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Eric Gibson is the Arts in Review editor of The Wall Street Journal and one of the paper’s art critics. He grew up in England and graduated with a B.A. in Art History from Trinity College in Hartford, Connecticut. He is the author of The Sculpture of Clement Meadmore (Hudson Hills Press, 1993) and lives with his wife on Long Island.
Erika Bachiochi received a graduate degree in theology from Boston College, where she was a Bradley Fellow, and received her Juris Doctor from Boston University School of Law. She currently lives ouside of Boston, MA.
Ethan Gutmann, a Visiting Fellow at Project for the New American Century, has written for the Wall Street Journal, The Weekly Standard, Investor’s Business Daily and other publications.
F.H. Buckley is a Foundation Professor at George Mason University’s Scalia School of Law. He is a frequent media guest and has appeared on Morning Joe, CNN, The Rush Limbaugh Show, C‑SPAN, NPR and numerous other outlets.
Fred Siegel has written widely on American and European politics and was described as “the historian of the American city” in a November 2011 profile in the Wall Street Journal.
Frederick Kagan is co-author of While America Sleeps: Self-Delusion, Military Weakness, and The Threat to Peace Today. His articles on defense and foreign policy have appeared in the Washington Post, the Wall Street Journal, and other publications. He lives with his wife, Kim, in Washington, D.C.
Gabriel Schoenfeld is a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute. He has written on world affairs for the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, The Atlantic, the New Republic, and Commentary, where he was the senior editor.
Gail Heriot is a professor of law at the University of San Diego and a member of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights.
Gary Lawson’s work has been cited in more than twenty opinions of United States Supreme Court justices. He is a founding member, and serves on the board of directors, of the Federalist Society for Law and Public Policy Studies and is on the editorial advisory board of the Heritage Guide to the Constitution.
Gary J. Schmitt is a Resident Scholar and Director of the Program on Advanced Strategic Studies at the American Enterprise Institute.
Gavan Tredoux is a Fellow of the Royal Anthropological Institute, and a mathematician and statistician by training, with extensive interests in the History of Science (galton.org, burtoniana.org).
Gene Dattel grew up in the majority-black cotton country of the Mississippi Delta. He was educated at Yale University and Vanderbilt University Law School. He then embarked on a twenty-year career in finance as a managing director of Salomon Brothers and Morgan Stanley.
George Gilder’s bestselling books have sold more than two million copies worldwide. In Wealth and Poverty, one of the most influential books of our time, Gilder made the moral case for capitalist creativity. With The Spirit of Enterprise, Microcosm, Telecosm, and Life After Television, Gilder achieved renown as a stunningly accurate prophet of the direction of technology development and enterprise, including Israel’s world-beating contributions.
George J. Veith is the author of Code-Name Bright Light: The Untold Story of U.S. POW Rescue Efforts During the Vietnam War, published by The Free Press in December 1997.
George Melloan, born in Greenwood, IN, was a writer and editor at the Wall Street Journal for 54 years. He joined the paper as a reporter in Chicago, moved to Detroit and then successively managed the Cleveland and Atlanta news bureaus. He became a page-one editor in New York in 1962 and in 1966 went to London as a foreign correspondent covering Europe, the Middle East and Africa.