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Robert G. Jahn,
Chairman of the Board of ICRL, has been director of the Princeton
Engineering Anomalies Research (PEAR) laboratory since its
establishment in 1979. An applied physicist and aerospace engineer, for
15 years he was Dean of the Princeton University School of Engineering
and Applied Science. He has presided over major research programs
in advanced aerospace propulsion systems in cooperation with NASA and
the U.S. Air Force, for which he was awarded a Medal for Outstanding
Achievement in Electric Propulsion. Author of two major textbooks
and several hundred publications in various technical fields, he is a
recipient of the Curtis W. McGraw Research Award of the American
Association of Engineering Education, a Fellow of the American
Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, a Fellow of the American
Physical Society, Vice President of the Society for Scientific
Exploration, and for sixteen years was a Director of the Hercules
Corporation. In 2006 he received the Edgar Mitchell Award for
Noetic Leadership.
Brenda J. Dunne,
President and Treasurer of ICRL, was Laboratory Manager of the
Princeton Engineering Anomalies Research (PEAR) laboratory from its
inception in 1979 until its closing in 2007. Although she holds a
Masters degree in developmental psychology from the University of
Chicago, her deeper interests are in the humanities, the history and
philosophy of religion, and cross-disciplinary approaches to the study
of consciousness that incorporate metaphysical as well as scientific
traditions. She also serves as Education Officer of the Society
for Scientific Exploration.
Barbara L. Valocore,
Secretary of ICRL, is President and founder of the Lifebridge
Foundation, Inc., which is associated with the Department of Public
Information of the United Nations. Lifebridge's purpose is to
promote the concept of the interconnectedness of all life and one
humanity. This is accomplished through the support of research in
frontier areas of study, carried out in an atmosphere of open inquiry,
free of prejudice and predetermined or anticipated results, and where
taking risks can lead to breakthroughs in our understanding of
consciousness.
Richard M. Adams holds
a BA degree in history from Yale University, attended the University of
Chicago School of Law, and received a JD degree from the University of
Michigan School of Law. He served as a city attorney in a small
community in Michigan before moving to California, where he practiced
law. In the 1970s he redirected his energies from law to business
through the formation of multiple companies and partnerships which
developed affordable market rate housing throughout the San Francisco
Bay area, and in the last 15 years he has focused on asset
management. He has served on the Board of Trustees and as an
officer of several non-profit organizations, including the Saybrook
Graduate School, and various organizations in the housing field.
His lifetime interest in philosophy has led him to the belief that
anomalous phenomena offer a window into the nature of reality, and he
has pursued the study of anomalies both subjectively and objectively.
John C. Valentino has
been a colleague of PEAR since his year-long internship at the
laboratory after graduating high school. He holds a B.S. degree
from the Integrated Business and Engineering Honors Program at Lehigh
University where he was president of his program's student council and
a member of the Tau Beta Pi Engineering Honor Society. He has
served as an advisory board member for STAR, a volunteer organization
promoting community-based education and college attendance for
disadvantaged middle and high school students. He is co-founder
and CEO of Psyleron, Inc., whose purpose is to provide comprehensive
solutions for researchers and individuals interested in exploring
mind-matter interactions, as well as to make consciousness-related
research and technology available to the broader public.
William H. Eddy
(Board member emeritus) has been involved with a diversity of cultures
and peoples for over 40 years, with special attention to how the
perception of nature is unconsciously shaped by the habits of thinking
in a particular language within a particular culture. For 22
years he was Adjunct Professor of Environmental Studies at the
University of Vermont, prior to which he held positions with The New
York Zoological Society, The Conservation Foundation, The African
Wildlife Foundation, and with the U.S. National Park Service. His
consulting work with this latter agency took him on many trips to
India, Nepal, and Sri Lanka. The U.S. Peace Corps also invited
him to help develop programs to increase environmental awareness and
understanding in a number of African, Central American, and Caribbean
countries. He lives on a farm in northern Vermont.
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