- Malcolm Dome
Malcolm Dome is a famous English writer/journalist on metal since (1979). In addition to writing books, he has been a journalist for Record Mirror, Kerrang! and Metal Hammer, among others. He also co-runs and DJs on an online radio station called TotalRock. www.totalrock.com - Ram Chandra Dome
Ram Chandra Dome (born 8 February, 1959 in Chilla village) is an Indian politician. He is currently a Lok Sabha member for the Birbhum constituency in West Bengal. He has been a member of Lok Sabha since 1989 and associated with ministry of Health and Family Welfare. - Robert Döme
Robert Döme is a Slovak professional ice hockey right wing currently playing in Sweden for Elitserien's MODO Hockey. After playing three seasons in the International Hockey League, Döme was drafted 17th overall in the 1997 NHL Entry Draft by the Pittsburgh Penguins. He appeared in 30 games with the Penguins in the 1997-98 season, and 22 more in the 1999-2000 season. He made his most recent NHL appearance in the 2002-03 season, playing in one game with the Calgary Flames. - Ray Nagin
Mayor Nagin said yesterday that "there are way to many frickin' - excuse me - cooks in the kitchen... they should have done these sandbagging operations first thing in the morning and it didn't get done... quite frankly I'm very frustrated" and today he is already on track to get the organizational problems fixed. New Orleans made a very rare, wise decision to elect this man, and I hope they keep him in office for quite a while. - James Garner
James Garner (born April 7, 1928) is an American film and television actor. He has starred in several television series spanning a career of more than five decades, including his roles as Bret Maverick in the popular 1950s western-comedy series, "Maverick", Jim Rockford in the popular 1970s detective drama, "The Rockford Files" and the father of Katey Sagal's character on "8 Simple Rules" following the death of John Ritter. - Kenneth Anger
Kenneth Anger (born February 3, 1927) is an American underground avant-garde film-maker and author. - Chris Craft
Christopher Craft (born in Porthleven, Cornwall, November 17, 1939) is a British racing driver who has competed in many different forms of motor sport. In 1971, he participated in 2 World Championship Formula One Grands Prix driving a Brabham prepared by Alain de Cadenet's team "Ecurie Evergreen", but failed to score a championship point. - Graham Lewis
Edward Graham Lewis (born 22 February 1953 in Grantham, Lincolnshire) is an English musician. Lewis is the bassist of the punk band Wire, which began in 1976. Lewis has been involved in many side projects, including Dome (with fellow Wire member B.C. Gilbert), Duet Emmo, P'o, Kluba Cupol, Ocsid, He Said Omala, and others. His solo projects have included He Said and Hox. Lewis is currently residing in Uppsala, Sweden. - Dennis Taylor
Dennis Taylor (born in Brooklyn, New York) is a soul singer and performer, best-known in the UK. As a child, Dennis was singing as part of a church choir in Brooklyn at the age of 7, but later moved to Virginia, and signed up to the US Air Force at 18, with whom he served for six years. Taylor then returned to New York, and following his earlier success in a talent competition, was able to secure a minor recording contract, … - Paul Hawken
Paul Hawken (b. 4 February 1946) is an environmentalist, entrepreneur, journalist, and best-selling author. At age 20, he dedicated his life to changing the relationship between business and the environment, and between human and living systems in order to create a more just and sustainable world. His work includes starting and running ecological businesses, writing and teaching about the impact of commerce upon the environment, … - Don Monson
Donald "Don" Monson (born April 1933 in Menahga, Minnesota) is a former American college basketball coach and the father of basketball coach Dan Monson. He was a high school head coach for 18 seasons and college head coach for 14 seasons: five at Idaho and nine at Oregon. - Frank Viola
Frank John Viola, Jr. (born April 19 1960 in East Meadow, New York) is a former starting pitcher in Major League Baseball who played for the Minnesota Twins (1982-89), New York Mets (1989-91), Boston Red Sox (1992-94), Cincinnati Reds (1995) and Toronto Blue Jays (1996). He batted and threw left-handed, and was nicknamed "Sweet Music" - an unusual nickname he picked up after a Minnesota sports writer declared that when Viola pitched, … - Philip Reid
Philip Reid was born a slave in the early 19th century at Charleston, South Carolina. Through an extraordinary turn of events he came to be a master craftsman and artisan, playing a key role in the completion of the United States Capitol building at Washington D.C. The Statue of Freedom, the crowning feature atop the dome of the U.S. Capitol, was hoisted into place on December 2, 1863. - Walter M. Miller Jr.
Walter Michael Miller, Jr. was an American science fiction author primarily known for a single novel, "A Canticle for Leibowitz", the only novel he published in his lifetime. - John Queen
John Queen (born February 11, 1882 in Lanarkshire, Scotland, died 1946) was a Manitoba politician, and the second parliamentary leader of that province's Independent Labour Party. He also served as mayor of Winnipeg on two occasions. A cooper by trade, Queen arrived in Canada in 1906 with his younger brother William, moving into a rooming house at 259 Dorothy St., … - Auguste de Montferrand
Auguste de Montferrand (January 23, 1786 - July 10, 1858) was a French Neoclassical architect who worked primarily in Russia. His two best known works are the Saint Isaac's Cathedral and the Alexander Column in Saint Petersburg. - Elfego Baca
Elfego Baca was a legendary lawman, lawyer, and politician in the closing days of the American wild west. Elfego Baca was born in New Mexico just before the end of the American Civil War. His family later moved to Topeka, Kansas when he was a young child. Upon his mother’s death in 1880, Baca returned with his father to Belen, New Mexico where his father became a marshal. In 1884, at age 19, Baca stole some guns, bought a mail-order sheriff’s badge, … - Félix Candela
Félix Candela was a Mexican architect and engineer. He worked from the 1930s to the 1960s, and he accomplished a great deal for Mexican architecture. Candela’s major contribution to structural engineering was the development of thin shells made out of reinforced concrete. He worked very hard during his life time to prove the real nature and potential reinforced concrete had in structural engineering. - Ross Cheever
Ross Cheever (born April 12, 1964 in Rome, Italy) is an American race car driver and is the younger brother of former Formula 1 driver and Indianapolis 500 champion Eddie Cheever. Born in Rome, Ross never completed a full season in elite level motorsport, however, he did make four CART starts for A.J. Foyt Enterprises in 1992 and drove for Dome in Formula 3000 and Japanese Formula Three in the early 1990's. - Domenico Gagini
Domenico Gagini (1449 - 1492) was an Italian sculptor. He was the son of Pietro Gagini. The Gagini were a family of sculptors and painters working during the Middle Ages and Renaissance. First recorded in Genoa in the early 15th century, was Domenico's grandfather Beltrame Gagini, and his three sons Pietro, Giovanni and Pace Domenico Gagini was the first sculptor of this family to achieve international fame. - Nikola Firentinac
Nikola Firentinac was a Renaissance sculptor and master architect. He was of Tuscan birth, but lived most of his life and conducted much of his work in Croatia. He is best known by his work on the Cathedral of St.Jacob in Šibenik, in 1455. After the death of Juraj Dalmatinac, Nikola finished the cathedral and its original stone dome following the original plans of Juraj. - Ambrose Swasey
Ambrose Swasey (December 19, 1846-June 15, 1937) was an American mechanical engineer and inventor. He was born in Exeter, New Hampshire. He apprenticed as a machinist and was employed at Pratt & Whitney. As his career progressed he became a foreman in the gear cutting section. He developed a new technique for making gear-tooth cutters. Subsequently he and Worcester R. Warner formed the machine tool firm Warner & Swasey Company, based in Cleveland, Ohio. - John Steven McGroarty
John Steven McGroarty (August 20 1862 - August 7 1944) was a poet, "Los Angeles Times" columnist, and author. Born at Buck Mountain, in Foster Township, near Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania he was the youngest of 12 children. One of McGroarty's best-known works is "The Mission Play" (1911), a three-hour pageant describing the California Missions from their founding in 1769 through secularization in 1834, ending with their "final ruin" in 1847. - Trdat The Architect
Trdat the Architect, known in Latin as Tiridates, was chief architect of the Bagratuni Dynasty of Armenia. In 961, Ashot III moved his capital from Kars to the great city of Ani where he assembled new palaces and rebuilt the walls. The Catholicosate was moved to the Arkina district in the suburbs of Ani where Trdat completed the building of the Catholicosal palace and the Mother Cathedral of Ani. - Stefano Ittar
Stefano Ittar (c1730 -1789) was born in Poland, where his father, a member of one of Italy's aristocratic families the Guidone de Hittar, had fled following a disagreement with the Grand Duke of Tuscany. While Ittar was still young his family moved to Rome, where under the patronage of Cardinal Alessandro Albani Ittar later studied architecture at this time influenced in Rome by the concepts of Francesco Borromini. - George A. Stephen
George A. Stephen, Sr. (c. 1922 - February 11, 1993) was an American inventor, entrepreneur, and the founder of Weber-Stephen Products Co., the company best known for the manufacturing of charcoal and gas grills. Stephen is credited with the invention of the Weber Kettle grill by cutting a metal buoy in half and fashioning a dome shaped grill with a rounded lid, which he began selling in 1952. - John Defrancisco
John Defrancisco is responsible for maintaining the scoreboards, sound system, energy management system, alarm systems and computer systems at the Dome. He oversees hazardous waste disposal and safety issues. He has worked at the Carrier Dome since 1997. Defrancisco was first employed by the University in 1984 as an electronic maintenance specialist with Resident Services. In 1988 he was transferred to the electronics shop in Physical Plant. - Étienne Sulpice Hallet
Étienne Sulpice Hallet was a French-born U.S. architect. Around 1789, Hallet went to the United States. There he became known as Stephen Hallet. He worked as Pierre L'Enfant's draftsman. Hallet submitted plans for the future Capitol in Washington, D.C. in form of a giant dome to Thomas Jefferson, however, the design of William Thornton was favored in 1793. Hallet then worked as supervisor for Thornton, until he tried to force some of his own designs. - Antoni Wiwulski
Antoni Wiwulski (1877-1919) was a Polish-Lithuanian architect and sculptor. He was born February 20, 1877 in Totma near Vologda in Imperial Russia. He graduated two of the most prestigious art and architecture universities of the epoch: the École Supérieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris and the Higher Technical School in Vienna. Among the most notable of his works are: * the Battle of Grunwald monument in Kraków, Poland * Chapel in Šiluva, … - Abdullah Gërguri
Abdullah Gërguri was a Kosovo Albanian painter, an important artist in restoration and conservation of the icons and frescoes. Gërguri was born in the village Sibofc of Podujevo, in Kosovo, Yugoslavia. The painter-conservator Gërguri while he was working at the Institute for Protection of Cultural Monuments in Priština, was engaged heavily in conservation of frescos, icons and monuments, and also in their restoration. He finished the High School of Arts in Peć (Alb. - Döme Sztójay
Döme Sztójay was a Hungarian soldier and diplomat who served as Prime Minister of Hungary during World War II. Born in Vršac, Sztójay joined the Austro-Hungarian Army as a young man and served as a colonel during World War I. After the war, Sztójay served in Admiral Miklós Horthy’s counter-revolutionary army, specializing in counter-espionage. - Johann-Georg Bendl
Johann-Georg Bendl or Jan Jiří Bendl (before 1620 - Prague, 27 May 1680) was a Baroque sculptor mainly at work in Prague. He was the son of the Bohemian sculptor Georg Bendl (c. 1570 - Prague, 1656). The wooden pulpit (now destroyed) of the St. Wenceslas church (of the Augustinian Order) in Prague was probably one of his earliest works. He also sculpted the pulpit in the church Kostel Panny Marie pod Řetězem in the Prague district Malá Strana. - Dome Karukoski
Dome Karukoski is a Finnish film director, His feature Beauty and the Bastard "(Tyttö sinä olet tähti)" showed at the Berlin International Film Festival and Tribeca Film Festival in 2006. The film. which stars Pamela Tola, concerns young people in Finland who are caught between conventional careers and more alternative forms of living. The film's score contains contemporary Finnish pop music, particularly hip-hop and rap. - Ryoji Ikeda
Japan's leading electronic composer/artist, Ryoji Ikeda, focuses on the minutiae of ultrasonics, frequencies and the essential characteristics of sound itself. For the past six years, Forma has produced and toured all of Ikeda's exhibition and performance projects worldwide. Since 1995, Ikeda has been intensely active through concerts, installations, and recordings, integrating sound, acoustics and sublime imagery. - Joseph Leconte
Joseph Le Conte (February 26 1823 - June 6 1901) was an American geologist. Of Huguenot descent, he was born in Liberty County, Georgia to Louis Le Conte, patriarch of the noted Le Conte family. He was educated at Franklin College in Athens, Georgia (now the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Georgia), where he graduated in 1841; he afterwards studied medicine and received his degree at the New York College of Physicians and Surgeons in 1845. - Jason Whetzell
I made these shows. - Tünde Döme
- Domenico Raimondi
- Dr David Christopher Dome MD
- Ivory Dome
Nigerian native, Lustful,Shallow, Work in progress, The Most beautiful boogie man,Fallible, Sleek and Chic . MUSIC,ART AND LITERATURE WHORE. I WILL DISAPPOINT YOU.
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