1   2   3   4   5  

  1. Jon Corzine

    Jon Stevens Corzine (born January 1, 1947) is the Governor of New Jersey. He was sworn into office on January 17, 2006, for a four-year term ending in 2010. He represented New Jersey in the United States Senate from 2001 until 2006, when he stepped down to take his seat as Governor. Prior to his political career, Corzine was Chairman and CEO of Goldman Sachs. He resides at Drumthwacket, the New Jersey Governor's official residence in Princeton, …

  2. Bob Menendez

    Robert "Bob" Menendez (born January 1, 1954) is a Democratic Senator from New Jersey. In January 2006, he was appointed by Jon Corzine to fill the seat made vacant by Corzine's resignation from the Senate to serve as Governor of New Jersey; Menendez subsequently won the seat in the November 7<sup>th&lt;/sup> general election later that year.

  3. Robert Menendez

    I am a US Senator for the state of NJ. I am a Democrat. My religion is Catholic. I am Separated From Spouse. I received my BA from St. Peter's College. I received my JD from Rutgers University. I live in Hoboken. I was born in New York, NY. For issues within my power to resolve, write me at "1 Gateway Ctr., 11th Fl., Newark, NJ 07102".

  4. John Stevens

    Col. John Stevens, III (1749 - March 6 1838) was an American lawyer, engineer, and an inventor. Born in New York, New York, the son of John Stevens (1715-1792), secretary to Governor Livingston of New York, and his wife, the former Elizabeth Alexander. He graduated King's College (which became Columbia University) in May 1768. At age 27 he was appointed a Captain in Washington's army, and was afterwards treasurer of New Jersey, …

  5. Michael Chang

    Michael Te-Pei Chang (張德培; Pinyin: Zhāng Dépéi; born February 22 1972, in Hoboken, New Jersey, USA) is an American former professional tennis player. He is best remembered for becoming the youngest-ever male winner of a Grand Slam singles title when he won the French Open in 1989 at the age of 17. Utilizing tremendous speed and strong determination, …

  6. Soanya Ahmad

    Soanya Ahmad (1984 -) is a principal participant of "1000 Days at Sea: The Mars Ocean Odyssey", a contemplated one thousand day voyage which commenced on April 21, 2007 from Hoboken, New Jersey. The mission has the aim of remaining in the open ocean, outside of contact with supporting ports, for a period of one thousand days, emulating in some respects interplanetary voyages such as those contemplated to the planet Mars.

  7. Jamal Patterson

    Jamal Patterson (born March 22, 1974 in Hoboken, New Jersey) is an American professional mixed martial arts (MMA) fighter. He is currently fighting for the New York Pitbulls of the International Fight League.

  8. Maurice Fitzgibbons

    Maurice Fitzgibbons represents District 5 on the Hudson County, New Jersey Board of Chosen Freeholders, one of nine members who serve in a legislative role administering all county business. District 5 includes the City of Hoboken and portions of the City of Jersey City. Fitzgibbons' three-year term of office expires on December 31, 2008. Now in the first year of his fourth term as freeholder, Fitzgibbons has served in various leadership capacities on the Board, …

  9. Malcolm Johnson

    Malcolm Johnson (September 24, 1904 - June 18, 1976) was a noted investigative journalist of the 1940s and 1950s. His 24-part series in the New York Sun, "Crime on the Waterfront," won the Pulitzer Prize for Local Reporting in 1949. The Sun articles formed the basis for the 1954 Elia Kazan movie "On the Waterfront," which starred Marlon Brando. Unlike the articles, which described corruption and organized crime infiltration on the New York City waterfront, …

  10. Orlando Palmeiro

    Orlando Palmeiro (b. January 19, 1969, in Hoboken, New Jersey) is a Major League Baseball outfielder, currently with the Houston Astros, who went to the University of Miami. His better known cousin Rafael Palmeiro was also a Major League player. Palmeiro has spent his entire career as a backup outfielder, never having been a regular starter. Palmeiro also made the last out of the 2005 World Series for the Houston Astros. He has played for the California & Anaheim Angels, …

  11. Alexa Ray Joel

    Alexa Ray Joel (born January 1, 1986) is an American singer and pianist. She is the daughter of popular pianist, singer, and songwriter Billy Joel and his second wife, model Christie Brinkley. She has credited her middle name to musician Ray Charles. Alexa Ray Joel began writing songs at a very early age. Growing up in a musical household, her gift for singing and songwriting was always encouraged by her parents.

  12. Walter Kidde

    Walter Kidde (March 7 1877 - February 9, 1943) was the court appointed trustee of the bankrupt New York, Susquehanna and Western Railway from July 24, 1937 until his death in 1943. He was sucedded by Henery K. Norton as trustee, and later president of the railroad. Born in Hoboken, New Jersey, Kidde was an active member of the business world, but at the time of his appointment as trustee he had no previous railroad experience.

  13. Linda Sharar

    Linda Sharar is an American folk singer/songwriter. She began singing, playing guitar, and writing songs as a teenager, inspired by James Taylor and Neil Young. While attending college at the University of Virginia and playing soccer for the school, she performed at open mikes in Charlottesville, Virginia. After graduation, she moved to New York City to begin her career as a singer-songwriter.

  14. Johnny Kucks

    John Charles Kucks (born July 27, 1933) was a pitcher for the New York Yankees and Kansas City Athletics in Major League Baseball. He was born in Hoboken, New Jersey. In 1952 he was signed as an amateur free agent. Johnny Kucks won the final game of the 1956 World Series between the Yankees and Brooklyn Dodgers, shutting out the Dodgers, 9-0. This game would be the final World Series game ever played at Ebbets Field.

  15. Richard Bruce Nugent

    Richard Bruce Nugent (also known as Richard Bruce and Bruce Nugent) (July 2, 1906 - May 27, 1987) was a gay writer and painter in the Harlem Renaissance. He was born in Washington, DC to a prominent African American family. Spending a large part of his life in New York City, he died in Hoboken, New Jersey. He was the first African American to publish a story that featured unabashedly homosexual characters and desires, …

  16. Kazimieras G. Prapuolenis

    Kazimieras G. Prapuolenis, or Kaz, (born 1959, Hoboken, New Jersey) is an American cartoonist and illustrator. In the 1980s he was a frequent contributor to the influential comics anthologies "RAW" and "Weirdo". Since 1992 he has drawn "Underworld", an adult-themed syndicated comic strip that appears in many alternative weeklies.

  17. John Wisden

    John Wisden (5 September 1826 - 5 April 1884) was an English cricketer who played 190 first-class cricket matches for three English county cricket teams, Kent, Middlesex and Sussex. He is now best known for launching the eponymous "Wisden Cricketers' Almanack" in 1864, the year after he retired from first-class cricket.

  18. Jesse Lyman Hurlbut

    Jesse Lyman Hurlbut (1843- ?) was an American Methodist Episcopal clergyman. He was born in New York City, graduated at Wesleyan University in 1864, and held pastorates at Newark, Montclair, Paterson, Plainfield, Hoboken, Morristown, Orange, and Bloomfield, N. J. After 1879 he was connected with the Sunday&#45;school and tract work of his denomination.

  19. John Grefe

    John Alan Grefe (born September 6, 1947 in Hoboken, New Jersey) is an American International Master of chess. His best result is a tie for first with Lubomir Kavalek in the 1973 U.S. Championship. FIDE awarded him the title of International Master in 1975. Grefe and Stuart Rachels are the only players since 1948 to win or co-win the U.S. Championship without already having, or later achieving, the title of International Grandmaster.

  20. Solomon Schindler

    Solomon Schindler was an American rabbi. He was born at Neisse, Germany, and was educated at Breslau. Coming to the United States in 1871, he was minister of congregations at Hoboken, N. J., and in Boston until 1894. He was also a member of the Boston School Board in 1888&#45;94. In 1895&#45;99 he was superintendent of the Federation of Jewish Charities of Boston and thenceforth until 1909, when he retired, served as superintendent of the Leopold Morse Home.

  21. The Chicken of Hoboken

    Don't hate the playa - hate the game. It's all about pleasing the ladies. But sometimes... I long to find that dream chick. The one who makes my waddle quiver. She's out there...

  22. Hoboken

    FUCK YOU AND FUCK HOBOKEN!!!

  23. Hoboken
  24. Dj Hoboken
  25. I Left My Heart In Hoboken
  26. Hoboken
  27. Hoboken Harry

    I'm the angry little alter ego of Hoboken. I think many of the same things you do, only difference is, I take action. As you can see in the weekly glimpses into my life on hobokenharry.com, we all go through the same things, uptown and downtown, east and west, newcomers and lifers.

  28. Megan Leigh McDonald

    Here's what a geek I am: I'm reading an ethnographic study on social networks and interpret the words 'playa names' as the spanish word for 'beach'...instead of player names.

  29. Mj Hoboken

    I like to hang out by the grade school and sell cigarettes.

  30. Tom Alison
  31. Anthony van Hoboken

    Anthony van Hoboken was a Dutch musicologist. He was born in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, and died in Zürich, Switzerland. Hoboken is best known for his "J. Haydn, Thematisch-bibliographisches Werkverzeichnis" (published 1957), or Hoboken-Verzeichnis, a catalogue of the compositions of Joseph Haydn. Haydn's works are often referred to by their "Hoboken number" (usually abbreviated to "Hob" or just "H"), taken from this catalogue.

  32. Nathan Dungan. Hoboken

    Nathan Dungan. Hoboken , N.J.: John Wiley & Sons, 2003. In this timely book, long-time financial advisor Nathan Dungan brings his experience in the financial world to bear on one of the most pressing matters facing us today: young people and their money. Dungan examines the underlying factors that shape young people�s spending habits and finds that youths are largely influenced by the distorted values of an economy that depends on voracious consumer appetites for survival.

  33. Pietro di Donato

    Pietro Di Donato (1911-1992) was an American writer born in West Hoboken, New Jersey (now Union City) to parents who emigrated from the region of Abruzzo in Italy. Di Donato had limited formal education but reached great popularity with his first novel "Christ in Concrete", which was published in 1939. The novel was inspired by the tragic death of Di Donato's father in a construction accident on Good Friday 1923.

  34. Christian Bauman

    Christian Bauman (born June 15, 1970, in Easton, Pennsylvania) is an American novelist and essayist. He lives near New Hope, Pennsylvania. His short essays have appeared semi-regularly on National Public Radio's All Things Considered since 2003. Bauman's third novel, titled "In Hoboken", is scheduled for release March 2008. Christian Bauman's first two novels, "The Ice Beneath You" (Simon & Schuster, 2002) and "Voodoo Lounge" (Simon & Schuster, …

  35. Leo Bosschart

    Leonard ("Leo") François Gerard Bosschart (born August 24, 1888 in Kota Radja, Dutch East Indies - died May 9, 1951 in Hoboken, Antwerp, Belgium) was a football (soccer) player from the Netherlands, who represented his home country at the 1920 Summer Olympics in Antwerp, Belgium. There he won the bronze medal with the Netherlands national football team.

  36. David Roberts

    David Roberts is the current mayor of Hoboken, New Jersey and is Hoboken's 36th mayor. He was elected mayor on May 8 2001, replacing Anthony Russo. In the 2001 election, Roberts received 6,064 votes and Russo received 4,759 votes. Roberts' inaugural address was on July 1 2001, and he announced a "master plan" for the city that was approved by the Hoboken Planning Board in 2004.

  37. Andy Leonard

    Andrew Jackson Leonard (June 1, 1846 - August 21, 1903) played left field for the original Cincinnati Red Stockings, the first fully professional baseball team. He was one of five men to play regularly for both the Cincinnati and the Boston Red Stockings, the latter winning six championships during his seven seasons. He played several infield positions on lesser teams in his early twenties but left field was his regular professional position.

  38. Bill Barth

    Bill (William Henry) Barth (December 13, 1942 in New York City - July 14, 2000 in Amsterdam, Holland) was an American Blues guitarist who along with John Fahey, and Henry Vestine located 1930s blues great Skip James in a hospital in Tunica, Mississippi in 1964. In the late 1960s he was a founding member of the band The Insect Trust. Co-founded the Memphis Country Blues Society, a non-profit organization dedicated to the preservation and promotion of the Delta blues.

  39. Jessica Bal

    I like being spontaneous. I love going out and getting wild, but every now and then I like to sit at home and chill w/my girls (as long as there's wine laying around somewhere). It all really depends on the phase of the moon (j/k). I might be the one they're talking about when they say THAT girl ;-) and yes I love to rock the big hoops, long nails, lots of rings, straight up Jersey trash I mean pride.

  40. Ny-nj Path Train

    For more information and rider alerts visit www.panynj.gov.; Thank you for riding PATH.

1   2   3   4   5