https://www.nytimes.com/1996/07/07/style/weddings-katharine-cornell-sebestyen-gorka.html
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sebastian_Gorka
Katharine Fairfax Cornell
https://www.nytimes.com/1996/07/07/style/weddings-katharine-cornell-sebestyen-gorka.html
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sebastian_Gorka
Katharine Fairfax Cornell
more on K Gorka
https://books.google.nl/books/about/Cornell_Iron_Works.html?id=aGfwnAEACAAJ&redir_esc=y
Katharine Cornell Gorka graduated from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (’82) and received her M.Sc. in Economics from the London School of Economics (’87). After working at The Asia Society, in New York City, she traveled extensively throughout Central and Eastern Europe conducting research on the post-communist transition and working for a number of organizations on democracy assistance projects in the region, including UNCDF, UNDP, Harvard University, and the Ford Foundation. She was a senior fellow at the World Policy Institute, where she wrote about the democratic transition, and later became the regional head of the USAID-funded Democracy Network program, whose purpose was to help rebuild civil society in the countries of Central Europe and the Balkans. Following that position, Katharine then co-founded with her husband, Dr. Sebastian Gorka, the Institute for Transitional Democracy and International Security (ITDIS), which focused on issues of economic reform and the problems associated with former communists and secret police in post-communist democracies. In 2008, after living in Hungary for 12 years, the Gorkas moved back to the United States. Katharine helped establish the Westminster Institute in the spring of 2009. In her current position as head of the Westminster Institute, Katharine is responsible for helping to define the threat to liberty posed by Islamic terrorism and subversion in the United States. She works closely with US government agencies, law enforcement and the intelligence community. Most recently she edited Fighting the Ideological War: Winning Strategies from Communism to Islamism.
Andrew Cornell joined Cornell Iron Works, Inc. in 1992 and became its eighth family CEO in 1997. The firm was founded in 1828 and has locations in Mountaintop, Pennsylvania; Gastonia, North Carolina and Phoenix, Arizona. Cornell employs six hundred people and produces security doors. In 1997, CIW was named Family Business of the Year in Pennsylvania, and in 2000 the company was listed as one of Pennsylvania’s Top 100 Best Places to Work. Andrew received his BA in Psychology from the University of Rochester in 1988 and he is a graduate of the Owner/President Management Program, a nine-week executive development program, at Harvard Business School.