Tuesday, September 04, 2007

Top 25 Influential People

They are the 25 most influential people of the past 25 years — those who changed our world, transformed technology, mapped the human body and affected the way we relate to one another.


Bill Gates (AP)

1 Bill Gates, software entrepreneur

His Microsoft software shaped the way millions use the technology that has transformed communications and commerce — making him the world’s richest man and, now, a leading philanthropist.


Ronald Reagan (AFP)

2 Ronald Reagan, 40th U.S. president

Elected in 1980 and re-elected in 1984, he put the United States on a more conservative course, restored buoyancy and confidence in the presidency and forged a partnership with a reformist Soviet leader that helped end the Cold War.


Oprah Winfrey (AP)

3 Oprah Winfrey, talk show host

As a talk-show host, first at WLS-TV’s AM Chicago in 1984, she pioneered a form of intimate public discourse that brought taboo subjects into the open and sparked a confessional, self-help culture.


Dr. Craig Venter, left (USA TODAY); Dr. Francis Collins, right (GNS)

4&5 Francis Collins & J. Craig Venter, mappers of the human genome

The Human Genome Project headed by Collins and a parallel private effort by Celera Genomics under Venter jointly announced the mapping of the human genome in 2000, opening the door to breakthroughs in identifying, treating and preventing the world’s most feared diseases.


Osama bin Laden (AP)

6 Osama bin Laden, terrorist

For most Americans, the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, by the al-Qaeda network he leads marked the beginning of a global battle against radical Islamists 12 years after the fall of the Berlin Wall marked the end of the Cold War.


Stephen Hawking (USA TODAY)

7 Stephen Hawking, physicist

In the tradition of Isaac Newton and Albert Einstein, he explored the nature of the universe. He popularized science, wrote the best-selling A Brief History of Time in 1988 and remains a puckish personality despite being severely disabled by Lou Gehrig’s disease.


Lance Armstrong (AP)

8 Lance Armstrong, cyclist and cancer activist

He won a record-breaking seven consecutive Tour de France races, cycling’s most prestigious event, after battling testicular cancer. Sales of his iconic "Livestrong" wristbands have raised millions of dollars to help fight cancer.


Pope John Paul II (AFP)

9 Pope John Paul II, pontiff

Polish-born Karol Jozef Wojtyla helped propel a peaceful revolution in Poland in 1989 that ended Soviet domination and reverberated through Eastern Europe. In a 26-year papacy, he defined the Roman Catholic Church’s role in modern times.


Bono (AFP)

10 Bono, rock musician and activist for Africa

Born Paul Hewson, the lead singer of the Irish rock band U2 has shrewdly pressed world leaders to forgive third-world debt and address the AIDS pandemic in Africa.


Mikhail Gorbachev (AFP)

11 Mikhail Gorbachev, Soviet leader

The last leader of the Soviet Union, from 1985 to 1991, he introduced economic and political reforms — glasnost and perestroika — and forged a partnership with an anti-Communist U.S. president. On Gorbachev’s watch, the Berlin Wall fell and the Soviet Union dissolved.


Larry Page, left, and Sergey Brin (AP)

12&13 Sergey Brin & Larry Page, co-founders of Google

After meeting as doctoral students at Stanford in 1995, they devised a way to organize information on the Internet by analyzing relationships between websites. Google is now the Web’s most-used search engine — so familiar it’s become a verb.


George W. Bush (Reuters)

14 George W. Bush, 43rd president

Taking office after a 5-4 Supreme Court decision settled the 2000 election, he led America’s response to the 9/11 attacks in 2001 and ordered the invasion of Iraq in 2003 — enmeshing the USA in its longest war since Vietnam.


Sam Walton (AP)

15 Sam Walton, retailing pioneer

A farm boy from Oklahoma who started with Walton's Five and Dime in Bentonville, Ark., he relied on high volume and low markups to build the world's biggest retailer — and swamp the competiton.


Deng Xiaoping (Xinhua)

16 Deng Xiaoping, Chinese leader

The de facto leader of China from 1978 into the 1990s, he opened the nation to global markets and economic modernization through “socialism with Chinese characteristics” — and cracked down on Tiananmen Square protesters in 1989.


Kirthmon Dozier (AP)

17 Michael Jordan, basketball star

Arguably the greatest basketball player of all time, mostly for the Chicago Bulls, his athletic leaps and slam dunks influenced a generation of players. With a likeable persona, he also led all leagues in lucrative endorsements.


Howard Schultz (AP)

18 Howard Schultz, Starbucks entrepreneur

A poor kid from Brooklyn who wanted to replicate Italian espresso bars, he cultivated a chain of coffeehouses that have influenced many Americans’ daily habits and taste buds much as Ray Kroc’s McDonalds did a generation earlier.


Nelson Mandela (USA TODAY)

19 Nelson Mandela, anti-apartheid leader

Released in 1990 after 27 years in prison, he preached reconciliation and was the first elected president of a fully democratic South Africa.


J. K. Rowling (AP)

20 J. K. Rowling, author

The first Harry Potter book, completed in 1995 and initially rejected by several publishing houses, launched a seven-volume series that absorbed children and adults in complicated fantasies spanning thousands of pages.


Hillary and Bill Clinton (AP)

21&22 Bill & Hillary Clinton, 42nd president & N.Y. senator

He was the first Democrat elected to two terms in the White House since FDR, then survived impeachment. She went from wronged wife to New York senator to the most viable female presidential contender in U.S. history.


Russell Simmons (USA TODAY)

23 Russell Simmons, hip-hop pioneer

He helped popularize a distinctively American form of music — co-founding the hip-hop label Def Jam — that has influenced mainstream pop culture, from music to dance to dress, since the mid-1980s.


Ryan White (USA TODAY)

24 Ryan White, the face of AIDS

The 13-year-old hemophiliac from Kokomo, Ind., was diagnosed with AIDS in 1984, then banned from attending his public middle school. A human face for a stigmatized disease, he died in 1990.


20th Century Fox

25 Homer Simpson, Everyman

The doughy star of TV’s The Simpsons epitomized the irony and irreverence at the core of American humor — the same force that’s helped make The Daily Show’s Jon Stewart a major source of news for young people.

USA TODAY reporting and writing by Susan Page; photo research by Robin Smith and Denny Gainer

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