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  • Amalie M. Kass is a lecturer on the History of Medicine in the Department of Social Medicine at Harvard Medical School. She is co-author of *Perfecting the World: The Life and Times of Thomas Hodgkin*, and author of numerous journal articles and encyclopedic entries.
  • Dr. Pride Chigwedere is an affiliate of the Harvard AIDS Initiative. He trained and worked as a physician at Harare Central Hospital, Zimbabwe, and then moved to the Harvard School of Public Health where he completed a doctorate in immunology and infectious diseases and post-doctoral training with renowned retrovirologist, Dr. Max Essex. He then joined McKinsey and Company where he has been advising the senior management of top pharmaceutical companies and global health institutions primarily in areas of business strategy and medical affairs. He is the lead author of the paper published in The Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes estimating the human toll of South Africa's AIDS policies, which has received wide publicity including The New York Times, The Guardian, BBC and other leading news organizations around the world.
  • Mark Jurkowitz, Associate Director of the Project for Excellence in Journalism, has spent nearly two decades covering the news media. He was the press critic and author of the Boston Phoenix's Don't Quote Me column from 1987-1994 and again from July 2005 until June 2006. In between, he spent 10 years at The Boston Globe, initially as the paper's ombudsman and then as its first full-time media beat writer. A graduate of Boston University, Jurkowitz has taught a course on media ethics at both Northeastern University and Tufts University and has been a commentator on media-related issues on outlets ranging from CNN's Reliable Sources to NPR's On the Media. He has also made more than 300 appearances as a regular panelist on Beat the Press, a weekly program on Boston's WGBH-TV that scrutinizes the journalism profession. In the 1990's, he spent a number of years as a radio talk host on WHDH-AM and WRKO-AM in Boston.
  • Marshall I. Goldman is a professor emeritus in the Wellesley College Department of Economics. An expert on the Russian economy and the economics of high technology, he joined the Wellesley faculty in 1958. He is also Associate Director of the Davis Center for Russian Studies at Harvard University. Professor Goldman is a 1952 graduate of the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania and received MA and PhD degrees in Russian studies and economics from Harvard University in 1956 and 1961, respectively. Professor Goldman has served as a trustee of the Noble and Greenough School as well as The Commonwealth School of Boston and is past president of the Hillel Council of Greater Boston. An internationally recognized authority on Russian economics, politics, and environmental policy, Professor Goldman is known for his study and analysis of the careers of Mikhail Gorbachev and Boris Yeltsin. He is the author of over a dozen books on the former Soviet Union, including *The USSR in Crisis: The Failure of an Economic System*, and *Gorbachev's Challenge: Economic Reform in the Age of High Technology* (1987). A consulting editor to the journal *Current History*, Goldman's expertise is also sought by the media. He has writen frequently for such publications as *Current History*, *Foreign Affairs*, *The New York Times*, *The Washington Post*, and *The Harvard Business Review*. He has written regularly for the Russian newspapers, *Moscow News* and *The Moscow Times*, and is often heard on National Public Radio.
  • Nina Turmarkin is Professor of History at Wellesley College. She has also been a Fellow at the Harvard University Russian Research Center for a quarter-century. At Wellesley, where she has taught since 1975, Professor Tumarkin specializes in courses on the entire span of Russian history and on Europe in the 20th century. Her first book, *Lenin Lives! The Lenin Cult in Soviet Russia *(1983), won that press' Wilson Prize for best first-book manuscript, and was acclaimed by reviewers in *New Republic*, *Newsweek* and other publications. In the past 10 years Professor Tumarkin has published a variety of articles, including two in *Atlantic* (1990, 1991) and two "Talk of the Town" pieces in *the New Yorker* (1990). She has also appeared on local and national radio and television programs as a commentator on contemporary Russia. In the mid-1980s Professor Tumarkin served as a special advisor to the National Security Council and to President Ronald Reagan. In 1985, she was the only woman of six Sovietologists to brief President Reagan, Vice President Bush, Secretary of State Schultz and other members of the administration before Mr. Reagan's first summit meeting with Mikhail Gorbachev. Nina Tumarkin is currently working on an expanded edition of her first book, *Lenin Lives!*, to include the recent desacralization of Lenin.