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  • Hugh Drummond is a vice president in O'Neill and Associates communications division, offering a diverse portfolio of expertise in media relations, communications, marketing, and government affairs gleaned from experience with nonprofits, corporations, start ups, public relations agencies, and Capitol Hill, as well as state-wide and national political campaigns. At O'Neill and Associates, Mr. Drummond provides crisis communications support to clients in the aviation and long-term care sectors. He also supports PR and marketing campaigns for clients in financial services, energy, non-profit, education and real estate development. Mr. Drummond's political background includes work as a special advisor to former U.S. Senator Bill Bradley, national scheduling and advance director for Senator Bradley's 2000 presidential campaign, and deputy campaign manager for former Massachusetts State Senator Warren Tolman's 2002 gubernatorial campaign.
  • Myran Parker-Brass, a native of Chicago, Illinois, is both a professional musician and music educator. She holds a double MD in Music Performance and Music Education and has been working for the past 30 years providing access to quality arts education for students, teachers, families and the broader community.
  • Catherine V. Scott teaches in the political science program at Agnes Scott College in Decauter, Georgia. Her interests include U.S. foreign policy, development theory, gender politics, feminist theory, and U.S. foreign policy in the post-Vietnam era.
  • John McCutcheon has emerged as one of the most respected and loved folksingers. As an instrumentalist, he is a master of a dozen different traditional instruments, most notably the rare and beautiful hammer dulcimer. His songwriting has been hailed by critics and singers around the globe. His thirty recordings have garnered every imaginable honor including seven Grammy nominations. McCutcheon has produced over twenty albums of other artists, from traditional fiddlers to contemporary singer-songwriters to educational and documentary works. His books and instructional materials have introduced budding players to the joys of their own musicality. Furthermore, his commitment to grassroots political organizations has put him on the front lines of many of the issues important to communities and workers.
  • George Annas is the Edward R. Utley Professor and Chair of the Department of Health Law, Bioethics & Human Rights of Boston University School of Public Health, and Professor in the Boston University School of Medicine, and School of Law. He is the cofounder of Global Lawyers and Physicians, a transnational professional association of lawyers and physicians working together to promote human rights and health. After graduating from Harvard Law School, he clerked for Justice John V. Spalding of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, and came to Boston University in 1972 as the Director of the Center for Law and Health Sciences at the law school. Professor Annas is the author or editor of sixteen books on health law and bioethics, including *American Bioethics: Crossing Human Rights and Health Law Boundaries* (2005), *The Rights of Patients* (3d ed. 2004), *Some Choice: Law, Medicine, and the Market* (1999), *Standard of Care: The Law of American Bioethics* (1993), and *Judging Medicine* (1987), and a play, entitled *Shelley's Brain* that has been presented to bioethics audiences across the U.S. and in Australia. Professor Annas has been called "the father of patient rights," "the doyen of American medico-legal analysts," and a "national treasure." Professor Annas wrote a regular feature on "law and bioethics" for the Hastings Center Report from 1976 to 1991, and a regular feature on "Public Health and the Law" in the *American Journal of Public Health* from 1982 to 1992 and since 1991 has written a regular feature on "Legal Issues in Medicine" for the *New England Journal of Medicine*, now under the title "Health Law, Ethics, and Human Rights." He is a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, a member of the Institute of Medicine, cochair of the American Bar Association's Committee on Health Rights and Bioethics (Individual Rights and Responsibilities Section) and a member of the Committee on Human Rights of the National Academies. He has also held a variety of government regulatory posts, including Vice Chair of the Massachusetts Board of Registration in Medicine, Chair of the Massachusetts Health Facilities Appeals Board, and Chair of the Massachusetts Organ Transplant Task Force.
  • Ellen Schattschneider (Department of Anthropology, Brandeis University) is a sociocultural anthropologist specializing in psychoanalytic, phenomenological and practice approaches to culture. She has strong ethnographic interests in East Asia, especially Japan. She received undergraduate training in philosophy, psychology and anthropology at Sarah Lawrence College, and graduate training in anthropology at the University of Chicago. Her principal ethnographic work has been conducted in the Tsugaru region of northern Tohoku, Japan (1991-92, 1997, 1999 and 2002). Dr. Schattschneider's academic writings give particular attention to ritual performance, gender and embodiment, spirit mediumship, sacred landscapes, visuality and the power of images, popular religious experience and comparative capitalist cultures. Her new book, *Immortal Wishes: Labor and Transcendence on a Japanese Sacred Mountain* (2003) explores healing, self-fashioning and embodied psychodynamic processes on a sacred landscape associated with a Shinto shrine founded by a rural Japanese woman in the 1920s. Her current research project, *Facing the Dead: Japanese Bride Dolls in the Mirror of War*, examines contemporary Japanese practices of spirit marriage and doll dedication, with close attention to traumatic popular memories of World War II and its legacies. She has been awarded a Fulbright grant for research in Japan during 2003-04 on this topic.
  • David Gelernter is professor of computer science at Yale, chief scientist at Mirror Worlds Technologies, contributing editor at *the Weekly Standard* and member of the National Council of the Arts. He's the author of several books and many technical articles; also essays on art criticism and fiction. The "Tuple Spaces" introduced in Carriero and Gelernter's *Linda System* (1983) are the basis of many computer-communication and distributed programming systems worldwide. *Mirror Worlds* (1991) "foresaw" the World Wide Web and was "one of the inspirations for Java"; the "Lifestream's" system (first implemented by Eric Freeman at Yale) is the basis for Mirror Worlds Technologies' software. He's the author of *The Muse in the Machine*, the novel *1939* (1995), *Machine Beauty* (1998) and other books; Mr. Gelernter is published in *Commentary*, *ArtNews*, * the Washington Post* and many others.