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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 ...
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.
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.
Never Enough: Donald Trump and the Pursuit of Success (published in paperback as The Truth About Trump) is a 2015 biography of Donald Trump by Michael D'Antonio.The book includes interviews with Trump, his son Donald Trump Jr., first wife Ivana Trump, second wife Marla Maples, and Theodore Dobias, Trump's coach and drill sergeant at New York Military Academy, which he attended as a teenager.
NAS founding president Stephen Balch receiving the National Humanities Medal from US President George W. Bush.. Originally called the Campus Coalition for Democracy, the National Association of Scholars was founded in 1987 by Herbert London and Stephen Balch [6] [7] with the goal of preserving the "Western intellectual heritage". [2]
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.
Pynchon, age 16, in his high school senior portrait. Thomas Pynchon was born on May 8, 1937, in Glen Cove, Long Island, New York, [5] one of three children of engineer and politician Thomas Ruggles Pynchon Sr. (1907–1995) and Katherine Frances Bennett (1909–1996), a nurse.