Honorary Fellows
Dr. Tom Sunic
was born in Zagreb, Croatia, 1953. Sunic studied French and English
Language and Literature at the University of Zagreb until 1978. He
gained his MA in 1985, and Doctorate in Political Science in 1988.
1988 - 1993, Sunic taught at California State University, the
University of Caifornia, and Juniata College, Pennsylvania. 1993 -2001,
he served in diplomatic positions with the Croatian Government in
Zagreb, London, Copenhagen, and Brussels. Sunic also taught at the
Anglo-American College, Prague. Sunic's books include Against Democracy and Equality, and Homo Americanus: Child of the Postmodern Age. He currently resides in Zagreb, where
he works as a freelance writer.
http://doctorsunic.netfirms.com/
Dr Kevin MacDonald is Professor of Psychology at California State University–Long Beach. After receiving a Masters degree in evolutionary biology, he received a Ph. D. in Biobehavioral Sciences, both at the University of Connecticut. Since assuming his position at California State University–Long Beach, his research has focused on developing evolutionary perspectives on culture, developmental psychology and personality theory, the origins and maintenance of monogamous marriage in Western Europe, and ethnic relations (group evolutionary strategies).
He is the author of more than 100 scholarly papers and reviews, and he is the author of Social and Personality Development: An Evolutionary Synthesis (1988), A People That Shall Dwell Alone: Judaism as a Group Evolutionary Strategy (1994), Separation and Its Discontents: Toward an Evolutionary Theory of Anti-Semitism (1998), and The Culture of Critique: An Evolutionary Analysis of Jewish Involvement in Twentieth-Century Intellectual and Political Movements (1998). He has also edited three books, Sociobiological Perspectives on Human Development (1988), Parent-Child Play: Descriptions and Implications (1994), and Evolutionary Perspectives on Human Development (2004). Cultural Insurrections, a collection of essays, appeared in 2008.
http://www.theoccidentalobserver.net/index.html
Michael O'Meara, Ph.D., was born in San Francisco in 1946. While at the Berkeley campus of the University of California in the late 1960s, he was active in student and anti-war politics. He then spent nearly a decade as a trade union activist, first as a Marxist and then as a revolutionary syndicalist. When he returned to graduate school, it was to study the comparative history of revolutionary labor movements. His first book, Every Factory a Fortress, was a history of the unionization of Paris's mass production workers. He subsequently developed an interest in the European New Right and wrote what is considered the principal English-language work on the subject: New Culture, New Right: Anti-Liberalism in Postmodern Europe. He is also the author of several hundred articles and translations mainly on French politics, European nationalism, and Heideggerian philosophy. His forthcoming book is entitled White Race, White Nation: Ethnonationalist Essays and Exhortations.
Margaret E Stucki (b. 1928). Painter, sculptor, author, poet, educator. BA (Philosophy, 1949), MA (Fine Art, 1959), Ph.D. (Education, 1975). Professor of Art, Hartwick College (1962-71); Professor of Art, Shelton College (Florida, 1971-74); Professor of Art, Rollins College, Patrick Air Force Base Extension (1972-75).
Listed in: Dictionary of International Biography, Dictionary of International Poets, 2000 Women in the World, Who’s Who in American Art, Who’s Who of American Women (including the Silver Anniversary Edition for having been on their list for 50 years consecutively), Who’s Who of Women of the World. Awards: Kodak Photography Award (1951 and 1961), Prize of the Swiss Civic Cultural Society (1983, for Der Matterhorn: Ein Dialog), Golden Poet of the Year (1984-1989).
Published works: The Revolutionary Mission of Modern Art or CRUD and other essays (1973); War on Light: the destruction of the image of God in man through modern art (1975); Eco-Elegia: elegies in ecology (1982); Gullible’s Travels: an educational tax-exempt trip around the world in a hot air balloon (1987); October: A Thoreaunal (2002); Margaret Stucki: a pictorial autobiography of the Swiss-American Artist in the Western Tradition (2004). Contributor to: Poetic Voices of America, National Anthology of College Verse.
Numerous art exhibitions, including US Senate, 1987; Capitol Building Hall of Flags, Augusta, Maine, 1978; etc.
Founder: Stucki-Linstead Museum of Fine Art (Pocatello, Idaho).
Christian Cultural Center, 1050 E. Center Street, Pocatello, ID. 83201-5201 USA.
Dr Alfred Vierling, 1970 - 1976 State University of Leiden: Doctor's degree in International Public Law; European Law; Law of International Political Organisations; Doctor's degree in Political Sciences, Constitutional Law, Administrative Law, Theory of Political Organisations; cyclical features of developing countries.
1976 Scientific Collaborator Leiden University, Faculty of Law, European Institute in the field of International Environment Protection Law. 1977 - 1979 Scientific Collaborator at Free University of Amsterdam, Faculty of Physics in the field of polemology and nuclear military strategies; full- Organizer, Conference on NATO Nuclear Strategies. 1980 Secretary, Interministerial Commission for Policy Coordination, Ministry of Culture, Recreation and Social Coaching. 1982 - 1986 Secretary to Member of Dutch Parliament. 1989 Senior Researcher, UNISA University, Pretoria, South Africa: 1999 teacher of economics Einstein Lyceum, Rotterdam. 2005/6 adviser/negotiator for Zhong He Jingji Wenhua Jiaoliu Zhongxin China-Netherlands Economic and Cultural Service Center.

Thomas Theologis was born in Neochorion, Agrapha, Greece, in 1935. (It is noteworthy that Agrapha means, in Modern Greek, “not written” or “unaccounted” for, most possibly, its inhabitants never succumbed to the Roman, Byzantine, and Ottoman Empires.) In 1944-1949, nonetheless, the area was full of communist guerillas; as a result, Th.Theologis joined the Greek Army as muleteer – experiencing the consequences of a war.
In 1948-1951 he spent three peaceful and productive years in the Children’s colonies of Larissa and Volos, Thessaly. Afterwards he won a scholarship for Anavryta National School, Athens. After his graduation, he left for Scotland (Gordonstown School and Aberdeen College of Education). He returned to Greece for his military service (2nd lieutenant).
In 1959 he was back to Anavryta National School - as language teacher and housemaster this time. In 1964 he embarked on studies in Lausanne University, Switzerland, and he got his degree in Political Economy in 1968. (While studying he used to teach at the International Institute ‘Le Rosey”.) During the years 1960-1970, he was tutoring the sons of a Greek tycoon, in parallel with his jobs and studies.
The last ten years he is continuously busy in historical research and writing. He has published five books so far - but his main work, a “History of Agrapha” remains unpublished.