- David Sirota
David Sirota is the bestselling author of the books "Hostile Takeover" (2006) and "The Uprising" (2008). He is a fellow at the Campaign for America's Future and a board member of the Progressive States Network - both nonpartisan organizations. E-mail him at ds@davidsirota.com. - Miguel Batista
Miguel Jerez Batista Descartes (born February 19, 1971 in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic) is a Major League Baseball pitcher who plays for the Seattle Mariners. Over his career, Batista has played for seven teams and been utilized extensively as both a starter and a reliever. His best seasons came in 2001 and 2003 with the Arizona Diamondbacks, when he went 11-8 and 10-9 with 3.36 and 3.54 ERAs respectively. - Mark Driscoll
Mark Driscoll (born October 11, 1970 in Grand Forks, ND) is an American minister and author. The co-founder and teaching pastor of Mars Hill Church in Seattle, Washington, he also co-founded the Acts 29 Network, and has contributed to the "Faith and Values" section of the Seattle Times. He also recently helped to start The Resurgence, a repository of missional theology resources. Driscoll graduated in 1989 from Highline High School, … - Tom Robbins
Thomas Eugene Robbins (born July 22, 1936 in Blowing Rock, North Carolina) is an American author. His novels are complex, often wild stories with strong social undercurrents, a satirical bent, and obscure details. His novel "Even Cowgirls Get the Blues" (1976) was made into a movie in 1993 directed by Gus Van Sant. - Lou Guzzo
Lou Guzzo is a former journalist, author, and television commentator in Seattle, Washington, USA. He was an art and theater critic for 20 years at the "Seattle Times", then served as the managing editor of the "Seattle Post-Intelligencer", where his investigative team wrote stories that led to the indictments of more than 50 corrupt government officials. He was closely associated with Dixy Lee Ray. - Steve Beren
Steve Beren "(b. September 9, 1951, New York, New York)" is a speaker, writer, and political activist from Seattle, Washington. Beren has been mentioned as a possible conservative candidate for city council in the Seattle 2007 elections. In 2006, Beren was the Republican candidate for U.S. Congress in Washington State's 7th Congressional District. Beren received 16% of the vote against incumbent Democratic Congressman Jim McDermott, who received 79%. - Alex Steffen
Alex Steffen Alex Steffen has been the Executive Editor of Worldchanging since he co-founded the organization in 2003, as the next phase in a lifetime of work exploring ways of building a better future. In a very short time, Worldchanging has become the most widely-read sustainability-related publication on the Internet, with an archive of over 7,000 articles by leading thinkers around the world. - Wesley J. Smith
Wesley J. Smith is a lawyer and an award winning author, a senior fellow at the Discovery Institute, an attorney for the International Task Force on Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide, and a special consultant for the Center for Bioethics and Culture. In 2004 he was named by the National Journal as one of the nation’s top expert thinkers in bioengineering. Smith has authored or co-authored eleven books. He formerly collaborated with consumer advocate Ralph Nader, … - 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. - William Prochnau
William Prochnau is an American journalist. His work on the Vietnam War while at the "Seattle Times" landed him on the master list of Nixon political opponents. His "Vanity Fair magazine" article "Adventures in the Ransom Trade" was inspiration for the 2000 film "Proof of Life". His novel "Trinity Child" was the basis for 1990's "By Dawn's Early Light". He also wrote "Once Upon a Distant War: David Halberstam, Neil Sheehan, … - Gil Dobie
Gilmour "Gloomy Gil" Dobie (January 21, 1879-December 23, 1948) was an American football head coach. He was born in Hastings, Minnesota, USA. - Stacey Levine
Stacey Levine is an American novelist, short story author and journalist. Born in St. Louis, she attended the University of Missouri journalism program and the University of Washington. Her fiction and criticism have appeared in numerous journals, including "The Washington Review, Fence, Witness, Water-Stone", the "Notre Dame Review", the "Iowa Review", the "Seattle Times", "The Rocket, The Stranger", and others. - Ryan Blitstein
Ryan Blitstein is a reporter at the San Jose MercuryNews. Ryan has been a staff writer at SF Weekly and Red Herring, and his work hasappeared in New York Observer, New York Daily News and The Seattle Times. Hestudied at Stanford University and Columbia University Graduate School ofJournalism. - Merl Reagle
Merl Reagle (b. January 5, 1950, Audubon, NJ) is a U.S. crossword puzzle creator. Since 1985, he has constructed a puzzle every Sunday for the "San Francisco Chronicle" (originally the "San Francisco Examiner"); it is now also published by the "Los Angeles Times", the "Philadelphia Inquirer", the "Seattle Times", the "Cleveland Plain Dealer", the "Hartford Courant", … - John Hager
John "Dok" Hager (1858-1932) was an American cartoonist, creator of the comic strip "Dok's Dippy Duck", which was published in the "Seattle Times" starting in 1917. Hager's nickname stems from his time as a dentist in Terre Haute, Indiana before he moved to Seattle, Washington in 1889 and began working for the "Times". Hager retired in 1925 due to blindness. - Steven L. Kent
Steven L. Kent is an American writer, best known for his video game journalism. In 1994, Steven started freelance journalism writing monthly video game reviews for the "Seattle Times". His reviews were then featured in "Electronic Games", "CD Rom Today", "ComputerLife", "NautilusCD", "American Heritage", "Parade", "USA Today", the "Chicago Tribune", "MSNBC", "Next Generation", … - Laura Chang
Laura Chang (born in Seattle, Washington) is an American journalist who has been the science editor of "The New York Times" since 2004. Previously, she had been assistant science editor beginning in 1998, then deputy science editor. Chang joined the "Times" in 1990. She began as a copy editor on the national desk, then became assignment editor. She also served as a special projects editor, where she handled projects on welfare reform, … - Pacha Khan Zadran
Pacha Khan Zadran is a powerful militia leader, politician and Pashtun nationalist in the southeast of Afghanistan. He was the ex Soviet-fighter militia leader that drove the Taliban from Paktia Province in the 2001 invasion, with American backing, and he subsequently assumed the governorship of the province. In 2002, he engaged in a violent conflict with rival tribal leaders in the province over the Governorship of the province, … - James Jaxxa
James Jaxxa is an American artist who lives and works in New York City, New York. Jaxxa's work includes painting, sculpture, site specific installation, appropriation and collage. Jaxxa attended School of Visual Arts and Rhode Island School of Design, and earned B.S. and M.S. degrees from Michigan State University. - Mike Luckovich
Mike Luckovich (born January 28, 1960) is an editorial cartoonist who has worked for "The Atlanta Journal-Constitution" since 1989. He is syndicated nationally to about 150 newspapers (as of October 2005), through Creators Syndicate and is the 2006 winner of the Reuben, the National Cartoonist Society's top award for cartoonist of the year. Luckovich began his career with the "The Greenville News" in South Carolina in 1984, … - Edward Felten
Edward Felten, a Princeton University computer scientist, hid and disabled the browser with a removal program he wrote while serving as a government witness during the antitrust trial in 1998. But in court, Microsoft adroitly demonstrated that, the way its software is written, Internet Explorer shows up unexpectedly now and then -- no matter how well the program is hidden -- backing its contention that the browser is integral to the operating system. - Carole Beers
- Bruce Milletto
- Ruth Robbins
Ruth Robbins is the original founder and publisher of Realdawg.com. Getting her start as a Pac-10 Advisor, writing Northwest and Regional Profiles for PrepStar Magazine. During her tenure with Rivals.com, Robbins was also a beat writer for Fox Sports Internet. - Luke Adamson
Luke Adamson Chief Technology Officer Luke brings over 11 years of professional software development and technology management experience to Next. He led the original team in 1997 which created the foundation for the online mortgage origination and fulfillment platform. Prior to joining the company, Luke started a U.S.-based database applications division for FrontBase, Inc., a Danish database vendor. - Anuradha Mittal
Anuradha Mittal , a native of India, is the Co-Director of Food First . Prior to her employment as the Co-Director, she was the Institute's Policy Director and coordinated Economic Human Rights: The Time Has Come! , a national campaign in the United States, which organized several Congressional hearings on growing hunger and poverty and the loss of family farms in the US. She is the co-editor of America Needs Human Rights (Food First Books, 1999). - Ross A. Albert
Mr. Albert frequently serves as a commentator concerning current SEC, securities, corporate governance and financial crime issues for local, national and international news organizations, including The Wall Street Journal , Associated Press, Reuters, United Press International, Canadian Press, CNN, CNNfn, CNBC, MSNBC, CTV (Canada’s largest private broadcast network), MSN Money, CBS MarketWatch, BBC News Radio, U.S. News & World Report, The Washington Post, The Los Angeles Times, The Atlanta Jo - Jody Brannon
Jody Brannon , Senior Editor, MSN.com. Jody Brannon directs editorial projects for MSN.com's homepage team, working out of New York and Redmond, and serves as ombudsman for Microsoft's portal. Her online career began in April 1995 with The Washington Post's Internet service, Interchange. - Harlan Feinstein
Musician and programmer, formerly from the Boston area, now in Seattle. - John Mccoy
Single duder in seattle... - Jim Wallis
Jim Wallis speaks locally, nationally, and internationally to more than 100,000 people each year. Come hear him speak in the coming months on behalf of Sojourners and Call to Renewal: Request Jim Wallis to speak at your next event. Nov. 13, 2007 Williamstown MA - Wendy Hidenrick
Life was simple back in AZ. My sister and I had a pretty sweet house, our dearest dog friends KC & Purdie, and not much to worry about except a 7:45am Aerobics class. But things change. Hope to connect with old friends here. Talk about where you are, where you've been and where you're goin. - Kim Peterson
A reporter for the Seattle Times. - Diana Lightner
C is for Cookie and Cash and that's good enough for me. - Sam
Freddy got Fingered is a hilarious movie, I dont care what anyone says. Rip Torn, hilarious. a>. - Alex
My full name is actually Alejandro... I like it, but most of my freinds call me Alex.. oh well, I like it both ways... I'm a warm, kind, happy kinda guy that enjoy making a new friend everywhere. Libra boy. My major is in Graphic Arts, but lately I'd been working more doing Bilingual English / Spanish Customer Service for major corporations and related fields. 100% Bilingual English / Spanish. Swimmer, runner, love hiking and kayaks. Summer kinda guy. - Hans Zeiger
Hans Zeiger , 19, a college sophomore, is a political activist, columnist, and student leader. As an Eagle Scout, Hans is the founder and national spokesman for the Scout Honor Coalition, a network of supporters of values held by the Boy Scouts of America. A native of Puyallup, Washington, Hans served as chairman of Washington Young Americans for Freedom from 2001 through 2003. - Dave
If you're reading this profile, you probably already know most of these things about me. - Col In Riley
Look! A slideshow! - Nate
I was at the Bite of Seattle and they had Dating On Demand there! I didn't do it because I want to find a bazillion dates or something (although a few more than the current amount would be nice). I did it because the group I was with was a bunch of girls and you can't *not* do cool stuff like that when you're around a bunch of girls. Three other girls (my sis, Becca, and Charlotte) did it, so I had to do it too.
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