- Kelvin Cato
Kelvin T. Cato (born August 26, 1974 in Atlanta, Georgia) is a professional basketball player. He is currently playing center for the New York Knicks of the NBA. - Milton Cato
Robert Milton Cato (June 3 1915- February 10 1997) was a socialist political leader in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines. Cato was born on Saint Vincent island. He joined the Canadian army and was involved in battles during World War II. After returning to Saint Vincent, he became involved in local politics. In 1955 he co-founded the Saint Vincent Labour Party, also known as the Unity Labour Party. In 1967, when Saint Vincent and the Grenadines became an associated state, … - Molly Scott Cato
Molly Scott Cato is a member of the Green Party of England and Wales and an academic. Molly is Senior Lecturer in Social Economy at the University of Wales Institute, Cardiff and a researcher for the Wales Institute for Research into Cooperatives. She earned her Ph.D. from the University of Wales with a thesis on employment policy in the South Wales Valleys, having taken a first degree at Oxford University. - Nancy Cato
Nancy Cato OAM (1917-2000) was an Australian writer. She published several historical novels and biographies, as well as two volumes of poetry. She was also a strong campaigner for environmental conservation. Cato was born in Glen Osmond in South Australia, and was a fifth-generation Australian. She studied English Literature and Italian at the University of Adelaide, graduating in 1939, then completing a two-year course at the South Australian School of Arts. - Marcus Porcius Cato
Marcus Porcius Cato, son of Cato the Younger by his first marriage to Atilia. He was the brother of Porcia Catonis, who was first married to Marcus Calpurnius Bibulus (co-consul with Caesar in 59 BC), and later married their half-cousin (on the maternal side) Marcus Junius Brutus. He had fought in the battle of Thapsus with his father. They were defeated and his father Cato committed suicide. Julius Caesar pardoned young Cato and allowed him to keep his father's property. - Suzy Cato
Suzy Cato (born 20 June 1968) is an Australian-born New Zealand children's entertainer. She is best-known as the host of several New Zealand children's television programmes, most notably "3pm" and "Suzy's World". For several years she also hosted "You and Me". Born in Brisbane, Australia, Cato moved to New Zealand as a child, living in Hamilton, then Kaikohe, then eventually moving to Auckland, where she still lives today. - Diomedes Cato
Diomedes Cato was an Italian-born composer and lute player, who lived and worked entirely in Poland. He is known mainly for his instrumental music. He mixed the style of the late Renaissance with the emerging Baroque, and also Italian idioms with Polish folk material; and in addition he was one of the first native-born Italian composers to visit Sweden. - Gavin Cato
Gavin Cato was an American child of Guyanese descent who was killed by a car driven by a Jewish driver, sparking the Crown Heights Riot. Seven year-old Cato and his cousin Angela were both struck, but she survived her injuries. Underlying racial tensions in the area and perceived inequality in the way the Jewish driver and Black pedestrians were treated at the scene led to three days of rioting. The driver fled to Israel before being charged, … - Bob Cato
Bob Cato (1923-1999) was a graphic designer whose work in record album cover design contributed to the development of music and popular culture for five decades. He was vice president of creative services at Columbia Records, and later at United Artists - Daniel Griswold
Daniel T. Griswold is director of the Cato Institute's Center for Trade Policy Studies. Before joining Cato in 1997, Griswold served as a congressional press secretary and a daily newspaper editorial page editor. Griswold holds a bachelor's degree in journalism from the University of Wisconsin and a M.Sc. in the politics of the world economy from the London School of Economics. - Curius Dentatus
Manius Curius Dentatus (d. 270 BC), son of Manius, was a plebeian hero of ancient Rome, notable for ending the Samnite War. According to Pliny he was born with teeth, thus the cognomen "Dentatus". He first appears as consul in 290 BC, defeating both the Samnites and Sabines that year, and (according to the sources) celebrating two triumphs. As suffect consul in 284 BC, he defeated the Senones, as consul again in 275 BC, … - Camila Bordonaba
Camila Bordonaba (b. El Palomar September 4, 1984) is a well known Argentine actress and composer. Bordonaba, nicknamed "Cato" by family and friends, is probably best remembered for her role as "Pato" and "Camila Bustillo" in the 1995 Telefe telenovela, "Tiny Angels". - Gaius Asinius Pollio
Gaius Asinius Pollio (65 BC - AD 4) was a Roman orator, poet, playwright, literary critic and historian, whose contemporary history, although lost, provided much of the material for the historians Appian and Plutarch. Pollio was most famously a patron of Virgil and a friend of Horace and had poems dedicated to him by both men. An inscription tells us his father was called Gnaeus. He had a brother called Asinius Marrucinus, known for his tasteless practical jokes, … - Nonius Marcellus
Nonius Marcellus, Latin grammarian and lexicographer, lived at the end of the 3rd or the beginning of the 4th century AD. He is often called the "Peripatetic of Thubursicum" (in Numidia, probably his birth-place). He is the author of a sort of lexicon, called "De compendiosa doctrina", in 20 sections or chapters, the first twelve of which deal with language and grammar, the remaining eight with special subjects (navigation, costume, food, arms). - Varro Atacinus
Publius Terentius Varro Atacinus (82 BC - ca. 35 BC) was an early Roman poet, more polished than the more famous and learned Varro Reatinus, his contemporary, and more widely read by the Augustans, who apparently dared not mention the other Varro's name. He was born in the province of Gallia Narbonensis, the southern part of Gaul with its capital at Narbonne, on the river Atax (now the Aude), for his cognomen "Atacinus" indicates his birthplace. - Curiatius Maternus
Curiatius Maternus appears in the "Dialogues" of Tacitus. He was clearly an author of tragedies in Latin, having composed a "Domitius", a "Medea", and a "Cato" by AD 74 or 75. He is probably the same as the sophist Maternus who was put to death by Domitian for speaking against tyrants in a practice speech. - Petrus de Crescentiis
Petrus de Crescentiis was a 13th century Bolognese author and descendant of Cato and Columella. His work, "Liber Commodorum Ruralium" (1303) was one of the principal agricultural works of the Middle Ages. De Crescentiis was a strong advocate of waiting till a wine was at least 1 year old before drinking it, in contrast to the contemporary view of critics of that time who felt that wine was best drunk very young. - William Duncombe
William Duncombe (January 19, 1690 - February 26, 1769) was a British author and playwright. He worked in the Navy Office from 1706 until 1725. That year, he and Elizabeth Hughes won a very large lottery sum on a joint ticket. He married Elizabeth in 1726 and "retired into literary leisure." The nature of their match is unknown, but the two did have a son together. - Tom G. Palmer
Tom G. Palmer is Vice President for International Programs at the Cato Institute, director of the Center for Promotion of Human Rights, a Senior Fellow of the Institute, and director of Cato University, the Institute's educational arm. - Nicholas Adam
Nicholas Adam was a French linguist and writer. Born in Paris, he achieved distinction by authoring a grammar book which bore the title: "La vraie manière d'apprendre une langue quelconque, vivante ou morte, par le moyen de la langue française" ("True manner of learning an unspecified, living or died language, by the means of the French language"). It consisted of five grammars: French, Latin, Italian, German, and English. - Brink Lindsey
As Cato's vice president for research, Brink Lindsey helps to oversee the Institute's current research agenda and develops new research programs. From 1998 to 2004, he was director of Cato's Center for Trade Policy Studies , helping to make it a leading voice for free trade. An attorney with extensive experience in international trade regulation, Lindsey was formerly director of regulatory studies at Cato and senior editor of Regulation magazine. - Will Wilkinson
Will Wilkinson (born 1973) is an American libertarian writer and thinker. Currently he is a policy analyst at the Cato Institute where he works on a variety of issues including Social Security reform and, most notably, the policy implications of happiness research. Wilkinson is also the managing editor of the Cato Institute's monthly web magazine, Cato Unbound. - Publius Flavius Vegetius Renatus
Publius Flavius Vegetius Renatus was a writer of the Later Roman Empire. Nothing is known of his life or station beyond what he tells us in his two surviving works: "Epitoma rei militaris" (also referred to as "De Re Militari"), and the lesser-known "Digesta Artis Mulomedicinae", a guide to veterinary medicine. - Georgius Merula
Georgius Merula (c. 1430 - 1494) was an Italian humanist and classical scholar born in Alessandria in Piedmont. The greater part of his life was spent in Venice and Milan, where he held a professorship and continued to teach until his death. To Merula we are indebted for the editio princeps of Plautus (1472), of the Scriptores ivi rusticae, Cato, Varro, Columella, Palladius (1472) and possibly of Martial (1471). - Cato The Elder
Marcus Porcius Cato (Latin: <small>M·PORCIVS·M·F·CATO</small>) (234 BC, Tusculum-149 BC) was a Roman statesman, surnamed the Censor ("Censorius"), "Sapiens, Priscus", or the Elder ("Major"), to distinguish him from Cato the Younger (his great-grandson). He came of an ancient plebeian family, noted for some military services, but not known for the discharge of the higher civil offices. - Cato The Younger
Marcus Porcius Catō Uticensis (95 BC-46 BC), known as Cato the Younger to distinguish him from his great-grandfather Cato the Elder, was a politician and statesman in the late Roman Republic, and a follower of the Stoic philosophy. He is remembered for his legendary stubbornness and tenacity (especially in his lengthy conflict with Gaius Julius Caesar), as well as his immunity to bribes, his moral integrity, … - West Digges
West Digges (1720-1786) was an English actor who made his first stage appearance in Dublin in 1749 as Jaffier in "Venice Preserv'd"; and both there and in Edinburgh until 1764 he acted in many tragic roles with success. He was the original "young Norval" in John Home's "Douglas" (1756). His first London appearance was as Cato at the Haymarket Theatre in 1777, and he afterwards played King Lear, Macbeth, Shylock and Wolsey. - Cato A. Hansen
Cato Andre Hansen is a Norwegian professional football defender who currently plays for Norwegian team Bryne. He played for Bodø/Glimt from 1995 to 2006, playing 217 games in the Norwegian Premier League. He became captain of the club for the 2006 season.. Three months into the season, Hansen accepted a contract offer for Bryne, and Bodø/Glimt agreed to let Hansen leave the club six months before his contract was due to expire. - Cato June
Cato June (born November 18, 1979 in Riverside, California) is an American football outside linebacker for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers of the National Football League. June excels as an outside linebacker, especially in the "Tampa-2" scheme. - Cato Guntveit
Cato Guntveit is a Norwegian footballer who currently plays for SK Brann. He was the captain of Brann from 2004 until recently, when Brann coach Mons Ivar Mjelde decided Martin Andresen should take over the captaincy prior to the 2006 season. Guntveit played briefly for local club Fana before joining Brann in 1995. He also spent two seasons at Aberdeen, but has played in Brann since 2002. Guntveit is married and has two children. One of the few "local lads" in Brann, … - Cato Bontjes van Beek
Cato Bontjes van Beek was a German member of the resistance against the Nazi régime. - Cato Maximilian Guldberg
Cato Maximilian Guldberg (August 11 1836 in Christiania (today Oslo) – January 14 1902, Oslo) was a Norwegian mathematician and chemist. Guldberg worked at the University of Oslo. Together with his brother-in-law Peter Waage, he defined the law of mass action. - Radley Balko
Previously, Balko was a policy analyst for the Cato Institute specializing in civil liberties issues, where he published a paper on alcohol policy and a groundbreaking study on paramilitary police raids. He is a columnist for FoxNews.com and has been published in The Wall Street Journal, Playboy, Time , The Washington Post, Los Angeles Times , Slate , Forbes , ESPN, the National Post , Worth and numerous other publications. - Diogo Ortiz de Villegas
D. Diogo Ortiz de Villegas "Calzadilla", was theologian and astronomer of King John II of Portugal. He was born in Calzadilla, Spain, in 1457 ca. and died in Almeirim, in 1519. He was Bishop of Tanger, later Viseu. Ortiz taught on the writings of Cato, Terence, Virgil, Sallust and some parts of the Bible, the theory of the planets and some elementary matters about astrology he heard from Tomás de Torres, an eminent doctor and astrologer of that time. - Sir Hyde Parker 5th Baronet
Vice Admiral Sir Hyde Parker, 5th Baronet. (February 25, 1714 - 1782), was born at Tredington, Worcestershire. His father, a clergyman, was a son of Sir Henry Parker. His paternal grandfather had married a daughter of Bishop Alexander Hyde, of Salisbury. He began his career at sea in the merchant service. Entering the Royal Navy at the age of 24, he was made lieutenant in 1744, and in 1748 he was made post-captain. - Hilary Stabb
Hilary Stabb is Jonathan Gray's executive assistant. Ages ago, she used to act, and has a few credits on stage and screen as Hil Cato. Under that name until 2004, she wrote poetry and fiction, appeared as a spoken-word artist, performed with jazz bands, painted, did some art production for the NYC club and party scene, produced a few shows on the internet, and wrote lyrics for rock band The Deep Down. In May 2004, she married Tom Stabb, lead singer/bassist for The Deep Down. In May 2005,... - Roger Pilon
Roger Pilon is Vice President for Legal Affairs for the Cato Institute, and an American libertarian legal theorist. In particular, he has developed a libertarian version of the rights theory of his teacher, noted philosopher Alan Gewirth. These views are discussed in discourse ethics. - John Cato
John Cato is an accomplished actor, comedian and voice-over artist. He can currently be heard as the Voice of DELL on their national commercials. He has also appeared in various national on-camera and voice-over commercials, on television in "General Hospital' and on HGTV, as well as independent features, CD-ROMS, and corporate industrials. His love of acting comes from his father, who introduced him to the comedy of Laurel and Hardy, Buster Keaton, the Marx Bros. and Abbott and... - Suzy Cato
Speaks fluent Maori - Cato
Well I'm a computer geeky if there ever was one. I will play around with my 4 computers pretty much non-stop if I could. I have gone from being a tech head to and IT auditor which has been an interesting change to say the least. I am now newly married and have a dog named Brady who is a blast. I usually try to take him to the park when I get home from work every day.
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