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  1. Martin Wolf

    Martin Wolf is a British journalist. He is associate editor and chief economics commentator at the Financial Times. He was awarded the CBE (Commander of the British Empire) in 2000. He left Oxford University with a master of philosophy degree in economics in 1971 to join the World Bank's young professionals programme, becoming a senior economist in 1974. He left the World Bank in 1981, to become Director of Studies at the Trade Policy Research Centre, in London.

  2. Anatole Kaletsky

    Anatole Kaletsky Anatole Kaletsky is Principal Economic Commentator and Associate Editor of The Times of London, where he writes a twice-weekly column on economics, politics and financial markets. Since 1997 he has also worked as an economic consultant, providing forecasts and policy analysis for financial institutions, multinational companies and international organisations through his company, Kaletsky Economic Consulting Ltd. In 1998 he was elected by Britainâ

  3. Kara Swisher

    Kara Swisher started covering digital issues for The Wall Street Journal's San Francisco bureau in 1997. Her column BoomTown originally appeared on the front page of the Marketplace section and also online at WSJ.com. Previously, Ms. Swisher covered breaking news about the Web's major players and Internet policy issues and also wrote feature articles on technology for the paper.

  4. Jug Suraiya

    Jug Suraiya is the Associate Editor of the Times of India, Delhi, an author besides being a columnist. He had his schooling in La Martiniere Calcutta. He writes the weekly column "Jugular Vein" which appears in all the Sunday editions of the Times of India, and the cartoon strip "Dubyaman" which appears daily. It covers everything from mundane to serious things that happen to people in everyday life, …

  5. Ben MacIntyre

    Ben Macintyre is a columnist writing for The Times newspaper. His columns range from current affairs to historical controversies.

  6. Jude Wanniski

    Jude Thaddeus Wanniski (June 17, 1936, Pottsville, Pennsylvania - August 29, 2005, Morristown, New Jersey) was a journalist, conservative commentator, and economic commentator. He is perhaps best known as the associate editor of "The Wall Street Journal" from 1972 to 1978. In 1976 Wanniski coined the term supply-side economics to distinguish the revival in classical economic thought from the more dominant "demand-side" Keynesian and monetarist theories.

  7. Jacob Weisberg

    Jacob Weisberg (born 1964) is an American political journalist, currently serving as editor of "Slate" magazine and a columnist for the Financial Times. He is the son of Lois Weisberg, a Chicago social activist and connector celebrated in Malcolm Gladwell's book "The Tipping Point". Weisberg's father, Bernard Weisberg, was a prominent Chicago lawyer and, later, judge. His parents were introduced at a cocktail party by novelist Ralph Ellison.

  8. Alex Gibney

    Alex Gibney is an Emmy- and Grammy-award winning American director and movie producer. His works include "Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room"(nominated for an Academy Award in 2006), "The Trials of Henry Kissinger", and 2006's "The Human Behavior Experiments". His latest film is Taxi to the Dark Side (2007), an in-depth look at the torture practices of the United States in Afghanistan, Iraq and Guantanamo Bay, …

  9. Rona Jaffe

    Rona Jaffe (June 12, 1932 - December 30, 2005) was an American novelist. Born in New York, New York, she wrote her first and most known book, "The Best of Everything", while working as an associate editor at Fawcett Publications in the 1950s. Published in 1958, it was later made into a movie, starring Joan Crawford. The book has been described as distinctly "pre-women's liberation" in the way it depicts women in the working world.

  10. Joe Hutshing

    Joe Hutshing is an American film editor who grew up in San Diego, California and is most well known for working multiple times with film director, Oliver Stone and well as with film director Cameron Crowe (who is also from San Diego, California). Hutshing has received multiple Academy Awards including for the notable film "JFK" about the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, as well as for the Oliver Stone-directed film, "Born on the 4th of July".

  11. Paul Levinson

    Paul Levinson <small>BA, MA, PhD</small&gt; is an author and professor of communications and media studies at Fordham University in New York City. Levinson's novels, short fiction, and non-fiction works have been translated into twelve languages. As a commentator on media, popular culture, and science fiction he has been interviewed over 500 times on many local, national and international television and radio shows.

  12. Veronica Belmont

    Blog.

  13. Nariman Farvardin

    Nariman Farvardin became dean of the A. James Clark University in 2001, after serving five years as chair of the department of electrical and computer engineering. He joined the university in January 1984, as a professor of electrical and computer engineering with a joint appointment with the Institute of System Research. Dean Farvardin was also a visiting professor at Ecole Nationale Superieure des Telecommunications, Paris, France, during 1990-91.

  14. Sean Nelson

    Sean Nelson (born June 12, 1973) is an American singer, songwriter, and keyboardist, notable as the frontman for alternative rock group Harvey Danger. Aside from Harvey Danger, Nelson has also provided vocals to Death Cab for Cutie, The Minus 5, Nada Surf, and vocals/keyboards to The Long Winters, on the independent record label Barsuk Records.

  15. Bernard Chazelle

    Bernard Chazelle (born November 5, 1955) is a professor of computer science at Princeton University. Although he is best known for his invention of the soft heap data structure and the most asymptotically efficient known algorithm for finding minimum spanning trees, most of his work is in computational geometry, where he has found many of the best-known algorithms, such as linear-time triangulation of a simple polygon, as well as many useful complexity results, …

  16. Jennifer Vanasco

    Jennifer Vanasco (born 1971 in Rockville Centre, New York) is an award-winning syndicated columnist for the gay press and a former theater critic for the Chicago Reader.

  17. Tariq Anwar

    Tariq Anwar is an Iranian film editor, whose credits include "Center Stage", "The Good Shepherd", and "Sylvia". He is the father of actress Gabrielle Anwar. He is Iranian born but is based in the United Kingdom

  18. Christopher Knights

    Christopher Knights (born 60's?), is an American voice actor, editor and camera operator best known for providing the voice of Private the penguin in Madagascar, also, he worked in several DreamWorks films as Shrek, Shrek 2, Shrek the third and Shrek 4-D (as a blind mouse)

  19. John Gater

    John has been involved in archaeological geophysics for 18 years, working for British Gas, the Ancient Monuments Laboratory (English Heritage) and Bradford University Research. In 1986, he set up Geophysical Surveys (later known as GSB Prospection), an independent consultancy in geophysics for archaeology. He is also associate editor of the Journal of Archaeological Prospection . John is interested in 'investigating without digging' all periods of archaeology.

  20. Róger Calero

    Róger Calero is one of the leaders of the Socialist Workers Party. He is a Communist political organizer, and was running for U.S. President in the 2004 election. Calero, a former meat packer, has been associate editor of "Perspectiva Mundial" (official Spanish language newspaper of the SWP) and a staff writer for "The Militant" (official English language newspaper of the SWP).

  21. Carole Ferrier

    Carole Ferrier is a Feminist Australian Academic. She is Professor in English at the School of English, Media Studies and Art History at the University of Queensland. She has many published works about feminism, socialism, literature and culture. She has been the editor the radical feminist journal Hecate since its inception in 1975.

  22. Robert Hess

    Robert Hess was an associate editor for the magazine MacWEEK and a notable Apple evangelist. He died on January 12, 1996 at age 29 from complications due to pneumonia. Hess published a list of post-expo parties for Macworld Conference & Expo each year. The list is now known as the "Hess Memorial Macworld Expo Events List" and handled by Ilene Hoffman.

  23. Jacek M. Zurada

    Jacek M. Zurada received his MS and PhD degrees (with distinction) in electrical engineering from the Technical University of Gdansk, Poland in 1968 and 1975, respectively. Since 1989 he has been a Professor, and since 1993 a distinguished Samuel T. Fife Professor with the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department at the University of Louisville, Kentucky. He was Department Chair from 2004 to 2006.

  24. Neil Pearson

    Neil Pearson (born London, England, April 27, 1959) is a "housewives favourite" among British actors. Pearson came from a poor London family, and as a boy, attended Woolverstone Hall, an experimental boarding school, where he learned to act. After graduating from the Central School of Speech and Drama, he made his first television appearance in 1982 and starred alongside Leonard Rossiter in Joe Orton's play "Loot" at the Lyric Theatre in London in 1984, …

  25. Quentin Reynolds

    Quentin James Reynolds was a journalist and World War II war correspondent. As associate editor at Collier's Weekly from 1933 to 1945, Reynolds averaged twenty articles a year. He also published twenty-five books, including "The Wounded Don’t Cry", "London Diary", "Dress Rehearsal", and "Courtroom", a biography of lawyer Samuel Leibowitz.

  26. Barney Hoskyns

    Barney Hoskyns is a British music critic and editor of Rock's Backpages. He graduated from Oxford with a First Class degree in English. He began writing about music for "Melody Maker" and "New Musical Express", quitting his job as staff writer at "NME "to research a book about soul music. The result was "Say It One Time For The Brokenhearted: Country Soul In The American South" (UK: Fontana, 1987; Bloomsbury reissue 1998).

  27. Tao Yang

    Tao Yang is Chief Scientist and Senior Vice President of Ask.com for web search. He is a tenured full professor in Computer Science at University of California, Santa Barbara. Yang co-ran research and development of Teoma search engine with Apostolos Gerasoulis from its earlier startup stage in 2000 and at Ask Jeeves (now Ask.com) for Teoma web search after it acquired Teoma in 2001. Teoma has been the backend search engine for Ask.com since December 2001, …

  28. Camilla Stivers

    Camilla Stivers is Distinguished Professor of Public Administration at Levin College of Cleveland State University. She received an MPA from the University of Southern California and a Ph.D. in public administration and policy from Virginia Tech. She is a former Albert A. Levin Professor of Urban Studies and Public Service at Levin College. She is also Associate Editor of Public Administration Review.

  29. Utpal Bhattacharya

    Utpal Bhattacharya is a finance professor at the Indiana University Kelley School of Business. He is known for his research on market integrity, especially on insider trading. In 2000, his research paper "When an Event is Not an Event" uncovered the rampant insider trading on Mexican stock markets. This led to many questions about the value and the enforceability of insider trading laws.

  30. Norman E. Bowie

    Norman E. Bowie (b. 1942) is a professor of strategic management, and of philosophy. He teaches in both of those departments at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis, Minnesota. He is an important voice in ongoing debates over business ethics, in which his own voice has been in favor of the Kantian view of ethics (in business as elsewhere) as a "kingdom of ends".

  31. Wolfgang Pesendorfer

    Wolfgang Pesendorfer (1963) is a professor of economics at Princeton University. He specializes in choice theory, game theory, and political economy.

  32. James Neuberger

    Professor James Neuberger Professor James Neuberger qualified at Oxford University in 1978. After House jobs in London he worked as a Senior House Officer and subsequently as a Registrar in Leeds before returning to London where he spent ten years at the Liver Unit in King’s College Hospital. In 1989, he was appointed to the Liver Unit at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Birmingham, where he is Professor of Hepatology.

  33. Malcolm Moos

    Malcolm Moos (1916, Saint Paul, Minnesota - 1982) was an American political scientist. He received his bachelor and masters degrees in political science from the University of Minnesota. He went on to receive his doctorate, also in political science, from the University of California, Los Angeles. After receiving his Ph.D. Moos taught for several years at Johns Hopkins University and was employed by the Baltimore Evening Sun as an associate editor.

  34. Steven Berkoff

    Steve has directed five independent films including large-scale movies produced in community contexts, and has won an Industrial Society directing award for corporate video. He was Director of Training for Glasgow Film and Video Workshop, and has directed television programmes for Anglia and Granada Television, where he also produced an arts series.

  35. Reuven Ramaty

    Reuven Ramaty was a pioneer in the fields of solar physics, gamma-ray astronomy, nuclear astrophysics, and cosmic rays. He was a HESSI Co-Investigator and one of the founding members of the HESSI team. His active involvement and enthusiastic support were critical for HESSI’s selection by NASA as the sixth Small Explorer (SMEX) mission. Following the launch on 5 February 2002, HESSI was renamed in his honor.

  36. Andrew Barto

    Andrew Barto is a professor of Computer science at University of Massachusetts, Amherst, and chair of the department since January 2007. His main research area is reinforcement learning. Professor Barto is a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, a Fellow and Senior Member of the IEEE, and a member of the American Association for Artificial Intelligence and the Society for Neuroscience.

  37. Alan Smeaton

    Professor Alan Smeaton is an author and academic at Dublin City University. Among his accomplishments are founding TRECVID, the Centre for Digital Video Processing, and being a winner of the University President's Research Award in Science and Engineering 2002. Currently (2007), Prof. Smeaton also serves on the editorial boards for the ACM Journal on Computers and Cultural Heritage and the journal Foundations and Trends in Information Retrieval.

  38. Peter G. Traber

    Peter G. Traber , M.D. President & CEO Baylor College of Medicine Peter G. Traber , M.D. is President and Chief Executive Officer of Baylor College of Medicine and Professor of Medicine, positions he has held since March 2003. Dr. Traber has had a long career in academic medicine involved in patient care, education, and research as well as leadership positions in the pharmaceutical industry.

  39. Oded Goldreich

    Oded Goldreich is a professor of Computer Science at the Faculty of Mathematics and Computer Science of Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel. His research interests lie within the theory of computing. Specifically, the interplay of randomness and computation, the foundations of cryptography and complexity theory at large. Goldreich made notable contributions to the development of zero knowledge proofs and in secure function evaluation.

  40. Hans R. Stoll

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