4/'6l !kj1f g/ ;;. /i ;, ; . re NATIONAL ACADEMY of ARBITRATORS, ORGANIZED SEPTEMBER 14, 1947 MEMBERSHIP DIRECTORY,. 1983.1984 INSTITUTEOF INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS LIBRARY FEB 1 84 UNIVERSITY OFCAUFORNIA BERKELEY OfficeoftheSecretary GraduateSchoolofBusinessAdministration TheUniversityofMichigan AnnArbor, Michigan48109-1234 U"Ilaw"49 V NATIONALACADEMYOFARBITRATORS EXTRACT FROM THECONSTITUTION Article II, Section 1 - The Purposes for which the Academy is formed are: To establish and foster the highest standards of integrity, competence, honor, and character among those engaged in the arbitra- tion of labor-management disputes on a professional basis; to secure the acceptance of and adherence to the Code of Professional Responsibility for Arbi- trators of Labor-Management Disputes prepared by the National Academy of Arbitrators, the American Arbitration Association and the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, or of any amendment or changes which -may be hereafter made thereto; to promote the study and understanding of the arbitra- tion of labor-management disputes; to encourage friendly association among the members of the pro- fession; to cooperate with other organizations, in- stitutions and learned societies interested in labor- management relations, and to do any and all things which shall be appropriate in the furtherance of these purposes.(AsamendedApril29,1975.) Article V, Section 1 - Members shall be elected by the Board of Governors in the manner provided intheBy-Laws. STATEMENTOFACADEMY PURPOSES ANDAIMS The National Academy of Arbitrators was founded at Chicago on September 14, 1947. As of September, 1983, the membership roster totaled approximately 623. The principal purposes of the organization are asfollows: "to establish and foster high standards and com- petence among those engaged in the arbitration of labor-management disputes on a professional basis; to adopt canons of ethics to govern the conduct of arbitrators; to promote the study and understanding of the arbitration of labor-manage- mentdisputes." The Academy is not an agency for the selection or appointment of arbitrators. It does invite and sponsor activities designed to improve general understanding of the nature of arbitration and its use as a means 1 of settling labor disputes. It meets in national con- vention annually, and more often in regional groupings. Such meetings are from time to time open to non- members. The Academy maintains, in addition to its Executive Committee, standing committees on Professional Responsibility and Grievances, Law and Legislation, Membership and Research and Education. The "Code of Professional Responsibility for Arbitrators of Labor- Management Disputes," jointly promulgated by the Academy, theAmericanArbitrationAssociation and the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, is the subject of continuing study and interpretive opinions by the Committee on Professional Responsibility and Grievances. The Academy reprints for its members lectures on various aspects of arbitration delivered at its meetings. It publishes a newspaper, The Chronicle, devoted to matters relating to internal organization and pro- fessional interestwhich iscirculatedtothemembership several times each year. The Academy publishes yearly a volume containing the proceedings of its Annual Meetings. A list of these publications is set forth atthebackof-thisDirectory. The business affairs of the Academy are conducted throughtheOfficeofthe ExecutiveSecretary-Treasurer, presently located at the Graduate School of Business Administration, The University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan48109-1234. STATEMENT OF POLICY RELATIVE TO MEMBERSHIP Membership in the Academy is conferred upon an applicant on the occasion of his or her attendance and presentation to the group at the business session of an Annual Meeting, following a vote of the Board of Governors upon recommendation of the Membership Committee. The Board of Governors shall entertain recommendations foradmission onlyat itsfall meeting. In considering applications for membership, the Academy will apply the following standards: (1) The applicant should be of good moral character, as demonstrated by adherence to sound ethical standards in professional activities. (2) The applicant should 2 havesubstantial andcurrentexperienceasan impartial arbitrator of labor-management disputes, so as to reflect general acceptability by the parties. (3) As an alternative to (2), the applicant with limited.but current experience in arbitration should have attained general recognition through scholarly publication or other activities as an impartial authority on labor-manage- mentrelations. Membership will not be conferred upon applicants who serve partisan interests as advocates or con- sultants for Labor or Management in labor-manage- ment relations or who are associated with or are members of a firm which performs such advocate or consultantwork. The Academy deems it inconsistent with continued membership in the Academy for any member who has been admitted to membership since the adoption of the foregoing restriction to undertake thereafter to serve partisan interests as advocate or consultant for Labor or Management in labor-management rela- tions or to become associated with or to become a member of a firm which performs such advocate or consultantwork. Because the foregoing restriction was not a con- dition for continued membership prior to April 20, 1976, it is the Academy's policy to exempt from the restriction members who were admitted prior thereto. However, the appearance of any Academy member in any partisan role before another Academy member serving as a neutral in a labor-relations arbitration orfact-finding proceeding shall, from and afterApril21, 1977, be deemed inconsistent with continued membership. OFFICERS Mark L. Kahn ...........President Alex Elson ..... .......... Vice-President ThomasT. Roberts ........... .... Vice-President JohnF.W.Weatherill ............... Vice-President Dallas M Young ....... ........Vice-President Dallas L. Jones ............... Secretary-Treasurer John E. Dunsford ......... ...... President-Elect 3 BOARD OFGOVERNORS Richard I.Bloch Edward E. McDaniel Howard D. Brown JohnC.Shearer John F.Caraway JamesJ.Sherman DanielG.Collins JamesL.Stern MarciaL.Greenbaum TedT.Tsuklyama JohnKagel Marian K.Warns Byron R.Abernethy(Ex-Officio) PRESIDENTS Ralph T. Seward 1947-1949 ................. William E. Simkin 1950 ................. David L. Cole 1951 ................. David A. Wolff 1952 ................. Edgar L. Warren 1953 ................. Saul Wallen 1954 ................. Aaron Horvitz ................. 1955 John Day Larkin 1956 ................. Paul N. Guthrie 1957 ................. Harry H. Platt 1958 ................. G. Allan Dash, Jr 1959 ................. Leo C. Brown, S.J 1960 ................. Gabriel N.Alexander 1961 ................. Benjamin Aaron 1962 ................. Sylvester Garrett 1963 ................. PeterM. Kelliher 1964 ................. Russell A. Smith 1965 ................. RobbenW. Fleming ...... 1966 ........... Bert L. Luskin 1967 ................. Charles C. Killingsworth ......... 1968 ........ JamesC. Hill 1969 ................. Jean T. McKelvey 1970 ................. Lewis M. Gill 1971 ................. Gerald A. Barrett ................. 1972 Eli Rock 1973 ................. David P. Miller ................. 1974 Rolf Valtin .................1975 H. D.Woods 1976 ................. ArthurStark 1977 ................. Richard Mittenthal 1978 ................. Clare B. McDermott 1979 ................. Eva Robins 1980 ................. EdgarA.Jones, Jr 1981 ................. Byron R. Abernethy 1982 ................. 4 EXECUTIVECOMMITTEE MarkL.Kahn, President Byron R.Abernethy DallasL.Jones JohnE.Dunsford ThomasT. Roberts THE STANDING COMMITTEES MEMBERSHIP COMMITTEE ArvidAnderson,Chair JosephF.Gentile TheodoreK.High J. B.Gillingham LawrenceT.Holden,Jr. Alan B.Gold Edward B.Krinsky MargeryF.Gootnick WilliamE.Rentfro JamesM. Harkless NicholasH.Zumas COMMITTEE ON PROFESSIONAL RESPONSIBILITYANDGRIEVANCES* WilliamJ.Fallon,Chair ReginaldAlleyne FrancisX.Quinn BruceR.Boals JoanParkerWeitzman FrederickH. Bullen C.BrianWilliams AlexanderB. Porter Sol M.Yarowsky AdvisoryPanel BenjaminAaron Eli Rock GeraldA. Barrett RalphT.Seward HowardA.Cole William E.Simkin BertL.Luskin ArthurStark RichardMittenthal COMMITTEE ON LAWAND LEGISLATION EmilyMaloney,Chair TimBornstein JamesE.Jones,Jr. David E. Feller IvanC.Rutledge HowardM.Fitch TheodoreJ.St.Antoine William B.Gould JamesP.Whyte AUDITING COMMITTEE HowardA.Cole,Chair AlfredC. Dybeck GeorgeNicolau 5 NOMINATING COMMITTEE JamesL.Stern,Chair ByronR.Abernethy AlfredC.Dybeck FrancesBairstow EdgarA.Jones,Jr. RESEARCH COMMITTEE MarioF. Bognanno,Chair JamesP. Begin PhilipK.Kienast ArthurE.Berkeley JosephKrislov ElizabethB.Croft J.Joseph Loewenberg Sherman F.Dallas 'CorneliusJ.Peck HowardG. Foster ReedC. Richardson MichaelJ.Jedel WilliamM.Weinberg CONTINUING EDUCATION COMMITTEE AnthonyV.Sinicropi, Chair ThomasF.Carey JoeH.Henderson DanaE.:eichn Richard H.Siegel GladysGetshenfeld CarltonJ.Snow Paul E.Glendon William M.Weinberg THE SPECIAL COMMITTEES COMMITTEEON ARCHIVES PeterSeitz,Chair Richard 1.Bloch JamesL.Stern CharlesM.Rehmus MartinWagner AnthonyV.Sinicropi DallasL.Jones(Ex-Officio) ArthurStark THECHRONICLE JamesJ.Sherman,Chair TiaSchneiderDenenberg GladysW.Gruenberg GerryL. Fellman COMMITTEEON FUTUREMEETING ARRANGEMENTS ThomasT. Roberts,Chair Donald P.Crane JohnJ.Mikrut,Jr. CharlesF.Ipavec AlanWalt MarkL.Irvings John F.W.Weatherill Richard HenryMcLaren NicholasH.Zumas 6 CQMMITTEE'ON ARRANGEMENTS -1t9M4-ANNUAL MEETING A'rthuturA.:Malinowaki,Chair' MartinA.Cohen AnneHarmon Miller AlbertA.Epstein ThomasT. Roberts JamesP. Martin AaronS.VolWi John P. McGury COMMITTEEON DEVELOPMENTOF NEWARBITRATORS CharlesL.MulirV,Jr.,Chair LewisR.Amis J.D.Dunn Michael H.Beck James'A.Gro~s ShyamDas TheodoreRole WilliamF.Dolson JosephA.Sinrlitico COMMITTEEON LEGALAFFAIRS HowardS.BlockCheir T BennettS.Aisenberg; WalterN. Kaufman GeorgeR.Fleischli RichardL.Ross J. RossHunter,Jr. Roland H.Strasshofer,Jr. JohnKagel COMMITTEE ON LEGAL REPRESENTATION Milton Rubin,Chair Gabriel N.Alexander Rfb4rtM.teventhal MartinA.Cohen NathanLipson PeterDiLeone RobertG. Meiners TimothyHeinsz' ArthurStark, COMMITTEEON OVERSEASCORRESPONDENTS CharlesJ.Morris,Chair FrancesBairstow PeterFlorey MarioF. Bognanno v atvin LitGPlIdman TimBornstein -J JosephLoewenberg GeraldCohen JamestC:'McBrearty TiaSchneiderDenenberg JackStieber William F. Dolson 7s COMMITTEEON PUBLIC EMPLOYMENT DISPUTESSETTLEMENT Helen M.Witt,Chair RobertJ.Ables AliceB.Grant IrvingT. Bergman JeromeGross GeorgeE. Bowles HaroldD.Jones,Jr. JeromeH. Brooks HarryH. Rains WalterL.Eisenberg ThomasN. Rinaldo PaulJ. Fasser,Jr. HermanTorosian COMMITTEE ON NEW MEMBERORIENTATION ArnoldM.Zack,Chair ElaineFrost JeanT.McKelvey JamesA. Healy PhilipP.Tamoush Richard R. Kasher TedT.Tsukiyama COMMITTEEON POLICY HANDBOOK MartinWagner,Chair Richard1.Bloch EvaRobins DallasL.Jones PROCEEDINGS EDITOR WalterJ.Gershenfeld PROGRAM COMMITTEE CharlesM.Rehmus,Chair JamesP.Begin MorrisA.Horowitz ThomasG.S.Christensen RichardMittenthal FredL.Denson WilliamP. Murphy BarbaraW.Doering MichaelD. Rappaport David E. Feller JamesJ.Sherman HowardG. Foster JesseSimons IsadoreP.Helburn DESIGNATING AGENCY LIAISON COMMITTEE LewisM.Gill,Chair EvaRobins RolfValtin 8 COMMITTEEON REGIONAL ORGANIZATION EdwinR.Teple,Chair Alvin L.Goldman ThomasJ.McDermott JohnPhillipLinn AlanWalt 1983 1984 REGIONALCHAIRS DallasMYoung,Coordinator Region 1-New England .......... PaulJ. Dorr 2-NewYorkCity.......... HerbertL.Marx,Jr. 3-Eastern Pennsylvania ..WalterH.Powell 4-DistrictofColumbia ....JosephA.Sickles 5-Southeast ..... HaroldD.Jones,Jr. 6-Upstate NewYork. DonaldP.Goodman 7-Canada ................ FrancesBairstow 8-Western Pennsylvania ..WilliamC.Stonehouse,Jr. 9-Ohio................. Samuel L.Chalfie 10-Michigan .............. ElliotI.Beitner 11-Illinois ................. RobertJ.Mueller 12-St. Louis............... GladysW.Gruenberg 13-Southwest ............. RaymondL.Britton 14-Rocky Mountain ....... GeorgeE.Bardwell 15-Northern California ....JoeH.Henderson 16-Southern California .... LeoWeiss 17-Pacific Northwest ...... J.B.Gillingham 9
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