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Records of the White House Office of Cabinet Affairs (George H. W. Bush Administration)
Richard W. Porter Subject Files
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Originally Processed With FOIA(s):
FOIA Number:
2025-0878-F
2025-0878-F
FOIA
MARKER
This is not a textual record. This is used as an
administrative marker by the George Bush Presidential
Library Staff.
Record Group/Collection:
George H.W. Bush Presidential Records
Collection/Office of Origin:
Cabinet Affairs, White House Office of
Series:
Porter, Richard, Files
Subseries:
OA/ID Number:
07137
Folder ID Number:
07137-005b
Folder Title:
Resume File [binder] [2]
Stack:
Row:
Section:
Shelf:
Position:
G
15
16
2
Withdrawal/Redaction Sheet
(George Bush Library)
Doc. No. / Type
Subject/Title
Date
Restriction
Classification
01. Resume
Re: Michael R. Darby; Personally Identifiable Information
n.d.
(b)(6)
redacted. (1 pp.)
02. Vitae
Biography, Re: Michael R. Darby; Personally Identifiable
n.d.
(b)(6)
Information redacted. (1 pp.)
03. Vitae
Curriculum Vitae, Re: Michael R. Darby; Personally Identifiable
06/18/91
(b)(6)
Information redacted. (1 pp.)
04. Resume
Re: Thomas K. Fleener; Personally Identifiable Information
n.d.
(b)(6)
redacted. (1 pp.)
Page 1 of 1
Collection:
Record Group:
Bush Presidential Records
Office:
Cabinet Affairs, White House Office of
Series:
Porter, Richard, Files
Subseries:
WHORM Cat.:
File Location:
Resume File [binder] [2]
Pinksheet Number:
RML16233
OA/ID Number:
07137-005b
Date Closed:
7/30/2025
FOIA/Sys Case #:
2025-0878-F
Re-review Case #:
P-2/P-5 Review Case #:
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
October 3, 1991
Dear Melissa:
I received your resume from Presidential Personnel -- and a
strong recommendation -- for the position of Staff Assistant in
the Domestic Policy Council.
Your background and experience are certainly impressive,
however, we have selected someone who we feel best fits the
requirements of the office at this time. The decision on who to
hire was not an easy one to make as just about everyone we met
would have made a fine addition to the staff.
Again, thank you for your interest and for your patience
throughout this process. If you don't mind, we will keep your
resume on file in the event that other opportunities within the
White House become available.
With best regards.
Sincerely
Richard W. Porter
Special Assistant to the President
and Executive Secretary
Domestic Policy Council
Melissa Cortese
4006 Glenridge Street
Kensington, MD 20895
MELISSA KATHLEEN CORTESE
4006 Glenridge Street
Kensington, Maryland 20895
(301) 946-4802
EDUCATION
WAKE FOREST UNIVERSITY, WINSTON-SALEM, NC
Bachelor of Arts, cum laude: Political Science major, English minor;
May, 1991
IMMACULATA COLLEGE HIGH SCHOOL, ROCKVILLE, MD
Honors Graduate, 1987
WORK
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY, WASHINGTON, D.C.
EXPERIENCE
Secretary's Summer Achievement Program: 1989, 1990
Policy Research Aide - Office of Policy, Planning and Analysis
wrote reports covering energy-related congressional legislation with special emphasis
on the Clean Air Act Amendments and the Strategic Petroleum Reserve
aided in the drafting of congressional testimony for senior DOE official
updated the section of DOE's annual report to the International Energy Agency which
concerned U.S. oil activities
worked in the Oil Policy division and provided general research assistance
THE WINDING BEAM, REHOBOTH BEACH, DE
Women's Specialty Retail, sales clerk, July-August, 1988
ADVANTAGE TEMPORARIES, INC., WASHINGTON, D.C.
June, 1988
.placed as a research assistant at the law firm of KAYE, SCHOLAR, FIERMAN,
HAYES, AND HANDLER
RACQUET AND JOG, BETHESDA, MD
Retail Sportswear and Equipment, sales clerk, June-August, 1986
TALBOTS, KENSINGTON, MD
Women's Specialty Retail, sales clerk, March-August, 1985
ACTIVITIES/
Dean's List, 1988,1990,1991
HONORS
Participant and mentor in select Wake Forest student leadership program LEAD:
Leadership Excellence Application and Development, 1989, 1990
Member of Pi Sigma Alpha, National Political Science Honor Society
Fidele Society-Wake Forest sorority, Spirit Chairman 1989-1991
Wake Forest Student Legislature; Election Committee member 1990-1991,
Representative, 1989
.1991 Senior Class Campaign fundraiser, Steering Committee member, 1990
Member of Wake Forest's Harbinger Corps-- student aides to Admissions Staff
POLITICAL
VOLUNTEER FOR BUSH '88 CAMPAIGN
EXPERIENCE
WINSTON-SALEM, NC
SEPTEMBER, 1987 - NOVEMBER, 1988
Founder and chairperson of Wake Forest University Students for Bush
September, 1987 - November, 1988
Worked with campaign staff of Bush/Quayle '88 for the Presidential
Debate held at Wake Forest on September 25, 1988
*coordinated all student volunteers for Bush/Quayle '88
*assisted staff in organizing airport rally, motorcade rally and
post debate victory rally
*helped advance staff set up the Vice President's holding areas
for the debate
*chosen to escort James A. Baker, III to his post-debate press
interviews
Member of the North Carolina Steering Committee for George Bush
Recruited and directed volunteer workers for Vice President Bush's
January 1988 visit to Winston-Salem; worked in areas of scheduling,
hospitality and press relations
VOLUNTEER FOR BUSH '88 CAMPAIGN
WASHINGTON, D.C., WINTER 1987
worked Saturdays providing general office assistance
VOLUNTEER FOR THE FUND FOR AMERICA'S FUTURE
WASHINGTON, D.C., SUMMER 1986
worked in Washington one to two days per week, according to need
duties included news clips selection and preparation, issue research, and
general administrative support
VOLUNTEER FOR REAGAN/BUSH '84 CAMPAIGN
MONTGOMERY COUNTY, MARYLAND, FALL 1984
worked phone banks in Rockville campaign office
DIANA G. CULP
Office of Policy Development
418 D Street, S.E.
U.S. Department of Justice
Washington, D.C.
10th St. and Constitution Ave., N.W.
(202) 544-3210
Washington, D.C. 20530
(202) 514-4016
PRESENT STATUS
3/90-Present
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE - Senior Counsel, Office of
Policy Development.
LEGAL EXPERIENCE
11/87-3/90
COVINGTON & BURLING - Associate. Insurance coverage
counseling, appellate litigation and legislative work.
3/89-4/90
REPORTER - The Federal Courts Study Committee, a 15-member
Committee of judges, lawyers and academics appointed by the
Chief Justice to evaluate and recommend changes in the
operation of the federal court system.
12/85-10/87
HILL & BARLOW - Boston, MA - Associate
8/84-9/85
THE HONORABLE JOHN J. GIBBONS - Clerkship
United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit.
9/83-8/84
THE HONORABLE RICHARD A. GADBOIS, JR. - Clerkship
United States District Court,
Central District of California
1/82-11/83
PROFESSOR ARTHUR R. MILLER - Research Assistant
Harvard Law School
BAR ADMISSIONS
U.S. Supreme Court
1988
District of Columbia
1988
Massachusetts
1985
California
1984
United States Court of Appeals -
Ninth (1984); Third (1985); First (1986) and
District of Columbia (1988) Circuits
Diana G. Culp
Page 2
EDUCATION
J.D., June 1983
HARVARD LAW SCHOOL
Cambridge, MA - cum laude
-
Addison Brown Prize Recipient, 1983
-
Research Assistant, Arthur R. Miller.
-
Harvard Women's Law Journal/Law Association.
A.B., 1979
OCCIDENTAL COLLEGE
Los Angeles, CA - summa cum laude; Phi Beta Kappa;
No. 1 in class of 390; Departmental Distinction in
two majors; Beinecke Foundation Scholar
PUBLICATIONS
Reporter, Report of The Federal Courts Study Committee, submitted to the
President, The Chief Justice, Congress, and the Judicial Conference on
April 3, 1990.
Stop Rearranging the Deck Chairs in the Titanic, ABA Journal, Vol. 77,
(June 1990).
Assistant Reporter, Third Circuit Task Force on Court Awarded Attorney
Fees, published and presented to the Third Circuit Judicial Conference,
Oct. 8, 1985; reprinted, 108 Federal Rules Decision (F.R.D.) 237 (1986).
Placing Limits Where None Belong - Conflicts on Campus; The First Amendment,
Occidental, Vol. 11, No. 4 (Spring 1988).
Charting a New Course -- Amendments to Admiralty Rules B, c, and E; 103
Federal Rules Decision (F.R.D.) 319 (Jan. 1985) (revised and updated).
Charting a New Course -- Amendments to Admiralty Rules B, c, and E; Journal
of Maritime Law and Commerce, Vol. 15, No. 3 (July 1984).
The New Rules of Civil Procedure: Managing Cases, Limiting Discovery; The
National Law Journal, Vol. 6, No. 13 (Dec. 5, 1983), co-authored with
Professor Arthur Miller.
Litigation Costs, Delay Prompted the New Rules of Civil Procedure; The
National Law Journal, Vol. 6, No. 12 (Nov. 28, 1983), co-authored with
Professor Arthur Miller.
Diana G. Culp
Page 3
REFERENCES
Senator Mitch McConnell
Senator Charles E. Grassley
Washington, D.C. 20510-1702
Washington, D.C. 20510-1501
(202) 224-8298
(202) 224-0473
Senator Pete Wilson
Congressman Carlos Moorhead
Contact: Ira Goldman
Washington, D.C. 20515-0522
Washington, D.C. 20510-0502
(202) 225-4176
(202) 224-3552
Edward S.G. Dennis, Jr., Esq.
Congressman Chris Cox
Assistant Attorney General
Washington, D.C. 20515-0540
Criminal Division
(202) 225-5611
U.S. Department of Justice
Washington, D.C. 20530
(202) 633-2601
The Honorable Joseph J. Weis, Jr.
The Honorable John J. Gibbons
Chairman, The Federal Courts
U.S. Court of Appeals for the
Study Committee
Third Circuit
U.S. Court of Appeals for the
(201) 624-2930
Third Circuit
(412) 664-3552
Professor Arthur R. Miller
The Honorable Richard A. Gadbois
Harvard Law School
U.S. District Court for the
(617) 495-4111
Central District of California
(213) 894-3067
The Honorable Levin Campbell
Samuel Gerdano
U.S. Court of Appeals for the
Minority Chief Counsel, Courts
First Circuit
and Administrative Practice
(617) 223-9002
Senate Judiciary Committee
(202) 224-6736
William K. Slate, II
Thomas J. Mooney, Esq.
Director
Minority Counsel, Subcommittee on
The Federal Courts Study Committee
Courts, Intellectual Property &
(215) 597-3320
Admin. of Justice
House Judiciary Committee
(202) 225-6504
Scott Gilbert, Esq.
Daniel Casey
Covington & Burling
Deputy Director
1201 Pennsylvania Ave., N.W.
Office of Policy Development
P.O. Box 7566
U.S. Department of Justice
Washington, D.C. 20044
Washington, D.C. 20530
(202) 662-5498
(202) 514-4087
STATE ? STATES OF STATE
U.S. Department of Justice
/
Office of Policy Development
Dear Richard:
As always, it was terrific seeing
you today. I'm absolutely thrilled
with the prospect of working with
you. To that end, I enclose copies
of my resume and a few writing samples.
I'll bring a short memorandum with
me to the interview, as well.
I look forward to seeing you
on Monday.
Sincerely,
Risa
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
April 2, 1991
Dear Diana:
Thank you for your interest in the position of Associate
Director and Deputy Executive Secretary to the Domestic Policy
Council. I appreciate the time you took to meet with us.
I hope you know the high regard I have for you and your
ability; that's why I sought you out to see if you would be
interested in the job. But, in the final analysis, we have
decided to select someone else for the position. The decision
was not an easy one to make -- just about everyone we met would
have made a fine addition to this office.
Again, thank you for taking the time to come meet with us.
I look forward to working with you more in the future.
With best wishes.
Sincerely yours,
Ridiond
Richard W. Porter
Special Assistant to the President
and Executive Secretary
Domestic Policy Council
Ms. Diana G. Culp
418 D Street, SE
Washington, D.C. 20003
JOHN J. DALEY
625 North Piedmont Street
Arlington, VA 22203
Home: (703) 841-9343 Work: (202) 456-6510
EDUCATION
B.A. in Political Science, The American University, Washington, DC, May 1990
Dean's List, Spring 1989, Fall 1989
Study Abroad in London, England at the University of London,
Birckbeck College through the American University, Spring 1989
RELEVANT ACADEMIC PROJECTS
Co-developed in-depth senatorial political campaign involving budgeting, media bites, and slogans
for Congresswomen Lynn Martin in a race against Senator Paul Simon during "Politics as Public
Relations" seminar. (Spring 1990)
Presented panel discussion on America's defense posture for the future as part of a "Public Speaking"
seminar. (Fall 1989)
In Brussels, analyzed and questioned military-political stances of current Soviet leadership and their
implication on the future of NATO. (London, Spring 1989)
WORK EXPERIENCE
The White House Office of Political Affairs, Intern.
The White House, Washington DC, September to present
Assisted Associate Director for the southwest region in drafting and finalizing Presidential political
briefings and event schedules for use by the President in his Fall 1990 political campaigning. Coordinated
Presidential activities for Congresswoman Pat Saiki's fundraising event. Tracked, recorded and
analyzed 1990 November election data for briefing to the President. Answered political correspondence,
and assisted in office administration.
Office of Congressman Jim McCrery, Intern.
United States Congress, Washington DC, June through July 1990
Conducted research and reported the various effects tariff barriers have on the standard of living.
Assisted in administrative duties, legislative correspondence, press releases, and constituent mailings.
Rockwell International Corporation, Staff Assistant.
Washington DC Office, July 1989 through December 1989
Handled preparation and distribution of the Washington office summary of current print media
material. Attended and reported on Congressional hearings dealing with nuclear energy; assisted in
export license date analysis; and performed short-term research assignments. Worked with the
software systems LEGI-SLATE, Microsoft Word, MacWrite, and MacDraw.
National Housing and Town Planning Council, Intern.
London, England, January 1989 through May 1989
Designed reserach surveys for a study of the London housing market. Conducted onsite visits of
housing developments for various research projects. Attended and subsequently drafted memos on
housingconferences within the London area.
Office of Senator Steve Symms, Intern.
United States Senate, Washington DC, September 1988 through December 1988
Researched and drafted statements of the issues of minimum wage and gun control for use on the
Senate floor. Prepared various research projects and responded to constituent mail.
429 CANNON BUILDING
JIM McCRERY
WASHINGTON, DC 20515
4TH DISTRICT, LOUISIANA
(202) 225-2777
BUDGET COMMITTEE
DISTRICT OFFICES:
TASK FORCES:
DEFENSE FOREIGN POLICY AND SPACE
Congress of the United States
621 EDWARDS STREET
SHREVEPORT, LA 71101
URGENT FISCAL ISSUES
(318) 226-5080
ARMED SERVICES
house of Representatives
110 EAST LULA STREET
LEESVILLE, LA 71446
SUBCOMMITTEES:
INVESTIGATIONS
Mashington, DC 20515
(318) 238-4550
MILITARY PERSONNEL AND COMPENSATION
July 31, 1990
To Whom It May Concern:
This letter serves to recommend Mr. John Daley. He
worked in my Washington office this summer and proved to be
highly motivated and most dependable.
John was given a major research paper to complete which he
finished with the necessary detail and professionalism. He
would make a welcomed addition to any office and I am certain you
will find him dedicated and very willing to learn.
If you need any further information in behalf of John,
please do not hesitate to contact me.
With kindest regards, I am,
Sincerely yours,
2 Member JIM McCRERY of Melrery Congress
JMcC: cn
STEVE SYMMS
IDAHO
United States Senate
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20510
January 5, 1989
Dear Sir or Madam:
I am pleased to recommend John Daley for employment in your
company. John worked in my Washington, DC office from September 5
to December 15, 1988. He is a hard working, enthusiastic, and
capable young man. His willingness to undertake a challenging
assignment and his sense of humor made John a fine employee and an
asset to me and my permanent staff.
During his tenure in my office, John worked on a variety of
legislative research projects, drafted responses to constituent
mail, and helped write statements for my use on the Senate floor.
His research was thorough, his writing clear, and his work timely
completed.
I am confident John will perform his job well and his employer
will be pleased with the decision to hire him.
Sincerely,
Steve Symmo
STEVE SYMMS
United States Senate
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
December 6, 1990
Dear Mr. Daley:
Thank you for the letter and resume you recently sent Ken
Yale. Mr. Yale has since taken another position within the
Administration.
I have reviewed your resume and believe that your background
and breadth of experience are certainly impressive.
Unfortunately, we have no positions available in this office for
someone with your expertise at this time. However, we will
continue to keep your resume on file in the event that an opening
does occur. In the meantime, I have taken the liberty of
forwarding a copy of your resume to the office of Presidential
Personnel so that they will be aware of your interest in a
position.
Again, thank you for writing and best of luck in your job
search.
Sincerely,
Ribel
Richard W. Porter
Special Assistant to the President
and Executive Secretary
Domestic Policy Council
Mr. John J. Daley
625 North Piedmont Street
Arlington, VA 22203
CC: Chase Untermeyer
December 4, 1990
Dear Mr. Yale:
I am currently working as an intern in the White House Office of
Political Affairs. During my time here I have worked closely
with the staff to coordinate the President's political activities
as well as acting as a liaison between the White House and
Republican candidates.
I am a recent graduate of The American University, in Washington,
DC with a Bachelor Degree in Political Science. During my four
years at the University I had the benefit of a quality education
combined with numerous internships to give me a very well rounded
study of government and practical application.
I have always felt myself to be a very dedicated, hard working
individual who offers a high caliber of work. I have a great
deal of pride and loyalty for both the work I do and those for
whom I work. My past academic and practical work experience has
taught me strong communication and organizational skills which
are invaluable to any office environment.
I feel I would be an asset to your office and would appreciate an
opportunity to meet with you to discuss a job possibility in your
office. I will call your office in the coming days to set up a
meeting, at your earliest convenience.
Thank you for your time and consideration. I look forward to
speaking with you soon.
Sincerely
JohngDaley John J. Daley
Mr. Kenneth P. Yale
Special Assistant to the President
and Executive Secretary
Domestic Policy Council
The White House
Washington, DC 20500
01. 28. 91 12:28 PM * IMMED. OFFICE ASH
PO1
SCOTT EUGENE DANIELS
Executive Assistant to
5506 Talon Court
Assistant Secretary for Health
Fairfax, VA 22032
Public health Service
Department of Health and Human
W - - (202) 245-7694
Services
H - (703) 978-9671
Washington, D.C. 20201
EDUCATION
1989
Ph.D., Philosophy and Public Policy, University of
Tennessee. Areas of concentration: biomedical
ethics, political philosophy, philosophy of
religion, philosophy of law, and philosophy of
science.
1982-1983
Legal Studies. College of Law, University of
Tennessee.
1980-1982
M.A. Philosophy, magna cum laude, Trinity
Evangelical Divinity School.
1977-1980
M.Div. Trinity Evangelical Divinity School.
1972-1976
B.S., Biology, Tri Beta, Nebraska Wesleyan
University. (Who's Who among Students in American
Universities and Colleges)
PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE
1989-
Executive Assistant to the Assistant Secretary for
Health (ASH). Serves as a personal adviser to the
ASH on a variety of extremely complex and sensitive
issues. Of particular concern are the issues in the
area of biomedical ethics. Plays a key role in
overall public health policy development, program
planning and evaluation, and development of long-
range goals. Acts as a sounding board for the ASH,
critiquing his plans and actions and providing
feedback relative to the potential political
sensitivities. Relays instruction to key personnel
with authority to impress and enforce the deadlines
of assignments. Represents the ASH in discussions
with immediate staff by conveying his point of view,
desired emphasis, and goals.
0'1. 28. 91 12:25 PM *IMMED. OFFICE ASH
P O 2
Page 2 - SCOTT EUGENE DANIELS
1986-1989
Special Assistant for Policy Development, Social
Security Administration. Served on the Supplemental
Security Income Intra-Agency Working Group.
Analyzed and briefed the Commissioner on work
incentive policies in the Disability Insurance
Program. Developed and represented the
Commissioner's initiative on national retirement
income security policy, a project designed to foster
economic independence in retirement by assessing the
health care, retirement income and social needs of
retirees in the 21st century. Awarded the
Commissioner's Certificate of Appreciation in
recognition of outstanding service achievement and
dedication in advancing the mission of Social
Security Administration.
1985-1986
Instructor. Tusculum College, Adult and Graduate
Programs.
1983-1986
Teaching Assistant, Department of Philosophy,
University of Tennessee. Courses: biomedical
ethics, philosophy of law, philosophy of religion,
ethical theory, social/political philosophy.
1981-1983
Graduate Assistant, Department of Philosophy,
University of Tennessee.
ACADEMIC WRITINGS
1986-
Ph.D. Dissertation. The Therapeutic/Non-Therapeutic
Distinction in Genetic Engineering: An Assessment of
the Moral Justification for Using Gene Therapy in
Health Policy.
1982
M.A. Thesis. A Philosophical Study of Theological
Ethics.
PROFESSIONAL AFFILIATIONS
The American Philosophical Society
Kennedy Institute of Bioethics
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
February 19, 1991
Dear Scott:
Thank you for your interest in the position of Associate
Director and Deputy Executive Secretary to the Domestic Policy
Council. I appreciate the time you took to meet with me.
Your background and experience are impressive, but we have
decided to select someone else for the position. The decision
was not an easy one to make -- just about everyone we met would
have made a fine addition to this office.
The newspaper article you sent me is troubling. I am quite
sure that no one intended to signal that the Administration
supports nationalized health care! I still haven't read the
other article carefully -- it will have to wait for slower days.
Again, thank you for interest and for taking time to come
meet with me. If you don't mind, we will keep your resume on
file in the event that other opportunities within the White House
become available.
Keep in touch.
Sincerely,
Richard
Richard W. Porter
Special Assistant to the President
and Executive Secretary
Domestic Policy Council
Mr. Scott Daniels
ALL the best -
5506 Talon Court
Fairfax, VA 22032
Withdrawal/Redaction Sheet
(George Bush Library)
Document No.
Subject/Title of Document
Date
Restriction
Class.
and Type
01. Resume
Re: Michael R. Darby; Personally Identifiable Information
n.d.
(b)(6)
redacted. (1 pp.)
Collection:
Record Group:
Bush Presidential Records
Office:
Cabinet Affairs, White House Office of
Series:
Porter, Richard, Files
Subseries:
WHORM Cat.:
File Location:
Resume File [binder] [2]
Date Closed:
7/30/2025
OA/ID Number:
07137-005b
FOIA/SYS Case #:
2025-0878-F
Appeal Case #:
Re-review Case #:
Appeal Disposition:
P-2/P-5 Review Case #:
Disposition Date:
AR Case #:
MR Case #:
AR Disposition:
MR Disposition:
AR Disposition Date:
MR Disposition Date:
RESTRICTION CODES
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) - [5 U.S.C. 552(b)]
Deed of Gift Restrictions
(b)(1) National security classified information
C(1) Closed by Executive Order 13526, governing access to national
(b)(2) Release would disclose internal personnel rules and practices of an
security information
agency
C(2) Closed by statute or by the agency which originated the information
(b)(3) Release would violate a Federal statute
C(3) Closed in accordance with restrictions contained in donor's deed of
(b)(4) Release would disclose trade secrets or confidential or financial
gift [formerly listed as only C]
information
PRM. Removed as a personal record misfile
(b)(6) Release would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion
of personal privacy
(b)(7) Release would disclose information compiled for law enforcement
Presidential Records Act - [44 U.S.C. 2204(a)]
purposes
(b)(8) Release would disclose information concerning the regulation of
P-2 Relating to the appointment to Federal office [(a)(2) of the PRA]
financial institutions
P-5 Release would disclose confidential advice between the President and
(b)(9) Release would disclose geological or geophysical information
his advisors, or between such advisors [(a)(5) of the PRA]
concerning wells
Michael R. Darby
Born (b) (6) in Dallas, Texas; two children
P.O. Box 446
Dartmouth A.B. 1967 summa cum laude
McLean, Virginia 22101
Chicago M.A. 1968, Ph.D. 1970
Office: (202) 377-3727
Home: (703) 821-3818
1989-
Under Secretary of Commerce for Economic Affairs and
1990-
Administrator of the Economics and Statistics Administration
Responsible for Commerce economic policy and statistics including Bureaus
of the Census and of Economic Analysis. Manage 10,000 career operational,
policy, administrative, research, and regulatory personnel plus some 400,000
temporary employees at peak of 1990 census mobilization.
1986-89 Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Economic Policy
Responsible for Treasury economic, domestic, space, and national-security
policy and for liaison with the Federal Reserve System. Member of crisis-
management team on and following October 19, 1987; one of two Treasury
principals under Chairman Gould on Working Group on Financial Markets.
1988-89
Member, National Commission on Superconductivity
1972-
University of California, Los Angeles: Anderson Graduate School of
Management, Professor 1987- ; Economics Department, Professor 1978-87,
Associate Professor 1973-78, Visiting Assistant Professor 1972-73
981-86
Editor, Journal of International Money and Finance
1964-82 Vice President and Director, Paragon Industries, Inc.
Financial strategist for Dallas manufacturer of kilns, furnaces, refractories.
1974-86 National Bureau of Economic Research: Research Associate 1976-86, Harry
Scherman Research Fellow 1974-75
1977-78 Visiting Fellow, Hoover Institution, Stanford University
1970-73 Assistant Professor, Economics Department, Ohio State University
AUTHOR
Six books and monographs and numerous journal articles and other
publications on macroeconomics, international finance, money and banking,
productivity, taxes, and regulation.
HONORS
Alexander Hamilton Award (Treasury's highest honor) 1989; serve/served
on Editorial Board of The American Economic Review, Contemporary
Policy Issues, and The Journal of International Money and Finance, on
Executive Committee of Western Economic Association; listed in Who's
Who in Economics: A Biographical Dictionary of Major Economists
1700-1981 F.D.I.C. Prize for Best Dissertation 1969-70; F.D.I.C.
Graduate Fellow; N.S.F. Graduate Fellow; Woodrow Wilson Fellow: Lilly
Honor Fellow; Senior Fellow of Dartmouth College; Phi Beta Kappa.
RESEARCH
Principal Investigator or Co-Principal Investigator on four research projects
on social security, international transmission under the Bretton Woods
system and under floating exchange rates, and productivity growth, total
grants $650,148 over 1976-86. Chaired 17 Ph.D. dissertations.
The Journal of
Economic Perspectives
A journal of the American Economic Association
Volume 3, Number 4 - Fall 1989 - Pages 137-148
Research on the Economics Profession
David Colander
Other Rankings
Economics departments are not the only institutions that can be ranked. In a
well-known article, Liebowitz and Palmer (1984) ranked journals, and in a forthcom-
ing paper Medoff ranked economists and young economists by citation. His top 25
economists and the top 25 young economists are reported in Tables 5a and 5b.
Ninety-six percent of the top 25 economists, as defined and computed by Medoff,
were concentrated at only twelve universities. They were the usual universities.
Table 5b
Young Economists (under 40 in 1985), Ranked by Total and Mean Citation,
1971-1985
Total Number
Rank by
Mean
Rank
Name
of Citations
Mean Number
Number
1
Berndt, E. (MIT)
1099
1
78.50
2
Blinder, A. (Princeton)
1073
3
71.53
3
Pindyck, R. (MIT)
877
4
58.47
4
Grossman, S. (Princeton)
788
2
71.64
5
Hausman, J. (MIT)
635
5
48.85
6
Green, J. (Harvard)
582
10
35.13
7
Deaton, A. (Princeton)
543
6
45.25
8
Polinsky, M. (Stanford)
540
8
41.38
9
Boskin, M. (MIT)
483
15
32.20
10
Joskow, P. (MIT)
466
13
33.29
11
Schmidt, P. (MSU)
461
19
28.81
12
Varian, H. (Michigan)
442
11
34.00
13
Kouri, P. (NYU)
428
21
38.91
14
Darby, M. (UCLA)
428
9
26.75
15
Hamilton, B. (Johns Hopkins)
390
20
27.86
16
Taylor, J. (Stanford)
384
18
29.54
17
Ehrenberg, R. (Cornell)
375
28
23.44
18
Buiter, W. (Yale)
360
14
32.73
19
Shiller, R. (Yale)
353
23
25.21
20
Hansen, L. (Chicago)
352
7
44.00
21
Willig, R. (Princeton)
325
24
25.00
22
Polachek, S. (SUNY)
315
26
24.23
23
Rosen, H. (Princeton)
305
22
25.42
24
Shoven, J. (Stanford)
281
36
21.62
25
Trussel, J. (Princeton)
272
30
22.67
"When total number of citations is equal, ranking is based on mean number.
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/ OF
BIOGRAPHY
UNITED
/
STATES
8
MICHAEL R. DARBY
UNDER SECRETARY FOR ECONOMIC AFFAIRS
AND
ADMINISTRATOR, ECONOMICS AND STATISTICS ADMINISTRATION
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Michael R. Darby was confirmed as Under Secretary of Commerce for Economic Affairs on
May 17, 1989. He succeeded Robert Ortner. In addition, Darby became the first Administrator
of the Economics and Statistics Administration when it was established June 11, 1990.
The Under Secretary for Economic Affairs is in charge of the department's economic and
statistical programs. The Economics and Statistics Administration includes the Bureau of the
Census and the Bureau of Economic Analysis.
Mr. Darby had been Assistant Secretary for Economic Policy at the Treasury Department since
mid-1986. Before coming to the Treasury, he had been a professor of economics at the
University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA) for eight years. He was an associate professor
of economics from 1973 to 1978 at UCLA, a visiting assistant professor in 1972-73, and an
assistant professor of economics at Ohio State University from 1970 to 1973.
His professional activities include serving as the editor of the Journal of International Money and
Finance from 1981 to 1986. He has been a member of the editorial boards of that Journal since
1986, of Contemporary Policy Issues since 1990, and of the American Economic Review from 1983
to 1987. He was a research associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research from 1976
to 1986, and a vice president and director of Paragon Industries from 1964 to 1982. He served
on the Executive Committee of the Western Economic Association from 1987 to 1990.
Mr. Darby has written numerous articles and books on money and banking, macroeconomics,
and international finance. He is listed in Who's Who in Economics. He has been honored as
a National Science Foundation Graduation Fellow (1967-69), Lilly Honor Fellow (1967-70) and
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Graduate Fellow (1969-70). In 1989 he received the
Treasury Department's highest honor, the Alexander Hamilton Award, in recognition of his
distinguished leadership and service.
Mr. Darby received his Ph.D. in economics from the University of Chicago in 1970 and his M.A.
in 1968. He was a Senior Fellow of Dartmouth College and graduated summa cum laude with
an A.B. in 1967.
He was born
(b) (6)
in Dallas, Texas. He has two children.
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security information
agency
C(2) Closed by statute or by the agency which originated the information
(b)(3) Release would violate a Federal statute
C(3) Closed in accordance with restrictions contained in donor's deed of
(b)(4) Release would disclose trade secrets or confidential or financial
gift [formerly listed as only C]
information
PRM. Removed as a personal record misfile
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of personal privacy
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Presidential Records Act - [44 U.S.C. 2204(a)]
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June 18, 1991
Michael R. Darby
Curriculum Vitae
Under Secretary for Economic Affairs
P.O. Box 446
Department of Commerce - Room 4848
McLean, Virginia 22101
14th and Constitution Avenue, N.W.
Home Phone: (703) 821-3818
Washington, D.C. 20230
Office Phone: (202) 377-3727
Personal: Born (b) (6) in Dallas, Texas. Two children.
Education: University of Chicago, Ph.D., 1970
University of Chicago, M.A., 1968
Dartmouth College, A.B., summa cum laude, 1967
Fields of Specialization:
Money and Banking, Macroeconomics, and International Finance
Professional Appointments:
U.S. Department of Commerce: Under Secretary for Economic
Affairs, 1989- ; Administrator, Economics and Statistics
Administration, 1990-
.
U.S. Department of the Treasury, Assistant Secretary for
Economic Policy, 1986-89.
National Commission on Superconductivity, Member, 1988-89.
University of California, Los Angeles: John E. Anderson
Graduate School of Management: Professor, 1987- ;
Department of Economics: Professor, 1978-87; Associate
Professor, 1973-78; Visiting Assistant Professor, 1972-73.
Paragon Industries, Inc., Dallas, Vice President and Director,
1964-82.
Journal of International Money and Finance, Editor, 1981-86.
National Bureau of Economic Research: Research Associate,
1976-86; Harry Scherman Research Fellow, 1974-75.
Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace, Stanford
University, Visiting Fellow, 1977-78.
Ohio State University, Department of Economics:
Assistant Professor, 1970-73; Director, Division for
Economic Research 1971-72.
2
Professional Activities:
Member of Editorial Board: American Economic Review, 1983-87;
Journal of International Money and Finance, 1986- ;
Contemporary Policy Issues, 1990-
.
Member, Western Economic Association Executive Committee,
1987-1990; Program Committee, 1980, 1986-1989; Invited
Sessions Committee, 1981, 1982.
Institute of Industrial Relations, U.C.L.A., Research Associate,
1981-85; Faculty Advisory Committee, 1981-82.
Chair, Selection Committee for the best article published in
Economic Inquiry, vol. 22 (1984).
Institute of Social Science Research, U.C.L.A., Faculty Advisory
Committee 1981-82.
External Examiner for Ph.D. in Economics, University of Western
Ontario, 1979.
Money and Macroeconomics Program Chairman, Econometric Society
Meetings, Chicago, August 1978.
Consultant, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System,
1976.
Book Review Editor, Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking,
1973-74.
Referee: American Economic Review, Canada Council, Journal of
Economic Literature, Journal of Finance, Journal of Money,
Credit, and Banking, Journal of Policy Modelling, Journal
of Political Economy, Macmillan, National Science
Foundation, Oxford Economic Papers, Quarterly Journal of
Economics, Quarterly Review of Economics and Business,
Southern Economic Journal.
Member: Academy of Political Science, American Economic
Association, American Finance Association, American
Statistical Association, Mont Pelerin Society, National
Association of Business Economists, Western Economic
Association.
Honors Received:
Alexander Hamilton Award (Treasury's highest honor), 1989.
Listed in Who's Who in Economics: A Biographical Dictionary of
Major Economists, 1700-1981, 1983. (Also 2nd edition, 1985).
3
Honors Received: (continued)
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Graduate Fellow, 1969-70.
Federal Deposit Insurance Prize for Best Dissertation,
Fellowship Year 1969-70.
National Science Foundation Graduate Fellow, 1967-69.
Lilly Honor Fellow, 1967-70.
Woodrow Wilson Fellow (Honorary), 1967-68.
Senior Fellow of Dartmouth College, 1966-67.
Phi Beta Kappa, 1966.
Research Grants
"A Dynamic Analysis of the Effects of Social Security on Income
and the Capital Stock," $20,850, American Enterprise Institute
for Public Policy Research, April - December 1976.
"The International Transmission of Inflation Through the World
Monetary System," Co-Principal Investigator with Anna J.
Schwartz for the National Bureau of Economic Research. In
association with Benjamin Klein, Arthur Gandolfi, James Lothian,
and Alan Stockman. Funding for September 1976 - August 1981
from the National Science Foundation, $434,051; Relm Foundation,
$14,313; Scaife Family Trusts, $50,000; and Alex C. Walker
Educational and Charitable Foundation, $15,000.
"The U.S. Productivity Slowdown: International Evidence on
Causes, Implications, and Responses," Principal Investigator
for the National Bureau of Economic Research. Funding for July
1982-June 1985 from the National Science Foundation, $67,500;
N.B.E.R. Project on Productivity and Industrial Change in the
World Economy, $38,934.
"International Transmission under Floating Exchange Rates,"
Principal Investigator with James R. Lothian, $10,000 grant from
the Earhart Foundation to the Foundation for Research in
Economics and Education, 1986.
Research in Process:
"The Ins and Outs of Unemployment: The Ins Win" (with John C.
Haltiwanger and Mark W. Plant)
"Cyclical Fluctuations in Organizational Capital and Aggregate
Production Functions" (with Lynne G. Zucker)
4
Michael R. Darby
Publications
Books and Monographs
1. Macroeconomics: The Theory of Income, Employment, and the
Price Level, New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1976.
2. Have Controls Ever Worked? The Post-War Record (with Michael
Parkin), Vancouver: The Fraser Institute, 1976.
3. The Effects of Social Security on Income and the Capital
Stock, Washington: American Enterprise Institute, 1979.
4. Intermediate Macroeconomics, New York: McGraw-Hill Book Co.,
1979.
4a. Intermediate Macroeconomics, Japanese ed., Yukio Masui and
Junji Narita, trans., Tokyo: McGraw-Hill-Kogakusha, 1981.
4b. Intermediate Macroeconomics (with Michael T. Melvin),
Glenview, Ill.: Scott Foresman and Co., 1986.
5. The International Transmission of Inflation by Michael R.
Darby, James R. Lothian, Arthur E. Gandolfi, Anna J. Schwartz,
and Alan C. Stockman, A National Bureau of Economic Research
Monograph, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1983;
paperback edition, 1985.
6. Labor Force, Employment, and Productivity in Historical
Perspective, Monograph and Research Series, No. 37, Los
Angeles: U.C.L.A. Institute of Industrial Relations, 1984.
Articles
1. "The Allocation of Transitory Income Among Consumers' Assets,"
American Economic Review, December 1972, 62: 928-41.
2. "Free Competition and the Optimal Amount of Fraud" (with Edi
Karni), Journal of Law and Economics, April 1973, 16: 67-88.
3. "The Permanent Income Theory of Consumption -- A Restatement,"
Quarterly Journal of Economics, May 1974, 88: 228-50.
4. "Postwar U.S. Consumption, Consumer Expenditures, and Saving,"
American Economic Review, May 1975, 65: 217-22.
5. "The Financial and Tax Effects of Monetary Policy on Interest
Rates," Economic Inquiry, June 1975, 13: 266-76.
5
6. "Three-and-a-Half Million U.S. Employees Have Been Mislaid:
Or, An Explanation of Unemployment, 1934-1941," Journal of
Political Economy, February 1976, 84: 1-16.
7. "The U.S. Economic Stabilization Program of 1971-1974," in M.
Parkin and M.R. Darby, Have Controls Ever Worked? The
Post-War Record, Vancouver: Fraser Institute, 1976.
(Reprinted in M. Walker, ed., The Illusion of Wage and Price
Control, Vancouver: Fraser Institute, 1976; Spanish
translation in M. Walker, ed., La Illusion del Control de
Precios y Salarios, Eduardo L. Suarez, trans., Monterrey,
Mexico: Centro de Estudios en Economia y Education, A.C.,
1982; also reprinted in Wage-Price Control: Myth and Reality,
Sudha R. Shenoy, ed., Sydney: Center for Independent Studies,
1979.)
8. "Price and Wage Controls: The First Two Years,"
Carnegie-Rochester Conference Series on Public Policy, April
1976, 2: 235-263.
9. "Rational Expectations under Conditions of Costly
Information," Journal of Finance, June 1976, 31: 889-95.
10. "The Consumer Expenditure Function," Explorations in Economic
Research, Winter-Spring 1977-1978, 4: 645-74.
11. "The NBER International Transmission Model: The Mark II
Disequilibrium Version, Lessons and Estimates, in Proceedings
of 1978 West Coast Academic/Federal Reserve Economic Research
Seminar, San Francisco: Federal Reserve Bank of San
Francisco, 1979.
12. "The Role of Money Supply Shocks in the Short-Run Demand for
Money" (with Jack Carr), Journal of Monetary Economics,
September 1981, 8: 183-199.
13. "Unanticipated or Actual Changes in Aggregate Demand
Variables: A Cross-Country Analysis,' in Proceedings of
Fourth West Coast Academic/Federal Reserve Economic Research
Seminar, Fall 1980, Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
Economic Review; Conference Supplement, November 1981.
14. "The International Economy as a Source of and Restraint on
United States Inflation," in William A. Gale, ed., Inflation:
Causes, Consequents, and Control, Cambridge: Oelgeschlager,
Gunn & Hain, Publishers, Inc., 1981.
15. "The Price of Oil and World Inflation and Recession," American
Economic Review, September 1982, 82: 738-751. (Republished
in microfiche form by EIC/Intelligence, 1984.)
6
16. "Does Purchasing Power Parity Work?" in Proceedings of Fifth
West Coast Academic/Federal Reserve Economic Research Seminar,
December 1981, San Francisco: Federal Reserve Bank of San
Francisco, 1982. (Reprinted in USIA's Portfolio:
International Economic Perspectives, vol. 9, no. 3.)
17. "International Transmission under Pegged and Floating Exchange
Rates: An Empirical Comparison," in J.S. Bhandari and B.H.
Putnam, eds., Economic Interdependence and Flexible Exchange
Rates, Cambridge: M.I.T. Press, 1983.
18. "British Economic Policy under Margaret Thatcher: A Midterm
Examination" (with James Lothian), Carnegie-Rochester
Conference Series on Public Policy, Spring 1983, 18: 157-207.
19. "The U.S. Productivity Slowdown: A Case of Statistical
Myopia," American Economic Review, June 1984, 74: 301-322.
20. "Monetary Policy in the Large Open Economy," in Albert Ando,
Hidekazu Eguchi, Roger Farmer, and Yoshio Suzuki, eds.,
Monetary Policy in Our Times, Proceedings of the First
International Conference sponsored by the Institute for
Monetary and Economic Studies, Bank of Japan, Cambridge:
M.I.T. Press, 1985.
21. "Unemployment-Rate Dynamics and Persistent Unemployment under
Rational Expectations" (with John C. Haltiwanger and Mark W.
Plant), American Economic Review, September 1985, 75:
614-637.
22. "The Internationalization of American Banking and Finance:
Structure, Risk, and World Interest Rates, Journal of
International Money and Finance, December 1986, 5: 403-428.
(Reprinted in Internationalization of Banking and Finance --
Analysis and Prospects, Proceedings of the Second
International Symposium on Financial Development, Seoul,
Korea: Korea Federation of Banks, 1986.)
23. "Economic Events and Keynesian Ideas: The 1930s and 1970s"
(with James R. Lothian), in John Burton, Leland B. Yeager,
Milton Friedman, Karl Brunner, Michael R. Darby, James R.
Lothian, Alan A. Walters, Patrick Minford, Michael Beenstock,
and Alan Budd, Keynes' General Theory: Fifty Years On: Its
Relevance and Irrelevance to Modern Times, London: Institute
of Economic Affairs, 1986.
24. "Qualitative Information, Reputation, and Monopolistic
Competition" (with John R. Lott, Jr.), International Review of
Law and Economics, June 1989, 9: 87-103.
7
25. "The International Transmission of Inflation Afloat" (with
James R. Lothian), in Michael D. Bordo, ed., Money, History,
and International Finance: Essays in Honor of Anna J.
Schwartz, University of Chicago Press, 1989.
26. "The Empirical Reliability of Monetary Aggregates as
Indicators: 1983-1987" (with Angelo R. Mascaro and Michael L.
Marlow), Economic Inquiry, October 1989, 27: 555-585.
[Honorable mention for Best Article in Economic Inquiry for
year of 1989.]
27. "Buffer Stock Models of the Demand for Money and the Conduct
of Monetary Policy" (with James R. Lothian and Michael
Tindall), Journal of Policy Modelling, Summer 1990, 12: 325-
345.
28. "The Impact of Government Deficits and Indebtedness on
Personal and Total Saving Rates" (with Robert Gillingham and
John Greenlees), Contemporary Policy Issues, in press 1991.
Notes and Comments
1. "Allais' Restatement of the Quantity Theory: Comment,"
American Economic Review, June 1970, 60: 444-46.
2. "Paper Recycling and the Stock of Trees," Journal of Political
Economy, September/October 1973, 81: 1235-55.
3. "Consumers' Durable Goods, Human Capital, and the Pareto
Optimality of the Lange-Lerner State,' Journal of Political
Economy, January/February 1974, 82: 180-84.
4. "Comments on Modigliani and Ando," in Jerome L. Stein, ed.,
Monetarism, Studies in Monetary Economics vol. 1, Amsterdam:
North-Holland Publishing Co., 1976.
5. "Price and Wage Controls: Further Evidence,"
Carnegie-Rochester Conference Series on Public Policy, April
1976, 2: 269-271.
6. "Indexing Social Security: What to Do? - Discussion, in
Colin D. Campbell, ed., Financing Social Security, Washington:
American Enterprise Institute, 1979.
7. "Social Security and Saving: Another Look,' Social Security
Bulletin, May 1979, 42 (5): 33, 35-36.
8. "The Monetary Approach to the Balance of Payments: Two
Specious Assumptions," Economic Inquiry, April 1980, 18:
321-326.
8
9. "Anticipated Money Growth and Employment Growth in the United
States: Discussion Comments," in Proceedings of Third West
Coast Academic/Federal Reserve Economic Research Seminar,
October 1979, Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco Economic
Review, Conference Supplement, August 1980.
10. "A Syllabus for Macrodynamics," in Edward Tower, ed.,
Macroeconomics, Monetary Economics, and Money & Banking Course
Materials, Durham, N.C.: Eno River Press, 1981. (Reprinted
with revisions in The American Economist, Spring 1983, 27:
71-78.)
11. "Consumption Function," "Dynamic Analysis," "Dynamic
Macroeconomic Models, "IS-LM Model, If "Permanent Income
Hypothesis,' and "Static Analysis,' in Douglas Greenwald, ed.,
Encyclopedia of Economics, New York: McGraw-Hill Book Co.,
1982.
12. "The Political Basis of International Inflation," in Raymond
Lombra and Willard Witte, eds., The Political Economy of
Domestic and International Monetary Relations, Amex, Iowa:
Iowa State University Press, 1982.
13. "Thatcher Monetary Policy is Working: No Case for Reflation"
(with James R. Lothian), Journal of Economics Affairs, October
1982, 3: 7-10.
14. "Some Pleasant Monetarist Arithmetic," Federal Reserve Bank of
Minneapolis Quarterly Review, Spring 1984, 8(2): 15-20.
(Reprinted in Thomas M. Havrilesky, ed., Modern Concepts in
Macroeconomics, Arlington Heights, Ill.: Harlan Davidson,
Inc., 1985; also reprinted in Federal Reserve Bank of
Minneapolis Quarterly Review, Winter 1985, 9(1): 32-37 due to
"unforeseen high demand" for original issue.)
15. "Monetary Anticipations and the Demand for Money: Reply to
MacKinnon and Milbourne" (with Jack Carr and Daniel L.
Thornton), Journal of Monetary Economics, September 1985, 16:
251-257.
16. "Bank Failures: The 1930s and the 1980s -- Discussion," in
The Search for Financial Stability: The Past Fifty Years, San
Francisco: Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, 1985.
17. "Comments on Hall's Proposals," in Colin D. Campbell and
William R. Dougan, eds., Alternative Monetary Regimes,
Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1986.
18. "The Response of Interest Rates to Money Announcements under
Alternative Operating Procedures and Reserve Requirement
Systems -- Discussion," in Proceedings of the 1985 Fall
Academic Conference, San Francisco: Federal Reserve Bank of
San Francisco, 1986.
9
19. "International Economic Policy Coordination and Transmission:
A Review," Oxford Economic Papers, November 1986, 38:
278-283.
20. "Recent Behavior of the Velocity of Money" (with William
Poole, David E. Lindsey, Milton Friedman, and Michael
Bazdarich), Contemporary Policy Issues, January 1987, 5:
1-33.
21. "The Consumption Function," in John Eatwell, Murray Millgate,
and Peter Newman, eds., The New Palgrave: A Dictionary of
Economics, London: The Macmillan Press Ltd., 1987.
22. "The Wealth Effect," in John Eatwell, Murray Millgate, and
Peter Newman, eds., The New Palgrave: A Dictionary of
Economics London: The Macmillan Press Ltd., 1987.
23. U.S. Treasury Department, "The Direct Revenue Effects of
Capital Gains Taxation: A Reconsideration of the Time-Series
Evidence" (prepared by Michael R. Darby, Robert Gillingham,
and John S. Greenlees), Treasury Bulletin, June 1988, pp. 2-8.
24. "The Black Box Revealed: Reply to Minarik" (with Robert
Gillingham and John S. Greenlees), Tax Notes, July 25, 1988,
40: 413-416.
25. "Real Exchange Rates and Freedom of International Trade and
Capital Flows," Cato Journal, Fall 1988, 8: 473-475.
(Reprinted in James A. Dorn and William A. Niskanen, eds.,
Dollars, Deficits, and Trade, Boston: Kluwer Academic
Publishers, 1989.)
26. "Challenges of Macro Policy in the Open U.S. Economy" (with
William Poole, Robert Eisner, and Allen L. Sinai),
Contemporary Policy Issues, January 1989, 7: 1-34.
27. "The U.S. External Deficit: Its Causes and Persistence --
Commentary," in Albert E. Burger, ed., The U.S. Trade Deficit:
Causes, Consequences, and Cures, Norwell, MA: Kluwer Academic
Publishers, 1989.
28. "Choosing Types of Volatility in a World of Change," in
International Banking Symposium, Lugano 17-18-19 Ottobre 1988,
(proceedings volume), Berne, Switzerland: Paul Haupt,
Publisher, 1989.
29. "Improvements in Economic Statistics," in 1990 Annual Research
Conference Proceedings, Washington: U.S. Bureau of the
Census, 1990.
10
30. "Capital Gains Taxation and the Cost of Capital: Discussion,"
in Charls E. Walker, Mark A. Bloomfield, and Margo Thorning,
eds., The U.S. Savings Challenge: Policy Options for
Productivity and Growth, Boulder: Westview Press, 1990.
31. "Trade Policy for a Growing World Economy -- a United States
Perspective, in International Banking Symposium, Lugano 15-
16-17 Ottobre 1990, (proceedings volume), Berne, Switzerland:
Paul Haupt Publishers, in press 1991.
Book Reviews
1. Portfolio Behavior of Financial Institutions, by William L.
Silber, Review, Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking, August
1972, 4: 753-54.
2. An Introduction to Money and Banking, by Colin D. Campbell and
Rosemary G. Campbell, Review, Dartmouth Alumni Magazine,
October 1972, 65 (1): 13-14.
3. The Cashless Society, by Robert Hendrickson, Review, Journal
of Money, Credit, and Banking, August 1973, 5: 870-71.
4. Selected Essays on the Economic Growth of the Socialist and
Mixed Economy by Michal Kalecki, Review, Journal of Political
Economy, November/December 1973, 81: 1484-85.
5. Permanent Income, Wealth, and Consumption, by Thomas Mayer,
Review, Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking, February 1975,
7: 122-24.
6. The Effect of Social Security on Personal Saving, by Alicia
Haydock Munnell, Review, Journal of Finance, May 1976, 31;
186-87.
7. The Unseen Revolution: How Pension Fund Socialism Came to
America, by Peter F. Drucker, Review, Business Week, July 19,
1976, no. 2441, pp. 6, 10.
8. Social Security versus Private Saving, edited by George von
Furstenberg, Review, Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking,
August 1981, 13: 407-408.
9. Essays in Post-Keynesian Inflation, edited by James H.
Gapinski and Charles E. Rockwood, Review, Journal of Economic
Literature, December 1981, 19: 1600-1601. (Reprinted in
Economic Impact, 1982/3, no. 39, pp. 88-89.)
10. The Great Depression Revisited, edited by Karl Brunner,
Review, Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking, May 1982, 14:
293-295.
11
11. The Economics of Large Government Deficits, conference
proceedings, Review, Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking,
November 1985, 17: 549-550.
Popular and Other Publications
1. "Why is Inflation so High?", "What Causes Gasoline
Shortages?", "How Secure is Social Security?", "Why are
Interest Rates so High?", and "Is Inflation Out of Control?"
in Focus on the Economy, Los Angeles: Century Federal Savings
and Loan Association, 1979-1980.
2. "Research Summary of The International Transmission of
Inflation" (with James R. Lothian), NBER Reporter, Winter
1981/2, pp. 6-9.
3. "Inflation," in Academic American Encyclopedia, vol. 11,
Danbury, Ct.: Grolier Inc., 1982. (Expanded revision, in
press.)
4. "World Inflation: USA Major Cause" (with James R. Lothian),
Economic Affairs, April-June 1984, 4(3): 9-13.
5. "America's Role in Global Inflation" (with James R. Lothian),
International Business Conditions Digest, July 1984, 2(7):
7-8.
6. "The Current Account Deficit, Capital Account Surplus, and
National Investment and Saving," in Robert M. Williams, ed.,
Proceedings of the 35th Annual Business Forecasting Conference
Held at UCLA, December 17, 1986, vol. 3, Los Angeles: UCLA
Business Forecasting Project, 1987.
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
The Under Secretary for Economic Affairs
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Economics and Statistics Administration
Washington, D.C. 20230
Richard- -
Further this
mornings conversation,
d thought I would he
useful for you to have
some paper on me. Thanks
for any help or advice you
can provide
Best
Michal
ECOMOMICS AND STATISTICS ADMINISTRATION
11 July 1991
The Administrator
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
7-21
Dear Connie,
Michael apparently has to
decide by the end & the
year whether he is going back
to UCLA. He'd rather stay
He asked me to keep an
but wants a new challenge.
eye out for him.
I thought you might like
to keep him F the back I
your mind -
Yours,
Richard
call were Hund
letter
MARY JO DENNIS
5-30
9201 Grandville
Detroit, Michigan 48227
313-836-1527
SPECIAL ATTRIBUTES:
*Self-directed and motivated
*Effective communication skills
*Handles administrative tasks effectively
*Creative.
EDUCATION:
Grand Valley State University, December, 1991
Major: B.A. Legal Studies
Area of emphasis: Commercial Law
WORK EXPERIENCE:
1990-present
Grand Valley State University, Allendale, Michigan
- Resident Assistant for co-ed residence hall of
400 freshmen.
- Supervising 58 freshmen women.
- Providing Wholeness programing.
- Assisting with hiring personnel.
- Individual and group advising.
- Administrative duties and special assignments.
- -Discipline.
Grand Valley State University, Allendale, Michigan
- Research Intern for Housing Department.
- Research Multiculturalism on college and university
campuses.
- -Prepare reports on findings to supervisor.
- -Developed Multicultural program to be incorporated
into Housing Department.
-Assist with the hiring of affirmative action
candidates.
1988-89
Casual Postal Clerk,
-Sorting, canceling mail and organizing packages.
1988
J.D. Wilson, Inc., Highland Park, Michigan
-Handled incoming calls, typed work orders, in
charge of billing, shipping special orders via
UPS, frieght vehicles.
1988
Historic Fort Wayne, Detroit, Michigan
-Interpretive Staff - Living history reenacting of
1864, handling incoming calls, sales, cashier,
assisting with special events and temporary
management of the gift shop.
P 04
Con't
MARY JO DENNIS
a
1985-86
Piney Woods Country Life School, Jackson, Mississippi
-Cashier and Social Activities Assistant - Sold,
maintained and stocked merchandise, assisted in
the organization of social activities and special
events.
1984
Piney Woods Country Life School, Jackson, Mississippi
-Assistant Dorm Associate - Tutored 7th and 8th grades
in English and Science, and supervised work detail.
1983
Piney Woods Country Life School, Jackson, Mississippi
-Receptionist - Handled incoming calls and directed
visitors.
EXTRACURRICULAR ACTIVITIES:
*Black Student Union
*N.A.A.C.P.
*Student Advocate Board
*We Care Committee
* Weightlifting
*Multicultural Committee
References available upon request
MELVIN GUPTON
June 3-
10006 Monica, Apt. 304
Detroit, MI 48204
(313) 934-8170h
pastor keith Butter
(313) 876-0693w
Cill
CAREER OBJECTIVE
To secure a position as a feature writer and copy editor in the magazine
industry with the freedom to travel as assigned.
EMPLOYMENT EXPERIENCE
CITY OF DETROIT - Employment and Training Department, Administrative
Services Division; Supervisor: Bonnie Bizzell (876-0687)
Sr. Personnel & Payroll Clerk - (Summer, 1986 - present) - Work flow includes
posting, keying and transmitting work time for salaried employees with sub-
sequent updating of employee time-banks and records.
CITY OF DETROIT - Employment and Training Department, Program Management
Division; Supervisor: Willie Walker (876-0631)
Jr. Typist + (May, 1985 - January, 1989) - Duties entailed enrolling,
updating and terminating an ongoing file of participants in Job Training
Partnership Act (JTPA) programs and later, entering the processed data into
a microcomputer system.
WAYNE STATE UNIVERSITY - Center for Black Studies, and the Speech Dept.
Supervisor: Dr. Geneva Smitherman (577-2321)
Student Research Assistant - (October, 1982 - June, 1985) - Duties included
clerical and reception work, running errands as assigned and assisting with
research and library projects involving information gathering and data entry.
EDUCATION
WAYNE STATE UNIVERSITY - Detroit, Michigan 48202
Rank: Senior; Major: Journalism (Print); GPA: 3.3+
Member, student chapter of the National Association of Black Journalists
Graduation: pending-April, 1992
SOUTHWESTERN HIGH SCHOOL - 6921 W. Fort Street, Detroit, MI 48209
College Preparatory Curriculum. GPA: 3.87; Valedictorian*
President, Technical and Business Club
Treasurer, Senior Class and the National Honor Society
Graduation: June 5, 1981
PERSONAL
Typing speed of 55-60 wpm; speak conversational French; personal computer
literate using BASIC and PASCAL; published poet; geometry and algebra tutor;
personable; industrious and a self-starter in pursuit of excellence.
EFERENCES
Available upon request.
RESUME
Wade T. Dyke
January 28, 1991
Office of the Secretary
U.S. Department of Education
Washington, DC 20202
phone: 202-401-3000
EDUCATION
University of Oxford, New College, Oxford, England, 1981-86
Doctor of Philosophy, in politics, completed June 1986.
Thesis: "The Development and Strategies of Corporate
Political Committees in United States Politics."
Master of Arts, in the Honour School of Philosophy,
Politics and Economics. Completed June 1983. Subject
papers included political theory, institutions, economic
principles, development, international relations.
University of Wisconsin - Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, 1975-80
Bachelor of Business Administration, with honors and
distinction, completed December 1980. Major in accounting.
WORK EXPERIENCE
U.S. Department of Education, Washington, DC, 1989-
Deputy Chief of Staff (Acting) and Special Assistant to the
Secretary and the Deputy Secretary. Responsibility for
office management, policy review and analysis, liaison with
Domestic Policy Council. Schedule C appointment (10/4/90-)
White House Fellowship, 1989-90
The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, 1986-
Assistant Professor, School of Public Policy and Management.
Lectured in business, politics and government (on leave)
Pace Setter Undergraduate Teaching Award, 1988; Cleveland
Foundation grant for economic development research, 1987-89
Office of the Governor, State of Wisconsin, 1979-80. Special
projects assistant.
Thanks. wade
Document Originally
Attached to
Following Page
OF EDUCATION
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY
November 16, 1990
FILE COPY
MEMORANDUM FOR THE DEPUTY SECRETARY
FROM:
Wade Dyke
SUBJECT:
Briefing on DPC paper -- infant mortality
Background
The Domestic Policy Council meets Monday, November 19, 1990
at 10:30 to discuss an options paper on infant mortality
presented by Dr. Sullivan and his deputy Connie Horner. The DPC
previously met on the issue on November 30, 1989 and returned it
to the Health Policy Working Group for further development.
The infant mortality rate in the U.S. is 9.7 deaths per 1000
births, about half the level of 1970. Progress has slowed
recently and the rate for blacks, native Americans, and Puerto
Ricans is about 50% higher than that for whites. Low birthweight
is a closely related factor. Low birthweight babies compose 60%
of infant deaths, though only 7% of all live births.
Government currently spends a considerable amount seeking to
address this problem. HHS spent about $4.3 billion in FY90 on
health care and research, Agriculture spent $2 billion for
special nutrition programs, and states spent $2.3 billion for
their share of related Medicaid costs. Public health departments
spent other monies on prenatal, infant and immunization efforts.
In FY91, Medicaid will guarantee coverage for pregnant mothers
and infants up to one year regardless of increases in income.
Many eligible women, though, do not currently enroll in Medicaid.
Options in the paper
1) Broad-based effort to expand service use. Increase outreach,
the number of community health centers, and funding for the WIC
supplemental nutrition program, among other ideas.
2) Target areas worst hit by high infant mortality rates, as a
means to increase the impact of efforts noted in #1.
3) Use bully pulpit. President and others would make speeches.
4) Undertake a national public education initiative. Use federal
and private resources, create a handbook and a toll-free number.
PAGE TWO -- DPC Meeting on Infant Mortality
Comments on DPC analysis of the problem
Do we need a larger research component and better data
collection? The supplemental data provided make evident we do
not know many of the reasons for low birthweight babies, for the
differentials among racial groups, or about other causal factors.
Comments on option one: Broad-based effort to expand service use
There is a profound problem reaching women who need the
services. Is there any evidence to suggest this expansion would
be somehow more effective? Governments already spend at least
$8.6 billion to reduce infant mortality in the U.S. (figure from
options paper). That is a considerable amount -- about $2,300
for every live birth, or about $7,000 for every birth to women
with family incomes under $15,000 (based on the number of live
births in 1987, about 3.8m, and the number of lower income women
who had children in 1987, about 1.2m -- 1989 Stat. Abs. of U.S.).
Comments on option two: Target worst hit areas
Would this have a sufficiently significant impact on the
problem? In 1986, 24% of infant deaths were in the six largest
metropolitan areas - New York City, LA, Chicago, San Francisco,
Philadelphia, and Detroit (1989 Statistical Abstract of U.S.).
Since causes of the problem are not well understood, such a
targeted demonstration and evaluation approach could be the most
promising in showing how to save lives, while reaching as much as
a quarter of the need.
Comments on option three: Use the bully pulpit
There is a clear need to champion responsible behavior.
That is a theme of the recently released "Toward a Drug-Free
Generation," the report of the National Commission on Drug-Free
Schools co-chaired by Bennett and Cavazos.
Comments on option four: National public education initiative
The Department Education could assist by distributing to
schools information on the HHS initiative, if it is approved.
Fly -
WADE T. DYKE
1550 NORTH CLARENDON BOULEVARD 1009
Ruhand
ARLINGTON, VIRGINIA 22209
February 28, 1991
Ms. Ede Holiday
Assistant to the President
and Secretary of the Cabinet
The White House
Washington, DC 20500
Dear Ede,
You put up with numerous phone calls on
my behalf, and then I did not take the offer
at the Domestic Policy Council. Please
forgive me for the indulgence of your time.
Lamar Alexander has asked me to stay and help
set up operations here as his Deputy Chief of
Staff pending his confirmation. Perhaps this
might be of service, too, in an indirect way
to you as keeper of the Cabinet flock.
Thank you most kindly for considering
me. I am always available if I can be of any
service.
Sincerely,
tade
Wade Dyke
WADE T. DYKE
1550 NORTH CLARENDON BOULEVARD 1009
Furlicherd
ARLINGTON, VIRGINIA 22209
11 February 1991
Deen Cede,
Thank you for the opportunity to
interview with you for the job of
Deputy Executive Secretary of the DPC.
you are very highly regarded
in our agency, as is what you are
doing with your offices.
Please let me know if I can
provide any other information beliful
to you in your decision.
Thanks again,
Sale Dy
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
April 2, 1991
Dear Wade:
Sorry for the delay in writing you, however, I did want to
thank you for your interest in the Deputy Executive Secretary
position and for the time you spent meeting with Ede, Steve, John
and myself.
Let me again congratulate you on your new position within
the Department of Education. I know that Lamar has gained a
truly superb Deputy Chief of Staff by your decision to accept his
offer.
We all look forward to working with you in your new capacity
there and wish you all the best for your continued success.
With best regards.
Sincerely,
Richard
Richard W. Porter
Special Assistant to the President
and Executive Secretary
Domestic Policy Council
Mr. Wade T. Dyke
1550 North Clarendon Blvd.
Apartment 1009
Arlington, VA 22209
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
April 2, 1991
Dear Suzanne:
Thank you for your interest in the position of Associate
Director and Deputy Executive Secretary to the Domestic Policy
Council. I appreciate your willingness to come down from New
York to talk with us.
It almost goes without saying that your background and
experience are impressive -- and Todd is a great advocate for
you! But in the final analysis, we have decided to select
someone else for the position. The decision was not an easy one
to make -- just about everyone we met would have made a fine
addition to this office.
Again, thank you for interest and for taking time to come
meet with us. If you don't mind, we will keep your resume on
file in the event that other opportunities within the White House
become available.
With best regards.
Sincerely,
Richard
Richard W. Porter
Special Assistant to the President
and Executive Secretary
Domestic Policy Council
Suzanne Fawbush, Esq.
Breed, Abbott & Morgan
153 E. 53rd Street
New York, NY 10022
JUDY ELLEN FISHER
2619 Garfield Street, N.W., #4
Washington, D.C. 20008
202-328-9213-H
202-566-2269-0
EXPERIENCE
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF TREASURY June 1990 - Present
Office of the Assistant Secretary for International Affairs, Confidential Assistant
Control and set priorities for correspondence and issue papers. Conduct special political
missions of the office.
UNITED STATES INFORMATION AGENCY March 1989 - June 1990
Office of Public Liaison, Staff Assistant
Published USIA's Daily News Summary, a 10-15 page compilation of world-wide
publications relevant to the agency. Authored press releases. Contributing writer of
news and feature stories for USIA World magazine. Official publicity photographer to
the USIA director and for USIA World. Organized press conferences and special events.
AMERICAN BICENTENNIAL PRESIDENTIAL INAUGURAL COMMITTEE
November 1988 - February 1989
Office of the Director of Personnel, Executive Assistant
Recruited staff and maintained personnel records. Assistant to the deputy director of
administration.
BUSH/QUAYLE 1988, INC. August - November 1988
Presidential campaign headquarters, State Administrative Liaison
Coordinated opening and closing of 21 offices in 19 states nationwide. Provided the
offices with administrative support prior to and during the general election.
GEORGE BUSH FOR PRESIDENT December 1987 - August 1988
Washington campaign headquarters, Assistant Volunteer Coordinator
As a full-time volunteer, assisted the volunteer coordinator by organizing the intern
program for students from across the country and Europe from high-school to graduate
level. Recruited other volunteers and organized campaign activities.
THE DCM GROUP, Arlington, Virginia July - November 1987
Public Relations Aide
Assisted seasoned political staff in various aspects of PR/communications work, i.e.,
survey preparation, press release publication, feature articles and photography.
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY Summer Employee 1985 & 1986
VSE CORPORATION, Alexandria, Virginia Summer Employee 1983 & 1984
EDUCATION
THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE UNIVERSITY
Bachelor of Arts in Journalism, May 1987
JUDY ELLEN FISHER
2619 Garfield Street, N.W., #4
Washington, D.C. 20008
202-328-9213-H
202-566-2269-0
ACTIVITIES AND RELATED EXPERIENCE
DOCENT, U.S. Department of Treasury 1991. Was selected for this volunteer program
by the Office of the Curator to give tours of the historic main Treasury building to
visitors and VIPs.
1990 BUSH/QUAYLE HOLIDAY BALL COMMITTEE Chairman, Public Relations
Committee
Jack Herrity for Chairman, Fairfax County Board of Supervisors 1987 Volunteer
PENN STATE COLLEGE REPUBLICANS Vice Chairman 1986-87, Treasurer 1985-86.
*
Reagan-Bush 1984 Volunteer
*
William F. Clinger for Congress 1984, 1986 Volunteer
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Penn State University's student newspaper. One of three
regular reporters on the business page.
PENN STATE PANHELLENIC COUNCIL Administrative Liaison. Served as the
Executive Board representative to School Administration and all other student groups.
ROBERT E. LEE HIGH SCHOOL SHIELD 1982-83. Senior Editor of yearbook.
JUDY ELLEN FISHER
2619 Garfield Street, N.W., #4
Washington, D.C. 20008
202-328-9213-H
202-566-2269-0
REFERENCES
Charles H. Dallara, Assistant Secretary, International Affairs, U.S. Department of
Treasury
202-566-2269
Deborah L. Miller, White House Liaison U.S. Department of Treasury 202-566-8409
(also Bush Campaign)
Kathy Armstrong, Deputy Director for Administration 1989 Inaugural Committee
Current number: 703-459-3007
Susan Loud Denniston, Office of Public Liaison, The White House, 202-456-7140
Marilyn (Pat) Thompson, Director, U.S. Information Agency, Office of Equal
Employment Opportunity 202-619-5151
Anthony Collings, Cable News Network 202-898-7587 (H) 703-658-4943
THOMAS K. FLEENER
111 Great Falls Street
Falls Church, Virginia 22046
(703) 534-5136 (home)
(202) 456-6772 (work)
EMPLOYMENT:
1/23/89 present
THE OFFICE OF THE VICE PRESIDENT
OF THE UNITED STATES
Office of the Staff Secretary
Deputy Staff Secretary
Washington, DC
Responsibilities include assisting the Special Assistant to the Vice President and Staff Secretary
manage and direct the flow of information to and from the Vice President of the United States. I also
prepare the Vice President's daily briefing book, assist in maintaining the permanent records of the Quayle
vice presidency, prepare economic policy correspondence and oversee the preparation of special written
messages from the Vice President.
1/09/89 - 1/20/89
THE AMERICAN BICENTENNIAL PRESIDENTIAL
INAUGURAL COMMITTEE
Inaugural Office of the Vice President-elect
Detailee
Washington, DC
Responsibilities included assisting immediate and extended members of the Quayle Family with their
participation in inaugural week activities. I also assisted in meeting the special needs of Indiana residents
who attended the inaugural.
8/23/88 - 1/03/89
THE INDIANA OFFICE OF UNITED STATES SENATORS
RICHARD G. LUGAR AND DAN QUAYLE
Acting State Director for Senator Dan Quayle
Indianapolis, Indiana
Responsibilities included directing the daily operation of Senator Quayle's five Indiana United States
Senate offices from his acceptance of the Republican vice presidential nomination through his resignation
from the Senate. As Acting State Director, I had oversight authority of the constituent services and project
operations and served as the principal contact for official Senate business in the State of Indiana for
Senator Quayle.
7/01/87 - 8/22/88
THE INDIANA OFFICE OF UNITED STATES SENATORS
RICHARD G. LUGAR AND DAN QUAYLE
Executive Assistant to Senator Dan Quayle
Indianapolis, Indiana
Responsibilities included managing Senator Quayle's involvement with Federal projects and grants in
the State of Indiana. Project and grant areas included transportation, some environmental issues, FEMA and
energy. I also assisted the State Director with the preparation and execution of Senator Quayle's trips to the
state and managed other special projects initiated by the Senator.
Withdrawal/Redaction Sheet
(George Bush Library)
Document No.
Subject/Title of Document
Date
Restriction
Class.
and Type
04. Resume
Re: Thomas K. Fleener; Personally Identifiable Information
n.d.
(b)(6)
redacted. (1 pp.)
Collection:
Record Group:
Bush Presidential Records
Office:
Cabinet Affairs, White House Office of
Series:
Porter, Richard, Files
Subseries:
WHORM Cat.:
File Location:
Resume File [binder] [2]
Date Closed:
7/30/2025
OA/ID Number:
07137-005b
FOIA/SYS Case #:
2025-0878-F
Appeal Case #:
Re-review Case #:
Appeal Disposition:
P-2/P-5 Review Case #:
Disposition Date:
AR Case #:
MR Case #:
AR Disposition:
MR Disposition:
AR Disposition Date:
MR Disposition Date:
RESTRICTION CODES
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) - [5 U.S.C. 552(b)]
Deed of Gift Restrictions
(b)(1) National security classified information
C(1) Closed by Executive Order 13526, governing access to national
(b)(2) Release would disclose internal personnel rules and practices of an
security information
agency
C(2) Closed by statute or by the agency which originated the information
(b)(3) Release would violate a Federal statute
C(3) Closed in accordance with restrictions contained in donor's deed of
(b)(4) Release would disclose trade secrets or confidential or financial
gift [formerly listed as only C]
information
PRM. Removed as a personal record misfile
(b)(6) Release would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion
of personal privacy
(b)(7) Release would disclose information compiled for law enforcement
Presidential Records Act - [44 U.S.C. 2204(a)]
purposes
(b)(8) Release would disclose information concerning the regulation of
P-2 Relating to the appointment to Federal office [(a)(2) of the PRA]
financial institutions
P-5 Release would disclose confidential advice between the President and
(b)(9) Release would disclose geological or geophysical information
his advisors, or between such advisors [(a)(5) of the PRA]
concerning wells
5/19/86 . 6/30/87
THE OFFICE OF UNITED STATES SENATOR DAN QUAYLE
Staff Assistant
Washington, DC
Responsibilities included managing incoming constituent mail, assisting the Administrative Assistant
and legislative staff in research activities and facilitating the Senator's travel in and around the Washington,
DC, area.
EDUCATION:
1985
Bachelor of Arts Degree
Indiana University, Bloomington
Double Major: History and Education
PERSONAL:
Born:
(b) (6)
REFERENCES:
Made available upon request.
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
February 19, 1991
Dear Tom:
Thank you for your interest in the position of Associate
Director and Deputy Executive Secretary to the Domestic Policy
Council. I appreciate the time you took to meet with me.
Your background and experience are impressive, but we have
decided to select someone else for the position. The decision
was not an easy one to make -- just about everyone we met would
have made a fine addition to this office.
Again, thank you for interest and for taking time to come
meet with me. If you don't mind, we will keep your resume on
file in the event that other opportunities within the White House
become available.
With best regards.
Sincerely,
Riliad
Richard W. Porter
Special Assistant to the President
and Executive Secretary
Domestic Policy Council
Mr. Thomas K. Fleener
111 Great Falls Street
Falls Church, VA 22046
January 29, 1991
Mr. Richard Porter
Special Assistant to the President
and Executive Secretary for the Domestic Policy Council
Office of Cabinet Affairs
The White House
Washington, DC 20500
Dear Mr. Porter:
Per your recent conversation with William Kristol I am
enclosing my resume for your review.
I would appreciate a few minutes of your time in the near
future to discuss possible employment opportunities with the
Domestic Policy Council.
Your time and consideration are greatly appreciated.
Sincerely,
form
Thomas K. Fleener
Enclosure
DIANA FURCHTGOTT-ROTH
American Petroleum Institute
1220 L Street, N.W.
5207 Westwood Drive
Washington, DC 20005
Bethesda, Maryland 20816
(202) 682-8538
(301) 229-3593
EDUCATION
M. Phil. in Economics, Brasenose College, Oxford University, 1982.
B.A. cum laude in Economics, Swarthmore College, 1979.
EMPLOYMENT
Economist, American Petroleum Institute, Policy Analysis Department, 1987-
present.
Conduct studies, write papers, and direct research on tax, energy, and environmental
issues. Advise representatives of oil companies on current Federal tax policy and
pending legislation.
Junior Staff Economist, Council of Economic Advisers, 1986-1987.
Provided support to the Chairman and Members of Council on a wide range of
economic issues. Fields of specialization included public finance and privatization.
Economist, Policy Economics Group, 1985-1986.
Analyzed the effects of proposed changes in tax laws on various industries including
banking, railroad, and trucking.
Senior Consultant, Booz, Allen and Hamilton Inc., 1983-1984.
Examined economic and financial effects of changing the tax status of industries in
Puerto Rico. Investigated costs and benefits of cleaning up Superfund hazardous waste
sites.
Consultant, Free Zone Authority, 1983
Compared manufacturing production costs in the Caribbean Basin and the Far East for
industrial location study.
Research Assistant, The Urban Institute, Summer 1982.
Research Assistant, Center for Naval Analyses, Summers 1979 and 1980.
Intern, Organization for American States, Summer 1978.
PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATIONS
Member, Board of Governors, National Economists Club, 1991-present.
Chairman, Board of Governors, National Economists Club, 1990 - 1991.
Chaired group that oversees general policy of club. Organized conference on "The
Role 1990. of Economic Experts in Intercompany Transfer Pricing Cases," September
President, National Economists Club, 1989 - 1990.
Presided over 750-member professional organization. Improved financial position of
club from $14,000 deficit to $3,000 surplus. Organized conference on "Applications
of Economic Modeling in Trade Remedy Cases before the International Trade
Commission," September 1989.
Vice President for Programs, National Economists Club, 1988-1989.
Organized guest speakers for semi-weekly club meetings.
Treasurer, Brasenose College Charitable Foundation, 1988-present.
Member of executive committee that manages foundation's portfolio and selects
American students for graduate fellowships to Brasenose College, Oxford University.
Member, American Economics Association.
Member, National Tax Association-Tax Institute of America (NTA-TIA).
Member, Federal Taxation and Finance Committee of NTA-TIA.
PAPERS
The Relation Between Tax Increases and the Federal Budget Deficit, Background Paper,
American Petroleum Institute. December 1987.
The Regressivity of Motor Fuel Excise Taxes, Background Paper, American Petroleum
Institute, March 1988.
The Effects of EPA's Designation of Nonattainment on New Plant Siting, Draft
Background Paper, American Petroleum Institute, March 1988.
Comparing the U.S. and Foreign Tax Treatment of the Petroleum Industry: A Review of
the 1988. Existing Literature, Background Paper, American Petroleum Institute, May
A Comparison of the Industrial and Regional Effects of the VAT with Various Other
Proposed Taxes, Draft Background Paper, American Petroleum Institute, December
1988.
The Unequal Geographic Burden of Increasing Federal Gasoline Excise Taxes,
Background Paper, American Petroleum Institute, May 1989.
OECD Countries and the VAT: The Historical Experience, Research Study #049,
American Petroleum Institute, February 1990. (Paper presented at the Western
Economics Association Meetings, San Diego, CA, July 1990.)
Comparisons of Marginal Effective Tax Rates Across Industries: A Review of the
Methodology, Draft Working Paper, American Petroleum Institute, October 1990.
The Measurement of Regressivity: The Case of the Motor Fuels Tax, Discussion Paper
#063, American Petroleum Institute, December 1990. (Paper presented at the
American Economics Association Meetings, Washington, D.C., December 1990.)
The Economic Costs of Increasing Federal Motor Fuel Taxes, Draft Working Paper,
American Petroleum Institute, January 1991.
Sustainable Development and the Petroleum Industry, Draft Working Paper, American
Petroleum Institute, July 1991.
Distributional Effects of Motor Fuel Taxes on the Elderly, Draft Background Paper,
American Petroleum Institute, July 1991.
PRESENTATIONS
"The Administration's Privatization Policies," speech before the National Economists Club,
March 1987.
"The Administration's Privatization Policies," presentation at the Southern Republican
Exchange, Columbia, South Carolina, August 1987.
"Advantages and Disadvantages of the VAT," presentation before the Industry Statements
Committee, American Petroleum Institute, Houston, Texas, June 1988.
"Tax Increases to Reduce the Federal Deficit," presentation for meeting of chief economists
of oil companies, American Petroleum Institute, Washington, D.C., February
1989.
JEFFREY R. GATES
Powell, Goldstein, Frazer & Murphy
1001 Pennsylvania Ave., N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20004
Telephone: (202) 624-7287
Facsimile: (202) 624-7222
Attorney, economist and investment banker with an 18-year history in employee stock ownership plans
(ESOPs) and their use as a technique of corporate finance.
Partner in the Washington office of Powell, Goldstein, Frazer & Murphy.
Counsel to the New York-based investment banking firm of Kelso & Company (1987-90). Mr. Kelso
is known as the originator of the ESOP concept. Transactions completed during that period include
the leveraged buyouts of American Standard ($3.033 billion, including a 19% ESOP) and Arkansas
Best Freightways ($479 million).
Consultant to the Washington-based Long Law Firm (1988-89). Senator Russell Long (retired) was
the primary legislative champion of ESOP legislation in the U.S. Congress.
Counsel to the U.S. Senate Committee on Finance (1980-87) with primary responsibility for the
conception, design and drafting of ESOP legislation and related legislative history. Also worked on
major tax bills enacted in 1981, 1982, 1984 and 1986.
Consultant to many of the 25 States that have enacted legislation favorable to employee stock
ownership.
Consultant to numerous foreign countries in their effort to adapt the ESOP concept to their economies.
For example, efforts beginning in 1984 led to the 1989 enactment of the first U.S.-style ESOP
legislation in the United Kingdom (followed by additional legislation enacted in 1990). A 1986
speaking tour of Australia launched the effort leading to the first ESOPs in Australia and helped
establish the Association for Employee Ownership in Australia.
Recent foreign ESOP-related projects include:
--Advising the Polish Finance Ministry (and, at that time, the Government Plenipotentiary for
Ownership Changes) on adapting the ESOP financing concept to ongoing privatization efforts.
--Participant in several protocols with the USSR, including ESOP demonstration projects and
development of a public finance system for the Soviets; also active in university programs offering
training for Soviet managers, including the Fuqua School of Business (Duke University) U.S.S.R.
Manager Development Program with responsibility for teaching financial restructuring (including
privatization) techniques and ESOPs.
--Technical advisor to the Hungarian Resz-Vetel Foundation in their drafting of legislation designed to
encourage ESOPs.
--Technical advisor to the Institute for Forecasting of the Czech Republic in their ongoing research and
evaluation of ESOP financing as a component of their restructuring legislation.
--Technical advisor to the Polish Self Management Activists Association in their formulation of ESOP-
related demonstration projects.
--Advisor to several Czech companies that are exempt from the voucher privatization process and wish
to include an ESOP as a component of their restructuring.
--Advisor to the State Commission on Restructuring Economic Systems (People's Republic of China).
Led a delegation to conduct a 5-day ESOP workshop in Beijing (April 1991) as a follow-up to an
earlier introductory visit (November 1988).
--Speaker at first U.S. State Department-sponsored technical seminar on privatization, addressing
employee stock ownership aspects of the program.
--Recently completed second 12-day trip to the Soviet Union; participated in privatization protocols
signed in the Soviet Union to establish Centers for Privatization in conjunction with the Moscow City
Council, the prime minister of Lithuania and the prime minister of Latvia.
Lectures widely throughout the U.S. and abroad, particularly on employee stock ownership plans (e.g.,
conducted an ESOP workshop in Bangkok in June as part of a Pacific Basin Finance Conference
sponsored by the Asian Development Bank, the Securities Exchange of Thailand and USAID and
attended by representatives of 23 Pacific Rim countries).
Chairman of the International Relations Committee of the ESOP Association; ex officio member of the
Executive Board.
Member of the Board of Directors of the National Center for Employee Ownership.
Member of the Board of Editors of The Journal of Employee Ownership Law and Finance.
Draftsman of the 1986 Presidential Task Force Report: "High Road to Economic Justice: Encouraging
Employee Stock Ownership Plans in Central America and the Caribbean" (strongly endorsed by both
President Reagan and Speaker of the House Jim Wright). Its chief proponent in the region is (now
former) Costa Rican President (and Nobel Peace laureate) Oscar Arias. A key recommendation of the
Report is to include ESOPs as a component of privatization-related debt-for-equity swaps.
Chairman, Aspen Institute Alumni Association of Washington; regular speaker at Aspen-sponsored
policy seminar, "The Future of the Corporation."
Frequent participant in Voice of America programs, including recent ESOP-related broadcast for
audiences speaking Polish, Lithuanian, Russian and Chinese.
Frequently provides expert testimony before both national and state legislative committees. Maintains
close contacts within the legislative and executive branches of the federal government.
01380620
No Interview
GARY JAY GERSHOWITZ
6 Stapleford Hall Court Potomac, Maryland 20854 (301)983-2256
OBJECTIVE:
Seeking a position in the Executive Branch in the
areas of research and/or communications that
develop programs and/or policy-related issues.
WORK EXPERIENCE:
U.S. Department of Interior
Administrative Services, Transportation Management
February 1991-present
Position: Assistant Office Manager
U.S. Department of Interior
Library, Information Products Branch
November 1988-February 1991
Position: Researcher
Co-produced The Main Event, a documentary about
the District of Columbia's American Cancer
Society's fundraising ball
Monument Parking Company, Washington, D.C.
June 1982-September 1986
Position: Assistant Supervisor
Discount Books, Washington, D.C.
January 1980-May 1982
Position: Book ordering and Research
EDUCATION:
The American University, Washington, D.C.
Bachelor of Arts in interdisciplinary studies
Graduated May 1979
Major: Communications and English
Supporting Field: Visual Media
G.P.A.: 3.2
The American University, Washington, D.C.
Master of Arts in English
Graduated December 1986
Supporting Field: Creative writing
G.P.A.: 3.4
SKILLS:
Computer Word Processing: WORDSTAR
Xerox 822 Word Processor
INTERESTS:
Writing; reading; swimming; music; fundraising
REFERENCES:
Available upon request
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
August 19, 1991
MEMORANDUM FOR RICHARD PORTER
MARTHA GOODWIN
FROM:
GARY BLUMENTHAL
SUBJECT:
Gary Gershowitz
For your information, I'm sending you the resume of Gary
Gershowitz. I interviewed Gary and believe he would make a very
good writer/researcher. His first preference is to work at the
White House. We do not have any appropriate positions available
in Cabinet Liaison. He has also met with folks in
Communications. However, I also suggested to him that he might
look in the agencies as well.
Thought the two of you might be interested.
Attachment
THE CARLYLE GROUP
A Private Merchant Bank
1001 Pennsylvania Avenue. N.W.
Washington. D.C. 20004-2505
(202) 347-2626
July 22, 1991
The Honorable Bobbie G. Kilberg
Deputy Assistant to the President for Public Liaison
The White House
Washington, D.C. 20500
Dear Bobbie:
I am writing on behalf of Gary Gershowitz (resume enclosed) who is currently at the
Department of Interior but is interested in a position within the White House. In
particular, Gary has expressed a specific desire to work in the research and policy
development area.
Gary is a smart, dependable and very hard working individual with a background
that lends itself well to a variety of responsibilities. He has overcome the disadvantages of
cerebral palsy and is a truly dedicated guy who I recommend enthusiastically and without
reservations.
I would appreciate you giving Gary your consideration.
2nd Sincerely, Malet
Frederic V. Malek
Senior Advisor
03/13/92
19:09
401 421 1001
S.J.S.
+++ WHITE HOUSE/OCA
5.
002/002
DAVID F. GUERTIN, JR.
5 River Street
Bristol, Rhode Island 02809
(401) 254-0495
OBJECTIVE
Seeking a responsible public service position to fully engage high level education
and solid experience in health care, labor or opportunities in an associated field.
PROFILE
Conscientious: Combine high intentions, sincere effort, intelligent
direction, integrity, and skillful execution.
Detail oriented: Consistently develop accurate evaluations, evidenced by
research background on sensitive issues.
Commitment: Able to cut through red tape, resolve problems quickly and
efficiently to reach goals and objectives.
Interpersonal skills: Relate to and communicate effectively with
professionals at all levels, resulting in diplomatic relationships and substantive
results.
EDUCATION
B.A. IN POLITICAL SCIENCE Rhode Island College . 1992
MINORS IN BUSINESS MANAGEMENT & MARKETING
Market research project compiled for Rhode Island College Chaplaincy to
redefine and direct agency's mission and objections.
Advertising campaign for the Rhode Island ALS Chapter to promote
public awareness of both the disease and the organization.
EXPERIENCE
STAFF CONSULTANT
1991 - Present
SJS, INC. - Providence, RI
Provide full range of functions for an international corporate management and
public policy consultancy led by Ira C. Magaziner. Collect data, conduct
interviews, and directed research team for projects in health care, education
and training of a labor force, total quality management, and high performance
work.
DEVELOPMENT OFFICER
1990- Present
HERRESHOFF MARINE MUSEUM - Bristol, RI
Implemented grant writing campaign to fund educational and curatorial
initiatives. Act as liaison between consultants and Board of Trustees to
organize capital campaign. Interfaced with Board and banking institutions to
negotiate museum's financing.
POLICY ANALYST INTERN
1989 1990
STATE OF RHODE ISLAND - Providence, RI
Worked on an eclectic range of issues encompassing adult correctional
problems, and substance abuse policies. Monitored and reported progress to
assist Governor's committees. Strong emphasis on research projects.
ALLIED BACKGROUND
CAMPAIGN CHAIRMAN
May - November 1990
Managed the Halsey C.Herreshoff '90 mayoral campaign resulting in a
landslide victory. Captured over 63% of the vote through use of strong
organization coupled with detailed planning and strategy.
AFFILIATIONS
Founder - RIC Republicans / Vice Chair, Bristol Republican Town Committee
DAVID L. GITLIN
met w/8-26
5721 Utah Avenue, N.W.
No letter
Washington, DC 20015
(202) 363-7522
OBJECTIVE
To obtain a position working in the government in which I can combine my experience
and interests in Republican politics with my skills in public relations.
EDUCATION
Cornell University, Ithaca, New York
Bachelor of Arts Degree, May 1991
Major: Government Grade Point Average: 3.31; Dean's List
Ithaca College London Center, Fall 1987; Dean's List
WORK
Washington Government Experience
EXPERIENCE
White House Intern
Sept.-Dec., 1989
Office of National Service, The White House, Washington, D.C.
Executed projects to promote community service. Contacted every governor's
office to encourage community service legislation. Wrote letters daily and
performed extensive correspondence work.
*Special Program: While interning at the White House, wrote thesis paper on
representativeness of government employees and studied U.S. politics with
Cornell professors.
Congressional Intern
June-August, 1990
Congressman Sam Gejdenson (CT), Washington, D.C.
Extensive interaction with constituents, including meetings, Capitol tours, and numerous
amounts of letter correspondence. Attended committee hearings and briefed
Congressman on material discussed.
Aetna Life & Casualty Intern
June-August, 1989
Corporate Finance Department, Hartford, CT
Calculated effectiveness of two investing firms, analyzed profits in foreign investments,
and wrote progress report.
ACTIVITIES
Chairman of Comell Pro-Desert Storm Coalition
Jan.-April, 1991
AND
Spoke at rallies and forums, and wrote articles on behalf of student republicans and
HONORS
local veterans supporting President Bush's policies throughout conflict in Persian Gulf.
President
April, 1990-April, 1991
Sphinx Head Honor Society
The oldest honor society at Cornell for students who contributed most to the betterment
of the university. 40 members met weekly to discuss issues and perform community
service activities for school and local community.
Vice President, 1989-1990, Pledge President, 1988
Delta Upsilon Fraternity
Assistant Teacher of Physical Education
Jan.-May, 1989
Alternative Community School, Ithaca, NY
Member of Lacrosse Team
1987, 1988
PERSONAL
Working knowledge of Word Perfect, Lotus 1-2-3, SAS, and mainframe.
Sports enthusiasm for basketball, skiing, and golf.
Extensive travel throughout United States, Europe, Thailand, and Japan.
REFERENCES
Available upon request
David Gitlin
Dar Richard,
Cherks you for taking time out of your schedule
to meet with me It 3 very abouts to me
why bretchen spects so highly of you
I know that I wold at be given on opportunity
to fill the openings based an J typing ability
for my handwriting, for that matter) what I do the have is
scross one to serve the President Chapfilly in
a White Hase), and werk to the best of ") ability
in doing so.
Thats for getting me those interviews an such
notice I truly hope to work there, and I
Ort exgerly wait for on peter a the stits of chances
of meeting with Ms Holiby
Swerly,
David
Richard,
I would appreciate anything you could do to
help with those stiff assistant openings. I had
heard of them a couple weeks back, So I sat
a Fesume and Cover letter to Ms. Holiday.
I trly want to serve the President in some
capacity, and the white Hose seems like the best
and not creating way to do that.
If the opening is feasible, I wold need to
Know very soon Thanks agon for all your
help and advice I'll call at about 6:00 p.m. today
Sheevely,
David Dill
202-363-7522
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
1 White House
- HHS
- HUD - emphasis on homeless
- Labor
1 middle of December
PAULA D. RIVERS GORDON, Ph.D.
1305 Boulevard Way #211
Walnut Creek, CA 94595
(415) 932 4876
AREAS OF SKILL AND EXPERIENCE
Consultant/Policy Analyst/Staff Officer, Domestic and Governmental Issue Areas
Made a significant national impact on the formulation and management of Federal programs and
policies in drug abuse prevention. Prepared material for White House and Congressional
initiatives directly impacting the direction of Federal efforts, including initiatives leading to the
establishment of the Special Action Office for Drug Abuse Prevention in the Executive Office of
the President. Played major role in the coordination and oversight of Federal intergovernmental
efforts in the field of drug abuse prevention (Federal Drug Abuse Prevention Coordinating
Committee under the aegis of the National Institute of Mental Health) and in the coordination of
national intergovernmental efforts during the energy crisis of 1974 (Federal Energy Office/
Federal Energy Administration and the National Governors' Conference).
Provided troubleshooting and liaison expertise during the 1974 national truckers' strike as Staff
Officer for the Federal Energy Office/Federal Energy Administration. Was involved in other
trouble shooting activities bearing on retail gas dealers' concerns and averting of threatened coal
mine shutdowns.
Provided troubleshooting and liaison expertise as a full time consultant to the Federal Emergency
Management Agency in the area of Federal nuclear attack preparedness and civil defense policies
and threatened repeat of a national truckers' strike. Performed in liaison role to the American
Medical Association and major national physician groups concerned with emergency prepared-
ness issues.
Formulated major initiatives leading to the restructuring of Federal civil defense and emergency
management efforts. Formulated major initiatives leading to the establishment of a national
clearinghouse on energy information and to the adoption of residential weatherization policies.
Undertook projects on the subject of environmental carcinogenesis, anticarcinogenesis and
carcinogenesis for the Electric Power Research Institute and the National Bureau of
Standards.
Consulted to the U.S. Civil Service Commission making recommendations for training and
standards in the public service. At the time of the Watergate Crisis, played a vocal role as a
member of local and national bodies of the American Society for Public Administration in urging
attention to the adoption by the Federal government of initiatives aimed at protecting
whistleblowers and at fostering the highest possible ethical standards within the Federal service.
Facilitator/Organizer/Adviser
Served as Conference Facilitator or Coordinator for conferences sponsored by the National
Capitol Area Chapter of the American Society for Public Administration, the National Council on
Crime and Delinquency, and the U.S. Department of Justice.
Organized and oversaw roundtable series sponsored by the National Capitol Area Chapter of the
American Society for Public Administration.
Served as Task Force Facilitator including efforts involving the National Governors' Conference,
the National Institute for Drug Abuse, and the Research Applied to National Needs Program of
the National Science Foundation.
Advised and instructed in the, Washington Semester Program, The American University, Wash-
ington, D.C. (1975).
Paula D. Rivers Gordon
Page 2
Researcher/Analyst/Writer
Researched, wrote, and prepared reports and work for publication on wide range of domestic
human and natural resource-related policy issues including drug abuse prevention, health-
related issues, criminal justice system-related issues, energy and environmental issues, Federal
emergency management, health and medical aspects of emergency management, ethics and the
public service, governmental policy formulation and implementation, research utilization, and
program and policy evaluation.
Candidate for Elective Office/Political Campaign Coordinator and Consultant
As a candidate for Congress, sought and received support from key national and statewide
groups and individuals.
Developed and oversaw the management of a political campaign organization involving paid
staff and several hundred volunteers.
Contributed to the formulation of an issue paper on the drug problem for one of the major 1988
presidential campaigns.
Instructor/Lecturer/Presenter
Instructed, lectured, and presented classes, programs, or workshops at California State Univer-
sity, Hayward; San Jose State University; University of San Francisco; University of California,
Berkeley; The American University, Washington, D.C.; San Francisco State University; Golden
Gate University, San Francisco; John F. Kennedy University, Martinez, CA; the Federal Executive
Institute, Charlottesville, VA; and Federal Executive Seminar Centers, Berkeley, CA and Oak
Ridge, Tennessee.
PROFESSIONAL HISTORY
University Instructor, California State University, Hayward (Organization Theory and Human
Behavior); San Jose State University (Introduction to Public Administration); and the Federal
Executive Institute, Charlottesville, VA (workshops on Values and Ethics in the Public Service
Sector) (1991).
Financial and Insurance Services Representative (1986 to present).
National Association of Security Dealers Registered Representative (1986-1990).
Director for Resource Development, non profit corporation (1985).
Consultant, Domestic and Governmental issue areas (1977-1985).
Major Party Nominee for U.S. Congress (7th District of California) (1978).
Fellow, U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare (1976-1977).
Consultant, Domestic and Governmental issue areas, including Consultant or Independent
Contractor to the Electric Power Research Institute and the National Science Foundation
(1974-1976).
Staff Officer, Office of Intergovernmental Relations, Federal Energy Office/Federal Energy
Administration (1/74-7/74).
Consultant in Drug Abuse Prevention (6/66-12/73).
Executive Director, non profit corporation aimed at combatting drug abuse among youth and
college age students (6/66-1/71).
Paula D. Rivers Gordon
Page 3
EDUCATION
Ph.D. in Public Administration - The American University, Washington, D.C. (1976). (Areas of emphasis:
Government Management, Organization Theory and Behavior, and Political Theory.)
Ph.D. Course Work Completed, Educational Policy Planning and Administration - Graduate School of
Education, University of California at Berkeley (1971).
M.A. in Public Administration - University of California at Berkeley (1969).
B.A. in Speech - University of California at Berkeley (1968).
PERSONAL
Memberships have included
American Society for Public Administration (Professional Standards and Ethics Committee)
and Elected Council Member, National Capitol Area Chapter (1973-1976)
American Association
for the Advancement of Science
American Political Science Association
American Public Health Association
Phi Kappa Phi
References Available Upon Request
BETH GREEN
3807 T Street, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20007
(202) 663-9160
EDUCATION
Harvard Law School. J.D., June 1986.
Supervising Editor of the Harvard Journal on Legislation;
Teaching Assistant to Professor Roger Fisher; National Finalist,
American Bar Association Negotiation Competition.
Bryn Mawr College. B.A. Sociology, magna cum laude, June 1983.
Vice President International Relations Society; Intern to
President for College Investment Committee; Resident Advisor.
PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE
Shaw, Pittman, Potts & Trowbridge. September 1988 to present.
Associate in the corporate and securities practice group with an
emphasis on acquisition of technology-related assets; software
development, distribution and licensing agreements; protection of
proprietary rights under government contracts; and consulting and
confidentiality agreements.
Conflict Management, Inc. August 1986 to September 1988.
Associate with a negotiation consulting firm providing strategic
advice and negotiation and mediation/facilitation services in
such areas as commercial disputes, litigation settlement and
international disputes. Designed and conducted negotiation
seminars for U.S. and multinational corporations, international
organizations, financial institutions, state legislators, judges,
lawyers and governmental agencies.
Masters Degree Program for Executives, Graduate School of
Business of Columbia University. January 1988, 1989 and 1990.
Adjunct faculty member to the Program, facilitating strategic
business simulations in the roles of senior executives and out-
side negotiators.
-1-
University of Virginia, Department of Government and Foreign
Affairs. December 1990 to present.
Guest lecturer on several occasions in the areas of negotiation
and international conflict for the undergraduate Department of
Government and Foreign Affairs.
Admitted to practice in the District of Columbia and Commonwealth
of Massachusetts.
COMMUNITY ACTIVITIES
D.C. Cares, Inc. April 1989 to present.
Founding member of the Board of Directors of a non-profit
organization formed to facilitate community service activity of
working people in the D.C. area. Held position of Project Devel-
opment Chairperson for two years with responsibility for estab-
lishing relationships with community service organizations. Cur-
rently hold the positions of Nominating Committee Chairperson and
member of Resource Development Committee. Have volunteered with
numerous community service organizations through D.C. Cares.
Harvard Club of Washington. May 1991 to present.
Elected as member of the Board of Directors of the Harvard Club
of Washington, to serve a three year term.
-2-
Kendall A. Harre
RESUME OF QUALIFICATIONS
6481 Reflection Drive #104
San Diego, California 92124
Telephone: (619) 285-9721
OBJECTIVE
Political Researcher/ Analyst
SUMMARY OF QUALIFICATIONS
Excellent research and written communication skills Policy
analysis knowledge of federal issues Write press releases
Media relations experience. Plan and oversee implementation
of fund-raising events Recruit, train and supervise volunteers
Skills:
WordPerfect Analyses of statistics Managerial and
administrative office skills Edit and rewrite letters
EDUCATION
San Diego State University
San Diego, California
Bachelor of Arts in Political Science
anticipated 5/91. English minor, emphasis in Creative Writing.
The American University, Washington D.C.
School of Public Affairs
Washington D.C.
Political Research Thesis
University of California, Santa Barbara
Santa Barbara, California
EXPERIENCE HIGHLIGHTS
1990-Present
Jim Bates for Congress, re-election campaign
Campaign Coordinator Assistant
Managed Get-Out-The-Vote (GOTV) campaign
strategy during the November 1990 election and June 1990
primary election.
Raised over $10,000 in fund-raising.
Handled vote solicitation and coordinating of volunteers.
Job involved 50% travel
1989
U.S. House of Representatives
Legislative Research Intern
Helped introduce Stratospheric Ozone Protection Act of 1990.
Assistant to Military Affairs Liaison
REFERENCES
Available upon request
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
February 25, 1991
Dear Mr. Harre:
Ken Yale passed along a copy of your resume and mentioned
your interest in a position within the Domestic Policy Council.
Your background is impressive, but we have already filled
the openings on our staff. I will, of course, keep your resume
on file in the event that I hear of an opening elsewhere in the
White House. I have also taken the liberty of forwarding your
resume to White House Personnel.
Again, thank you for your resume and best of luck in your
job search.
Sincerely
Richard Poter
Richard W. Porter
Special Assistant to the President
and Executive Secretary
Domestic Policy Council
Mr. Kendall Harre
6481 Reflection Drive #104
San Diego, CA 92124
CC: Chase Untermeyer
Ken Yale
Kendall A. Harre
Richard Porteo
6481 Reflection Drive #104
San Diego, California 92124
fyr
(619) 285-9721
K
February 9, 1991
Mr. Kenneth Yale
Special Assistant to the President and Executive Secretary,
Domestic Policy Council
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20500
Dear Mr. Yale:
As a soon to be graduate of political science from San Diego State University and having had
experience formulating legislation on the Congressional level, I am well aware of the importance of
the Special Assistant to the President and Executive Secretary, Domestic Policy Council. Your
office has a strong influence on America's policy making and I would very much like to play a part
in this field as a low-level researcher or political analyst.
I am well versed in the ways of Capitol Hill having worked as a legislative researcher for San
Diego Congressman Jim Bates and assistant to our military affairs liaison. In this capacity, I
regularly attended and recorded Congressional committee meetings, frequently contacted lobbyists
and provided policy analysis on federal issues affecting San Diego. As my resume indicates, I
have a solid background in public relations and public affairs from effectively working with the
media, various San Diego organizations and constituents.
I am presently completing my Bachelors degree and will graduate in May 1991. I feel my
experience is solid and in this point in my career I am very interested in pursuing a career assisting
in political research. I feel I am capable of making a major contribution.
I am free to travel and open to relocation. I would welcome the opportunity to further discuss your
requirements.
Thank you for your interest.
Very Sincerely,
Kendalt Darre
Kendall Harre
enclosures
DANIEL R. HEIMBACH
3312 Webley Court
Home: (703) 573-5018
Annandale, VA 22003
Work: (703) 695-4350
EDUCATION
Drew University
Ph.D.
(Law, Politics & Ethics)
1988
M.Phil.
(Law, Politics & Ethics)
1984
Trinity Evangelical Divinity School
M.Div.
(Theology)
1982
M.A.
(Philosophy)
1982
United States Naval Academy
B.S.
(Oceanography & Naval Science)
1972
JOB HISTORY
Department of Defense/Department of the Navy
Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Navy (Manpower) 1991--present
Responsible for the recruiting, training, discipline, readi-
ness, end strength, personnel policies, budgeting and other
manpower aspects of the nation's approximately 600,000 Navy
and 200,000 Marine Corps men and women. In this capacity,
is a principle advisor and assistant to the Assistant Secre-
tary for Manpower and Reserve Affairs. Directs studies,
develops initiatives, makes recommendations for long range
improvements, maintains liaison with all other related
offices and organizations within the Department of Navy,
Department of Defense, and other government agencies, over-
sees the preparation of Congressional testimony, supervises
the review, evaluation, validation and justification of all
aspects of Navy and Marine Corps manpower programs, repre-
sents the Department of the Navy and the Administration in
speeches and other public appearances.
White House, Domestic Policy Council
Associate Director for Domestic Policy
1990-1991
Directed interagency policy coordination, advised on the
formation of policy positions, coordinated policy efforts
with other White House offices, reviewed Presidential
speeches for policy direction and content.
Deputy Executive Secretary
1989-1991
Assisted in identifying domestic policy issues requiring
Presidential attention, organized the formation of inter-
DANIEL R. HEIMBACH
2
agency working groups, managed interagency policy develop-
ment activities, drafted issue summaries, oversaw prepara-
tion of policy options for Cabinet-level consideration and
Presidential decision.
Senator Richard G. Lugar
1985-1989
Domestic Policy Advisor and Legislative Assistant
Drafted legislation and developed strategy for successful
passage, analyzed issues, recommended positions, advised
votes, coordinated responses on a range of domestic policy
concerns including: health, Medicare/Medicaid, Social
Security, veterans' affairs, welfare, transportation,
commerce, communications, religious liberty, child-care,
long-term care, abortion, and drugs. Provided public
liaison with key constituent groups, represented the Senator
in public debate on domestic policy issues, initiated and
planned a state-wide conference on infant mortality invol-
ving private, state, and federal resources.
Department of Defense
Summer, 1983
Office of Research and Laboratory Management
Professional Assistant
Represented the Department of Defense at interagency
meetings, setup meeting with outside groups, provided
liaison with the National Science Foundation, conducted
legislative research, drafted speeches, correspondence and
reports.
United States Navy
1972-1977
Commissioned Officer
Combat service in the Vietnam War. Served in a variety of
positions involving: leadership, personnel management, admi-
nistration, communications, intelligence, public affairs,
electronic warfare, military strategy, ship control, and
base security. Managed and directed up to 80 working subor-
dinates. For a time, managed the largest account of classi-
fied security material in the Pacific. As Officer of the
Deck (OOD) for the USS Kitty Hawk, had periodic operating
responsibility for a $2 billion aircraft carrier with over
100 high performance aircraft and over 5,000 men and
officers.
HONORS
Academic
Qualified with Distinction in Law, Morality & Ethics: 1985
Graduate Merit Assistantships: 1984-1985 & 1983-1984
Most Significant Thesis in Philosophy of Religion: 1982
3
DANIEL R. HEIMBACH
Summa Cum Laude (M.Div.) & Magna Cum Laude (M.A.) : 1982
Who's Who Among Students in American Universities: 1981
Professional
Who's Who in Government Services: 1990
Military
National Defense Medal; Vietnam Campaign Medal; Vietnam
Service; Presidential Unit Citation.
FOREIGN EXPERIENCE
Raised in Southeast Asia with extensive travel in Asia,
Europe and Africa. Born in China during the communist
revolution. Lived for several years in China, Singapore,
Thailand, and Malaysia.
4
DANIEL R. HEIMBACH
POLITICAL INVOLVEMENT
1988 Bush for President: Provided information and policy
analysis to Domestic Policy Director for Bush-Quayle
campaign. Unpaid volunteer. Started July 12, 1988.
Wrote Bush policy theme paper on the "family" covering:
*
The family and tax policy,
*
The family and child care policy,
The family and education policy.
Wrote a published article comparing and defending the
Bush child care initiative with the Democratic child
care initiative supported by Dukakis.
Reviewed materials for Bush policy theme paper
"Investing in Our Children: Education and Beyond. "
Wrote proposal for the Bush initiative on tenant
control of public housing.
Helped establish policy goals for addressing the
circumstances of children and families living in public
housing.
Provided research data and materials on workforce
demographics.
Researched and provided an extensive listing of U.S.
religious groups with international concerns along with
names and phone numbers of leaders.
Canvased issues and concerns of religious
organizations.
1988 Campaign to reelect Senator Richard Lugar: Provided policy
advice, legislative research, fund-raising.
1981 George Kangas for Congress (R-IL) : Not successful.
1980 Reagan-Bush campaign: Door-to-door.
1980 Albert Lee Smith for Congress (R-AL) : Door-to-door.
03/06/91
15:58
OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY, USDA
NO. 089
P002/005
Gregory P. Hess, M.D.
Office of the Secretary, 200A
Telephone: 202-447-4859
14th & Independence Ave SW
Science Policy, Planning
Washington, D.C. 20250-0100
and Development.
PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE:
1990 Advisor to USDA, EPA & FDA/ Liaison to the President's Council on Competitiveness. Consultant
serving as the interdepartmental advisor to the Deputy Secretary of Agriculture, Deputy
Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, and the Commissioner of the Food & Drug
Administration. Trilateral representative to the Council, developing positions of interdepartmental
policy consensus. Special expertise in risk assessment and food safety issues.
Special Assistant to the Undersecretary for International Affairs and Commodity Programs, U.S.
Department of Agriculture. Consultant and Coordinator for the Office of the Secretary on the
Sanitary and Phytosanitary section of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade. Worked
closely with environmental, consumer and legislative groups.
Assistant Professor, Department of Emergency Medicine, Georgetown U. Medical Center, and
Attending Physician, Department of Emergency Medicine, Georgetown U. and affiliated Fairfax
Hospital, Virginia, level II trauma, tertiary care hospital. Residency training programs, including
emergency medicine. Instructor in ACLS, ATLS and PALS. Board Certified Emergency Medicine.
Team Physician, U.S. Alpine Ski Team.
1989 White House Fellow, Presidential Commission Appointee as Special Assistant to Clayton Yeutter,
Secretary of Agriculture. Policy analyst and advisor to the Secretary and Subcabinet. Special areas
of expertise include food safety, science and environmental issues, both domestic and international
aspects. Member of the Agricultural Policy Coordination Council, addressing priority issues of
national concern and intergovernmental policy implementation. Liaison to Food and Drug
Administration, Department of Energy and Environmental Protection Agency. USDA Participant
in the Uruguay Round Negotiating Group on Agriculture, Sanitary and Phytosanitary Regulations
and Barriers, Geneva, Switzerland. Special U.S. Participant, Joint FAO/WHO Food Standards
Programme, Codex Alimentarius Commission, D.C.
1988 President, Founder & CEO Emergency Medicine Physicians, providing complete Emergency
Medicine hospital services including physician staffing, billing, risk management, quality assurance,
and medical education programs. Directed all areas of budget, finance, contract negotiations,
malpractice insurance, recruitment and third party reimbursement. Consultation services, including
medicolegal risk management.
Director of Sports Medicine & Occupational Medicine, Lakefront Medical Center. A 15,000
square ft. facility providing pre-competitive athletic evaluations, executive health assessments, and
care of sports medicine illnesses and orthopaedic disorders. Services include laboratory, X-ray,
pulmonary & cardiovascular testing, physical therapy and rehabilitation, aquatic, aerobic and weight
training programs. Support staff include exercise physiologists, athletic trainers, physical therapists,
nutritionists and 27 consulting, subspecialty physicians. Team Physician, U.S. Alpine Ski Team.
03/06/91
15:59
OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY, USDA
NO. 089
P003/005
Gregon P.Hess. M.D
Regional Medical Director, The Sterling Group, Miami, Florida, providing medical services and
consultation to Sterling and their Southeastern clients in areas of Emergency Medicine practice
management, medicolegal risk management and Emergency Department services. Served as a
Director of Emergency Medicine, directing hospital Attending and support staff in all facets of
patient care. Active, Full Privileges, including First Surgical Assistant. Member of Executive
Committee and Critical Care Committee. Director and Founder of Topics in Emergency Medicine
monthly lecture series, AMA approved for category 1 continuing medical education. Member of
Emergency Medical Services Council; offered a county EMS Directorship. Active in community
health care education programs and hospital public relations activities. Established the highest
standards of emergency care, increased patient visits and increased hospital revenue.
Clinical Instructor in Emergency Medicine, Orlando Regional Medical Center, providing didactic
academic instruction and clinical supervision for Residents and Medical Students. Instructor in
Advanced Trauma Life Support, Advanced Cardiac Life Support and Pediatric Advanced Life
support.
1986 Chief Resident in Emergency Medicine, Orlando Regional Medical Center. Coordinated and
assisted in the development of the new Emergency Medicine Residency Program. Created the
educational and clinical framework for emergency medicine training, including policy issues.
Residency Leadership Award.
1984 Resident in Emergency Medicine, Riverside Methodist Hospital/Ohio State University. Clinical
Instructor in Emergency Medicine. Provided direct patient care and direction to junior residents,
medical students, nursing staff and other members of the health care team.
Supervisor, Central Ohio Poison Center. Provided direct consultation on a broad range of
environmental, drug and food poisoning cases for immediate clinical care. Acted as a clinical and
didactic resource for pharmacy personnel and health care students.
1981 Account Executive, First Investors Corporation. Registered Representative serving as an investment
counselor and financial analyst specializing in health care professionals. Frequently achieved
superior sales and volume levels.
1980 Assistant Director of Admissions, Skidmore College. Activities included extensive U.S. travel and
recruitment, interviewing prospective candidates, evaluating applications for admission, marketing,
public speaking and special assignments as an active member of the college administration.
Promoted from Admissions Officer. Director of Nursing and Minority Admissions. Co-Director
for Coeducation in a successful transition from a women's to coeducational institution.
1978 Regional Coordinator, National Alliance of Business. Liaison to business, government and
educational resources for a seven county area. Served to improve career opportunities for the
disadvantaged including Viet Nam Veterans, past criminal offenders and troubled youth.
Legislative consultant and corporate gifts Co-Director.
03/06/91
16:00
OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY, USDA
NO. 089
P004/005
Gregory P. Heas. M.D.
EDUCATION:
National Faculty, Essential Topics in Emergency Medicine
American College of Emergency Physicians, Dallas, Texas.
Speakers Bureau, Mead Johnson Pharmaceutical Inc.
Assistant Professor, Dept. of Emergency Medicine, Georgetown U., D.C.
Instructor, Advanced Cardiac Life Support, Pediatric Advanced Life Support
And Advanced Trauma Life Support, American College of Surgeons.
Board Certified in Emergency Medicine, American Board of Emergency Medicine.
Fellow, Hughston Sports Medicine Hospital, Columbus, Georgia 31995.
Chief Resident in Emergency Medicine, Orlando Regional Medical Center, Fl.
Resident in Emergency Medicine, Riverside Methodist Hospital/Ohio State U.
Albany Medical College & Albany Law School of Union University, New York. M.D.
Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs, NY. B.A. in Biology/Chemistry. Business minor.
ACADEMIC HONORS:
Residency Leadership Award-"Outstanding contribution in the organization,
development and establishment of the Emergency Medicine Residency Program."
Marsh Scholar, 1981 - 1984 Albany Medical College of Union University, NY.
Skidmore College Honor Society, Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs, New York.
New York State Regents Scholar, 1974 - 1978, statewide annual competition.
PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATIONS:
Legislative Committee, American College of Emergency Physicians, Orlando FL.
Board of Directors, Political Action Committee, FL American College of Emergency Physicians.
Team Physician, United States Alpine Ski Team.
American College of Physician Executives, Tampa, Florida.
American Medical Association, North Dearborn Street, Chicago Illinois.
American College of Legal Medicine, Associate in Medicine, Pennsylvania.
The Hughston Sports Medicine Society, Columbus, Georgia
03/06/91
16:01
OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY, USDA
NO. 089
P005/005
Scholarship and Research
G.P.Hess, MD
oncations:
Hess, Gregory P., "Difficulty Swallowing," Principles and Practice of Emergency
Medicine, published by Lea & Febiger, edited by Schwartz, Chapter 84, in press for 1990.
Hess, G.P., Cappiello, W. & Poole, B., "Prevention and Treatment of Overuse
Tendon Injuries," Sports Medicine, 8 (6): 371 - 384, 1989.
Hunter, S. and Hess, G.P., Cappiello, W., Joyce, D., "Foot Problems in Athletes,"
Team Physicians Handbook, Chapter 42, Little & Brown, in press 1989/1990.
Hess, G.P., Sanders, R., "The Ilizorov External Fixator," Hughston Health Alert p.
2 -3, 1989.
Hess, G.P., Walson, P., "Seizures Secondary to Oral Viscous Lidocaine," Annals of
Emergency Medicine, 17: p.725 - 727, July 1988.
Hess, G.P., Approach to Foreign Body Sensation, Difficulty Swallowing and
Hoarseness; ENT Emergencies," Emergency Medicine Clinics of North America, May 1987.
Brown, C., Hess, G., et al, "Referencing Errors in Emergency Literature," Annals of
Emergency Medicine, 15:5, p. 173, May 1986. (Abstract.)
Papers:
Hess, G.P., "The Late Maturing Athlete; Special Concerns and Considerations,"
presented at Pediatric Grand Rounds, Orlando Regional Medical Center, 1989. Updated
data and presentation from Albany Medical College 2nd Annual Sports Medicine Winter
Symposium, Sam Lords Castle, Barbados, 1985.
Hess, G.P., "Analysis of Pre-Clinical Physiology; Instruction Format and Technique,"
Funded by a grant from the Albany Medical College, Union University, p. 1 - 39, 1982.
Presentations:
Founder and Director, "Topics in Emergency Medicine," Monthly lecture series for
emergency medicine personnel, ACEP approved for 1 hour of category 1 CME credit per
lecture hour, 1987 - 1989.
Hess, G.P., "Steroid Use; The Ben Johnson Story," The Ageless Athlete, Hughston
Sports Medicine Foundation quarterly lecture series, Columbus, GA 1988.
Primary Research:
"Post-Traumatic Pulmonary Insufficiency," Primary Research Assistant, Albany
Medical College, Department of Physiology, Professor Ezra Malik,
January 1977 - June 1977, Undergraduate double credit thesis for Skidmore College.
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
April 2, 1991
Dear Greg:
Thank you for your interest in the position of Associate
Director and Deputy Executive Secretary to the Domestic Policy
Council. I appreciate the time you took to meet with us -- we
were all sorry you decided not to pursue further discussions.
It almost goes without saying that you have a superb record.
If we had gotten that far, I think you would have been an
impressive addition to our office.
Again, thank you for interest and for taking time to come
meet with us. Good luck with your future endeavors. I hope our
paths cross on the ski slopes some day!
With best regards.
Sincerely,
Richard
Richard W. Porter
Special Assistant to the President
and Executive Secretary
Domestic Policy Council
Mr. Gregory P. Hess, M.D.
Office of the Secretary
U.S. Department of Agriculture
Room 200-A
14th & Independence Ave., SW
Washington, D.C. 20250-0100
UNITED STATES UNITED DEPARTMENT OF
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20250
March 18, 1991
Richard Porter
Executive Secretary
The Domestic Policy Council
The White House
Dear Richard,
I enjoyed our recent meetings, and I want to thank you for considering me as a candidate
for the Domestic Policy Council's staff. I particularly want to thank you for your candor,
and willingness to explore potential options. I am very sorry that a "detail" was not possible,
and that the surrounding circumstances made it necessary to withdraw my name from
consideration.
Brad Baker and a number of other colleagues have spoken highly of you, and I can now say
first-hand that I agree with their perspective. I sincerely appreciated the opportunity to
meet with you, and I hope you will feel free to call upon me if I can be of assistance on
healthcare issues or any other topic.
Thank you for your time and consideration. I hope we will have an opportunity to work
together sometime in the future.
Sincerely,
Hy
Gregory P. Hess
Orde
1 Richard
UNITED STATES UNITED DEPARTMENT 0 OF VERICULTURE
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20250
Give to to
RWP
March 14, 1991
The Honorable Edith E. Holiday
Assistant to the President
Secretary to the Cabinet
The White House
Dear Ms. Holiday,
Thank you very much for meeting with me this past Monday. I realize you have a busy
schedule, and I sincerely appreciated the time that you made available.
The issues being addressed by the Domestic Policy Council are fascinating, and it was only
with great reluctance that I withdrew my name from consideration as a member of your
staff. I am very sorry that the current situation prevented me from committing through the
1992 election. I sincerely enjoyed the opportunity to meet with you, Richard and the other
members of the DPC. It is an excellent "team" and has helped me to appreciate the
outstanding work done by your office.
Thank you again for your time and consideration. I am involved in a variety of healthcare
issues, and if I can be of assistance to your office in this or any other area please feel free
to call upon me.
Sincerely,
Hy
Gregory P. Hess
MARY HEWITT
110 D Street, S.E. #412
Home (202) 547-3799
Washington, D.C. 20003
Work (202) 463-5928
OBJECTIVE / SUMMARY:
Seeking a professional position utilizing diversified experience gained through:
-
Production experience with nationwide television program
-
Research, editing and feature story coordination - business emphasis
- Media liaison, briefing and special project work for senior executives
- Knowledge of legislative issues, processes
- Strong administrative, coordinating, communications skills
- Technical television production skills
- Planning and co-managing special marketing, promotion and public relations events
EMPLOYMENT HISTORY:
U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Washington, D.C.
June 1990 - present (full-time)
ASSIGNMENT MANAGER/PRODUCTION ASSOCIATE
July 1989 to June 1990 (part-time)
First Business - syndicated to over 95 stations nationwide
Nation's Business Today - ESPN
Led daily editorial staff meetings for two national business news programs
Initiated, assigned, oversaw stories for newsroom staff and international stringers
Coordinated satellite feeds, wrote news stories, leads for newscasts
Researched stories, edited business news stories and features
Coordinated production of reports on international stories, business and economic issues on a daily basis
Managed staff of twenty reporters, editors and cameramen
Occasional on-air reporting and field producing business packages.
National Credit Union Administration, Washington, D.C.
July 1989 to June 1990
CONFIDENTIAL ASSISTANT TO THE VICE CHAIRMAN
Reviewed and coordinated all matters requiring the Vice Chairman's attention
Performed special projects for the Vice Chairman and Board of Directors. Assisted in implementing
"how to" books for Polish representatives to institute credit unions and banks in Poland
Researched and analyzed issues and prepared briefings
Coordinated with media for appearances, interviews; prepared Vice Chairman
U.S. Department of Treasury, Office of Legislative Affairs,
October 1988 to July 1989
Washington, D.C.
LEGISLATIVE ASSISTANT
Reviewed and responded to inquiries from the Executive Branch for the Legislative Affairs Office
Researched and analyzed legislative issues for senior staff members
Compiled, analyzed, summarized briefing materials
Worked closely with senior legislative managers of developing issues and coordinating projects with
Congressional staff
Seattle Pacific Industries, UNIONBAY Sportswear, Seattle, WA
Feb. 1986 to July 1988
DIVISIONAL COORDINATOR/MARKETING - ADVERTISING DIVISION
Developed and implemented promotions and public relations nationally with major retailers (Macy's,
Nordstrom, Goldwaters, Bloomingdales) for $275 sportswear manufacturer company
Determined market positions of two national sportswear lines
Coordinated and negotiated with companies for co-sponsorships of major events; produced, promoted
and coordinated; evaluated success after event
Management training participant for marketing/advertising department. Produced promotions locally
and nationally, working within budgets from $2,000 to $500,000
Instigated, developed relations with MTV for promotions
Mary Hewitt - Page Two
KIRO Television, CBS Affiliate, Seattle, WA
June 1985 to Feb. 1986
FEATURE STORY PRODUCER INTERN
Assisted in producing feature miniseries for CBS affiliate in Seattle, Washington
Associated Students of Central Washington University, Ellensburg, WA
1982 1984
PROGRAM DIRECTOR
EDUCATION:
Central Washington University, Ellensburg, WA
B.A., Broadcast Journalism, 1985; Minor: Political Science
New York University, New York, NY, 1989 - 1990
Courses: Essentials of Management, Accounting Principles, Management Writing
University of Washington, Seattle, WA, 1987 - 1989
Courses: Advertising, Public Relations, Business Management
Additional Training: Office of Personnel Management, U.S. Government, Washington, D.C., 1989 - 1990
Effective Business & Technical Presentations, Report Writing in Government
ACTIVITIES:
Member - Radio Television News Directors Association, National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences
Community Home Health Care, Seattle, WA - Volunteer, Public Relations
Central Washington University - Elected and served as student body Vice President; International
Rotary Club, Board Member; Served on Judicial Council for Academics; Disc Jockey KCAT
Campaigned for local/national candidates - Hawaii and Seattle, WA
Odessa Brown Cancer Research Clinic, Seattle, WA - Coordinated fashion show to raise funds for clinic
STEVE HILL
4611 Hunt Avenue
Chevy Chase, MD 20815
(301) 652-2713
EMPLOYMENT
EXPERIENCE:
Political Appointee to President George Bush
PENSION BENEFIT GUARANTY CORPORATION
Special Assistant to the Executive Director for Legislative Affairs.
Advises on and plays a key role in developing legislative strategies for obtaining
Congressional action on key policy initiatives of the Executive Director (e.g., risk
related premiums). Obtains studies, reports, and other factual background material from
PBGC staff or others and assists the CPRD legislative director in drafting Corporate
proposals outlining issues and solutions in language which is clear to individuals with a
variety of professional perspectives. Establishes contacts with and presents proposal to
officials whose support is important to ultimate passage, e.g., policy makers in the
Departments of Labor, Commerce, and Treasury. Identifies potential supporters and
opponents of the proposal in the Senate and House of Representatives; develops plans for
mobilizing supporters and, as far as possible, addressing the concerns of opponents.
Assists in the identification of potential sponsors for specific legislative proposals and
attempts to obtain actual sponsorship. Provides coordination with sponsor, other
supporters, and the Corporation, ensuring that any Corporate action required to support
the legislative process occurs in a timely manner.
Monitors progress of legislation which wholly or partially impacts PBGC responsibilities
or operations. Identifies supporters and opponents and advises the Executive Director of
PBGC or executive staff actions which may positively influence the outcome of the
proposal. Provides initial identification for the Corporation of any proposals affecting
PBGC.
Monitors progress of budgetary legislation impacting Corporate programs and operations.
Performs a broad variety of support tasks necessary to facilitate PBGC's legislative
requirements. Arranges hearings, writes testimony and point papers, works with
Congressional staffs in scheduling hearings and testimony, etc.
Establishes and maintains liaison with the Department of Labor congressional relations
staff, ensuring clear communications and, as necessary coordination on pension related
issues. Communicates with various internal groups to maintain awareness of their stance
on issues related to PBGC and to provide information explaining the policies and aims of
the Corporation. Maintains contacts with officials in the White House and on Capitol
Hill; arranges conferences between PBGC officials and political decision-makers.
Works with and advises PBGC personnel in the Office of General Counsel, Corporate
Policy and Research Department, and Communications and Public Affairs Department on
congressional relations issues, concerns, and strategies.
Manages projects involving legislative and policy matters of a confidential nature which
are of direct concern or interest to the Executive Director. Researches files and records
for relevant information and advises the Executive Director on implications of
alternative policy decisions.
Steve Hill
Resume Page 2
Special Assistant to the Executive Director.
DUTIES AND RESPONSIBILITIES
At the request of the Executive Director, incumbent coordinates and/or prepares reports
on Corporate activities relative to Congressional or legislative matters, and
communicates with Congressional staff.
Manages projects involving corporate management matters of sensitive or confidential
nature which are of direct concern or interest to the Executive Director. Researches
files, records, and regulations for specific information to respond to requests for factual
and background material on the referenced issues and problems.
As requested, prepares periodic reports on the status of corporate activities and/or items
of interest to the Executive Director.
As assigned by the Executive Director, manages ad hoc project of a special and complex
nature relating to Corporate needs. Projects involve one or more organizational segment
of the Corporate or task forces mandated by the Executive Director and require
maintenance of tight time schedules. Ensure that work is accomplished in accordance
with established time frames; deals with and resolves conflict which deter
accomplishments or work on schedule. Issues time extensions where appropriate.
Maintain contact with PBGC operating officials for the purpose of relaying actions
required by the Executive Director such as the preparation of special reports or studies,
revision of documents which submitted to him for signature or approval, etc. and to obtain
information from committee members as to the issues and/or problems that wish discuss
in the next scheduled meetings.
Performs other duties as assigned.
Special Assistant to the Administrator for Urban Mass Transportation.
Major Duties
Serves, when directed by the Administrator as the Administrator's personal liaison with
the immediate Office of the Secretary and its representatives.
As assigned, conveys to the Office of the Secretary, transit officials, members of the
public, state and local government and other outside interest groups, the Administrator's
philosophies, values, and goals as necessary for responsive implementation of policies and
procedures. Assures the systematic examination of alternative courses of action,
clarifying the relative choices and their implications for presentation to the
Administrator for his decision.
Interacts with the above groups while giving offense. Established and maintains effective
working relationships with individuals or groups holding opposing points of view or having
conflicting interests.
Produces written material and or transmits verbally in a manner to achieve understanding
and acceptance by groups with varying levels of comprehension and diverse political
objectives/perspectives.
Steve Hill
Resume Page 3
Transition Team Leader for President-Elect George Bush
I served as a member of the Department of Transportation Transition Office Contact
(TOC) team. The team's mission was to gather information to provide a smooth transition
from the Reagan administration to the Bush administration. I was named lead TOC team
member for three of the Department's modal administrations: the Urban Mass
Transportation Administration, the Office of the Secretary, and the Federal Railroad
Administration. I interviewed the administrator and deputy administrator of each mode,
reviewed both internally and externally generated documents, and organized
comprehensive briefing books on each mode's mission, role, key personnel, organization,
key issues, calendar of events, key congressional committees and outside interest groups.
I additionally, provided Secretary-designate Skinner with a briefing on each of my
assigned modal administrations.
STEVEN M HILL & ASSOCIATES
BASIC FUNCTION:
Develop working relationships with financial institutions, (e.g., commercial banks, S.B.A.,
MESBIC, etc.)
PRIMARY RESPONSIBILITIES:
1. Provide financial and analytical assistance in order that clients may respond more
effectively to questions on Bonding, Debt Financing, Insurance and Line of Credit.
2. Act as consultant in areas of Accounting Services and System Design, Inventory
Controls, Planning and Scheduling.
3. Obtain procurement construction contracts from public and private sectors. This
includes: Technical Assistance in areas of estimating, Bidding, Bonding, and
Construction Financing.
4. Develop joint ventures between minority and majority contractors and owners.
5. Aid in transactions; including strategy, target companies, due diligence, negotiating,
structuring and obtaining financing new business planning and monitoring.
6 Assisted in structuring and obtaining debt and equity capital; due diligence,
management and operations reviews; involvement in recapitalizing, leveraged
buy-outs, and ESOPS.
7. Audit management performance and conduct operations reviews.
8.
Conduct strategy and planning to assist corporate and operational organizations.
MERRILL LYNCH, PIERCE, FENNER & SMITH
Provided for on-going management of individual and corporate cash, stocks, and bonds for
individual and corporate trust and pension retirement accounts. This included the direct
marketing of financial securities sold over the N.Y.S.E., ASE, and Over the Counter (OTC).
Steve Hill
Resume Page 4
OCCIDENTAL PETROLEUM CORPORATION
BASIC FUNCTION:
Provided financial analysis support to the Consumer and Animal Health Group in the areas
of profit planning and budgets.
PRINCIPAL RESPONSIBILITIES:
1.
Coordinated and assisted business unit management in the development of budgets,
forecasts and long range plans.
2. Assisted marketing management in planning product improvements through a
continuing program of profitability/financial analysis of performance by individual
products.
3. Provided information to facilitate management decisions by conducting financial
evaluations of new product introductions, acquisitions, existing business operations,
inventory levels and other projects of financial significance to the business unit.
4. Performed required administrative duties associated with Annual Capital Budget.
5.
Conduct feasibility studies on all major capital investment proposals to ensure
project viability.
ANDERSON CLAYTON FOODS
BASIC FUNCTION:
Administered the Annual Capital Budget and performed economic feasibility studies on
various projects, performed AFE analyses, coordinated preparation of the Capital Budget,
conducted post audits of AFL's, and conducted profitability studies.
PRINCIPAL RESPONSIBILITIES:
1. Conducted financial evaluations of New Product Introductions, Acquisitions, Exist
Business Operations, Inventory Levels and other various projects of financial
significance to the division.
2. Assisted the manager in profit planning and in developing the financial objectives
that supported the division's long range purpose and goals.
3.
Performed major AFE analyses, except as directed otherwise by department manager.
4. Coordinated preparation of the annual Capital Budget in detail and supportive
descriptions of capital investments and return on investments (ROI) analysis.
NOTE:
Company was bought out in a merger by Quaker Oats in 1985. I do not know where
records are being held.
Steve Hill
Resume Page 5
EDUCATION: SOUTHERN METHODIST UNIVERSITY, Dallas, Texas 1976-1977
Master's Degree in Public Administration; Concentration: Finance 3.33 G.P.A.
SOUTHERN METHODIST UNIVERSITY, Dallas, Texas 1973-1976
Bachelor of Applied Studies; Concentration: Economics and Criminal Justice.
PROFESSIONAL AND COMMUNITY
ASSOCIATIONS:
Member of the New York Stock Exchange
Member of the National Association of Securities Dealers
Member of the Texas Board of Insurance Underwriters
Gubernatorial Appointee to the State Job Training
Coordinating Council (Texas Department of Commerce)
Former Board Member of the Dallas Small Business Corporation
Former Board Member of the City of Dallas Economic Development Committee
Associate Director for Precinct Development Dallas County Republican Party
Former Member of Dallas County Young Republican Club
MARK K. HINGSTON
Office of the General Counsel
3900 Cathedral Ave., N.W.
Department of the Treasury
Apartment 802A
1500 Pennsylvania Ave., N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20016
Washington, D.C. 20220
(202) 337-2920
(202) 566-2327
OFFICE OF THE GENERAL COUNSEL
October 1989 to the present
Department of the Treasury
Attorney with responsibility for a broad range of civil and administrative matters including
appropriations law, labor relations, Federal personnel and equal employment opportunity cases,
government contracts, and other general law matters. Specific projects include:
(1)
protest litigation defending the Department's award of $400 million computer
procurement;
(2)
establishing an interagency child care non-profit corporation;
(3)
advising on employee drug testing plans; and
(4)
advising on handicap discrimination regulations.
OFFICE FOR CIVIL RIGHTS
September 1986 to October 1989
U.S. Department of Education
Attorney Advisor to the Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights. Directly advised three incumbents
and senior management on all aspects of Federal civil rights law prohibiting race, sex, handicap
and age discrimination in elementary, secondary and post-secondary educational institutions.
Provided legal counsel on agency operations, personnel matters, equal employment opportunity
cases, Inspector General investigations, Congressional relations, and Federal court litigation.
Specific projects included:
(1)
coordinating review of higher education desegregation plans in ten states;
(2)
reviewing enforcement recommendations to ensure consistency with civil rights
law and Administration policy;
(3)
coordinating Merit Systems Protection Board litigation over employee removals;
(4)
managing equal employment opportunity case load and negotiated settlements on
behalf of management;
(5)
advising on Federal ethics matters.
OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY
November 1985 to January 1986
U.S. Department of Education
Acting Director of Scheduling and Briefing. Coordinated Secretary's staff responsible for
scheduling a large number of events around the country, invitations and substantive and political
briefings. Coordinated extensive, national travel and appearances by Secretary. Managed
transition to new staff and office procedures.
OFFICE OF LEGISLATION
September 1985 to July 1986
U.S. Department of Education
Sole legal advisor to the Assistant Secretary on Congressional action, court decisions and
Department regulatory activity.
GALLAGHER & GALLAGHER, P.C.
February 1985 to June 1985
Boston, Massachusetts
As a law clerk, researched and wrote for firm concentrating in the defense of tort, personal
injury, product liability, and workers compensation cases. Also performed miscellaneous
administrative and investigative tasks. (While attending law school.)
OFFICE OF THE CHAIRMAN
June to September 1984
National Endowment for the Humanities
Assisted in the development of programs for the Bicentennial of the U.S. Constitution.
H. & R. BLOCK, INC.
February to May 1984
Boston, Massachusetts
In the main Boston office, reviewed Federal and State income tax returns prepared by other
staff. (While attending law school.)
OFFICE OF THE CHAIRMAN
September 1982 to August 1983
National Endowment for the Humanities
Special Assistant to the Chairman. Organized the Jefferson Lecture series. Conducted
research for Chairman's speeches, special projects, and controversial grant issues. Advanced and
accompanied the Chairman on extensive official travel.
OFFICE OF THE MAYOR
July 1978 to July 1982
City of Boston, Massachusetts
Assistant to the Director of the Mayor's Office of Public Safety. Served as liaison to the Police
Department for major events and Mayoral programs, including citywide anti-gang patrols,
Mounted Police program, political demonstrations, police and fire personnel layoffs, weather
emergencies and notorious crimes. Planned and coordinated Boston Police and other public
safety agencies' operations for large scale public events and special events, including the Fourth
of July, New Year's Eve, the visit of Pope John Paul II, Boston's 250th anniversary, and a
Presidential visit. Developed and coordinated various Mayoral policies and programs for police,
fire and public works departments.
OFFICE OF THE POLICE COMMISSIONER
January 1977 to June 1978
Boston, Massachusetts
Working closely with senior police officials, handled press inquiries about crimes and
Department policy, prepared detailed statistical studies of reported crime, patrol operations and
computerized 911 dispatch system. Planned special unit to investigate racially motivated crimes.
(While attending college.)
EDUCATION
Department of Justice, Legal Education Institute. Courses on Federal employment law, agency
civil practice. 1985, 1990.
Army Judge Advocate General's School. Government contracts course. 1990.
J.D. cum laude, 1985. SUFFOLK UNIVERSITY LAW SCHOOL, Boston, MA
Class rank 15 of 122. Dean's list: 1981-82, 83-84, 84-85.
Suffolk Transnational Law Journal staff, 1984-85
Judicial intern, Massachusetts Superior Court, spring, 1985
A.B. cum laude, 1978. BOSTON UNIVERSITY, Boston, MA
Political Science and Philosophy double major
NEEDHAM SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL, Needham, MA, honors, 1973
LINDISFARNE COLLEGE, Ruabon, North Wales, Britain, 1969-1971
PROFESSIONAL MEMBERSHIPS
Massachusetts Bar (December 17, 1985)
Federal Bar Association
Massachusetts Bar Association
PERSONAL
Married to Ann Guthrie Hingston.
Avocations: mountaineering, softball, touch football, cycling.
Registered Republican, District of Columbia.
REFERENCES
William J. Bennett, Director
Office of National Drug Control Policy
Executive Office of the President
Washington, D.C. 20500
(202) 673-2520
[former Secretary of Education and former Chairman of the National Endowment for the
Humanities]
Terence J. Pell, General Counsel
Office of National Drug Control Policy
Executive Office of the President
Washington, D.C. 20500
(202) 673-2520
[former Deputy Assistant Secretary for Policy, Office for Civil Rights, U.S. Department of
Education]
Mrs. Peter W. Sweetser
475 Potomska Road
South Dartmouth, MA 02748
(508) 992-0394
[former Massachusetts Republican State Committeewoman]
met w/ on A
9-25
79
Susan B. Hoffman
500 N. Roosevelt Blvd. #202
Falls Church, VA 22044
703-241-9789
EDUCATION
Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, Louisiana
B.A. - 1990- Concentration in Social Sciences and Liberal Arts
EXPERIENCE
Congressman Richard Baker
Washington, D.C.
Special Projects Coordinator
Present
Currently planning and organizing economic development conference for Southeast Louisiana. Also
organized Greater Baton Rouge "Salute the Troops" Parade and assisted with the Congressional Arts
Competition and the Congressional Awards Competition. In addition to planning, responsibilities
include coordinating volunteer activity and all media for projects.
Catholic High School
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Assistant to the Director of Development
March - August, 1991
Fund raising activity including capital campaign, annual appeal and special events. Implemented
annual fund-raising plan built around 13,000 donors to raise an annual goal of three million dollars.
puisiana State Legislature
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
egislative Assistant, Jefferson Delegation
Jan. 1987 - Dec. 1990
Worked with office administrator to oversee and supervise support staff. Coordinated requests and
projects of 21 legislators, as well as analyzed and tracked bills through the entire legislative process.
The White House
Washington, D.C.
Intern, Office of National Service
Fall, 1989
Assisted with the verification, selection, and media announcements of the "Daily Point of Light"
recipient. Also assisted office staff and Director with correspondence, office projects, and special
events.
Bush for President
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
State Youth Chairman
1988
Wrote and implemented successful youth plan for Bush for President Campaign. Oversaw ongoing
youth campaigns at all major universities across Louisiana. Worked closely with Bush State
Chairman and the Executive Director regarding youth and other campaign activities.
CAMPAIGN ACTIVITY
Bush for President (primary and general); Baker for Congress '86; Livingston for Governor '87; Robert
Garrity for State Representative '87; Ongoing work with annual Republican Delegation fund-raiser
"Elephant Stomp".
EFERENCES AVAILABLE UPON REQUEST
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
October 2, 1991
Dear Susan:
Thank you for your interest in the position of Staff
Assistant in the Domestic Policy Council. I appreciate the time
you took to meet with me and some of the other staff.
Your background and experience are certainly impressive,
however, we have decided to select someone else. We had a
difficult time agreeing on which candidate to choose since you
and several others would have made a fine addition to the staff.
Again, thank you for your interest and for your patience
throughout this process. If you don't mind, I would like to keep
your resume on file to be sure you are considered when other
opportunities within the White House become available.
With best regards.
Sincerely,
Richard W. Porter
Special Assistant to the President
and Executive Secretary
Domestic Policy Council
Ms. Susan B. Hoffman
500 N. Roosevelt Blvd. #202
Falls Church, VA 22044