anes lemercier alias for jenny feeling |
Junge Mädchen alleine zu Hause Video
Liebestolle Nixen Video
Private Casting X Julia Taylor Video
Private Matador Avalanche Sex in the Alps Video
Sexx the Hard Way Video
Un corpo da sbattere Video
Ass Quest # Video
Ecstasy Girls Video
La mansión del placer y la sumisión Video as Karma Rosenberg
Mondo Extreme Geyser Gash Video as Carma
Los pecados Video
Sky de fondo Video
Luciano's Lucky Ladies Video
I segreti della villa Video
Ridskolan Video
Biblestudent as Karma Rosenberg
Rocco Salvaje y despiadado Video
Cock Smokers Video
Private Matador Anal Garden Video
Top model dal vivo
Bombones bańados de leche Video
Analisi sessuale Video
Polline as Carmen Lajolla
Ass to Mouth Video
Donne allo specchio Video
Ecstasy Girls Video
Horny Over Video Anna Amore
Vanessa Blue Vanessa Blue
Tina Burner Tina Burner
Tyra Butts Tyra Butts
Camille Camille
Caramel Caramel
Coca Coca Herbs 'N Spices Video
Big Black Wet Asses Video
Sexy Bootylicious Moms Video
Tippin' tha Scales Video
Real Big Afro Tits Video
Les ravageuses ŕ la ferme Video
Older and Anal Video
My Thick Black Ass Video
Bi Dazzled Video
Black Cherry Bombs Video
Black Cocksmokers Video
Super Ball XXX Ebony Cheerleader Orgy Video
World's Luckiest Jock Video
Blowjob Adventures of Dr Fellatio Video
Ultimate Strap On Super Slam Video
Motorhome Madness Video
Big Move Video
Bootie Deal Video
The World's Biggest Gang Bang III The Houston Video
Fluffer
The World's Luckiest Black Man Video
The World's Luckiest Patient Video
Ultimate Strap On Super Slam Video
Violation of Cinnabunz Video
Coolin' with da Hunnys Video
Girl Jam Video
Action Man Video
Anal After Hours Video
Black Horizon Video
Black Jack City Video
Black Nurses Video
Black Wives Video
Buck Shot Video
Harem Video
Bi Bi Black Video
Black Bi Demand Video
Kick Him to the Curb Video
Blackyard Boogie Video
Booty Bang Video
Booty Bang Video
Bootylicious Superfreak Video
Brown Sugah Babes Video
Coochies Under Fire Video
The World's Luckiest Man Video
Screw My Wife Please Video
I Black Beauty Video Dominique Simone
Champagne Pendavis Champagne Pendavis
as Champagn
Lady Antoinette Lady Antoinette Real Bi Swingers Video
Chocolate Cream Pie Video as Domonique Simone
Booty Talk Video
My Baby Got Back Video
Analyze These Video
Solveig's Way Video
Milkin' It for All It's Worth Video
Ebony Ecstasy Video
Big and Busty Superstars Video as Dominique
Black Flyz # Video
NYDP Blue Video
Mission Hard Video
Black Babewatch
Black Beach Video
Bootin' Up Video
Call Girl
Prostitute as Deirdre Morrow
Coming Out Bi Video
Susan as Domonique Simone
Dominique's Bi Adventure Video
I Cream on Jeannie Video
Mistress n' da Hood Video as Domonique Simone
Money Money Money Video
My Baby Got Back Video
Opie Goes to South Central Video
Sex Scandals Video
Sistaz N' Chainz Video as Domonique Simone
Tammi Ann The Girl Just Can't Help It Video
The Passion Video
Uninhibited
Detective Jordan's Wife as Dominique
Whoopin' Her Behind Video
Black Analyst
Anal Riders Video
Adventures of D P Boys Backyard Boogie Video as Coco
Adventures of D P Boys Big Bad Booty Video as Coco
Adventures of D P Boys Chocolate City Video as Coco
Animal Attraction Video
Big Knockers Video
Blackbroad Jungle Video
Student
Black Flava Video
Black Streets Video as Dominique
Booty by Nature Video
Olivia
Buttslammers Quake Rattle and Roll Video
Dark Tunnels Video
Dominique Goes Bi Video
Ebony Princess Video
Forget Me Not Video
Freak dat Booty Video
Lauren Page
Howard Sperm's Private Parties Video
Bobbin
Into the Fire Video
Mistress to Sin Video
Superboobs Video
Switch Hitters Video
Gina
The Price Was Right Video
Anal Magic Video
Harlots from Hooterville Video
Anal Orgy Video
Bazooka County The Jugs Video
Black Butt Jungle
Black Buttnicks Video
Black Is Back Video uncredited
Buttwoman Video
Groupies Video as Dominique
I Dream of Teri Video as Dominique
If You're Nasty Video
Maliboobies Video
Mo' White Trash Video
Musical Bedrooms Video as Dominique
My Baby Got Back Video
Nothing Butt the Truth Video as Dominique
Party Favors Video
Positively Pagan Video
Sista Video
Starbangers Video
The Anal Team Video
The Boobyguard Video
The Psychic Video
Welcome to Bondage Dominique Video
Wild Buck Video
Ladykiller Casanova Returns Video
Cat Burglar as Dominique Simone
Fear of a Black Hat
Girl in Hot Tub uncredited
Going Pro Video
Up and Coming Executive Video
Anal Rampage Video
Anal Rookies Video
Anal Sluts and Sweethearts Video
An Evening at Club Josephine Video as Dominique
Back to Back
Black Jack City Black's Revenge Video
Black Velvet Video
Velvet as Domonique Simone
Blow Job Bonnie Video
Boomeranal Video
Butt's Up Doc Video
Cycle Sluts Video
Deep Cheeks III Video
Foolish Pleasure Video
Sherry as D Simone
Foxes Video as Dominique
Girls Gone Bad Misfits of Society Video
Group Therapy Video
Guess Who's Coming to Dinner Video as Dominique
Head Again Video as Dominique
Hidden Obsessions
Hooter Heaven Video
Hotel Sex Video as Dominique
Illusions II Video
In Loving Color Part Video as Dominique
In Loving Color Part Two Video
Jack the Stripper Video
Harem Girl as Domonique Simone
Ladies Lovin' Ladies Lovin' Ladies Video as Dominique
Layin' Down the Law Video as Dominique
Leena Goes Pro Video
Mocha Magic Video
My Baby Got Back Video as Dominique
Nookie Court Video as Dominique
One Million Years DD Video
Maka
Oreo a Go Go Video
Return of the Bimbo Video as Dominique
Rock & Roll Fantacies Video as Dominique
Screwballs Video as Dominique
Sex Trek III The Wrath of Bob Video
Lt Uwhore as Domonique Simone
Step to the Rear Video as Dominique
Stolen Hearts Video as Dominique
Tailiens Video
Tailiens Video
Tailiens Video
The Adventures of Breastman as Domonique Simone
The Bimbo Video as Dominique
The Blues Video
The Coach's Daughter Video as Dominique
The Goddaughter Part II Video as Dominique
The Silence of the Buns Video
Girl on Blanket
Two Women
Video Girl
Mirror Images
Slave Girl as Deirdre Morrow
Black & White in Living Color Video
In Too Deep Video
Private Affairs Vol Video
Sexy Secrets N° Video as Dominique
The Vision
Kim Davis
The Young One Part Seven Video
Acts of Confession Video
Amateur Lesbians Video
Babes
Bangin' with the Home Girls Video
Black Balled
Black Jack City Video
Black Mariah Video as Domonique Simone
Black Obsession Video
Black on White Video
Breaking and Entering Video as Dominque
Breast Worx Video
California Taxi Girls Video as Dominique
Dream Lover Video
Edward Penishands Video
Louise T T Boy
Tom Chapman Tom Chapman
Dusty Dusty The Black Butt Sisters Do Los Angeles Video as Mercedez
The Black Butt Sisters Do New York Video as Mercedez
Interactive Video
Bad Side of Town Video
Double Penetration Video
Mega Splash Peter North Video
A Little Nookie Video
Ass Backwards Video
Jamie as Mercedes
Blond Bombshell Video as Mercedez Lynn
Breathless Video
Catalina Video as Mercedes
Decadent Video
Edward Penishands Video
Ghost to Ghost Video as Mercedez Lynn
Hard to Thrill Video
Immorals Choice Cuts Video
I Want to Be Nasty Video
Ladies in Combat Video
Married with Hormones Video
Nellie's Friend as Mercedes Marc Andrews
T T Boy T T Boy
Tom Chapman Tom Chapman Naked Fairy Tales TV Movie
Born to Be Bad Video
Tabatha and Her Friends Video
Bubbles Galore
Starlet
Lies of Passion Video
The Secret Dungeon Video
Deep Inside Racquel Darrian Video
Les femmes érotiques Video
Sensual Exposure Video
Power Play Equestrian Hallway Encounter
Speedtrap Video
Selen the Perfect Lover Video
Helen uncredited
Propuesta criminal
Michelle as Rachel Vickers
After Midnight Video
Best of Raunch Video
Rainbows Video
Sexual Healing Video
Used Cars
Warm to the Touch
Wild Attraction as Nelly Vickers
Bassi istinti
Linda Forrester as Nellie Marie Vickers
January 1: Revolutionary forces under the leadership of Fidel Castro overthrow the corrupt Batista government in Cuba. 50 years of repressive one-man rule by the future Soviet ally ensue before Castro relinquishes control to his brother.[86][87][88]
February 3: The Day the Music Died: Pop Rockers Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens and The Big Bopper are killed along with the pilot of a small plane in bad weather near Clear Lake, IA.[89]
June 16: Superman is Dead?: Front page headlines allege that actor George Reeves' shooting death is a suicide, shocking a generation of youngsters mourning the first major superhero of comic books and TV.[90][91]
September 29: Beatnik goes TV: The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis debuts, featuring Bob Denver as "beat" character Maynard G. Krebs.[92]
How to Speak Hip: Improvisational pioneer Del Close's satirical comedy record is released, laying down the lingo for a generation.[93][94]
1960s[edit]
1960[edit]
The Student League for Industrial Democracy has changed their name to Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) and first meet in Ann Arbor, MI. SDS dissociates itself from LID in 1965, and becomes the most notable radical student political organization of the counterculture era.[95][96]
A beatnik community in Cornwall, UK noted for wearing their hair past their shoulders, and including a young Wizz Jones, is interviewed by Alan Whicker for BBC TV.[97]
Harvard professors Timothy Leary and Richard Alpert begin experimenting with hallucinogens at Cambridge, MA. The highly controversial Leary soon becomes the most notable advocate of LSD use during the era.[98][99]
February 1: The first of the Greensboro sit-ins sparks a wave of similar protests against segregation at Woolworth and other retail store lunch counters across the American South.[100]
March 26: Governor Buford Ellington of Tennessee orders an investigation into a CBS news crew for filming a Nashville sit-in.[101]
April: The Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) is organized by Ella Baker at Shaw University.[102]
May 1: U-2 Incident: a US spy plane searching for Soviet nuclear installations is shot down deep within the USSR. The CIA pilot is captured alive and paraded in the Russian press after the White House enlists NASA in a botched and quickly-exposed deception claiming that the plane went missing during a weather flight.[103][104]
May 9: The Pill: The US Food & Drug Administration approves the use of the first reliable form of birth control: a 99%-effective pill. The Sexual Revolution commences, first in the bedrooms of married couples.[105][106]
May 13: Black Friday: 400 police using firehoses force a student "mob" out of a HUAC meeting at City Hall in San Francisco. The counterculture era of student protest begins.[107][108][109]
May 19: SANE holds an anti-arms race rally at Madison Square Garden in New York, NY. 20,000 attend.[110]
November 8: John F. Kennedy is elected 35th President of the US, defeating sitting Vice President Richard M. Nixon in what is considered to be the closest and most intellectually-charged US presidential election since 1916.[111][112][113] Nearly 70 million ballots are cast, but the margin of victory is just slightly more than 100,000 votes.[114]
1961[edit]
January: Look Magazine journalist George Leonard writes about "Youth of the Sixties: The Explosive Generation," and predicts that the "quiet generation" of the 1950s "is rumbling and is going to explode…"[115][116]
January 17: US President Eisenhower gives his farewell address to the nation, and uses much of his time to warn of the undue influence of the "Military Industrial Complex."[117]
January 20: In a powerful inaugural address, new US President Kennedy calls upon citizens to "ask not what your country can do for you—ask what you can do for your country."[118][119]
March 1: JFK signs an executive order creating the Peace Corps.[120]
March 28: JFK orders final cancellation of the oft-resurrected USAF B-70 Bomber program in a significant rollback of the nuclear arms race.[121]
March 30: The UN Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs is signed in New York City, tightening controls on international trade in opiates.[122]
April 12: Vostok: Man in Space: The western world is again shocked when Cold War foe the USSR follows its Sputnik triumph, putting the first human in space.[123]
April 17: A CIA-led invasion force intent on the overthrow of Fidel Castro lands at the Bay of Pigs in Cuba. Anti-Castro Cuban expatriates and CIA mercenaries are overtaken and captured by Cuban forces. JFK, who inherited the operation planned under the previous administration, attempts to cut losses and denies US air support.[124][125]
May 4: Freedom Riders: Civil Rights activists travel on public buses and trains across the American South to personally confront and challenge segregation.[126]
June 4: JFK meets with Soviet Premier Khrushchev in Vienna, and reports no progress on issues concerning partitioned Germany. Another Berlin Crisis ensues.[127][128]
August 13: Berlin Wall: To stem the massive tide of emigration from the communist east into the free west, the construction of a wall dividing the city of Berlin begins under Soviet direction.[129]
October 25: US and Soviet tanks face off at Checkpoint Charlie in Berlin.[130][131]
November 1: Women Strike for Peace: 50,000 women march in 60 cities in the US to demonstrate against nuclear weapons.[132][133]
November 30: Cuban Project: aggressive covert operations against despot Fidel Castro's revolutionary rule in Cuba are authorized by JFK and soon implemented under the direction of Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy.[134][135][136]
December 14: JFK signs an executive order establishing the Presidential Commission on the Status of Women.[137][138]
1962[edit]
January 18: Operation Ranch Hand: The US military begins the use of extremely toxic and carcinogenic defoliants in Vietnam. Use of the dioxin-containing Agent Orange begins in 1965.[139]
February 4: US helicopters assist the South Vietnamese army in the capture of Hung My.
February 26: Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Valerian Zorin warns the UN that the Americans "are getting bogged down in a very disadvantageous and politically unjustified war (in Vietnam) which will entail very unpleasant consequences for them."[140]
March 16: US Defense Secretary Robert McNamara reveals that US troops in Vietnam have engaged in ground combat.
March 19: Bob Dylan's first album Bob Dylan is released. It reaches #13 in the UK, but does not chart on the Billboard 200 in the US.
March 31: Cesar Chavez begins organizing migrant farm workers in California.[141]
June 15: The SDS completes the Port Huron Statement.[142]
July–August: Dr. King's Albany Movement civil rights protest against segregation is active in Albany, GA.
August 5: Film star Marilyn Monroe dies of a barbiturate overdose under suspicious circumstances in Los Angeles. Monroe's death is a precursor to an explosion of recreational use of highly addictive prescription drugs (and thousands of accidental pill overdose deaths) during the counterculture era, even as legitimate use of these drugs is already in decline.[143][144]
September 12: JFK speaks at Rice: "... we choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard ..."[145]
September 27: Rachel Carson's Silent Spring is published. The modern environmental movement begins.[146]
October 1: James Meredith is the first African-American student to enter "Ole Miss".[147][148]
October 5: Love Me Do: The Beatles' first single is released in the UK. From this modest beginning the group eventually goes on to sell over 600 million records worldwide and remains the best selling musical group of all time.[149][150]
October: The Cuban Missile Crisis brings the world to the brink of nuclear war after the USSR attempts to station nuclear missiles in Cuba, thereby directly threatening the US.[151]
December: The USAF Skybolt air-launched ballistic missile program is cancelled by President Kennedy.[152]
Inspired by Aldous Huxley's Human Potential Movement, Michael Murphy and Dick Price found the Esalen Institute in Big Sur, California.[153]
Sex and the Single Girl: Helen Gurley Brown's post-pill dating manual becomes a best-seller. Brown's attempt to have the book "banned" for marketing purposes fails, but early sales top 2 million copies. Brown goes on to edit influential Cosmopolitan Magazine for over 30 years.[154]
The Other America: Michael Harrington's compelling study of the intractable plight of the poor in the US is published. The book is credited with inspiring LBJ's "War on Poverty."[155]
Ken Kesey's One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest is published.[156]
Seven Days in May, a novel depicting a foiled military coup in the US, is published. A movie follows and reaches theater screens in 1964 with an all-star cast.[157]
1963[edit]
Betty Friedan's The Feminine Mystique is published. The modern feminist movement is born.[158]
Bob Fass begins the long-running, late night Radio Unnameable program on WBAI-FM in New York City, a listener-supported station that is later remembered as "the pulse of the movement" by Wavy Gravy.[159][160][161]
April: Chandler Laughlin organizes a Native American Church peyote ceremony, a precursor to The Red Dog Experience.
April–May: Birmingham Campaign: Civil Rights activists trained by James Bevel are attacked by police in Birmingham, Alabama. Similar events occur at various locations across the deep south throughout the spring and summer.
May: The first organized Vietnam War protests occur in England and Australia.
May 1: Undercover Bunny: Gloria Steinem's Playboy Club exposé appears in Show Magazine.[158]
June 10: A Strategy of Peace: JFK delivers a powerful commencement speech at American University.[162]
June 11: Buddhist monk Thich Quang Duc self-immolates in Saigon. AP photographer Malcolm Browne's coverage of the horrific event reportedly motivates JFK to increase US troop strength in the developing Vietnam conflict.[163][164]
June 12: NAACP Field Secretary Medgar Evers is assassinated in Jackson, MS.[165]
June 17: The US Supreme Court rules public school-sponsored Bible reading unconstitutional.[166][167]
July 26–28: The now-legendary Newport Folk Festival features Bob Dylan and fellow protest singers Pete Seeger, Joan Baez, Phil Ochs, and Peter, Paul & Mary.[168][169]
August 28: Martin Luther King, Jr. gives his landmark "I Have a Dream" speech before 200,000 on the Mall in Washington, DC during the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom.[170]
September 24: The US Senate ratifies The Partial Test Ban Treaty as signed by the US and USSR, ending testing of nuclear weapons under water, in the atmosphere, and in space by the superpowers.[171]
September 26: The US Senate debates a report that folk music is being infiltrated by communism. Two senators speak and conclude it is "American," dismissing the report.[172]
October 27: 225,000 students in Chicago schools boycott classes in protest at ongoing segregation.
October 31: Harvard University is scandalized by disclosure that students have engaged in on-campus "sex orgies."[173]
November 2: South Vietnamese President Ngo Dinh Diem is assassinated in Saigon.[174]
November 22: US President John F. Kennedy is assassinated in Dallas, TX. Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson is sworn in as 36th President of the US.[175]
November 24: Suspected JFK assassin Lee Harvey Oswald is himself murdered by Jack Ruby under lax police security in Dallas, thereby creating doubt for many, and opening the door to myriad conspiracy theories concerning the Kennedy Assassination and the veracity of later government findings.[176]
1964[edit]
January: The Holy Modal Rounders' version of "Hesitation Blues" marks the first reference to the term psychedelic in music.[177]
January 8: LBJ's State of the Union address features a declaration of "War on Poverty".[178][179]
January 13: The Times They Are A-Changin': Bob Dylan's 3rd album is released and the title track is soon considered to be the most prophetic and relevant American protest song of the era. Dylan disagrees, saying the song "is a feeling."[180][181]
January 23: 24th Amendment ratified: US Congress and states are prohibited from conditioning the right to vote in federal elections on payment of poll or other forms of tax.[182]
January 27: Defense Secretary Robert McNamara states that there are now 15,000 US troops in South Vietnam, and that most will be withdrawn by the end of 1965.
February 1: I Want to Hold Your Hand: The Beatles achieve their first hit #1 on Billboard with a 7-week run on top. Beatlemania has spread to the US, and the monumental British Invasion of UK music begins.[183][184]
February 7–22: The Beatles make their first US visit and appear on The Ed Sullivan Show. The February 9 telecast is seen by over 73 million, the largest TV audience to date in the US.[185]
February 21–24: Students at Maryland State College protesting a segregated restaurant are fought by police.
February 25–26: Tens of thousands of school students in Boston and Chicago skip classes in protest of segregation.
March 16: 25% of school students in New York City strike to protest segregation.
April 4: Beatles singles occupy the top 5 slots on the Billboard Hot 100. It's an unprecedented, and never repeated, chart achievement.[186]
April 20: Approximately 85% of black students in Cleveland boycott classes to protest segregation.[187]
May: Appearance of the Faire Free Press (later the Los Angeles Free Press), earliest of many "underground" US newspapers of the counterculture era.
May: San Francisco Sheraton Palace Hotel sit-ins result in arrests of University of California, Berkeley students protesting racially discriminatory Bay area hiring practices.[188]
May 7: President Johnson first refers to "the Great Society" in a speech in Athens, OH.
May 12: The first public draft-card burning is reported in New York City.
June 14: Ken Kesey and the drug-drenched Merry Pranksters depart California in the repurposed school bus "Further" en route to the 1964 World's Fair in Queens, NY.
June 22: "I Know it When I See it": The US Supreme Court overturns the obscenity conviction of an Ohio theater operator. Although local obscenity battles continue to the present, the decision clears the way for the commercial exhibition of sexually-explicit film material in the US.[189][190][191]
July 2: The Civil Rights Act is signed by President Johnson. Racial segregation in public places and race-based employment discrimination are now banned under federal law.
July: The US Federal Communications Commission (FCC) adopts radio non-duplication rules: FM must broadcast original content, not simply simulcasts of AM sister stations. Soon, FM DJs are free to play the music of the generation without regard to chart status.[192][193]
August 2: War Dance: the spurious Gulf of Tonkin Incidents off the coast of Vietnam lead to the nearly unanimous passage of the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution by the US Congress on August 7, giving the president unprecedented broad authority to engage in full "conventional" military escalation in Southeast Asia without a formal declaration of war.[194]
October 1: The Free Speech Movement begins with a student sit-in at the University of California, Berkeley.[195][196][197]
October 14: Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. wins the Nobel Peace Prize.[198]
October 25: Bad Boys The Rolling Stones appear on Ed Sullivan and create so much audience disruption that Sullivan bans the "lewd" group from his show. The Stones are back, however, in future years.[184]
November 3: Sitting President Lyndon B. Johnson is elected President of the US in his own right, defeating Republican Arizona Senator Barry Goldwater in a landslide.[199]
November 4: Comedian Lenny Bruce is convicted on obscenity charges in New York City. Bruce is soon sentenced to a workhouse.[200]
December 2: In a now-famous speech during another Berkeley sit-in, student Mario Savio tells supporters of the Free Speech Movement to "put your bodies upon the gears."[201][202]
1965[edit]
February 8: Aerial bombing of North Vietnam by the US commences.
February 9–15: Thousands demonstrate against the US attacks on North Vietnam at the US Embassies in Moscow, Budapest, Jakarta, and Sofia.
February 21: Malcolm X is assassinated in New York City.
March: The "Filthy Speech Rally" at Berkeley.[203][204]
March 6: Regular US troops engage in combat in Vietnam for the first time.
March 7–25: The SCLC stages the watershed Selma to Montgomery marches, initiated and initially organized by James Bevel.
March 16: Alice Herz, age 82, self-immolates in Detroit, MI in protest of Vietnam escalation. Herz dies 10 days later.[205]
March 24–25: The first major "Teach-in" is held by the SDS in Ann Arbor, MI. 3000 attend.
March 25: For Your Love: Already a guitar legend, blues purist Eric Clapton quits The Yardbirds after release of the proto-psychedelic hit. Clapton recommends Jimmy Page to fill his spot. Page passes (though he later joins the group), but suggests Jeff Beck, who accepts.[206][207]
Spring: Don't trust anyone over 30: Berkeley grad student and Free Speech activist Jack Weinberg's quip is quoted in paraphrase, inadvertently creating a key catchphrase of the generation.[208]
April: Beatles John Lennon and George Harrison are given LSD without their knowledge by their dentist at a UK dinner party.[209]
April: US combat troops in Vietnam total 25,000.
April 17: The first major anti-Vietnam War rally in the US is organized by the SDS in Washington, DC. 25,000 attend. Joan Baez, Judy Collins, and Phil Ochs perform.
May: Owsley Stanley returns to the Bay Area with the first large batch of LSD for sale as a recreational drug.[210][211]
May 17: Hunter S. Thompson's article The Motorcycle Gangs: Losers and Outsiders appears in The Nation. A book soon follows.
May: Draft card burnings take place at University of California, Berkeley. A coffin is marched to the Berkeley draft board, and President Johnson is hanged in effigy. Jerry Rubin forms the Vietnam Day Committee[212] with Abbie Hoffman and others during these events.[213]
June–August: Red Dog Experience comes into full flower at Virginia City, Nevada's Red Dog Saloon - full-fledged "hippie" identity takes shape.
June 7: Griswold v. Connecticut: The US Supreme Court rules that Constitutional privacy guarantees trump a Connecticut statute banning use of contraceptives by married couples. "Comstock-era" laws are likewise now moot in other states. In 1972, the court rules that protections apply to unmarried couples as well.[214][215][216]
June 11: International Poetry Incarnation: Notables including Allen Ginsburg, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Michael Horovitz and William S. Burroughs participate in a breakthrough event for the UK Underground, Royal Albert Hall, London.[217]
June 11: The Beatles are awarded as Members of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (MBE) by the Queen for their contributions to British commerce. The myth that they smoked marijuana in a palace bathroom after the investiture ceremony is later debunked by George Harrison. Paul McCartney is knighted by the Queen in 1997, a year after producer George Martin.[218][219]
July 25: Bob Dylan "goes electric" and is booed at the Newport Folk Festival.
July 30: Medicare is signed into law in the US, giving seniors a healthcare safety net.
August 6: The Voting Rights Act is signed into law in the US; "Literacy tests", poll taxes and other local schemes to prevent voting by blacks are newly or further banned under federal law.
August 11: Watts: 6 days of massive race riots erupt in Los Angeles: 35 dead, 1000 buildings damaged or destroyed. Meanwhile, smaller riots occur in Chicago.
August 24: She Said She Said: The Beatles briefly rest in Laurel Canyon near the end of their grueling American tour. Unable to leave their rented home, they invite local company, including the The Byrds, Peter Fonda, Joan Baez, and Peggy Lipton. Lennon writes a song, which appears on Revolver in 1966.[220][221][222]
August 31: The ban on the burning of draft cards is signed into law in the US.
September 5: The word hippie is used in print by San Francisco writer Michael Fallon, helping popularise use of the term in the media, although the tag was seen earlier in a
2 Heir presumptive
2.1 Second World War
2.2 Marriage and family
3 Reign
3.1 Accession and coronation
3.2 Continuing evolution of the Commonwealth
3.3 Acceleration of decolonisation
3.4 Silver Jubilee
3.5 1980s
3.6 1990s
3.7 Golden Jubilee
3.8 Diamond Jubilee and beyond
4 Public perception and character
4.1 Finances
5 Titles, styles, honours and arms
5.1 Titles and styles
5.2 Arms
6 Issue
7 Ancestry
8 See also
9 Notes
10 References
11 Bibliography
12 External links
Early life
Elizabeth as a thoughtful-looking toddler with curly, fair hair
Princess Elizabeth aged 3, April 1929
Elizabeth was born at 02:40 (GMT) on 21 April 1926, during the reign of her paternal grandfather, King George V. Her father, Prince Albert, Duke of York (later King George VI), was the second son of the King. Her mother, Elizabeth, Duchess of York (later Queen Elizabeth), was the youngest daughter of Scottish aristocrat Claude Bowes-Lyon, 14th Earl of Strathmore and Kinghorne. She was delivered by Caesarean section at her maternal grandfather's London house: 17 Bruton Street, Mayfair.[2] She was baptised by the Anglican Archbishop of York, Cosmo Gordon Lang, in the private chapel of Buckingham Palace on 29 May,[3][c] and named Elizabeth after her mother, Alexandra after George V's mother, who had died six months earlier, and Mary after her paternal grandmother.[5] Called "Lilibet" by her close family,[6] based on what she called herself at first,[7] she was cherished by her grandfather George V, and during his serious illness in 1929 her regular visits were credited in the popular press and by later biographers with raising his spirits and aiding his recovery.[8]
Elizabeth's only sibling, Princess Margaret, was born in 1930. The two princesses were educated at home under the supervision of their mother and their governess, Marion Crawford, who was casually known as "Crawfie".[9] Lessons concentrated on history, language, literature and music.[10] Crawford published a biography of Elizabeth and Margaret's childhood years entitled The Little Princesses in 1950, much to the dismay of the royal family.[11] The book describes Elizabeth's love of horses and dogs, her orderliness, and her attitude of responsibility.[12] Others echoed such observations: Winston Churchill described Elizabeth when she was two as "a character. She has an air of authority and reflectiveness astonishing in an infant."[13] Her cousin Margaret Rhodes described her as "a jolly little girl, but fundamentally sensible and well-behaved".[14]
Heir presumptive
Elizabeth as a rosy-cheeked young girl with blue eyes and fair hair
Princess Elizabeth aged 7, painted by Philip de László, 1933
During her grandfather's reign, Elizabeth was third in the line of succession to the throne, behind her uncle Edward, Prince of Wales, and her father, the Duke of York. Although her birth generated public interest, she was not expected to become queen, as the Prince of Wales was still young, and many assumed that he would marry and have children of his own.[15] When her grandfather died in 1936 and her uncle succeeded as Edward VIII, she became second-in-line to the throne, after her father. Later that year Edward abdicated, after his proposed marriage to divorced socialite Wallis Simpson provoked a constitutional crisis.[16] Consequently, Elizabeth's father became king, and she became heir presumptive. If her parents had had a later son, she would have lost her position as first-in-line, as her brother would have been heir apparent and above her in the line of succession.[17]
Elizabeth received private tuition in constitutional history from Henry Marten, Vice-Provost of Eton College,[18] and learned French from a succession of native-speaking governesses.[19] A Girl Guides company, the 1st Buckingham Palace Company, was formed specifically so that she could socialise with girls her own age.[20] Later, she was enrolled as a Sea Ranger.[19]
In 1939, Elizabeth's parents toured Canada and the United States. As in 1927, when her parents had toured Australia and New Zealand, Elizabeth remained in Britain, since her father thought her too young to undertake public tours.[21] Elizabeth "looked tearful" as her parents departed.[22] They corresponded regularly,[22] and she and her parents made the first royal transatlantic telephone call on 18 May.[21]
Second World War
In September 1939, Britain entered the Second World War, which lasted until 1945. During the war, many of London's children were evacuated to avoid the frequent aerial bombing. The suggestion by senior politician Lord Hailsham[23] that the two princesses should be evacuated to Canada was rejected by Elizabeth's mother, who declared, "The children won't go without me. I won't leave without the King. And the King will never leave."[24] Princesses Elizabeth and Margaret stayed at Balmoral Castle, Scotland, until Christmas 1939, when they moved to Sandringham House, Norfolk.[25] From February to May 1940, they lived at Royal Lodge, Windsor, until moving to Windsor Castle, where they lived for most of the next five years.[26] At Windsor, the princesses staged pantomimes at Christmas in aid of the Queen's Wool Fund, which bought yarn to knit into military garments.[27] In 1940, the 14-year-old Elizabeth made her first radio broadcast during the BBC's Children's Hour, addressing other children who had been evacuated from the cities.[28] She stated:
We are trying to do all we can to help our gallant sailors, soldiers and airmen, and we are trying, too, to bear our share of the danger and sadness of war. We know, every one of us, that in the end all will be well.[28]
Elizabeth in Auxiliary Territorial Service uniform, April 1945
Princess Elizabeth (left, in uniform) on the balcony of Buckingham Palace with (left to right) her mother Queen Elizabeth, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, King George VI, and Princess Margaret, 8 May 1945
In 1943, at the age of 16, Elizabeth undertook her first solo public appearance on a visit to the Grenadier Guards, of which she had been appointed colonel the previous year.[29] As she approached her 18th birthday, the law was changed so that she could act as one of five Counsellors of State in the event of her father's incapacity or absence abroad, such as his visit to Italy in July 1944.[30] In February 1945, she joined the Women's Auxiliary Territorial Service as an honorary second subaltern with the service number of 230873.[31] She trained as a driver and mechanic and was promoted to honorary junior commander five months later.[32][33]
At the end of the war in Europe, on Victory in Europe Day, Princesses Elizabeth and Margaret mingled anonymously with the celebratory crowds in the streets of London. Elizabeth later said in a rare interview, "We asked my parents if we could go out and see for ourselves. I remember we were terrified of being recognised ... I remember lines of unknown people linking arms and walking down Whitehall, all of us just swept along on a tide of happiness and relief."[34]
During the war, plans were drawn up to quell Welsh nationalism by affiliating Elizabeth more closely with Wales. Proposals, such as appointing her Constable of Caernarfon Castle or a patron of Urdd Gobaith Cymru (the Welsh League of Youth), were abandoned for various reasons, which included a fear of associating Elizabeth with conscientious objectors in the Urdd, at a time when Britain was at war.[35] Welsh politicians suggested that she be made Princess of Wales on her 18th birthday. The idea was supported by the Home Secretary, Herbert Morrison, but rejected by the King because he felt such a title belonged solely to the wife of a Prince of Wales and the Prince of Wales had always been the heir apparent.[36] In 1946, she was inducted into the Welsh Gorsedd of Bards at the National Eisteddfod of Wales.[37]
In 1947, Princess Elizabeth went on her first overseas tour, accompanying her parents through southern Africa. During the tour, in a broadcast to the British Commonwealth on her 21st birthday, she made the following pledge:
I declare before you all that my whole life, whether it be long or short, shall be devoted to your service and the service of our great imperial family to which we all belong.[38]
Marriage and family
Main article: Wedding of Princess Elizabeth and Philip Mountbatten, Duke of Edinburgh
Elizabeth met her future husband, Prince Philip of Greece and Denmark, in 1934 and 1937.[39] They are second cousins once removed through King Christian IX of Denmark and third cousins through Queen Victoria. After another meeting at the Royal Naval College in Dartmouth in July 1939, Elizabeth—though only 13 years old—said she fell in love with Philip and they began to exchange letters.[40] Their engagement was officially announced on 9 July 1947.[41]
The engagement was not without controversy: Philip had no financial standing, was foreign-born (though a British subject who had served in the Royal Navy throughout the Second World War), and had sisters who had married German noblemen with Nazi links.[42] Marion Crawford wrote, "Some of the King's advisors did not think him good enough for her. He was a prince without a home or kingdom. Some of the papers played long and loud tunes on the string of Philip's foreign origin."[43] Elizabeth's mother was reported, in later biographies, to have opposed the union initially, even dubbing Philip "The Hun".[44] In later life, however, she told biographer Tim Heald that Philip was "an English gentleman".[45]
Before the marriage, Philip renounced his Greek and Danish titles, converted from Greek Orthodoxy to Anglicanism, and adopted the style Lieutenant Philip Mountbatten, taking the surname of his mother's British family.[46] Just before the wedding, he was created Duke of Edinburgh and granted the style His Royal Highness.[47]
Elizabeth and Philip were married on 20 November 1947 at Westminster Abbey. They received 2500 wedding gifts from around the world.[48] Because Britain had not yet completely recovered from the devastation of the war, Elizabeth required ration coupons to buy the material for her gown, which was designed by Norman Hartnell.[49] In post-war Britain, it was not acceptable for the Duke of Edinburgh's German relations, including his three surviving sisters, to be invited to the wedding.[50] The Duke of Windsor, formerly King Edward VIII, was not invited either.[51]
Elizabeth gave birth to her first child, Prince Charles, on 14 November 1948. One month earlier, the King had issued letters patent allowing her children to use the style and title of a royal prince or princess, to which they otherwise would not have been entitled as their father was no longer a royal prince.[52] A second child, Princess Anne, was born in 1950.[53]
Following their wedding, the couple leased Windlesham Moor, near Windsor Castle, until 4 July 1949,[48] when they took up residence at Clarence House in London. At various times between 1949 and 1951, the Duke of Edinburgh was stationed in the British Crown Colony of Malta as a serving Royal Navy officer. He and Elizabeth lived intermittently, for several months at a time, in the hamlet of Gwardamanga, at Villa Guardamangia, the rented home of Philip's uncle, Lord Mountbatten. The children remained in Britain.[54]
Reign
Accession and coronation
Elizabeth in crown and robes next to her husband in military uniform
Coronation portrait of Queen Elizabeth II and the Duke of Edinburgh, June 1953
Coronation of Elizabeth II
Main article: Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II
During 1951, George VI's health declined and Elizabeth frequently stood in for him at public events. When she toured Canada and visited President Harry S. Truman in Washington, D.C., in October 1951, her private secretary, Martin Charteris, carried a draft accession declaration in case the King died while she was on tour.[55] In early 1952, Elizabeth and Philip set out for a tour of Australia and New Zealand by way of Kenya. On 6 February 1952, they had just returned to their Kenyan home, Sagana Lodge, after a night spent at Treetops Hotel, when word arrived of the death of the King and consequently Elizabeth's immediate accession to the throne. Philip broke the news to the new Queen.[56] Martin Charteris asked her to choose a regnal name; she chose to remain Elizabeth, "of course".[57] She was proclaimed queen throughout her realms and the royal party hastily returned to the United Kingdom.[58] She and the Duke of Edinburgh moved into Buckingham Palace.[59]
With Elizabeth's accession, it seemed probable that the royal house would bear her husband's name, becoming the House of Mountbatten, in line with the custom of a wife taking her husband's surname on marriage. British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and Elizabeth's grandmother, Queen Mary, favoured the retention of the House of Windsor, and so on 9 April 1952 Elizabeth issued a declaration that Windsor would continue to be the name of the royal house. The Duke complained, "I am the only man in the country not allowed to give his name to his own children."[60] In 1960, after the death of Queen Mary in 1953 and the resignation of Churchill in 1955, the surname Mountbatten-Windsor was adopted for Philip and Elizabeth's male-line descendants who do not carry royal titles.[61]
Amid preparations for the coronation, Princess Margaret informed her sister that she wished to marry Peter Townsend, a divorcé‚ 16 years Margaret's senior, with two sons from his previous marriage. The Queen asked them to wait for a year; in the words of Martin Charteris, "the Queen was naturally sympathetic towards the Princess, but I think she thought—she hoped—given time, the affair would peter out."[62] Senior politicians were against the match and the Church of England did not permit remarriage after divorce. If Margaret had contracted a civil marriage, she would have been expected to renounce her right of succession.[63] Eventually, she decided to abandon her plans with Townsend.[64] In 1960, she married Antony Armstrong-Jones, who was created Earl of Snowdon the following year. They were divorced in 1978; she did not remarry.[65]
Despite the death of Queen Mary on 24 March, the coronation on 2 June 1953 went ahead as planned, as Mary had asked before she died.[66] The ceremony in Westminster Abbey, with the exception of the anointing and communion, was televised for the first time.[67][d] Elizabeth's coronation gown was embroidered on her instructions with the floral emblems of Commonwealth countries:[71] English Tudor rose; Scots thistle; Welsh leek; Irish shamrock; Australian wattle; Canadian maple leaf; New Zealand silver fern; South African protea; lotus flowers for India and Ceylon; and Pakistan's wheat, cotton, and jute.[72]
Continuing evolution of the Commonwealth
Further information: Historical development of the Commonwealth realms, from the Queen's accession
The Commonwealth realms (pink) and their territories and protectorates (red) at the beginning of Elizabeth II's reign
A formal group of Elizabeth in tiara and evening dress with eleven politicians in evening dress or national costume.
Elizabeth II and Commonwealth leaders at the 1960 Commonwealth Conference, Windsor Castle
From Elizabeth's birth onwards, the British Empire continued its transformation into the Commonwealth of Nations.[73] By the time of her accession in 1952, her role as head of multiple independent states was already established.[74] Spanning 1953–54, the Queen and her husband embarked on a six-month around-the-world tour. She became the first reigning monarch of Australia and New Zealand to visit those nations.[75] During the tour, crowds were immense; three-quarters of the population of Australia were estimated to have seen her.[76] Throughout her reign, the Queen has undertaken state visits to foreign countries and tours of Commonwealth ones and she is the most widely travelled head of state.[77]
In 1956, French Prime Minister Guy Mollet and British Prime Minister Sir Anthony Eden discussed the possibility of France joining the Commonwealth. The proposal was never accepted and the following year France signed the Treaty of Rome, which established the European Economic Community, the precursor of the European Union.[78] In November 1956, Britain and France invaded Egypt in an ultimately unsuccessful attempt to capture the Suez Canal. Lord Mountbatten claimed the Queen was opposed to the invasion, though Eden denied it. Eden resigned two months later.[79]
The absence of a formal mechanism within the Conservative Party for choosing a leader meant that, following Eden's resignation, it fell to the Queen to decide whom to commission to form a government. Eden recommended that she consult Lord Salisbury, the Lord President of the Council. Lord Salisbury and Lord Kilmuir, the Lord Chancellor, consulted the British Cabinet, Winston Churchill, and the Chairman of the backbench 1922 Committee, resulting in the Queen appointing their recommended candidate: Harold Macmillan.[80]
The Suez crisis and the choice of Eden's successor led in 1957 to the first major personal criticism of the Queen. In a magazine, which he owned and edited,[81] Lord Altrincham accused her of being "out of touch".[82] Altrincham was denounced by public figures and slapped by a member of the public appalled by his comments.[83]
Aleksejs Širovs born – chess player
Andris Škele born – politician Prime Minister of Latvia
Armands Škele – basketball player
Ksenia Solo born – actress
Ernests Štalbergs – – architect ensemble of the Freedom Monument
Izaks Nahmans Šteinbergs – – politician lawyer and author
Maris Štrombergs – BMX cyclist gold medal winner at and Olympics
T edit Esther Takeuchi born – materials scientist and chemical engineer
Mihails Tals – – the th World Chess Champion
Janis Roberts Tilbergs – – painter sculptor
U edit Guntis Ulmanis born – president of Latvia
Karlis Ulmanis – – prime minister and president of Latvia
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karin-schubert
karli-sweet
karmen-kennedy
karol-castro
kascha
kassi-nova
kat
kate-frost
kate-jones
kathia-nobili
kathleen-gentry
kathleen-white
kathy-divan
kathy-harcourt
kathy-heart
kathy-kash
katie-cummings
katja-love
kat-langer
katrina-isis
katrina-kraven
katy-borman
katy-caro
kaycee-dean
kayla-kupcakes
kay-parker
k-c-valentine
keama-kim
keira-moon
keisha
keli-richards
kelli-tyler
kelly-adams
kelly-blue
kelly-broox
kelly-hearn
kelly-kay
kelly-kline
kelly-nichols
kelly-royce
kelly-skyline
kendra-kay
kenzi-marie
keri-windsor
ketthy-divan
kianna-dior
kiley-heart
kim-alexis
kimber-blake
kimberly-carson
kimberly-kane
kimberly-kyle
kim-de-place
kim-holland
kimi-gee
kimkim-de
kim-kitaine
kimmie-lee
kimmy-nipples
kina-kara
kira-eggers
kira-red
kirsty-waay
kitty-langdon
kitty-lynxxx
kitty-marie
kitty-shayne
kitty-yung
kora-cummings
kris-lara
krista-lane
krista-maze
kristara-barrington
kristarah-knight
kristi-klenot
kristina-blonde
kristina-king
kristina-klevits
kristina-soderszk
kristine-heller
kristin-steen
krisztina-ventura
krystal-de-boor
krystal-steal
kylee-karr
kylee-nash
kylie-brooks
kylie-channel
kylie-haze
kylie-wylde
kym-wilde
kyoto-sun
lachelle-marie
lacy-rose
lady-amanda-wyldefyre
lady-stephanie
laetitia-bisset
lana-burner
lana-cox
lana-wood
lara-amour
lara-roxx
lara-stevens
lataya-roxx
latoya
laura-clair
laura-lazare
laura-lion
laura-may
laura-orsolya
laura-paouck
laura-zanzibar
lauren-black
laurence-boutin
lauren-montgomery
laurien-dominique
laurien-wilde
laurie-smith
lauryl-canyon
lauryn-may
leah-wilde
lea-magic
lea-martini
leanna-foxxx
lee-caroll
leigh-livingston
leilani
lenora-bruce
leslie-winston
lesllie-bovee
letizia-bruni
lexi-lane
lexi-matthews
lezley-zen
lia-fire
liliane-gray
liliane-lemieuvre
lili-marlene
lily-gilder
lily-labeau
lily-rodgers
lily-valentine
linda-shaw
linda-vale
linda-wong
linnea-quigley
lisa-bright
lisa-de-leeuw
lisa-k-loring
lisa-lake
lisa-melendez
lisa-sue-corey
lise-pinson
little-oral-annie
liza-dwyer
liza-harper
lizzy-borden
logan-labrent
lois-ayres
lola-cait
long-jean-silver
loni-bunny
loni-sanders
loona-luxx
lorelei-lee
lorelei-rand
lorena-sanchez
lori-alexia
lori-blue
lorrie-lovett
luci-diamond
lucie-doll
lucie-theodorova
lucy-van-dam
lydia-baum
lynn-franciss
lynn-lemay
lynn-ray
lynn-stevens
lynx-canon
lysa-thatcher
madelina-ray
madison-parker
magdalena-lynn
maggie-randall
mai-lin
mandi-wine
mandy-bright
mandy-malone
mandy-may
mandy-mistery
mandy-starr
marcia-minor
maren
margit-ojetz
margitta-hofer
margo-stevens
margot-mahler
mariah-cherry
marianne-aubert
maria-tortuga
marie-anne
marie-christine-chireix
marie-christine-veroda
marie-claude-moreau
marie-dominique-cabannes
marie-france-morel
marie-luise-lusewitz
marie-sharp
marilyn-chambers
marilyne-leroy
marilyn-gee
marilyn-jess
marilyn-martyn
marilyn-star
marina-hedman
marion-webb
marita-ekberg
marita-kemper
marlena
marlene-willoughby
marry-queen
martine-grimaud
martine-schultz
maryanne-fisher
mary-hubay
mary-ramunno
mary-stuart
mascha-mouton
maud-kennedy
mauvais-denoir
maxine-tyler
maya-black
maya-france
megan-leigh
megan-martinez
megan-reece
mei-ling
melanie-hotlips
melanie-scott
melba-cruz
melinda-russell
melissa-bonsardo
melissa-del-prado
melissa-golden
melissa-martinez
melissa-melendez
melissa-monet
mercedes-dragon
mercedes-lynn
merle-michaels
mesha-lynn
mia-beck
mia-lina
mia-smiles
michele-raven
michelle-aston
michelle-ferrari
michelle-greco
michelle-maren
michelle-maylene
michelle-monroe
micki-lynn
mika-barthel
mika-tan
mikki-taylor
mimi-morgan
mindy-rae
ming-toy
miranda-stevens
miss-bunny
miss-meadow
miss-pomodoro
missy
missy-graham
missy-stone
missy-vega
misti-jane
mistress-candice
misty-anderson
misty-dawn
misty-rain
misty-regan
mona-lisa
mona-page
moni
monica-baal
monica-swinn
monika-peta
monika-sandmayr
monika-unco
monique-bruno
monique-cardin
monique-charell
monique-demoan
monique-gabrielle
monique-la-belle
morgan-fairlane
morrigan-hel
moxxie-maddron
mulani-rivera
mysti-may
nadege-arnaud
nadia-styles
nadine-bronx
nadine-proutnal
nadine-roussial
nadi-phuket
nanci-suiter
nancy-hoffman
nancy-vee
natacha-delyro
natalia-wood
natalli-diangelo
natascha-throat
natasha-skyler
naudia-nyce
nessa-devil
nessy-grant
nesty
nicki-hunter
nicky-reed
nicole-berg
nicole-bernard
nicole-black
nicole-grey
nicole-london
nicole-parks
nicole-scott
nicole-taylor
nicolette-fauludi
nicole-west
nika-blond
nika-mamic
niki-cole
nikita-love
nikita-rush
nikki-charm
nikki-grand
nikki-king
nikki-knight
nikki-randall
nikki-rhodes
nikki-santana
nikki-steele
nikki-wilde
niko
nina-cherry
nina-deponca
nina-hartley
nina-preta
oana-efria
obaya-roberts
olesja-derevko
olga-cabaeva
olga-conti
olga-pechova
olga-petrova
olivia-alize
olivia-del-rio
olivia-flores
olivia-la-roche
olivia-outre
ophelia-tozzi
orchidea-keresztes
orsolya-blonde
paige-turner
paisley-hunter
pamela-bocchi
pamela-jennings
pamela-mann
pamela-stanford
pamela-stealt
pandora
paola-albini
pascale-vital
pat-manning
pat-rhea
patricia-dale
patricia-diamond
patricia-kennedy
patricia-rhomberg
patrizia-predan
patti-cakes
patti-petite
paula-brasile
paula-harlow
paula-morton
paula-price
paula-winters
pauline-teutscher
penelope-pumpkins
penelope-valentin
petra-hermanova
petra-lamas
peyton-lafferty
phaedra-grant
pia-snow
piper-fawn
pipi-anderson
porsche-lynn
porsha-carrera
precious-silver
priscillia-lenn
purple-passion
queeny-love
rachel-ashley
rachel-love
rachel-luv
rachel-roxxx
rachel-ryan
rachel-ryder
racquel-darrian
rane-revere
raven
reagan-maddux
rebecca-bardoux
regan-anthony
regine-bardot
regula-mertens
reina-leone
reka-gabor
renae-cruz
renee-foxx
renee-lovins
renee-morgan
renee-perez
renee-summers
renee-tiffany
rhonda-jo-petty
rikki-blake
riley-ray
rio-mariah
rita-ricardo
roberta-gemma
roberta-pedon
robin-byrd
robin-cannes
robin-everett
robin-sane
rochell-starr
rosa-lee-kimball
rosemarie
roxanne-blaze
roxanne-hall
roxanne-rollan
ruby-richards
sabina-k
sabre
sabrina-chimaera
sabrina-dawn
sabrina-jade
sabrina-johnson
sabrina-love-cox
sabrina-mastrolorenzi
sabrina-rose
sabrina-scott
sabrina-summers
sacha-davril
sahara
sahara-sands
sai-tai-tiger
samantha-fox
samantha-ryan
samantha-sterlyng
samantha-strong
samueline-de-la-rosa
sandra-cardinale
sandra-de-marco
sandra-kalermen
sandra-russo
sandy-lee
sandy-pinney
sandy-reed
sandy-samuel
sandy-style
sandy-summers
sara-brandy-canyon
sara-faye
sarah-bernard
sarah-cabrera
sarah-hevyn
sarah-mills
sarah-shine
sara-sloane
sasha
sasha-hollander
sasha-ligaya
sasha-rose
satine-phoenix
satin-summer
savannah-stern
savanna-jane
scarlet-scarleau
scarlet-windsor
seka
selena
serena
serena-south
severine-amoux
shana-evans
shanna-mccullough
shannon-kelly
shannon-rush
shantell-day
sharon-da-vale
sharon-kane
sharon-mitchell
shaun-michelle
shawna-sexton
shawnee-cates
shay-hendrix
shayne-ryder
sheena-horne
sheer-delight
shelby-star
shelby-stevens
shelly-berlin
shelly-lyons
sheri-st-clair
sheyla-cats
shonna-lynn
shyla-foxxx
shy-love
sierra-sinn
sierra-skye
sigrun-theil
silver-starr
silvia-bella
silvia-saint
silvie-de-lux
silvy-taylor
simone-west
sindee-coxx
sindy-lange
sindy-shy
siobhan-hunter
skylar-knight
skylar-price
skyler-dupree
smokie-flame
smoking-mary-jane
solange-shannon
sonya-summers
sophia-santi
sophie-call
sophie-duflot
sophie-evans
sophie-guers
stacey-donovan
stacy-lords
stacy-moran
stacy-nichols
stacy-silver
stacy-thorn
starla-fox
starr-wood
stefania-bruni
stella-virgin
stephanie-duvalle
stephanie-rage
stephanie-renee
stevie-taylor
summer-knight
summer-rose
sunny-day
sunset-thomas
sunshine-seiber
susan-hart
susanne-brend
susan-nero
susi-hotkiss
suzanne-mcbain
suzan-nielsen
suzie-bartlett
suzie-carina
suzi-sparks
sweet-nice
sweety-pie
sybille-rossani
sylvia-benedict
sylvia-bourdon
sylvia-brand
sylvia-engelmann
syreeta-taylor
syren-de-mer
syvette
szabina-black
szilvia-lauren
tai-ellis
taija-rae
taisa-banx
talia-james
tamara-lee
tamara-longley
tamara-n-joy
tamara-west
tami-white
tammy
tammy-lee
tammy-reynolds
tania-lorenzo
tantala-ray
tanya-danielle
tanya-fox
tanya-foxx
tanya-lawson
tanya-valis
tara-aire
tasha-voux
tatjana-belousova
tatjana-skomorokhova
tawnee-lee
tawny-pearl
tayla-rox
taylor-wane
teddi-austin
teddi-barrett
tera-bond
tera-heart
tera-joy
teresa-may
teresa-orlowski
teri-diver
teri-weigel
terri-dolan
terri-hall
tess-ferre
tess-newheart
thais-vieira
tia-cherry
tianna
tiara
tiffany-blake
tiffany-clark
tiffany-duponte
tiffany-rayne
tiffany-rousso
tiffany-storm
tiffany-towers
tiffany-tyler
tiger-lily
tigr
timea-vagvoelgyi
tina-blair
tina-burner
tina-evil
tina-gabriel
tina-loren
tina-marie
tina-russell
tish-ambrose
tommi-rose
tonisha-mills
topsy-curvey
tori-secrets
tori-sinclair
tori-welles
tracey-adams
traci-lords
traci-topps
traci-winn
tracy-duzit
tracy-love
tracy-williams
tricia-devereaux
tricia-yen
trinity-loren
trisha-rey
trista-post
trixie-tyler
ultramax
ursula-gaussmann
ursula-moore
uschi-karnat
valentina
valerie-leveau
valery-hilton
vanessa-chase
vanessa-del-rio
vanessa-michaels
vanessa-ozdanic
vanilla-deville
velvet-summers
veri-knotty
veronica-dol
veronica-hart
veronica-hill
veronica-rayne
veronica-sage
veronika-vanoza
via-paxton
vicky-lindsay
vicky-vicci
victoria-evans
victoria-gold
victoria-knight
victoria-luna
victoria-paris
victoria-slick
victoria-zdrok
viper
virginie-caprice
vivian-valentine
vivien-martines
wendi-white
wendy-divine
whitney-banks
whitney-fears
whitney-wonders
wonder-tracey
wow-nikki
xanthia-berstein
yasmine-fitzgerald
yelena-shieffer
yvonne-green
zara-whites
zsanett-egerhazi
zuzie-boobies
A Paler Shade of Blue Video
Laura's Mother
Bad Side of Town Video
Legend Video
Black Widow
Lethal Passion Video
A Little Irresistible Video
Amateur Lesbians Video
Black Obsession Video
Bonfire of the Panties Video
Breast Friends Video
City of Sin
Mary Madison aka Mary Madness
Crude Video
Debbie Does Wall Street Video
Patoot
Decadent Video
Dyke Bar Video
Eternity Video
Marta Briggs
Fixation
Forbidden Desires Video
Hard Core Cafe Video
Hard Core Cafe Revisited Video
Lucky Break Video
Mamm's the Word Video
On Stage in Color Video
Party Doll A Go Go Video
Vivian
Party Doll A Go Go Part Video
Purely Sexual Video
Shattered Video
Jill Donnelly
Some Like It Big Video
Red Rose
Stake Out Video
Veronica
Temptation Eyes Video
Vegas Blackjack
Krystle as Raven
Women of Color
Curse of the Cat Woman Video
Veronica
Anal Encounters The Beginning of the End Video
Imagine Video
On the Loose Video
Pump Video
Taboo IX Video
Alicia Lodge
Big Game
Blue Heaven
Catalina Five Sabotage Video
Catalina Five Tiger Shark Video
Catalina Five Undercover Video
Catalina Five White Coral Blue Death Video
Digital Lust Video
Everything Goes
Eyewitness Nudes
Raven
Gettin' Wet
Haunted Passions Video
I Do
Images of Desire
Denise
La casa de los sueńos Video
Lick My Lips
Loose Lips Video
Madame X
Maid for Service
Married Women Video
Elizabeth
Possession
Precious Peaks
Sexual Intent
Sizzle
Sporting Illustrated Video
The Girl Has Assets
Vegas Joker's Wild
Catalina Five Treasure Island Video
Total Reball Video
Insatiable Video
Penthouse Love Stories Video
Wet Shots The Best of Taija Rae Volume Video
High Price pread Video
Star Cuts Raven Video short
Gourmet Premier Video short
Heart Throbs
Lujuria carnal
Nina Sutherland
Naked Eyes Video
Falana
Nina Is Taboo
Nina se carga a la familia
Nina Sutherland
Sexos prohibidos
Nina Sutherland
Sky Pies Video
Assistant Security
Tomate familiar
Nina Sutherland
The Grafenberg Spot
Sex Show Viewer
Demasiado bueno para decir no
Girl in the Brothel
Spermbusters Video
Breezy Video
Girls of Penthouse Video
The Locket
Melts in Your Mouth
Perversidad en la cárcel
Paulette
Photo Flesh
Pretty As You Feel Video
Radio K KUM
Slumber Party Marilyn Chambers
Veronica Hart Veronica Hart
as Veronica
Nicholas W Taylor Nicholas W Taylor
Raven Raven
Veronica Foxx Veronica Foxx
Tina Marie Tina Marie
Sandy Sandy
Jessica Rider Jessica Rider
Justine Case Justine Case
Ian Yarnell Ian Yarnell
Chris Legend Chris Legend
Rest of cast listed alphabetically
Julian Wells Julian Wells
Claudia Whittaker
Swinging Shift
Teasers Video
The Pink Lagoon A Sex Romp in Paradise
Shana
Tracie Lords Video
Tracy Lords Video short
Where the Girls Are Video
Lisa Howe as Raven St James
Girls on Fire
Tamara as Vicky Vickers
Las camas del hospital
Brenda Brinkley
Talk Dirty to Me Part III
Nudist uncredited
El sexo en la marina
Jackie
Kinky Business
Brunette Hooker in Pickup uncredited
Sexo en la playa
Candy
Sappho Sextet
Clarissa
Barbie Doll Barbie Doll
Mike Horner Mike Horner
Cal Jammer Cal Jammer
Ron Jeremy Ron Jeremy
Jamie Leigh Jamie Leigh
Mercedes Lynn Mercedes Lynn
Joey Murphy Joey Murphy
Peter North Peter North
Raven Raven
Marilyn Rose Marilyn Rose
Scarlett Scarlett
Joey Silvera Joey Silvera
Putting It All Behind Video
Return to Camp Beaver Lake Video
Woman on Couch as Mercedes
Skin Deep Video
Sleeping Around Video as Mercedez Lynn
Summer Heat Video
George's Secretary as Mercedez
Surf City Sex Video as Mercedez
Sweet Cheeks Video
Tailspin Video
Gail Winger
II The Back Doors Video
The Midas Touch Video
The Spectacle Video
Tired Guy's Wife as Mercedez
Twin Cheeks
Put It in Gere Video
Girl with Peter as Mercedez
Fanny Annie Video
Catalina Five Tiger Shark Video as Mercedez
Cheeks A Backstreet Affair
Scarlett as Mercedes
Tailgate Party
Twin Cheeks
East L A Law Video
Gail Force Gail Force
Ryan Knight Ryan Knight
Mercedes Lynn Mercedes Lynn
Sean Michaels Sean Michaels
Peter North Peter North
Alexandria Quinn Alexandria Quinn
Dominique Simone Dominique Simone
Jake Steed Jake Steed
Shelby Stevens Shelby Stevens
Wayne Summers Wayne Summers
Blake West Blake West
Immorals Stroked Video
Simply Irresistible Video as Domonique
Skippy Jif & Jam Video
Special Treatment Video as Dominique
The Midas Touch Video
The Model Video
The X Producers Video
V I C E II Video as Dominique
Wicked Thoughts Video as Dominque
Wild Thing Video
You Can Touch This Video
Carnal Crimes Video
Leggy Girl as Deirdre Morrow
Fanny Annie Video
Desert Strip Video
Anal Angels Video
Black & Blue
Body Heat Video
Eternal Bliss Video as Coco
Even More Dangerous
Andrea Capiletti Annie as Dominique
Girlfriends Video as Dominique
Hot Licks Video
Love Is
Nothing Serious
Soft Tail
We're No Angels Video
East L A Law Video
Tina Tina
Kira Kira
Bootin' Up Video
Fantasy Gangbang Video uncredited
My Baby Got Back Video
Opie Goes to South Central Video
So Bad Video
The Black Butt Sisters Do Miami Video
Whoopin' Her Behind Video
Adventures of D P Boys South of the Border Video
Adventures of D P Boys Janet and Da Boyz Video
Anal Asians Video
Battle of the Glands Video
Black Gang Bangers Video
Bump & Grind Video
Cracklyn Video
Da Booty Call Video
Lips Video
Sniff Doggy Style Video
Winter Heat Video
Big Bust Babes Video
Black Jack City Video
Booty in the House Video
Girl in Bar
Breastman Does the Himalayas Video
Hot Tight Asses Video
Rump Shaker Video
Sista Video
Girls from Hootersville Volume Four Video
Kim Eternity Kim Eternity
Foxy Foxy
India India
Jade Jade
Jazz Jazz
Karma Karma
Kayla Kayla
Kira Kira
La rose et le fouet Video
Nacho sfonda Laura Video
Natural Wonders of the World Video
Screw My Wife Please And Make Her Eyes Roll Video
Sexe ŕ la carte Video
The Best of Laura Angel Video
Pueblerinas jamonas y guarronas Video as Karma Nera
Lustgĺrden Video
Young Selma as Karma Rosenberg
Rocco y Kelly se lo follan todo Video
Rocco el pervertido Video
Vivir follando Video
Euro Angels Hardball Euro Ringmaster Video
Nacho el matador Video as Carma
El hotel de los polvos Video
El Limbo y los culos según José Video
Lolitan pĺ ridläger Video as Karmen Rosenberg
Maurizia in paradiso Video as Karmen Solana
Onora il padre Video
Reinas del vicio Video
Sodomania Orgies Video
Stories of Ass Video
Transsexual Centerfolds Video
Treulose Tomaten Video
Bardame Strip Club
Debauchery Video
Junge Debütantinnen Blutjung und schon verdorben Video as Renata
True Anal Stories Video
Private Black Label Devil in the Flesh Video
Euro Angels Can Openers Video as Renata
Net Surfers Video
Girl Jam Video
Black Dirty Dancers Video
Freche Biester Anal Piraten Video as Carmen Lajolla
Gerd Klingenberg Gerd Klingenberg
Robert Rosenberg Robert Rosenberg
Sandra Russo Sandra Russo
Sonya Smith Sonya Smith
Nicol Taylor Nicol Taylor
Steve Vincent Steve Vincent
Christian West Christian West
Omar Williams Omar Williams
La Locandiera Video
Luciano's Lucky Ladies Video
Worldwide Sex Video Sexx the Hard Way Video as Nataly Dune
L'Homme dressé Video as Nataly Dune
The Best by Private Latex Sex Video
La rose et le fouet Video
Pirate Video Deluxe Hell Whores and High Heels Video
Worldwide Sex Wild in Paris Video
Fóllame
La femme BAP
Contratos perversos Video as Nataly Dune
La inocencia tiene un precio Video as Nataly Dune
L'hard fatal Video
La fliquette en planque as Nataly Dune
La fisgona Video as Nataly Dune
Niqueurs nés Video
Drôles de filles as Nataly Dune
La vérité si tu bandes Video as Nataly Dune
Net Surfers Video
Ensorceleuses Le projet Blair Bitch Video as Nataly Dune
Latin Psycho Video
Sodomania Up Your Ass Video
The Best by Private Anal Toppers Video
Virtualia Episode Three Dark Side Video
Anal Addicts Video Laura Angel
Chris Charming Chris Charming
Conny Dachs Conny Dachs
Philippe Dean Philippe Dean
Nathalie Dune Nathalie Dune
Helen Duval Helen Duval
Karma Karma
Gerd Klingenberg Gerd Klingenberg
Robert Rosenberg Robert Rosenberg
Sandra Russo Sandra Russo
Sonya Smith Sonya Smith
Nicol Taylor Nicol Taylor
Steve Vincent Steve Vincent
Christian West Christian West
Omar Williams Omar Williams
Clausura Video
El tatuaje Video
Entrapment of Mind Video
L'affaire Katsumi Video
La residencia del vicio Video
Carla
Rituals of Love Video
Roma Ciudad del amor Video
Sex Meat Video
Sodomania Orgies Video
Sodomania Slop Shots Video
Assman Video as Sandra
Italian Flair Video
Woman at party
Pirate Video Deluxe The Academy Video
Private XXX Sex Lust and Videotapes Video
Euro Angels Awesome Asses Video
Between the Lines Video
Mafia's Revenge Video as Sandra
Mr Beaver Checks In Video
Reinas del vicio Video
Junge Debütantinnen Blutjung und schon verdorben Video as Sandra
Net Surfers Video
Jakub Jakub
John John
Jan Jonas Jan Jonas
Verionika Kalvachova Verionika Kalvachova
as Monika
Anetta Keys Anetta Keys
as Aneta
Nancy Lee Nancy Lee
Meridian Meridian
Peter Rain Peter Rain
Reinhard Reinhard
as Reinhardt
Robert Rosenberg Robert Rosenberg
Sandra Russo Sandra Russo
Julian St Jox Julian St Jox
Relazioni intime Video as Aneta Keis
Fuck V I P LSD Video
My Sexy Kittens Video as Dominique
Lesbian Lust Volume Superglam com Lesbians Video
Loaded The Pissing & Fisting Adventure Video as Aneta Keys
Footsie Babes Video
Girls on Girls Video as Anetta Heys
International Eye Candy Video as Anetta Smrhova
Fetish Desires Video as Aneta
Russian Institute Lesson Video as Sunny
ALS DVD # Alana Part & Cayenne Video as Alana
Guess Who's Cumming Video as Aneta
Pirate Fetish Machine Theatre of Lust Video as Sunny
LesBabez Video
EuroBabes Video as Aneta
Big Toys No Boys Video as Linda
Exxxtraordinary Eurobabes Video as Aneta Keys
Girls Hunting Girls Video as Aneta
LesBabez III Video
Pussy Eaters Video as Aneta
Teen Tryouts Audition Video as Cindy Sweet
Hustler XXX Video as Anette Parker
La menteuse Video as Sunny
Czech Mates Video as Aneta
Pleasures of the Flesh Video as Aneta Brawn
Total Babe Video as Adriana
Young & Wild Video as Aneta
Rocco Ravishes Prague Video as Aneta
Between the Lines Video as Aneta
as Samantha
Sammy Lee Sammy Lee
Hard Intrusion as Sanny Jay
Private XXX Lorna Goes Wild Video
Sperm Swap Video as Sandra
Teen Solos Video
Her First MILF Video
How's That Big Cock Gonna Fit in My Ass Video as Sunny Day
My Sexy Kittens Raw Video as Monica
Seventeens Summertime Video
Spicy Teens Video as Monica
Swallow My Rod & Share the Wad Video
Cum Filled Throats Video
Private Tropical Caribbean Dream Video
Ass Traffic Video as Sandra
Fuckdoll Sandwich Video
Gangland Video
Gang Me Bang Me Video as Sandra
Get Your Shit Off My Black Dick Video
High Class Hookers Video
Nancy
Young Harlots The Academy Video as Sandra
My Sexy Kittens Video as Monica
My Sexy Kittens Video as Monica
My Sexy Kittens Video as Monica
My Sexy Kittens Video as Monica
When Porn Stars Play Sex for Fun Video as Samantha
Gaper Maker Video
Cum Swappers Video as Samantha
True Anal Stories Video as Pupy
Hardcore Climax Video as Patrice
Beautiful Girls Video as Pupy
Fucking Beautiful Video as Samantha
Girls Interrupted Cock Loving Lesbians Video as Samantha
Semen Shots Video as Samantha
Teen Tryouts Audition Video as Samantha
Footballers' Wives Second Half Video
Man Trap Apply Within Video
Bite Video
Relaxxx Video
Chloe's Column Fuck Fame Video Michelle Thorne
Herself
Michelle B Michelle B
Michelle
Paige Ashley Paige Ashley
Paige
Laura Michaels Laura Michaels
Herself
Daisy Rock Daisy Rock
Daisy
Sunny Jay Sunny Jay
Nancy
Lala Lala
Lala
Rest of cast listed alphabetically
Alex Alex
Ben Ben
Les Les
Danny Mountain Danny Mountain
Danny
Paul Paul
Wayne Wayne
Chloe
Lesbian Carwash Video
All Internal Video
The Only Way Is Sexsex Video
Strip & Search Video
Cranked Video
Paige
Vampyre Lovers Video
Who Stole Roger Rabbit Video
Nurse
Unit XXX
The Demise of Renee Richards Video
Black Beauty The Devil's Doorway Video
Motor Birds Video
Voyeur Video
Wife Swap Video
Ammonia Arrestibly Arsewipe
Blazed & Confused Video
Dressed to Fuck Video
Angel Perverse Video
Black Cock Sluts Video
Soccer Babes Video
High Class Hookers Video
Screaming Orgasms Video
Filthy Little Whores Video
Backseat Driver Video
and Natural Video
A Perverted Point of View Video Misha
Sasha Sasha
Angel Long Angel Long
Ashley Long Ashley Long Michelle Thorne
Herself
Michelle B Michelle B
Michelle
Paige Ashley Paige Ashley
Paige
Laura Michaels Laura Michaels
Herself
Daisy Rock Daisy Rock
Daisy
Sunny Jay Sunny Jay
Nancy
Lala Lala
Lala
Rest of cast listed alphabetically
Alex Alex
Ben Ben
Les Les
Danny Mountain Danny Mountain
Danny
Paul Paul
Wayne Wayne
as Ashley
Laura Michaels Laura Michaels
as Jane Luna
Moon Woman
Hardcore Control Video
II Anything Goes Video
Dealer
Adventures of Dirty Dog Volume Dirty Debutaunts Video
Cathula Vampires of Sex Video as Laura Ranger
A E R Adult Entertainment Robots Volume The New Breed Video as Laura Ranger
Seventeen Teenage Home Video Linda's First Time Video as Laura Ranger
Cathula Video
Vampire Sex as Laura Ranger
Sin Twins Video as Jane
Hide HideSelf credits
High Class Hookers Video
Herself
The Dark Side of Porn TV Series documentary
Herself
Diary of a Porn Virgin Herself as Laura
Karl Kinkaid Karl Kinkaid
as K K
Steve Hooper Steve Hooper
Barefoot Confidential Video
Black Cravings Video
Bottom Feeders Video
Campus Confessions Video as Ashley
Cream Filling Video
Fetish Are You Human Video
Gangfucked Video
Gangland Video
Grrl Power Video
Gutter Mouths Video
Heavy Metal Video
Hot Bods and Tail Pipe # Video as Ashley
Jenna Confidential Video
New Girls in Town Video
Runaway Butts Video
Specs Appeal Video
Teacher's Pet Video
Cheerleader
The th Horseman Video
The Virgin Canvas Video
Sun Model as Ashley
Train My White Ass Video
V Eight Video
V Eight Video
Young as They Cum Video
Sin Twins Video as Ashley
Teacher's Pet Video
Julie Girl in Bathroom
The Finger Club # Video
The Writer Stories of Lust Video Jessica Darlin
Kitten Kitten
Angel Long Angel Long
Ashley Long Ashley Long
Lexington Steele Lexington Steele
Up Your Ass Video
Viewers Wives Video as Taz
Swallow My Pride Video
Girlvert Video
Double Parked Video
Angel
Svensk lusta Video
Sara as Sarah Slick
Den osynlige mannens sexäventyr Video as Sarah Slick
Naughty College School Girls Video as Angel
Ben Dover Essex Girls Video as Sarah
Screaming Orgasms Video
Assault That Ass Video
Angel
Gangland Video
Caution Your Azz Is in Danger Video
Black Cravings Video
Barely Legal Video as Angel
Grrl Power Video
Handjobs Video
Heavy Metal Video
Hot Bods and Tail Pipe # Video
Initiations Video
Pussy Playhouse Video
Runaways VII Video as Angel
Sex Addicts Video
Sweatin' It Video
The Beast Within Video
Velvet Rose Velvet Rose
Brian Surewood Brian Surewood
Swallow My Pride Video
Stasys Eidrigevicius graphic artist
Pranas Gailius lt Pranas Gailius painter
Paulius Galaune
Petronele Gerlikiene – self taught Lithuanian American artist
Algirdas Griškevicius lt Algirdas Griškevicius
Vincas Grybas – sculptor
Leonardas Gutauskas lt Leonardas Gutauskas painter writer
Vytautas Kairiukštis – lt Vytautas Kairiukštis painter art critic
Vytautas Kasiulis – lt Vytautas Kasiulis painter graphic artist stage designer
Petras Kalpokas painter
Rimtas Kalpokas – lt Rimtas Kalpokas painter graphic artist
Leonas Katinas – lt Leonas Katinas painter
Povilas Kaupas – lt Povilas Kaupas
Algimantas Kezys Lithuanian American photographer
Vincas Kisarauskas – lt Vincas Kisarauskas painter graphic artist stage designer
Saulute Stanislava Kisarauskiene – lt Saulute Stanislava Kisarauskiene graphic artist painter
Stasys Krasauskas – lt Stasys Krasauskas graphic artist
Stanislovas Kuzma – lt Stanislovas Kuzma sculptor
Antanas Martinaitis – lt Antanas Martinaitis painter
Jonas Rimša – lt Jonas Rimša painter
Jan Rustem painter
Antanas Samuolis – lt Antanas Samuolis painter
Šarunas Sauka painter
Boris Schatz – sculptor and founder of the Bezalel Academy
Irena Sibley née Pauliukonis – Children s book author and illustrator
Algis Skackauskas – painter
Antanas Žmuidzinavicius – painter
Franciszek Smuglewicz – painter
Yehezkel Streichman Israeli painter
Kazys Šimonis – painter
Algimantas Švegžda – lt Algimantas Švegžda painter
Otis Tamašauskas Lithographer Print Maker Graphic Artist
Adolfas Valeška – painter and graphic artist
Adomas Varnas – painter
Kazys Varnelis – artist
Vladas Vildžiunas lt Vladas Vildžiunas sculptor
Mikalojus Povilas Vilutis lt Mikalojus Povilas Vilutis graphic artist
Viktoras Vizgirda – painter
William Zorach – Modern artist who died in Bath Maine
Antanas Žmuidzinavicius – painter
Kazimieras Leonardas Žoromskis – painter
Politics edit
President Valdas Adamkus right chatting with Vice President Dick Cheney left See also List of Lithuanian rulers
Mindaugas – the first and only King of Lithuania –
Gediminas – the ruler of Lithuania –
Algirdas – the ruler together with Kestutis of Lithuania –
Kestutis – the ruler together with Algirdas of Lithuania –
Vytautas – the ruler of Lithuania – together with Jogaila
Jogaila – the ruler of Lithuania – from to together with Vytautas the king of Poland –
Jonušas Radvila – the field hetman of Grand Duchy of Lithuania –
Dalia Grybauskaite – current President of Lithuania since
Valdas Adamkus – President of Lithuania till
Jonas Basanavicius – "father" of the Act of Independence of
Algirdas Brazauskas – the former First secretary of Central Committee of Communist Party of Lithuanian SSR the former president of Lithuania after and former Prime Minister of Lithuania
Joe Fine – mayor of Marquette Michigan –
Kazys Grinius – politician third President of Lithuania
Mykolas Krupavicius – priest behind the land reform in interwar Lithuania
Vytautas Landsbergis – politician professor leader of Sajudis the independence movement former speaker of Seimas member of European Parliament
Stasys Lozoraitis – diplomat and leader of Lithuanian government in exile –
Stasys Lozoraitis junior – politician diplomat succeeded his father as leader of Lithuanian government in exile –
Antanas Merkys – the last Prime Minister of interwar Lithuania
Rolandas Paksas – former President removed from the office after impeachment
Justas Paleckis – journalist and politician puppet Prime Minister after Soviet occupation
Kazimiera Prunskiene – the first female Prime Minister
Mykolas Sleževicius – three times Prime Minister organized
Girlvert Video as Jasmine Lynne
The Oral Adventures of Craven Moorehead # Video
Gangbang Virgins Video as Jasmine Lynne
Assault That Ass Video as Jasmine Lynne
Barely Video as Jasmine Lynne
Deep Cheeks Video as Jasmine Lynne
Deep Throat This Video as Jasmine Lynne
Double Penetration Virgins D p Dilemma Video as Jasmine Lynne
Grrl Power Video as Jasmine Lynne
Heaven Video
Angel II
Hot Bods and Tail Pipe # Video as Jasmine Lynne
Lost Innocence Auditions Video as Jasmine Lynne
New Girls Bitches Come They Go Video
North Pole # Video as Jasmine Lynne
Older Women & Younger Women Video
Perverted Stories Video
Sex Toys Video
Teen Dreams Video
Teens Goin' Wild Video
The Babysitter Video as Jasmine
The Beast Within Video
University Coeds Video
Jasmin as Jasmin
Violation of Ashley Blue Video
White Trash Whore Video
Young & Cumming Video
Young and Anal Video
Young as They Cum Video
Barely Legal Video as Jasmine
Jasmine Lynn Jasmine Lynn
as Jasmine Lynne
Sara Mark Sara Mark
Jessica May Jessica May
Lauren Phoenix Lauren Phoenix
Brett Rockman Brett Rockman
Vic Sinister Vic Sinister
as Victoria
Brian Surewood Brian Surewood
John West John West
Dani Woodward Dani Woodward
Playgirl Private Pleasures Video
Pussy Farts Video
Pussyman's Bikini Butt Babes Video
Share the Load Video
Sperm Smiles Video as Victoria Sinn
Spunk'd Video as Victoria Sin
Stick It in My Face Video
Stroker's Angels Video
Swallow Me P O V Video
The Voyeur Video as Victoria Sin
Tits and Ass Video
White Butts Drippin' Chocolate Nuts Video
XXX Training Video as Victoria
Train My White Ass Video as Victoria
Guy Cream Pie Video
A Load in Every Hole Video
Assault That Ass Video
Barefoot Confidential Video
Barefoot Confidential Video
Black Dicks in White Chicks Video as Victoria Sinista
Bottom Feeders Video
Breakin' 'Em in Video as Victoria
Double Indulgence Video as Victoria
Epic Global Orgies Video
Fresh New Faces Video as Victoria
Full Service Video
Gooey Buns Video as Victoria
Big Breasted Lesbians Video
M I L T F Video
My Friend's Hot Mom Video
My Hot Wife Is Fucking Blackzilla Video
My Wife Likes It Black Video
My Friend's Hot Mom Video
Top Heavy Video
Carnal Coeds Video Sandy Beach
Kristina Cross Kristina Cross
Savannah Jane Savannah Jane
Wonder Boobs Video
On Location in Fantasy Island Video
Tit to Tit Video
Concrete Heat Video
Double D Dykes Video
Snatch Masters Video
Gang Bang Bitches Whitney's Saturday Night Gang Bang Video
More Than a Handful Life Under the Big Top Video
Anal Aristocrat Video
Babes Illustrated Video
Boobtown Video
Busty Porno Queens Video
Flexxx Video
Mellon Man Video
Plumb and Dumber Video
Spinners Video
Stupid and Stupider Video
The Black Bamboo Video
Thunder Boobs Video
Titty Town Video
Fantasías depravadas Video
A Woman Scorned Video
Breastman's Wild West Adventure Video
Lusty Lap Dancers Video
Lusty Lap Dancers Video
Nightmare on Lesbian Street Video
Tit Tease Video
Big Knockers Vol
Girls of Sorority Row Video
Shave Tails Video
Liza Harper Liza Harper
Emily Jewel Emily Jewel
Malita Malita
Randi Rage Randi Rage
Caressa Savage Caressa Savage
Alexandra Silk Alexandra Silk
Angelica Sin Angelica Sin
Maid Marry Ann
Tattoo Video
Intensive Care Unit Video
Eva
XXX Trek The Final Orgasm Video
Angry Anal Part Video
Milkin' It for All It's Worth Video
Sweet Enough to Eat Video
Angelica's Anal Sinns Video
BJ Becky Video
Fuck You Ass Whores Video
Sticky Fingered Video
The Lecher Video
Xtreme Janine Video
Summer of Sin Video
Pirate Broken Dreams Video
Pirate Sex Club Video
Suspicious Pleasures Video
Jennifer Lawrence
Dangerous Tides Video
Club Sunset Video
Valerie Prescott
Stacked Titanic Tits Video
A Girl's Affair Video
S M U T Tricks n' Treats Video
No Man's Land Video
RX for Sex Video
Nick's Bitches Video
Not Far from Heaven Video
Older Bolder Better Video
Real College Girls Video
Toe Jam Video
Hot Video
Older and Lesbian Video
Women Seeking Women Video as Nicole
It's Just Wrong Video
Dirty Thirties & Lesbian Video
M I L F Money Video
Older Women with Younger Girls Video
E A Video
Older and Lesbian Video
Twenty Tied Video
Meanwhile Back at the Ranch Video
Women Seeking Women Volume Video as Nicole
We Go Deep Video
Lesbian Hospital Video
Nurse Nicole as Nicole
Lesbian Mature Women Video
M I L T F Video
Older Women Younger Men Video
Older Women & Younger Women Video
Women Seeking Women Video as Nicole
Blowjob Adventures of Dr Fellatio Video
Knee Pad Nymphos Vol # Video
Tales from the B & G Company Video
Nicole Moore Nicole Moore
Erica
Mother Lovers' Society Vol Video
Erica Lauren
Mother Lovers Society Video
Erica
Lesbian Beauties Mature Women Video
Mother Daughter Exchange Club Video
My Friend's Hot Mom Video
There's Something Wrong with Mommy Video
Fuck My Old Ass Video
Oh No There's a Negro in My Wife Video
Oh No There's a Negro in My Mom Video
Cuckold MILFs Video
Mothers Teaching Daughters How to Suck Cock Video
Scene Three
Plus MILFs Video
Kinky Big Butt Cougars Video
My Friend's Hot Mom Video
Granny's Hairy Pussy Video
Ass Masters Video
MILF and Honey Video
Mother Fucker Video
Older Women Younger Men Video
Somebody's Mother Video
Hot Video
Mature Women with Younger Girls Video
Older and Anal Video
Forty and Furry Video
Mature Shavers Video
Older Bolder Better Video
Dirty Looks
Hollywood Hustle as Paulina Down
Hot Cargo
I'm No Brat Video
Keep It Cumming as Paulina Down
Ladies' Man
Brigit as Paulina Down
Legend Part Video Crystal Ashley
Harmony Bliss Harmony Bliss
Christian Christian
Deauxma Deauxma
Dana Hayes Dana Hayes
Erica Lauren Erica Lauren
Bridgette Monroe Bridgette Monroe
Will Powers Will Powers
Rocco Reed Rocco Reed
Alan Stafford Alan Stafford
Danny Wylde Danny Wylde
Live Bait
Meltdown
Model Wife Video
Photo Shoot Girl # as Brigitte Monroe
Night Trips II Video
Oriental Spice
Miss Dallas as Bridgett Monroe
Passionate Lips
Playing the Field
Rear Burner
Star Video as Paulina Down
Star Spangled Banger
Sweet Miss Fortune Video
Sweet Tease
The Fire Down Below
The Taming of Tami Video as Brigitte Monroe
Torrid Without a Cause
Triple Header Video
Undercover Carol as Paulina Down
Where the Girls Sweat Video
Wire Desire
Amazing Tails V Video
Jungle Jane segment "Monkeying Around" as Brigitte Monroe
Driving Miss Daisy Crazy Video
Sex Kittens
Between a Rock and a Hot Place Video
Delicate Matters
Heather Lere Heather Lere
Porsche Lynn Porsche Lynn
Madison Madison
Bridgette Monroe Bridgette Monroe
Caressa Savage Caressa Savage
Bionca Seven Bionca Seven
as Bionca
Tianna Tianna
Kirsty Waay Kirsty Waay
Up and Cummers Video
Whore House Video
El diablo de la Srta Jones el infierno Video as Nikole Lace
Investigación anal Video
Synchronous Swimmer
New Hookers Video
Girls of the Athletic Dept Video
A Clockwork Orgy Video
Prison Matron as Nikole Lace
Anal Sluts & Sweethearts Video as Nikole Lace
Hotel Sodom Video
Pick Up Lines Video
Strap on Sally Chantilly's French Kiss Video
Strap on Sally Triple Penetration Trollop Video as Nikole Lace
Swedish Erotica
The Erotic Artist Video
After Midnight Video
Anal Bad Girls Video as Nikole Lace
Anal Persuasion Video
Renee as Nikole Lace
Babe Watch Part Video
Bad Girls Cell Block Video as Nikole Lace
Domination Video as Nikole Lace
Dresden Diary Endangered Secrets Video
Fantasy Chamber Video
Raunch Uncut Jewel Video
Seymore and Shane Do Ireland Video
Summer of ' Video
Up and Cummers Video
Silk Stockings The Black Widow Video
Where the Girls Sweat Video
Red Door Diaries Video
Selena Under Siege Video
Sex Bandits Video Bam Bam
Marine Cartier Marine Cartier
Alex Dane Alex Dane
Leanna Foxxx Leanna Foxxx
Jill Kelly Jill Kelly
Nyrobi Knight Nyrobi Knight
Nicole Lace Nicole Lace
Missy Missy
Peter North Peter North
Gerry Pike Gerry Pike
Alex Sanders Alex Sanders
Stephanie Swift Stephanie Swift
Tabitha Tabitha
Tatyana Tatyana
Frank Towers Frank Towers
Shameless Video
Sinnocence Video
Slippery Slopes Video
Smoke Screen Video
Sodomania Warning Not for the Faint of Heart Video
The Comix Video
The Other Side Video
The Sexual Solution Video
The Sin a bun Girls Video
Fashion Sluts Video
Talking Blue TV Series
Anal Addicts Video
Malibu Heat Video
Perverted Stories II Video
Pick Up Lines Video
Takin' It to the Limit Nastier Than Ever Video
The Voyeur Video
Creme De Femme Video as Natasha Marie
Sex Academy The Art of Talking Dirty Video
Sex Academy The Art of Real Sex Video
Seymore and Shane Do Ireland Video
Stardust Video
Girls of the Very Big Video
Kama Sutra The Art of Making Love Video
Cuntrol Video as Natasha Marie
Sex Academy Video
Anal Delights Video
Rebecca
Catwalk Video
Chrissie
El diablo de la Srta Jones el infierno Video
Prairie Gals Video
A Clockwork Orgy Video
Blue Movie Video
Dr Desire Dawn Burning
J R Carrington J R Carrington
Rebecca Lord Rebecca Lord
Anna Malle Anna Malle
Rick Masters Rick Masters
Missy Missy
Jonathan Morgan Jonathan Morgan
Peter North Peter North
Precious Silver Precious Silver
Steven St Croix Steven St Croix
Marilyn Star Marilyn Star
Tony Tedeschi Tony Tedeschi
Vince Vouyer Vince Vouyer
Erotika Video
Profiles House Dick Video
Strap on Sally Chantilly's French Kiss Video
Strap on Sally Triple Penetration Trollop Video
Cracklyn Video
Creme De Femme Video
De Sade Video
Erotic Obsession Video
Euro max Cream 'n' Eurosluts Video
Fantasy Chamber Video
Gangbang Girl Video
Horny Henry's French Adventure Video
Lessons 'N' Love Video
Nasty Nymphos # Video
Private Film Golden Triangle Video as Rebecca Carré
Private Video Magazine Video
Pussyman The Squirt Queens Video
Rebecca's World Tour French Edition Video
The French Way Video
The Naked Truth Video
Tight Shots Video
Private Film Money for Nothing Sex for Free Video as Rebecca Carre
Scuole superiori Video as Rebecca
maschi per Sandy as Rebecca Dupont
Felecia Felecia
Rebecca Lord Rebecca Lord
Tracy Love Tracy Love
Peter North Peter North
Tony Tedeschi Tony Tedeschi
Marc Wallice Marc Wallice
Gang Bang Dollies Video
Hardcore Fantasies Video
Hollywood Halloween Video
Hot Tight Asses Video
Lesbian Debutante Video
Pick Up Lines Video
Private Stories Beach Bang Video
Private Stories Forest Nymph Video
Sinboy Video
Smooth Ride Video
Mary
The Show Video
Edie the Starlet as Tracy Lori
Nymph
Nymph One
The Portrait of Dorie Grey Video
Anal Fever Video
Erotic Newcummers Video
Molina Video
Jenny
Pick Up Lines Video
Talk Dirty to Me Part Video
The Wild Ones Video
Time Machine Video
Up Close and Personal Video
Video Adventures of Peeping Tom Video
Anal Lovebud Video
Back Field in Motion Video
Naked & Nasty Video
Spinners Video
Tracy Love Tracy Love
Peter North Peter North
Vince Vouyer Vince Vouyer
Voyeur Strippers Video
XXX T V Video T T Boy
Nena Cherry Nena Cherry
as Nina Cherry
Paul Cox Paul Cox Sinful Desires Video
Anal Holiday Video
Butt Bangers Ball Video
La esposa de la mafia Video
Sunbather
The Backway Inn Video
A Girl's Affair Video
Bad Girls Bust Out Video
Sleepover Video
Babes Behind Bars Video
Babewire Video
Bedtime Stories Video
Busty Babes in Heat Video
Incorrigible Video
Lady M's Anything Nasty # Pink Pussy Party Video
Lethal Affairs Video
Moondance Video
Bachannalian
Pocahotass Video
Prime Choice Video
Suzi Bungholeo Video as Kelly Jeen
Captive Video
Erotic Newcummers Video
The Cumm Brothers Two Goos for Every Girl Video
The Delegate Video
Big Boobs in Buttsville Video
Celine DeVoux Celine DeVoux
Kelly Jean Kelly Jean
Christi Lake Christi Lake
as Christy Lake
Peter North Peter North
Young and Anal Video
Young Girls Do Video
Young Girls Do Sweet Meat Video
Night Tales Video
Boob Acres Video
Lucinda
Deep Behind the Scenes with Seymore Butts Video
GutterMouths Video
In Your Face Video
Love Exchange Video
Anal Delinquent Video
Anal Maniacs Video as Nena Anderson
Anal Trashy Ass Video
Back Field in Motion Video as Nina
Blondes Video
Dales House of Anal Video
Girls of the Panty Raid Video
Hellfire Video
Interview Caught in the Act Video
Legal Briefs Video
Love Dancers Video
Pizza Sluts Video
Velvet Video
Video Virgins Video
Young and Anal Video
Young Girls Do Troublemakers Video
Erotic Newcummers Video
Hollywood Hineys Vol Video
Hollywood Hineys Vol Video
Rod Fontana Rod Fontana
Holly Hummer Holly Hummer
Damien Michaels Damien Michaels
Dick Nasty Dick Nasty
Blake Palmer Blake Palmer
Ursula Ursula
A Girl's Affair Video
Ass Openers Video
Hot Tight Asses Video
KSEX Video
Naked Outdoors Video
She Has Skills Video
Tails of Perversity Video
Anal Crack Attack Video as Cort Knee
Anal Fireball Video
Anal Load Lickers Video
Anal Sex Freaks Video
Anal Video Virgins Video
Career Girls Video
Naked Mockey Rayna Video
Pussyman's Nite Club Party Video
Roller Babes Video as Cort Knee
Sinboy Bareass Barbecue Video
Squirters Video
Triple Penetration Debutante Sluts Video
Anal Institution Video
Canned Heat Video
Hot Tight Asses Video
Hot Tight Asses Video
Raw Footage Video
Anal Lovebud Video as Cort Knee
Black for More Video
Caught in the Act Video as Mikki Lynn
Cherry Cheeks Video
Dr Butts Video Johnnie Black
Chloe Chloe
Cortknee Cortknee
Paul Cox Paul Cox
Delphin Delphin
Micky Lynn Micky Lynn
Peter North Peter North
Alexandria Quinn Alexandria Quinn
Jake Steed Jake Steed
Kyle Stone Kyle Stone
Vince Vouyer Vince Vouyer
Harry Horndog Love Puppies Video
Hot Tight Asses Video
No Fly Zone Video
Pvt Heather Westland as Mickey Lynn
Sex Punk Video
Sharon Starlet Video
Sheepless in Montana Video
Rosie McDonald
Sindy Does Annal Video as Mikki Lynn
Take the A Train Video
The Fury Video
Whoomp There She Is Video
Anal Knights in Hollywood Video
Bush League Video
Heidigate Video
Raunch Video
Up and Coming Executive Video
Malcolm XXX Video
Raunch French Kiss Video
The Uptown Girl Video
Ultra Head Video
Andrea Price
Private Affairs Vol Video
Private Affairs Vol Video
Nick East Nick East
Veronica Hart Veronica Hart
Haley Hills Haley Hills
as Debbie Jointed
Jalynn Jalynn
Dan Johnson Dan Johnson
Keisha Keisha
Chasey Lain Chasey Lain
Micky Lynn Micky Lynn
Tiffany Mynx Tiffany Mynx
Brittany O'Connell Brittany O'Connell
Primal Desires Video
st Cave Girl
Super Hornio Brothers Video
Crude Video
Deep Cheeks II as P J Kerrington
Don't Bother to Knock Video as P J Sparx
Jamie Loves Jeff Video as PeeJay
Nightfire Video
On the Job Training Video P J Sparxx
Joey
Teri Diver Teri Diver
Mimi
Mike Horner Mike Horner
Dirk
Micky Ray Micky Ray
Cave Man Leader
Diane O'Daine Diane O'Daine
st Cave Girl
Jaylin Jaylin
nd Cave Girl
Rick Masters Rick Masters
st Cave Man
Michael J Cox Michael J Cox
nd Cave Man
Passages III Video as P J Sparks
Passages IV Success Video
Girl in Pool
Sleeping with Emily Video
Emily as P J Kerrington
Southern Comfort Video
Spread Sheets Video
The Bad News Brat Video
Vow of Passion Video
Where There's Sparxx There's Fire Video
Wild Child
Linda as K C Kerrington
Anal Climax Video
Anal Encounters Video
Imagine Video
Manbait Video
Mavis
Painful Initiation Video
Private Affairs Vol Video
Taboo IX Video
Talk Dirty to Me Part Video
Sally
Bite Video
Christine Winters as P J Kerrington
Persia Persia
Nikki Sinn Nikki Sinn
P J Sparxx P J Sparxx
Jake Steed Jake Steed
Cole Stevens Cole Stevens
Hot Tight Asses Video
In Loving Color Video
Home Boy Shopping Network Girl as Venus
In Loving Color Part Video as Venus
In Loving Color Part Two Video
Mary as Venus
II Jugsy Video
Auditioner at Bar uncredited
Lez Go Crazy
Lust Crimes Video
My Baby Got Back Video
One Lay at a Time Video
Pubic Eye Video
Sex Wish Video
Supermarket Babes in Heat Video
Tailiens Video
The Adventures of Breastman
The Best Rears of Our Lives Video
The Dirtiest Girl in the World Video
White Men Can Hump
Portrait of Lust Video
Bunz Eye Video as Venus
Butties Video
Rent a Butt Video as Lynette
Shoot to Thrill Video
You Bet Your Butt Video
Rocky Mountains Video
Persia Persia
Rusty Rhodes Rusty Rhodes
Tatiana Tatiana
Tianna Taylor Tianna Taylor
as Chanel
Monica
Lo más duro del Kamasutra Video
First Whores Club Video
Crudehilda
Lisa Video
Click TV Series
Movie Theater Wife
Sexual Dependence Day Movie Theater Wife
Rocky El regreso
Assy Video
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See also Use of performance enhancing drugs in sport
Legal status of anabolic steroids and other compounds with anabolic effects in Western countries
Anabolic steroids are banned by all major sports bodies including Association of Tennis Professionals Major League Baseball Fédération Internationale de Football Association the Olympics the National Basketball Association the National Hockey League World Wrestling Entertainment and the National Football League The World Anti Doping Agency WADA maintains the list of performance enhancing substances used by many major sports bodies and includes all anabolic agents which includes all anabolic steroids and precursors as well as all hormones and related substances Spain has passed an anti doping law creating a national anti doping agency Italy passed a law in where penalties range up to three years in prison if an athlete has tested positive for banned substances In Russian President Vladimir Putin signed into law ratification of the International Convention Against Doping in Sport which would encourage cooperation with WADA Many other countries have similar legislation prohibiting anabolic steroids in sports including Denmark France the Netherlands and Sweden
Usage edit
June 12: Major League Baseball pitching star Dock Ellis takes LSD and throws a no-hitter. Ellis later quits drugs, becomes a recovery counselor, and expresses deep regret over drug abuse during his entire playing career.[441][442]
June 13: President Nixon appoints the President's Commission on Campus Unrest. The report issued in September finds a direct correlation between the unrest and the level of US military involvement in Indochina.
June 15: The US Supreme Court confirms conscientious objector protection on moral grounds.
June 22: The US voting age is lowered to 18. This is soon challenged and overturned in the Supreme Court, leading to the swift adoption of the 26th Amendment on June 1, 1971 guaranteeing suffrage at 18.
June 27–28: Bath Festival of Blues and Progressive Music, Shepton Mallet, Somerset, UK, featuring Hot Tuna, Fleetwood Mac, Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd and many more.
July: Huston Plan: A broad, cross-agency scheme for illegal domestic surveillance of anti-war figures is concocted by a White House staffer, and accepted but then quickly quashed by President Nixon. Elements of the plan were, however, allegedly implemented in any event.[443][444][445]
August 6: Riot police evacuate Disneyland in Anaheim, CA after a few hundred Yippies stage a protest.
August 17: Communist activist Angela Davis appears on the FBI's Ten Most Wanted list after a firearm purchased in her name is linked to a murder plot involving a judge.
August 24: The Sterling Hall Bombing at the University of Wisconsin in Madison by anti-war activists kills physics researcher Robert Fassnacht. Four others are severely injured, and millions of dollars in damages occur.[446]
August 26: Women's Strike for Equality: 50 years after US women's suffrage, 20,000 celebrate and march in New York City, demanding true equality for women in American life.[447]
August 26–31: 600,000+ attend Third Isle of Wight Festival. Over fifty acts including The Who, Hendrix, Miles Davis, The Doors, Ten Years After, ELP, Joni Mitchell, and Jethro Tull.
August 29–30: Rioting and violence erupts at Chicano Moratorium anti-war rally in Los Angeles; reporter Rubén Salazar is killed by a tear gas shell.
September: Jesus Christ Superstar: The Christian Rock Opera debuts as an album. It later becomes a smash on Broadway and on film.[448]
September 12: Timothy Leary escapes prison with help from the Weather Underground, and joins Eldridge Cleaver in Algiers.
September 16: London: Apolitical hard rock act Led Zeppelin end the Beatles' 8-year run as Melody Maker's world #1 group of the year.
September 18: Exceptionally influential musician Jimi Hendrix dies from complications of a probable drug overdose at age 27 in London.
September 19: Pilton Pop, Blues & Folk Festival, the first ever Glastonbury Festival, features T-Rex and is attended by 1,500 people.
October: The Female Eunuch: Germaine Greer's pro-feminist bestseller is published.[449]
October: Keith Stroup founds NORML, a group working to end marijuana prohibition, in Washington, DC.
October 4: Janis Joplin, rock's first female superstar, dies as the result of an apparent accidental heroin overdose at age 27 in Los Angeles.
October 13: Political activist Angela Davis is arrested on kidnapping, murder, and conspiracy charges.
October 26: Doonesbury debuts as a syndicated comic strip, acknowledges the counterculture, and continues to chronicle events into the 21st century.[450]
October 29: President Nixon is pelted with eggs by an unfriendly crowd of 2000 after giving a speech in San Jose, CA.
November 7: Jerry Rubin appears live on The David Frost Show and tries to pass a joint to the talkshow host, the signal for Yippies in the audience to rush the stage and protest.
December 6: The Maysles Brothers release their film documentary of Altamont: Gimme Shelter.
December 21: Elvis Presley arrives unannounced at the White House. The King meets and is photographed with President Nixon. They discuss patriotism, hippies, and the war on drugs.[451][452]
December: Paul McCartney sues to dissolve the Beatles.
1971[edit]
January 2: The ban on cigarette advertising on US TV and radio takes effect.[453]
January 12: Styled after the UK TV hit Till Death Us Do Part, the long-running US smash All in the Family debuts with Rob Reiner as Michael Stivic, the counterculture's college-educated answer to the working-class Archie Bunker.[454][455]
January 31: Police fire on a peace march in Los Angeles, killing one.
February 4: A military induction center in Oakland, CA is bombed.
February 4–8: Rioting in Wilmington, NC leaves 2 dead.
February 13: An induction center in Atlanta, GA is bombed.
February 21: The UN Convention on Psychotropic Substances is signed in Vienna, with the intention of controlling psychoactive drugs such as amphetamines, barbiturates, benzodiazepines, and psychedelics at the international level.[122]
March 1: The US Capitol building is bombed by war protesters; no injuries, but extensive damage results.
March 5: The FCC says that it can penalize radio stations for playing music that seems to glorify or promote illegal drug usage.
March 8: The Fight of the Century: Conscientious Objector and counterculture hero Muhammad Ali loses to default symbol of the pro-war right Joe Frazier at Madison Square Garden, NYC, in what is widely considered to be the greatest heavyweight fight in boxing history.[456][457][458]
March 11: Rioting at University of Puerto Rico leaves 3 dead.
April 23: Vietnam veterans protest against the war at the US Capitol in Washington, DC, throw their medals on the steps, and testify to US war crimes.
April 24: 500,000 protesters rally at US Capitol to petition for an end to the war; 200,000 rally against the war in San Francisco.
May 3: Over 12,000 anti-war protesters are arrested on the third day of the 1971 May Day Protests in Washington, DC.
May 10: Attorney General John N. Mitchell compares the anti-war protesters to Nazis, and on May 13, calls them Communists.
May 17: The play Godspell opens in New York, depicting Jesus and his disciples in a contemporary, countercultural milieu.
May 21: Marvin Gaye releases the socially conscious album What's Going On.[422][459]
May 31: US military personnel in London petition at US Embassy against the Vietnam War.
June 13: Pentagon Papers: The New York Times publishes the first excerpt of illegally leaked secret US military documents detailing US intervention in Indochina since 1945. A Federal Court injunction on June 15 temporarily stops the releases.[460]
June 18: The Washington Post publishes excerpts from the Pentagon Papers, halted by court order the following day.
June 20–24 : 'Glastonbury Fayre', the second Glastonbury Festival, features David Bowie, Traffic, Fairport Convention, and the first incarnation of the "Pyramid Stage".
June 22: The Boston Globe publishes Pentagon Papers excerpts; this is halted by injunction on the 23rd and the newspapers are impounded.
June 28: Muhammad Ali's conviction for draft resistance is unanimously overturned by the US Supreme Court in Washington, DC.
June 28: President Nixon releases all 47 volumes of Pentagon Papers to Congress.
June 30: Supreme Court rules 6-3 that newspapers have a right to publish the Pentagon Papers. The Times and Post resume publication the following day.
July 3: Jim Morrison, founding member of The Doors, dies of a probable heroin overdose at age 27 in Paris.[461]
August 1: Concert for Bangladesh: George Harrison and friends including Ravi Shankar, Ringo Starr, Eric Clapton, Leon Russell, Billy Preston and Bob Dylan stage a landmark charity event in New York. Popular albums and a film follow, and the shows become a model for huge rock benefits such as Live Aid.[462]
August 18: Attorney General Mitchell announces there will be no Federal investigation of the 1970 Kent State shootings.
August: Cheech & Chong's eponymous first album is released.
September 3: Burglars operating under the direction of White House officials break in to the office of Daniel Ellsburg's psychiatrist in a botched attempt to find files to discredit the Pentagon Papers leaker.[463]
September 9: Attica: Prisoners take control, hold hostages, and riot at Attica State Prison, NY. 39 die before prisoner demands are met and order is restored.
September 15: Greenpeace is founded in Vancouver, BC.
October: est, the controversial self-improvement training program holds its first conference in San Francisco.[464]
October 8: Three FBI informants reveal on PBS that they were paid to infiltrate anti-war groups and instigate them to commit violent acts which could be prosecuted.
October 19–23: Rioting in Memphis leaves one dead.
October 29: Guitar phenomenon Duane Allman of the Allman Brothers Band is killed in a motorcycle accident in Macon, GA at age 24.
November 10: Berkeley, CA City Council votes to provide sanctuary to all military deserters.
November: Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, Hunter S. Thompson's drug-drenched indictment of 1960s counterculture, is published in Rolling Stone in 2 parts.
December 10: John Sinclair Freedom Rally: John Lennon and other notables perform and speak at Crisler Arena in Ann Arbor to protest the treatment of Sinclair, who gave two pot joints to an undercover cop and was sentenced to 10 years in prison.[465]
December 26–28: 15 Vietnam veterans occupy the Statue of Liberty to protest the war.
December 28: Anti-war veterans attempt takeover of Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C. 80 are arrested.
December: Feminism comes of age: Gloria Steinem's Ms. Magazine is first published as an insert in New York Magazine. The first standalone issue arrives the following month.
Stephen Gaskin establishes "The Farm" hippie commune in Tennessee.
Saul Alinsky's Rules for Radicals is published.[466]
Abbie Hoffman's Steal This Book is published.
The Anarchist Cookbook is published.
Our Bodies, Ourselves is published.[467]
1972[edit]
February 1: The Needle and the Damage Done: Neil Young releases a moving musical testimonial of friends lost to deadly narcotics during the era. Growth of heroin use flattens out in the 1970s, but is considered "hip" and explodes again within unindoctrinated generations in the 1990s and beyond.[468][469]
March: The Nixon administration begins deportation proceedings against John Lennon, on the pretext of his 1968 marijuana charge in London.[470]
March 22: The National Commission on Marihuana and Drug Abuse, appointed by President Nixon, finds "little danger" in cannabis, recommending abolition of all criminal penalties for possession.
April 16: Facing heavy ground losses, US forces resume the bombing of Northern Vietnam.
April 17–18: Students at University of Maryland protesting the bombing battle with police and National Guard are sent in.
April 22: Large anti-war marches in New York, San Francisco, and Los Angeles.
May 2: US FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover dies at 77 after nearly 50 years of virtually unchallenged control over the principal federal law enforcement agency.[471]
May 19: Weather Underground bomb at the Pentagon causes damage but no injuries.
May 21–22: 15,000 demonstrate in Washington against the war.
June 4: Angela Davis is acquitted on all counts in her weapons trial.
June 12: John Lennon's Plastic Ono Band releases the politically charged double album Some Time in New York City.
June 17: The Watergate burglars are arrested in Washington, DC.
July 28: Actress Jane Fonda visits North Vietnam. Fonda's return incites outrage when a photograph[472] of her seated on an enemy anti-aircraft gun is published, and she insists that POWs held captive have not been tortured or brainwashed by the communists. Fonda continues to apologize for her controversial visit to the present.[473][474]
July: The first Rainbow Gathering of the Tribes is held over 4 days in Colorado, US.
October 26: October Surprise?: US National Security Advisor Henry Kissinger tells a White House press conference that "we believe that peace is at hand."[475]
November 2–8: About 500 protesters from the American Indian Movement take over the Bureau of Indian Affairs in Washington.
November 7: Republican Richard Nixon is re-elected in a landslide over progressive democrat Senator George McGovern.
November 16: Police kill 2 students during campus rioting at Southern University in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.
November 21: A Federal Appeals Court overturns the conviction of the "Chicago 7" members.
December 18–29: US Operation Linebacker II becomes most intensive bombing campaign of the war.
The Joy of Sex: Unthinkable a decade earlier, the widely read sex manual for the liberated 1970s is published and openly displayed in mainstream bookstores.
Michael X, a self-styled black revolutionary and civil rights activist in 1960s London, is convicted of murder. He was executed by hanging in Spain in 1975.
1973[edit]
January 1: Bangladeshis burn down the US Information Service in Dacca in protest of the bombing of North Vietnam.
January 2: Aerial bombing of North Vietnam resumes after a 36-hour New Year's truce.
January 4: Forty neutral member nations of the UN formally protest the US bombing campaign.
January 5: Canada's Parliament votes unanimously to condemn US bombing actions and calls for them to cease.
January 10: Anti-war demonstrators attack US consulate in Lyons, France, and burn down the library of America House in Frankfurt, West Germany.
January 15: Anti-war protesters occupy US consulate in Amsterdam.
January 15: President Nixon suspends the bombing, citing progress in the Peace talks with Hanoi. West German Chancellor Willy Brandt warns Nixon that US relations with Western Europe are at risk.[476]
January 22: Former US President Lyndon B. Johnson dies of cancer at his Texas ranch.
January 22: The US Supreme Court rules on Roe v. Wade, effectively legalizing abortion.[477][478]
January 28: US combat military involvement in Vietnam ends with a ceasefire, and commencement of withdrawal as called for under the Paris Peace Accords.[479]
February 27 – May 8: Wounded Knee incident: Native American activists occupy the town of Wounded Knee, SD; 2 protesters and 1 US Marshal are killed during a lengthy standoff.[480]
March: The first military draftees who are not subsequently called to service are selected, unceremoniously ending the Vietnam era of conscription in the US.
March 8: Ron "Pigpen" McKernan, a founding member of the Grateful Dead, dies of a gastrointestinal hemorrhage at age 27 in Corte Madera, CA.[481]
March 29: Last US combat troops leave Vietnam as US POWs have been released.
May 17: The Senate Watergate Committee begins televised hearings on the ever-growing Watergate scandal implicating the President for gross abuses of power.
July 1: The Drug Enforcement Administration supplants the BNDD.[482]
July 28: Summer Jam at Watkins Glen, NY draws 600,000 to see the Grateful Dead, the Band, and the Allman Brothers - the largest such gathering in the US since Woodstock.[483]
August 15: All US military involvement in Indochina conflict officially ends under the Case–Church Amendment.
October 10: Vice President Spiro Agnew resigns. President Nixon names Congressman Gerald R. Ford of Michigan to replace Agnew on October 12.[484]
October 23: Congress begins to consider articles of impeachment against Nixon.
November 14: Greece: Students at Athens Polytechnic strike against the military junta. Tanks roll the 17th and at least 24 die.[485]
November 17: At a session with 400 AP editors, President Nixon states, "People have got to know whether or not their President is a crook. Well, I'm not a crook. I've earned everything I've got."[486]
1974[edit]
Saddled by a decade of drug-related legal problems, Timothy Leary reportedly becomes an informant for the FBI.[487]
January 3: A Federal judge dismisses charges against 12 members of the Weathermen involved in the October 1969 "Days of Rage". This is a timeline of the African-American Civil Rights Movement of 1954-1968, a nonviolent freedom movement to gain legal equality and enforcement of constitutional rights for African Americans. The goals of the movement included securing equal protection of the laws, ending legally established racial discrimination, and gaining equal access to public facilities, education reform, fair housing, and the ability to vote.
1954
May 3 – In Hernandez v. Texas, the U.S. Supreme Court rules that Mexican Americans and all other racial groups in the United States are entitled to equal protection under the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
May 17 – In Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kans. and in Bolling v. Sharpe, the U.S. Supreme Court rules against the "separate but equal" doctrine, overturning Plessy v. Ferguson and saying that segregation of public schools is unconstitutional.
July 30 – At a special meeting in Jackson, Mississippi called by Governor Hugh White, T.R.M. Howard of the Regional Council of Negro Leadership, along with nearly one hundred other black leaders, publicly refuse to support a segregationist plan to maintain "separate but equal" in exchange for a crash program to increase spending on black schools.
September 2 – In Montgomery, Alabama, 23 black children are prevented from attending all-white elementary schools, defying the recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling.
September 7 – The District of Columbia ends segregated education; Baltimore, Maryland follows suit on September 8
September 15 – Protests by white parents in White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia force schools to postpone desegregation another year.
September 16 – Mississippi abolishes all public schools with an amendment to its State Constitution; private segregation academies are founded for white students.
September 30 – Integration of a high school in Milford, Delaware collapses when white students boycott classes.
October 4 – Student demonstrations take place against integration of Washington, DC public schools.
October 19 – Federal judge upholds an Oklahoma law requiring African-American candidates to be identified on voting ballots as "negro".
October 30 – Desegregation of U.S. Armed Forces said to be complete.
Frankie Muse Freeman is the lead attorney for the landmark NAACP case Davis et al. v. the St. Louis Housing Authority, which ended legal racial discrimination in the city's public housing. Constance Baker Motley was an attorney for NAACP: it was unusual to have two women attorneys leading such a high-profile case.
1955
January 15 – President Dwight D. Eisenhower signs Executive Order 10590, establishing the President's Committee on Government Policy to enforce a nondiscrimination policy in Federal employment.
January 20 – Demonstrators from CORE and Morgan State University stage a successful sit-in to desegregate Read's Drug Store in Baltimore, Maryland
April 5 – Mississippi passes a law penalizing white students by jail and fines who attend school with blacks .
May 7 – NAACP and Regional Council of Negro Leadership activist Reverend George W. Lee is killed in Belzoni, Mississippi.
May 31 – The U.S. Supreme Court rules in "Brown II" that desegregation must occur with "all deliberate speed".
June 8 – University of Oklahoma decides to allow black students.
June 23 – Virginia governor and Board of Education decide to continue segregated schools into 1956.
June 29 – The NAACP wins a U.S. Supreme Court suit which orders the University of Alabama to admit Autherine Lucy.
July 11 – Georgia Board of Education orders that any teacher supporting integration be fired.
July 14 – A Federal Appeals Court overturns segregation on Columbia, SC buses.
August 1 – Georgia Board of Education fires all black teachers who are members of the NAACP.
August 13 – Regional Council of Negro Leadership registration activist Lamar Smith is murdered in Brookhaven, Mississippi.
August 28 – Teenager Emmett Till is killed for whistling at a white woman in Money, Mississippi.
November 7 – The Interstate Commerce Commission bans bus segregation in interstate travel in Sarah Keys v. Carolina Coach Company. On the same day, the U.S. Supreme Court bans segregation on public parks and playgrounds. The governor of Georgia responds that his state would "get out of the park business" rather than allow playgrounds to be desegregated.
December 1 – Rosa Parks refuses to give up her seat on a bus, starting the Montgomery Bus Boycott. This occurs nine months after 15-year-old high school student Claudette Colvin became the first to refuse to give up her seat. Colvin's was the legal case which eventually ended the practice in Montgomery.
Roy Wilkins becomes the NAACP executive secretary.
1956
January 9 – Virginia voters and representatives decide to fund private schools with state money to maintain segregation.
January 16 – FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover writes a rare open letter of complaint directed to civil rights leader Dr. T.R.M. Howard after Howard charged in a speech that the "FBI can pick up pieces of a fallen airplane on the slopes of a Colorado mountain and find the man who caused the crash, but they can't find a white man when he kills a Negro in the South." [1]
January 24 – Governors of Georgia, Mississippi, South Carolina and Virginia agree to block integration of schools.
February 1 – Virginia legislature passes a resolution that the U.S. Supreme Court integration decision was an "illegal encroachment".
February 3 – Autherine Lucy is admitted to the University of Alabama. Whites riot for days, and she is suspended. Later, she is expelled for her part in filing legal action against the university.
February 24 – The policy of Massive Resistance is declared by U.S. Senator Harry F. Byrd, Sr. from Virginia.
February/March – The Southern Manifesto, opposing integration of schools, is drafted and signed by members of the Congressional delegations of Southern states, including 19 senators and 81 members of the House of Representatives, notably the entire delegations of the states of Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina and Virginia. On March 12, it is released to the press.
February 13 – Wilmington, Delaware school board decides to end segregation.
February 22 – Ninety black leaders in Montgomery, Alabama are arrested for leading a bus boycott.
February 29 – Mississippi legislature declares U.S. Supreme Court integration decision "invalid" in that state.
March 1 – Alabama legislature votes to ask for federal funds to deport blacks to northern states.
March 12 – U.S. Supreme Court orders the University of Florida to admit a black law school applicant "without delay".
March 22 – King sentenced to fine or jail for instigating Montgomery bus boycott, suspended pending appeal.
April 23 – U.S. Supreme Court strikes down segregation on buses nationwide.
May 26 – Circuit Judge Walter B. Jones issues an injunction prohibiting the NAACP from operating in Alabama.
May 28 – The Tallahassee, Florida bus boycott begins.
June 5 – The Alabama Christian Movement for Human Rights (ACMHR) is founded at a mass meeting in Birmingham, Alabama.
September 2–11 – Teargas and National Guard used to quell segregationists rioting in Clinton, Tennessee; 12 black students enter high school under Guard protection. Smaller disturbances occur in Mansfield, Texas and Sturgis, Kentucky.
September 10 – Two black students are prevented by a mob from entering a junior college in Texarkana, Texas. Schools in Louisville, Kentucky are successfully desegregated.
September 12 – Four black children enter an elementary school in Clay, Kentucky under National Guard protection; white students boycott. The school board bars the four again on Sep. 17.
October 15 – Integrated athletic or social events are banned in Louisiana.
November 13 – In Browder v. Gayle, the U.S. Supreme Court strikes down Alabama laws requiring segregation of buses. This ruling, together with the ICC's 1955 ruling in Sarah Keys v. Carolina Coach banning "Jim Crow laws" in bus travel among the states, is a landmark in outlawing "Jim Crow" in bus travel.
December 20 – Federal marshals enforce the ruling to desegregate bus systems in Montgomery.
December 24 – Blacks in Tallahassee, Florida begin defying segregation on city buses.
December 25 – The parsonage in Birmingham, Alabama occupied by Fred Shuttlesworth, movement leader, is bombed. Shuttlesworth receives only minor injuries.
December 26 – The ACMHR tests the Browder v. Gayle ruling by riding in the white sections of Birmingham city buses. 22 demonstrators are arrested.
Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission formed.
Director J. Edgar Hoover orders the FBI to begin the COINTELPRO program to investigate and disrupt "dissident" groups within the United States.
1957
February 8 – Georgia Senate votes to declare the 14th and 15th Amendments to the United States Constitution null and void in that state.
February 14 – Southern Christian Leadership Conference is formed; Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. is named its chairman.
April 18 – Florida Senate votes to consider U.S. Supreme Court's desegregation decisions "null and void".
May 17 – The Prayer Pilgrimage for Freedom in Washington, DC is at the time the largest nonviolent demonstration for civil rights.
September 2 – Orval Faubus, governor of Arkansas, calls out the National Guard to block integration of Little Rock Central High School.
September 6 – Federal judge orders Nashville public schools to integrate immediately.
September 15 – New York Times reports that in three years since the decision, there has been minimal progress toward integration in four southern states, and no progress at all in seven.
September 24 – President Dwight Eisenhower federalizes the National Guard and also orders US Army troops to ensure Little Rock Central High School in Arkansas is integrated. Federal and National Guard troops escort the Little Rock Nine.
September 27 – Civil Rights Act of 1957 signed by President Eisenhower.
October 7 – The finance minister of Ghana is refused service at a Dover, Delaware restaurant. President Eisenhower hosts him at the White House to apologize Oct. 10.
October 9 – Florida legislature votes to close any school if federal troops are sent to enforce integration.
October 31 – Officers of NAACP arrested in Little Rock for failing to comply with a
6.2.4 Chess
6.2.5 Olympics
Athletes[edit]
Baseball[edit]
Ryan Braun, outfielder
(Milwaukee Brewers)
Ike Davis, first baseman
(Oakland Athletics)
Ian Kinsler, second baseman
(Detroit Tigers)
Ryan Lavarnway, catcher
(Atlanta Braves)
Jason Marquis, pitcher
(Cincinnati Reds)
Joc Pederson, outfielder
(Los Angeles Dodgers)
Kevin Youkilis, first and third baseman
Cal Abrams, US, outfielder[2]
Rubén Amaro, Jr., US, outfielder, general manager (Philadelphia Phillies)[2]
Morrie Arnovich, US, outfielder, All-Star[2]
Brad Ausmus, US, catcher, All-Star, 3x Gold Glove, manager of the Detroit Tigers[2]
José Bautista, Dominican-born, pitcher[2]
Robert "Bo" Belinsky, U.S., pitcher. Pitched no-hit game as rookie with Los Angeles Angels in 1962.[3]
Moe Berg, US, catcher & shortstop, and spy for US in World War II[2]
Ron Blomberg, US, DH/first baseman/outfielder, Major League Baseball's first designated hitter[4]
Lou Boudreau, US, shortstop, 8x All-Star, batting title, MVP, Baseball Hall of Fame, manager[2]
Ralph Branca, US, pitcher, 3x All-Star[5]
Ryan Braun, US, outfielder, 2007 Rookie of the Year, home run champion, 5x All-Star, 5x Silver Slugger, 2011 National League MVP (Milwaukee Brewers)[6]
Craig Breslow, US, relief pitcher (Boston Red Sox)[2]
Mark Clear, US, relief pitcher, 2x All-Star[7]
Andy Cohen, US, second baseman, coach
Harry Danning, US, catcher, 4x All-Star[2][8]
Ike Davis, US, first baseman (Oakland Athletics)[9]
Moe Drabowsky, US, pitcher[10]
Harry Eisenstat, US, pitcher[11]
Mike Epstein, US, first baseman[2]
Harry Feldman, US, pitcher[2]
Scott Feldman, US, pitcher (Houston Astros)[2]
Gavin Fingleson, South African-born Australian, Olympic silver medalist[12]
Nate Freiman, US, first baseman (Oakland Athletics)[13][14]
Sam Fuld, US, outfielder (Oakland Athletics)[15]
Sid Gordon, US, outfielder & third baseman, 2x All-Star[2]
John Grabow, US, relief pitcher[2]
Shawn Green, US, right fielder, 2x All-Star, Gold Glove, Silver Slugger[2]
Hank Greenberg, US, first baseman & outfielder, 5x All-Star, 4x home run champion, 4x RBI leader, 2x MVP, Baseball Hall of Fame[2]
Ken Holtzman, US, starting pitcher, 2x All-Star[2]
Joe Horlen, US, pitcher, All-Star, ERA leader[2]
Gabe Kapler, US, outfielder[2]
Ian Kinsler, US, second baseman, 3x All-Star (Detroit Tigers)[16]
Sandy Koufax, US, starting pitcher, 6x All-Star, 5x ERA leader, 4x strikeouts leader, 3x Wins leader, 2x W-L% leader, 1 perfect game, MVP, 3x Cy Young Award, Baseball Hall of Fame[2]
Barry Latman, US, pitcher[11]
Ryan Lavarnway, US, catcher (Atlanta Braves)[17]
Al Levine, US, relief pitcher[2]
Mike Lieberthal, US, catcher, 2x All-Star, Gold Glove[2]
Elliott Maddox, US, outfielder & third baseman[2]
Jason Marquis, US, starting pitcher, Silver Slugger, All Star (Cincinnati Reds)[2]
Erskine Mayer, US, pitcher[2]
Bob Melvin, US, catcher & manager of the Oakland Athletics[18]
Jon Moscot, US, pitcher (Cincinnati Reds)[19]
Jeff Newman, US, catcher & first baseman, All-Star, manager[2]
Joc Pederson, US, outfielder (Los Angeles Dodgers)[20]
Barney Pelty, US, pitcher[2]
Lipman Pike, US, outfielder, second baseman, & manager, 4x home run champion, RBI leader[2]
Kevin Pillar, US, outfielder (Toronto Blue Jays)
Aaron Poreda, US, pitcher (Yomiuri Giants)[2]
Scott Radinsky, US, relief pitcher[2]
Dave Roberts, US, pitcher[2]
Saul Rogovin, US, pitcher[2]
Al "Flip" Rosen, US, third baseman & first baseman, 4x All-Star, 2x home run champion, 2x RBI leader, MVP[2]
Goody Rosen, Canada, outfielder, All-Star[2]
Josh Satin, US, second baseman (Cincinnati Reds)[21]
Richie Scheinblum, US, outfielder, All-Star[2]
Scott Schoeneweis, US, pitcher[2]
Michael Schwimer, US, relief pitcher (Toronto Blue Jays)[22]
Art Shamsky, US, outfielder & first baseman[2]
Larry Sherry, US, relief pitcher[2]
Norm Sherry, US, catcher & manager[2]
Moe "the Rabbi of Swat" Solomon, US, outfielder[2]
George Stone, US, outfielder, 1x batting title[23]
Steve Stone, US, starting pitcher, All-Star, Cy Young Award[2]
Danny Valencia, US, third baseman (Oakland Athletics)[24]
Phil "Mickey" Weintraub, US, first baseman & outfielder
Josh Whitesell, US, first baseman (Saraperos de Saltillo)[25]
Steve Yeager, US, catcher[2]
Kevin Youkilis, US, first baseman, third baseman, & left fielder, 3x All-Star, Gold Glove, Hank Aaron Award[2]
Josh Zeid, US, pitcher for the Detroit Tigers
Basketball[edit]
Omri Casspi
Jordan Farmar
Gal Mekel
Jon Scheyer
Sam Balter, US, 5' 10" guard, Olympic champion[8][26]
Sue Bird, US & Israel, WNBA 5' 9" point guard, 2x Olympic champion, 4x All-Star (Seattle Storm)[27]
David Blatt, US & Israel, Israeli Premier League 6' 3.5" point guard, coached Russia National Basketball Team, Israel's Maccabi Tel Aviv to Euroleague Championship, Euroleague Coach of the Year, 4x Israeli Coach of the Year, Head Coach of Cleveland Cavaliers[28][29]
David Blu (formerly "Bluthenthal"), US & Israel, Euroleague 6' 7" forward (Maccabi Tel Aviv)[30]
Harry Boykoff, US, NBA 6' 10" center[31]
Tal Brody, US & Israel, Euroleague 6' 2" shooting guard[8]
Larry Brown, US, ABA 5' 9" point guard, 3x All-Star, 3x assists leader, NCAA National Championship coach (1988), NBA coach, Olympic champion, Hall of Fame[8][26]
Omri Casspi, Israel, 6' 9" small forward, drafted in 1st round of 2009 NBA Draft (Sacramento Kings)[32]
Shay Doron, Israel & US, WNBA 5' 9" guard (New York Liberty)[33]
Lior Eliyahu, Israel, 6' 9" power forward, NBA draft 2006 (Orlando Magic; traded to Houston Rockets), playing in the Euroleague (Hapoel Jerusalem)[34]
Jordan Farmar, US, NBA 6' 2" point guard (Los Angeles Clippers)[35]
Marty Friedman, US, 5' 7" guard & coach, Hall of Fame[8]
Ernie Grunfeld, Romania-born US, NBA 6' 6" guard/forward & GM, Olympic champion[36]
Yotam Halperin, Israel, 6' 5" guard, drafted in 2006 NBA draft by Seattle SuperSonics (Hapoel Jerusalem)[34]
Sonny Hertzberg, US, NBA 5' 9" point guard, original NY Knickerbocker[37]
Art Heyman, US, NBA 6' 5" forward/guard[37]
Nat Holman, US, ABL 5' 11" guard & coach, Hall of Fame[8]
Red Holzman, US, BAA & NBA 5' 10" guard, 2x All-Star, & NBA coach, NBA Coach of the Year, Hall of Fame[8]
Eban Hyams, India-Israel-Australia, 6' 5" guard formerly of the Australian National Basketball League, Israeli Super League, first ever Indian national to play in ULEB competitions[38]
Barry Kramer, first team All-American at NYU in 1963
Joel Kramer, US Phoenix Suns 6'7" forward
Sylven Landesberg, US, 6' 6" former UVA shooting guard (Maccabi Tel Aviv)[39]
Rudy LaRusso, US, NBA 6' 7" forward/center, 5x All-Star[40]
Nancy Lieberman, US, WNBA player, general manager, & coach, Olympic silver, Hall of Fame[26][41]
Gal Mekel, Israel, NBA 6' 3" point guard (Dallas Mavericks)[42]
Bernard Opper, US, NBL and ABL 5' 10" guard, All-American at University of Kentucky
Donna Orender (née Geils), US, Women's Pro Basketball League 5' 7" point guard, All-Star, current WNBA president[37]
Lennie Rosenbluth, US, NBA 6' 4" forward[36]
Danny Schayes, US, NBA 6' 11" center/forward (son of Dolph Schayes)[37]
Dolph Schayes, US, NBA 6' 7" forward/center, 3x FT% leader, 1x rebound leader, 12x All-Star, Hall of Fame, & coach (father of Danny Schayes)[8]
Ossie Schectman, US, NBA 6' 0" guard, scorer of first NBA basket[36]
Doron Sheffer, US (college), Maccabi Tel Aviv,Hapoel Jerusalem
Jon Scheyer, US, All-American Duke University 6' 5" shooting guard & point guard (Maccabi Tel Aviv)[43]
Barney Sedran, US, Hudson River League & New York State League 5' 4" guard, Hall of Fame[8]
Sidney Tannenbaum, US, BAA 6' 0" guard, 2x All-American, left as NYU all-time scorer[8]
Alex Tyus, US & Israel, 6' 8" power forward/center (Maccabi Tel Aviv)
Neal Walk, US, NBA 6' 10" center[37]
Max Zaslofsky, US, NBA 6' 2" guard/forward, 1x FT% leader, 1x points leader, All-Star, ABA coach[8]
Bowling[edit]
Barry Asher, 10 PBA titles, PBA Hall of Fame[7]
Marshall Holman, 22 PBA titles (11th all-time); PBA Hall of Fame[44]
Mark Roth, 34 PBA titles (5th all-time); PBA Hall of Fame[45]
Boxing[edit]
Yuri Foreman
Zab Judah
Dmitry Salita
Barney Aaron (Young), English-born US lightweight, Hall of Fame[46]
Abe Attell ("The Little Hebrew"), US, world champion featherweight, Hall of Fame[8]
Monte Attell ("The Knob Hill Terror"), US, bantamweight[47]
Max Baer ("Madcap Maxie"), US, world champion heavyweight. Wore a Star of David on his trunks; inducted into the International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame. Hall of Fame/[48]
Benny Bass ("Little Fish"), US, world champion featherweight & world champion junior lightweight, Hall of Fame[8]
Fabrice Benichou, France, world champion super bantamweight[34]
Jack Kid Berg (Judah Bergman), England, world champion junior welterweight, wore a Star of David on his trunks, Hall of Fame[8]
Maxie Berger, Canada, wore a Star of David on his trunks[49]
Samuel Berger, US, Olympic champion heavyweight[8]
Jack Bernstein (also "John Dodick", "Kid Murphy", and "Young Murphy"), US, world champion junior lightweight[8]
Nathan "Nat" Bor, US, Olympic bronze lightweight[26]
Mushy Callahan (Vincente Sheer), US, world champion light welterweight[47]
Joe Choynski ("Chrysanthemum Joe"), US, heavyweight, Hall of Fame[8][50]
Robert Cohen, French & Algerian, world champion bantamweight[8]
Al "Bummy" Davis (Abraham Davidoff), US, welterweight & lightweight, wore a Star of David on his trunks[47]
Louis "Red" Deutsch, US, heavyweight, later famous as the proprietor of the Tube Bar in Jersey City, NJ and inspiration for Moe Szyslak on "The Simpsons"
Carolina Duer ("The Turk"), Argentine, WBO world champion super flyweight and bantamweight[51]
John "Jackie" Fields (Jacob Finkelstein), US, world champion welterweight & Olympic champion featherweight, Hall of Fame[8]
Hagar Finer, Israel, WIBF champion bantamweight[52]
Yuri Foreman, Belarusian-born Israeli US middleweight and World Boxing Association champion super welterweight[53]
György Gedó, Hungary, Olympic champion light flyweight[41]
Abe Goldstein, US, world champion bantamweight[54]
Ruby Goldstein ("Ruby the Jewel of the Ghetto"), US, welterweight, wore a Star of David on his trunks[8]
Roman Greenberg ("The Lion from Zion"), Israel, International Boxing Organization's Intercontinental champion heavyweight[53]
Stéphane Haccoun, France, featherweight, super featherweight, and junior lightweight[55][56]
Alphonse Halimi ("La Petite Terreur"), France, world champion bantamweight[8]
Harry Harris ("The Human Hairpin"), US, world champion bantamweight[8]
Gary Jacobs, Scottish, British, Commonwealth, and European (EBU) champion welterweight[57]
Ben Jeby (Morris Jebaltowsky), US, world champion middleweight[47]
Yoel Judah, US, 3x world champion kickboxer and boxer & trainer[58]
Zab Judah ("Super"), US, world champion junior welterweight & world champion welterweight (Converted to Christianity)[58][59][60][61]
Louis Kaplan ("Kid Kaplan"), Russian-born US, world champion featherweight, Hall of Fame[8][50]
Solly Krieger ("Danny Auerbach"), US, world champion middleweight[8]
Julie Kogon US, 1947 New England Lightweight Champion. Inducted into the Connecticut Boxing Hall of Fame.
Benny Leonard (Benjamin Leiner; "The Ghetto Wizard"), US, world champion lightweight, Hall of Fame[8]
Battling Levinsky (Barney Lebrowitz), US, world champion light heavyweight, Hall of Fame[8]
King Levinsky (Harry Kraków), US, heavweight, also known as Kingfish Levinsky[8]
Harry Lewis (Harry Besterman), US, world champion welterweight[47]
Ted "Kid" Lewis (Gershon Mendeloff), England, world champion welterweight, Hall of Fame[8]
Sammy Luftspring, Canada, Canadian champion welterweight, Canada's Sports Hall of Fame[47]
Saoul Mamby, US, world champion junior welterweight[47]
Al McCoy (Alexander Rudolph), US, world champion middleweight[8]
Daniel Mendoza, England, world champion heavyweight, Hall of Fame[8]
Jacob Michaelsen, Denmark, Olympic bronze heavyweight[26]
Samuel Mosberg, US, Olympic champion lightweight[8]
Bob Olin, US, world champion light heavyweight[62]
Victor Perez ("Young"), Tunisian, world champion flyweight[8]
Harold Reitman ("The Boxing Doctor"), professional heavyweight that fought while working as surgeon, Golden Gloves champion.[63]
Charlie Phil Rosenberg ("Charles Green"), US, world champion bantamweight[8]
Dana Rosenblatt ("Dangerous"), US, world champion middleweight[64]
Maxie Rosenbloom ("Slapsie"), US, world champion light heavyweight, wore a Star of David on his trunks, Hall of Fame[8]
Barney Ross (Dov-Ber Rasofsky), US, world champion lightweight & junior welterweight, Hall of Fame[8]
Mike Rossman (Michael Albert DiPiano; "The Jewish Bomber"), US, world champion light heavyweight, wore Star of David on trunks[64]
Shamil Sabirov, Russia, Olympic champion light flyweight[26]
Dmitry Salita ("Star of David"), US, North American Boxing Association champion light welterweight[65]
Isadore "Corporal Izzy" Schwartz ("The Ghetto Midget"), US, world champion flyweight[8]
Al Singer ("The Bronx Beauty"), US, world champion lightweight[47]
"Lefty" Lew Tendler, US, bantamweight, lightweight, and welterweight, wore a Star of David on his trunks, Hall of Fame[8]
Sid Terris ("Ghost of the Ghetto"), US, lightweight, wore a Star of David on his trunks[54]
Matt Wels, England, champion of Great Britain lightweight and world champion welterweight
Canoeing[edit]
Jessica Fox
Shaun Rubenstein
László Fábián, Hungary, sprint canoer, Olympic champion (K-2 10,000 meter), 4x world champion (3x K-2 10,000 meter and 1x K-4 10,000 meter) and one silver (K-4 10,000 meter)[26]
Imre Farkas, Hungary, sprint canoer, 2x Olympic bronze (C-2 1,000 and 10,000 meter)[66]
Jessica Fox, French-born Australian, slalom canoer, Olympic silver (K-1 slalom), world championships bronze (C-1)[67]
Myriam Fox-Jerusalmi, France, slalom canoer, Olympic bronze (K-1 slalom), 5 golds at ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships (2x K-1, 3x K-1 team)[41]
Klára Fried-Bánfalvi, Hungary, sprint canoer, Olympic bronze (K-2 500 m), world champion (K-2 500 m)[26]
Leonid Geishtor, USSR (Belarus), sprint canoer, Olympic champion (Canadian pairs 1,000-meter)[41]
Joe Jacobi, US, slalom canoer, Olympic champion (Canadian slalom pairs)[41]
Michael Kolganov, Soviet (Uzbek)-born Israeli, sprint canoer, world champion, Olympic bronze (K-1 500-meter)[41]
Anna Pfeffer, Hungary, sprint canoer, Olympic 2x silver (K-2 500 m), bronze (K-1 500 m); world champion (K-2 500 m), silver (K-4 500 m), 2x bronze (K-2 500)[26]
Naum Prokupets, Moldovan-born Soviet, sprint canoer, Olympic bronze (C-2 1,000-meter), gold (C-2 10,000-meter) at ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships[41]
Leon Rotman, Romanian, sprint canoer, 2x Olympic champion (C-1 10,000 meter, C-1 1,000-meter) and bronze (C-1 1,000-meter), 14 national titles[41]
Shaun Rubenstein, South Africa, canoer, World Marathon champion 2006[68]
Cricket[edit]
Michael Klinger
Ben Ashkenazi, Australia (Victorian Bushrangers)
Ali Bacher, South Africa, batsman and administrator (relative of Adam Bacher)[69]
Mike Barnard, England, cricketer[69]
Mark Bott, England, cricketer[70]
Stevie Eskinazi, South African born, Australian raised, English wicketkeeper
Mark Fuzes. Australian all rounder played for Hong Kong. Father Peter Fuzes kept goal for Australian Soccer team (see)[71]
Dennis Gamsy, South Africa, Test wicket-keeper[72]
Darren Gerard, England, cricketer[73]
Norman Gordon, South Africa, fast bowler[69]
Steven Herzberg, English-born Australian, cricketer[74]
Sid Kiel, South Africa, opening batsman (Western Province)[75]
Michael Klinger, Australia, batsman (Western Warriors)[69]
Leonard "Jock" Livingston, Australia, cricketer[69]
Bev Lyon, England, cricketer[69]
Dar Lyon, England, cricketer (brother of Bev)[69]
Greg, Jason, and Lara Molins, two brothers and a cousin from the same Irish family[74]
Jon Moss, Australia, allrounder (Victorian Bushrangers)[69]
John Raphael, England, batsman[69]
Marshall Rosen, NSW Australia, cricketer and selector[76]
Lawrence Seeff, South Africa, batsmen[77]
Maurice Sievers, Australia, lower order batsman and fast-medium bowler[69]
Bensiyon Songavkar, India, cricketer, MVP of 2009 Maccabiah Games cricket tournament[78]
Fred Susskind, South Africa, Test batsman[69]
Fred Trueman, England, English test fast bowler (a lifelong Christian)[69]
Julien Wiener, Australia, Test cricketer[69]
Mandy Yachad, South Africa, Test cricketer[69]
Equestrian[edit]
Margie Goldstein-Engle
Robert Dover, US, 4x Olympic bronze, 1x world championship bronze (dressage)[79]
Margie Goldstein-Engle, US, world championship silver, Pan American Games gold, silver, and bronze (jumping)[80]
Edith Master, US, Olympic bronze (dressage)[26]
Fencing[edit]
Helene Mayer
Soren Thompson
Henri Anspach, Belgium (épée & foil), Olympic champion[26]
Paul Anspach, Belgium (épée & foil), 2x Olympic champion[26]
Norman Armitage (Norman Cohn), US (sabre), 17x US champion, Olympic bronze[26]
Albert "Albie" Axelrod, US (foil); Olympic bronze, 4x US champion[8]
Péter Bakonyi, Hungary (saber), Olympic 3x bronze[41]
Cliff Bayer, US (foil); youngest US champion[37]
Albert Bogen (Albert Bógathy), Austria (saber), Olympic silver[41]
Tamir Bloom, US (épée); 2x US champion[37]
Daniel Bukantz, US (foil); 4x US champion[37]
Sergey Sharikov, Russia (saber), 2x Olympic champion, silver, bronze[26]
Yves Dreyfus, France (épée), Olympic bronze, French champion[26]
Ilona Elek, Hungary (saber), 2x Olympic champion[26]
Boaz Ellis, Israel (foil), 5x Israeli champion[34]
Siegfried "Fritz" Flesch, Austria (sabre), Olympic bronze[26]
Dr. Dezsö Földes, Hungary (saber), 2x Olympic champion[26]
Dr. Jenö Fuchs, Hungary (saber), 4x Olympic champion[81]
Támas Gábor, Hungary (épée), Olympic champion[8]
János Garay, Hungary (saber), Olympic champion, silver, bronze, killed by the Nazis[8]
Dr. Oskar Gerde, Hungary (saber), 2x Olympic champion, killed by the Nazis[26]
Dr. Sándor Gombos, Hungary (saber), Olympic champion[62]
Vadim Gutzeit, Ukraine (saber), Olympic champion[82]
Johan Harmenberg, Sweden (épée), Olympic champion[26]
Delila Hatuel, Israel (foil), Olympian, ranked # 9 in world[83]
Lydia Hatuel-Zuckerman, Israel (foil), 6x Israeli champion[84][85]
Dr. Otto Herschmann, Austria (saber), Olympic silver[26]
Emily Jacobson, US (saber), NCAA champion[86]
Sada Jacobson, US (saber), ranked # 1 in the world, Olympic silver, 2x bronze[86]
Allan Jay, British (épée & foil), Olympic 2x silver, world champion[26]
Endre Kabos, Hungary (saber), 3x Olympic champion, bronze[26]
Roman Kantor, Poland (épée), Nordic champion & Soviet champion, killed by the Nazis[26]
Dan Kellner, US (foil), US champion[86]
Byron Krieger, US[87]
Grigory Kriss, Soviet (épée), Olympic champion, 2x silver[26]
Allan Kwartler, US (saber), 3x Pan American Games champion[10]
Alexandre Lippmann, France (épée), 2x Olympic champion, 2x silver, bronze[8]
Helene Mayer, Germany & US (foil), Olympic champion[26]
Ljubco Georgievski ????? ???????????
Kiro Gligorov ???? ????????
Nikola Gruevski ?????? ????????
Gjorge Ivanov ????? ??????
Gordana Jankuloska ??????? ??????????
Zoran Jolevski ????? ????????
Srgjan Kerim ????? ?????
Lazar Koliševski ????? ??????????
Hari Kostov ???? ??????
Trifun Kostovski ?????? ?????????
Ilinka Mitreva ?????? ???????
Lazar Mojsov ????? ??????
Tito Petkovski ???? ?????????
Lui Temelkovski ??? ???????????
Boris Trajkovski ????? ??????????
Vasil Tupurkovski ????? ???????????
Zoran Zaev ????? ????
Partisans World War II freedom fighters edit Mirce Acev ????? ????
Mihajlo Apostolski ????j?? ??????????
Cede Filipovski Dame ???? ?????????? ????
Blagoj Jankov Muceto ?????? ?????? ??????
Orce Nikolov ???? ???????
Strašo Pindžur ?????? ??????
Hristijan Todorovski Karpoš ????????? ?????????? ??????
Revolutionaries edit Yordan Piperkata ?????? ???????? ?????????
Goce Delcev ???? ?????
Petar Pop Arsov ????? ??? ?????
Dame Gruev ???? ?????
Jane Sandanski ???? ?????????
Dimitar Pop Georgiev Berovski ??????? ??? ???????? ????????
Ilyo Voyvoda ???? ??? ??????????
Pere Tošev ???? ?????
Pitu Guli ???? ????
Dimo Hadži Dimov ???? ???? ?????
Hristo Uzunov ?????? ??????
Literature edit Gjorgji Abadžiev ????? ???????
Petre M Andreevski ????? ? ??????????
Maja Apostoloska ???? ???????????
Dimitrija Cupovski ????????? ????????
Jordan Hadži Konstantinov Džinot ?????? ???? ???????????? ?????
Vasil Iljoski ????? ??????
Slavko Janevski ?????? ????????
Blaže Koneski ????? ???????
Risto Krle ????? ????
Vlado Maleski ????? ???????
Mateja Matevski ?????? ????????
Krste Misirkov ????? ?????????
Kole Nedelkovski ???? ???????????
Olivera Nikolova
Anton Panov ????? ?????
Gjorche Petrov ????? ??????
Vidoe Podgorec ????? ????????
Aleksandar Prokopiev ?????????? ?????????
Koco Racin ???? ?????
Jovica Tasevski Eternijan ?????? ???????? ?????????
Gane Todorovski ???? ??????????
Stevan Ognenovski ?????? ??????????
Music edit Classical music edit Composers edit Atanas Badev ?????? ?????
Dimitrije Bužarovski ????????? ??????????
Kiril Makedonski ????? ??????????
Toma Prošev ???? ??????
Todor Skalovski ????? ?????????
Stojan Stojkov ?????? ???????
Aleksandar Džambazov ?????????? ????????
Conductors edit Borjan Canev ?????? ?????
Instrumentalists edit Pianists
Simon Trpceski ????? ????????
Opera singers edit Blagoj Nacoski ?????? ???????
Boris Trajanov ????? ????????
Popular and folk music edit Composers edit Darko Dimitrov ????? ????????
Slave Dimitrov ????? ????????
Jovan Jovanov ????? ???????
Ilija Pejovski ????? ????????
Musicians edit Bodan Arsovski ????? ????????
Goran Trajkoski ????? ?????????
Ratko Dautovski ????? ?????????
Kiril Džajkovski ????? ?????????
Tale Ognenovski ???? ??????????
Vlatko Stefanovski ?????? ???????????
Stevo Teodosievski ????? ????????????
Aleksandra Popovska ?????????? ????????
Singers and Bands edit Lambe Alabakoski ????? ??????????
Anastasia ?????????
Arhangel ????????
Kristina Arnaudova ???????? ?????????
Kaliopi Bukle ???????
Dani Dimitrovska ???? ???????????
Riste Tevdoski ????? ????????
Karolina Goceva ???????? ??????
Vaska Ilieva ????? ??????
Andrijana Janevska ????????? ????????
Vlado Janevski ????? ????????
Jovan Jovanov ????? ???????
Leb i sol ??? ? ???
Aleksandar Makedonski ?????????? ??????????
Elvir Mekic ????? ?????
Mizar ?????
Jasmina Mukaetova ??????? ????e???? The Malagasy French Malgache are the ethnic group that forms nearly the entire population of Madagascar They are divided into two subgroups the "Highlander" Merina Sihanaka and Betsileo of the central plateau around Antananarivo Alaotra Ambatondrazaka and Fianarantsoa and the "coastal dwellers" elsewhere in the country This division has its roots in historical patterns of settlement The original Austronesian settlers from Borneo arrived between the third and tenth centuries and established a network of principalities in the Central Highlands region conducive to growing the rice they had carried with them on their outrigger canoes Sometime later a large number of settlers arrived from East Africa and established kingdoms along the relatively unpopulated coastlines
The difference in ethnic origins remains somewhat evident between the highland and coastal regions In addition to the ethnic distinction between highland and coastal Malagasy one may speak of a political distinction as well Merina monarchs in the late th and early th century united the Merina principalities and brought the neighboring Betsileo people under their administration first They later extended Merina control over the majority of the coastal areas as well The military resistance and eventual defeat of most of the coastal communities assured their subordinate position vis ŕ vis the Merina Betsileo alliance During the th and th centuries the French colonial administration capitalized on and further exacerbated these political inequities by appropriating existing Merina governmental infrastructure to run their colony This legacy of political inequity dogged the people of Madagascar after gaining independence in candidates ethnic and regional identities have often served to help or hinder their success in democratic elections
Within these two broad ethnic and political groupings the Malagasy were historically subdivided into specifically named ethnic groups who were primarily distinguished from one another on the basis of cultural practices These were namely agricultural hunting or fishing practices construction style of dwellings music hair and clothing styles and local customs or taboos the latter known in the Malagasy language as fady citation needed The number of such ethnic groups in Madagascar has been debated The practices that distinguished many of these groups are less prevalent in the st century than they were in the past But many Malagasy are proud to proclaim their association with one or several of these groups as part of their own cultural identity
"Highlander" ethnic groups
Merina
Sihanaka
Betsileo
Zafimaniry
Coastal ethnic groups
Antaifasy or Antefasy
Antaimoro or Temoro or Antemoro
Antaisaka or Antesaka
Antambahoaka
Antandroy or Tandroy
Antankarana
Antanosy or Tanosy Academia edit Afifi al Akiti
Khasnor Johan historian
Khoo Kay Kim
Jomo Kwame Sundaram
Danny Quah
Harith Ahmad
Architects edit Main article List of Malaysian architects
Artists edit Main article List of Malaysian artists
Business edit Tan Sri Syed Mokhtar Al Bukhary born
Tan Sri Dato Loh Boon Siew –
Tan Sri Jeffrey Cheah
Tan Sri William Cheng
Dato Choong Chin Liang born
Tan Sri Dato Tony Fernandes born
Lim Goh Tong –
Tan Sri Tiong Hiew King
Tan Sri Teh Hong Piow born
Chung Keng Quee –
Tan Sri Ananda Krishnan born
Robert Kuok born
Tan Sri Quek Leng Chan born
Shoba Purushothaman
Shah Hakim Zain
Halim Saad
Tan Sri Mohd Saleh Sulong
Tan Sri Vincent Tan born
Lillian Too born
Tan Sri Dr Francis Yeoh
Tun Daim Zainuddin born
Tan Sri Kong Hon Kong
Designers edit Bernard Chandran fashion designer
Jimmy Choo born shoe designer
Poesy Liang born artist writer philanthropist jewellery designer industrial designer interior architect music composer
Inventors edit Yi Ren Ng inventor of the Lytro
Entertainers edit Yasmin Ahmad – film director
Stacy Angie
Francissca Peter born
Jamal Abdillah born
Sudirman Arshad –
Loganathan Arumugam died
Datuk David Arumugam Alleycats
Awal Ashaari
Alvin Anthons born
Asmawi bin Ani born
Ahmad Azhar born
Ning Baizura born
Kasma Booty died
Marion Caunter host of One In A Million and the TV Quickie
Ella born
Erra Fazira born
Sean Ghazi born
Fauziah Latiff born
Angelica Lee born
Daniel Lee Chee Hun born
Fish Leong born
Sheila Majid born
Amy Mastura born
Mohamad Nasir Mohamad born
Shathiyah Kristian born
Meor Aziddin Yusof born
Ah Niu born
Dayang Nurfaizah born
Shanon Shah born
Siti Nurhaliza born
Misha Omar born
Hani Mohsin –
Aziz M Osman born
Azmyl Yunor born
P Ramlee born
Aziz Sattar born
Fasha Sandha born
Ku Nazhatul Shima Ku Kamarazzaman born
Nicholas Teo born
Pete Teo
Penny Tai born
Hannah Tan born
Jaclyn Victor born
Chef Wan
Adira Suhaimi
Michael Wong born
Victor Wong born
Dato Michelle Yeoh Hollywood actress born
James Wan director of Hollywood films like several Saw films Insidious The Conjuring Fast and Furious born
Ziana Zain born
Zee Avi
Shila Amzah
Yunalis Zarai
Zamil Idris born
Military edit Leftenan Adnan – Warrior from mainland Malaya
Antanum Warrior from Sabah Borneo
Rentap Warrior from Sarawak
Syarif Masahor Warrior from Sarawak
Monsopiad Warrior from Sabah Borneo
Haji Abdul Rahman Limbong Warrior from Telemong Terengganu
Mat Salleh Warrior from Sabah Borneo
Rosli Dhobi Warrior from Sarawak
Politicians edit Parameswara founder of Sultanate of Malacca
Tunku Abdul Rahman Putra Al Haj st Prime Minister of independent Malaya
Tun Abdul Razak nd Prime Minister
V T Sambanthan Founding Fathers of Malaysia along with Tunku Abdul Rahman and Tan Cheng Lock
Tun Dato Sir Tan Cheng Lock Founder of MCA
Tun Hussein Onn rd Prime Minister
Mahathir Mohammad th Prime Minister Father of Modernisation
Abdullah Ahmad Badawi th Prime Minister since
Najib Tun Razak Current Prime Minister since
Dato Seri Ong Ka Ting
Dato Seri Anwar Ibrahim
Dato Wan Hisham Wan Salleh
Nik Aziz Nik Mat
Raja Nong Chik Zainal Abidin Federal Territory and Urban Wellbeing Minister
Wan Azizah Wan Ismail
Karpal Singh
Lim Kit Siang
Lim Guan Eng
Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah
Religious edit Antony Selvanayagam Roman Catholic Bishop of the Diocese of Penang
Anthony Soter Fernandez Archbishop Emeritus of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Kuala Lumpur and Bishop Emeritus of the Diocese of Penang
Gregory Yong – Second Roman Catholic Archbishop of Singapore
Tan Sri Datuk Murphy Nicholas Xavier Pakiam Metropolitan archbishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Kuala Lumpur president of the Catholic Bishops Conference of Malaysia Singapore and Brunei and publisher of the Catholic weekly newspaper The Herald
Datuk Ng Moon Hing the fourth and current Anglican Bishop of West Malaysia
Sportspeople edit Squash edit Datuk Nicol Ann David
Ong Beng Hee
Azlan Iskandar
Low Wee Wern
Badminton edit Chan Chong Ming men s doubles
Dato Lee Chong Wei
Chew Choon Eng men s doubles
Wong Choong Hann
Chin Eei Hui women s doubles
Hafiz Hashim
Roslin Hashim
Wong Pei Tty women s doubles
Choong Tan Fook men s doubles
Lee Wan Wah men s doubles
Koo Kien Keat men s doubles
Tan Boon Heong men s doubles
Retired edit Tan Aik Huang
Eddy Choong
Punch Gunalan
Yap Kim Hock
Foo Kok Keong
Jalani Sidek
Misbun Sidek
Rashid Sidek
Razif Sidek
Cheah Soon Kit
Lee Wan Wah
Football soccer edit Brendan Gan Sydney FC
Shaun Maloney Wigan Athletic
Akmal Rizal Perak FA Kedah FA RC Strasbourg FCSR Haguenau
Norshahrul Idlan Talaha Kelantan FA
Khairul Fahmi Che Mat Kelantan FA
Mohd Safiq Rahim Selangor FA
Mohd Fadzli Saari Selangor FA PBDKT T Team FC SV Wehen
Rudie Ramli Selangor FA PKNS F C SV Wehen
Mohd Safee Mohd Sali Selangor FA Pelita Jaya
Baddrol Bakhtiar Kedah FA
Mohd Khyril Muhymeen Zambri Kedah FA
Mohd Azmi Muslim Kedah FA
Mohd Fadhli Mohd Shas Harimau Muda A FC ViOn Zlaté Moravce
Mohd Irfan Fazail Harimau Muda A FC ViOn Zlaté Moravce
Wan Zack Haikal Wan Noor Harimau Muda A FC ViOn Zlaté Moravce F C Ryukyu
Nazirul Naim Che Hashim Harimau Muda A F C Ryukyu
Khairul Izuan Abdullah Sarawak FA Persibo Bojonegoro PDRM FA
Stanley Bernard Stephen Samuel Sabah FA Sporting Clube de Goa
Nazmi Faiz Harimau Muda A SC Beira Mar
Ahmad Fakri Saarani Perlis FA Atlético S C
Chun Keng Hong Penang FA Chanthaburi F C
Retired edit Serbegeth Singh owner founder of MyTeam Blackburn Rovers F C Global dvisor
Mokhtar Dahari former Selangor FA and Malaysian player
Lim Teong Kim former Hertha BSC player