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  1. Wacey Rabbit

    Wacey Rabbit (born November 6, 1986 in Lethbridge, Alberta) is a Canadian professional ice hockey centre who currently plays for the Vancouver Giants of the Western Hockey League. Rabbit was drafted in the 5th round, 154th overall by the Boston Bruins in the 2005 NHL Entry Draft.

  2. Bunny Rabbit

    Bunny Rabbit is a New York City musical artist, renowned for using the contrast of happy-sounding, almost lullaby-like vocal sounds in combination with hard hitting lyrics about death, sex and drugs. Bunny Rabbit uses a pseudo-pop-art style for her artistic video clips featuring raw animation and newspaper cut-out style animation. A native of Brooklyn, NY, Bunny Rabbit has gained an international following and radio airplay, …

  3. John Updike

    John Hoyer Updike (born March 18 1932 in Shillington, Pennsylvania) is an American writer. Updike's most famous work is his Rabbit series ("Rabbit, Run"; "Rabbit Redux"; "Rabbit Is Rich"; "Rabbit At Rest"; and "Rabbit Remembered"). "Rabbit is Rich" and "Rabbit at Rest" both won Pulitzer Prizes for Updike. Describing his subject as "the American small town, …

  4. Johnny Hodges

    John Cornelius "Johnny" Hodges (25 July, 1907-11 May, 1970) was an American alto saxophonist and lead player of Duke Ellington's saxophone section, born in Cambridge, Massachusetts. He spent 38 years with Ellington, leaving to lead his own band from 1951 to 1955. Hodges started playing with Lloyd Scott, Sidney Bechet, Lucky Roberts and Chick Webb. When Ellington wanted to expand his band in 1928, Ellington's clarinet player Barney Bigard recommended Hodges, …

  5. Carl Stalling

    Carl W. Stalling (November 10, 1891-November 29, 1972) was a noted American composer and arranger of music for animated cartoons. He is most closely associated with the Looney Tunes shorts produced by Warner Bros., where he worked, averaging one complete score each week, for twenty-two years. Stalling started his career as an accompanist for silent films on the piano and theater organ in Independence, Missouri.

  6. Ken Sansom

    Kenneth Sansom first began acting in the early seventies. His first role was in and episode of "Mayberry R.F.D.", a continuation of the "Andy Griffith Show". He is best known for his role as Rabbit in "Winnie the Pooh". Ken is a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

  7. Will Ryan

    Will Ryan (November 13, 1939) is a voice actor originally from Cleveland, Ohio. Something of a prodigy, his music career began when, while still in high school, he signed the first of two recording contracts with CBS Records. Leaving music for a while, he took over the job once held by R. Crumb at the American Greetings card company back in his native Cleveland. Transferring to live comedy, he formed a team with Phil Baron and, as Willio and Phillio, …

  8. Art Paul

    Art (Arthur) Paul (born January 18, 1925 in Chicago, Illinois) is an American graphics designer and the designer of the Playboy bunny. Paul studied at the Art Institute of Chicago (1940-1943) and at the Institute of Design [Illinois Institute of Technology](1946-1950). He was working as a freelance designer when he in 1953 was contacted by playboy founder Hugh Hefner who needed a logo for his new magazine. He created the now famous rabbit wearing a tuxedo bow tie.

  9. Nina Raine

    Nina Raine is an English theatre director and playwright. She graduated from Christ Church, Oxford with a 'double First' in English Literature. She won the Channel Four/Jerwood Spaces Young Regional Theatre Director bursary in 2000 to train as a director at the Royal Court Theatre where she assisted on a number of plays including "My Zinc Bed", "Mouth to Mouth", "Presence" and "Fucking Games".

  10. Frank Fenner

    Frank John Fenner (born 21 December, 1914) is an Australian scientist with a distinguished career in the field of virology. His two greatest achievements are cited as the eradication of smallpox, and the control of Australia's rabbit plague through the introduction of myxoma virus.

  11. Jennifer Terran

    Jennifer Terran is an American singer-songwriter and pianist. Multi-talented, she is also a hip hop dance instructor, as well as a producer, having established her own music label, Grizelda Records, on which she has produced five solo albums: "Cruel", "Rabbit", "The Musician", "Live from Painted Cave" and "Full Moon in 3". Her childhood spent in Los Angeles, California was infused with music and musical influences.

  12. Yukiru Sugisaki

    Yukiru Sugisaki was born on December 26, a Capricorn with blood type O. Her hobbies are dramas, video games, and "collecting rabbit things". Sugisaki's face is rarely seen, as she prefers to draw herself with a rabbit face or mask in her manga profile images. She also seems to have developed a trait of leaving her series unfinished before moving on to different projects (Notably D.N.Angel, which has seen multiple month-long droughts between chapters.

  13. Bodil Joensen

    Bodil Joensen or Bodil Jørgensen was a Danish pornographic actress born in the village Hundige, near Copenhagen. (Her name is pronounced "Yu<nowiki>'</nowiki>En-sen"). An animal lover, she ran a small entrepreneurial farm and animal husbandry business, and enjoyed celebrity status from her many pornographic films in which she engaged in sex acts with animals. An icon and celebrity for a time, with her own successful business, …

  14. Junius Matthews

    Junius Conyers Matthews was born on (June 12, 1890 in Chicago, Illinois - January 18, 1978). He was a private in World War I before becoming an actor. Determined to become a popular radio and television actor, his career began on stage where he got his first role in the classic silent film, "The Silent Witness" (1917). He later played the role of the "Tin Woodman" on radio version of "The Wizard of Oz".

  15. Piero Manzoni

    Piero Manzoni (july 13 1933 - February 6, 1963) was an Italian artist best known for his ironic conceptual art in direct response to the work of Yves Klein. Manzoni was born in Soncino, province of Cremona. In his paintings Manzoni experimented with various pigments and materials. In one case he used phosphorescent paint and cobalt chloride so the colours would change over time. However, he had some less ordinary ideas as well.

  16. Sam Crane

    Sam Crane is a British actor primarily focused on theatre. His theatre credits include "Ghosts" at the Bristol Old Vic, "And Then There Were None" at the Gielgud Theatre, "24 Hour Plays" at the Old Vic, "Major Barbara" at the Manchester Royal Exchange, "Rabbit" with Frantic Assembly, "A Little Requiem for Kantor" at the ICA and most recently, as Rodorigo in "Othello" at the Globe Theatre.

  17. Mary Tofts

    Mary Tofts (born c. 1701) was a maidservant from Godalming, England, who in 1726 became the subject of considerable controversy when she hoaxed doctors into believing that she had given birth to at least sixteen rabbits. Tofts was twenty-five years old and married at the time, and despite a miscarriage in August had still seemed pregnant. She went into apparent labor and the Guildford male-midwife John Howard arrived to assist.

  18. Geoff Pierson

    Geoff Pierson (born June 16, 1949 in Chicago, Illinois) is an American actor best known for his role on The WB series "Unhappily Ever After" as Jack Malloy, the father of a dysfunctional family whose best friend is a stuffed animal rabbit named Mr. Floppy. Other TV roles a regular role on the short-lived "That 80's Show", and recurring roles on "Grace Under Fire" as Grace's ex-husband Jimmy and on "24" as President John Keeler.

  19. Brendan McMahon

    Brendan Francis McMahon (born New Zealand) is a financier from Sydney, Australia who made headlines for animal cruelty in July and August, 2005. He jointly operated Meares-McMahon Capital, a finance and mortgage brokering firm. His business partner is the brother-in-law of James Packer. He bought the animals from pet stores. He smoked ice regularly and mutilated the animals. When the carcasses were found, some of them had been skinned, …

  20. Eiki Eiki

    is a female mangaka from Japan who has been writing manga since 1998. Most of her manga are written under the yaoi genre. One of her good friends, also a fellow manga artist, is Mikiyo Tsuda, otherwise known as Taishi Zaō. They often co-author manga together, display their art together, and have autograph sessions together, among other things. Eiki Eiki has even been known to sometimes act as "Taishi Zaō's" manager.

  21. Carol Vitale

    Carol Vitale (born November 14, 1948, in Elizabeth, New Jersey) is an American model and television program hostess/personality, who resides simultaneously in both Los Angeles, California and Miami, Florida. She was "Playboy" magazine's Playmate of the Month for its July 1974 issue. Her centerfold was photographed by David Chan. Carol grew up in New Jersey with six brothers and sisters. She had a very wholesome childhood and was close to her maternal grandparents.

  22. Alberto Tarantini

    Alberto Tarantini is an Argentine former football player. He played as a defensive left back early in his career, and later as a full back. He rose through the Boca Juniors youth divisions in the early 1970s, and was noted for his afro hairdo and his large front teeth, which earned him the nickname "conejo" ("rabbit"). Tarantini was part of the under-23 team that won the 1975 Toulon tournament, together with Jorge Valdano, Américo Gallego, and others, …

  23. Bear Jj1

    Bear JJ1 was a brown bear whose travels and exploits in Austria and Germany in the first half of 2006 drew international attention. JJ1, also known as Bruno in the German press (some newspapers also gave the bear different names, such as Beppo or Petzi), is believed to have been the first brown bear on German soil in 170 years. Previously, the last sighting of a bear in what is now Germany was recorded in 1838 when hunters shot a bear in Bavaria.

  24. Camille Guérin

    Jean-Marie Camille Guérin (b. December 22, 1872, Poitiers, France; d. June 9, 1961, Paris. French veterinarian, bacteriologist and immunologist who, together with Albert Calmette developed the Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG), a vaccine for immunization against tuberculosis. Camille Guérin was born in Poitiers to a family of modest means. His father died of tuberculosis in 1882 (as well as his wife, in 1918).

  25. Rabbit Brown

    Richard "Rabbit" Brown (c1880-c1937) was a Black blues guitarist and composer. His music was characterized by a mixture of blues, pop songs, and original topical ballads. He recorded six record sides for Victor Records on May 11, 1927. Rabbit Brown was most likely born around 1880 in or near New Orleans, Louisiana. He did live in New Orleans from his youth on, and eventually moved to a rough district called the Battlefield.

  26. Rabbit Kekai

    Rabbit Kekai (November 11, 1920-) is a professional surfer and innovator of surfing. He was the master of surfing in the 1930s, 40s, and 50s and also winner of the Peruvian and Makaha International titles.

  27. Rabbit Maranville

    Walter James Vincent Maranville (November 11, 1891 - January 5, 1954), better known as Rabbit Maranville, was a Major League Baseball shortstop. At the time of his retirement in 1935, he had played in a record 23 seasons in the National League, a mark which wasn't broken until 1986 by Pete Rose. He was widely known as one of "baseball's most famous clowns" due to his practical jokes and lack of inhibitions.

  28. Rabbit Robinson

    William Clyde "Rabbit" Robinson (March 5, 1910 - April 8, 1915), was a Major League Baseball player who played 3 seasons in the major leagues for the Washington Senators (1903), Detroit Tigers (1904), and Cincinnati Reds (1910). Robinson played in 206 games, 64 as a second baseman, 54 as a shortstop, 50 as an outfielder, and 33 as a third baseman. Robinson had a .223 career batting average and a .294 on base percentage, with 156 hits, 71 runs scored, 63 bases on balls, …

  29. Bartolomeu Perestrelo

    Bartolomeu Perestrelo (also called Pedro Moniz Perestrelo), pron., was a Portuguese navigator and explorer that, together with João Gonçalves Zarco and Tristão Vaz Teixeira, discovered the Madeira Islands (1419-1420). Nobleman of Genoese origin, he was granted, as hereditary fief (capitania), the island of Porto Santo and, together with his fellow fleet commanders, started the colonization of the islands.

  30. Aristides Leão

    Aristides de Azevedo Pacheco Leão was one of the most noted Brazilian biologists and scientists, one of the founders of the Biophysics Institute of the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro and the discoverer of spreading depression, an electrophysiological phenomenon of the central nervous system, which received his name. Leão was born to an intellectual family in Rio de Janeiro. He started to study medicine at the University of São Paulo, but had to interrupt it, …

  31. Adolf Eugen Fick

    Adolf Eugen Fick (born 3 September, 1829, in Kassel, Germany; died 21 August, 1901, in Blankenberge, Flandern) was a German physiologist usually credited with the invention of contact lenses. He earned a 1851 doctorate at Marburg in medicine. In 1855 he introduced Fick's law of diffusion, which governs the diffusion of a gas across a fluid membrane. In 1870 he was the first to devise a technique for measuring cardiac output, called the Fick Principle.

  32. Jackie Tavener

    John Adam "Jackie" Tavener, nicknamed "Rabbit," was a baseball player. He played shortstop for six seasons with the Detroit Tigers (1921, 1925-1928) and Cleveland Indians (1929). Born in Celina, Ohio, Tavener reached the Major Leagues at the end of the 1921 season and played two games with the Detroit Tigers. After those two games, Tavener did not play again in the Major Leagues until four years later in 1925.

  33. Michael Bore

    Michael Kenneth Bore (born June 2, 1947 at East Hull, Yorkshire) was a right handed batsman and left arm medium pace bowler who played for Yorkshire and Nottinghamshire. Bore made his debut for Yorkshire in 1969 as the great County Championship side of the sixties began to break up. He played for his native county until 1977 when he moved to Nottinghamshire where he played past the age of 40 until 1988.

  34. Theodor Ludwig Wilhelm von Bischoff

    Theodor Ludwig Wilhelm von Bischoff was a German biologist. He made a special study of embryology; was professor of Anatomy at Heidelberg, of Physiology at Gießen, and of both at Munich. He is best known for his monographies of deer, dogs, guinea pigs, and rabbits, especially towards their (embryonic) development. His studies concerning animal metabolism by measuring urea were less successful, as was his research of the anatomy of skull and brain.

  35. Russ Sandlin

    Over Twenty years of contact center management experience with emphasis in utilizing people, processes and technologies to optimize results. Managed all phases of operations for large call centers in Mexico, India, Pakistan, Dubai, Qatar, Philippines and US; Retained large Technology Company Financial Arm in Philippines Call center saving contract from point of 30 day notice of separation; Launched and managed 5 different large programs successfully in two different Philippine call . . .

  36. Rabbit Rabbit

    i used to have a different profile on friendster...it was irresponsible and naughty and in it, i was doing all sorts of dirty things to dirty people and dirty objects. i was dirty. but the friendster police shut it down and sent me to a program to "reeducate" me and now i'm healed and i recognize the horrible person i used to be. i realize now that its nice when things are nice. people can change.

  37. Rabbit Rabbit

    i am small.

  38. Rabbit Rabbit
  39. Roger Rabbit
  40. Roger Rabbit

    I am a fun loving soul that has but two purposes in life, make people laugh and shower my Jessica with love and affection!

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