People
- Alexander Kolb (1891-1963), German general
- Abram Bowman Kolb (1862-1925), Canadian teacher and publisher
- Allison Kolb (1915-1973), U.S. politician
- Annette Kolb (1870-1967), German pacifist
- Barbara Kolb (born 1939), U.S. composer
- Bubba Kolb (born 1940), jazz pianist
- Brandon Kolb (born 1973), U.S. baseball player
- Brian Kolb, U.S. politician
- Carol Kolb, U.S. comedy writer
- Chris Kolb, U.S. politician
- Clarence Kolb (1874-1964), U.S. vaudeville performer
- Claudia Kolb (born 1949), U.S. swimmer
- Danny Kolb (born 1975), U.S. baseball player
- David Kolb (born 1941), U.S. philosopher
- David A. Kolb (born 1939), U.S. educationist
- Edward Kolb, American cosmologist
- Emil Kolb (born 1936), Canadian politician
- Frank Kolb (born 1945), German historian
- Franz Kolb, German inventor
- Jon Kolb (born 1947), U.S. football player
- Kevin Kolb (born 1984), U.S. football player
- Larry J. Kolb, U.S. spy and writer
- Lawrence Kolb (1911-2006), U.S. psychiatrist
- Michael J. Kolb, U.S. archaeologist
- Ophélia Kolb French actress
- Robert Kolb U.S. theologian, systematician
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Famous quotes containing the word people:
“The chief lesson of the Depression should never be forgotten. Even our liberty-loving American people will sacrifice their freedom and their democratic principles if their security and their very lives are threatened by another breakdown of our free enterprise system. We can no more afford another general depression than we can afford another total war, if democracy is to survive.”
—Agnes E. Meyer (18871970)
“The people of the United States have been fortunate in many things. One of the things in which we have been most fortunate has been that so far, due perhaps to certain basic virtues in our traditional ways of doing things, we have managed to keep the crisis of western civilization, which has devastated the rest of the world and in which we are as much involved as anybody, more or less at arms length.”
—John Dos Passos (18961970)
“Some [adolescent] girls are depressed because they have lost their warm, open relationship with their parents. They have loved and been loved by people whom they now must betray to fit into peer culture. Furthermore, they are discouraged by peers from expressing sadness at the loss of family relationshipseven to say they are sad is to admit weakness and dependency.”
—Mary Pipher (20th century)