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Steve Cohen is an American author and attorney. He is a founding partner of Pollock Cohen LLP.
His articles, mostly opinion pieces, have appeared in The New York Times , [1] The Wall Street Journal , City Journal [2] Time, [3] and others. He is the author or co-author of six books. His early career included stints at Time and Scholastic. [4] He co-chaired the Clinton White House literacy task force "Prescription for Reading Partnership," and was on the board the United States Naval Institute. [5] At age 58 he went to law school, and is currently an attorney in New York City.
Cohen grew up in Lynbrook, New York and was appointed to the United States Naval Academy in Annapolis by Congressman Allard Lowenstein. [6] Cohen attended the Academy for nearly three years, then transferred to Brown University under the G.I. Bill. He graduated in 1975, with a concentration in Public Policy. In 2013, he graduated from New York Law School, and is admitted to practice in New York.[ citation needed ]
Early in his career, Cohen worked for the Governor of Rhode Island, for the New York State Senate, and for several advertising agencies. He was also on Ronald Reagan's national campaign staff in the 1980 Presidential race, where he wrote and produced television commercials and print ads "Podium" [7] and "No More". [8]
For nearly seven years Cohen worked for Time Inc. where he held marketing positions.[ citation needed ]
Cohen spent two years as a vice president with Playboy, and won two Clio Awards for best radio and television advertising campaigns.[ citation needed ]
For nine years Cohen was then a Managing Director at Scholastic, the children's publishing company. [4] He was responsible for creating and managing several businesses including Parent & Child Magazine, the Parent Bookshelf, and the Everything You Always Wanted to Know About....(Kindergarten, First Grade, Second Grade) book series.[ citation needed ]
Cohen left Scholastic to become CEO of several internet start-ups including 4-to-14/Brainquest.com; Living Independently/Quietcare (sold to General Electric;) and MultiMedicus/The Child Health Guide – developed in cooperation with Harvard and Dartmouth Medical Schools. [9]
Since 1983, Cohen has been an adjunct professor and NYU and Fordham.[ citation needed ]
Beginning in 1976, Steve began writing articles for magazines and newspapers. He has written – most on issues of public policy – for The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Sun, The New York Observer, [10] Bloomberg View, The Daily Beast, [11] and others.
He has written or co-authored six books:
Joyce Maynard is an American novelist and journalist. She began her career in journalism in the 1970s, writing for several publications, most notably Seventeen magazine and The New York Times. Maynard contributed to Mademoiselle and Harrowsmith magazines in the 1980s, while also beginning a career as a novelist with the publication of her first novel, Baby Love (1981). Her second novel, To Die For (1992), drew on the Pamela Smart murder case and was adapted by Gus Van Sant into the film To Die For in 1995. Maynard received significant media attention in 1998 with the publication of her memoir At Home in the World, in which she describes her relationship with J. D. Salinger.
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Stephen Ira Cohen is an American attorney and politician serving as the U.S. representative from Tennessee's 9th congressional district since 2007. He is a member of the Democratic Party. The district includes the western three-fourths of Memphis. Cohen is Tennessee's first Jewish congressman and since 2023 has been the dean of and only Democrat in the state's congressional delegation.
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Stephen Frand Cohen was an American scholar of Russian studies. His academic work concentrated on modern Russian history since the Bolshevik Revolution and Russia's relationship with the United States.
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Walter Dean Myers was an American writer of children's books best known for young adult literature. He was born in Martinsburg, West Virginia, but was raised in Harlem, New York City. A tough childhood led him to writing and his school teachers would encourage him in this habit as a way to express himself. He wrote more than one hundred books including picture books and nonfiction. He won the Coretta Scott King Award for African-American authors five times. His 1988 novel Fallen Angels is one of the books most frequently challenged in the U.S. because of its adult language and its realistic depiction of the Vietnam War.
Christopher Swift Dickey was an American journalist, author, and news editor. He was the Paris-based world news editor for The Daily Beast. He authored seven books, including Our Man in Charleston: Britain's Secret Agent in the Civil War South (2015); Securing the City: Inside America's Best Counterterror Force – the NYPD (2009), and a memoir, Summer of Deliverance (1998), about his father, the poet/novelist James Dickey.
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Scholastic is the official student publication of the University of Notre Dame. Founded in 1867, it is the United States' oldest continuous college publication. Scholastic has been both Notre Dame's weekly student newspaper and now a monthly news magazine. Originally, its motto was Disce Quasi Semper Victurus, Vive Quasi Cras Moriturus.
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