CIA PARTICIPANTS IN BROOKINGS PROGRAM
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP85B01152R000200250034-4
Release Decision:
RIPPUB
Original Classification:
C
Document Page Count:
84
Document Creation Date:
December 20, 2016
Document Release Date:
November 1, 2007
Sequence Number:
34
Case Number:
Publication Date:
May 13, 1983
Content Type:
REPORT
File:
Attachment | Size |
---|---|
CIA-RDP85B01152R000200250034-4.pdf | 1.83 MB |
Body:
ROUTING AND RECORD SHEET
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Professional Development/OTE DMI
Room 1036 CofC 10 May 1983
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1983
Attached are the program
schedule, seating chart, and
z.
biographic information on
participants who will attend
the upcoming Brookings
3.
Luncheon and Conference on
Friday, 19 May 1983.
4.
Thank you for your partici-
pation.
s.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
13.
FORM
I-79
Approved For Release 2007/11/01: CIA-RDP85B01152R000200250034-4
CIA PARTICIPANTS IN BROOKINGS PROGRAM
DATE: Friday, 13 May 1983
TIME: 12:00-2:00 p.m.
LOCATION:
HOST:
OTE REPRESENTATIVE:
Luncheon - Executive Dining Room 7D42
Conference - DCI Conference Room 7D64
Harry E. Fitzwater
Deputy Director for Administration
Chairman, Senior Officer Development Course
Directorate of Intelligence
Executive Officer, China Division,
Office of East Asia Analysis
Office of African and Latin American?Analysis
Technology & Strategic Systems Branch,
Naval Systems Division,
Office of Scientific and Weapons Research
25X1
Deputy C ie a ense Industries Division,
Office of Soviet Analysis
Directorate of Administration
25X1
LOA I_
Approved For Release 2007/11/01 : CIA-RDP85B01152R000200250034-4
Approved For Release 2007/11/01 : CIA-RDP85B0l152R000200250034-4
Directorate of Operations
Chief, Policy Coordination Staff
Collection Technology Group,
Office of Research and Development
Special Programs Staff,
Office of Training and Education
THE BROOKINGS INSTITUTION
Advanced Study Program
CONFERENCE FOR
BUSINESS EXECUTIVES
ON
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
OPERATIONS
ARTHUR L. ANDREWS (Larry)
Manager-Logistics/Product Support
McDonnell Douglas
Astronautics Company
5301 Balsa Avenue
Huntington Beach, CAL. 92647
(714) 696-2060
Mr. Andrews has a background of 29 years of engineering and technical management
experience. Receiving his undergraduate M.E. Degree from Stevens Institute of
Technology, he continued with graduate studies in Engineering and Business
Management at U.C.L.A. and Florida State; and received his M.S. Degree in Systems
Management from the University of Southern California.
As Manager - Logistics/Product Support, Mr. Andrews directs the Logistic/Product
Support organization responsible for providing total technical support services
for the full range of company products. Activities under his management include
operation and maintenance concept development and analysis in support of missile
and Space systems; field service engineering to provide technical assistance for
delivered products; technical training services for both factory and customer
personnel; spares support functions including provisioning documentation, procure-
ment, inventory control, and sales; administration of overhaul and repair activities;
and development of technical publications for company-supplied equipment and systems.
Mr. Andrews began his career as a Test Engineer with Curtis Wright, working with
experimental jet engines. Following a 3-year tour in the Air Force as a Nuclear
Weapons Officer, Mr. Andrews joined McDonnell Douglas where he has progressed
through a variety of assignments in Engineering and Management to his current
position. His past assignments have involved Liquid Rocket Propulsion System
Design Analysis and Test, Launch Operations Engineering at Kennedy Space Center,
and Engineering Program Management. Mr. Andrews' past assignments have included
management positions on many major aerospace programs that include the Thor IRBM,
Nike Hercules missile system, Delta and Saturn space boosters, and the Skylab
Space program; in addition he has acted as a consultant to ERNO-VFW, Fokker on
the European Spacelab program.
Mr. Andrews is an Associate Fellow of the American Institute of Aeronautics and
Astronautics (AIAA) and has served on the AIAA Support Systems Technical Committee,
of which he was Chairman for 2 years. He is currently serving on the AIAA Aero-
space Maintenance Technical Committee. He is a senior member of the Society of
Logistics Engineers, and has served on the Aerospace Industries Association
Propulsion Working Committee. He has authored papers and articles for AIAA
symposia presentation and the Astronautics and Aeronautics magazine. He resides
in Rancho Palos Verdes, CA, is a member of the Antique Watch and Clock Collectors
Association and when not sailing, scuba diving, or skiing, he devotes his time to
community activities. He is active in his church, serving in the past as a
director, president, and various committee chairmanships. He has served in various
Scouting positions at the troop, district and council level and has been honored
with the District Award of Merit and the Silver Beaver award.
WALTER J. BARROW, Jr. (Buzz)
Manager, Environmental Permitting
and Programs
Florida Power & Light Co.
P.O. Box 14000
Juno Beach, FL. 33408
(305) 863-3642
W. J. "Buzz" Barrow has studied at the University of Southern California,
New York University, University of Maryland and Culver-Stockton College
in both Engineering and Management.
Buzz is the Manager of Permitting and Programs in the Environmental
Affairs Department for Florida Power & Light Co. in Juno Beach, Florida.
Buzz was employed by Florida Power & Light Co. in August of 1971 as an
Administrative Assistant to the Vice President. During the next several
years he established and continues to oversee the licensing and
permitting operations that are currently used Company wide. Included
in his other responsibilities are environmental licensing for the
Company's two nuclear power plants and eight fossil fuel plants. He
also is responsible for developing sites for ultimate power plant
certification, licensing and coordinates and presents Company policy
relating to environmental legislation rules and regulations that eminate
from both state and federal governments.
He is a retired United States Air Force pilot and held the rank of
Lieutenant Colonel. While in the Air Force he studied Electrical and
Aeronautical Engineering as well as advanced management programs to
help him in his capacity as a Squadron Commander and eventually Director
of Safety.
Buzz is frequently called upon to speak before civic and private or-
ganizations on environmental issues and is a member of the Florida
Chamber of Commerce Natural Resources Policy Committee, the Edison
Electric Institute Utility Air Regulatory Group, the Florida Electric
Power Coordinating Group Environmental Committee (past Chairman) and
the Southeastern Electric Exchange.
ALBERT R. BERNARD, Jr. (Al)
Vice President
Exxon Chemical Americas
P. 0. Box 3272
Houston, Texas 77001
(713) 870-6401
Received a B.S. in Chemical Engineering from Purdue University in 1967,
followed by an M.S. in Industrial Administration (MSIA) in 1968, also from
Purdue. Honored as a Krannert Scholar in the MSIA program.
Currently Vice President - Specialties for Exxon Chemical Americas. Has
P and L responsibility for Exxon Chemical's specialty chemicals businesses
in the Western Hemisphere with total sales over $150 million. These
businesses serve a wide range of markets in the petroleum, mining, elec-
tronics, adhesives, rubber and agricultural industries. The various prod-
ucts solve operating problems or impart desired performance characteristics
to the customers' formulated products. Also responsible for assessing and
commercializing new specialty chemical opportunities for Exxon Chemical
Americas.
Joined Exxon Chemical after receiving MSIA degree in 1968. Held several
positions in manufacturing followed by an assignment as Product Executive
for Exxon Chemical's worldwide Plastics operations at its headquarters
(then in New York). In 1978, moved to Essochem Europe Inc. (division of
Exxon Chemical) as Planning Manager for Olefins, working on long-range
strategic studies and acquisitions. Immediately preceding current assign-
ment, was Marketing Manager for Olefins in Europe. Exxon Chemical is the
largest manufacturer of olefins in Europe, making products primarily
serving the plastics and rubber industries in Europe, the Middle East and
Africa.
In 1982, returned to the U.S. and was appointed Vice President of Exxon
Chemical Americas.
JEROME BERNSTEIN (Jerry)
Logistics Department Manager
Esso Europe Inc.
50 Stratton Street
London W1X 6AU, England
01 - 493 7030, Ext. 3435
Jerome Bernstein graduated from the City University
management of New York with a
B.S. Degree in Chemical Engineering. He has participated in numerous
training programs, including the Columbia University Exec-
utive Program in Business Administration.
Mr. Bernstein currently works in Exxon's European headquarters' office
and holds the title of Logistics Department Manager. In this capacity
he is responsible for co-ordination of the performance of Exxon's
European Refining, Marine and Pipeline operations. His department is
responsible for developing with field management plans and programs to
ensure safe, efficient and competitive operations.
Prior to current
ass managementhpos it ions in the engnment Bernstein has held a number of
In his last assignment he managed Exxon's Petroleum Research Labor-
atories in Baton Rouge (1976-1981). Earlier assignments included man-
aging a number of Exxon's Engineering Divisions.
Mr. Bernstein is a member of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers
and the American Petroleum Institute.
S cond President
J-1
Hancock Mutual
Li a Insurance n Co.
John ancock Place
P.O. B
'3 x 111
Boston,. SS. 02117
(617) 4 -2133
EDUCATION:
A.B. Boston Universit 1965
Harvard Business School, Program for Management Development-1978
PRESENT POSITION:
John Hancock Realty Services Corp. John Hancock
idiary which is involved in the mortgage banking
Entire business career with John Hancock Mut 1 Life Insurance Company in the
Mortgage and Real Estate Department. Progress d through various levels of responsibility
to most recent position as Second Vice Presiders in charge of Loan Production
involving the annual investing of approximately 00,000,000 in mortgages and real
estate and the management of a $4.5 billion portfo o.
OUTSIDE ACTIVITIES
Board of Director - Greater Boston Real Estate Board
Member - Mortgage Bankers Association of America
RECENT CIVIC & COMMUNITY ACTIVITIES
Member and Chairman - Norwell Government Study Commission
FRANCIS H. CLOUDMAN, III (Terry)
Division Controller
IBM-General Products Division
5600 Cottle Road, P40/098
San Jose, CAL. 95193
(408) 224-6837
BA in Economics, Rice University
MBA, Stanford University
Division Controller, IBM - General Products Division, San Jose, CA
Responsibilities
Provide financial planning assistance in preparation of
Division plans. Provide financial analysis of performance
against plan, pointing out areas where management attention
is needed. Direct the division accounting operations. Provide
staff guidance to functional controllers and ensure that sound
financial controls and practices are maintained. Provide
financial assistance to Division management.
Mr. Cloudman joined The General Products Division of IBM in
San Jose, California in 1971. In 1972 he became a Financial
Analyst and in 1975 he moved to Boulder, Colorado where he
became the GPD Laboratory Controller. In 1976 he moved to
Bethesda, Maryland to become the Manager of Financial Services
for the Federal Systems Division. He became in 1978, Manager of
Pricing for the Office Products Division, in Franklin Lakes,
New Jersey. In 1980 he was promoted to Manager of Budgets at
Corporate Headquarters in Armonk. In 1981 he returned to
Franklin Lakes as the Division Controller for the Customer
Service Division and in 1982 became the Division Controller
of the General Products Division in San Jose, California.
RUDOLPH H. COOK
Chief Engineer
Test & Evaluation
Engineering
Lockheed-California Co.
P.O. Box 551
Dept. 74/01, Bldg. 63-3, Plant A-1
Burbank, CAL. 91520
(213) 847-5187
BSME - University of Colorado
ME - University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA)
POSITION 'AND RESPONSIBILITIES:
Responsible for all Engineering flight test, laboratory and
development shop activities of the Lockheed-California Company.
Past activities and assignments over 24 years have included:
o Engineering Project Manager S-3A, a Navy carrier antisubmarine
warfare aircraft.
o Manager, development, demonstration and certification of
communications autopilot and'control systems for F-104,
Electra, Constellation, P-3, L-1011 and CP-140 aircraft.
o Manager, data acquisition and flight test instrumentation
organization for the Lockheed-California Company.
HARRY F. DEL MURO
Director, Mission Development
TRW Electronics & Defense
One Space Park R5/2251
Redondo Beach, CAL 90278
(213) 536-1543
Mr. Del Muro attended the New York Technical Institute of New Jersey,
Hofstra College, Hempstead, New York, and the UCLA Graduate School of
Business Management.
His current position is Director of Mission Development /Group Development
for the Space & Technology Group of the Electronics and Defense Sector of
TRW Inc.
He has been with TRW for the past 20 years with increasing responsibility
in areas focusing upon requirements analysis, program development, and
marketing.
Prior to TRW, he was employed by RCA, United Technology Corp.,
Office of Naval Research, and the Hazeltine Corp.
nications Program
Old Oro
Armonk,
Mr. Fairfield joined IBM in 1967. has held positions
in press relations, internal communica ions, and related
the IBM design program.
B.A. degree in English Loyola University, Chicago (1958).
Mr. Fairfield has held a riety of communications positions
in IBM. He was named to hi present posdition in 1981.
Currently he is responsible r Corporate film, literature
and cultural support activitie as well as supervision of
JACK FARISS
General Attorney
Marathon Oil Co.
539 S. Main Street
Findlay, Ohio 45840
(419) 422-2121
Mr. Fariss received his B.A. degree from Rice University in 1951, with a major in
business and finance. He served on active duty for two years in the U. S. Navy
Reserve as a deck officer. He then received a master's degree in business from
Stanford University in 1955. After working in the audit department of Arthur
Anderson & Company, he received his Bachelor of Laws degree from the University
of Texas in 1959.
Mr. Fariss is presently a General Attorney for Marathon Oil Company in Findlay,
Ohio. His responsibilities include supervision of attorneys engaged in labor
law, environmental law, real estate, and administrative matters.
Prior to his present position, Fariss served three and one-half years as Manager,
Legal in Marathon's London, England office. Previous responsibilities included
assignments as staff attorney, international exploration and production; marketing;
finance; and natural gas. Prior to joining Marathon in 1962, he was staff attorney
for Plymouth Oil Company in its Pittsburgh, Pa. and Houston, Texas offices.
Mr. Fariss has served on the United Way campaign, area council of the Boy Scouts
of America and various committees of the YMCA. He is a member of the Ohio, Texas
and American Bar Associations.
ALBERT B. GILMAN (Al)
Senior Vice President
Bank of America
3600 American River Drive
Sacramento, CAL. 95825
(916) 449-4421
Mr. Gilman attended Humboldt State College in 1936 and the Stonier Graduate
School of Banking, Rutgers College in 1963.
As senior vice president of Bank of America's Sacramento-North Counties
Region, headquartered in?Sacramento, he is in charge of the bank's 150
branches in 26 counties in Northern California. He was appointed to this
position in April, 1974. As head of one of the bank's Regions, Mr. Gilman
is responsible for all lending activities in his, Region, as well as
administrative functions.
He joined the bank in 1939 and served in various Northern California branches
before entering branch administration at the San Francisco Headquarters in the
mid-1950s. He was named a vice president in 1962, and in 1966, became area
administrator for the Oakland Region. He came to his assignment in Sacramento
in 1974.
In Sacramento, Gilman is a member of the Sacramento Metropolitan Chamber of
Commerce and the Del Paso Country Club. He is past president of the
Sacramento Area Commerce & Trade Organization and treasurer of the Sacramento
History Center. He is on the Board of Boy Scouts; Camellia Festival Association;
Port of Sacramento; Sacramento Symphony League; Vocational Industrial Clubs of
America; and serves as a community consultant to the Junior League of Sacramento.
He also served as a member of a special committee of the Sacramento Metropolitan
Airport.
JOSEPH M. GOLUB (Joe)
Manager Production Resources
Distribution Transformer Div.
Westinghouse Electric Co.
Newton Bridge Road
Athens, GA. 30613
(404) 548-3121
B.B.A. Degree - University of Georgia. Undergraduate credits at Penn State
University, Westminister College and University of Pittsburgh.
Since 1981 Mr. Golub has been Division Manager of Production Resources for
the Distribution Transformer Division. The Division includes plants at
Athens, Georgia and Jefferson City, Missouri. He is responsible for the
Division capital expenditures program which eiceeds $3 million, for
development of advanced facilities, for international licensee support and
for the cost improvement programs.
Mr. Golub has spent his entire business career of over forty years with
Westinghouse. He has been in management since 1955 when he became a member
of a new plant planning team and followed up as Industrial Engineering Manager
at the new facility in Athens. Georgia in 1958. In 1967 he transferred to
corporate headquarters as an Industrial Engineering Consultant for two years
and returned to Athens in 1969 as Manager of Manufacturing Support. From
1976 to 1981 he was involved with setting up plants in Puerto Rico and
South America.
He is a member of the American Institute of Industrial Engineers (AIIE).
He has served as President of the Westinghouse Employes Association and was
active in Little League baseball.
KEVIN M. HENNING (Kev)
District Operations
Manager-East Operations
Marathon Oil Co.
P.O. Box 53266
Lafayette, LA. 70505
(318) 233-8240
Graduated from Marietta College in 1969 with a Bachelor of Science Degree
in Petroleum Engineering. Worked as a VISTA Volunteer prior to beginning
employment with Marathon Oil Company in February of 1970. While working
for Marathon, completed post-baccalaureate courses in statistics and
business administration and participated in various company sponsored
technical schools and management programs. During the spring of 1981,
completed the fourteen week Program for Management Development at Harvard
Business School.
Currently District Operations Manager-East Operations in Marathon's Gulf
Coast Offshore District located in Lafayette, Louisiana. Responsible for
planning and implementing programs and conducting day-to-day drilling, oil
and gas production and construction activities in the Eastern Gulf of Mexico.
Four departments report to the District Operations Manager which include:
Drilling, Engineering, Geology and Production Operations with a total of 109
technical and supervisory personnel and 193 field personnel. Currently this
area is producing 33,000 barrels of liquid hydrocarbons per day and 120
million cubic feet of gas per day.
Began 13 year career with Marathon Oil Company in Northwest Louisiana as a
field engineer and worked in various engineering assignments in Louisiana
and Texas until 1976. In 1976, became a Production Foreman working a
seven-on and seven-off schedule, supervising five offshore oil and gas pro-
duction platforms. In January, 1977, named Production Superintendent in
Marathon's Venice, Louisiana office. After one year in Venice, moved to
Marathon's Lafayette office as District Engineer for Eastern Operations
and remained in that position until December, 1980. In December, 1980,
became Operations Superintendent for Eastern Operations. In February,
1982, re-assigned as District Drilling Superintendent for Eastern Operations.
Remained in that position until July, 1982, when appointed to current position
of District Operations Manager for Eastern Operations.
Over the years involved in various professional and civic organizations.
In the professional area they include: The American Petroleum Institute,
Society of Petroleum Engineers and Louisiana Association of Business and
Industry. Current Chairman of the Evangeline Section, SPE of AIMS. In
the community, served as Scoutmaster, Little League Baseball Coach and
Division Chairman for the Lafayette United Givers Fund.
JOHN E. MACK (Jack)
Director
Central Office Operations
Systems
Bell Laboratories, WB 1L301
Crawfords Corner Road
Holmdel, N.J. 07733
Mr. John E. Mack received a Bachelor of Science degree in
Engineering Physics from Montana State University in 1948,
and Master of Science and Ph.D. degrees in Physics in 1951 and
1954, respectively, from Lehigh University.
Mr. Mack is Director of Central Office Operations Systems
Engineering Center at Bell Laboratories, responsible for
centralized maintenance planning, and related systems
engineering studies and requirements.
Mr. Mack joined Bell Laboratories in 1954 and was primarily
engaged in development of memory systems for electronic switching
systems. In 1956 he began supervising a group working on
Electronic Switching Systems exploratory development, and in
1961 became Head of the Automatic Number Identification Systems
and Special Switching Projects Department. In this position,
he was concerned with continued extension of the Direct Distance
Dialing telephone service. In 1966, he was promoted to Director
of the Toll and Tandem Switching Laboratory, responsible for
development of switching systems in the Bell System long-distance
network. He assumed his present position in 1972.
Mr. Mack is a member of the American Physical Society and the
honor societies Tau Beta Pi, Sigma Xi, and Phi Kappa Phi. He is
co-author of an IEEE paper with W. B. Smith. He is the Spiritual
Center Advisor for St. Mary's Church in Colts Neck, New Jersey.
FRANK M. MAURO
Senior Consultant
Lockheed Corporation
P.O. Box 551 (D/08-10, B/63 Al)
Burbank, California 91520
(213) 847-6671
Pepperdine University, MBA, May 1979
New York University, MSEE, June 1973
Manhattan College, BEE, May 1970
(2) Current Position and Responsibilities:
Senior Consultant, Lockheed Corporation. Currently participating in
a two year management development program assigned to the Lockheed
Corporation's Strat
i
eg
c Planning Staff. As part of the staff, I
responsible for the development and
1983-1992 Corporate Strategic Plan. T
-tion ram a urn ntly r responsible for the
definition and institution of a financiallyStrategic planning process
along with various staff assignments, as they arise.
(3) Summary of Career:
1970-1974 - ARMA, Division AMBAC Industries.
Design and Development Engineer. Responsible for design
and development of digital Processing and test systems.
1974-1982 Lockheed California Company
Held various positions within both the technical and
managerial ranks. The following is a listing of positions
held:
o Project Engineering
o Software Development Manager
o Preliminary Design Department Manager
o Corporate Planning Staff
(4) Honors:
Eta Kappa Ku
Memberships:
Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers
National Management Association
Civic Activities:
Junior Achievement
BARRY P. MIKESELL
Manager Estimating: Pricing
Westinghouse Electric Corp.
Intergrated Logistic Support Div.
1111 Schillins Road
Hunt Valley, Md. 21031
(301) 995-5209
Mr. Mikesell graduated from Duquesne University in 1967, in the
upper 10% of his class with a B.S. in Accounting. He also at-
tended the University of Pittsburgh and Carnegie Mellon where
he participated in the Fine Arts and Engineering Programs.
His present position as Manager Estimating and Pricing with
Westinghouse, Logistic Support Division and in this position
prepares const proposals for spare parts, repair services, test
equipment and other logistic support services for air and ground
radar equipment sold by Westinghouse. The volume of activity is
approximately 2 to 2.5 billion a year. Over sixty people are
directly involved in this activity and our prime customer is the
U.S. Airforce.
Prior to this assignment he had 15 years experience with Westing-
house Controller's and financial organization. His tour included
Corporate Auditing, Financial Planning and Cost Control, Ac-
counting and cost accountinf for large construction contracts.
The product lines and deciplines that any assignments related to
were engineering, manufacturing, marketing, and research and
development. Customers included both government and commercial.
FLOYD E. OLSON
Division Manager - Pricing
Northwestern Bell Telephone Co.
100 South 19th Street, 1270 Dodge
Omaha, Nebraska 68102
(402) 422-3253
Attended Morningside College in Sioux City, Iowa. Have a B. S. Degree
in Math and Physics.
Present position is Division Manager - Pricing, Northwestern Bell Tele-
phone Co., Regulatory Department. I supervise the preparation and administra-
tion of Northwestern Bell Nebraska Tariffs.
I have twenty-nine years experience in Management and Non-management.
Twenty-five years was spent in managing the maintenance of technical plant.
The last four years has been in my present Regulatory position.
Civic activities consist of the following: Millard Lions Club member,
UCS Speakers Bureau, Northwestern Bell Speakers Bureau, and Dominican Parenting
Program.
Currently I am President of the Millard School Board, Member of the Nebraska
Council for Teacher Education, Speaker at the National School Board Conference
1982 and 1983. Also an active member of the Omaha Safety Council.
CRAIG J. PACE
Regional Counsel
Hewlett-Packard
Co.
3404 E. Harmony
Road
Ft. Collins, CO
80525
(303) 226-3800, Ext. 3145
B.A. in History, Brigham Young University (1968); J.D. degree, University
of Utah (1971).
Since 1981, Mr. Pace has been Central/Northwest Regional Counsel in
Hewlett-Packard's General Legal Department. In that position, he is
responsible for handling non-technical/non-tax legal matters for Hewlett-
Packard's facilities in Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Colorado and Illinois.
Mr. Pace joined Hewlett-Packard in 1974 after three years of private
legal practice in San Jose, California. Between 1974 and 1981, he spent
two years in Boston at Hewlett-Packard's medical electronics facility
and the balance of the time at Company headquarters in Palo Alto, Cali-
fornia, where he concentrated on employee relations related matters.
He is admitted to practice in California and is a member of the American
Bar Association.
PERCY A. PAYNE
Division Production Manager
On-Shore Division
Shell Oil Company
P.O. Box 61062
New Orleans, Louisiana 70161
(504) 588-4001
Percy Payne is a graduate of Mississippi State University with a 8S in mechanical
engineering and an MS in petroleum engineering. He began his Shell career in
1968 as an engineer in the Production Department. He held a number of engineering
assignments of increasing responsibility through 1975. From 1976 Percy has been
in management positions both in engineering and operations. He is presently
Division Production Manager in New Orleans.
H. W. PRAETORIUS (Walt)
Manager, Western Division
Exploration
Exxon Company, U.S.A.
Box 120
Denver, Colorado 80201
(303) 789-7490
Mr. Proetorius received his B. S. degree in Geology at Washington State University
in 1954. In 1956, he received his M. S. degree in Geology at the University of
Colorado.
He is currently the Manager of the Western Division, Exploration Department,
Exxon Company, U.S.A. He manages Exxon's oil and gas exploration activities
in eleven western states.
In 1958, Mr. Praetorius began his career with Exxon in Vernal, Utah, as a geologist.
From 1958-1971, he held a variety of professional and supervisory assignments
in the Rocky Mountain states, Oklahoma, and Texas. From 1971-1973, he joined
the Headquarters staff of Esso Exploration and was involved in oil and gas exploration
programs in Europe, Africa, and Latin America. In 1973, he returned to domestic
oil and gas exploration as a Geological Advisor in the Western Division of Exxon
Company, U.S.A., Denver, Colorado. Subsequently, he served as Geological
Manager, becoming Exploration Manager in 1982.
Mr. Praetorius currently is a member of the America Association of Petroleum
Geologists and other local geological societies.
STEPHEN C. SAMELS (Steve)
Senior Counsel
IBM
Old Orchard Road
Armonk, New York 10504
(914) 756-4833
Education:
B.S.L.(law), University of Minnesota, 1957
Juris Doctor, University of Minnesota Law School, 1959
Current Position and Responsibilities
Senior Counsel
Office of the Senior Vice President & General Counsel
IBM Corporation, Armonk, New.York.
Responsible for litigation for or against IBM in various
cases pending throughout the U.S.
Career Summary
1960- Swan, Mattson, Pongiales & Samels
Rochester, Minnesota
1962-1963 Assistant County Attorney
Olmsted County, Minnesota
IBM Cor :
1963-64 Attorney, General Products Div., Endicott, NY
1965-66 Staff Attorney, Federal Systems Div., Gaithersburg, MD
1967-72 Area Counsel, Systems Mfg. Div./General Systems Div.,
Rochester, Minn.
1973-76 Senior Staff Counsel, IBM Europe, Paris, France
1980-82 Counsel, System Products Div., White Plains, NY
Admissions and Memberships
Bar admissions:
Minnesota; New York; U.S. District Court, northern
district, NY; U.S. District Court, District of Columbia and
U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit; U.S. Supreme Court
Memberships:
American Bar Association; D.C. Bar Association; American
Arbitration Association; Delta Tau Delta Fraternity; La
Confrerie des Chevaliers du Tastevin
LEE ARTHUR SCHANUEL
Manager-Program Development
and Marketing
McDonnell Douglas Astronautics Co.
Box 516
St. Louis, Missouri 63166
(314) 232-5869
B.S. degree, School of Business-Marketing, Southern Illinois University,
Edwardsville (1967)
Since 1970, Mr. Schanuel has been responsible for conducting competitive
analyses, compiling marketing action plans and customer contact plans,
and market analysis for individual products and product lines. He has
been involved in Corporate planning activities preparing ten-year environ-
mental forecasts, operating plans and new programs sales estimates. He
currently is responsible for maintaining a continuing surveillance of
Federal budgets affecting company programs, tracking Congressional activity
during the budget approval cycle and alerting management of any actions
having an adverse effect on company products and programs.
In 1967, having been in the General Engineering Division of McDonnell
Aircraft since 1955, Mr. Schanuel transferred to the McDonnell Douglas
Electronics Company where he was responsible for Marketing Aerospace Ground
Equipment, trainers and simulators and various avionic flight hardware.
Mr. Schanuel contributed to an article in the AIAA publication, Astronautics
and Aeronautics, titled "Aerospace Highlights 1980 - Space Systems."
BYRON A. SCORDELIS
Vice President
Bank of America
555 California Street, SVITR 210U
San Francisco, California 94104
(415) 622-6487
As a Vice President in Bank of America's Retail Financial Services Division,
Byron A. Scordelis serves as Director of Strategic Planning. In this capacity,
he is responsible for directing the implementation of major elements of the
Bank's retail strategic plan in the California marketplace; these specific
elements include branch reconfiguration, evaluation of electronic delivery
systems, transaction product development, market segmentation, and revamping
of organizational and incentive structures. Scordelis was appointed to this
post in August 1982.
Prior to his current assignment, Scordelis spent three years as a member of the
BankAmerica Corporation planning staff where he was responsible for development
of the Bank's corporate-level strategic plan for its California retail banking
business. He joined the Bank's California Division in 1974 at Sunnyvale Main
Office, where he served as a commercial lending officer and subsequently as an
Assistant Vice President in the Corporate Banking Group. In 1977, he moved
to Santa Clara Main Office as Assistant Manager and Senior Credit Officer.
He was elected as a Vice President with the Bank in 1979.
A native of Boston, Massachusetts, Scordelis is a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of
the University of California at Berkeley where he earned two undergraduate
degrees in Economics and Resource Conservation in 1972. He received a masters
degree in Business Administration from Stanford University in 1974.
GEORGE L. SWEENEY
Manager of Government Services
Florida Power and Light Co.
4200 W. Flagler Street
Miami, Florida 33131
(305) 442-5181
Florida International University - Bachelor of Business Administration
Degree (1977)
Major: Management/Personnel
Miami-Dade Community College - Associates in Arts Degree (1970)
Southern Division Manager of Governmental Services:
Responsible for the management of all personnel in Governmental
Services, for the Southern Division of Florida Power & Light Company,
as they interface with all governmental agencies on issues and
functions necessary for the day to day operations to provide
electrical services within the rule, regulations and guidelines
mandates by local and state ordinances and statutes.
Started Working with FPL April 2, 1956.
Held many responsibilities within the Customer, Engineering and
Commercial areas.
Was Manager of Southern Division Claims Office from 1973-1982
Member of Kiwanis Club of Miami
Past President of North Miami Jaycees
FIU Alumni Association
President North Miami Little League
Dade County Police Chiefs Association
Dade County Fire Officers Association
South Florida Claims Association
American Society of Industrial Security
SOLOMON D. TRUJILLO (Sol)
Assistant to the
Vice President
Mountain Bell
400 Tijeras N.W. Station 734
Albuquerque, New Mexico 87102
(506) 765-8940
Mr. Trujillo received his Bachelor Science degree from the University
of Wyoming in May, 1973. He then received his Master Business
Administration in May, 1974.
His present position is Assistant to the Vice President for
Mountain Bell. This position is the permanent chairperson of
the District Operations Council (DOC) and is responsible for
effective intersegment resolution of customer service problems
to assure that service levels meet or exceed corporate objectives.
Implicit also is the responsibility for the success and reputation
of the Company in all external relations matters.
Mr. Trujillo's career with the Telephone Company began in June,
1974 as a Commercial and Administrative Forecaster. He held this
position until August, 1976 when he went to work as a Staff
Administrator/Regulatory Matters. In February, 1978 he was
promoted to District Staff Manager-Rates and Tariffs and finally
in June, 1981 he was again promoted to his present position of
Assistant to the Vice President.
He is an active member in Kiwanis, the Hispano Chamber of Commerce,
Success Oriented Managers Offering Support and the Albuquerque
Greater Chamber of Commerce.
THOMAS C. VARLJEN (Tom)
Engineering Manager
Advanced Reactors Division
Westinghouse Electric Corp.
P.O. Box 158
Madison, Pa. 15663
(412) 722-5546
Mr. Varljen received his Bachelor of Science Degree from New York University in 1960
and his Master of Science Degree from the University of California in Berkeley in 1966.
Mr. Varljen is presently Engineering Manager of the Advanced Reactors Division of the
Westinghouse Electric Corporation. In this capacity he directs the activities of the
multi-discipline Department responsible for a wide variety of design, analysis, develop-
ment and test functions related to advanced nuclear technology development programs.
His organization is principally involved in engineering the Clinch River Breeder Reactor
Plant and follow-on Liquid Metal Fast Breeder Reactor Projects. Other activities include
engineering support of other advanced fission reactor systems and nuclear fusion reactor
development.
Upon graduation from New York University, Mr. Varljen joined the staff of the Lawrence
Livermore National Laboratory in Livermore, California and was a physicist in the group
responsible for the design, development and operation of the PLUTO nuclear ramjet
reactor, as well as other advanced nuclear systems for defense and space applications.
He joined Westinghouse in 1967 at the Westinghouse Astronuclear Laboratory and served
in a variety of engineering and management positions, including Manager, Thermoelectric
Applications and Manager, Nuclear Design and Radiation Analysis. From 1974 through
1981, he was associated with Westinghouse Nuclear Fusion activities as Manager of
Engineering and Manager of Fusion Programs. During the period 1974 through 1976 he
led the engineering effort for the conceptual design of the Tokamak Fusion Test
Reactor, now in operation at the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory.
Mr. Varljen is a registered professional engineer in Nuclear Engineering. He is
past-chairman of the Mt. Diablo Section of the American Institute of Aeronautics
and Astronautics and the Pittsburgh Section of the American Nuclear Society. He is
also a member of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the
American Management Association. His community activities include service on the
Board of Directors of his local YMCA and volunteer leadership in the Boy Scout Program.
He has over thirty publications and has served on a number of advisory panels for
the U. S. Department of Energy and U. S. representative at a number of international
conferences, principally in the fusion energy field.
CONFERENCE FOR BUSINESS EXECUTIVES
ON
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT OPERATIONS
Advanced Study Program
1775 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W.
Washington, D. C. 20036
TAB 1 LIST OF PARTICIPANTS
TAB 2 SCHEDULE OF DISCUSSION SESSIONS
TAB 3 BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION ON THE SPEAKERS
AND BROOKINGS STAFF
Senior level officials of our nation's corporations need to be
able to analyze government operations and decision-making processes.
Any list of a business executive's responsibilities and required
skills surely would include a working knowledge of the constantly
changing, dynamic public policy environment. The Conference in
which you are now participating is designed to assist corporate
executives acquire that knowledge.
Government impacts on business in hundreds of ways every day.
National tax and expenditure policies, intergovernmental funding
mechanisms, foreign trade policies, regulation and deregulation,
and numerous other policy areas are in constant flux. Decisions
in these areas have both an immediate and a long-term impact on
our nation's corporations. It is not enough to know the outcome
of policy decisions. Understanding the processes through which
decisions are made sharpens planning and gives executives the
ability to help shape those decisions.
This Conference is designed to give you the opportunity to partici-
pate in serious, educational discussions with key actors in the
federal decision-making arena on a nonpartisan basis. You will
have the opportunity to raise questions and issues of interest to
you while gaining valuable, insights into government decision pro-
cesses, management problems, and policy planning. Our goal is to
insure that you develop in some depth an informed and balanced
insight into the workings of the federal government.
We achieve this objective by providing you with an extensive
schedule of informal, off-the-record discussions with members of
Congress representing a spectrum of political persuasions, Execu-
tive Branch officials, representatives of non-governmental associa-
tions, with the press, and with other knowledgeable participants
in governmental processes. A Senior Staff Member of The Brookings
Institution has designed this program for you. That staff member
will be with you throughout the Conference to help stimulate
critical thought. To a very large extent the success of this Con-
ference will depend on the exchange of views which you and your
colleagues generate with the government officials who have agreed
to meet with you. We encourage you to participate in the sessions
both fully and openly.
This Brookings Conference series is now in its twenty-first year.
We are confident that it will provide you with an understanding
and an awareness of federal government operations that will help
to improve your corporate leadership skills at a time when U.S.
corporations are not only expected to grow and promote productivity,
but also to help achieve numerous difficult, and often conflicting,
social goals.
We welcome you with the hope you will find the Conference both
Advanced Study Program
The Brookings institution
JAMES P. BAUGHMAN
Manager, Management
Education Operation
General Electric Company
3135 Easton Turnpike
Fairfield, Connecitcut 06431
RICHARD E. CAVANAGH
Partner
McKinsey & Company
1700 Pennsylvania Avenue, N. W.
Washington, D. C. 20006
STEPHEN H. FULLER
Professor of Business
Administration
School of Business
Harvard University
Soldiers Field
Boston, Massachusetts 02163
L. C. HUNTER
Senior Vice President
Florida Power and
Light Company
P. O. Box 529100
Miami, Florida 33152
DONALD M. LEVINSON
Vice President - Human Resources
CIGNA Corporation
Hartford, Connecticut 06152
WILLIAM McGAGH
Senior Vice President - Finance
Northrop Corporation
1800 Century Park East
Los Angeles, California 90067
CHARLES E. McKITTRICK, JR.
Vice President - Government Affairs
IBM Corporation
Suite 1200
1801 K Street, N. W.
Washington, D. C. 20006
WILLIAM SANDERS
Vice President, Corporate Per-
sonnel and Employee Relations
Sears, Roebuck & Company
Sears Tower
Chicago, Illinois 60684
WILLIAM G. SHARWELL
Vice President - Divestiture
Information and Staff
American Telephone and
Telegraph Company
195 Broadway
New York, New York 10007
T. H. TIEDEMANN
Manager
Compensation, Organization, and
Executive Development Division
Exxon Corporation
1251 Avenue of the Americas
New York, New York 10020
CHARLES E. WELCH
Vice President - External Affairs
E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Company
Wilmington, Delaware 19898
MICHAEL J. WIDMER
Manager, Corporate Personnel
and Administration
Cabot Corporation
125 High Street
Boston, Massachusetts 02110
Advanced Study Program
The Brookings Institution
March 1983
Approved For Release 2007/11/01 CIA-RDP85B01152R000200250034-4
LIST OF PARTICIPANTS
Approved For Release 2007/11/01 CIA-RDP85B01152R000200250034-4
CONFERENCE FOR BUSINESS EXECUTIVES ON
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT OPERATIONS
MAY 8-13, 1983
ARTHUR L. ANDREWS
Manager
Logistics/Product Support
McDonnell Douglas Astronautics Co.
5301 Bolsa Avenue
Huntington Beach, California 92647
W. J. BARROW, JR.
Manager, Environmental
Permitting & Programs
Florida Power & Light Company
Post Office Box 14000
Juno Beach, Florida 33408
ALBERT R. BERNARD, JR.
Vice President
Exxon Chemical Americas
P. 0. Box 3272
Houston, Texas 77001
JEROME BERNSTEIN
Logistics Department Manager
Esso Europe Inc.
50 Stratton Street
London W1X 6AU
England
Seco Vice President
John Han Mutual Life
Insurance cbwpany
John Hancock Plac
P. 0. Box Ill
F. H. CLOUDMAN, III
Division Controller
General Products Division
IBM Corporation
P40/098
5600 Cottle Road
San Jose, California 95193
RUDOLPH H. COOK
Chief Engineer
Test & Evaluation Engineering
Lockheed-California Company
Dept. 74-01, Bldg. 63-3,
Plant A-1
P. 0. Box 551
Burbank, California 91520
HARRY F. DEL MURO
Director, Mission Development
TRW Electronics & Defense
R5/2251
One Space Park
Redondo Beach, California 90278
Dire r
Communic ons Program
JACK FARISS
General Attorney
Marathon Oil Company
539 South Main Street
Findlay, Ohio 45840
ALBERT B. GILMAN
Senior Vice President
Bank of America
3600 American River Drive
Sacramento, California 95825
JOSEPH M. GOLUB
Manager, Production Resources
Distribution Transformer Division
Westinghouse Electric Corporation
Newton Bridge Road
Athens, Georgia 30613
KEVIN M. HENNING
District Operations Manager -
East Operations
Marathon Oil Company
P. O. Box 53266
Lafayette, Louisiana 70505
JOHN E. MACK
FLOYD F. OLSON
Northwestern Bell
100 South 19th Street
1270 Dodge Building
Omaha, Nebraska 68102
CRAIG J. PACE
Regional Counsel
Hewlett-Packard Company
3404 E. Harmony Road
Ft. Collins, Colorado 80525
PERCY A. PAYNE
Production Manager
On-Shore Division
Shell Oil Company
P. O. Box 61062
New Orleans, Louisiana 70161
H. W. PRAETORIUS
Manager, Western Division,
Director, Central Office
Exploration
Operations Systems
Exxon Company, U.S.A.
Bell Laboratories
Box 120
WB 1L301
Denver, Colorado
80201
Crawfords Corner Road
Holmdel, New Jersey
07733
FRANK M. MAURO
Senior Consultant
Lockheed Corporation
STEPHEN C. SAMELS
Senior Counsel
IBM Corporation
Old Orchard Road
Armonk, New York
10504
D/08-10, B/63 Al
P. O. Box 551
Burbank, California
91520
LEE ARTHUR SCHANUEL
Manager, Program Development
BARRY P. MIKESELL
Manager
Estimating and Pricing
Integrated Logistics Support Div.
Westinghouse Electric Corporation
111 Schilling Road
Hunt Valley, Maryland 21031
and Marketing
McDonnell Douglas Astronautics Co.
Box 516
St. Louis, Missouri 63166
BYRON A. SCORDELIS
Vice President
Bank of America
Suite 2100
555 California Street
San Francisco, California 94104
GEORGE L. SWEENEY
Southern Division Manager
of Government Services
Florida Power & Light Company
P. O. Box 029311
4200 W. Flagler Street
Miami, Florida 33131
SOLOMON D. TRUJILLO
Assistant to the Vice
President
Mountain Bell
Station 734
400 Tijeras N. W.
Albuquerque, New Mexico 87102
THOMAS C. VARLJEN
Engineering Manager
Advanced Reactors Division
Westinghouse Electric Corp.
P. O. Box 158
Madison, Pennsylvania 15663
Fri, :\. aCtan,
BRADLEY H. PATTERSON, JR.
Senior Staff Member
Advanced Study Program
The Brookings Institution
FRANCES E. MARTIN
Conference Assistant
Advanced Study Program
The Brookings Institution
5:00 P.M.
The Hemisphere Room
The Washington Hilton
Connecticut Avenue and
T Street, N.W.
6:30 P.M.
The Thoroughbred Room
The Washington Hilton
7:00 P.M.
The Thoroughbred Room
The Washington Hilton
10:00 P.M.
The Towers Lounge
The Washington Hilton
Bradley H. Patterson, Jr.
Senior Staff Member and
Conference Chairman
Advanced Study Program
The Brookings Institution
THE ENVIRONMENT OF FEDERAL
DECISION MAKING
Elliot Kline
Dean
School of Business and
Public Administration
University of the Pacific
Continuation of Informal
Discussion (OPTIONAL)
7:30 A.M.
Ballroom Entrance
(Terrace Level)
The Washington Hilton
7:45 A.M.
Room 106/108
Brookings Institution
9:30 A.M.
Room 7315
GAO Building
441 G Street, N.W.
11:00 A.M.
(Room to be Announced)
Capitol Hill
12:30 P.M.
(Room to be Announced)
Capitol Hill
Board chartered bus for
Brookings
STAFF WORK FOR THE SENATE:
THE COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN RELATIONS
Edward G. Sanders
Staff Director
Senate Committee on Foreign
Relations
The U.S. Senate
THE FUNCTIONS OF THE
GENERAL ACCOUNTING OFFICE
Frank Fee
Assistant Comptroller
General for Operations
The General Accounting Office
THE TASK OF A MEMBER OF
CONGRESS
The Honorable Katie Hall
U.S. Congresswoman from
Indiana
FINANCIAL ISSUES IN THE 98th
CONGRESS
The Honorable David Durenberger
United States Senator from
Minnesota
2:30 P.M.
Room East Front 100
The Capitol
4:00 P.M.
Room 5-211
The Capitol
6:30 P.M.
The Biggs Lounge
Room 201
Brookings
7:00 P.M.
Room 106/108
Brookings
9:45 P.M.
The Towers Lounge
The Washington Hilton
NATURAL RESOURCES ISSUES IN
THE 98th CONGRESS
The Honorable
Charles Pashayan, Jr.
U.S. Congressman from the
17th District of California
U.S. House of Representatives
POLICY COORDINATION FOR THE
SENATE DEMOCRATS:
THE ROLE OF THE DEMOCRATIC
POLICY COMMITTEE
Robert Liberatore
Staff Director
Senate Democratic Policy
Committee
The U.S. Senate
NUCLEAR REGULATORY ISSUES:
PROSPECTS AND CHOICES
James A. Fitzgerald
Assistant General Counsel
The Nuclear Regulatory
Commission
Continuation of Informal
Discussion (OPTIONAL)
7:30 A.M.
Ballroom Entrance
(Terrace Level)
The Washington Hilton
7:45 A.M.
Room 106/108
Brookinqs
9:30 A.M.
Front Steps
Brookings
9:45 A.M.
Capitol Hill
12:15 P.M.
The Quality Inn
415 New Jersey Avenue
Capitol Hill
Board chartered bus for
Brookings
THE BUDGET DILEMMA:
ISSUES FOR THE CONGRESS
Nancy M. Gordon
Assistant Director for
Human Resources and
Community Development
The Congressional Budget Office
INDIVIDUAL VISITS TO
COMMITTEE HEARINGS
THE BUDGET ISSUE IN THE SENATE:
A DEMOCRATIC PERSPECTIVE
2:00 P.M.
Ground Floor Theater
The Supreme Court
2:30 P.M.
The West Conference Room
The Supreme Court
MOTION PICTURE ON THE
SUPREME COURT
THE ROLE OF THE SUPREME COURT
IN NATIONAL POLICYMAKING
Mark Cannon
Administrative Assistant
to the Chief Justice of
the United States
4:00 P.M.
Room 1242
National Science
Foundation
1800 G Street, N.W.
6:30 P.M.
The Biggs Lounge
Room 201
Brookings
7:00 P.M.
Room 106/108
Brookings
9:45 P.M.
The Towers Lounge
GOVERNMENT'S CONTRIBUTION TO
SCIENCE IN BUSINESS AND INDUSTRY
Dr. Peter Wilkniss
Deputy Assistant Director for
Scientific, Technological
and International Affairs
The National Science Foundation
EMPLOYMENT POLICY ISSUES IN THE
AMERICA OF THE '80's
Gary Burtless
Senior Fellow
Economic Studies Program
The Brookings Institution
Continuation of Informal
Discussion (OPTIONAL)
7:30 A.M.
Ballroom Entrance
(Terrace Level)
The Washington Hilton
7:45 A.M.
Room 106/108
Brookings
9:30 A.M.
(Room to be Announced)
The Department of State
22nd and C Streets,N.W.
11:00 A.M.
The Department of State
Board Chartered bus for
Brookings
SECRET INTELLIGENCE VS. PUBLIC
ACCOUNTABILITY:
A DILEMMA OF A FREE SOCIETY
A. R. Cinquegrana
Deputy Counsel for
Intelligence Policy
The Department of Justice
WEDNESDAY, MAY 11, 1983 WASHINGTON, D. C.
12:30 P.M.
Room 106/108
Brookings
2:30 P.M.
Room 2334
Treasury Department
East Executive Avenue
THE ROLE OF NON-GOVERNMENTAL
GROUPS IN THE POLICY PROCESS
OF WASHINGTON:
THE WILDERNESS SOCIETY
William Turnage
Executive Director
The Wilderness Society
EAST-WEST ECONOMIC POLICY:
ISSUES AND CHOICES
Stephen J. Canner
Director of the Office of
East-West Economic Policy
Department of the Treasury
4:00 P.M. FOREIGN POLICY ISSUES IN THE
The Auditorium NEXT TWO YEARS:
Brookings AN INDEPENDENT ASSESSMENT
The Honorable
Donald F. McHenry
School of Foreign Service
The Georgetown University
DINNER AND EVENING FREE
(BUS RETURNS TO THE HOTEL)
7:30 A.M. Board chartered bus for
Ballroom Entrance Brookings
(Terrace Level)
The Washington Hilton
7:45 A.M.
Room 106/108
Brookings
DOES AND SHOULD AMERICA
HAVE AN INDUSTRIAL POLICY?
Malcolm Lovell
Guest Scholar
The Brookings Institution
and
Former Under Secretary of
Labor
9:30 A.M. INSTITUTIONAL STAFF WORK FOR
Room 10103 THE PRESIDENT:
New Executive THE OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT AND
Office Building BUDGET
17th and H Street, N.W.
Joyce J. Walker
Deputy Associate Director,
Transportation, Commerce
and Housing Division
Office of Management and
Budget
11:00 A.M. PERSONAL STAFF WORK FOR THE
Room 10103 PRESIDENT: THE ROLE OF THE
New Executive WHITE HOUSE
James E. Jenkins
Deputy Counsellor to the
President
The White House
12:30 P.M.
Room 106/108
Brookings
2:30 P.M.
Room 10214
Department of
Transportation
400 7th Street, S.W.
4:00 P.M.
Room 5542
HHS, N. Bldg.
330 Independence Ave., S.W.
6:30 P.M.
The Biggs Lounge
Brookings
7:00 P.M.
Room 106/108
Brookings
9:45 P.M.
The Towers Lounge
The Washington Hilton
STAFF WORK FOR THE VICE
PRESIDENT: CHALLENGES AND
ISSUES
Frederick M. Bush
Deputy Chief of Staff
to the vice President
ISSUES IN TRANSPORTATION
POLICY
Donald R. Trilling
Executive Assistant to the
Deputy Scretary
Department of Transportation
MAKING GOVERNMENT EFFICIENT:
THE ROLE OF AN INSPECTOR GENERAL
Bryan B. Mitchell
The Deputy Inspector General
Department of Health and
Human Services
THE ROLE OF THE FOURTH ESTATE
IN TIIE POLICY PROCESS OF
WASHINGTON
Don Oberdorfer
Staff Writer
The Washington Post
Continuation of Informal
Discussion (OPTIONAL)
7:30 A.M.
The Map Room
The Washington Hilton
NATIONAL RESOURCES ISSUES IN THE
80's: PRIORITIES OF THE REAGAN
ADMINISTRATION
Craig Potter
Deputy Assistant Secretary
for Fish and Wildlife and
Parks
The Department of Interior
10:15 A.M.
Room 1E801
(Conference Room 1)
The Pentagon
DEFENSE MANPOWER ISSUES: DO WE
HAVE ENOUGH OF THE RIGHT KIND?
Brigadier General
Anthony Lukeman
Director, Manpower Plans
and Policy Division
Headquarters, United States
Marine Corps
The Department of Defense
12:15 P.M.
The Executive Dining
Room
Central Intelligence
Agency
1:00 P.M.
The Director's
Conference Room
Central Intelligence
Agency
Officers of the Central
Intelligence Agency
INTELLIGENCE AND NATIONAL
SECURITY
Officers of the Central
Intelligence Agency
(Taxis available to National
and Dulles Airports)
BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION
ON
SPEAKERS AND CHAIRPERSON
Gary Burtless was born near Auburn, in rural upstate New York.
After attending local schools he entered Yale College, where he
graduated Magna cum laude in 1972 after majoring in economics.
Before attending graduate school he worked a year and a half as
a researcher and administrator in the Gary (Indiana)Negative In-
come Tax Experiment, one of the nation's earliest scientific social
experiments. In 1977 he obtained a Ph.D. in economics from the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he specialized in
econometrics, labor economics, and public finance. He served from
1977 to 1979 as an economist in the office of the Assistant Sec-
retary for Planning and Evaluation, Department of Health, Educa-
tion and Welfare, and from 1980-1981 as an economist in the Office
of the Assistant Secretary for Policy Evaluation and Research,
Department of Labor.
Mr. Burtless came to the Brookings Institution in 1981, where he
has studied social security, unemployment insurance, private pen-
sions, retirement behavior and employment and training policy. He
has published articles in the Journal of Political Economy,
American Economic Review, and other leading journals in economics.
He is now editing a book with Henry Aaron of Brookings on social
security, pensions and retirement. Mr. Burtless is a Senior
Fellow in Brookings Economic Studies Program.
A native of Newport News, Virginia Mr. Bush received his B.A.
from the University of Colorado, a Certificate d'Assuidite from
the University of Nice in France, and his M.A. from American Uni-
versity in Washington.
He began his professional career in 1971 as a clerk on the staff
of the Senate Republican Policy Committee. In 1973 he was ap-
pointed Legislative Assistant to Congressman Joseph Skubitz.
In 1974 Mr. Bush joined the Republican Nationanl Committee staff
as Assistant to the Finance Chairman and in 1975 was made Deputy
Finance Director of the President Ford Committee.
Mr. Bush went to Chicago in 1977 as the finance Director of the
Illinois Republican Party, then in 1979 joined the staff of the
George Bush for President Committee as Finance Director, operating
out of Houston.
During the Transition, Mr. Bush was the Assistant for Administra-
tion on the staff of the Vice-President-Elect.
President Reagan appointed Mr. Bush as the Assistant Secretary
of Commerce for Tourism in 1981.
In 1982 Mr. Bush returned to the Vice President's Staff as
Deputy Chief of Staff to the Vice President.
He was a Member of the American Council of Young Political Leaders,
European Delegation, elected to the Board of the American Council of
Young Political Leaders, 1980; private consulting to numerous
Republican Party entities and candidates nationwide. He speaks
fluent French. He was a delegate to the Republican Associates of
Chicago Club, 1977. He was on the Presidential Inaugural Celebra-
tion 1982 and 1983.
He enjoys skiing, tennis,racketball and has travelled extensively
throughout Eastern and Western Europe, Central America, Far East
and numerous African nations.
Mr. Canner has had over fifteen years experience in international
economics and financial issues at Treasury, the Department of
State, and the World Bank. Mr. Canner holds a M.A. and Ph.D. in
Economics from Clark University in Massachusetts. Prior to
joining the Treasury in 1966 he taught at Clark, Worcester Poly
Tech and Northeastern Universities. He is presently the Director
of Treasury's Office of East-West Policy.
Mark Cannon is the Administrative Assistant to the Chief
Justice of the Su reme Court. He is the first individual
to hold t e o ice.
Dr. Cannon received his B.A. in policical science from the
University of Utah. He earned an M.A., M.P.A. and Ph.D.
from Harvard University in the related fields of political
economy, government and public administration.
In 1956, Dr. Cannon joined the staff of Congressman Henry
Aldous Dixon as Administrative Assistant. He served in
this position until 1960. From 1961 to 1963, he was
legislative assistant in Utah for Senator Wallace F. Bennett.
He also served as the chairman of the Political Science
Department of Brigham Young University from 1961 to 1964.
Joining the Institute of Public Administration in 1964, Dr.
Cannon served as Director of the Venezuelan Urban Develop-
ment Program and also as Director of International Programs.
From 1968 to 1972, Dr. Cannon was Director of the Institute.
Dr. Cannon was the first non-lawyer to be admitted to the
American Bar Association in the new Judicial Association
Program. He is a member of the National Academy of Public
Administration and the Inter-American Advisory Council to
the U.S. Department of State.
He has published widely in the fields related to public
policy, institutional and administrative innovation.
DAVID DURENBERGER (continued)
(Subcommittees on Legislation and
the Rights of Americans -- he is
Chairman; Subcomittee on Budget)
He is also a member of the Senate Republican Committee on Com-
mittees, of the Senate Steel Caucus, of the Senate Export Caucus,
of the Concerned Senators for the Arts, of the Senate Rail Caucus
(he is Co-Chairman); of the Congressional Alcohol Fuels Caucus
(he is a Sponsor), of the Congressional Wood Energy Caucus and of
the Senate Drug Enforcement Caucus.
A native of St. Cloud, Minnesota, U.S. Senator David Durenberger
received his B.A. degree from St. John's University, Collegeville,
cum laude in political science, and his J.D. degree from the
University of Minnesota Law School.
From 1959 to 1966 he was in private practice with the law firm
of LeVander, Gillen, Miller & Durenberger in South St. Paul;
from 1967 to 1971 he was Executive Secretary to Governor Harold
LeVander; and from 1971 to 1978 he was Counsel for Legal &
Community Affairs, then Corporate Secretary and then Manager,
International Licensing Division of H.B. Fuller Company in
St. Paul.
Senator Durenberger was Lieutenant, U.S. Army Intelligence at
Fort Holabird, Maryland, 1956 and Captain, 407th Civil Affairs &
Military Government Company, Fort Snelling, 1957-1963.
He was elected in 1978 to serve the remaining four years of
the term to which Hubert H. Humphrey was elected in 1976;
and was elected by his colleagues to serve as president of the
eleven-member Republican freshman class.
The Senator from Minnesota is active in numerous community,
fraternal and professional organizations. He is a member of
the American, Minnesota and District Bar associations and
Corporate Counsel Association.
Senator Durenberger was reelected to the U.S. Senate in 1982 and
now serves on the following committees:
Environment and Public Works (Subcommittees on Toxic Substances
and Environmental Oversight -- he
is Chairman; Environmental Pollu-
tion; Water Resources)
Finance (Subcommittees on Health-he is
Chairman; on Energy and Agricultural
Taxation, on Social Security and
Income Maintenance Programs)
Governmental Affairs (Subcommittees on Intergovernmental
Relations -- he is Chairman; on
Energy, Nuclear Proliferation and
Government Processes; on Informa-
tion and Regulatory Affairs)
FRANCIS X. FEE
Francis X. Fee is currently the Assistant Comptroller General
for Operations.
Mr. Fee joined the General Accounting Office in 1963 after i graduating from Villanova University, with a B.S. eee variety
economics in 1963. From then until 1972, he performed
of assignments in the former Civil and Resources and Economics
Divisions. In 1972, he was selected to participate in the
President's Executive Interchange Program, working a full year
with the American Telephone and Telegraph Company in New York
City. In 1973, he was promoted to Assistant Regional Manager
in the Philadelphia Regional office and, in 1975, he was ap-
pointed Regional Manager of New York. He was appointed Director,
Field Operations Division in 1979.
Mr. Fee has received numerous awards for his outstanding con-
tributions. He received a cash award for superior performance
in 1968, an outstanding performance rating and the Career De-
velopment Award in 1972, a Special Education Award in 1973, and
an outstanding performance rating and the Distinguished service
Award in 1978. In February, 1981, he was presented GAO's Meri-
torious Executive Award.
Effective October 1, 1982, Mr. Fee was appointed to the position
of Assistant Comptroller General for Operations responsible for
the day-to-day management of the technical and administrative
activities of the General Accounting Office. In this capacity,
he is responsible for the coordination of work between the
various GAO staff and the assessment of office organization to
accomplish the Agency's mission.
Mr. Fitzgerald received his B.A. from Holy Cross College and his
law degree from Yale Law School.
He served four years with the Navy's Judge Advocate General's
Corps, including duties with cruiser/destroyer forces in Viet
Nam.
Mr. Fitzgerald was appointed Assistant U.S. Attorney in the
District of Columbia and served in that capacity for five years.
In 1975 he joined the Nuclear Regulatory commission in its
General Counsel's office and his present position is Assistant
General Counsel.
In 1982 the Commission asked Mr. Fitzgerald to create and be the
first manager of a new office of Investigations -- and he has
just completed that assignment.
Mr. Fitzgerald is the recipient of the Commission's Meritorious
Service Award and the SES Performance Award.
Nancy M. Gordon is currently Assistant Director for Human Re-
sources and Community Development of the Congressional Budget
Of fice (CBO). The BO is a nonpartisan organization mandated
to provide the Congress with budget-related information and
analyses of alternative policies. Dr. Gordon's division is
responible for preparing reports and testimony for the Congress
in areas such as employment, health, social security, and com-
munity development.
Before coming to the CBO she worked for Sarah Weddington, Assis-
tant to the President, first as Executive Director of President
Carter's Interdepartmental Task Force on Women and then as a
Senior Adviser. Prior to that, she was a Senior Research
Associate at the Urban Institute. Her research there focused
on the treatment of women under the Social Security and private
pension systems, the marriage penalty in the federal personal
income tax system, and the payment of alimony and child support
by absent parents. Dr. Gordon has published extensively on
federal policy and employment issues.
In addition, Dr. Gordon was a Brookings Economic Policy Fellow
at the Department of Labor and an Assistant Professor at the
Graduate School of Industrial Administration of Carnegie-Mellon
University. She has acted as a consultant and expert witness
in legal proceedings on sex discrimination in wages and served
on the Board of Directors of Worldwide Assurance for Employees
of Public Agencies (1982-present) and of the Public Interest
Economics Foundation (1978-1979).
Dr. Gordon received her Bachelor's Degree in Economics from
the University of California at Berkeley in 1964 and her Doc-
torate in Economics from Stanford University in 1970. While
attending Stanford, she was awarded a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship,
an IBM Fellowship, and a Stanford-Wilson Dissertation Fellowship.
Con resswoman Katie Hall of Gary, Indiana won a special election
on November 2, 1982 to represent the 1st Congressional District
of Indiana during the 97th Congress. On that date she was also
elected to represent the 1st District during the 98th Congress.
In winning the two elections, Congresswoman Hall became the first
Black woman to serve in the Indiana Congressional delegation.
The 1st Congressional District is located in the northwest region
of the state of Indiana and encompasses the northern most portions
of Lake and Porter counties and the northwest corner of LaPorte
county.
As a member of Congress, Mrs. Hall has been selected to serve
on two important committees, Public Works and Transportation, and
Post Office and Civil Service. Her subcommittee assignments are
Economic Development, Aviation, Public Works and Grounds (under
the Public Works Committee) and Postal Operations and Services
and Civil Service (under the Post Office Committee).
Along with her regular full-time duties, Mrs. Hall is an active
member of the Steel Caucus, the Northeast/Midwest Coalition, the
Congressional Black Caucus and the Congressional Caucus for Women's
Issues.
Prior to her election to Congress, Mrs. Hall served as an Indiana
State Representative for one term and as a State Senator between
1976 and 1982. During her terms in the General Assembly, she
sponsored some of Indiana's milestone legislation on Crime Victim
Compensation and Rape Victim Assistance.
Mrs. Hall is a former educator in the Gary public school system.
She received her S.S. degree from Mississippi Valley State University
and an M.S. degree from Indiana University. She has also taken
advanced educational studies at Indiana University Northwest.
Mrs. Hall has enjoyed a very active political career. Some of
her previous positions include Vice Chairperson of the Lake County
Democratic Organization, Secretary of the Indiana State Democratic
Central Committee, Chairperson of the 1980 Indiana Democratic
State Convention, and Vice Chairperson for the Gary Housing
Authority's Board of Commissioners.
Additionally, Mrs. Hall is a member of the N.A.A.C.P., the National
Council of Negro Women, the American Association of University
Women, and the Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority. Mrs. Hall is also active
in several professional organizations including the Indiana State
Teachers Association, the National Education Association, the American
Federation of Teachers (Local M4), the Gary Classroom Teachers
Association, the Gary Council for the Social Studies, and the Phi Delta
Kappa Educational Sorority.
KATIE HALL (continu*d
Married for 25 years, Mrs. hail is the mother of two daughters,
Jacqueline and Junifer, and the guardian of one niece, Michelle.
Her husband is a principle in the Gary public schools system and
teaches at Indiana University Northwest (IUN). Her daughters also
received advanced degrees from IUN.
Mrs. Hall is a member of the Van Buren Baptist Church, and serves on
the Senior Usher Board, and the Male Chorus Boosters.
Katie Beatrice Green Hall was born in Mound Bayou, Mississippi
on April 3, 1938. She is the recipient of many awards for contri-
butions to politics, education, religious and civic concerns. She
is also listed in Who's Who in the Midwest and Who's Who in Black
America.
The President on November 5, 1981 appointed James E. Jenkins
to be Deputy Counsellor to the President.
Since 1975, Mr. Jenkins has been Executive Vice President and
Co-Founder of Mark Briggs and Associates, Inc., a local govern-
ment and economic development consulting firm headquartered in
Sacramento, California. He was Secretary of Health and Welfare,
State of California, in 1974-75. He served concurrently as a
member of the Governor's Cabinet and was responsible for super-
visory authority over the Department of Health, Department of
Benefit Payments (Welfare), Department of Corrections, Youth
Authority, Rehabilitation, Employment and Office of Aging.
In 1971-74, he was Assistant to the Governor and Director of
Public Affairs, State of California, with responsibility for
all state-federal relations. He was Deputy Director of Finance,
State of California, in 1969-71.
Previously, in 1966-69, Mr. Jenkins was Washington Representa-
tive for the City of San Diego, California. He served in the
United States Navy as Director of Public Affairs, 11th Naval
District, in 1964-66. In 1959-64, he was Public Affairs Assis-
tant to four Secretaries of the Navy.
Mr. Jenkins attended the United States Merchant Marine Academy
(Class of 1944); Armed Forces Information School (1946-47);
and Naval War College (1957-58). He resides in Carmichael,
California; he is 58.
Elliot Kline is Dean and Professor of the School of Business
and Public Administration at the University of the Pacific,
a position TFe-E-a-S-R-el-CT since 1977. Dr. Kline holds a .A.,
M.P.A. and Ph.D degrees from the University of Colorado.
His Ph.D. is in the field of public administration/political
science. Prior to joining the the administration and faculty
of the University of the Pacific, Dr. Kline taught at Drake
University, the University of Denver and Taxas A & M. At
Drake University, he was also the Director of the Institute
of Public Affairs and Administration.
Dr. Kline is an active member of the American Society for
Public Administration. Among his activities, he has been
Chairman of its Committee on Government Relations with
Business and Industry. He is also the author of numerous
professional papers, monographs and articles in the area of
public policy.
A native of Baltimore, Mr. Liberatore received his B.S. at
the Georgetown University School of Foreign Service.
He was associated during 1972-1975 with the Chase Manhattan
Bank as Assistant Treasurer, then went to Jamaica with Chase
Merchant Bankers as manager of Credit and Marketing.
After four years in Jamaica, Mr. Liberatore in 1979 joined
the staff of Senator Floyd Haskell of Colorado as
Legislative Director.
Two years later, in 1981, he was appointed as a Professional
Staff Member on the Staff of the Senate Democratic Policy
Committee.
Mr. Liberatore was then elevated to his current position as
the Staff Director of the Senate Democratic Policy
Committee.
Brigadier General Anthony Lukeman is the Director, Manpower Plans
and Policy Division, Headquarters Marine Corps, Washington, D. C.
He was born in Jamaica, New York. Upon graduation from Dart-
mouth College, where he earned a B.A. degree in Government in
June 1954, he was commissioned a second lieutenant in the Marine
Corps. He also holds a master's degree in Business Administra-
tion from George Washington University, (1963).
Following completion of The Basic School, Quantico, Va., he joined
the 2nd Marine Division at Camp Lejeune, N. C., where he served
initially as a platoon leader, and later, rifle company executive
officer, and rifle company commander in the 3rd Batallion, 8th
Marines.
Subsequent duty as a company grade officer included a tour at the
Marine Corps Recruit Depot, Parris Island, S. C., as a series of-
ficer (April 1956-October 1958) and supply tours on Okinawa and
Camp Lejeune (October 1958-May 1962).
He participated in the Advanced Degree Program prior to being
transferred in June 1963 to Camp H. M. Smith, Hawaii, serving for
three years in financial management assignments. While there, he
was promoted to major in September 1965.
His first tour in Vietnam came in July 1966, when he served with
the 1st Batallion, 3rd Marines, and Headquarters, 3rd Marine Divi-
sion.
Returning to the United States in September 1967, he reported to
Headquarters, Marine Corps, Washington, D. C. where he served as
an Analyst in the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for
Manpower and Reserve Affairs. During this assignment he was pro-
moted to lieutenant colonel in July 1969.
Transferred to Quantico, he completed the Command and Staff College.
Following graduation in June 1971, he reported to the 1st Marine
Division, Camp Pendleton, California, where he commanded the 2nd
Battalion, 1st Marines, and subsequently served as the Assistant
G-1 of the division.
Continuing his professional education, he attended the National
War College, in Washington, D. C., from July 1973 to July 1974.
BRIGADIER GENERAL ANTHONY LUKEMAN, (continued)
General Lukeman then served as the Liaison officer to the Viet-
namese Marine Corps from the Defense Attache Office, Saigon, and
participated in planning and executing the evacuation of U.S. and
Vietnamese citizens from Saigon and Vung Tau during April 1975.
Ordered back to Headquarters Marine Corps, he served for three
years in the Requirements and Programs Division. He was promoted
to colonel in July 1976 while assigned at Headquarters.
From June 1978 until August 1979, General Lukeman commanded the
5th Marines, then was assigned as the Chief of Staff of the 1st
Marine Division. While serving in this capacity, he was selected
in February 1980 for promotion to brigadier general. He was
advanced to that grade on April 21, 1980 and assigned duty as
Deputy Fiscal Director of the Marine Corps, ueadnu arters Marine
Corps in April, 1930. He then served in this capacity until as-
suming his current assignment in July 1980.
His decorations and medals include the Bronze Star Medal with
Combat "V"; the Meritorious Service Medal with two gold stars in
lieu of a second and third awards; and the Joint Service Commenda-
tion Medal.
Mr. Lovell is currently a Guest Scholar in the Economic Studies
Program of the Brookings Institution, joining Brookings on
March 1, 1983.
Prior to joining Brookings, Mr. Lovell served as the nation's
seventeenth Under Secretary of Labor beginning on September 29,
1981.
As the second-ranking official in the U.S. Department of Labor,
Lovell was responsible for helping to administer a wide range
of laws and programs to protect and improve the welfare of
American workers.
Lovell had previously been President of the Rubber Manufacturers
Association since March 1973. The association, with headquarters
in Washington, D. C., is the national trade association of the
tire and rubber industry.
Lovell served in the Nixon Administration as Assistant Secretary
of Labor for Manpower from 1970 to 1973. Before being named by
President Nixon to the sub-Cabinet post, he served as Deputy
Assistant Secretary for Manpower and Manpower Administrator from
1969 to 1970.
He was appointed by President Ford to the National Advisory Council
on Vocational Education and served until 1979. He was a member
of the National Commission for Manpower Policy from March 1975
until August 1979.
Donald F. McHenry served as U.S. Permanent Representative to
the United Nations from September 1979 until January 20, 1981.
As chief United States representative to the United Nations,
he also served as a member of President Carter's Cabinet. At
the time of his appointment, Ambassador McHenry was the U.S.
Deputy Representative to the U.N. Security Council, a position
to which he was appointed in March 1977.
Ambassador McHenry is currently University Research Professor
of Diplomacy and International Affairs at Georgetown University
and president of International Relations Consultants, Inc. He
is also a Trustee of the Brookings Institution.
Ambassador McHenry has studied, taught and worked primarily in
the fields of foreign policy and international law and organiza-
tions. He joined the U.S. Department of State in 1963 and ser-
ved eight years in various positions related to U.S. foreign
policy. In 1966 he received the Department's Superior Honor
Award. In 1971, while on leave from the Department, he was a
Guest Scholar at the Brookings Institution, Washington, D.C.
and an International Affairs Fellow of the Council on Foreign
Relations, New York. In 1973, after leaving the State Department,
he joined the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in
Washington, D.C. as Director of Humanitarian Policy Studies.
In 1976 he served as a member of President Carter's transition
staff at the State Department before joining the U.S. Mission
to the U.N.
During his career, Ambassador McHenry represented the United
States in a number of international fora and as the U.S. Re-
presentative on the U.N. Western Five Contact Group, he was the
chief U.S. negotiator on the question of Namibia.
Ambassador McHenry has taught at Howard and American Universi-
ties and the Georgetown University School of Foreign Service,
all in Washington, D. C. He is the author of Micronesia: Trust
Betrayed (Carnegie Endowment, 1975) and numerous articles pub-
lished in professional journals and newspapers.
Ambassador McHenry is a Director of the International Paper Com-
pany, the Coca-Cola Company, The First National Bank of Boston
and its holding company the First National Boston Corporation,
the SmithKline Beckman Corporation, the Institute for Interna-
tional Economics and The American Ditchley Foundation. He
serves as a trustee of Mount Holyoke College, The Ford Founda-
tion and the Phelps-Stokes Fund and as a Governor of the American
Stock Exchange. He is a member of the Council on Foreign Re-
lations and of the Editorial Board of Foreign Policy Magazine.
Ambassador McHenry was born in St. Louis, Missouri in 1936.
He grew up in East St. Louis, Illinois. He graduated in 1957
from Illinois State University and two years later received a
Master's Degree from Southern Illinois University. He has done
post-graduate work at Georgetown University.
Mr. Mitchell has served in the Department of Health and Human
Services (formerly the Department of Health, Education, and
Welfare), for about sixteen years. During this period, he spent
approximately three years in the Office of Planning and Evalua-
tion, Office of Education. This was followed by an assignment
as Deputy Director, Office of Management, Planning and Techno-
logy, Office of the Secretary. He commenced his assignment as
Assistant Inspector General for Health Care and Systems Review,
in March 1977, concurrently with the establishment of the of-
fice of Inspector General. He was appointed by the Secretary
to the position of Senior Assistant Inspector General for Audit
and Systems in August 1979. On September 11, 1979, the Secre-
tary again appointed him to the position of Acting Deputy
Inspector General for the Office of Inspector General.
Mr. Mitchell has a Bachelor's Degree in Engineering from
Georgia Institute of Technology and a Master's Degree in
Management from The George Washington University.
Approved For Release 2007/11/01 : CIA-RDP85B01152R000200250034-4
Don Oberdorfer has been covering dip om tic nets for the Washington
Post since February, 1976. Prior to that, he was a White House
correspondent and columnist for The Post (1968-72) and Northwest
Asia correspondent, based in Tokyo (1972-75).
Oberdorfer is a native of Atlanta, Ga. He graduated from Prince-
ton University with a B.A. in Public and International Affairs
(1952) and served as a lieutenant in the U.S. Army in Korea. In
1955 he began his professional career as a reporter on The
Charlotte Observer, becoming that newspaper's Washington corres-
pondent in 1958.
In 1961-65, he was a Washington editor and contributor of The
Saturday Evening Post magazine. He was national affairs corres-
pondent for the Knight Newspapaer chain in 1965-68, during which
time he made several lengthy trips to Indochina and covered the
Vietnam war at home and abroad.
He is the author of a book, "Tet!" (Doubleday, 1971), a finalist
for the National Book Award in the year of its publication, a
poliitcal-military history of the decisive battle of the Vietnam
war.
He has won several awards for diplomatic reporting. In 1980, he
was awarded the Barnet Nover prize of the White House Correspon-
dents Association for his coverage of President Carter's diplo-
macy. In 1981, he won the Edwin M. Hood award for diplomatic
correspondence of the National Press, and in 1982 the Edward
Weintal prize for diplomatic reporting of Georgetown Universtity.
In the fall semester of 1977 and again in the fall semester of
1982, he was Ferris Professor of Journalism at Princeton Univer-
sity, during leaves of absence from The Post.
Charles "Chip" Pashayan was born and raised in Fresno, California.
He graduated from high school in 1959, Pomona College in 1963 and
Hastings Law School, University of California, in 1968. He holds
a masters degree from Oxford University in American and British
Constitutional Law, and is a member of the California State Bar
and the United States Supreme Court Bar.
Chip served for two years in the U.S. Army as a Captain assigned
to Strategic Intelligence at the Pentagon, one year as a special
assistant to the Department of Communications and Transportation,
and two years as Special Assistant to the General Counsel at HEW,
providing legal advice on matters of the Constitutional separation
of powers.
He was elected to the U.S. Congress on November 7, 1978, in his
first bid for public office, and was re-elected to a second term
on November 4, 1980 and a third term in 1982. His Committee assign-
ments are Interior and Insular Affairs and the Committee on Post
Office and Civil Service.
Bradley Patterson has been a Senior Staff Member of the Advanced
Study Program of The Brookings Institution since January 1, 1977.
He has been a Federal Career Executive for thirty-two years,
fourteen of which have been on the White House Staff.
Mr. Patterson was born in Wellesley, Massachusetts. He received
his Bachelor's and Master's Degrees from the University of Chicago,
taught at the Cranbrook School in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, and
joined the Department of State in 1945.
After nine years in the State Department, Mr. Patterson was
appointed the Assistant Cabinet Secretary at the White House
and served in that post from 1954 to 1961. He then was named
Executive Secretary of the Peace Corps (1961-1962), a National
Security Affairs Adviser to the Secretary of the Treasury (1962-
1966), Executive Director of the National Advisory Commission on
Selective Service (1966-1967), and Executive Director of the
National Advisory Council on Economic Opportunity (1967-1969).
He was a member of the Class of 1966 at the National War College.
In the Fall of 1969, Mr. Patterson rejoined the White House Staff
as the Executive Assistant to Leonard Garment, being closely
involved with civil rights and Indian affairs. In late 1974 he
was appointed Assistant Director of the Presidential Personnel
Office; later President Ford also designated him as his coordi-
nator for policies and programs affecting American Indians.
In 1960 Mr. Patterson received the Arthur S. Flemming Award as one
of the Ten Outstanding Young Men in Federal Service, and in 1975 he
was given a Special Citation by the Civil Service Commission.
Mr. Patterson is the President-Elect of the 17,000 member American
Society for Public Administration, the nationwide professional
organization of public administrators. He served previously as
Vice President, then President of ASPA's National Capital Area
Chapter, as Chair of ASPA's National Policy Issues Committee
and as a Member of ASPA's National Council.
In the fall of 1981 Mr. Patterson was elected to membership
in the National Academy of Public Administration.
Mr. Patterson is the author of a Special Paper of the American
Society for Public Administration entitled, The President's
Cabinet: Issues and Questions; of an article i tthe in-the
1978 issue of The Bureaucrat entitled, "White House Staff:
The Bashful Bureaucrac- - y"; and of an article about the Reagan
White House Staff in the December 1980 issue of The Washingtonian.
Mr. Potter came to the Interior Department from the Senate
Appropriations Committee where he was a professional staff member
for several years. Most of that time was spent working with the
Interior Subcommittee, although he also worked on the Transpor-
tation Subcommittee for a considerable period of time. Prior
to the initiation of his career on Capitol Hill, which began in
1975 as Chief Counsel to the Senate Post Office and Civil Service
Committee, Mr. Potter was engaged in the private practice of
law in Cheyenne, Wyoming. His practice in Wyoming emphasized water
law and administrative procedure.
Craig was born and spent his childhood in California and Illi-
nois, and for the twenty or so years prior to coming to Washington,
Wyoming was his home.
Craig entered on duty as the Department of the Interior in March
1981, as Special Assistant to the Assistant Secretary for Fish
and Wildlife and Parks.
On July 4, 1982, he was named Deputy Assistant Secretary for Fish
Wildlife and Parks.
Edwards G.Sanders was appointed Staff-Director-of the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee by Chairman Charles H. Percy in
January 1981. He works directly with the Chairman to set
Committee priorities and manages the members of the majority
staff.
Mr. Sanders began his career in government at the Office of
Managcenent and Budget in 1969. He held positions of
increasing responsibility and in 1980 was appointed
Associate Director for National Security and International
Affairs, becoming only the third career civil servant in
OMB's history to be appointed to a political-level position.
As Associate Director, Mr Sanders was responsible for OMB's
review of all defense, intelligence, and foreign affairs
programs.
He has served also as a special assistant to the Assistant
Secretary of the Treasury for International Affairs in
1972-1973 and was an economist with the Institute for
Defense Analyses in 1966-1969.
Mr. Sanders graduated from Pomona College in 1963, received
his Ph. D. in economics from Yale University in 1969, and
attended the Advanced Management Program at the Harvard
Business School in 1980. He has received OMB's Exceptional
Service Award and the National Civil Service League's Career
Service Award .
BS in Economics, 1956; Univ. of Pennsylvania
MS in Economics, 1959; Univ. of Pennsylvania
PhD in Business and Applied Economics; 1969 Univ. of Pennsylvania
Worked 15 years for Westinghouse Electric Corporation in a
progression of assignments of increasing responsibility: computer
programmer, systems analyst, corporate consultant, Manager of
Management Sciences, Director of Washington operations for the
Public Management Services group.
Joined the Department of Transportation in 1973. Since August 1981,
has been Executive Assistant to the Deputy Secretary, working on a
variety of assignments for the Deputy (or the Secretary), supporting
the Deputy in policy formulation and decisionmaking in selected
areas and representing him in executive meetings.
November 1973 to August 1981 - Worked for the Assistant Secretary
for Policy and international Affairs. As Director of the Office
of Industry Policy, supervised a professional staff focusing on
policy issues affecting the private sector, such as regulatory
reform, safety regulation, the problems of the auto industry, mari-
time policy, and the financial conditions of the companies in the
transportation sector. Served as Project Director and principal
author of the Department's January 1981 report on the U.S. auto
industry. Before that, as Director of the Office of Intermodal
Transportation, managed a professional staff doing policy ana'_yses
on energy issues, truck size and weight, intermodal matters, and the
auto industry.
Served one year as Acting Deputy Assistant Secretary for Policy and
International Affairs, primarily involved with the issues of regu-
latory reform, energy and the independent truckers' strike.
Received President's Meritorious Executive Award in 1980,
Secretary's Meritorious Achievement Awards (Silver) in 1978, 1979,
and 1981, Superior Performance Awards (Bronze) in 1976 and 1977.
Has authored or was contributing author to a number of papers and
Departmental reports, including: "Potential for Motor Vehicle Fuel
Economy improvement" (1974); "Statement of National Transportation
Policy" (1974); "Highway Safety Needs Report" (1976); "National
Transportation: Trends and Choices to the Year 2000" (1977); "Tne
U.S. Automobile Industry" (19811.
Bill Turnage graduated from Yale University in 1965, and
subsequently studied at Balliol College, Oxford--where he
used his free time for hiking in England and Scotland. Upon
returning to the United States he served for three years in
the State Department as an economic officer and as special
assistant to the director of the U.S. aid program for Latin
America. It was during that time that his interest in hiking
evolved into a concern for the environment, particularly
natural areas. He spent every spare moment in Shenadoah
National Park and the Great Smoky Mountains. As his interest
grew, he became involved with the Potomac Appalachian Trail
Club and returned to Yale to study at the graduate school of
Forestry and Environmental Studies.
While at Yale Bill served as Associate Chubb Fellow,
directing the prestigious Chubb Fellowship program, which
brings important public figures to Yale for extended visits
and seminars. One of the Chubb Fellows was Ansel Adams, the
eminent photographer and conservationist. In 1972 Bill
moved to Carmel, California, to become business manager and
environmental associate to Ansel Adams. Together they helped
establish the Big Sur Foundation to work for the protection
of California's spectacular Big Sur coastline, and were
instrumental in persuading President Ford to inaugurate a
billion dollar national parks improvement program in 1976.
They played a decisive role in stopping a management plan
for Yosemite National Park that would have greatly increased
development in the park's most spectacular areas. Adams and
Turnage collaborated on numerous environmental projects and
were particularly interested in national park and wilderness
issues. In his environmental work and through his
involvement in the establishment and development of groups
and institutions aimed at the promotion of photography as
fine art, Turnage gained invaluable experience in
administration, communications publishing, fundraising and
financial management.
Bill is 38 years old, and enjoys contemporary art, music,
ballet, medieval cathedrals and ski mountaineering as
leisure pursuits.
In August of 1978, the Governing Council of the Wilderness
Society selected Bill Turnage as the Society's seventh
Executive Director and he took office in November 1978. As
Executive Director his primary goals include the
articulation of a "land ethic" through the education of a
larger, broader and more committed wilderness preservation
and land protection constituency.
Ms. Walker received her B.A. with honors, at the University of
Northern Colorado (where she was a Boettcher Scholar and was
President of Associated Women and of Mortar Board), her Master
of Public Administration at the University of Colorado, and
she attended the Program for Senior Managersin Government at
Harvard.
After teaching in Junior High School in Colorado Springs, Ms.
Walker came to Washington in 1965 as a Management Analyst with
the Bureau of Labor Statistics of the Department of Labor.
In 1966 she transferred to the Agency for International De-
velopment of the Department of State as a Management Analyst,
then spent two years as an Administrative Officer with
the
De-
velopment and Resources Corporation in New York City.
She joined the Office of Management and Budget in 1970
as
a
Budget Preparation Specialist; in 1971 was promoted to
be
Assis-
tant Chief of the Budget Preparation Branch, and Chief
of
that
Branch in 1973.
In 1976 Ms. Walker was elevated to be the Deputy Associate
Director for Economics and Government in the Budget Review Divi-
sion, and in 1978 was appointed in her present position as Deputy
Associate Director of 0MB for Transportation, Commerce and
Housing.
The Roger W. Jones Award for Executive Leadership, 1983
-Presidential Rank of Meritorious Executive, Senior Executive
Service, 1980
-One of six to receive the Federal Woman's Award, 1976
The William A. Jump Meritorious Award for Exemplary Achievement in
Public Administration, 1972
-Member of the Advisory Panel on Public Management Education,
John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University,
1980-82
-Member of the Executive Resources Board, Office of Manage-
ment and Budget, 1979-81
-Member of Executive Women in Government
PETER E. WILKNISS
Dr. Wilkniss was born in Berlin, Germany and received his Master's
and Ph.D. degrees from the Technical University in Munich. He
was a Research Assistant at the Technical University during 1959-
1961 while he studied for the doctorate. As a U.S. citizen in
1961 he joined the staff of the U.S. Naval Ordnance Station as a
research chemist and radiological protection officer, moving up
in 1964 as Head of its Nuclear Chemistry Branch.
In 1966 he moved to the Naval Research Laboratory as Research
Oceanographer and in 1970 was elevated to be Head of the NRL's
Geochemistry Section, and in the next year also Head of its
Chemical Oceanography Branch. In 1974 he also became Chairman of
the NRL's Radiological Committee.
Dr. Wilkniss transferred to the National Science Foundation in
1975 as Manager of the Research Program in its National Center
for Atmospheric Research. In 1976 he became Manager of the In-
ternational phase of NSF's Ocean Drilling/Ocean Sediment Coring
Program and in 1980 was made Manager of the Ocean Drilling Pro-
ject Team. Later in 1980 he was elevated to be the Director of
the Division of Ocean Drilling Programs and then appointed as
Senior Science Associate in the Office of the Director of the
National Science Foundation.
His current position, as a member of the Senior Executive Ser-
vice, is De ut Assistant Director of the NSF for Scientific,
Technological and International Affairs.
During 1978-81 Dr. Wilkniss was a liaison member of the Marine
Board of the National Research Council/National Academy of Sciences;
in 1975-78 he was a member of the American Metereological Society's
Committee on Atmospheric Chemistry and Radioactivity and during
1975-76 was a member of the Interagency Committee on Atmospheric
Sciences.
Among his many awards and commendations has been the nomination
in 1973 for the National Civil Service League's Special Achieve-
ment Award.
Dr. Wilkniss is Currently a member of the American Geophysical
Union, of Sigma Xi and of the American Association for the Ad-
vancement of Science.
He is the author of fifty-three articles in recognized scientific
and technical journals and has made presentations in some 91
national and international conferences and workshops.