Ferdinand Waldo Demara, Jr. traveled the country posing as a Navy officer, a surgeon, a teacher, and more, beginning in the 1940s. He is known as the "Great Imposter" for pulling off some of the greatest identity hoaxes in history.
Nicknamed "The Ox," bass guitarist John Entwistle was a founding member of the legendary rock band the Who.
Writer and critic E.M. Forster is the author of Howards End, A Passage to India and A Room With a View.
Jean Harlow was an American actress who proved herself a platinum-blonde sex-symbol and able comedian in 1930s Hollywood.
Henry Miller was a 20th century American writer, who created a new sort of novel—later characterized as a fictionalized autobiography.
Dorothy Parker was the sharpest wit of the Algonquin Round Table, as well as a master of short fiction and a blacklisted screenwriter.
Famed mathematician Alan Turing proved in his 1936 paper, "On Computable Numbers," that a universal algorithmic method of determining truth in math cannot exist.