The Advocates 4-8-09 -Docot Kenneth Cohn

“The Advocates”

 With

Richard J. Garfunkel

 WVOX – AM Radio 1460- 12 Noon Wednesday

April 8, 2009

All archived shows at:

http://advocates-wvox.com

 

On Wednesday, April 8, 2009, at 12:00 Noon, I will be hosting my show The Advocates on WVOX- 1460 AM, and you can also listen to the program live streaming at www.wvox.com. One can call the show at 914-636-0110 to reach us on the radio. Our guest is Dr. Kenneth Cohn, the author Collaborate for Success, and Better Communication for Better Care, and we will be talking about his ideas on the critical issue of healthcare reform.

 

Dr. Cohn is a board-certified general surgeon who obtained his M.D. degree from Columbia College of Physicians and Surgeons Medical School, completed his residency at the Harvard-Deaconess Surgical Service, and performed fellowships in endocrine and oncologic surgery at the Karolinska Hospital and at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, respectively.  He was Assistant Professor of Surgery at SUNY Health Science Center at Brooklyn and later moved to Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center as Associate Professor of Surgery and Chief of Surgical Oncology at the VA Hospital at White River Junction. 

 

Dr. Cohn also is a 1998 graduate of the MBA program of the Tuck School at Dartmouth.  He worked initially as a consultant at Health Advances, assisting 6 firms to commercialize new products.  At Cambridge Management Group, he led change-management initiatives for physicians at affiliated hospitals within the Yale New Haven, Banner Colorado, Cottage Santa Barbara, and Sutter Sacramento Health Systems.

 

 Dr. Cohn remains clinically active, covering surgical practices in New Hampshire and Vermont.  He has been mentoring physicians in leadership development since 1999, finding that physicians enjoy learning from fellow physicians. 

 

 

Dr. Cohn’s writing experience includes over 45 published articles in peer-reviewed healthcare journals.  His article, “The Tectonic Plates Are Shifting: Cultural Change vs. Mural Dyslexia,” won the Dean Conley Award in 2009 from the American College of Healthcare Executives for the best article in a healthcare management publication.

 

He has written two books, Better Communication for Better Care: Mastering Physician-Administration Collaboration, and Collaborate for Success!  Breakthrough Strategies for Engaging Physicians, Nurses, and Hospital Executives, published by Health Administration Press, 2005 and 2006.

 

Dr. Cohn is the editor of The Business of Healthcare, a three-volume set, published December 2007 that comprises practice management, leading healthcare organizations, and improving systems of care.  He is also the editor of Improving Physician-Hospital Relations: A Field-Tested System, a multimedia distance-learning program comprising topics such as engaging physicians to improve care, improving operating room throughput, dealing with disruptive physicians, and employing cutting-edge physician recruiting and retention strategies.  He blogs weekly on topics related to healthcare collaboration at http://healthcarecollaboration.com/blog.

 

Meanwhile, the mission of the “Advocates” is to bring to the public differing views on current public policy issues. Public policy, therefore, is what we as a nation legally and traditionally follow.

 

My essays on FDR and other subjects at can be accessed at https://www.richardjgarfunkel.com. One can also listen to all of the archived shows at: http://advocates-wvox.com.

 

Next week I will be hosting former Congressman Joseph J. DioGuardi, the author of Unaccountable Congress, It Doesn’t Add Up, on income tax day, April 15th.

 

The Advocates 4-1-09 Rick Kelsey and Gary Johnson

“The Advocates”

 With

Richard J. Garfunkel

 WVOX – AM Radio 1460- 12 Noon Wednesday

April 1, 2009

All archived shows at:

http://advocates-wvox.com

 

On Wednesday, April 1, 2009, at 12:00 Noon, I will be hosting my show The Advocates on WVOX- 1460 AM, and you can also listen to the program’s live streaming at www.wvox.com. One can call the show at 914-636-0110 to reach us on the radio. Our guests are Rick Kelsey and Gary Johnson, and our topic today is, “Creating Game-Changers for Education, Through Urban Game Design,” the using of “The Mentoring & Collaboration Model” to solve important technology problems and opportunities at the community level

 

Rick Kelsey (site coordinator) currently serves as the Technology Director for McKinley Technology High School in Washington, DC. Mr. Kelsey also serves as the Director for The Institute of Urban Game Design. Previously, Rick had worked as the Department Chair at the Jeb Stuart High School in Falls Church, Virginia. Before entering the field of education, Mr. Kelsey's career included a twenty-five year focus in healthcare management. Mr. Kelsey served in the role of Vice President of several prestigious hospitals and healthcare firms. From 1977 to 1980, Mr. Kelsey served as Director of the prestigious King Fahd Hospital in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. Mr. Kelsey's education includes a MBA in Healthcare Administration from Temple University and a Master in education from American University. He has taught Healthcare Administration courses as an adjunct professor at St. Joseph's University, Temple University, and Kind Faisal University in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

 

In 2009, Rick has started his own management and consulting company “Be The Game LLC…” His company provides management and consulting to non profits who wish to support the development of inner city technology training programs for teens, young adults, older adults and seniors. He also has developed a motor coach training center that travels to schools, retirement centers and community events to provide technology training on the motor coach. In 2009,The Game already has clients in Washington DC; Prince Georges County, Maryland; Dallas, Texas; Jefferson, Texas; Orlando, Florida; Oviedo, Florida and Huntsville, Alabama. 

 

Gary Johnson was born and raised in Washington, DC where he attended the public schools and graduated with a BS degree in Organizational Management from Columbia Union College. He also attended Antioch University School of Law, where he studied in the Masters of Legal Science program. At the age of 23, Gary was assigned to The White House where he worked for three Assistants to the President for National Security Affairs. Throughout his 30- year professional working career

He has learned how to use his personal power to define his success. He is the author of the book 25 Things That Really Matter In Life (Courtland Press, ISBN-13: 978-0-9791113-0-3) and was a contributing author to the book IN SEARCH OF FATHERHOOD(R) — TRANSCENDING BOUNDARIES (Publisher: Xlibris Corporation; March 22, 2004, ISBN: 141343777X). The book is a collection of essays and interviews that explore the issues and questions that fathers struggle to resolve on a day-to-day basis. Gary is the owner of Gary A. Johnson Company & Associates, a management training and consultant firm; and two award-winning web sites: Homework Help Page.com and Black MenInAmerica.com.

 

Meanwhile, the mission of the “Advocates” is to bring to the public differing views on current “public policy “issues. “Public policy,” therefore, is what we as a nation legally and traditionally follow.

 

My essays on FDR and other subjects at can be accessed at https://www.richardjgarfunkel.com. One can also listen to all of the archived shows at: http://advocates-wvox.com.

 

Next week I will be hosting Dr. Kenneth Cohn, the author of Collaborate for Success, Break though Strategies for Engaging Physicians, Nurses and Hospital Executives, and the subject will be health care reform in America.

Michael Shapiro talks aboutBarnard Madoff and the Violation of Trust and Legal Redress 3-25-09

“The Advocates”

 With

Richard J. Garfunkel

 WVOX – AM Radio 1460- 12 Noon Wednesday

March 25, 2009

All archived Shows at:

http://advocates-wvox.com

 

Wednesday, March 25, 2009, at 12:00 Noon, I am hosting “The Advocates” on WVOX- 1460 AM, or you can listen to the program’s live streaming at www.wvox.com.  One can call the show at 914-636-0110 to reach us on the radio.  Our special guest is Mr. Michael Shapiro, a long-time Scarsdale resident and noted criminal defense lawyer. Mr. Shapiro, who was raised in the Bronx, was educated at the City College of New York, where he received a Bachelor of Arts cum laude, and later earned his JD from New York University. He is currently a faculty member of the Cardozo Law School’s Intensive Advocacy Program and has been a frequent guest panelist at the Harvard Law School. Michael started his legal career as a prosecutor, serving as a special assistant attorney general in the then newly established NY State Office of the Special Prosecutor for Nursing Homes, Health and Social Services. He is now a partner with the prestigious Wall Street, New York law firm, Carter, Ledyard & Milburn, which was established in 1854. As a testament to his career, and reflective of his interested in individual liberty, he was elected to New York’s most exclusive criminal defense group, the NY Council of Defense Lawyers, an elite organization that promotes the protection of individual rights guaranteed by the United States Constitution through education and advocacy. Mr. Shapiro previously appeared on The Advocates on October 4 and 11, 2007 discussing faith-based initiatives and the “Establishment Clause.” He also appeared on May 28, 2008 discussing, “Is conservatism a lost cause.”

 

Today’ program will focus on “Bernard Madoff, the Violation of Trust and Legal Redress.” Mr. Shapiro, and his law firm represent a number of Madoff’s victims and he will talk about what we can do to prevent future Madoff scams and what victims can do.

 

Meanwhile, the mission of The Advocates is to bring to the public differing views on current “public policy “issues. “Public policy,” therefore, is what we as a nation legally and traditionally follow. Over the years, the “public policy” of the United States has changed or has been modified greatly. As an example, “free public education” is the public policy of the United States. Also, over time great struggles have ensued over the control of the direction of “public policy” For example: free trade vs. protectionism, slavery vs. emancipation, state’s rights vs. Federalism, and an all-volunteer armed forces or the “draft.”

 

One can find my essays on FDR and other subjects at https://www.richardjgarfunkel.com and one can also see all of the archived shows at: http://advocates-wvox.com.

 

Letter to the Editor of the Journal News 3-24-09

Letter to the Editor- Journal News

March 24, 2009

 

 

Recently there was a letter to the editor written by Peter Polstein. He basically accused the Obama administration of treasonous activity with his ludicrous claim that we were moving towards becoming a Marxist nation. His understanding of history seems to be incredibly flawed. He accuses the Obama Administration of putting us in “dire financial circumstances.” His accusations seem to border on mental instability, as he worries about “political correctness,” as if that were a threat to all of our well-being. He has declared that the Obama administration is a bunch of “left-wing” elitists who are violating the Constitution daily. After 68 days in office he has already declared that the cabinet is a group of “incompetent or left elitists.” But that isn’t all, he wants immediate term limits for the Congress, excuses AIG for being at the heart of many of our economic problems, and conveniently forgets the last administration, whose foreign adventurism, lack of regulation and oversight, deficit spending, historical incompetence, and give-away tax programs led us into this economic morass. At the end of his mindless diatribe, he sites the armed forces and our sacrifices on the battlefield. To quote Samuel Johnson, who said in 1775, “Patriotism is the last refuge of a scoundrel.” Haven’t we had enough of these baseless accusations from these arm chair generals and so-called “experts” on the US Constitution? Every time there is an economic disaster created by Wall Street and their GOP acolytes, the voters decide that it is time for a change. Well, 2008 was not much different then 1912, 1932, 1960 and 1992. Hopefully the tide has changed because of the aggressive actions by the Obama Administration. The public wanted action and President Obama is delivering it!

 

Richard J. Garfunkel

 

Country moving toward socialism

 

In the short time that this administration has been in power, the promise of change has been immediate and its pre-election promises have been levied out with little or no concern for the overall populace. The Cabinet is made up of either incompetent or elite left individuals. The smoke-and-mirror daily entreatments do not mask the true intent of moving this country toward a hard left socialist, if not Marxist, government. They speak of the former administration's lack of constitutional verve, yet, they have taken positions so contrary to the Constitution that it is becoming the subject of scrutiny. If there was ever a reason to place term limits on those in the House and Senate to eight years, this administration has generously provided the ultimate reason for a constitutional amendment.

It is easy to politicize a scapegoat such as AIG. Their continued rhetoric, pointing fingers, and congressional and senatorial hearings are simply distractions, while they place our country in dire financial circumstances. I am sick and tired of political correctness and a government that pledges only they can provide what is needed for the people.

For those of us who have served this country with honor, and for the millions who paid the ultimate sacrifice since our founding, it is time to take our country back to those principles in which the Constitution was born. This country will not be a model for European socialism; let this administration understand full well the intent.

Peter Polstein

 

The Importance of Higher Education, and The Sustainability of our Schools 3-18-09

“The Advocates”

 With

Richard J. Garfunkel

 WVOX – AM Radio 1460- 12 Noon Wednesday

March 18, 2009

All archived shows at:

http://advocates-wvox.com

 

On Wednesday, March 18, 2009, at 12:00 Noon, I will be hosting my show “The Advocates” on WVOX- 1460 AM, and you can also listen to the program’s live streaming at www.wvox.com. One can call the show at 914-636-0110 to reach us on the radio. Our guests today are three educators; Dr. Ronald Valenti , Dr. Jennifer Schulman and Ms. Rose Uzzo. Our topic today is a dual one, the importance of higher educational, especially PhD programs for improving our school leadership and a discussion on the sustainability of our public school system in recessionary America. In other words, can the current funding system in New York State continue to provide strong educational opportunities for today’s young people?

 

Dr. Ronald Valenti is currently a full-time administrator at the College of New Rochelle, and directs the Saint John Fisher College’s Executive Leadership Ed.D program at the College of New Rochelle. He also serves as an Adjunct Professor, teaching courses in the SJFC Doctoral Program. Dr. Valenti earned his doctorate in secondary education and administration from New York University where he received the Founder’s Award for the highest academic achievement. He also was the recipient of the 2005 Distinguished Service Award from the NY State Council of School Superintendents, and the 2001 Excellence in Educational Leadership Award. He was selected in 1986 as one of the 100 outstanding school managers in North America.  Prior to coming to the College of New Rochelle he dad served as a Superintendent of Schools for 28 years throughout NY’s downstate region.  He is also a former President of the lower Hudson Council of School Superintendents.

 

Dr. Jennifer Schulman is presently the principal at the Robert C. Dodson School in Yonkers, NY. She is a graduate of Mercy College with a BA degree, the College of New Rochelle with a MS degree, and Fordham University with a Professional Diploma in Administration and an Ed.D. She has been an educator who has served the Yonkers School District for 36 years.

 

Dr. Schulman has been a consultant for the National Urban Alliance and has facilitated workshops at National Leadership Conferences, at Queens College and St. Johns’ University.  Dr. Schulman has served as a principal at many levels in the Yonkers School District for over 19 years.

 

Rosemary Uzzo, a member of “Who’s Who in Education,” has a BA and an MA from Fordham University. She was a member of the Yonkers Board of Education from 1961 through 1996. During that period of time she served as the Director of Information Services, for the Yonkers Board of Education, served as an Assistant Principal, a curriculum Coordinator, and a curriculum writer. She is still active as an Instructor for Adult Education through BOCES, been the director of the Jewels Learning Center at the Yonkers YMCA. Ms. Uzzo has been an instructor at Mercy College, and an adjunct professor at Fordham University. She is the author of “Exploring New York,” and activity text for fourth grade students in New York State. She has served on numerous Boards and Councils, which include Mayor’s Community Relations Board, Westchester Council on crime and Delinquency, National Council of Christians and Jews, Bronxville Women’s League, the Italian-American/African-American Dialogue Group, American Association of University Women, among a number of others. 

 

Meanwhile, the mission of the “Advocates” is to bring to the public differing views on current “public policy “issues. “Public policy,” therefore, is what we as a nation legally and traditionally follow. Over the years, the “public policy” of the United States has changed or has been modified greatly. As an example, “free public education” is the public policy of the United States.

 

My essays on FDR and other subjects at can be accessed at https://www.richardjgarfunkel.com. One can also listen to all of the archived shows at: http://advocates-wvox.com.  Next week I will be hosting Mr. Michael Shapiro, the distinguished trial attorney, who is a partner of the law firm of Carter, Ledyard of NYC, NY. Mr. Shapiro, and his firm, is representing a number of Bernard Madoff’s financial victims.

Cal Ramsey of the NY Knicks, Basketball and Its Impact on Inner City Youth 3-4-09

“The Advocates”

 With

Richard J. Garfunkel

 WVOX – AM Radio 1460- 12 Noon Wednesday

March 11, 2009

All archived shows at:

http://advocates-wvox.com

 

On Wednesday, March 11, 2009, at 12:00 Noon, I will be hosting my show “The Advocates” on WVOX- 1460 AM, and you can also listen to the program’s live streaming at www.wvox.com. One can call the show at 914-636-0110 to reach us on the radio. Our guest is Cal Ramsey and Alan Rosenberg will join me as a guest panelist. Our topic is “Basketball and its impact on inner city youth.”

 

Mr. Cal Ramsey has been part of the NYC athletic landscape for over fifty years. Since his graduation from NYU in 1959, where he starred in basketball as an All-American, he still holds many team records and was a member of NYU’s Scholastic Honor Society. Because of his excellent career on the hard courts, he has been enshrined in a number of regional sport’s hall of fames. He is even a member of the famed Friar’s Club. After two seasons in the NBA with both the old St. Louis Hawks and the NY Knicks, his basketball career was cut short by a knee injury. He then began work in the NY Public Schools. He has devoted his life to working with the youth of NYC with regards to an emphasis on education and staying-in-school.  Mr. Ramsey has had a three decade career in broadcasting and public relations with the NY Knicks, and has also devoted his considerable energies to NYU’s alumni affairs department.    

 

Also today we have Alan D. Rosenberg, who will serve as our guest panelist. Alan, who is a native Mount Vernon, graduated from AB Davis/MVHS and New York University. He is a long-time CPA, who has offices in both New York City and Scarsdale and is an avid sports fan and memorabilia collector.  Alan also played basketball for NYU, and has been heavily active in NYU alumni affairs.

 

Meanwhile, the mission of the “Advocates” is to bring to the public differing views on current “public policy “issues. “Public policy,” therefore, is what we as a nation legally and traditionally follow. Over the years, the “public policy” of the United States has changed or has been modified greatly. As an example, “free public education” is the public policy of the United States.

 

My essays on FDR and other subjects at can be accessed at https://www.richardjgarfunkel.com. One can also listen to all of the archived shows at: http://advocates-wvox.com.

 

Next week I will be hosting Dr. Ronald Valenti, Dr. Jennifer Schulman and Ms. Rose Uzzo, and we will be talking about higher education regarding doctoral programs and how they impact on education and its future.

 

Maryann Goldman talks about the FBI InfraGard Program 3-4-09

“The Advocates”

 With

Richard J. Garfunkel

 WVOX – AM Radio 1460- 12 Noon Wednesday

March 4, 2009

All archived shows at:

http://advocates-wvox.com

On Wednesday, March 4, 2009, at 12:00 Noon, I will be hosting my show “The Advocates” on WVOX- 1460 AM, and you can also listen to the program’s live streaming at www.wvox.com. One can call the show at 914-636-0110 to reach us on the radio. Our guest is Special Agent Maryann Goldman of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and we will talk about InfraGard and its critical importance to national security. Joining me on our panel will be Mr. Tony Russo, the President of the InfraGard Hudson Valley Membership Alliance Inc, who is the also the President of Aries Wine and Spirits, which is located at 128 West Post Road in White Plains, NY, and White Plains City Councilman Glen Hockley.

 InfraGard is a United States Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Public-private partnership that began in the Cleveland, Ohio, Field Office in 1996. It was a local effort to gain support from the information technology industry and academia for the FBI's investigative efforts in the cyber arena.

Ms. Maryann Goldman has been a Special Agent with the Federal Bureau of Investigation since 1991.  During her 17+ years with the FBI, SA Goldman has coordinated and participated in numerous criminal and National Security investigations while working out of the FBI's flagship office in New York.  Arriving at the New York Field Office in 1991, SA Goldman worked on background investigations of Federal Employees and Presidential Appointees until being assigned to the Organized Crime Unit in 1993.  From 1993 until 1997, SA Goldman investigated members and associates of the Colombo Organized Crime Family operating out of New York, Long Island, and New Jersey.

 

In 1997, SA Goldman transferred to the National Security Division as the lead Under Cover Agent. The intelligence gathered by SA Goldman pursuant to this operation assisted numerous US operations nationally and overseas.  SA Goldman received an award from the National Security Agency for her contributions to National Security.  In 2000, SA Goldman returned to the Criminal Division, and continued her investigation of Organized Crime Matters out of the FBI's White Plains Resident Agency.  From 2000 through 2008, SA Goldman was the lead Case Agent on investigations of Organized Crime members.  Also during this time, SA Goldman initiated and led an unprecedented international investigation of Organized Crime's participation in international money laundering and exploitation of the US banking and financial systems.  As a result of these investigations, SA Goldman arrested and indicted numerous members and associates of Organized Crime and their co-conspirators in the financial sector in the US and overseas. For this investigation, SA Goldman was nominated for the Attorney General's Award, and received a number of awards from local law enforcement agencies for partnerships created with their departments.   In October of 2008, SA Goldman transferred to the Intelligence Division to serve as one of two InfraGard Coordinators in the New York Office

 

Meanwhile, the mission of the “Advocates” is to bring to the public differing views on current “public policy “issues. “Public policy,” therefore, is what we as a nation legally and traditionally follow. Over the years, the “public policy” of the United States has changed or has been modified greatly. As an example, “free public education” is the public policy of the United States.

 

My essays on FDR and other subjects at can be accessed at https://www.richardjgarfunkel.com. One can also listen to all of the archived shows at: http://advocates-wvox.com.

 

Next week I will be hosting Mr. Cal Ramsey, the long-time basketball commentator for the NY Knicks team, and Mr. Alan Rosenberg, CPA, a basketball and collecting aficionado. Our subject will be big-time sports, its affect on inner city youngsters, and Cal Ramsey’s experiences playing and broadcasting the game.

The Energy Independence Rally in Washington 2-25-09

 

“The Advocates”

 With

Richard J. Garfunkel

 WVOX – AM Radio 1460- 12 Noon Wednesday

February 25, 2009

All archived shows at:

http://advocates-wvox.com

 

On Wednesday, February 25, 2009, at 12:00 Noon, I will be hosting my show “The Advocates” on WVOX- 1460 AM, and you can also listen to the program’s live streaming at www.wvox.com. One can call the show at 914-636-0110 to reach us on the radio.  Our guest will be Mr. Neil Goldstein, who is the Executive Vice-President of Energy Alternatives for the 21st Century.  Our subject will be his group’s sponsoring of the “Energy Independence Rally in Washington, DC, on March 3, 2008,” and how we can wean ourselves off the dependency of imported oil!

 

Neil had served as Executive Director of the American Jewish Congress from January 2002 until the middle of 2008. Mr. Goldstein also previously served at the American Jewish Congress from 1983-1987, first as Director of the New York Metropolitan Region and later as Assistant Executive Director. Mr. Goldstein is a graduate of MIT and has served on many committees, which include being on the New York State Advisory Committee on Human Rights and the Nanuet Board of education, along with his work with AIPAC, Chief of Staff for Representative Jerry Nadler and work with the US Holocaust Memorial Museum.

 

Meanwhile, the mission of the “Advocates” is to bring to the public differing views on current “public policy “issues. “Public policy,” therefore, is what we as a nation legally and traditionally follow. Over the years, the “public policy” of the United States has changed or has been modified greatly. As an example, “free public education” is the public policy of the United States.

 

My essays on FDR and other subjects at can be accessed at https://www.richardjgarfunkel.com. One can also listen to all of the archived shows at: http://advocates-wvox.com. The broadcasts with Drs. Christopher Breiseth, Nora Eisenberg and Cynthia Koch is now archived.

 

Next week I will be hosting FBI Special AgentMaryanne Goldman, who will be talking about her work with InfraGuard.

 

FDR and the Birth of the Presidential Libraries 2-18-09

“The Advocates”

 With

Richard J. Garfunkel

 WVOX – AM Radio 1460- 12 Noon Wednesday

February 18, 2009

All archived shows at:

http://advocates-wvox.com

 

On Wednesday, February 18, 2009, at 12:00 Noon, I will be hosting my show The Advocates on WVOX- 1460 AM, and you can also listen to the program’s live streaming at www.wvox.com. One can call the show at 914-636-0110 to reach us on the radio. Our guest is Cynthia M. Koch, who is Director of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum in Hyde Park, New York.  The Roosevelt Library is the nation’s first presidential library and the only one used by a sitting president.  It includes 17 million pages of archival material and museum collections serving annually more than 125,000 researchers, museum visitors and students. The Roosevelt Library is one of the nation’s twelve presidential libraries administered by the National Archives and Records Administration. Our subject is “FDR and the Birth of Presidential Libraries and how these institutions are important tools in our ability to understand our government and how it works.”

 

Dr. Koch is a native of Erie, Pennsylvania and she holds a Ph.D. and M.A. in American Civilization from the University of Pennsylvania and a B.A. in History from Pennsylvania State University.

 

Previously Dr. Koch was Associate Director of the Penn National Commission on Society, Culture and Community, a national public policy research group at the University of Pennsylvania. She served as Executive Director of the New Jersey Council for the Humanities, a state affiliate of the National Endowment for the Humanities, and was Director of the National Historic Landmark Old Barracks Museum in Trenton, New Jersey, where she led a $10.3 million project of capital restoration and museum development.

 

In addition to her dissertation, The Virtuous Curriculum: Schoolbooks and American Culture 1785-1830, she is the author or editor of numerous articles in professional and scholarly books and journals.

 

 

Dr. Koch lives in Clinton Corners, New York with her husband, Eliot Werner, president of Eliot Werner Publications, and their two cairn terriers.   

 

Meanwhile, the mission of The Advocates is to bring to the public differing views on current “public policy “issues. “Public policy,” therefore, is what we as a nation legally and traditionally follow. Over the years, the “public policy” of the United States has changed or has been modified greatly. As an example, “free public education” is the public policy of the United States.

 

My essays on FDR and other subjects at can be accessed at https://www.richardjgarfunkel.com. One can also listen to all of the archived shows at: http://advocates-wvox.com. The broadcast with Dr. Christopher Breiseth former CEO of the Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt Institute is now archived.

 

Next week I will be hosting Mr. Neil Goldstein, of The Israel Energy Partnership, and in future weeks, Ms.Maryann Goldman, of the FBI’s InfraGard program and Mr. Cal Ramsey, the long-time NBA performer and broadcaster will appear on The Advocates.

 

Presidents of the 20th Century and Their Intellect 2-16-09

Presidents of the 20th Century and Their Intellect

On President’s Day

By

Richard J. Garfunkel

February 16, 2009

 

Today I am a guest on Bob Marrone’s morning show to be one of WVOX radio’s resident experts on FDR, and the presidency, as the station commemorates “Presidents’ Day.” Though many believe that this day is now officially named Presidents’ Day they are wrong. The law, HR 15951, which was signed in 1968, officially shifted Washington’s Birthday to the 3rd Monday in February. It came into affect on January 1, 1971, during the administration of the late and unlamented Richard Nixon, who named it Presidents’ Day. Well the official bill to change the name to Washington-Lincoln Day failed in Congress, and even though “Tricky Dickie” renamed it Presidents’ Day, the change was never signed into law.

 

In fact, there is no official way to even spell Presidents Day or Presidents’ Day. The only one clear fact is that under federal law it is still Washington’s Birthday and that only a handful of states have changed it to Presidents’ Day. Therefore, Washington’s Birthday, which was enacted as a federal holiday in 1880, in the District of Columbia, and was expanded to the nation in 1895, still remains. The holiday was first celebrated in 1796, the last year our first President was in office, but because when Washington was born, the old style calendar was in use, and many celebrated his birthday both on February 11th and February 22nd, the generally recognized birthday of the “Father of Our Country.” Aside from all of that this past Thursday was the 200th birthday of Abraham Lincoln and his birthday was never celebrated in any of the states south of the Mason-Dixon Line.

 

I am glad people still think seriously about the IQ and mental health of our leaders. It would surprise me greatly, and almost everyone else I have known, that George W. Bush was reported to have an IQ near JFK. If George W. Bush has IQ of 115 and that sounds reasonable, then Bill Clinton has one of 215. I know of no example that George W. Bush has ever read a book of any consequence and he was by all accounts a barely passing student in college (560 Verbal on his SATs and a legacy!). I do not know what his core curriculum was, or whether he just didn't care, as many rich boys (and poor boys) don't. But, all in all, it is the poor boys that must excel to succeed. Certainly Bill Clinton was a poor boy, and he excelled, was incredibly well read, and his language and overall skills reflected that intellect. Yes, he was flawed, like many of us.

 

But, all in all, good political leaders do not have to be intellects, and in a sense the public has a tendency to mistrust them. Certainly Stevenson was labeled an “egg head” and the country rejected him, by wide margins, over the affable, but non-intellectual Dwight Eisenhower, who favored Zane Grey western novels as a way to intellectually test his gray matter or just relax. He spent more days on vacation, and away from work then any President, except maybe Calvin Coolidge or GW Bush in his term up to 9/11.

 

Jack Kennedy was a bright, and talented young man, who had many more advantages then most of his presidential peers. His great communicative skills were not hurt by his Hollywood good looks, and he had terrific political instincts fostered by his close connection to world events and the political theater of his upbringing. FDR raised himself to be President in the model of his cousin TR, but JFK, after the death of his brother, was fast-tracked to the job by the incredible heavy-hitting Kennedy political machine. Despite his incredible advantages he still had to produce, and he was quite capable of reflecting those skills on all of his campaign venues. As President he was inexperienced, a bit too young, and therefore pushed around by his own Congress. In a potential second term he would have had a short window of opportunity to succeed before morphing into the traditional lame-duck status that befits presidential 2nd terms. Certainly Michael Dukakis, who was and is quite bright, suffered from some of the same fear that the public has of intellectual superiority. In the modern era, only Teddy Roosevelt, and Woodrow Wilson, two true intellects, were elected to the Presidency. Few people saw TR as an intellect and he was elevated initially by violence, and not the direct will of the electorate. Ironically Wilson, former President of Princeton, an intellectual reformer, historian, and a writer, besides being the popular reform Governor of New Jersey, was elected as a true minority President, when his eventual political enemy, the former president, Teddy Roosevelt, split the vote in a three- way election.

 

So we do not have a long wonderful history of electing truly bright people. Maybe, in his own way, Nixon would be considered bright, a law school graduate from Duke, along with the highly educated and successful businessmen and engineers Herbert Hoover and Jimmy Carter. Certainly anyone smart enough to captain a nuclear submarine and to pass Admiral Hyman Rickover's rigorous tests was no dope. But few give or gave him good marks as a President, and he was never perceived as an intellect. Most people saw him as a country-boy peanut farmer! William Howard Taft, our largest president was an educated man, a lawyer, territorial governor, a cabinet official and also a Supreme Court Justice. But no one accused him of being overly gifted as an intellect. Warren Harding was a handsome fellow, with an eye for the ladies, and a political hack, as was Gerald Ford. Harry S Truman, like Coolidge, Teddy Roosevelt, Lyndon B. Johnson and Gerald Ford was elevated to the job and unlike those I just mentioned, did not attend college. But Truman, who was never thought of as an intellect, was certainly no a fool, and now is widely recognized as near-great President, but still an unpopular one. LBJ was a political animal with a minor college education, who was quite bright, and incredibly energetic and ambitious, but not an intellect either. Coolidge was a dour fellow who slept through most of his five years in the job and had little vision or transferable ideals. Reagan certainly would never be accused of being well educated or bright, and was at best a line-reciting puppet with a primitive understanding of almost anything. His familiarity with the scientific world was appalling and his total inability to react with a spontaneous thought was embarrassing. Again he never had high marks regarding his reputation of being well read or an intellect, but he was and remains popular. He certainly could deliver a quippish line and was well-liked as a genial non-malevolent soul. History may just flay him to shreds as he will probably fall significantly in the minds of future generations of historians. This recent meltdown of our financial system may relegate him as being a modern day Coolidge to Hoover. Of course no two circumstances in history are exactly the same.

 

Of course we are left with one President who has always confounded everyone. FDR, the most successful politician and statesman in the history of the western world, was not an intellect. Everyone remembers Oliver Wendell Holmes “supposed” remark that he (FDR) was “a second rate intellect, but (had) a first-class temperament.” (Denied by Oliver Wendell Holmes to his death!) According to Thomas Corcoran, his former and favorite clerk when he was on the Court, Holmes, when he met FDR at his home, confused him for a moment with his old rival Theodore Roosevelt. Holmes was thinking of TR has a “first rate-rate intellect with a second rate temperament.” Then in contemplation he reversed it with FDR. He never thought FDR was a “second-rate” intellect, but second to his 5th cousin!

 

FDR was reasonably better educated then most, and had very high communication skills. His great strength really resided in his exceptional “people” skills. He knew how to get good people to do good and loyal work. He engendered great loyalty and love from his staff, and even received grudgingly given respect from his political enemies. Even the Japanese, in the midst of the war and on the edge of defeat, offered moments of silence, over the radio, at the news of his death and recognized him as a “great” man. No man in history had the combination of domestic, worldwide and posthumous acclaim. He owned the office and almost no one, even his great and most vicious opponents, could discount his power and skills. In a sense, an eternally healthy FDR would have gone on and on. His supporters were never tired of him, and his opponents were plum worn out by his skills, charm and worldwide support. Today he remains an almost unchallenged icon, far above his contemporaries and all who have followed. Most collective memories of FDR are unique and reverential. Though he was secretive, at times vindictive, and often politically too bold, his legacy remains unprecedented and will continue to grow.