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Who Is David Horowitz

David Horowitz is editor-in-chief of Front Page
Magazine and president of the Center for the Study of Popular Culture. A
bestselling conservative author and editor, Horowitz may be best known for his
lifelong intellectual and political journey.
Horowitz, who grew up in New York City as the son of two lifelong Communists,
earned a Bachelor's degree from Columbia University in 1959 and a Master's
degree from the University of California at Berkeley in 1961. Horowitz quickly
became a leader of the New Left. During the '60s, Horowitz edited Ramparts
Magazine, an influential left-wing journal.
In the 1970s, dissatisfied with the tragic consequences of radical politics in
America and abroad, Horowitz withdrew from politics. He and his partner Peter
Collier then co-authored a series of bestselling biographies of prominent
American families: The Rockefellers: An American Dynasty (1976), The Kennedys:
An American Drama (1985), The Fords: An American Epic (1987) and The Roosevelts:
An American Saga (1994). For these works, the Los Angeles Times called Horowitz
and Collier "the premier chroniclers of American dynastic tragedy." In 1978
Horowitz was honored with a Guggenheim Fellowship, and in 1990 he received the
Teach Freedom Award from former President Ronald Regan.
During the '80s, Horowitz's second thoughts about politics crystallized. In
their 1989 book, Destructive Generation: Second Thoughts About the Sixties,
Horowitz and Collier chronicled the legacy of the New Left and its effects on
American politics and culture. Horowitz's political journey is recounted in his
autobiography, Radical Son, which was published by the Free Press in February
1997. Author George Gilder has called Radical Son "the first great American
autobiography of his generation."
In 1988, Horowitz created the Center for the Study of Popular Culture. The
Center boasts 40,000-plus members, and publishes four magazines, including
Heterodoxy, a monthly focusing on "political correctness and other follies."
One of Horowitz's current concerns is bringing new voices to Hollywood. In 1996
he and the Center held a daylong conference at Paramount Studios called Images
of Ourselves, which featured Sen. Sam Nunn and William Bennett and brought
together the best and the brightest from Washington and Hollywood. In the words
of Los Angeles magazine, holding it "would have been unthinkable several years
ago." David Horowitz has spoken at over 60 colleges and universities. He has
appeared on "Nightline," "Crossfire," "Today," "Good Morning America" and "The
CBS Morning News," and gives hundreds of interviews yearly on talk radio.
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