Whitey - People

People

  • Whitey (musician), born Nathan Joseph White, British electro-rock musician
  • Whitey Alperman (1879–1942), baseball player
  • Richie Ashburn (1927–1997), MLB player and broadcaster
  • Whitey Bimstein (1897–1969), boxer and boxing trainer
  • James J. Bulger (born 1929), allegedly the leader of an Irish organized crime group in the Boston area in the 1970s
  • Whitey Ford (born 1928), Major League Baseball (MLB) pitcher
  • Whitey Glazner (1893–1989), MLB pitcher
  • Roy Grant (1916–2010), of the American country music duo Whitey and Hogan
  • Lorrin "Whitey" Harrison (1913–1993), American surfer and surf equipment innovator
  • Whitey Herzog (born 1931), MLB player and manager
  • Whitey Krakow (died 1941), New York mobster and hitman for Murder, Inc.
  • Whitey Kurowski (1919–1999), MLB player
  • Whitey Lockman (1926–2009), MLB player, coach, manager and executive
  • Whitey Mitchell (1932–2009), American jazz bassist and television writer and producer
  • Whitey Moore (1912–1987), MLB pitcher
  • Whitey Von Nieda (born 1922), National Basketball Association player, basketball coach
  • Whitey Platt (1920–1970), MLB player
  • Sanger D. Shafer (born 1934), American country music songwriter and musician
  • Myer Skoog (born 1926), National Basketball Association player
  • Whitey Thomas (1895–1978), American football player
  • Whitey Wietelmann (1919–2002), MLB player and coach
  • Whitey Wilshere (1912–1985), MLB pitcher
  • Whitey Wistert (1912–1985), American football and baseball player, member of the College Football Hall of Fame
  • Whitey Witt (1895–1988), MLB player
  • Whitey Woodin (1894 – after 1935), American football player

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Famous quotes containing the word people:

    Most people die from the remedy rather than from the illness.
    Molière [Jean Baptiste Poquelin] (1622–1673)

    Many people will say to working mothers, in effect, “I don’t think you can have it all.” The phrase for “have it all” is code for “have your cake and eat it too.” What these people really mean is that achievement in the workplace has always come at a price—usually a significant personal price; conversely, women who stayed home with their children were seen as having sacrificed a great deal of their own ambition for their families.
    Anne C. Weisberg (20th century)

    The one conclusive argument that has at all times discouraged people from drinking a poison is not that it kills but rather that it tastes bad.
    Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900)