- Alan Greenspan
Alan Greenspan (born March 6, 1926) is an American economist and was Chairman of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve of the United States from 1987 to 2006. Following his retirement as Fed chairman, he accepted an honorary (unpaid) position at HM Treasury in the United Kingdom. First appointed Fed chairman by President Ronald Reagan in August 1987, he was reappointed at successive four-year intervals until retiring on January 31, 2006, … - Elaine Garzarelli
Elaine was a partner and managing director at Lehman Brothers prior to starting her own company in 1995. She has been studying the stock market for over 20 years and was ranked first team in Quantitative Research in Institutional Investor magazine's all-star poll for 11 years; she was also top ranked in Portfolio Strategy and Market Timing. - Paul Tudor Jones
Paul Tudor Jones (b. 1954, Memphis, Tennessee) is a well-known commodity trader. Having made $500 million in 2005, he is worth an estimated $2.5 billion, and was ranked by "Forbes" in September 2006 as the 117th richest person in the world. One of his earliest successes was predicting Black Monday in 1987, tripling his money during the event due to large short positions. Jones uses a global macro strategy when trading in some of his funds. - Bob Reiss
Bob Reiss (born 1951) is an American author of nonfiction and fiction books. Reiss, who also writes under the pen-names of Scott Canterbury and Ethan Black, has written more than a dozen books, including "Purgatory Road", a murder mystery set in Antarctica, "The Road to Extrema", a study of the destruction of Brazilian rain forests, and "The Coming Storm", which focuses on global warming and catastrophic weather. - William Fox
William Fox (born Wilhelm Fuchs in January 1, 1879-May 8, 1952) founded the Fox Film Corporation in 1915 and the Fox West Coast Theatres chain. Although Fox sold his interest in these companies in a 1936 bankruptcy settlement, his name lives on as the namesake of the FOX Television Network and 20th Century Fox film studio. Wilhelm Fuchs was born to Jewish parents in Tolcsva, Hungary, then part of Austria-Hungary. - Richard Egan
Richard (Dick) J. Egan was born in 1930 and as a co-founder of EMC Corporation was a successful Massachusetts business leader in the 20th century. A year after receiving a degree in electrical engineering from Northeastern University in 1962, he was on the team that helped develop Project Apollo memory systems for NASA. - Howard Stein
Howard Stein (born circa 1926) is an American financier who is widely considered one of the fathers of the mutual fund industry. Stein was Chairman and CEO of Dreyfus Corporation for more than 30 years. When Stein started at Dreyfus in 1955 it had approximately 2 million dollars in assets. Before the sale in 1994 this had grown to 90 Billion dollars. Dreyfus was sold to Mellon Bank Corporation in 1994 for $1.8 billion. Stein retired after the sale. - Roger Hall
Roger Leighton Hall, CNZM, QSO (b. Essex, England, 1939) is described as the most successful playwright of his generation. He writes comedies with a serious vein of social criticism and a feeling of pathos running through them. Hall's best-known work in New Zealand is probably "Glide Time" (1976), which depicts the frustrations and petty triumphs of a group of workers in a government office. - Robert Holmes à Court
Michael Robert Hamilton Holmes à Court (July 27 1937, Johannesburg, South Africa–September 2 1990, Perth, Western Australia) was an entrepreneur who became Australia's first billionaire before dying suddenly of a heart attack in 1990. He was a distant relative of the first Lord Heytesbury. Holmes à Court was one of the world's most feared corporate raiders through the 1980s, … - Brer Ruthven Viscount Ruthven of Canberra
Patrick Leo Brer Ruthven, Viscount Ruthven of Canberra and Dirleton (born 1964) is the son of the 2nd Earl of Gowrie and heir apparent to the earldom. Brer attended Westminster School. He wrote a number of articles for the NME and formed a rock band, the Pleasure Splinters, with Nick LeQuesne and Alan White. In 1982 he started work for Mike Lesser as Company Secretary of Pancan, a robotic theatre lighting system invented by Peter Wynne-Wilson. - Herbert Harley Murray
Sir Herbert Harley Murray (November 4, 1829 - March 22, 1904) colonial governor was born in Bromley, England and died in England. Murray was educated at Christchurch, Oxford and entered the civil service in 1852. He was chairman of England's Board of Customs and then acted as a relief commissioner for Newfoundland after the 1894 bank crash. Murray was made governor of Newfoundland in 1895 and knighted that same year. - John Terence Nicholls O'Brien
Sir John Terence Nicholls O'Brien (April 23, 1830 - February 28, 1903) surveyor, engineer and colonial governor, born in Manchester, England and died in London, England. He studied at Elizabeth College, Guernsey, and then attended Royal Military Academy Sandhurst. O'Brien, a British Army officer, received a medal of honour for his service in the Indian Mutiny War. In 1881 he was appointed governor of Heligoland, knighted in 1888 and became governor of Newfoundland in 1889. - Black Monday
Traveling is my favorite thing to do these days because I'm a single man. LOL 9 times out of 10 you will see me smiling, laughing or cracking jokes. I guess Iâm an idealist based on what people tell me. Growing up on this planet, you have to be an idealist. Maybe it comes from reading so many books. I really need to cut back on reading. Never!!!!!!!!! I still have over 100 books on my wish list on Amazon plus I read 4 different books a day. - Black Monday
we'd just like to say were debuting some time next year keep u posted. - Black Monday
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- Gabbi Grobbelaar
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