User:Ravedave/ALS
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is a list of famous people who have or had Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.
[edit] Notable people with ALS
- Raymond Abrashkin - author
- Augustine (Augie) Nieto - fitness guru
- Zeca Afonso - Portuguese folk singer and anti-fascist politician
- David E. Babcock, Sr. - former CEO, May Department Stores - 1975–1980; governor of U.S. Postal Service - 1980
- Derek Bailey - British avant-garde guitar virtuoso
- Jason Becker - American guitar virtuoso
- Rob Borsellino - Des Moines Register columnist and author of So I'm Talkin' to This Guy...
- Scott Brazil - American television producer and director
- Harry Browne - best-selling author and 2-time Libertarian U.S. presidential candidate
- Jerry Glenn Bryant - professional wrestler from Memphis, TN
- Mao Zedong - Chairman of the Chinese Communist Party
- Ezzard Charles - boxer; former world heavyweight champion
- Leonard Cheshire - notable RAF pilot and charity worker
- Sid Collins - radio personality; radio voice of the Indianapolis 500
- Luca Coscioni - Italian researcher, political activist and advocate for euthanasia
- Dominic S. D'Angona - nuclear physicist
- Dennis Day - singer, comedian, actor
- Michael Donnelly - Gulf War veteran
- John Drury - longtime ABC7 Chicago news anchor
- Bruce Edwards - PGA Tour caddy for golfer Tom Watson
- Jenifer Estess - theatre producer; star of HBO documentary Three Sisters, subject of HBO film Jennifer; founding member of Project ALS
- Steven G. Gey- law professor and expert on the separation of church and state and freedom of speech; former on-air analyst for ABC during the 2000 presidential recount
- Lou Gehrig - baseball player, after whom the disease is commonly referred
- Marc Harrison - designer
- Pro Hart - Australian painter
- Stephen Hawking - theoretical physicist and author of several books on astrophysics, including A Brief History of Time
- Stephen Heywood - carpenter; subject of So Much So Fast and His Brother's Keeper
- Jim "Catfish" Hunter - baseball player
- Jörg Immendorff, German painter
- Jacob K. Javits, U.S. Senator from New York
- Axel Jensen - writer
- Jimmy Johnstone, Scottish international footballer
- Hans Keller - Austrian-born British musicologist and music critic.
- Suna Kıraç, Turkish businesswoman and philanthrophist
- Leadbelly - blues singer and guitarist
- Joseph Mayo - Clerk of the Maine House of Representatives
- Charles Mingus - jazz bass player
- Glenn Montgomery - NFL football player for the Houston Oilers and Seattle Seahawks
- Johnathon Nadaro - Australian painter and sculptor
- David Niven - actor
- Krzysztof Nowak, Polish footballer
- Richard K. Olney - neurologist; ALS physician and researcher
- Sidney Preston Osborn - former governor of Arizona
- Neon Park - American artist
- Diane Pretty - British "right to die" advocate
- Don Revie - English football player and manager
- Sue Rodriguez - Canadian "right to die" advocate
- Franz Rosenzweig - philosopher and religious thinker
- Stanley Sadie - British musicologist, music critic and editor of the New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians
- Ed Sadowski - baseball catcher and coach
- Morrie Schwartz - educator
- Raúl Sendic - Uruguayan Marxist and leader of the Tupamaros
- Gianluca Signorini - Italian football player
- Lane Smith - actor
- Konrad Spindler - archaeologist, involved in the analysis of the Ötzi glacier mummy
- Jon Stone - creator of Sesame Street
- Maxwell D. Taylor - former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
- Roy Walford - gerontologist and life extensionist
- Charlie Wedemeyer - former athlete and coach; motivational speaker
- George Yardley - basketball player
- Michael Zaslow - soap actor
- Roberto Fontanarrosa - Argentine cartoonist and writer
- Konstantinos Apostolos Doxiadis - Greek architect, urban planner and visionary
[edit] References
Jim O'Hagan Olympic swimmer