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  1. La Shawn Barber

    La Shawn Barber is a black conservative columnist and blogger who lives in the Washington D.C. area. Barber is a native of South Carolina. An alcoholic in her younger years, Barber took a vow of sobriety and abstinence shortly before her thirtieth birthday. She later moved to Washington, D.C. to serve as a legislative correspondent for a Democratic senator. She eventually converted to Christianity, became a political conservative, and pursued writing.

  2. Nat Hentoff

    Nat Hentoff contributes regularly to Village Voice and The Wall Street Journal . Among other publications in which his work has appeared are The New York Times , The New Republic , Commonwealth , The Atlantic , and The New Yorker , where he was a staff writer for more than 25 years.

  3. Tom Knott

    Tom Knott is a columnist whose byline appears in the Sports and Metro sections of The "Washington Times". Knott has a B.A. degree in psychology from George Mason University.

  4. Brent Bozell

    BRENT BOZELL, President of the Media Research Center: Well, you know, I'm institutionally sympathetic to the idea that a spouse should be off-limits if the spouses want to be off-limits, if the spouse isn't participating in the political process. In this case, you've got a spouse who is well-informed, well-educated, well-spoken and outspoken on the campaign trail campaigning on behalf of her husband. So absolutely she's fair game. Of course she is.

  5. Frank Gaffney

    Despite his often extremist views, Gaffney is frequently cited in the press as an "expert" on U.S. foreign policy, appearing regularly on the BBC and other radio and TV broadcasts. He is also a prolific writer, having published in most major media outlets and opinion journals, including the Wall Street Journal , USA Today , The New Republic , Washington Post , New York Times , Christian Science Monitor , Los Angeles Times , National Review , Newsday , and Commentary magazine.

  6. Doug Bandow

    Douglas (Doug) Bandow is a former columnist with Copley News Service and senior fellow at the Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank. He resigned in 2005 due a scandal involving payments for columns from lobbyist Jack Abramoff and wrote about it in the Los Angeles Times. He served as a Special Assistant to President Ronald Reagan and as a Senior Policy Analyst in the 1980 Reagan for President campaign. He is also a columnist for Antiwar.com.

  7. Rick Amato

    Rick Amato is the radio talk show host of "The Rick Amato Show", Op-Ed Columnist for the"Washington Times" newspaper, columnist for"Townhall.com", political commentator, contributor to "KUSI television" in San Diego and frequent guest on cable TV news shows. The radio show's tagline is "Broadcasting From The Edge of America in San Diego, California.

  8. Deroy Murdock

    Deroy Murdock is a columnist with Scripps Howard News Service and a media fellow with the Hoover Institution on War, Revolution and Peace at Stanford ...

  9. Rowan Scarborough

    Rowan Scarborough is a "Washington Times" reporter who writes a weekly column with fellow reporter Bill Gertz called "Inside the Ring." He has written a book about Donald Rumsfeld called "Rumsfeld's War: The Untold Story of America's Anti-Terrorist Commander". He graduated "summa cum laude" from the School of Journalism at the University of Maryland. He then served in the United States Navy as a Hospital Corpsman.

  10. Robert Stacy McCain

    Robert Stacy McCain (born 1959) is an assistant national editor for "The Washington Times" and co-author (with Lynn Vincent) of "DONKEY CONS: Sex, Crime, and Corruption in the Democratic Party". He lives in Maryland with his wife, Lou Ann, and their six children. McCain was born in Atlanta, Georgia and graduated in 1983 from Jacksonville State University in Alabama. His journalism career began with the (now defunct) "Cobb News-Chronicle" in 1986.

  11. Richard Miniter

    Richard Miniter (born 1967) is the author of two New York Times best selling books, "Losing bin Laden" and "Shadow War" and is an internationally recognized expert on terrorism. He is also a fellow at the Hudson Institute, Washington Editor of PajamasMedia.com and a former editorial page writer for "The Wall Street Journal Europe". He has been published in "The New York Times", "The Washington Post", …

  12. Peter Bergen

    Peter Bergen is a print and television journalist who appears as a terrorism analyst on CNN. He is known for conducting the first television interview with Osama Bin Laden in 1997. He has written several books on terrorism, including "Holy War, Inc." and "The Osama bin Laden I Know". Bergen is Adjunct Professor in South Asia Studies at Johns Hopkins University"s School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) and a Senior Fellow at the New America Foundation.

  13. Jeffrey T. Kuhner

    Jeffrey T. Kuhner is the editor of the American Internet news magazine "Insight on the News". He is a regular contributor to the commentary pages at the Washington Times and has written for Human Events, National Review Online and Investor's Business Daily. In January 2007, he gained notice in the media as purveyor of the "first anonymous smear of the 2008 presidential race" for his role in the Insight magazine "madrassa" media controversy.

  14. Sheldon Richman

    Sheldon Richman is editor of The Freeman , published by The Foundation for Economic Education in Irvington, New York, and serves as senior fellow at The Future of Freedom Foundation. He is the author of FFFs award-winning book Separating School & State: How to Liberate Americas Families ; Your Money or Your Life: Why We Must Abolish the Income Tax ; and FFFs newest book Tethered Citizens: Time to Repeal the Welfare State.

  15. Con Coughlin

    Con Coughlin is a British journalist and author. He is currently the executive foreign editor of the Daily Telegraph and is the author of various non-fiction books relating to the middle east, and the War on Terror. He is considered one of the world's leading right wing authorities on the Middle East. He is the son of the Daily Telegraph's former legal affairs correspondent. After his education at public school and Oxford University, he joined the Daily Telegraph in 1980, …

  16. Patrick Michaels

    Patrick J. Michaels, Ph.D., (born February 15, 1950) is a Research Professor of Environmental Sciences at the University of Virginia. He has been the university's Climatologist for Virginia since 1980. His professional specialty was the influence of climate on agriculture. In interviews Michaels has said that he does not contest the basic scientific principles behind greenhouse warming and acknowledges that global mean temperature has increased in recent decades, …

  17. Bo Hi Pak

    Bo Hi Pak (born August 18, 1930) is one of the most well-known members of the Unification Church. A Lieutenant Colonel in the South Korean army, he joined the nascent Unification Church in the 1950s, later rising to become one of the most important church leaders. During the 1970s and 1980s he was Moon's interpreter, the role for which he is the most famous. He also ran several non-profit foundations which advanced church goals.

  18. Samuel Francis

    Samuel Todd Francis was a nationally syndicated paleoconservative columnist known for his opposition to immigration, multiculturalism, and his involvement in debates concerning other controversial issues of the day. His many supporters characterized him as a conservative and a Machiavellian, while to his critics he was a reactionary and a racist. Francis was also a leading political theorist of paleoconservatism.

  19. Andrew G. Bostom

    Andrew G. Bostom, MD, MS is an American scholar and Associate Professor of Medicine at Brown University Medical School. He is also an author on Islam and is a regular contributor to FrontPageMag.com and the American Thinker magazine. Andrew Bostom is the author of The Legacy of Jihad, a work which provides an analysis of Jihad based on an exegesis of Islamic primary sources on the topic.

  20. Iason Athanasiadis

    Iason Athanasiadis is a British-Greek writer, photographer, political analyst, and television producer who has contributed to a range of media, including the BBC, al-Jazeera, Channel 4, and specializes in the Middle East. A graduate of Oxford University, Iason has written for the Christian Science Monitor, the Financial Times, the International Herald Tribune, the Sunday Telegraph, The Guardian, the Toronto Star, the Washington Times, …

  21. Carlton Sherwood

    Carlton Sherwood is an American journalist who produced the anti-John Kerry film "Stolen Honor". Sherwood served on two news teams which were responsible for the award of the Pulitzer Prize and the Peabody Award to their organizations. After working for the "Washington Times", he wrote "Inquisition", a book about Sun Myung Moon, leader of the Unification Church.

  22. Scott Speicher

    Michael Scott Speicher was a U.S. Navy pilot whose F/A-18 Hornet fighter was reportedly shot down by an air-to-air missile fired from an Iraqi MiG-25 the first night of Operation Desert Storm on January 17, 1991; since then there has been no evidence of his death, nor any evidence that he is still alive. There is much controversy over the possibility that he might have survived and been taken prisoner by the Iraqis.

  23. Donald J. Boudreaux

    Donald J. Boudreaux became chairman of the department of economics at George Mason University in August 2001. He previously served as president of the libertarian think tank Foundation for Economic Education, a post he accepted in May 1997. He also teaches Economic Foundations of Legal Studies at the George Mason University School of Law. From 1992 to 1997, Boudreaux was professor of law and economics at Clemson University.

  24. Alon Ben-Meir

    Dr. Alon Ben-Meir (born 1937) is a professor of international relations and Middle Eastern Studies at The New School and at New York University and is the Middle East Project Director at the World Policy Institute. Born in Baghdad, Iraq, Ben-Meir has resided in the United States since the late 1960s. He earned his master's degree in philosophy and doctorate in international relations from Oxford University.

  25. James Whelan

    James Whelan was the founding editor of the "Washington Times", beginning in 1982. He resigned after in 1984, claiming that the paper's statement of independence from the Unification Church had not been upheld.

  26. Henry Farrell

    Henry Farrell is a political scientist at George Washington University. He previously taught at the University of Toronto and earned his PhD from Georgetown University. His research interests include, trust and co-operation; E-commerce; the European Union; and institutional theory. Farrell is a member of the Crooked Timber group blog. In this connection, he has been quoted extensively in mass media, including the Christian Science Monitor, …

  27. Winfield Myers

    Winfield Myers (born 1960) is an American journalist and public intellectual in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Born in Georgia, Myers is a graduate of Young Harris College and the University of Georgia, and attended graduate school in history at Tulane University and the University of Michigan. He taught on the Great Books and Renaissance history at Michigan, world history at Xavier University of Louisiana, medieval history at Tulane, …

  28. David Satter

    David Satter , a former Moscow correspondent, is a long time observer of Russia and the former Soviet Union. He is a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute and a visiting scholar at the Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS). Satter was born in Chicago in 1947 and graduated from the University of Chicago and Oxford University, where he was a Rhodes Scholar and earned a B.Litt degree in political philosophy.

  29. John Barron

    John Barron (1930, Wichita Falls, Texas - February 24, 2005) was an American journalist who exposed Communist activities. Barron, son of a Methodist minister, graduated from the University of Missouri, and studied Russian in the United States Naval Postgraduate School. In 1965, Barron joined the Washington bureau of Reader's Digest.

  30. Dan Olmsted

    Dan Olmsted is an investigative reporter and senior editor for United Press International (UPI), and the author of the "Age of Autism" report series. Olmsted's columns on health and medicine appear regularly in the "Washington Times" and are syndicated nationally from UPI's Washington D.C. bureau.

  31. Michael Breen

    Michael Breen is a Seoul-based consultant and author of "Kim Jong-il: North Korea's Dear Leader" and "The Koreans". He has lived in Korea for many years and has a very intricate grasp of Korean culture, society and history which makes him a prominent figure in the country's collection of expatriates. He has covered North and South Korea for several newspapers including "The Guardian" (London), and the "Washington Times".

  32. Michael E. Toner

    Michael E. Toner, American attorney and political appointee, specialized in election law, and currently employed by Bryan Cave LLP where he heads the Election Law and Government Ethics Practice. He is also a senior advisor to Bryan Cave Strategies. He formerly served as the chairman of the Federal Election Commission (FEC), the regulatory body that oversees campaign finance for United States federal elections. Mr.

  33. Jeremiah O'Leary

    Jeremiah O'Leary (d. 1993) was an American newspaper reporter and columnist. He served as a U.S. Marine in the Pacific theater during World War II and fought in the invasions of New Britain, Guam and Peleliu. He also served in Korea during the Korean War. After the war, he was a reporter for the "Washington Star-News" (later called the "Washington Star"), focusing on defense and foreign policy issues.

  34. Meyrav Wurmser

    Dr. Meyrav Wurmser , the former Executive Director of the Middle East Media Research Institute (MEMRI), is a leading scholar of the Arab world. Dr. Wurmser is a frequent guest on radio and television, including BBC, Fox News, CNN, PBS and CNBC.

  35. W.A. Criswell

    Wallie Amos Criswell, Ph.D. (December 19, 1909 – January 10, 2002), was an American pastor, author, and a two-term elected president of the Southern Baptist Convention from 1968 to 1969. Supporters have described him as the patriarch of the "Conservative Resurgence" within the SBC. Criswell was born in Eldorado, Oklahoma, and felt a divine call to enter the Christian ministry as a teenager.

  36. Thomas Jipping

    Thomas L. Jipping is Vice-President for Legal Policy and Director of the Center for Law & Democracy at the Free Congress Foundation. In addition to directing the Judicial Selection Monitoring Project at the Paul Weyrich-led D.C. think tank he also serves as Senior Fellow in Legal Studies for Concerned Women for America, a female-led, Christian-oriented policy organization.

  37. Terrence P. Jeffrey

    Terrence P. Jeffrey became Editor of "Human Events", a national conservative weekly in the United States, in 1996. Prior to that, he served as campaign manager to Republican candidate Pat Buchanan in the 1996 presidential race, and as research director in Buchanan's 1992 campaign. In between the two campaigns, Jeffrey was executive director of the American Cause. He was born in San Francisco and graduated from Princeton University in 1981.

  38. Marc S. Ellenbogen

    Marc S. Ellenbogen (born February 6, 1963) is a philanthropist and venture capitalist and currently the Chairman of the Global Panel Foundation and President of the Prague Society for International Cooperation. Mr. Ellenbogen also sits on the National Advisory Board of the US Democratic Party and is Vice Chairman of the Democratic ExPat Leadership Council

  39. Roberto Sierra

    Roberto Sierra is a Puerto Rican composer. Sierra studied composition in Europe, notably with György Ligeti in Hamburg, Germany. He came to prominence in 1987 when his first major orchestral composition, Júbilo, premiered at Carnegie Hall with the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra. Since then, his works have been performed by the orchestras of San Francisco, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Pittsburgh, Atlanta, Houston, Dallas, Detroit, San Antonio, and Phoenix, …

  40. Arthur Brisbane

    Arthur Brisbane (1864-1936) was an American newspaper editor, born in Buffalo, N. Y., and educated in the public schools of the United States and Europe. In 1882, he began newspaper work in New York City as a reporter for the "Sun". He remained occupied in the newspapers field until the 1920s. In 1897, he accepted the editorship of the "New York Evening Journal" which was in the "Hearst chain" of newspapers sold throughout the country.

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