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3 unusual facts about Ferraro


Ferraro

Geraldine Ferraro (1935 – 2011), U.S. politician and 1984 Vice-President candidate

John Ferraro (1924 – 2001), Los Angeles city council man

Rick Ferraro (born 1950), Canadian former politician in Ontario


A Catholic Statement on Pluralism and Abortion

Two Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur, Patricia Hussey and Barbara Ferraro (no relation to Geraldine Ferraro), did not recant from their pro-choice positions.

Allan Weiner

After the M/V Fury fiasco, Ferraro purchased a small licensed AM station, WHVW in Hyde Park, New York.

Blue Sky Studios

Blue Sky was founded in February 1987 by Chris Wedge, Carl Ludwig, Dr. Eugene Troubetzkoy, Alison Brown, David Brown and Michael Ferraro, who had previously worked on the Disney film Tron while employed at MAGI/Synthavision.

Combs College of Music

A partial list of notable faculty during the 1970s and 80s also included the duo-piano team of Toni and Rosi Grunschlag, performers and pedagogues Jacob Neupauer, Michael Guerra, Donald Reinhardt, Anthony Weigand, Romeo Cascarino, Dolores Ferraro, Frank Versaci, Joseph Primavera, Keith Chapman, Morton Berger, Howard Haines, William Fabrizio and John McIntyre.

Eugene Eason

He questioned her backing for affirmative action, minority set-aside arrangements on public contracts, abortion, the Second Amendment, the 1984 Mondale-Ferraro ticket.

Far Side Virtual

Simon Reynolds said that while the album's song titles allude to the 21st century, the album is sonically reminiscent of the 1990s and that Ferraro shares interest in that time period with contemporaries like Oneohtrix Point Never.

InMage

John Ferraro was chief executive of InMage from 2006 until 2011, when co-founder and chairman Kumar Malavalli took over.

Jim Ferraro

Ferraro became a Sports Agent, and in the early 1980s went on to also represent a number of first-round draft picks from the Hurricane's early championship years, including Albert Bentley and Eddie Brown (the 1985 NFL "Rookie of the Year").

Vince Ferraro

In 2011 Ferraro made national news when he attempted to trademark Occupy Wall Street.


see also