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Klingenstein is a partner in Cohen Klingenstein, a Wall Street hedge fund investment firm that administers a portfolio worth more than US$2.3 billion, as of 2023. [5] Cohen Klingenstein was founded in 1981, and is principally owned by George M. Cohen and Klingenstein. [6] Klingenstein has donated more than $10 million in the 2024 election cycle ...
Thomas Klingenstein has been the chairman of the board of trustees since approximately 2010. [c] [9] Michael Pack was president from 2015 to 2017. [10] Ryan P. Williams assumed the post in 2017. [2] [11] The Claremont Institute publishes The Claremont Review of Books, [12] The American Mind, [13] The American Story Podcast, [14] and Claremont ...
APP started its super PAC, originally named the Campaign for American Principles, [31] in 2015 after the Obergefell v. Hodges ruling. [32] APP chairman Sean Fieler, a hedge fund manager, is a major funder of the American Principles Project and has given more than $1.3 million to the APP super PAC. [33]
I also added Thomas Klingenstein to the "Key people" section. Klingenstein is the chairman of the board and a major funder of the Claremont Institute, giving $2.5 of the $5.7 million in grants it received in 2019.
The Book of Common Prayer: A Biography. Lives of Great Religious Books. Princeton University Press. ISBN 9780691191782. Jeanes, Gordon (2006). "Cranmer and Common Prayer". In Hefling, Charles; Shattuck, Cynthia (eds.). The Oxford Guide to The Book of Common Prayer: A Worldwide Survey. Oxford University Press. pp. 21– 38. ISBN 978-0-19-529756-0.
Thomas wrote the book during a sabbatical at New College, Oxford in 1978–79. [1] He wrote some of it in Hereford, where he was living and used two typewriters, one in each city. [23] It was translated into 30 languages. [24] William Golding in 1983; ten years later, D. M. Thomas visited Golding's house on the night of his death.
Thomas Common (1850–1919) [1] was a translator and critic, who translated several books by Friedrich Nietzsche into English. There is little information about him biographically, though indications are that he was a well-educated and literate scholar. He lived in the area of Corstorphine, Scotland which is now a suburb of Edinburgh.
Months later appeared a hostile biography by James Cheetham, who had admired him since the latter's days as a young radical in Manchester, and who had been friends with Paine for a short time before the two fell out. Many years later the writer and orator Robert G. Ingersoll wrote: Thomas Paine had passed the legendary limit of life.