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Authors: A-C
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Maggie
Gallagher, author of the The Abolition
of Marriage and Enemies of Eros,
is a nationally syndicated columnist with Universal
Press, and an affiliate scholar at the Institute
for American Values. She has contributed to
The New Republic, The Wall Street Journal,
National Review, Cosmopolitan, and The
New York Times among many others. She lives
with her husband and children in Westchester,
New York.
Pamela F. Gallin, M.D., FACS, author of How To Survive Your Doctor’s Care, is one of the country’s leading pediatric surgeons. At Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center and the Columbia University College of Physicians & Surgeons, one of the top medical centers in the United States, she is director and associate professor of Pediatric Ophthalmology at the Edward S. Harkness Eye Institute. Dr. Gallin is also the associate professor of Pediatrics at Children’s Hospital of New York. Dr. Gallin currently sits on the board of the National Center of Policy for Families and Children. She resides in Westchester, NY, with her family.
Adam Gamble is a writer and investigative reporter, and the author of A Public Betrayed and In the Footsteps of Thoreau. He has served as publisher at On Cape Publications in Massachusetts since 1995, where he has produced two dozen books. During the three years of research that went into A Public Betrayed, he personally interviewed more than 150 individuals.
Bill Gertz, author of Breakdown and bestsellers Betrayal and The China Threat, is the defense and national security reporter for the Washington Times. One of the most respected reporters in his field, he has unrivaled access to sources within the Pentagon and the American intelligence community. He has lectured at the FBI academy and the National Defense University. Gertz lives with his family near Washington, D.C.
Rosemary
Gibson, author of Wall of Silence,
is a leader in health care innovation, making
cutting-edge improvements in the care of patients
and their families for more than twenty years.
Gibson's work has included implementing training
programs for physicians at 800 hospitals, including
Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center and Mount
Sinai Medical Center in New York. Gibson also
initiated new standards for the treatment of
patients in pain with HIV/AIDS and breast cancer.
These standards are now in effect at 18,000
health care facilities nationwide. She also
worked with Bill Moyers and Public Affairs Television
to develop the PBS documentary, On Our Own
Terms, which had more than 20 million viewers.
Cole A. Giller, M.D., Ph.D., author of Port in the Storm, is a board-certified neurosurgeon and associate professor of neurosurgery at Southwestern Medical School in Dallas, Texas. Dr. Giller has spent the last thirteen years in clinical practice counseling patients suffering from neurological illnesses on their medical decisions. Before embarking on his medical career, Dr. Giller taught mathematics at the University of California at Berkeley. He received his medical degree at the UCLA School of Medicine and holds a doctorate in mathematics from the University of California at Berkeley. He is on the editorial board of the Journal of Neuroimaging and is an ad hoc reviewer for numerous peer-reviewed journals, including Stroke, Archives of Neurosurgery, and Neurosurgery. Dr. Giller lives with his family in Dallas.
Dore
Gold, is author of Hatred’s Kingdom and the president of the Jerusalem Center
for Public Affairs, served as Israel’s
ambassador to the United Nations from 1997 to
1999. Having served as foreign policy advisor
to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel,
he has been a diplomatic envoy to the leaders
of Egypt, Jordan, the Persian Gulf states, and
the Palestinian Authority, and has been intimately
involved in Arab-Israeli negotiations. Ambassador
Gold, who earned his Ph.D. in International
Relations and Middle East Studies from Columbia
University, has written numerous books and articles
on the Middle East, his articles appearing in
such publications as the New York
Times, the Washington Post, the Wall
Street Journal, Commentary, and the Daily
Telegraph. He lives in Jerusalem with his
wife and two children.
Bernard
Goldberg, author of Bias, is
the winner of seven Emmy Awards and was once
rated by TV Guide as one of the ten most
interesting people on television. Having served
for nearly thirty years as a reporter and producer
for CBS News, he now reports for the critically
acclaimed HBO program Real Sports, hosted
by Bryant Gumbel. He has written for the New
York Times and the Wall Street Journal.
Goldberg lives with his family in Miami.
Stephen
Goldsmith, author of The Twenty-first
Century City, served as mayor of Indianapolis,
the nation’s 12th largest city, from 1992
until 2000. Mr. Goldsmith’s two-term tenure
attracted nationwide attention and earned him
a reputation as one of America’s most
innovative mayors. In his book, The Twenty-First
Century City: Resurrecting Urban America,
he details his efforts to make city government
more efficient.
Guillermo Gonzalez, author of The Privileged Planet, is assistant research professor of astronomy and physics at Iowa State University. He received his Ph.D. in astronomy from the University of Washington did his post-doctoral research at the University of Texas, Austin, and the University of Washington. He has received fellowships, grants, and awards from NASA, the University of Washington, Sigma Xi, and the National Science Foundation. He is the author of over sixty peer-reviewed scientific articles.
Antonio
M. Gotto, Jr.,
author of The Cornell Illustrated Emergency
Medicine & First Aid Guide, is the Dean
and Professor of Medicine at the Weill Medical
College of Cornell University and an internationally
renowned authority on cardiovascular disease.
He is the author with Michael DeBakey, of the
highly acclaimed, bestselling book, The New
Living Heart Diet.
Robert
Graysmith, author of The Bell Tower,
is the national best-selling author of Zodiac—a
true-crime thriller that has been optioned by
Touchstone Pictures for a major motion picture.
A San Francisco Chronicler journalist
for more than twenty years, Graysmith is a Foreign
Press Club Award winner, a seven-time Pulitzer
Prize nominee, and a Gold Medal illustrator.
He is also the author of the New York Times
bestseller The Sleeping Lady, Unabomber,
and The Murder of Bob Crane. He lives
in San Francisco.
Leonard
M. Greene, author of The National Tax
Rebate: A New America with Less Government, is president and founder of the Institute
for SocioEconomic Studies in White Plains, New
York. He is the author of Free Enterprise
Without Poverty, published by W.W. Norton.
Peter
Hannaford is the author of The Reagans:
A Political Portrait, the coauthor of
Remembering Reagan and The Quotable Ronald Reagan. His association with
Ronald Reagan dates back to 1971. He eventually
became director of public affairs for then-Governor
Reagan, and he also held senior speechwriting
and communications positions in the 1976 and
1980 Reagan presidential campaigns. In addition
to being an author and editor, Hannaford is
currently a public relations/public affairs
consultant in Washington, D.C.
J. Dennis Hastert, author of Speaker, has been Speaker of the House of Representatives since 1999 and has served in Congress since 1986. A former member of the Illinois House of Representatives and for sixteen years a teacher and coach at Yorkville High School, Hastert divides his time between Washington, D.C., and Yorkville, Illinois, with his wife, Jean.
J.
Robert Hatherill,
author of The BrainGate, is a Stanford
University-trained research scientist and on
the faculty of the Environmental Studies Program
at University of California, Santa Barbara.
He received his doctorate in Environmental Toxicology
from the University of Michigan and is board-certified
in clinical chemistry by the American Society
of Clinical Chemists. Dr. Hatherill has written
extensively for technical and academic journals
and has published articles in the San Francisco
Chronicle, the Los Angeles Times,
and the Chicago Tribune. He is the author
of the highly successful book Eat to Beat
Cancer. In the private sector, Dr. Hatherill
has served as lead scientist for research teams
for Ciba-Geigy Corporation and the World Health
Organization. Dr. Hatherill lives and teaches
in Santa Barbara, California.
Steven F. Hayward, author of The Real Jimmy Carter, is F. K. Weyerhaeuser Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and Senior Fellow at the Pacific Research Institute. He is the author of The Age of Reagan: The Fall of the Old Liberal Order, 1964–1980 and Churchill on Leadership. A frequent speaker and journalist, he has written for the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Baltimore Sun, San Francisco Chronicle, Chicago Tribune, Reason, Policy Review, and National Review. He holds a Ph.D. in American Studies from the Claremont Graduate School and divides his time between Washington, D.C., and California.
Deirdre
Henderson, author of Prelude to Leadership,
was a research assistant to Senator John
F. Kennedy in 1959 and 1960, and during the
Kennedy administration worked for the Department
of State. In 1967 she was the Democratic nominee
for Congress in Massachusetts’ sixth district.
A private consultant, she now lives in Massachusetts.
Alan
P. Henry, author of SellOut, has
had a distinguished newspaper career covering
three decades with the Chicago Sun-Times,
Boston Herald, Boston Globe, Middlesex News,
and Pioneer Press, where he is currently
Deputy Executive Editor. He has won numerous
awards for news, investigative, feature, and
column writing and is an award-winning writer
of short stories.
David Horowitz, author of Unholy Alliance, is a nationally known author and lifelong civil rights activist. He was one of the founders of the New Left movement in the 1960s. He has written numerous books, including The Politics of Bad Faith, The Art of Political War, and Radical Son, his celebrated autobiography. He is president of the Center for the Study of Popular Culture and the founder of online newsmagazine FrontPageMag.com.
James
C. Humes, author of Confessions of a
White House Ghostwriter, is a former
presidential speechwriter whose words have helped
create some of the most memorable moments in
history. Before his speechwriting career, he
represented the US State Department in lectures
on American government all over the world, and
has served as a communications advisor to major
US corporations, including IBM and DuPont. He
is the author of 23 other books, including the
Pulitzer Prize nominated Churchill: Speaker
of the Century, and is a widely sought speaker
across the country. He lives in Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania.
Michael
S. Hyatt, author of The Y2K Personal
Survival Guide, is a best-selling
author specializing in technology and its impact
on today’s consumers. A much sought-after
speaker and consumer advocate, he has appeared
on more than 650 radio and television talk shows
and has testified before Congress on the subject
of technology and the consumer. Hyatt is executive
vice president and publisher of Thomas Nelson
Publishers. He lives with his wife and five
daughters outside of Nashville, Tennessee.
Laura
Ingraham’s nationally syndicated radio
show is heard coast-to-coast on the Talk Radio
Network. She is the author of the bestselling
book Shut Up & Sing, and her columns
have appeared in the New York Times, the
Washington Post, USA Today, and the New
York Sun. A frequent political commentator
on television, she has worked hard for CBS News
and MSNBC. Laura is a former white-collar criminal
defense attorney and law clerk for the Supreme
Court of the United States. She is a graduate
of Dartmouth College and the University of Virginia
School of Law, and lives in the Washington,
DC area.
John
L. Jackley, author of Below the Beltway:
Money, Sex, Power, and Other Fundamentals of
Democracy in the Nation's Capital, spent
the 1980s on Capitol Hill as press secretary
for then-House Majority Whip-at-Large Ronald
Coleman (D-TX), Jim Mattox (D-TX), and Thomas
Luken (D-OH). He currently resides near Portland,
Oregon with his two children.
Nicole Johnson,
Miss America 1999 and author of Living with
Diabetes, is the National Spokesperson for
the American Diabetes Association and sits on
its board of directors. She is active with many
diabetes and medical associations, and has received
numerous awards for her work. A graduate of
Regent University in Virginia Beach with a master’s
degree in journalism, she lives in Tampa, Florida.