So you really think blacks and Whites are equal?
First it was Rhodesia a beautiful prosperous nation turned over to blacks and their currency is so destroyed that it takes hundreds of trillions of dollars just to buy a piece of gum. Then you have South Africa a country where under apartheid more blacks owned cars than in every other African country combined, turned over to blacks and now 50% of their military has AIDS, they face daily rolling blackouts and White farmers are being murdered and raped.
Finally we arrive at the United States, once the greatest and most powerful nation the world had ever seen, turned over to blacks and we have the following scenario.
Man Raps Before Louisiana Legislature - Watch more Funny Videos
In case you are wondering these are the sounds this beast of the field made. It really blows my mind that anyone could ever truly consider a negro equal to a White man.
Bow bow bow
Bow bow
Bow bow bow
Bow bow
Bow bow bow
Hurricane
Bow bow
Bow bow bow
Bow bow
Bow bow bow
Bum bum bum
Bum bum bum
Bum bum bum
Bum bum bum
She fine den a bitch, ass and her tits
Thick in tha hips every nig want her
Call her Halle Berry, Halle berry
Halle Berry, Halle berry
She walkin like a model
Hands on your knees
Scrub the ground
She ain't nothing but a tease
Halle Berry, Halle berry
Halle Berry, Halle berry
Well let's get ratchet
Let's get ratchet
Look at her prettier then Halle and thicker than Janet
She say she like all of my club bangers I be jamming
Told her to bust it open let me see what's really happnin
She the ship and I'm the captain
I'm tha captain
Booty bigger than the pus
And I'm all the way in your city
I'm from louisianna so you gotta show me how your
City do it for that camera
Make it drop and bring it back to the top
You no amateur
Girl you can give it to me it ain't nothing I can't handle
She just got out of the shower smellin like a scented candle
And I'm finna finna?
Sliding off tha mattress
No moving no acting baby this is real action
Beat it up so bad
You be scared to walk past me
I know your halle berry
Baby there's no acting
I beat it up so bad
You be scared to walk past me for real
She fine den a bitch ass and her tits
Thick in tha hips every nig want her
Call her Halle Berry, Halle berry
Halle Berry, Halle berry
Sunday, May 30, 2010
Saturday, May 29, 2010
Another Phony "Holocaust Survivor"
by Ian Mosley
Somebody seems to have let their old Yiddishe grandpa escape from the kosher nursing home, and he’s embarrassing not only the family but the Tribe.
An article from the Wausau Daily Herald reports: “A public presentation in Wausau by a man who claimed to have survived Auschwitz has been canceled as family members have come forward disputing the veracity of his story. Gunther Skaletz was scheduled to speak publicly Tuesday evening at Wausau East High School, hosted by a Wausau group A Walk in Their Shoes. In a statement Monday morning, the group said it could not verify or confirm allegations that Skaletz was lying, but that it was canceling the event due to a ‘cloud of controversy.’ Skaletz, who lives in Manitowoc and is a frequent speaker for schools, churches and other Wisconsin organizations, claimed in his book that he was sent to and later released from the Nazi death camp Auschwitz, conscripted by the German army and forced to fight the Soviets… then captured and sent to a Russian work camp, from which he escaped. In addition to the public event Tuesday, Skaletz was also scheduled to speak to classrooms today and tomorrow. Those events have also been canceled.”
The Germans didn’t trust the Jews, that’s why they were locking them up in labor camps during the war. The claim that he was drafted into the German army straight out of Auschwitz is just not believable. I suspect he was spinning more and more fantastic yarns, and someone finally checked with the relatives, who quickly put an end to his career as a Holocaust lecturer.
And if this Jew were willing to volunteer himself as a “Holocaust survivor” to lecture to impressionable young public school children, how many other Jewish fraudsters are out there pounding a guilt complex into young Gentile heads spinning Holocaust tales that have no basis in fact?
However it came about, the fact remains that someone in Wisconsin seems to have doubted and questioned, and not only gotten away with it, but a Holocaust fraudster was removed from the public stage. Needless to say, this story has received no national coverage at all, but maybe it’s the beginning of a trend. One can only hope so.
How long are we expected to continue fighting the Second World War? When, oh when, will these Jews finally decide they have milked enough out of it and give it a rest?
Somebody seems to have let their old Yiddishe grandpa escape from the kosher nursing home, and he’s embarrassing not only the family but the Tribe.
An article from the Wausau Daily Herald reports: “A public presentation in Wausau by a man who claimed to have survived Auschwitz has been canceled as family members have come forward disputing the veracity of his story. Gunther Skaletz was scheduled to speak publicly Tuesday evening at Wausau East High School, hosted by a Wausau group A Walk in Their Shoes. In a statement Monday morning, the group said it could not verify or confirm allegations that Skaletz was lying, but that it was canceling the event due to a ‘cloud of controversy.’ Skaletz, who lives in Manitowoc and is a frequent speaker for schools, churches and other Wisconsin organizations, claimed in his book that he was sent to and later released from the Nazi death camp Auschwitz, conscripted by the German army and forced to fight the Soviets… then captured and sent to a Russian work camp, from which he escaped. In addition to the public event Tuesday, Skaletz was also scheduled to speak to classrooms today and tomorrow. Those events have also been canceled.”
The Germans didn’t trust the Jews, that’s why they were locking them up in labor camps during the war. The claim that he was drafted into the German army straight out of Auschwitz is just not believable. I suspect he was spinning more and more fantastic yarns, and someone finally checked with the relatives, who quickly put an end to his career as a Holocaust lecturer.
And if this Jew were willing to volunteer himself as a “Holocaust survivor” to lecture to impressionable young public school children, how many other Jewish fraudsters are out there pounding a guilt complex into young Gentile heads spinning Holocaust tales that have no basis in fact?
However it came about, the fact remains that someone in Wisconsin seems to have doubted and questioned, and not only gotten away with it, but a Holocaust fraudster was removed from the public stage. Needless to say, this story has received no national coverage at all, but maybe it’s the beginning of a trend. One can only hope so.
How long are we expected to continue fighting the Second World War? When, oh when, will these Jews finally decide they have milked enough out of it and give it a rest?
New Video Shows US Chopper Shooting Iraqi Farmers
How exactly does this protect my freedom?
Here is the video straight through.
This is the video with commentary
Here is the video straight through.
This is the video with commentary
Quote Of The Week
"The fixed determination to acquire the warrior soul, and having acquired it, to conquer or perish with honor, is the secret of success in war."
General George S. Patton Jr.
The Wrath Of The Awakened Saxon
by Rudyard Kipling
It was not part of their blood,
It came to them very late,
With long arrears to make good,
When the Saxon began to hate.
They were not easily moved,
They were icy -- willing to wait
Till every count should be proved,
Ere the Saxon began to hate.
Their voices were even and low.
Their eyes were level and straight.
There was neither sign nor show
When the Saxon began to hate.
It was not preached to the crowd.
It was not taught by the state.
No man spoke it aloud
When the Saxon began to hate.
It was not suddently bred.
It will not swiftly abate.
Through the chilled years ahead,
When Time shall count from the date
That the Saxon began to hate.
It was not part of their blood,
It came to them very late,
With long arrears to make good,
When the Saxon began to hate.
They were not easily moved,
They were icy -- willing to wait
Till every count should be proved,
Ere the Saxon began to hate.
Their voices were even and low.
Their eyes were level and straight.
There was neither sign nor show
When the Saxon began to hate.
It was not preached to the crowd.
It was not taught by the state.
No man spoke it aloud
When the Saxon began to hate.
It was not suddently bred.
It will not swiftly abate.
Through the chilled years ahead,
When Time shall count from the date
That the Saxon began to hate.
Thursday, May 27, 2010
Introducing the Private Option Health Care Act
Statement of Congressman Ron Paul
United States House of Representatives
Statement Introducing the Private Option Health Care Act
May 27, 2010
Madam Speaker, I rise to introduce the Private Option Health Care Act. This bill places individuals back in control of health care by replacing the recently passed tax-spend-and-regulate health care law with reforms designed to restore a free market health care system.
The major problems with American health care are rooted in government policies that encourage excessive reliance on third-party payers. The excessive reliance on third-party payers removes incentives for individual patients to concern themselves with health care costs. Laws and policies promoting Health Maintenance Organizations (HMOs) resulted from a desperate attempt to control spiraling costs. However, instead of promoting an efficient health care system, HMOs further took control over health care away from patients and physicians. Furthermore, the third-party payer system creates a two-tier health care system where people whose employers can afford to offer "Cadillac" plans have access to top quality health care, while people unable to obtain health insurance from their employers face obstacles in obtaining quality health care.
The Private Option Health Care Act gives control of health care back into the hands of individuals through tax credits and tax deductions, improving Health Savings Accounts and Flexible Savings Accounts. Specifically, the bill:
A. Provides all Americans with a tax credit for 100% of health care expenses. The tax credit is fully refundable against both income and payroll taxes;
B. Allows individuals to roll over unused amounts in cafeteria plans and Flexible Savings Accounts (FSA);
C. Provides a tax credit for premiums for high-deductible insurance policies connected with a Health Savings Accounts (HSAs) and allows seniors to use funds in HSAs to pay for medigap policies;
D. Repeals the 7.5% threshold for the deduction of medical expenses, thus making all medical expenses tax deductible.
This bill also creates a competitive market in heath insurance. It achieves this goal by exercising Congress's authority under the Commerce Clause to allow individuals to purchase health insurance across state lines. The near-monopoly position many health insurers have in many states and the high prices and inefficiencies that result, is a direct result of state laws limiting people's ability to buy health insurance that meets their needs, instead of a health insurance plan that meets what state legislators, special interests, and health insurance lobbyists think they should have. Ending this ban will create a truly competitive marketplace in health insurance and give insurance companies more incentive to offer quality insurance at affordable prices.
The Private Option Health Care Act also provides an effective means of ensuring that people harmed during medical treatment receive fair compensation while reducing the burden of costly malpractice litigation on the health care system. The bill achieves this goal by providing a tax credit for negative outcomes insurance purchased before medical treatment. The insurance will provide compensation for any negative outcomes of the medical treatment. Patients can receive this insurance without having to go through lengthy litigation and without having to give away a large portion of their awards to trial lawyers.
Finally, the Private Option Health Care Act also lowers the prices of prescription drugs by reducing barriers to the importation of Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved pharmaceuticals. Under my bill, anyone wishing to import a drug simply submits an application to the FDA, which then must approve the drug unless the FDA finds the drug is either not approved for use in the United States or is adulterated or misbranded. This process will make safe and available imported medicines affordable to millions of Americans. Letting the free market work is the best means of lowering the cost of prescription drugs.
Madam Speaker, the Private Option Health Care Act allows Congress to correct the mistake it made last month by replacing the new health care law with health care measures that give control to health care to individuals, instead of the federal government and politically-influential corporations. I urge my colleagues to support this bill.
25 Questions To Ask Anyone Who Is Delusional Enough To Believe That This Economic Recovery Is Real
By Michael Snyder - BLN Contributing Writer
If you listen to the mainstream media long enough, you just might be tempted to believe that the United States has emerged from the recession and is now in the middle of a full-fledged economic recovery. In fact, according to Obama administration officials, the great American economic machine has roared back to life, stronger and more vibrant than ever before. But is that really the case? Of course not. You would have to be delusional to believe that. What did happen was that all of the stimulus packages and government spending and new debt that Obama and the U.S. Congress pumped into the economy bought us a little bit of time. But they have also made our long-term economic problems far worse. The reality is that the U.S. cannot keep supporting an economy on an ocean of red ink forever. At some point the charade is going to come crashing down.
And GDP is not a really good measure of the economic health of a nation. For example, if you would have looked at the growth of GDP in the Weimar republic in the early 1930s, you may have been tempted to think that the German economy was really thriving. German citizens were spending increasingly massive amounts of money. But of course that money was becoming increasingly worthless at the same time as hyperinflation spiralled out of control.
Well, today the purchasing power of our dollar is rapidly eroding as the price of food and other necessities continues to increase. So just because Americans are spending a little bit more money than before really doesn’t mean much of anything. As you will see below, there are a whole bunch of other signs that the U.S. economy is in very, very serious trouble.
Any “recovery” that the U.S. economy is experiencing is illusory and will be quite temporary. The entire financial system of the United States is falling apart, and the powers that be can try to patch it up and prop it up for a while, but in the end this thing is going to come crashing down.
But as obvious as that may seem to most of us, there are still quite a few people out there that are absolutely convinced that the U.S. economy will fully recover and will soon be stronger than ever.
So the following are 25 questions to ask anyone who is delusional enough to believe that this economic recovery is real….
#1) In what universe is an economy with 39.68 million Americans on food stamps considered to be a healthy, recovering economy? In fact, the U.S. Department of Agriculture forecasts that enrollment in the food stamp program will exceed 43 million Americans in 2011. Is a rapidly increasing number of Americans on food stamps a good sign or a bad sign for the economy?
#2) According to RealtyTrac, foreclosure filings were reported on 367,056 properties in the month of March. This was an increase of almost 19 percent from February, and it was the highest monthly total since RealtyTrac began issuing its report back in January 2005. So can you please explain again how the U.S. real estate market is getting better?
#3) The Mortgage Bankers Association just announced that more than 10 percent of U.S. homeowners with a mortgage had missed at least one payment in the January-March period. That was a record high and up from 9.1 percent a year ago. Do you think that is an indication that the U.S. housing market is recovering?
#4) How can the U.S. real estate market be considered healthy when, for the first time in modern history, banks own a greater share of residential housing net worth in the United States than all individual Americans put together?
#5) With the U.S. Congress planning to quadruple oil taxes, what do you think that is going to do to the price of gasoline in the United States and how do you think that will affect the U.S. economy?
#6) Do you think that it is a good sign that Arnold Schwarzenegger, the governor of the state of California, says that “terrible cuts” are urgently needed in order to avoid a complete financial disaster in his state?
#7) But it just isn’t California that is in trouble. Dozens of U.S. states are in such bad financial shape that they are getting ready for their biggest budget cuts in decades. What do you think all of those budget cuts will do to the economy?
#8) In March, the U.S. trade deficit widened to its highest level since December 2008. Month after month after month we buy much more from the rest of the world than they buy from us. Wealth is draining out of the United States at an unprecedented rate. So is the fact that the gigantic U.S. trade deficit is actually getting bigger a good sign or a bad sign for the U.S. economy?
#9) Considering the fact that the U.S. government is projected to have a 1.6 trillion dollar deficit in 2010, and considering the fact that if you went out and spent one dollar every single second it would take you more than 31,000 years to spend a trillion dollars, how can anyone in their right mind claim that the U.S. economy is getting healthier when we are getting into so much debt?
#10) The U.S. Treasury Department recently announced that the U.S. government suffered a wider-than-expected budget deficit of 82.69 billion dollars in April. So is the fact that the red ink of the U.S. government is actually worse than projected a good sign or a bad sign?
#11) According to one new report, the U.S. national debt will reach 100 percent of GDP by the year 2015. So is that a sign of economic recovery or of economic disaster?
#12) Monstrous amounts of oil continue to gush freely into the Gulf of Mexico, and analysts are already projecting that the seafood and tourism industries along the Gulf coast will be devastated for decades by this unprecedented environmental disaster. In light of those facts, how in the world can anyone project that the U.S. economy will soon be stronger than ever?
#13) The FDIC’s list of problem banks recently hit a 17-year high. Do you think that an increasing number of small banks failing is a good sign or a bad sign for the U.S. economy?
#14) The FDIC is backing 8,000 banks that have a total of $13 trillion in assets with a deposit insurance fund that is basically flat broke. So what do you think will happen if a significant number of small banks do start failing?
#15) Existing home sales in the United States jumped 7.6 percent in April. That is the good news. The bad news is that this increase only happened because the deadline to take advantage of the temporary home buyer tax credit (government bribe) was looming. So now that there is no more tax credit for home buyers, what will that do to home sales?
#16) Both Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac recently told the U.S. government that they are going to need even more bailout money. So what does it say about the U.S. economy when the two “pillars” of the U.S. mortgage industry are government-backed financial black holes that the U.S. government has to relentlessly pour money into?
#17) 43 percent of Americans have less than $10,000 saved for retirement. Tens of millions of Americans find themselves just one lawsuit, one really bad traffic accident or one very serious illness away from financial ruin. With so many Americans living on the edge, how can you say that the economy is healthy?
#18) The mayor of Detroit says that the real unemployment rate in his city is somewhere around 50 percent. So can the U.S. really be experiencing an economic recovery when so many are still unemployed in one of America’s biggest cities?
#19) Gallup’s measure of underemployment hit 20.0% on March 15th. That was up from 19.7% two weeks earlier and 19.5% at the start of the year. Do you think that is a good trend or a bad trend?
#20) One new poll shows that 76 percent of Americans believe that the U.S. economy is still in a recession. So are the vast majority of Americans just stupid or could we still actually be in a recession?
#21) The bottom 40 percent of those living in the United States now collectively own less than 1 percent of the nation’s wealth. So is Barack Obama’s mantra that “what is good for Wall Street is good for Main Street” actually true?
#22) Richard Russell, the famous author of the Dow Theory Letters, says that Americans should sell anything they can sell in order to get liquid because of the economic trouble that is coming. Do you think that Richard Russell is delusional or could he possibly have a point?
#23) Defaults on apartment building mortgages held by U.S. banks climbed to a record 4.6 percent in the first quarter of 2010. In fact, that was almost twice the level of a year earlier. Does that look like a good trend to you?
#24) In March, the price of fresh and dried vegetables in the United States soared 49.3% - the most in 16 years. Is it a sign of a healthy economy when food prices are increasing so dramatically?
#25) 1.41 million Americans filed for personal bankruptcy in 2009 – a 32 percent increase over 2008. Not only that, more Americans filed for bankruptcy in March 2010 than during any month since U.S. bankruptcy law was tightened in October 2005. So shouldn’t we at least wait until the number of Americans filing for bankruptcy is not setting new all-time records before we even dare whisper the words “economic recovery”?
If you listen to the mainstream media long enough, you just might be tempted to believe that the United States has emerged from the recession and is now in the middle of a full-fledged economic recovery. In fact, according to Obama administration officials, the great American economic machine has roared back to life, stronger and more vibrant than ever before. But is that really the case? Of course not. You would have to be delusional to believe that. What did happen was that all of the stimulus packages and government spending and new debt that Obama and the U.S. Congress pumped into the economy bought us a little bit of time. But they have also made our long-term economic problems far worse. The reality is that the U.S. cannot keep supporting an economy on an ocean of red ink forever. At some point the charade is going to come crashing down.
And GDP is not a really good measure of the economic health of a nation. For example, if you would have looked at the growth of GDP in the Weimar republic in the early 1930s, you may have been tempted to think that the German economy was really thriving. German citizens were spending increasingly massive amounts of money. But of course that money was becoming increasingly worthless at the same time as hyperinflation spiralled out of control.
Well, today the purchasing power of our dollar is rapidly eroding as the price of food and other necessities continues to increase. So just because Americans are spending a little bit more money than before really doesn’t mean much of anything. As you will see below, there are a whole bunch of other signs that the U.S. economy is in very, very serious trouble.
Any “recovery” that the U.S. economy is experiencing is illusory and will be quite temporary. The entire financial system of the United States is falling apart, and the powers that be can try to patch it up and prop it up for a while, but in the end this thing is going to come crashing down.
But as obvious as that may seem to most of us, there are still quite a few people out there that are absolutely convinced that the U.S. economy will fully recover and will soon be stronger than ever.
So the following are 25 questions to ask anyone who is delusional enough to believe that this economic recovery is real….
#1) In what universe is an economy with 39.68 million Americans on food stamps considered to be a healthy, recovering economy? In fact, the U.S. Department of Agriculture forecasts that enrollment in the food stamp program will exceed 43 million Americans in 2011. Is a rapidly increasing number of Americans on food stamps a good sign or a bad sign for the economy?
#2) According to RealtyTrac, foreclosure filings were reported on 367,056 properties in the month of March. This was an increase of almost 19 percent from February, and it was the highest monthly total since RealtyTrac began issuing its report back in January 2005. So can you please explain again how the U.S. real estate market is getting better?
#3) The Mortgage Bankers Association just announced that more than 10 percent of U.S. homeowners with a mortgage had missed at least one payment in the January-March period. That was a record high and up from 9.1 percent a year ago. Do you think that is an indication that the U.S. housing market is recovering?
#4) How can the U.S. real estate market be considered healthy when, for the first time in modern history, banks own a greater share of residential housing net worth in the United States than all individual Americans put together?
#5) With the U.S. Congress planning to quadruple oil taxes, what do you think that is going to do to the price of gasoline in the United States and how do you think that will affect the U.S. economy?
#6) Do you think that it is a good sign that Arnold Schwarzenegger, the governor of the state of California, says that “terrible cuts” are urgently needed in order to avoid a complete financial disaster in his state?
#7) But it just isn’t California that is in trouble. Dozens of U.S. states are in such bad financial shape that they are getting ready for their biggest budget cuts in decades. What do you think all of those budget cuts will do to the economy?
#8) In March, the U.S. trade deficit widened to its highest level since December 2008. Month after month after month we buy much more from the rest of the world than they buy from us. Wealth is draining out of the United States at an unprecedented rate. So is the fact that the gigantic U.S. trade deficit is actually getting bigger a good sign or a bad sign for the U.S. economy?
#9) Considering the fact that the U.S. government is projected to have a 1.6 trillion dollar deficit in 2010, and considering the fact that if you went out and spent one dollar every single second it would take you more than 31,000 years to spend a trillion dollars, how can anyone in their right mind claim that the U.S. economy is getting healthier when we are getting into so much debt?
#10) The U.S. Treasury Department recently announced that the U.S. government suffered a wider-than-expected budget deficit of 82.69 billion dollars in April. So is the fact that the red ink of the U.S. government is actually worse than projected a good sign or a bad sign?
#11) According to one new report, the U.S. national debt will reach 100 percent of GDP by the year 2015. So is that a sign of economic recovery or of economic disaster?
#12) Monstrous amounts of oil continue to gush freely into the Gulf of Mexico, and analysts are already projecting that the seafood and tourism industries along the Gulf coast will be devastated for decades by this unprecedented environmental disaster. In light of those facts, how in the world can anyone project that the U.S. economy will soon be stronger than ever?
#13) The FDIC’s list of problem banks recently hit a 17-year high. Do you think that an increasing number of small banks failing is a good sign or a bad sign for the U.S. economy?
#14) The FDIC is backing 8,000 banks that have a total of $13 trillion in assets with a deposit insurance fund that is basically flat broke. So what do you think will happen if a significant number of small banks do start failing?
#15) Existing home sales in the United States jumped 7.6 percent in April. That is the good news. The bad news is that this increase only happened because the deadline to take advantage of the temporary home buyer tax credit (government bribe) was looming. So now that there is no more tax credit for home buyers, what will that do to home sales?
#16) Both Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac recently told the U.S. government that they are going to need even more bailout money. So what does it say about the U.S. economy when the two “pillars” of the U.S. mortgage industry are government-backed financial black holes that the U.S. government has to relentlessly pour money into?
#17) 43 percent of Americans have less than $10,000 saved for retirement. Tens of millions of Americans find themselves just one lawsuit, one really bad traffic accident or one very serious illness away from financial ruin. With so many Americans living on the edge, how can you say that the economy is healthy?
#18) The mayor of Detroit says that the real unemployment rate in his city is somewhere around 50 percent. So can the U.S. really be experiencing an economic recovery when so many are still unemployed in one of America’s biggest cities?
#19) Gallup’s measure of underemployment hit 20.0% on March 15th. That was up from 19.7% two weeks earlier and 19.5% at the start of the year. Do you think that is a good trend or a bad trend?
#20) One new poll shows that 76 percent of Americans believe that the U.S. economy is still in a recession. So are the vast majority of Americans just stupid or could we still actually be in a recession?
#21) The bottom 40 percent of those living in the United States now collectively own less than 1 percent of the nation’s wealth. So is Barack Obama’s mantra that “what is good for Wall Street is good for Main Street” actually true?
#22) Richard Russell, the famous author of the Dow Theory Letters, says that Americans should sell anything they can sell in order to get liquid because of the economic trouble that is coming. Do you think that Richard Russell is delusional or could he possibly have a point?
#23) Defaults on apartment building mortgages held by U.S. banks climbed to a record 4.6 percent in the first quarter of 2010. In fact, that was almost twice the level of a year earlier. Does that look like a good trend to you?
#24) In March, the price of fresh and dried vegetables in the United States soared 49.3% - the most in 16 years. Is it a sign of a healthy economy when food prices are increasing so dramatically?
#25) 1.41 million Americans filed for personal bankruptcy in 2009 – a 32 percent increase over 2008. Not only that, more Americans filed for bankruptcy in March 2010 than during any month since U.S. bankruptcy law was tightened in October 2005. So shouldn’t we at least wait until the number of Americans filing for bankruptcy is not setting new all-time records before we even dare whisper the words “economic recovery”?
Everybody Draw Holocaust Day
In response to "Everyone Draw Muhammad Day" muslims have hit back with "Everybody Draw Holocaust Day" where as far as I can tell they are doing great work in bringing much needed attention to the holocaust hoax.
In this case I don't necessarily ascribe to the proverb "the enemy of my enemy is my friend" since I don't care to live amongst muslims anymore than any other non White group. However they are in no way as big a threat to White Western society as the jews. I certainly do take seriously the fact that there are 1 billion of them worldwide, but the fact remains their influence in world affairs as well as their impact on White society pales in comparison to the death grip the jews now enjoy.
I encourage everyone to check out "Everybody Draw Holocaust Day" you might learn something new but if nothing else you will certainly piss off the nation wreckers.
Tuesday, May 25, 2010
The Hook Nosed Rats Are Mad At Pat Buchanan
"To the best of my knowledge, none of Buchanan's bosses or colleagues at MSNBC have ever publicly challenged him to explain his bigoted proclivities. The real question is why MSNBC continues to give him an aura of respectability by retaining him as a regular political commentator despite his abysmal anti-Semitic record.
The overwhelming majority of MSNBC's viewers have no idea that Buchanan is not just another affable talking head. That is where he must be exposed. Buchanan has a Constitutional right to be an anti-Semite, but at the very least he should be identified as such every time he is allowed to appear on national television."
Well who would be more fair and objective than the author of this piece /rolleyes
Menachem Z. Rosensaft is Adjunct Professor of Law at Cornell Law School, and Vice President of the American Gathering of Jewish Holocaust Survivors and Their Descendants
One good thing that came of reading this article and some of Buchanan's quotes is I certainly gained respect for the man.
If you want to read the diatribe of an angry kike click here
The overwhelming majority of MSNBC's viewers have no idea that Buchanan is not just another affable talking head. That is where he must be exposed. Buchanan has a Constitutional right to be an anti-Semite, but at the very least he should be identified as such every time he is allowed to appear on national television."
Well who would be more fair and objective than the author of this piece /rolleyes
Menachem Z. Rosensaft is Adjunct Professor of Law at Cornell Law School, and Vice President of the American Gathering of Jewish Holocaust Survivors and Their Descendants
One good thing that came of reading this article and some of Buchanan's quotes is I certainly gained respect for the man.
If you want to read the diatribe of an angry kike click here
Saturday, May 22, 2010
Quote Of The Week
"Surrender means that the history of this heroic struggle will be written by the enemy; that our youth will be trained by Northern school teachers; will learn from Northern school books their version of the War; will be impressed by all the influences of history and education to regard our gallant dead as traitors, and our maimed veterans as fit subjects for derision.
If this cause, that is dear to my heart, is doomed to fail, I pray Heaven may let me fail with it, while my face is toward the enemy and my arm battling for that which I know is right.
I am with the South in death, in victory or defeat. I believe the North is about to wage a brutal and unholy war on a people who have done them no wrong, in violation of the constitution and the fundamental principles of the government. They no longer acknowledge that all government derives its validity from the consent of the governed."
General Patrick Cleburne - Confederate States of America
If this cause, that is dear to my heart, is doomed to fail, I pray Heaven may let me fail with it, while my face is toward the enemy and my arm battling for that which I know is right.
I am with the South in death, in victory or defeat. I believe the North is about to wage a brutal and unholy war on a people who have done them no wrong, in violation of the constitution and the fundamental principles of the government. They no longer acknowledge that all government derives its validity from the consent of the governed."
General Patrick Cleburne - Confederate States of America
House Approves Extra 205 Million For Israel 410-4 Vote
I wrote about last week how Barack wanted to give 200 million extra to Israel on top of the billions we already give them per year. Well the jews and their shabbos goy in Congress have voted 410-4 in favor of sending over 200 million tax payer dollars to the terror state of israel.
As I pointed out in the original post, we are rich why not? Our economy is strong, our people are employed we basically have money flowing out of our ears so whats another 200 mil? /s
The four Congressman who voted against the resolution were John Conyers (D – MI), Dennis Kucinich (D – OH), Ron Paul (R – TX), and Pete Stark (D – CA).
Here is the full article
1/10th of US Banks Classify As "Problem Banks"
As I've said from day 1 and recently in this post we are on shaky ground. The following story lends credence to that.
WASHINGTON—A total of 775 banks, or one-tenth of all U.S. banks, were on the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.'s list of "problem" institutions in the first quarter, as bad loans in the commercial real-estate market weighed on bank balance sheets.
Poor loan performance in other sectors also continued to hurt banks, with the total number of loans at least three months past due climbing for the 16th consecutive quarter, FDIC officials said in a briefing on Thursday.
"The banking system still has many problems to work through, and we cannot ignore the possibility of more financial market volatility," FDIC Chairman Sheila Bair said.
There were 702 on the FDIC's "problem" bank list at the end of 2009 and 252 at the end of 2008.
FDIC officials said they expected the number of failed banks to peak this year after climbing steadily over the past three years. Regulators have shut 72 banks so far this year, more than double the number closed by this time last year. Ms. Bair said regulators were preparing for a steady pace of additional closures through the end of the year. A total of 237 banks have failed since the beginning of 2008.
The failures continue to strain the FDIC's fund to protect consumer deposits, although officials signaled they were confident they had enough cash on hand to deal with the expected spate of failures, without having to assess new fees on the banking industry. The agency's deposit insurance fund stood at negative-$20.7 billion at the end of the first quarter, a slight improvement from the end of 2009. (So even though you are 21 billion dollars in the hole, we are supposed to see this as good news? Good how? That it isn't 22 billion? Give me a break)
"We have the necessary industry-funded resources to complete the cleanup," Ms. Bair said, in a reference to the fees that the agency assesses on banks for insuring their deposits.
Banks, squeezed by problem loans and the continued recession, responded by reducing their lending. The industry's total loan balances grew by 3% during the quarter, but the increase was due to accounting changes that required banks to bring securitized assets back onto their balance sheets. Without taking into account these accounting changes, lending would have declined for the seventh straight quarter, as banks cut back across most major lending categories.
"There is a lot of credit distress still in the mortgage-portfolio area," FDIC Chief Economist Richard Brown said at the FDIC briefing.
FDIC officials said they saw some signs for optimism. (Wow you mean the same numbskulls who didn't see the crash coming, and are themselves now completely broke?) The total $18 billion, first-quarter profit reported by U.S. banks and thrifts was the highest since the first three months of 2008 and more than triple the profit recorded in the first quarter of last year. More than half of insured banks reported growth in net income during the quarter—the highest level in more than three years—and firms set aside less money to reserve for future losses.
The FDIC data suggested that the largest U.S. banks were faring better than their smaller rivals. (Wow what a shock could it be because we handed them trillions of dollars for free? You had me 24 trillion and I'd be looking pretty damn good too) The former enjoyed the largest year-over-year increase in earnings and saw the biggest reduction in loan-loss reserves, or the money they must set aside to account for future, expected losses on loans. Ms. Bair said the rate of decline in lending by larger banks also slowed in each of the past two quarters.
WASHINGTON—A total of 775 banks, or one-tenth of all U.S. banks, were on the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.'s list of "problem" institutions in the first quarter, as bad loans in the commercial real-estate market weighed on bank balance sheets.
Poor loan performance in other sectors also continued to hurt banks, with the total number of loans at least three months past due climbing for the 16th consecutive quarter, FDIC officials said in a briefing on Thursday.
"The banking system still has many problems to work through, and we cannot ignore the possibility of more financial market volatility," FDIC Chairman Sheila Bair said.
There were 702 on the FDIC's "problem" bank list at the end of 2009 and 252 at the end of 2008.
FDIC officials said they expected the number of failed banks to peak this year after climbing steadily over the past three years. Regulators have shut 72 banks so far this year, more than double the number closed by this time last year. Ms. Bair said regulators were preparing for a steady pace of additional closures through the end of the year. A total of 237 banks have failed since the beginning of 2008.
The failures continue to strain the FDIC's fund to protect consumer deposits, although officials signaled they were confident they had enough cash on hand to deal with the expected spate of failures, without having to assess new fees on the banking industry. The agency's deposit insurance fund stood at negative-$20.7 billion at the end of the first quarter, a slight improvement from the end of 2009. (So even though you are 21 billion dollars in the hole, we are supposed to see this as good news? Good how? That it isn't 22 billion? Give me a break)
"We have the necessary industry-funded resources to complete the cleanup," Ms. Bair said, in a reference to the fees that the agency assesses on banks for insuring their deposits.
Banks, squeezed by problem loans and the continued recession, responded by reducing their lending. The industry's total loan balances grew by 3% during the quarter, but the increase was due to accounting changes that required banks to bring securitized assets back onto their balance sheets. Without taking into account these accounting changes, lending would have declined for the seventh straight quarter, as banks cut back across most major lending categories.
"There is a lot of credit distress still in the mortgage-portfolio area," FDIC Chief Economist Richard Brown said at the FDIC briefing.
FDIC officials said they saw some signs for optimism. (Wow you mean the same numbskulls who didn't see the crash coming, and are themselves now completely broke?) The total $18 billion, first-quarter profit reported by U.S. banks and thrifts was the highest since the first three months of 2008 and more than triple the profit recorded in the first quarter of last year. More than half of insured banks reported growth in net income during the quarter—the highest level in more than three years—and firms set aside less money to reserve for future losses.
The FDIC data suggested that the largest U.S. banks were faring better than their smaller rivals. (Wow what a shock could it be because we handed them trillions of dollars for free? You had me 24 trillion and I'd be looking pretty damn good too) The former enjoyed the largest year-over-year increase in earnings and saw the biggest reduction in loan-loss reserves, or the money they must set aside to account for future, expected losses on loans. Ms. Bair said the rate of decline in lending by larger banks also slowed in each of the past two quarters.
Discounts Offered For Mixed Race Couples
There is no push for diversity! You guys are just jew bashing racists. They aren't trying to destroy the White race you are just a paranoid hate monger. We've all heard that crap hundreds of times yet these quotes and the following story speaks for itself.
"The white race is the cancer of human history" - Susan Sontag - jew
“The goal of of abolishing the white race is on its face so desirable that some may find it hard to believe it could incur any opposition other than from committed white supremacists.” - Noel Ignatiev - jew
"We must realize that our Party's most powerful weapon is racial tension. By propounding into the consciousness of the dark races that for centuries they have been oppressed by the Whites, we can mould them to the program of the Communist Party. In America, we will aim for subtle victory. While inflaming the Negro minority against the Whites, we will instill in the Whites a guilt complex for their exploitation of the Negroes. We will aid the Negroes to rise to prominence in every walk of life, in the professions and in the world of sports and entertainment. With this prestige, the Negro will be able to intermarry with the Whites and begin a process which will deliver America to our cause." - Israel Cohen - jew
"Keep bashing the dead white males, and the live ones, and the females, too, until the social construct known as the white race is destroyed. Not deconstructed, but destroyed." - Noel Ignatiev - jew
Source
JACKSON, MS (WLBT) - Thirteen restaurants around the metropolitan Jackson area are taking part in Mission Mississippi's "Two & Two Restaurant Days" on Tuesday and Thursday of this week.
Those who eat at participating restaurants for lunch and/or dinner will receive a 22-percent discount on their meal if they dine with someone of a different race.
A minimum of two people should be on each ticket order. Once you're seated, mention that you are participating in the program to receive the discount. And remember to tip your server based on the full price of the meal.
Here is a list of the participating restaurants:
* Basil's (downtown)
* Bon Ami
* Bravo!
* Broad Street Baking Co.
* Bully's
* Foodies (dine-in only)
* High Noon Cafe (at Rainbow Whole Foods)
* Koinonia Coffee House
* Pan-Asia
* Primos Cafe (both locations)
* Sal & Mookie's
* Two Sisters Kitchen
For more information, visit www.missionmississippi.org.
Source
"The white race is the cancer of human history" - Susan Sontag - jew
“The goal of of abolishing the white race is on its face so desirable that some may find it hard to believe it could incur any opposition other than from committed white supremacists.” - Noel Ignatiev - jew
"We must realize that our Party's most powerful weapon is racial tension. By propounding into the consciousness of the dark races that for centuries they have been oppressed by the Whites, we can mould them to the program of the Communist Party. In America, we will aim for subtle victory. While inflaming the Negro minority against the Whites, we will instill in the Whites a guilt complex for their exploitation of the Negroes. We will aid the Negroes to rise to prominence in every walk of life, in the professions and in the world of sports and entertainment. With this prestige, the Negro will be able to intermarry with the Whites and begin a process which will deliver America to our cause." - Israel Cohen - jew
"Keep bashing the dead white males, and the live ones, and the females, too, until the social construct known as the white race is destroyed. Not deconstructed, but destroyed." - Noel Ignatiev - jew
Source
JACKSON, MS (WLBT) - Thirteen restaurants around the metropolitan Jackson area are taking part in Mission Mississippi's "Two & Two Restaurant Days" on Tuesday and Thursday of this week.
Those who eat at participating restaurants for lunch and/or dinner will receive a 22-percent discount on their meal if they dine with someone of a different race.
A minimum of two people should be on each ticket order. Once you're seated, mention that you are participating in the program to receive the discount. And remember to tip your server based on the full price of the meal.
Here is a list of the participating restaurants:
* Basil's (downtown)
* Bon Ami
* Bravo!
* Broad Street Baking Co.
* Bully's
* Foodies (dine-in only)
* High Noon Cafe (at Rainbow Whole Foods)
* Koinonia Coffee House
* Pan-Asia
* Primos Cafe (both locations)
* Sal & Mookie's
* Two Sisters Kitchen
For more information, visit www.missionmississippi.org.
Source
Friday, May 21, 2010
32 US States Now Bankrupt
Courtesy of Economic Policy Journal we now know that the majority of American states are currently insolvent, and that the US Treasury has been conducting a shadow bailout of at least 32 US states. Over 60% of Americans receiving state unemployment benefits are getting these directly from the US government, as 32 states have now borrowed $37.8 billion from Uncle Sam to fund unemployment insurance. The states in most dire condition, are, not unexpectedly, the unholy trifecta of California ($6.9 billion borrowed), Michigan ($3.9 billion), and New York ($3.2 billion). With this form of shadow bailout occurring, one can only wonder how many other shadow programs are currently in operation to fund states under the table with federal money.The full list of America's 32 insolvent states is below, sorted in order of bankruptedness.
California $6,900
Michigan 3,900
New York 3,200
Penn. 3,000
Ohio 2,300
Illinois 2,200
N.C. 2,100
Indiana 1,700
New Jersey 1,700
Florida 1,600
Wisconsin 1,400
Texas 1,000
S.C. 886
Kentucky 795
Missouri 722
Connecticut 498
Minnesota 477
Georgia 416
Nevada 397
Mass. 387
Virginia 346
Arkansas 330
Alabama 283
Colorado 253
R.I. 225
Idaho 202
Maryland 133
Kansas 88
Vermont 33
S.D. 24
Tennessee 21
Virgin Islands 13
Delaware 12
California $6,900
Michigan 3,900
New York 3,200
Penn. 3,000
Ohio 2,300
Illinois 2,200
N.C. 2,100
Indiana 1,700
New Jersey 1,700
Florida 1,600
Wisconsin 1,400
Texas 1,000
S.C. 886
Kentucky 795
Missouri 722
Connecticut 498
Minnesota 477
Georgia 416
Nevada 397
Mass. 387
Virginia 346
Arkansas 330
Alabama 283
Colorado 253
R.I. 225
Idaho 202
Maryland 133
Kansas 88
Vermont 33
S.D. 24
Tennessee 21
Virgin Islands 13
Delaware 12
Rand Paul IS A Zionist Neo Con
As I wrote earlier in the month I have cut my support for Rand Paul 100% since it came to my attention that he was a zionist who supports the terror state of israel. Now there is even more proof straight from the horses mouth.
Source
I've obtained a document that the Rand Paul campaign is circulating to those interested in his views on Israel, and it's interesting to see how the positions he's taking as a Republican Senate candidate in Kentucky differ from those adopted by his father, Rep. Ron Paul, a harsh critic of U.S.-Israel ties.
"Israel and the United States have a special relationship," Rand's position paper begins. "With our shared history and common values, the American and Israeli people have formed a bond that unites us across the many thousands of miles between our countries and calls us to work together towards peace and prosperity for our countries."
Rand goes on to support free trade with Israel, call for divestment from Iran, and "strongly object to the arrogant approach of (the) Obama administration" toward the peace process. "Only Israel can decide what is in her security interest, not America and certainly not the United Nations," he asserts.
In one clear departure from his father, Rand states that:
As a United States Senator, I would never vote to condemn Israel for defending herself.
Whether it is fighting Hezbollah in Lebanon, combating Hamas-linked terrorists in Gaza or dealing with potential nuclear threats in the Persian Gulf, Israeli military actions are completely up to the leaders and military of Israel, and Israel alone.
By contrast, when Israel retaliated against Hamas in Gaza to stop rockets from being fired toward Israeli civilians, his father rushed to condemn Israel. In a YouTube video, Ron Paul called it a "pretty sad day for the whole world" that he said reflected the spread of the idea of preemtive war. He went further, by saying the fact that the United States provides aid to Israel and did nothing to try and stop the military action made the U.S. complicit. He said the action would "antagonize" the Arab-Muslim world and warned that "we’ll suffer the consequences."
Continued U.S. support for Israel is part of Ron Paul's broader view of foreign policy and the concept of "blowback." Rand Paul focuses his statement on condemning foreign aid to enemies of Israel, saying that, "In the Senate, I would strive to eliminate all aid to countries that threaten Israel." But he doesn't address the issue of aid to Israel itself.
You can read the full statement after the jump.
The United States Special Relationship with Israel
By Dr. Rand Paul
Candidate, United States Senate
Israel and the United States have a special relationship. With our shared history and common values, the American and Israeli people have formed a bond that unites us across the many thousands of miles between our countries and calls us to work together towards peace and prosperity for our countries.
The free trade agreement that has existed, and been subsequently strengthened, between our countries since 1985 is a tremendous mutual benefit. As a United States Senator, I would work against the growing protectionist sentiment in our country and defend free trade with Israel.
I would never vote to place trade restrictions on Israel, and I would filibuster any attempts to place sanctions on Israel or tariffs on any Israeli goods.
The issue of Palestine is incredibly difficult and complex. The entire world wishes for peace in the region, but any arrangement or treaty must come from Israel, when she is ready and when her conditions have been met.
I strongly object to the arrogant approach of Obama administration, itself a continuation of the failures of past U.S. administrations, as they push Israel to make security concessions behind thinly veiled threats.
Only Israel can decide what is in her security interest, not America and certainly not the United Nations. Friends do not coerce friends to trade land for peace, or to give up the vital security interests of their people.
As a United States Senator, I would never vote to condemn Israel for defending herself.
Whether it is fighting Hezbollah in Lebanon, combating Hamas-linked terrorists in Gaza or dealing with potential nuclear threats in the Persian Gulf, Israeli military actions are completely up to the leaders and military of Israel, and Israel alone.
It is not the place of outsiders to meddle or pass judgment or to use our power or relationship to force Israel to go against her own interest for the sake of “peace.”
Peace is a laudable goal. But it is just that – a goal. It is not an end at any cost.
It makes no sense to me that the United States provides Arab countries hostile to Israel with $12 billion in annual financial and military aid. Many of the weapons that Israel would face in a Middle Eastern conflict would have come directly from our government. I find this appalling. In the Senate, I would strive to eliminate all aid to countries that threaten Israel.
Finally, Iran has become increasingly bellicose towards Israel. Thankfully, Israel has one of the bravest, most elite military forces in the world. I would never vote to prevent Israel from taking any military action her leaders felt necessary to end any Iranian threat.
Just as the United States would not follow the will of another country in the face of our national security, we shall not limit the options of Israel in this area.
Finally, I believe the United States should increase the pressure on Iran. I would mandate that all publicly managed investment funds divest from Iran immediately.
We should not be subsidizing any company that does business with Iran, and we should not allow U.S. companies or those with funds from U.S. taxpayers to enrich Iran through its national energy program. I would fight to end all subsides to American corporations that do business with Iran, including so-called renewable energy companies that work through Brazil to provide support to Iran and empower its dictators dangerous nuclear saber rattling.
Source
I've obtained a document that the Rand Paul campaign is circulating to those interested in his views on Israel, and it's interesting to see how the positions he's taking as a Republican Senate candidate in Kentucky differ from those adopted by his father, Rep. Ron Paul, a harsh critic of U.S.-Israel ties.
"Israel and the United States have a special relationship," Rand's position paper begins. "With our shared history and common values, the American and Israeli people have formed a bond that unites us across the many thousands of miles between our countries and calls us to work together towards peace and prosperity for our countries."
Rand goes on to support free trade with Israel, call for divestment from Iran, and "strongly object to the arrogant approach of (the) Obama administration" toward the peace process. "Only Israel can decide what is in her security interest, not America and certainly not the United Nations," he asserts.
In one clear departure from his father, Rand states that:
As a United States Senator, I would never vote to condemn Israel for defending herself.
Whether it is fighting Hezbollah in Lebanon, combating Hamas-linked terrorists in Gaza or dealing with potential nuclear threats in the Persian Gulf, Israeli military actions are completely up to the leaders and military of Israel, and Israel alone.
By contrast, when Israel retaliated against Hamas in Gaza to stop rockets from being fired toward Israeli civilians, his father rushed to condemn Israel. In a YouTube video, Ron Paul called it a "pretty sad day for the whole world" that he said reflected the spread of the idea of preemtive war. He went further, by saying the fact that the United States provides aid to Israel and did nothing to try and stop the military action made the U.S. complicit. He said the action would "antagonize" the Arab-Muslim world and warned that "we’ll suffer the consequences."
Continued U.S. support for Israel is part of Ron Paul's broader view of foreign policy and the concept of "blowback." Rand Paul focuses his statement on condemning foreign aid to enemies of Israel, saying that, "In the Senate, I would strive to eliminate all aid to countries that threaten Israel." But he doesn't address the issue of aid to Israel itself.
You can read the full statement after the jump.
The United States Special Relationship with Israel
By Dr. Rand Paul
Candidate, United States Senate
Israel and the United States have a special relationship. With our shared history and common values, the American and Israeli people have formed a bond that unites us across the many thousands of miles between our countries and calls us to work together towards peace and prosperity for our countries.
The free trade agreement that has existed, and been subsequently strengthened, between our countries since 1985 is a tremendous mutual benefit. As a United States Senator, I would work against the growing protectionist sentiment in our country and defend free trade with Israel.
I would never vote to place trade restrictions on Israel, and I would filibuster any attempts to place sanctions on Israel or tariffs on any Israeli goods.
The issue of Palestine is incredibly difficult and complex. The entire world wishes for peace in the region, but any arrangement or treaty must come from Israel, when she is ready and when her conditions have been met.
I strongly object to the arrogant approach of Obama administration, itself a continuation of the failures of past U.S. administrations, as they push Israel to make security concessions behind thinly veiled threats.
Only Israel can decide what is in her security interest, not America and certainly not the United Nations. Friends do not coerce friends to trade land for peace, or to give up the vital security interests of their people.
As a United States Senator, I would never vote to condemn Israel for defending herself.
Whether it is fighting Hezbollah in Lebanon, combating Hamas-linked terrorists in Gaza or dealing with potential nuclear threats in the Persian Gulf, Israeli military actions are completely up to the leaders and military of Israel, and Israel alone.
It is not the place of outsiders to meddle or pass judgment or to use our power or relationship to force Israel to go against her own interest for the sake of “peace.”
Peace is a laudable goal. But it is just that – a goal. It is not an end at any cost.
It makes no sense to me that the United States provides Arab countries hostile to Israel with $12 billion in annual financial and military aid. Many of the weapons that Israel would face in a Middle Eastern conflict would have come directly from our government. I find this appalling. In the Senate, I would strive to eliminate all aid to countries that threaten Israel.
Finally, Iran has become increasingly bellicose towards Israel. Thankfully, Israel has one of the bravest, most elite military forces in the world. I would never vote to prevent Israel from taking any military action her leaders felt necessary to end any Iranian threat.
Just as the United States would not follow the will of another country in the face of our national security, we shall not limit the options of Israel in this area.
Finally, I believe the United States should increase the pressure on Iran. I would mandate that all publicly managed investment funds divest from Iran immediately.
We should not be subsidizing any company that does business with Iran, and we should not allow U.S. companies or those with funds from U.S. taxpayers to enrich Iran through its national energy program. I would fight to end all subsides to American corporations that do business with Iran, including so-called renewable energy companies that work through Brazil to provide support to Iran and empower its dictators dangerous nuclear saber rattling.
We Support Arizona.com
It is absolutely crucial that we all lend our support to the Sovereign State of Arizona during this time when much of the country is waging economic and political war against them. Throughout this whole process I have been shocked that people are literally against Arizona simply for closing their border to ILLEGAL immigration.
Today the invaders of our country are more brazen than ever about their plans for this once great Republic. Their plan is nothing short of complete conquest.
So where do you find yourself now? On the continent YOUR fathers founded? You are under attack by all sides, the blacks are only 12% of the population and 58% of the total crime, hispanics commit the majority of the remaining 40%, there are over 1 billion muslims worldwide and are wreaking havoc in most of Europe, and at the head of the mud colored beast is the International jew. They are the ones who opened the gates either figuratively in our case or literally in the case of 8th century Spain.
They use the non Whites, plain and simple. They use them to defile a nation and they use them for class warfare. So is this just some hate filled tirade? Your Goddamn right it is. At this stage in the game I don't give a damn for a man that doesn't hate. Hate the people who have bankrupted our nation, killed millions of our men in pointless wars, destroyed our morality and family structure all while putting us under the impression that he is a friend, the chosen of God.
Our country is being overrun and when people say the things that I have above you label us "racists". When will you learn? When your daughter is raped? When your son is sent off to war to die for the state of israel? This is real and pretending that the situation isn't dire doesn't make it go away. The only thing that will make it go away is for you to get off the couch, get educated, educate those around you and prepare yourself for what is to come. That is your duty as descendants of some of the greatest men in all of history.
__________________________________________________________________________________
The purpose of this post (originally) was to let everyone know about a website I found that has a lot of information pertaining to Arizona's new immigration law and the ramifications of it. The site is
we-support-Arizona.com
Today the invaders of our country are more brazen than ever about their plans for this once great Republic. Their plan is nothing short of complete conquest.
So where do you find yourself now? On the continent YOUR fathers founded? You are under attack by all sides, the blacks are only 12% of the population and 58% of the total crime, hispanics commit the majority of the remaining 40%, there are over 1 billion muslims worldwide and are wreaking havoc in most of Europe, and at the head of the mud colored beast is the International jew. They are the ones who opened the gates either figuratively in our case or literally in the case of 8th century Spain.
They use the non Whites, plain and simple. They use them to defile a nation and they use them for class warfare. So is this just some hate filled tirade? Your Goddamn right it is. At this stage in the game I don't give a damn for a man that doesn't hate. Hate the people who have bankrupted our nation, killed millions of our men in pointless wars, destroyed our morality and family structure all while putting us under the impression that he is a friend, the chosen of God.
Our country is being overrun and when people say the things that I have above you label us "racists". When will you learn? When your daughter is raped? When your son is sent off to war to die for the state of israel? This is real and pretending that the situation isn't dire doesn't make it go away. The only thing that will make it go away is for you to get off the couch, get educated, educate those around you and prepare yourself for what is to come. That is your duty as descendants of some of the greatest men in all of history.
__________________________________________________________________________________
The purpose of this post (originally) was to let everyone know about a website I found that has a lot of information pertaining to Arizona's new immigration law and the ramifications of it. The site is
we-support-Arizona.com
List Of Famous Jews
This is not a complete list.
Name | Occupation | Birth | Death | Known for |
---|---|---|---|---|
Caroline Aaron | Character actress, 1980s to present | |||
Paula Abdul | Singer, later American Idol judge | |||
Walter Abish | Alphabetical Africa | |||
Paul Ableman | I Hear Voices | |||
Jack Abramoff | Lobbyist, incarcerated | |||
Max Abramovitz | Designed UN Headquarters | |||
Dan Abrams | Host of MSNBC's The Abrams Report | |||
Elliott Abrams | Asst. Secy. of State involved in Iran-Contra | |||
Floyd Abrams | First Amendment lawyer | |||
J. J. Abrams | Alias and Lost | |||
M. H. Abrams | The Mirror and the Lamp | |||
Jerry Abramson | Mayor of Louisville | |||
Dannie Abse | Ash on a Young Man's Sleeve | |||
Leo Abse | Labour MP for Torfaen, 1983-87 | |||
Bella Abzug | Feminist and former Congresswoman | |||
André Aciman | Out of Egypt | |||
Kathy Acker | Blood and Guts in High School | |||
Gary Ackerman | Congressman, New York 5th | |||
King Ad-Rock | Beastie Boys | |||
Joey Adams | Borscht Belt comedian | |||
Sheldon Adelson | Las Vegas billionaire | |||
Alfred Adler | Founder of Individual Psychology | |||
Dean S. Adler | Lubert-Adler Management | |||
Felix Adler | Ethical Culture | |||
John Adler | Congressman, New Jersey 3rd | |||
Luther Adler | Broadway actor | |||
Robert Adler | Invented wireless remote control | |||
Stella Adler | Theater actress, Group Theater | |||
Shai Agassi | Former executive, SAP | |||
Shmuel Agnon | 'Tmol Shilshom | |||
Larry Agran | Twice Mayor of Irvine, California | |||
Fred E. Ahlert | I'm Gonna Sit Right Down and Write Myself a Letter | |||
Amy Alcott | Winner of 5 Majors | |||
Sholem Aleichem | Fiddler on the Roof | |||
Jason Alexander | George Costanza on Seinfeld | |||
Samuel Alexander | Space, Time, and Deity | |||
Mel Allen | Sportscaster, Voice of the Yankees | |||
Woody Allen | Annie Hall | |||
Gloria Allred | Feminist lawyer | |||
Barry J. Alperin | Former Vice Chairman of Hasbro | |||
Herb Alpert | Tijuana Brass, Co-Founder, A&M Records | |||
Lyle Alzado | Steroid-using defensive lineman | |||
Ed Ames | Try to Remember | |||
Yigal Amir | Assassin of Yitzhak Rabin | |||
Gilbert M. Anderson | Broncho Billy | |||
Christian Anfinsen | Molecular structure of proteins | |||
Walter Annenberg | Media mogul, created TV Guide | |||
Eddie Antar | Crazy Eddie | |||
Mary Antin | The Promised Land | |||
Herod Antipas | Put John the Baptist to death | |||
Judd Apatow | Anchorman, The 40 Year Old Virgin | |||
Aharon Appelfeld | In the Wilderness | |||
Max Apple | I Love Gootie | |||
Nicole Appleton | All Saints | |||
Diane Arbus | Influential photographer | |||
Army Archerd | Variety's gossip columnist | |||
Hannah Arendt | Origins of Totalitarianism | |||
Moshe Arens | Likud Minister | |||
Ted Arison | Founder of Carnival Cruise Line | |||
Adam Arkin | Dr. Aaron Shutt on Chicago Hope | |||
Alan Arkin | Catch 22 | |||
Harold Arlen | Wrote score to Wizard of Oz | |||
Roland Arnall | Ameriquest billionaire | |||
Tom Arnold | Ex-Husband of Roseanne Barr | |||
Raymond Aron | Political philosopher, social theorist | |||
Darren Aronofsky | Pi, Requiem for a Dream | |||
Bernard W. Aronson | ACON Investments LLC | |||
David Arquette | Muppets From Space | |||
Patricia Arquette | Ed Wood | |||
Rosanna Arquette | Desperately Seeking Susan | |||
Bea Arthur | Maude and The Golden Girls | |||
Sholem Asch | Yiddish novelist | |||
Leon Askin | General Burkhalter on Hogan's Heroes | |||
Ed Asner | Lou Grant | |||
Izzy Asper | Founder, CanWest Global | |||
Harvey Atkin | Sgt. Coleman on Cagney and Lacey | |||
Leopold Auer | Hungarian violinist, teacher | |||
Robert J. Aumann | Game theorist | |||
Mili Avital | Stargate | |||
Julius Axelrod | Research of neurotransmitters | |||
Hank Azaria | Moe and Apu on The Simpsons | |||
Irving Azoff | Rock music mogul | |||
Milton Babbitt | Music for Synthesizer | |||
Isaac Babel | Soviet master of short stories | |||
Hector Babenco | Kiss of the Spider Woman | |||
Lauren Bacall | Key Largo | |||
Barbara Bach | Atook zug zug Lana | |||
Lawrence S. Bacow | President, Tufts University | |||
Leo Baeck | Progressive Jewish Rabbi | |||
Carroll Baker | Baby Doll | |||
Bob Balaban | Parents | |||
Michael Balcon | Eealing Studios | |||
Steve Ballmer | CEO of Microsoft | |||
Elizabeth Banks | The Baxter | |||
John Banner | Sgt. Schultz on Hogan's Heroes | |||
Theda Bara | A Fool There Was | |||
Ehud Barak | Prime Minister of Israel, 1999-2001 | |||
Robert Bárány | Studied inner ear, equilibrium system | |||
Daniel Barenboim | Director, Berlin State Opera | |||
Ike Barinholtz | MADtv | |||
Ellen Barkin | Siesta | |||
Roseanne Barr | Roseanne | |||
Barbara Barrie | Mrs. Barney Miller | |||
Gene Barry | The War of the Worlds | |||
Todd Barry | Worst Guest of the Week | |||
Stanley F. Barshay | Schering-Plough executive | |||
Peter Bart | Former editor of Variety | |||
Justin Bartha | National Treasure | |||
Bernard M. Baruch | Coined the term Cold War | |||
Burt Baskin | Co-Founder of Baskin-Robbins | |||
Leonard Baskin | Sculptor and printmaker | |||
Alfie Bass | Bootsie and Snudge | |||
Randall Batinkoff | For Keeps | |||
Otto Bauer | Austrian Marxist | |||
Vicki Baum | Grand Hotel | |||
Abraham D. Beame | Mayor of New York City, 1974-77 | |||
Julian Beck | Reverend Kane in Poltergeist II | |||
Menachem Begin | Prime Minister of Israel, 1977-82 | |||
Anthony Beilenson | Congressman from California, 1977-97 | |||
Peter Beinart | Washington Post columnist | |||
Joshua Bekenstein | Bain Capital | |||
David Belasco | Madame Butterfly | |||
Naaman Belkind | Israeli spy | |||
Joshua Bell | Violin virtuoso | |||
Saul Bellow | The Adventures of Augie March | |||
Richard Belzer | Munch on Homicide, Law & Order: SVU | |||
Shlomo Ben-Ami | Israeli Foreign Minister, 2000-01 | |||
David Ben-Gurion | First Prime Minister of Israel | |||
Yitzhak Ben-Zvi | President of Israel, 1952-63 | |||
Baruj Benacerraf | Gene control of HLA antigens | |||
Laslo Benedek | The Wild One | |||
H. Jon Benjamin | Coach McGuirk on Home Movies | |||
Richard Benjamin | Westworld | |||
Walter Benjamin | The Arcades Project | |||
Jack Benny | The Jack Benny Show | |||
Barbi Benton | Hee-Haw regular, 1971-76 | |||
Daniel Benzali | Ted Hoffman on Murder One | |||
Marisa Berenson | Barry Lyndon | |||
Boris Berezovsky | Russian oligarch, now in Israel | |||
Justin Berfield | Malcolm in the Middle | |||
Alan Berg | Murdered radio host | |||
Gertrude Berg | The Goldbergs | |||
Nick Berg | US contractor, beheaded on Iraq videotape | |||
Carolyn Berger | Justice, Delaware Supreme Court | |||
Samuel D. Berger | US Ambassador to South Korea, 1961-64 | |||
Sandy Berger | National Security Advisor for Bill Clinton | |||
Victor L. Berger | Socialist Rep. from Wisconsin | |||
Gustav Bergmann | Ontologist | |||
Henri Bergson | L'Évolution Créatrice | |||
Shelley Berkley | Congresswoman, Nevada 1st | |||
Milton Berle | Mr. Television | |||
Irving Berlin | White Christmas, God Bless America | |||
Isaiah Berlin | The Hedgehog and the Fox | |||
Warren Berlinger | American character actor | |||
Chris Berman | Sportscaster on ESPN | |||
Howard Berman | Congressman, California 28th | |||
Shelley Berman | Inside Shelley Berman | |||
Ben Bernanke | Federal Reserve Chairman | |||
Herschel Bernardi | Voiced Charlie the Tuna, Jolly Green Giant | |||
Edward Bernays | Propaganda | |||
Sandra Bernhard | The King of Comedy | |||
Curtis Bernhardt | A Stolen Life | |||
Sarah Bernhardt | French theatre actress | |||
Alan S. Bernikow | Deputy CEO, Deloitte & Touche, 1998-2003 | |||
Carl Bernstein | Broke the Watergate story | |||
Eduard Bernstein | Evolutionary Socialism | |||
Leonard Bernstein | Conductor, New York Philharmonic | |||
Stuart Bernstein | US Ambassador to Denmark, 2001-05 | |||
Claude Berri | Jean de Florette | |||
John Berry | The Bad News Bears Go to Japan | |||
Gary Bertini | Music Director, Jerusalem Symphony, 1978-87 | |||
Joe Besser | The Three Stooges | |||
Bruno Bettelheim | Fraudulent child psychologist | |||
Harold Beznos | Michigan real estate developer | |||
Hayyim Nahman Bialik | Foremost Hebrew poet | |||
Mayim Bialik | Blossom Russo on Blossom | |||
Kenneth Bialkin | Mergers & Acquisitions lawyer | |||
Theodore Bikel | The Defiant Ones | |||
Rudolf Bing | Manager of the NY Metropolitan Opera, 1950-72 | |||
Stanley Bing | Columnist for Fortune | |||
László Bíró | Ballpoint pen | |||
Joey Bishop | Rat Pack member | |||
Claudia Black | Aeryn Sun on Farscape | |||
Eli Black | Swan dive onto Park Avenue | |||
Jack Black | Half of Tenacious D | |||
Jay Black | Second "Jay" fronting Jay and the Americans | |||
Leon Black | Billionaire, Apollo Management | |||
Lewis Black | Rants on The Daily Show | |||
Michael Ian Black | The State | |||
David Blaine | World's least engrossing daredevil | |||
Selma Blair | A Dirty Shame | |||
Brad Blakeman | Republican strategist | |||
Mel Blanc | Man of 1,000 Voices | |||
Arthur Blank | Co-Founder of Home Depot | |||
Robert S. Blank | Whitcom Partners | |||
Yasmine Bleeth | Baywatch | |||
Jeffrey L. Bleustein | CEO of Harley-Davidson, 1997-2005 | |||
Wolf Blitzer | The Situation Room | |||
Ernest Bloch | Schelomo | |||
Felix Bloch | Studied nuclear magnetic resonance | |||
Henry Bloch | Co-Founder of H&R Bloch | |||
Konrad Bloch | Cholesterol and fatty acid metabolism | |||
Richard Bloch | H&R Block, cancer activist | |||
Allan Bloom | The Closing of the American Mind | |||
Michael Bloomberg | Mayor of New York City | |||
Mike Bloomfield | Guitarist, Paul Butterfield Blues Band | |||
Ben Blue | The Big Broadcast of 1938 | |||
Léon Blum | Thrice Prime Minister of France | |||
Baruch S. Blumberg | Hepatitis B vaccine | |||
Judy Blume | Author of children's books | |||
Sidney Blumenthal | Advisor to Bill and Hillary Clinton | |||
W. Michael Blumenthal | US Secretary of the Treasury, 1977-79 | |||
Franz Boas | Father of American Anthropology | |||
Steven Bochco | Cop Rock | |||
Lloyd Bochner | It's a cookbook | |||
Jerry Bock | Fiorello! | |||
Artur Bodanzky | Opera Conductor at the NY Met, 1915-39 | |||
Peter Bogdanovich | The Last Picture Show | |||
Danny J. Boggs | 6th Circuit Court of Appeals | |||
Irving Bolotin | Senior VP at Lennar, 1972-98 | |||
Josh Bolten | White House Chief of Staff | |||
Michael Bolton | Love Is a Wonderful Thing | |||
Lisa Bonet | Denise on The Cosby Show | |||
Murray Bookchin | The Ecology of Freedom | |||
Daniel Boorstin | The Creators | |||
Elayne Boosler | Has had 7 cable comedy specials | |||
Victor Borge | Comedic pianist | |||
Max Born | Pioneer of quantum mechanics | |||
Steven M. Bornstein | President of ESPN, 1990-99 | |||
Alex Borstein | Ms. Swan on MADtv | |||
Rudy Boschwitz | US Senator from Minnesota, 1978-91 | |||
Tom Bosley | Dad on Happy Days | |||
Shmuley Boteach | Shalom in the Home | |||
Elsbeth Bothe | Baltimore Circuit Court Judge, retired | |||
Leon Botstein | President of Bard College | |||
Lou Boudreau | MLB Shortstop, Hall of Famer | |||
Rob Bourdon | Linkin Park drummer | |||
Caprice Bourret | Model and actress and singer and whatever | |||
Barbara Boxer | US Senator from California | |||
Zach Braff | Scrubs | |||
Myles Brand | President of the NCAA, 2003-09 | |||
Louis D. Brandeis | US Supreme Court Justice, 1916-39 | |||
Ryan Braun | Milwaukee Brewers | |||
Gregory Breit | Proton-proton dispersion | |||
David Brenner | Guest on Tonight Show 158 times | |||
Sydney Brenner | Genetic regulation of organ development | |||
Stephen Breyer | US Supreme Court Justice | |||
Fanny Brice | The Baby Snooks Show | |||
Myron H. Bright | 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, 1968-85 | |||
Ronald M. Brill | Former EVP, Home Depot | |||
Sergey Brin | Co-Founder of Google | |||
Jenne K. Britell | Structured Ventures, Inc. | |||
Leon Brittan | UK Home Secretary, 1983-85 | |||
Max Brod | The Redemption of Tycho Brahe | |||
Joseph Brodsky | Social parasite turned Poet Laureate | |||
Adam Brody | Seth Cohen on The O.C. | |||
Adrien Brody | The Pianist | |||
Eleanor Bron | A Touch of Love | |||
Charles Bronfman | Fifth richest person in Canada | |||
Edgar Bronfman, Jr. | CEO of Seagram, Warner Music, etc | |||
Edgar Bronfman, Sr. | CEO of Seagram's until 1994 | |||
Anita Brookner | Hotel Du Lac | |||
Albert Brooks | Broadcast News | |||
David Brooks | Shields and Brooks | |||
Mel Brooks | Blazing Saddles | |||
Richard Brooks | In Cold Blood | |||
Georgia Brown | The Raging Moon | |||
Harold Brown | US Secretary of Defense, 1977-81 | |||
Herbert C. Brown | Discovered organoboranes | |||
Lew Brown | Beer Barrel Polka | |||
Lenny Bruce | Multiply obscene comic | |||
Jerry Bruckheimer | Bombastic Movie Producer | |||
David Brudnoy | Boston talk radio host | |||
Patrick Bruel | Force Majeure | |||
Martin Buber | Ich und Du | |||
Art Buchwald | Syndicated columnist and humorist | |||
Gordon Bunshaft | Skyscraper architect | |||
Brooke Burke | Co-Host, Dancing with the Stars | |||
Arnold I. Burns | Deputy US Attorney General, 1986-88 | |||
George Burns | Oh, God! | |||
Abe Burrows | Co-Author, Guys and Dolls | |||
Frederick Busch | Don't Tell Anyone | |||
Harold Butler | Founder of Denny's | |||
Jerry Butler | 10 1/2 Weeks | |||
Judith Butler | Gender Trouble | |||
Red Buttons | They Shoot Horses Don't They? | |||
Seymore Butts | Family Business | |||
Samuel Byck | Unsuccessful Nixon assassin | |||
Amanda Bynes | All That | |||
James Caan | Vegas, Elf | |||
Susan Cabot | The Wasp Woman | |||
Irving Caesar | Tea for Two | |||
Sid Caesar | Your Show of Shows | |||
Sammy Cahn | Three Coins in the Fountain | |||
Hortense Calisher | In the Absence of Angels | |||
Elias Canetti | Crowds and Power | |||
Eddie Cantor | Banjo Eyes | |||
Eric Cantor | Congressman, Virginia 7th | |||
Robert Capa | War photographer | |||
Lizzy Caplan | Kat Warbler on The Class | |||
Kate Capshaw | Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom | |||
Benjamin L. Cardin | US Senator from Maryland | |||
Kitty Carlisle | A Night at the Opera | |||
Robert Caro | Biographer of Lyndon Johnson | |||
Nell Carter | Housekeeper on Gimme A Break | |||
Mama Cass | The Mamas and the Papas | |||
René Cassin | Legal scholar, Nobel Prize recipient | |||
Ernst Cassirer | The Myth of the State | |||
William Castle | House on Haunted Hill | |||
Phoebe Cates | Fast Times at Ridgemont High | |||
Safra A. Catz | President & CFO of Oracle | |||
Stanley Cavell | Professor of Aesthetics, Harvard | |||
Paul Celan | Todesfuge | |||
Emanuel Celler | Congressman from New York, 1923-73 | |||
Bennett Cerf | Founder of Random House | |||
Michael Chabon | The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay | |||
Marc Chagall | I and the Village | |||
Ernst B. Chain | Discovered penicillin | |||
Jonathan Chait | Senior Editor, The New Republic | |||
Mona Charen | Conservative columnist | |||
Larry Charles | Seinfeld writer, also directed Borat | |||
Jule Charney | Quasi-gesotrophic theory | |||
Paddy Chayefsky | Network | |||
Michael Chertoff | US Homeland Security Czar | |||
Alfred Chester | The Exquisite Corpse | |||
Judy Chicago | The Birth Project | |||
Alex Chiu | Inventor of magnetic immortality rings | |||
Bruce Chizen | CEO of Adobe, 2000-07 | |||
Emmanuelle Chriqui | Sloan on Entourage | |||
Connie Chung | NBC news anchor | |||
Aaron Ciechanover | Ubiquitin-mediated protein degradation | |||
André Citroën | Europe's Henry Ford | |||
Buddy Clark | How Are Things in Glocca Mora | |||
Marcia Clark | Former O.J. prosecutor | |||
Robert Clary | LeBeau on Hogan's Heroes | |||
Andrew Dice Clay | Ford Fairlane | |||
Daniel Clowes | Eightball, Ghost World, David Boring | |||
Andrei Codrescu | Exquisite Corpse | |||
Ethan Coen | Half of the Coen brothers | |||
Joel Coen | Half of the Coen brothers | |||
Ben Cohen | Ben & Jerry's Homemade, Inc. | |||
Betsy Z. Cohen | CEO of RAIT Investment Trust, 1997-2006 | |||
Eli Cohen | Israel's greatest spy | |||
Jared Cohen | Children of Jihad | |||
Leonard Cohen | Everybody Knows | |||
Morris Raphael Cohen | Reason and Nature | |||
Myron Cohen | Borscht Belt comic | |||
Peter A. Cohen | CEO of Shearson Lehman, 1983-90 | |||
Rob Cohen | The Fast and the Furious | |||
Ronald Cohen | British venture capitalist, Apax | |||
Sacha Baron Cohen | Boyakasha! Respec | |||
Scott Cohen | The 10th Kingdom | |||
Stanley Cohen | Nerve and skin cell growth factors | |||
Steve Cohen | Congressman, Tennessee 9th | |||
Wilbur J. Cohen | HEW Secretary, 1968-69 | |||
Claude Cohen-Tannoudji | Trapped atoms with laser light | |||
Marc Cohn | Walking In Memphis | |||
Mindy Cohn | Natalie on The Facts of Life | |||
Roy Cohn | Joseph McCarthy's henchman | |||
Steven Cojocaru | Entertainment Tonight fashion critic | |||
Cy Coleman | Hey, Big Spender | |||
Norm Coleman | US Senator from Minnesota, 2003-09 | |||
Jackie Collins | Hollywood Wives | |||
Lauren Collins | Degrassi: The Next Generation | |||
Alan Colmes | Hannity & Colmes | |||
Betty Comden | Singin' in the Rain | |||
Joe Conason | New York Observer political columnist | |||
Jennifer Connelly | Betty Ross in The Hulk | |||
Con Conrad | The Continental | |||
Leon G. Cooperman | Omega Advisors, Inc. | |||
Aaron Copland | Fanfare for the Common Man | |||
David Copperfield | Disappeared the Statue of Liberty | |||
Sam Coppersmith | Congressman from Arizona, 1993-95 | |||
Ricardo Cortez | The Torrent | |||
Howard Cosell | Straight-shooting, toupee-wearing commentator | |||
Jim Cramer | Mad Money | |||
Norma Crane | Fiddler on the Roof | |||
Norm Crosby | Stand-up and nightclub comic | |||
James S. Crown | Henry Crown and Company | |||
Lester Crown | CEO of Henry Crown & Co. | |||
Billy Crystal | When Harry Met Sally | |||
James W. Crystal | Frank Crystal & Company | |||
Peter D. Cummings | Ram Realty Services | |||
Tony Curtis | Some Like It Hot | |||
Disco D | Ghetto-tech DJ | |||
Mike D | Beastie Boys | |||
Meir Dagan | Chief of the Israeli Mossad | |||
Edward Dahlberg | Because I Was Flesh | |||
Marcel Dalio | The Sun Also Rises | |||
Stuart Damon | Alan Quartermaine on General Hospital | |||
Walter Damrosch | Conductor, popularizer of music | |||
Rodney Dangerfield | Never did get no respect | |||
Erin Daniels | The L Word | |||
Marc Dann | Attorney General of Ohio | |||
Sam Dash | Chief counsel, Senate Watergate committee | |||
Jules Dassin | Topkapi | |||
Hal David | Raindrops Keep Fallin' on My Head | |||
Larry David | Seinfeld co-creator, Curb Your Enthusiasm | |||
Mack David | La vie en rose | |||
Mario Davidovsky | Synchronisms | |||
Andrew Davis | The Fugitive | |||
Brandon Davis | Oil heir, pal of Paris Hilton | |||
Clive Davis | Founder of Arista Records | |||
Lanny J. Davis | White House Counsel, 1996-98 | |||
Marvin Davis | Oil magnate, former owner of 20th Century Fox | |||
Paige Davis | Katie Couric lookalike on Trading Spaces | |||
Sammy Davis, Jr. | Coolest hepcat in the Rat Pack | |||
Susan Davis | Congresswoman, California 53rd | |||
Moshe Dayan | Israeli military leader | |||
Taylor Dayne | Tell It to My Heart | |||
Midge Decter | Neoconservative maven | |||
Michael Dell | Founder of Dell Computer | |||
Brad Delson | Guitarist for Linkin Park | |||
Cecil B. DeMille | Pioneering film director | |||
Jacques Derrida | Deconstructionism, Intellectual Terrorist | |||
Alan Dershowitz | Lawyer, represented Klaus von Bulow | |||
Natalie Dessay | Coloratura soprano | |||
John Deutch | CIA Director, 1995-96 | |||
Donny Deutsch | CNBC talk show host | |||
Martin Deutsch | Discovered positronium | |||
Peter Deutsch | Congressman from Florida, 1993-2005 | |||
Neil Diamond | Cherry Baby | |||
Don Diamont | The Young and the Restless | |||
Charles M. Diker | Diker Management LLC | |||
Barry Diller | CEO of USA Interactive Corp. | |||
DJ AM | New York Club DJ | |||
Stanley Donen | Singin' in the Rain | |||
Kirk Douglas | Spartacus | |||
Melvyn Douglas | Being There | |||
Michael Douglas | Wall Street | |||
Fran Drescher | The Nanny | |||
Alfred Dreyfus | Dreyfus Affair scapegoat | |||
Richard Dreyfuss | Close Encounters of the Third Kind | |||
Orvil Dryfoos | New York Times Publisher, 1961-63 | |||
Jacqueline du Pré | Cellist | |||
David Duchovny | Mulder on The X-Files | |||
Patricia Duff | Ron Perelman's ex-wife | |||
Kitty Dukakis | Wife of Michael Dukakis | |||
Émile Durkheim | Rules of the Sociological Method | |||
Stanley H. Durwood | Father of the multi-screen movie theater | |||
Andrea Dworkin | Anti-pornography activist | |||
Bob Dylan | The Times They Are A-Changin' | |||
Jakob Dylan | Head Wallflower and Bob Dylan's son | |||
Abba Eban | Foreign Minister of Israel, 1966-74 | |||
Fred Ebb | Top Broadway lyricist, Cabaret | |||
Gerald M. Edelman | Chemical structure of antibodies | |||
Irwin Edman | Philosopher’s Holiday | |||
Gus Edwards | By the Light of the Silvery Moon | |||
Zac Efron | High School Musical | |||
Paul Ehrlich | Father of chemotherapy | |||
David Eigenberg | Steve Brady on Sex and the City | |||
David Einhorn | Jewish reform movement | |||
Ira Einhorn | Earth Day founder turned killer | |||
Carol B. Einiger | Post Rock Advisors LLC | |||
Hallie Kate Eisenberg | Beautiful | |||
Warren Eisenberg | Co-Founder, Bed Bath and Beyond | |||
Sergei Eisenstein | Alexander Nevsky | |||
Hanns Eisler | German radical composer | |||
Will Eisner | Turned comic book authors into Sequential Artists | |||
Stuart Eizenstat | US Ambassador to the EU, 1993-96 | |||
Danny Elfman | Oingo Boingo, movie composer | |||
Richard Elfman | Forbidden Zone | |||
Gertrude B. Elion | Developed medicines for leukemia, herpes, AIDS | |||
Stanley Elkin | The Living End | |||
Larry Ellison | CEO of Oracle | |||
Richard Ellmann | James Joyce | |||
Mischa Elman | Ukrainian-American violin prodigy | |||
Charles M. Elson | Economist, University of Delaware | |||
Edward E. Elson | US Ambassador to Denmark, 1994-98 | |||
Rahm Emanuel | White House Chief of Staff | |||
Robert Emden | Stellar structure | |||
Eliot Engel | Congressman, New York 17th | |||
Eve Ensler | The Vagina Monologues | |||
Nora Ephron | When Harry Met Sally | |||
Brian Epstein | Manager of The Beatles | |||
Jacob Epstein | Strand Statues | |||
Jeffrey E. Epstein | Reclusive money manager | |||
Theo Epstein | General Manager of the Boston Red Sox | |||
Ben Erdreich | Congressman from Alabama, 1983-93 | |||
Erik Erikson | Eight Stages of Childhood | |||
Joseph Erlanger | Nerve conduction | |||
Levi Eshkol | Third Prime Minister of Israel | |||
Susan Estrich | Fox News liberal | |||
Ray Evans | Que Sera Sera | |||
Robert Evans | The Kid Stays In The Picture | |||
Sammy Fain | Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing | |||
Peter Falk | Detective Columbo | |||
Stacey Farber | Ellie Nash on Degrassi | |||
Perry Farrell | Lead singer of Jane's Addiction | |||
Howard Fast | Spartacus | |||
Andrew Fastow | Disgraced CFO of Enron | |||
Jon Favreau | Swingers | |||
Frances Faye | Out, Lesbian nightclub singer | |||
Oded Fehr | Resident Evil: Apocalypse | |||
Jules Feiffer | Can't draw but writes like a master | |||
Steve Feinberg | Cerberus Capital Management | |||
Russ Feingold | US Senator from Wisconsin | |||
Dianne Feinstein | US Senator from California | |||
Leonard Feinstein | Co-Founder, Bed Bath and Beyond | |||
Michael Feinstein | Revives the Great American Songbook | |||
Douglas Feith | Under Secretary of Defense for Policy, 2001-05 | |||
Meyer Feldberg | Dean of Columbia Business School, 1989-2004 | |||
George Feldenkreis | CEO of Perry Ellis International | |||
Corey Feldman | The Lost Boys | |||
Marty Feldman | Eye-gor in Young Frankenstein | |||
Morton Feldman | Coptic Light | |||
Tovah Feldshuh | Kissing Jessica Stein | |||
Edna Ferber | Show Boat and Giant | |||
Emanuel Feuermann | Cellist | |||
Mark Feuerstein | Good Morning, Miami | |||
Arthur Fiedler | Conductor of the Boston Pops | |||
Leslie A. Fiedler | Love and Death in the American Novel | |||
Totie Fields | Weight-conscious comedienne | |||
Harvey Fierstein | Torch Song Trilogy | |||
Bob Filner | Congressman, California 51st | |||
Jeanna Fine | Sleeping Booty | |||
Larry Fine | Larry on The Three Stooges | |||
Vivian Fine | Drama for Orchestra | |||
Howard Fineman | Newsweek chief political analyst | |||
Eric D. Fingerhut | Congressman from Ohio, 1993-95 | |||
Fyvush Finkel | Picket Fences | |||
Norman Finkelstein | The Holocaust Industry | |||
Sam Firstenberg | American Ninja | |||
Carrie Fisher | Princess Leia in Star Wars | |||
Eddie Fisher | Crooner, top RCA/Victor vocalist | |||
Franklin M. Fisher | Economist at MIT | |||
Lee Fisher | Lt. Governor of Ohio | |||
Max M. Fisher | Gas station tycoon | |||
Bela Fleck | Banjo virtuoso | |||
Ari Fleischer | White House Press Secretary, 2001-03 | |||
Richard Fleischer | Soylent Green | |||
Martin Fleischmann | Cold fusion crank | |||
Leon Fleisher | Piano virtuoso | |||
Herbert Fleishhacker | San Francisco banking magnate | |||
Heidi Fleiss | Hollywood madam | |||
Jonathan Safran Foer | Everything Is Illuminated | |||
Jared Fogle | Lost 245 lbs eating only fast food | |||
Luke Ford | Journalist of the pornographic arts | |||
Maureen Forrester | Contralto, interpreter of Mahler | |||
Abe Fortas | US Supreme Court Justice, 1965-69 | |||
Ben Foster | The Door in the Floor | |||
Jon Foster | Damien Cutler on Windfall | |||
Sam Fox | US Ambassador to Belgium | |||
William Fox | Founder of 20th Century Fox | |||
James Franck | Franck-Hertz experiment | |||
Anne Frank | The Diary of Anne Frank | |||
Barney Frank | Congressman, Massachusetts 4th | |||
Bruno Frank | Storm in a Teacup | |||
Lawrence Frank | Head Coach, New Jersey Nets | |||
Leo Frank | Innocent man, lynched by mob | |||
Otto Frank | Father of Anne Frank | |||
Waldo Frank | American cultural critic and social historian | |||
Al Franken | US Senator from Minnesota | |||
Helen Frankenthaler | Mountains and Sea | |||
Felix Frankfurter | US Supreme Court Justice, 1939-62 | |||
Bonnie Franklin | Ann Romano on One Day at a Time | |||
Dennis Franz | Det. Sipowicz on NYPD Blue | |||
Frank Kelly Freas | Illustrator of science fiction and fantasy | |||
Arthur Freed | MGM producer, big budget musicals | |||
A. Stone Freedberg | Found H. Pylori near stomach ulcers | |||
Leonard Frey | Stage actor, The Boys in the Band | |||
Daniel Fried | US Asst. Secy. of State for European Affairs | |||
William Friedkin | The Exorcist | |||
Elizebeth Friedman | WWI Cryptographer | |||
Kinky Friedman | Texas Jewboy | |||
Milton Friedman | 1976 Nobel Prize for Economics | |||
Thomas Friedman | New York Times | |||
Tully M. Friedman | Hellman & Friedman | |||
Otto Robert Frisch | Described fission | |||
Justine Frischmann | Guitarist, Elastica | |||
Martin Frost | Congressman from Texas, 1979-2005 | |||
David Frum | Coined "Axis of Evil" | |||
Alan S. Frumin | US Senate Parliamentarian | |||
Stephen Fry | Jeeves and Wooster | |||
Richard S. Fuld, Jr. | CEO of Lehman Brothers, 1993-2008 | |||
Allen Funt | Producer and host of Candid Camera | |||
Robert F. Furchgott | Nitric oxide as a cardiovascular signal | |||
Mira Furlan | Ambassador Delenn on Babylon 5 | |||
Kenny G | Easy-Listening Saxophonist | |||
Serge Gainsbourg | Je t'aime ... moi non plus | |||
Peter Gallagher | American Beauty | |||
Mavis Gallant | Prolific Canadian short story author | |||
Romola Garai | Rory O'Shea Was Here | |||
Victor Garber | Jack Bristow on Alias | |||
Martin Garbus | Attorney for Lenny Bruce | |||
John Garfield | Gentleman's Agreement | |||
Art Garfunkel | Simon and Garfunkel | |||
Merrick B. Garland | US Court of Appeals, DC Circuit | |||
Jeff Garlin | Jeff Greene on Curb Your Enthusiasm | |||
Leonard Garment | Former Special Counsel to Nixon | |||
Brad Garrett | Robert on Everybody Loves Raymond | |||
Ina Garten | Barefoot Contessa | |||
Romain Gary | Roots of Heaven | |||
Herbert S. Gasser | Nerve conduction | |||
Peter Gay | The Enlightenment: An Interpretation | |||
Frank Gehry | Postmodern architect | |||
Sam Gejdenson | Congressman from Connecticut, 1981-2001 | |||
Larry Gelbart | M*A*S*H | |||
Sarah Michelle Gellar | Buffy the Vampire Slayer | |||
Uri Geller | Thinks he has us snowed | |||
Gina Gershon | Showgirls | |||
George Gershwin | Rhapsody In Blue | |||
Ira Gershwin | They Can't Take That Away from Me | |||
Christopher Gersten | Husband of Linda Chavez | |||
Jami Gertz | Muffy on Square Pegs | |||
Estelle Getty | The Golden Girls | |||
Gabrielle Giffords | Congresswoman, Arizona 8th | |||
Jacob H. Gilbert | Congressman from New York, 1960-71 | |||
Melissa Gilbert | Little House on the Prairie | |||
Sara Gilbert | Darlene on Roseanne | |||
Walter Gilbert | Sequencing techniques for DNA | |||
Jack Gilford | Save the Tiger | |||
Sid Gillman | NFL Coach, Hall of Famer | |||
Alfred G. Gilman | G-protein cell signal transmission | |||
Benjamin A. Gilman | Congressman from New York, 1973-2003 | |||
Ronald Lee Gilman | 6th Circuit Court of Appeals | |||
Hermione Gingold | Madame Alvarez in Gigi | |||
Ruth Bader Ginsburg | US Supreme Court Justice | |||
Sheldon Glashow | Electroweak Theory | |||
Cynthia A. Glassman | Economic Affairs, US Commerce Dept. | |||
Nathan Glazer | Co-Editor, The Public Interest | |||
Dan Glickman | Former Congressman, President of the MPAA | |||
Paulette Goddard | Reap the Wild Wind | |||
Erving Goffman | The Presentation of Self | |||
Elon Gold | Gavin P. Miller on Stacked | |||
Judy Gold | 25 Questions for a Jewish Mother | |||
Albert Goldbarth | The most prolific modern poet | |||
Adam Goldberg | Saving Private Ryan | |||
Arthur J. Goldberg | Supreme Court Justice, 1962-65 | |||
Bernard Goldberg | Bias | |||
Bill Goldberg | Pro wrestler | |||
Jonah Goldberg | National Review Online | |||
Marshall Goldberg | Chicago Cardinals RB | |||
Rube Goldberg | Designer of impossible contraptions | |||
Jeff Goldblum | The Fly | |||
Maurice Goldhaber | Neutrons | |||
Susan Golding | Mayor of San Diego, 1992-2000 | |||
Duff Goldman | Ace of Cakes | |||
Ron Goldman | Murder victim, OJ Simpson trial | |||
William Goldman | Marathon Man | |||
Harvey J. Goldschmid | SEC Commissioner, 2002-05 | |||
Neil Goldschmidt | Governor of Oregon, 1987-91 | |||
Jerry Goldsmith | Prominent soundtrack composer | |||
Olivia Goldsmith | The First Wives Club | |||
Stephen Goldsmith | Mayor of Indianapolis 1992-99 | |||
Eugen Goldstein | Cathode rays | |||
Joseph L. Goldstein | Hypercholesterolemia and cell metabolism | |||
Matthew Goldstein | Chancellor of CUNY | |||
Richard J. Goldstein | Fluid mechanics | |||
Samuel Goldwyn | Put the G in MGM | |||
Tony Goldwyn | From the Earth to the Moon | |||
Victor Gollancz | Founder of Victor Gollancz, Ltd. | |||
Samuel Gompers | First President of the AFL | |||
Amy Goodman | Host of Democracy Now! | |||
Benny Goodman | Bespectacled jazz clarinetist | |||
Charles H. Goodman | Vice Chairman of Henry Crown & Co. | |||
Ellen Goodman | Retired columnist for The Boston Globe | |||
Oscar Goodman | Mayor of Las Vegas | |||
Shira D. Goodman | EVP at Staples | |||
Leo Gorcey | Bowery Boy | |||
Keith Gordon | Christine | |||
Mack Gordon | Chattanooga Choo Choo | |||
Michael Gordon | Pillow Talk | |||
Mike Gordon | Bass guitarist for Phish | |||
Joseph Gordon-Levitt | Third Rock From the Sun | |||
Lesley Gore | Well-known crying advocate | |||
Eydie Gorme | Blame it on the Bossa Nova | |||
Jay Gorney | Brother, Can You Spare A Dime? | |||
Abraham Gosman | Bankrupt Palm Beach nursing home magnate | |||
David S. Gottesman | First Manhattan Company | |||
Gilbert Gottfried | Loudmouth Jewish comic | |||
Alfred Gottschalk | President, Hebrew Union College, 1971-95 | |||
Elliott Gould | Trapper John in M*A*S*H film | |||
Harold Gould | Martin Morganstern on Rhoda | |||
Jason Gould | Son of Streisand and Elliott Gould | |||
Ronald M. Gould | 9th Circuit Court of Appeals | |||
Stephen Jay Gould | Evolutionary biologist and paleontologist | |||
Bill Gradison | Congressman from Ohio, 1975-93 | |||
Laurence S. Grafstein | Managing Director, Lazard | |||
Aubrey Graham | Jimmy Brooks on Degrassi | |||
Sheilah Graham | Beloved Infidel | |||
Lee Grant | Portnoy's Complaint | |||
Alex Grass | Founder of Rite Aid | |||
James Grauerholz | William S. Burrough's assistant | |||
Alan Grayson | Congressman, Florida 8th | |||
Adolph Green | Singin' in the Rain | |||
S. William Green | Congressman from New York, 1978-93 | |||
Shawn Green | New York Mets | |||
Bryan Greenberg | Jake Jagielski on One Tree Hill | |||
Hank Greenberg | Two-time American League MVP | |||
Shecky Greene | Chicago nightclub comic | |||
Jeff Greenfield | ABC, CNN talking head | |||
Jerry Greenfield | Ben & Jerry's Homemade, Inc. | |||
David Greenglass | Gave atomic secrets to Julius Rosenberg | |||
Alan Greenspan | Federal Reserve Chairman, 1987-2006 | |||
Jesse L. Greenstein | Co-Discoverer of quasars | |||
Gerald Greenwald | CEO of United Air Lines, 1994-99 | |||
Robert Greenwald | Outfoxed, Xanadu | |||
Jennifer Grey | Dirty Dancing | |||
Joel Grey | Cabaret | |||
Zvi Griliches | Technology, Education, and Productivity | |||
Amiram Grinvald | High-resolution optical imaging | |||
Charles Grodin | Perpetually angry talk-show host, actor | |||
James J. Grosfeld | CEO of Pulte Homes, 1974-90 | |||
David J. Gross | Deep structure of matter | |||
Terry Gross | Host of Fresh Air on NPR | |||
David Grossman | The Smile of the Lamb | |||
Leslie Grossman | What I Like About You | |||
Marc Grossman | US Under Secy. for Political Affairs, 2001-05 | |||
Robert Grossman | Versatile illustrator, caricaturist | |||
Sanford J. Grossman | CEO of Quantitative Financial Strategies | |||
Andy Grove | CEO of Intel, 1987-98 | |||
Lizzie Grubman | Celebrity publicist and SUV-wielder | |||
Greg Grunberg | Matt Parkman on Heroes | |||
Henry A. Grunwald | Managing Editor of Time, 1968-79 | |||
Mandy Grunwald | Hillary Clinton media adviser | |||
Daniel Guggenheim | Mining magnate | |||
Meyer Guggenheim | Patriarch of Guggenheim fortune | |||
Peggy Guggenheim | Renowned art collector | |||
Lani Guinier | The Tyranny of the Majority | |||
Thomas Guinzburg | Former owner, Viking Press | |||
Ed Guthman | Nixon enemy, Pulitzer Prize winner | |||
Amy Gutmann | President, University of Pennsylvania | |||
Steve Guttenberg | Police Academy | |||
Jake Gyllenhaal | Donnie Darko | |||
Hugo Haase | German parliamentarian, Marxist, pacifist | |||
Marilyn Hacker | Presentation Piece | |||
Buddy Hackett | Abrasive old school comic | |||
Jacques-Salomon Hadamard | Prime number theorem | |||
Corey Haim | The Lost Boys | |||
David Halberstam | The Powers That Be | |||
Judah ben Samuel Halevi | Hebrew Poet of the Middle Ages | |||
Efraim Halevy | Head of the Mossad, 1998-2003 | |||
Fromental Halévy | La Juive | |||
Monty Hall | Let's Make a Deal | |||
Mark Halperin | TIME senior political analyst | |||
Cheryl F. Halpern | Corporation for Public Broadcasting | |||
Marvin Hamlisch | The Way We Were | |||
Armand Hammer | Soviet agent of influence | |||
Chelsea Handler | Chelsea Lately | |||
Oscar Handlin | The Uprooted | |||
Helene Hanff | 84, Charing Cross Road | |||
E. Y. Harburg | The Wizard of Oz | |||
Isser Harel | Head of the Mossad, 1952-63 | |||
Jane Harman | Congresswoman, California 36th | |||
Estelle Harris | Estelle Costanza on Seinfeld | |||
Jonathan Harris | Dr. Zachary Smith on Lost in Space | |||
Samantha Harris | Co-Host, Dancing with the Stars | |||
Walter L. Harris | CEO of Tanenbaum-Harber Co. | |||
Lorenz Hart | Lyricist, Rodgers and Hart | |||
Mary Hart | Entertainment Tonight | |||
Lindsay Hartley | Theresa Crane on Passions | |||
Geoffrey Hartman | The Unmediated Vision | |||
Moritz Hartmann | German patriotic poet | |||
Rita E. Hauser | Former Partner, Stroock & Stroock & Lavan | |||
Todd Haynes | Far From Heaven | |||
Anthony Hecht | The Hard Hours | |||
Ben Hecht | The Front Page | |||
Chic Hecht | US Senator from Nevada, 1983-89 | |||
Amy Heckerling | Fast Times At Ridgemont High | |||
Dan Hedaya | Bestubbled character actor, Blood Simple | |||
Jascha Heifetz | Violin virtuoso | |||
Carolyn Heilbrun | Amanda Cross, mystery novelist | |||
Henry Heimlich | Heimlich maneuver | |||
Heinrich Heine | Buch der Lieder | |||
Joseph Heller | Catch-22 | |||
Isaias W. Hellman | Los Angeles banker | |||
Lillian Hellman | Little Foxes | |||
Warren Hellman | Hellman & Friedman | |||
Leona Helmsley | Queen of Mean | |||
Mark Helprin | Winter's Tale | |||
Buck Henry | Frequent SNL host | |||
Nat Hentoff | The Jazz Life | |||
Herblock | Editorial Cartoonist, The Washington Post | |||
Herod the Great | Roman Ruler of Palestine | |||
Seymour Hersh | Uncovered the My Lai Massacre | |||
Avram Hershko | Ubiquitin-mediated protein degradation | |||
Marshall Herskovitz | Executive Producer, thirtysomething | |||
Gustav Hertz | Franck-Hertz experiment | |||
Theodor Herzl | Lead Zionist | |||
Chaim Herzog | President of Israel, 1983-93 | |||
Myra Hess | Held lunchtime concerts during WWII | |||
Don Hewitt | 60 Minutes creator | |||
Ira Michael Heyman | Chancellor of UC Berkeley, 1980-90 | |||
Jonah Hill | Superbad | |||
Steven Hill | Adam Schiff on Law & Order | |||
Arthur Hiller | An Alan Smithee Film | |||
Judd Hirsch | Taxi | |||
Peter B. Hirsch | Electron microscopy in metallurgy | |||
Al Hirschfeld | Pen and ink caricaturist | |||
Laura Z. Hobson | Gentleman's Agreement | |||
Abbie Hoffman | Steal This Book | |||
Dustin Hoffman | Rain Man, The Graduate | |||
Roald Hoffmann | Woodward-Hoffmann reaction | |||
Susanna Hoffs | Lead singer of The Bangles | |||
Robert Hofstadter | Investigated electron scattering and nuclei | |||
Marshall Holman | Professional bowler, mostly retired | |||
Janet L. Holmgren | President, Mills College | |||
Elizabeth Holtzman | Congresswoman from New York, 1973-81 | |||
Oskar Homolka | Sabotage | |||
Sidney Hook | Pragmatist | |||
Monica Horan | Everybody Loves Raymond | |||
Henry Horner | Governor of Illinois, 1933-40 | |||
David Horowitz | Conservative activist | |||
H. Robert Horvitz | Genetic regulation of organ development | |||
Harry Houdini | Best-known magician and debunker | |||
Ehud Houminer | CEO of Philip Morris USA, 1988-90 | |||
Curly Howard | Highest pitched Stooge | |||
Michael Howard | UK Home Secretary, 1993-97 | |||
Moe Howard | Boss Stooge | |||
Shemp Howard | Stooge | |||
Irving Howe | Editor of Dissent | |||
Bronislaw Huberman | Polish violin prodigy, Pan-Europeanist | |||
Conrad Hubert | Flashlights | |||
Sol Hurok | American impresario | |||
Robert J. Hurst | Vice Chairman of Goldman Sachs, 1999-2004 | |||
Leonid Hurwicz | Mechanism design theory | |||
Dick Hyman | Pianist, Organist, Conductor, Composer | |||
Trina Schart Hyman | Children's book illustrator | |||
Oscar Hammerstein I | Olympia Theatre | |||
Scott Ian | Guitarist for Anthrax | |||
Carl Icahn | Billionaire, took over TWA | |||
Eugène Ionesco | The Bald Soprano | |||
Jack Irons | Drummer for the Red Hot Chili Peppers | |||
Jason Isaacs | Black Hawk Down | |||
Michael Isikoff | Newsweek reporter | |||
Menasseh ben Israel | Vindiciae Judaeorum | |||
Jozef Israëls | Dutch scene painter | |||
Eugene Istomin | American piano prodigy | |||
Edmond Jabès | The Book of Resemblances | |||
Ze'ev Jabotinsky | Founder of the Jewish Legion | |||
Jacob | Father of the twelve tribes | |||
Lou Jacobi | Avalon | |||
Gary N. Jacobs | General Counsel for MGM Mirage | |||
Irwin M. Jacobs | Co-Founder of Qualcomm | |||
Marc Jacobs | Fired in 1993 after releasing a "Grunge" line | |||
Paul E. Jacobs | CEO of Qualcomm | |||
Jeff Jacoby | Boston Globe columnist | |||
Sam Jaffe | Gunga Din | |||
Janet Jagan | President of Guyana, 1997-99 | |||
Sid James | Carry on... | |||
Jacob K. Javits | US Senator from New York, 1957-81 | |||
Ricky Jay | Jay's Journal of Anomalies | |||
Tony Jay | Voice and character actor | |||
Elfriede Jelinek | Die Klavierspielerin | |||
Ron Jeremy | The Hedgehog | |||
Jesus Christ | Carpenter, evangelist | |||
Ruth Prawer Jhabvala | Heat and Dust | |||
Joseph Joachim | Virtuoso violinist, Joachim Quartet | |||
Billy Joel | Didn't start the fire | |||
Josef Joffe | Editor of Die Zeit | |||
Scarlett Johansson | Ghost World, Lost in Translation | |||
John the Baptist | Precursor to Jesus Christ | |||
Al Jolson | The Jazz Singer | |||
Hans Jonas | Gnostic philosopher | |||
Erica Jong | Fear of Flying | |||
Spike Jonze | Being John Malkovich | |||
Joseph | Possessed multicolored dreamcoat | |||
Keith Joseph | Conservative UK Minister, Thatcher influence | |||
St. Joseph | Husband of Mary | |||
Brian D. Josephson | Discovered the Josephson Effect | |||
Josephus | The Jewish War | |||
Josiah | King of Judah | |||
Judge Judy | Telejurist extraordinaire | |||
Neil Kadisha | Co-Founder of Qualcomm | |||
Franz Kafka | Metamorphosis | |||
Daryn Kagan | CNN Live Today | |||
Donald Kagan | The Great Dialogue | |||
Elena Kagan | US Solicitor General | |||
Frederick Kagan | Neocon military historian, now at AEI | |||
Mauricio Kagel | Absurdist composer | |||
Steve Kagen | Congressman, Wisconsin 8th | |||
Meir Kahane | Founder of Jewish Defense League | |||
Albert Kahn | Detroit architect, factory designer | |||
Louis Kahn | Prominent architect | |||
Daniel Kahneman | The psychology of economics | |||
Chester Kallman | Librettist, translator | |||
Bert Kalmar | Who's Sorry Now? | |||
Harry P. Kamen | CEO of Metropolitan Life, 1993-98 | |||
Michael Kamen | Prolific film composer and conductor | |||
Matthew H. Kamens | Of Counsel, Wolf Block | |||
Sheldon Kamins | Blum Frank & Kamins | |||
Eric R. Kandel | Signal transduction in the nervous system | |||
John Kander | Top Broadway composer | |||
Carol Kane | Simka on Taxi | |||
Garson Kanin | It Should Happen to You | |||
Peter R. Kann | CEO of Dow Jones, 1991-2006 | |||
Gabe Kaplan | Mr. Kotter on Welcome Back, Kotter | |||
Jill Kaplan | Publisher of Crain's New York Business | |||
Joel D. Kaplan | White House policy advisor | |||
Justin Kaplan | Mr. Clemens and Mark Twain | |||
Stanley H. Kaplan | Developed SAT study aids | |||
Mitch Kapor | Founder of Lotus, Co-founder EFF | |||
Bruce Karatz | CEO of KB Home, 1986-2006 | |||
James Karen | The Return of the Living Dead | |||
Theodore von Kármán | Kármán vortices | |||
Mel Karmazin | President and COO of Viacom, 2000-04 | |||
Martin Karplus | Karplus Equation | |||
Garry Kasparov | Grand Master chess player | |||
Moshe Katsav | President of Israel, 2000-07 | |||
Chris Kattan | Saturday Night Live | |||
Bernard Katz | Neurotransmitters and the pineal gland | |||
Jonathan Katz | Dr. Katz, Professional Therapist | |||
Omri Katz | Eerie, Indiana | |||
Phil Katz | Creator of PKZIP | |||
Steven T. Katz | Professor of Religion | |||
Vera Katz | Mayor of Portland Oregon, 1993-2005 | |||
Jeffrey Katzenberg | Produced Shrek | |||
Ephraim Katzir | President of Israel, 1973-78 | |||
Robert A. Katzmann | 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals | |||
Stanley Kauffmann | Film critic for The New Republic | |||
Charlie Kaufman | Being John Malkovich, Adaptation | |||
George S. Kaufman | You Can't Take It With You | |||
Lloyd Kaufman | The Toxic Avenger | |||
Jorma Kaukonen | Jefferson Airplane | |||
Julie Kavner | Marge on The Simpsons | |||
Danny Kaye | The Secret Life of Walter Mitty | |||
Lainie Kazan | My Favorite Year | |||
Alfred Kazin | On Native Grounds | |||
Munr Kazmir | CEO, Direct Meds, Inc. | |||
Harvey Keitel | Pimp from Taxi Driver | |||
Amos Kenan | The Road to Ein Harod | |||
Felicity Kendal | The Good Life | |||
Jerome Kern | Show Boat | |||
Cameron Kerry | John Kerry's younger brother | |||
Imre Kertész | Holocaust survivor, literature Nobel | |||
István Kertész | Hungarian operatic conductor | |||
Hermann Kesten | I, the King | |||
Michael Kidd | Award-winning choreographer | |||
David Kimche | Israeli spy, masterminded Iran-Contra | |||
Martin S. Kimmel | Founder of Kimco Realty | |||
Sidney Kimmel | CEO of Jones Apparel Group, 1975-2002 | |||
Richard Kind | Paul Lassiter on Spin City | |||
Alan King | Jewish comic and Friars Club fixture | |||
Carole King | Tapestry | |||
Larry King | Larry King Live | |||
Michael Kinsley | Slate founder | |||
Shane Kippel | Gavin Mason on Degrassi | |||
Leon Kirchner | Quartet No. 3 | |||
Mia Kirshner | The L Word | |||
Lincoln Kirstein | Co-Founder, New York City Ballet | |||
Henry Kissinger | US Secretary of State, 1973-77 | |||
John Kitzhaber | Governor of Oregon, 1995-2003 | |||
Ron Klain | Joe Biden's Chief of Staff | |||
Larry Klayman | Founder, Judicial Watch | |||
Dylan Klebold | Columbine Massacre | |||
Allen Klein | Prehensile ABKCO executive | |||
Calvin Klein | Fashion designer | |||
Joe Klein | Anonymous author of Primary Colors | |||
Naomi Klein | The Shock Doctrine | |||
Robert Klein | Unable to stop his leg | |||
Ron Klein | Congressman, Florida 22nd | |||
Andrew J. Kleinfeld | 9th Circuit Court of Appeals | |||
Otto Klemperer | Prominent German conductor | |||
Werner Klemperer | Col. Klink on Hogan's Heroes | |||
Paul Kletzki | Director, Bern Symphony, 1964-67 | |||
Franz Kline | Abstract expressionist painter | |||
Leon Klinghoffer | Shot and thrown overboard by terrorists | |||
Aaron Klug | Structural analysis of viruses | |||
Jack Klugman | The Odd Couple | |||
Philip M. Klutznick | US Secretary of Commerce, 1980-81 | |||
Alfred A. Knopf | American publisher | |||
Ed Koch | Mayor of New York City, 1978-89 | |||
Walter Koenig | Chekov on Star Trek | |||
Herb Kohl | US Senator from Wisconsin | |||
Max Kohl | Kohl's Department Stores | |||
Alfred Kohlberg | The China Lobby Man | |||
Donald L. Kohn | Vice Chairman of the Federal Reserve | |||
Walter Kohn | Density-functional theory | |||
Frederick Kohner | Gidget | |||
Teddy Kollek | Mayor of Jerusalem, 1965-93 | |||
David H. Komansky | CEO of Merrill Lynch, 1996-2002 | |||
Milton R. Konvitz | Cornell Professor, Labor and Industrial Relations | |||
Bernie Kopell | Doc on The Love Boat | |||
Quentin Kopp | California politician and judge | |||
Ted Koppel | Nightline | |||
Zoltán Korda | Sahara | |||
Harvey Korman | The Carol Burnett Show | |||
Arthur Kornberg | Synthesized DNA | |||
Tony Kornheiser | Pardon the Interruption | |||
Jerzy Kosinski | Being There | |||
Martin Kosleck | German-American character actor | |||
David Kossoff | The Mouse That Roared | |||
Henry Koster | The Bishop's Wife | |||
Yaphet Kotto | Homicide | |||
Sandy Koufax | Three-time Cy Young Award winner | |||
Serge Koussevitzky | Music Director, Boston Symphony, 1924-49 | |||
Simon Kovar | Preeminent Basoon player and teacher | |||
Martin Kove | Det. Isbecki on Cagney & Lacey | |||
Alex Kozinski | Chief Judge, 9th Circuit Court of Appeals | |||
Hersh Kozlov | Wolf Block Schorr & Solis-Cohen | |||
Jonathan Kozol | Death at an Early Age | |||
Robert Kraft | Owner, New England Patriots | |||
Stanley Kramer | It's A Mad Mad Mad Mad World | |||
Judith Krantz | Scruples | |||
Lee Krasner | Abstract expressionist | |||
Hans Krebs | Tricarboxylic acid cycle | |||
Bruno Kreisky | Chancellor of Austria, 1970-83 | |||
Marvin Krislov | President, Oberlin College | |||
Bill Kristol | Editor of The Weekly Standard | |||
Irving Kristol | Influential neocon | |||
Randall S. Kroszner | Federal Reserve Governor | |||
Paul Krugman | New York Times columnist/economist | |||
Larry Krystkowiak | Head Coach, Milwaukee Bucks | |||
Stanley Kubrick | 2001: A Space Odyssey | |||
Lisa Kudrow | Friends | |||
Maxine Kumin | Up Country | |||
Madeleine M. Kunin | Governor of Vermont, 1985-91 | |||
Mila Kunis | Jackie on That 70's Show | |||
William Kunstler | Civil rights attorney | |||
Irv Kupcinet | Kup's Column | |||
Nicholas Kurti | Molecular gastronomy | |||
Daniel Kurtzer | US Ambassador to Israel, 2001-05 | |||
Tony Kushner | Angels in America | |||
Simon Kuznets | National Income and Its Composition | |||
Shia LaBeouf | The Battle of Shaker Heights | |||
Jeffrey M. Lacker | President and CEO, Richmond Fed | |||
Carl Laemmle | Independent Motion Picture Company | |||
Karl Lagerfeld | Chanel, Lagerfeld | |||
Imre Lakatos | Philosopher of Science and Mathematics | |||
Ricki Lake | Hairspray | |||
Adam Lamberg | Gordo on Lizzie McGuire | |||
Adam Lambert | American Idol | |||
Martin Landau | Mission: Impossible, Space 1999 | |||
Ann Landers | Syndicated advice columnist | |||
John Landis | An American Werewolf in London | |||
Charles Lane | Grumpy character actor | |||
Fritz Lang | Metropolis | |||
Sherry Lansing | Former Paramount executive | |||
Meyer Lansky | The brains behind the Mafia's money | |||
Tom Lantos | Congressman from California, 1981-2008 | |||
Sidney Lapidus | Warburg Pincus | |||
David Lascher | Vinnie on Blossom | |||
Albert Lasker | Advertising executive and medical research patron | |||
Harold Laski | A Grammar of Politics | |||
Melvin J. Lasky | Editor of journal Encounter | |||
Estée Lauder | Cosmetics magnate | |||
Leonard Lauder | Chairman of Estee Lauder | |||
Ronald S. Lauder | US Ambassador to Austria, 1986-87 | |||
William Lauder | CEO, Estée Lauder | |||
Ralph Lauren | Founder, Polo Ralph Lauren | |||
Piper Laurie | Catherine Packard in Twin Peaks | |||
Frank Lautenberg | US Senator from New Jersey | |||
Linda Lavin | Alice | |||
Jerome Lawrence | Inherit the Wind and Mame | |||
Steve Lawrence | The Steve Lawrence Show | |||
John Howard Lawson | One of the Hollywood Ten | |||
Nigel Lawson | Chancellor of the Exchequer, 1983-89 | |||
Emma Lazarus | The New Colossus | |||
Norman Lear | Creator of All in the Family | |||
Fran Lebowitz | Social satirist, Metropolitan Life | |||
Mimi Leder | Deep Impact | |||
Joshua Lederberg | Genetic properties of bacteria | |||
Francis Lederer | Pandora's Box | |||
David M. Lee | Superfluidity of helium-3 | |||
Stan Lee | Created Spider-Man and The Hulk | |||
Walter Legge | Classical music producer at EMI | |||
Herbert H. Lehman | Governor of New York, 1933-42 | |||
Lew Lehrman | Rite Aid drugstore founder | |||
Fritz Leiber | Ship of Shadows | |||
Jerry Leiber | Hitmaker for Elvis | |||
Annie Leibovitz | Celebrity photographer | |||
Carol Leifer | Comic inspired Seinfeld's Elaine | |||
Mike Leigh | Naked, Topsy-Turvy | |||
Donovan Leitch, Jr. | Glory | |||
Mark Lenard | Ambassador Sarek on Star Trek | |||
Moses de Leon | Zohar | |||
Robert Z. Leonard | The Divorcee | |||
Louis Lepke | Head of Murder, Inc. | |||
Alfred Lerner | CEO of MBNA, 1982-2002 | |||
Gerda Lerner | The Woman in American History | |||
Max Lerner | Ideas Are Weapons | |||
Michael Lerner | Barton Fink | |||
Oscar Levant | Panelist, Information Please | |||
Max Levchin | Co-Founder of PayPal | |||
Jeremy Leven | Don Juan DeMarco | |||
Larry Levenson | Founder of Plato's Retreat | |||
Denise Levertov | With Eyes at the Back of Our Heads | |||
Edward H. Levi | US Attorney General, 1975-77 | |||
Primo Levi | Survival in Auschwitz | |||
Rita Levi-Montalcini | Nerve and skin cell growth factors | |||
Claude Lévi-Strauss | French anthropologist | |||
Carl Levin | US Senator from Michigan | |||
Harvey Levin | Prince of the paparazzi | |||
Ira Levin | Rosemary's Baby | |||
Jerry Levin | CEO of Time Warner, 2000-02 | |||
Meyer Levin | Compulsion | |||
Sandy Levin | Congressman, Michigan 12th | |||
Tony Levin | Bassist for King Crimson | |||
Emmanuel Levinas | Totality and Infinity | |||
Adam Levine | Frontman of Maroon 5 | |||
David Levine | Caricaturist, New York Review of Books | |||
James Levine | Music Director, NY Metropolitan Opera | |||
Mel Levine | Congressman from California, 1983-93 | |||
Philip Levine | What Work Is | |||
Barry Levinson | Rain Man | |||
Elliott H. Levitas | Congressman from Georgia, 1975-85 | |||
Bernard-Henri Lévy | Who Killed Daniel Pearl? | |||
Chandra Levy | Gary Condit's dead intern | |||
Eugene Levy | Earl Camembert from SCTV | |||
Marv Levy | NFL, CFL, and NCAA coach | |||
Shawn Levy | Rat Pack Confidential | |||
Steven Levy | Hackers | |||
Kurt Lewin | Field theorist, group dynamicist | |||
Monica Lewinsky | Engaged in Presidential cigar play | |||
Al Lewis | Grandpa on The Munsters | |||
Bernard Lewis | Middle East scholar | |||
David Lewis | Leader of Canada's NDP, 1971-75 | |||
Jerry Lewis | Cinderfella | |||
Peter B. Lewis | Chairman of Progressive | |||
Richard Lewis | Such a nice young man | |||
Shari Lewis | Lamb Chop's Play-Along | |||
Mark Leyner | The Tetherballs of Bougainville | |||
Lewis Libby | Cheney's former Chief of Staff | |||
Frank Licht | Governor of Rhode Island, 1969-73 | |||
Richard A. Licht | Lt. Governor of Rhode Island, 1985-89 | |||
Roy Lichtenstein | Whaam! | |||
Todd Lickliter | Head Coach, University of Iowa | |||
Avigdor Lieberman | Israeli Foreign Minister | |||
Hadassah Lieberman | Wife of Joseph Lieberman | |||
Joseph Lieberman | US Senator from Connecticut | |||
György Ligeti | Lontano, Lux Aeterna | |||
Judith Light | Angela Bower on Who's the Boss? | |||
David E. Lilienthal | TVA Chairman, 1941-46 | |||
Hal Linden | Barney Miller | |||
Linda Lingle | Governor of Hawaii | |||
Sol Linowitz | Negotiated return of the Panama Canal | |||
Alex D. Linz | Home Alone 3 | |||
Joanne Lipman | Editor of Condé Nast Portfolio, 2007-09 | |||
Fritz Lipmann | Carbohydrate oxidation | |||
Jonathan Lipnicki | The Jeff Foxworthy Show | |||
Gabriel Lippmann | Photographic color plate | |||
Walter Lippmann | Today and Tomorrow | |||
Seymour M. Lipset | American Exceptionalism | |||
James Lipton | Host, Inside the Actors Studio | |||
Martin Lipton | Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz | |||
Dahlia Lithwick | Slate senior editor | |||
Sanford M. Litvack | General Counsel of Disney, 1991-98 | |||
Anatole Litvak | Anastasia | |||
Maxim Litvinov | Soviet foreign minister, ousted in nod to Hitler | |||
Jay Livingston | Que Sera Sera | |||
Tzipi Livni | Israeli Foreign Minister, 2006-09 | |||
Jacques Loeb | Investigator of artificial parthenogenesis | |||
Lisa Loeb | Stay (I Missed You) | |||
Solomon Loeb | Co-Founder of Kuhn, Loeb and Co. | |||
Frederick Loewe | My Fair Lady | |||
Otto Loewi | Acetylcholine as a neurotransmitter | |||
Herbert Lom | Mysterious Island | |||
Stacy London | What Not to Wear | |||
Jon Lovitz | Yeaaaah, that's the ticket! | |||
Allard Lowenstein | Congressman, New York 5th | |||
Leo Lowenthal | Literature and the Image of Man | |||
Nita Lowey | Congresswoman, New York 18th | |||
Bernard Lown | Inventor of defibrillator, peace activist | |||
David J. Lubar | President of Lubar & Co. | |||
Gary Lucas | Avant-guitarist, Magic Band alumnus | |||
Matt Lucas | Little Britain | |||
Sid Luckman | Chicago Bears QB, Hall of Famer | |||
Sidney Luft | Ex-Husband of Judy Garland | |||
Sidney Lumet | Dog Day Afternoon | |||
Jamie Luner | Lexi on Melrose Place | |||
Frank Luntz | Republican pollster, strategist | |||
Isaac ben Solomon Luria | Jewish mystic | |||
Ranan Lurie | Hugely popular political cartoonist | |||
Rod Lurie | The Contender | |||
Rosa Luxemburg | Co-Founder, Communist Party of Germany | |||
André Lwoff | Operon theory of genetic control | |||
Natasha Lyonne | Slums of Beverly Hills | |||
Eugene Lyons | Anti-Communist Editor of American Mercury | |||
Lorin Maazel | Conductor, New York Philharmonic | |||
Earle I. Mack | Real estate magnate | |||
John Mack | A Prince of Our Disorder | |||
Aline MacMahon | Dragon Seed | |||
Noel Madison | American character actor | |||
Bernard L. Madoff | Madoff Investment Securities LLC | |||
Ira Magaziner | Internet advisor under Bill Clinton | |||
Mary Magdalene | Early follower of Jesus Christ | |||
Moses Maimonides | Codified Jewish law | |||
Bernard Malamud | The Fixer | |||
Janet Malcolm | The Journalist and the Murderer | |||
Joshua Malina | Will Bailey on The West Wing | |||
Robert Malley | Ex-National Security Council | |||
Leonard Maltin | Film critic | |||
David Mamet | Glengarry Glen Ross | |||
Howie Mandel | Host of Deal Or No Deal | |||
Marvin Mandel | Governor of Maryland, 1969-79 | |||
Szolem Mandelbrojt | French Mathematician | |||
Benoit Mandelbrot | Fractal mathematician | |||
Osip Mandelshtam | Acmeist Russian poet | |||
Peter Mandelson | EU Commissioner for Trade | |||
Camryn Manheim | Ellenor Frutt on The Practice | |||
Barry Manilow | I Write The Songs | |||
Joseph L. Mankiewicz | The Barefoot Contessa | |||
Abby Mann | Judgment at Nuremberg | |||
Herbie Mann | Jazz flautist | |||
Karl Mannheim | Ideology and Utopia | |||
Dinah Manoff | Ordinary People | |||
Patrick Marber | Closer | |||
Marcel Marceau | Mime, created Bip the clown | |||
Bernie Marcus | Co-Founder of Home Depot | |||
Jeffrey A. Marcus | Cable TV magnate | |||
Ruth A. Marcus | Washington Post columnist | |||
Stanley Marcus | CEO of Neiman-Marcus, 1950-72 | |||
Herbert Marcuse | One-Dimensional Man | |||
Cindy Margolis | Playmate/Queen of the Internet | |||
Miriam Margolyes | The Age of Innocence | |||
Jack A. Markell | Governor of Delaware | |||
Quinn Martin | Quinn Martin Productions | |||
Chico Marx | An Italian con-man of a Marx Brother | |||
Groucho Marx | You Bet Your Life | |||
Gummo Marx | Left the Marx Brothers troupe early | |||
Harpo Marx | Silent harp-playing Marx Brother | |||
Zeppo Marx | Straight man of the Marx Brothers | |||
Virgin Mary | Virgin mother of Jesus Christ | |||
Eric Maskin | Mechanism design theory | |||
Sophie Masloff | Mayor of Pittsburgh, 1988-94 | |||
Abraham Maslow | Hierarchy of Needs | |||
Jackie Mason | The World According to Me! | |||
Matisyahu | Hasidic toaster | |||
Marlee Matlin | Deaf actress on The West Wing | |||
Walter Matthau | Messy half of the Odd Couple | |||
André Maurois | French biographer | |||
Marcel Mauss | The Gift | |||
Peter Max | Psychedelic art has featured Statues of Liberty | |||
Robert Maxwell | Mirror Group tycoon | |||
Elaine May | Wrote and directed Ishtar | |||
Arno J. Mayer | Marxist Jew, quasi-revisionist | |||
Louis B. Mayer | The final M in MGM | |||
Billy Mays | Bearded infomercial pitchman | |||
Monet Mazur | Blow | |||
Paul Mazursky | Down and Out in Beverly Hills | |||
Malcolm McLaren | Sex Pistols manager | |||
Anne Meara | Stiller and Meara | |||
Scott Mechlowicz | EuroTrip | |||
Peter Medak | Romeo Is Bleeding | |||
Michael Medved | Traditional values pundit, film critic | |||
Ken Mehlman | RNC chairman 2005-07 | |||
Golda Meir | Fourth Prime Minister of Israel | |||
Kurt Mendelssohn | Cryogenics and pyramids | |||
Moses Mendelssohn | Brilliant German-Jewish philosopher | |||
Yehudi Menuhin | Child prodigy violinist, conductor | |||
Idina Menzel | Rent | |||
J. Ezra Merkin | Chairman of GMAC | |||
David Merrick | Hello, Dolly! | |||
Bob Merrill | How Much Is That Doggie In The Window? | |||
Robert Merrill | Operatic baritone, NY Metropolitan Opera | |||
Robert C. Merton | Risk management and options | |||
Robert K. Merton | On the Shoulders of Giants | |||
Don Messick | Voice of Scooby Doo | |||
Debra Messing | Grace on Will & Grace | |||
Howard Metzenbaum | US Senator from Ohio, 1977-95 | |||
Nicholas Meyer | Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan | |||
Giacomo Meyerbeer | Robert le Diable | |||
Ari Meyers | Emma McArdle on Kate & Allie | |||
Seth Meyers | Saturday Night Live | |||
Al Michaels | Sportscaster, believes in miracles | |||
Lorne Michaels | Producer of Saturday Night Live | |||
Albert A. Michelson | Measured the speed of light | |||
Adam Michnik | Gazeta Wyborcza | |||
Bette Midler | Ol' Red Hair | |||
Sylvia Miles | Midnight Cowboy | |||
Stanley Milgram | Milgram Experiment | |||
Darius Milhaud | The Creation of the World | |||
David Miliband | British Foreign Secretary | |||
Ed Miliband | British MP, Doncaster North | |||
Ralph Miliband | Parliamentary Socialism | |||
Harvey Milk | Openly gay SF city supervisor | |||
Michael Milken | Convicted financial executive | |||
Arthur Miller | Death of a Salesman | |||
Jeremy Miller | Ben Seaver on Growing Pains | |||
Jonathan Miller | Beyond the Fringe | |||
Judith Miller | Credulous NY Times WMD maven | |||
Irving Mills | Songwriter, music scout, raconteur | |||
César Milstein | Hybridoma technique (monoclonal antibodies) | |||
Howard P. Milstein | Chairman of Emigrant Bank | |||
Nathan Milstein | Virtuoso violinist, interpreter of Bach | |||
Paul Milstein | Manhattan real estate developer | |||
Hermann Minkowski | Minkowski space | |||
Oskar Minkowski | Linked pancreas to diabetes | |||
Hyman Minsky | Inherently unstable markets | |||
Frederic S. Mishkin | Federal Reserve Governor | |||
Kevin Mitnick | Former "most wanted" hacker | |||
Isaac Mizrahi | Unzipped | |||
Mark E. Mlotek | EVP at Henry Schein | |||
Rea Mochiach | New York-based multi-instrumentalist | |||
Leon of Modena | Riti Ebraici | |||
Amedeo Modigliani | Cubist Italian sculptor and painter | |||
Franco Modigliani | Life-cycle theory | |||
Eben Moglen | Shareware law | |||
Henri Moissan | Isolated fluorine | |||
Ferenc Molnár | The Paul Street Boys | |||
Marilyn Monroe | Some Like It Hot | |||
Ron Moody | Fagin in Oliver Twist | |||
Les Moonves | CEO of CBS Television | |||
Sara Jane Moore | Tried to kill President Ford | |||
Rick Moranis | SCTV, Honey I Shrunk The Kids | |||
Oskar Morgenstern | Game theorist | |||
Henry Morgenthau, Jr. | US Secretary of the Treasury, 1934-45 | |||
Dick Morris | Fox News lapdog, former Clinton advisor | |||
Moses | Ten Commandments | |||
Robert Moses | New York City planner | |||
Bruce E. Mosler | CEO of Cushman & Wakefield | |||
Donny Most | Ralph Malph on Happy Days | |||
Zero Mostel | A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum | |||
Tommy Mottola | Former head of Sony Music | |||
Michael Mukasey | US Attorney General, 2007-09 | |||
Paul Muni | The Life of Louis Pasteur | |||
Peter Munk | Founder of Barrick Gold | |||
Arthur Murray | Founded Arthur Murray dance studios | |||
Bess Myerson | First Jewish Miss America | |||
Roger B. Myerson | Mechanism design theory | |||
Jerrold Nadler | Congressman, New York 8th | |||
Joseph E. Nathan | Founder of Glaxo | |||
Daniel Nathans | Restriction enzymes (DNA cleavage) | |||
Yitzhak Navon | President of Israel, 1978-83 | |||
Alla Nazimova | Blood and Sand | |||
Tim Blake Nelson | O Brother, Where Art Thou? | |||
Howard Nemerov | US Poet Laureate, 1987-88 | |||
Benjamin Netanyahu | Prime Minister of Israel | |||
Joseph Neubauer | CEO of ARAMARK | |||
Richard L. Neuberger | US Senator from Oregon, 1955-60 | |||
Si Newhouse, Jr. | Chairman of Condé Nast | |||
S. I. Newhouse, Sr. | Founder of Advance Publications | |||
Donald Newhouse | Advance Newspapers billionaire | |||
Anthony Newley | Artful Dodger in Oliver Twist | |||
Howard H. Newman | Former Partner, Warburg Pincus | |||
Paul Newman | Salad dressing magnate | |||
Peter C. Newman | The Canadian Establishment | |||
Craig Newmark | Founder, Craigslist | |||
Helmut Newton | Celebrity photographer | |||
Mike Nichols | Primary Colors | |||
Leonard Nimoy | Commander Spock on Star Trek | |||
Marshall W. Nirenberg | RNA's role in protein synthesis | |||
Max Nordau | Zionist and cultural critic, Degeneration | |||
Danny Nucci | Eraser | |||
Martha Nussbaum | The Fragility of Goodness | |||
Louis Nye | Sonny Drysdale on Beverly Hillbillies | |||
Laura Nyro | New York songwriter | |||
Ken Ober | Remote Control, Ober and Olsen | |||
Adolph Ochs | New York Times Publisher, 1896-1936 | |||
Clifford Odets | Sweet Smell of Success | |||
Morris W. Offit | Founder of OFFITBANK | |||
Sophie Okonedo | Hotel Rwanda | |||
Ehud Olmert | Prime Minister of Israel, 2006-09 | |||
David Opatoshu | Raid on Entebbe | |||
Robert Oppenheimer | Physicist, headed the Manhattan Project | |||
Suze Orman | The Road to Wealth | |||
Norman Ornstein | American Enterprise Institute | |||
Super Dave Osborne | Underwhelming daredevil | |||
Sharon Osbourne | Wife of Ozzy Osbourne | |||
Gerald M. Ostrov | CEO of Bausch & Lomb | |||
Ronn Owens | KGO radio talk show host | |||
Amos Oz | Elsewhere, Perhaps | |||
Frank Oz | Yoda, Miss Piggy, and The Stepford Wives | |||
Cynthia Ozick | The Puttermesser Papers | |||
Vladimir de Pachmann | Histrionic Russian pianist, known for Chopin | |||
Alan J. Pakula | All the President's Men | |||
Charlemagne Palestine | Strumming Music | |||
Grace Paley | The Little Disturbances of Man | |||
William S. Paley | Chairman of CBS, 1946-83 | |||
Gwyneth Paltrow | Shakespeare in Love | |||
Erwin Panofsky | Studies in Iconology | |||
Joseph Papp | Founder, New York Shakespeare Festival | |||
Barbara J. Pariente | Justice, Florida Supreme Court | |||
Mitchell Parish | Volare | |||
Dorothy Parker | Constant Reader known for acerbic quips | |||
Sarah Jessica Parker | Carrie on Sex and the City | |||
Adam Pascal | Broadway cast of Rent | |||
Amy Pascal | Sony Pictures co-chairman | |||
Solomon Passy | Bulgarian Minister of Foreign Affairs | |||
Boris Pasternak | Doctor Zhivago | |||
Joe Pasternak | Destry Rides Again | |||
Amy Wynn Pastor | Carpenter on Trading Spaces | |||
Mandy Patinkin | Dead Like Me | |||
David Paymer | Mr. Saturday Night | |||
Peaches | Fatherfucker | |||
Daniel Pearl | Murdered Wall Street Journal reporter | |||
Lou Pearlman | Boy bands and Ponzi schemes | |||
Josh Peck | Drake and Josh | |||
Jan Peerce | Operatic tenor, NY Metropolitan Opera | |||
Larry Peerce | Goodbye, Columbus | |||
Rudolf Peierls | Frisch-Peierls Memorandum | |||
Nelson Peltz | CEO of Triarc | |||
Leo Penn | The Dark Secret of Harvest Home | |||
Arno Penzias | Detected primordial radiation | |||
Georges Perec | La Vie: mode d'emploi | |||
Ron Perelman | Billionaire, owns 60% of Revlon | |||
S. J. Perelman | New Yorker humorist | |||
Shimon Peres | President of Israel | |||
Martin L. Perl | Discovered the Tau Lepton | |||
Richard Perle | Prince of Darkness | |||
Itzhak Perlman | Israeli violinist | |||
Philip B. Perlman | US Solicitor General, 1947-52 | |||
Rhea Perlman | Cheers | |||
Ron Perlman | Hellboy | |||
Nehemiah Persoff | The Harder They Fall | |||
Max F. Perutz | X-Ray analysis of hemoglobin | |||
Jon Peters | Half of Hollywood Peters-Guber duo | |||
Roberta Peters | Coloratura soprano, NY Metropolitan Opera | |||
Leo Pfeffer | Religious liberty scholar, attorney | |||
Irna Phillips | Queen of soap operas | |||
Gregor Piatigorsky | Russian-American cello virtuoso | |||
Molly Picon | Yiddish theatre actress | |||
Marge Piercy | Gone to Soldiers | |||
Gregory Pincus | Inventor of oral contraceptives | |||
Walter Pincus | Washington Post reporter with CIA ties | |||
Pink | Can't Take Me Home | |||
David Pinski | Yiddish playwright, Der Oitzer | |||
Harold Pinter | The Birthday Party | |||
Daniel Pipes | Influential neocon | |||
Camille Pissarro | French Impressionist painter | |||
Ingrid Pitt | Countess Dracula | |||
Jeremy Piven | Ari Gold on Entourage | |||
John Podhoretz | Conservative columnist | |||
Norman Podhoretz | Prominent neocon author | |||
Jared Polis | Congressman, Colorado 2nd | |||
Sydney Pollack | Tootsie | |||
Kevin Pollak | Host of Celebrity Poker | |||
Tracy Pollan | Ellen Reed on Family Ties | |||
Jonathan Pollard | Spied for Israel | |||
Faith Popcorn | The Popcorn Report | |||
Ron Popeil | Ginsu knives, Mr. Microphone | |||
Samuel J. Popeil | Veg-O-Matic | |||
David H. Popper | US Ambassador to Chile, 1974-77 | |||
Karl Popper | Critical Rationalist | |||
Sylvia Porter | Financial columnist | |||
Natalie Portman | Queen Amidala in Star Wars | |||
Ted Post | Hang 'Em High | |||
Chaim Potok | The Chosen | |||
David S. Pottruck | CEO of Charles Schwab, 1998-2004 | |||
Maury Povich | The Maury Povich Show | |||
Dennis Prager | Conservative Jewish radio host | |||
Harry Pregerson | 9th Circuit Court of Appeals | |||
Otto Preminger | Anatomy of a Murder | |||
Emeric Pressburger | Black Narcissus | |||
André Previn | Concert pianist and orchestral conductor | |||
Ilya Prigogine | Thermodynamic systems | |||
David Proval | Richie on The Sopranos | |||
Stanley B. Prusiner | Prions | |||
Maxwell M. Rabb | US Ambassdor to Italy, 1981-89 | |||
Isidor Isaac Rabi | Magnetic beam resonances | |||
Yitzhak Rabin | Twice Prime Minister of Israel | |||
Stuart Rabner | New Jersey Chief Justice | |||
Gilda Radner | Saturday Night Live | |||
Philip Rahv | Co-Founder, Partisan Review | |||
Sam Raimi | Spider-Man | |||
Ted Raimi | Joxer on Xena, Warrior Princess | |||
Luise Rainer | German film actress | |||
Howell Raines | Executive editor, NYT, resigned | |||
Rosa Raisa | Operatic soprano | |||
David Rakoff | Don't Get Too Comfortable | |||
Harold Ramis | Egon Spengler in Ghostbusters | |||
Tony Randall | Felix Unger in The Odd Couple | |||
John Randolph | Prizzi's Honor | |||
Michael Rapaport | Zebrahead | |||
Sally Jessy Raphael | Controversialist talk show host | |||
Brett Ratner | Red Dragon | |||
Bruce Ratner | New York City developer | |||
Charles A. Ratner | CEO of Forest City Enterprises | |||
Diane Ravitch | Education reformer | |||
Man Ray | Dadaist photographer | |||
Steven A. Raymund | CEO of Tech Data, 1986-2006 | |||
Shari Redstone | President of National Amusements | |||
Sumner Redstone | Chairman and CEO of Viacom | |||
Nikki Reed | Thirteen | |||
Roger Rees | Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby | |||
Bar Refaeli | Israeli model, dating DiCaprio | |||
Steve Reich | Minimalist composer, Different Trains | |||
Tadeus Reichstein | Adrenocortical hormones | |||
Carl Reiner | Your Show of Shows | |||
Fritz Reiner | Music Director, Chicago Symphony, 1953-62 | |||
Rob Reiner | Meathead | |||
Frederick Reines | Co-Discover of the Neutrino | |||
Stephen Reinhardt | 9th Circuit Court of Appeals | |||
Jehuda Reinharz | President, Brandeis University | |||
Paul Reiser | Mad About You | |||
Judith Reisman | Hates Kinsey | |||
Jason Reitman | Up in the Air | |||
Abe Reles | Hitman for Murder, Inc. | |||
Ed Rendell | Governor of Pennsylvania | |||
Paul Reubens | Pee-wee Herman | |||
Andrew Revkin | New York Times science reporter | |||
Simon Rex | What I Like About You | |||
Malvina Reynolds | Little Boxes | |||
Abraham Ribicoff | Senator and Governor from Connecticut | |||
Frank Rich | New York Times | |||
Marc Rich | Pardoned by Clinton | |||
Mordecai Richler | The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz | |||
Don Rickles | King of the Insult | |||
Hyman Rickover | Built the nuclear navy | |||
Ron Rifkin | Arvin Sloane on Alias | |||
Malcolm Rifkind | UK Foreign Secretary, 1995-97 | |||
Meshulam Riklis | Corporate raider | |||
Martin Ritt | The Long Hot Summer | |||
Joan Rivers | Can we talk? | |||
Larry Rivers | American pop artist | |||
Melissa Rivers | Daughter of Joan Rivers | |||
Irv Robbins | Co-Founder of Baskin-Robbins | |||
Jerome Robbins | West Side Story | |||
Doris Roberts | Marie on Everybody Loves Raymond | |||
George R. Roberts | Kohlberg Kravis Roberts | |||
Tanya Roberts | Bond Girl, Beastmaster, That 70s Show | |||
Leo Robin | Thanks For The Memory | |||
Edward G. Robinson | Key Largo | |||
Arthur Rock | Coined term "Venture Capitalism" | |||
Martin Rodbell | G-protein cell signal transmission | |||
Richard Rodgers | Rodgers and Hammerstein | |||
Seth Rogen | Knocked Up | |||
Shorty Rogers | Shorty Rogers and His Giants | |||
Anne Roiphe | Up the Sandbox! | |||
Sigmund Romberg | The New Moon | |||
Harold Rome | I Can Get It for You Wholesale | |||
Jim Rome | Jim Rome is Burning | |||
Wayne Allyn Root | The Zen of Gambling | |||
Irwin Rose | Ubiquitin-mediated protein degradation | |||
Leonard Rose | Virtuoso cellist | |||
Michael N. Rosen | Partner, Bryan Cave | |||
Alan Rosenberg | Alvin Masterson on The Guardian | |||
Ethel Rosenberg | Executed for being married to Julius Rosenberg | |||
Julius Rosenberg | Leaked atomic bomb secrets to USSR | |||
Stuart Rosenberg | Cool Hand Luke | |||
William Rosenberg | Founder of Dunkin' Donuts | |||
Peter R. Rosenblatt | Washington attorney | |||
Eric S. Rosengren | President and CEO, Boston Fed | |||
Samuel I. Rosenman | White House Counsel, 1943-46 | |||
Ed Rosenthal | Advocate for legalizing marijuana | |||
Julius Rosenwald | Sears executive and Good Samaritan | |||
Ilene Rosenzweig | Swell designer | |||
Dennis B. Ross | US Middle East Envoy, 1992-2000 | |||
Herbert Ross | Steel Magnolias | |||
Marjory Ross | Regnery Publishing | |||
Rick Ross | Cult expert, deprogrammer | |||
Robert Rossen | The Hustler | |||
Bruno Rossi | Rossi curve and magnetopause | |||
Emmy Rossum | The Day After Tomorrow | |||
Leo Rosten | The Joys of Yiddish | |||
Eugene Victor Rostow | Dean of Yale Law School, 1955-65 | |||
Joseph Rotblat | Nuclear physicist, anti-nuke activist | |||
Eli Roth | Cabin Fever | |||
Henry Roth | Call It Sleep | |||
Joe Roth | Revolution Studios, former Disney CEO | |||
Mark Roth | Professional bowler | |||
Philip Roth | Portnoy's Complaint | |||
Steven Rothman | Congressman, New Jersey 9th | |||
Edmond de Rothschild | Father of the Yishuv | |||
Edmund de Rothschild | British banker | |||
Jacob Rothschild | RIT Capital Partners | |||
Lynn Forester de Rothschild | Telecom executive | |||
Debbie Rowe | Michael Jackson's ex-wife | |||
David M. Rubenstein | Director of the Carlyle Group | |||
James P. Rubin | State Department Spokesman, 1997-2000 | |||
Jerry Rubin | Yippie, one of the Chicago 7 | |||
Rick Rubin | Ubiquitous record producer, Def Jam | |||
Robert E. Rubin | US Treasury Secretary, 1995-99 | |||
Saul Rubinek | Ticket to Heaven | |||
Anton Rubinstein | The Tower of Babel | |||
Artur Rubinstein | Polish-American piano virtuoso | |||
Zelda Rubinstein | Tangina in Poltergeist | |||
Harry Ruby | Who's Sorry Now? | |||
Paul Rudd | The Shape of Things | |||
William C. Rudin | Rudin Management Company | |||
Warren Rudman | US Senator from New Hampshire, 1980-93 | |||
Rita Rudner | Naked Beneath My Clothes | |||
Keri Russell | Felicity | |||
Winona Ryder | Edward Scissorhands | |||
Daryl Sabara | Spy Kids | |||
Albert Sabin | Developed oral polio vaccine | |||
Jeffrey Sachs | The End of Poverty | |||
Nelly Sachs | O the Chimneys | |||
Samuel Sachs | Half namesake of Goldman Sachs | |||
Boris Sagal | The Omega Man | |||
Bob Saget | America's Funniest Home Videos | |||
Mort Sahl | Early influential stand-up comic | |||
S. Z. Sakall | Casablanca | |||
Soupy Sales | Inveterate pie thrower | |||
Jonas Salk | Discoverer of the first polio vaccine | |||
Edwin E. Salpeter | Quantitative electron microscopic autoradiography | |||
Barry Salzberg | CEO of Deloitte & Touche | |||
Andy Samberg | SNL, The Lonely Island | |||
Herbert Samuel | High Commissioner of Palestine, 1920-25 | |||
Paul Samuelson | Theory of revealed preference | |||
Bernie Sanders | US Senator from Vermont | |||
Adam Sandler | The Wedding Singer, SNL alumnus | |||
Edward Sapir | Anthropological linguist | |||
David Sarnoff | CEO of RCA, founder of NBC | |||
Vidal Sassoon | Celebrity hairstylist | |||
Ben Savage | Cory on Boy Meets World | |||
Fred Savage | The Wonder Years | |||
Michael Savage | Savage Nation | |||
Josh Saviano | Paul Pfeiffer on The Wonder Years | |||
Rebecca Schaeffer | Actress murdered by stalker | |||
Akiva Schaffer | The Lonely Island | |||
Jan Schakowsky | Congresswoman, Illinois 9th | |||
Andrew V. Schally | Hypothalamic hormones (brain peptides) | |||
Morton Owen Schapiro | President, Williams College | |||
Dore Schary | President of MGM, 1951-56 | |||
Dolph Schayes | NBA Hall of Famer, coach | |||
Arthur L. Schechter | US Ambassador to the Bahamas, 1998-2001 | |||
Lynn Schenk | US Congresswoman from California, 1993-95 | |||
Heinrich Schenker | Music theorist | |||
James H. Scheuer | Congressman from New York, 1965-93 | |||
Béla Schick | Schick test for diphtheria | |||
Adam Schiff | Congressman, California 29th | |||
Jacob Schiff | New York banker | |||
Steve Schiff | Congressman from New Mexico, 1989-98 | |||
David Schizer | Dean of Columbia Law School | |||
Arthur M. Schlesinger | The Rise of the City | |||
Leonard A. Schlesinger | President of Babson College | |||
Debbie Schlussel | Conservative pundit | |||
Artur Schnabel | Pianist and classical composer | |||
Karl Schnabel | Modern Technique of the Pedal | |||
Rob Schneider | Deuce Bigalow: Male Gigolo | |||
Rose Schneiderman | Union leader of the 1920s-'50s | |||
Bruce Schneier | Applied Cryptography | |||
Arthur Schnitzler | Reigen | |||
Arnold Schoenberg | Emancipated dissonance | |||
Gershom Scholem | Revolutionized the study of Kabbalah | |||
Myron S. Scholes | Black-Scholes options pricing model | |||
Daniel Schorr | Veteran journalist, Nixon enemy | |||
Bitty Schram | A League of Their Own | |||
Avery Schreiber | Burns and Schreiber | |||
Liev Schreiber | Actor, voiceover talent | |||
Budd Schulberg | What Makes Sammy Run? | |||
Debbie Wasserman Schultz | Congresswoman, Florida 20th | |||
Dutch Schultz | Bootlegger, murderer, numbers racketeer | |||
Howard Schultz | Founder of Starbucks | |||
Joel Schumacher | The Lost Boys | |||
Chuck Schumer | US Senator from New York | |||
Allyson Schwartz | Congresswoman, Pennsylvania 13th | |||
Arthur Schwartz | That's Entertainment | |||
Delmore Schwartz | Summer Knowledge | |||
Josh Schwartz | Creator, The O.C. | |||
Julius Schwartz | Silver Age comics pioneer | |||
Melvin Schwartz | Researcher of neutrinos | |||
Sherwood Schwartz | Gilligan's Island, The Brady Bunch | |||
William Schwartz | Dean of Boston University Law, 1980-88 | |||
Jason Schwartzman | Rushmore | |||
Karl Schwarzschild | Black holes, Schwarzschild radius | |||
Martin Schwarzschild | Structure and Evolution of the Stars | |||
David Schwimmer | Ross on Friends | |||
Neil Sedaka | Laughter In The Rain | |||
Erich Segal | Love Story | |||
George Segal | Fun with Dick and Jane | |||
Jason Segel | How I Met Your Mother | |||
Emilio Segrè | Co-Discoverer of the antiproton | |||
Nathan Seiberg | String theorist at Princeton | |||
Donald H. Seiler | Seiler & Company LLP | |||
Jerry Seinfeld | A show about nothing | |||
Bud Selig | Commissioner of Baseball | |||
Peter Sellers | Inspector Clouseau | |||
Bruce M. Selya | 1st Circuit Court of Appeals, 1986-2006 | |||
David O. Selznick | Producer of A Star Is Born | |||
Mel Sembler | US Ambassador to Italy, 2001-05 | |||
Maurice Sendak | Where The Wild Things Are | |||
Dan Senor | Senor Strategies LLC | |||
MC Serch | 3rd Bass MC, produced Nas album Illmatic | |||
Rudolf Serkin | Czech-American piano prodigy | |||
Phyllis S. Sewell | Ex-VP, Federated Department Stores | |||
Paul Shaffer | David Letterman's bandleader | |||
Peter Shaffer | Amadeus, Equus | |||
Ben Shahn | American Social Realist painter | |||
Silvan Shalom | Foreign Minister of Israel, 2003-06 | |||
Bob Shamansky | Congressman from Ohio, 1981-83 | |||
Yitzhak Shamir | Twice Israeli Prime Minister | |||
Albert Shanker | American Federation of Teachers | |||
Adam Shankman | Hairspray 2007 | |||
Judith Shapiro | President, Barnard College | |||
Karl Shapiro | Person, Place and Thing | |||
Samuel H. Shapiro | Governor of Illinois, 1968-69 | |||
Milton J. Shapp | Governor of Pennsylvania, 1971-79 | |||
Moshe Sharett | Prime Minister of Israel, 1953-55 | |||
Ariel Sharon | Prime Minister of Israel, 2001-06 | |||
Elliot Sharp | New York avant-garde musician | |||
William Shatner | Captain Kirk on Star Trek | |||
Melville Shavelson | Yours, Mine and Ours | |||
Shabtai Shavit | Director-General of the Mossad, 1989-96 | |||
Artie Shaw | Clarinetist, big band leader | |||
Irwin Shaw | Rich Man, Poor Man | |||
Wallace Shawn | Ate dinner with Andre | |||
William Shawn | Editor of The New Yorker, 1952-87 | |||
Zalman Shazar | President of Israel, 1963-73 | |||
Harry Shearer | Almost half the voices on The Simpsons | |||
Sid Sheinberg | President and COO of MCA, 1973-95 | |||
Adrienne Shelly | Waitress | |||
Brad Sherman | Congressman, California 27th | |||
Vincent Sherman | The Young Philadelphians | |||
Armin Shimerman | Quark on Star Trek: Deep Space Nine | |||
Iosif S. Shklovskii | Synchrotron radiation of the Crab Nebula | |||
Amity Shlaes | The Forgotten Man | |||
David Shoenberg | Physicist at Cambridge | |||
Isaac Shoenberg | 405-line format television | |||
David Sholtz | Governor of Florida, 1933-37 | |||
Dinah Shore | See the U-S-A in a Chev-ro-let | |||
Pauly Shore | Encino Man | |||
Zalman Shoval | Twice Israeli Ambassdor to the US | |||
Michael Showalter | The State | |||
Lee Shubert | Broke the Erlanger theater syndicate | |||
Martin Shubik | Economist and game theorist | |||
Morton Shulman | Ontario MPP, iconoclast | |||
Joe Shuster | Co-Creator of Superman | |||
Jesse Shwayder | Founder of Samsonite Corporation | |||
Bugsy Siegel | Brought the mob to Las Vegas | |||
Jerry Siegel | Creator of Superman | |||
Joel Siegel | Film critic | |||
Ned L. Siegel | The Siegel Group | |||
Jamie-Lynn Sigler | Tony Soprano's bratty daughter | |||
Beverly Sills | Soprano at the New York City Opera | |||
Howard Da Silva | Bartender in The Lost Weekend | |||
Joel Silver | Producer, The Matrix | |||
Josh Silver | Keyboardist for Type O Negative | |||
Ron Silver | Wiseguy | |||
Sheldon Silver | Speaker, NY State Assembly | |||
Robert Silverberg | Nightwings | |||
Fred Silverman | TV producer and executive | |||
Jonathan Silverman | The Single Guy | |||
Sarah Silverman | The Sarah Silverman Program | |||
Phil Silvers | You're in the Army Now | |||
Shel Silverstein | Where the Sidewalk Ends | |||
Alicia Silverstone | Clueless | |||
Gene Simmons | Blood-spouting KISS bassist | |||
Nick Simmons | Son of Gene Simmons | |||
Simon ben Yohai | Galilean Rabbi, Sifre | |||
Carly Simon | You're So Vain | |||
Neil Simon | The Odd Couple | |||
Norton Simon | Founder, Norton Simon Museum | |||
Paul Simon | Simon and Garfunkel | |||
Bryan Singer | X-Men | |||
Isaac Bashevis Singer | Yentl, the Yeshiva Boy | |||
Isadore Singer | Atiyah-Singer index theorem | |||
Lori Singer | Footloose | |||
Peter Singer | Animal Liberation | |||
Robert Siodmak | The Killers | |||
Norman Sisisky | Congressman from Virginia, 1983-2001 | |||
Gene Siskel | Siskel and Ebert | |||
Helen Slater | Supergirl | |||
Carl S. Sloane | Co-Founder, Temple, Barker & Sloane | |||
Everett Sloane | Patterns | |||
Lindsay Sloane | Valerie Birkhead on Sabrina | |||
Nicolas Slonimsky | Preeminent musicologist | |||
Hillel Slovak | Guitarist for the Red Hot Chili Peppers | |||
Dolores K. Sloviter | 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals | |||
Robert Smigel | Triumph the Insult Comic Dog | |||
Yakov Smirnoff | What a country | |||
Gregory Smith | Ephram on Everwood | |||
Jacob Smith | Cheaper by the Dozen | |||
Simon E. Sobeloff | 4th US Court of Appeals, 1956-70 | |||
Rena Sofer | General Hospital | |||
Marla Sokoloff | Lucy Hatcher on The Practice | |||
Nahum Sokolow | World Zionist Organization | |||
Stephen Solarz | Congressman from New York, 1975-93 | |||
Izler Solomon | Director, Indianapolis Symphony, 1956-76 | |||
Alan D. Solomont | DNC National Finance Chairman, 1997 | |||
Georg Solti | Chicago Symphony Orchestra | |||
Fred Sommers | The Logic of Natural Language | |||
Stephen Sondheim | West Side Story | |||
Barry Sonnenfeld | Men in Black | |||
Susan Sontag | Novelist, critic, intellectual | |||
Aaron Sorkin | The West Wing, Sports Night | |||
Andrew Ross Sorkin | The New York Times | |||
Chaim Soutine | Expressionist painter, Carcass of Beef | |||
Michael I. Sovern | President of Columbia University, 1980-93 | |||
Boris Spassky | Grandmaster defeated by Bobby Fischer | |||
Arlen Specter | US Senator from Pennsylvania | |||
Phil Spector | Creator of the Wall of Sound | |||
Regina Spektor | Anti-folk singer | |||
Aaron Spelling | Beverly Hills 90210 | |||
James Speyer | New York Banker | |||
Sam Spiegel | Lawrence of Arabia | |||
Art Spiegelman | Maus | |||
Steven Spielberg | E.T. | |||
Brent Spiner | Data on Star Trek: TNG | |||
Joel Elias Spingarn | Literary critic, NAACP leader | |||
Baruch de Spinoza | Rationalist, lensmaker | |||
Jordana Spiro | PJ Franklin on My Boys | |||
Mark Spitz | Olympic swimmer | |||
Eliot Spitzer | Governor of New York, 2007-08 | |||
Philip Sporn | American Electric Power Company | |||
Jerry Springer | The Jerry Springer Show | |||
Nancy Spungen | Sid Vicious's girlfriend | |||
Norman H. Stahl | 1st Circuit Court of Appeals, 1992-2001 | |||
Susan Stamberg | NPR | |||
Dan Stamper | Editor of Viscera! vampire webzine | |||
Florence Stanley | Bernice Fish | |||
Paul Stanley | Lead singer for Kiss | |||
Darren Star | Creator of Beverly Hills 90210 franchise | |||
Ben Stein | Host of Win Ben Stein's Money | |||
Gertrude Stein | Avant-garde writer, salon | |||
Herbert Stein | Economic adviser for Nixon | |||
Joel Stein | LA Times columnist | |||
Jules Stein | Founder of MCA | |||
William H. Stein | Studied ribonuclease | |||
David Steinberg | Second City alumnus | |||
Saul Steinberg | Ex-CEO of Reliance Group Holdings | |||
William Steinberg | Music Director, Pittsburgh Symphony, 1952-76 | |||
Jack Steinberger | Researcher of neutrinos | |||
Gloria Steinem | Founder, Ms. Magazine | |||
George Steiner | After Babel | |||
Max Steiner | Gone With the Wind | |||
Laurence A. Steinhardt | US Ambassador to USSR, 1939-41 | |||
Avraham Stern | Founder of Lohamei Herut Israel | |||
Daniel Stern | City Slickers | |||
David J. Stern | Commissioner of the NBA | |||
Gary H. Stern | President and CEO, Minneapolis Fed | |||
Howard Stern | The King of All Media | |||
Howard K. Stern | Anna Nicole Smith's lawyer | |||
Isaac Stern | Violin virtuoso | |||
Leonard Stern | Billionaire, Hartz pet supply | |||
Shoshannah Stern | Deaf actress | |||
Walter P. Stern | Chairman, Hudson Institute | |||
Rachel Stevens | In UK pop band S Club 7 | |||
Jon Stewart | Anchor of The Daily Show | |||
Gary Stiffelman | Music industry attorney | |||
Ben Stiller | There's Something About Mary | |||
Jerry Stiller | Frank Costanza on Seinfeld | |||
Mike Stoller | Hitmaker for Elvis | |||
I. F. Stone | I. F. Stone's Weekly | |||
Irving Stone | Historical biographical novelist | |||
Richard B. Stone | US Senator from Florida, 1975-80 | |||
Lee Strasberg | Theater director and acting coach | |||
Susan Strasberg | Picnic | |||
Oscar S. Straus | Thrice Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire | |||
Annette Strauss | Mayor of Dallas 1987-91 | |||
Robert S. Strauss | US Ambassador to Russia, 1991-92 | |||
Dominique Strauss-Kahn | Chairman, International Monetary Fund | |||
Barbra Streisand | You Don't Bring Me Flowers | |||
Charles Stross | Accelerando | |||
Jule Styne | Three Coins in the Fountain | |||
Arthur Hays Sulzberger | New York Times Publisher, 1935-61 | |||
Cathy J. Sulzberger | LHIW Real Estate | |||
Punch Sulzberger | New York Times Publisher, 1963-91 | |||
Marc Summers | Super Sloppy Double Dare | |||
Bruce Sundlun | Governor of Rhode Island, 1991-95 | |||
Joel Surnow | 24, Half Hour News Hour | |||
Jacqueline Susann | Valley of the Dolls | |||
David Susskind | The David Susskind Show | |||
Janet Suzman | Nicholas and Alexandra | |||
Jeffrey Swartz | President and CEO of Timberland | |||
James Joseph Sylvester | Studied finite analysis | |||
Marcy Syms | Syms Corporation | |||
István Szabó | Being Julia | |||
Leo Szilard | Nuclear chain reaction | |||
Orly Taitz | Defend Our Freedoms Foundation | |||
Myles Tanenbaum | Real Estate developer | |||
Burton M. Tansky | CEO of Neiman Marcus | |||
Lilyan Tashman | Puttin' on the Ritz | |||
Henry Taub | Founder of ADP | |||
Nicholas F. Taubman | Advance Auto Parts scion | |||
Elizabeth Taylor | Cleopatra | |||
Julie Taymor | Across the Universe | |||
Brian Teacher | Winner, 1980 Australian Open | |||
Edward Teller | Father of the Hydrogen Bomb | |||
Howard M. Temin | Tumor viruses and host genetics | |||
Lionel Tertis | First prominent violist | |||
Abigail Thernstrom | Opponent of Affirmative Action | |||
Eddie Kaye Thomas | American Pie | |||
Khleo Thomas | Roll Bounce | |||
Michael Tilson Thomas | Music Director, SF Symphony | |||
Andre Tippett | New England Patriots, Hall of Famer | |||
Andrew H. Tisch | Loews Corporation | |||
Bob Tisch | CEO of Loews, Owner NY Giants | |||
James S. Tisch | CEO of Loews | |||
Jonathan M. Tisch | CEO of Loews Hotels | |||
Laurence Tisch | CEO of CBS, 1986-95 | |||
Ashley Tisdale | Maddie on Zack and Cody | |||
James Toback | The Pick-up Artist | |||
George Tobias | Abner Kravitz on Bewitched | |||
Michael Todd | Around the World in Eighty Days | |||
Martin Tolchin | Founder, The Hill | |||
Robert I. Toll | Co-Founder of Toll Brothers | |||
Ernst Toller | Transformation | |||
Jeffrey Toobin | CNN Senior Legal Analyst | |||
Chaim Topol | Fiddler on the Roof | |||
Mel Tormé | The Velvet Fog | |||
Dara Torres | Swimmer, won medals in 5 Olympics | |||
Frank D. Trestman | CEO of Mass Merchandisers, 1983-87 | |||
Calvin Trillin | Humorist | |||
Diana Trilling | Literary critic, The Nation | |||
Lionel Trilling | The Liberal Imagination | |||
Joe Trohman | Guitarist for Fall Out Boy | |||
Barbara Tuchman | A Distant Mirror | |||
Richard Tucker | Operatic tenor, NY Metropolitan Opera | |||
Sophie Tucker | Some of These Days | |||
Jon Turteltaub | National Treasure | |||
Amos Tversky | Cognitive psychologist, studied risks | |||
Tristan Tzara | Founded the Dada movement | |||
Ricky Ullman | Phil of the Future | |||
Leon Uris | Battle Cry | |||
Abigail Van Buren | Dear Abby emeritus | |||
Anneliese van der Pol | Chelsea Daniels on That's So Raven | |||
Bobby Van | Broadway actor | |||
Harold E. Varmus | Genetic causes of cancer | |||
Michael Vartan | Never Been Kissed | |||
Frankie Vaughan | Give Me the Moonlight, Give Me the Girl | |||
Conrad Veidt | Maj. Strasser in Casablanca | |||
Immanuel Velikovsky | Worlds in Collision | |||
Gabriele Veneziano | Father of string theory | |||
Charles Vidor | A Farewell to Arms | |||
Bruce Vilanch | The fat guy who writes everyone's jokes | |||
Christoph von Dohnányi | Conductor, Cleveland Orchestra, 1984-2002 | |||
Diane von Furstenberg | Fashion designer | |||
Ludwig von Mises | Libertarian Economist | |||
Albert Von Tilzer | Take Me Out To The Ball Game | |||
Harry Von Tilzer | Just Like The Girl Who Married Dear Old Dad | |||
Marvin Wachman | Temple University President, 1973-83 | |||
David Wain | The State | |||
Sam Waksal | CEO, ImClone | |||
Selman A. Waksman | Streptomycin and other antibiotics | |||
George Wald | Physiology of the retina | |||
Lillian Wald | Henry Street Settlement | |||
Mike Wallace | Veteran 60 Minutes correspondent | |||
Eli Wallach | The Magnificent Seven | |||
Otto Wallach | Terpenes and essential oils | |||
Marc Wallice | HIV+ pornstar | |||
Hal B. Wallis | Casablanca | |||
Barbara Walters | 20/20, The View | |||
Michael Walzer | Just and Unjust Wars | |||
Zoë Wanamaker | Susan Harper on My Family | |||
Judge Wapner | People's Court | |||
Aby Warburg | Founder of the Warburg Institute | |||
Felix M. Warburg | Kuhn, Loeb and Co. | |||
Max M. Warburg | M. M. Warburg & Company | |||
Paul M. Warburg | The Federal Reserve System | |||
David Warner | The Omen | |||
Jack L. Warner | Co-Founder, Warner Bros. | |||
Lesley Ann Warren | The Limey | |||
Kevin M. Warsh | Federal Reserve Governor | |||
Lew Wasserman | Chairman and CEO of MCA, 1946-95 | |||
August von Wassermann | Syphilis test | |||
Bruce Wasserstein | Wall Street dealmaker | |||
Al Waxman | Lt. Samuels on Cagney and Lacey | |||
Henry Waxman | Congressman, California 30th | |||
Edgar Wayburn | Conservationist, Sierra Club president | |||
Helene Weigel | The Berliner Ensemble | |||
Kurt Weill | The Threepenny Opera | |||
Sanford I. Weill | CEO of Citigroup, 1998-2003 | |||
Max Weinberg | Drummer for Springsteen and Conan | |||
Anthony Weiner | Congressman, New York 9th | |||
Randi Weingarten | President, United Federation of Teachers | |||
Bob Weinstein | Miramax and Dimension Films | |||
Harvey Weinstein | Miramax and The Weinstein Co. | |||
Mikey Weinstein | With God on Our Side | |||
Ellen L. Weintraub | US FEC Commissioner | |||
Ronald Weiser | US Ambassador to Slovakia, 2001-04 | |||
Cora Weiss | Samuel Rubin Foundation | |||
Michael T. Weiss | The Pretender | |||
Morry Weiss | CEO of American Greetings, 1987-2003 | |||
Theodore S. Weiss | Congressman from New York, 1977-92 | |||
Zev Weiss | CEO of American Greetings | |||
Victor Weisskopf | Head of CERN, 1961-65 | |||
George Weissman | CEO of Philip Morris, 1978-84 | |||
Rachel Weisz | The Constant Gardener | |||
Bruce Weitz | Sgt. Belker on Hill Street Blues | |||
Ezer Weizman | President of Israel, 1993-2000 | |||
Chaim Weizmann | First President of Israel | |||
Paul Wellstone | US Senator from Minnesota, 1991-2002 | |||
David Wessel | Wall Street Journal | |||
Nathanael West | The Day of the Locust | |||
Jennifer Westfeldt | Notes from the Underbelly | |||
Ruth Westheimer | 4'7" of concentrated sex | |||
Rob Wexler | Congressman, Florida 19th | |||
Abigail S. Wexner | Wife of Leslie H. Wexner | |||
Leslie H. Wexner | CEO of Limited Brands | |||
Shannon Whirry | Softcore star | |||
Jacques L. Wiener, Jr. | 5th Circuit Court of Appeals | |||
Norbert Wiener | Cybernetics | |||
Elie Wiesel | Anti-Holocaust and human-rights activist | |||
Leon Wieseltier | The New Republic | |||
Simon Wiesenthal | Nazi hunter | |||
Eugene Wigner | Law of conservation of parity | |||
Billy Wilder | Sunset Blvd. | |||
Gene Wilder | Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory | |||
Richard Willstätter | Plant pigments | |||
Paul Winchell | Ventriloquist and inventor | |||
Jerry Wind | Director, SEI Center, Wharton | |||
Amy Winehouse | Rehab | |||
Debra Winger | An Officer and a Gentleman | |||
Jon Winkelried | Formerly Co-COO of Goldman Sachs | |||
Henry Winkler | Fonz on Happy Days | |||
Irwin Winkler | Rocky | |||
Philip D. Winn | HUD scandal figure pardoned by Clinton | |||
Mare Winningham | Georgia | |||
Marissa Jaret Winokur | Hairspray | |||
Shelley Winters | Method actress and camp queen | |||
Jay S. Wintrob | CEO, AIG Retirement Services | |||
Adele Wiseman | The Sacrifice | |||
Frederick Wiseman | Titicut Follies | |||
Edward Witten | String theorist at Princeton | |||
Bertram D. Wolfe | Three Who Made a Revolution | |||
Alex Wolff | The Naked Brothers Band | |||
Nat Wolff | The Naked Brothers Band | |||
Marv Wolfman | Former Editor-In-Chief of Marvel Comics | |||
Paul Wolfowitz | President of the World Bank, 2005-07 | |||
Louis Wolfson | Business criminal, horse breeder | |||
Herman Wouk | The Caine Mutiny | |||
Robert Wuhl | Arliss on Arli$$ | |||
Ron Wyden | US Senator from Oregon | |||
Noah Wyle | Dr. John Carter on ER | |||
Rosalyn Sussman Yalow | Developed radioimmunoassay technique | |||
Elliott Yamin | American Idol | |||
Peter Yarrow | The Peter in Peter, Paul, and Mary | |||
Sidney Yates | Congressman from Illinois, 1949-99 | |||
Anton Yelchin | Delivering Milo | |||
Jack Yellen | Happy Days Are Here Again | |||
Anzia Yezierska | Bread Givers | |||
Ada E. Yonath | Cryocrystallography | |||
Kevin Youkilis | Boston Red Sox | |||
Mark G. Yudof | President of the University of California | |||
Harris Yulin | Roger Stanton on 24 | |||
Saul Zaentz | One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest | |||
Edward J. Zander | CEO of Motorola, 2004-07 | |||
Israel Zangwill | Children of the Ghetto | |||
Abraham Zapruder | Documented JFK's assassination on film | |||
Fred S. Zeidman | GOP activist | |||
Solomon Zeitlin | Dead Sea Scrolls debunker | |||
Samuel Zell | Equity Office Properties billionaire | |||
James David Zellerbach | US Ambassador to Italy, 1957-60 | |||
Strauss Zelnick | CEO of BMG Entertainment, 1998-2000 | |||
Howard Zieff | Private Benjamin | |||
Efrem Zimbalist | Russian-American violinist | |||
Stephanie Zimbalist | Remington Steele | |||
Richard Zimmer | Congressman from New Jersey, 1991-97 | |||
Marvin Zindler | Houston reporter, KTRK-TV | |||
Howard Zinn | A People's History of the United States | |||
Fred Zinnemann | From Here to Eternity | |||
Grigory Zinoviev | Old Bolshevik executed during the Great Purge | |||
Edward Zorinsky | US Senator from Nebraska, 1976-87 | |||
John Zorn | Prolific avant-garde composer | |||
David Zucker | Airplane! | |||
Jerry Zucker | Ghost | |||
Mark Zuckerberg | Founder of Facebook | |||
Louis Zukofsky | Co-Founded Objectivist poetry movement | |||
Adolph Zukor | Founder of Paramount Pictures | |||
Terry Zwigoff | Ghost World |
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