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13.1b

CLINICAL CONSULTING FACULTY

Claire Allphin, PhD, LCSW: BA, San Francisco State University, 1961; MSW, University of California, Berkeley, 1963; PhD, California Institute for Clinical Social Work, 1979. Dr.

Allphin is a member of the C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco. She is a clinical social worker in private practice in Oakland, California. She does psychotherapy with

individuals, couples, groups, and also gives consultation and supervision to individuals and groups and organizations. She is on the teaching staff at the Psychotherapy Institute in Berkeley, California. Her theoretical orientations are Jungian, Self-Psychology, and Tavistock Group Relations Theory. She supervises interns at the outpatient clinic of the C. G. Jung Institute of San Francisco.

Gabie Berliner, PhD, LCSW: BA, Pomona College, 1957; MA, Columbia University, 1958; MSW, University of California, Berkeley, 1966; PhD, California Institute for Clinical Social Work, 1983. Dr. Berliner’s clinical social work experience has been primarily with children and families in outpatient clinics. She has also worked in adolescent residential and day treatment programs and with seriously disturbed adults. Her current

specialization is child therapy, adjustment to divorce, parenting problems. She also trains interns in child therapy.

Beverly Burch, PhD, LCSW: BA, Wake Forest University, 1967; MA, Wake Forest University, 1971; MSW, University of Tennessee, 1976; PhD, California Institute for Clinical Social Work, 1989. Dr. Burch is in private practice in Oakland, CA, working with individuals and couples. She has published two books: On Intimate Terms: The

Psychology of Difference in Lesbian Relationships (University of Illinois Press, 1992) and Other Women: Lesbian/Bisexual Experience and Psychoanalytic Views of Women (Columbia University Press, 1997) as well as a number of papers on women's

psychology and the dynamics of relationship. She has also published poems and short stories and has a strong interest in the creative process.

Karla R. Clark, PhD, LCSW: BA Antioch College, Yellow Springs, Ohio, 1960, MA School of Social Services Administration, University of Chicago, 1962, PhD, California Institute for Clinical Social Work, 1983. Advanced Certification in the Psychotherapy of the Disorders of the Self, Masterson Institute 1986. Dr. Clark is in private practice in San Rafael, California, working mostly with individuals in long term psychotherapy. She founded the San Francisco Masterson Institute and served on its faculty until 1993. She was also part of the faculty at the Western Institute of the Family Service Association for many years. Currently, in addition to her private practice, she consults with clinicians concerning aspects of their work both individually and in groups. She supervises

students for the Community Institute for Psychotherapy in San Rafael and serves on the Consulting Clinical Faculty for The Sanville Institute. Her articles on aspects of the psychotherapy of the disorders of the self-have appeared in journals and in several books.

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Linda A. Cozzarelli, MA, LCSW: BS, Ohio State University, Columbus, 1963, MA,

University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, 1971; Certificate, Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy Program for Children and Adolescents, The Institute for Psychoanalysis, Chicago, Illinois, 1980. Ms. Cozzarelli has focused on psychotherapy with children, adolescents and adults. She gives consultation and supervision to individuals and teachers. She is a psychotherapist, consultant teaching staff member and Director of the Bereavement Program at the Ann Martin Children's Center, Piedmont, California. She has served on the teaching staff of the Psychotherapy Institute in Berkeley, California. Her theoretical orientation is Self-Psychology.

Joan Dasteel, PhD, PsyD, LCSW: BA, University of California, Los Angeles, 1964; MSW, University of California, Los Angeles, 1967; PhD, California Institute for Clinical Social Work, 1978. PsyD Institute of Contemporary Psychoanalysis, 1998. Dr. Dasteel has a private practice with adults, adolescents and couples in West Los Angeles and was a Senior teacher and lecturer at the Extension Division of the University of California in Los Angeles. She was president of the Board of Trustees at the The Sanville Institute from 1980-83 and from 1991-92. She is the co-founder of the Southern Friends of The Sanville Institute and The Psychotherapy Services, clinical consultant for La Goal in Los Angeles, and Academic Consulting Faculty at The Sanville Institute.

Carmely Estrella, PhD, LCSW: BA, Sociology, California State University, Los Angeles, 1973; MSW, University of California, Los Angeles, 1975; PhD, California Institute for Clinical Social Work, 1993.

Lynn Alicia Franco, MSW, LCSW: BA, International Relations, Latin American Focus, University of California, Los Angeles, 1966; MA, Education and Latin American Studies, California State University, Los Angeles, 1969; California Standard Teaching Credential, History and Government, University of San Francisco, 1971; MSW and State of

California Pupil Personnel Credential, University of California, Berkeley, 1977. Lynn Franco’s teaching experience includes clinical supervision and consultation at the Psychotherapy Institute in Berkeley, and at the University of California, San Francisco.

She is a certified analyst member of the C. G. Jung Institute in San Francisco and has a private practice of Jungian analysis for individuals and depth psychotherapy for couples.

She also serves as a clinical and organizational consultant.

Judy Greene, MSW, LCSW: BA, University of California, Berkeley; MSW University of Chicago, School of Social Services. Teacher and supervisor in the psychotherapy training program at the Psychotherapy Institute, as well as consultant to the program supervisors in the Supervisor-Study Program. She supervised for 20 years at the John F.

Kennedy University Community Counseling Center, training clinic in the University’s Master’s Degree program in Clinical Psychology. Maintains a private practice in

psychotherapy and consultation. Long term work with adults, adolescents and couples.

Ruth C. Hill, PhD, MFT: BA, University of California at Berkeley; MA, University of California at Berkeley; PhD, Wright Institute, Berkeley. Dr. Hill specializes in cross- cultural psychotherapy and has been a consultant to agencies and courts in the San Francisco Bay Area. She is Clinical Director of the Family Support Services Program at Bessie Carmichael School, San Francisco, providing direct clinical services to children and their parents. She is a Jungian-oriented psychotherapist in private practice in Berkeley.

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Lili Hodis, PhD, PsyD, LCSW: BA, California State University, Northridge, 1971; MSW, University of Southern California, 1973; PhD, California Institute for Clinical Social Work, 1982; PsyD, Institute for Contemporary Psychoanalysis, 2000. Formerly Psychiatric Director at Portals House, an outpatient psychosocial agency. Has been actively involved in admissions at the The Sanville Institute and is a member of the Clinical Consulting Faculty. Was editor of Hospital and Community Psychiatry and taught at the U.C.L.A. School of Social Welfare. She has been in private practice in West Los Angeles since 1973, conducting psychotherapy and psychoanalysis with individuals as well as sex therapy with couples and individuals. She also treats children and adolescents and does supervision and consultation. She has published on subjects related to trans- cultural psychotherapy (Israel Journal of Psychiatry & Related Sciences) and borderline personality disorders (Clinical Social Work Journal). She has presented at various conferences and meetings. Her orientation is psychodynamic, relational and

intersubjective psychoanalysis, coupled with object relations. She conducts treatment in Hebrew & Yiddish as well as English.

Kathleen W. Huston, PhD, MFT: BA, Denison University; MS, California State East Bay;

PhD, Institute of Transpersonal Psychology. Dr. Huston treats individual adults, couples, and adolescents in her private practice in Hayward and Danville. Managing emotional distress, loss and resilience are special therapeutic interests, applicable to short and long term therapy. Resilience and life-long growth relate to her doctoral research into factors influencing intellectual and emotional growth in the last third of life. Her therapeutic orientation utilizes psychodynamic, relational, and transpersonal

perspectives. Organizational dynamics also interest her and were valuable when serving as president of CAMFT, The Sanville Institute, and board member of Saybrook

University.

Rebecca D. Jacobson, PhD, LCSW: BA, Anthropology, University of California, Los Angeles, 1957; MSW, University of Southern California, 1960; Fellowship in Child Psycho-therapy, Reiss-Davis Child Study Center, 1969; PhD, Institute for Clinical Social Work, 1979. Dr. Jacobson was formerly a clinical social worker in a family agency, in psychiatric in-patient and outpatient services for adults and in psychiatric outpatient services for children. She is currently supervising for the Los Angeles Child

Development Center. She is retired from private practice.

Carol Jenkins, PhD, LCSW : BA, Psychology, University of Rochester, 1973; MSW, University of California, Berkeley, 1976; PhD, California Institute for Clinical Social Work, 1999. Instructor, Russell House Psychotherapy Institute, 1994-present; Faculty,

Psychotherapy Institute, 1994-present; Adjunct Faculty, John F. Kennedy University, 1982-87; Private Practice with individuals and couples, 1976-present.

Cheryl Jern, PhD, LCSW, MFT: BA, San Francisco State University; MSW, San

Francisco State University; PhD, The Sanville Institute, Berkeley. Dr. Jern specializes in chronic illness, aging, and grief/loss, and has lectured at numerous agencies in the North Bay. She is especially interested in the impact of chronic illness on the

psychotherapist, having done her doctoral research in this area. In addition to her private practice in Petaluma, she is the "embedded mental health provider" to Petaluma's

National Guard unit. Her orientation is relational and attachment.

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Elaine Leader, PhD, LCSW: Diploma in Social Work, University of London, 1964; BA, University of California, Los Angeles, 1968; MSW, University of California, Los Angeles, 1970; PhD, California Institute for Clinical Social Work, 1981. Dr. Leader is currently Executive Director of the Center for the Study of Young People/TEEN LINE and specializes in individual, family and group psychotherapy with adults, children and adolescents. Her theoretical orientation is psychodynamic. Her publications have appeared in the Clinical Social Work Journal and The Journal of Child and Adolescent Group Therapy.

Janet Linder, PhD, LCSW: BA, Antioch College, Ohio 1976; MSW, San Francisco State University, 1982; PhD, The Sanville Institute, 2011. Janet’s research interests include family life, intimacy, gender and sexuality. She taught at UC Berkeley Extension’s Drug and Alcohol Studies Program from 1987-1996, and at California Institute of Integral Studies from 2006-2008. She is currently on the faculty of the Women’s Therapy Center and The Psychotherapy Institute in Berkeley.

Maggie Magee, MSW, LCSW: MA, Syracuse University, 1964; MSW, University of California, Berkeley, 1973; Certificate in Psychoanalysis, Los Angeles Institute and Society for Psychoanalytic Studies, 1992. She served as Clinical Supervisor at the Gay and Lesbian Community Services Center from 1982-1991. She has maintained a private practice since 1981. In 1992, she began teaching at the Los Angeles Institute and Society for Psychoanalytic Studies.

Sheila Marems, PsyD, LCSW.: BA, Psychology, University of California, Los Angeles, 1967; MSW, University of California, Los Angeles, 1971; PsyD, Institute for

Contemporary Psychoanalysis. Board Certified Diplomate. Private practice in Los Angeles since 1971. Short- and long-term psychoanalytic psychotherapy with individual adults, adolescents and children; marital and family psychotherapy; crisis intervention;

treatment of substance abuse problems; diagnostic evaluations; supervision.

Terrence McBride, MSW, LCSW: BA, University of California, Los Angeles, 1965; MSW, University of California, Los Angeles, 1971; Certificate of Training in Psychoanalysis, Los Angeles Institute and Society for Psychoanalytic Studies, 1988; PhD, Candidate, Los Angeles Institute and Society for Psychoanalytic Studies, 1993. Board Certified Diplomate. Faculty, Los Angeles Institute for Psychoanalytic Studies and Wright Institute Los Angeles. Private practice of psychotherapy and psychoanalysis since 1973.

Russell McCloud, MSW, PhD, LCSW: BA, University of Maryland, 1967; MSW, 1970, Florida State University; PhD, The Sanville Institute, 2011. Fifty years of experience in delivery, supervision and management of health care services most of which has been I mental health settings. Currently a psychotherapist in the Child and Adolescent program at Kaiser Permanente, Riverside, CA. The subject of his research is The Impact of Hearing About Trauma on Experienced Social Work Clinicians.

Kenneth K. Miya, PhD, LCSW: BS, University of Utah, 1968; MSW, University of Utah, 1970; PhD, California Institute for Clinical Social Work, 1980. Dr. Miya is Acting District Chief, South Bay Mental Health Clinic and Coastal Asian Pacific Mental Health Clinic and in private practice in Encino and Thousand Oaks. He has served in a variety of clinical and management positions in community mental health. He does clinical consulting and psychotherapy with adults.

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Tanya Moradians, PhD, LCSW: BA, University of California, Berkeley, 1958; MSW, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, 1971; PhD, California Institute for Clinical Social Work, 1981. Certified Group Psychotherapist from the Los Angeles Group

Psychotherapy Institute, Los Angeles, in 1978. Specializes in using Self Psychology to treat women suffering from poor self-esteem, and working with people in later life, using group therapy to deal with issues of aging. Assistant Clinical Professor in the

Department of Psychiatry at the University of California, Los Angeles, teaching individual, family and group therapy to psychiatric residents at UCLA Neuropsychiatric Institute.

She maintains a private practice as a clinician, supervisor and consultant in Sherman Oaks and Westwood.

Idell Natterson, PhD, LCSW; BA, MSW from UCLA:, PhD from Sanville Institute.,

Private practice in Beverly Hills, CA, teaching in- service at Maple Center in Beverly Hills, CA and Jewish Family Service, Los Angeles, CA: Continuing Education provider for California in monthly series, “Idell’s Seminars”.

Ellen G. Ruderman, PhD, LCSW: BA, University of California, Los Angeles, 1959; MSW, School of Social Work, University of Southern California, 1963; PhD, California Institute for Clinical Social Work, 1983. Training and Supervising Analyst, Faculty, Institute of Contemporary Psychoanalysis, Los Angeles; Chair, Southern California Area Committee on Psychoanalysis in Clinical Social Work; Adjunct Faculty, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center Division of Psychiatry (Thalians Clinic); Consulting Clinical Faculty, California Institute for Clinical Social Work; formerly Clinical Faculty; UCLA Graduate School of Social Welfare;

Consulting Editor, Clinical Social Work Journal; Issue Co-Editor, Psychoanalytic Inquiry (“On Touch in the Psychoanalytic Situation”), Issue Co-Editor, Psychoanalytic Inquiry (“The Life Stage of the Psychoanalyst: Developmental Transitions and Epiphanies”).

Member, Executive Board, National membership Committee on Psychoanalysis and Clinical Social Work; Member, National Study Group on Psychoanalysis and Clinical Social Work. Private practice of psychoanalysis and psychoanalytic psychotherapy, individual and group psychoanalytic supervision, Encino and West Los Angeles.

Publications in The Psychology of Today’s Woman: New Psychoanalytic Visions; the Clinical Social Work Journal; Science and Psychoanalysis; Journal of Orthopsychiatry;

Journal of Public Health; Psychoanalytic Inquiry; Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy;

The Social Work Psychoanalysts Casebook: Clinical Voices in Honor of Jean Sanville.

Currently at work with Jean Sanville on editing Women of the Millennium: Clinical and Treatment Perspectives to be published by International Universities Press.

Pat Sable, PhD, LCSW: BA, Skidmore College, Northwestern University; MSW,

University of Southern California, 1976; PhD, University of Southern California, 1986. An adjunct professor at the USC School of Social Work and has a private practice of

psychotherapy in West Los Angeles. She has published extensively in professional journals on the application of attachment theory to clinical practice with adults. She is the author of the book Attachment and Adult Psychotherapy.

Terese G. Schulman, PhD, LCSW: BA, University of Illinois, 1971; MSW, University of Illinois, 1973; PhD, California Institute for Clinical Social Work, 1999. She is a candidate at the San Francisco Psychoanalytic Institute. She is in private practice in Oakland.

Penny Schreiber, PhD, LCSW: BA, Valparaiso University, MSW, University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee, PhD, The Sanville Institute. Dr. Schreiber is in private practice in Menlo Park, and sees individual adults and couples.

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Norman M. Sohn, PhD, LCSW,: BA, University of Connecticut, 1959; MSSA, Mandel School of Applied Social Sciences, Case Western Reserve University, 1968; Post- Master’s Certificate, Department of Psychiatry, Mt. Zion Hospital and Medical Center, 1974; PhD, California Institute for Clinical Social Work, 1979. Board Certified Diplomate.

Member and faculty, the S.F. Psychotherapy Research Group; Clinical Faculty, Langley Porter Psychiatric Institute, UCSF; Clinical Consulting Faculty, The Sanville Institute;

Adjunct Clinical Faculty, Wright Institute; Member, Committee on Psychoanalysis.

Lectures on treatment of Holocaust survivors and their children, premature termination of treatment, and control mastery theory. Former Director of Adult Services and Director of Intern Training, Jewish Family and Children's Services; and past lecturer UCB, Social Welfare Extension, CSCSW Fellow. Private practice in San Francisco.

Mario L. Starc, MSW, PhD, LCSW: BA, UC Berkeley, 1974; MSW from California State University, Sacramento, 1977; PhD, The Sanville Institute, 2009. He is a licensed clinical Social Worker and a Board Certified Diplomate in Clinical Social Work, an Advanced Candidate at the C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco, and is on the faculty of The Psychotherapy Institute in Berkeley. Prior to entering full time private practice in 1993, he worked as Clinical Social Worker in an outpatient mental health clinic, as the director of a psychiatric hospital, and as a therapist and director of a Family Service Agency. In addition to his practice in individual and group psychotherapy he has served as a high school consultant for over 24 years, and also worked for 25 years as a consultant to several kidney dialysis clinics. In addition to his interest analytic psychology and

psychotherapy he maintains a deep interest in the areas of Refugee Identity, Culture and the Psychology of culture. His dissertation at The Sanville Institute was entitled, A

Narrative Study of Exile: Writers’ Reflections. Since 1993 he has been the co-founder and director of the Slovenian Study Group in San Francisco.

Evelyn Tabachnick, PhD, LCSW: MA, University of Chicago, 1949; MSW, University of Southern California, 1974; PhD, The Graduate Center for Child Development and

Psychotherapy, 1991. Clinical supervisor in the Post Master's Fellowship in Social Work, Department of Psychiatry, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center. Clinical Consulting Faculty at the California Institute for Clinical Social Work, 1991 to present. Nine years working with children and families in the therapeutic Nursery School of the Early Childhood

Development Program at Cedar-Sinai's Department of Psychiatry. Special area of experience and interest is in early childhood development. Private practice in Los Angeles.

Karlyn M. Ward, PhD, LCSW: BA, Carleton College, Northfield, Minnesota, 1959; MS, Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio, 1961; PhD, California Institute for Clinical Social Work, 1988. Private practice, Marin County. Certified analyst member of the C. G.

Jung Institute of San Francisco, Fellow, Association for Music and Imagery.

Linda Waters, PhD, LCSW: MSW, University of California Los Angeles, 1980, PhD, The Sanville Institute, 2010. Dr. Waters has had a private practice in psychotherapy,

consultation, and clinical supervision since 1986 with offices in South Pasadena and the Larchmont area of Los Angeles. She is a clinical consultant with USC’s School of Social Work. After beginning her career as a clinician at Five Acres, a residential treatment facility for children in Los Angeles, Linda has had a multifaceted career as a clinician, supervisor, clinical consultant, teacher, trainer, program developer, and administer. She has worked in a variety of areas, including residential treatment, community-based services, child sexual abuse treatment and clinical field consultation at USC. She

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developed and coordinated Five Acres’ MSW Internship Program and received the Jules Levine Distinguished Field Education Award from USC in May 2007 and the Extra Mile Award from UCLA in June 2008.

Steven E. Zemmelman, PhD, LCSW: BA University of California at Berkeley; MSW, UCLA; PhD, California Institute for Clinical Social Work. Dr. Zemmelman is certified to practice as a Jungian Analyst by the C. G. Jung Institute of San Francisco. He is as an Assistant Clinical Professor in the Department of Psychiatry at University of California at San Francisco, a lecturer in the School of Social Welfare at University of California at Berkeley, a member of the clinical faculty at The Psychotherapy Institute in Berkeley, and a core faculty member of The Sanville Institute Most of his work is as a therapist and analyst working with children, adolescents, individual adults, and couples.

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