X-Nico

2 unusual facts about Schulz


Christian Norberg-Schulz

The Onion, a fictional and satirical "newspaper", has featured Ask the Concept of Phenomenology in Architecture as developed by Christian Norberg-Schulz, a parody of an advice column.

Mark Z. Danielewski quotes Norberg-Schulz on page 74 of his novel House of Leaves, and then again on pages 170-71 (in the second edition).


3524 Schulz

3524 Schulz was named after Charles M. Schulz, the popular cartoonist who created 'The Peanuts'.

Adelheid Schulz

Adelheid "Heidi" Schulz (born 31 March 1955 in Lörrach) was a member of the West German terrorist Red Army Faction.

Anergates

The only report about T. chefketi as a host of A. atratulus was given by Schulz & Sanetra (2002) as an amendment of the identified material published by Heinze (1987) from Tavşanlı (Turkey, Kütahya district).

Barbara Schulz

Barbara Schulz (born 1972) is a French actress who won the Prix Suzanne Bianchetti in 2001.

For her performances on the stage, Schulz has been nominated several times for the Molière Award, winning in 2001 in the category Best Female Newcomer (“Molière de la révélation théâtrale”) for the play Joyeuses Pâques.

Beau Peep

On the forum of the official Beau Peep website, writer Roger Kettle also claims to have been inspired by the American comic strip Peanuts by Charles M. Schulz, in that like Schulz's creation Charlie Brown, Beau Peep is a "loveable loser."

Bill Schulz

William Dawes "Bill" Schulz (born August 14, 1975) is an American journalist and television personality, best known for being on the Fox News late-night show Red Eye w/ Greg Gutfeld.

Serving as host Greg Gutfeld's "repulsive sidekick," who was routinely the target of Gutfeld's running gags, Schulz often looked directly into the camera (even when he was not being talked to) with his signature "crazy-eyed look," along with frequently waving to the television viewing audience.

Bohemian Massif

;Motuza, G.; Murphy, J.B.; Nance, R.D.; Pisarevsky, S.A.; Schulz, B.

Bonde da Stronda

Léo Stronda (Leonardo Schulz Cardoso) (2006-present)

Carl Theodor Schulz

Schulz was a founding member of the Christiania Gardener Association and the Norwegian Horticulture Society; he was the first chairman of the former, and vice-chairman of the latter organisation.

Charlie Brown and Charles Schulz

Charlie Brown and Charles Schulz is a documentary about the creator of the Peanuts series, Charles Schulz.

Crazy Otto

The Crazy Otto Medley, a tune by Maddox composed of Schulz-Reichel's tunes.

Daniel Shanahan

His major works include Towards a Genealogy of Individualism (University of Massachusetts Press, 1992) and Language, Feeling and the Brain (Transaction Publishers, 2007) Waiting for Something That Never Arrived: Meditations on a Progressive America in Honor of Tony Judt (Togga, 2011) and Sparky's Folks: A Tribute to the Life and Work of Charles Schulz (Togga, 2012).

Düsseldorfer EG

1990: Helmut de Raaf, Markus Fleming, Uli Hiemer, Mike Schmidt, Rick Amann, Andreas Niederberger, Stefan Königer, Christoph Kreutzer, Jürgen Schulz, Gerd Truntschka, Bernd Truntschka, Chris Valentine, Peter Lee, Andreas Brockmann, Dieter Hegen, Oliver Kasper, Manfred Wolf, Roy Roedger, Lane Lambert, Dieter Willmann, Peter Hejma jun.

Eliot Slater

In 1934 Slater was awarded a Rockefeller Foundation travelling fellowship, which he used to study psychiatric genetics under Bruno Schulz at the Forschungsanstalt für Psychiatrie (Psychiatric Research Institute) in Munich.

Frank J. Reilly

Gerald Allison, Michael Aviano, James Bama, Basil Gogos, Jack Faragasso, Fred Fixler, Gordon Johnson, Carl Hantman, Doug Higgins, Clark Hulings, Ronnie Lesser, Frank Liljegren, Peter Max, Gerald McConnell, George Passantino and Robert Emil Schulz are among them.

Frieda

According to Schulz, Frieda's character was inspired by his longtime friend Frieda Rich, a local artist whom he met while taking classes at the Art Instruction Schools in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Friedemann Schulz von Thun

Schulz von Thun worked as a professor of psychology at the University of Hamburg until his retirement on 30 Sep. 2009.

Fritz W. Schulz

They had two daughters; Ilse Agnes Piper, née Schulz (15 August 1915 - 13 September 2006, Hamburg) and Käthe Luise Schulze-Wenck, née Schulz (16 December 1916 - 30 September 2010, Itzstedt).

In 1907, at age 23, Friedrich Wilhelm Schulz, entered the 'Berlin academy for the arts', Charlottenburg.

Heinrich E. M. Schulz

Heinrich E. M. Schulz (1859-1918) was a German entomologist.

Jody Schulz

When Fast could still not convince Schulz, he called Emory, and, during a snowstorm, flew in to Kent Island, Maryland, where Schulz lived.

Johann Heinrich Schulz

In 1798 Frederick William III allowed a review of the trial, which confirmed the earlier decision that Schulz had been in violation of the Religious Edict.

Karl-Lothar Schulz

During the campaign in the West, Schulz and his men dropped into Holland to seize the airport at Waalhaven near Rotterdam, in order to allow the rapid landing of more German air-landing troops.

Karlín

Lucia Moholy (born Schulz January 18, 1894, Karolinenthal bei Prag, died May 17, 1989, Zollikon, Switzerland) photographer, documentarist, publicist

Leap into Bliss

Leap into Bliss (German: Salto in die Seligkeit) is a 1934 Austrian comedy film directed by Fritz Schulz and starring Schulz, Olly Gebauer and Rosi Barsony.

Little Red-Haired Girl

A 1947 high school graduate, Johnson was working in the accounting department of the Art Instruction, Inc., a correspondence school where Schulz worked.

Martin Schulz

On 24 November 2010 the British MEP Godfrey Bloom caused a row in the European Parliament when he interrupted a speech by Martin Schulz, heckling him with the Nazi propaganda slogan ‘Ein Volk, ein Reich, ein Führer’ (‘one people, one empire, one leader’) and accusing him of being an ‘undemocratic fascist’.

Otto Schulz-Kampfhenkel

In 1943 Schulz-Kampfhenkel got promoted to Special Commissioner of geographical questions in the Reichsforschungsrat after he had been lieutenant of Luftwaffe and SS-Untersturmführer.

Pigpen

Pig-Pen, a character in Charles M. Schulz's comic strip Peanuts

Prince Heinrich XV of Reuss-Plauen

He commanded 12 battalions in the brigades of Federico Bianchi and Franz Schulz von Rothacker.

Random Access Music

Its current members are David Fetherolf, Gilbert Galindo, Jonathan Pieslak, David Schober, B. Allen Schulz, Wang Jie, and Stefan Weisman.

Robert L. Schulz

On December 1, 2008, Schulz questioned whether President-elect Obama is a natural born citizen of the United States.

Russell Schulz-Widmar

Born into a family of German and Dutch immigrants, Russell Schulz grew up northwest of Chicago, near the village of Hebron, Illinois.

Sabine Bergmann-Pohl

Sabine Bergmann-Pohl née Schulz (born 20 April 1946 in Eisenach, Thuringia) is a German doctor and politician.

Storage Wars

The show features the auctioneering couple of Dan Dotson and Laura Dotson, as well as buyers: Barry Weiss, the usually together but occasionally separated team of Darrell and Brandon Sheets, the team of Jarrod Schulz and Brandi Passante, and Dave Hester.

Sun of a Beach – The Return of Alleinunterhalter vol. 5

this album was recorded live and features Mambo's 80 year old Hammond Organ teacher, Heidi Schulz singing covers of Anarchy in the UK and Sympathy for the Devil.

Sybille Waury

She also starred as Dorothée in the Schulz & Schulz-movies next to Götz George and Martina Gedeck.

The Street of Crocodiles

The book, inspired by Schulz's short story and available in print and electronic formats, is introduced by The Village Voice film critic, J. Hoberman, as "...a walk on the wild side, an expedition down a melancholy boulevard of dreams."

Toronto '09

# Mike Foyle - Bittersweet Nightshade (Markus Schulz Return to Coldharbour Remix)

William F. Schulz

From 1997 to 2005, Federal Election Commission records show that William F. Schulz contributed a total of $9,450 to the campaigns of Democratic Party politicians Gary Ackerman, Geraldine Ferraro, Carolyn McCarthy, Steve Israel, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Edward M. Kennedy, Charles Schumer, John Kerry, Patrick Leahy, Bill Nelson and Al Gore.


see also