
Born, raised and educated in East New York, Brooklyn, Jack Bilello, a former Fulbright Scholar and Chairman of History at the Lindenhurst, New York Public School System, lives in Massapequa Park, Long Island.
He has served as an adjunct professor at St. Joseph's College and as a field supervisor at Dowling College on Long Island. He is the author of four novel as well as numerous magazine and newspaper articles and reviews.
He has appeared on radio and TV programs and has been a lecturer and guest speaker at various venues, including Molloy College, Farmingdale University and Long Island University.
INTERVIEWS ON THE WRITER'S DREAM
LECTURE SERIES
WWII
The greatest conflict in human history, determined what kind of a nation we were to become in the entire 20th Century and beyond. Sixty million people perished from 1939 to 1945, or one person every three seconds for six consecutive years.
THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR
The American Civil War cost more lives than all other American Wars combined. The results and consequences of this conflict which resulted in the loss of 750,000 lives remains timely and timeless. It determined what kind of nation we were to become from the mid-19th Century to the present. Joseph Stalin, of all people, once said that the death of a million people is a statistic. The death of one person is a tragedy.
LAUGH, CRY, THINK "A WORLD WITHOUT LITERATURE IS A DEAD WORLD."
Humor, Emotion and Thought are those qualities which make us truly and uniquely human. Join Jack Bilello, on his journey through his novels, to the heart of the human condition.
THE ITALIAN AND JEWISH AMERICANS IN WAR AND PEACE
America has always been a nation of immigrants. This program takes us through the trials and tribulations of these "new immigrants" (late 19th Century and early 20th Century), and their acceptance into the main body of American society following their major contributions in WWII and beyond.
WORLD WAR I
An historical perspective and the effects of WWI on subsequent world history.
THE SUPREME COURT
The Supreme Court has become a controversial branch of American Government today. This lecture includes a discussion of the landmark cases that have led to the Court we have today.