1. Lee Jong-Wook

    Lee Jong-wook was the Director-General of the World Health Organization for three years. He was born in Seoul, South Korea and died - while in office - in Geneva, Switzerland. Lee obtained a medical degree from Seoul National University, then enrolled at the University of Hawaii to study public health, earning a Master's degree. He joined the WHO in 1983, working on a variety of projects including the Global Programme for Vaccines and Immunizations and Stop TB.

  2. Chris Candido

    Chris Candido (March 21, 1972 - April 28, 2005), also known as Skip, was an American professional wrestler best known for his participation in the World Wrestling Federation tag team known as The Bodydonnas with Zip, and his girlfriend and valet Sunny (the two were never legally married).

  3. Tommie Frazier

    Tommie Frazier (born on July 16, 1974 in Bradenton, Florida) is a former NCAA football quarterback for the Nebraska Cornhuskers. Frazier led his team to back-to-back consensus national championships in 1994 and 1995, and he remains the only quarterback to have done so since the 1950s. The 1995 Nebraska team is considered to have been one of the most dominant in the history of American college football. He wore the number 15 in his college days.

  4. J. R. Richard

    James Rodney Richard (born March 7 1950) is a former right-handed starting pitcher in Major League Baseball. Richard spent his entire Major League playing career, spanning 1971 to 1980, with a single team, the Houston Astros. After a remarkable high school career, he was selected by the Astros as the second pick in the first round of the 1969 amateur draft. From the time he made his major league debut with the Astros in 1971, …

  5. Tony Vidmar

    Tony Vidmar (born July 4, 1970 in Adelaide) is an Australian football (soccer) player of Slovenian-Italian origin, currently playing with the Central Coast Mariners in the Australian A-League. He was a member of the Australian national team, competed at the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona for his native country, and is currently Australia's third highest capped player. His brother Aurelio Vidmar was also an Australian football player.

  6. Chucky Mullins

    Roy Lee "Chucky" Mullins was an American football player at Ole Miss (University of Mississippi) best known for the courage and indomitable will to continue his life after a devastating football injury that left him paralyzed below the neck. Mullins was injured on October 28, 1989, during the Ole Miss Rebel's Homecoming game against the Vanderbilt Commodores in Oxford, Mississippi. As Mullins tackle Vandy fullback Brad Gaines after a short pass, …

  7. Harry Reasoner

    Harry Reasoner was an American journalist known for his inventive use of language as a television commentator. Born in Dakota City, Iowa, Reasoner studied journalism at Stanford University and the University of Minnesota. He served in World War II and then resumed his journalism career with "The Minneapolis Times". After going into radio with CBS in 1948, Reasoner worked for the United States Information Agency in the Philippines.

  8. Brian Mullen

    Brian Patrick Mullen (born March 16, 1962 in New York City, New York) is a former professional ice hockey player who spent eleven seasons in the NHL playing for the Winnipeg Jets, New York Rangers, San Jose Sharks, and New York Islanders. Mullen grew up in the Hell's Kitchen neighborhood of New York. He and older brother Joe Mullen played roller hockey in the streets of Manhattan as children. After landing a job as a stick boy for the New York Rangers, …

  9. Thaddeus H. Caraway

    Thaddeus Horatius Caraway (1871-1931) was a Democratic Party politician from Arkansas who represented the state first in the U.S. House of Representatives (1913-1921) and then in the U.S. Senate (1921-1931). Caraway was born on a farm near Springhill, Missouri on October 17, 1871, and attended the common schools as a boy. In 1883 he moved with his parents to Clay County, Arkansas; in 1896 he graduated from Dickson College in Tennessee, …

  10. Charita Bauer

    Charita Bauer was an American soap opera actress. Born in Newark, New Jersey, she played headstrong and opinionated Bertha "Bert" Miller Bauer on the long-running soap "The Guiding Light" on radio from 1950 to 1956 and on TV from 1952 to 1985. While her character was a spitfire in the earlier days, by the 1970s she had been relegated to the ceremonial role of town matriarch. To avoid confusion between her real life and her popular soap role, …

  11. Romaine Fielding

    Romaine Fielding, was an American actor, screenwriter and film director. Born William Grant Blandin in Riceville, Iowa, he worked and acted in live theatre for a number of years until 1911 when he turned to acting, writing and directing silent films for Philadelphia-based Lubin Studios.

  12. Blood Clot

    My Interests include: Push Ups, Showers, and I have a little bird in my pocket who I feed little worms.