| Donna Auguste, President and CEO, Alpha and Omega, Inc., Denver, CO. Donna leads a small R&D team, discovering innovative solutions to problems in diverse fields such as energy, robotics, and wireless sensor networks. For twelve years, she also led the non-profit organization she founded in 2001, Leave a Little Room Foundation, building schools, hospitals, and housing in developing countries. She was previously president and CEO of Freshwater Software, which she co-founded and led to become an industry pioneer in e-commerce server monitoring and management. Her career before Freshwater included engineering leadership roles at US West Advanced Technologies, Apple Computer, and IntelliCorp. Donna earned a BS in 1980 in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science from the University of California, Berkeley, and has completed graduate studies in computer science at Carnegie-Mellon University and Regis University. Donna holds eight engineering patents, and has been honored by the Women in Technology International Hall of Fame, the National Society of Black Engineers, the Girl Scouts of Colorado, and the Cure d'Ars Catholic Community of Denver. She was also featured in the PBS mini-series "Science and the American Dream". Donna and her husband David live in Denver, CO. She is a member of the 1998 class of Henry Crown Fellows at the Aspen Institute. |
| Charles Bobrinskoy, Vice Chairman, Director of Research, Ariel Investments, Chicago, IL. Charles Bobrinskoy is the vice chairman and director of research for Ariel Investments, a Chicago-based money management firm that serves retirement plans and individual investors through its no-load mutual funds and manages separate accounts for institutional clients. As vice chairman and director of research, Charlie oversees the firm’s Investment and Trading Teams as well as all of Ariel Investments’ propriety research. He is also co-portfolio manager of Ariel Focus Fund, a concentrated portfolio investing in mid-to-large cap companies. Additionally, Charlie is a member of Ariel Investments board of directors. Charlie came to Ariel in 2004 from the Global Corporate and Investment Bank of Citigroup, Inc. Most recently, he served as a managing director and head of North American Investment Banking Branch Offices where he managed approximately 100 professionals across six North American branches, including Chicago. Charlie’s investment banking career began in 1983 at Salomon Brothers, Inc. (a Citigroup predecessor company) where he held numerous leadership positions. Beyond Ariel Investments, Charlie is active in the Chicago community, teaching monthly investing classes at two Chicago inner-city schools and serving on the boards of the Museum of Science and Industry and After School Matters. He is also a member of the Duke University Trinity Board and a Director for Innerworkings, Inc. a publicly traded print procurement company. Charlie is a member of the Commercial Club, Economic Club of Chicago and is a 1998 Henry Crown Fellow of the Aspen Institute. He received an AB in economics from Duke University and earned his MBA from the University of Chicago. Charlie is frequently quoted in various news publications such as The Wall Street Journal, Barron’s, Money and USA Today, and regularly appears on BNN, Bloomberg, CNBC and Fox Business News. He and his wife, Mary Ann, and their seven children live in Glenview, IL. |
| William Bynum, President and CEO, Hope Enterprise Corporations/Hope Credit Union, Jackson, MS. Bill Bynum is the President and CEO of Hope Enterprise Corporations/Hope Credit Union, a nationally respected community development financial institution, intermediary and policy center that addresses development needs confronting low-wealth people and communities in Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi and Tennessee. Since 1994 Hope Enterprise Corporations/Hope Credit Union has provided over $1 billion in financing and related assistance for entrepreneurs, homebuyers and community development projects in the Delta, areas affected by Hurricane Katrina and other distressed Mid South communities, benefiting more than 60,000 individuals. Prior to joining Hope Enterprise Corporations/Hope Credit Union, Bill helped establish Self-Help, a pioneer in the development banking industry, and directed programs at the North Carolina Rural Economic Development Center. Bynum is a Henry Crown Fellow of the Aspen Institute and recipient of the National Federation of Community Development Credit Unions Annie Vamper Award, National Rural Assembly Rural Hero Award; Ernst & Young/ Kauffman Foundation National Supporter of Entrepreneurship Award and University of North Carolina Distinguished Alumnus Award. He serves as a trustee/director the Winthrop Rockefeller Foundation, Foundation for the Mid South, Regions Bank Community Development Corporation, William Winter Institute for Racial Reconciliation, Mississippi Children's Museum, Mississippi Access to Justice Commission and is Chairman of the President's Community Development Advisory Board. |
Mark Contreras, Chief Executive Officer, Calkins Media, Inc., Terrace Park, OH. Mark Contreras is CEO of Calkins Media, Inc. Prior to joining Calkins in late 2011, he was the head of the Scripps newspaper division (Senior Vice President/Newspapers) from 2006 to 2011. Before Scripps, he served five years as Senior Vice President of Pulitzer, Inc. Mark spent more than a decade with Capital Cities/ABC, Inc prior to its sales to the Walt Disney Company in the late 1990s. He was previously president and publisher of The Times Leader in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. Prior to The Times Leader, he spent five years at The Kansas City Star. He began his newspaper career as marketing services manager for The Oakland Press in Pontiac, Michigan. Mark earned his MBA from Harvard Business School and a BA in history from the University of Chicago. He has completed the advanced executive program at Northwestern University's Newspaper Management Center. He served as Chairman of the Newspaper Association of America from 2010 to 2011. Mark is former chairman of The American Press Institute. He is a board member of the National Hispanic Foundation for the Arts and is a trustee of the Scripps Howard Foundation. He is a 1998 Henry Crown Fellow of The Aspen Institute and a member of the Aspen Global Leadership Network. | |
Andrea Cunningham, Chief Executive Officer, Bite Communications North America, Palo Alto, CA. Andrea “Andy” Cunningham is an entrepreneur at the forefront of marketing, branding, positioning and communicating “The Next Big Thing,” and has played a key role in the launch of a number of new categories including video games; personal computers; desktop publishing; digital imaging; RISC microprocessors; software as a service; very light jets; and clean tech investing. Andy came to Silicon Valley in 1983 to work for Regis McKenna and help Steve Jobs launch the Macintosh. When Steve left Apple to form Next and acquire Pixar, he chose Andy’s public relations agency, Cunningham Communication, to represent him. She continued to work with Steve for several years and has developed marketing, branding and communication strategies for game-changing technologies and companies ever since. Andy is CEO of Bite, a global marketing services agency, and founder and president of SeriesC, a management consultancy steeped in marketing strategy. The two firms collaborate on projects to accelerate growth for pre-tipping point companies. Andy serves on the boards of The Aspen Institute; CEO; Computer History Museum; Peninsula Open Space Trust; World Presidents Organization and ZERO1: The Art & Technology Network, an organization she founded in 2000 with the mission to shape the future at the intersection of art and technology. She is a 1998 Henry Crown Fellow and holds memberships in the Arthur W. Page Society, CEO, TED, Women Corporate Directors and WPO. Andy received a BA in English from Northwestern University and lives in Palo Alto, California, with her husband, Rand Siegfried, and their two children, McKinley and Cormac. Andy is a member of the 1998 Class of Henry Crown Fellows and a member of the Aspen Global Leadership Network at the Aspen Institute. | |
Lance Drummond, Executive Vice President, Operations and Technology, TD Canada Trust Bank, Charlotte, NC. Lance Drummond is the Executive VP of Operations and Technology at TD Canada Trust Bank. Prior to TD, Lance was at Fiserv, where he led several strategic growth initiatives in data analytics, consulting and wealth management. Before joining Fiserv in April 2009, Lance led digital payment strategies as the head of Online Bank and ATM Operations at Bank of America. In this role, he managed the largest consumer online bank in the U.S., serving millions of active online consumers, bill payers and mobile subscribers. He was also responsible for delivering capabilities across the largest bank-owned network of ATMs in the country, including the deployment of deposit image ATMs. Prior to this, Lance was the Service and Fulfillment Operations executive for Global Technology and Operations at Bank of America, providing end-to-end operations support for all of the bank's customers, banking centers and 18,000 ATMs. He initially led supply chain management when he joined Bank of America in 2002. Before Bank of America, Lance was with Eastman Kodak Company for 26 years in a variety of technology and leadership positions. His last position there was Chief Operating Officer for the Kodak Office Professional Products Division where he was responsible for day-to- day operations of the $1.7 billion business unit. He directed eBusiness, global manufacturing, five strategic planning units, sales and marketing, global supply chain, quality and information technology. Lance is a Director on the University of Rochester, Board of Trustees, a Board Member of the North Carolina Dance Theatre, and Founder of Dreamseeds, a children arts program offered through Sojourner House, Rochester NY. He received his bachelor's degree in business management from Boston University, a master's degree in business administration from the Simon Business School at the University of Rochester, and a master's degree in management science from Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Lance received the MIT Sloan Fellowship in 1994 and the Aspen Institute's Henry Crown Fellowship in 1998. | |
Lounette Dyer, Renewable Energy Consultant, New York, NY. Lounette is currently a Renewable Energy Consutant. She was formerly senior vice president for technology at Market Echo in New Canaan, CT. She was also the founder, CEO, and chairman of eTailProfit, and co-Founder and former chief technology officer of Cogit Corporation, which she left in December 1999. Lounette began her career writing software at Xerox spin-off ParcPlace Systems, Greenwich Capital and Teradata before co-founding her first company, HyperParallel Inc., in 1994. She was recognized in 1996 in a Forbes magazine profile of 20 leading women entrepreneurs in an article entitled "Women of the Valley", as "Distinguished Alumni of the Decade," by the California Institute of Technology Alumni Association, and in 1998 as one of the "50 Most Influential Business Women of the Bay Area" by the San Francisco Business Times. Lounette is also an author, patent holder and prize-winning percussionist who has toured professionally. She earned a BS degree in computer science, mathematics and music from Western Michigan University in 1982 and received an MS degree in 1987, as well as a PhD in 1991 in computer science from the California Institute of Technology. Lounette currently lives in New York City. She is a member of the 1998 class of Henry Crown Fellows at the Aspen Institute. | |
Janet Froetscher, President and Chief Executive Officer, National Safety Council, Itasca, IL. Janet Froetscher is President and CEO of the National Safety Council, an organization that saves lives by preventing injuries and deaths at work, in homes and communities, and on the roads through leadership, research, education and advocacy. Under Janet’s leadership, the Council has focused on key safety initiatives, grounded in science, to advance its mission. These include the creation of the Journey to Safety Excellence approach to workplace safety that promotes continuous improvement of leadership and employee engagement, safety management systems, risk reduction and performance measurement. Janet has also led NSC in taking a leadership role on the issues of distracted and teen driving. NSC was the first organization to call for a national ban on cell phone use while driving; has driven 34 states to pass texting laws; and has encouraged corporations to adopt corporate cell phone bans. The Council has also been successful in advocating for better graduated driving license requirements for teen drivers and in promoting education for parents of teen drivers. Janet has spoken widely about critical safety concerns, at many national and international gatherings of public and private sector safety leaders. Prior to joining the National Safety Council, Janet served as chief executive officer of the United Way of Metropolitan Chicago and chief operating officer of the Aspen Institute. Her corporate experience includes leadership roles within the Commercial Club of Chicago and Bankers Trust Company. Janet holds a Bachelors degree from the University of Virginia and a MBA from the Kellogg Graduate School of Management of Northwestern University. She is a Board member of the Chicago Board of Options Exchange and Chicago Chamber of Commerce, and a member of the Chicago Network and Commercial Club of Chicago. Janet is a member of the 1998 class of Henry Crown Fellows at the Aspen Institute. | |
| Jack Furst, Founder, Oak Stream Investors, Dallas, TX. Jack is the founder of Oak Stream Investors in Dallas, TX. Prior to founding Oak Stream, he co-founded HM Capital Partners (formerly Hicks, Muse, Tate & Furst Inc.) in 1989. Jack was a senior advisor at HM Capital, and also served as director of several of the Firm’s portfolio companies. Previously, Jack was a partner of Hicks and Haas, a merger and acquisitions and corporate finance specialist for The First Boston Corporation and a financial consultant for Price Waterhouse. He serves on the board of directors of the Boy Scouts of America-Circle Ten Council, is a council member on CBA Foundation Advisory Council and MBA Investment Fund at the University of Texas at Austin, the Associate Board of the Edwin L. Cox School of Business at Southern Methodist University, and the Board of Advisors for Southern Methodist University's Center for the Study of Financial Institutions and Markets. Jack received his BS from the College of Business Administration at Arizona State University in 1981 and his MBA from the Graduate School of Business at the University of Texas in 1984. He and his family make their home in Argyle, TX. Jack is a member of the 1998 class of Henry Crown Fellows at the Aspen Institute. |
Jack Giraudo, Senior Vice President & Chief Compliance Officer, Tessera Technologies, Inc., San Jose, CA. Jack Giraudo is currently SVP and COO of Tessera Technologies, Inc., a company that develops, invests in, licenses and delivers innovative miniaturization technologies and products for next-generation electronic devices. Prior to joining Tessera Technologies, Jack was Chairman, Founder and a Director of Sonnedix, an independent solar power producer. He was formerly the President of AES Solar BV, an alternative energy subsidiary of The AES Corporation, a publicly traded global power company. Before that he held the title of vice president and chief compliance officer at AES and was responsible for implementing and managing a global compliance and ethics program for 30,000 employees in 27 countries. Prior to joining AES, Jack was General Counsel of Sithe Asia Holdings, an independent power company owned by Vivendi S.A. based in Hong Kong. He also served as a senior project finance lawyer with Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom in Washington, Beijing and Hong Kong and a securities lawyer with Davis, Polk and Wardwell in New York. After law school, he clerked for Judge Alfred T. Goodwin in the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. Jack held several positions in the Reagan Administration, first as an attorney-advisor in the Office of Legal Counsel and later in the Labor Department as a special assistant and chief of staff to the United States Secretary of Labor. Jack graduated summa cum laude with a BA in economics and political science from U.C. Berkeley, received a B.Phil. in political theory from Oxford University and a law degree from the University of California, Hastings College of Law. Jack is a frequent speaker to industry groups about solar power, alternative energy, business ethics and corporate governance, and has appeared on NBC's "The Wall Street Journal Report," CNN, CNBC, the PBS program "Technopolitics," and spoken on National Public Radio's "Market Watch," and "All Things Considered." He has been a frequent speaker at the Carnegie Council of Ethics in International Affairs in New York. He is a 1998 Henry Crown Fellow of The Aspen Institute and a member of the Aspen Global Leadership Network. | |
Brad Greenwald, Partner, Abundant Venture Partners, Denver, CO. Brad is currently a partner at Abundant Venture Partners, which provides promising entrepreneurs with investment capital, strategic guidance and the outsourcing of administrative functions (HR, accounting, etc.). Prior to that he served as CEO of DLF Capital, Inc. (formerly Discovery Land Fund) from 2007-2011. Prior to that, he spent seven years as Vice President for Marketing and Business Development for WildBlue Communications, a satellite Broadband Internet service (formerly known as iSKY.) From 1992-1997, Brad was vice president of sales, marketing and operations at Time Warner Cable, and during his tenure built a $350 million, 650,000 customer, cable TV and high-speed Internet division. In his first three years at the company, Brad was vice president of marketing at Time Warner Satellite Services/PRIMESTAR, and grew the satellite TV customer base from 9,000 to more than 400,000 customers. Brad previously worked for Loyalty Management Group, a consumer membership service, and from 1985 to 1991, worked in various marketing and consulting capacities with Bain & Co., Polaroid and Oxfam. Brad has been a committed volunteer and business leader for Oxfam in a variety of functions including devoting a full-time year with Oxfam U.K. in fundraising. In addition, he was an inaugural Board member for Kid-Care, a Meals-On-Wheels charity for poor children in Houston. And, while in Houston he also served on the Board Advisory Group for the Houston Image Group, a semi-public organization devoted to improving the city of Houston’s image to foster economic and cultural development. Brad holds a master's degree in business administration from Harvard Business School and a bachelor's degree in economics from Princeton University. He is a member of the 1998 class of Henry Crown Fellows at the Aspen Institute. | |
Reed Hastings, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Netflix, Inc., Los Gatos, CA. Reed founded his first company, Pure Software, in 1991. He took Pure Software public in 1995 and grew it into one of the 50 largest public software companies in the world by 1997. He then went on to form Netflix, Inc., launching the movie rental subscription service in 1999. Today Netflix has over 3,000,000 subscribers and over $700 million in revenues. Reed is also active in education reform, having served on the California State Board of Education, as president of the board from 2000 to 2003, and also leading successful statewide campaigns for more charter public schools and passage of local school bonds. He is the chairman of EdVoice and an active educational philanthropist. Reed received an MSCS degree from Stanford University and a BA from Bowdoin College, and holds several patents. Between Bowdoin and Stanford, Reed served in the Peace Corps at a high school in Swaziland. He is a member of the 1998 class of Henry Crown Fellows at the Aspen Institute. | |
Chris Howard, President, Hampden-Sydney College, Hampden Sydney, VA. Christopher B. Howard became the twenty-fourth president of Hampden-Sydney College in July of 2009, making him one of the youngest college presidents in the United States. Chris comes to Hampden-Sydney from the University of Oklahoma where he served as Vice President for Leadership and Strategic Initiatives as well as the Director of the Honors College Leadership Center and a President’s Associates Presidential Professor. In areas of business, Chris is a member of the MOBO Systems Advisory Board. He also served in General Electric’s Corporate Initiatives Group, and has worked in sales, marketing, international project management, strategic planning, internal consulting, and business development at Bristol-Myers Squibb. Chris was also the acting Managing Director of Endeavor South Africa. An Air Force Lieutenant Colonel, he was called to active duty during 2003 in Afghanistan where he was awarded a Bronze Star and serves as the Reserve Attaché to Liberia. Chris is a distinguished graduate of the US Air Force Academy where he earned a B.S. in political science. In 2003, he was inducted into the Verizon Academic All-American Hall of Fame. A Rhodes Scholar, Chris earned his doctorate in politics at Oxford University and an MBA with distinction from the Harvard Business School. Chris is a member of the 1998 class of Henry Crown Fellows at the Aspen Institute. | |
| Suzanne Nora Johnson, Former Vice Chairman, Goldman Sachs Group, Inc., Santa Monica, CA. Suzanne Nora Johnson is former vice chairman of The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. She also served as chairman of the Global Markets Institute and was a member of the firm’s management committee. Prior to joining Goldman Sachs, Suzanne was an attorney with Simpson, Thacher & Bartlett and worked as a law clerk for the U.S. Court of Appeals. Suzanne currently serves on the corporate boards of American International Group, Inc., Intuit Inc., Pfizer Inc., and Visa Inc. She also serves on the boards of several nonprofit institutions, including the American Red Cross, the Broad Foundation, the Brookings Institution, the Carnegie Institution of Washington, the Markle Foundation, TechnoServe, the University of Southern California and Women’s World Banking. She chairs a number of endowment investment committees. Suzanne serves on the Global Agenda Council for Systemic Financial Resilience for the World Economic Forum. Suzanne received her J.D. from Harvard Law School and her B.A. from the University of Southern California. She is a member of the 1998 class of Henry Crown Fellows at the Aspen Institute. |
| Li Lu, Founder and Chairman, Himalaya Capital, Pasadena, CA. Li is the founder and Chairman of Himalaya Capital in Pasadena, CA. As a student at Nanjing University in 1989, Li became one of the principal student leaders during the Tiananmen Square demonstration as the president of Student Congress on Tiananmen Square and is responsible for leading the last three thousand survivors from the Square. Because of his actions, Li was put on the Chinese government's most wanted list, and was forced into hiding before fleeing to the West. From 1990-96, Li attended Columbia University, becoming the first student in the University's history to simultaneously receive B.A., J.D. and M.B.A. degrees from the undergraduate college, law school and business school. He is a tireless lecturer and champion of human rights and democracy for China and his book Moving the Mountain - My Life in China, has been made into a documentary film. Li makes his home in New York, NY with his wife Jie Li. He is a member of the 1998 class of Henry Crown Fellows at the Aspen Institute. |
Peter A. Reiling, Executive Director of the Henry Crown Fellowship Program & Executive Vice President for Leadership and Seminar Programs, Aspen Institute, Washington DC. Peter is Executive Vice President for Leadership and Seminar Programs and Executive Director of the Henry Crown Fellowship Program at the Aspen Institute. In these roles, he oversees the Institute's growing portfolio of leadership initiatives (the Aspen Global Leadership Network) and seminars (including The Aspen Seminar, offered at the Institute since 1950) as well as its flagship leadership program. Peter is a trustee, officer, and senior moderator of the Aspen Institute; a Henry Crown Fellow (Class of 1998); founder of the Africa Leadership Initiative (ALI), a collaboration between the Aspen Institute and five African business leaders; and co-founder of the Institute’s Central America, India and Middle East Leadership Initiatives, as well as of the Aspen-NewSchools Education Fellowship. Prior to joining the Aspen Institute, from 1996 to 2004, Peter was President and CEO of TechnoServe, an international organization helping entrepreneurs across Africa, Latin America, India, and Central Europe to build businesses in their communities. He is co-founder of the Aspen Network of Development Entrepreneurs and currently serves as chairman of the board of the Central America Leadership Foundation as well as on the boards of ALI/East Africa, ALI/West Africa, ALI/South Africa, and Pegasus Tower Holdings LLC. Peter is a former adjunct professor at Columbia University's School of International and Public Affairs and guest lecturer at the Institute for Developing Economies in Tokyo. He is also a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, and was named "Outstanding Social Entrepreneur" by the Schwab Foundation in Geneva. He is a graduate of Georgetown University (BSFS) and the University of California/Berkeley (MBA), with additional studies at the Universite Libre de Bruxelles. Peter is married to Denise Byrne and is the father of two children, Dylan and Eva Luna. | |
Jeffrey Schwartz, President & CEO, SureSale, Venice, CA. Jeffrey is currently President and CEO of SureSale, a leading certification platform for pre-owned vehicles. Widely recognized as a pioneer in the automotive Internet, Schwartz was President and CEO of two early companies in the sector- Autobytel and AutoWeb.com. Prior to that, he served as Vice President, Corporate Affairs for The Walt Disney Company in Burbank, CA and was responsible for negotiating the company's long-term strategic marketing and promotional partnerships and administering the company's affairs worldwide. He has also served as an analyst for a state environmental agency, taught political science at the University of Southern California, was engaged in research at a nationally known foundation, and founded and served as director of an advocacy organization serving indigent children, which continues to directly serve over 2,000 children annually. He holds a BA (1988) in international relations and an MA (1991) and Ph.D. (1993) in political science from the University of Southern California. He has served on the board of the Motion Picture Association of America, the Public Affairs Council, the National Association of Manufacturers, and the Citizen's Research Foundation. He is an active member of the Asia Society and chaired the Entertainment and Media in Asia Conference for three consecutive years. He is an appointed commissioner on the Los Angeles Convention and Exhibition Center Authority and the Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy. He and his wife, Suzanne, and their three children live in Calabasas, CA. Jeffrey is a member of the 1998 class of Henry Crown Fellows at the Aspen Institute. | |
Cheryl Shavers, Chairman and CEO, Global Smarts, Inc., Santa Clara, CA. Cheryl is Chairman and CEO of Global Smarts in Santa Clara, CA, a company she founded in June 2001. Shavers was formerly Under Secretary for Technology at the U.S. Department of Commerce. Prior to being nominated to this post by the Clinton White House, she served as senior manager of Corporate Business Development for Intel Corporation, as a product engineer at Motorola, and a process development engineer and patent agent at Hewlett-Packard. She holds a B.S. (1976) in chemistry and a Ph.D. (1981) in solid-state chemistry from Arizona State University and an honorary master's degree (1997) in business management from California Polytechnic State University. Shavers is a board member of Intel Foundation's "Women in Science and Engineering Scholarship" program, a member of the board of directors of the San Jose Tech Museum of Innovation, a mentor for the Semiconductor Research Corporation, and in 1996 was one of ten inductees into the International Women in Technology Hall of Fame. Shavers currently lives in Santa Clara, CA with her husband, Joseph Agu, and their three children. She is a member of the 1998 class of Henry Crown Fellows at the Aspen Institute. | |
Anthony So, Director-Program on Global Health and Technology Access & Professor of the Practice of Public Policy and Global Health, Sandford School of Public Policy, Duke University, Durham, NC. Anthony joined Duke University's Sanford School of Public Policy in March 2004 as director of the Program on Global Health and Technology Access. He was also appointed a senior fellow in Science and Health Policy at Duke Law School's Center for the Study of the Public Domain and serves on the steering committee for the university's Center for Genome Ethics, Law and Policy. For the previous five years, he served as associate director of the Rockefeller Foundation's Health Equity Program. Prior to joining the foundation, Anthony directed the activities of the Liaison Office for Quality (1997-98) as senior advisor to the Administrator at the Agency for Health Care Policy and Research, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, under HHS Secretary Donna Shalala. During 1995 and 1996, he served as Shalala's White House Fellow, and from 1992 to 1995, he was a Senior Medical Research Associate at the American College of Physicians. He currently serves on the boards of the Echoing Green Foundation; the American Medical Student Association Foundation; Grantmakers in Health; the Open Society Institute's Information Program Sub-Board; the Advisory Council of Princeton University's Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs; the National Board of the Asian Pacific Islander American Health Forum; and on the Board of Directors of Clean Water Fund. In a six-year, combined program at the University of Michigan, he received his B.A. in philosophy and biomedical sciences and his M.D. He earned his M.P.A. from Princeton University as a Woodrow Wilson Scholar. Anthony is a member of the 1998 class of Henry Crown Fellows at the Aspen Institute. |
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