Ann is married to Jennifer Aull, who pastors with Ann in the Greenpoint Reformed Church in Brooklyn.
Norman | Norman Mailer | Norman architecture | Norman conquest of England | Anglo-Norman | Norman Rockwell | Norman, Oklahoma | Norman Lear | Greg Norman | Jessye Norman | Norman Jewison | Norman Wisdom | Britten-Norman Islander | Norman Foster | Norman Whitfield | Norman Tebbit | Norman Schwarzkopf, Jr. | Norman McLaren | Norman Davies | Anglo-Norman language | Norman Tindale | Norman Thomas | Norman Lamont | Norman Kretzmann | Norman Greenbaum | Norman Foster, Baron Foster of Thames Bank | Norman Finkelstein | Larry Norman | Norman Kittson | Dick Norman |
Board members include Jonathan Brent, Editorial Director of Yale University Press; Norton Garfinkle, former Chairman of the George Washington University Institute for Communitarian Policy Studies; Thomas E. Mann of the Brookings Institution; Norman J. Ornstein, resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research; Hugh Price, formerly president of the National Urban League; Alan Wolfe of Boston College; and Ruth A. Wooden.
Norman J. Hunt (died 1984), American big band composer and conductor
Norman Jonathan Hall (1837 – May 26, 1867) was an officer in the United States Army during the American Civil War, perhaps most noted for his defense of his sector of the Union line against Pickett's Charge during the Battle of Gettysburg.
He received his B.A. from Brigham Young University in 1947, and subsequently studied at the Paris Conservatory of Music under André Lafosse for two years (1950–1951) where he lived in Paris with his wife Evelyn Hunt and their son Steven Hunt.
Dignitaries at the honoring ceremony including then-Governor George Pataki, Senator Charles Fuschillo and Levy's widow, Joy Levy.
During his career, he supervised mathematicians like Dominique de Caen, Rolf S. Rees, and Bill Jackson, among others.
After his release he hosted a popular radio program on CFRB where he denounced the criminal lifestyle and his own past life.
An avid film fan from childhood, Warren entered the film industry as a runner on The Millionairess (1960) and as an assistant director (The Dock Brief, 1962) before directing the short film Fragment in 1965.