- David Addington
David S. Addington (b. January 22, 1957, Washington, D.C.), is chief of staff and former legal counsel to Vice President Dick Cheney. He was appointed to replace Lewis "Scooter" Libby as Cheney's chief of staff upon Libby's resignation on October 28, 2005. He was described by "U.S. News and World Report" as "the most powerful man you've never heard of". - Khaled Abu Toameh
Khaled Abu Toameh is an Israeli Arab Muslim journalist, documentarian and the West Bank and Gaza correspondent for the Jerusalem Post and U.S. News and World Report. He is also the Palestinian affairs producer for NBC News since 1988. His articles are published in numerous publications such as "The Sunday Times", "Daily Express" and the "New Republic". Khaled Abu Toameh was previously a senior writer for The Jerusalem Report, … - John Sexton
John Edward Sexton (born 1942) is the fifteenth President of New York University, having held this position since 2002. Prior to that, he served as Dean of the NYU School of Law, one of the top five law schools in the country according to "U.S. News and World Report". He is also currently the Chairman of the Board of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. Sexton holds a B.A. in History (1963), an M.A. in Comparative Religion (1965), … - Claudia Rosett
Claudia Rosett is an American writer and journalist. She is journalist-in-residence at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies, a policy institute based in Washington, D.C. Rosett has been recognized for her groundbreaking work exposing the corruption behind the U.N.'s Oil-for-Food program. As U.S. News and World Report senior writer Michael Barone explained: "The U.N. Oil for Food program, we learn from the reporting of Claudia Rosett in The Wall Street Journal, … - Timothy Noah
Timothy Noah , a contributing editor of the Washington Monthly , writes Slate's "Chatterbox" column. Previously, he was an assistant managing editor at US News and World Report and a reporter in the Washington bureau of The Wall Street Journal . Noah was an editor at the Washington Monthly from 1983-5. His most recent article for the Monthly was "Small things make a big difference" . - Paul Rieckhoff
Paul Rieckhoff founded and is Executive Director of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America (IAVA). A non-partisan non-profit founded in 2004 with tens of thousands of members in all 50 US states, IAVA is America’s first and largest Iraq and Afghanistan veterans' group. Honored by "Esquire" as one of "America’s Best and Brightest" in 2004, Rieckhoff has appeared on hundreds of radio and television programs. - Mona Eltahawy
Mona Eltahawy is an award-winning New York-based journalist and commentator and an international lecturer on Arab and Muslim issues. Her opinion pieces have appeared frequently in the International Herald Tribune, The Washington Post and the pan-Arab Asharq al-Awsat newspaper and she has also published opeds in The New York Times, the Christian Science Monitor, Egypt's al-Dostour and Lebanon's Daily Star. - Pat Dollard
Patrick Dollard is an American documentary filmmaker. A native of New York City of Puerto Rican and Irish descent, in the 1990s he was a Hollywood talent agent, manager, and producer most known for guiding the career of Oscar-winning director Steven Soderbergh from his neophyte "Sex, Lies and Videotape" early days onward through the mega-successful mainstream, e.g. "Ocean's Twelve" and a multi-picture deal with Mark Cuban's HDNET cable channel. - Scott Miller
Scott Miller, artistic director and founder of New Line Theatre in St. Louis, MO, has been directing musical theatre since 1981. He has written the book, music, and lyrics for nine musicals, as well as two non-musical plays. His play "Head Games" has been produced in St. Louis, Los Angeles, London, at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in Scotland, and throughout the UK. His latest work, "Johnny Appleweed", a scathing satire of American politics, religion, … - Dave Hickey
Dave Hickey is one of the best known American art and cultural critics practising today. He has written for many major American publications including "Rolling Stone", "Art News", "Art in America", "Artforum", "Harper's Magazine", and "Vanity Fair". He is currently Professor of English at the University of Nevada Las Vegas. - Gabor Boritt
Gabor Boritt is the Robert Fluhrer Professor of Civil War Studies and Director of the Civil War Institute at Gettysburg College. Born in World War II Hungary, he participated as a teenager in the 1956 revolution against the Soviet Union. He escaped to the United States, where he received his higher education and became one of the finest Lincoln scholars. His life story is soon to be the subject of a feature-length documentary film titled "Budapest to Gettysburg". - Ken Lubas
Ken Lubas was a photojournalist on the staff of the Los Angeles Times for more than 33 years before retiring to pursue a career in fine-art photography and photo illustration. His work has appeared on the covers and in the pages of Sports Illustrated, TV Guide, National Geographic, Time, U.S. News and World Report, Newsweek and Life Magazine among other national and international publications. - Chandler Burr
Chandler Burr (born December 30, 1963) is an American journalist and author, best known for his science writing. Burr achieved critical success with "The Emperor of Scent" (2003), a book-length account of scientist Luca Turin's efforts to decode the sense of smell. Burr's first book, "A Separate Creation" (1996), summarized research on the biological origins and explanations of homosexuality. Published by Hyperion, a subsidiary of the Walt Disney Company, … - Jihan El-Tahri
Jihan El-Tahri was born in Beirut, Lebanon, and is a writer, director and producer of documentary films. She is a French and Egyptian national. In 1984, she received her BA in Political Science, and in 1986 her MA in Political Science from the American University in Cairo. She worked as a news correspondent with U.S. News and World Report and Reuters, TV researcher, and associate producer in Tunisia, Lebanon, Iraq, Jordan, Algeria, and Egypt between 1984 to 1990. - Russ Warner
Russ Warner was a Democratic Party Congressional candidate in the California's 26th congressional district against incumbent David Dreier. He lost the June 6 primary to Cynthia Matthews, who ran against Dreier in 2004, by almost 10%. Born in West Virginia, Warner's family moved to Ohio and then Arizona before settling in California. Warner began work at U.S. News and World Report and eventually founded and ran his own magazine distribution company, … - Samantha Power
Samantha Power 's 'A Problem from Hell' is a broad attempt to document the major acts of genocide/human rights violations of the 20th century paired with the international community's subsequent negligence in each case. She reports on the Holocaust, the Armenian genocide, and especially her major areas of research- Rwanda and Serbia. - James Fallows
James Fallows is a national correspondent for The Atlantic Monthly and has worked for the magazine for more than 25 years. He has written for the magazine on a wide range of topics, including national security policy, American politics, the development and impact of technology, economic trends and patterns, and U.S. relations with the Middle East, Asia, and other parts of the world. - Michael Yon
Michael Yon is an American author and blogger. He was embedded with the 1st Battalion, 24th Infantry Regiment (Deuce Four) of the 25th Infantry Division in Mosul, Iraq until the end of its deployment in September 2005. Yon's dispatches were excerpted by several American newspapers, including the "Northwest Guardian", the "Boston Herald", "The Seattle Times", The "Star Tribune", and "The Weekly Standard". - Artyom Borovik
Artyom Borovik was a prominent Russian journalist and media magnate. He was the son of a Soviet-era journalist, Genrikh Borovik, who worked for many years as a foreign correspondent in the U.S. Artyom Borovik was a pioneer of investigative journalism in the Soviet Union during the beginning of glasnost. He worked for the American CBS program "60 Minutes" during the 1990s, and began publishing his own monthly investigative newspaper "Top Secret", … - Adrian Havill
Adrian Havill is a writer born in Bournemouth, England. He began his writing career in 1962 for US News and World Report. In 1984, he began writing biographies of subjects as diverse as OJ Simpson and Jack Kent Cooke. - Stanley Jennings
Stanley Jennings was a cartoonist, photographer, and journalist. He worked for 15 years for "National Geographic" magazine, from 1956 to 1971. He was a contributor to many Washington publications, including the Washington Post, the Washington Daily News, the Washington Times-Herald, The US News and World Report, and Parade Magazine. He designed the current version of the National Press Club seal. - Gloria Anne Borger
Gloria Anne Borger (born 1952) [ 1 ] is a political pundit, American journalist , and columnist . Borger is presently a contributing editor and columnist for US News and World Report magazine and a Senior Political Analyst at CNN. She was formerly the National Political Correspondent for CBS News . Since joining CNN in 2007, she has frequently been seen covering the 2008 campaign trail. - Chu Ching-Wu
Professor Paul Chu, native of Taishan, Guangdong but born in Hunan, China in 1941, received his Bachelor of Science degree from Cheng-Kung University in Taiwan in 1962. He earned his Master of Science degree from Fordham University, New York in 1965, and completed his PhD degree at the University of California at San Diego in 1968. All of his three degrees are in physics. After two years' performing industrial research with Bell Laboratories at Murray Hill, New Jersey, … - Fred Frailey
Fred Frailey ffrailey@kiplinger.com Fred Frailey is the editor of Kiplinger's Personal Finance magazine. He joined the staff in May 1987 and oversees the creation of each issue of the magazine. Prior to joining Kiplinger's Personal Finance , Fred was an assistant managing editor at U.S. News and World Report where he worked for 16 years. He has also worked for the Chicago Sun-Times , the Kansas City Star and the Sulphur Springs Daily News Telegram (Texas). - Lori Leibovich
Lori Leibovich Editor Lori's work has also appeared in Elle, Salon.com, Talk, the New York Times, The New York Times Book Review, The Washington Post, The New York Observer, Harper's Bazaar and US Weekly. Lori has been a flower girl once, a bridesmaid five times and officially became an Indiebride on August 25, 2001. She lives in Brooklyn with her husband, Larry Kanter and their son. - David Batstone
David Batstone is a professor of Ethics at the University of San Francisco. He is the founder and president of Right Reality, an international social venture firm. Batstone has authored seven books, the two most recent being Not For Sale (HarperSF) and Saving the Corporate Soul (Jossey-Bass). He was a member of the founding team of Business 2.0 magazine and served six years as executive editor of Sojourners magazine and founder of the SojoMail e-zine. - Russell Heimlich
As a Digital Media Engineer I take interest in several areas of multimedia production. I enjoy projects that combine the web, video, and multimedia in order to deliver a compelling message. - David Jessup
- Dean Clark
- Courtney Calvin
- Jim di Liberto
- Alex Kingsbury
- Chris Wilson
- Courtney Bistyga
- Brian Madden
- Allison Zomper
- Sarah Bartlett
- Danielle Knight
- Angie C. Marek
- Alexa Keefe
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