vail, Colorado. Prior to that, Danielle was a consulting engineer in her native New Zealand.
- Bryan Miller (food writer) (req. 2015-07-15) - former restaurant critic and food writer, The New York Times; magazine writer; Template:Worldcat id; [731]; [732]; [733]; [734]
- Robert Mole - author; British civil servant; twice Mentioned in Despatches; awarded a Burma Star; wrote The Temple Bells Are Calling, an autobiography of his posting in Burma incorporating the politics of Burma from 1824 to 1948 during the Japanese occupation of Burma; [735]; Template:Worldcat id; [736]
N–S
- The Office Hobo - Nom de plume of the contemporary writer whose experiment of living in his Los Angeles office for nearly two years gained him notoriety as a social agitator. The Office Hobo got his start on his blog [www.theofficehobo.com] and published subsequent articles in L.A. Weekly [737]; [738]. An interview with the anonymous writer appeared in the June 2014 issue of Germany's Business Punk Magazine [print version only]. In 2014, The Office Hobo moved out of his office and into his truck camper. Though the actual identity of the author is unknown, his blurred image has been on national television, featured on the Fusion TV channel in September of 2014 [739]. The Office Hobo is reporting to be completing a memoir titled Home-Free: My Life as The Office Hoboon his time living in his office, though no report of its publication has been mentioned yet.
- Maxim Popenker - Russian programmer who is a firearm hobbyist, wrote seven books about guns (both in English and Russian) and has been working for several domestic and foreign gun magazines [740] [741] [742]
- Crystal Renaud - author of Dirty Girls Come Clean (Moody Publishers, 2011). Founder of Dirty Girls Ministries assisting women addicted to pornography and sexual addiction ([743]; [744]; [745])
- Mary Reynolds (landscape designer) - Irish born landscape designer, author of "The Garden Awakening: Designs to Nurture Ourselves and Our Land", nature activist, organic gardener and winner of the 2002 Gold Medal at the Chelsea Flower Show. (Sources: Smithsonian Magazine Interview [746] Book Endorsement video from Jane Goodall [747] Interview/book review at the Telegraph [748] RTE piece [749] Part of 100 European Women in Design exhibit [750] Book review in Japan Times [751] Interview in Irish Examiner [752] Book review Publisher's Weekly [753] 1 of 7 Female Landscape Architects You Need to Know [754] Website [755])
- Carey Roberts - American columnist, men's-rights activist and anti-feminist; conservative commentator on political correctness; [756]
- Martin Rosenbaum - freedom-of-information journalist; blogger for the BBC (since 2006); [757]; [758]; [759]
- Neil P. Ruzic - author of Where the Winds Sleep - Man's Future on the Moon, a Projected History (1970; Garden City, New York: Doubleday; OCLC 73907); innovator; part of Operation Paperclip (NASA's Von Braun group)
- Jared Sawyer Jr. - founder of National Youth Empowerment Initiative and author of three books; starred in BBC's Around the World in 80 Faiths; actor known for his roles in Tyler Perry's Boo 2: A Made Halloween, My Harvest Is Near, and The Best of Enemies; was a child prodigy first appearing on ABC Nightline [760] [761] [762]
- Amit Singh - author, technical writer, columnist, etc., see [763]
- Peter Stiff - London-born author who wrote a trilogy on South Africa's secret warfare. He also authored Cry Zimbabwe, which tells how Robert Mugabe became the president of Zimbabwe and ruined the country; [764]; Peter Stiff (Q21091211)
- Earl Swift - American author of seven books, including "Auto Biography," "The Big Roads" and the forthcoming "Chesapeake Requiem" (HarperCollins). (Sources: Forbes review [765] NPR interview [766] Chesapeake Requiem [767] author site [768])
T–Z
- Carlos Enrique Taboada (18 July 1929 - 15 April 1997), Mexican screenwriter and director known for his numerous cult horror and suspense films including Hasta el viento tiene miedo, Veneno para las hadas, and El Libro de piedra. His works noted for combining Gothic elements with Italian giallo techniques, have been remade multiple times in both English and Spanish, and are cited as an influence for numerous creators, such as Guillermo del Toro and Quentin Tarantino. Has a full article on the Spanish-language Wikipedia.
- Unto Tähtinen - philosopher; author of Ahimsa - Non-Violence in Indian Tradition; Template:Worldcat id
- Isabel Thomas, author of more than 100 non-fiction books for children, published around the world in 20 languages. Shortlisted for the Blue Peter Book Awards 2011. [769]; [770] [771]; [772]; [773] [774] [775] [776] [777] [778]
- Patricia Volk - Author of "Stuffed: Adventures of a Restaurant Family," "Shocked: My Mother, Schiaparelli, and Me," and four works of fiction. She is also a frequent contributor to The New York Times. [779]
- Richard G. Walsh - Author of "Three Versions of Judas," and other books, Professor of Religion; Co-Director, Honors Program. B.A., Baylor University; M.Div., Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary; Ph.D., Baylor University.[780]
- Tara Washburn - author of "Crossing Bridges" (2014), diagnosed with Aspergers Syndrome at age 28, advocate for a new view of Autism, Founder of Hearts that Feel<http://www.heartsthatfeel.com/2011/10/dont-touch-me.html>, guest of Autism Warriors <http://sayitproductions.com/shows/autism-warriors-023-autism-from-the-inside-out-tara-washburn/> published in "Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought", claims a blog reader base of 12,000 in 82 countries
- Seth Weintraub, Author, Web Publisher, 9to5mac.com, 9to5google.com, 9to5Toys.com, https://electrek.co/about/
- Wayne Wickelgren, Author, Professor, http://www.harvard60.org/wickelgren.html, https://www.amazon.com/Wayne-A.-Wickelgren/e/B001HD1MN8, http://www.columbia.edu/~nvg1/Wickelgren/
- Anthony G. Williams - author of Rapid Fire: the Development of Automatic Cannon, Heavy Machine Guns and their Ammunition for Armies, Navies and Air Forces, Flying Guns: Development of Aircraft Guns, Ammunition and Installations (with Emmanuel Gustin), Assault Rifle: the Development of the Modern Military Rifle and its Ammunition, Machine Gun: the Development of the Machine Gun from the Nineteenth Century to the Present Day and Sub-Machine Gun: the development of sub-machine guns and their ammunition from World War 1 to the present day (with Maxim Popenker) and editor of Jane's Ammunition Handbook / IHS Jane's Weapons: Ammunition [781] [782]
- Randall Wood - author of Moon Nicaragua, Living Abroad in Nicaragua, Dictator's Handbook: a practical manual for the aspiring tyrant; [783]; [784]
- Raghda Zaid (blogger) (born 1991) - author of Baghdad Girl blog,Baghdad Girl blog: Part 2, [785] ; [786] ; [787] ; [788] ; [789] ; [790]
- David Zweig (born 1974) - American journalist and fiction writer. Author of Invisibles: The Power of Anonymous Work in an Age of Relentless Self Promotion based on his widely read article for The Atlantic "What Do Fact-Checkers and Anesthesiologists Have in Common?" Invisibles has been translated into five languages and received coverage in The New York Times, The Washington Post, The New Republic, The Wall Street Journal, Slate, Salon, Wired, Fortune, Forbes, and the author was interviewed on numerous public radio programs and TV shows, including CBS This Morning, CNBC, MSNBC, FOX, and the CBC. Zweig is also a well known writer on technology, media and psychology for outlets such as The Atlantic and The New York Times. His 3,000 word takedown in Salon on errors in the David Brooks book "The Road to Character" was widely read and cited, including a citation in the Sunday New York Times itself, by Margaret Sullivan, the paper's Public Editor, where it was noted that Zweig's piece led to Brooks's publisher altering the text of the book for future editions and the Times making corrections on past Brooks columns. (The piece is also linked to in David Brooks (journalist)#Criticism.) Zweig's 2,000 word feature on the front page of The New York Times real estate section on his move from the city to the suburbs was widely read and cited as well, and also generated backlash on social media.
Biologists
Please request articles about biologists at Wikipedia:Requested articles/Biography/Biologists, not here. |
Botanists
- Julius Aamisepp (1883–1950) - Estonian plant breeder; ()
- P. B. Adams (fl. 1978) - ()
- Paul Aellen (1896–1973) - ()
- Hossein Akhani (born 1950) - ()
- Manoel Allemão (died 1863) - ()
- Kelly Allred (born 1949) - ()
- E. G. Andrews - ()
- Antoni Lukianowicz Andrezjowski (1785–1868) - ()
- Nicolai Matveevich Andronov (fl. 1955) - ()
- Appulei Barbarus - ()
- Francisco Bonafé Barceló (born 1908) - ()
- Josep Batlle i Mateu - ()
- Augusto Béguinot (1875–1940) - ()
- Ghulam Raza Bhatti - meritorious professor of botany and pro-vice chancellor, Shah Abdul Latif University; founder and director of the university's Herbarium and Botanical Garden, Pakistan's first botanical garden, and the Centre for Biodiversity and Conservation (Khairpur)
- Bernard Jocelyn Brooke (or Bernard Brooke (botanist)) (1908–1966) - ()
- Thomas Burford - American apple expert, author of Apples-A Catalog of International Varieties, Monroe, Virginia: Printed and published by Thomas Burford, 1991, Revised 1998. Perhaps "Burford, Tom" (author of Apples of North America, Portland, Oregon: Timber Press, Inc., 2013) is the next generation?
- Montserrat Garriga Cabrero - ()
- Antoní Càstor - ()
- S. L. Chang (fl. 1979) - ()
- D. Francisco Antonio de Arrábida (1771–1850) - ()
- Ary Johannes De Bruijn (1811–1896) - ()
- Oliver Atkins Farwell (1867–1944) - ()
- Olga Fedstshenko (1845–1921) - Russian botanist; ()
- Johannes Fleischer (born 1582) - German botanist; ()
- Olayo Díaz Giménez (1810–1885) - Spanish botanist; ()
- Arne Hässler (1904–1952) - ()
- Margit Luise Hauser - ()
- Georg Christoph Heim (1743–1807) - ()
- Franciscus Holkema (1840–1869) - Dutch botanist; ()
- Arthur Hermann Holmgren (born 1912) - ()
- Bjorn Frithiofsson Holmgren (1872–1946) - ()
- Hjalmar Josef Holmgren (1822–1885) - ()
- Noel Herman Holmgren (born 1937) - ()
- Patricia Kern Holmgren (born 1940) - ()
- Isao Hurusawa (born 1916) - ()
- Emil J. Imbach (1897–1970) - ()
- Johannes Albertus Janse (1911–1977) - ()
- Carel Christiaan Hugo Jongkind (born 1954) - ()
- Kurt Krause (1883–1963) - ()
- Joseph Lanjouw (1902–1984) - Dutch botanist; ()
- Georgios Lavrentiades (born 1920) - ()
- Jean-François Leroy (botanist) - ()
- Carlo Antonio Lodovico (1741–1826) - ()
- Francesc Masclans i Girvès (1905–1999) - ()
- Georg Friedrich Wilhelm Meyer (1782–1856) - ()
- Joan Salvador i Riera (1683–1726) - ()
- Olof Selling - ()
Business people
Please request articles about people in business at Wikipedia:Requested articles/Business and economics/People in business, not here. |
Chefs
- Segev Moshe (or Moshe Segev; I don't know which is correct; he): Official site. Apparently a celebrity chef from Israel. Infamous for serving Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe (who was visiting Israel) pieces of chocolate in a shoe-shaped metal bowl. ([791], [792], [793], [794]) That shoe was apparently made by Tom Dixon.
- Yolanda gampp - Youtube Cake Artist; appears on her Youtube Chanel, How To Cake It; [795]; Has been featured on The Today Show, The Social, Cityline, Breakfast Television, and BuzzFeed; She has her own website [796] Yolanda is From Toronto, Canada.
Chemists
Please request articles about chemists at Wikipedia:Requested articles/Natural sciences/Chemistry#Chemists, not here. |
Computer scientists
- Bruno Bernardino (Bruno Morais Bernardino) - senior web programmer and manager, inventor of visualCaptcha, author of the book Pro jQuery Plugins, COO at Clevertech; [797]
- Yuriy Bulygin
Intel CHIPSEC McAfee — senior director, advanced threat research team, office of the CTO Eclypsium ZDNET CRUNCHBASE Security Center of Excellence Black Hat USA
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_invited_speakers_at_cryptology_conferences#2015
LinkedIn:
"formerly led Advanced Threat Research and microprocessor vulnerability analysis teams at INTEL
author of open source CHIPSEC platform security assessment framework
"The former head of Intel's advanced threat team, has published research showing that the Spectre CPU flaws can be used to break into the highly privileged CPU mode on Intel x86 systems known as System Management Mode (SMM)."
[ZDNET, 18May2018]
founder & CEO of ECLYPSIUM
"Today, we are proud to announce a new approach to enterprise security that protects the firmware and hardware at the heart of our devices. For everything from laptops to servers to network devices, we find the areas where you are vulnerable and actively defend against attacks in the firmware. This is specifically the area where the most innovative attackers have been focusing recently, and until today, where defenders have lagged behind. This is an incredibly exciting time for the industry, and I would like to thank our investors Andreessen Horowitz, Intel Capital, Ubiquity Ventures, and our individual investors for believing in Eclypsium. In the next few paragraphs I’ll try to quickly explain what is driving us on this journey.
Hardware and firmware-level attacks that live below the level of the operating system are a glaring blind spot that is reshaping enterprise security. For the entire history of modern information security, the battle has largely been waged from the operating system up. Antivirus software and malware continuously battle for control of the host OS, and when an infection is suspected, the common response is to simply reimage the machine. This approach is blind to vulnerabilities in firmware or hardware, which live below the level of the OS and fails both at protection and remediation of an actual attack.
The main motherboard, network cards, management controllers, storage devices and dozens of other components at the heart of our devices all rely on firmware developed by different manufacturers and can be compromised. This is true for any type of device and OS ranging from laptops to the servers that run our applications in enterprise, to the network appliances that operate our network infrastructure, to industrial systems that operate our critical infrastructure. It is a large attack surface and devices can be backdoored in the supply chain before you ever pull it out of the box.
Most organizations don’t have the inhouse expertise to find vulnerabilities or firmware backdoors and implants. Worse still, most firmware is rarely updated and upgrades are often manual and tricky procedures. So if an attacker can compromise the firmware on the device, he is often beyond the reach of traditional security. He often will have fundamental control over the device and its data while remaining invisible and persistent enough to survive even a complete OS reinstall. The recent DHS alert of state-sponsored attacks targeting enterprise network infrastructure show that these threats have become mainstream and are an immediate issue for all enterprises.
And that is the point – these attacks are all about persistence. Unlike the countless variants of evolving malware, infrastructure-level attacks are about persistence of an advanced attack. They are more rare by nature than commodity malware, but they are likewise far more valuable to an attacker and costly to an organization.
This problem has been the central focus of my research from my days leading the Advanced Threat Research team at Intel to founding CHIPSEC, and has culminated in our work here at Eclypsium. We have built a new layer of security that defends an organization’s firmware and infrastructure and protects them from backdoors and implants. We detect devices that have vulnerable hardware or firmware, detect and isolate devices with implanted firmware, and protect your critical hardware from compromise or physical damage by an attack. We apply this approach both in the enterprise, in data centers, and within the hardware supply chain itself."
- Robin Christopherson (Robin Christopherson is a leading evangelist for digital inclusion and the importance of ensuring that websites, apps and services are accessible to all. A founding member of UK technology charity [AbilityNet] (1998), Christopherson received an MBE in the [2017 new year honours list] in recognition of his services as an ambassador for digital inclusion spanning two decades. His work also won Christopherson the 2016 Technology4Good '[special Award]' - previously bestowed on Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales and scientist Professor Stephen Hawking.) ([798] 2017 New Year Honours [799] [800])
- Frank Colvin - MCP, MCP+I, MCSE-NT4.0, MCSA, MCSE+Sec-Win2003; Manager of Hosting Services, MDI-ICI; Manager of Global IT, Infoweapons; actor, singer, musician; listed in Who's Who of American Volunteers
- Gillian Crampton Smith, she received the 2014 Lifetime Practice Award from ACM SIGCHI
- Terry Davis (software developer) - Self-proclaimed schiziophrenziac who created his own very technically developed 64-bit operating system, TempleOS (also known as Losethos or SparrowOS). Believes that his operating system is literally God's temple, and that God speaks to him through the computer's random number generator. Has an infamous reputation among internet communities: see [801], [802], [803] (must have "show dead" enabled in your Hacker News account to see these comments, because he's been hellbanned there). Would be a very interesting and noteworthy article.
- Mark Dowd - Australian computer security researcher; mentioned in Hakin9, W00w00, Criticism of Windows Vista, Defensive programming; author of [804], judge of the Pwnie Awards [805], member of the Black Hat security conference review board [806], Black Hat Briefings, founder of Azimuth Security [807], and computer security bug finder [808], [809], [810],[811], [812], [813],[814], [815]
- Benjamin Edelman - American spyware researcher; professor of business administration, Harvard Business School; [816]
- Pierre Gougelet (or Pierre-Emmanuel Gougelet) - software developer; created XnView
- Edward A. Guilbert (died 1993) - "Father of Electronic Data Interchange", the early form of business-to-business e-commerce that preceded the Web, Guilbert played a key role as head of the Transportation Data Coordinating Committee in helping create EDI standards that went into wide use by the late 70s and were required in supplier communications by many companies, including Wal-Mart, in the early 80s ([817])
- Phil Haack - senior program manager, Microsoft (ASP.NET team); [818]
- Nicole Hamilton - Author of Hamilton C shell and of the ranker and query language for the first release of Microsoft's Bing search engine. A paper she coauthored at the time won the 10-year test of time award at the 2015 International Conference on Machine Learning. She has over 1300 citations and 9 issued patents. She is also a trans woman, having transitioned in the late 90s. She rarely talks about her experience but has done so on a panel in 2007 at Stanford (available on iTunes) and on a couple of web pages she wrote contemporaneously about her experiences with facial surgery and laser skin resurfacing. Currently, she is a lecturer in electrical engineering at University of Washington Bothell. Appears to satisfy both WP:CREATIVE and WP:ACADEMIC. Currently only a redirect, not a WP:BLP.
- Johnathan Harris - computer scientist; known for his "We feel fine" works neuromap simulation; featured on TED ([819]); [820]
- John Impagliazzo - American professor of computer science, department chair at Hofstra University; specialist in computer history; [821]
- Peter Zilahy Ingerman - computer scientist; FBCS, CITP, CEng, CSci, Life Member Sigma Xi, Life Member (Sr.) IEEE; inventor of the "thunk"; implemented simulator (under Windows) for UNIVAC I and II
- Jerry Jalava - Finnish programmer; lost finger in motorcycle accident and replaced it with USB drive; [822]
- Tuoc Luong - CEO of Shanda Online and Shanda Innovations America; Ex-SVP of Yahoo Search Division; Vietnamese-American executive in high tech / Silicon Valley; [823]
- Wendy Mackay https://www.lri.fr/~mackay/ and ACM SIGCHI 2014 Lifetime Service Award recipient.
- Gregory Maxwell - Has been a member of the Mozilla Foundation, Wikimedia Foundation, Bitcoin Foundation, and Xiph.Org Foundation; released 19,000 pre-1923 articles of the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society into the public domain; former Wikipedia checkuser; developer of Bitcoin and Opus
- Stu Nicholls - CSS programmer; author of CSSplay; [824]
- Steven K. Roberts - coiner of the term technomad, creator of BEHEMOTH (big electronic human-energized machine only too heavy) in the 1980s (an entire The Phil Donahue Show episode featured him as guest); creator of the Microship along with other other high-tech mobile machines; [825]; [826]; [827]; [828]
- Niels Henrik Sodemann (Niels Henrik Sodemann) - Founder of the virtual waiting room, CEO at Queue-it [829]
- Kent Speakman - entrepreneur; award-winning digital-media professional; thought leader; influential in social media, mobile applications and entertainment industry; founded ENGAGEIA Inc.; co-founded SeeMail; [830]; [831]; [832]
Earth scientists
Please request articles about earth scientists at Wikipedia:Requested articles/Natural sciences#Earth scientists, not here. |
Economists
Please request articles about economists at Wikipedia:Requested articles/Business and economics#Economists, not here. |
Educators
A–M
- Nazih Ayubi (1944–1995) - Egyptian political scientist and Middle East scholar; former professor, University of California, Los Angeles; author of several books on Middle East political issues; numerous Wikipedia references; [833]
- Pauline Atherton Cochrane - American librarian and Professor Emeritus, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and Syracuse University. see: Barre, Kathryn. Pauline Atherton Cochrane: Weaving Value from the Past". Libraries & the Cultural Record 45.2 (2010): 210−237; ASIST Pioneers; [http://www.personal.kent.edu/~tfroehli/sighfis/cochrn.htm Listing in "Index of Information Science Pioneers" (es)
- Christopher Lance Coleman - African-American nurse, behavioral scientist, author and consultant; Fagin Term Associate Professor, University of Pennsylvania; Chairman of the Board, Haven Youth Center Inc.; elected Fellow in the American Academy of Nursing; specializes in secondary prevention of HIV/AIDS; [834];[835];[836]
- Janice Fiamengo - Canadian lecturer and notable female critic of feminism; author of The Woman's Page: Journalism and Rhetoric in Early Canada and prolific editor [837]
- John P. Foley, S.J. American educator and Catholic priest. Founder of the Cristo Rey Network, the largest network of high schools in the United States whose enrollment is limited to low-income youth. He was awarded the Presidential Citizens Medal in 2008 and has been featured on 60 Minutes and numerous other national and international outlets. Cristo Rey Network and [838] and (http://www.cbsnews.com/videos/underprivileged-students-in-southwest-chicago-receive-top-education/)
- Dan Gurskis - Professor of Screenwriting, Brooklyn College; [839]
- Kent Murdock Lloyd (1931–1999) - Deputy Under Secretary of Education during the Reagan Administration 1981–1985, author of several books on educational management. [www.reagan.utexas.edu/archives/speeches/1981/41381a.htm] [840] [841]
- Wesley Parkinson Lloyd (1904–1977) Dean of Students at Brigham Young University, Director of Japanese Universities Counseling and Guidance, author of books and papers on educational philosophy [842]
- Loris Malaguzzi (1920–1994) Italian educator and philosopher responsible for the system of municipal preschools and infant and toddler centers in Reggio, Italy, widely accepted as the best schools in the world. http://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/obituary-loris-malaguzzi-1367204.html
- Nancy Martin - (1909-2003) "Pioneering educationalist whose research and initiatives transformed English teaching" [843]
- Muska Mosston - Israeli-American educator; creator of The Spectrum of Teaching Styles and earlier, the Developmental Movement (1965). http://spectrumofteachingstyles.org/NEW2/about-us/the-authors/muska-mosston/
N–Z
- Jose R. Otaola (1945) - Basque-Spanish-American educator and biologist; UPRM, UIPR, a; [844]
- Patrick Overton - American author of the "Faith" poem and many other things; [845]
- Scott D. Pearson - Executive Director, District of Columbia Public Charter School Board; [846]; [847]; [848]; [849]
- Martha T. Roth - Dean of Humanities, University of Chicago; Professor of Assyriology, Oriental Institute, Department of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations, Committee on Jewish Studies, and the College; Editor-in-Charge, Chicago Assyrian Dictionary; [850]
- Beth H. Slingerland - pioneering dyslexia educator; creator of the Slingerland classroom adaptation of the Orton-Gillingham approach for teaching dyslexic children; [851]
- Clint Smith - Clint Smith, Instructor and author. President and Director of Thunder Ranch®, is a Marine Corps veteran of two infantry and Combined Action Platoon tours in Vietnam. His experience includes seven years as a police officer during which he served as head of the Firearms Training Division as well as being a S.W.A.T. member and precision rifleman. https://thunderranchinc.com/
- Priya Venkatesan - former Dartmouth College professor who achieved notoriety by threatening lawsuits against the school and some of her undergraduate students; [852]; [853] [854]
- Neil L. Waters - Professor of History; Kawashima Professor of Japanese Studies at Middlebury College in Vermont; noted for speaking out against Wikipedia as a citable reference. Required subject of study at DeVry University Online..... [855] and [856]
- Patricia Zander (1943–2008) - British-American pianist and instructor; ARCM, LRAM, Royal College of Music, London; studied with Cyril Smith; longtime faculty member of the New England Conservatory; students included Yo-Yo Ma, Judith Gordon, and Max Levinson; toured and recorded with Ma; [857]
- Rakesh Vohra George A. Weiss and Lydia Bravo Weiss University Professor at the [University of Pennsylvania]; [858]
- M K Bashar Ln. M K Bashar is the founder and chairman of Cambrian Education Group [Cambrian College, Dhaka]; [859]
- James W. Walters (1945-)Professor of Religion and Bioethics at [Loma Linda University School of Religion]; [860] Co-founder of [Adventist Today] Author of several publications including but not limited to: [Living is Loving: Relationships Matter Most (Washington DC: Review and Herald Publishing Assoc., 1985)] [Bioethics Today, A New Ethical Vision (Loma Linda University Press, 1988), editor. [War No More? Options in Nuclear Ethics (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1989), editor] [Facing Limits: Ethics and Health Care for the Elderly (Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 1993), edited with Gerald R. Winslow] [Choosing Who's to Live: Ethics and Aging (University of Illinois Press, 1996), editor] [What is a Person? An Ethical Exploration (University of Illinois Press, 1997)] [Martin Buber and Feminist Ethics, The Priority of the Personal (Syracuse University Press, 2003)] [The Predicament of Belief in Dialogue, Philip Clayton and Steven Knapp and 8 Discussants (in press), edited with Philip Clayton]
Engineers
- Dan E. Arvizu (Current Laboratory Director of NREL, the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, located in Golden, Colorado, which is the United States' primary laboratory for renewable energy and energy efficiency research and development. Dr. Arvizu became the eighth Director of the U.S. Department of Energy's National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) on January 15, 2005. Dr. Arvizu also is a Senior Vice President with Midwest Research Institute, which manages NREL on behalf of the DOE. Prior to joining NREL, Dr. Arvizu was Senior Vice President and Chief Technology Officer of the Federal and Industrial Client Groups with CH2M Hill Companies, Ltd. Before joining CH2M HILL, he was an executive with Sandia National Laboratories, where he directed Research Centers for Advanced Energy Technology, Material and Process Sciences, and Technology Commercialization. In 2004, Dr. Arvizu was appointed by President George W. Bush to the National Science Board, which is the governing board of the National Science Foundation. Dr. Arvizu has served on a number of boards and advisory committees, including the Secretary of Energy's National Coal Council and the Secretary of Defense's Army Science Board. He has also served on the Technical Advisory Board of the G8 International Renewable Energy Task Force. He has a Bachelors of Science in Mechanical Engineering from New Mexico State University and a Master of Science and Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering from Stanford University.) [861] [862] [863]
- Jan Arps - Published a formula to predict how much crude a well will produce and when it will run dry. Used by almost every oil company in the world today. Should be combined with an Arps equation article.
- Jonny Cohen - Inventor of the GreenShield and Columbia University Mechanical Engineering Student; [864]
- Fabian Bartos (Youngest 30 Under Thirty 2016, Leyden High School Student. 3D Printed Electric Violin and Electric Cello, etc. White House printed and presented at White House.) (http://advancedmanufacturing.org/bartos/)
- Allen Baum - principal engineer, Intel named on over 17 patents in the area of processor architectures; [865]
- George S. Dotson - mechanical engineer; graduated magna cum laude from MIT and with distinction from Harvard Business School; US Army Captain in Vietnam War; President, Helmerich and Payne Drilling; Chairman of the Board, Atwoon Oceanics; one of the wealthiest men in Oklahoma; inducted into the Tulsa Hall of Fame; [866]; [867]
- Georg Duffing (1861-1944) - known for his studies of nonlinear oscillations, using what is now known as the Duffing equation (see e.g. de:Georg Duffing and the biographical references at Duffing equation)
- Konstantin Vasilyevich Frolov (or Konstantin Frolov) - Russian mechanical engineer, Russian Academy of Sciences; Lenin Prize winner; titled Hero of Socialist Labour; awarded medal "Gold Star", two Orders of Lenins, etc.; [868]
- Frank Jackson M.B.E - Communist journalist for the Moscow News turned civil engineer, he was appointed MBE in 1991 for services to the civil engineering industry.?He founded the Jackson Environment Institute at UCL in 1993,and the Jackson Foundation.(http://www.independent.co.uk/news/obituaries/frank-jackson-39004.html) (http://frankjacksonfoundation.org.uk/)
- Chris Gronet - founder of Solyndra, the famous failed solar cell startup [869]
- Standish Lee - civil engineer officer of the court of mysore, many recognitions over a forty year career, recognized for Bangalore model city 1838–1911 Standish Lee Mysore [870]
- Arleo E. Magtibay - businessman and engineer; 1983 TOYM Awardee for Engineering, University of the Philippines; Gamma Sigma Pi fraternity founder; [871]
- Roger Munk - Founder of Airship Industries and Hybrid Air Vehicles, and creator of the Hybrid Air Vehicles HAV 304 Airlander 10.[59] [60] [61]
- William Guy Redmond Jr., 1922–2014 - 60 years advanced engineering at Lockheed Martin, 20 patents, Technical innovation award from NASA for his ultra-simple electronic temperature controller [872]
- Alan S. Tetelman (1936–1978) - UCLA professor, co-founder of Failure Analysis Associates and "world renowned expert in the field of fracture mechanics and its application to the failure of materials in engineering applications" [873] who, in an tragically ironic incident, died as a passenger of PSA Flight 182
- Howard Frank (internet) — Internet Hall of Fame inductee [874]
- Robert Liebeck/Bob Liebeck — [[Boeing][NASA][MIT][UCI]] practicing professor at MIT, adjunct at UC Irvine, developer of the Liebeck Foil, designing BWB next generation jet [875][876][877][878]
- Ermanno Bazzocchi (1914 – 2015), Italian aeronautical engineer and designer (it)
Entertainers
Actors
- A–M
- Elijah Boothe (requested 8/15/17) is a an American actor best known for his roles in Netflix's Luke Cage where he plays the role of Young Cottonmouth (Cornell Cottonmouth). Elijah has also appeared in numerous television shows and feature films including CBS's Golden Boy and Blue Bloods, and the original Netflix film Coin Heist. [879] [880] [881] [882] [883] [884] [885] [886] [887]
- Aldrich Bowker, American actor, born 1875 and deceased, 1947. Played supporting roles in about 25 films between 1939 and 1942, including Abe Lincoln in Illinois (film) (1940) and I Married a Witch (1942). He has biographical entries in a number of books [888] [889]
- Miche Braden, American singer and stage actress. Passes GNG. Here are some sources: [890] [891] [892] [893] [894] [895] [896] [897] [898] [899] [900] [901] [902] [903] [904]
- Laura Brunkala - 06/24/2015 American actress. Best known for her appearances on Key and Peele, Video Game High School, and Sharon 1.2.3. Living in Los Angeles. Also known for her work as a director and producer on The Valley. She starred in The Birthing Field, an independent film that has won several awards including Best Drama, Best Thriller, and Best Director, at several film festivals including HRIFF, Motor City Nightmares, and IFFICA. [905] [906]
- Paul Castro Jr. - Paul Castro Jr is an American stage and film actor, known for his roles in the New York City, Off-Broadway revival of Love and Human Remains as Kane, The Skeleton Twins, [People, Places, Things], Good Ol' Boy, Buffalo Boys and Skook. [907] [www.PaulCastroJr.com][908]
- Micheal Bemma - Canadian Actor / Director; Produced/Directed/Acted in several of his own movies; [909] , [910]
- Parker Coppins. Requested 12/10/14. Actor, most known for the movie Born Bad. Has a popular YouTube channel called MineplexOfficial, where videos of him playing the game Minecraft are uploaded. The channel is one year old as of December 9 and has over 200,000 subscribers. [911] [912] and https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QePaSEOEm-s
- Scott Davies (actor) - best known for playing the title role in Phantom of the Opera; 1
- Megan Davis (actress) - American Actress (Born Tulsa, Oklahoma). She is best known for her role as Maya in the feature film Animus and Hannah on 2 Broke Girls (TV series). She was also on Bones (TV Series). [913] [914] [915] [916]
- Andrés Espinel - Argentinian musical theatre actor; starring Tick Tick... Boom and "(Disney Latino) El Jardin de Clarilu; [917] [918] [919] [920] Tick, Tick... Boom!
- Mel Gorsha - American voice actress, video game writer, founder of Novella Gaming.[62][63][64][65][66]
- Reatha Grey - African-American actress; stars on Off Their Rockers; [921] [922] [923]
- Vera Hartegg (1902–1981)) - actress during World War II; made many propaganda films and married Konstantin Hierl, a major figure in the administration of Nazi Germany Filmography (German) [924]
- Jax Jackson - Transgender Actor; starred in two feature films including Hannah Free and Jamie and Jessie Are Not Together. Originated the role of Jaq in the world premiere of Teddy Ferrara, a play by Christopher Shinn, becoming the first open transgender actor on stage at The Goodman Theatre in Chicago. [925] [926] [927] Category:Transgender and transsexual actors
- Matthew Jure - British film and television actor; most notably played Young George Barlow in 'Waterloo', the final episode of flagship BBC coldcase series 'Waking The Dead' [928] [929] and Day V Lately Day V Lately#cite note-0 [930] in Yell's 'Pulse & Thunder' television campaign. [931] [932]
- Naama Kates - American film actress, composer, and producer. Notable for her roles in independent films Eden and Chloe as well as television show NCIS. [933] [934] [935] [936] [937] [938] [939]
- John Leader (actor) - American voice actor, promo narrator, see [940]
- Leana Lewis - American television and film actress and model; appeared in television series Get Shorty ([941]) ([942]) and Better Call Saul ([943]) ([944]) ([945]) ([946]) ([947]) ([948]) Starred in featured film Bear Creek ([949]) ([950]) ([951]) ([952]) and appeared films such as Journey from the Bogan ([953]) Our Souls At Night ([954]) Granite Mountain ([955]) Rage of the Mummy ([956]) ([957]) and many others ([958]) ([959]) ([960]) She is known worldwide ([961]) ([962]) ([963]) ([964]) and recognized by peers ([965]) ([966]) Further information can be found on her IMDb page ([967]) including her biography and media.
- Dillon McFarlane - Scottish actor and singer; appearing in Operatunity Knox (2018), Crazed (2016), Netflix's Vikingane and The Bank Job [968]; [969];
- N–Z
- Christopher Niosi: American voice actor and content producer, most famous for creating his own animated web series named Tome: Terrain of Magical Expertise, but also had a small role in the american dub of Pokemon as a character named Khoury, as well as the main male character Alex Eggleston in the upcoming JRPG YIIK being made by Ackk studios and set to release in the 4th quarter of 2015. [970] [971] [972]
- Amanda Pennington - American actress and producer; film: Windcroft; TV: All My Children; producing: The Sea Is All I Know; [973]; [974]; [975]
- Wayne Pyle - American actor (born October 29, 1966); known for the films One Percent More Humid, Darcy, Mi America and others, he had a co-starring role on Gotham (TV series) and was a series regular on The Magic Door on WBBM-TV [976][977] [978] [979]
- Timothy Renouf - British actor, born Timothy Christopher de Jersey Renouf in Jersey, Channel Islands, on March 22, 1989. [980], [981]. He was also scouted as a fashion and catwalk model as a teenager [982]
- Shelah Richards - Born Sheila Geraldine Richards in Dublin, Ireland, on May 23, 1903. Irish actor, theatre director, and producer. Member of Abbey Theatre in Dublin. [983], [984], [985]
- Brett Ryback - American stage and television actor, and musical theatre writer and composer. He portrayed the character "Reed" from the web series LG15: The Resistance.[67] In 2013 he also originated the role of Marcus in the Off-Broadway musical Murder for Twoopposite Jeff Blumenkrantz.[68] He has made appearances on multiple Television shows including Modern Family, How I Met Your Mother, House, and Cupid.[69] His one act play WEÏRD won the 2007 Tennessee Williams One-Act Play Competition.[70] In 2013, his musical The Tavern Keeper's Daughter was named "Best Theatre Production" by Pasadena Weekly.[71]
- Rachel Singer - 11/14/2016. Actor. Best known for her role as Chloe in Fight Club. Also known for her work in "The Green Mile (film)", "The West Wing", "ER (TV series)" and an award-winning Southwest Airlines commercial. [986] [987]
- Darsan Solomon (born Darsan Jordean Solomon January 5, 1993) is an American actor best known for his recurring role as Burf on Victorious. Also known for his recurring role as Dave on Community (TV series); [988]; [989]
- Frank Hoyt Taylor - Southwest Virginia actor; appeared in films Warm Springs, A Lesson Before Dying, Junebug & Dreamer; [990]
- Iabou Windimere - American actress known for playing two roles in, and assistant director, for the movie Psycho Killer [991]; [992]; [993] [994] [995]); [996]; [997]; [998]
- Jeff Woodman - voice actor and narrator of audiobooks; provides the voice for IBM's Watson, the Jeopardy!-playing computer; [999]; [1,000]; [1,001]; [1,002]; [1,003]; [1,004]
- Ella Wortley - expand redirect, child actress played Cindy Williams in EastEnders; [[List of EastEnders characters (1998)]; London West End productions of Oliver! (as Pretty Polly) and Matilda the Musical (as Hortensia);[1,005]; The Sound of Music (as Louisa)
Choreographers
- Marven Payne - African-American choreographer, dancer and director; first non-Japanese artistic director of a major dance company in Japan, the Shiki Theater Company; [1,006]
- Robert Scevers - American choreographer and dancer; Premiere Danseur with The Harkness Ballet; [1,007]
Comedians
- Adam Eget - Comedian and manager of The Comedy Store. Currently known as Norm Macdonald's sidekick and co-host on Norm Macdonald Live. Now redirects to Norm Macdonald Live [1,008] [1,009] [1,010] [1,011]
- Troy Dixon (died age 27, December 6, 2008) - Canadian stand-up comic; played "T-Bag" in the web series Pure Pwnage; [1,012]
- Sherman Edwards (comedian) - had a scene in war of the worlds but was eventually cut[1,013]. voted 2012's best stand up comedian by the chicago reader[1,014]. 2012 INNY award winner for 'Best in Stand Up' [1,015]
- Matt Golightly - stand-up comic; appeared on the The Bob & Tom Show (April 11, 2008) - American comedian; [1,016]- American comedian; [1,017] - Professional, Touring stand-up comic based out of Austin, Texas
- Joe Machi [1,018] - notable comedian based in New York City; recurring panelist on the satirical talk show Red Eye w/Greg Gutfeld as the "Frightened Correspondent"; finalist on the reality television talent show Last Comic Standing and winner of its first ever "Sudden Death Round". [1,019]
- Katy Olson (comedian), Comedian, Actress, met her long lost biological half sister in a class at Columbia University [1,020] Olson Is in the upcoming film, The Paper Store starring [Richard Kind]. [1,021] She was also featured in the series Stand Up or Shut Up, which aired on the [Starz] Network in 2006. The story of her reunion with her sister received widespread media attention. [ http://www.cbsnews.com/news/it-feels-like-a-fairy-tale-separated-sisters-meet-in-writing-class/], [1,022]
- Julieanne Smolinski - comedian and blogger; name appears in several articles on wikipedia, known for debating Will Shortz [1,023]
- Steve Trevino - Mexican American Comedian;[1,024]; 1st 1-hour comedy special on Showtime [1,025] Appeared on 'WTF with Marc Maron' [1,026]
- Sapan Verma - Indian stand-up comedian [1,027] [1,028]
Filmmakers
Place new filmmaker requests under the most-appropriate subcategory below.
Directors
- Hervé Bodilis - porn director; best known for work with Marc Dorcel, numerous awards won; fr:Hervé Bodilis
- Abhijeet Choudhary - Indian young theatre playright, screenwriter and director; [1,029]; [1,030]
- Nehal Dutta (born January 30, 1974) - Kolkata, India / Filmmaker, Renowned Film Director in Tollywood Film Industry. His 10 years experience of direction in various projects including corporate commercials, music videos and movies as individual director.[1,031][1,032][1,033]
- Blair Fukumura - director, writer and producer; [1,034]; [1,035]; [1,036]; [1,037];[1,038]; [1,039]; [1,040]
- Brett Ingram - American documentary filmmaker; [1,041][1,042]
- Matt Norman (director) Matt Norman, born 20th October 1971, Tallangatta, Victoria Australia, is an International award winning filmmaker, actor, writer and author well known for his last film Salute about his famous uncle ``Peter Norman`` who was the 200m silver medalist at the 1968 Mexico City Olympics. Peter Norman was part of the ``Black Power Protest`` by wearing an OPHR (Olympic Project for human rights) badge. Matt Norman was the co-author of the book "A Race to remember - The Peter Norman story" Johnstone, Damian; Norman, Matt T. (2008). A Race to Remember: The Peter Norman Story (2008 ed.). JoJo Publishing. ISBN 9780980495027. - Total pages: 320. More information can be found at [72], [73], [74], [75], [76], [77],
- Lonzo Nzekwe - (born September 11, 1974) - director, writer and producer of award-winning films Anchor Baby and Meet The Parents; Winner Best Film 2010 Harlem International Film Festival, Winner of Best Short Film at the 2016 Africa Movie Academy Awards with the film, Meet The Parents; Lonzo Nzekwe is the founder and CEO of IronFlix video streaming platform with special focus on movies and TV shows from Africa and the diaspora [1,043]; [1,044]; [1,045]; Anchor Baby (film); [1,046]; Harlem International Film Festival; [1,047]; [1,048]; [1,049]; [1,050]; [1,051]; [1,052]; [1,053]; [1,054]; [1,055]; [1,056]; [1,057]
- Kenim Obaigbena (also known as Kenim O.) - British-American film director and video journalist of Nigerian descent; [1,058]; [1,059]; [1,060]; [1,061]; [1,062][1,063]; [1,064]; [1,065]; [1,066]
- Shunsuke Okubo - (born May 24, 1994) - director, writer and producer. In addition to directing television commercials and music videos, Okubo is best known for directing the 2016 drama film 20 Seconds of Courage and the upcoming feature film Into the World.; and also sometimes actor from the films you’ve most likely seen, The Wolverine (film), Free Birds, Equals (film), Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children (film) etc… (Mainly uncredited roles); Shunsuke Okubo is the executive (producer) of SO STUDIOS productions with special focus on Films, TV shows and Theatres. He believe in the power of young talents and always support them. [1,067]; [1,068]; [1,069]; [1,070]; [1,071]; [1,072]; [1,073]; [1,074]; [1,075]; [1,076]; [1,077]; [1,078];
- Martin Rawlings-Fein - Jewish-American filmmaker and writer who directs, edits writes films that reflect the transgender experience in San Francisco, produced Perfect Fit ([1,079]), a Tranny Fest selection (2009); and Gillian, a Tranny Fest selection (2010) ([1,080]); prides himself on crafting 100% trans-made films; [1,081]; [1,082]
- Saud Jubaer- (bornAugust 18, 1992) is a New York City-based, young Bengali filmmaker. His first short film Hands (2012) was Official Selection at Girls Impact The World Film Festival organized by Harvard University. His most recent work The God of Small Things (2017)[78] is a Neo-neorealist film shot in Bangladesh, was inspired by his childhood memories of religious rituals and its trauma.[79][80][81][82]]
- Mohamed Roshdy (born May 22, 1986) - Egyptian Director/ Filmmaker, Screen writer and producer of many TV Ads, and Short Movies. [1,083] [1,084] [1,085] [1,086] [1,087] [1,088] [1,089] [1,090]
- Anthony Supreme (born August 20, 1984) - Monroe, NC / Filmaker, Photographer [1,091] [1,092] [1,093] [1,094]
- Robert Tutak Professor of film at Brooklyn College of the City University of New York,[83] graduate of the Lodz Film School of Poland, and founder/director of the Manhattan Film Academy, Robert Tutak has written and directed sixteen short documentaries and short fiction films. His work has been exhibited internationally in Canada, China, Czech Republic, Germany, Finland, France, Israel, Italy, New Zealand, The Netherlands, Poland, Romania, and the UK, among other countries, as well as in the US including at the Museum of Modern Art in New York and the UCLA Film and Television Archive. IMDB [84], United Nations Film Festival[85], International Documentary Film Festival of Amsterdam[86], The News, Poland[87], 7thart[88], Timeout Dubai[89],Brooklyn College [90], Polish Film Institute[91], British Film Institute[92], Cinema Italiano[93], Tutak Films[94], Manhattan Film Academy[95]. National Film School in Łódź, Alumni[96]
- MK Pak - previously known as Eddie Pak, a Malaysian film director, producer and scriptwriter, whose career spans more than 38 years, filled with awards and accomplishments.[97]
Documentary filmmakers
- Victoria Kereszi - documentary filmmaker; films screened at Anthology Film Archives, Athens International Film Festival; educator; cable access advocate; [1,095] and [1,096]
- Alan Raymond and Susan Raymond - documentary filmmakers; Academy Award winners; created PBS documentary An American Family (1973); [1,097]
- Etienne Verhaegen - Filmed many documentaries [1,098] and won many awards for his work [1,099]. I would write the article myself, but almost all non-primary sources are in French (which I don't speak)
- Simran Kaler - filmmaker of Punjab vs Pesticides and Wrestling in Punjab Budhism in Punjab Five rivers still Thirsty Leged of Malerkotla
- Kevin McMahon (Kevin McMahon is an award-winning Canadian director, writer and producer of feature documentaries and documentary TV series.) [1,100]; [1,101]; [1,102]; (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_Made); (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Parks_Project); [1,103]; [1,104]; (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waterlife); [1,105]; [1,106];
- Dai Sil Kim-Gibson - independent filmmaker/writer, known for championing issues of human rights. Her films have garnered many awards, including the Kodak Filmmaker Award, in addition to national broadcast on PBS and on the Sundance Channel in the United States. She has received grants from the Rockefeller and MacArthur Foundations. Formerly professor of religion at Mount Holyoke College with a Ph.D in religion from Boston University, and an author of many articles, "Silence Broken: Korean Comfort Women" is her first book (The Philadelphia Inquirer, "unforgettable") and her second book is "Looking for Don: A Meditation." She has also complied and edited a memoir by her late husband, Donald D. Gibson, "Iowa Sky." Her own memoir, "Korean Sky" is now available at Amazon.com. , editor, director, and co-director and narrator of 'SA-I-GU: From Korean Women's Perspectives [1,107]. This live-action documentary, which was broadcast nationally on PBS' "P.O.V." series, explores the April 1992 Los Angeles riots from the perspective of members of the Korean-American community three months after the event. With the exception of one interview with a young Korean-American man, the program consists of the little-heard thoughts and feelings of Korean-American women shopkeepers who owned many of the businesses destroyed in the violent aftermath of the Rodney King decision.
Producers
- Barry Barnholtz: 67 producing credits [1,108]
- Al Burton - American television producer and composer, noted for producing Hollywood A Go-Go, Charles in Charge, Win Ben Stein's Money, Hello, Larry, Diff'rent Strokes and The Facts of Life and for composing the theme music to his shows. [1,109]. I am having trouble finding WP:RS for this subject, which utterly surprises me given his string of hits.
- Harry Fine - producer of iconic 1960s and 1970s films The Vampire Lovers, Up The Junction and some unique masterworks The Long Day's Dying
- Robert Lamb (producer) - British film producer; BBC documentary about Free and Open Software ([1,110] by OnePlanet Pictures, London)
- Griffin McElroy (currently a re-direct link) - Founding senior video producer for American video game website Polygon. He makes several Let's Play video series on the Polygon YouTube channel, like Monster Factory, Touch the Skyrim, and most notably Car Boys with Polygon colleague Nick Robinson (producer), which has been praised by the New York magazine. He is also known for co-hosting the weekly comedy advice podcast My Brother, My Brother and Me, which recieved over 3.5 million streams in November 2016, and the TV series based on the podcast which premiered on NBC's Seeso streaming platform in February 2017. He also co-hosts a video game podcast provided by Polygon called CoolGames Inc., also with Robinson, along with two other podcasts. Griffin was named one of Forbes' "30 under 30" for the year 2016. [1,111]
- Michael J. Mouncer - American producer; produced award-winning documentary White Lines and The Fever: The Death of DJ Junebug; [1,112]
- Lisa Pellegrene (producer, writer, director, actress and animal advocate) [1,113] [1,114] [1,115] [1,116] [1,117]
- Nick Robinson (producer) - Video producer for American video game website Polygon and brother of electronic music producer Porter Robinson. He makes Let's Play video series on the Polygon YouTube channel, and he is mainly known for the series Car Boys with Polygon colleague Griffin McElroy, which has been praised by the New York magazine. He co-hosts a video game podcast provided by Polygon called CoolGames Inc., also with McElroy.
- Jeffrey Schenck 104 credits! [1,118]
- Mark Schulze (producer) - American video producer from San Diego, California, Director of Photography and videographer, noted for producing The Great Mountain Biking Video, Full Cycle: A World Odyssey and co-producing Massage for Relaxation. He was an early innovator of the helmet cam Helmet camera with some of the earliest known captured POV footage currently digitally accessible to the public [1,119]. Schulze is CEO of San Diego's oldest video production company Crystal Pyramid Productions [1,120] and originator of San Diego's first and largest stock footage library company, New & Unique Videos [1,121], Stock footage, [1,122] Schulze also has a presence at Imdb [1,123] In 2015 Schulze found himself in front of the video camera and not in his customary spot behind it after finding a lost Panasonic Lumix on the ocean floor off La Jolla. The story of how he and his wife reunited the camera with its family months after they had dropped it from their kayak appeared on Inside Edition and Local San Diego news stations [1,124], [1,125], [1,126]. In 1990 Schulze and his wife Patty Mooney traveled around the world to produce a mountain biking documentary Full Cycle: A World Odyssey. They brought mountain biking tourism to South Australia [1,127]. Schulze and Mooney were among the first documented underwater mountain bikers off the coast of Costa Rica in 1994. A clip appeared on Real TV [1,128]. A clip of Schulze riding a mountain bike underwater in the ocean was broadcast on a Pacman commercial [1,129] Patty Mooney (talk) 23:55, 20 February 2016 (UTC)
- Beth Stevenson - Canadian producer/executive producer with 32 credits. Noted for producing/executive producing Chop Socky Chooks,Radio Free Roscoe,My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic, Julius Jr., and more. She has worked with several major networks including: CBC, Disney Jr., Nick Jr., Teletoon, Cartoon Network, MTV, HBO Family, PBS, and more. She was a former partner and executive at Decond Entertainment (now DHX Media) and she has since founded her own company Brain Power Studio and continues to produce/executive produce movies and television series. [1,130] [1,131] [1,132] [1,133] [1,134] [1,135] [1,136] [1,137]
- Kevin Craig West - American actor and producer; [1,138]
- Jacob Worth: YouTube video producer, Corporate journalist, Activist, Jewelry expert. Exposed the Brilliant Earth Diamond Scam. [1,139][1,140][1,141][1,142]
- Traci Kochendorfer- American Short and Reality Web series Producer SafeLink Short Film Transition Phase Filmnoted for executive producing Beckinfield Sci-Fi reality series along with Jonathan Frakes
- Gloria Z. Greenfield An American activist and director/producer, focusing on Israel and the Jewish world. IMDB JWA 1 JWA 2 The production company, has several movies, and there's information on LinkedIn and other news sites as well.
Screenwriters
- Michael Ajakwe Jr. - American screenwriter, producer and director, known for The Brothers García, Between Brothers, and other TV shows [1,143], as well as founding the Los Angeles Web Series Festival
- Adrienne Marie Coins - American screenwriter/producer of Pills (2017) and Ditch (2017); [1,144]; [1,145]
- Anshuman Sinha - Indian television screenwriter; Special:Search/Anshuman Sinha; [1,146]; [1,147]
- Steven L. Bloom - See http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0089237; co-wrote Overnight Delivery, James and the Giant Peach (film) Tall Tale (film), Like Father Like Son (1987 film), The Sure Thing, among others
- Sarah Heyward (American screenwriter and producer known for HBO's Girls (TV series)) [1,148][1,149][1,150][1,151]
- Michelle Lovretta aka M.A. Lovretta - creator/writer/executive producer of TV show Lost Girl (2011–2013). Writer/producer of TV show The Secret Circle (TV series) (2011–2012). Writer for TV show Mutant X (2003–2004).
- Tomas Mureika - American-Canadian Filmmaker (Writer-Director-Producer-Actor), known for Driftwood (1994), #22 on imdb's list of Top-Rated Western Films [[1,152]], Deep in the Heart [[1,153]] and The X Generation [[1,154]]/Playwright-Director-Actor-Producer, known for multi-award-winning Seniors and Easter/Music Journalist for All Music Guide, prolific other freelance sources including Rolling Stone, iTunes and Pitchfork (cited as expert source in numerous Wikipedia articles and AllMusic.com pages) [[1,155]]
Other filmmakers
(casting directors, cinematographers, special-effects people, et al.)
- Akshay Kumar Parija (He is a film producer in Odia cinema prominently in the international arena) [1,156]
- Alixe Gordin - casting director; from late 1960s to the late 1990s; IMDb credits list 25+ titles including Summer of '42, Sophie's Choice, Prizzi's Honor, Klute; [1,157]
- Roberta Hodes - director, script supervisor, writer and other roles; from 1950s to the late 1980s; IMDb credits list 18 titles including On the Waterfront; graduate of Vassar [1,158]
- Alan Shayne - American actor (Broadway and television), casting director (Broadway, film and television), producer (television) and screenwriter (television) and book writer; casting director for films including All the President's Men (1976), The Drowning Pool (1975) and Lovers and Other Strangers (1970); theatre casting director including 1960s original Broadway productions of Oliver! and I Can Get It for You Wholesale; namesake of Alan Shayne Associates; [1,159]; [1,160]; [1,161]; co-wrote book, with Norman Sunshine, Double Life - A Love Story from Broadway to Hollywood (2011; New York City: Magnus Books; Enfield: Publishers Group UK; ISBN 978-1936833023); Template:Worldcat id
- Storm Dain - Youtube Gamer and Film Creator; 9,000+ subscribers; 3,000,000+ views; [1,162];[1,163];[1,164]
- Dado Valentic - Award winning Colourist and Colour Scientist. Best known for his post-production work on Marco Polo Season II, Exodus, Game of Thrones, Sherlock Holmes, Total Recall. ; [1,165]
- Michael L. Fink - American Visual Fx Supervisor for feature films since the 1970's. Known for [[The Golden Compass], [[The Life of Pi], [[Bladerunner] and other films. Has won Academy Award among other honors. Is also and educator and is Chair of the Production Department at the University of Southern California School of Cinematic Arts.
- Philip Edward Alexy - visual effects animator; from late 1990's to present; IMDb credits list 25+ titles including Casper, Jumanji, Flubber, Star Wars: Episode One - The Phantom Menace, Charlotte's Web, A Dog's Purpose; [1,166]
- Oli White - A YouTuber with over 2.4 million subscribers from England. ; [1,167]
- Don Mingaye - Art Director from Hammer Horror era - See [1,168], [1,169], [1,170].
Film Editors
- Evan Lottman (1930-2001) Film Editor: Sophie's choice, Apocalypse Now, The Exorcist,... de:Evan A. Lottman
Magicians
- Samala Venu (magician) - Award-winning Illusionist, magician and hypnotist, National Award Winner and two-time Guinness Record holder [1,171][1,172][1,173][1,174][1,175][1,176][1,177][1,178][1,179][1,180][1,181][1,182][1,183][1,184][1,185][1,186][1,187]
- S Chandran(magician)awarded Doctorate Degree on Magic from International Magicians Society and Merlin Award Winner in 2014.[1,188] He is one of the Guinness Record holder in Singapore.[1,189][1,190]
Musicians
Please request articles about musicians at Wikipedia:Requested articles/music, not here. |
Performance artists
- Rima Das - Indian-Australian model, dancer and choreographer; Miss India Australia Bollywood 2008; Miss Earth Australia Water 2010; community worker and ambassador; Melbourne Bollywood icon; Diwali Ambassador 2009, female protagonist in Indian television series filmed in Melbourne (release 2011). [1,191] [1,192] [1,193] [1,194] [1,195] [1,196] [1,197] [1,198] [1,199] [1,200] [1,201] [1,202]
- Branko Miliskovic (born 1982 in Belgrade) - Serbian artist; working in the performance-art field, long-term living installations, film and photography; living in Hamburg, Germany; working worldwide. [1,203] [1,204] [1,205] Trouble #6, Avril/Mai 2010, Bimestriel Halles de Schaerbeek, Brussels, p.23; Nederlands Film Festival 09, catalogue, Panorama Nieuwe Lichting, p. 242; Time Out Tel Aviv, interviewed by Eitan Buganim, November 26, 2009, Issue 369, p.76; [Alba Art Show] 2008, Associazione Culturale "Amici Dell'Arte" (catalogue) [1,206] [1,207] [1,208] [1,209] [1,210]
- Gregory Popovich - world-champion juggler; top-20 finalist in America's Got Talent; creator of the Popovich Comedy Pet Theater. [1,211] [1,212] [1,213]
- Raye Sunshine - Canadian drag queen; 39th Empress of the Dogwood Monarchist Society. [1,214]
- Jean-Baptiste Thiérrée - French actor and stage performer; founder of contemporary traveling circuses Le cirque bonjour, Le cirque imaginaire and Le cirque invisible inspiration for Cirque de Soliel; married to actress Victoria Chaplin, daughter of Charlie Chaplin. [1,215]
- Charlotte Triebus (*1988) - German performance artist [1,216]
- Julia Anne Turnbull (1822–1887) - American ballet dancer and actress [1,217]
- Alexander Wheill - Canadian musician, producer, actor, video editor. [1,218] [1,219]
- Benjy Wertheimer - Award-winning songwriter, vocalist, composer, and multi-instrumentalist, specialising in kirtan and New Age music. [1,220] (requested 4th Sept 2017)
- Curtis "Unkle" Adams - Canadian musician and motivational speaker; from Regina, Saskatchewan; he specializes in Hip-Hop and is known for making music with positive messages; his most famous songs include 'Original'[1,221], 'I am Stronger'[1,222] and 'At Least a Million'[1,223]; his music is available on YouTube and Spotify. [1,224] (requested 26th February 2018)
Publicist
- George D. Lottman (1900-1942) - American Publicist who invented this job in New York in the roaring twenties in Tin Pan Alley and then in the Brill Building on Broadway next to Times Squart, chronicler, song writer who wrote the lyrics of Anchors Aweigh
Radio personalities
See also the list of requests for Wikipedia:Requested articles/Biography/By profession#Disc jockeys.
- Gettysburg Ghost Gals - Gettysburg Ghost Gals "live" Radio Show hosts on liveparanormal.com; 2014 Gettysburg historical and paranormal world wide radio show with celebrity guests and live from haunted locations throughout America. http://www.liveparanormal.com/gettysburg.html , http://gettysburgghostgals.com/
- Aaron Camaro - Decibel Geek co-host; Crossfire Wrestling Ring Announcer; on-air staff early 2000s for WIFC [1,225]
- Caroline Casey (radio host) - radio talk-show host, KPFA's Something's Happening; author, Making the Gods Work for You (Random House, 1998); [1,226]
- Kevin Hughes British radio and TV personality. Presnetns heart south Wales drive time has done report and showbiz for British , Australian and Canadian TV and radio shows. http://www.kevinhughes.net http://www.heart.co.uk/wales/radio/shows-presenters/weekends/kevin-hughes/
- Mark L. Plotkin - Former WTOP political analyst and radio show host and advocate for DC statehood [1,227]
- Nick Queen - host of the paranormal talk radio show Whispers Radio on WKKX (Ohio); [1,228]
- Jay Soderberg - ESPN producer for several major podcasts downloadable at ESPN's PodCenter; [1,229]
- Christy Taylor - night-show host and music director, XETRA-FM (San Diego, CA); worked for WXRK, WZMR, WFLY, WWYL, WDRE (formerly WXXP) and WICB; [1,230]; WXRK; [[WZMR]; WFLY; [1,231]
- Norman Wilson (radio host) - (full title is Dr. Norman G Wilson, not to be confused with Rev. Norman G Wilson) Host of the well known christian radio show The Wesleyan Hour. Also an international evangelist, he had preached along side and/or was personally acquainted with Billy Graham, James Dobson, Jerry Fallwell, Cliff Barrows, and George Beverley Shay. He was also the author of many books such as Follow the Leader: A Daily Spiritual Journal, People Just Like Us, The Call to Contentment: Life Lessons by the Beatitudes (which he co-authored with Jerry Brecheisen), Journey into Holiness: Experiencing Gods Power for Holy Living, and many others. He has served for many years in the pastorate, taught in a Christian liberal arts college, and been part of a concert and recording ministry. His latest album is entitled "Thinkin' About Home." Norman G. Wilson and his wife, Nancy, are the parents of three grown children and the grandparents of eight. They live in Indianapolis, Indiana. He has been called "the most influential Wesleyan minister since John Wesley." by the General Superintendent of the Wesleyan Church at the time of his retirement, Jerry Pence. (https://www.wesleyan.org/336/the-wesleyan-hour) (http://wesleyananglican.blogspot.com/2008/06/some-reflections-on-wesleyan-church.html)
Television personalities
- James C. Albury - Co-host on the internationally syndicated PBS show Star Gazers [1,232] and Coordinator of the Kika Silva Pla Planetarium [1,233] at Santa Fe College [1,234].
- Ahmad al-Shugairi - Saudi Arabian television preacher, known as a "satellite sheik"; [1,235]
- Matt Blashaw - licensed contractor and television host for HGTV and DIY Network; [1,236]; [1,237]
- Daphne Brogdon - American television host, panelist, comic, and sometimes actress; [1,238]; [1,239]; [1,240]; [1,241]
- Jennifer Delgado - Co-host of America's Morning Headquarters on The Weather Channel, previously with CNN [1,242].
- Jennifer Eichler - Midwestern television and media personality who was known as "The Watson's Girl". [1,243][1,244][1,245][1,246][1,247][1,248][1,249][1,250]
- Trent Fasnacht - General Contractor and Blogger who hosted American Rehab Charleston and Restoring Charleston on HGTV and DIY featuring three of his extreme home renovations. [1,251][1,252][1,253][1,254][1,255][1,256] [1,257][1,258][1,259][1,260]
- Frank Fritz - co-founder of Antique Archeology is an American reality star and antique collector [1,261]; [1,262] (current wikilink is a redirect)
- Mary Hager - Executive Producer of Face the Nation; [1,263]
- Richard Hall (journalist) - British television host for the Travel Channel; journalist; [1,264]
- Missie Rennie - strategic media consultant and is also a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. She has spent 30 years in television news, for the most part at CBS as the executive producer [20 years!!!] of CBS News Sunday Morning [1,265] [1,266], [1,267], [1,268]
- Josh Temple - host of House Crashers; was host of America's Toughest Jobs; some acting; [1,269]; [1,270]; [1,271]; [1,272]; [1,273]
Environmentalists
- Edwin Chota - Peruvian anti-logging campaigner assassinated by illegal loggers in September 2014. Many articles written about him including National Geographic http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2014/09/140911-peru-amazon-illegal-logging-chota-alto-tamaya/ Very inspirational man whose death may be the catalyst to reshape the logging industry of Peru. Worthy of a Wikipedia article due to his mission being to solve some of our biggest global problems.
- Emile Grandjean Danish immigrant born in 1861 who studied forestry before immigrating to the US in 1883. Before Idaho became a State in 1890, he built a winter cabin below Grandjean Peak on a site that later became occupied by Grandjean Ranger Station. Emile joined the Forest Service in 1905, and is credited for his early efforts in organizing many of the conservation activities to protect the land from uncontrolled grazing and mining. Today, Emile’s original forest ranger cabin is part of Sawtooth Lodge located on the south fork of the Payette River. He served as supervisor of Boise National Forest from 1906-1922. The roadside marker dedicated to Emile Grandjean is found on Highway 21 between Lowman and Stanley. [98]
- Tyson-Lord Gray M.Div., S.T.M., M.A., J.D., Ph.D. (Environmentalist, Attorney, Professor, Activist, Theologian, Politician) (http://richmanlawgroup.com/why-rlg/people/) (https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Tyson_Lord_Gray) (https://theamm.org/minister-profile/542102/tyson-lord-justice-gray/) (http://vanderbilt.academia.edu/TysonLordJGray) (http://www.liberalparty.org/lpcandidates/tyson-lord-gray/) (https://ballotpedia.org/Tyson-Lord_Gray) (http://2011.on-climate.com/graduate-scholar-recipients/index.html) (http://www.becreaturekind.org/who-we-are/) (https://www.ithaca.edu/fleff09/festival/fellows/) (http://www.nysba.org/Sections/Environmental_and_Energy/Section_Fellowships_and_Awards/Recipients_Minority_Fellowship_in_Environmental_Law.html) (https://law.pace.edu/food-law-externship) (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCZ_Cj4T0vlf1EmoaJ0PE--A) (www.greencommunityvision.com)
- Douglas H. Pimlott - wildlife biologist; ecologist; professor of ecology, forestry, environmental studies and lecturer in landscape architecture; multiple citizen activist organization founder; known before his death in 1978 as one of Canada's foremost environmentalists; carnivore and wolf conservation and management pioneer; champion of wild spaces and protected areas in Ontario and across Canada; pioneering international wolf researcher with the UN's IUCN in Switzerland; one of the first who in published articles advocated for the reintroduction of wolves into Yellowstone National Park (circa 1972); Arctic Canadian environmentalist, Inuit and First Nations collaborator and supporter; campaigner against offshore drilling in the Beaufort Sea; author of dozens of technical and semi-technical publications and several books including Oil Under the Ice and The World of the Wolf; founding catalyst and/or president of the Canadian Nature Federation, the Canadian Arctic Resources Committee, the Algonquin Wildlands League, the Canada-US Environmental Council, the Canadian Association for the Human Environment; founder of the Environmental Studies Program at Innes College, University of Toronto; conservation philosopher; inspirer of a generation of his students and colleagues. Born Quyon Quebec January 1920; Died Richmond Hill, Ontario July 1978) Please see The Canadian Encyclopedia and Wikipedia articles about wolves, the Canadian Arctic, etc.
- Chad Pregracke (born c. 1976) - environmentalist; 2013 CNN Hero of the Year, 2002 Jefferson Award for Public Service, known for mass cleanup efforts along the Mississippi, Missouri and other Midwestern U.S. rivers; efforts have been chronicled in books, National Geographic ([1,274]) and television (e.g., the Discovery Channel; founded Living Lands and Waters ([1,275])
Espionage and intelligence
- Robert Glynn Faithfull - WWII British intelligence; Major in the British Army; father of Marianne Faithfull; husband of the Baroness Erisso Eva von Sacher-Masoch; part-founder of Braziers Park, Ipsden, Oxfordshire; distant cousin of actress Joanna Lumley
- Glenn S. Gerstell - General Counsel of the (US) National Security Agency and American lawyer. Often quoted in Washington Post [1,276] and similar publications. Appointed in 2015 [1,277]
- Pawel Monat Polish spy assigned to Polish Embassy in the United States in height of the Cold War, defected to west. paywalled Time article, on Amazon non-fiction book he wrote, scan on Google books of Life magazine article, appeared on television's To Tell the Truth but not much information there.
Fashion
- Emanuele Bertoli - (born July 3 1967) owner of BerBrand, a company that makes mother-of-pearl buttons for clothing designers like Giorgio Armani and Stefano Ricci ([1,278]) ([1,279])([1,280])
- Meeghan Dunleavy – Beauty pageant titleholder; Ms Kansas United States 2015, Ms Kansas United States 2014, Top 10 at Ms United States 2014 and Top 15 at Ms United States 2015 for the Miss United States Organization; Fashion model with Models and Images; Fitness Model; National Physique Committee bikini competitor; Wichita Thunder Lightning Girl; reality tv cast member for The Fashion Hero [1,281][1,282][1,283][1,284][1,285][1,286]
- Angelina Glass - beauty-pageant winner; Miss Germany Universe 2007, Miss Deutschland 2005, Miss Berlin 2005; [1,287]; [1,288]
- Davina Hull (Davina Hull was the very first Miss Africa Idaho and Miss Black Idaho, she did an amazing amount for her community and world in her time as a pageant queen even though she face no community support and some discrimination) ( Miss Africa Idaho site, Idaho State Journal: [1,289] [1,290], Human Library, and other)
- Tristin Huntamer - American Glamour, Nude, Pin-Up, Art, and Alternative Fashion model and famous internet featured model, Ice hockey blogger for Rink Rocket, Libertarian and Austrian Economics activist, Modeled in America and Italy,; [1,291][1,292][1,293][1,294][1,295][1,296][1,297][1,298][1,299]
- Levi Jackson (model) - Levi Jackson is an American model and hair stylist. He has most recently appeared in DNA magazine, an Australian monthly magazine targeted to gay men. Born in Olathe, Kansas, he lives in New York City. [1,300]
- Lendale Johnson - American international Model Signed with Oyama Model Management in Cape Town, South Africa(2014), 2015 celebrity guest model and tennis player for Black Fashion Week USA (USA tennis player on the ITF), Signed autographs for Sickle Cell Anemia in 2014, Extra on Fox TV's 2015 Empire season 1 pilot, cast member and assistant producer for HuLu's 2015 reality TV show The Model Idea; Was auctioned off in 2015 in Chicago for American Heart Association "Fifty Shades of Red, dine with a celebrity" [1,301][1,302][fifty-shades-of-red-presented-by-national-association-of-professional-women-chicago-chapter][1,303][1,304][1,305][www.notedfashion.net][1,306][1,307][1,308][1,309][1,310][1,311][1,312][1,313][1,314] - Person claiming to be the subject of this entry came onto IRC and said there was a source available at the domain name "notedfashion.net" or "notedfashion.co.za" about a charity trip he took to South Africa in 2014. The site is dead, but may come back. Additional sources may be available under this person's entry at Wikipedia:Requested articles/Sports#Tennis players
- Sanjana Jon (New York based Fashion designer, sister of Anand Jon) (https://lifeandtrendz.com/exclusive-chat-fashion-designer-sanjana-jon/)
- Tweetie de Leon - Filipino model; [1,315]
- Stefano De Martino - Italian dancer, model, showman, choreographer, businessperson and ballet dancer - es:Stefano De Martino [1,316] [1,317]
- Carmiezinas Nicolosi - Italian model; Mutya Ng Pilipinas 2005 winner; [1,318]; MOD
- Ann Person - Founder of Stretch and Sew an international business built around knit fabrics, one of Oregon's first female entrepreneurs ;[1,319]; [1,320]; [1,321]
- Nick Snider (born August 31, 1988) - American fashion model; Prada VMan magazine, L'Uomo Vogue and i-D, Forbes top-10 male supermodel; [1,322]
- Kennedy Summers (kennedy summer is hollywood actress and playboy model ) ([1,323]) ,([1,324]) , ([1,325]) ,([1,326])
- Nastya Zhidkova - Russian model; noted for being an albino. Has worn designs from BCBG Max Azria.[1,327]
Feminist figures
- Anna Coote, British co-author of various feminist books, writer and advocate on social policy Guardian profle
- Catherine Lundy - heroine from the Battle of Lundy's Lane (part of the War of 1812); [1,328]
Folklorists
- Judith McCulloh (1935–2014) - American folklorist; NEA National Heritage Fellow; Statement on the Death of NEA National Heritage Fellow Judith McCulloh; Judy McCulloh, 1935–2014; editor at the University of Illinois Press
- Carl Wilhelm von Sydow - Swedish professor of ethnology (Scandinavian and Irish folklore)}; father of Max von Sydow sv:Carl Wilhelm von Sydow
Geographers
- Harlan H. Barrows (Harlan Harland Barrows) (1877–1960) - American geographer primarily known for his Association of American Geographers presidential address Geography as Human Ecology; Template:Worldcat id
- Jasper S. Bilby (Jasper Sherman Bilby, 1864–1949), Chief Signalman for the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey (1884–1937), designer of the Bilby tower (in 1926). Refs: Indiana Historical Society, NOAA #1, NOAA #2, Geocaching #1, with PD images, Amazon author page
- Samuel Whittemore Boggs (1889–1954) - American political geographer and cartographer; developed the Boggs eumorphic projection, author of International boundaries: a study of boundary functions and problems (1940); Samuel Whittemore Boggs: An Appreciation; ja:サミュエル・ホイットモア・ボッグス
- John R. Borchert (1918–2001) - American geographer, who contributed to several aspects of the practical application of geographical concepts [1,329]
- Neil Brenner (born 1969) - American urban theorist, professor at the Harvard Graduate School of Design; a main proponent of the state/space approach on political geography; gscholar
- Jean Brunhes (1869–1930) - French geographer, one of the founding figures of human geography fr:Jean Brunhes
- Ian Burton (born 1935) - co-author of the influential book The Environment as Hazard; Template:Worldcat id [1,330]
- Alexey Butakov (1816–1869) - Russian admiral and explorer ru:Бутаков, Алексей Иванович
- William A. V. Clark (born 1938) - population geographer at UCLA studying residential mobility, migration and housing choice [1,331] gscholar
- Philip N. Cooke (Philip Cooke (planner)) (born 1946) - British regional planner and geographer; a chief proponent of the concept of regional innovation systems; earlier in his career, conductor of the Economic and Social Research Council "locality studies" research programme (officially called "The Changing Urban and Regional System in the United Kingdom") [1,332]
- Susan L. Cutter (born 1950) - developed the "hazards of place" approach on social vulnerability [1,333]
- (Sir) Henry Clifford Darby (1909–1992) - British geographer; known for his works on the historical geography of England; first geographer to be elected to the British Academy; Template:Worldcat id; Wikidata: Henry Clifford Darby (Q18911658)
- Stephen Graham (urbanist) (born 1965) - British urbanist and geographer; theorist on urban technology and network infrastructures; de:Stephen Graham (Stadtforscher); Template:Worldcat id; gscholar
- John Fraser Hart (born 1924) - American geographer, taught until he was 91; StarTribune article University of Minnesota article
- Jack D. Ives (born 1931) - British mountain researcher, recipient of several notable awards (Patron's Medal, Sir Edmund Hillary Mountain Legacy Medal, King Albert Mountain Award); [1,334]
- Preston James (Preston E. James) (1899–1986) - American geographer; known for his works on Latin America and the history of geographical thought Template:Worldcat id
- Edgar Kant (1902–1978) - Estonian geographer at Tartu (rector 1941–1944) and Lund; Edgar Kant (1902-1978): A Baltic Pioneer et:Edgar Kant
- Eric Lambin (born 1962) - Belgian geographer; researcher on land use and land cover change, especially its governance and impact on the environment; also author of two popular science books; Profile of Eric F. Lambin (PNAS article); fr:Éric Lambin; gscholar
- John Leighly (1895–1986) - American geographer and climatologist at Berkeley [1,335]
- Fred Lukermann (Fred E. Lukermann) - geographer; Template:Worldcat id
- Timothy R. Oke (T. R. Oke) (born 1941) - Canadian geographer; "the world's leading expert on urban microclimates", according to the Royal Canadian Geographical Society; gscholar; pl:Timothy Oke
- James J. Parsons (1915–1997) - American geographer, prominent member of the Berkeley School of Latin Americanist Geography; memorial
- Gerald F. Pyle – American medical geographer; wrote books including Diffusion of Influenza Patterns and Paradigms; [1,336]
- Edward A. Reeves (Edward Ayearst Reeves) (1862–1945) - surveyor and map curator at the Royal Geographical Society
- Harold Rose (geographer) (Harold M. Rose) (1930–2016) – First and, as of 2016, only Afro-American president of the Association of American Geographers; also one of the first geographers to do research on urban segregation, crime and violence; obituary
- Richard Joel Russell (1895–1971) – American geomorphologist and climatologist [1,337] [1,338]
- David Sibley (geographer) (born 1940) - British geographer, primaly known for his book Geographies of exclusion; a biography can be found in the book Key Thinkers on Space and Place
- Barry Smit (born 1948) - Canadian geographer, one of the first geographers to study climate change adaptation [1,339] [1,340]
- J. Russell Smith (Joseph Russell Smith) (1874–1966) - American geographer known for his works on agriculture, especially the book Tree Crops: A Permanent Agriculture from 1929; Template:Worldcat id; Wikidata: J. Russell Smith (Q20122757); J. Russell Smith: Geographer, Educator, and Conservationist (book from 1964 about him)
- James Alfred Steers (J. A. Steers) (1899–1987) - British geographer; Cambridge-based coastal geomorphologist; Wikidata: James Alfred Steers (Q18529920)
- LeRoy M. Tolman, globe-maker and cartographer (died 2015-09-12, aged 84). Worked for Replogle Globes. O'Donnell, Maureen, "Globe-maker's chief cartographer", Chicago Sun-Times, September 17, 2015, (all of) p. 25. Requested 2015-09-17.
- Derwent Whittlesey (1890–1956) - American geographer and historian; one of the few professors of geography at Harvard; wrote, among other topics, on political and agricultural geography ja:ダウエント・ホイットルセー [1,341]
- Harold St. John Loyd Winterbotham (Harold St John Loyd Winterbotham) (1878–1946) - British brigadier and surveyor; director of the Ordnance Survey 1930–1934; often misspelled as Harold St. John Lloyd Winterbotham [1,342]
- Ermanno Stradelli (1852 – 1926), Italian explorer, geographer and photographer (it)
Historians
- Catherine Allgor - author, historian, public intellectual; award-winning 1st book Parlor Politics; 2nd book A Perfect Union nominated for the George Washington Book Prize; appointed to a Presidential Commission (James Madison Memorial Fellowship Foundation); 2012-2105, Director of Education at the Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens [1,343]; presently President of the Massachusetts Historical society [1,344]
- John M. Beattie (1932–2017) - historian of crime and criminal justice in early modern England, author of the foundational book Crime and the courts in England, 1660-1800; Template:Worldcat id
- Manu Bhagavan - historian of modern India and human rights; books include The Peacemakers: India and the Quest for One World; Template:Worldcat id
- Ruth Bettina Birn (et) – Holocaust historian
- Peter B. Brown - historian; specializes in Russian history and author of 'How Muscovy Governed: Seventeenth-Century Russian Central Administration'. See <https://www.ric.edu/history/faculty_Details.php?id=9054>
- Vincent L. Clark - a historian who was awarded THE PAUL R. COPPOCK ANNUAL AWARD by the West Tennessee Historical Society [1,345]
- Jane Hampton Cook - author and historian; wrote American Phoenix: John Quincy and Louisa Adams, the War of 1812, and the Exile that Saved American Independence[99]
- Christian Essellen (1823–1859) - German historian and author; wrote dramatic poem "Babylon (German Life and Civilization)" de:Christian Esselen
- Andrew K. Frank - author and historian; Professor at Florida State University, author of Creeks and Southerners: Biculturalism on the Early American Frontier, Routledge Historical Atlas of the American South, and The Seminoles, Leading scholar of southeastern Indians and the Seminole Tribe of Florida. Involved in mediation and preservation of ancient Tequesta site in Miami. See <http://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/community/miami-dade/article2087816.html> <https://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/colleges/florida-states-unusual-bond-with-seminole-tribe-puts-mascot-debate-in-a-different-light/2014/12/29/5386841a-8eea-11e4-ba53-a477d66580ed_story.html> and <http://history.fsu.edu/People/Faculty-by-Name/Andrew-K.-Frank>
- Donald S. Frazier - author and historian; Professor of History; author of Blood and Treasure, Cottonclads, Fire in the Cane Field, Thunder Across the Swamp, and Blood on the Bayou. Editor of The U.S. and Mexico at War and Love and War. Leading scholar of the Trans-Mississippi Theater in the American Civil War. Education entrepreneur who created the McWhiney History Education Group.
- Igor Gusev (historian) - a Riga-based historian who studies Holocaust in Latvia and argues that the Latvian government distorts 20th-century Latvian history [1,346] [1,347]
- Ian Hancock (historian) - Australian historian. From http://ncb.anu.edu.au/people/ncb-visitors : "Ian Hancock is an historian and biographer. He has written extensively on the political history of Uganda and Southern Rhodesia/Rhodesia/Zimbabwe; he has also lectured in imperial, colonial and African history at Monash University and in African, Australian and British history at the Australian National University. Now Ian is considered to be the pre-eminent historian of the Liberal Party in Australia. He has written many entries on Liberal Party figures for the Australian Dictionary of Biography, including the acclaimed article on former Prime Minister Harold Holt and, in 2002, published a full-scale biography of the former prime minister, Sir John Gorton. His last book, Nick Greiner: A Political Biography, was published in 2013. Ian is currently working on biographies of public service mandarin, Sir Frederick Wheeler, former Liberal Senator, Sir John Carrick, and former federal Attorney-General, Tom Hughes."
- Alex Handy - Videogame historian, founder of the Museum of Art and Digital Entertainment. "Gertrude Stein of video games" [1,348]
- Margaret Atwood Judson - American historian, specializing in British political history of the Tudor and Stuart period; university professor and academic NY Times obituary
- Visvaldis Lacis - a historian in Latvia who once joined the Waffen-SS [1,349]
- Simon Loseby - British historian, University of Sheffield professor of late antique and early medieval history; specializes on exchange-systems; Gaul/Francia; the Mediterranean; Gregory of Tours; [1,350]
- Calvin Luther Martin - former professor of history at Rutgers University; books include Keepers of the Game (University of California Press), In the Spirit of the Earth (Johns Hopkins University Press), The Way of the Human Being (Yale University Press); Template:Worldcat id
- Hoffman Nickerson 1/15/2013 - author of Warfare in the Roman Empire; the Dark and Middle Ages, to 1494 A.D., 1925 and Democracy and Massacre referenced here Criticism of democracy with a link to http://www.unz.org/Pub/AmMercury-1932apr-00391?View=PDF ; Saratoga campaign and The Turning Point of the Revolution referenced in the bibliography.
- Kurt Pätzold - German historian de:Kurt Pätzold
- Emil Pocock - a Professor of History and American Studies at Eastern Connecticut State University who studies history of malls- [1,351]
- Daniel M. Roberts Jr. - historian; Professor of Liberal Arts at the University of Richmond; host of A Moment In Time history radio program, which is heard by more than four million listeners daily on over 146 radio stations nationwide. [1,352] [1,353] [1,354]
- Edmund Russell/Edmund P. Russell, Joyce and Elizabeth Hall Distinguished Professor of United States History at the University of Kansas; developed the approach of "evolutionary history" as a means to synthesize research on environmental history and history of technology; faculty profile, gscholar profile
- Edward Shorter (de) - Canadian social historian of medicine, especially psychiatry [1,355]
- John Springhall - Professor Emeritus at the University of Ulster. He is the author of the book Youth, Popular Culture, and Moral Panics [1,356] [1,357]
- Alexandre Strokanov Ph.D. - Professor of History at Lyndon State College. [1,358] [1,359] [1,360] [1,361] [1,362] [1,363] [1,364] [1,365] [1,366] [1,367]
- Quintard Taylor - Professor Emeritus, Dorothy Bullitt Professor of American History at the University of Washington. Just delivered the 2016 Denny Lecture at MOHAI (which is why I noticed he's missing). faculty page, home page, http://www.blackpast.org/ (which he founded) biographical article on HistoryLink
- Jon Tuska - film historian and author; cited many times on Wikipedia (Special:Search/Jon Tuska); [1,368]
- Alexandre Vautravers - Associate Professor of History and International Relations, Webster University, Université de Genève. [1,369]. Founder of the SECURITY FORUM in 2007. Editor in chief of the Revue militaire suisse (RMS+) [1,370].
- Clarence Earl Walker - Distinguished Professor of Department of History of University of California, Davis who authored Deromanticizing Black History and We Can't Go Home Again [1,371] [1,372] [1,373]
- Judith Walkowitz should have a wiki page! She is a hugely influential historian - http://history.jhu.edu/directory/judith-walkowitz/
- Sam Bass Warner, Jr. (born 1928) - Urban historian, wrote historiographies on Boston, Philadelphia, and the development of American cities in general; Template:Worldcat id; Wikidata: Sam Bass Warner, Jr. (Q21264964)
- James Graham Wilson - Historian at the United States Department of State. [1,374]. Author of The Triumph of Improvisation: Gorbachev's Adaptation, Reagan's Engagement, and the End of the Cold War. [1,375]
- Sam Wineburg a Professor of the Stanford University who wrote Reading Like a Historian: Teaching Literacy in Middle and High School Classrooms - [1,376] [1,377]
- Julian E. Zelizer - Professor of History and Public Affairs, Princeton University. [1,378]
Inventors
- Kiara Nirghin (A teen inventor that won the Google Science Fair in 2016 with her invention titled "No more thirsty crops." She has been placed on the Times Top 30 most influential teens list and been featured in various publications, including Scientific American) (https://www.googlesciencefair.com/en/)
- Lance Von Allmen (Inventor who created a material that absorbs oil designed to assist in cleaning up oil spills in aquatic conditions.) (Free to Choose Part 5; https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YRLAKD-Vuvk; Possible first person story; https://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20101031202503AAz4pZB).
- Justinian Caire (One of the investors in Santa Cruz Island in the late 1800's. He was a French immigrant and founder of a successful San Francisco hardware business that sold equipment to miners. By the late 1880s Caire had acquired all of the shares of the Santa Cruz Island Company.) (http://www.independent.com/news/2013/aug/15/justinian-caire/)
- Alan Cocconi - engineer, inventor, and developer of technology needed for modern electric cars and airplanes; founder of AC Propulsion; has registered several patents [1,379][1,380][1,381]
- Ariel R. Davis - inventor of the first slider multiple tap autotransformer dimmer and numerous other patents relating to stage lighting. Davis filed for the transformer patent (USRE23409 E)[100] in 1941. He also created the first slider cross connect panel for connecting lighting circuits to individual dimmers. Many schools, colleges, churches and buildings in the United States have had his products installed. He founded the Ariel Davis Mfg. Co. in Provo, Utah and later moved it to Salt Lake City, Utah. He sold the company around 1970 so he could focus on inventing when it was renamed ElectroControls. His inventions include one for solar heating (US 4136668 A)
- Riccardo Giraldi - Italian Inventor, Designer and Creative Director. Explores new technologies focusing on user experience and designed experiences that connect physical and digital. Award winner designer shaping the future of human computer interaction. Now Creative Director at Microsoft working on HoloLens [1,382]. Invented Escape Flight [1,383],[1,384],[1,385],[1,386],[1,387], Mind Controlled Scalextric (first mind controlled race game) [1,388],[1,389],[1,390], Creative Director of Google Web Lab[1,391],[1,392],[1,393], Honda The Experiment, EELs [1,394], and numerous other award winning projects [1,395],[1,396],[1,397]. Speaker at FITC [1,398], Cannes, Imagination Day, Kikk [1,399], Glugg[1,400][1,401]. [1,402],[1,403],[1,404],[1,405],[1,406],[1,407],[1,408],[1,409]
- Johnathan Goodwin - co-founder of SAE Energy; [1,410]; [1,411]
- William R. Pape - Co-Founder of Verifone, EVP and Co-Founder of TraceGains, Inc. Holder of multiple patents, professor, rancher, author, blogger, co-designer of the first commercial spell checker system for computers. [1,412]
- Stephen M. Key - award winning inventor and patent holder of the SpinLabel Rotating Label Technology.[1,413] Licensed over 30 products in the past 30 years. Co-Founder of inventRight - Helping people bring ideas to market for over 10 years. Author of the One Simple Idea book series. [1,414];[1,415];[1,416]
- Jan Vinzenz Krause - German businessman; director, Institute for Condom Consultancy; invented a spray-on condom; [1,417];[1,418]
- Frank J. Richtig Blacksmith; regarded for much of the 20th century as among the greatest custom knifemakers in the United States.[101] Perhaps best known today for inventing a steel heat-treatment process that achieved exceptional results but was lost when he died; some of today's leading knife makers are still working to recreate it.[102]
- Stephen L. Rush - inventor of organic hydrolysis and combination ethanol / bio-diesel plant [1,419], "Systems and Processes for Cellulosic Ethanol Production" application Ser. No. 12/014,090, filed January 14, 2008; [1,420]
- Richard Sclafani - invented the see-through 0s New Year's Eve glasses; [1,421]
- David Schurig - EE professor, inventing invisibility cloak; [1,422]
- Charlie Sobcov - Ottawa student who invented window decals transparent to humans, but not to birds; [1,423], but his "invention" had been on sale for more than a year
- Allan Thieme - Inventor of the Amigo in 1968, the world's first power operated vehicle, more commonly known as a mobility scooter. Thieme's company Amigo Mobility is still operating in Michigan. In 1977, the Social Security Administration added power operated vehicles (Amigos) to coverage under Medicare [1,424]. In 1982, Amigo Mobility was #212 on Inc.'s Fastest Growing Companies list [1,425] and Allan Thieme was named the US Small Businessman of the Year. In 2012, Allan Thieme of Amigo Mobility was named the Michigan Manufacturer of the Year [1,426].
- Stanislav V'Soske - inventor of the tufted-wool rug in 1925; custom and museum-quality rug manufacturer with collaborations with 20th-century artists and architects; [1,427]; [1,428]
Journalists
See also the list of requests for Documentary Filmmakers.
- Maximillian Alvarez - Columnist at The Baffler magazine [1,429], outspoken critic of the corporatization of higher education in articles for The Baffler and the Chronicle Review and advocate for graduate student rights, currently serving as graduate student representative for the American Comparative Literature Association [1,430], dual-PhD candidate in Comparative Literature & History at the University of Michigan [1,431], BA in Slavic Languages & Literatures from the University of Chicago, widely cited.
- Panthi Kishor - New York based Journalist. TV Host. Founder and editor in chief of Khasokhas Weekly, a Nepali newspaper published in New York. Host of ‘Talk of the Town USA’. Official Website.
- Carl Azuz - (Anchor of CNN 10, daily 10 minute broadcast of current events designed for middle and high school students) (http://www.cnn.com/profiles/carl-azuz)
- Jeremy Balan - Founder of SanFranPreps.com, a non-profit online publication covering high school sports in San Francisco. [1,432] [1,433]
- Jon Banner: ABC News-senior executive producer is leaving ABC News after more than 25 years at the company. Banner is leaving the TV news business altogether, joining beverage and snack behemoth PepsiCo as senior VP of global strategy and planning [1,434]
- Erwin D. Canham - former editor of The Christian Science Monitor; wrote The Authentic Revolution, published July 15, 1950, added to the Congressional Record, July 25, 1950, and widely referenced in bibliographies; Template:Worldcat id
- Ingrid Ciprian-Matthews: was named Vice President of CBS News in March 2011 [1,435]
- David Corvo: named Senior Executive Producer, Primetime News of NBC News, overseeing Dateline NBC and the new primetime newsmagazine broadcast with Brian Williams, in June 2011. Formerly the Executive Producer of Dateline, Corvo also oversees other primetime news programming. Corvo began his broadcast journalism career in 1975 as a news writer and producer at KNXT (now KCBS) [1,436]
- Marcia Coyle - Chief Washington Correspondent for The National Law Journal; [http://authors.simonandschuster.com/Marcia-Coyle/79843795/biography
- Sammy Darko – Ghanaian journalist. He is currently BBC correspondent in Ghana.[1,437], [1,438], [1,439], [1,440], [1,441].[1,442].
- Miguel Diocuore - online news magazine editor; [1,443]
- Katie Eastman - reporter for ABC 5 News in Des Moines, Iowa; shoots, writes and edits stories for 10 p.m. broadcast; degree in broadcast journalism from Emerson College in Boston; during college, worked for EIV News and won several college Associated Press awards and two New England Emmy Awards for best college newscast; [1,444]; [1,445] [1,446]
- David Eimer, a British journalist who was the correspondent in China for Sunday Telegraph from 2007 to 2012 and authored the book The Emperor Far Away [1,447] [1,448] [1,449] [1,450]
- Laurence Eyton, a journalist who is a correspondent in Taiwan for The Economist and once had a column in Taiwan Daily and authored the book Break the myth [1,451]
- Michael Fitzgerald (writer) - [1,452]
- Liam Fitzpatrick (journalist): TIME senior editor, former TIME senior writer, former daily Hong Kong-newspaper columnist, Hong Kong dance-party pioneer, iPhone photographer, Hong Kong Eurasian poet. [1,453] [1,454] [1,455] [1,456] [1,457] [1,458]
- Corinna da Fonseca-Wollheim - reporter and music critic for the New York Times. Formerly with The Classical Review, a mini-biography can be found in their announcement of her departure. [103] Having been born in Germany and grown up in Brussells, gone to college in England, receiving a PhD in Italian Literature, she is fluent in English, German, Dutch, French, Italian, and Spanish. [104] She has written about her grandfather, who perished in the Buchenwald concentration camp, and her grandmother.[105] She interned in Jerusalem with the Associated Press, where she met her husband, Bret Stephens, who at the time was an editor at The Jerusalem Post. They now live in New York, where Stephens is a NYT columnist, and have three children. Other sources include Tablet [106] and Facebook [107].
- Susannah Frame - Chief Investigative Reporter at KING 5 Media Group, the largest media company in the Pacific Northwest, which is based in Seattle, WA. http://www.king5.com/article/about-us/team-bios/susannah-frame/281-94586869, http://www.seattlemag.com/article/most-influential-king-5-news-susannah-frame, https://bellevuerotary.net/susannah-frame-king-5-chief-investigative-reporter/, http://www.peabodyawards.com/award-profile/hanfords-dirty-secrets-king-tv-seattle, https://www.washingtonpolicy.org/publications/detail/king-5-news-susannah-frame-receives-award-for-ongoing-investigation-into-state-ferries-waste
- Donna Francavilla - freelance CBS Radio News contributor covering Alabama, Agence France Press writer, President/Founder of Frankly Speaking Communications LLC, http://issuu.com/jodonnell/docs/pm_flipbook_b-metro_july_15__2_/1, https://www.youtube.com/user/FranklySpeakingCom, http://280living.com/people/francavilla-takes-12-awards-in-statewide-communications-cont/, http://www.al.com/living/index.ssf/2012/07/my_landscaping_success_donna_f.html
- Christopher Freeze - Christopher L. Freeze is a commercial pilot, flight instructor, Aviation World Record Holder[108], and author of multiple aviation books and magazine articles.[109] Freeze has amassed nearly 3000 hours of in-flight instruction and been published multiple publications, including "Air & Space"[110], "AOPA Pilot"[111], "AOPA Flight Training"[112], "General Aviation News"[113], "EAA Sport Aviation"[114], and "Air Line Pilot" magazines.[115]
- Patrice Gaines - journalist, author and NPR commentator; [1,459]
- Clinton W. Gilbert - 20 years writing and editing New York papers, moved to Washington in 1918, as Philadelphia Public Ledger correspondent. Wrote Mirrors of Washington and Behind the Mirrors of Washington [1,460]
- Giovanni Giovannini - it:Giovanni Giovannini
- Lawrence A. Gobright journalist, correspondent for the Associated Press for thirty years. Reported on Abraham Lincoln's administration and the Civil War. Was at Ford's Theater minutes after Lincoln was shot. Dispatches to AP.
- Walter Goodman (writer) (1927–2002), a writer and editor, known for his work for The New York Times. At The Times he was a member of the Editorial Board, Deputy Editor of both the Book Review and Arts and Leisure sections, Cultural Critic and Television. Author of nine books, the best known of which is The Committee, a history of the House Un-American Affairs Committee (HUAC) (1968, Farrar Straus & Giroux). Received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1973. Archived articles from The New York Times: [1,461] Obituary in The New York Times: [1,462] links to TV interviews on The Open Mind, PBS, host Richard Heffner: [1,463]] (1983) [1,464]] (1993) [1,465]] (1993) Other details can be found in Who's Who editions before Mr. Goodman's death in 2002.
- Ekaterina Gordon - Russian journalist and singer-songwriter who announced plans to participate in the 2018 Russian presidential election and said that once elected she would abolish the presidential post and make Russia a parliamentary republic; [1,466]
- Jack Greenberg (reporter) - Scholastic News Kids Press Corps reporter; interviewed John McCain, Jodi Rell, Tim Russert, Brian Williams, etc.; [1,467]
- Rome Hartman - Hartman most recently served as Executive Producer at BBC News, where he developed, launched and produced U.S.-targeted newscast BBC World News America. Before that, Hartman spent 24 years at CBS, including serving as the executive producer of The CBS Evening News, where he oversaw the launch of CBS Evening News With Katie Couric. He also produced more than 100 reports for 60 Minutes and served as the senior producer on 60 Minutes II. [1,468]
- Dominic Holden, writes for Buzzfeed, won the 2016 Journalist of the Year Award from the National Lesbian and Gay Journalism Association [1,469], number 17 on the Advocate's "Top 50 Most Influential LGBTs in the Media" for 2017 [1,470], which is to say the highest-ranking person on that list who lacks an article, immediately ahead of Nate Silver and Frank Bruni, both of whom have long had articles. Picture available on Commons if anyone writes this. I'd write it myself, but WP:COI: I know him and most of his family. - Jmabel | Talk
- Jack F. Hullett - The Washington Post news editor [1,471]
- Neil Irwin - The Washington Post journalist and author of The Alchemists: Three Central Bankers and a World on Fire.[1,472]
- Rich Jaroslovsky - Online News Association founder and first president of the Online News Association; founding Managing Editor of The Wall Street Journal Online; former WSJ White House correspondent and national political editor; personal-technology columnist for Bloomberg News. [1,473]
- Richard Johnson (journalist) - Long time gossip columnist for the New York Post. [1,474] [1,475]
- Shehab Khan - Reporter and Political columnist, The Independent; known for his coverage during the UK general election of 2017, as well as series of scoops regarding the Department of Health in the UK. [1,476][1,477]
- Sputnik Kilambi - war reporter, Radio France Internationale; known for her 2002 exposure of sexual trafficking in the Balkans perpetrated by international peacekeepers, as well as for her media activism and mentorship of young journalists [1,478]
- Jake Lahut (Journalist from Upstate New York and the author of "The Forbidden Genre: The Evolution of the Psychiatric Memoir," a senior honors thesis for the College of Letters at Wesleyan University. Lahut has worked for The New Yorker as an assistant to Mark Singer, conducting research and fact checking for his most recent book, "Trump and Me." [1,479] [1,480]. Lahut wrote for the Albany Times Union over the summer of 2016, covering breaking news along with local politics and culture [1,481]. Lahut is a senior at Wesleyan University, where he serves as Editor-in-Chief of The Wesleyan Argus, the oldest twice weekly student newspaper in the country [1,482]. In June 2017, Lahut will begin writing for Politico in Washington D.C. [1,483]). ([1,484] [jakelahut.com] [1,485] [1,486] [1,487])
- Angelique Lazo - TV Patrol segment anchor from 1987 to 1993 and Teledyaryo main edition anchor on People's Television Network. [1,488](Reference regarding her marriage) [1,489](Reference regarding her career)
- Troy Masters: Pioneering LGBT journalist and publisher in New York City Gay City News, LGNY, QW Magazine, OutWeek Magazine since 1989. Masters joined OutWeek Magazine as an advertising manager (1989–1991), after a stint in New York City's competitive publishing world, Whittle Communications and Ziff Publishing leaving to join in the fight against AIDS and choosing ACT-UP and Journalism to help rally community support. He joined OutWeek where he worked with many journalists who would go on to exception careers, Maer Roshan, Michelangelo Signorile, Sarah Petit, Gabriel Rotello, Dale Peck, Duncan Osborne, Michael Goff, Andrew Jacobs. Masters started QW after OutWeek folded, financed by music producer William F. Chafin (1958−92) and upon his death the magazine also folded. LGNY (1994-2002) began after Masters recuperated from a painfully engaging series of deaths among his closest friends. LGNY was an immediate success, focusing on community controversy about rates of HIV infections among gay men, racism and gay cultural maters. LGNY joined The Villager when Masters sought to partner with that publication after the events of September 11. [1,490] [1,491] [1,492] [1,493] In March of 2002 Masters joined with The Villager, Downtown Express, and other publications and changed the name of LGNY to [Gay City News], now America's largest LGBT newspaper and the only one serving New York City. Masters was born in [Gallatin, Tennessee] and was educated at the [University of Tennessee, Knoxville].
- Patrick McKendry - New Zealand herald - Sports Journalist [1,494]
- Ahmad Salkida - Nigerian Journalist - Reports extensively on Boko Haram, he was arrested and tortured by a state government, and subsequently declared wanted by Nigeria's Army in 2016. [1,495]
- Riyaad Minty - media innovator, speaker, shaping the future of media: Engagement Lead Project AJ+, Head of Social Media at Al Jazeera [1,496] [1,497] [1,498] [1,499] [1,500] [1,501] [1,502] [1,503]
- Victor Neufeld - senior executive producer of ABC News prime-time magazines [1,504]
- Mike Nizza - American journalist, New York Times reporter, including writing its The Lede blog; [1,505]
- Bill Owens (journalist): executive editor of 60 Minutes since June 2008. Owens was CBS News' White House producer (1996-00), working with Pelley, Bill Plante and Rita Braver, and covering, among many other stories, the impeachment of President Bill Clinton. Prior to that, he was a producer for the CBS Evening News in Washington, D.C. (1994−96). Owens was the anchor producer for Paula Zahn and Harry Smith (1993−94) and the coordinating producer for CBS This Morning (1991−93) in New York. He also served as a national desk assignment editor and field producer (1990−91), as well as a desk assistant for CBS News and for WCBS-TV, the CBS Owned station in New York (1988−90). [1,506]
- Gino Palumbo - it:Gino Palumbo
- Debra Pickett - American journalist, Chicago Sun-Times columnist whose resignation from the paper, in protest of an assignment, is already noted on the Chicago Sun-Times article page, current work at www.debrapickett.com and http://www.huffingtonpost.com/debra-pickett/
- Isaiah J. Poole – Journalist, editor and political activist; currently (March 2017) communications director for People's Action; previously editor of the Campaign for America's Future website OurFuture.org (2006-2016); previously worked at several news organizations. See https://peoplesaction.org/2016/09/isaiah-j-poole-named-communications-director-for-peoples-action/, https://ourfuture.org/author/isaiahjpoole, https://www.linkedin.com/in/ijpoole/
- Elle Reeve of Vice News - About 30K Google hits, and here coverage of the August 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, VA went seriously viral. Before Vice she was a senior editor at New Republic. Clearly a rising star, I think the Charlottesville coverage pushes her above the line for notability.
- Emily Rogers (journalist) - A well-known journalist within the video game industry. She is well-known for creating rumors about many unannounced products or details about products. She has been mentioned in several sources, including (recently) in TechnoBuffalo, Inquisitr, and more.
- Michael Rosen (journalist): named executive producer of The Saturday Early Show in June 2008. He also served as Northeast Bureau Chief (1996–2000) and assignment editor in the Northeast bureau (1991−96) for ABC News, where he supervised coverage of major news stories, including the crash of TWA Flight 800, the 1996 Republican and Democratic National Conventions, and the 1999 war in Serbia. [1,507]
- Andrew Rule - Australian print journalist and author; Multiple journalism award-winner, Crime reporting and Co-author of Underbelly series of books with John Silvester. http://www.melbournepressclub.com/perkin/honour-roll
- Alfio Russo - it:Alfio Russo
- Gadi Schwartz (American Journalist, NBC News Correspondent for TODAY Show, NBC Nightly News, MSNBC, Host of Stay Tuned - (first daily news show on Snapchat) (https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/nbc-news-launches-stay-tuned-snapchat-news-show-n784156) (http://www.adweek.com/tvnewser/gadi-schwartz-joins-nbc-news-as-correspondent/282437) (http://adage.com/article/media/tv-s-quest-recapture-lost-viewers-snapchat/310536/) (http://nbcsportsgrouppressbox.com/bio/gadi-schwartz-2/) (https://twitter.com/gadinbc?lang=en) (http://caseymesser.com/casey-messer-blog/2017/01/24/meet-gadi-schwartz/) (https://www.mediamoves.com/2017/07/nbc-news-launches-snapchat-news-show-co-hosted-gadi-schwartz.html) (https://www.abqjournal.com/826942/cibola-grad-helps-nbc-tell-its-stories.html)
- Ethan J. Skolnick - American sports columnist, South Florida Sun-Sentinel;([1,508]); writes Season Ticket blog;([1,509]) WFTL-Fox Sports 640AM "First Team" ([1,510]) with Lesley Visser
- Sabina Slonková: award-winning investigative journalist. Investigated official hired hitman for $1mio. to try to have her killed. cs: Sabina Slonková [1,511] [1,512] [1,513] [1,514]
- Ugo Stille - it:Ugo Stille
- Tess van Straaten - award-winning Canadian television journalist; weekend anchor at CHEK-TV, Victoria; previously an anchor and reporter at A-Channel Winnipeg, CFCN Calgary, etc.; [1,515]
- Marcos Stupenengo - Fox International Channels Senior International Correspondent; CNN former International Correspondent, ESPN former news reporter. ([1,516]) ([1,517]) ([1,518]) ([1,519])
- Walter Tobagi - it:Walter Tobagi
- Tom Treanor (War Correspondent, Journalist, Author)(http://oztypewriter.blogspot.com/2015/11/the-legendary-intrepid-californian-war.html)(http://www.history.com/topics/world-war-ii/d-day/videos/war-correspondent-reports-on-d-day-invasion)(https://ladailymirror.com/2014/07/30/1944-in-print-tom-treanor-one-damn-thing-after-another/)
- John Troan - top editor for The Pittsburgh Press who most notably covered Jonas Salk's team when they developed a polio vaccine; obituary
- JR Valrey (also known as The Minister of Information) - American journalist; host and founder of Block Report Radio on KPFA ([1,520]) radio in Berkeley, California, and throughout the Pacifica network; guest and fill-in host on The Morning Mix ([1,521]) and Friday Night Vibe ([1,522]) and Flashpoints on KPFA and the Pacifica network; subject of video documentary Block Reportin 101: The Street Level Journalism of JR Valrey ([1,523]) and Operation Small Axe; editor and contributing journalist for The San Francisco Bayview [1,524]; involved in the Oscar Grant protests, opposed by the Chauncey Bailey Project ([1,525]); journalist for Youth Outlook in Oakland, California
- Alex Wallace (producer) - oversees Today, and Rock Center; will now oversee ;;NBC Nightly News, where she was once EP. [1,526] [1,527]
- Mark S. Watson - A military correspondent who was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1963 by President John F. Kennedy (though the ceremony was presided over by President Lyndon B. Johnson). He was born in New York in 1887 and served as an intelligence officer in Europe in World War I. He became a full-time military correspondent for the Baltimore Sun in World War II and won a Pulitzer Prize for Reporting in 1945. He died in 1966. <[1,528]
- David Wright (journalist) - American television journalist; ABC News News correspondent (since 2000); two national Emmy Award Winner (for Iraq and Darfur) [1,529];
- Ingrid Wickelgren (journalist) - Life Sciences Writer; Scientific American Writer, Editor; [1,530]; [1,531]; [1,532]; [1,533];
- Jesse Zel Lurie - journalist, publisher and philanthropist User:Alonza1/sandbox. His work involves encouraging conflict resolution between Jewish and Arab citizens of Israel.
- Muhammad Zulqarnain Zulfi - Correspondent, Bureaucracy Today Governance magazine (2014-). Former Sub-Editor of The Indian Express: Politics, Technology, Business
- Panthi Kishor - New York based Journalist. TV Host. Founder and editor in chief of Khasokhas Weekly, a Nepali newspaper published in New York. Host of ‘Talk of the Town USA’. Official Website.
Law
Criminals
- John Berkery- Philadelphia mobster and leader of the Irish K&A Gang. [1,534][1,535][1,536]
- Hughie McLoon - Philadelphia speakeasy owner, former Philadelphia A's mascot, and police informer gunned down during prohibition by Danny O'Leary.[1,537][1,538]
- Mohamad Jamal Khweis Arab Muslim American ISIS terrorist from Fairfax County, Virginia. He surrendered on March 14, 2016 to Kurdish defense forces in Iraq[116][117]
- Otty Sanchez - Woman Accused Of Killing Newborn and ate Brain [1,539]
- Chander Matta [1,540] - murdered 3 women in 1990. Graduated from Wakefield High School (Arlington County, Virginia)
- Doyle Arthur Cannon - American criminal fugitive; former Green Beret; escaped 1990s; [1,541]
- Peter DiFronzo-Duda - youngest made man in the history of the Chicago Outfit; nephew of John DiFronzo (also known as Johnny "No Nose" DiFronzo); [1,542]
- Hubert Geralds - given death penalty after confessing to six homicides of women; One murder was later linked to a different serial killer, and sentence was commuted to life. [1,543]
- Lewis Gilbert (criminal) (executed 2003) - received the death penalty for murdering Bill and Flossie Brewer [1,544]
- Jeremy Peter Andrew Green - Serving life for the murder of Nicole Waterhouse and attempted murder of Karen Browne in York [1,545]
- James Durward Harper (or James Harper (criminal)) - sold US secrets to the Polish; convicted of treason in 1983; [1,546]
- Bernard Holstein (real name Bernard Brougham) - Australian literary hoaxer; author of fake Holocaust memoir Stolen Soul [1,547]
- Francesco Lanza - San Franciscan Don in the 1930s [1,548]
- Gary Wayne Lefkowitz – white-collar criminal from California; charged in 1994; convicted and sentenced to 24 years in federal prison in 1995, a record sentence for white-collar crime [1,549]
- Edward Mueller (criminal) (also known as Mr. 880) - New York counterfeiter in the late 1930s–1940s; notable for the difficulty the Secret Service encountered trying to identify him; subject of 1950 film; [1,550]
- Guy Anthony Ray-Hills - Scottish pedophile who sexually abused British film director Don Boyd at the Loretto School; [1,551]
- Willie Carter Sharpe - woman blockader (rum runner) from Franklin County, Virginia; with a proto-muscle car, she distracted federal agents watching for bootleg convoys out of the mountains during prohibition; subject of "The Great Franklin County Moonshine Conspiracy", a 1934 article by Sherwood Anderson in Liberty; featured in the History channel's miniseries America: The Story of Us (2010; episode: "Boom") [1,552]
- Anson Wong - believed to be world's-biggest trafficker in wildlife; mentioned in the January 2010 issue of National Geographic [1,553]
- Rory Jack Thompson (aka Jack Newman) (1942-1999) - American born CSIRO marine biologist, murdered his estranged wife Maureen in 1983 by beating her with a blunt object and then strangulation. He then chopped the body into pieces and disposed of some of the pieces by flushing them down the toilet. Found not guilty by reason of insanity. Hanged himself with a shoelace in his cell in Risdon Prison on 18 September 1999. [1,554]
- Hubert Ernst Zafke - (born September 26, 1920 [1,555]) German solider. Former SS Oberscharführer [1,556] who served as a Medic in Auschwitz-Birkenau from August 15 to September 14, 1944. Charged with accessory to murder of 3,681 people. [1,557] Set to stand trial once again in early 2017. [1,558]
Detectives and police
- Alok Kumar (police officer) -Indian police service; While posted as ACP he led the police team that neutralized notorious gangster Mohd. Inam Khan @ Inammuddin and arrested dreaded gangster Ibrahim @ Baddu and their two associates Salim Khan and Asraf in an encounter. As Addl. DCP/Crime he supervised the team that worked out 32 cases of bomb blasts that took place in Delhi and in neighbouring areas and arrested dreaded terrorist Kamran and his other accomplices who had been sent by ISI trained Syed Abdul Karim Tunda to cause large scale terror. He was awarded Police Medal for Meriotrious Services in the year, 2002 and then President's Police Medal for Gallantry in the year 2007 for his conspicuous role played in an encounter in which four militants Shahid Gahoor, Bashir Ahmed, Ponnu, Fayyaz Ahmed Lone, Abdul Majeed Baba of Jaish-e-Mohammed were apprehended from under Ranjit Singh Flyover, Delhi.[118] In 2007 he led the team of Delhi Police (special cell) that cracked 13 September 2008 Delhi bombings and other serial blasts throughout the country. The investigation led to Batla House encounter on 18 September 2008.; Kumar is considered to be an expert on gang rivalries in Delhi and terror outfits operating around the country.[119]; He is also the editor of delhi police- history and heritage; He was also awarded President's Police Medal for distinguished service in 2010; https://kafilabackup.files.wordpress.com/2008/10/dcpalokkumar.jpg[120][121][122][123][124][125]
- Alice Clement (police officer)- American Chicago Police Department detective sergeant first grade; One of the first female detectives (http://www.chicagomag.com/Chicago-Magazine/December-2003/The-Detective-Wore-Pearls/)
- Sheriff Ralph Froehlich - Longest running sheriff in the state of New Jersey. Born on December 31, 1930 and raised in Elizabeth, New Jersey. Prior to being sheriff, worked for Elizabeth Police Department in New Jersey for about 20 years, and left with the rank of Lieutenant, moving to the Union County, New Jersey Sheriff's Office and running for sheriff in 1978. He was sheriff for 13 terms. He has so many accomplishments. He passed away at the age of 83 on July 20, 2014 from lung cancer. Survived by his 2 daughters and 7 grandchildren. http://www.nj.com/union/index.ssf/2014/07/union_county_sheriff_ralph_froehlich_remembered_during_funeral_for_dedication_positive_influence.html
- Mohammed Tanzil Ahmed (Decorated NIA DSP, instrumental in many high profile cases pertaining to curbing terrorism, face currency, cracking many cases, tracking and grabbing many highly placed terrorists, including Yasin Bhatkal, Danish Riyaz. Recently killed while returning from a family function by 24 bullets) (http://indianexpress.com/article/india/india-news-india/nia-officer-mohammed-tanzil-ahmad-shot-dead-bijnor-noida-bike-assailants-latest-updates/)
Lawyers
- V. Mary Abraham Lawyer and consultant based out of New York. Writer for the American Bar Association's Law Technology Today, faculty for the School of Professional Studies at Columbia University where she teaches in the Information and Knowledge Strategy degree program. Author of a blog, Above and Beyond KM, and the report "Optimizing Law Firm Support Functions". [1,559] [1,560] [1,561] [1,562]
- Alex Abdo (Alexander Abdo), ACLU attorney. Source: "Alex Abdo". American Civil Liberties Union. Retrieved 9 October 2016. Source: Coleman, Libby (8 October 2016). "The Lawyer Finishing What Snowden Started". OZY. Retrieved 9 October 2016.
- Dan Cox (Attorney in Maryland) (http://www.coxlawcenter.com/) (http://coxforcongress.org/) (https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/md-politics/gop-primary-in-mds-8th-district-4-moderates-and-a-conservative/2016/04/16/c0ff5618-0016-11e6-9d36-33d198ea26c5_story.html) (http://www.mymcmedia.org/dan-cox-wins-republican-eighth-congressional-district-primary/)
- Roger C. Cramton - American lawyer and legal scholar at Cornell University; United States Assistant Attorney General in charge of the Office of Legal Counsel (1972–1973; legal advisor to Richard Nixon), first chairman of the Legal Services Corporation (1975–1978; succeeded by Hillary Clinton). [1,563] [1,564]
- Philip Holloway (attorney) (Criminal Justice Attorney; CNN Legal Analyst; 11Alive Legal Analyst. Philip Holloway has also represented many high profile clients whose cases drew national news attention.) ([1,565];[uinterview.com/news/maxwell-lomas-friend-found-bobbi-kristina-brown/]; [1,566]; ([1,567]); ([1,568]); ([1,569])
- Shamoil T. Shipchandler (Regional Director for the United States Securities and Exchange Commission, Fort Worth Regional Office; former Deputy Criminal Chief and Assistant United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Texas; 2000 graduate of Cornell Law School and 1996 graduate of Middlebury College. Mr. Shipchandler prosecuted 40 defendants in the largest mortgage fraud scheme in Texas — for which he received the Department of Justice's Director's Award; prosecuted defendants in a $400 million Provident Royalties scheme in 2012; prosecuted the former mayor of Melissa, Texas for public corruption in 2013; and negotiated the largest corporate immigration fraud settlement in history in 2013 — for which he was awarded the DHS Secretary's Silver Medal.) ([1,570]; [1,571]; [1,572]; [1,573]; [1,574]; [1,575]; [1,576])
- Benjamin Charles Bachrach - Chicago attorney born 1874 Elgin, Illinois, second public defender in the United States (first in Illinois), counsel for the defense in the Loeb-Leopold Murder Case (Chicago) for which renowned advocate Clarence Darrow presented the defense plea [1,577] [1,578], defended Chicago Alderman Thomas J O'Malley (acquitted of murder) [1,579]
- Gurbir Singh Grewal - Bergen County Prosecutor & Appointed Attorney General of the State of New Jersey by the Governor Elect Phil Murphy.
- James F. Ring [1,581],[1,582], [1,583], [1,584], [1,585], [1,586] James F. Ring is a trial attorney and a co-founding partner of Chu, Ring & Hazel LLP, where he serves as an advisor for clients involved in formal legal proceedings, crisis management, contractual negotiations and events involving a substantial risk of litigation. Jim is also the Chief Executive Officer of Fair Outcomes, Inc. , a company founded by a small group of game theorists, computer scientists, and practicing attorneys for the purpose of providing parties involved in litigation or difficult negotiations with access to online bargaining mechanisms that can be used to regulate and resolve conflict. After graduating cum laude from Suffolk University Law School in 1983 and completing a judicial clerkship, Jim joined the law firm of Bingham, Dana & Gould (now known as Bingham McCutchen LLP) as an associate in that firm's litigation area, where he began working with his current law partners, John H. Chu and William A. Hazel. The law firm of Chu, Ring & Hazel was formed in 1995, and Jim and his partners co-founded Fair Outcomes, Inc. in 2006. He has served as a speaker to groups of economists, judges, and lawyers, and is the author of several published articles, on strategic issues relating to the management of conflict and crisis.
- Derek Keane Brown [1,587], named Assistant District Attorney to Bertie, Northampton, Hertford counties in North Carolina January 2013. Graduated from Campbell University Norman Adrian School of Law in May 1996 and licensed in the state of North Carolina in August 1996. Licensed as a National Football League Players Association (NFLPA) Certified Contract Advisor in October 2010 and with the State of North Carolina as an Athlete Agent. Shortly thereafter started began Encore Sports Management - A Division of the Brown Law Firm, PC.
- John T. Rodgers [1,588], appointed U.S. Magistrate Judge of U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Washington (announced 8/22/2013). Formerly private practice attorney, and Public Defender (heading the Office of the Public Defender) in Spokane County, WA. Also Adjunct Professor at Gonzaga Law School.
- Nikolay Nikiforov (professor) (ru) - Prof., leader Russian Fascist Organization
- Michael A. Carvin - Former Deputy Assistant to the United States Attorney General; lead attorney for the National Federation of Independent Business in National Federation of Independent Business v. Sebelius Former lead attorney representing George W. Bush in the Bush v. Gore dispute for the American presidency in 2000. Sources: [1,589] and [1,590]
- Matthew Collins (lawyer) – author of the highly-regarded Oxford University Press books The Law of Defamation and the Internet (2001, 2005, 2010)[1,591] and Collins on Defamation (2014),[1,592] media law barrister at the Victorian Bar,[1,593] and senior fellow at the University of Melbourne[1,594]
- Lance Alan Cooper (trial attorney), Georgia Attorney; Major case: Melton vs. GM; [1,595] "After noticing serious problems with her 2005 Chevrolet Cobalt, including the engine shutting off while she drove, Brooke Melton took her vehicle to her local dealership. A day after she picked it up from the dealership, her car lost power suddenly, veered into oncoming traffic, was struck by another vehicle, and rolled into a creek. Melton was killed in the accident.At the request of Melton's parents, Lance Cooper launched an investigation into her death. When Cooper initially filed Melton v. General Motors against GM and the dealership that serviced Brooke's vehicle, he believed the accident was caused by a defect related to a power-steering recall issued by GM one week before the accident. But Cooper retained experts who determined that the real culprit in the fatal accident was a defective ignition switch that caused the car to turn off suddenly while Melton was driving. Cooper then showed that GM had known about the deadly ignition defect before the accident, exposing a corporate cover-up and federal regulatory lapse that led to GM recalling over 2.5 million cars, a Congressional investigation, and a large (but confidential) settlement to compensate the Melton family on September 21, 2013."
- Lee Parsons Davis (or Lee Davis (lawyer)) - lawyer; Westchester Bar; cited in The Art of Cross-Examination (about the Kip Rhinelander miscegenation case)
- John Lorimer Graham (1797–1876) - New York City lawyer; innovative NYC postmaster, summoned to DC as adviser to Abraham Lincoln, Army Colonel, associate of an introducer of baseball to the West Coast; [1,596]
- Mark Gaston Pearce - Chairman National Labor Relations Board, Labor Lawyer; community leader; accomplished painter. request made June 23, 2012; published resources www.nlrb.gov; wwww.uncrownedcommunitybuilders.com; markgpearce.com; buffalonews.com
- Neil C. Robinson, Jr. (1942-Present), Prominent South Carolina Attorney and President of Southeastern Wild Life Expo [1,597]
- Harry T. Wilks - Hamilton, Ohio attorney and philanthropist, Miami University trustee, developer of Pyramid Hills Sculpture Park. Harry T. Wilks, Hamilton philanthropist, dies at 89.
- Judge J. Jay Caraway - Louisiana Second Circuit Court of Appeal judge (http://www.la2nd.org/caraway) (http://www.judgejaycaraway.com/#!resume/cee5) (http://bossierpress.com/burnett-a-judicial-battle-on-tap-and-snow-in-dc/)
- Austin C. Smith - New York lawyer who wrote first scholarly work on the dischargeability of certain private student loans (https://nacba252017.sched.com/speaker/austinsmith2) ( http://www.abi.org/committee-post/the-misinterpretation-of-11-usc-%C2%A7-523a8) (http://www.nebraskadebtbankruptcyblog.com/2015/02/private-student-loan-discharge-are-bankruptcy-courts-getting-it-wrong/) and went on to litigate the first successful lawsuits discharging private student loans and established multiple precedents in law allowing discharge of certain private student loans. Has received extensive coverage in multiple media outlets for his work, including the Wall Street Journal, ABC News, Marketwatch, NPR, Fox News, Law360, the National Law Journal, and more: (https://money.good.is/articles/loophole-that-could-erase-student-loans) (https://www.wsj.com/articles/judge-says-bankrupt-law-grads-can-cancel-bar-loans-1458941328) (http://abovethelaw.com/2016/03/broke-law-grad-gets-bar-study-loan-discharged-in-bankruptcy/) (http://www.marketwatch.com/story/these-lawyers-may-have-discovered-a-way-to-wipe-away-student-debt-in-bankruptcy-2017-02-13) (https://www.wsj.com/articles/bankruptcy-becomes-an-option-for-some-borrowers-burdened-by-student-loans-1482834600) (https://www.law360.com/articles/776626/bankrupt-law-grad-needn-t-repay-citi-loan-judge-says); (http://abcnews.go.com/Business/judges-ruling-law-school-grads-debt-signal-seismic/story?id=37981518) (http://peopleenespanol.com/chica/erasing-school-debt-lawyer/).
LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender) figures
- Ferd Eggan activist, author, journalist; [1,598]; [1,599]; fiction work featured in the American National Corpus
- Michael A. Gilbert - Professor of Philosophy, York University (working at argumentation theory and transgender problems); fiction writer; businessman; committed cross-dresser; [1,600]
- Michael Hames-García - professor of ethnic studies and director of the Center for the Study of Women and Society at the University of Oregon; see [1,601] and [1,602]; author of several books [1,603]; winner of a Lambda literary award [1,604]; his work is cited by a few Wikipedia entries, including Prison.
- Nikki Hearts, alt lesbian pornstar.[1,605]
- Gemma Hickey, NL trans-rights activist, documentary film maker [1,606]
- Catherine Humphries (link redirects to a different person) - Squadron Leader in Australian Defence Force, first female in a combat role within RAAF, having served for 18 years including in Afghanistan and the Middle East. Transgender military officer who has appeared in media and noted in Cosmo Australia top 50 LGBT 2017; [1,607];[1,608];[1,609];[1,610];[1,611];[1,612];[1,613]
- Christopher Karas (Human Rights activist; barred from using Harvey Milk quote; critical of Catholic School System; barred from donating blood; critical of MSM blood and organ donation policy in Canada.) See the section above on "Activists"
- Callen Ubeda - Writer, LGBT rights activist, health educator, former president of Iowa State University's Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Ally, Alliance; [1,614]; [1,615];[1,616]; [1,617]; [1,618]; [1,619]; [1,620]; [1,621]
- Simmie Williams - teenager killed in Ft. Lauderdale for being gay; [1,622]; [1,623]
- Barrett Reid, artist and librarian. biography, scholarship
- Rafael Alencar, gay Pornstar from Brazil. www.men.com/model/47/rafael-alencar
Linguists
- Alan Cienki - American linguist; professor at VU University, Amsterdam; work on Slavic linguistics, metaphor and gesture studies; [1,624]
- Aldo Gabrielli it:Aldo Gabrielli
- Carleton Taylor Hodge - [1,625]
- Lilias Homburger - [1,626]
- Johannes Kirchner - classics scholar and philologist; associated with the Athenians Project; de:Johannes Kirchner
- Timothy Shopen - [1,627]
- Wolfgang Wolck - Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus SUNY at Buffalo; internationally renowned sociolinguist; Quechua expert & enthusiast; created the concept of "ethnolects"; Ethnolect [1,628]
Maritime figures
- Commodore Michael Clapp - Falklands War
- Sir Matt Nyugen - pirate and privateer
- John Pulling - pirate captain; the man who helped Paul Revere
- Capt.Mutamba Paul- Special forces,and Uganda's youngest army officer, captain at 21, chief spy 2012
Mathematicians
Please request articles about mathematicians at Wikipedia:Requested articles/Mathematics#Mathematicians, not here. |
Medical people
Please request articles about people in medicine at Wikipedia:Requested articles/Biographies/People in medicine, not here. |
Military figures
- Dominic J. Caraccilo (born 1962 -) - Notable Figure for Seneca Falls, NY CDP; Brigadier General Select Retired Colonel, US Army; Deputy Commander, 101st Airborne Division; XO to MNC-I Commander; Commander, 3rd BCT, 101st Airborne Division; Division G3, 101st Airborne Division; Battalion Commander, 2nd Battalion (Airborne), 503rd Infantry, Executive Officer, 75th Ranger Regiment; 65 months of combat experience; Operations Desert Shield, Desert Storm; Kosovo; OEF 1; OIF 1, 3, 5 & &7; Commanded a combat Parachute Assault into Northern Iraq; author of Forging a Special Operations Force: The US Army Ranger, Helion & Company Limited, 2015, Beyond Guns and Steel: A War Termination Strategy, Praeger Securities International, 2011, Achieving Victory in Iraq: Countering an Insurgency: Stackpole Books, 2008, Surviving Bataan and Beyond, Stackpole Books, 1999, 2005, The Ready Brigade, MacFarland & Company, 1993;
- Blas Crespo (born 1778, died 1853) - Assigned to the 3rd Battalion of the Cuban Infantry Regiment; commanded Fort Matanzas, in Florida, during the Patriot War. He is in the book, The Other War of 1812. [1,629]
- Peter Kemmis Betty MC (1916-2016) - Gurkha officer (Lieutenant Colonel). The Times obituary October 5 2016 and Telegraph obituary 5 October 2016.
- Sudip Bose - served as a physician on the front lines in Iraq for nearly 15 months. http://www.northwestern.edu/magazine/winter2005/cover/cover/sidebar7.html http://www.salon.com/2004/06/17/bose/
- Donald Weldon Brann Major General; Deputy Chief of Staff, 15th Army. Died falling from cliff in Austria while hunting, less than 8 days after death of General Patton; Born September 26, 1895 to December 29, 1945; [1,630], [1,631]
- Joseph Dwyer (US Army medic) – US Army medic of American heroism and integrity in the Iraq war; died of apparent drug overdose; [1,632]
- Sgt. Louis H. Fischer - [1,633].
- Goitom Ghebrezghi (died 2009) - chief of the Eritrean Police Force; [1,634]
- John Fane Charles Hamilton; Marine Captain and commander of 43rd the regiment at the Battle of Gate Pa where he was killed. The city of Hamilton, New Zealand is named after him. Hamilton Article
- Matthew Hoh I didn't exactly know where to put this request since this guy is also like an activist.. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/matthew-hoh/
- Karl H. Houghton; Major in the Army in World War II. Captured by Imperial Japan. Scientist & Doctor wwii-pows.mooseroots.com/l/96886/Karl-H-Houghton POW Info , www.west-point.org/family/japanese-pow/POW%20Photos.htm Image , history.nasa.gov/SP-4003/ch7-2.htm Project Mercury ,& www.archives.com/1940-census/karl-houghton-mn-43911257 Census 1940.
- Israel Hutchinson - American military and political figure in French and Indian War and Revolution; Sgt. Co. of Rangers at Lake George and Ticonderoga (1758); Capt of Co. of Rangers with Wolfe on the Plains of Abraham (1759); Capt. Co. of Militia from Danvers, Ma, on April 19, 1775, battled retreating British at Menotomy; Lt. Col in 5th Continental Regiment at Bunker Hill, Col. during Siege of Boston; as Col. of 27th Continental Regiment, helped Washington escape Long Island and later cross the Delaware and take Trenton; spent 21 years in Massachusetts General Court
- Manson Sherrill Jolly (or Manson Jolly) - guerrilla during Radical Reconstruction in Anderson County, South Carolina; served in the Confederate Army as First Sergent of Company F, First S.C. Cavalry; subject of Manse: One Man's War, a historical novel by Wilton Earle; subject of film Unbridled Justice: The Legend of Manse Jolly (currently[when?] in production)
- Colonel Sir Bryce Knox MC & Bar - Mounted Cavalry at l'Olmo Gap, Lord-Lieutenant of Ayrshire http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/1448147/Colonel-Sir-Bryce-Knox.html
- Mate Lausic - Croatian military and police officer, was inter alia Chief of the country's Military Police, hr
- Rodolfo Gustavo da Paixão (pt)
- François Marie Pitot - Commander and leader of France in 1800 in a single-ship action USS Constellation vs La Vengeance
- MG Bernard Linn Robinson (1901–1994) - U.S. Army major general, WWI, WWII, Korea; [1,635]
- Anders Edvard Ramsay (1799-1877), Finnish general serving in the Imperial Russian Army - sv, fi, pl, ru
- Sorqan-Shira, the merciful Tayichi'ud guard who saved the life of Genghis Khan and eventually became one of the nine ministers. He is the father of Chilaun, one of the four valiant warriors. All info seen Genghis Khan by John Man
- Lynda van Devanter - American nurse at Pleiku, Vietnam war. Author of Home by Morning, from which the TV series China Beach was made.
- Ettore Viola - it:Ettore ViolaJGVR (talk) 02:25, 17 December 2012 (UTC)
- Ernst von Bauer WWII Generalmajor, see 189th Infantry Division (Wehrmacht). Not to be confused with Ernst Bauer (Kapitän zur See), U-boat commander.
- Andrew Westbrook - American revolutionary during War of 1812; traitor to British Army; subject of the novel Westbrook; or the Outlaw (1851) by Major John Richardson
- Udeny Wolf-Hutchinson - American Revolutionary War soldier; portrayed in Liberty's Kids TV series
- Maxwell Woodhull (1813–1863) - Commander, U.S. Navy; namesake of Woodhull Memorial Flagstaff in Arlington National Cemetery and Maxwell Woodhull House
- Sir James Kearney (British Army Officer) (20 Dec 1842–1846) - Lt.Gen. of the 7th (The Queen's Own) Regiment of (Light) Dragoons (Hussars)
- Dimitrios Itsios (el) - Greek sergeant http://en.protothema.gr/sargeant-dimitrios-itsios-the-story-of-a-modern-greek-hero/
- Koos Stadler - retired SANDF soldier who has been a special forces officer and author of Recce: Small Team Missions Behind Enemy Lines ; [1,636]; [1,637]; [1,638]
American Medal of Honor recipients
- Medal of Honor recipients needing articles - Per Roger Davies, rather than add a thousand articles for creation this link represents all Medal of Honor recipients still needing articles.
Natural scientists, other
Please request articles about other types of scientists at Multi-Category & Other Scientists, not here. |
Ornithologists (birds)
Please request articles about ornithologists at Wikipedia:WikiProject Birds/Article requests/People, not here. |
Philosophers
- Donatella Di Cesare (de:Donatella Di Cesare) - philosopher
- Phillip Cole - Senior Lecturer in Politics and International Relations at the University of the West of England, Bristol and a Visiting Professor of Applied Philosophy with Social Ethics Research Group at University of South Wales. Author of The Myth of Evil. Now redirects to Philip Cole, a professor and the director of the Department of Pharmacology and Molecular Sciences at Johns Hopkins University Medical School [1,639] [1,640] [1,641] [1,642]
- Stanley Godlovitch - Author and philosopher. Author of Musical Performance: A Philosophical Study (1998) and co-editor of Animals, Men and Morals: An Inquiry into the Maltreatment of Non-humans (1971).
- Jacob Michael Held - philosopher, University of Central Arkansas; see [1,643]; editor Dr. Suess and Philosophy, with James B. South, James Bond and Philosophy, and numerous articles and essays on pop culture, political and legal theory, and the history of philosophy; [1,644]
- Donald C. Hodges - Marxist Professor Emeritus of Philosophy, Florida State University; prolific author; [1,645]; [1,646]; Template:Worldcat id
- Andrew Koch (born 1953) - scholar of contemporary social philosophy, epistemology and poststructural-anarchism; professor, Appalachian State University; wrote Knowledge and Social Construction (2005), Romance and Reason (2006), Poststructuralism and the Politics of Method (2007), Democracy and Domination (2009)
- Geddes MacGregor or (John Geddes MacGregor) (1909–1998) - Scottish philosopher, Dean of the Graduate School of Religion and Professor of Philosophy of Religion, USC;[disambiguation needed]; wrote 20+ books on philosophy, religion and Scotland
- Anton C. Pegis (born 1905) - scholar and editor of philosophy books; Template:Worldcat id
- Laura Purdy – philosophy professor; see [1,647]; distinct from the late fashion designer of the same name
- Jean-Gérard Rossi - author of La Philosophie Analytique
- Ulrich Verster (born 1944) - solitary contemplative or hermit, published 14 books in philosophy Template:Worldcat id
- Bob Proctor - Canadian philosopher and businessman; Template:Worldcat id
- Jerome M. Segal - Senior research scholar at the University of Maryland Institute for Philosophy and Public Policy; author of Agency and Alienation: A Theory of Human Presence (1991) and Creating the Palestinian State: A Strategy for Peace (1989), and coauthor of Negotiating Jerusalem (2000); President and founder of The Jewish Peace Lobby. To the Editors, What We Work for Now
- Muhammad Shakeel Auj - A Karachi University Prof, [1,648], Dr Muhammad Shakeel Auj: Islamic scholar murdered in Pakistan due to his liberal views, Al Qaeda in the Indian Subcontinent leader says attacks on 'blasphemers' ordered by Zawahiri — Obaid Raza (talk) 19:31, 7 May 2015 (UTC)
Physicists
Please request articles about physicists at Wikipedia:Requested articles/Natural sciences/Physics#Physicists, not here. |
Political figures
Please request articles about politicians and other political figures at Wikipedia:Requested articles/Biographies/Political figures, not here. |
Psychologists
- Dr. Christian Conte - Dr. Christian Conte is a mental health specialist in the field of anger management having level V anger management certification, the highest level possible, and he is the creator of “Yield Theory” – a tremendously powerful approach to change, combining radical compassion with conscious education – for the effective treatment of anger issues. Dr. Conte currently trains correctional institutions, sports teams, and organizations in the practical application of his Yield Theory Anger Management Program. In addition to Certified Anger Management Specialist – V, his other degrees, licenses and certifications include Ph.D. – Counselor Education and Supervision, Duquesne University; M.S. – Community Agency Counseling, California University of Pennsylvania; Licensed Professional Counselor; Nationally Certified Psychologist; Certified Domestic Violence Counselor; and Nationally Certified Counselor.Dr. Conte has several books and videos that are used in institutions around the world to train counselors, as well as educate people in anger management. He co-founded a center in South Lake Tahoe, CA to help rehabilitate people who were convicted of violent crimes. And he was an award-winning, tenured professor at the University of Nevada, Reno, before he left the West Coast to return to his home state of Pennsylvania. Currently Dr. Conte works with the Florida State University and the University of Oregon football teams, as well as University of Tennessee football and University of Pittsburgh Athletics. And he applies his Yield Theory in maximum security prisons throughout the state of Pennsylvania. Dr. Conte was co-host of the reality show Coaching Bad on Spike TV, and Family Therapy on VH1. He’s also a frequent expert guest on CBS’s KDKA Radio. In July 2015 he conducted the TEDx talk, “Why I Chose to Go to Prison.” Degrees/License/Certifications: Ph.D. – Counselor Education and Supervision, Duquesne University; M.S. – Community Agency Counseling, California University of Pennsylvania; Licensed Professional Counselor; Nationally Certified Psychologist; Certified Anger Management Specialist – V; Certified Domestic Violence Counselor; Nationally Certified Counselor.
- Dr. Ben Ambridge - Psychologist / Popular science writer. Author of Psy-Q; Psychology columnist for The Guardian/The Observer and The Big Issue. TED talk on the Top 10 Myths of Psychology. http://www.benambridge.com
- Natalie Rogers - Psychologist. Daughter of Carl Rogers. Creator of Person-Centered Expressive Arts Therapy. Author of The Creative Connection: Expressive Arts as Healing (1993). Founded the Person-Centered Expressive Therapy Institute in 1984, which has since been re-named to Person-Centered Expressive Arts Associates. http://www.nrogers.com/
- Dr. Nehama Baum - Creator of the Multi Focal Approach - http://www.torontopubliclibrary.ca/detail.jsp?Entt=RDM2506161&R=2506161, http://www.mukibaumfoundation.com/about/our-philosophy/
- David Bearison, Ph.D. - Professor Emertius of Developmental Psychology and the Founding Director of Psychology and Law at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York, Adjunct Professor of Pediatrics at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine and Adjunct Professor of Medical Psychology in Pediatrics and Psychiatry at Columbia University's College of Physicians and Surgeons, Visiting Scholar at the Hastings Center, in Garrison, New York, a think tank that promotes ethical issues in medicine and life sciences, and a founder member of the editorial board of Sex Roles: A Journal of Research, the first and preeminent behavioral science journal devoted to the study of gender differences and equities. Dr. Bearison is also an elected Fellow and life member of the American Psychological Association and the Society of Pediatric Psychology, receiving the Society's lifetime achievement award, the Lee Salk Distinguished Service Award. Critically acclaimed author of When Treatment Fails: How Medicine Cares for Dying Children (Oxford University Press) [1,649] and its sequel, The Edge of Medicine: Stories from Dying Children and Their Parents (Oxford University Press) [1,650] and frequent editor and publisher of over 75 articles about psychology, education, medicine, nursing, and social work covering compelling research and narratives on caring for children, palliative care, and adjusting to medical trauma.
- Adrian C. Brock - Irish psychologist who edited Internationalizing the History of Psychology [1,651] [1,652]
- Janell Carroll - teaches psychology at University of Hartford. She is a sexologist, author, and researcher. Dr. Carroll's research has been published in a variety of national and international journals and she has presented her research at meetings and symposiums around the world. Her research interests include human sexuality, women's issues, gender, child development, and sex education. She is the author of the highly acclaimed college-level sexuality textbook titled Sexuality Now: Embracing Diversity and a popular book for young women titled The Day Aunt Flo Comes To Visit: An Honest Conversation About Getting Your Period. Dr. Carroll also hosts her own blog and website at www.drjanellcarroll.com.
- Robbie Case - author of the classic neo-Piagetian text, Intellectual Development: Birth to Adulthood (1985); key figure in education; Stanford obituary "Canadian Psychology Researchers" biography Robbie Case Memorial Lecture; Template:Worldcat id
- Daniel Bochner - psychologist; founder of the relational-systems theory; author of The Therapist's Use of Self in Family Therapy and The Emotional Toolbox: A Manual for Mental Health; Template:Worldcat id
- Don Olweus - creator of the Olweus Bullying Prevention Program [1,653][1,654][1,655]
- Alicia Danforth - http://www.erowid.org/culture/characters/danforth_alicia/
- Seymour Epstein - American psychologist; developed cognitive experiential self theory (CEST); professor emeritus at the University of Massachusetts; [1,656]
- Gary W. Evans - American environmental psychologist; researcher on how the physical environment effects children's development Cornell faculty page gscholar
- András Feldmár or Andrew Feldmar - Canadian psychologist; wrote about LSD therapy; banned from the United States; [1,657]
- Jack R. Gibb (died 1994) - author of books including Trust, chapters in 26 professional books on management, organizational development, group dynamics, human potential, communications, and education, and hundreds of articles in professional journals on those subjects and on learning theory, therapy, and counseling; [1,658]
- Richard Ivry - psychologist and neuroscientist at the University of California, Berkeley; researches cognition and action in healthy and brain damaged individuals; [1,659]
- Arthur Jersild (1902–1994) - American psychologist; specialized in child development; [1,660]
- Brenda A. LeFrançois, b. 1968, critical psychologist, social work educator, professor Memorial University. Mad Studies theorist and activist. Co-editor of Mad Matters: A Critical Reader in Canadian Mad Studies (CSPI) and Psychiatry Disrupted: Theorizing Resistance and Crafting the Revolution (MQUP). Author of numerous articles in the area of Mad Studies, critical children's rights, critical disability studies, and childhood studies. See [1,661] [1,662]
- Michael C. Mithoefer - https://www.erowid.org/culture/characters/mithoefer_michael/
- David Schnarch - sex and relationship therapist, psychologist, and professor of urology de:David Schnarch
- Alan J. Schwartz (born 1970) - Psychologist of medical decision making. Michael Reese Endowed Professor of Medical Education, University of Illinois at Chicago. Editor-in-chief, Medical_Decision_Making_(journal) and Medical Decision Making Policy & Practice. John M. Eisenberg Award for Practical Application of Medical Decision Making. With Dr. Saul J. Weiner, known for studies using covert audiorecording of physicians seeing real patients or actors documented in the book Listening for What Matters: Avoiding Contextual Errors in Health Care which won the 2017 PROSE Award for Excellence in Biological & Life Sciences. (https://soundcloud.com/catskill-review/alan-schwartz-on-listening-for-what-matters-doctors-and-their-patients, http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/04/11/us-doctors-advice-idUSTRE73A71P20110411, http://abc7.com/archive/7668068/, https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/09/100914162251.htm, http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=129934800, http://www.huffingtonpost.com/stefan-kertesz/quality-eludes-doctors-wi_b_684221.html, http://health.usnews.com/health-news/best-hospitals/articles/2009/08/11/difficult-medical-choice-3-steps-to-making-the-right-decision)
- Barbara Spellman (a.k.a. Bobbie Spellman) - cognitive psychologist; named a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science; [1,663]
- Michael A. Wallach - American psychologist; professor at Duke University, Harvard University, MIT and the University of Chicago; editor of Alternatives in Psychology book series; [1,664] Template:Worldcat id
- Lisa L. M. Welling - Dr. Lisa Welling is a professor at Oakland University in Rochester, Michigan. Grounded in evolutionary reasoning, her research generally surrounds three inter-related areas: hormonal influences on behavior, mate choice, and sources of variation in adaptive preferences.[126]; Professor at Oakland University; author; editor;
- Frederic Fappani von Lothringen - French-German psychologist. He is an Author (Education, Youth and Happiness ), a writer in french and german and the president and fonder of a NGO ( in 23 Contries ) with consultativ Statut ECOSOC UNO. See Viaf : https://viaf.org/viaf/295914932/ or Google : https://g.co/kgs/esMQbj
Religious figures
Atheistic Satanism
- Malcolm Jerry - Co-founder of The Satanic Temple A Mischievous Thorn in the Side of Conservative Christianity The Satanic Temple, Now Wooing Kids and Moms Inside the Satanic Temple's Secret Baphomet Monument Unveiling Satanic Temple Petitions to Mount a Statue in Little Rock Satanists Move To Put Statue Of Goat-Headed Icon At Arkansas Capitol Baphomet
- Jex Blackmoore) - Director- The Satanic Temple of Detroit National Satanic Temple Rep Jex Blackmore Says Satan Is Not Real; Tells Christians 'Don't Waste Your Prayers on Us Here's What Happened When a Pastor and a Satanist Sat Down to Hash Out Their Differences Jex Blackmore on the Satanic Temple's 'Snaketivity Scene' Super Christian on Youtube - Jex Blackmore Confused spokesperson of The Satanic Temple Religion in Metro Detroit The Satanic Temple of Detroit performs "Unbaptism Ritual" on Devil's Night Debate over Satanic statue devolves into shouting match as Detroit pastor berates 'non-theist' Satanist Jex Blackmore Jex Blackmore on the Satanic Temple's 'Snaketivity Scene Satanist Deception Satanicviews Jex Blackmore SlashDetroit Ep. 84 - Slash Detroit: Bring Back Black Bottom - w/ Jex Blackmore, Nolan Finley, & Nancy Kaffer On Becoming Unmother Jex Blackmore of the Detroit chapter of the Satanic Temple
Anglican/Episcopal
- Bliss Browne (born 1950) - Episcopalian minister, social activist, community organizer and author; first female priest to speak at Westminster Abbey; founder and president of Imagine Chicago; [http://www.imaginechicago.org/founder.html
- Bill Butler (Evangelist) (1914−1995) British missionary who went to Uganda with Church Missionary Society and became Archdeacon of Busoga. Author of Hill Ablaze. One of the team at the heart of the East African Revival. [1,665]
- Rev. Dr. Robert G. Certain - chaplain; Colonel, USAFR (retired); former POW; delivered homily at the national funeral service of President Gerald Ford; delivered invocation at the Republican National Convention; [1,666]
- Dr. Robert W. Radtke - President of Episcopal Relief & Development. Mentioned as a key person in the Wikipedia article for the organization. Former Vice President for Programs of the Asia Society. [1,667] [1,668]
Baptist
- Absalom Backus Earle (1812–1895) - American Baptist preacher and author; seven books including Bringing in the Sheaves and Abiding Peace; [http://www.reformedreader.org/a.b.earle.html
Buddhism
- David McMahan (or David L. McMahan) - scholar of Asian studies and Buddhism modernism; Professor of Religious Studies, Franklin & Marshall College; [1,669]; Template:Worldcat id
- Giei Sato - author of Unsui: A Diary of Zen Monastic Life (ISBN 0824802721)
- Yunqi Zhuhong (1535–1615) - monk of the late Ming dynasty, 雲棲株宏 Record of Self-Knowledge, Personnel at Yunqi and Their Duties and Regulations Regarding Good Deeds and Punishments at Yunqi trans. in Chun-fang Yu, The Renewal of Buddhism in China: Chu-Hung and the Late Ming Synthesis, Buddhist Studies and Translations (Columbia University Press, 1981); [1,670]; [1,671]; read Strategies, Tactics and Doctrine: Yunqi Zhuhong and Buddhist Interaction with Confucian Gentry in Ming China
- Jetsunma Tamdrin Wangmo Kelzang Chokyi Nyima (rje btsun ma grub pa'i rta mgrin dbang mo skal bzang chos kyi nyi ma) (1836–1896)[1,672]
- Jetsunma Thinley Chodron [1,673]
- Lakshminkaradevi: A female Siddha in Tantric Buddhism. A story on her can be found in: John S. Strong ed., The Experience of Buddhism, second ed., Belmont (CA): Wadsworth Books, 2002): 195−96 — an excellent anthology that I use in my Buddhism class
- Harvey Daiho Hilbert-roshi: Abbot Emeritus Order of Clear Mind Zen [1,674] . Engaged Zen teacher and practitioner [see http://www.npr.org/2012/11/09/164685368/vet-recalls-the-legacy-of-war-that-lasts-forever], frequent contributor SweepingZen.com http://sweepingzen.com] and author listed on Amazon.com [1,675]
- Kosai Sōitsu, error: {{nihongo}}: Japanese or romaji text required (help) - Japanese Abbot and Teacher of Date Masamune; ja:虎哉宗乙
Catholicism
- Alonso de Hojeda (Dominican) - convinced Spain's Queen Isabella I of the existence of Crypto-Judaism among Adalusian conversos in 1477, kick-starting the Spanish Inquisition
- Sean Fagan - Challenged church orthodoxy. References: [1,676], [1,677], [1,678]
- Livio Fanzaga - it:Livio Fanzaga
- Alfredo Gallegos Lara (or Alfredo Lara; also known as Padre Pistolas) - Mexican priest; wears a pistol; [1,679]
- Anthony Giroux Meagher - deceased archbishop of Kingston, Ontario, Canada
- Fr. Edward T. OakesS.J. - deceased Society of Jesus theologian, writer and critic of intelligent design creationism [1,680]
- Saint Napoleon - it:San Napoleone
- Hubert Marie Michel Marcel Herbreteau - current French bishop of Roman Catholic Diocese of Agen. His biography is on French Wikipedia at Hubert Herbreteau (fr) and can be translated.
Eastern Orthodox
- Elisabeth Behr-Sigel - Eastern Orthodox Christian theologian and writer; known as "the grandmother of Orthodox feminism"; Template:Worldcat id
Hinduism
- Mahayogi Swami Buddha Puri - founder of Siddhamrita Surya Kriya Yoga; acknowledged as a spiritual scientist in India; [1,681]
Islam
- Meraj Rabbani - Islamic scholar who is trying to spread peace through quran and sunnah and questions all the major sects like sufis,shias,deobandis,barelwis etc; [1,682];
- Shabbir Ally - Islam apologist who wrote 101 contradictions of the Bible, which created a lot of problems in the Christian community; [1,683]; [1,684] (Christian response to his pamphlet)
- Shaykh Taner Ansari - Turkish-born Muslim Sufi Shaykh; head of the Qadir-Rifai Tariqa, based in New York, written four books: Grand Master's of Sufism (translated); Alternative Healing: The Sufi Way; What About My Wood! 101 Sufi Stories; The Sun Will Rise in the West: The Holy Trail; [1,685]
- Sheikh Adil Kalbani (or Adil Kalbani (sheik)) - "... King Abdullah had chosen him to be the first black man to lead prayers in Mecca" at the Grand Masque, fall 2008. "A Black Iman Breaks Ground Leading the Faithful in Mecca", The New York Times, printed, late edition, Saturday, April 11, 2009 (p. a6); [1,686]
- Mahomed Khatri - hero and role model for young disabled Muslims; [1,687]; [1,688]; [1,689]
- Jamal Khawaja - progressive-liberal American Muslim blogger for the Houston Chronicle; substantial corpus of writing on post-modern and existential approaches to Islam and Islamic philosophy as it relates to American culture; [1,690]
Judaism
Please request articles about Jewish figures at Wikipedia:Requested articles/Biographies/Jewish figures, not here. |
New-age spirituality
- Robert Hartley (new-age spiritualist) (also known as Ishvara (author)) - American New Ager; founder of Harbin Hot Springs; author of Oneness in Living (as Ishvara; ISBN 9781556434136); [1,691]; [1,692]
- Teal Scott - The Spiritual Catalyst, Author of The Sculptor in The Sky. AuthorHouse. 2011. ISBN 978-1-4567-4724-4. Experienced Artist, Spiritual Intuitive & Teacher and/or Guru. [1,693]
- Stewart Emery - He served as the first CEO of EST Erhard Seminars Training, was the co-founder of Actualizations in 1975. Stewart is the best-selling author of the books, Actualizations: You Don’t Have to Rehearse to be Yourself. Doubleday. 1978. ISBN 978-0385131223. and The Owner's Manual For Your Life. Pocket. 1984. ISBN 978-0671464240. Stewart currently resides in Northern California and runs Belvedere Consultants based in Belvedere-Tiburon just north of San Francisco. [1,694]
Non-denominational Christian
- Anketell M. Henderson - (b. 1822; d. 1876) Congregational Minister, author [1,695]
- Rick Bezet - senior pastor of 8,000-member New Life Church of Arkansas ([1,696]); board member of the ARC; [1,697]
- Frank Benson Jones - pastor, author of Stop the Prosperity Preachers, second black pilot hired by United Airlines, editor of Black Panther;; newspaper, earned 8 air medals and Air Force commendation medal in Vietnam [1,698], [1,699] [google "Frank Benson Jones"]
- Ron Pegg - Australian researcher (c. 2000) claiming parallels between religious history and modern-day CD-ROMs possibly sent back through time; [1,700]
- Richard Owen Roberts - preacher, author, expert on revival; president and a founding director of International Awakening Ministries; [1,701]
- Pamela Sorensen (Pamela "PJ" Sorensen) - Prominent "Messianic Jewish" (Jewish Christian) Pastor, Teacher, Missionary; President and CEO of Signs And Wonders Ministries;[1,702]
- Bill Schnoebelen author of fundamentalist Christian books, many published by Jack Chick. Claims to be a former Freemason, Mormon, Catholic priest, Wiccan, Satanist and vampire. Somewhat controversial(!) There existed an article on him at one time, but it was deleted for reasons unknown. His website: http://www.withoneaccord.org/
- Nate Cunningham - American Christian Apologist. Featured on SecularTv and a recurring guest on theNewCovenantGroup. Notable appearances include discussions with Greg Boyd (theologian) Talking: With Greg Boyd & Nate Cunningham and Richard Carrier The Secular Market: EP 04 - The Historicity of Jesus. Additional citations: spirituality.info-zone.org/, redeeminggod.com/, meilanimacdonald.com/, datab.us/, finshaggy.blogspot.com/. Website: NateCunningham.org
- Margaret King (missionary), before and during the Boxer Rebellion; "one of the best-known and best-loved missionaries in central China" according to her bio in Each to Her Post: Six Women of the China Inland Mission (1982) by Phyllis Thompson.
- Jessie Gregg, missionary and evangelist who travelled exceptionally widely in China, according to her bio in Each to Her Post: Six Women of the China Inland Mission (1982) by Phyllis Thompson.
- Jessie McDonald (1888-1980), one of the first Canadian female doctors, missionary in China, one of the last to leave in 1952. Each to Her Post: Six Women of the China Inland Mission (1982) by Phyllis Thompson. A Missionary in China
Other
- Josué Yrion - Brazilian Evangelist preacher. Author of various books; he founded Josué Yrion World Evangelism and Missions, Inc.
- Maeyken Wens - Anabaptist martyr who was burned at the stake in Antwerp for refusing to stop declaring Scripture [1,703]
- Jonathan Bernis - Messianic Jewish Rabbi who is President and CEO of Jewish Voice Ministries International [1,704]
Pentecostal and charismatic
Presbyterian, Reformed and Calvinism
- Sarah Pierpont Edwards - wife of Jonathan Edwards, American Calvinist theologian and third president of the College of New Jersey (now Princeton University); mother of Aaron Burr, Sr., second president of the College of New Jersey; grandmother of Aaron Burr, third Vice President of the United States
- Hermanus Knoop - Reformed (Gereformeerd) Pastor, concentration-camp survivor
- Samuel Locke (Presbytarian) - Former National Director of Special Offerings and Direct Marketing Appeals for the Presbyterian Church (USA) who came under criticism and ultimately fired for a controversial ad campaign; was highest-ranking openly gay national PCUSA staff member after coming out late in life after a straight marriage; former candidate for State Auditor of Indiana and United States Congress
Protestant
- William E. Gilroy, D.D. (Editor of The Congregationalist, Boston MA. Gilroy's articles were published nationally in newspapers for apparently decades. I have seen a brilliantly written article from Gilroy on page 4 the 16 November 1929 edition of The Clarksburg Exponent, Clarksburg West Virginia. The article urged new attitudes of kindness and love toward all racial groups. This article is as relevant today as it was in 1929. According to The American Missionary Volume 76, 1922, Gilroy took a tour of the South to get acquainted with the works of the A.M.A. and came back a profound believer in its value. Gilroy's articles were obviously still being published in the late 1950s as seen in the links below.)1 2 3 4
- Enos Hitchcock - quoted in an Economist article as having said "The free access which many young people have to romances, novels and plays has poisoned the mind and corrupted the morals of many a promising youth."; may be the Enos Hitchcock (1745–1803) who was a well-known minister (not sure of denomination) during the American Revolution mentioned here
- John Hunt (b. 1812) - A missionary to Fiji. He was born in England and was one of the first Methodists. He went to the Fiji Island, which was cannibalistic. He was the first person to write down the Fijian language. He translated the New Testament from Greek into Fijian. He died of a disease while on the island of Fiji but not before converting the entire island to Christianity and ending the cannibalism and human sacrifice. There are many books written about him including Rowe, George Stringer. A Missionary Among Cannibals; or, the life of John Hunt who was eminently successful in converting the people of Fiji from cannibalism to Christianity. New York: Carlton & Porter, 1859.; McLean, Archibald. Epoch Makers of Modern Missions. New York, Chicago [etc.] Fleming H. Revell company, 1912. Source of the image. There are also many websites devoted to him, [1,705] and [1,706] among many others. His name is also mentioned in the History of Fiji page.
- Matthew Flannagan - new zealander christian, apologist and philosopher [1,707]
- Thomas Munster - Swedish Christian reformist; sv:Thomas Munster
- Edward R. Skane (or Edward Skane) - reverend, television evangelist, book author; father of high-profile murdered son, died February 2001
- Thomas Thorowgood (c. 1600–1669) - English Divine; author of Jewes in America, or Probabilities that the Americans Are of that Race; influential to the writing and thought of John Eliot; intellectual peer to Menasseh Ben Israel
- Adrian Bulley - United Reformed Church minister and Synod Clerk for the United Reformed Church synod of Wales, previously Moderator for the United Reformed Church synod of Wessex; outspoken supported of LGBT inclusion in the Church and supporter of asylum justice in the UK [1,708] [1,709] [1,710] [1,711]
- Walker Railey - Requested November 12, 2015. Former First United Methodist minister accused and acquitted of having tried to kill his wife, Peggy Railey. [1,712]; [1,713]; [1,714]
- Francis M. Craft (1852-1920) - Missionary to the Sioux [1,715]
- William Schnoebelen - American fundamentalist Christian author focussing on Satanism, Wicca, Mormonism, Freemasonry, Vampirism, anti-Catholicism, UFOs and spiritual warfare. Some books published by Chick Publications. [1,716] [1,717]
Unitarian Universalist
- Thomas Amory - minister of Newington Green Unitarian Church (1770–74); included in Dictionary of National Biography
- Rochemont Barbauld - minister of Newington Green Unitarian Church (1802-08); included in the Dictionary of National Biography; husband of writer Anna Laetitia Barbauld; went mad, attacked her, drowned self in New River (England)
- Edith Martineau - born Mary Edith Nettlefold but better known as Mrs. Sydney Martineau; first woman to lead the British Unitarians (from 1929 the lay president of the General Assembly of Unitarian and Free Christian Churches); wife of the 1912 Olympic fencer on whom we have an article [1,718]
- John Hanly Morgan - Unitarian minister; activist in the U.S. and Canada; recipient of the International Lenin Peace Prize (1980–82); biography included in the Canadian Who's Who 2010 edition; article created with a clear COI at User:Fuzziehollis/Rev. John Hanly Morgan; third-party-editor assistance requested: 11 July 2011
- Gertrude von Petzold - "a pioneer in many ways: in England she was the first woman who got a post as a church minister, in Germany she was the first woman who qualified for a professorship in Germanics at Kiel University. Her ecumenical attitude resulted in membership within the Lutheran Church, the Unitarians and finally the Quakers" [1,719]
Wicca and witches
- Edain McCoy - author of Celtic Myth and Magick and other works published by Llewellyn Publications; purported founder of the Witta tradition
- Agnes Snoth (1500s) - burned at the stake with four other women; preached against auricular confessions, stating that it was sinful to ask forgiveness from a man for what only God can grant There is a source on page 49 of this PDF, which may come in handy.
Sociologists
- Michèle Barrett - sociologist and cultural theorist, former president of British Sociological Association, mentioned many Wikipedia articles
- Simon Dinitz - American sociologist and criminologist; professor emeritus, Ohio State University; wrote Schizophrenics in the New Custodial Community; first professor to receive all three of OSU's Distinguished Teaching, Distinguished Research, and Distinguished Service Awards; [1,720]
- Thomas A. DiPrete - American Sociologist, Giddings Professor of Sociology, co-director of the Institute for Social and Economic Research and Policy (ISERP) at Columbia University, author of The Rise of Women: The Growing Gender Gap in Education and What it Means for American Schools, with Claudia Buchmann (2013), winner of several awards. http://sociology.columbia.edu/node/232
- Eliot Freidson (died December 14, 2005) - pioneering researcher in medical sociology and other professions; wrote "landmark" Profession of Medicine (1978); ideas achieved "methodological cult status" (see F. Condrau's The Patient's View Meets the Clinical Gaze, 2007); [1,721] NY Times obituary
- Fatma Müge Göçek (Fatma Muge Cocek) - Turkish professor of sociology and women's studies at the University of Michigan. Also the author of Denial of Violence [1,722] [1,723]
- Leah Renae Kelly - author of In My Own Voice: Explorations in the Sociopolitical Context of Art & Cinema, Canadian Ojibwe native
- Samantha Kwan - American sociologist and woman-studies scholar; considers the Western society's anxiety toward "obesity" a moral panic; [1,724]
- Jonathan Murdoch (1954–2005) - British rural sociologist; played a major part in introducing actor–network theory to human geography and planning theory (along with Sarah Whatmore and a few others); de:Jonathan Murdoch
- Karen Sternheimer - American sociologist who authored It'S Not the Media and Kids These Days, etc.; [1,725]; [1,726]; Karen Sternheimer (Q46368590)
- DaShanne Stokes (Date Requested: October 8, 2016). - (born 1978 [1,727]) American sociologist, progressive writer [1,728], LGBT rights activist [1,729], civil rights activist. Stokes is an author and civil rights activist [1,730] [1,731] who received his doctorate in sociology at the University of Pittsburgh [1,732]. Stokes writes for The Huffington Post [1,733] . Stokes is a late discovery adoptee, author, speaker, and commentator known for his work advancing civil rights and social justice [1,734]. Stokes has taught about human rights and social justice at the University of Pittsburgh [1,735]. He has been mentioned and cited in Wikipedia articles about the Native American mascot controversy, the eagle feather law, religious discrimination, smudge stick, freedom of religion, religious discrimination in the United States, and institutional racism. Stokes has presented work at the American Sociological Association [1,736] [1,737]. Stokes has been quoted in newspaper articles, magazines, journals, blogs, religious sermons, and books [1,738]. He has also been featured in radio and television media appearances [1,739]. Dr. Stokes has published articles in MSN [1,740], The Huffington Post [1,741], The Advocate [1,742] [1,743], The Chronicle of Higher Education [1,744], and Indian Country Today Media Network [1,745] [1,746]. He was founder and director of Religious Freedom with Raptors [1,747] [1,748] [1,749], an organization which sought to change the eagle feather law [1,750].
Sports figures
Please request articles about Sports figures at Wikipedia:Requested articles/Sports, not here. |
References
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