Paper: October 29th, 2008, "Organizations & Individuals: Conflict & Co-operation" by Maury Nunes paper

ORGANIZATIONS & INDIVIDUALS: CONFLICT & CO-OPERATION

Copyright 2008 Morris A. Nunes

Presentation for ALPS – October 29, 2008

Why can’t we all just get along?!? – Rodney King
Stovepiping.
Living in a Silo.
Interservice Rivalry.
“Not my job.”
Organizational Politics.
Lack of Bipartisanship.

The dysfunctions on this incomplete list are all related manifestations of the same kind of disease. Whatever it’s called, the effects are generally pernicious. Here’s why.
Organizations and alliances are instituted among men (and women) to accomplish one or more agreed common goals, whether the goals be governmental, commercial, military, charitable, professional, institutional or whatever other issues of human endeavor matter to organizations and individuals, including personal goals.
Such common goals may be noble, like the alliance in World War II between Britain and the U.S. (and ultimately others) to defeat the Axis Powers. They may also be ignoble, such as the combination of those same Axis powers. By its civilized progress, history demonstrates that the vast majority of such confederations are for progressive and beneficial purposes. They are exemplified by small business partnerships, treaties of cooperation, medical collaborations, agricultural cooperatives and marriages, to name but a fraction.
The pernicious effect of the dysfunctions is to subordinate the achievement of common goals to other perceived imperatives of the players. Such imperatives may range from ego to jealousy to greed to feelings of slight, insult, disrespect or betrayal to other motivations covering the gamut of interpersonal negativity to “purer” motives borne of different visions, perspectives, expectations or understandings. Whatever the etiology of the dysfunction, in the extreme the accord fractures, then terminates and the goals go unachieved, not infrequently with former partners engaged in recriminations and destructive behavior like lawsuits, denigration, interference, violence and wars.
Often (but not always) I think unbiased observers look at the participants and wonder to themselves, “How stupid are these people?” Such feelings are not unknown – some would say are prevalent – among American voters observing various organs of U.S. Government, most notably the Congress1, in which cooperative efforts are essential to achievement. Even if one party has a massive majority, as there are always factional divisions based on other identities, such as State, region, race, urbanization, etc., it seems to many (especially when it is their desired legislation that is log-jammed) that the common good takes a back seat to factionalism. Perhaps Henry Adams had something of an explanation of this phenomenon:
The effect of Power and Publicity on all men is the aggravation of self, a sort of tumor that ends by killing the victim’s sympathies.

Why do these conflicts arise and why do these failures of cooperation occur?
I posit FOUR reasons:
Two of these we may dispose of quickly; two deserve more time.
MALEVOLENCE: Some allies are or become allies in name only. Their motives are not pure and they lie in wait for the opportune moment to turn their “insider” position into some kind of advantage to the detriment of their partner(s).
While it is true that provocations, real or imaginary, may generate such malevolence, the fact is that once attitudes of disunity are set in one or both parties, the alliance is doomed. The law statutorily recognizes this reality in partnership law with the words “wrongful dissociation”2 meaning that a partner acts in contravention of a statutorily defined fiduciary duty of loyalty.3 The law recognizes with those words that when a partner so acts, the partner is implicitly removing oneself from the partnership. Such a breach of duty is so serious that it legally fractures the entity of associated partners in a partnership and unless all the remaining partners agree, the partnership itself is dissolved.4 [Partners may elect to waive the wrongfully dissociative act, but such forgiveness is understandably rare where attitudes have hardened.]

INCOMPATIBILITY: Sometimes parties get together who do not belong together, or, alternatively grow apart over time. These are relationships where the parties are acting out of pure motives but have discordant interests. The discord is either unrecognized or hope triumphs over reality to lead the parties to politely ignore the discord. The parties proceed despite the signals that say “Stop!”
[Perhaps Ogden Nash recognized an underlying reason the parties may proceed: “I believe a little incompatibility is the spice of life, particularly if he has income and she is pattable.”}
Where the parties never should have connected to one another, the relationship is just a mistake, evidence of the imperfection of mere mortals. Where the parties grow apart one may take comfort in the fact that change is inevitable and the evolution that change begets is natural and concomitantly inevitable, even if sometimes disheartening. Sometimes the termination of the relationship is nothing short of merciful.

Let us pause for a moment to define success of the entity as achievement of common goals for which it was formed.
Hence, those two reasons cited so far, Malevolence and Incompatibility, make success impossibility.
So that brings us to the third and fourth reasons, which are potentially remediable:

COMMUNICATION: People with the best of intentions and purest of motives may still (and often) fail to communicate properly. Though anecdotal, I will exercise an author’s prerogative to say this: In over thirty years of practicing law, I have been involved in prosecuting or resolving disputes as a litigating attorney, a mediator, an arbitrator or an agency adjudicator (as a Virginia Supreme Court Hearing Officer or a member of the Virginia Board for Professional & Occupational Regulation). In my estimation, in at least half of the disputes of which I have first-hand personal knowledge the root cause was poor communication – misperception, mistransmission, paucity, surfeit or complete absence of communication.
Sometimes the fault in communication lies with the transmitter, sometimes with the recipient; usually by the time it has escalated to the point where “the lawyers” are involved, there is plenty of fault to go around. In fact getting “the lawyers” involved seems to usually exacerbate the dispute rather than ameliorate it, because lawyers are taught to counsel their clients to cease communicating directly with the fellow disputant and to instruct that all subsequent communication go through the attorney. The reason is the old legal saw that “Anything you say can and will be used against you.” [Yeah, that’s from the police shows, applicable to criminal law, but in fact the same logic applies in civil disputes as well.]
Nowhere is this lawyer’s shibboleth more destructive than in divorce cases, especially where the parties cannot afford to live apart or will not live apart for other reasons such as desire to care for children or physical infirmity. How in the world can any rational person ever expect a married couple to resolve their differences and reconcile if they cannot communicate with one another and do so in private? I would venture to say that in any case where they do reconcile, the spouses each place a degree of trust in each other, throw lawyerly caution to the wind, and find their way, albeit sometimes with the assistance of a social worker, marital mediator or other trained counselor, or even through the intercession of friends or family.
But in any event, until the air fouled by deficient communication is cleared, whether in divorce or any other kind of dispute, the progress of the associative relationship is impeded, or even halted. Clearing the air to restore understanding and trust through curatively precise communication, often leading to mutual or separate corrective action, is the baseline process for resolution of the dispute through which progress toward success can be revived or reinvigorated. Whether we label that communication process as negotiation, mediation, reconciliation, apology, admission, forgiveness, condonation or something else, it is still communication.
I have written before, a tiny voice in a tidal wave of others, of the importance for precision in communication5, exhorting and recommending (perhaps less than artfully precise communication) some simple proposals for betterment of the disease that Winston Churchill called “Terminological Inexactitude.” Rather than belabor this gathering with repetition of past presentations I have just adverted by footnote. Suffice it to say that if communication is the problem, there is perhaps the best chance for preventing a dispute from becoming an irretrievable rupture.
However, what those earlier works do say little about and what deserves substantial consideration is the impact that cultural divides have upon communication. It is not merely the cultural difference between, say, Pakistanis and Brazilians, or American Whites and American Hispanics, but as well the cultural divide between entertainers and doctors or between naval officers and army enlistees.
It is not merely linguistic differences that apply, but also differences in acculturated perceptions. One example I know too well is the cultural difference between lawyers and professional engineers. Ask a lawyer to read a statute and tell you what it permits and the lawyer will likely tell you what it permits and what it may permit as well as what arguments may be raised as to how it might be interpreted to permit or prohibit this or that. Ask an engineer what it means and he’ll likely give you a concise single focus answer that will accurately distill its principal thrust.
Who has answered the question?
Both of them surely have and both of them are right when viewed through their own prism. We’re all prisoners of our upbringing and training (a point to which I’ll return) and those processes, whether at the hands of parents, teachers, coaches or whomever, hardwire us right down to the point where the reptilian brain takes over.
The development of jargon, the flood of particularized acronyms, the au currant news within each specialized channel and the unavoidable imperatives of any field (from blue collar laborers to nuclear physicists) create differences in emphasis, risk perception, reward valuation, ratiocination and spontaneous impulse. The same may undoubtedly be said about cultural differences between those from Mongolia and those from Montreal.
So one recommendation to consider at this juncture is that if there’s a dispute between folks of different cultures, an early point on the checklist for getting to the root of the problem is to find out what the communications have been leading up to this point in the dispute.
Another is to see what terms in common have been given different meanings. Rather famously, Abraham Lincoln implicitly described this difference in meanings as a cause of the American Civil War:
We all declare for liberty, but in using the same word we do not mean the same thing. With some, the word liberty may mean for each man to do as he pleases with himself and the product of his labor; while with others the same word may mean for some men to do as they please with other men and the product of other men’s labor. Here are two, not only different, but incompatible things, called by the same name, liberty. And it follows that each of the things is by the respective parties called by two different and incompatible names, liberty and tyranny.

FEAR & LOATHING: “There’s a right way, a wrong way and the Army way.” – Anonymous
Disputes that arise from differences in beliefs, desires, needs, visions and intentions are the most intractable. Whatever our field of endeavor, whatever our background, we are trained to believe there is a right and wrong. As stated, we are all prisoners of our upbringings and our acculturation processes.
A part of those processes often includes dire warnings of the dangers of deviating from the standard, from the proven path. And often, each of us has found that, indeed, following the prescribed procedures in the proper order produces the anticipated outcome. We don’t mix the eggs into our cake batter after baking, nor do we substitute chicken fat for the eggs when baking a cake. It often seems just that simple, obvious and unassailable and anyone who cannot accept that is either to be feared or loathed.
So if some alien shows up with a notion challenging those truisms the common reactions tend to be either fear or loathing. The fear is that the alien will ruin the chance of achieving some objective or threaten some existing valuable construct. The loathing is that the alien, clearly untutored and unsophisticated (if not downright dumb) deserves to waste none of my time with such idiotic drivel. [A personnel officer would be appalled that an employee adding 2+1 gets 11! How stupid! Except that if the employee is a mathematician computer engineer, he will prove that in a base 2 number system it does add to 11.]
Fear and loathing are emotions. Courage is another emotion, but the intellectual courage to question one’s own beliefs, however closely held; to consider the possibility that there may be other valid viewpoints; to recognize that the world is not unidimensional; such courage is all too rare.
Even rarer the courage to compromise in the face of fear and loathing.
Pride is another emotion and it is a form of pride (one of those seven deadly sins) that having staked out a position it is somehow a sign of weakness to allow that the position may be suboptimal or worse.
How much time is wasted in meetings, conferences, negotiations and contests of one sort or another among people supposedly working toward the same goals over one-upmanship, blame placing and shifting, scheming, politicking and maneuvering because of such fear and loathing? And more importantly, why is this phenomenon a perpetual organizational black hole for so much energy and so much unrealized potential of ideas and personnel?
Here I must interject the listing, from an anonymous author, of the seven stages of a government project:
1. Conception
2. Enthusiasm
3. Implementation
4. Disillusion
5. Failure
6. Search for the Guilty
7. Punishment of the Innocent
No doubt, at the present, we are seeing exactly this with the financial markets meltdown. The result will surely be legislation restricting and devaluing those financial institutions that survived by doing the right thing as those that did the wrong thing in enthusiastically following the government lead of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac for easier credit and expansive lending will largely have disappeared. Thus will be sown the seeds for the next financial crisis, just as seeds for this one were sown by the passage of Sarbanes-Oxley in punishing the innocent after the failure of Enron and its brethren.
But I digress.

Apart from the acculturation and perspective issues that often are the ingredients for disputes, I believe that the reason disputes and failures to cooperate yield failure to achieve goals is fundamentally a failure of leadership. Actually, a four part failure.
The first failure is in training:
Leaders in different fields, in different organizations (and I surely include the schools from the most unsophisticated of kindergartens to the most advanced of doctorate programs) do not to this observer seem to adequately train their charges to think in any but the most conformist, narrow, arrogant and even prejudiced modes within their concentrations. I believe that thought-habit is hard to break especially when everyone is of the same ilk. I believe that is at least a partial explanation for the storied battles of academics within their departments, the frequency of break-ups of professional practices (and as a lawyer I can say “you can imagine how contentious lawyers can be with one another”) and the monster battles of research scientists within the same discipline.
The second failure of leadership is one of direction:
That is leaders too often fail to instruct their minions to consider the opposite viewpoint. Worse, they often fail to lead by example, rarely inquiring for opposing opinions or walking a bit in a rival’s shoes. What is it about so many cultures that characterize such consideration as a sign of weakness? Nowhere is this regrettable outlook more apparent than in the ongoing “gotcha” war that the media and politicians relentlessly and pointlessly wage, though all presumably want a more perfect union. Instead of promoting measured public discourse and thoughtful discussions of options for workable solutions, this war, which both sides (or should we say “all sides”) energetically perpetuate, obstructs, distracts and detracts, fostering nothing so much as cynicism and distrust among the public.
The third failure of leadership is one of neglect:
Considering the alien alternative, walking a bit in the alien’s shoes, second-guessing oneself, testing the iron bars of hallowed doctrine is not incentivized. Thinking outside the box is often condemned and ridiculed as heresy or apostasy. To be fair, most academic institutions do seem to encourage (or at least permit) unconventional thinking – up to a point – which is to say the box may be bigger, but thought outside the box is subject to condemnation.
It is most interesting to the point of being instructive that three of the great commercial success stories of the last 25 or so years are companies that reputedly were explicit in encouraging and incentivizing iconoclasm, open doors and freer thinking – Apple, MicroSoft and Google. Perhaps this will be the wave of the future, though these organizations seem much more the exception than the rule. [And we must note that IBM did much the same thing with its research arm in the Post-World War II era, yielding untold benefits in products, services, profits, advancement of science and economic activity.]
The fourth failure of leadership is in dispute management:
Too often leaders look not to sources of conflict but to dealing strictly with the conflict at hand and moving on to the next one. Conflicts are in many cases, I submit, a symptom of a disease of the relationship (between individuals or intra-organizational). Leaders who do not consider the possibility that conflict may suggest something is amiss to the point of systemic dysfunction, perhaps in the leader’s own performance, are indeed failing to perform. Leadership means solving problems, which requires accurate problem identification and forthright problem confrontation. Symptoms are problematic, but ipso facto they are not the problem.

CONCLUSION – EGG DROP SOUP
So if a leader does identify the disease and is willing to confront it, what should the leader do?
Train, Direct, Incentivize and Manage!
Easy to say, but how does a leader know how to do this.
And more importantly where we will find such revolutionary leaders?
To no small extent, sociologically we face a chicken and egg problem. If the solution is leadership, where are the leaders to come from when the system of acculturation directs training away from the emergence of the very types of leaders we need and the organizations themselves are so punishing of “heretical” ideas? We need leaders to produce leaders. In the words of Walter Lippmann,
The final test of a leader is that he leaves behind him in other men the conviction and the will to carry on.

Most Chinese restaurants offer an appetizer of egg drop soup. The two key ingredients are chicken broth and eggs6 The soup can be pretty tasty when the right spices are added. There’s a lesson here:
Nobody who enjoys the soup cares which came first in making the soup, the chicken or the egg. And if you read the footnoted recipe you can see that you can prepare either half first but what makes the soup is their combination – with the right admixture of spices.
Similarly, it’s up to all of us to be thought leaders within our own circles and to encourage others to exhibit similar leadership, focused on the common goals, with less concern about who gets the credit (e.g. for being first). Focusing on common goals should also mean fair consideration for unexpected and even challenging points of view.
There is a caveat here, because every rule has its inevitable exceptions. (Recognizing that the challenging idea may represent an exception is itself an example of such thought leadership.)
The caveat is that extended contemplation of other ideas, a sort of perpetual management-by-committee, is potentially a sure route to nowhere as progress stops while leaders fail to make a decision. Sometimes, the unforgiving minute requires action for the common good and in such situations the best may well be the enemy of the good. In his brilliant work, The Ninth Wave, author Eugene Burdick recognized an axiom of leadership, “One person can make a decision faster than a group.”7 In those urgent circumstances, the leader must simply and decisively lead.
Skilled leaders know when this caveat is applicable. However, excellent leaders also know how to manage such a situation, effectively communicating the message that urgency is paramount to those who raise objections, but transmitting that message without punishing or discouraging future independent thought.
If you’ve ever played golf (or like me played at it) it seems that there are so many different things to simultaneously concentrate on and translate into physical action – grip, head down, eyes focused, knees bent, slow and steady backswing, arm stiff, smooth straight-ahead arc, hips swiveling, etc., etc. So it is with leadership, especially thought leadership. Just as a golfer (or any athlete) has to practice to create muscle memory, so, too, I believe leaders need to practice to create personal and organizational “brain-muscle” memory.
Vince Lombardi, the great football coach, may have said it best:
Leaders aren't born they are made. And they are made just like anything else, through hard work. And that's the price we'll have to pay to achieve that goal, or any goal.

-o0o-

FOOTNOTES
1. See, e.g. Fox News Opinion Poll, October 8-9, 2008. Question: “Do you approve or disapprove of the job Congress is doing?” Approve: 13%; Disapprove: 77%; Unsure 10%; Similar results for NBC/Wall Street Journal Poll; CBS News Poll; CNN/Opinion Research Poll; the Harris Poll; etc. See http://www.pollingreport.com/CongJob1.htm

2. See Uniform Partnership Act, §601(5)..
3. ibid, §404
4. ibid, §801 and 802
5. Nunes, Morris, Truth & Consequences, A Theory of Miscommunication, ALPS, 1990.
6. See Recipe at http://food.yahoo.com/recipes/allrecipes/45515/restaurant-style-egg-drop-soup
7 Burdick, Eugene, The Ninth Wave, p. 65, Dell Publishing (NY, 1956; 4th ed. 1963)
N.B. All Quotations are from Bartlett’s Familiar Quotations.

Under construction...

September's meeting information has been posted under Next Meeting.

This is the new site for the Alpha Literary & Philosophical Society aka ALPS which will replace the old website at http://www.alphaliterary.com/. My name is James Peterson and I'm the newly appointed Webmaster of ALPS that will be making this all possible.

Doge's to do list:
- Update Roster & History up to current
- Add direct submit feature for members
- Posting template
- Upload papers with posts and links
- Create posts and fix links for paper subjects on front page menu
- Add updates as prescribed by Mr. Thompson et al.

FAQ

What is A.L.P.S.?

Dr. Max Flapan in the early ‘70s was a latter-day "Renaissance Man" involved in a wide range of interests; his active mind attracted many friends from diverse professions and careers, resident in the City of Fairfax area. Max was a WWII Army officer who had come to the U.S. as a Russian immigrant boy; on retirement in the 1960’s, Max completed his doctorate. Among other projects afterwards, he gave courses on such subjects as the Soviet Constitution, portraying it objectively as a Leninist ploy, excessive on human rights promises beyond the U.S. Constitution in some respects, but criminally deficient on any delivery of promise.

Max felt that there was a useful civic role in the area for a discussion or learning group which could meet regularly, presenting, in modes of debate, serious written papers on current and passing social concerns of citizens: thus A.L.P.S. was born in the early ‘70’s with about a dozen charter members invited from professions of law, science and engineering, government, seminaries and education, etc.; monthly night meetings were held in members’ homes in a beginning fraternal environment for which the door was explicitly open for future women presenters. Venue of meetings later shifted to City of Fairfax facilities as host for our monthly papers; these have accrued to well over 200 in our record for this new Millennium, covering a wide range and variety of topics of contemporaneous concerns.

That record begins with a paper by A.L.P.S.’ first Secretary, doctoral candidate Col. Bill Cover: "Towards a New Cosmology"; given re a former "Jubilee Year". Copernicus wrote in Latin, "sotto voce" to a small literate audience of about 1% of Western Europeans; this astronomer challenged a concept of mankind’s centrality in God’s plan. The earth indeed orbited around the sun, contrary to Church interpretation. Analogously in our own times, in a half-millennium since were identified many similar icons to be challenged in our national and worldwide societal Gestalt, then barely emergent from ravages of global warfare. Papers since have paralleled history and headlines.

Early A.L.P.S. papers dealt with the "energy crisis" then consuming early ‘70’s news; a DOE author noted dominance of coal resources in our own country, later confirmed. Human biological/ethical and moral considerations were then and remain major concerns. China’s emergence as a rival power was discussed soon after Nixon’s entente with Peking. A GMU Dean related Democracy with Foreign Policy. A local Federal Judge discussed the Bicentennial of the U.S. Constitution. Superpower disarmament was a recurrent subject of members from ACDA, State, the Armed Forces and intelligence communities. Legal issues with privacy were a continuing theme of papers. Satellite communications and worldwide impacts of space were topical. A WWII-Nisei, Hiroshi, discussed civilian encampments of Japanese in the early 1940’s. Contrasts in treatment of slavery by Latin cultures were compared with ante-bellum America. A former missionary to India discussed experiences with Asian sub-continent mores. A former State Department Assistant Secretary wrote of the initial design of a Cold War "hot-line" between the U.S. and the U.S.S.R.

More recent papers have treated: evolution, advances of medicine, war, crime, early Americana, experiences in post-depression America. Selected biographies and literature segments were presented. World hunger with its pervasive implications related to universal health care was argued. Antarctic research is a recurrent topic along with the new Moscow regime and related security issues. A paper critiquing Hume’s philosophy was later published in the Transactions of the American Philosophical Society; other papers were published by authors in ASEE (Engineering Education), in JMT (Medical Technology), and others. A.L.P.S. serves as a terminal medium for criticism of "pregnant authors" and their papers, serving to provide last-minute modifications to texts in the interests of better communication and presentation.

In summary, A.L.P.S. has had meetings during the past quarter-century on the last Wednesday of each month (barring holiday conflicts). Presently meetings are held at 7:45 p.m. in the City’s "Old Town Hall" on University Drive. All are invited, particularly those students interested in a multidisciplinary and interactive audience. Dues are not required. Our WEB SITE – alpsociety.blogspot.com/ (formerly www.alphaliterary.com) – contains writings on a gamut of current events of U.S. history (with many ancient lessons), put together by active participants from top-to-working level positions, for the last 25 years. Papers generally contain an in-depth study of problems faced by society. Questions from the general public are referred to the A.L.P.S. Web Page, but if more detailed queries arise, they may be relayed to GRODG82505@AOL.COM.

Where and when do you meet?

The Alpha Literary and Philosophical Society meets in the Green Acres Center of Fairfax, Virginia (4401 Sideburn Road, Room 112, Fairfax City, VA 22030) at 7:45 PM on the last Wednesday of every month (see Schedule). During each meeting, our members present and discuss their individual works.

Who is allowed to attend?

Anyone who is interested in the original purpose stated by the founder of ALPS.
"To engage in moderate debate, discussion, and exchange of views and opinions on timely affairs or on social and political theories of earlier thinkers with dissenting and diverse views that are intellectually credible and expressed in reasonably civilized form." - Maxwell Flapan, Ph.D., (1906-1973), Founder.

How do I access the archives?

The archives are currently not in use. They may be resurrected if the ALPS steering committee decides to publish past papers from the physical archive.

Papers

Army, 1957: "Fit fer a Sojer", Baxter, William P.

The Chernobyl disaster and its ramifications: "Chernobyl and the Downfall of the Soviet Union", Bush, David M.
The Battle of the Bulge; strategy, tactics, results; a retrospective: "The Battle of the Bulge: A 50th Anniversary Perspective", Bush, David M.
An Analysis of the Harry Potter Books: "The Harry Potter Phenomenon", Bush, David M.
The History of Cosmology: "The Scientific Revolution", Bush, David M.

MDR-TB A Brief Review: "Multiple Drug Resistant Tuberculosis", Coon, Robert G.

Why the Pope did not speak out against the Nazis: "Pope Pius XII and the Second World War", DeVan, Richard J.

Carl Schurz, German Revolution, American History, German Unification: "Carl Schurz, German Revolutionary, American Statesman", Elstun, Esther N., Ph.D.
Quest for Christa, Christa T., Germany Divided, germany, federal republic of germany, german history: "Images of a Divided Germany in Christa Wolf's novel The Quest for Christa T.", Elstun, Esther N., Ph.D.

The Hydrogen Energy System: "The Inevitability of Non-Fossil Energy - Disaster or Opportunity?", Escher, William J. D.

Oberammergau Passion Play: "Oberammergau: A Pledge Fulfilled", Hoopes, Ronald G.

The nature and solutions to the Iraq War are explored: "Five Short Papers on Iraq", Lamborn, G. L.

Law Run Amok: "Deluge: Regulation on the Wrong Track", Morris, A.Nunes, Esq.
Springboard for Discussion: "A Peculiar Hubris", Nunes, Morris A., Esq.
Defining the being, otherness, self: "Being and otherness", Nunes, Morris A., Esq.
Estate Planning myths & misunderstandings: "Estate Planning & Probate in Virginia", Nunes, Morris A., Esq.
Terrorism: "Historical Parallels in Terrorism", Nunes, Morris A., Esq.
Electoral College, Constitution: "Reaffirming the Electoral College in the Wake of Electoral Turmoil", Nunes, Morris A., Esq.
Law, Lawyers: "Why Lawyers are That Way", Nunes, Morris A., Esq.

The nine principals of war adopted by the U.S. and their use in Iraq: "Iraq and the Principals of War", Partridge, Charles C.

The Delphic inscription and Socratic care of the self: "Know Thyself", Partridge, John

The U-2 Incident, Francis Gary Powers, Operation Overflight, Soviet Union, SAM, Mike Drant, CIA, KGB: "The U-2 Incident: A Personal Overview", Powers, Francis G., Jr.

The Church and the Jews: "Constantine's Sword", Rodgers, George
Merging Archaeological with Documentary Science: "In Search of Paul", Rodgers, George
Tanker Spills: "Technology Advances for Tanker Spills", Rodgers, George
The Magic Mountain, by Thomas Mann; German Literature: "The Magic Mountain, by Thomas Mann", Rodgers, George
Fermat's Last Theorem: "Singular Passion", Schultz, George T.

The Parson's Cause, Patrick Henry, George Cooke, Revolutionary Art, Nineteenth Century Art, Gibbes Art Museum: "The Parson's Cause", Thompson, Charles Robert

The development of the European Monetary Union (EMU): "European Monetary Dis-union", Young, Stanley E.
Human Rights: "Rights of Passage: The Philosophy of Human Rights", Young, Stanley E.

Next Meeting

Last ALPS email from Secretary Mr. Bob Thompson (with a few minor edits by Doge J. Peterson).
ALPHA LITERARY & PHILOSOPHICAL SOCIETY
Founded 1973
"… To engage in moderate debate, discussion, and exchange of views and opinions on timely affairs or on social and political theories of earlier thinkers … with dissenting and diverse views that are intellectually credible and expressed in reasonably civilized form."
-- Maxwell Flapan, Ph.D., (1906-1973), Founder
Wednesday, April 29, 2009
Granny Stories
By Susan Devan
at
Green Acres Center
4401 Sideburn Road, Room 112,
Fairfax City, VA 22030
7:45 PM
Presenting the Presenter:
Susan Devan is now retired, and was an Administrative assistant, Institute for Thermal Processing Specialists; former geographer at Dept. Interior; analyst for DOD; mother of six children. Currently, free-lance writer for Hexagon; fine artist with commission underway; she now writes plays, short stories and nonfiction. She continues to write and be recognized by literary groups in West Virginia. BS, Foreign Service from Georgetown U. Having read a couple of these stories, they are really funny!
On the Calendar .... Our calendar is set for 2009. Thank you, writers!
2009
May 27 Larry Lamborn: On Genealogy
Jun 24 Joe Scheisl – The Clouds of War
Jul Summer break – no paper needed
Aug Summer break – no paper needed
Sep 30 Maria Ivusic – My Brother, A Patriot in the USA
Oct 28 Susan and Dick Devan: A Debate - At the time of the American Revolution, which side would we have supported and why? He says, she says …
Nov 18 Richard Geller: The Great Depression 1929-1945, A Second Look
Dec Holiday break – no paper needed
2010
First month James Peterson - The History of Regressive Thought
Attendance in March ‘09 = 9
I must have a prodigious quantity of mind; it takes as much as a week, sometimes, to make it up. -- Mark Twain in The Innocents Abroad
ALPS web site is restored as a blog - Thanks to James Peterson, the ALPS web site and discussion blog is now open. Web address is: http://alpsociety.blogspot.com/ Check out this blogspot today. See the new address in the letterhead.
Finances ...
Balance 3/15/09 $239.27
In the hat 3/25/09 12.00
Balance 4/19/09 $251.27
C. R. Thompson , Sec.,
4219 Burke Station Road,
Fairfax, VA 22032
703-978-5823,

Roster & History

Please note, this will be updated this summer. JMP 5/18/10

Membership Roster - August 2007
This is the 12th edition. It reflects current and past membership of the Society, as well as all papers presented since our founding in 1973. Copies of most of these papers are in the ALPS archives. No papers were presented between 1978 and 1983.
Peter R. Badger8716 Center RoadSpringfieldVA 22152, 703-569-3265. Atty. US Govt. Formerly USMC Infantry officer, Vietnam. AB, Hamilton Col.; JD, Capital U School of LawColumbusOH.
• War Crimes in America (1/88)
• The Burning of Washington - 1814 (9/89)
William P. Baxter, 10328 Sager Ave., #121,p FairfaxVA 22030, 703-273-8866. LTCUSA, Ret. Specialty: Soviet/East European Affairs. BS, USMA; MA, U of Kansas; grad studies, Georgetown U.Member, Member, ALPS Steering Committee.
• Recent Personnel Changes in the Soviet Ministry of Defense (1/85)
• Innocent Abroad in Israel (5/86)
• Is the Russian Bear Becoming a Calico Cat? (1/90)
• In the Vortex of a Crisis: The Soviet Union Today (1/91)
• Armed Forces in the Russian Federation - A Status Report (1/97)
• The Deer Hunt (10/97)
• Baptism (4/98)
• Fit Fer A Sojer (2/99)
• Iraqi Employment of Chemical Agents in the War With Iran (2/00)
Jerry Bixler, 10328 Sager Ave., Apt. 222FairfaxVA 22030. Entrepreneur and the landlord’s enforcer.
Doris Bloch10092 McCarty Crest CourtFairfax VA. 703-591-3344. B.A. in Chemistry from Douglass CollegeRutgers University. On graduation, worked for Eli Lilly, then moved to IN, NH, WI, CO, and MA, all in a seven year span, and ultimately arrived in northern VA in 1969, when her (late) husband joined the George Mason University faculty as a "pioneer" in this new Fairfax college undertaking. Chemist and computer analyst for the United States Pharmacopeia, CRC Systems (a govt. contractor), and the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), retiring in Sept. 2004.
Benjamin Bush – 4504 Andes DriveFairfaxVA 22030, 703-591-6467
David M. Bush4504 Andes DriveFairfaxVA 22030, 703-591-6467. Environmental ResearchUS Geological Survey. Former Artillery officer, US Army. BA, The Ohio State U.
• Their Finest Hour Revisited: A New Commentary in Commemoration of the 50th Anniversary of the Battle of Britain. (9/90)
• Guadalcanal (9/92)
• The Scientific Revolution (10/93)
• Creation Revisited: The Conjunction of Physics and Metaphysics (4/94)
• 50th Anniversary of the Battle of the Bulge (1/95)
• Chernobyl and the Downfall of the Soviet Union (5/02)
• Transformation of the US Army: From Citizen Soldiers to Professional Warriors (1/03)
• The Harry Potter Phenomenon (6/04)
• The New Biology (2/06)
Robert G. Coon10921 Warwick Ave.FairfaxVA 22030, 703-273-6671. Formerly Extramural Science Advisor, FDA; assignments in NSF; CIA; US Army Chemical Corps. BS & MA, Syracuse U; Ph.D./microbiology U. Penn. ALPS charter member.
• Some Issues in Human Experimentation (11/73)
• Some Issues Involved in Human Genetic Engineering (2/76)
• Antibiotic-resistant Neisseria (4/77)
• Review: Blaming Technology: The Irrational Search for Scapegoats (4/83)
• Perspectives on World Hunger (4/86)
• Perspectives in Biological Warfare (11/90)
• Perspectives on the Hot Zone (5/96)
• Is the City of Fairfax Vulnerable to Bioterrorism? (11/99)
• Commentary on Unrestricted Warfare (9/01)
• Is FairfaxVA Prepared for a Terrorist Attack? (9/03)
• On Avian Flu (3/06)
Susan G. DevanP. O. Box 1031RomneyWV 26757 304-822-5050
Susan is now totally retired, and was an Administrative assistant, Institute for Thermal Processing Specialists; former geographer at Dept. Interior; analyst for DOD; mother of six children. Currently, free-lance writer for Hexagon; fine artist with commission underway; she now writes plays, short stories and nonfiction. BS, Foreign Service from Georgetown U.
• Whom The Gods Destroy, (9/98)
• The Peppermint Pumpkin (6/00)
• Warrior Politics by Robert Kaplan: A Book Review (5/02)
• The Games We Played (4/04)
Richard J. Devan - P. O. Box 1031RomneyWV 26757 304-822-5050 Birthplace: ChicagoIL. He lived in various places (including HonoluluHI, when Pearl Harbor was attacked!) until his family settled in the Central Valley of California when he was 9. He graduated from the College of the Pacific with a degree in civil engineering. After serving in the Army (at Arlington Hall and the Pentagon) he worked briefly as a civil engineer in California, then returned to work for the Defense Dept. as a systems analyst. He continued as systems analyst for Defense and Labor until retirement, then as a systems programmer with various contractors to the Federal Govt. for a few years until full retirement in the mountains of West Virginia. He reads, writes, does photography and other artwork, and watches in amazement as his progeny multiply. Dick and I have joined the West Virginia Writers and the Ice Mountain Writers (regional for the Eastern Panhandle; our members are all originally from Northern Virginia, Maryland or Pennsylvania). Dick writes nonfiction and poetry. He is also the ALPS website manager.
• Pope Pius XII and The Second World War (10/05)
Sam Eisen, 3831 Chantal Lane, FairfaxVA 22031 703-827-7660 (O) Investment Manager
• The Benefits and Pitfalls of International Investing (4/95)
Esther N. Elstun, Ph. D. FairfaxVA. Former Professor, German and European Studies, GMU. Earned BA, Colorado College; MA and Ph. D, Rice University.
• Thomas Mann and His Politics (2/96)
• Two Short Stories by Hermann Hesse - A Discussion (3/97)
• Carl Schurz: German Revolutionary, American Statesman (11/98)
• Images of a Divided Germany in Christa Wolfe’s Novel, The Quest for Christa T.
(3/00)
• Europe Through a Feminist Austrian’s Eyes – Lilian Faschinger’s Novel: Magdalena
the Sinner (10/02)
• "Being" and "Otherness" Revisited: A Discussion of Luise Rinser's Hinkela (11/05)
Alfred N. Fowler8945 Glenbrook RoadFairfaxVA 22031, 703-280-1660. CAPT, USN, Ret. Formerly: American Geophysical Union; Exec Sec, Council of Managers, National Antarctic Programs; NSF; Navy Meteorologist and aviator. BS, St. Louis U; BS, Naval PG School; MS, The George Washington U.
• The Race to the South Pole 1911-to 1912, (3/84)
• Aviation Safety in Antarctica, (5/91)
• Governance of Antarctica (6/97)
Richard Geller 9126 Christopher St.FairfaxVA22031- was born in Los Angeles and moved to Virginia in 1999. He is a high school dropout who has read 10,000 books. He started his first company at age 18 and sold the company a few years later. He co-founded several franchises and software technology start-ups that were heavily centered on direct marketing, and with his brother he co-founded Amazing Media and raised $14 million from Silicon Valley venture capitalists. He has presented at forums including the Washington Press Club and George Washington University, and is widely quoted in magazines including Entrepreneur and Investors Business Daily. Richard has authored four books on business marketing and is on the board of directors of a venture-backed Maryland company, Judicial Dialog Systems. He co-founded and runs Sponsera, an Internet advertising technology company that helps professionals such as psychologists and dentists get new clients and patients via the Internet. His interests include economics, Internet marketing endeavors, international travel, food and cooking, running barefoot and sitting around.
• Money: Is The Dollar Dead? What Will Replace It? (2/07)
• The Democracy Religion: Should We Believe? (6/07)
Roger Hill4709 Guinea RoadAnnandaleVA 22003, 703-323-7309. He was born in Pennsylvania into a military family. He graduated from Baumholder High School, in Germany, and USAF Academy. He retired from USAF as Colonel, and continued to work in the Washington area. In June 2006, he received a Doctor of Arts in Community College Education from George Mason U. He now teaches history and political science at area colleges. Here is a man just getting started!
• Why We Memorialize Our War Dead They Way We Do, Part 1 (10/06)
• Why We Memorialize Our War Dead They Way We Do, Part 2 (11/06)

Maria Ivusic – 922 24th St., NW, Apt 4, WashingtonDC20037. 202-337-6898. Freelance consultant; translator of Russian and Yugoslav for CIA Language School. Former announcer Yugoslav Radio. Born in Serbia, immigrated to US in 1965. MA, Russian language, American U; BA English, French, U of Sarajevo.

• Kosovo (4/99)
• Boris Yeltsin (6/99)
• Heroes Are Tired (1/00)
• Lessons of Yugoslavia by Mihajlo Mihajlov (4/01)
• Hopes and Illusions of Changes in The Communist Regime (2/02)
• Art in Central Park - A Discussion (6/05)
• Women in East European Politics (4/07)
Chris Ivusic - 922 24th St., NW, Apt 4, WashingtonDC20037. Born in Massachusetts. He graduated from the University of Massachusetts Amherst with a B.A. degree in English. Chris is a retired journalist and writer-editor, having worked for the Springfield (Mass.) Daily News and Albany (NY) Knickerbocker News-Union Star, both now defunct, and for the federal government agencies, General Services Administration, Interior Department and Department of the Army.
• A GI in World War II Europe (5/07)
G. Lawrence Lamborn10306 Ranger RoadFairfaxVA 22030Col., USAR; US Govt.. Former tour in El Salvador. BA and MA, Washington U. Areas of interest: Latin America, South Asia and East Asia.
• Liberation Theology: Christian Movement or Marxist Creation? (6/88)
• IndiaSouth Asia’s Strong Man or Strawman? (4/90)
• Numismatic Reflections: Speculations on the History and Future of World Currencies
(3/94)
• Central Asia: Past Glories and Future Prospects (6/96)
• Shadows of the Caucasus: Source of Regional Prosperity Or International Conflict?
(3/99)
• New Dimensions for the Old Dominion: Evolution of Elections and Voting in VA (1/02)
• The Evolution of Local Government In VA: Distinguished Past, Daunting Future (3/03)
• Five Short Papers on Iraq (11/03)
Willis E. Naeher, 13890 Chelmsford Dr., #209, Heritage Hunt, Gainesville VA 20155, 703-743-1388. Born 9/11/20 in Scranton Penna. Graduated from George Washington University in 1950. Enlisted in U.S,. Army Air Force and assigned to General Hap Arnold’s Commo Center as a Code Clerk in Washington D.C.  Transferred to the Army Airways Communications System when it was organized in Ashville NC. Reassigned to the Central Pacific area on
Kwajalien Atoll in the Marshal Islands and to Makin Island in the Gilbert Islands. After two years, discharged with the rank of T/Sgt in Washington D.C. Employed by CIA as a Code Clerk and a Communications Security Officer. During this period, he was assigned to a variety of projects i.e. the U2 Spy Plane, the Berlin tunnel and the Bay of Pigs. Transferred to the Office of Communications, Dept of state as chief of the Communications Center and was promoted to Deputy Assistant Secretary of State. He was appointed Chairman of the Negotiating Committee to transfer the Moscow Hot Line from the transatlantic cable to satellite facilities. Retired in 1978 and became a consultant to several Communications companies .
• The Moscow Hotline 10/91)
• Cryptographer: Its Origins and Quo Vadis? (6/92)
• The Out of This World Airplane - the U2 (11/93)
• Was W.W.II A “Good” War? (10/94)
• Terrorism (11/95)
• The Evolution of The Revolution: A Study of The American Militia Movement (4/97)
• The Diplomatic Courier Service (11/97)
• The Chernobyl Disaster: Where? When? Why? (5/01)
• Chernobyl Accident 16 Years Later: Medical and Psychological Conditions (11/02)
• Is Europe Dying? (4/06)
Morris A. Nunes7247 Lee HighwayFalls ChurchVA 22046, 703-241-4917. Attorney, private practice in real estate, taxes, financial matters. Author 5 books; numerous articles; television show producer; arbitrator; business appraiser; lecturer. BS, Wharton School; BA, U. Penn; JD, Georgetown U. ALPS steering committee.
• Winston Churchill & The Philosophy of Achievement (2/84)
• Why Businesses Often Fail (11/84)
• Planning Your Own Funeral (9/85)
• In the (TV) Wasteland (2/87)
• The American Taboo (11/87)
• If Nixon Had Been Elected President (2/89)
• Truth & Consequences: A Theory of Miscommunication (5/90)
• Snipping at the Gordian Knot: Structural Approaches to Taming the Federal Budget Deficit (4/91)
• The Missing Link In Education (3/92)
• Why Ups Come Down - A Brief Essay (10/92)
• Deluge: Regulation on the Wrong Track (9/93)
• Why Lawyers Are That Way (6/94)
• Being & Otherness (11/96)
• Estate Planning & Probate in Virginia (5/98)
• Reaffirming The Electoral College in the Wake of Electoral Turmoil (2/01)
• Historical Parallels in Terrorism (11/01)
• A Peculiar Hubris (5/03)
• The Dragon Game - An Exercise in Economics (2/05)
• The Best Laid Plans … The Intersection of Leadership and Strategy (3/07)
Norm and Betsy Olsen6309 Lee HighwayArlingtonVA 22205, 703-237-0526
Norman Olsen served in the Peace Corps in Columbia, 1962 to 1964. He taught at a University and placed several athletes on the Columbian Olympic team. He was stationed with USAID/ Vietnam 1966 to 1970. He also served in a variety of posts with USAID including Washington DCKenyaBotswanaRwandaCameroon, and Uganda. He helped found the Amateur Cycling Association of Kenya. In Washington, organized a program for training 3,000 Nigerian students in trade and technical disciplines, paid for by the Nigerian government. He managed a successful bean marketing cooperative in Rwanda that had sales of over $5 million per year. In Cameroon, he kept the American School of Yaoundé solvent as the students won the International Knowledge Bowl. He assisted the Ugandans to promulgate a new constitution and hold the first free and fair elections in their history. Over the past eight years as a consultant developed a democratization strategy for Cambodia, (implementation was temporarily slowed by a coup), assisted Indonesia in organizing the world’s largest election monitoring operation, (it resulted in Indonesia’s first free and fair national election), and returned to Botswana to see the African village where Betsy and his wife lived, had grown into the Bakersfield California of Africa. Betsy has accompanied Norm on most of these assignments, supporting and teaching in each place.
• Vietnam and Iraq: A strategic and Tactical Comparison (4/05) - by Norm Olsen
• The Pedagogy of Writing (5/05) - by Betsy Olsen
Charles C. Partridge13434 Point Pleasant Dr.ChantillyVA 22021, 703-378-8134. Legislative Counsel, National Association of Uniformed Services. ColonelUSA, Ret. Formerly, Office of Legislative LiaisonUS Army; Chief of Staff, 2nd Infantry Div.; CO, 2nd Infantry Support Command. BS, U. of Alabama; MPA, Penn State U.; Command & General Staff CollegeArmy War CollegeALPS Steering Committee.
• National Service (3/90)
• The Great Health Care Debate (5/94)
• Review of The Just War by Paul Ramsay (1/01)
• Principles of War in Iraq (11/04)
John Knox Partridge. Associate professor of philosophy, Wheaton Coll., NortonMA. BA and MA, College of William & Mary; Ph.D., The Johns Hopkins U.
• How Morals Motivate: David Hume’s Genealogy of Moral Motivation
• Meno’s Paradox and the Drama of Dialectic (9/00)
• “Know Thyself”: The Delphic Inscription and Socratic Care of the Self (3/05)
George F. Rodgers3544 Queen Anne Dr.FairfaxVA 22030, 703-591-4357. Adjunct faculty in telecommunications, NOVA; Systems/Electrical Engineer; radar, sonar. BSUS Coast Guard Academy; MSEE, MIT; Registered Professional Engineer-EE. ALPS charter member.
• From Sign-Stimuli to Cybernetics (5/73)
• Confucius and Beethoven (4/74)
• Pilgrimage in Suburbia (5/75)
• The Modern Soviet Navy (3/77)
• Review: Heyerdahl’s Early Man and the Ocean (5/83)
• Hyperinflation in the Weimar Republic and the Rise of Nazis to Power (10/85)
• D. H. Lawrence: Apostle of Transition (9/88)
• Dynamics of Mathematics in Life & The Physical Sciences (6/91)
• A Demonstration Project for Advanced Math in High Schools (11/92)
• Long Range Forecasting for Fairfax City (2/95)
• Book review: The Magic Mountain, Thomas Mann (9/96)
• Post-Calculus Mathematics for High Schools (1/99)
• Pre-College Teaching Challenges for S&T Tracks (5/00)
• Technology Advances for Tanker Spill Problems (10/01)
• The 20% Factor For Women in S & T ((/02)
• Book Review: Constantine’s Sword (10/03)
• The Conquerors, and Inside the Vatican of Pius XII (9/04)
• Book Review: “In Search of Paul” by Crossan & Reed (9/05)
• A Book Reviw: Walking The Bible, by Bruce Feiler (1/07)
Joseph Schiesl9680 Janet Rose CourtManassasVA20111. 703-323-5413. Joe is a native of ElizabethNJ. He holds a Mechanical Engineering degree from NJ Institute of Technology, a Meteorology degree from NYU, and a Hydrologist Certification from the World Meteorological Organization's Hydrology Course for Foreign Nationals. He served as a USAF Weather Officer, preparing global aviation forecasts in support of SAC. Later he worked for the National Weather Service (NWS), first as a regional forecaster for the states of VA, MD, DE, WV, and DC. After transferring to NWS headquarters, Joe was responsible for automating the meteorologic, hydrologic, and oceanographic data collection networks. He chaired a number of Interagency committees for the Office of the Federal Coordinator for Meteorology. Since retiring from the Federal service in 1998, Joe has done technical editing for National Geographic and Time-Life and now works part time for a technology corporation in Hawaii.
• How Meteorological Instruments Evolved (1/05)
Philip T. Smiley3603 Willoughby Point LaneFairfaxVA 22033. 703-378-1520. CAPT, USN, Ret. Naval aviator. Program manager, Northrop Grumman; Independent consultant. Doctoral candidate, George Washington U. BS, San Diego State Coll; MS, U of Southern California.
• The Federal Government’s Role in Higher Education (6/03)
• Sowing the Seeds of Love in a Troubled World: 3 prize-winning essays submitted to the Rotary Club of Crystal City, presented by their authors (high school sophomores)
Frank D. Spicer5201 Whisper Willow Dr.FairfaxVA 22030.
William B. Staples10076 Daniels Run WayFairfaxVA 22030, 703-218-3172. ColonelUSA, Ret. Arms Control And Disarmament Agency. Formerly, 5th Special Forces GpVietnam; US Army Chemical Corps. BA, MS, U. of Washington.
• Arms Control - What is the Future? (5/85)
• SALT II: Interim Restraints (6/86)
• The INF Treaty: An Explanation and Status Report (2/88)
• How Will The Bush Administration Handle Arms Control? (1/89)
• What Will The Chemical Weapons Convention Do To, or For, US? 3/93
• Chemical Weapons Treaty Implementation (6/95)
• Reorganization of Foreign Affairs Agencies (9/97)
• US Government Role in Chem-Bio Terrorism - PDD 39 (2/04)
H. Eugene Thompson3742 Chain Bridge RoadFairfaxVA 22030, 703-273-2666.
Charles R. Thompson4219 Burke Station RoadFairfaxVA 22032, 703-978-5823. Consulting On Government Procurement, Inc. LTCUS Army, Ret. BS, West Virginia U.; MS, Florida Institute of Technology. Secretary, ALPS, 1993-
• Social Programs in Government Procurement (9/86)
• Form and Usefulness of Biography (11/89)
• The Parson’s Cause (4/93)
• Roots of Hatred: An Overview of the Origin and History of Islam (6/02)
Charles Uphaus4041 Woodland Dr.FairfaxVA 22030, 703-273-8444
Born Missouri, 1947; B.S. from Arizona State University (1969) and M.S. in agricultural and resource economics from the University of Hawaii (1975). Peace Corps volunteer (Nepal) and soon-to-be-retired foreign service officer with the U.S. Agency for International Development.
He and Kathy have lived in numerous overseas locations, most recently in Bangladesh.
• Justice, Righteousness and the Prophetic Tradition (5/06)
Otto W. Will, III, 10114 Ballynahown CircleFairfaxVA 22030-2491, 703-691-2598. CAPT, USN, (Ret), 1953-83. Commanded surface ships, US Navy; USNA instructor in naval subjects, personnel at selection-assignment and headquarters levels, ship acquisition and modernization, facilities planning and programming, Naval War College. TRW, Inc. (ret) 1983-94; Ship Acquisition Support Project engineering services merchant ship USN augmentation applications, amphibious warfare ships. BS, USNA; MS, George Washington U. Author: Simplified Rules of the Nautical Road, (USNI 1963, 1968)
Robert A. Wright4339 Majestic LaneFairfaxVA 22033, 703-378-4090. LTC, USAR, Ret. Operations Officer, USA Intelligence Command. BA, Spanish Lit., Brown U.
Stanley E. Young10315 Ford RoadFairfaxVA 22030, 703-273-6958. Economist, Ret. Formerly, CIA Russian studies; economic analysis, planning, personnel management, budget; comptroller, Federal Credit Union. BS, Macalester Col.; MA, U. of Minnesota.
• Uncharted Economic Waters (2/86)
• Report to James Madison: Virginia’s Economy in 1787 (9/87)
• 1992 E.C. Street (5/89)
• Mayopia: A Squint at the Ancient Mayas (1/92)
• Rights of Passage: The Philosophy of Human Rights (1/94)
• European Monetary Dis-union (2/97)
Presentations by Former ALPS Members
Bobby Anderson, On Financing a War (9/95); A Synopsis of Early Medicine (10/96)
Leon Boothe: Democracy and Foreign Policy, 12/73; The US & The Middle East Dilemma: An Overview, 10/74; One Historian Looks at The Bicentennial, 3/76
Dennis J. Bowden: The Russian Revolutions of 1917 and 1991: A Brief Comparison (2/92)
J. Howe Brown: John Quincy Adams & The Jubilee of the Constitution, 10/83; Issues in Felony Sentencing in Virginia, 11/86
Omar Buchwalter: Moral Education: Is It Possible? 2/75; Developments of Anti-Jewish Sentiments in the New Testament, 2/78
John J. Burke: Freedom of Information: How Much Is Too Much? 10/88
Thomas Coldwell: US Navy Memorial: A Living Memorial on America’s Main Street (4/92)
Gerald J. “Jerry” Coutant: The National Forests: The Lands Nobody Wanted (4/96)
* William W. Cover: ALPS charter member. Toward a New Cosmology, 3/73; Historical Survey of Disarmament Efforts and Issues, 4/76; ALPS Redux: Origins and Policies, with Brief Bio of Founder, 5/84; Westmoreland vs CBS, et al., 12/84; The American Character, or, David M. Potter’s People of Plenty 1/86;  The English Civil War & the “Puritan Revolution”, 1642-1660, 5/87; Mr. Jefferson’s Army, 10/89; Discussant: The Situation in the Middle East, 10/90; Discussant: The Crisis in the Persian Gulf, 2/91
Donald L. Cummings, Conflict in Northwest Africa, (2/90); NAFTA: A Mexican Perspective (5/93)
Michael Devan: Cold Fusion: Power For The Future (5/99)
* Leslie V. DixALPS charter member. Privacy: Some Considerations (2/74); The Right of Privacy Extended: Abortion (Roe vs Wade) (11/75); Constitutional Convention? (On Tugwell’s Compromising of the Constitution) (2/77); A Selection of Recent Cases Sounding in Tort (9/83); Interpreting the Amended Constitution (11/85); The US Constitution: The Roots of Due Process (1/87)
William J. D. Escher: The Inevitability of Non-Fossil Energy - Disaster or Opportunity? (9/94)
The Sling of David on the Moon: The Lunatron Concept (5/95)
Robert A. Gessert: US Arms Export Policy and Weapons Cooperation, 3/78
Harley Grimm, Communication Satellites Come of Age, 9/74; The Computer Said That!, 6/76
* Edward B. Gross ALPS Charter Member. What’s Going on Here? (10/73) Lifeboat Drills on the Titanic(4/74) Extrasensory Phenomenology (5/74) The Titanic Revisited (14 months later) (9/75) Genesis or Evolution (1/06)
J. Mauri Hamilton, Is It Impressionism or Neo-Impressionism? (2/93), Existentialism (3/95)
Ronald G. HoopesOberammergau: A Pledge Fulfilled (1/98)
* Toshio Hoshide, Personal Justice Denied: The Evacuation of Civilians in World War II, 3/87
* Harry W. Johnson, On Creationism (1/96)
* Fred C. Lewis: Atheism in the US (5/88); Serious Problems Facing Our Nation (6/89)
Joseph C. Luman: Statues & Pigeons, Heroes & You, 4/84; The Most Powerful Fiction I Perceive, 3/86; Helping Hands, Out, Up, or Off? 3/89; Associations - An American Disease, 9/91
Jack Manley: Review: Lefevre’s Understandings of Man, 6/73
Ron McRae: Psychic Arms Race?, 11/83; Living Insane in an Insane World, 9/84
Benjamin Nunez: A Survey of Slavery in Latin America, 3/85
Richard B. O’Keeffe, Sr.: A Translation from Two Sandinista Texts, 1893 & 1981, 4/88
* Merton S. Parsons: Review: Galbraith’s Economics of Consciousness, 9/73; World Food and World Population, 6/75
Richard A. Pledger: Predicting Presidential Performance, 10/84; The Beauty of Mathematics, 4/87
F. Gary Powers, The U-2 Incident: A Personal Overview (6/98)
A. Vance Renfroe: Decay of Democracy’s Birthplace: Social Values, Political Necessity (6/87); China’s Economy: The Golden Ricebowl (10/87); TR As Commander in Chief (6/90); The Psalter: A Mirror of Hebrew Culture (3/91); Picking Up the Splinters of the Former Soviet Union (2/94); Russia and a New World Order: The Next Chapter (5/97); A Reading of Original Poems (2/98); The Future of Tenure: Can This Dinosaur Tiptoe Through the Tar Pit? ( 10/99); An Instance of the Fingerpost: Justanotre University & The Violin Player (4/00); National Security & Higher Education in the Knowledge Age (10/00); An Overview and Comparison of Selected National Security Leadership Preparation Programs in Major Institutions of Higher Education in the Greater Washington Metropolitan Area (6/01)
John Salmon: Psychology of Consciousness, 9/73; Tribalism and World Politics, 9/76; Abraham Before His Time: The Ebla Tablets, 11/77
William Schultheiss: Understanding the Artificial, 4/75; Intelligence in Government, 12/76
* George T. Schultz: Singular Passion (10/98)
Lee Swan: Mantras, Mandalas, and Mudras, 1/74
Howard S. Teague: Soviet Agriculture, 2/85
Otto F. Unsinn: Congress and the Military, 6/84
Art Warner: Energy in the US, 11/74; Construction of a National Energy Policy, 5/76
* Charles E. Waterman: Reflections on Being a Prisoner By Choice (5/77); Goethe: An Appreciation (3/83), (5/92); 40 Years After: A Corporal’s-Eye View of D-Day/Utah Beach. (6/84); Detective Story: Search For Our Proto-Indo-European “Cousins” (3/88); Bastille Day 200 (4/89); Biblical Criticism: A Microscope on Holy Writ (11/91)
* Eston T. White: Dissidence in the Soviet Union, 10/86
Jay Wilson: Some Current Controversies in Evolutionary Biology, 6/85
* Deceased