Lorenz lived in Russia where he worked as a taxidermist in the Zoological Garden of the Imperial University in Moscow.
Theodore Roosevelt | Theodore Dreiser | Theodore Sturgeon | Lorenz Hart | Theodore von Kármán | Theodore Roosevelt, Jr. | Theodore Parker | Theodore Bikel | Theodore | Theodore Roosevelt National Wildlife Refuge Complex | Théodore Botrel | Konrad Lorenz | Charles Theodore, Elector of Bavaria | Theodore Wirth | Theodore Ushev | Theodore Robinson | Theodore of Tarsus | Theodore Edgar McCarrick | Théodore Dubois | Lorenz cipher | Theodore Roethke | Theodore of Mopsuestia | Théodore Géricault | Theodore Dru Alison Cockerell | Théodore Dézamy | Theodore C. Blegen | Lorenz Oken | John Theodore of Bavaria | Charles Theodore | Theodore Ziolkowski |
Max O. Lorenz, American economist, responsible for the Lorenz curve
The term Lorenz curve seems first to have been used in 1912 in a textbook The Elements of Statistical Method.
He completed his M.A. in 1972 and his Ph.D. in 1975 at Princeton University, under the direction of Theodore K. Rabb and Lawrence Stone.
He created the Lawless Department of Dermatology in Beilison Hospital, Tel-Aviv, Israel; the T. K. Lawless Student Summer Program at the Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel; the Lawless Clinical and Research Laboratory in Dermatology of the Hebrew Medical School, Jerusalem; Roosevelt University's Chemical Laboratory and Lecture Auditorium, Chicago; and Lawless Memorial Chapel, Dillard University, New Orleans.
Along with Robert I. Rotberg, he is also the co-founder and editor of the Journal of Interdisciplinary History and was also an advisor for the 1993 television series Renaissance.