DR. GEORGE WILSON ALBEE
George Albee used to drive a big checkered taxicab during his years as a University of Vermont (UVM)
psychology professor. So when a woman flagged him down at the Burlington airport
one day, he loaded her bags and drove her to the Radisson. When she tried to pay,
he told her, No need for that maam. The cabs in Burlington are free
today. Its a special.
The story, recounted by his UVM colleagues, says a lot about Albees
playful sense of humor, but also about the 1970 APA presidents belief in service
to others. Albee called on his fellow psychologists to help the less fortunate and
tackle such social problems as racism, sexism, unemployment and child abuse. In
his view these social problemsand not twisted moleculesengender
psychopathology in individuals.
George liked to say that No mass disorder affecting
humankind has ever been brought under control by treating an individual,
says longtime Albee protégé Lynne Bond, PhD, of UVM.
Rather, Albee held that the best way to handle psychological vulnerability
is to take on capitalism, patriarchy and other such large-scale systems that he
believed foster it. Along with others such as James Kelly, PhD, Seymour Sarason,
PhD, and Emory Cowen, PhD, Albee was a major founder of the approach, known as primary
prevention of psychopathology.
George said that instead of waiting for people to go over
the waterfall, we should be building dams to keep them from going over in the first
place, says Bond.
He did nothing halfheartedly
Albee wasnt afraid to share his opinions on primary prevention,
or any other matter, notes Bond, who first knew Albee through her parents. Albee
took her to baseball games in the 1950s and 1960s when he was a professor at Clevelands
Case Western Reserve University.
Whether it was talking about psychology and the world, cheering
at an Indians game or telling jokes at midnight, George was full of passion,
Bond says. He did nothing halfheartedly.
He could also be passionately combative, she says, posing outrageous
anti-statements to stir a reaction. In a talk at APAs 2001 Annual Convention,
for example, he proposed the dismantling of organized religion, claiming they
are all patriarchal...and that is one of the major sources of social injustice in
our society.
On the lighter side, Albee enjoyed teasing his colleagues. He
was known for instigating weight-loss contests at APA Annual Conventions, then sending
his competitors boxes of chocolates to thwart their diets. He submitted his dog
Otis for a whos who of academia publication. He urged Bond to apply for a
faculty position at UVM but warned, Just dont tell people you know me.
It could help with some but will hurt with most.
Albee also invited colleagues to two-day chicken grills on his
10-acre property outside Burlington, where he kept chickens, pigs and cows. Another
cooking specialty was his Marco Polo pot roast, which won an award in a national
beef cook-off.
Pro-prevention, anti-medicalization
While Albee didnt take himself too seriously, says UVM colleague
Justin Joffe, PhD, he took primary prevention very seriously, founding the influential
Vermont Conference on the Primary Prevention of Psychopathology.
Of those in the area, he was especially politically aware
and perhaps most controversial, says Joffe, noting that Albees thinking
stemmed from his service on President Eisenhowers Joint Commission on Mental
Health and Illness in the 1950s. Based on that work, he claimed in his book Mental
Health Manpower Trends (Basic Books, 1959) that continuing the medicalization
of mental health services would mean the development of psychopathology for many,
and treatment for only a privileged few.
He took on psychiatry for selling the idea that mental
disorders are biologically based and need chemical interventions, says Joffe.
He also debated with psychology colleagues who pushed one-on-one therapy.
One of Albees favorite sayings was, Therapy between
consenting adults shouldnt be illegal. He thought the field should rather
focus on large-scale social interventions and leave individual therapy to bachelors-level
providers.
Albee pushed his prevention approach through service in countless
governance positions in APA and its divisions. He published 230 articles and book
chapters on prevention, and helped co-found the American Association for Applied
and Preventive Psychology and the American Psychological Society.
George advocated strongly for psychologists to leave their
offices and engage in community mental health action as public citizens, says
APA President Gerald P. Koocher, PhD. We must strive to keep his ideals prominent
in our work.
Read George W. Albees presidential address at APAs 1970 Annual Convention in the 1970 American Psychologist (Vol. 25, No. 12, pages 1071–1080).
DR. JOHN JANEWAY CONGER
Contemporaries of former APA President John Janeway Conger, PhD, knew him as someone who quietly but
doggedly rose to the top of all he undertook.
He commanded a Navy destroyer escortthe U.S. Tweedyin
World War II. He became the U.S. Naval Academys first chief psychologist.
And he advanced from professor to dean at the University of Colorado School of Medicine
to chancellor of the universitys Health Sciences Centerthe first U.S.
psychologist to assume such high positions at a medical school, says Congers
former colleague Jerome Kagan, PhD.
Not only was he dean, but he quickly earned a reputation
among psychologists for his creative research on personality and psychopathology
in adolescence, like on adolescent conflict between autonomy and family dependence,
says Kagan.
Congers career culminated in service on several U.S. presidential
commissions and a 1981 term as APA presidentpolitical positions in which he
promoted childrens mental health and stronger families. He particularly emphasized
adults responsibility to the nations youth.
The future of individual families, whatever their form,
will depend on...the degree to which we are able collectively to view ourselves
as our brothers and sisters, and above all, our childrens keepersall our children, he said in his presidential address at APAs 1981 Annual
Convention.
A charmer
As steadfast as Congers leadership resolve was his uniform
of a blue blazer, preppie tie and gray pants, and his zeal for sailing, says another
Conger colleague Nicholas Cummings, PhD. Cummings was APA past-president when Conger
was president-elect, and he ribbed Congeran Amherst College and Yale University
graduate about both traits.
We had a winter board retreat in Newport Beach, California,
and John came towing his sailboat all the way from Colorado, chuckles Cummings,
who himself prefers powerboats.
In turn, Conger teased Cummings for forcing the cancellation of
a meeting of President Carters Mental Health Commission because it was too
close to Christmas. The two served together on the commission, and Cummings recalls
that Former First Lady Rosalynn Carter enjoyed Congers company.
John was the commissions child expert, and she was
interested in the subject, says Cummings. But I think it was his sense
of humor and charm that really captivated her.
A collaborator
The Carter connection also helped Conger land a position as vice
president of the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, says Kagan.
In additional to being socially astute, recalls Kagan, Conger
was an eloquent writer, even publishing some of his poems.
His writing and social skills also propelled his collaboration
with Kagan and Paul Henry Masson, PhD, to produce the textbook Child Development
and Personality (Harper & Row). The text set a precedent with its organization
by developmental stage, rather than psychological topic. Not surprising for an effort
involving Conger, by 1958 it was the leading textbook in the field, says Kagan.
Current APA President Gerald P. Koocher, PhD, remembers its influence.
When I was an undergraduate nearly 40 years ago, Congers textbook provided
my introduction to developmental psychology, he says. It soon became
a classic.
Reflecting on what drove Congers interest in children and
adolescence, Kagan guesses it was Americas postwar fixation on parental influence.
We believed back then that we could solve problems like
schizophrenia and alcoholism by fixing childrearing, he says. Now genetic
determinism is in vogue, says Kagan, but developmentalists like Conger have helped
inform a complex picture of what shapes human behavior.
Read Dr. John J. Congers presidential address at APAs
1981 Annual Convention in the 1981 American Psychologist (Vol. 36, No. 12, pages
1475–1484).