PERSONNEL
MRU functioned in stealth mode, unlike its West Coast equivalent, SRI;
in fact, its Founder/Director's name, Schleicher means Stealth
in fact, its Founder/Director's name, Schleicher means Stealth
SELECTED RESUMES OF PERSONNEL
MRU is pleased to be able to offer some of the leading scientists in the fields of biocommunications, bio-physics, big-cybernetics and related scientific disciplines. The individuals whose resumes follow were selected in order to show a broad base of complementary expertise.
CARL SCHLEICHER
Research and Development Director
Mr. Carl Schleicher is President and Research and Development Director of Mankind Research Unlimited, Inc. -a frontier of science research company located in Washington, D. C.
Mr. Schleicher has special qualifications and back-ground in the fields of biocybernetics, bionics, psychophysics, special sensor design and biocommunications research. This includes the design and application of devices used in the scientific evaluations of research in those advanced technology fields such as infrared radiation detectors, ultra-violet recorders, magnetometers, bio-feedback recorders, Lakhovsky wave oscillators, and human sensory measurement devices. In the course of this research, Mr. Schleicher has developed special software systems employing statistical analysis, -operation research, and mathematical programming to record, evaluate, and document biological effects of special environ-mental factors on plants, animals, and humans.
One of Mr. Schleicher's most recent works has been the design and development of a state of the art technological forecasting and assessment system for the valuing and selection of multi-million dollar R&D projects. Some of the methods used in this system included state-of-the-art software techniques such as interacting exploratory and normative forecasting subroutines, decision tables and optimization alogorithms.
A prolific writer, Mr. Schleicher has written many articles, manuals and reports (published and unpublished) which include the areas of statistical theory, war gaming simulations, systems engineering, biophysical effects, human Engineering and para-pyschology.
Mr. Schleicher studied electrical engineering at -Drexel Institute of Technology and graduated with a B.S. in Engineering from the U. S. Naval Academy. He received his M. A. from the University of Cologne in political economics and has also done graduate study at the University of Lund (Sweden) and the University of Bonn (Germany). Currently Mr. Schleicher is a Ph.D. candidate at American University in the field of Technology of Management with specialties in Operations Research, Management Information Systems and R & D Management.
JAMES C. ALLER Biomedical Engineer
Dr. Aller has had extensive experience in clinical engineering, biomedical research and has designed and developed advanced medical systems. His most current assignment has been as an Associate Professor in the Department of Clinical Engineering at George Washington University Medical Center. He has served as Lecturer on various biomedical engineering application areas which include: Hospital Information Systems for the Institute of Advanced Technology, Automated Data Processing (ADP) and Medicine at the Civil Service Commission, and Reliability for Tutorial on Multitesting at the International Health Evaluation Association. In addition, Dr. Aller has served as a consultant to the President's Advisory Council on Management Improvement (Health Study) and has organized and developed a course in "Clinical Engineering" at the George Washington University School of Engineering. Dr. Aller held the Chair of Physical Science in 1968 to 1970 while a Professor at the Naval War College and also served there as a member of the Advanced Technology Committee where he was responsible for the introduction of time-sharing computer support of curriculum objectives. During the period 1963 to 1967, he was a member of the Professional Staff of the Operations Evaluation Group at the Center for Naval Analyses of the University of Rochester. While a staff member, Dr. Aller was awarded a Fellowship in Medical Systems Development Laboratories by the U.S. Public Health Service.
Dr. Aller served for a period of twenty years (1942-1962) as a naval officer which included major assignments as Fleet Electronic Warfare Officer, Missile Range Director, Project Officer of Regulus II Missile, Head of Missile Guidance Division, Pt. Mugu (California), and as Project Officer and Test Pilot for the evaluation of optical aids to all weather landing at the Naval Test Center Patuxent River (Maryland).
Dr. Aller graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy with a B.S.E.E. in 1942 and subsequently received his M.A. and M.E.S. from Harvard University. In 1968, he was awarded the Doctor of Science degree from George Washington University. Dr. Aller is a Senior Member of the IEEE, the Society for Advanced Medical Systems, and various other professional scientific organizations. He is also Editorial Advisor to Biocharacterist and is listed in Who's Who in the Computing Field Aller, continued
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
Publications and Presentations
"Evaluation of Medical Systems," Engineering Research Foundation Conference, Deerfield, Massachusetts, 1969.
"Electronic Warfare Concept," Naval War College Review, May, 1970.
"Evaluation of Health Care Delivery Systems," University of l Virginia Colloquium speaker, June 1971.
"Medical Engineering" (article in press).
"Action Styles and Management Game Performance," Colloquiums of the University of Texas Business School, (in press).
"Data Reduction through Multidimensional Analysis," Transactions of Eascon 1971. "The Organization and Staffing of Evaluation Units in Limited Institutions," paper presented at XIX International Meeting of the Institute of Management Science, April 4, 1972, Houston, Texas - joint author
"The Use of Man-Machine Systems in Medical Decisions," presented at 1972 San Diego Biomedical Symposium, February 2-4, 1972, joint author
"A Proposal for Improvement in the Selection Process of Candidates for High Political Office by Use of New Medical Technology," presented at 1972 San Diego Biomedical Symposium, February 2-4, 1972, joint author .
"Automation et Acquisition De L' Information Medicale en fonction Du Diagnostic E1 Du Traitement, (fourth author). Presented at l Sixth World Congress of Cybernetic Medicine, Naples April 5-9, 1972 by R. P. Charland, M.D.
Action Styles and Management Game Performance An Exploratory Consideration." Naval War College Review, Vol XXIV, No. 10 June 1972 pp 65-82. (Third author). Aller, continued Co-Author
"Watch Out That Those Bits Don't Bite - A Case Study," Proceedings r of 23rd Annual Conference on Engineering in Medicine and Biology, L Washington, D.C., 1970.
"Systems Analysis of Operational Data from a Multiphasic Screening Center," Proceedings of the IEEE, Vol. 57, No. 11, November, 1969.
"Reliability of Multiphasic Screening Systems," in Proceedings of 21st Annual Conference on Engineering in Medicine and Biology, sponsored by IEEE, ISA, and ASME, Houston, Texas, November 18-21, Vol. 10, p. 2236, 1968.
"Introduction of Computer Techniques to Older Multitest Screening Groups," Proceedings of Third Joint Meeting Clinical Society and Commissioned Officers Assn., Public Health Service, San Francisco, March, 1968.
"Comment on 'chagas' Disease," IEEE Transaction of Bio-Medical Engineering, Vol. BME-15, No. 4, pp. 326-327, 1968.
Clinical Engineering in Health Service Delivery Multitest Facilities: A Model, presented before ASEE Annual Meeting, June 1971.
CHRISTOPHER BIRD Biocommunications Editor/Russian Translator
Mr. Bird's experience in biocommunications has largely been gained during research for a biography on the life and work t of the late biocommunications researcher Dr. Wilhelm Reich. This research has taken him into tangential fields such as bionics, psychophysics and psychology, where he has conducted investigations and reported the results in a series of technical papers. Additionally, Mr. Bird's linguistic skills, education and training have equipped him well for carrying out research in the biocommunications field. Mr. Bird has worked professionally as an interpreter and translator in the Russian and French languages. He learned the former by living with a family of white Russian emigres and the latter from two year's residence in France working with refugees and displaced persons. Mr. Bird studied Chinese for three years at Harvard and Yale and has a basic knowledge of Spanish, German and Serbo-Croatian.
After graduating Mr. Bird worked for a classified government agency. During this period he was stationed in Japan. He then served in the U.S. Army, specializing in psychological warfare, and prepared a course of study in that subject for the Divisional Staffs of the South Vietnamese army.
After his military service, Mr. Bird became the Washington representative of the Rand Development Corporation of Cleveland, Ohio, whose President, Dr. H. J. Rand, was one of the first to undertake private negotiations with the Soviet Union for the exchange and purchase of technological information. During this period, he attended the Pugwash meeting on Atomic, Chemical and Biological Warfare as an assistant to the international industrialist Cyrus Eaton. Next, Mr. Bird became editor of the Gallatin Annual of International Business. He later worked for Time magazine as a correspondent in Yugoslavia. After his return from Yugoslavia, he became a free-lance writer and biocommunications lI researcher. A selection of articles and lectures by Mr. Bird L followers
Mr. Bird received his B.A. in Biology from Harvard, where he also studied the histories of Russia, China and Southeast Asia, I in 1951. He completed the course work for a B.A. Anthropology at the University of Hawaii and passed the comprehensive exam-inations for a Ph.D. in Russian Area Studies at American | University in January 1967. He received a Certificate in Chinese Language from the Yale Institute of Far Eastern Languages in 1950. Bird, cont.
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
"From a Reporter's Notebook" (summary of situation in Yugoslavia). Problems of Communism, July-October
Lectures on Yugoslavia to Businessmen's Training Course at American University; School for Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University; American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies, Washington, D.C., 1969.
"Soviet Foreign Aid". Lecture, Carnegie Seminar on Technical Cooperative and California Institute of Technology Graduate Seminar on Soviet Foreign Policy, University of Southern California, December 1963.
"Scholarship and Propaganda" (part of a series: Russia in Africa). Problems of Communism, March- April, 1962. Reprinted in Le Contrat Social, Paris, July, 1962 as "L'Africanisme en URSS".
"Soviet Objectives in Africa" World Affairs Institute, University of Southern California Annual volume for 1961.
Lectures on "Russia and Africa" to Institute of World Affairs, E. Carolina College, 1961; American Association for - Advancement of Slavic Studies, Washington Chapter, 1961; Rand Corporation, Santa Monica, 1961.
"Soviet Ethnography: A Base for Applied Study of and Operations in Africa", (Analysis of Soviet writing on Africa). Human Organization, Fall of 1960.
Series of articles in Africa Special Report on Soviet research in Africa: "Soviet Ethnographic Research on Africa", October 1957. "Bibliography of Soviet Publications on Africa", October 1957. "Africa's Diverse Peoples Offer Openings for Soviet Agitation', November, 1957. "What Russia Reads about Africa", December 1957. "A Soviet Anthropologist Visits Ghana", March 1958. "Soviet Scholars Embark on Major Program of African Research", April 1958. "New Soviet Journal on Asia and Africa", August 1958. "Letters from Vietnam". Series of articles including interview with President Ngo Dinh Diem for Honolulu Advertiser (Editorial page).
Bird, cont.
Participant, Harvard International Seminar, summer 1957.
Lecture, Harvard Summer School Conference on Political Geography (Soviet Designs on Africa), summer 1957.
"Force for Freedom" (psychological warfare in the Philippines). American Mercury, 1956. .
Editor, "News from the Pacific", Anthropological Society of Hawaii, 1956-57. Translated and published a Russian novel, (Mnymye Velichiny, Chekhov Press, New York) which appeared as The Chains of Fear - Regnery, 1958, and ran in eight issues of Saturday Evening Post May-July, 1958.
In Partisan Review, 1961 Special Issue: "Dissonant Voices in Soviet Literature", translated "The Making of Asper" by A. Grin. Scientific translations for Academy of Sciences, et-al.
EDWIN BOYLE, JR Medical Researcher/Advanced Diagnostic Applications
Dr. Boyle has had over twenty years' experience as a medical researcher and is currently serving as the Director of Research at the Miami Heart Institute. Dr. Boyle's medical background includes assignments as a rotating intern at the Philadelphia General Hospital, Assistant Resident at Watts Hospital, Durham, North Carolina (Teaching Hospital of the University of North Carolina), and Resident at the University of Virginia Hospital in Charlottesville. He has also held a postdoctoral Fellow-ship at the National Heart Institute and was the Senior Clinical Investigator of the Metabolism section of that institution. Afterwards he became an established Investigator of the American Heart Association and the Director of the Lipid Metabolism Laboratory of the Medical College of South Carolina, where he was an Instructor in Medicine. He became an Associate in Medicine at the Medical College of South Carolina, and eventually Assistant Professor of Research-Medicine at that institution. In 1971, Dr. Boyle was appointed Clinical Voluntary Assistant Professor at the School of Medicine of the University of Miami in addition to his work at the Miami Heart Institute. Dr. Boyle has published or presented over fifty papers on aspects of lipids research and cardiovascular disease and has several others in preparation. He also lectured extensively on a wide variety of medical subjects. In his recent years Dr. Boyle has taken a special interest in researching the human psyche and its influence upon states of the physical body. Some of this research has included the study of gifted individuals who possess special sensory abilities and investigating such individuals by clinical methods employing hypnosis and EEGs, EKGs, myographs, plethysmographs and other laboratory apparatus. |
Dr. Boyle took his B.A. from the University of North Carolina in 1943, and his Certificate of Medicine in 1945. His M.D. is from the Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Dr. Boyle is a member of many Medical Societies, including the Aldous Huxley Foundation, the American Association for the |Advancement of Science, several councils of the American I Heart Association, the American Medical Writers Association and the American Board of Internal Medicine. He is also a member of the Medical Electronics and Data Society, the New Horizons "Psychic) Research Foundation, the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine, and the American Schizophrenia Association.
I DR. CHARLES R. BUFFLER I| Research Physicist 1 Dr. Buffler has over fifteen years' experience as a scientific researcher, primarily in the fields of magnetism and parapsychology. During and after a research assignment at Harvard, he conducted several experiments, which resulted in his "Spin Wave Analysis of Ferromagnetic Resonance" and other papers disseminated in the Journal of Applied Physics, the American Journal of Physics and various other scientific publications. Dr. Buffler's latest work is on the effects of weak or near zero magnetic fields on humans and on the theoretical aspects of microwave interactions with various materials.
Dr. Buffler has a long-standing interest in the field of parapsychology. He has assisted in and performed independent experiments on a possible biomagnetic explanation for dow-sing, and has investigated phenomena of general extrasensory perception and psychokinesis. Some of these experiments were conducted in Paris with the eminent ESP researcher, Professor Yves Rocard, Director of the Physics and Chemistry Laboratories of the Ecole Normale Superioure, University of Paris.
Dr. Buffler received his B.S. in Physics (1951) from the University of Texas, and his M.S. (1956) and Ph.D (1959) -from Harvard. He is a Senior Member of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers and a participating member of the IEEE Groups on "Microwave Theory and Techniques", "Magnetics", "Engineering in Medicine and Biology" and "System Science and Cybernetics". He is also a member of the American Society of Dowsers, Phi Beta Kappa, the Honorary physics society Sigma Pi Sigma and Sigma XI.
DR. JOHN CARSTOIU Biophysics Researcher
Though educated primarily as a mathematician, Dr. Carstoiu's recent research and experimental work has been principally in the biophysics and bionics fields. Some of this research has involved experiments with plasma radiation and waves, knownas the Priore treatment, which deals with the biophysical application of magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) in the treatment ofcancer and in developing immunology of living cells to sleeping sickness. Further research has included the study of the 85 biological effects (in terms of health status, accident rates, behavioral patterns, etc.) to humans and animals of variations in electromagnetic, magnetic and gravitational fields. For his work in these areas, Dr. Carstoiu was awarded in 1965 the prize, "Prix des Laboratories," by the French Academy of Sciences.
Dr. Carstoiu came to America in 1949 and became a member of the faculties of Johns Hopkins University and Indiana University in succession. Eve has since lectured at Columbia and North-Eastern University. He became a citizen in 1954. In 1955 he joined the aerospace industry, where he worked on the optimal trajectories of jet aircraft and missiles, the passive detection of fast-moving objects and the NIDAR effect and the C-layer.
In 1959 Dr. Carstoiu joined an electronics company where he conducted research in magneto-fluid dynamics. He was particularly concerned with the ASW problem, shock-wave propagation in the presence of a magnetic field and radio and magnetohydrodynamic wave interaction. Two years later he founded the corporation of which he has been President and Chief Scientist ever since. That company has conducted research on the earth's interior and its magnetism, the electrodynamic properties of sea water (with -possible applications to communication between and detection of submerged submarines), magnetic storms and auroras, electromagnetic phenomena, the dynamics of storms, atmospheric electricity, artificial meteors and many other topics.
Dr. Carstoiu received his B.S. in Mathematics from the University -of Bucharest, Romania, and a degree in Civil Aeronautical Engineering from the "Ecole Nationale Superieure de l'Aeronautique in Paris. He became a Doctor of Science in Mathematics at the University of Paris. Dr. Carstoiu has published extensively in the Journal of Rational Mechanics and Analysis, the Journal de and many others. Certain of his works are:
Carstoiu cont.
Articles in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science of the USA:
"Induced Electromagnetic Fields in the Earth", Vol. 45, p. 208, 1959.
"Hydromagnetic Waves in a Compressible Fluid Conductor", Vol. 46, p. 131-136, 1960.
"Note on Hydromagnetic Waves in a Compressible Fluid Conductor, Vol. 47, p. 891-898, 1961.
Magnetohydrodynamic Waves in a Constant Dipole Magnetic Field", Vol. 48, p. 990-996, 1962. This article was also published as NASA Technical Note D-1689, December 1962
''Note on Electric and Magnetic Polarization in Moving Media", Vol. 57, p. 1536-1541, 1967.
"Electrohydrodynamic Waves and Related Phenomena", Vol. 58, p. 870-875, 1967.
"Fundamental Equations of Electromagnetodynamics of Fluids: Various Consequences", Vol. 59, p. 326-331, 1968.
Some new aspects of Magnetohydrodynamic Phenomena" in Relativistic Fluid Mechanics and Magnetohvdrodynamics, New York: Academic Press, 1963.
"Tentative Synthesis of Electrohydrodynamic Phenomena in the Earth's Atmosphere--Theoretical Development" in Planetary Electrodynamics, Vol. 2, p. 277-289, ed. Samuel C. Coroniti and J. Hughes. New York, Gordon and Breach, 1969.
Dr. Carstoiu's theories on electrohydrodynamics have also been discussed in "Electricity and Weather Modification" by Seymour Tilson in IEEE Spectrum, p. 39-40 April, 1969. STANLEY R. DEAN Biocommunications Researcher/Clinical Psychiatrist
Dr. Dean has had extensive experience in clinical psychiatry and research, including research in biocommunications. His general internship was at Hurley Hospital, Flint, Michigan, In 1935. He went on to take his psychiatric training at Taunton State Hospital, Massachusetts; Boston Psychopathic Hospital, Massachusetts; Fairfield State Hospital, Connecticut; and Montefiore Hospital, New York. Dr. Dean was in clinical practice in psychiatry from 1940 to 1965. In addition, he has been a member of the American Psychiatric Association Task Force on Transcultural Psychiatry, an Executive counselor for the American Association of Social Psychiatry, and an Executive counselor for the International Federation for Hygiene, Preventive Medicine and Social Medicine. He has also been Vice-President of the Psychiatric Council of the Pan American Medical Association, Founder and Vice-President of the Research in Schizophrenia Endowment (RISE), co-founder of the Stanley R. Dean International Award for Research in Schizophrenia and Staff Psychiatrist Emeritus at Stamford Hospital and St. Joseph's Hospital, both of Stamford, Connecticut. Dr. Dean is at present a Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville. He is also the Regional Psychiatric Consultant for the Erickson Education Foundation and the Medical consultant for the National Study of the Medical Importance of Wine, conducted by the California Wine Institute. Dr. Dean has published about fifty articles, of which those that pertain to biocommunications are listed.
Dr. Dean graduated from the University of Michigan Medical School (Cum Laude) in 1934. He is a Diplomate of the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology and a Fellow of the American College of Psychiatrists. In addition, he is a member of Phi Kappa Phi and Alpha Omega Alpha. Dr. Dean is a Fellow of: the American Society for Psychical Research, the American Psychiatric Association, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, American Medical Authors, and the Royal Society of Medicine (Great Britain). Stanley R. Dean, (cont.)
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY 'Beyond the Unconscious: The Ultraconscious". Psychologia, Vol. 8, No. 3:145-50, September 1965.
"Beyond the Unconscious: The Ultraconscious". American Journal of Psychiatry, Vol. 122, No. 4:471 October 1965.
The Ultraconscious" American Journal of Psychiatry Vol. 122
"Is There an Ultraconscious Beyond the Unconscious?" Canadian Psychiatric Association Journal, Vol. 15, No. 1:57-62
"The Ultraconscious Mind". Behavioral Neuropsychiatry, Vol. 2 ' No. 1-2:32-36, April-May 1970.
"Metapsychiatry and the Ultraconscious". Published - American Journal of Psychiatry, Vol. 128 No 5 (Nov) 1971. Reprinted in Congressional Record, Vol.117 No 176 (Nov 17)
SKAIDRITE MALIKS FALLAH Foreign Area Analyst and Parapsychology Researcher
Mrs. Fallah has had wide experience as a foreign area analyst with primary emphasis on Eastern Europe. She has also conducted independent research in parapsychology. Her particular fields are international law, social and political developments and conflicts in less developed countries, revolutionary movements and organizations and minority groups and subcultures within a society. She has written many published and unpublished technical research reports, one of which, "Research Notes on Current Activities in Selective Fields of- Parapsychology', is of particular interest due to the nature of the task proposed in this paper. This document was published at the Cultural Information Analysis Center (CINFAC) in May 1969 and was prepared for the use of the Department of the Army, U.S. Army Combat Development Command.
Mrs. Fallah was one of the six U.S. members selected by the New York Board of Education to participate in a two-month social studies workshop in Israel. While a member of the Foreign Areas Studies Division's (FASD) multi-disciplinary team which prepared handbooks on Latin America; she conducted research for and wrote the chapters on economic development and conditions in Venezuela and Peru. Upon completion of that assignment, she worked as a Senior Research Associate in the Cultural Information Analysis Center (CINFAC), initially as a member of the Asia/Pacific branch and later in the Func-tional Studies branch. In this capacity Mrs. Fallah con-ducted research on a great variety of subjects pertaining to the governments and peoples of Asia as well as selected domestic problems involving racial minority groups. Note: CINFAC is a division of the Center for Research in Social Systems (CRESS) which at that time was under contract to the U.S. Army Research Office for foreign area support services and special international studies.
Mrs. Fallah received her B.A. in International Relations, with emphasis on Political Science and Sociology, from Hunter College in 1960. She received her M.A. in International Relations (Latin American Area Studies) from Johns Hopkins University in 1962.
Mrs. Fallah has traveled extensively and is particularly familiar with Eastern Europe, having been raised and educated in the Baltic state of Latvia prior to the Soviet take-over in1945. She has native fluency in several foreign languages, particularly those of Eastern Europe.
Fallah, cont.
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
Publications
Research Notes on Hue as a Traditional City of Vietnam. SORO/CRESS, 1964.
A Selected Bibliography on Urban Insurgency and Urban Un-rest In Latln Amerlca and Other Areas. CRESS 1966.
Customs and Taboos of Selected Tribes Residing along the Western Border of the Republic of Vietnam. CRESS 1967.
Co-author
A Study of Rear Area Security Measures, "China 1937-1945" SORO/CRESS, 1965.
Research Notes on the Vietnamese Village Council. SORO/CRESS, 1965.
U.S. Army Area Handbook for Venezuela, SORO/FAS, 1966.
Anotated Bibliography on Internal Defense. CRESS,1968. Unpublished Reports
"Notes on the Social, Economic and Political Situation in Thailand", 1967.
"Research Notes on Current Activities in Selective Fields of Parapsychology", CRESS, 1969.
"Black Muslims; Problems of Custody and Incarceration", - CRESS, 1969.
"Training of Military Advisors: An Annotated Bibliography and Selected Readings", CRESS, 1969. Co-author
"Significant Developments in the Republic o' Korea, 1955-1968", CRESS, 1968.
"Political, Economic, Social, Psychological and Military Factors in Indonesia, Japan, India, Thailand and Malaysia", CRESS, 1968.
-PAUL E. T. J ENSEN
Engineering Specialist and Technical Analyst/Writer
Mr. Jensen is an Engineering Specialist doing intelligence research and analysis. For the past ten years he has studied Eurasian Communist and Free World research and technology programs. He has been especially interested in new commun-ication techniques, combat surveillance systems, and long range technological forecasts relating to these programs. The results of his studies have been published in over 30 classified publications for agencies of the Department of Defense. Recently he has been reviewing East European scientific and technical journals covering research neurology, psychiatry, biophysics, related electronic measurement techniques, and brain research. At present he is preparing an article on the methodology of research in telepathic communication and related fields.
Mr. Jensen has managed the air defense task of the Army's "Electronic Warfare 1975" Study and also the Electromagnetic Threat to Armv-S5. Since 1964 he has participated in threat and vulnerability studies for the Army. In June 1966 he was made project supervisor for the studies being done for the US Army Security Agency Combat Developments Activity. Earlier in 1966 he headed an analysis project developing a Threat to Army-75.
Mr. Jensen was a company representative at the US Army Electronic Proving Ground, Fort Huachuca, Arizona, during 1959 and 1960. From 1960 to 1964, he was supervisor of engineering writing and, later, manager of the R&D Publi-cations Department. During World War II and the Korean Conflict, he served in the United States Navy and the United States Marine Corps.
Mr. Jensen holds a B.S. degree in Physics (1947) and a B.B.A. in Marketing (1949) from Tulane University. He has also done graduate work in mathematics at San Jose State College, and psychology studies at the University of Virginia.
NORMAN KOROBOW
Psychology Researcher
Mr. Korobow brings to the company a total of over 25 years experience in psychological research and computer applications. His work has been in the areas of human factors; research instrumentation in optics, electronics, physiological psycho-logy and communications; and computer applications to research.
As part of Mr. Korobow's previous experience, he was head of an interdisciplinary team for the solution of Information Control system problems. This work included perceptual and bandwith requirement analysis, and the setting of psychological require-ments for Aerospace training equipment design. Mr. Korobow also preformed neuro-psychiatric research in the areas of personality behavior under stress, personality and chemotherapy, research design and implementation, and instrumentation development. He directed research on accident related variables, and studied methods for the determination of trainability of selected mili-tary personnel in advanced electronic techniques.
Earlier, Mr. Korobow conducted research on Military Leadership at the U.S.M.A. at West Point. This work involved the analysis of identifiable personality variables associated with graded i leadership behavior, the development of new training techniques, | and motion picture production. He has also studied man-machine capability in the area of sensorimotor performance under stress, and the human factors in system design for avionics.
Mr. Korobow received his B.A. degree in psychology and M.A. in psychology and biology from Brooklyn College, City University of New York. He later earned a Ph.D. in psychology from New York University. He has had extensive teaching experience and has taught courses in general psychology, normal personality, personnel psychology, experimental psychology, and industrial psychology. He is a member of several professional organizations, including the Eastern Psychological Association, the New York I State Psychological Association, arid the American Psychological Association. Korobow is a certified psychologist in New York State.
Some of Mr. Korobow's many scholarly publications include:
"Errors in Perception". M.A. Thesis, Brooklyn College Library, 1946.
"Personality and Audiogenic Stress". Ph.D. Thesis, 1953. "Reactions to Stress; a reflection of personality trait organization". Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology 51:464-8, 1955.
Korobow, cont.
How to Get More out of Training Aids". Technical Publication SDC 383 7-1 Special Devices Center, Office of Naval Research.
"A Study of the Utilization of Four Representative Training Devices". Technical Publication SDC 383 - 7-2 Special Devices Center, Office of Naval Research, Project 20-A-1OA, l G 1932.
"1970 Human Factors Data for ILAAS". GK 2910-0057, Bureau of Naval Weapons, Dept. of the Navy (SECRET), November 1967.
"Human Factors Analytical Study of ILAAS 1967". GH 2910-0004- 041 Bureau of Naval Weapons, Dept. of Navy (Research on instrument legibility under high altitude high ambient light conditions. Development of a new technique for pilot unburdened weapon delivery), 1964.
"Human Factors Analytical Study for ILAAS 1970", GK 2910-0004-042 Bureau of Naval Weapons, Dept. of Navy (SECRET), (Perceptual and motor limitations on man as controller and decision maker in 1967 aircraft).
RICHARD B. LA TONDRE
Senior Technical Analyst for Support Services
Mr. La Tondre has served as the SIGINT/Electronics Warfare Officer, Advanced Requirements Branch, Marine Corps Development Center, Quantico, Virginia; the Communications Officer for the Chief, Department of Defense Special Representative in Vietnam; I and an Intelligence Research Analyst for the National Security I Agency. He has also received extensive formal training in the fields of combat intelligence, guerrilla warfare, photomagery, hydrography, special communications, electronic warfare, and analytical analysis.
My. La Tondre is currently employed as project engineer for the Enemy Electromagnetic Threat (CD-107-EW), a study being conducted for a U.S. Government Agency. He is primarily responsible for the planning and implementation of the electronic Warfare effectiveness analysis effort as related to the update and publication of the Enemy Electromagnetic Threat- 1975. He has participated in various electronic threat analysis L projects and studies, including the "Enemy Electromagnetic i Threat to Friendly Tactical Aircraft in South Vietnam.
La Tondre has also been an electronics warfare consultant performing special ED analysis and feasibility studies for private industry, including Triangle Research Corporation, DIDEEN, the Associated Designers, Inc., and TECHTRAN Corporation.
Mr. La Tondre attended Jackson College, Honolulu, Long Beach, City College, Long Beach State College, and George Washington University. He also studied Chinese Mandarin at the U.S. Army Language School, Presidio of Monterey and Data Processing at the National Security Agency.
JOHN E. LAURANCE Astro - and Biophysics Scientist
Mr. Laurance is a diversified scientist and regis-tered professional engineer with an advanced degree and numerous pre-doctorate courses covering astro-physics, nuclear physics, electronics, physical chemistry, engineering and medical subjects. He has had extensive experience in conducting and directing scientific research in multi-disciplinary fields and especially those involving energy systems. In addition, he has a broad supplemental background in conducting investi-gations and performing research related to paranormal fields and in developing electronic sensor systems derived through such research.
A pioneer in space research, Mr. Laurance has served on advisory committees during the initial establishment of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and has been space program manager for several major corporations in the aeronautics and space industry. In the latter capacity, as manager of the Astro-Electronics Division (Engineering Programs Development and Programs Analysis), he was responsible for program planning for advanced space vehicle systems. Prior to this Laurance coordinated the support of basic research programs for the Office of Naval Research in Washington, D.C. and in the eleven western states where he served as acting chief scientist. In 1969 Mr. Laurance became Vice President and General Manager of a new corporation established to pro-vide new technologies and scientific procedures to Latin American and other developing countries.
Mr. Laurance has been involved in the study of extra sensory perception and other paranormal subjects since 1930. Subsequent to 1963 he has made several trips to Latin American countries to investigate these subjects, particularly in the area of bioenergetic activities including medical healing. In 1968, as an Associate of '`Essentia Research Associates" he accompanied a group of U.S. medical doctors to Brazil to I investigate the works of the widely acclaimed medical healer Arigo. While there, individuals in this group which were referred to as "The Medical Commission on Arigo" also looked into additional subjects such as heart transplants and paranormal activity demonstrations.
Mr. Laurance was instrumental in the establishment in 1968 of "Life Energies Research, Inc.", a non-profit organi-zation which conducts scientific investigations of unusual and little known properties of human energy systems. In connection with this research, he created electronic measuring equipment and conducted research on radiations emanating from human energy sources. He now serves on the Research Committee and is a member of the Board of Directors of Life Energies Research.
Laurance (cont.) Mr. Laurance received his B.S. at Whittier College, M.S. at the University of Southern California and did graduate work at the University of California. He is a member o f numerous professional and scientific societies and is listed in professional directories including "American Men Science" and "Who's Who in the East".
MRU is pleased to be able to offer some of the leading scientists in the fields of biocommunications, bio-physics, big-cybernetics and related scientific disciplines. The individuals whose resumes follow were selected in order to show a broad base of complementary expertise.
CARL SCHLEICHER
Research and Development Director
Mr. Carl Schleicher is President and Research and Development Director of Mankind Research Unlimited, Inc. -a frontier of science research company located in Washington, D. C.
Mr. Schleicher has special qualifications and back-ground in the fields of biocybernetics, bionics, psychophysics, special sensor design and biocommunications research. This includes the design and application of devices used in the scientific evaluations of research in those advanced technology fields such as infrared radiation detectors, ultra-violet recorders, magnetometers, bio-feedback recorders, Lakhovsky wave oscillators, and human sensory measurement devices. In the course of this research, Mr. Schleicher has developed special software systems employing statistical analysis, -operation research, and mathematical programming to record, evaluate, and document biological effects of special environ-mental factors on plants, animals, and humans.
One of Mr. Schleicher's most recent works has been the design and development of a state of the art technological forecasting and assessment system for the valuing and selection of multi-million dollar R&D projects. Some of the methods used in this system included state-of-the-art software techniques such as interacting exploratory and normative forecasting subroutines, decision tables and optimization alogorithms.
A prolific writer, Mr. Schleicher has written many articles, manuals and reports (published and unpublished) which include the areas of statistical theory, war gaming simulations, systems engineering, biophysical effects, human Engineering and para-pyschology.
Mr. Schleicher studied electrical engineering at -Drexel Institute of Technology and graduated with a B.S. in Engineering from the U. S. Naval Academy. He received his M. A. from the University of Cologne in political economics and has also done graduate study at the University of Lund (Sweden) and the University of Bonn (Germany). Currently Mr. Schleicher is a Ph.D. candidate at American University in the field of Technology of Management with specialties in Operations Research, Management Information Systems and R & D Management.
JAMES C. ALLER Biomedical Engineer
Dr. Aller has had extensive experience in clinical engineering, biomedical research and has designed and developed advanced medical systems. His most current assignment has been as an Associate Professor in the Department of Clinical Engineering at George Washington University Medical Center. He has served as Lecturer on various biomedical engineering application areas which include: Hospital Information Systems for the Institute of Advanced Technology, Automated Data Processing (ADP) and Medicine at the Civil Service Commission, and Reliability for Tutorial on Multitesting at the International Health Evaluation Association. In addition, Dr. Aller has served as a consultant to the President's Advisory Council on Management Improvement (Health Study) and has organized and developed a course in "Clinical Engineering" at the George Washington University School of Engineering. Dr. Aller held the Chair of Physical Science in 1968 to 1970 while a Professor at the Naval War College and also served there as a member of the Advanced Technology Committee where he was responsible for the introduction of time-sharing computer support of curriculum objectives. During the period 1963 to 1967, he was a member of the Professional Staff of the Operations Evaluation Group at the Center for Naval Analyses of the University of Rochester. While a staff member, Dr. Aller was awarded a Fellowship in Medical Systems Development Laboratories by the U.S. Public Health Service.
Dr. Aller served for a period of twenty years (1942-1962) as a naval officer which included major assignments as Fleet Electronic Warfare Officer, Missile Range Director, Project Officer of Regulus II Missile, Head of Missile Guidance Division, Pt. Mugu (California), and as Project Officer and Test Pilot for the evaluation of optical aids to all weather landing at the Naval Test Center Patuxent River (Maryland).
Dr. Aller graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy with a B.S.E.E. in 1942 and subsequently received his M.A. and M.E.S. from Harvard University. In 1968, he was awarded the Doctor of Science degree from George Washington University. Dr. Aller is a Senior Member of the IEEE, the Society for Advanced Medical Systems, and various other professional scientific organizations. He is also Editorial Advisor to Biocharacterist and is listed in Who's Who in the Computing Field Aller, continued
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
Publications and Presentations
"Evaluation of Medical Systems," Engineering Research Foundation Conference, Deerfield, Massachusetts, 1969.
"Electronic Warfare Concept," Naval War College Review, May, 1970.
"Evaluation of Health Care Delivery Systems," University of l Virginia Colloquium speaker, June 1971.
"Medical Engineering" (article in press).
"Action Styles and Management Game Performance," Colloquiums of the University of Texas Business School, (in press).
"Data Reduction through Multidimensional Analysis," Transactions of Eascon 1971. "The Organization and Staffing of Evaluation Units in Limited Institutions," paper presented at XIX International Meeting of the Institute of Management Science, April 4, 1972, Houston, Texas - joint author
"The Use of Man-Machine Systems in Medical Decisions," presented at 1972 San Diego Biomedical Symposium, February 2-4, 1972, joint author
"A Proposal for Improvement in the Selection Process of Candidates for High Political Office by Use of New Medical Technology," presented at 1972 San Diego Biomedical Symposium, February 2-4, 1972, joint author .
"Automation et Acquisition De L' Information Medicale en fonction Du Diagnostic E1 Du Traitement, (fourth author). Presented at l Sixth World Congress of Cybernetic Medicine, Naples April 5-9, 1972 by R. P. Charland, M.D.
Action Styles and Management Game Performance An Exploratory Consideration." Naval War College Review, Vol XXIV, No. 10 June 1972 pp 65-82. (Third author). Aller, continued Co-Author
"Watch Out That Those Bits Don't Bite - A Case Study," Proceedings r of 23rd Annual Conference on Engineering in Medicine and Biology, L Washington, D.C., 1970.
"Systems Analysis of Operational Data from a Multiphasic Screening Center," Proceedings of the IEEE, Vol. 57, No. 11, November, 1969.
"Reliability of Multiphasic Screening Systems," in Proceedings of 21st Annual Conference on Engineering in Medicine and Biology, sponsored by IEEE, ISA, and ASME, Houston, Texas, November 18-21, Vol. 10, p. 2236, 1968.
"Introduction of Computer Techniques to Older Multitest Screening Groups," Proceedings of Third Joint Meeting Clinical Society and Commissioned Officers Assn., Public Health Service, San Francisco, March, 1968.
"Comment on 'chagas' Disease," IEEE Transaction of Bio-Medical Engineering, Vol. BME-15, No. 4, pp. 326-327, 1968.
Clinical Engineering in Health Service Delivery Multitest Facilities: A Model, presented before ASEE Annual Meeting, June 1971.
CHRISTOPHER BIRD Biocommunications Editor/Russian Translator
Mr. Bird's experience in biocommunications has largely been gained during research for a biography on the life and work t of the late biocommunications researcher Dr. Wilhelm Reich. This research has taken him into tangential fields such as bionics, psychophysics and psychology, where he has conducted investigations and reported the results in a series of technical papers. Additionally, Mr. Bird's linguistic skills, education and training have equipped him well for carrying out research in the biocommunications field. Mr. Bird has worked professionally as an interpreter and translator in the Russian and French languages. He learned the former by living with a family of white Russian emigres and the latter from two year's residence in France working with refugees and displaced persons. Mr. Bird studied Chinese for three years at Harvard and Yale and has a basic knowledge of Spanish, German and Serbo-Croatian.
After graduating Mr. Bird worked for a classified government agency. During this period he was stationed in Japan. He then served in the U.S. Army, specializing in psychological warfare, and prepared a course of study in that subject for the Divisional Staffs of the South Vietnamese army.
After his military service, Mr. Bird became the Washington representative of the Rand Development Corporation of Cleveland, Ohio, whose President, Dr. H. J. Rand, was one of the first to undertake private negotiations with the Soviet Union for the exchange and purchase of technological information. During this period, he attended the Pugwash meeting on Atomic, Chemical and Biological Warfare as an assistant to the international industrialist Cyrus Eaton. Next, Mr. Bird became editor of the Gallatin Annual of International Business. He later worked for Time magazine as a correspondent in Yugoslavia. After his return from Yugoslavia, he became a free-lance writer and biocommunications lI researcher. A selection of articles and lectures by Mr. Bird L followers
Mr. Bird received his B.A. in Biology from Harvard, where he also studied the histories of Russia, China and Southeast Asia, I in 1951. He completed the course work for a B.A. Anthropology at the University of Hawaii and passed the comprehensive exam-inations for a Ph.D. in Russian Area Studies at American | University in January 1967. He received a Certificate in Chinese Language from the Yale Institute of Far Eastern Languages in 1950. Bird, cont.
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
"From a Reporter's Notebook" (summary of situation in Yugoslavia). Problems of Communism, July-October
Lectures on Yugoslavia to Businessmen's Training Course at American University; School for Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University; American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies, Washington, D.C., 1969.
"Soviet Foreign Aid". Lecture, Carnegie Seminar on Technical Cooperative and California Institute of Technology Graduate Seminar on Soviet Foreign Policy, University of Southern California, December 1963.
"Scholarship and Propaganda" (part of a series: Russia in Africa). Problems of Communism, March- April, 1962. Reprinted in Le Contrat Social, Paris, July, 1962 as "L'Africanisme en URSS".
"Soviet Objectives in Africa" World Affairs Institute, University of Southern California Annual volume for 1961.
Lectures on "Russia and Africa" to Institute of World Affairs, E. Carolina College, 1961; American Association for - Advancement of Slavic Studies, Washington Chapter, 1961; Rand Corporation, Santa Monica, 1961.
"Soviet Ethnography: A Base for Applied Study of and Operations in Africa", (Analysis of Soviet writing on Africa). Human Organization, Fall of 1960.
Series of articles in Africa Special Report on Soviet research in Africa: "Soviet Ethnographic Research on Africa", October 1957. "Bibliography of Soviet Publications on Africa", October 1957. "Africa's Diverse Peoples Offer Openings for Soviet Agitation', November, 1957. "What Russia Reads about Africa", December 1957. "A Soviet Anthropologist Visits Ghana", March 1958. "Soviet Scholars Embark on Major Program of African Research", April 1958. "New Soviet Journal on Asia and Africa", August 1958. "Letters from Vietnam". Series of articles including interview with President Ngo Dinh Diem for Honolulu Advertiser (Editorial page).
Bird, cont.
Participant, Harvard International Seminar, summer 1957.
Lecture, Harvard Summer School Conference on Political Geography (Soviet Designs on Africa), summer 1957.
"Force for Freedom" (psychological warfare in the Philippines). American Mercury, 1956. .
Editor, "News from the Pacific", Anthropological Society of Hawaii, 1956-57. Translated and published a Russian novel, (Mnymye Velichiny, Chekhov Press, New York) which appeared as The Chains of Fear - Regnery, 1958, and ran in eight issues of Saturday Evening Post May-July, 1958.
In Partisan Review, 1961 Special Issue: "Dissonant Voices in Soviet Literature", translated "The Making of Asper" by A. Grin. Scientific translations for Academy of Sciences, et-al.
EDWIN BOYLE, JR Medical Researcher/Advanced Diagnostic Applications
Dr. Boyle has had over twenty years' experience as a medical researcher and is currently serving as the Director of Research at the Miami Heart Institute. Dr. Boyle's medical background includes assignments as a rotating intern at the Philadelphia General Hospital, Assistant Resident at Watts Hospital, Durham, North Carolina (Teaching Hospital of the University of North Carolina), and Resident at the University of Virginia Hospital in Charlottesville. He has also held a postdoctoral Fellow-ship at the National Heart Institute and was the Senior Clinical Investigator of the Metabolism section of that institution. Afterwards he became an established Investigator of the American Heart Association and the Director of the Lipid Metabolism Laboratory of the Medical College of South Carolina, where he was an Instructor in Medicine. He became an Associate in Medicine at the Medical College of South Carolina, and eventually Assistant Professor of Research-Medicine at that institution. In 1971, Dr. Boyle was appointed Clinical Voluntary Assistant Professor at the School of Medicine of the University of Miami in addition to his work at the Miami Heart Institute. Dr. Boyle has published or presented over fifty papers on aspects of lipids research and cardiovascular disease and has several others in preparation. He also lectured extensively on a wide variety of medical subjects. In his recent years Dr. Boyle has taken a special interest in researching the human psyche and its influence upon states of the physical body. Some of this research has included the study of gifted individuals who possess special sensory abilities and investigating such individuals by clinical methods employing hypnosis and EEGs, EKGs, myographs, plethysmographs and other laboratory apparatus. |
Dr. Boyle took his B.A. from the University of North Carolina in 1943, and his Certificate of Medicine in 1945. His M.D. is from the Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Dr. Boyle is a member of many Medical Societies, including the Aldous Huxley Foundation, the American Association for the |Advancement of Science, several councils of the American I Heart Association, the American Medical Writers Association and the American Board of Internal Medicine. He is also a member of the Medical Electronics and Data Society, the New Horizons "Psychic) Research Foundation, the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine, and the American Schizophrenia Association.
I DR. CHARLES R. BUFFLER I| Research Physicist 1 Dr. Buffler has over fifteen years' experience as a scientific researcher, primarily in the fields of magnetism and parapsychology. During and after a research assignment at Harvard, he conducted several experiments, which resulted in his "Spin Wave Analysis of Ferromagnetic Resonance" and other papers disseminated in the Journal of Applied Physics, the American Journal of Physics and various other scientific publications. Dr. Buffler's latest work is on the effects of weak or near zero magnetic fields on humans and on the theoretical aspects of microwave interactions with various materials.
Dr. Buffler has a long-standing interest in the field of parapsychology. He has assisted in and performed independent experiments on a possible biomagnetic explanation for dow-sing, and has investigated phenomena of general extrasensory perception and psychokinesis. Some of these experiments were conducted in Paris with the eminent ESP researcher, Professor Yves Rocard, Director of the Physics and Chemistry Laboratories of the Ecole Normale Superioure, University of Paris.
Dr. Buffler received his B.S. in Physics (1951) from the University of Texas, and his M.S. (1956) and Ph.D (1959) -from Harvard. He is a Senior Member of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers and a participating member of the IEEE Groups on "Microwave Theory and Techniques", "Magnetics", "Engineering in Medicine and Biology" and "System Science and Cybernetics". He is also a member of the American Society of Dowsers, Phi Beta Kappa, the Honorary physics society Sigma Pi Sigma and Sigma XI.
DR. JOHN CARSTOIU Biophysics Researcher
Though educated primarily as a mathematician, Dr. Carstoiu's recent research and experimental work has been principally in the biophysics and bionics fields. Some of this research has involved experiments with plasma radiation and waves, knownas the Priore treatment, which deals with the biophysical application of magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) in the treatment ofcancer and in developing immunology of living cells to sleeping sickness. Further research has included the study of the 85 biological effects (in terms of health status, accident rates, behavioral patterns, etc.) to humans and animals of variations in electromagnetic, magnetic and gravitational fields. For his work in these areas, Dr. Carstoiu was awarded in 1965 the prize, "Prix des Laboratories," by the French Academy of Sciences.
Dr. Carstoiu came to America in 1949 and became a member of the faculties of Johns Hopkins University and Indiana University in succession. Eve has since lectured at Columbia and North-Eastern University. He became a citizen in 1954. In 1955 he joined the aerospace industry, where he worked on the optimal trajectories of jet aircraft and missiles, the passive detection of fast-moving objects and the NIDAR effect and the C-layer.
In 1959 Dr. Carstoiu joined an electronics company where he conducted research in magneto-fluid dynamics. He was particularly concerned with the ASW problem, shock-wave propagation in the presence of a magnetic field and radio and magnetohydrodynamic wave interaction. Two years later he founded the corporation of which he has been President and Chief Scientist ever since. That company has conducted research on the earth's interior and its magnetism, the electrodynamic properties of sea water (with -possible applications to communication between and detection of submerged submarines), magnetic storms and auroras, electromagnetic phenomena, the dynamics of storms, atmospheric electricity, artificial meteors and many other topics.
Dr. Carstoiu received his B.S. in Mathematics from the University -of Bucharest, Romania, and a degree in Civil Aeronautical Engineering from the "Ecole Nationale Superieure de l'Aeronautique in Paris. He became a Doctor of Science in Mathematics at the University of Paris. Dr. Carstoiu has published extensively in the Journal of Rational Mechanics and Analysis, the Journal de and many others. Certain of his works are:
Carstoiu cont.
Articles in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science of the USA:
"Induced Electromagnetic Fields in the Earth", Vol. 45, p. 208, 1959.
"Hydromagnetic Waves in a Compressible Fluid Conductor", Vol. 46, p. 131-136, 1960.
"Note on Hydromagnetic Waves in a Compressible Fluid Conductor, Vol. 47, p. 891-898, 1961.
Magnetohydrodynamic Waves in a Constant Dipole Magnetic Field", Vol. 48, p. 990-996, 1962. This article was also published as NASA Technical Note D-1689, December 1962
''Note on Electric and Magnetic Polarization in Moving Media", Vol. 57, p. 1536-1541, 1967.
"Electrohydrodynamic Waves and Related Phenomena", Vol. 58, p. 870-875, 1967.
"Fundamental Equations of Electromagnetodynamics of Fluids: Various Consequences", Vol. 59, p. 326-331, 1968.
Some new aspects of Magnetohydrodynamic Phenomena" in Relativistic Fluid Mechanics and Magnetohvdrodynamics, New York: Academic Press, 1963.
"Tentative Synthesis of Electrohydrodynamic Phenomena in the Earth's Atmosphere--Theoretical Development" in Planetary Electrodynamics, Vol. 2, p. 277-289, ed. Samuel C. Coroniti and J. Hughes. New York, Gordon and Breach, 1969.
Dr. Carstoiu's theories on electrohydrodynamics have also been discussed in "Electricity and Weather Modification" by Seymour Tilson in IEEE Spectrum, p. 39-40 April, 1969. STANLEY R. DEAN Biocommunications Researcher/Clinical Psychiatrist
Dr. Dean has had extensive experience in clinical psychiatry and research, including research in biocommunications. His general internship was at Hurley Hospital, Flint, Michigan, In 1935. He went on to take his psychiatric training at Taunton State Hospital, Massachusetts; Boston Psychopathic Hospital, Massachusetts; Fairfield State Hospital, Connecticut; and Montefiore Hospital, New York. Dr. Dean was in clinical practice in psychiatry from 1940 to 1965. In addition, he has been a member of the American Psychiatric Association Task Force on Transcultural Psychiatry, an Executive counselor for the American Association of Social Psychiatry, and an Executive counselor for the International Federation for Hygiene, Preventive Medicine and Social Medicine. He has also been Vice-President of the Psychiatric Council of the Pan American Medical Association, Founder and Vice-President of the Research in Schizophrenia Endowment (RISE), co-founder of the Stanley R. Dean International Award for Research in Schizophrenia and Staff Psychiatrist Emeritus at Stamford Hospital and St. Joseph's Hospital, both of Stamford, Connecticut. Dr. Dean is at present a Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville. He is also the Regional Psychiatric Consultant for the Erickson Education Foundation and the Medical consultant for the National Study of the Medical Importance of Wine, conducted by the California Wine Institute. Dr. Dean has published about fifty articles, of which those that pertain to biocommunications are listed.
Dr. Dean graduated from the University of Michigan Medical School (Cum Laude) in 1934. He is a Diplomate of the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology and a Fellow of the American College of Psychiatrists. In addition, he is a member of Phi Kappa Phi and Alpha Omega Alpha. Dr. Dean is a Fellow of: the American Society for Psychical Research, the American Psychiatric Association, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, American Medical Authors, and the Royal Society of Medicine (Great Britain). Stanley R. Dean, (cont.)
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY 'Beyond the Unconscious: The Ultraconscious". Psychologia, Vol. 8, No. 3:145-50, September 1965.
"Beyond the Unconscious: The Ultraconscious". American Journal of Psychiatry, Vol. 122, No. 4:471 October 1965.
The Ultraconscious" American Journal of Psychiatry Vol. 122
"Is There an Ultraconscious Beyond the Unconscious?" Canadian Psychiatric Association Journal, Vol. 15, No. 1:57-62
"The Ultraconscious Mind". Behavioral Neuropsychiatry, Vol. 2 ' No. 1-2:32-36, April-May 1970.
"Metapsychiatry and the Ultraconscious". Published - American Journal of Psychiatry, Vol. 128 No 5 (Nov) 1971. Reprinted in Congressional Record, Vol.117 No 176 (Nov 17)
SKAIDRITE MALIKS FALLAH Foreign Area Analyst and Parapsychology Researcher
Mrs. Fallah has had wide experience as a foreign area analyst with primary emphasis on Eastern Europe. She has also conducted independent research in parapsychology. Her particular fields are international law, social and political developments and conflicts in less developed countries, revolutionary movements and organizations and minority groups and subcultures within a society. She has written many published and unpublished technical research reports, one of which, "Research Notes on Current Activities in Selective Fields of- Parapsychology', is of particular interest due to the nature of the task proposed in this paper. This document was published at the Cultural Information Analysis Center (CINFAC) in May 1969 and was prepared for the use of the Department of the Army, U.S. Army Combat Development Command.
Mrs. Fallah was one of the six U.S. members selected by the New York Board of Education to participate in a two-month social studies workshop in Israel. While a member of the Foreign Areas Studies Division's (FASD) multi-disciplinary team which prepared handbooks on Latin America; she conducted research for and wrote the chapters on economic development and conditions in Venezuela and Peru. Upon completion of that assignment, she worked as a Senior Research Associate in the Cultural Information Analysis Center (CINFAC), initially as a member of the Asia/Pacific branch and later in the Func-tional Studies branch. In this capacity Mrs. Fallah con-ducted research on a great variety of subjects pertaining to the governments and peoples of Asia as well as selected domestic problems involving racial minority groups. Note: CINFAC is a division of the Center for Research in Social Systems (CRESS) which at that time was under contract to the U.S. Army Research Office for foreign area support services and special international studies.
Mrs. Fallah received her B.A. in International Relations, with emphasis on Political Science and Sociology, from Hunter College in 1960. She received her M.A. in International Relations (Latin American Area Studies) from Johns Hopkins University in 1962.
Mrs. Fallah has traveled extensively and is particularly familiar with Eastern Europe, having been raised and educated in the Baltic state of Latvia prior to the Soviet take-over in1945. She has native fluency in several foreign languages, particularly those of Eastern Europe.
Fallah, cont.
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
Publications
Research Notes on Hue as a Traditional City of Vietnam. SORO/CRESS, 1964.
A Selected Bibliography on Urban Insurgency and Urban Un-rest In Latln Amerlca and Other Areas. CRESS 1966.
Customs and Taboos of Selected Tribes Residing along the Western Border of the Republic of Vietnam. CRESS 1967.
Co-author
A Study of Rear Area Security Measures, "China 1937-1945" SORO/CRESS, 1965.
Research Notes on the Vietnamese Village Council. SORO/CRESS, 1965.
U.S. Army Area Handbook for Venezuela, SORO/FAS, 1966.
Anotated Bibliography on Internal Defense. CRESS,1968. Unpublished Reports
"Notes on the Social, Economic and Political Situation in Thailand", 1967.
"Research Notes on Current Activities in Selective Fields of Parapsychology", CRESS, 1969.
"Black Muslims; Problems of Custody and Incarceration", - CRESS, 1969.
"Training of Military Advisors: An Annotated Bibliography and Selected Readings", CRESS, 1969. Co-author
"Significant Developments in the Republic o' Korea, 1955-1968", CRESS, 1968.
"Political, Economic, Social, Psychological and Military Factors in Indonesia, Japan, India, Thailand and Malaysia", CRESS, 1968.
-PAUL E. T. J ENSEN
Engineering Specialist and Technical Analyst/Writer
Mr. Jensen is an Engineering Specialist doing intelligence research and analysis. For the past ten years he has studied Eurasian Communist and Free World research and technology programs. He has been especially interested in new commun-ication techniques, combat surveillance systems, and long range technological forecasts relating to these programs. The results of his studies have been published in over 30 classified publications for agencies of the Department of Defense. Recently he has been reviewing East European scientific and technical journals covering research neurology, psychiatry, biophysics, related electronic measurement techniques, and brain research. At present he is preparing an article on the methodology of research in telepathic communication and related fields.
Mr. Jensen has managed the air defense task of the Army's "Electronic Warfare 1975" Study and also the Electromagnetic Threat to Armv-S5. Since 1964 he has participated in threat and vulnerability studies for the Army. In June 1966 he was made project supervisor for the studies being done for the US Army Security Agency Combat Developments Activity. Earlier in 1966 he headed an analysis project developing a Threat to Army-75.
Mr. Jensen was a company representative at the US Army Electronic Proving Ground, Fort Huachuca, Arizona, during 1959 and 1960. From 1960 to 1964, he was supervisor of engineering writing and, later, manager of the R&D Publi-cations Department. During World War II and the Korean Conflict, he served in the United States Navy and the United States Marine Corps.
Mr. Jensen holds a B.S. degree in Physics (1947) and a B.B.A. in Marketing (1949) from Tulane University. He has also done graduate work in mathematics at San Jose State College, and psychology studies at the University of Virginia.
NORMAN KOROBOW
Psychology Researcher
Mr. Korobow brings to the company a total of over 25 years experience in psychological research and computer applications. His work has been in the areas of human factors; research instrumentation in optics, electronics, physiological psycho-logy and communications; and computer applications to research.
As part of Mr. Korobow's previous experience, he was head of an interdisciplinary team for the solution of Information Control system problems. This work included perceptual and bandwith requirement analysis, and the setting of psychological require-ments for Aerospace training equipment design. Mr. Korobow also preformed neuro-psychiatric research in the areas of personality behavior under stress, personality and chemotherapy, research design and implementation, and instrumentation development. He directed research on accident related variables, and studied methods for the determination of trainability of selected mili-tary personnel in advanced electronic techniques.
Earlier, Mr. Korobow conducted research on Military Leadership at the U.S.M.A. at West Point. This work involved the analysis of identifiable personality variables associated with graded i leadership behavior, the development of new training techniques, | and motion picture production. He has also studied man-machine capability in the area of sensorimotor performance under stress, and the human factors in system design for avionics.
Mr. Korobow received his B.A. degree in psychology and M.A. in psychology and biology from Brooklyn College, City University of New York. He later earned a Ph.D. in psychology from New York University. He has had extensive teaching experience and has taught courses in general psychology, normal personality, personnel psychology, experimental psychology, and industrial psychology. He is a member of several professional organizations, including the Eastern Psychological Association, the New York I State Psychological Association, arid the American Psychological Association. Korobow is a certified psychologist in New York State.
Some of Mr. Korobow's many scholarly publications include:
"Errors in Perception". M.A. Thesis, Brooklyn College Library, 1946.
"Personality and Audiogenic Stress". Ph.D. Thesis, 1953. "Reactions to Stress; a reflection of personality trait organization". Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology 51:464-8, 1955.
Korobow, cont.
How to Get More out of Training Aids". Technical Publication SDC 383 7-1 Special Devices Center, Office of Naval Research.
"A Study of the Utilization of Four Representative Training Devices". Technical Publication SDC 383 - 7-2 Special Devices Center, Office of Naval Research, Project 20-A-1OA, l G 1932.
"1970 Human Factors Data for ILAAS". GK 2910-0057, Bureau of Naval Weapons, Dept. of the Navy (SECRET), November 1967.
"Human Factors Analytical Study of ILAAS 1967". GH 2910-0004- 041 Bureau of Naval Weapons, Dept. of Navy (Research on instrument legibility under high altitude high ambient light conditions. Development of a new technique for pilot unburdened weapon delivery), 1964.
"Human Factors Analytical Study for ILAAS 1970", GK 2910-0004-042 Bureau of Naval Weapons, Dept. of Navy (SECRET), (Perceptual and motor limitations on man as controller and decision maker in 1967 aircraft).
RICHARD B. LA TONDRE
Senior Technical Analyst for Support Services
Mr. La Tondre has served as the SIGINT/Electronics Warfare Officer, Advanced Requirements Branch, Marine Corps Development Center, Quantico, Virginia; the Communications Officer for the Chief, Department of Defense Special Representative in Vietnam; I and an Intelligence Research Analyst for the National Security I Agency. He has also received extensive formal training in the fields of combat intelligence, guerrilla warfare, photomagery, hydrography, special communications, electronic warfare, and analytical analysis.
My. La Tondre is currently employed as project engineer for the Enemy Electromagnetic Threat (CD-107-EW), a study being conducted for a U.S. Government Agency. He is primarily responsible for the planning and implementation of the electronic Warfare effectiveness analysis effort as related to the update and publication of the Enemy Electromagnetic Threat- 1975. He has participated in various electronic threat analysis L projects and studies, including the "Enemy Electromagnetic i Threat to Friendly Tactical Aircraft in South Vietnam.
La Tondre has also been an electronics warfare consultant performing special ED analysis and feasibility studies for private industry, including Triangle Research Corporation, DIDEEN, the Associated Designers, Inc., and TECHTRAN Corporation.
Mr. La Tondre attended Jackson College, Honolulu, Long Beach, City College, Long Beach State College, and George Washington University. He also studied Chinese Mandarin at the U.S. Army Language School, Presidio of Monterey and Data Processing at the National Security Agency.
JOHN E. LAURANCE Astro - and Biophysics Scientist
Mr. Laurance is a diversified scientist and regis-tered professional engineer with an advanced degree and numerous pre-doctorate courses covering astro-physics, nuclear physics, electronics, physical chemistry, engineering and medical subjects. He has had extensive experience in conducting and directing scientific research in multi-disciplinary fields and especially those involving energy systems. In addition, he has a broad supplemental background in conducting investi-gations and performing research related to paranormal fields and in developing electronic sensor systems derived through such research.
A pioneer in space research, Mr. Laurance has served on advisory committees during the initial establishment of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and has been space program manager for several major corporations in the aeronautics and space industry. In the latter capacity, as manager of the Astro-Electronics Division (Engineering Programs Development and Programs Analysis), he was responsible for program planning for advanced space vehicle systems. Prior to this Laurance coordinated the support of basic research programs for the Office of Naval Research in Washington, D.C. and in the eleven western states where he served as acting chief scientist. In 1969 Mr. Laurance became Vice President and General Manager of a new corporation established to pro-vide new technologies and scientific procedures to Latin American and other developing countries.
Mr. Laurance has been involved in the study of extra sensory perception and other paranormal subjects since 1930. Subsequent to 1963 he has made several trips to Latin American countries to investigate these subjects, particularly in the area of bioenergetic activities including medical healing. In 1968, as an Associate of '`Essentia Research Associates" he accompanied a group of U.S. medical doctors to Brazil to I investigate the works of the widely acclaimed medical healer Arigo. While there, individuals in this group which were referred to as "The Medical Commission on Arigo" also looked into additional subjects such as heart transplants and paranormal activity demonstrations.
Mr. Laurance was instrumental in the establishment in 1968 of "Life Energies Research, Inc.", a non-profit organi-zation which conducts scientific investigations of unusual and little known properties of human energy systems. In connection with this research, he created electronic measuring equipment and conducted research on radiations emanating from human energy sources. He now serves on the Research Committee and is a member of the Board of Directors of Life Energies Research.
Laurance (cont.) Mr. Laurance received his B.S. at Whittier College, M.S. at the University of Southern California and did graduate work at the University of California. He is a member o f numerous professional and scientific societies and is listed in professional directories including "American Men Science" and "Who's Who in the East".
ANDREI LOBANOV-ROSTOVSKY
Sovietologist/Soviet Bloc Trend Analyst
Professor Lobanov-Rostovsky has had wide experience extending over fifty years as Sovietologist and observer-analyst of Eastern European affairs. He has lectured and written extensively on this subject and has in more recent years closely followed trends in parapsychology from Eastern Europe with emphasis on psychical research in the Soviet Union. Professor Lobanov-Rostovsky has been active in psychical research in the United States since the 1930's and is a member of the 'American Society of Psychical Research.
Russian by birth, Prof. Lobanov-Rostovsky served in the Russian Imperial Guards and the French Army during World War I, and in the White Army during the Russian civil war of 1919-1920. Afterwards he went to London and spent the next ten years as Foreign Correspondent for Baring Bros., Ltd. He emigrated to America in 1930 and became a U.S. citizen in 1936. Since coming to America he has taught European, Russian and Far Eastern history -ART at nearly fifteen colleges, although he has always been a member of the History Departments at either U.C.L.A. (1930-1945) or the University of Michigan (1945-1952) where he is a Professor Emeritus of History. Among his extra teaching assignments was a year with the U.S. Army Special Training Corps. He has also lectured on parapsychology.
Prof. Lobanov-Rostovsky attended the Imperial School of Law at St. Petersburg (now Leningrad), the Lycee de Nice (France) and the Institut des Sciences Politiques in Paris, from whom he received his diploma in 1923. He has published over forty books and articles relating to his specialty. They include:
Russia and Asia. New York, The Macmillan Company, 1933.
Russia and Europe: 1789-1825. Durham, Duke University Press, 1947.
Russia and Europe: 1825-1878. Ann Arbor, The George Wahr Publishing Co., 1954.
"Russia at the Crossroads: Europe or Asia". London, The Slavonic Review, March 1928. Lobanov-Rostovsky, cont.
"The Soviet Muslim Republics of Central Asia" London, Journal of the Royal Institute of International Affairs, July 1928.
"Psychological Undercurrents of the Russian Revolution". London, The Slavonic Review, March 1929. Bali
"The Problem of Strategic Frontiers" in Frontiers of the Future (Lectures arranged by the University of California Committee on International Relations). Berkeley, University of California Press, 1941.
"Russia and Germany". The Russian Review, March - April 1943.
"The United States and Russia". Reprinted from the United States in the Postwar World, Ann Arbor, University of Michigan Press, 1947.
"Trends of Soviet Foreign Policy in Asia". Recent Soviet Trends, Proceedings of the Conference Held at the University of Texas, 1956, Austin, University of Texas Publications, 1957.
A Digest of the Krasnyi Arkiv-Red Archives Vol 31 - 106 Editied by Lobanov Rostovsky Ann Arbor, The University of Michigan Press, 1955.
"The Soviet Union and the War". The World in Turmoil, Proceedings of the Institute of World Affairs, Vol. XIX, pp. 130-133, Los Angeles, University of Southern California, 1942.
"Russian Expansion in the Far East in the Light of the Turner Theory". The Frontier in Perspective, pp. 79-95, Madison, University of Wisconsin Press, 1957.
ARTHUR MARCUS Research Psychologist
Mr. Marcus brings to this project more than thirteen years of experience in the areas of experimental psychology, human factors analysis, training and field consulting for both government and industry. Much of his work has been in the design of field tests and the evaluation of the performance effectiveness of people and systems in a variety of settings. He has participated in many projects related to the design, development and evaluation of information systems. This work has included the determination of requirements, development of operational methods and procedures, allocation of man-machine functions, evaluation of system alternatives and the selection of hardware and software applications for system implementation.
Mr. Marcus has been responsible for coordinating, directing and conducting experiments in human performance, including the experimental design and preparation of apparatus and procedures, collection and analysis of data and interpretation of results both with regard to their theoretical implications and their practical applications.
Mr. Marcus has performed and reported on applied research studies (both field and experimental) to determine immediate answers to special human factors problems. In doing this, he has surveyed relevant literature for useful ideas, facts, approaches and techniques. He has reviewed research reports published by other organizations and individuals and has maintained liaison with, and when necessary has obtained assistance from, other researchers and organizations who have lan interest and capability to perform psychological research.
Since joining the company, Mr. Marcus has become invoIved in two major military electronic system efforts, notably the SHORTSTOP System and the Air Combat Maneuvering Range System. His work has been in the human factors areas of display design, workplace layouts and in the determination of personnel require-ments for operation, maintenance and control. His tasks on SHORTSTOP include the optimization of operator duties, planning and participating in field tests, and the analysis of a variety of EW functions.
Mr. Marcus has provided support to numerous other military , System Program Offices (including SAM-D, LHA, NMCC, 416L, BUIC and 440L) through the application of exploratory and advanced development findings to system acquisition problems. His primary function has been to insure that adequate psychological principles and techniques are applied to improve the design, performance and operational capability of current and planned military systems through the conduct of research tasks and special studies. Marcus, cont.
Marcus received his M.S. degree in Experimental Psychology and has completed the course requirements for a Ph.D. at the Diversity of Massachusetts. He received his B.B.A. industrial Psychology from the City College of New York. Marcus currently holds a SECRET clearance.
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
Preliminary Evaluation of Human Factors Affecting the Selection and Utilization of Displays for the ACMR System. Systems Consultants, Inc. 25 May 1970.
Sequence Diagram Techniques in Systems Analysis (with T. G. Slattery and H. E. Etter). Dunlap & Associates, Inc. Monograph No. 5, 1 July 1969.
A Case for AD Human Performance Testing. Dunlap & Associates, Inc. Report No. 176-48, 21 November 1968.
SAM-D Symbology-Human Factors Testing of Proposed Symbol Code (with H. Bowen and R. Bughman). Dunlap Associates, Inc. Report No. 176-38, 24 July 1968.
Integrated Closed-Circuit Television Study (Report prepared on the EHA Program for the Raytheon Co.). Dunlap and Associates, Inc., 27 November 1967.
National Military Command Center Briefing Facilities Users' Manual. Decision Sciences laboratory, Electronic Systems
Division, January 1966. "The Effect of Correct Response Location on the Difficulty l Level of Multiple-Choice Questions". Journal of Applied Psychology, 47, 48-51, 1963.
E. STANTON MAXEY, M.D.
Medical-Biophysical Researcher
Dr. Maxey has practiced general surgery in Stuart, Florida, since 1956. In addition to his practice, he has wide interests in Aviation and Electronics. He is Licensed as a commercial pilot (airplane single and (multi engine ratings) and as an Instrument and Flight Instructor. At present he holds a patent for his Video Landing and Departure System and has applied for patents on other inventions in electronics.
Dr. Maxey is conducting extensive studies in sleep research and human unconscious behavior patterns. Through the use of sophisticated sensors, he is attempting to determine the effects of exterior phenomena on dreams. An innovative feature of this research will be the use of electromagnetic recording of EEG's, ultraviolet and infrared sensors, precise weight analysis and the correlation of these technical factors with exterior phenomena such as electromagnetic fields, moon and planetary positions, barometric changes, and the dream recall abilities of the subject.
Dr. Maxey received his B.S. (Cum Laude) in 1946 from Wake Forest College where he was also elected to Phi Beta Kappa. He received his M.D. from the M.D. Bowman Gray School of Medicine in 1950, and completed his medical Internship (1950-1951) at the University of Pennsylvania. His surgical residency was at the Chesapeake and Ohio Hospital in Huntington, West Virginia, from 1951-1955. Dr. Maxey is certified by the American Board of Surgery and is a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons.
|H. SCOTT MC CANN
Technical Writer/Editor
Mr. McCann brings to the company a total of nearly ten years experience in technical writing, and editing of weapon systems technical manuals. He has also had experience in testing half lattice crystal filters and traveling wave tube amplifier systems.
Mr. McCann has most recently worked with TV station WETA where he was an engineer responsible for the operation and light maintenance of station equipment, the conduct of day to day air operations, and network switching. He previously served as a technical editor for Operations Research, Inc. where he was responsible for all-stages of editing. Mr. McCann held a similar position with Tate Technical Service, Inc.
As a technician for IIT Research Institute, Mr. McCann has had four years of experience with the Electromagnetic Compatibility Analysis Center (ECAC) working with engineers on various RFI problems on communications, radar, and weapons systems. In addition, Mr. McCann served as a technician for the Aeronca Manufacturing Corporation, responsible for testing half lattice crystal filters and traveling wave tube amplifier systems.
Mr. McCann received his B. S. degree in English from Loyola College, and is currently a candidate there for a Masters Degree in Psychology. Mr. McCann has a First Class Radio- ~ telephone (Broadcast Engineer) license.
HENRY C. MONTEITH
Electrical Engineer/Bioluminescent Researcher
Mr. Monteith has had over ten years experience in engineering which has included color TV design, bioluminescent research, and development of innovative medical techni-ques. Presently he is a technical staff engineer of an engineering company under contract to the Atomic Energy Commission at Albuquerque, New Mexico. Mr. Monteith special interests have led him into research involving the study of biological effects of electromagnetic forces on living organisms at the molecular, and atomic levels. This has led him into experimenting and validating recent Russian research in the area of bioluminescence which is referred 'to as the "Kirlian effect.'' Prior to his present position, Mr. Monteith was assigned to the research laboratories of a large manufacturer of television sets where he designed circuitry and developed decoder parameters for color television. Subsequent to this assignment, he completed four years of military service in the U.S. Navy.
Mr. Monteith received his B.S. in Electrical Engineering from the Milwaukee School of Engineering in 1965.He also studied engineering at the University of Pennsylvania and Purdue University. In 1970, he was awarded an M.S. degree in electrical engineering, with a minor in computer science from the University of New Mexico. Currently, he Is completing studies leading to a doctorate degree also at the University of New Mexico. His academic honors include member-ship in the Sigma Pi Sigma Physics honor society.
SELECTED RESEARCH PAPERS "Computer Determination of Decoder Parameters for Color Television", RCA Working Report, August 1967.
"The Time Theory of Nikolai A. Kozyrev", unpublished report written as internal company memorandum, Sandia Corporation, 1971.
"Stimulated Emissions from Living Forms May Provide Clues to Novel Medical Techniques of the Future" (submitted for publication in the near future).
STEFAN T. POSSONY
Sovietologist and Psychological Warfare Specialist
Dr. Possony is a Sovietologist, International Affairs, and Psychological Warfare Specialist of high reputation and experience. Prior to and during the early stages of World War II, he served as an Advisor to the French Air Ministry and the French Foreign Office. After this assignment, he came to the United States and held a post as a Carnegie Re-search Fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, New Jersey.
During World War II and through 1946, he was a Psy-chological Warfare Specialist at the Office of Naval Intelligence (ONI). Between 1946 and 1961, he served as Special Advisor to the Assistant Chief of Staff, Intel-ligence, USAF. During the same period, Dr. Possony served as Professor of International Politics r Georgetown Uni-versity, and during 1956-1958 as Director of Research for Life Magazine's Russian Revolution project. In 1961, Dr. Possony became Director of the International Political Studies Program at the Hoover Institution on War Revolution and Peace, where he is now a Senior Fellow. He testified before the U.S. Senate Internal Security Sub- Committee on the Threat of U.S. Security Posed by Stepped-up Sino-Soviet Hostilities and has on frequent occasion been called upon as a special consultant to U.S. Presidential Committees, Congress, and the Defense Department.
Dr. Possony has been a Visiting Professor at American, ''European and Asian universities and participated in numerous international conferences.
Dr. Possony received his Ph.D. from the University of Vienna.
He has authored, co-authored and edited many books and other publications. Some of the more recent and relevant of these are: The Strategy of Technology; and Lenin, the Compulsive Revolutionary.
MILAN RYZL
Biocommunications/Parapsychology Scientist
Dr. Milan Ryzl is an international authority in biocommunications and parapsychology, who has lectured widely both in the United States and in Europe. Dr. Ryzl, educated in Czechoslovakia, was a member of the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences in Prague and was a leading figure in the application of scientific methods to the study of parapsychology. After he arrived in the United States, he worked with Dr. J. B. Rhine at the Institute of Parapsychology in Durham, North Carolina. There, Dr. Ryzl was especially noted for his original research on the influence of hypnosis on ESP.
Dr. Ryzl has taught parapsychology at San Diego State College and is currently a professor of parapsychology at San Jose State University. He is a member of and has founded parapsychological and psychical research groups in Europe and in the United States. Dr. Ryzl's primary efforts in this field have been to document a case for parapsychology by means of highly refined and systematized scientific methods. He published his results in 'Parapsvchology: A Scientific Approach (Hawthorn Books, 1970). In this work, Dr. Ryzl presents indisputable and thoroughly documented evidence that psychic phenomena exist and scientifi-cally examines the full range of psychic phenomena by evaluating experimental evidence derived from laboratory controlled testing.
Dr. Ryzl is also well known as a reviewer and analyst of parapsychology developments and trends in Eastern Europe. He has frequently published reviews and commentaries on parapsychological works from behind the Iron Curtain. One such is Telepatie A Jasnovidnost (Telepathy and Clairvoyance), by Dr. Z. Rejdak. Dr. Ryzl's review of this book was published in the July-August 1971 edition of the Parapsychology Review.
P. PAUL SAUVIN
Electromechanical Engineer/Bionics Researcher
Sauvin has had wide experience as an electromechanical engineer and researcher. Such bionics research has included the application of biological principles to the study and design of engineering systems; especially those that are electronic, biometric and bioluminescent. For thirteen years he worked in the aerospace industry, where he was initially a Flight Technician and eventually an Engineering Associate. His duties were primarily concerned with the installation, maintenance collection of flight data on airborne Doppler radar systems. He laid out and assembled experimental research and development units. Afterwards, Mr. Sauvin was responsible for the cable layout of the Plane Position Data Display Console and the electrical alignment, mechanical adjustment and maintenance of this console at the National Facilities Experimental Center. Mr. Sauvin also assisted with the initial development and maintenance of the Weather Display Console. He hen moved into systems engineering, and set up a Telemetry Test Labratory for the Mobile Mid-range Ballistic Program, performed evalutation tests of telemetry sub-carrier oscillator and pulse code System and participated in the preparation of the research and development specifications and the work statement for the signal conditioner for the Stellar Acquisition Feasibility Flight Test program. He later held project engineering responsibility for this development.
Sauvin is currently with National Institute for Rehabilitation Engineering (NIRE) at St. Joseph's Hospital, Paterson, New Jersey, which designs and dispenses act types of special rehabilitation equipment, tools and prosthetic devices for the severely disabled. Apart from his work at NIRE, Mr. Sauvin has conducted independent research into medical applications of the bionic, biometric, biochemical and bioluminescent sciences. This research deals with the detection and analysis of emissions and electro- optical/electromagnetic radiation given off by human, animal and plant organisms. His research has also included investigations of the High Frequency "Kirlian Effect" photography, thought-controlled devices, and psycho-kinetic switches. The goal of such research and analysis is to devise and develop hardware configurations which can aid the handicapped and severely disabled.
Sauvin has studied at Delehanty Institute and attended Westchester Community College. He completed a programming course at National Air Facilities Experimental Station.
Sauvin is currently active as a private pilot (single engine and seaplane ratings). He holds a 2nd class license in broadcast engineering, a 1st class radiotelephone license and an F.C.C. technician license. He has written many technical articles in the fields of electronic system applications, advanced electromechanical systems, applied bionics and rehabilitation engineering devices and techniques.
GEORGE SCHEPAK
Russian Technical Translator/Biocybernetics Researcher
Mr. Schepak has had wide experience both as a translator and as an aerospace systems engineer, and has additionally been very active in parapsychological research. He has translated Russian scientific articles in parapsychology with emphasis in the fields of medicine, physics, geo-magnetism, botany and zoology. Mr. Schepak was born and educated in Russia. He has also studied in Russian schools in Germany.
Mr. Schepak has been an engineer with several California aerospce firms. He has designed solid state general purpose, computers and worked on ground support equipment for inertial components. He participated in the DISCOVERER, MIDAS, SAMOS, VOYAGER and APOLLO space programs.
Mr. Schepak is now participating in a research program headed by Dr. Barbara Brown, Chief of Experiential Psychology at Sepulveda Veterans Administration Hospital, in which he is investigating the physiological aspects of healing using EEG's, EKG's and other physiological measurements.
Mr. Schepak has been an active member of the California Society for Psychical Research since 1962 and Director of Research for that organization since 1969. He is also a member of the Biofeedback Society and does advanced research in this area.
Mr. Schepak holds a B.S. in Engineering from UCLA, and a LL.B. from the Blackstone School of Law. In addition he has studied in cybernetics, the behavioral sciences, biological feedback and parapsychology.
Mr. Schepak has been a naturalized citizen of the United States since March 1955 and has held a Defense contractor security clearance.
BERTHOLD ERIC SCHWARZ, M.D.
Psychiatry/Parapsychology Researcher
Dr. Schwarz is a psychiatrist in private practice in Montclair, New Jersey. In addition to his practice, he has conducted extensive psychiatric/parapsychological researches and is the author of over fifty published reports (a selected bibliography follows). Prior to his entry into private practice, Dr. Schwarz was a Fellow in Psychiatry at the Mayo Foundation from 1950 to 1955. In addition to the basic studies required by the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology, the Fellowship gave Dr. Schwarz experience as a consultant to all sections of the Mayo Clinic, the psycho-somatic and closed divisions of St. Mary's Hospital, in child psychiatry and neurological services and as manager of the consulting service for the downtown hospitals. He has conducted depth electrographic and clinical research on LSD, mescaline, and clinical electroencephalography in the Section of Physiology and neurophysiological studies on animals and humans. Dr. Schwarz also made psychoanalytic investigations while working on the Mayo Clinic schizophrenia, delinquency and perversion projects, as well as studying didactic and personal psychoanalysis.
In addition to his private practice, Dr. Schwarz has studied telepathic communications in the parent-child and physician - patient relationships. He has also made investigations of the accomplishments of such extraordinary paragnosts as Henry Gross, Jacques Romano, Gerard Croiset and Joseph Dunninger. These psychiatric-parapsychological studies and techniques are focused on the elements of reality, psychopathology and induced psychophysiology.
Dr. Schwarz received his B.A. from Dartmouth College and his Diploma in Medicine from the Dartmouth Medical School in 1945. He graduated from the New York University College of Medicine in 1950 and interned at Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital, Hanover, New Hampshire, 1951. He received a M.S. in Psychiatry from the Mayo Graduate School of Medicine of Minnesota; and is a diplomate of the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology and a member of the American Medical Association as well as the American Electroencephalographic Society. Schwarz, cont.
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
"Telepathic Experiments in a Child Between 1 and 3-1/2 Years". International Journal of Parapsychology, Vol. III, No. 4:5-52, 1961.
"Physiological Aspects of Henry Gross's Dowsing". Parapsychology, Vol. 4-, No. 2:71-86, 1962-1963.
"Psychodynamic Experiments in Telepathy". Corrective Psychiatry and Journal of Social Therapy, Vol. 9, 169-218, 1963.
"Discussion of Dr. Grad's paper 'Psychic Healing"'. New York Academy of Science, 28 October 1963. Journal of American Social and Psychical Research, Vol. LIX: 127-29, 1965.
Psychic-Dynamics. New York, Pageant Press, 1965 (Title of paperback, Psychiatrist Looks at ESP, A Signet Mystic Book, New York 1968.).
"Death of a Parapsychologist, Possible Terminal Telepathy with Nandor Fodor". Samikea, Vol. 2, No. 1:1-14, 1966-1967.
"The Telepathic Hypothesis and Genius: A Note on Thomas Alva Edison". Corrective Psvchiatrv and the Journal of Social Therapy, Vol. 13' No. 1, 17019, January 1967.
"Possible Telesomatic Reactions". The Journal of the Medical Society of New Jersey, Vol. 64, No. 11:600-603, November 1967.
Preface to the American edition of Telepathy and Clairvoyance, by Professor Dr. W. H. C. Tenhaeff, Trans. Mrs. A. C. Matteson, 1967.
-"Precognition and Psychic Nexus". Journal of the American Society of Psychosomatic Dentistry and Medicine, Vol. 18, No. 2.
"Telepathy and Pseudotelekinesis in Psychotherapy". The Journal of the American Society of Psychosomatic Dentistry and Med-icine, Vol. 15, No. 4:144-154, October 1968.
"Parent-Child Telepathy", A study of the Telepathy of Everyday Life, Garrett Publications, New York, 1971.
Co-author: "Hypnotic Phenomena, Including Hypnotically Activated Seizures, Studied with the Electroencephalogram". Journal of Nervous and Mental Diseases, 122:564-574, December 1955. Schwarz, cont.
"Behavioral and Electroencephalographic Effects of Hallucinogenic - Drugs". A.M.A. Arch. Neurology Psychiatry, 75:83-90, January 1956
"Electroencephalographic Changes in Animals under the Influence of Hypnosis". Journal of Nervous and Mental Diseases 124: 433-439, November 1956.
"A Study of Chlorpromazine Photosensitivity". Journal of Investigative Dermatology, 28:329-338, 1957
ALBERT B. WING
Senior Scientist/Engineer for Advanced Technology
Mr. Wing has over twenty years experience in the research, design, and development of advanced technology which date back to his work on the Manhattan Project during World War II. He has also served as a senior staff scientist for an advanced systems engineering company, manager of operations research and systems research projects for a defense agency, and as a technical consultant. Mr. Wing is currently performing research in technologies of sensors and pattern recognition; information processing and display; feature discrimination, enhancement, and recognition; and transfer of electronic warfare technology to anti-crime applications.
Mr. Wing has served as a management advisor to U.S. government RDT&E programs and has devised systems for interdisciplinary problem evaluation and innovative solutions. Among his many government consulting tasks have been his assignments as a special consultant in radiation sensing and solid-state transducer physics, X-ray and neutron diffraction, microwave systems, bionics, geophysics, and chemical engineering.
In private industry, Mr. Wing has developed an air traffic contra' system, served as project manager for a camouflage R&D effort, and headed the special projects department for a University of Rochester team under contract to the Manhattan Project. His other industrial experience includes analysis of: microwave antenna radiation patterns and new antenna designs; foreign technology developments in lasers, masers, and sensors; ionospheric propagation and upper atmosphere technologies, and reconnaissance and surveillance communications.
While serving as principal physicist to the Cornell Aeronautical Laboratories, Mr. Wing directed research which included biosensor telemetry, space-environment simulation chambers, IFF video defruiters, shipboard electro-magnetic computability, centralized time and frequency control, broad spectrum camouflage, sound-ranging equipment, and imagery transmission.
Mr. Wing received his B.S. in Chemistry from Brown University in 1943 and his M.S. in Optics and Physics from the University of Rochester in 1952. He has also taken additional graduate courses at these institutions in advanced organic chemistry, advanced physiology, neurology, biochemistry, pharmacology, and toxicology. His professional organization affiliations include the IEEE (Senior Member), American Institute of Physics, American Chemical Society, Optical Society of America, and the Rochester Academy of Science.
Mr. Wing is listed in American Men of Science and has been named to honorary membership in the Research Society of America. He obtained two Atomic Energy Commission Fellowships in 1944-45 and 1949-50 tenable at the University of Rochester. For his work on the Manhattan Project, he received a Certificate of Appreciation from the Secretary of War. v SELECTED PUBLICATIONS BY FIELDS
Geophysics-
"The Earth-Scanning Problem in the GEOS Altimetry Program," NASA Report., 1967. "On Satellite Geophysical Discrimination Techniques," Rome Air Force Base Report., 1966. "New Designs for Inertial, Gravitational & Magnetic Field Sensors," Defense Communication Agency, 1968.
Electronics- "A Critical Survey of Satellite Attitude Sensor Devices," Defense Communication Agency Report., 1967. BuShips Contract Specifications Manual for Defruiters in IFF Video Equipment," Cornell Aeronautical Laboratories/Navy Rept., 1966.
X Rays -
"Crystal & Molecular Structure of Dimethoxy-benzophenone by the Direct Probability Method," (co-author), Acta Cryst. 10, 481 (1957); ibid. 11, 257 (1958).
"X Ray Cartography of Cleaved Crystals," Report of Naval Research Laboratory Progress, Dec. 1961, p.7.
"Aligning Single Crystals for X Ray Diffraction," (co-author), Rev. Sci. Instr. 23,442 (1952). Naval Research Laboratory Reports #4402 (1954) & #4553 (1955), and many other writings in this area.
John E. Laurance, astro- and biophysicist and engineer, has wide training in nuclear physics, electronics, physical chemistry, engineering and medical sciences. Mr. Laurance received his B.S. at Whittier College, his M.S. at the University of Southern California and did graduate work at the University of California. He has conducted many research projects in these fields and has carried his knowledge into the development of electronic sensor systems relating to the paranormal. One of the pioneers in space research, Mr. Laurance served on advisory committees of. NASA and worked as space program manager for several corporations. He has also served as acting chief scientist for the Office of Naval Research. In 1968, he helped to organize Life Energies Research, Inc., a non-profit institution for the investigation of human-energy systems and currently serves as a member of its Board of Directors and on its Research Committee. Addition-ally, he has made several trips to Brazil to study paranormal medical healing. Mr. Laurance is listed in various professional directories including American Men of Science and Who's Who in the East.
Dr. Andrei Lobanov-Rostovsky is a retired professor of history who has spent a lifetime avocationally studying Hindu philosophy as it relates to parapsychology and human betterment. He received his doctorate from the Institut des Sciences Politiques in Paris. After ten years as a correspondent for Baring Brothers in London, he taught European, Russian and Far Eastern history at UCLA and the University of Michigan. Author of over 40 books and articles in his specialty, Professor Lobanov- Rostovsky continues to teach at colleges in Florida and to give lectures through-out the U. S. in the fields of ancient philosophies, transcendental meditation, and parapsychology. A Russian by birth, he commands several foreign languages.
Arthur Marcus, research psychologist, received his M.S. degree in experimental psychology and has completed course requirements for the Ph.D. at the University of Massachusetts. He has had thirteen years' experience in human factors analysis,developing training programs, and field consulting for both government and industry. He has designed many tests for the evaluation of human potential in a variety of settings and has participated in various projects relating to the design, development and evaluation of information systems. Mr. Marcus has coordinated and directed experiments in human performance including the experimental design and preparation of apparatus and procedures, collection and analysis of data and interpretation of results both with regard to their theoretical and to their practical implications.
Dr. E. Stanton Maxey is a general medical surgeon practicing in Stuart, Florida. He received his B.S. from Wake Forest College (1946) and his medical degree from the Bowman Gray School of Medicine (1950). After interning at the University of Pennsylvania, he completed his surgical residency at the C&O Hospital in Huntington, West Virginia (1951-55). He is certified by the American Board of Surgery and is a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons. Dr. Maxey, in addition to his surgical career, is licensed as a commercial pilot and flight instructor and has taken out, or is applying for, patents on inventions in electronics and aviation. He has conducted extensive research into the human unconscious and dreams correlating his findings with the effects of such exterior influences as electromagnetic fields, barometric changes and the positions of the moon and planets.
H. Scott McCann, a technical writer and broadcast engineer, holds a B.S. degree in English from Loyola College where he is also pursuing a master's degree in psychology. He has ten years' experience in writing and editing mechanical manuals and has worked in testing half lattice crystal filters and travelling wave tube amplifier systems. As a technician for ITT Research Institute, he worked with their Electromagnetic Compatibility Analysis Center. Recently he has worked with TV station WETA in Washington, D. C. as the engineer responsible for operation and maintenance of equipment, conduct of air operations and network switching. He previously was a technical editor with Operations Research, Inc. and the Tate Technical Service.
George Schepak, Russian-born aerospace systems engineer and scientific trans-lator, was educated in Russia and Germany. He has worked with several California aerospace firms where he designed solid-state, general purpose, computers and participated in the U. S. space program. He is currently participating in a research program at the Sepulveda (California) Veterans Administration Hospital where he is investigating the physiological aspects of healing using EEGs, EKGs and other devices for monitoring physiological functioning. He has translated many Russian articles in the parapsychological field dealing with medicine, physics, magnetism, botany and geology. An active member of the Southern California Society for Psychical Research, he became its Director of Research in 1969. He holds a B.S. in Engineering from UCLA and a law degree from the Blackstone School of Law.
Albert B. Wing, advanced technology engineer, took his B.S. in Chemistry at Brown University (1943) and his M.S. in Optics and Physics from the University of Rochester (1952). After working on the Manhattan Project in W. W. II, he has served as a Senior Staff Scientist for an advanced systems engineering company, manager of operations research for a defense agency and as a private consultant in radiation sensing and solid-state transducer physics, X-ray and neutron diffraction, microwave systems, bionics, geophysics and chemical engineering. Earlier he was principal physicist to the Cornell Aeronautical Laboratories where he directed research in biosensor telemetry, space-environment simulation chambers, IFF video defruiters, centralized time and frequency control and other problems. Mr. Wing's affiliations include the IEEE (Senior Member), the American Institute of Physics and the American Optical Society. He is listed in American Men of Science and was named to honorary membership in the research Society of America.
Optics-
"The Sharpening of Photographic Images: A Systems Approach," to be published. "The Anastigmatic Anisotropy of Visual Acuity," M.S. Thesis, U of R. 1951.
NEW DOCUMENT
LISTING OF HEALTH AND WELFARE PROGRAMS WHICH ARE WITHIN THE CAPABILITY OF MANKIND RESEARCH UNLIMITED, INC.
1. Investigations into Causal and Preventive Factors for the Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS)
2. Methods of Improving Beds, from a Therapeutic and Comfort Standpoint, for Hospital Patients
3. Applications of Music-color and Chromotherapy as Remedial Agents in the Treatment of Emotionally Disturbed and Retarded Children
4. Analysis of the French-developed Electronic Anesthetic System
5. Investigations of Geopathogenic Factors and Their Effects on Inducing of Human Illness
6. Application of the Burr-Ravitz Electrodynamic Field Theory to the Precise Electronic Prediction and Determination of Female Ovulation Times in Terms of Minutes
7. Application of Newly Developed U.S. Army "Thermoviewer" Devices to Analyze Diagnostically the Status of Body Tissue Beneath the Skin
8. Investigations into the Use of Negative Ion Generators and Their Potential Application in Enhancing Human Performance, Welfare, and Health
9. Use of the Italian -Developed Device Referred to as the "Tobiscope" to Analyze and Detect Abnormal or Malignant Conditions in Body Cells and Tissues and to Locate Acupuncture Points
10. Use of High Frequency Electromagnetic Waves with Pulse Cadence Near Alpha Rhythm Brain Wave to Produce Narcosis Effects
11. Use of Psychobiological and Physico-Chemical Drugs to Alter States of Con-sciousness and Control Moods, Fatigue, Alertness, Personality, Perception, Tension
12. Through Interaction of Biophysiological Techniques and Electromagnetic Fields, Varying Emotional States of Groups of People and Inducing Visual or Auditory Hallucinations by Applying Specific Field Intensities
13. Luminescent Microscopy Techniques to Diagnose illnesses
14. Analysis of Acupuncture and Its Degree of Effectiveness in Treating Human Ailments
15. Human Sensitivity to, and Effects of, Ultrasonic Energy
16. Biological Effects in Strong or Reinforced and Weak or Disturbed Geomagnetic and Electromagnetic Fields
17. Production of Electrographic Images of Living Organisms
18. Human Perception and Relation to the Conditioned Reflex
19. Applications of Neurocybernetics
20. Bio-Feedback Training and Applications
21. Electromagnetic Field and Magnetoresistance Effects on Neural Tissues
32. Biological Effects of Water Treated by Magnetic Fields on the Behavior and Activity of Living Organisms
23. Use of 'Microwave (SHE) Therapy" in the Treatment of Diseases
24. Investigation of the Stimulating Effect of Electromagnetic Fields on HemopoIesis and on the Composition of the Blood in Humans and Animals
25. Measurement of the Electric Parameters of Body Tissues in Various Frequency. Ranges for Diagnostic Purposes - I :3
26. Effects of Electromagnetic Fields on Cultures of Normal and Malignant Human Cells and on Malignant Tumors
27. Effects of Electromagnetic Fields on Human Blood in Respect to Clotting Time and Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate.
28. Destruction of Bacteria by Electromagnetic Waves of Certain Wavelengths and by Biotherapy Means
29. Physical and Chemical Factors which Influence and Inhibit the Olfactory Senses
30. Ability of Electric Potentials on the Skin (referred to as "skin potentials") to Immediately Reflect Internal Changes in the Human Body
31. Use of Magnetic Fields and Magnets to Effect Pain-Deadening Conditions
NEW DOCUMENT
SYSTEMS CONSULTANTS, INC., is an organiza-tion of technical and management specialists who are able to provide solutions to a broad range of problems in the fields of:
· Systems Engineering · Computer Technology · Management Consultation
The interdependency of technical disciplines to solve these problems has resulted in the development || of a highly diversified staff. Our project management approach to organization enables us to maximize the staff resources available for each client.
SYSTEMS CONSULTANTS, INC., maintains high standards of performance that are reflected in two basic corporate objectives:
· The timely and accurate definition of client problems
· The client's complete satisfaction with, and ability to implement the solution
This introductory brochure provides a brief de-scription of the Company and its qualifications. Addi-tional information will be furnished upon request.
SYSTEMS ENGINEERING
Company has participated in projects concerned with a wide spectrum of technical and sclentific skills and capabilities that we have been applied to the following type assignments: · Aircraft and electronic systems
· Command and control systems
· Data collection and display systems
· Product quality assurance projects
. Reliability and maintainability studies
· Test and evaluation projects
· Economic and mathematical modeling
· Electronic systems simulation
· Ship and craft armament systems
. Multi-sensor aircraft systems
· Electro-optical sensor systems
Our efforts in these assignments have not been limited to the commonly accepted concepts of systems engineering. Systems Consultants relates its work to the total system, and its impact on the external and internal interfaces that exist throughout the operating environment. The assignments cover the broad range of development from feasibility through test and evaluation.
COMPUTER TECHNOLOGY
Many of the new problems posed by modern technology can only be solved through the application of advanced computer sciences. The computer staff of Systems Consultants, Inc. constantly seeks new and better solutions to such problems. Among our current efforts in this area are:
· Design and evaluation of interactive graphic display systems · Analysis and design of an automated Con-gressional constituent mail system
· Analysis and integration of airborne and ship-board data processing systems
· Specification, simulation, and evaluation of com-plex multi-processing systems
· Studies of third-generation real-time computer systems · Analysis and design of advanced multi-processing executive programs for real time applications
· Evaluation, analysis, and specification of high- level programming languages We have had broad experience in computer system feasibility, design, development, analysis, simulation and evaluation. The Company has performed system analysis on a variety of client problems and selected the optimum combination of automated machines and manual procedures which efficiently and economically process the data to meet the needs of management.
MANAGEMENT CONSULTING
In the conduct of business and government many complex problems relate to the development of infor-mation for managers and directors. Our staff is experienced in the development of solutions to manage-ment problems for national, state and local govern-ments as well as private industry. The Company provides its clients with a wide variety of management services, including:
· Management Information Systems
· Appraisal System Design
· Program Management Planning
· Cost Benefit Analysis
· Organization Evaluation
· Training Program Development
· Equipment Procurement
· Technical Audit
· Architectural Safety Advisory
· Security and Safety Planning
Through our efforts in these, areas, Systems Consultants, Inc., has had extensive experience in planning, organizing, and evaluating a variety of gov-ernmental and industrial projects as well as defining, developing and implementing management information systems, professional training programs, safety and security methods and procedures.
CORPORATE OFFICES
1054 31St STREET N.W. WASHINGTON, D. C.
TE LEPHONE (202) 333~800 TWX (710) 822-0103
WASHINGTON DlVISION 202 333-6800 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting 202 333-6800 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting 202 333-6800 end_of_the_skype_highlighting begin_of_the_skype_highlighting 202 333-6800 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting 202 333-6800 end_of_the_skype_highlighting end_of_the_skype_highlighting begin_of_the_skype_highlighting 202 333-6800 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting 202 333-6800 end_of_the_skype_highlighting begin_of_the_skype_highlighting 202 333-6800 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting 202 333-6800 end_of_the_skype_highlighting end_of_the_skype_highlighting end_of_the_skype_highlighting end_of_the_skype_highlighting
1050 31st Street N.W. Washington, D.C.
3500 Virginia Beach Boulevard Suite 411
Virginia Beach, Virginia
1411 Jefferson Davis Highway (Suite 808 ~ 99R) Arlington, Virginia v NEW YORK DIVISION 7777 Leesburg Pike, Fails Church, Virginia
2 Penn Plaza
New York City
410 Jerico Turnpike
Jericho, New York
809 Aquidneck Ave
P.O. Box 330
Middletown, Rhode Island
6525 Belcrest Road Hyattsville, Maryland
RlDGECREST DIViSION 543 Graaf Street, Ridgecrest, California.
CALIFORNIA DIVISION
16661 Ventura Boulevard Encino, California
7330 Convoy Court San Diego, California
3255 Wing Street Diego, California
Systems Consultants Inc. was established in 1966 and has experienced continued growth in personnel, skills, experience and facilities. The staff is composed of scientific, engineering and management specialists. To support the technical staff, SCI maintains complete services in graphic arts, technical publications, management presenta-tions and computer time-sharing facilities.
The broad academic and professional background of the Company's staff have enabled it to develop strong capabilities in a variety of fields. The Company has no affiliation with equipment manu-facturers; therefore, we are able to provide objec-tive evaluations of our client's needs.
The Corporation is formed around four operating divisions to enable diversified and independent management of the services and products tailored to specific customer requirements. 1. Burr, Dr. Harold S., Blueprint for Immortality -- The Electric Patterns of Life, N. Spearman, London, 1972 (in press).
2 Stromberg, Gustaf, The Soul of the Universe, Educational Research Institute, N. Hollywood, California, 1948.
3 Daniels, Rexford, "New Horizons in EMC", Proceedings of the 1970 IEEE Inter-national Symposium on Electro-Magnetic Compatibility, pp. 160-67.
4 Pressman, A. S., Electromagnetic Fields and Life, Plenum Press, New York, 1970 (originally published in Russian by Nauka Press, Moscow, 1968).
5 To the Reader", Main Currents in Modern Thought, Volume 19, Number 1, September-October 1962.
11. This situation is exemplified by the work of Professor H. S. Burr of Yale University on life fields or the so-called L-Fields, which was conducted with his colleague and former student? Dr. Leonard J. Ravitz.
6. Daniels, op cit. (Note: This does not imply that we currently have identified all forces which may appear on the electromagnetic spectrum nor that we have adequately described all laws that govern natural phenomena.)
7. Karagulla, Dr. Shafica, Breakthrough to Creativity: Higher Sensory Perception, Virginia Beach, Virginia, 1970.
8. See, for instance, Puharich, Henry.K., M.D., "The Work of the Brazilian Healer Arigo", in The Varieties of Healing Experience, The Academy of Parapsychology and Medicine, 1971.
9. Karllns, Marvin and Lewis M. Andrews, Biofeedback -- Turning on the Power of - Your Mind, J. B. Lippincott, 1972.
1O. Green, Elmer, Ph.D., "Biofeedback for Mind-Body Self-Regulation: Healing and Creativity", in The Varieties of Healing Experience, The Academy of Para-psychology and Medicine, 1971.
12. Tromp, S. W., Psychical Physics, Elsevier Press, Amsterdam, 1949.
13. Dyson, Freeman J., "Energy and the Universe", Scientific American, September 1971.
14. Alfven, Hannes, "Anti-Matter and Cosmology", Scientific American, April 1967.
15. Carstoiu, J., "Carstoiu's Suggestions for Gravity Waves", published in Relativity Reexamined, by Leon Brillouin, Academic Press, New York, 1970.
16. Huxley, Julian, The Doors of Perception, Harper (paperback).
17. Grof, Stanislav, "LSD Psychotherapy and Human Culture", The Journal for the Study of Consciousness, Volume 3, Number 2, July-December 1970, pp. 100-118.
18. Lilly, John C., The Center of the Cyclone -- An Autobiography of Lunar Space, Julian Press, New York, 1972.
19. Dean, Stanley R., "Metapsychiatry and the Ultra-Conscious", Congressional Record, 17 November 1971, Volume 117, Number 176, Washington, D. C.
20. Stern, Jess, Edgar Cayce, The Sleeping Prophet, Bantam Books (paperback), 1967-1971, 287 pp., and Cerminara, Gina, Ph.D., Many Mansions, A.R.E. Publishers, Virginia Beach, Virginia.
21. See the monthly Medical Research Bulletin, Edgar Cayce Foundation, Medical Research Division, Phoenix, Arizona.
22. The Varieties of Healing Experience, Transcript of the Interdisciplinary Symposium of 30 October 1971, The Academy of Parapsychology and Medicine, Los Altos, California.
23. Journal of Paraphysics, The Paraphysical Laboratory, Downton (Wiltshire), England.
24. Tietze, Thomas R., "Science Officially Meets PSI", Psychic June 1971, - pp. 18-21. 25. Journal of Cybernetics (USSR), and others.
26. Ryzl, Milan, Parapsychology, A Scientific Approach, Hawthorn, New York,
27. 0strander, Sheila, and Lynn Schroeder, Psychic Discoveries Behind the Iron Curtain, Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, 1970.
28. Unfortunately, these figures are not matched in the US, where only insignifi-cant sums have been spent for this type of research. This indicates that the European Communist countries, especially the USSR, seem to be more aware of the benefits and applications of biocommunications research. Mankind Research Unlimited hopes to counter and reverse this trend so that the full fruits and benefits derived from this research are also made available to our own citizenry.
Sovietologist/Soviet Bloc Trend Analyst
Professor Lobanov-Rostovsky has had wide experience extending over fifty years as Sovietologist and observer-analyst of Eastern European affairs. He has lectured and written extensively on this subject and has in more recent years closely followed trends in parapsychology from Eastern Europe with emphasis on psychical research in the Soviet Union. Professor Lobanov-Rostovsky has been active in psychical research in the United States since the 1930's and is a member of the 'American Society of Psychical Research.
Russian by birth, Prof. Lobanov-Rostovsky served in the Russian Imperial Guards and the French Army during World War I, and in the White Army during the Russian civil war of 1919-1920. Afterwards he went to London and spent the next ten years as Foreign Correspondent for Baring Bros., Ltd. He emigrated to America in 1930 and became a U.S. citizen in 1936. Since coming to America he has taught European, Russian and Far Eastern history -ART at nearly fifteen colleges, although he has always been a member of the History Departments at either U.C.L.A. (1930-1945) or the University of Michigan (1945-1952) where he is a Professor Emeritus of History. Among his extra teaching assignments was a year with the U.S. Army Special Training Corps. He has also lectured on parapsychology.
Prof. Lobanov-Rostovsky attended the Imperial School of Law at St. Petersburg (now Leningrad), the Lycee de Nice (France) and the Institut des Sciences Politiques in Paris, from whom he received his diploma in 1923. He has published over forty books and articles relating to his specialty. They include:
Russia and Asia. New York, The Macmillan Company, 1933.
Russia and Europe: 1789-1825. Durham, Duke University Press, 1947.
Russia and Europe: 1825-1878. Ann Arbor, The George Wahr Publishing Co., 1954.
"Russia at the Crossroads: Europe or Asia". London, The Slavonic Review, March 1928. Lobanov-Rostovsky, cont.
"The Soviet Muslim Republics of Central Asia" London, Journal of the Royal Institute of International Affairs, July 1928.
"Psychological Undercurrents of the Russian Revolution". London, The Slavonic Review, March 1929. Bali
"The Problem of Strategic Frontiers" in Frontiers of the Future (Lectures arranged by the University of California Committee on International Relations). Berkeley, University of California Press, 1941.
"Russia and Germany". The Russian Review, March - April 1943.
"The United States and Russia". Reprinted from the United States in the Postwar World, Ann Arbor, University of Michigan Press, 1947.
"Trends of Soviet Foreign Policy in Asia". Recent Soviet Trends, Proceedings of the Conference Held at the University of Texas, 1956, Austin, University of Texas Publications, 1957.
A Digest of the Krasnyi Arkiv-Red Archives Vol 31 - 106 Editied by Lobanov Rostovsky Ann Arbor, The University of Michigan Press, 1955.
"The Soviet Union and the War". The World in Turmoil, Proceedings of the Institute of World Affairs, Vol. XIX, pp. 130-133, Los Angeles, University of Southern California, 1942.
"Russian Expansion in the Far East in the Light of the Turner Theory". The Frontier in Perspective, pp. 79-95, Madison, University of Wisconsin Press, 1957.
ARTHUR MARCUS Research Psychologist
Mr. Marcus brings to this project more than thirteen years of experience in the areas of experimental psychology, human factors analysis, training and field consulting for both government and industry. Much of his work has been in the design of field tests and the evaluation of the performance effectiveness of people and systems in a variety of settings. He has participated in many projects related to the design, development and evaluation of information systems. This work has included the determination of requirements, development of operational methods and procedures, allocation of man-machine functions, evaluation of system alternatives and the selection of hardware and software applications for system implementation.
Mr. Marcus has been responsible for coordinating, directing and conducting experiments in human performance, including the experimental design and preparation of apparatus and procedures, collection and analysis of data and interpretation of results both with regard to their theoretical implications and their practical applications.
Mr. Marcus has performed and reported on applied research studies (both field and experimental) to determine immediate answers to special human factors problems. In doing this, he has surveyed relevant literature for useful ideas, facts, approaches and techniques. He has reviewed research reports published by other organizations and individuals and has maintained liaison with, and when necessary has obtained assistance from, other researchers and organizations who have lan interest and capability to perform psychological research.
Since joining the company, Mr. Marcus has become invoIved in two major military electronic system efforts, notably the SHORTSTOP System and the Air Combat Maneuvering Range System. His work has been in the human factors areas of display design, workplace layouts and in the determination of personnel require-ments for operation, maintenance and control. His tasks on SHORTSTOP include the optimization of operator duties, planning and participating in field tests, and the analysis of a variety of EW functions.
Mr. Marcus has provided support to numerous other military , System Program Offices (including SAM-D, LHA, NMCC, 416L, BUIC and 440L) through the application of exploratory and advanced development findings to system acquisition problems. His primary function has been to insure that adequate psychological principles and techniques are applied to improve the design, performance and operational capability of current and planned military systems through the conduct of research tasks and special studies. Marcus, cont.
Marcus received his M.S. degree in Experimental Psychology and has completed the course requirements for a Ph.D. at the Diversity of Massachusetts. He received his B.B.A. industrial Psychology from the City College of New York. Marcus currently holds a SECRET clearance.
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
Preliminary Evaluation of Human Factors Affecting the Selection and Utilization of Displays for the ACMR System. Systems Consultants, Inc. 25 May 1970.
Sequence Diagram Techniques in Systems Analysis (with T. G. Slattery and H. E. Etter). Dunlap & Associates, Inc. Monograph No. 5, 1 July 1969.
A Case for AD Human Performance Testing. Dunlap & Associates, Inc. Report No. 176-48, 21 November 1968.
SAM-D Symbology-Human Factors Testing of Proposed Symbol Code (with H. Bowen and R. Bughman). Dunlap Associates, Inc. Report No. 176-38, 24 July 1968.
Integrated Closed-Circuit Television Study (Report prepared on the EHA Program for the Raytheon Co.). Dunlap and Associates, Inc., 27 November 1967.
National Military Command Center Briefing Facilities Users' Manual. Decision Sciences laboratory, Electronic Systems
Division, January 1966. "The Effect of Correct Response Location on the Difficulty l Level of Multiple-Choice Questions". Journal of Applied Psychology, 47, 48-51, 1963.
E. STANTON MAXEY, M.D.
Medical-Biophysical Researcher
Dr. Maxey has practiced general surgery in Stuart, Florida, since 1956. In addition to his practice, he has wide interests in Aviation and Electronics. He is Licensed as a commercial pilot (airplane single and (multi engine ratings) and as an Instrument and Flight Instructor. At present he holds a patent for his Video Landing and Departure System and has applied for patents on other inventions in electronics.
Dr. Maxey is conducting extensive studies in sleep research and human unconscious behavior patterns. Through the use of sophisticated sensors, he is attempting to determine the effects of exterior phenomena on dreams. An innovative feature of this research will be the use of electromagnetic recording of EEG's, ultraviolet and infrared sensors, precise weight analysis and the correlation of these technical factors with exterior phenomena such as electromagnetic fields, moon and planetary positions, barometric changes, and the dream recall abilities of the subject.
Dr. Maxey received his B.S. (Cum Laude) in 1946 from Wake Forest College where he was also elected to Phi Beta Kappa. He received his M.D. from the M.D. Bowman Gray School of Medicine in 1950, and completed his medical Internship (1950-1951) at the University of Pennsylvania. His surgical residency was at the Chesapeake and Ohio Hospital in Huntington, West Virginia, from 1951-1955. Dr. Maxey is certified by the American Board of Surgery and is a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons.
|H. SCOTT MC CANN
Technical Writer/Editor
Mr. McCann brings to the company a total of nearly ten years experience in technical writing, and editing of weapon systems technical manuals. He has also had experience in testing half lattice crystal filters and traveling wave tube amplifier systems.
Mr. McCann has most recently worked with TV station WETA where he was an engineer responsible for the operation and light maintenance of station equipment, the conduct of day to day air operations, and network switching. He previously served as a technical editor for Operations Research, Inc. where he was responsible for all-stages of editing. Mr. McCann held a similar position with Tate Technical Service, Inc.
As a technician for IIT Research Institute, Mr. McCann has had four years of experience with the Electromagnetic Compatibility Analysis Center (ECAC) working with engineers on various RFI problems on communications, radar, and weapons systems. In addition, Mr. McCann served as a technician for the Aeronca Manufacturing Corporation, responsible for testing half lattice crystal filters and traveling wave tube amplifier systems.
Mr. McCann received his B. S. degree in English from Loyola College, and is currently a candidate there for a Masters Degree in Psychology. Mr. McCann has a First Class Radio- ~ telephone (Broadcast Engineer) license.
HENRY C. MONTEITH
Electrical Engineer/Bioluminescent Researcher
Mr. Monteith has had over ten years experience in engineering which has included color TV design, bioluminescent research, and development of innovative medical techni-ques. Presently he is a technical staff engineer of an engineering company under contract to the Atomic Energy Commission at Albuquerque, New Mexico. Mr. Monteith special interests have led him into research involving the study of biological effects of electromagnetic forces on living organisms at the molecular, and atomic levels. This has led him into experimenting and validating recent Russian research in the area of bioluminescence which is referred 'to as the "Kirlian effect.'' Prior to his present position, Mr. Monteith was assigned to the research laboratories of a large manufacturer of television sets where he designed circuitry and developed decoder parameters for color television. Subsequent to this assignment, he completed four years of military service in the U.S. Navy.
Mr. Monteith received his B.S. in Electrical Engineering from the Milwaukee School of Engineering in 1965.He also studied engineering at the University of Pennsylvania and Purdue University. In 1970, he was awarded an M.S. degree in electrical engineering, with a minor in computer science from the University of New Mexico. Currently, he Is completing studies leading to a doctorate degree also at the University of New Mexico. His academic honors include member-ship in the Sigma Pi Sigma Physics honor society.
SELECTED RESEARCH PAPERS "Computer Determination of Decoder Parameters for Color Television", RCA Working Report, August 1967.
"The Time Theory of Nikolai A. Kozyrev", unpublished report written as internal company memorandum, Sandia Corporation, 1971.
"Stimulated Emissions from Living Forms May Provide Clues to Novel Medical Techniques of the Future" (submitted for publication in the near future).
STEFAN T. POSSONY
Sovietologist and Psychological Warfare Specialist
Dr. Possony is a Sovietologist, International Affairs, and Psychological Warfare Specialist of high reputation and experience. Prior to and during the early stages of World War II, he served as an Advisor to the French Air Ministry and the French Foreign Office. After this assignment, he came to the United States and held a post as a Carnegie Re-search Fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, New Jersey.
During World War II and through 1946, he was a Psy-chological Warfare Specialist at the Office of Naval Intelligence (ONI). Between 1946 and 1961, he served as Special Advisor to the Assistant Chief of Staff, Intel-ligence, USAF. During the same period, Dr. Possony served as Professor of International Politics r Georgetown Uni-versity, and during 1956-1958 as Director of Research for Life Magazine's Russian Revolution project. In 1961, Dr. Possony became Director of the International Political Studies Program at the Hoover Institution on War Revolution and Peace, where he is now a Senior Fellow. He testified before the U.S. Senate Internal Security Sub- Committee on the Threat of U.S. Security Posed by Stepped-up Sino-Soviet Hostilities and has on frequent occasion been called upon as a special consultant to U.S. Presidential Committees, Congress, and the Defense Department.
Dr. Possony has been a Visiting Professor at American, ''European and Asian universities and participated in numerous international conferences.
Dr. Possony received his Ph.D. from the University of Vienna.
He has authored, co-authored and edited many books and other publications. Some of the more recent and relevant of these are: The Strategy of Technology; and Lenin, the Compulsive Revolutionary.
MILAN RYZL
Biocommunications/Parapsychology Scientist
Dr. Milan Ryzl is an international authority in biocommunications and parapsychology, who has lectured widely both in the United States and in Europe. Dr. Ryzl, educated in Czechoslovakia, was a member of the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences in Prague and was a leading figure in the application of scientific methods to the study of parapsychology. After he arrived in the United States, he worked with Dr. J. B. Rhine at the Institute of Parapsychology in Durham, North Carolina. There, Dr. Ryzl was especially noted for his original research on the influence of hypnosis on ESP.
Dr. Ryzl has taught parapsychology at San Diego State College and is currently a professor of parapsychology at San Jose State University. He is a member of and has founded parapsychological and psychical research groups in Europe and in the United States. Dr. Ryzl's primary efforts in this field have been to document a case for parapsychology by means of highly refined and systematized scientific methods. He published his results in 'Parapsvchology: A Scientific Approach (Hawthorn Books, 1970). In this work, Dr. Ryzl presents indisputable and thoroughly documented evidence that psychic phenomena exist and scientifi-cally examines the full range of psychic phenomena by evaluating experimental evidence derived from laboratory controlled testing.
Dr. Ryzl is also well known as a reviewer and analyst of parapsychology developments and trends in Eastern Europe. He has frequently published reviews and commentaries on parapsychological works from behind the Iron Curtain. One such is Telepatie A Jasnovidnost (Telepathy and Clairvoyance), by Dr. Z. Rejdak. Dr. Ryzl's review of this book was published in the July-August 1971 edition of the Parapsychology Review.
P. PAUL SAUVIN
Electromechanical Engineer/Bionics Researcher
Sauvin has had wide experience as an electromechanical engineer and researcher. Such bionics research has included the application of biological principles to the study and design of engineering systems; especially those that are electronic, biometric and bioluminescent. For thirteen years he worked in the aerospace industry, where he was initially a Flight Technician and eventually an Engineering Associate. His duties were primarily concerned with the installation, maintenance collection of flight data on airborne Doppler radar systems. He laid out and assembled experimental research and development units. Afterwards, Mr. Sauvin was responsible for the cable layout of the Plane Position Data Display Console and the electrical alignment, mechanical adjustment and maintenance of this console at the National Facilities Experimental Center. Mr. Sauvin also assisted with the initial development and maintenance of the Weather Display Console. He hen moved into systems engineering, and set up a Telemetry Test Labratory for the Mobile Mid-range Ballistic Program, performed evalutation tests of telemetry sub-carrier oscillator and pulse code System and participated in the preparation of the research and development specifications and the work statement for the signal conditioner for the Stellar Acquisition Feasibility Flight Test program. He later held project engineering responsibility for this development.
Sauvin is currently with National Institute for Rehabilitation Engineering (NIRE) at St. Joseph's Hospital, Paterson, New Jersey, which designs and dispenses act types of special rehabilitation equipment, tools and prosthetic devices for the severely disabled. Apart from his work at NIRE, Mr. Sauvin has conducted independent research into medical applications of the bionic, biometric, biochemical and bioluminescent sciences. This research deals with the detection and analysis of emissions and electro- optical/electromagnetic radiation given off by human, animal and plant organisms. His research has also included investigations of the High Frequency "Kirlian Effect" photography, thought-controlled devices, and psycho-kinetic switches. The goal of such research and analysis is to devise and develop hardware configurations which can aid the handicapped and severely disabled.
Sauvin has studied at Delehanty Institute and attended Westchester Community College. He completed a programming course at National Air Facilities Experimental Station.
Sauvin is currently active as a private pilot (single engine and seaplane ratings). He holds a 2nd class license in broadcast engineering, a 1st class radiotelephone license and an F.C.C. technician license. He has written many technical articles in the fields of electronic system applications, advanced electromechanical systems, applied bionics and rehabilitation engineering devices and techniques.
GEORGE SCHEPAK
Russian Technical Translator/Biocybernetics Researcher
Mr. Schepak has had wide experience both as a translator and as an aerospace systems engineer, and has additionally been very active in parapsychological research. He has translated Russian scientific articles in parapsychology with emphasis in the fields of medicine, physics, geo-magnetism, botany and zoology. Mr. Schepak was born and educated in Russia. He has also studied in Russian schools in Germany.
Mr. Schepak has been an engineer with several California aerospce firms. He has designed solid state general purpose, computers and worked on ground support equipment for inertial components. He participated in the DISCOVERER, MIDAS, SAMOS, VOYAGER and APOLLO space programs.
Mr. Schepak is now participating in a research program headed by Dr. Barbara Brown, Chief of Experiential Psychology at Sepulveda Veterans Administration Hospital, in which he is investigating the physiological aspects of healing using EEG's, EKG's and other physiological measurements.
Mr. Schepak has been an active member of the California Society for Psychical Research since 1962 and Director of Research for that organization since 1969. He is also a member of the Biofeedback Society and does advanced research in this area.
Mr. Schepak holds a B.S. in Engineering from UCLA, and a LL.B. from the Blackstone School of Law. In addition he has studied in cybernetics, the behavioral sciences, biological feedback and parapsychology.
Mr. Schepak has been a naturalized citizen of the United States since March 1955 and has held a Defense contractor security clearance.
BERTHOLD ERIC SCHWARZ, M.D.
Psychiatry/Parapsychology Researcher
Dr. Schwarz is a psychiatrist in private practice in Montclair, New Jersey. In addition to his practice, he has conducted extensive psychiatric/parapsychological researches and is the author of over fifty published reports (a selected bibliography follows). Prior to his entry into private practice, Dr. Schwarz was a Fellow in Psychiatry at the Mayo Foundation from 1950 to 1955. In addition to the basic studies required by the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology, the Fellowship gave Dr. Schwarz experience as a consultant to all sections of the Mayo Clinic, the psycho-somatic and closed divisions of St. Mary's Hospital, in child psychiatry and neurological services and as manager of the consulting service for the downtown hospitals. He has conducted depth electrographic and clinical research on LSD, mescaline, and clinical electroencephalography in the Section of Physiology and neurophysiological studies on animals and humans. Dr. Schwarz also made psychoanalytic investigations while working on the Mayo Clinic schizophrenia, delinquency and perversion projects, as well as studying didactic and personal psychoanalysis.
In addition to his private practice, Dr. Schwarz has studied telepathic communications in the parent-child and physician - patient relationships. He has also made investigations of the accomplishments of such extraordinary paragnosts as Henry Gross, Jacques Romano, Gerard Croiset and Joseph Dunninger. These psychiatric-parapsychological studies and techniques are focused on the elements of reality, psychopathology and induced psychophysiology.
Dr. Schwarz received his B.A. from Dartmouth College and his Diploma in Medicine from the Dartmouth Medical School in 1945. He graduated from the New York University College of Medicine in 1950 and interned at Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital, Hanover, New Hampshire, 1951. He received a M.S. in Psychiatry from the Mayo Graduate School of Medicine of Minnesota; and is a diplomate of the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology and a member of the American Medical Association as well as the American Electroencephalographic Society. Schwarz, cont.
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
"Telepathic Experiments in a Child Between 1 and 3-1/2 Years". International Journal of Parapsychology, Vol. III, No. 4:5-52, 1961.
"Physiological Aspects of Henry Gross's Dowsing". Parapsychology, Vol. 4-, No. 2:71-86, 1962-1963.
"Psychodynamic Experiments in Telepathy". Corrective Psychiatry and Journal of Social Therapy, Vol. 9, 169-218, 1963.
"Discussion of Dr. Grad's paper 'Psychic Healing"'. New York Academy of Science, 28 October 1963. Journal of American Social and Psychical Research, Vol. LIX: 127-29, 1965.
Psychic-Dynamics. New York, Pageant Press, 1965 (Title of paperback, Psychiatrist Looks at ESP, A Signet Mystic Book, New York 1968.).
"Death of a Parapsychologist, Possible Terminal Telepathy with Nandor Fodor". Samikea, Vol. 2, No. 1:1-14, 1966-1967.
"The Telepathic Hypothesis and Genius: A Note on Thomas Alva Edison". Corrective Psvchiatrv and the Journal of Social Therapy, Vol. 13' No. 1, 17019, January 1967.
"Possible Telesomatic Reactions". The Journal of the Medical Society of New Jersey, Vol. 64, No. 11:600-603, November 1967.
Preface to the American edition of Telepathy and Clairvoyance, by Professor Dr. W. H. C. Tenhaeff, Trans. Mrs. A. C. Matteson, 1967.
-"Precognition and Psychic Nexus". Journal of the American Society of Psychosomatic Dentistry and Medicine, Vol. 18, No. 2.
"Telepathy and Pseudotelekinesis in Psychotherapy". The Journal of the American Society of Psychosomatic Dentistry and Med-icine, Vol. 15, No. 4:144-154, October 1968.
"Parent-Child Telepathy", A study of the Telepathy of Everyday Life, Garrett Publications, New York, 1971.
Co-author: "Hypnotic Phenomena, Including Hypnotically Activated Seizures, Studied with the Electroencephalogram". Journal of Nervous and Mental Diseases, 122:564-574, December 1955. Schwarz, cont.
"Behavioral and Electroencephalographic Effects of Hallucinogenic - Drugs". A.M.A. Arch. Neurology Psychiatry, 75:83-90, January 1956
"Electroencephalographic Changes in Animals under the Influence of Hypnosis". Journal of Nervous and Mental Diseases 124: 433-439, November 1956.
"A Study of Chlorpromazine Photosensitivity". Journal of Investigative Dermatology, 28:329-338, 1957
ALBERT B. WING
Senior Scientist/Engineer for Advanced Technology
Mr. Wing has over twenty years experience in the research, design, and development of advanced technology which date back to his work on the Manhattan Project during World War II. He has also served as a senior staff scientist for an advanced systems engineering company, manager of operations research and systems research projects for a defense agency, and as a technical consultant. Mr. Wing is currently performing research in technologies of sensors and pattern recognition; information processing and display; feature discrimination, enhancement, and recognition; and transfer of electronic warfare technology to anti-crime applications.
Mr. Wing has served as a management advisor to U.S. government RDT&E programs and has devised systems for interdisciplinary problem evaluation and innovative solutions. Among his many government consulting tasks have been his assignments as a special consultant in radiation sensing and solid-state transducer physics, X-ray and neutron diffraction, microwave systems, bionics, geophysics, and chemical engineering.
In private industry, Mr. Wing has developed an air traffic contra' system, served as project manager for a camouflage R&D effort, and headed the special projects department for a University of Rochester team under contract to the Manhattan Project. His other industrial experience includes analysis of: microwave antenna radiation patterns and new antenna designs; foreign technology developments in lasers, masers, and sensors; ionospheric propagation and upper atmosphere technologies, and reconnaissance and surveillance communications.
While serving as principal physicist to the Cornell Aeronautical Laboratories, Mr. Wing directed research which included biosensor telemetry, space-environment simulation chambers, IFF video defruiters, shipboard electro-magnetic computability, centralized time and frequency control, broad spectrum camouflage, sound-ranging equipment, and imagery transmission.
Mr. Wing received his B.S. in Chemistry from Brown University in 1943 and his M.S. in Optics and Physics from the University of Rochester in 1952. He has also taken additional graduate courses at these institutions in advanced organic chemistry, advanced physiology, neurology, biochemistry, pharmacology, and toxicology. His professional organization affiliations include the IEEE (Senior Member), American Institute of Physics, American Chemical Society, Optical Society of America, and the Rochester Academy of Science.
Mr. Wing is listed in American Men of Science and has been named to honorary membership in the Research Society of America. He obtained two Atomic Energy Commission Fellowships in 1944-45 and 1949-50 tenable at the University of Rochester. For his work on the Manhattan Project, he received a Certificate of Appreciation from the Secretary of War. v SELECTED PUBLICATIONS BY FIELDS
Geophysics-
"The Earth-Scanning Problem in the GEOS Altimetry Program," NASA Report., 1967. "On Satellite Geophysical Discrimination Techniques," Rome Air Force Base Report., 1966. "New Designs for Inertial, Gravitational & Magnetic Field Sensors," Defense Communication Agency, 1968.
Electronics- "A Critical Survey of Satellite Attitude Sensor Devices," Defense Communication Agency Report., 1967. BuShips Contract Specifications Manual for Defruiters in IFF Video Equipment," Cornell Aeronautical Laboratories/Navy Rept., 1966.
X Rays -
"Crystal & Molecular Structure of Dimethoxy-benzophenone by the Direct Probability Method," (co-author), Acta Cryst. 10, 481 (1957); ibid. 11, 257 (1958).
"X Ray Cartography of Cleaved Crystals," Report of Naval Research Laboratory Progress, Dec. 1961, p.7.
"Aligning Single Crystals for X Ray Diffraction," (co-author), Rev. Sci. Instr. 23,442 (1952). Naval Research Laboratory Reports #4402 (1954) & #4553 (1955), and many other writings in this area.
John E. Laurance, astro- and biophysicist and engineer, has wide training in nuclear physics, electronics, physical chemistry, engineering and medical sciences. Mr. Laurance received his B.S. at Whittier College, his M.S. at the University of Southern California and did graduate work at the University of California. He has conducted many research projects in these fields and has carried his knowledge into the development of electronic sensor systems relating to the paranormal. One of the pioneers in space research, Mr. Laurance served on advisory committees of. NASA and worked as space program manager for several corporations. He has also served as acting chief scientist for the Office of Naval Research. In 1968, he helped to organize Life Energies Research, Inc., a non-profit institution for the investigation of human-energy systems and currently serves as a member of its Board of Directors and on its Research Committee. Addition-ally, he has made several trips to Brazil to study paranormal medical healing. Mr. Laurance is listed in various professional directories including American Men of Science and Who's Who in the East.
Dr. Andrei Lobanov-Rostovsky is a retired professor of history who has spent a lifetime avocationally studying Hindu philosophy as it relates to parapsychology and human betterment. He received his doctorate from the Institut des Sciences Politiques in Paris. After ten years as a correspondent for Baring Brothers in London, he taught European, Russian and Far Eastern history at UCLA and the University of Michigan. Author of over 40 books and articles in his specialty, Professor Lobanov- Rostovsky continues to teach at colleges in Florida and to give lectures through-out the U. S. in the fields of ancient philosophies, transcendental meditation, and parapsychology. A Russian by birth, he commands several foreign languages.
Arthur Marcus, research psychologist, received his M.S. degree in experimental psychology and has completed course requirements for the Ph.D. at the University of Massachusetts. He has had thirteen years' experience in human factors analysis,developing training programs, and field consulting for both government and industry. He has designed many tests for the evaluation of human potential in a variety of settings and has participated in various projects relating to the design, development and evaluation of information systems. Mr. Marcus has coordinated and directed experiments in human performance including the experimental design and preparation of apparatus and procedures, collection and analysis of data and interpretation of results both with regard to their theoretical and to their practical implications.
Dr. E. Stanton Maxey is a general medical surgeon practicing in Stuart, Florida. He received his B.S. from Wake Forest College (1946) and his medical degree from the Bowman Gray School of Medicine (1950). After interning at the University of Pennsylvania, he completed his surgical residency at the C&O Hospital in Huntington, West Virginia (1951-55). He is certified by the American Board of Surgery and is a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons. Dr. Maxey, in addition to his surgical career, is licensed as a commercial pilot and flight instructor and has taken out, or is applying for, patents on inventions in electronics and aviation. He has conducted extensive research into the human unconscious and dreams correlating his findings with the effects of such exterior influences as electromagnetic fields, barometric changes and the positions of the moon and planets.
H. Scott McCann, a technical writer and broadcast engineer, holds a B.S. degree in English from Loyola College where he is also pursuing a master's degree in psychology. He has ten years' experience in writing and editing mechanical manuals and has worked in testing half lattice crystal filters and travelling wave tube amplifier systems. As a technician for ITT Research Institute, he worked with their Electromagnetic Compatibility Analysis Center. Recently he has worked with TV station WETA in Washington, D. C. as the engineer responsible for operation and maintenance of equipment, conduct of air operations and network switching. He previously was a technical editor with Operations Research, Inc. and the Tate Technical Service.
George Schepak, Russian-born aerospace systems engineer and scientific trans-lator, was educated in Russia and Germany. He has worked with several California aerospace firms where he designed solid-state, general purpose, computers and participated in the U. S. space program. He is currently participating in a research program at the Sepulveda (California) Veterans Administration Hospital where he is investigating the physiological aspects of healing using EEGs, EKGs and other devices for monitoring physiological functioning. He has translated many Russian articles in the parapsychological field dealing with medicine, physics, magnetism, botany and geology. An active member of the Southern California Society for Psychical Research, he became its Director of Research in 1969. He holds a B.S. in Engineering from UCLA and a law degree from the Blackstone School of Law.
Albert B. Wing, advanced technology engineer, took his B.S. in Chemistry at Brown University (1943) and his M.S. in Optics and Physics from the University of Rochester (1952). After working on the Manhattan Project in W. W. II, he has served as a Senior Staff Scientist for an advanced systems engineering company, manager of operations research for a defense agency and as a private consultant in radiation sensing and solid-state transducer physics, X-ray and neutron diffraction, microwave systems, bionics, geophysics and chemical engineering. Earlier he was principal physicist to the Cornell Aeronautical Laboratories where he directed research in biosensor telemetry, space-environment simulation chambers, IFF video defruiters, centralized time and frequency control and other problems. Mr. Wing's affiliations include the IEEE (Senior Member), the American Institute of Physics and the American Optical Society. He is listed in American Men of Science and was named to honorary membership in the research Society of America.
Optics-
"The Sharpening of Photographic Images: A Systems Approach," to be published. "The Anastigmatic Anisotropy of Visual Acuity," M.S. Thesis, U of R. 1951.
NEW DOCUMENT
LISTING OF HEALTH AND WELFARE PROGRAMS WHICH ARE WITHIN THE CAPABILITY OF MANKIND RESEARCH UNLIMITED, INC.
1. Investigations into Causal and Preventive Factors for the Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS)
2. Methods of Improving Beds, from a Therapeutic and Comfort Standpoint, for Hospital Patients
3. Applications of Music-color and Chromotherapy as Remedial Agents in the Treatment of Emotionally Disturbed and Retarded Children
4. Analysis of the French-developed Electronic Anesthetic System
5. Investigations of Geopathogenic Factors and Their Effects on Inducing of Human Illness
6. Application of the Burr-Ravitz Electrodynamic Field Theory to the Precise Electronic Prediction and Determination of Female Ovulation Times in Terms of Minutes
7. Application of Newly Developed U.S. Army "Thermoviewer" Devices to Analyze Diagnostically the Status of Body Tissue Beneath the Skin
8. Investigations into the Use of Negative Ion Generators and Their Potential Application in Enhancing Human Performance, Welfare, and Health
9. Use of the Italian -Developed Device Referred to as the "Tobiscope" to Analyze and Detect Abnormal or Malignant Conditions in Body Cells and Tissues and to Locate Acupuncture Points
10. Use of High Frequency Electromagnetic Waves with Pulse Cadence Near Alpha Rhythm Brain Wave to Produce Narcosis Effects
11. Use of Psychobiological and Physico-Chemical Drugs to Alter States of Con-sciousness and Control Moods, Fatigue, Alertness, Personality, Perception, Tension
12. Through Interaction of Biophysiological Techniques and Electromagnetic Fields, Varying Emotional States of Groups of People and Inducing Visual or Auditory Hallucinations by Applying Specific Field Intensities
13. Luminescent Microscopy Techniques to Diagnose illnesses
14. Analysis of Acupuncture and Its Degree of Effectiveness in Treating Human Ailments
15. Human Sensitivity to, and Effects of, Ultrasonic Energy
16. Biological Effects in Strong or Reinforced and Weak or Disturbed Geomagnetic and Electromagnetic Fields
17. Production of Electrographic Images of Living Organisms
18. Human Perception and Relation to the Conditioned Reflex
19. Applications of Neurocybernetics
20. Bio-Feedback Training and Applications
21. Electromagnetic Field and Magnetoresistance Effects on Neural Tissues
32. Biological Effects of Water Treated by Magnetic Fields on the Behavior and Activity of Living Organisms
23. Use of 'Microwave (SHE) Therapy" in the Treatment of Diseases
24. Investigation of the Stimulating Effect of Electromagnetic Fields on HemopoIesis and on the Composition of the Blood in Humans and Animals
25. Measurement of the Electric Parameters of Body Tissues in Various Frequency. Ranges for Diagnostic Purposes - I :3
26. Effects of Electromagnetic Fields on Cultures of Normal and Malignant Human Cells and on Malignant Tumors
27. Effects of Electromagnetic Fields on Human Blood in Respect to Clotting Time and Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate.
28. Destruction of Bacteria by Electromagnetic Waves of Certain Wavelengths and by Biotherapy Means
29. Physical and Chemical Factors which Influence and Inhibit the Olfactory Senses
30. Ability of Electric Potentials on the Skin (referred to as "skin potentials") to Immediately Reflect Internal Changes in the Human Body
31. Use of Magnetic Fields and Magnets to Effect Pain-Deadening Conditions
NEW DOCUMENT
SYSTEMS CONSULTANTS, INC., is an organiza-tion of technical and management specialists who are able to provide solutions to a broad range of problems in the fields of:
· Systems Engineering · Computer Technology · Management Consultation
The interdependency of technical disciplines to solve these problems has resulted in the development || of a highly diversified staff. Our project management approach to organization enables us to maximize the staff resources available for each client.
SYSTEMS CONSULTANTS, INC., maintains high standards of performance that are reflected in two basic corporate objectives:
· The timely and accurate definition of client problems
· The client's complete satisfaction with, and ability to implement the solution
This introductory brochure provides a brief de-scription of the Company and its qualifications. Addi-tional information will be furnished upon request.
SYSTEMS ENGINEERING
Company has participated in projects concerned with a wide spectrum of technical and sclentific skills and capabilities that we have been applied to the following type assignments: · Aircraft and electronic systems
· Command and control systems
· Data collection and display systems
· Product quality assurance projects
. Reliability and maintainability studies
· Test and evaluation projects
· Economic and mathematical modeling
· Electronic systems simulation
· Ship and craft armament systems
. Multi-sensor aircraft systems
· Electro-optical sensor systems
Our efforts in these assignments have not been limited to the commonly accepted concepts of systems engineering. Systems Consultants relates its work to the total system, and its impact on the external and internal interfaces that exist throughout the operating environment. The assignments cover the broad range of development from feasibility through test and evaluation.
COMPUTER TECHNOLOGY
Many of the new problems posed by modern technology can only be solved through the application of advanced computer sciences. The computer staff of Systems Consultants, Inc. constantly seeks new and better solutions to such problems. Among our current efforts in this area are:
· Design and evaluation of interactive graphic display systems · Analysis and design of an automated Con-gressional constituent mail system
· Analysis and integration of airborne and ship-board data processing systems
· Specification, simulation, and evaluation of com-plex multi-processing systems
· Studies of third-generation real-time computer systems · Analysis and design of advanced multi-processing executive programs for real time applications
· Evaluation, analysis, and specification of high- level programming languages We have had broad experience in computer system feasibility, design, development, analysis, simulation and evaluation. The Company has performed system analysis on a variety of client problems and selected the optimum combination of automated machines and manual procedures which efficiently and economically process the data to meet the needs of management.
MANAGEMENT CONSULTING
In the conduct of business and government many complex problems relate to the development of infor-mation for managers and directors. Our staff is experienced in the development of solutions to manage-ment problems for national, state and local govern-ments as well as private industry. The Company provides its clients with a wide variety of management services, including:
· Management Information Systems
· Appraisal System Design
· Program Management Planning
· Cost Benefit Analysis
· Organization Evaluation
· Training Program Development
· Equipment Procurement
· Technical Audit
· Architectural Safety Advisory
· Security and Safety Planning
Through our efforts in these, areas, Systems Consultants, Inc., has had extensive experience in planning, organizing, and evaluating a variety of gov-ernmental and industrial projects as well as defining, developing and implementing management information systems, professional training programs, safety and security methods and procedures.
CORPORATE OFFICES
1054 31St STREET N.W. WASHINGTON, D. C.
TE LEPHONE (202) 333~800 TWX (710) 822-0103
WASHINGTON DlVISION 202 333-6800 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting 202 333-6800 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting 202 333-6800 end_of_the_skype_highlighting begin_of_the_skype_highlighting 202 333-6800 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting 202 333-6800 end_of_the_skype_highlighting end_of_the_skype_highlighting begin_of_the_skype_highlighting 202 333-6800 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting 202 333-6800 end_of_the_skype_highlighting begin_of_the_skype_highlighting 202 333-6800 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting 202 333-6800 end_of_the_skype_highlighting end_of_the_skype_highlighting end_of_the_skype_highlighting end_of_the_skype_highlighting
1050 31st Street N.W. Washington, D.C.
3500 Virginia Beach Boulevard Suite 411
Virginia Beach, Virginia
1411 Jefferson Davis Highway (Suite 808 ~ 99R) Arlington, Virginia v NEW YORK DIVISION 7777 Leesburg Pike, Fails Church, Virginia
2 Penn Plaza
New York City
410 Jerico Turnpike
Jericho, New York
809 Aquidneck Ave
P.O. Box 330
Middletown, Rhode Island
6525 Belcrest Road Hyattsville, Maryland
RlDGECREST DIViSION 543 Graaf Street, Ridgecrest, California.
CALIFORNIA DIVISION
16661 Ventura Boulevard Encino, California
7330 Convoy Court San Diego, California
3255 Wing Street Diego, California
Systems Consultants Inc. was established in 1966 and has experienced continued growth in personnel, skills, experience and facilities. The staff is composed of scientific, engineering and management specialists. To support the technical staff, SCI maintains complete services in graphic arts, technical publications, management presenta-tions and computer time-sharing facilities.
The broad academic and professional background of the Company's staff have enabled it to develop strong capabilities in a variety of fields. The Company has no affiliation with equipment manu-facturers; therefore, we are able to provide objec-tive evaluations of our client's needs.
The Corporation is formed around four operating divisions to enable diversified and independent management of the services and products tailored to specific customer requirements. 1. Burr, Dr. Harold S., Blueprint for Immortality -- The Electric Patterns of Life, N. Spearman, London, 1972 (in press).
2 Stromberg, Gustaf, The Soul of the Universe, Educational Research Institute, N. Hollywood, California, 1948.
3 Daniels, Rexford, "New Horizons in EMC", Proceedings of the 1970 IEEE Inter-national Symposium on Electro-Magnetic Compatibility, pp. 160-67.
4 Pressman, A. S., Electromagnetic Fields and Life, Plenum Press, New York, 1970 (originally published in Russian by Nauka Press, Moscow, 1968).
5 To the Reader", Main Currents in Modern Thought, Volume 19, Number 1, September-October 1962.
11. This situation is exemplified by the work of Professor H. S. Burr of Yale University on life fields or the so-called L-Fields, which was conducted with his colleague and former student? Dr. Leonard J. Ravitz.
6. Daniels, op cit. (Note: This does not imply that we currently have identified all forces which may appear on the electromagnetic spectrum nor that we have adequately described all laws that govern natural phenomena.)
7. Karagulla, Dr. Shafica, Breakthrough to Creativity: Higher Sensory Perception, Virginia Beach, Virginia, 1970.
8. See, for instance, Puharich, Henry.K., M.D., "The Work of the Brazilian Healer Arigo", in The Varieties of Healing Experience, The Academy of Parapsychology and Medicine, 1971.
9. Karllns, Marvin and Lewis M. Andrews, Biofeedback -- Turning on the Power of - Your Mind, J. B. Lippincott, 1972.
1O. Green, Elmer, Ph.D., "Biofeedback for Mind-Body Self-Regulation: Healing and Creativity", in The Varieties of Healing Experience, The Academy of Para-psychology and Medicine, 1971.
12. Tromp, S. W., Psychical Physics, Elsevier Press, Amsterdam, 1949.
13. Dyson, Freeman J., "Energy and the Universe", Scientific American, September 1971.
14. Alfven, Hannes, "Anti-Matter and Cosmology", Scientific American, April 1967.
15. Carstoiu, J., "Carstoiu's Suggestions for Gravity Waves", published in Relativity Reexamined, by Leon Brillouin, Academic Press, New York, 1970.
16. Huxley, Julian, The Doors of Perception, Harper (paperback).
17. Grof, Stanislav, "LSD Psychotherapy and Human Culture", The Journal for the Study of Consciousness, Volume 3, Number 2, July-December 1970, pp. 100-118.
18. Lilly, John C., The Center of the Cyclone -- An Autobiography of Lunar Space, Julian Press, New York, 1972.
19. Dean, Stanley R., "Metapsychiatry and the Ultra-Conscious", Congressional Record, 17 November 1971, Volume 117, Number 176, Washington, D. C.
20. Stern, Jess, Edgar Cayce, The Sleeping Prophet, Bantam Books (paperback), 1967-1971, 287 pp., and Cerminara, Gina, Ph.D., Many Mansions, A.R.E. Publishers, Virginia Beach, Virginia.
21. See the monthly Medical Research Bulletin, Edgar Cayce Foundation, Medical Research Division, Phoenix, Arizona.
22. The Varieties of Healing Experience, Transcript of the Interdisciplinary Symposium of 30 October 1971, The Academy of Parapsychology and Medicine, Los Altos, California.
23. Journal of Paraphysics, The Paraphysical Laboratory, Downton (Wiltshire), England.
24. Tietze, Thomas R., "Science Officially Meets PSI", Psychic June 1971, - pp. 18-21. 25. Journal of Cybernetics (USSR), and others.
26. Ryzl, Milan, Parapsychology, A Scientific Approach, Hawthorn, New York,
27. 0strander, Sheila, and Lynn Schroeder, Psychic Discoveries Behind the Iron Curtain, Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, 1970.
28. Unfortunately, these figures are not matched in the US, where only insignifi-cant sums have been spent for this type of research. This indicates that the European Communist countries, especially the USSR, seem to be more aware of the benefits and applications of biocommunications research. Mankind Research Unlimited hopes to counter and reverse this trend so that the full fruits and benefits derived from this research are also made available to our own citizenry.