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* [[El Wood]] - British alternative model; regularly appears in ''[[Front (magazine)|Front]]''; [http://www.myspace.com/mwuhaha]
* [[El Wood]] - British alternative model; regularly appears in ''[[Front (magazine)|Front]]''; [http://www.myspace.com/mwuhaha]
* [[Camille Zajac]] - American model from [[Santa Cruz, California|Santa Cruz]], [[California]]; local celebrity in [[Monterey Bay]] area; [http://camillezajac.com/]
* [[Camille Zajac]] - American model from [[Santa Cruz, California|Santa Cruz]], [[California]]; local celebrity in [[Monterey Bay]] area; [http://camillezajac.com/]
* [[Sophia Marie]] - Mexican-Italian model
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{{div col end}}



Revision as of 08:54, 17 June 2012

Add your request in the most appropriate place below.

Before adding a request please:

Biography requests are organized by profession and nationality; add your request to both categories if possible. Keep requests in order by the person's last name.

Information to include
  • Name – be certain of the spelling; alphabetize by last name in each section.
  • Date requested – so that older requests can be more easily tracked.
  • Identifying information – For, example, there are lots of James Smiths in the world; so specify which one are you asking about -- the Scottish architect, the American rapper, or who?
  • Notability – if it isn't already obvious from the identifying information, describe precisely what makes them notable. Be concise.
  • Reference – add a link to a reference which identifies the person and/or highlights their notability

Also, when adding a request, please include as much information as possible (such as webpages, articles, or other reference material) so editors can find and distinguish your request from an already-created article.

By profession

Academics

Activists

Adventurers, explorers and pioneers

  • William A. Bond - world-record-holding exotic game hunter; has a museum of 140 individual mounts; one of the largest private collections of Civil War artifacts; after his death they were auctioned to museums and other collections worldwide); owner of a 4,400-acre 5BB Ranch in Vernon, Texas; graduated from the Virginia Military Institute; served as a captain in World War II; wrote book Bill Bond Chronicle; ancestors were largest plantation operators in Tennessee
  • John Broache or John Broach (which is it?) - Scottish (French?) cavalier, pioneer and explorer; one of the first explorers in Virginia, twenty years after Captain James Hook; listed in the "Virginia Land Patents and Grants"; the first Broach to arrive in America (most Broaches in the U.S. are related to him distantly)
  • Scott Cassell - explorer and filmmaker; first to film giant squid in its native environment; documentary credits include undersea cameraman for nearly 20 documentaries for Disney, MTV Wildboyz, the Discovery Channel, Animal Planet, BBC and the History Channel; has over 12,000 hours as a diver; submersible pilot and captain with over 800 dives; holds the world record for longest distance traveled by a diver; led an expedition (November 2006) that filmed an estimated 40-foot-long giant squid in predatory behavior in its natural environment
  • Roger Chao
  • Ripley Davenport (born 23 May 1970 in the United Kingdom) - FRGS, desert explorer, adventurer and expedition leader; served in both the British Royal Navy and Royal Air Force Regiment; known to have served in a special-forces unit of the Royal Navy for a period of time; completed a solo unassisted traverse of the Namib Desert in 1998 and in the same year completed a solo traverse of the Kara-kum Desert; numerous other desert crossings are listed to him including the longest-solo-and-unassisted walk ever completed across the vast land mass of Mongolia in 2010 without the aid of machine, animal or outside support; completed 1,012 miles in 52 days while hauling his entire supplies on a specially wheeled trailer; journey was cut short because of injury; in 2011, returned to Mongolia as expedition leader for the Gobi 2011 Expedition; the expedition team covered 1,000 miles in 51 days supported by bactrian camels and a Mongolian support crew, from Bulgan in Khovd province to Sainshand; continues to engage in desert exploration and adventure; [49]
  • Farnum Fish - early aviator; [50]; [51]
  • Charles K. Hamilton (1886–1914) - pioneer American aviator; piloted at least one of Augustus Roy Knabenshue's dirigibles
  • David H. Jarvis (or David Jarvis) - led a three-man rescue team with a herd of about 400 reindeer across 1,500 miles of tundra and pack-ice to Point Barrow, Alaska, to save the men of a whaling fleet that had become trapped in the ice off coast
  • Elizier Jewett - namesake of Jewett City, Connecticut; founded a settlement there in 1771; [52]
  • Thelma Popp Jones - road a bike (circa 1944) with a friend to follow path of Mark Twain's adventures; wrote online memoir The Lure of the Open Road
  • Shinzi Kazama - Japanese motorcyclist; rode to North and South Poles on motorcycles; mentioned in the documentary television series Pole to Pole (1992), directed by Michael Palin
  • Daniel Lagace - world traveler and former member of the U.S. Air Force; created a new system for travel
  • John Rowe Moyle - Mormon pioneer; settler of Alpine, Utah; master stonemason for the Salt Lake Temple; carver of the inscription "Holiness to the Lord"
  • George Moyse - thought to be the oldest British skydiver; age 97
  • Bimal Mukherjee - first Indian globe trotter who traveled around the world on bicycle between 1926 and 1937; wrote Bengali book Du chakay duniya
  • Xavier Rosset - [53]
  • William R. Royal - US Navy Lt. Colonel Ret.; in the late 1950s, he and other scuba divers found artifacts and human bones from at least seven individuals in Warm Mineral Springs; a partially burned log found in association with some of the human bones was radiocarbon dated to about 10,000 years ago; if the bones were the same age as the log, then the bones were the oldest known evidence of human occupation in Florida at the time
  • Lucas Sullivant - surveyor who established the Franklinton neighborhood of Columbus, Ohio; namesake of a street on the west side of Columbus
  • "Black" Mike Winage (1870–1977) - pioneer, scout, explorer, tracker and mine-finder; one of the original settlers in the Yukon during the Klondike Gold Rush; subject, at age 98, of a National Geographic (1968)
  • Eugene Maizan - (1819-1845) African Explorer. Possibly the first European to penetrate East Africa.., Maizan proceeded as far as the district of Deje-la-Mhora, on the Uzaramo plateau about 80-150 kilometers from the coast, when he was set upon by Mazangera tribesmen under sub-chief Hembe, and bound to a calabash tree and savagely murdered.., Ref: Documents sur l'Histoire, la Géographie et le Commerce de l'Afrique Orientale by Charles Guillain

Anthropologists

Archaeologists

Architects

Artists

  • bela Silva world known artist (born Lisbon Portugal, march 25, 1966) masters in the fine arts from School of the Art Institute of Chicago in Chicago, Worked with paint,sculpurs, titles and other art formats; [71]  ; [72] ; [73]  ; [74] last one is in Portuguese
  • Ally Burguieres (born Alexandra Gertrude Burguieres, November 21, 1982) - American academic, entrepreneur, and visual artist; PhD in communication from Queen's University in Belfast, Northern Ireland; Noted for conceptual paintings on nostalgia and manipulation of color; Co-owner and artist at Gallery Burguieres in the New Orleans French Quarter; [75]
  • Chadwick & Spector (born Chadwick Gray, June 21, 1972; Laura Spector, June 11, 1973) - American visual art collaborators from who have worked worldwide; noted for their visionary project "Museum Anatomy" which as been lectured about in universities, written about in several books and has won multiple international awards; [76]
  • Jimmy Dahlberg (born April 3, 1981, in Östersund, Sweden) is a Swedish artist. [77]; [78]; [79]; [80]; [81]; [82]; [83]
  • Hollister J. "Hop" David - artist primarily known for his tessellations and other math art; [84]; [85]; [86]
  • Maya Green (born Maria Greenblat; March 11, 1957) - Ukrainian-Jewish contemporary painter, graphic artist, illustrator and sculptor; [87]
  • Vincent Andrew Hartgen (req. 2012-04-30)- Maine artist founded the University of Maine Museum of Art, known for modern semi-abstract watercolors. [88]
  • Edgar Hubert (1906–1985) (req. 2009-07-23)- abstract artist; considered one of Britain's most radical abstract painters of the 1930s; [89]; [90]
  • Rockne Krebs (born December 24, 1938) (req. 2011-05-02)- American sculptor; born in Kansas City, Missouri; known for pioneering work in laser and light art; prominent member of the D.C. art scene from the 1960s to the early 1990s; used several different media such as lasers, prisms, neon, prints, paint, plexiglass, metals, mobiles, and cloth; [91]
  • Khalil Rahman (born 1983) - Bangladeshi political cartoonist; cartoonist for The Daily Samakal and the editor for the monthly children's magazine, Natunpata; [92]; [93]; [94]
  • Eglė Rakauskaitė (aka Rakė) (born 30th of April 1967) Lithuanian mix media artist; considered most innovative Lithuanian artist [95]
  • Peter Rodick (req. 2008-04-12)- art director, responsible for the advancement of post-post-modern design; humanitarian and subject of upcoming CBS drama House of Hope (drama)
  • Lisa Solberg (req. 2010-03-02)- American (Los Angeles) artist; [96]; [97]; [98]
  • Kelly D. Williams (req. 2009-10-06)- American contemporary artist and conceptual designer; founding member of the Rolf Contemporary Gallery of Art; [99]; [100]

Designers

Graphic artists

Illustrators

Painters

Photographers

Please read the Notability Criteria for Photographers before submitting a request.

Tues Rahman Tues Rahman is a professional wildlife and conservation filmmaker & Photographer based in Guwahati, India. He used to make films for international & National television until 2000. Since then he've focussed on making short films on specific conservation issues in India. What he enjoy most about his job is spending time in the wilderness and sharing that experience with other people through his films.

  • Ruven Afanador (req. 2011-12-03) - Colombian-born American photographer with three books and many international exhibitions; es:Ruven Afanador
  • Jackie Alpers (born 1968) (req. 2012-01-30) - food, fine-art and fashion photographer; author with five books in publication; [162]; [163]; [164]; [165];[166]
  • Gary Braasch (req. 2007-11-23) - nature photographer and author; [167]; [168]
  • Troy Christopher (born 1981) (req. 2011-07-07) - fashion and model photographer; notable for male-model photography and also support and involvement with the NOH8 Campaign as its graphics designer and video editor; [169]; [170]; [171]; [172]
  • River Clark (req. 2010-03-31) - fashion photographer; in permanent photography collection at the Guggenheim; numerous books and publications including Vogue, Elle, Marie Claire, Sports Illustrated, Cosmopolitan, Bazaar, Playboy; [173]; [174]
  • Bryan Denton (req. 2011-10-11) - photojournalist based in Beirut, Lebanon; notable for his extensive coverage of the Libyan Revolution for The New York Times; first solo exhibition will be at New York University's Gulf and Western Gallery ([175]); [176]; [177]
  • Benjamin Donaldson (req. 2012-04-29) - American fine-art photographer; work has been exhibited nationally and internationally including at Jen Bekman Gallery; [178]; work featured in the New Yorker, Details, Nylon and Sueddeutsche Zeitung magazines; is a Lecturer in Photography at the Yale School of Art; ([179])
  • Patrick Eagar (req. 2011-01-10) - English sports photographer, specialising in cricket; regarded as the world's top cricket photographer; referred to by Wisden as "The godfather of cricket photography" ([180]); [181] (written about Eagar by former England captain and current commentator Mike Atherton) and [182]; [183].
  • Peter Feldstein - photographer; Smithsonian show The Oxford Project; professor, University of Iowa
  • Trevor Godinho (req. 2012-04-07) (born December 18, 1982) - Indian-born Canadian celebrity and fashion photographer; published in many international magazines including Maxim, Playboy (Franch and U.S. editions); Alfa Norway, Elle Canada, Zoo Weekly Australia, Che Belgium, UMM Canada; has photographed celebrities including Michael Douglas, Nicolas Cage, Edward North, Jeff Bidges, Clive Owen, et al.; interviewed for Woman.ca ([184]) and Fashion One TV in Los Angeles; graduated from Sheridan College and University of Toronto (2008); [185]; works internationally out of New York City and other locations
  • Fitz W. Guerin (born 1846) (req. 2012-04-28) - One of the most prolific photographers during the turn of the century in St. Louis. Prior to that he was awarded a Medal of Honor during the Civil War [186]; [187]; [188]; [189];
  • Paul Hamilton (photographer) (req. 2010-11-23) - macro photographer and author; [190]
  • Joshua Hoynes (born 1975) (req. 2011-07-30) - American photographer and custom QR code designer; from Georgia; served five years in the United States Coast Guard; [191]; [192]
  • Mark Kelley (photographer) (req. 2007-01-12) - [193][dead link]; [194]
  • Lisa Kereszi (req. 2012-04-29) - American fine-art photographer; work has been exhibited nationally and internationally; [195]; work in collections of Whitney Museum, MoMA, Brooklyn Museum and others; has 4 book monographs in print; and has been an educator at the Yale School of Art since 2004, where she is now Acting Director of Undergraduate Studies in Photography ([196])
  • John Kippin (req. 2007-01-09) - [197]; [198]
  • Shane Lavalette (req. 2011-09-17) - American fine-art photographer; work has been exhibited nationally and internationally; [199]; commissioned by the High Museum of Art for its "Picturing the South" series; work has been published in many publications; founding publisher and editor of Lay Flat, an independent imprint for contemporary photography ([200])
  • Troy Lilly (req. 2012-01-28) - nature photographer; author of ForestWander Nature Photography; [201]; [202]; [203]; [204]; [205]; [206]; [207]
  • Lucien Lorelle (1984–1968) (req. 2008-05-09) - photographer from Paris, France; also published a few books; [208]; fr:Lucien Lorelle
  • James B. Norman (req. 2011-08-26) - architectural photographer and author; noted for documentary photography of historic bridges and architecture for the collections of the Historic American Engineering Record and the Historic American Building Survey for the Library of Congress [209]; six published books; works included in the permanent collections of the Seattle Art Museum and the Portland Art Museum
  • Ron O'Donnell (born 1952) (req. 2007-03-13) - Scottish photographic artist; [210]
  • Kenneth Parker (req. 2010-12-16) - American fine-art landscape photographer; represented in multiple galleries nationally including the Weston Gallery ([211]); assistant to Eliot Porter; praise by Paul Caponigro; [212]; [213]; [214]
  • Jake Rajs (born 1952) (req. 2012-03-19 ) - landscape and architectural photographer; published 16 coffee table books by Rizzoli, Monacelli Press and Random House; [215]; [216]
  • Allen Russ (req. 2011-3-23) - landscape and architectural photographer; [217]; [218]; [219]; [220]; publications/reviews: [221]; [222]; [223]
  • Rainer W. Schlegelmilch (born 1941) (req. 2012-06-13) - Formula 1, sports car and automobile photographer; 50 years of consistent motorsport archive since 1962; 42 editorial books published by 2012; international exhibitions; [224]; [225]; [226]; [227]; [228]
  • Edmund Shea - American rock culture photographer; at least eight mentions on Wikipedia
  • Art Sinsabaugh (req. 2006-09-06) - [229]
  • Mike Stimpson (req. 2009-11-20) - recreated many famous photographs, including Afghan Girl, Raising the Flag on Iwo Jima, and the Times Square VJ Day kiss, in LEGO; [230]
  • Guy Tal (req. 2010-12-27) - landscape photographer and author; [231], Ultimate Guide to Digital Nature Photography; [232]; [233]; published articles including in Outdoor Photographer, Popular Photography
  • Waldemar Titzenthaler (req. 2007-10-26) - German photographer; de:Waldemar Titzenthaler; [234]
  • Max Waldman (1919–1981) (req. 2012-04-14) - American photographer; specialized in dance and theatre photography; images in collections including the Museum of Modern Art and the George Eastman House International Museum of Photography and Film; [235]; [236]; [237]; [238]

Sculptors

Astronomers

Authors

Fiction writers, dramatists and poets

  • Harry Hemsly (req. pre-2012-03-03) - wrote the poem "The English Language"
  • Zack Kahn (comedian) (req. pre-2012-03-03) - Los-Angeles comedian and internet celebrity; wrote Prose and Kahns (2011)
  • Yu Wo (req. pre-2012-05-20) - wrote the novels "1/2 Prince", "The Legend of the Sun Knight".

Non-fiction writers

A–G
H–M
  • Jane Haapiseva-Hunter (also known as Jane Hunter) (req. 2010-09-27 - American historian, political scientist and author; [270]
  • Heather Havrilesky (req. 2008-11-07) - columnist and critic for suck.com (as Polly Esther), Salon.com, and [271]
  • Henry Hemming (req. pre-2012-01-30) - British author and artist published by John Murray (publisher); works include In Search of the English Eccentric, Misadventure in the Middle East and OffScreen; [272].
  • Booton Herndon (1915–1995) (req. pre-2012-01-30) - writer; wrote histories of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, the Junior Chamber of Commerce, the Ford empire, wrote biographies on Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pickford, Guy Lombardo, Fulton Lewis, Desmond Doss, Bergdorf Goodman, and a work on The Humor of JFK; [273]; [274]
  • Tannah Hirsch (req. pre-2012-01-30) – contract-bridge columnist
  • Tony Holkham (born 1948 in Mitcham, Surrey) (req. 2012-02-25) - British writer and consumer adviser; [275]; expert in the field of customer communication through labels, manuals, websites and other company literature; author of Label Writing and Planning - A Guide to Good Customer Communication, a business-advice book in the packaging and labeling field ([276]); wrote Beating the Big One, the story of the 1997 Atlantic crossing by Alan Priddy ([277]) and Challenge, the story of the 1996 round-Britain sailing relay by the Multiple Sclerosis Society of Great Britain ([278]); as a consumer adviser, wrote Don't Take It Lying Down, a consumer-advice book ([279]); has written short stories for London Mystery Magazine, The Evening News and Omni as well as contributing to New Scientist; regular freelance writer for the Royal National Lifeboat Institution; contributes pieces about family history and the countryside to specialist or local magazines including The Three Counties Magazine and Pembrokeshire's Best, which were published in Views from the Hills: A Country Diary (2011) ([280]); inveterate letter-writer, poet ([281]) and blogger ([282]); has had a full-length musical play for children and adults performed by an amateur dramatic society and a school; personal online writing tutor and business writing adviser and trainer; educated at Churcher's College; lives and works in Pembrokeshire, Wales; Template:Worldcat id
  • Ken Howard (author & Episcopal minister) (req 2010-10-17) - Episcopal minister and author of Paradoxy: Creating Christian Community Beyond Us and Them, (2010, Orleans, MA: Paraclete Press); full name: The Rev. Kenneth W. Howard; [283]
  • Michael A. Hughes (req. pre-2012-01-30) - information architect, senior user-experience design professional, author, columnist and speaker
  • Sunny Jacobs (req. pre-2012-01-30) - imprisoned for 17 years for a double murder she did not commit; author of Stolen Time; [284]
  • Rhoda Janzen (req. pre-2012-01-30) - author of New York Times bestselling paperback nonfiction Mennonite in a Little Black Dress; English and Creative Writing Professor, Hope College
  • Charlotte Russell Johnson (req. pre-2012-01-28) - author of A Journey to Hell and Back, Daddy's Hugs, A Journey to Hell and Back the Flipside, Grace under Fire: The Journey Never Ends, Mama May I, In the Lords Eyes Mama's Pearls, Breaking the Curse and Kissing Hell Goodbye; Template:Worldcat id
  • Gregory Paul Johnson (req. pre-2012-01-30) - author of Put Your Life on a Diet: Lessons Learned Living in 140 Square Feet ([285]), published by Gibbs-Smith ([286]); interviewed by numerous international media outlets; [287]
  • M. Tim Jones (pre-2012-01-30) - author of several books in the computer-science field as well as many articles covering GNU/Linux, artificial intelligence, embedded systems, and general topics in computer programming
  • Mike Joyner (req. pre-2012-01-30) - author of Hills Of Truxton, Stories And Travels Of A Turkey Hunter, Tales from the Turkey Woods, Mornings Of My Better Days
  • Evan Keliher (also known as Grandpa Ganja) (req. pre-2012-01-30) - American writer; cannabis culture
  • A.C. Kermode (Alfred Cotterill Kermode) (req. 2012-02-20) - books include Mechanics of Flight (1932) and Flight Without Formulae (1940); Template:Worldcat id
  • Jude Kessler (req. pre-2012-01-30) - author of The Beatles trilogy Shudda Been There
  • Charlotte Matheny Kirkwood (1838–1926) (req. pre-2012-01-30) – author of Into the Eye of the Setting Sun about her travels on the Oregon Trail
  • Funke Koleosho (2009) (req. pre-2012-01-30) – author of Gourmand Award Winning Cookbook Contemporary Nigerian Cuisine First of its type Nigerian all colour cookbook JOK Publishing
  • Mark Kriegel (req. 2010-05-18) - author and sports commentator
  • Phyllis & Eberhard Kronhausen (req. pre-2012-01-30) - sexuality researchers and authors of numerous popular, somewhat controversial books in the 1960s and 1970s
  • Eve LaPlante (req. pre-2012-01-30) - wrote Salem Witch Judge: The Life and Repentance of Samuel Sewall, the true story of Sewall, who sentenced to death more than thirty people convicted of witchcraft in Salem, Massachusetts
  • Leo Ou-fan Lee (req. pre-2012-01-30) - former Columbia University professor; scholar of modern (20th-century) Chinese literature in the Western world
  • Justin Leivars (born 1974) (req. 2011-12-16) - military historian and militaria expert, author, comedian and comedy drama/sitcom writer; born in Derby, United Kingdom
  • Charles de Leusse (born 1976) (req. 2011-02-13) - French writer (born in Paris); author of the book of aphorisms, Le Sablier (in French text) (2006; ISBN: 2-7481-7934-X; EAN: 9782748179347); [288])
  • Ronda Lee Levine (Roberts) (born 1977) (re. 2012-04-09) - American writer and social and political philosopher; author of "Success in Life through Personality Engineering"(2011; isbn 1463730845); contributor to "What Philosophy Can Tell You about Your Lover" (2012; isbn 0812697634); author of over 1000 articles on philosophy, film, political theory, project management, and education; born in California
  • Reeve Lindbergh (req. pre-2012-01-30) - author of Under a Wing - A Memoir, Forward from Here - Leaving Middle Age - and Other Unexpected Adventures, et al., as well as numerous children's books; the daughter of Charles and Anne Morrow Lindbergh
  • William Lobdell (req. pre-2012-01-30) – former Los Angeles Times reporter; wrote Losing My Religion - How I Lost My Faith Reporting on Religion in America and Found Unexpected Peace
  • Carlos Malvar (req. pre-2012-01-30) - author of Not Quite Unreal; toured with a speechless project for the British Council Literature Department ([289]); Korea Literature Translation Institute's writer-in-residence (a one-week program);[290]; [291]; [292]
  • George J. Marlin (req. pre-2012-01-30) - political writer and editor; books include Squandered Opportunities - New York's Pataki Years, The Politician's Guide to Assisted Suicide, Cloning, and Other Current Controversies and The American Catholic Voter - 200 Years of Political Impact
  • Sondra Marshak (req. 2012-02-05) - science-fiction author; wrote about the Star Trek franchise, wrote several novels as well as co-wrote Shatner - Where No Man - The Authorized Biography of William Shatner; 10+ mentions in Wikipedia articles; Template:Worldcat id
  • Judith MacKenzie McCuin (req. 2011-01-14) - textile artist with 20+ years of experience; author of The Intentional Spinner and Teach Yourself Visually Handspinning; has contributed to a variety of industry publications, including Handwoven, Interweave Knits, PieceWork and Spin-Off; lives in Augusta, Montana
  • Melanie McGrath (req. pre-2012-01-30) - British writer; one of her books referenced often on Wikipedia
  • Fik Meijer (req. pre-2012-01-30) - author of Gladiators: History's Most Deadly Sport and other books focusing on ancient history
  • William D. Middleton (1928 - July 10, 2011) (req. pre-2012-01-30) - author of numerous books on railroads and railroading, including South Shore: America's Last Interurban (Golden West Books 1970), North Shore - America's Fastest Interurban (Golden West Books 1968), and the so-called "traction trilogy": The Interurban Era (1961), The Time of the Trolley (1967), and When Steam Railroads Electrified (1974) (all published by Kalmbach Publishing); born in Davenport, Iowa; died in Livonia, New York
  • Robert Mole (req. pre-2012-01-30) - author; British civil servant; twice Mentioned in Despatches; awarded a Burma Star; wrote The Temple Bells Are Calling, an autobiography of his posting in Burma incorporating the politics of Burma from 1824 to 1948 during the Japanese occupation of Burma; [293]; [294]; [295]
  • Alain Montadon (req. pre-2012-01-30) - French author of several books on etiquette, perhaps equivalent to Letitia Baldridge or Debrett's
N–S
  • Decker Peters (req. 2012-5-5) very popular author of gay erotica, who lives in Provincetown, Massachusetts. His work has appeared in the magazines "Mandate" and "Playguy" and in the print anthologies "Skin & Ink" and "Latin Boys." His website has received over half a million readers since 2002, and his blog has been cited by Cybersocket and Unzipped magazine as one of the "hottest" examples of gay erotica on the web. From Cybersocket, Kurt von Behrmann writes of Deckerotica: "Merging the literate with the erotic doesn’t mean you have to check your brain at the bedroom door.
  • Norman Polmar (req. pre-2012-01-30) - author of many books and magazine articles, primarily on military aviation and naval matters
  • Shane G. Poplawski (req. pre-2012-01-30) - golf-course architect and historian; has written about golf-course architects, especially Hugh Irvine Wilson; native to the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, area; (?alma mater: University of Pennsylvania?)
  • Josephine Powell (req. 2010-03-11) - filmmaker and producer; consultant for Tito Puente; author of Tito Puente - When the Drums are Dreaming (Authorhouse, 2007); film consultant, including The Mambo Kings (1992); dance and Cuban-music historian; [296]
  • Bob Powers (req. pre-2012-01-30) - comedian and humor writer; author of You Are A Miserable Excuse For A Hero and Happy Cruelty Day!
  • Derrius Quarles (req. pre-2012-01-30) - author of "MillionDollarScholar: Winning the Scholarship Race" (2011); winner of $1+ million in scholarships for college; CEO of MillionDollarScholar LLC
  • Edward Rasor (req. pre-2012-01-30) - author of The Journey of a Modern Mystic: The Battle for The Kingdom of God (2006)
  • Carey Roberts (req. pre-2012-01-30) - American columnist, men's-rights activist and anti-feminist; conservative commentator on political correctness; [297]
  • Shawn Roop (req. 2010-07-10) - author of Pathways to Love: 28 Days to Self Love (2010); tantra teacher and spiritual guide since 2000
  • Martin Rosenbaum (req 2011-10-02) - freedom-of-information journalist; blogger for the BBC (since 2006); [298]; [299]; [300]
  • Matt Rosenberg (req. pre-2012-01-30) - author and geographer
  • Neil P. Ruzic (req. pre-2012-01-30) - author of Where the Winds Sleep - Man's Future on the Moon, a Projected History (1970; Garden City, New York: Doubleday; OCLC 73907); innovator; part of Operation Paperclip (NASA's Von Braun group)
  • SARK (also known as Susan Ariel Rainbow Kenedy) - author of books on creativity and how to release it; SARK is a knife
  • Susan Schaller (req. 2008-12-13) - author of A Man Without Words, the first book in English about a language-less adult
  • Herbert Schlossberg (req. 2009-11-08) - author of Idols for Destruction: Christian Faith and Its Confrontation with American Society, and other books
  • Takeo Shimizu, Ph.D. (req. pre-2012-01-30) - author of Fireworks: The Art, Science, and Technique, a major resource for the fireworks industry
  • Amit Singh (req. pre-2012-01-30) - author, technical writer, columnist, etc.; [301]
  • Manuel J. Smith (req. 2010-08-17) - author of assertiveness-training bestseller When I Say No, I Feel Guilty (1975)
  • P.D. Smith (or Peter D. Smith) (req 2008-11-03) - British author of scientific and cultural history, most recently of Doomsday Men (2007) ([302]); also writes for The Guardian; [303]
  • Barbara Stcherbatcheff (born 1981) (req. pre-2012-01-30) - revealed as London's anonymous "CityGirl" columnist; writer of Confessions of a City Girl; has written for Vanity Fair; musician; financial journalist in London; [304]
  • Glenn Stout (req. 2009-05-31) - author of Young Woman and the Sea: How Trudy Ederle Conquered the English Channel and Inspired the World, Red Sox Century, Nine Months at Ground Zero and other books; editor of The Best American Sports Writing series
  • Susan Rubin Suleiman or Susan Suleiman (req. pre-2012-01-30) - literary and cultural critic and theorist; Harvard professor; author
  • Zena Sutherland - reviewer of children's books; editor of The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books for almost thirty years; namesake of the Zena Sutherland Prizes in Children's Literature
T–Z
  • Unto Tähtinen (req. 2012-01-25) - philosopher; author of Ahiṃsā - Non-Violence in Indian Tradition; Template:Worldcat id
  • Jack Terry, MD (born Jakub Szabmacher) (req. pre-2012-01-30) - Holocaust survivor; co-author (with Alicia Nikecki) of the book Jackub's World: A Boy's Sory of Loss and Survival in the Holocaust; [305]
  • Beth Thomas, child abuse victim and abuser whose story was told in 1990 HBO documentary Child of Rage and on whom the 1992 film Child of Rage was based. Author of More Thread Than Hope. [306], [307]
  • J. Douglas Thompson (req. pre-2012-01-30) - doctor and diet-book author; based in Oakland, California; namesake of early-20th-century building in Oakland
  • Dean Tong (req. 2009-07-15) - author and consultant on child abuse, custody and abduction cases; wrote Elusive Innocence; television appearances including CNN, Court-TV, 48 Hours and Primetime; later charged with domestic violence; [308]
  • Charles E. Trimble (also known as "Chuck") (born 1935) (req. 2010-02-22) - Native-American writer; columnist for Indian Country Today; former Executive Director, National Congress of American Indians, a founder of the American Indian Press Association; not associated with Trimble Navigation
  • Ken Tucker (writer) (req. pre-2012-01-30) - writer and reviewer; numerous references on Wikipedia; a search for "Ken Tucker" and "Entertainment Weekly" returns many mentions, and many more without that linkage; [309]; [310]; [311]; [312]; Ken Tucker is an English footballer (who amusingly receives a number of accidental links)
  • Doreen Virtue (req. 2008-09-27) - American author; alleged clairvoyant; psychotherapist; Hay House author of many books on the topic of angels; originator of the "Angel Therapy" brand; [313]
  • Helen Waterford (req. 2008-09-27) - Holocaust survivor; author of Commitment to the Dead: One Woman's Journey Toward Understanding; paired up with former Hitler Youth Alfons Heck to teach people that peace and understanding can come to two sworn enemies
  • Aidan Watson-Morris (req. pre-2012-01-30) - self-published author of To Flee or Not to Be, has been featured on Google News, Newsguide, Having a Laugh, et al.; [314]
  • Jacob Whittingham (req. pre-2012-01-30) - author of What Being Black Is and What Being Black Isn't
  • Thomas Willeford (req. 2012-04-20) - Author of "Steampunk Gear, Gadgets, and Gizmos: A Maker's Guide to Creating Modern Artifacts", Owner of Brute Force Studios, and vast contributor to the Steampunk aesthetic style.
  • Margret Wittmer (1904–2001) (req. 2009-10-13) - German author of the book [[[Postlagernd Floreana]] (1959, Germany; later translated into 13 languages) a narration of the pioneering Wittmer Family in Galapagos Archipelago
  • Martin Wright (author) (req. pre-2012-01-30) - author of Power Politics (book)|Power Politics
  • Caroline A. Zimmermann (born 1944) (req 2008-06-30) - American non-fiction writer; wrote The Super Sneaker Book, Your Child Can Be a Model and How to Break into the Media Professions

Biologists

Botanists

  • Carpology ()
A–G
H–Z

Business people

Chefs

Chemists

Computer-science people

Educators

A–M
N–Z

Engineers

Entertainers

Actors

A–M
N–Z

Pornography actors

Mia Domore is a retired porn star who was active 1999 to 2004. She never participated in the porn lifestyle so was never given her proper dues but apeared in over 300 scenes.

Choreographers

Comedians

Disc jockeys

See also the list of requests for Radio Personalities.

Entertainment-business people

Filmmakers

Place new filmmaker requests under the most-appropriate subcategory below.

Directors

Documentary filmmakers

Producers

Screenwriters

Other filmmakers

(casting directors, cinematographers, special-effects people, et al.)

  • Woodysgamertag (req. 2012-06-02) - Youtube director; 750,000+ subscribers; 145,000,000+ views; 1250+ views; [546]

Magicians

Musicians

Performance artists

Radio personalities

See also the list of requests for Disc Jockeys.

Singers

Television personalities

Environmentalists

Espionage and intelligence

Fashion

Designers

Models

Feminist figures

Folklorists

  • () (born 1922) (req. pre-2012-01-24) - Professor Emeritus of English, University of Pennsylvania; author; [656]; specialized in American folklore
  • () (req. pre-2012-01-24) - African-American folklorist, political activist, administrator of the National Negro Congress, founder of Philadelphia chapter of the American Federation of Teachers
  • () (req. pre-2012-01-24) - folklorist
  • () (1848–1927) (req. pre-2012-01-24) - British folklorist and solicitor
  • () (1880–1964) (req. pre-2012-01-24) - American researcher of Norse literature and mythology; Professor of Germanic Studies, University of Texas; translated Norse Poetic Eddas into English; Knighthood in the Icelandic Order of the Falcon; [657]
  • () (1898–1967) (req. pre-2012-01-24) - African-American folklorist
  • () (or Gladys Armanda Reichard) (1893–1955) (req. pre-2012-01-24) - American anthropologist; authority on Navajo culture
  • () (1890–1973) (req. pre-2012-01-24) - American folklorist; proverb scholar; "Paremiologist"; Professor of German Literature and Folklore, University of California, Berkeley; bio
  • () (req. pre-2012-01-24) - Swedish professor of ethnology (Scandinavian and Irish folklore}; father of Max von Sydow sv:Carl Wilhelm von Sydow
  • () (req. pre-2012-01-24) - Professor of Folklife Studies and American Civilization, University of Pennsylvania

Geographers

Historians

A–M
N–Z
  • Carlos Norena - professor of Ancient Roman history at the University of California, Berkeley; winner of the Distinguished Teaching Award in the Social Sciences (2007)
  • Sarah Pomeroy (or Sarah B. Pomeroy) (req. 2010-3-30) - historian of antiquity; author of Spartan Women, and Goddesses, Whores, Wives and Slaves: Women in Classical Antiquity, both of which are heavily referenced in Wikipedia articles (Sparta, Gorgo, etc.)
  • Albert Prago - historian and veteran of the Spanish Civil War; rote about the role of Jews in the Spanish Civil War
  • Henri Prentout - medieval historian active around the turn of the 20th century; notable for turning Norman history on its head when he published a comprehensive and scathing critique of Dudo of St. Quentin
  • Charles Read (historian) (req. pre-2010-05-18) - cited many times on wikipedia
  • J. Saunders Redding - African-American Historian and first African-American faculty member at an Ivy League school (Brown and later a full professor at Cornell)
  • Loren J. Samons II (req. 2008-10-10) - Associate Professor of Classical Studies and Associate Dean for Students, College of Arts and Sciences at Boston University; author of Empire of the Owl; editor of Athenian Democracy and Imperialism; coauthor of Athens from Cleisthenes to Pericles
  • John S. Shirley (1908–1988) (req. 2009-03-01) historian, author and biographer; life work on history of Thomas Harriot; books, papers in the University of Delaware (22 linear feet); wrote three books on Harriot
  • Henry Sills (req. pre-2010-05-18) - ethical historian; known for his public speeches and critical views on fellow historians' works
  • Noah Andre Trudeau (req. 2011-11-21) - American historian specializing in the Civil War; wrote Southern Storm: Sherman's March to the Sea
  • Jon Tuska (req. 2009-01-27) - film historian and author; cited many times on Wikipedia (Special:Search/Jon Tuska); [664]
  • David Ulansey (req. 2008-11-28) - American religion historian; specializes in religions of the ancient Mediterranean; wrote The Origins of the Mithraic Mysteries: Cosmology and Salvation in the Ancient World; founder of Species Alliance nonprofit organization; co-founder of Planetwork Project; webmaster of massextinction.net

Inventors

Journalists

See also the list of requests for Documentary Filmmakers.

A–M
N–Z

Law

Criminals

Detectives and police

Lawyers

LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender) figures

Linguists

Maritime figures

Mathematicians

Medical people

Military figures

A–M
N–Z

American Medal of Honor recipients

Dawud Agbere

Musical-instrument makers

  • Georges Chanot III (1831–1895) (req. 2011-07-30) 19th-century violin maker based in Soho, London; mentioned in several wiki articles but no article on him; [803]

Natural scientists, other

Ornithologists (birds)

Philanthropists

  • Texas Whore

Philosophers

Physicists

Political figures

Psychics

Psychologists

N–Z

Religious figures

Anglican/Episcopal

Baptist

  • Voddie Baucham - national speaker; Pastor of Preaching, Grace Family Baptist Church in Spring, Texas; wrote What He Must Be... If He Wants To Marry My Daughter, Family Driven Faith, The Ever Loving Truth, The Supremacy of Christ in a Post Modern World
  • Absalom Backus Earle (1812–1895) (req. 2008-11-20) - American Baptist preacher and author; seven books including Bringing in the Sheaves and Abiding Peace; [835]
  • John Jasper (1812–1901) early African-American Baptist preacher and philosopher; [836]
  • W. B. Johnson - first president of the Southern Baptist Convention
  • Lucy Whitehead McGill Waterbury Peabody (req. 2009-11-30) - leader in women's foreign missions organizations; founder of Baptists for World Evangelism; helped advocate an annual interdenominational day of prayer for missions, which became the World Day of Prayer; [837]
  • Jack Schaap - Baptist minister
  • Win Worley - Baptist minister; preeminent researcher and practitioner who reopened the "untouchable" topic of deliverance from evil spirits, showing that believing and unbelieving alike can be inhabited and driven by the spiritual forces of darkness, and showing how to free both self and others from their destructive influence
  • Charles L. Worley (req. pre-2012-5-22) - Baptist pastor; made news headlines in May of 2012 for suggesting America can get rid of homosexuals by penning them in large areas with electrified fences, air lifting food to them, and letting them die out, because they cannot reproduce; [838]; [839]

Buddhism

Catholicism

Eastern Orthodox

Hinduism

Islam

Judaism

Fundamentalist Latter-Day Saints

  • Nephi Jeffs (req. pre-2012-01-28) - brother to cult leader Warren Jeffs; claimed his brother renounced his position as head of the FLDS church

New-age spirituality

Non-denominational Christian

Other

Pentecostal and charismatic

Presbyterian, Reformed and Calvinism

Protestant

  • Carlos Annacondia (req. pre-2012-01-24) - Argentine revivalist, evangelist and author
  • Albion Ballenger (req. pre-2012-01-24) - 19th-century Seventh-day Adventist minister and author; banned from church
  • Samuel Joaquín Flores (req. pre-2012-01-24) - Mexican evangelist; The Light of the World Church
  • Enos Hitchcock (req. pre-2012-01-24) - quoted in an Economist article as having said "The free access which many young people have to romances, novels and plays has poisoned the mind and corrupted the morals of many a promising youth."; may be the Enos Hitchcock (1745–1803) who was a well-known minister (not sure of denomination) during the American Revolution mentioned here
  • Charles Latimer Marson (1859–1914) (req. pre-2012-01-24) - founder of the Christian Socialist Society in the U.K.; editor The Christian Socialist; [879]
  • Thomas Munster (req. pre-2012-01-24) - Swedish Christian reformist; sv:Thomas Munster
  • Mickey Robinson (req. pre-2012-01-24) - author, healer; claims after dying in an accident went to heaven and spoke with God before returning to earth
  • Edward R. Skane (or Edward Skane) (req. pre-2008-03-01) - reverend, television evangelist, book author; father of high-profile murdered son, died February 2001
  • Thomas Thorowgood (c. 1600–1669) (req. pre-2012-01-24) - English Divine; author of Jewes in America, or Probabilities that the Americans Are of that Race; influential to the writing and thought of John Eliot; intellectual peer to Menasseh Ben Israel
  • Phyllis A. Tickle (req. pre-2012-01-24) - American author, editor and professor; pioneered the religious section in Publisher's Weekly, thus gaining mainstream recognition for religious fiction and nonfiction
  • Willard Uphaus (1890–1983) (req. 2011-07-21) - protestant minister and lifelong pacifist; became director of a retreat center in New Hampshire from 1953 to 1969; blacklisted as communist during the McCarthy era
  • Edmond Wong (req. 2008-06-14) - evangelist to the homeless of San Francisco for twenty years

Shamanism

  • Ted Andrews (July 16, 1952 - October 24, 2009) (req. pre-2012-01-28) - North American shaman; author, speaker and teacher; in May 2002 and 2007, gave speech at the United Nations Staff Recreation Council in New York City about his writings and work with animals; author of 40+ books (which have been translated into 24+ foreign languages), including Animal Speak: The Spiritual and Magical Powers of Creatures Great and Small (1993; Llewellyn Publications)

Unitarian Universalist

Wicca and witches

  • Triene Langheldes (died 1613) (req. pre-2012-01-24) - alleged Dutch witch, the last alleged witch in the Netherlands
  • Edain McCoy (req. pre-2012-01-24) - author of Celtic Myth and Magick and other works published by Llewellyn Publications; purported founder of the Witta tradition
  • Anna Muggen (died 1608) (req. pre-2012-01-24) - alleged Dutch witch
  • Agnes Snoth (1500s) (req. pre-2012-01-24) - burned at the stake with four other women; preached against auricular confessions, stating that it was sinful to ask forgiveness from a man for what only God can grant

Sociologists

  • Theodore W. Allen (req. pre-2012-02-22) - sociologist; Template:Worldcat id
  • Simon Dinitz (req. pre-2012-01-24) - American sociologist and criminologist; professor emeritus, Ohio State University; wrote Schizophrenics in the New Custodial Community; first professor to receive all three of OSU's Distinguished Teaching, Distinguished Research, and Distinguished Service Awards; [884]
  • Dora Fabian (req. pre-2012-02-22) - German socialist in pre-war Nazi era; died mysteriously with Mathilde Wurm in London, 1 April 1935; Anna Funder has written a fictional account of her life ([885]; [886]); [887]
  • Eliot Freidson (died December 14, 2005) (req. pre-2012-01-24) - pioneering researcher in medical sociology and other professions; wrote "landmark" Profession of Medicine (1978); ideas achieved "methodological cult status" (see F. Condrau's The Patient's View Meets the Clinical Gaze, 2007); [888]
  • James M. Henslin (req. pre-2012-01-24) - author of Sociology: A Down-to-Earth Approach; [889]
  • Ely Karmon (req. pre-2012-01-24) - Israeli political scientist; researcher at the Institute for Counter-Terrorism ([890]) and the Institute for Policy and Strategy at the Interdisciplinary Center (IDC) in Herzliya, Israel; [891]
  • Leah Renae Kelly (req. pre-2012-01-24) - author of In My Own Voice: Explorations in the Sociopolitical Context of Art & Cinema, Canadian Ojibwe native
  • Samantha Kwan (req. pre-2012-01-24) - American sociologist and woman-studies scholar; considers the Western society's anxiety toward "obesity" a moral panic; [892]
  • Everett Carll Ladd, Jr. (req. pre-2012-01-24) - American sociologist, political scientist, polling expert; [893]
  • Pavel Osinsky (req. pre-2012-01-24) - American sociologist; professor, Knox College; thesis paper, War, State Collapse, Redistribution: Russian Revolution Revisted, cited on Wikipedia.... notable enough for bio?
  • Andrew Sayer (req. pre-2012-01-24) - British geographer-turned-sociologist; a main proponent of realist philosophy in the social sciences
  • Rob Shields (req. 2012-03-04) - sociologist; known for his book Places on the Margin, an influential book within the sociology of space
  • Hilary Silver (req. pre-2012-02-22) - sociologist; Brown University professor

Sports figures

Boxers, martial artists and wrestlers

Game players

  • Christian Harder, Professional Poker Player espn article, stats
  • Allen Kennedy - American card sharp (1897-1960), inventor of center deal, bio in The Magician and the Cardsharp: The Search for America's Greatest Sleight-of-Hand Artist by Karl Johnson (Henry Holt and Co., 2005)

Other sports figures

  • Andrew Barranco - coach of Jessica Long (paraolympian); Regional Aquatic Director; [896]
  • Mark Bavis (born March 13, 1970; died September 11, 2001) (req. 2012-03-16) - American Hockey League left winger, including the Providence Bruins and the South Carolina Stingrays; scout for the Los Angeles Kings; born in Roslindale, Massachusetts; killed on United Airlines Flight 175 during the September 11 attacks; Boston University hockey player; namesake of the Mark Bavis Leadership Foundation; [897]; [898]
  • Ted Bulling (req. pre-2012-01-24) - head track and field, and cross country coach, Nebraska Wesleyan University; won multiple conference championships, placing in the top five at nation meets, coaching multiple national champions, coaching Kim Oden at the Olympic trials, and also has received multiple regional and national coaching awards
  • Marco Confortola (req. 2008-08-05) - last known survivor of K2 mountain disaster August 1, 2008
  • Jeffrey Crompton (req. pre-2012-01-24) - professional basketball player (1978–1984); less than stellar yet notable NBA player, see stats
  • Giovanni Fanello (req. pre-2012-01-24) - it:Giovanni Fanello
  • Jack Favor (req. 2008-06-02) - rodeo champion wrongfully convicted of murder; later released after being granted a new trial and found not guilty
  • William Thomas Finnegan (born 1987) (req. pre-2012-01-24) - Irish long jumper in 2008; Senior All Ireland Triple Jump and Combined Event Medalist; Olympic decathalon hopeful
  • Michael Robert Lee (born 3 June 1968) (req. pre-2012-01-24) - Australian cricket player who also played with Surrey County Cricket Club in England; [899];(moved (pre-2012-01-24) from Michael Lee talk page, full contents edited out, in page history)
  • Diane Mohlman[verify notability] (req. 2012-02-02) - fitness trainer; [900]; [901].....what makes her notable? both sites provided are personal sites (and don't mention coverage by any third-party reliable sources) (2012-02-02)--71.167.157.17 (talk) 06:45, 2 February 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Ed Nadalin (req. 2009-12-12) - American professional skateboarder in the 1970s
  • Danny Rensch (req. pre-2012-01-24) - American chess player and coach; FIDE Master, with two IM norms; one of the strongest U-25 (was number one in nation at 19); notably one of the top-five players of Arizona; owns and runs American Chess Events, which sponsors ACC and FIDE events along with monthly USCF tournaments
  • Nicholas Romanov (runner) (req. pre-2012-01-24) - founder and developer of the Pose Method, the leading running method; [902]
  • Frank Sanders (climber) (req. 2008-07-21) record-setting mountaineer; climbs the Devils Tower National Monument every day in order to deal with his alcoholism; [903]
  • Carolyn Still (Association Football Club executive) The youngest Chief Executive of an English Football Club, appointed Chief Executive of Mansfield Town in September 2011; Second claim to fame is that she is one of very few females in the role; [904] and [905]; A google search will reveal that she has already had a colourful career. see [906] and [907]
  • Don Vesco (req. 2009-10-01) - American motorcycle and land speed racer. Holds FIA World Land Speed Record of 458mph; inducted into the Motorsports Hall of Fame (2004); [908]
  • Dwain Weston (died October 7, 2003) (req. pre-2012-01-24) - Australian base jumper and daredevil
  • Glen Worthington (or Glen "Zeuz" Worthington) (req. pre-2012-01-24) - Utah Hall of Famer ([909]); Utah State University Hall of Famer; [910]; athletic director of Logan High School for 30 years; Logan, Utah socialite; earned ten varsity letters at Utah State in football, track and basketball from 1926 to 1929; given the nickname "Zeus" by his Coach Dick Romney; was a four-year basketball starter; served as team captain for two years and was twice named to the all-conference team; won the gold medal in the Inter-Organization track meet in 1927 and 1928, finished second in 1926 and 1029; during his four-year career as a sprinter, he was undefeated in the high and low hurdles
  • Patrick Lambke (req. 2012-05-25) Jouster. Trained Shane Adams of "Full Metal Jousting" on the History Channel. Consults on medieval shows for the History Channel and was in National Geographic Channel's "Knights of Mayhem". While traveling from Newport News, Virginia to Charlotte, NC, after participating in the Hunt Club Farm Renaissance & Fantasy Faire as the "Black Knight", he faced $325 in fees from the airline over his overweight luggage and wore his armor onto the plane after a security guard suggested it. With only 10 minutes to make the flight from Charlotte to Denver, he ran through the airport still in said armor. He joked about disguising himself as a white knight-to see whether the perks would be better. (summarized from an article in the Virginian Pilot by Lauren King; he apparently has a website somewhere)

Ufologists

  1. ^ 1