TRIP TO ILLINOIS & INDIANA 11-14 NOVEMBER 1977
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Body:
STAT
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November 23, 1977
Admiral Stansfield Turner
Director of Central Intelligence
Washington, D. C. 20505
It was super to see you and Pat last week.
STAT
I enjoyed your talk very much.
I thought you might like to see some of the work we do, D e) yL.
so I am enclosing our brochures on Dams and Water
Resourses Planning.
Yours,
P. S. I attach the Mike Royko article.
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STAT
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G) N D,7-h-11
AL
15 NOV 1977
MEMORANDUM FOR: NIO/Near East & South Asia
FROM: Director of Central Intelligence
When talking in Chicago, I met
I managed to
have a substantive talk on Indian politics with them, and found them
interested and interesting. I even suggested to them we might like
to ask them to consult with us on things like the new NIE. They
indicated a willingness to consider it at least -- I pass it along
in case you are interested.
STANSF E
cc: D/DCI/NI
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MEMORANDUM FOR: Director of Central Intelligence
FROM: John
SUBJECT: Illinois/Indiana Trip, 11 - 14 November 1977
1. Proposed schedule is listed below. Suggested letter
tol is attached.
Friday, 11 November
0710 Depart Qtrs 'D'
0730 Depart W'VNA (Breakfast Enroute)
0930 Arrive Indianapolis Airport
1030 Arrive De Pauv University
1100 Address
1200 Luncheon
1400 Depart De Pauw
? R&R Knights
1800 Arrive Wabash - Reception
1830 Dinner
2030 Address
2130 Depart Wabash
? RON Knights
Saturday, 12 November
1000 Depart Kngiths
1100 Depart Indianapolis Airport
1140 Arrive O'Hare Int'l Airport
1230 Arrive Harza's
Sunday, 13 November
1915 Arrive North Shore Unitarian Church
1930 Address and QE,A
2030 Depart North Shore Unitarian Church
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Monday, 14 November
? Meet with
STAT
Council 1130 Arrive Council on Foreign Relations Bldg
, meet Pres.
Requested 1145 Depart for Standard Oil of Ind. Bldg
1200 Arrive Standard Oil Bldg, Cocktails with
15-20
Senior Members
1230 Luncheon
1300 Address
1400 Depart Council
1500 . Depart O'Hare Int'l Airport
1655 Arrive IVNA
2. - Council on Foreign Relations said
normally invitations to the luncheon are extend s only.
However, they would be "more than happy to have sit at
the head table with you, Mrs. Turner and several of er of the
senior members." I've attached her address and telephone number.
STAT
STAT
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- (nifea Zfatez zena1e6"% r--
John,
For your information
Thought you might find the enclosed
articles of interest. It 'appears the
trip was a complete success.
If there is anything in the future
I can do, please do not hesitate to
contact me at any time.
vid' A-`SKaw
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THE INDIANAPOLIS NEWS
SATURDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 12, 1977
2 Flaws:
New CIA
Chief
GREENCASTLE, Ind. (AP) - CIA
Director Stansfield Turner says he sees
two potential flaws in the nation's re-
vamped intelligence policy - timidity
when risky action is demanded and the
possibility of security leaks through in-
creased supervision.
Nevertheless, he said, he feels the
nation is on the way to establishing the
proper balance between checks on the
CIA and effective intelligence
gathering.
"I can't guarantee you this is going
to work, but I'll tell you that I'm op-
timistic today," he told an audience at
DePauw University yesterday. "I think
in two or three years it will settle down
into a relationship that is one of good
supervision, good oversight but still al-
lowing enough initiative, enough effec-
tiveness to perform the vital intelli-
gence missions that our country re-
quires."
Addressing a student group for the
first time since his appointment as head
of the CIA, Turner said that while
undercover operations are now used
only with presidential sanction, "the
spy . . . remains a vital arrow in the
quiver of our intelligence capabilities"
and probably will for years longer.
Turner conceded there are risks "in
two directions" in the supervisory proc-
ess designed to guard against CIA ex-
cesses, he said.
"One is what I call timidity .
(that) we'll only do those things that
are easy and not risky," he said. "It's
easy ... to vote `No.' It's more dif-
ficult to stand up and say, `Yes, that
risk is worth it - it's important to the
country.' "
"And the second danger we face,"
Turner said, "is one of security leaks -
the more you proliferate the number of
people in the oversight process . . . the
more danger there is of some inadver-
tent leak which will destroy an intelli-
gence operation, endanger lives and cost
information we would obtain for our
country's benefit."
Pointing out that most of the infor-
mation gathered by the CIA is overt
and academically useful, Turner also
condemned universities which forbid as-
sociations between their scholars and
the intelligence community.
"(If) a university has a regulation
that any external contact . . . must be
reported, clearly that's fine," he said.
"But there have been cases where they
have singled out intelligence ... I
think that's discriminating against the
individual's right to association and
right to determine with whom he con-
ducts his business."
He later told reporters he was
pleased with the disposition of charges
against former CIA director Richard
Helms, accused of testifying falsely be-
fore the Senate Foreign Relations Com-
mittee. Helms received a fine and sus-
pended sentence in a plea bargain ar-
rangement with the Justice Depart-
ment.
"I clearly am reminded . . . that
none of us in government is abovo
law or entitled to lie," Tv-
PAGE 13
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THE INDIANAPOLIS STAR
PAGE 8
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 12,1977
SPEAKS AT DEPAUW
CIA Director Defends Policy
Of Working With Scholars
(AP Photo)
VOLLEY OF QUESTIONS HIT TURNER
CIA Director Answers Press Before Tennis
same would be true regarding the Robert Kennedy case.
Asked about microwaves the Russians are beaming
at the American Embassy in Moscow, Turner said he is
unhappy about the situation and, wants it stopped. He
added that the beams are below the Russian safety
standard, which is 100 times as stringent as the
American standard.
Turner refused to discuss the foreign policy aspects
of the Panama Canal treaties. But he said he believes
that the canal is vulnerable to sabotage or attack.
He said he has no reason to believe President Carter
has withheld information about the canal treaties from
the American public as was charged by retired Adm.
John S. McCain Jr. in Indianapolis Thursday.
Turner got in some tennis while he was at the
university and before going on to Wabash College at
Crawfordsville.
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By PAUL M. DOHERTY
Greencastle, Ind. - The head of the CIA defended
the intelligence agency's the policy of working with
academic persons during a visit here Friday.
He also displayed a deft hand at publicity gimmicks.
ADM. STANSFIELD TURNER brought up his con-
cern about continued work with college faculty and
other academic people in his formal remarks at the
DePauw University Performing Arts Center and was
asked about it by a faculty member during a luncheon
in the Student Union.
Turner said the CIA has academic people on its
payroll, but mentioned that the agency's policy is not to
have in its pay anyone who works for accredited news
agencies.
Some people are taking an unreasonable attitude that
any such relationship is improper and unhealthy, he
continued.
"I hope very much to reverse this trend," he said.
Turner told of a Brooklyn College professor who
traded information about Russia with the CIA and
became a center of controversy. He was denied tenure.
Such an attitude is "very discouraging and very
improper," he stated.
He claimed some in the academic community made
similar mistakes in the 1960s, when some campuses
removed reserve military training programs in response
to student protests. Some scholars who complained of a
typically narrow, right-wing military mind thus "took
their hand off the tiller" of influence over future
officers, he declared.
TURNER SAID HE is satisfied with the suspended
prison term given to former CIA director Richard
Helms in return for pleading guilty to lying to a Senate
committee. He said a trial might have forced the
disclosure of important foreign policy secrets.
In answers to questions from the DePauw audiences
and from the press, Turner said congressional control
over his agency is much tighter than in the past. He
declared he would be remiss if he let the agency's
ability to conduct covert operations atrophy. Turner
stressed that House and Senate special committees get
regular reports from him and that any covert operation
would need their approval as well as that of the
President.
He stated that "spooks and archeology" go together
because aerial photography can detect regular contours
of earth that reveal sites of ancient structures in places
which might be inaccessible or subject to security
restrictions.
IN ANSWER TO a question, Turner said he is not
familiar with an as-yet unpublished book claiming a CIA
connection with the assassination of Robert Kennedy.
Turner added that he has studied the. files on John
Kennedy's assassination and is sure there was no CIA
connection with that event. He said he is confident the
I r~
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THE COURIER.JOURNAL, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1977 B 3
Turner says
CIA only spies
as last resort
Associated Press
GREENCASTLE, Ind. - Stansfield
Turner, CIA director, told a college au-
dience yesterday that new oversight of
,.the-intelligence community is creating
an American information-gathering ap-
paratus that balances the nation's securi-
ty needs with its traditional openness.
However, he said that while clandes-
tine operations are now used only as a
last resort. "the spy - that's been here
since Biblical days - remains a vital
arrow in our quiver of intelligence capa-
bilities."
Speaking at DePauw University - his
first college appearance since President
Carter named him to head the CIA -
Turner said he is fortunate, because un-
Photograph, Page B 3.
Question, anyone?
Stansfield Turner, director of the CIA; answers questions at a press
conference after his speech to students at DePauw University. Turner
had changed into athletic clothes after the speech to the students yes-
terday in preparation for a tennis match after the press conference.
(Story, Page B 1.)
like former CIA chief Richard Helms,
Turner must divulge information to Con.
press only through the new Senate and
House oversight committees.
"I have a buffer, a protection against
being asked by some other committee a
question that it would be very difficult
to apswer in public forthrightly and
honestly," he said. "So when I'm asked
about what we're doing and how we're
doing it, I really only report to those
two committees."
Later, Turner told a news conference
that he was pleased with the disposition
of charges that Helms gave false testi-
mony to a Senate committee. After plea
bargaining with the Justice Department,
Helens was allowed to plead guilty and
reeved a fine and suspended sentence.
"I clearly am reminded . . . that
none of us in the government are above
the law or entitled to lie," he said. "Sec-
ondly, I am pleased for the sake of our
country that we did not have to go
through a public trial and the very
probable release of important informa=
.tion to conduct that trial."
Turner told the students that while
the new oversight arrangements are
aimed at making his agency more pub-
licly accountable, he would be remiss to
let its covert abilities atrophy.
"When we start talking about closed
societies, such as those behind the Iron
Curtain," he said, "our ability to get ...
information is severely limited.
"Would you want us . . . to go ahead
with the new strategic arms limitation
(talks) with the Soviet Union if I
couldn't tell you that I had a reasonable
probability of knowing something about
the trends, the attitudes, the construc-
tion rates . . . in that country in their
military sphere?"
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6 May 1977
MEMORANDUM FOR: Admiral Turner
FROM: Aide
SUBJECT: PA Trips to Illinois/Indiana and
New York City
1. New York City trip. Recommend make this trip in October.
One-two days, RON New York City, try to do following_
NYC Association of Harvard Business School (1730-1930)
Union League Club of New York (Lunch)
Council on Foreign Relations (PM Meeting)
Recommend:
a. We try for Monday so could spend weekend
in New York City and return to Washington Monday
evening, or -
b. Make the trip Wednesday/Thursday between
Presidential meetings.
2. Illinois/Indiana trip. Recommend following schedule:
Friday, 11 November: De Pauw Uni
?: - ?- arch,
Sunday, 13 November: North Shor
-
Monday, 14 November: ChicaG^ r^~Inri1 on Foreign
This would leave most of week'e
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3. Between Herb Hetu's office and myself, we have been
in touch with all of these groups and they are amenable to
these dates.
4. Herb Hetu concurs.
Very respectfully,..
STAT
LCDR, U.S. Navy
0/DCI/JJK/kgt/6 May 1976
Distribution:
Orig - Addressee
1 - ER
1- 0/DCI
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TRIP ITINERARY
Date: Date:
Date: Date:
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The C~tor of Central Intelligence
Washingron. D. C.20505
Dear Thad,
Thanks so much for a most memorable and
enjoyable evening on your beautiful campus and
for having Patricia and me as guests in your
home. I enjoyed meeting with you and your
alumni gathering. It was a good opportunity
to further what I hope will be ever improving
relations between the-intelligence community
and academia.
I'll look forward to seeing you again
should my travels take me to Crawfordsville.
In the meantime, thanks again.
Yours,
Dr. Thaddeus Seymour
President
Wabash College
Crawfordsville, Indiana 47933
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WABASH COLLEGE
CRAWFORDSVILLE. INDIANA 47933
November 15, 1977
Admiral Stansfield Turner
Central Intelligence Agency
McLean, Virginia 22101
Thank you for visiting Wabash College last Friday.
I am happy that everything went smoothly and want you
to know that I enjoyed the evening very much. I have
heard many favorable comments from others who were
present.
STAT -
I especially want to commend
for the pleasant and efficient way in which he has
worked with me since last summer in arranging your
visit. He has been most helpful and I appreciate it.
Sincerely,
Donald E. Thompson
Chairman, Lecture Committee
STAT -
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Dear Mr. Grand,
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The Dire, _o( Central Intelligence
4 November 1977
STAT
has informed me of your very
thoughtful letter regarding my visit to Wabash
College. Your interest in the workings of our
government, and particularly the CIA, is gratifying.
The questions you raise are thought-provoking and
I look forward to answering them in person next
Friday.
Although I will not be discussing employment
and job opportunities in my formal remarks, I would
be happy to answer any questions.you or your
classmates may have in the ensuing discussion period.
Again, thanks for your suggestions, and I'll
look forward to seeing you next week.
STANSFIELD TURNER
STAT
Mr. Robert T. Grand
Beta Theta Pi
Wabash College
Crawfordsville, Indiana
47933
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The Dii ~r of Central Intelligence C J I
Dear President Seymour,
Thanks so much for your very warm note
and kind invitation to spend the evening with
you a week from today. My wife and I accept
with great pleasure and look forward very much
to-being with you and on the Wabash campus.
See you soon.
Dr. Thaddeus Seymour
President
Wabash College
Crawfordsville, Indiana 47933
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RICHARD G. LUGAR COMMITTEES:
INDIANA
AG
T
R
U
5107 DIRKSEN OFFICE BUILDING
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20510
Room 447
46 EAST OHIO STREET
INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA 46204
STAT
2Cniteb .cif atez zenaf e
Office of the Director
Central Intelligence Agency
Washington, D.C. 20505
STAT
C
L
U
E, NURITION, AND FORESTRY
BANKING, HOUSING, AND URBAN AFFAIRS
SELECT COMMITTEE ON INTELLIGENCE
Senator Dick Lugar has requested I forward to you and
Admiral Turner the attached article wich appeared in the
Monday, October 31, 1977 issue of The Indianapolis News
announcing his visit to the Wabash University campus on
November 11.
I understand his schedule is progressing well at both DePauw
and Wabash. I will bother you with one final phone call
early next week to offer any last minute assistance.
Needless to say, if a problem arises, please contact me at
Sincerely,
Richard F. Hohlt
Executive Assistant
RFH/eal
STAT
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ON ,NC2V. 11 Av~- 0,1?11 CA Director Will
Speak At Wabash
Special to The News
CRAWFORDSVILLE, Ind. - Adm.
Stansfield Turner, director of the CIA,
will speak on CIA operations at Wabash
College Nov. 11.
Turner's lecture will begin at 8:30
p.m. in Ball Theater of the Humanities
Center. The speech is free and the
public is invited.
Turner was appointed to the CIA
post in March. Before then, he was
commander in chief of the Allied
Forces Southern Europe in Naples,
Italy, a position he assumed in 1975.
A Rhodes Scholar from the Naval
Academy, Turner has served a variety
of sea assignments, including comman-
der of a minesweeper, a destroyer and
a guided missile frigate. His shore as-
signments included politico-military di-
vision in the office of the chief of naval
;operations and assistant and naval aide
to the secretary of the Navy.
Turner was promoted to rear admir-
al in 1970 and assumed command of a
carrier task group of the Sixth Fleet
while aboard the aircraft carrier USS
Independence. After that, he directed
the systems analysis division of the
office of the chief of naval operations.
In 1972, Turner became the 36th
president of the Naval War College in
Newport, R.I., receiving the rank of
vice admiral.
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C
QP
Robert T. Grand
Beta Theta Pi
Wabash College
Crawfordsville, Ind. 47933
October 28,1977
Office of the Director
Central Intelligence Agency
Washington, D.C. 20505
Rick Hohlt, Senator Richard Lugar8s Executive Assistant, informed
me that you would appreciate some suggestions concerning topics
college students might interested in learning more about regarding
the C.I.A.
College students will, obviously, ask sole questions concerning
past cases involving alleged C.I.A. abuses of power. I believe,
however, that students want to know more about the positive
programs that they hear are being undertaken to improve the
effectiveness and integrity of the C.I.A. Some questions which
come to mind are as follows: 1) How much C.I.A. information is
derived from sources available to all citizens---how much is
gathered through cove meths ? 2) Where does the U.S. stand
in relation to other countries in the field of intelligence
gathering? 3) Is there evidence to show that the reettdttions
placed on governmental intelligence agencies have endangered
our security and defense. I realize that these ques ons are general,
yet, 1a answers could clear up some of the misconceptions
about the role of the C.I.A. in our society.
A mention of jobotunLta.es within the C.I.A. and requirements
for employment would probably be of interest to an audience who
will soon face a tight job market. Are there any particular
courses of study which would better prepare one for C.I.A.
service?
I hope these suggestions will be useful to Mr. Turner. It seems
to me that his scheduled public appearances will enhance the
image of the C.I.A. I feel that the best way to clear up the
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1QP
Robert T. Grand
Beta Theta Pi
Wabash College
Crawfordsville, Ind. 47933
"mysticism" surrounding the C.I.A. is to educate the public
about its purpose---the need for intelligence information---
the methods used to gather the necessary information. May
these efforts, particularly the one on November 11, be a
success.
Robert T. Grand
Senior-Wabash College
BG/bg
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31 October 1977
~I
STAT
My brother Dan Evans is presently on the
Board and Treasurer. He is looking forward to
meeting you, and I am sure he will do his
utmost to see that your visit there is worth-
while. I asked him to send along some facts
about Wabash (attached). Have sent them to
remarks.
STAT
as possible input for your
STAT
Attachment
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WABASH COLLEGE
CRAWFORDSVILLE* INDIANA 47933
October 25, 1977
Admiral Stanfield Turner
Central intelligence Agency
;McLean, Virginia 22101
Dear Admiral Turner :
All of us at Wabash are looking forward to your visit in two weeks,
and we are anxious to make it a pleasant and memorable occasion for
you. I know-that Mr. ald Tha on, Librarian of the College,
has been in touch with about details, and I
assume that these will be fl=rther re jn as the date approaches.
STAT
Mr. Thanpson-.and =will-be working out the final details
of your after ocr. schedule, but I did want to write today to extend
a warm. and personal invitation to you.
sincerely,
t(O_Vg?
Thaddeus SeyTraur
/cr
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Wabash College is a small, independent, liberal arts college for men.
Although founded in 1832 by Presbyterian ministers, the College has no
affiliations with any church. It is also one of the few colleges that neither
seeks nor accepts money from any governmental agency. V
In 1973, the Board of Trustees voted unanimously to preserve Wabash as a
college for men. This was not a vote against coeducation, but rather a vote
affirming the importance of men's education as an alternative.in our society.
The College launched a $32 million campaign for "Continued Independence
and Excellence" in 1974. The goal was reached in December of last year and
the money has been used to endow faculty salaries and scholarships, and to
renovate campus facilities. -
Wabash has long been noted for academic standards among the highest in
the midwest. Graduates are prominent statesmen, judges, attorneys,-physicians,
educators, ministers, journalists and industrialists. Approximately 350 alumni
are practicing attorneys and 450 are physicians or surgeons. In 1972, the
national average for admission to medical schools was 38 -percent. Wabash's
average was 65 percent. Approximately half of the graduating seniors each year
go on to further their education in post-graduate schools.
Important figures in the history of Indiana as well as the country
have been Wabash men.
Caleb Mills, the first professor at Wabash, was responsible for developing
public education in Indiana. Thomas Marshall, a Wabash alumnus, was vice
president of the United States. John L. Campbell is recognized as being the
first person to suggest the international Exhibition of 1876 in Philadelphia
to celebrate the centennial. He was later its permanant secretary.
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On Nov. 12, Wabash and DePauw University will once again renew the
"Oldest Continuous Football Rivalry West of the Alleghenies." The prize for
the victor is the 350-pound Monon Bell, donated to the two institutions by
the Monon railroad.
The Bell is currently at Wabash after the Little Giants beat the
Dannies 14-7 last year. Wabash plans to keep the Bell in 1977. So far
into the season, DePauw, a rest home for sissies, is-1 and 4, while Wabash
is 4 and 1.
The rivalry, carries over to other sports as well. Last year, Wabash
beat DePauw in every contest but one. This--year, the .Little Giants have
been victorious in soccer and cross country. The-football game is the
hottest rivalry of all and the first nine games of the season do not
count when the teams meet on the field.
As with any game,.training is the most important-aspect. In the Sept.
.10, 1973, edition of.Sports Illustrated, an article describes how the DePauw
coach drives 30 miles from Greencastle to Crawfordsville, drops the
team off on the Wabash campus and they "run like hell for home."
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.-ZAWFORDSVILLE. INDIANA 47933
April 10, 1975
LILLY LIGRA;:Y
1:, teri h in the nation in ;upplyin,- the;,i::Lry
i-culty to the 34 top."precut;iouc universities".
In c~ ` c .crti~t for Nov cc. 1972, in a table entitled "i.vcra ;e
.1,1:1 1il Productlvlt3r of I ns~t . ~iition S with Respect i0 Science Graduates
:~waried 1ST Fellowships in 1909, 1970, and 1971", Wabash College
r.nced tenth in the nation in the number of awards per 100 science
graduates per year.
lz a stwcy published in the Chao. icle of ii_,. -her Education for i arch 30,
1:;709 college classes of 1963 and 19o9 were ranked in academic
institutions throughout the country with regard to winning Woodrow
Wilson awards. Wabash. College was 18th.
In 5bience for August .9, 1974, There is a study of the origin of doctoral
itutions. Wabash College placed
degrees of students from 295 inst40
32nd during the period-1920-1939 and 30th during 1950-19.61.
Wabash College was host-in 1973 to the NCAA College Division track and
field meet.
Caleb Iilis was responsible for developing public education in Indiana.
John.Lyle Cal;tpbel1 is recognized as being the first person to suggest the
Interns.tional Exhibition of 1676 in Philadelphia..to celebrate the
centennial. He was later its permanent secretary.
. T hcmas Xarshall, a Wabash alumnus, was vice president of the United States.-
Wlabash?College was host to the Olympic Decathalon in 1955 and 1956.
Wabash College has the largest endowment per student among academic
institutions in Indiana.
by two. or more colleges collectively to obtain financial adistance
exclusively from business. and. industry for higher education for uses
other than capital improvements.
In 1570 the Cotncil.on Library Resources made eight initial grants to college
libraries in. the 'United States for the purpose of more closely inter
rating library zzterials with the insti-actional program of the college,
the .Library at Wabash College was one of the first eight to receive
a five-year matching grant of .550,000.
F ank Sparks is credited with originating the idea of organized e~forts
i:. 1501 the Ford Foundation initiated a series of matching grants to private
liberal arts colleges. Wabash College was included in the first
group of eight colleges and received a grant of 32,000,000.
Li .1972 .ho national average for actmiscion to medical schools was 38 . /
percent 'of appliccnts. Wabash College's. average was 65 percent.'
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WABASH COLLEGE
CRAWFORDSVILLE, INDIANA 47933
October 21, 1977
STAT
Central Intelligence Agency
McLean, Virginia 22101
STAT
I thought it might be in-order to outline our suggested
schedule for Admiral Turner's visit to Wabash College on Friday,
November 11, subject to your approval. Please feel free to
suggest any changes you wish.
17:30-18:30 : cocktail hour with alumni class representatives,
their wives, and administrative officers of
the college.
18:45-20:00 : dinner with the same group.
20:30 : talk in college theater to same group, plus
students, faculty, and townspeople (theater
holds about 300 people).
After talk : questions and answers from add&ence.
As far as the time of arrival is concerned, we will leave
that to you. If the Admiral would like to come sooner than 5:30,
we can provide a guest house on the campus where he can be alone
and relax. Or we can do anything else he might like to do, such
as sightseeing or talking with people.
I believe you told me that the Admiral has his own plans for
spending the night Friday. If he wishes to stay in Crawfordsville,
we can make adequate arrangements.
Please le me know if the plans outlined are O.K. or if changes
should be made.
Sincerely,
Donald E. Thompson
Chairman, Lecture Committee
DET:lp
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WABASH COLLEGE
CRAWFORDSVILLE, INDIANA 47933
September 26, 1977
STAT
STAT
Central Intelligence Agency
McLean, Virginia 22101
I suggested when I talked with you last week.
I thought it might be helpful if I summarized our recent talks. I have told
you that information about the scheduling of a well-known artist on November 11
became somehow lost in the shuffle. In the meantime, here is a repeat of what
resentatives of each graduating class (with their wives) will be meeti
'qu1UJ.L _L .L ILL ii J. cuiu
talk in our eater auditorium about 8 or 8:15? If he agrees, there would be a
question and answer period afterward.
on the campus on Noye er -l2. 0n the evening of November 11 the college will
give a cocktail party and dinner for them I have been requested to injn tp
his lecture will be built into the cl s re-presentative ro ram so there should
b about 10 of em in the audience. There will also be students and faculty.
Townspeople are free to attend. The auditorium seats about 300 people.
I believe you said the Admiral would finish at DePauw about 2-3:00 P.M. It is
a forty-five minute drive to Crawfordsville. We could arrange some quiet place
where he and his party could relax for an hour or two before the evening
schedule begins.
DET : bhe
Donald E. Thompson
Chairman, Lecture Committee
STAT
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WABASH COLLEGE
CRAWFORDSVILLE, INDIANA 47933
September 8, 1977
Central Intelligence Agency
McLean, Virginia 22101
I'm very sorry that there has been such a mixup
about Admiral Turner's proposed visit. I do think,
however, that Friday night might not have been
good because of so many possible Wabash-DePauw
activities and also being a weekend. I sincerely
hope the visit can be arranged for Thursday night,
November 10, or some other time.
On several occasions when I have talked with
you I meant to ask if you might know my son. He
is Lt. Cdr. Neil B. Thompson who has been public
information officer for the joint conmland in Taiwan
since 1975. He has been in the navy for about
twelve years.
Sincerely,
Donald E. Thompson
Chairman, Lecture Committee
DET:lp
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WABASH COLLEGE
CRAWFORDSVILLE, INDIANA 47933
July 28, 1977
Central Intelligence Agency
McLean, Virginia 22101
As chairman of the college lecture committee,
information about other events are sent to me. I
have just discovered that another important event
had been scheduled for the night of November 11
before I talked with you about Admiral Turner's visit.
Would it be possible for the Admiral to speak
here on Thursday night, November 10? I certainly
hope so because many people here would like to meet
him and hear his talk.
W
is sort? hat are our financial obligations for a visit )
Sincerely,
Donald E. Thompson
Chairman, Lecture Committee
"14
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ns;
row received a copy of 1ette fr m Donald.
Thompson to
June. You sent it to
'please buz me. "
ER 77-7826
same subject) on
I with a note `
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WABASH COLLEGE
CRAWFORDSVILLE, INDIANA 47933
1')- r/8.26
June 8, 1977
Admiral Stansfield Turner
Central Intelligence Agency
McLean, Virginia 22101
A friend of mine from DePauw University tells
me it is possible that you may visit DePauw on
November 11. If you do, would it be possible for you
also to come to Wabash College? We are only thirty
miles from Greencastle.
I would like to invite you to address our student
body, faculty, and townspeople on any subject of your
choice but particularly on some phase of intelligence
activities that can be discussed. We have a student
body of 800 men. An evening would be preferable but
we could consider another time of day.
I hope you can give us a favorable reply. Thank you.
Sincerely,
Donald E. Thompson
Chairman, Lecture Committee
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TO: a C-T
FROM:
Date:
SUBJECT:!/ GUa~
REMARKS:
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WABASH COLLEGE
CRAWFORDSVILLE. INDIANA 47933
STAT
Central Intelligence Agency
McLean, Virginia 22101
STAT
June I, 1977
A friend of mine from DePauw University says it is possible that
Admiral Turner may visit DePauw on November II. If he does, would it
be possible for the admiral to consider visiting Wabash College. We
are only thirty miles from DePauw.
I shall appreciate hearing from you and hope for a favorable reply.
Thank you for your help.
DET/mvm
Sincerely yours,
/70
Donald E. Thompson
Librarian
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June I, 1977
STAT
STAT
Central Intelligence Agencyl
McLean, Virginia 22101
A friend of mine from DePauw University says it is possible that
Admiral Turner may visit DePauw on November Ii. I.f he does, would It
be possible for the admiral to consider visiting Wabash College. We
are only thirty miles from DePauw.
I shall appreciate hearing from.you and hope for a favorable reply.
Thank you for your help.
Sincerely yours,
Donald E. Thompson
Librarian
DET/mvm,
G'V-- , ~_V ~ ,
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WABASH COLLEGE
Crawfordsville, Indiana
11 November 1977
Admiral and Mrs. Turner
Dr. and Mrs. Thaddeus Seymour
(There may be two other people at the table--as yet unnamed)
Top People at Wabash College
Dr, and Mrs. Thaddeus Seymour, President
Victor Powell, Dean
Dan Evans, Treasurer
Robert Mitchum, Alumni Director
Alan Anderson, Director of Development
Donald Thompson, Librarian; also in charge of lecture series
Wendy Tucker, Head of Publicity
Mike Maloney, Assistant to Head of Publicity
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546 Wabash
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expected to continue in graduate or professional schools. 90 students
awarded baccalaureates 1968-71 received graduate fellowships.
Fees, 1971-72. Full-time tuition $2,420 a year. Part-time tuition $110 a
credit hour. Application $15; health $25 a year: activity $15 a semester;
graduation $20. Room $450 a year; board about $500.
Student Financial Aid, 1970-71. 600 undergraduates received aid.
Scholarships and grants 533, from $200 to $2,500. total $572,425: appli-
cations close May 1. Loans 233, from $100 to $1,500, total $232.070.
College-assigned jobs 237, total $60,957.
Departments and Teaching Staff, 1970-71. Art professors 0. associate
professors 0, assistant professors 1, instructors 1, additional part-time 0:
biology 2,3,3,1,0; chemistry 1,2,2,1,0; classical language 2,0,1,0.0; eco-
nomics 1,1,1,2,0; English 1,2,2,1,1: German and Russian 1,0,1,1.1; his-
tory 1,3,0,0,0; mathematics 2,2,1,1,0; music 0,0,1,2,0; philosophy and
religion 1,3,1,0,0; physics 1,1,2,0,0; political science 0,1,1,2,1; psychology
1,3,2,0,1; Romance language 1,2,1,1,0; speech 1,1,0,0,0; theatre 0,0,1,1,0.
Total: 79. Men full time 74, part time 3; women full time 1, part time 1.
Degrees held: 54 doctorates, 20 master's, 4 bachelor's, I professional.
Enrollment. Fall 1970: Undergraduate 854 men: lower division full
time 471, part time 5; upper division full time 378. 65% of undergradu-
ates came from within state. Transfer students: 8 lower division men.
Foreign Students, 1970-71. Undergraduate 13 men. Europe 3, Latin
America 1, South Asia 9. College offers no scholarships specifically
designated for foreign students.
Student Life. College's 3 residence halls (capacity 168) house 20% of
men. All freshmen and sophomores must live on campus. 65% of men
join and live in 9 fraternities. Additional housing includes private apart-
ments for married students and upper division students. Intercollegiate
athletics: football, basketball, wrestling, track, baseball. Cars permitted.
College sponsors 6-10 cultural productions in Wabash Humanities Cen-
ter. Chapel on campus; Newman Club. Crawfordsville (pop. 13,842) is 45
miles from Indianapolis (metropolitan pop. 1,109,882).
Publications. College catalog, July. Alumni magazine, Wabash Bulle-
tin, quarterly.
Library. 197,565 volumes; 720 current periodicals; 2,500 microfilm
reels; 2,000 discs. 23,672 volumes added, $206,369 spent on books and
periodicals 1967-68-1970-71.
Finances, 1970-71. Total revenues $3,961,289: educational and general
$3,650,667 (student tuition and fees $1,655,408, endowment income
$619,014, gifts $1,282,199, sponsored research $94,046): student aid
$123,404; auxiliary enterprises $187,218. Total expenditures $3,951,209:
educational and general $3,238,524; student aid $525,467; auxiliary en-
terprises $187,218. Net addition to operating reserves $10,080. Net addi-
tion to plant during fiscal year $713,919. Book value of endowment assets
$17.095,314, market value $23,555,783.
Buildings and Grounds. 50 acres. Total value buildings, grounds, equip-
ment $17,900,000.
Administration. President, Thaddeus Seymour. Address admission in-
quiries to Director of Admissions.
Wabash College
301 West Wabash Avenue
Crawfordsville, Indiana 47933
Tel.: (317) 362-1400
Wabash College, a private college for men, offers bachelor's degree
programs in liberal arts.
Accreditation: NCA; chemistry.
History. Established as Wabash Manual Labor College and Teachers
Seminary 1832; first instruction 1833; incorporated 1834; first baccalau-
reate 1837; present name adopted 1851.
Governing Board. 21 trustees; self-perpetuating unit of 14 members; 6
members elected by alumni; 4-year terms; president of college ex officio.
Calendar. Semester system. Regular session early September to early
May. Freshmen admitted September, January. Degrees conferred May.
No regular summer session.
Characteristics of Freshmen, 1970-71. Men: 56% ranked in top fifth of
secondary school class, 27% in second fifth, I1% in third fifth, 5% in
fourth fifth, 2% in bottom fifth. Median SAT scores: 537 verbal, 586
mathematical. I National Merit Scholar. 90% of applicants accepted.
65% of entering freshmen came from within state.
Admission. Rolling admissions plan. For fall acceptance, applications
may be submitted as early as second semester of junior year. Require-
ments: Graduation from accredited secondary school with 4 units En-
glish, 2 in a foreign language, 3 mathematics, 2 laboratory science.
Recommend 1-2 additional units in a foreign language, I additional unit
each in mathematics and science. CEEB SAT. For transfer students: C
average. Maximum credit toward baccalaureate 60 semester hours.
College credit and advanced placement given for college-level work
completed in secondary school on basis of CEEB Advanced Placement
Examinations. Secondary school students may enroll in courses at Wa-
bash.
Degree Requirements. For A.B.: 120 semester hours; C average; final
year in residence. Maximum amount of degree credit allowed toward
baccalaureate from CLEP 8 semester hours. Grading system: A-F; pass-
fail option in I course a semester.
Special Academic Programs. Interdisciplinary programs in Far Eastern
studies. Dual-degree programs in engineering with Columbia University
and.University of Rochester. Afro-American studies program. Philadel-
phia urban semester and New York arts semester. Independent study
and research available in all areas. Member of Great Lakes Colleges
Association.
Degrees Conferred. Year ending June 30, 1971: bachelor's 177 (A.B.).
Honorary 4 (LL.D. 3, L.H.D. 1). Of those receiving baccalaureates, 60%
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DANIEL F. EVANS
TREASURER
WABASH COLLEGE
CRAWFORDSVILLE
INDIANA 47933
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Wabash College is a small, independent, undergraduate liberal arts
college for me. Founded in 1832 by Presbyterian ministers and laymen,
the College has from its beginning been independent of both church and-
state. Wabash, therefore, remains not only one of the few men's colleges,
but one of the few colleges and universities in the country that neither
seeks or accepts federal funds.
Independence is an article of faith here. Our policy affirms a belief
that a community must be self-sufficient, that individual initiative
remains the mainspring of a free society.
Independence touches every aspect of life at the College. Students
take particular pride in the independent environment in which they
study and live. The College has but one rule of conduct. It is simply
stated in the College Catalog, "The student is expected to conduct him-
self at all times, both on and off the campus, as a gentleman and a
responsible citizen."
Wabash stands high among colleges of recognized excellence, a position
derived from rigorous academic standards, dedicated teaching, and a
coherent curriculum.
We believe in the Liberal Arts. The goal of a liberal education, in
the Wabash view, is not simply knowhow, or even knowledge. It is,
rather, the liberally educated man, a man who from his study of science,
literature, history, and other forms of human inquiry, has come to the
realization that the problem of man is man, that the question is not
simply "how?" but "why?" In the final analysis, Wabash holds, liberal
education has as its single aim the humane man.
Today, a liberal arts education is particularly practical as it pre-
pares men to be adaptable and to respond to the demands of an unknown
and uncertain future.
The contributions of Wabash to its region and to the nation have, over
the years, been impressive. Our first professor, Caleb Mills, was re-
sponsible for developing the system of public education in Indiana.
Professor John Lyle Campbell first suggested the Centennial Exhibition
of 1876 in Philadelphia and served as its permanent secretary. Wabash
alumnus Thomas Riley Marshall was Governor of Indiana and Vice President
of the United States.
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The Journal of Chemical Education reported, in the fall of 1973, that
"Wabash ranks tenth in the nation in supplying chemistry faculty to the
34 'top prestigious universities'." In another study, published in
American Scientist at the end of 1972, Wabash ranked eighth in "average
productivity .of institutions with respect to science graduates awarded
National Science Foundation Fellowships in 1969, 1970, and 1971." The
other seven in this group included Harvard, Yale, M.I.T., and California
Institute of Technology.
Wabash has contributed, out of all proportion to its size, to the leader-
ship of Indiana, the Midwest, and the nation. It has always counted
among its alumni prominent statesmen, judges, attorneys, physicians,
educators, ministers, journalists, and industrialists. One Wabash man
is the retired Director of Museum of Natural History (Smithsonian)..
Another is executive vice president of one of the largest charitable
foundations in the world. Wabash graduates have been or are presidents
and chancellors of great universities including the University of Maryland,
University of Bridgeport, and Dominican College. Many are leaders in
industry and commerce. Approximately 350 Wabash alumni are practicing
attorneys, and another 450 are physicians and surgeons. These 800 pro-
fessional men alone represent more than ten percent of all living
alumni, one of whom is the Surgeon General of the United States Navy.
The current president of Wabash is the eleventh in a line of distin-
guished leaders. Among his immediate predecessors were the late Dr.
Frank H. Sparks, founding father of the Council for Financial Aid to
Education and the concept of corporate giving to higher education,
and Dr. Byron K. Trippet, who has continued his service to education
both as president of the Independent College Funds of America and as
president of the University of the Americas in Mexico.
Wabash has a reputation for sound financial management. This is par-
ticularly apparent in the notable growth of the endowment from $12,800,000
(market value) in 1962 to $40,000,000 today. This $47,000 of endowment
for each student places Wabash among the top 5-10 colleges or univer-
sities in the country in this important resource category.
The physical plant includes 32 buildings on 50 acres. The plant
represents an investment outlay of $20,200,000 with a current replace-
ment value, for insurance purposes, of $33,000,000.
Athletics are an integral part of our educational program. At Wabash
a locker is provided for every student, and 85 percent of the students
participate in either one of the 10 varsity sports or the wide range
of intramural athletics. This year, as in most, 10 percent of the
850 man student body is out for varsity football.
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The competition has changed from the early 1900's when Wabash played
Purdue, Notre Dame, Michigan, Illinois, Minnesota and won our share.
The fighting spirit of those days when our teams earned the nickname
"Little Giants" remains a characteristic of Wabash teams today.
This indomitable spirit is contrasted with that of arch rival DePauw.
In the words of John Underwood, Sports Illustrated, September 10, 1973,
describing the series which now stands 39-37-7 in DePauw's favor,
"Wabash has been playing DePauw in the privacy of western
Indiana since 1890, which makes it (orchestra up) 'The Oldest
Continuous Football Rivalry West of the Alleghenies.'...
DePauw on the other hand Underwood continues as he describes
the typical Wabash opinion of DePauw7, is a rest home for
sissies. DePauw men are called 'Dailies' and are a hankie-
waving bunch. Nevertheless, they are not particularly keen-
witted. A Dannie carries an umbrella when the sun is out
and puts it down when it starts to rain. How does a Dannie
get in shape for the big game? The coach dumps him off the
bus at Wabash, and he runs like hell for home."
November 1, 1977
09- el-lw .
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ON " 1OV. ,11
Monday, October V., 1144;,'
Speak At Wabash
SwclaI to.TM News
CRAWFORDSVILLE, Ind. - Adm.
Stansfield Turner, director of the CIA,
will speak on CIA operations at Wabash
College Nov. 11.
Turner's lecture will begin at 8:30
p.m. in Ball Theater of the Humanities
the systems analysis division of the
office of the chief of naval operations.
In 1972, Turner became the 36th
president of the Naval War College in
Newport, R.I., receiving the` rank of
vice admiral.
Center. The speech is free and the
public is invited. I h mote,; 'Stabbed`
Turner was, appointed to the CIA At Reformat ry
post in Marc` $e#ore htheni ' he vas
corn natlder .in, chief of the.:. lied , , snec/al,to,.me hews.
Forces Southe n Europe lapleso" e D LE
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+?7+:' ?AT ` Ff'
a, guided issi e4 rtgate His 4 pore 'a + ,VPts rd Iios~ t r in Jnd as =dle
vision iii tkh office of the chief of naval ' a Investigate s said' seve l ?y fs .
operations and assistant and naval aide are a ion pecttonga
+hlch s ? p l
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4cal in 1970 and assumed comet n"d of a5 a ebster wKa~s serf , g ail a entet ce
carrier tasita--group of. the'Sixth Fleet ~.:.for fits convit ton to ; art o countyg of-..
while ,aboard the-aircraft, carrier uss causing an;in~ury it,,fhe coin issionwof
Independence, After -that; he directed w?y'apf lorry
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Wabash College is a small, independent, liberal arts college for men.
Although founded in 1832 by Presbyterian ministers, the College has no
affiliations with any church. It is also one of the few colleges that neither
seeks nor accepts money from any governmental agency.
In 1973, the Board of Trustees voted unanimously to preserve Wabash as a
college for men. This was not a vote against coeducation; but rather a vote
affirming the importance of men's education as an alternative in our society.
The College launched a $32 million campaign for "Continued independence
and Excellence" in 1974. The goal was reached in December of last year and
the money has been used to endow faculty salaries and scholarships, and to
renovate campus facilities.
Wabash has long been noted for academic standards among the highest in
the midwest. Graduates are prominent statesmen, judges, attorneys, physicians,
educators, ministers, journalists and industrialists. Approximately 350 alumni
are practicing attorneys and 450 are physicians or surgeons. In 1972, the
national average for admission to medical schools was 38 percent. Wabash's
average was 65 percent. Approximately half of the graduating seniors each year
go on to further their education in post-graduate schools.
Important figures in the history of Indiana as well as the country
have been Wabash men.
Caleb Mills, the first professor at Wabash, was responsible for developing
public education in Indiana. Thomas Marshall, a Wabash alumnus, was vice
president of the United States. John L. Campbell is recognized as being the
first person to suggest the international Exhibition of 1876 in Philadelphia
to celebrate the centennial. He was later its permanant secretary.
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On Nov. 12, Wabash and DePauw University will once again renew the
"Oldest Continuous Football Rivalry West of the Alleghenies." The prize for
the victor is the 350-pound Monon Bell, donated to the two institutions by
the Monon railroad.
The Bell is currently at Wabash after the Little Giants beat the
Dannies 14-7 last year. Wabash plans to keep the Bell in 1977. So far
into the season, DePauw, a rest home for sissies, is 1 and 4, while Wabash
is 4 and 1.
The rivalry carries over to other sports as well.- Last year,-Wabash
beat DePauw in every contest but one..--This year,-the--Little Giants have
been victorious in soccer and cross country. The football game is the
hottest rivalry of all and the first nine games of the season do not
count when the teams meet on the field.
As with any game, training is the most important aspect. In the Sept.
10, 1973, edition of.Sports Illustrated, an article-describes how the DePauw
coach drives 30 miles from Greencastle to Crawfordsville, drops the
team off on the Wabash campus and they "run like hell for home."
lb-
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? C fORDSVILLE, INDIANA 47b33
April 10, 1975
1175 . ,_ .:zch Collc;c :,r' cu tc: ;:: in the nation in ;ui~pl~in;~ chc::;iotry
faculty to tho
for 1'iov.C* 1ec. 1972, in a table entitled "Average
a P oauctlv1 y of 1n it ~utions with Respect to Science lrT ouate3
.;S? Fellowships in 1969, 1970, and 1;71"; 'Wabash College
r ..?t:cd tenth in the nation in the number of awards per 100 science
brab, aces per year.
in a s%?:::%`;, published In the Chro-lcle Of ?il.^'her Edu ca .ion ior_! arch 309
? !;:170, college classes 01r 1068 and 1.969 were rcuu:GCi Jr, Zi:CBdemiiC
institutions throug ou, h country with regard to winni.r ; Woodrow
Wilson awards. Wabash College was 18th.
In :;cie :.e for Au`""ast .9, 197k, There is a study of the origin of doctoral
degrees of-students from 295 institutions. Wabash- College -placed
32nd during the period 1920-1939 and 30th dar:zn 1950-19051.
Wabash College was host in 1973 to the-NCAA College Division tract. and
field meet,
Caleb ells was responsible for developing public education in Indiana.-
John -Lyle Ca.:mpbell is recognized as being the first person to suggest the
Inte~.ationai t tion of 1676 in Phiiadelp:ia..to celebrate the
centem ial. He was late:c its permanent secretary.
.Thomas iarshall9 a Wabash alumnus, was vice president of the United States.
Wabash -College was host to the Olympic Decathalon in 1955 and 1956.
Wabash College has the largest endowment per student among academic
institutions in Indiana.
r a Sra~.cs is credited with originating the idea of organized ebforts
by two. or more colleges collectively to obtain financial s.idistance
exclusively from business s,nd industry for higher education for uses
other than capital improvements. .
In. 1970 ;:he'. Council. on Library Resources made eight initial grants to college
Ja.braries in the United 'States for the purpose of more closely integ-
rat~:.~ library ra, teTials with the ins1~ructional program of ~ the college,
The -ii library at Wabash College was one of the first eight to receive
a five-year matching grant of $50,0000
In 190 _ Ford Y'ouno.ation iritnatea. a series of matching grants to private
scra1 ar s colleges. biabash College was included in the first
;rou of eight; colleges and received a grant of $2,000,000.
0-,j1 average for admission to medical schools was 38 / .
In 972 he i
percen,. of applicants. Wabash College's . average was 65 percent.
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DePauw University
Greencastle, Ind.
1100-1400, Friday, 11 November 1977
Wabash Universit
Crawfordsville, Ind.
1700-2100, Friday, 11 November 1977
SECRECY AND MORALITY IN INTELLIGENCE
A. Past seven months
looking at/explaining past intel activities
not exercise in burying/praising past
value of looking at past: makes you want to
of our nation.
find ways to ensure mistakes/impressions of
mistakes don't reoccur. All we do must rest on
a solid foundation of the ethical/moral values
B. Ethics
- Would like to write a formal code of ethics for
the IC. Not an effort to restrict action, instead to
try to help. We all have own personal code, but
organizations must have standards too. Unexpressed,
they can only be assumed. It really isn't fair
to our employees to expect them to live up to
standards which have not been made explicit.
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Problems:
1. Values hard to pin down; interpretations of
national ethics change with time and cir-
cumstance.
2. Difficult to test acceptability of secret
operations through public opinion. Consequently
must attempt to judge what the nation wants
today and will continue to approve tomorrow.
In doing so, whether or not a formal code of ethics
can be written, the reassessment of our operations
and their measurement against today's expressed ethics
is worthwhile because:
a. it sensitizes the whole IC to the
issues, and
b. it encourages public understanding of the
real problems involved in trying to run
an intelligence organization. in accordance
with the Marquis of Queensbury rules.
We do have some guidelines, however, - for instance on the
1. Domestic side that is, activities involving U.S.
citizens, in U.S.A., have easiest time.
Most are closely controlled by law, e.g.,
new wiretap legislation. I'm sure you feel
as I do - don't want to go to jail any more
than any other citizen.
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- In other cases we are regulated by Presidential
order:
Assassinations.
- Finally, have our own regulations:
a. Media.
Today - no paid contractual relationships
with accredited American media are permitted.
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We don't use them as agents. However,
do respect journalists as citizens. They
have right to assist the government by
passing on observations/information if they
so desire. Nothing improper. Injurious
freedom? press sharing -
b. Clergy/missionaries
No secret, paid or unpaid, contractual
relationships permitted. None exist.
c. Academia
Do have paid relationships - e.g., engage
professors to write or do research for us.
Afraid, however, the popular but unreasonable
view in some areas of academe that any
relationship between the academic and intell
communities is improper. This had led
to unhealthy reduction in the amount of contact
I hope to expand those relationships.
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Let me dwell on this a bit as it is
important, controversial, and not well
understood.
I don't want to undermine academia:
1) By influencing curricula/teaching;
2) By tarnishing image.
Thus, we will not enter into paid or unpaid
relationships which would prejudice teaching
responsibilities nor will we use academic
status of one of our associates to conceal
his identity.
But within those limits still lots of room
for association with the IC which need not call
into doubt the authenticity and credibility of
our educational institutions.
The enormous intellectual resources in our universities
should be free to interact with government at all levels.
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Recently, for instance, I asked an imminent Sovietologist to
do some work for us. It would be a shame if he could not because
of irresponsible pressures within the academic community. He will
provide a degree of depth and perspective on the Soviet Union which
it is difficult to find outside the academic community. At the same
time he will become more valuable to his students by improving the
depth of his understanding of how government actually operates in
the Soviet Union. Even if he is not able to relate to his students
the classified information he might acquire in this kind of exchange,
unquestionably his insights and improved understanding will make his
teaching more relevant and enhance his ultimate worth on the campus.
This raises the question -
If a relationship exists between an individual on
campus for example and the IC, should the IC be
obliged to reveal that relationship to the administration
of the school and perhaps even to the public?
I believe it is the individual professor's right to associate with
whomever he deems appropriate and I also believe it is his
prerogative to reveal his relationships to his institution or not;
just as you and I, he should be the final arbiter of who knows his
personal business. Clearly the professor must have a conscience
and perhaps the university some rules about what level of outside
activity constitutes interference with his professional duties, but
such rules should apply to all extra-teaching activities not just
those with the CIA or other intelligence organizations.
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Let me also point out that the benefits of.IC and AC
working together is not a one way street. For instance in the
field of archaeology, some parts of the world are inaccessible,
to archaeologists due to either geography or political climate.
Aerial photographs can not only provide access to the unaccessible,
they can reveal features which are either invisible or distorted
to an observer at ground level. Ancient cities, fortifications,
villas, roads, and other structures which have been eroded by
time, destroyed by war, or in many cases vandalized can be
revealed to the aerial camera. The Intelligence Community,
because of its particular needs, has acquired a massive amount
of photography useful to the academic community.
It would be a shame if this knowledge could not be shared
because universities chose to levy rigid prohibitions on their
faculty.
.-So in the United States, intell activity carefully
circumscribed within a framework of both laws and regulations
which protect the citizen.
2. Overseas and with respect to non-U.S. citizens, the
problem of reflecting our nation's values in intelligence
operations becomes much more of a judgmental question and one
where the trade-offs must be weighed judiciously.
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- In open societies like ours it is relatively
easy to keep abreast of trends/attitudes, foreign
policy initiatives, and to be prepared for future events.
Intelligence operations are largely a matter of shared
confidences, reading the newspapers and journals, and
keeping one's eyes open.
- In closed societies our need for good information
about trends, policies, and intentions is just as great,
while ability to acquire that information openly is
severely limited.
Most extreme example, of course, is Soviet
Russia. First society in our history with potential
to literally destroy us. Need gain access to
assure national security, e.g., SALT; but info.-
needed pertains wider sphere than purely military.
Much more mundane and practical than that - 1972 grain
deal.
Yet only access sometimes is through clandestine means.
Here, the benefits of gaining vital intelligence must
be weighed against our fundamental preference to deal openly
and honestly with our neighbors, and be as solicitous of the
individual rights of foreigners as we are of our own citizens.
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When does the need for good information
outweigh the desire to reflect American
values in everything we do.
Clandestine collection
and covert action are highly charged issues
in the eyes of the average American.
People come to this issue with varied
backgrounds and prejudicies: some wonder
why the U.S. should engage in any
clandestine action at all; others wonder.
whether any clandestine action the U.S. takes
abroad could harm an important American
interest; still others, outraged at Soviet
electronic eavesdropping on U.S. citizens'
phone calls, or Korean payments to U.S.
Congressmen, but uncomfortable about the
basis for their outrage for fear CIA engages
in equivalent practices in the Soviet Union
and Korea, are confused.
Clandestine gathering of information is a
tool used sparingly. There is always a
necessity for ascertaining that. this
information is not available through overt
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or less risky sources. I assure you,
however, that with all the wonderful new
technical means we have today, clandestine
spying is still a vital arrow in our
quiver of intelligence gathering techniques.
- To what lengths should
we go in pursuing information? To what
limits should pragmatism override idealism?
On whose judgment should we depend? Recall
operate largely in secret, public
scrutiny cannot be our guide; we
must find a surrogate process of public
oversight. That has been one major result
of past several years of scrunity and
criticism.
Oversight
(1) Personal interest of President/VP
(2) Senate Select Committee
relations with IC are close and
excellent
(3) New House Committee
- benefits of 1 committee in House
and 1 in Senate
(4) Legal requirement for approval for
covert operations
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- ru-- -
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(5) IOB
C
- Risk in all of this:
(1) Timidity - least common denominator
(2) Security leaks
But I believe in balance - next few
years critical
C. Limits on Public Oversight - More sharing - more in.touch -
within limits of secrecy
Both - process of intelligence - how to do it -
And - Product - Energy - Soviet Economy
Even within limits - Benefits - most important
relates to fact values are hard to pin down;
changing - hence must stay in touch with society,
not only through Congress, elected executive
branch and but also own contact with public.
Where does this all lead?
o New American model of intelligence
- British model - Secrecy
- American model - balance - openess vs. secrecy
Out of :this. balance .-.2.things
(.1) Greater input from public to standards
expect IC
(2) Greater input from IC to public contributing
to a more informed debate on major issues.
This kind dialogue is the essence of the democratic process.
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The D.. j>j !or of Central intelligence
30 November 1977
Again thanks, and all the best.
Yours,
STANSFIELD TURNER.
Mrs. Robert L. Weinberg
STAT,
Dear.Nina,
Thanks so-much for sending all the clippings,
and particularly for the names of thelpeople who
came to the lecture. I must admit there were a
couple I did not identify quickly!
It was really fun to see all of you and I
am only.sorry that they whisked me off to what
turned out to be a Unitarian reception afterwards.
I thought everyone would be there and we would
have more opportunity to visit.
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STAT
rl/i7 /77
V
k~- 4~-a- ',( *>?~
`` () c~ " lKt x- '7L 7Z
s-rV
&I"
U~
CLT-
A &f-c c I
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A h&ye-o- , -:;&- (-P,~ av,-- j -4--
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STAT
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STAT
E-
J = c~ ? 4 L C~a-ate- (~ c9 %~ /~il!`tlk .G ~ GC.~ .
4-P14S -- cc, rte
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STAT
STAT.
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a,Q~ 7- W7:~~
oGAUNCODED_
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November 18, 1977
Admiral Stansfield Turner
The Director of Central Intelligence
Washington, D.C. 20505
Your speech at the North Shore Unitarian Church
in Deerfield last Sunday night was one of the great
occasions for the Church, its members and the Deer-
field, Highland Park communities.
I would again like to thank you for taking the
time to visit with us. I do hope that some years
from now you will accept another invitation for a
return engagement, be it as Director of Central in-
telligence or as Secretary of State.
Everyone also enjoyed meeting Mrs. Turner. It
was kind of her to be present.
With best wishes.
Very incerel yours,
RML:MsM Ric rd Marti Lyon
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Approved
U
CHEVROLET
Admiral Stansfield Turner, Director
Central Intelligence Agency
Washington, D. C. .20505
Clarissa and I both applaud your tremendous performance at
the Unitarian Church last night. You did a superb job..
We are-very happy that a person of your stature andinteg-
you do.
We were also so happy to see Pat. It has been a long time.
Pat commented on the many little messages that we have sent
you over the years.., I. hope you ,maylenjoy the.. one that . is.
enclosed.
Jim jncuso
JVM: j hr > ._.
Enclosure
JAMES V. MANCUSO
CHAIRMAN
:USO CHEVROLET, INC.
I ANCUSO LEASING CO.
673.0020
583.4323
I
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, rim-r-9
I II I I I I 1 I VI I I IpWL 1 _ t I I 1 1 1 I I I I I , I I VIII I I I I : I I I 1 I I 1 1,I1 -1 1 1 11 1 III 1 ;I
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CHEVROLET
November 4, 1977
Admiral Stansfield Turner, Director
Central Intelligence Agency
Washington, D. C. 20505
Both Clarissa and my secretary showed me clippings from the local
papers announcing'you as the speaker at the North Shore Unitarian
Church in Deerfield on November 13th.
Clarissa and I fully intend to be there as a part of your audience.
The thought occurs to me that while you are in Chicago you might
need transportation. We now have a Cadillac dealership, as you
may know, and have available a 1978 Cadillac limousine and driver.
If you have any use for the car and driver I would be happy to
make them available to you during your stay here. If you wish, we
can have the car pick you up at the airport, and you can take it
from there and make whatever use you wish of it.
Also, I know your schedule must be crowded, but if you do have any
time while you are here, and would like a quiet dinner, Clarissa and
I would be most happy to have you as our guest. If you need a con-
venient place to stay, we have a pretty roomy house in Winnetka,
where you (and your wife if she is travelling with you) would be
most welcome to spend a few days.
Stan, I don't want to intrude, but do want to let you know that if
we can be of any service to you while you are in the area, we would
be very happy to do so.
JVM : j hr
Enc. -
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STAT
Dear Nina,
going .to be running from one event to another. As I mentioned, I'm
You were wonderful to offer to have us drop in for cocktails
or such. I'm afraid the. schedule has filled itself up and we are
looking over those photos and trying to remember who's who..
pictures of what we were all like in 1941!. I've had so much fun just
'..,Incidentally, I found that
How nice to hear from you once more and to get the wonderful
even doing a talk on Sunday night at the North Shore Unitarian Church.
in Deerfield. I usually at least take Sunday off!
address has changed
and, just-in case anyone is interested, it-now-is:
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STAT...
-'hope we'll- work-something out on
` A11 --the best.
.Yours,
STAT
STANSFIELD TURNER
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STAT
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CALIFORNIA OFFICE
1801 CENTURY PARK EAST
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90067
AREA CODE 213 277-7200
SEYFARTH, SHAW, FAIRWEATHER & GERALDSON
55 EAST MONROE STREET
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60603
AREA CODE 312 346-8000
CABLE ADDRESS: INTERLEX
October 27,'. 1977,
Admiral Stansfie.ld Turner
The Director of, Central Intelligence
Washington,.D.C. 20.505
to take this. opportunity to invite you and your wife,..
Patricia., to an informal and relaxed supper at 5:30'p.m.
ql-/0-~2
WASHINGTON, D.C. OFFICE
1800 M STREET, N.W.
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20036
AREA CODE 202 872-1300
FLORIDA OFFICE
ONE BISCAYNE TOWER
2 SOUTH BISCAYNE BOULEVARD
MIAMI, FLORIDA 33131
AREA CODE 305 358-1760
The North Sh'ore Unitarian Church is looking for-.
ward. to your speech on November 13, and I would like..
STAT
We will have ample time toi get to the Church.. We
would also like you to be present. for a short reception
at the Church following your address and the question
and answer period.
With best wishes.
RML:MsM Richard Martin Lyon
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I.I. VI
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CALIFORNIA OFFICE
1801 CENTURY PARK EAST
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90067
AREA CODE 213 277-7200
STAT
SEYFARTH, SHAW, FAIRWEATHER & GERALDSON
55 EAST MONROE STREET
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60603
AREA CODE 312 346-8000
CABLE ADDRESS: INTERLEX
WASHINGTON, D.C. OFFICE
1800 M STREET, N.W.
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20036
AREA CODE 202 872-1300
FLORIDA OFFICE
ONE BISCAYNE TOWER
2 SOUTH BISCAYNE BOULEVARD
MIAMI, FLORIDA 33131
AREA CODE 305 358-1760
Central Intelligence /
Washington,,D.C..20505
I enjoyed talking to you again last Tuesday con-
cerning the arrangements for. November 13. An invitation
to. Admiral Turner went out. today. You might want to.
have the following additional details.
STAT
Please tell me if I c be of help in any way.
Si eely,
RML:MsM ichard Marfin Lyon
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STAT
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C
JAMES E. PIKE, C. S.
September 22, 1977
Admiral Stansfield Turner
Director
Central Intelligence Agency
Washington, D. C. 20505
STAT
STAT
STAT
Those two hours on ABC yesterday with David
Hartman and Steve Bell were excellent. What is out-
standing about it is the sense of integrity it brings to the
Administration. And in the face of the Lance hearings
makes for a highly believable and trustworthy balance.
Keep up the good work - your friends out here are all
with you.
Wanted to tell you that a new member of The
Board of Directors of The Mother Churc
She takes office on December 1st. She's
the mother of who I believe has sent his
resume' to you. She's young, attractive (a good tennis
player !) - and adds spiritual depth and a sense of youth-
fulness to The Board. Thought you might like to have
this information.
Hope to hear you out here in November. If
you've any needs that I could help with, let me know.
Warmest regards to Pat and you -
JEP:clt
Dictated, but not
read by Mr. Pike.
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The Direct. _ .of Central intelligence
31 AUG 1977
Mr. Richard Martin Lyon
Seyfarth, Shaw, Fairweather
& Geraldson
55 East Monroe Street
Chicago; Illinois 60603
Dear Mr. Lyon,
information you need for publicity and your introductory
remarks.
talk to the ABA. I too am looking forwar to meeting
you in November and to returning home once again.
I hope the attached biography will provide the
Thank you for sending me a copy of
Again, I'm looking forward to our meeting. In the
STANSFIELD TURNER
STAT
6100- ,,;w
C
STAT
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ADMIRAL:.STANSFIELD TURNER
Dear Jim,
Many thanks for your note.-Pat and I want to
STAT'
STAT
STAT
person.
also were most happy to have an opportunity to
meet Abbie. She is a remarkable and wonderful
thank you again for both the spiritual and material
feasts we enjoyed in San Francisco with you.. We
Thanks for your offer of,a_Paulinized Cadillac.:
We are go e staying with a close friend,
in Winnetka and'-I am sure he will
take care of our transportation needs. I
appreciate it nonetheless.-
If we get to 'see -you. on the lath at-the
Unitarian Church, I-would be-pleased, but I know?
how -busy your schedule is . =
Mr. James E. Pike. C.S.
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STAT.
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S)_ 2V
0
August 25, 1977
Your dad has sent your November 11 to .14 schedule.
You book yourself like a lecturer. It'.-s . good when you can
get one a day - and two in one day is super.
If you need a car - my.Paulinized Cadillac convertible
is at your service. My own schedule is filled, but I hope to
hear you on November ;13th. Incidentally, the North Shore,
Unitarian Church is in Deerfield- on Half Day Road -about
2100 block.
At Wabash College tell Thad.Seymour, the President,
that you'd like to see the new portraits of Frank and Abbi-e
Sparks. They are in, naturally, the Frank H. Sparks Center.
Pat and you will enjoy them.
Good to see you both - better yet to "feel" the inner
enthusiasm you express for all that is great and good.
Love to all of you,
Jame s'- . Pike
P. S. Also take your tennis racquet to DePauw.
is a whiz on the courts.
Admiral Stansfield Turner
Director
Central Intelligence Agency
Washington, D. C. 20505
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CALIFORNIA OFFICE
ISO[ CENTURY PARK EAST
IS ANGELES, CALIF. 90067
AREA CODE 213 277-7200
August 22, 1977
Admiral Stansfield Turner
The .Director. of Central Intelligence
Washington, D.C. 20505
Dear Admiral Turner:
STAT I am lookin forward to-meeting you
WASHINGTON, D.C. OFFICE
1800 M STREET, N.W.
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20036
AREA CODE 202 872-1300
FLORIDA OFFICE
ONE BISCAYNE TOWER
2 SOUTH BISCAYNE BOULEVARD
MIAMI, FLORIDA 33131
AREA CODE 305 358-1760
STAT on November 13. While-I expect.. STAT to work out details I would
appreciate it if material helpful for-publicity
and for my Introduction on the night of-your
address can be forwarded-to me at this. time.
II like to. do
some background work on the speaker of the evening.
Should.you: prefer__it I _can_ of course stop by
your office on one, of my trips to Washington in
the next few weeks..
With best wishes
RML:MsM Richard Martin Ly
Enclosure.
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SEYFARTH, JHAW, FAIRWEATHER & GERALDSON
55 EAST MONROE STREET
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60603
AREA CODE 312 346-8000
.CABLE ADDRESS: INTERLEX
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STAT
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The Dire,., -/of Central Intelligence
Washington, D. C 20505
I
13 June 1977
Dear Mr. Lyon,
to coordinate the final details.
Thanks so much for the invitation to speak
at the North Shore Unitarian Church. I accept
with pleasure.
I understand my staff has been in touch
and Sunday, 13 November is amenable to all.
My staff will continue to be in touch with you
and to. meeting you in November.
I'm looking forward to "coming home" again
STANSFIELD TURNER
Mr. Richard M. Lyon
Seyfarth, Shaw, Fairweather
and Geraldson
55 East Monroe Street
Chicago, Illinois-60603
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f
CALIFORNIA OFFICE
1801 CENTURY PARK EAST
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90067
AREA CODE 213 277-7200
SEYFARTH, SHAW, FAIRWEATHER & GERALDSON
55 EAST MONROE STREET
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60603
AREA CODE 312 346-8000
March 12, 1977
Admiral Stansfield Turner
Director
Central Intelligence. Agency
The White House
Washington,' D.C..
WASHINGTON, D.C. OFFICE
1800 M STREET, N.W.
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20036
AREA CODE 202 872-1300
Dear Admiral Turner:
It was with a great deal of interest .that I,.along.
with many other. residents of the North Shore. of Chicago,
read of the designation and confirmation of a. Highland
Park native as the President's.'choice.to head the Central
Intelligence Agency.
I am writing you. as a member. of. the. Board of Trustees
of the North Shore.Unitarian Church which. draws many of. its
members from Highland Park, .Deerfield, Northbrook, Glenview
and LakeForest,. Illinois:. The Board has asked. me to in-
vite you to give a talk at our Church on a subject:in.the
general area of your new governmental responsibilities.
In view of the New York. Times description of..you as a man
"endlessly curious-about philosophy, . theater, opera.,.in-
ternational politics and military. affairs. I would be most
hesitant to limit. you in. the choice of a to.pic,.,although
of course,.your concepts. of national security and military
affairs would be of real interest..
I would schedule your talk on a Sunday evening of your
choice, and publicize.it in the adjoining suburban communi-
ties.. Since our Church generally enjoys 'a summer recess
from, Mid-June to Mid-September, I might suggest that if you
can accept our invitation that you let me' have.a few possible
dates between now and early June or from late September
th>sough .October, 1977.
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Page: Two.
Chairman,: Board of. Trustees
~1-3 BUov-e.~
193 - P03 o
30
' ,vez,_
STAT
STAT
Admiral Stansf'ield Turner March 12,..1977
In view of the President's. great emphasis on. having
his. Cabinet members... maintain grass roots contacts with
the American people, I certainly want to be one of the
first in line to request that you honor' us wi.th'your
presence..
Enclosed is .'a brochure.'which describes. some of the
aesthetic features of the. North 'ShOre. 'Unitarian Church.'
I look forward. to hearing from you,
Richard. Martin:Lyon:H
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1, 1
I I I I I I I 1 I I ! I I I I III ! I !II I'!II
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the ~L1seOgLass wir2aoius
aF Use
norztb shore
Z1121~QR1Q12 C~2~1t2CF2
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the f iusc-lez-10 - gLass zuinaows of
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~orzeworzo
Integral to architect Ron Dirsmith's imaginative concept of a
worship area for, the North Shore Unitarian Church was a
soaring, sculptured white wall punctuated by multicolored
glass panels. This idea, creatively bold, won enthusiastic re-
ponse from Bob White, artist in fused glass.
the r1orzrb 42or ~r~rta~ziar~ cF~Uwcf~
Minister, architect, and artist then pooled ideas, hopes, and
doubts, as the work evolved. No ordinary, stylized theological
cliches in stained glass would do. This work was to bring vivid
life to the beauty and honesty of the Unitarian Universalist
faith!
Their three-fold effort brought together a rational theology,
an imposing work of art, and an architectural setting to dis-
play it worthily. Its exposition of a liberal religious world-
view is eloquently silent, but expressive in full measure and
lofty impact.
Bob White's glass panels are a modern masterpiece in a medium
wherein he stands virtually alone. Fused glass is more respon-
sive than stained glass to subtleties in the artist's conception.
Applying his talent in both the limitations and opportunities
of this medium, Bob White has created in these 23 panels a
glorious statement of human dignity and worth, of the majesty
of human discovery, and of the ineffable beauty of the uni-
verse we are privileged to inhabit.
May this book celebrate the achievements of a great artist, and
the congregation and friends whose vision and generosity made
this magnificent work possible.
Russell Bletzer
Minister
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IB
0a,
6
C7 ,D
1 Sensitive, intelligent man scans-through the lens of accumulated knowledge
of his predecessors-to farther, clearer reaches of understanding of his uni-
verse. He is Man-the-Searcher, ever inquisitive, daring the unknown, correct-
ing error, revealing new facets of palpable truth. The magnifying lens is
stamped with a theorem of Copernicus. Man's eye embraces the earth turning
in its envelope of atmosphere, into the distant infra of open space and the
Sun-Source, shedding its spectrum range of color from red to violet upon his
gaze. In his raised hand he balances a tetrahedron, a geometric figure drawn
from Euclid. His right arm reaches downward to his fellows with,a gift of
Promethean fire in his hand.
2 "Chimaera and the Lens": gods anthropomorphic and pantheistic created out
of man's fears and mystification. Behind primitive searchings grew founda-
tions of science; analysis, though often grotesquely misguided, was sometimes
serene, inspired, beautiful. Priest, Poet and Philosopher sought to penetrate
the dread veils of death, and to stem tides of social misfortune. In so doing,
they led the way to liberation of human mind from superstition. They
opened doorways and lenses to closer study of the structure, of life and paths
of social growth. A microscopic lens cuts through the images of Sphinx,
Plumed Serpent and a falcon-headed deity of Egypt. A magnified drop of
water and a grain of salt, the cross-section of a vein, tell of Man seeking
truth in the minutiae of his natural environment.
3 The microscopic lens of panel no. 2 continues downward into this section,
capturing the symmetry and beauty of a single snowflake. Beneath the lens
are symbols of dread forces of nature that man has sought to propitiate or
control: quake, storm, flood, and fire.
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0
4 Man has for centuries used the human eye as a mystical symbol of vision and
supreme knowledge. It appears in literary and artistic allusion throughout all
times and cultures into the present. The eye here is the focal center of
surrounding subject matter, in the central panel of the major group. The eye
here depicted is not the "All-seeing eye of God", but the "All-searching eye
of Man", which gathers the rays of light into its crucible and pours them
forth again in all the colors and patterns of the visible world, and searches
for truth in all directions, outward and within.
5 Beneath man's "searching eye" (Panel no. 4), treasures from under the earth
have come into view, as casual chance and directed search revealed marvels of
ancient cultures. Here, left to right, are: 1) irridescent beauty in a buried
Greek vial; 2) prehistoric cave painting of a bison; 3) a stone tablet bearing a
hieroglyphic text.
6 Bands of varying rock strata enfold: 1) skeleton of an insect preserved in
amber. 2) fossil radiolaria; 3) carbonized prehistoric leaf. At the bottom of
this and two following panels is the red of fiery molten rock magma beneath
earth's cold crust.
7 Continuing bands of rock strata show: 1) a 50 million year old bony fish
fossil; 2) a fossil brachiopod with original pearly lustre. In upper position;
an under-earth lake of oil.
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8 The structural patterns of earth's mountains continuing beneath the seas, with sands and tides suggested
above.
9 Man as creator of his environment has expanded his skills in harmony with his expanding knowledge of
physics and mathematics. The Golden Age of classic architecture under Pericles is suggested here by a
corner of the Parthenon, with entablature of the Doric order. Two capitals illustrate Corinthian and
Ionic order of Greek architecture. The Gothic section to the left typifies the fervor of Christian faith
following the dark ages, which produced the soaring, upreaching height of cathedrals. From the engineer-
ing knowledge of. the Romans there developed a new expression, transforming mosaics of opacity into
art realms of unprecedented transparency in colored light. Design of this section suggests the high vault-
ed ceilings of Chartres Cathedral, with the noted Jesse Tree stained glass window. The central section of
Panel no. 9 shows a moon-rocket poised against its launching tower, symbol of man's new-found
command over his environment: the ability to migrate and be housed in the inimical void beyond earth's
atmosphere.
10. Man beneath the scientific lens, showing the autonomic nervous system with its vine-like tentacles
reporting and commanding the functions of organic life. Upper. right is the Code of Hammurabi, from
2100 B.C. in Babylonia, one symbol of man's historic struggle to give law and symmetry to his social
entity. In the lower left are symbols of Greek philosophy, Indian mysticism, and Christian theology -
forces which have moved Western man, over 20 centuries, toward ethical commitment. This panel poses
a question: "What shall be the future line of man's search for and affirmation of truth?"
11 The first"earth-rise" is depicted here: the view witnessed by astronauts on the moon. The theme of
Panel no. 11 is approximately juxtaposed to no. 1, wherein Copernicus' theory states that the earth and
a system of planets revolve around a central sun. Through mastery of mathematics, astronomy, physics,
chemistry, and mechanics, man has reached past the bondage of his native earth, traveled.into outer
space, and beheld his earth as a whole. In the upper section of the panel we see how atomic fusions of
the sun explode, sending energy earthward through the infra of space.
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12 This second group of panels treats of the beauty of man's environment,
beginning with "Splendor of the Skies," first of the group, 12th in the total
series. It opens with the arch of the rainbow, long-familiar symbol of promise
and beauty. Within its embrace are clouds-cirrus, cumulus, and stratus-and
a flare of lightning. A telescopic view of the spiral nebula in Pisces follows.
13 Titled "Flowers of Water", this panel shows the strange forms and beauty of
sea plankton, as revealed by the microscope.
14 "Flowers of Air and Earth Commingling" shows trees reaching branches into
the air, red bird and cedar tree, fronds of palm. In the lower section, a moth
hovers above fern; flowering plants and vine crown an outcropping of rock.
At the far right is the tree beneath the earth, spreading tendrils of a root
system under ground.
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15 From left to right are living coral patterns and tropical fishes in the shallows:
titled "Flowers of the Sea."
16 "Flowers of Mountain, Meadow, and Marsh," showing a plant of the High
Sierras imprisoned in a globe of morning ice; blue lupine spikes; a dragon
fly and an iris.
17 Flame and the pattern of a rocket flare form a pattern called "Flowers of
Fire."
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II 1 I I 1I I I I
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18 "Microcosm." Lower motif diagrams force-patterns of carbon atoms, arranged geometrically to structure
the many-sided hardness of a crude diamond, hardness that exceeds that of all other known substances.
Above this design appear. the nucleolus and chromosomes of a single, general human cell, crowned by the
centrosome which triggers the cell's self-division. Of the trillion diversified cells in the adult human body,
we glimpse here only a miniscule fraction of the complex microcosmic structure. These two motifs together
hint at the presently known structure of inorganic substance and organic life.
19 "From Micro-Cosmos to Macro-Cosmos." This panel assumes a theoretical mid-point at which man's intel-
ligence looks outward to the extensions of space, and inward to.the invisible activity of sub-atomic forces.
Lower motif is the making of matter from energy: a high energy gamma ray is divided into positron and
electron when fired into liquid hydrogen, leaving distinctive tracery of mysterious fact. Upper motif of this
panel diagrams the speculative formation of proto-sun and solar system, born from gravitational forces
working upon planetary dust and inter-spatial gaseous clouds, revolving and evolving.
20 "Listening to the Stars." Pictorial diagram of advancing development of radio-astronomy, which plumbs the
depths and character of distant galaxies by radio-wave, and provides new knowledge of the universe of stars,
sometimes beyond the range of most powerful visual telescopes.
21 (Artist's descriptive notes lost) The viewer here picks up a foretaste of the next panel, with spiral expansion
hinted, but not yet developed. Bob White recalls something of earth's magnetosphere and the phenomenon
of the auroras.
22 "Cosmology - the expanding Universe." Brief hints of spiralling shapes of galaxies believed to be (relative
to a fixed position of the earth in the Milky Way) receding from our position at mathematically determined
speeds illustrated by their spectra. Questions of positive, flat, or negative curvature of the entire cosmos, of
space itself, to what unknown dimension or to infinite extensions of time, matter,. energy, space, and
meaning?
23 Visible at only a few positions in the building: consists of source of light harmonious in color with general
schema of remaining 22 glass panels. In view of the value of the science of spectroscopy to man's search for
reality and promise in his world and in the universes beyond, this pattern of spectral light is an appropriate
conclusion.
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the arztist
Bob White is the lone master .of the medium of fused glass, a transparent
prodigality of color and detail that resembles older stained glass methods
as a bolt of lightning resembles a fluorescent lamp. Through years of experi-
mentation he developed the skill to liberate stained glass from its leaden
divisions that limited the scope of the artist to creating jigsaw puzzles in
glass. The heat of a kiln releases the flow of color into color, the merging of
patterns within one boundary. Fused glass technique enables the artist to
transcend the usual limitations, until he seems to paint radiant colors upon a
transparent canvas!
In total command of this advanced medium, Bob White's impressive scholar-.
ship takes over the conception and planning of his work. The "wall of-glass"
for the North Shore Unitarian Church took shape in the artist's mind and
heart as he pondered the humanistic emphasis of this rational, noncreedal,
dogma-free religious faith. His knowledge of history, medicine, astronomy,
mathematics, and nuclear physics-among other fields of learning-gave variety
and structure to the total work of art, consisting of 23 individual panels.
Let Bob White tell how he conceives the work, its form, and its message:
While all 23 panels of fused glass in the worship area of this church are
designed as a single artistic composition, it was from the first conceived that
this total symphonic scheme should be divided into three separate, related
movements.
The first, major group of openings '.explores thematically Man's age-long.
search for 'the truths ' of the universe. The emphasis is upon man and the
positive factors in his historic, evolution.
The second, middle group of openings, comprising six panels, is the lyrical,
or pastoral movement of the composition. It treats of the beauty of the
natural world surrounding Man, the, flowers of air, earth, water, ' and, fire
which grace his environment. This passage is intended as a ,kind of song of
gratitude for the inexhaustible variety of refreshment and inspiration offered
by Nature to Man's senses.
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The Third Movement (the final, "upper" cluster of free-form glass openings)
seeks to express the forward movement of Man's continuing search for the
truth into the microcosm and macrocosm of reality. Only by the aid of most
ingenious and complex instrumentation and through the lenses of a new
"quantum" mathematics has the contemporary searcher been able to pene-
trate into fields hitherto locked to man's comprehension and investigation.
It is the exciting theme of man's unquenched thirst for further reaches of
exploration and knowledge that prompts the design of these last few panels.
So, in a sense, the composition seeks to indicate pathways toward the un-
known future of Man's destiny. Obviously, the "Unknown Itself" cannot be
depicted, and therefore I have chosen to present symbols of steps already
taken into daring research and speculation, which open out new vistas of the
future directions of penetration of Man's mind into ever-expanding depths
of minutiae and flinging distances of magnitude.
Born the seventh and youngest'child in an Iowa family, Bob knew from the
age of nine that he wanted to be an artist. At the age of seventeen he enrolled
in the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, and later travelled in Europe for
two years, painting as he went from one country to another.
It was at the Chartres Cathedral that he made the choice to work in glass.
He found the light of the windows psychedelic in impact, a pulsating, physical
thing to the eye, like sound upon the ear drum.
After many years of work in conventional stained glass, he began to experi-
ment with fusions, and was pleased with what he found. In 1930 he re-
ceived a Guggenheim fellowship to pursue studies in the creative arts of glass.
He has done painting and sculpture, and sometimes combines the forms and
techniques. But with a major work of art in fused glass completed at the
North Shore Unitarian Church, Bob White went on to an even larger church
project in Mason City, Iowa, where there are two hundred and fifteen fusions,
instead of twenty-three!
There is satisfaction, and gratitude to the artist, also, in the existence in this
church of a masterpiece of art. Although its value and greatness may await the
slow decree of history, we who have participated in the artist's creative
efforts, watching his work grow, have reached our verdict. We know that we
have a monumental work, magnificent in conception and execution, to be
appreciated now, and by ages to come!
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the OPChttCt
Ron Dirsmith is a native of Chicago,
and still works here. Soon after his
graduation from the University of
Illinois, he received a Prix de Rome
fellowship, and spent two years in
Rome, becoming enamored of its an-
cient ruins and ivy-covered walls. To
this respect and love for antiquity, he
brings a freshness of innovative modern
ideas, and blends the two influences
into an architectural style as unique as
his ebullient personality.
A feeling for space - for the people
who use it, and ways they can use it -
is a guiding principle in Ron Dirsmith's
work. It undergirds his aesthetic sim-
plicity and boldness. It has made the
North Shore Unitarian Church a land-
mark of functional church architecture.
Architect and glass artist together cre-
ated the "wall of glass", a noteworthy
achievement and a work of distinction.
1
time ' 1'1' 1121 ter
Born' and. educated in Massachusetts,
Russell Bletzer served his first parish in
Wilton, New Hampshire during his
senior year in Harvard Divinit"School.
Following pastorates in- Erie; Penn-
sylvania.?and Needham; Massachusetts,
he was 'called by the' North Shore
Unitarian Church in 1956, to become
its first full-time minister. The group
at that time was meeting in- rented
quarters, in a school. in ,Lake Forest:
Russell's courageous leadership'in the
pulpit and ' in the community, his attention to pastoral concerns, and his
testament to truth and'to integrity in
his own life. have helped to,gather,?a?
congregation that has had the courage,'
foresight and commitment to join in
the creation. of a worship area that
expresses dedication to beauty and to
highest ideals.
Credits-
Editing/ Russell Bletzer
Design & Graphics / Tak Murakami
Coordinator / Su2anne Dirsmith
Photographs /'cTak Murakami
Typesetting & Protlution / Graphic Design & Typography
Printer / Otar Printin Company
`\ k
\et ~ ~
f?? Copyrigh
;North ShorefUnitarian Church 2100 Hal ay Road, Deerfield, Illinois 60015
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II;I'I~III I! I Imo'
C;IICACO TRIBUNE (SU3URBAN Tt~ li.
met the facts from CIA insider..
By Jean Latz Griffin speak on "Secrecy and Morality is In=
IS THERE really a 007 in the CIA? telligencee" The free lecture is open to the
Is murder part of U.S. espionage?- public, and was arranged by the church. became head of the CIA in
How many secrets do we have tokeep? Maarrch eafterbeing appointed by President
If you would like to ask these and other Carter. Before that he was commander-
questions of a Washington official who is in-chief of the Allied forces in southern
in an excellent position to know the Europe and president of the Naval.War...
answers, you will have the chance Nov.
13. CollegeatNewport,R-L
7i 4,
ADM. STANSFIELD Turner.- Central_f:,'-.TURNER =ATTENDED Amherst
Intelligence Agency director, will speak [Mass.] College and the Naval Academy
and answer questions at 7:30 P.M. in the _ at Annapolis, and was a Rhodes Scholar. -
North Shore Unitarian (march, 21 - 00 Half ; at Oxford University where he received
Day Rd., Deerfieldi ? his master's degree. in philosophy,:'poli- -.
Turner, a native of Hig d rk, will tics, and economics.:
M
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STAT
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Next 10 Page(s) In Document Denied
Iq
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,Glad to be bacx on nL:r';-r1 . riurC ,~1 UU G~1{7L CCld 1.C lw 1i1~ iies C
I appreciate having been raised here.
Since leaving Chicagoland--lived in lots interesting places
Raise family--roots
ry professional roots Navy upturned 9 months ago
Interveneing months exciting
9 months ago came to a beleagered organization in CIA
Investigated--attacked
Fortunate--came at moment opportunity--2 reasons
1. Have in CIA and other intelligence agencies-- one finest groups
of dedicated public servants--record admirable--foundation--
rebuild confidence.
2. Moment when out of the past investigations is ea-AL in.g
Entirely new model of intelligence--American---
Old model--maximum secrecy, agencies and minimum supervision.
New model uniquely sculpted to characteristics of our country
one hand --more open like our socitty
other hand--less independent, more supervised like the
checks and balances in our governmental system--
Let me explain cardinal features
1. Openess--
sharing more--precess clearly cannot tell all
Like Know-- large not spying --simply research.
Sharing more of analysis
check each study --unclassify?
Studies -- Soviet economy
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'~ I! I I'~I I 'I'' II I I k'I I I it !Ilfi. I I .II ~ ~ ~ ~'
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Don't overdo--mustOave secrets
1. Protect secrets
2.' Share with public
3. Keep in tom with public
--recoize must operate intelligence mechaniz,:! ways
I m octant
acceptable ethical / moral standards society
1. Difficult - changing
c
Dif
must be self control -- regulation derives from
1st type control
lose sources
lose advantages
advantages
2 r",rnt test on publj
JCS"`,'""" types
ult judgements -contro s-- 3
fi
Derives efforts to write code ethics -- not easy
enough to be guidance but not tie in knots
Process doing it important-- makes wrestle with issues
~-lcs ,i--- to what lengths
No standard--what info wo
recognize not black and white
on--
closed societies
G 2 /tS
T .-F-or-get -r-- -L've;
alh; itv obtain informati
s cificws anu
2nd form controls in addition self scrutiny -- Pe
regulations
S
wiretaps -- US citizens
ASsassination
--chas
Explicit written u' dance--ne:~t session Congress
3rd Controls Oversight
President
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0
Timidity
2 - 3 years balance
Cut this confident have evolved ways to maintain secrecy
while still conducting intellig nce operations in ways
will only strengthen our open society.
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Lo uLcooer 1~ E
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St. John's Forum
Washington, D. C.
1000, Sunday, 6 November 1977
North Shore Unitarian Church
Chicago, Ill.
1900-2100, Sunday, 13 November 1977
SECRECY AND MORALITY IN INTELLIGENCE
A. Past seven months
looking at/explaining past intel activities
not exercise in burying/praising past
value of looking at past: makes you want to find
ways to ensure mistakes/impressions of mistakes
don't reoccur. All we must do rest on a solid
foundation of the ethical/moral values of our nation.
B. Ethics
- Would like to write a formal code of ethics for the IC.
Not an effort to restrict action, instead to try to help.
We all have own personal code, but organizations must
have standards too. Unexpressed, they can only be assumed-
It really isn't fair to our employees to expect them to
live up to standards which have not been made explicit.
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- Problems:
1. Values hard to pin down; interpretations of
national ethics change with time and circumstance.
2. Difficult to test acceptability of secret operations
through public opinion. Consequently, must attempt
to judge what the nation wants today and will
continue to approve tomorrow.
- In doing so, whether or not a formal code of ethics can
be written, the reassessment of our operations and their
measurement against today's expressed ethics is----worthwhile
because:
a. it sensitizes the whole IC to the issues, and
b. it encourages public understanding of the
real problems involved in trying to run
an intelligence organization in accordance
with the Marquis of Queensbury.rules.
We do have some guidelines however - for instance on the
1. Domestic side that is, activities involving U.S.
citizens, in U.S.A., have easiest time.
- Most are closely controlled by law, e.g.,
new wiretap legislation. I'm sure you feel
as I do - don't want to go to jail any more
than any other citizen.
- In other cases we are regulated by Presidential order:
Assassinations.
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0
Finally, have our own regulations:
a. Media
Today - no paid contractual relationships
with accredited American media are'permitted.
We don't use them as agents. However, do
respect journalists as citizens. They have
right to assist the government by passing
on observations/information if they so
desire. Nothing improper. Injurious
freedom? press sharing -
b. Clergy/missionaries '
No secret, paid or unpaid, contractual
relationships are permitted. None exist.
c. Academia
Do have paid relationships - e.g., engage
professors to write or do research for us.
Afraid, however, the popular but unreasonable
view in some areas of academe that any
relationship between the academic and intel
communities is improper. This has led
to unhealthy reduction in the amount of
contact.
I hope to expand those relationships. Harvard
guidelines, dialogue with Harvard/Amherst;
speaking on campuses.
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4
The enormous intellectual resources in our
universities should be free to interact
with government at all levels.
So within the United States, intel activity carefully
circumscribed within a framework of both laws and regulations
which protect the citizen.
2. Overseas and with respect to non-U.S. citizens, the
problem of reflecting our nation's values in intelligence
operations becomes much more of a judgmental question and one
where the trade-offs must be weighed judiciously.
- In open societies like ours it is relatively easy
to keep abreast of trends/attitudes, foreign policy initiatives,
and to be prepared for future events. Intelligence
operations are largely a matter of shared confidences,
reading the newspapers and journals; and keeping
one's eyes open.
- In closed societies our need for good information
about trends, policies, and intentions is just as great,
while ability to acquire that information openly is
severely limited.
Most extreme example, of course, is Soviet Russia.
First society in our history with potential to
literally destory us. Need gain access to
assure national security - e.g., SALT; but info
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needed pertains wider sphere than purely military.
Much more mundane and practical than that - 1972
grain deal.
Yet, only access sometimes is through clandestine
means.
Here, the benefits of gaining vital intelligence must
be weighed against our fundamental preference to deal
openly and honestly with our neighbors, and be as
solicitious of the individual rights of foreigners as
we are of our own citizens.
When does the need for good information
outweigh the desire to reflect American
values in everything we do?
Clandestine collection and covert
action are highly charged issues in the
eyes of the average American.
People come to this issue with
varied backgrounds and prejudices:
some wonder why the U.S. should
engage in any clandestine action
at all; others wonder whether any
clandestine action the U.S. takes
abroad could harm an important
American interest; still others,
outraged at Soviet electronic
eavesdropping on U.S. citizens'
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6
phone calls, or Korean payments to
U.S. Congressmen, but uncomfortable
about the basis for their outrage
for fear CIA engages in equivalent
practices in the Soviet Union and
Korea, are confused.
Clandestine gathering of information is
a tool used sparingly. There is always
a necessity for ascertaining that this
information is not available through
overt or less risky sources. I assure
you, however, that with all the wonderful
new technical means we have today
clandestine spying is still a vital
arrow in our quiver of intelligence
gathering techniques.
To what lengths, however, should
we go in pursuing information? To what
limits should pragmatism override idealism?
On whose judgment should we depend?
Recall - operate largely in secret,
. public scrutiny cannot be our
guide; we must find a surrogate process
of public oversight. That has been one
major result of past several years
of scrutiny and criticism
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- Oversight
n
(1) Personal interest of President/VP
(2) Senate Select Committee
- relations with IC are close and excellent
(3) New House Committee
benefits of 1 committee in House
and 1 in Senate
(4) Legal requirement for approval for
covert operations
(5) IOB
- Risk in all of this:
(1) Timidity - least common denominator
(2) Security leaks
But I believe in balance - next few years critical
C. Limits on Public Oversight - More sharing - more in touch -
within limits of secrecy
Both - process of intelligence - how to do it - And - Product
Energy - Soviet Economy
Even within limits - Benefits - most important relates to fact
values are hard to pin down; changing - hence must stay in touch
with society, not only through Congress, elected executive branch
but also own contact with public.
- Where does this all lead?
New American model of intelligence
-British model - Secrecy
-American model - balance openess vs secrecy
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Out this balance - 2 things
(1) Greater input from public to
standards expect IC
(2) Greater input from IC to public
contributing to a more informed
debate on major issues
This kind of dialogue is the essence of the democratic
process.
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The Diredor 1 v
Central intelligence Agency
11 January 1978
Dear Clark,
Thanks so much for your note after my visit to Chicago. It
was good to see you, even if the time to visit was rather brief
with all that crowd.
Pat and I are both sorry we did not get to see Woody. We will
look forward to seeing your new place on the Exmoor grounds. I don't
know it specifically but I can certainly picture its setting. I
would think that was one of the better locations on all of the North
Shore -- private, quiet and refined.
I really appreciate your generous remarks on my presentation.
As you can see from the media, it isn't all easy sailing but I am
confident we are moving in the right direction. The support of
friends like you is most helpful and I am grateful for it.
Hope we'll be able to get together more in 1978. Again, thanks
and all the best.
STANSFIELD TURNER
STAT
Mr. C. Clark Fuller, Jr.
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V--1,7-- //
November 30, 1977
Dear Stan,
It was a real pleasure seeing you and Pat again, and
I appreciated your kind note advising of your being in town for
a presentation. Woody was sorry she didn't get to see you both
but perhaps we can arrange our getting together on your next
trip.
I really didn't have the opportunity to explain that we
are currently living in Lake Forest but have just purchased an
older home (1926) on Exmoor, and are in the process of re-
modeling. It is one of the few "Mediterranean culture" homes
in the area and, although not large, is an extremely interesting
structure. It was built by the Hogue family, so perhaps you
know it. We hope to move in around the first of the year and
look forward to showing it to you and Pat.
Stan, I am sure you have received fine reports on
your presentation, but I would like to add mine, too. I have
talked with several of the attendees and they all are favorably
impressed. I am sure that you recognize that, even among
that group, there were those quite critical of some of the
organization's past operations (as I am sure you are), yet
all, I feel, were solidly behind a dynamic intelligence insti-
tution. , In my opinion your presentation instilled a confidence
that you (probably of only a limited number of men) are the man
able to bring that about.
Kindest regards to you both,
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December 6, 1977
Admiral Stansfield Turner
Central Intelligence Agency
Washington, D. C. . 20505 ,,,;;:
. ' ..:Er ASSOCIATE
ONE IBM PLAZA, SUITE 2621 o CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60611
AREA CODE 312 ? 822-0355:,'
LIFE INSURANCE ? ANNUITIES ? DISABILITY `? EMPLOYEE BENEFITS
ROBERT C. PREBLE JR.
Dear Stan::
I don't know'.if you ever'received a copy of the enclosed publication of
the Council. If not, I thought you might be interested
"7 ..
? What struck me were the divergent opinions in many areas between leaders
and the public. For example on page 23,-the "leaders" were far more
negative concerning the CIA than the public Interesting
It was great to see you again and meet your wife. I'll hope for another
and better opportunity in the future.
Robl t eble Jr., CLU.
- RCP j
CHARTERED LIFE UNDERWRITER
LIFE MEMBER MILLION DOLLAR ROUNDTABLE
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FR
John D. Gray
Chairman
Richard E. Burow
Alexander Hehmeyer
Arthur E. Rasmussen
E. Norman Staub
Richard L. Thomas
Mrs. Albert Wohlstetter
Vice Chairmen
David J. Rosso
Treasurer
Robert McNeill
Assistant Treasurer
Mrs. Bernard G. Ziv, Jr.
Secretary
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Roger E. Anderson
Karl D. Bays
William O. Beers
James F. Beret
Robert G. Biesel
Joseph L. Block
Samuel B. Casey, Jr.
Even T. Collinsworth, Jr.
Stanton R. Cook
Wesley M. Dixon, Jr.
John F. Gallagher
Lucius Gregg
Professor Chauncy Harris
Stanley G. Harris
Harold H. Hines, Jr.
James Hoge
Philip Hummer
Professor D. Gale Johnson
Paul R. Judy
Harvey Kapnick
Arthur L. Kelly
Donald P. Kelly
Irving Kupcinet
Mrs. Herbert C. Loth. Jr.
Robert H. Malott
Charles Marshall
Louis E. Martin
Aloysius A. Mazewski
William J. McCarter
Mrs. Charles A. Meyer
Mrs. Newton Minow
Mrs. Kenneth Montgomery
Philip A. Odeen
Frank C. Osment
Senator Charles H. Percy
George Polli
George A. Ranney, Sr.
Arthur W. Schultz
Charles B. Stauffacher
Edmund A. Stephan
Senator Adlai E. Stevenson, III
James H. Stone
Dr. Robert H. Strotz
Howard J. Trienens
J.W. Van Gorkom
Maynard P. Venema
Omer G. Voss
Mrs. J. Harris Ward
ADVISORY BOARD
Augustine S. Hart
Chairman
Charles A. Bane
Melvin Brorby
Edmond I. Eger
Walter T. Fisher
Richard A. Hoefs
Edward D. McDougal, Jr.
Herbert V. Prochnow
Alex R. Seith
Hermon D. Smith
Richard H. Templeton
Clifton M. Utley
Robert E. Wieczorowski
Robert B. Wilcox
Louise Leonard Wright
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The C icago Council On Foreign RelatioL
.~
116 South Michigan Avenue ? Chicago, Illinois 60603 ? (312) 726-386,
November 15, 1977
Admiral Stansfield Turner
Director, Central Intelligence
Central Intelligence Agency
Washington, D.C. 20505
We want to thank you very much for being w
here in Chicago. We were particularly pleased that
schedule permitted you to address the Chicago Commi
which is our senior invitational group and a forum
contains very prominent and influential leaders frc
business and other professions.
It should be underlined that the turnout
meeting was especially large, which was testimony
strong interest in the Agency and in you. We thou?
you handled the session in a most impressive mannei
hope we can have you back in Chicago before too mu(
passes.
Sincerely,
, ('X' ~~/ 4
Arthur Cyr
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JSIDLEY & AUSTINC
ONE FIRST NATIONAL PLAZA
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60603
TELEPHONE 312: 329-5400
TELEX 25-4364
November 10, 1977
WASHINGTON OFFICE
1730 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE, N.W.
WASHINGTON. D. C. 20008
TELEPHONE 202:624-9000
TELEX 89-463
EUROPEAN OFFICE
9 HOLLAND PANE
Pounded in 1866 as LONDON, Wi l 3TH. ENGLAND
Williams & Thompson TELEPHONE 01: 727-1416
TELEX 21781
Adm. Stansfield Turner
Director of Central Intelligence
Central Intelligence Agency
Washington, D.C. 20505
I'm so sorry, but I find that I will be out
of the City when you are here. I will call you the next
time I'm in Washington.
Warmest personal regards.
MIL/dm
STAT
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Ai,.-iIRAL STANSFIELD TURNER
Dear Nina,
31 October 1977
How nice to hear from you once more and to get the wonderful
.looking over those. photos and trying to remember who's who...
pictures of what we were all -like in 1941! I've had so much fun just-
going to be running from one event to another. As I mentioned, I'm
or such.:. I'm afraid the schedule has filled itself.up and we 'are
You were wonderful to offer to have us drop in for cocktails
even doing a talk on Sunday night at the North Shore Unitarian Churc
in Deerfield. I usually at-least .take-Sunday off!
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another. :tri p_ _
A1l --the best.__
address has changed
Yours, ..
. Mrs. Robert Weinberg
STAT
STAT
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The C motor of Central Intelligence
Washington. D. C. 20505
25 October 1977
Dear Morrie,
Thanks for your letter. It was
fun to meet and have a chance to visit.
I most appreciate your willingness to
come all this way to help in this
project.
I do hope we can have a chance to
say hello on the 14th of November. I
look forward to the opportunity to
speak to that group very much.
In the meantime, again thanks and
very best wishes.
STANSFIELD TURNER
STAT
STAT
Mr. Morris I. Leibman
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.:ADIVURAL .STANSFIELD TURNER
STAT
Dear Clark,
Just received your nice note through
Congressman Morgan Murphy. I was up
testifying. before:.,his Committee just today.
I 'am going to be in Chicago for a
speech to the Council on Foreign Relations
at noon on 14 November.. If there is any
chance of seeing you then, I'd.enjoy it.
-In the meantime, thanks for your thoughtful
ness and all the best.to.you and Woody..
Mr-.--:,-C:. Clark Fuller,:-.'Vice:'- President
Amoco--International Oil Company '
Mail Code 4906-A
:200 East Randolph'Drive
Chicago,-'Illinois -60601
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(DIDLEY & AUSTIN
ONE FIRST NATIONAL PLAZA
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS GOG03
TELEPHONE 312: 329-5400
TEIXx 25-43G4
Founded in 1866 as
Williams & Thompson
STAT
STAT
STAT
October 13, 1977
Adxn. Stansfield Turner
Director of Central Intelligence
Central Intelligence Agency
Washington, D.C. 20505
WASHINGTON OFFICE
1730 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE, N.WV.
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20006
TELEPHONE 202: 624-9000
TELEX 89-4G3
EUROPEAN OFFICE
9 HOLLAND PARK
LONDON, wit 3TH, ENGLAND
TELEPHONE 01:727-141G
TELEX 21781
Pardon this long delay in thanking you for your
hospitality and a most interesting luncheon.
I have been travelling a good deal, but have
.managed to explore some of the aspects we talked about. I
look forward to being in touch with shortly.
sends you his warmest and I look
forward to being with you soon again, hopefully when you
are speaking here on November 14th. In that connection,
if there is anything we can do for you while you are here,
please let us know.
MIL/dm
Enclosure
For your records, I'm enclosing a biographical
Warmest personal. regards.
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STAT
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Mrs. Robert ' Weinberg 7-
C
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r
PREBLE ASSOL-JATES
ONE IBM PLAZA, SUITE 2621 ? CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60611
AREA CODE 312 ? 822-0355
LIFE INSURANCE ? ANNUITIES ? DISABILITY ? EMPLOYEE BENEFITS I
CHARTERED LIFE UNDERWRITER
LIFE MEMBER MILLION DOLLAR ROUNDTABLE
September 1, 1977
Admiral Stansfield Turner
Central Intelligence Agency
Washington, D.C. 20505
L2-,~33$"
Dear Stan:.
I note that you will be speaking to-the Chicago Committee of the Council on
.Foreign Relations on November 14th.
I nave ben a director of the-Council for the last six years and will look.1_
forwa d t seeing you again in November:
Frate n lyy
-Robert \(~. (Pfeb1 e, Jr., CLU
RCPjr/lv
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CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY
August 16, 1977
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~.i
PUBLIC AFFAIRS
Phone: (703) 351-7676
Mr. Richard C. Bjorklund
Executive Editor
Lerner Newspapers
7519 North Ashland
Chicago, Illinois 60626'
Dear Mr. Bjorklund,
C
Admiral Turner has asked me to thank you for your letter of
August 2nd. He will be in the Chicago area in mid-November, but
the schedule is still somewhat uncertain. In any event, we will
be happy to cooperate if at all possible. I will give you a call
when our trip plans become firm to see if we can work out a
mutually agreeable date and time.
In the meantime, I am enclosing a biography of Admiral Turner
and some additional information on the CIA which I hope you will
find useful. Please let me know if we can assist in any other way.
Sincerely,
STAT
l
STAT
STAT
Herbert . eu
Assistant to the Director
(Public Affairs)
Enclosures
Biography of Admiral Turner
Central Intelligence Agency Information Kit
A/DCI/PAO:HEHetu/mee
Distribution
Oriq - Addressee w/encls
1 /basic
1 - ER w /basic
1 - PAO Chrono w/basil
1 - Chicago trip file w/basic
1 - PAO Board/ae rey-
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Dear Richard,
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n TITD\TCD n ~~' / J !
:Thanks for your note.: We accept with alacrity and
pleasure your offer to give-us hospitality. on November 12th
and 13th. We. are entirely-in your hands as to what we do
Saturday night or Sunday, other than-my trouncing you in a
game of tennis.
..:'Do look forward to seeing you then..
thanks and all. the best
Mr- R--ichard- D"Harza
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rner ~uvspaers
7519 North Ashland ChicaaolL60626 312 761-7200
Admiral Stanfield Turner
Director
Central Intelligence Agency
Executive Office Building
Washington, D.C. 20506
Dear Admiral Turner:
Our publisher, Louis Lerner, met with You today and passed on to us.
the word that You are a Highland Parker and that You will be in Chi-
cai'o later this Year.
We are eager to have a hometown interview with You, one that would
cover Your residency in Highland Park, Your military career and the
challenges of your present position.
Please have Your staff contact us about the dates of your upcoming
visit to the Chicago area and we will arrange our schedule to the
time you have available.
Richard C. B3orklund
Executive Editor
LINCOLNBELMONT BOOSTER
UPTOWN NEWS
HIGHLAND PARKIHIGHWOOD'
HARLEM!IRVING TIMES
THE SKOKIE LIFE
VOICE OF ELK GROVE VILLAGE
LINCOLN PARKI
RAVENSWOOD!LINCOLNITE
FT. SHERIDAN LIFE
HARLEM!FOSTER TIMES
LINCOLNW00D LIFE
VOICE OF BENSENVILLE!
LAKEVIEW BOOSTER
RAVENSWOOD NE ISL !
DEERFIELLD LINCOLNSHIRE LIFE
SCHILLER PARK TIMES
MORTON GROVE LIFE
WOOD DALE
NORTHCENTERI
ALBANY PARK NEWS 4, 14 j
NORTHBROOKI
JEFFERSON!MAYFAIR TIMES
THE NILES LIFE
VOICE OF ADDISON.
IRVING PARK BOOSTER
TOWN NEWS
FLLD LIFE
PORTAGE PARK TIMES
DES PLAINES EAST MAIN LIFE
VOICE OF ITASC.t ROSELLEI
THE BOOSTER-MAIL EDITION
ROGERS,PARK!
WHEELING!
LOGAN SQUARE TIMES
THE SUNDAY LIFE
BLOOMINGOALE MEDINAH
SKYLINE
EDGEWATER NEWS
BUFFALO GROVE LIFE
NORTHLAKE TIMES
VOICE OF SCHAUMBURG
THE SUNDAY BOOSTER
THE SUNDAYYSTAR
GLENVIEW LIFE
FRANKLIN PARK TIMES
VOICE OF HOFFMAN ESTATES
LAKE FOREST!
PROVISO TIMES
VOICE OF HANOVER PARK
LAKE COUNTY LIFE
RIVER GROVE TIMES
VOICE OF STREAMWOOD!
ELMWOOD PARK TIMES
BARTLETT
NORTHWEST TIMES
NORTHWEST SUNDAY TIMES
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Admiral Stansfield Turner
Director of Central Intelligence
Washington, D. C. 20505
Thanks for your letter of July 20.
-It now looks like John and I won't be coming to Washington
regarding Mercersburg. John's health situation disinclines
us to want him that far from home because his treatment
regimen might suffer. This isn't final until we see how he
looks when he-returns from-two-weeks in California (working
at our office there . )
.We are--delighted to -learn-of-.your November 12-14 visit and
-we-will be here.. We hope you can stilt with ?s . - we can
even house a bodyguard-! Furthermore, I 'plan to achieve.
tennis revenge! If appropriate, we would-like to have some
of your friends in on Saturday night or Sunday afternoon. Pat
and Dorothy can work on that.
We are having a .great summer here. Dorothy just returned
from. Denmark; Laura works at Harza-Chicago and will attend
University of. Michigan this fall. I am busy at the office, but
still play tennis and. read books!
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1VO.ti1IRAL STANSE'IELD TURNER
Dear Cecil,
How nice to hear from you and find.that you are busily
and happily settled in Chicagoland. Pat and I do look for-
ward to coming your way in November. I'm afraid that I will
not arrive in Chicago until Saturday afternoon, and hence
will not have an opportunity to talk to your and the Navy's
recruiters. I am going to goof off on Saturday and Sunday
with a long-time and close friend in Winnetka between
speaking engagements Friday night at Wabash College in
Indiana, Sunday night at the North Shore Unitarian Church
in Highland Park, and Monday noon at-the Council on Foreign
Relations in Chicago. If there's time to get up to Fort
Sheridan, we'll certainly give you a call and hope to drop
by or at least say hello on the phone.
I was most intrigued with the letter which Susie
received from Hollins. Enclosed is an initiative I took
in response. I haven't disclosed Susie's connection with
me, and so I hope she won't be embarrassed.
Do give my best to I enjoyed working
with him several times in the past. All the best to you
and-to Sally. We certainly miss seeing you regularly as.
in Naples.
STANSFIELD TURNER
STAT
Brigadier General F. Cecil Adams, Jr., USA
DCG, USA Recruiting Command
Fort Sheridan, Illinois 60037
,r7p file
(w/o encl)
W/o end)
-STAT
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22 JUL 1977.
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ADMIRAL STANSI'IELD TURNER
20 JUL 1977
Dear Dorothy and Dick,
We are still expectantly waiting and hoping for
the Richard and John visit to Washington to be rescheduled.
Hope it will be soon.
In the meantime, I wanted to let you know that we
are planning to be. in Chicagoland the weekend of
12 November. I am giving a speech at Wabash College
on Friday-night-, the 11-th. We'll proceed by air to
Chicago on Saturday; I then give another talk to the
North Shore Unitarian Church in Highland Park on Sunday
night;- and a final talk?-to the-Council on Foreign Relations
-n.Chicago at noon on Monday, the 14th of November. We
hope we can sign up to see you at your convenience between
our arrival Saturday morning and the talk Sunday.
We'll continue to look forward-to seeing you here
when you are enroute to-Mercersburg. All the best. .
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STAT
SIAI
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AD" IRAL STANSFIELD TURNER
things about it. Despite its great length, I-must-find
How very thoughtful of you to send-The Bodyguard
...,time to get through it quickly.-
at G.D.-Searle. Hope you're not having too many problems
out there in Skokie with the Nazis, as I read in the
Delighted to hear things are going well with you
. press! .
We are coming to Chicagoland in November. I speak
at the Council on Foreign Relations at luncheon on the
-14th. The night before I've been asked to talk at the
North Shore Unitarian Church in Highland Park. We will
be staving inWinnetka with some close friends
that-we might be able to get together for at least a
on Saturday night and Sunday, and hope
brief visit. I'll be in touch..
In the mean-time, again many thanks for your
thoughtfulness-and Pat joins me-in sending our best
to you and Joyce.
The Honorable Donald H. Rumsfeld
G.D. Searle & Company
Box 1045
Skokie, Illinois 60076
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u. J. Searle & Co.
Box 1045
Skokie, Illinois 60076
Telephone (312) 982-700
June 28, 1977
Vice Admiral Stanfield Turner
Central Intelligence Agency
Washington, D.C. 20505
Enclosed is a copy of "Bodyguard of Lies". If you have not read
it, I think you would enjoy it. Since January 20, I have been
able to do a great deal of reading, which for me is a real pleasure,
and found this book of interest and, in view of your new respon-
sibilities, I thought you might enjoy it. I hope things are going
well with you and that the difficult early days of taking over an
organization are behind you.
Joyce and I have moved back to Winnetka and are delighted to be
home. My business responsibilities with G. D. Searle & Co. appear
to be both interesting and challenging. If business or pleasure
brings you to the Chicago area, do let us know as we would enjoy
seeing you.
Warm regards.
ip
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The Direc if Central Intelligence E;cecutivo .:.-, /J {
Washington. DC.20505
13 June 1977
Dear Mr. Cyr,
Thanks so much for the invitation to meet
with The Chicago Council on Foreign Relations.
I accept with pleasure.
I understand my staff has been in touch
and Monday, 14 November is amenable to all. My
staff will continue to be in touch with you to
coordinate the final details.
I'm looking forward to "coming home" again
and to meeting you in November.
STANSFIELD TURNER
Mr. Arthur Cyr
The- Chicago Council on
Foreign Relations
116 South Michigan Avenue
Chicago, Illinois 60603
A/DCI/PAO/kgt/25 May 1977
Distribution:
Orig - Addressee
ER w/basic
1 - A/DCI/PAO w/basic
STAT 1 - 0/DCI
1 - A/DCI/PAO (holdback)
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THE CHICAGO C0MM1EE
Sponsored by The Chicago Council on Foreign Relation:
116 South Michigan Avenue, Chicago 60303
(312) 726.3960
Chairman of
The Committee
JOHN D. GRAY
Chairman
Hart Schaffner & Marx
Vice-Chairman
ARTHUR I.I. WOOD
Chairman of the Board
Sears, Roebuck & Company
Secretary
.EDMUND A. STEPHAN
Senior Partner
Mayer, Brown and Platt
Rear Admiral Stansfield Turner
Director
Central Intelligence Agency
McLean, Virginia
t?
On behalf of The Chicago Committee of The Chicago Council on
A. ROBERT ABBOUD Foreign Relations, I would like to extend to you an invitation
Chairman of the Board
The First National Bank of Chicago to meet with us on a mutually convenient date either in the
ROGER E. ANDERSON
Chairman of the Board
Continental Illinois National Bank
and Trust Company of Chicago
WILLIAM O. BEERS
Chairman of the Board
Krattco Corporation
TAMES F. SERE'
Chairrn;rn & Chief Executive Officer
Borg-Warner Corporation
HUGH M. CAMPBELL
Partner
Price Waterhouse and Co.
STANTON R. COOK
Chairman & Publisher
Chicago Tribune Company
HARVEY KAPNICK
Chairmar.
Arthur Anderson & Co.
late spring or fall of this year.
Composed of Chicago's most influential business, financial,
academic and professional leaders, The Chicago Committee: meets
regularly with prominent national and world figures to discuss
subjects of significance in the field of international affairs.
The enclosed materials indicate a sampling of recent speakers
to The Chicago Committee.
Our program period from September through June features luncheon
meeting . Our speakers normally address the group for twenty to
thirty minutes and then respond to questions from the members.
All sessions are strictly off-the-record, allowing our guests to
speak with absolute candor.
Should your schedule permit a visit to Chicago, we would be
most happy to arrange a date for you. Please indicate__vQ1>.>r'
preferred dates. At that time, John E. Rielly, Program Director
BROOKS McCORMICK -- President & Chief Executive Officer of The Chicago Committee and President of The Chicago Council
International Harvester Company on Foreign Relations, will contact you to determine the specific
ROBERT H. MALOTT
Chairman & President
FMC Corporation
NEWTON N. l.IINOW
Partner
Sidley & Austin
E. NORMAN STAUB
Vice Chairman
The Northern Trust Company
CHARLES B. STAUFFACHER
President & Chief Executive Officer
Field Enterprises, Inc.
date and topic to be presented.
It would be an honor and a pleasure to include you in our
program during this coming program year.
JDG: rcp
JOHN E. SWEARINGEN Enclosure
Chairman of the Board
Standard Oil Company tlndiana)
ROBERT A WOHLSTETTER
Author & Consultant
Program Director
JOHN E. RIELL.Y
President
Chicago Council on Foreign Relations
Sincerely yours,
~4~
I'
1
C`G'
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.II.I,II III
YI I I1 I III, I I I ~ 1 I
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THE
CHICAGO COUNCIL
ON FOREIGN RELATIONS
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Introduction
This year marks the 55th anniversary of
the founding of the Chicago Council on
Foreign Relations. The past two years
have been active ones for the Council,
as both the popular and professional
programs continue to expand.
Membership remains high and has now
averaged 22,000 for the last five years. In
its professional work, the Council
continues to devote substantial
attention to problems related to the
countries of the Organization for
Economic Cooperation and Develop-
ment. We continue our strong interest in
international economic issues,
especially in relation to Europe. We
continue our long-time interest in Japan
and a Council study group resulted in a
second book on this subject--Japan and
the New Asia, published in 1976.
Another study group on the topic
"The State in Europe" resulted in a
book in 1977. The papers presented at
the 1976 meeting of the Atlantic
Conference series (which the Council
administers) resulted in the book
Detente and the Atlantic Nations, also
published in 1977.
Program
The Council has continued the diversi-
fication of its large popular program.
More resources have been devoted
during the past two years to
programming in both the Western and
Northern suburbs, where approximately
half of the Council's members reside. In
addition, we have scheduled a series of
small invitational meetings for members
to give them,an opportunity for
intensive discussions with visiting
experts. Over the past two years, the
Council has featured appearances by an
increasing number of major political
figures. During the Presidential election
year, Governor Jimmy Carter, President
Gerald Ford, and Secretary of State
Henry Kissinger appeared within a brief
period of time in the spring of 1976. The
Council's highly successful Forum
program for younger members continues
to offer over forty meetings a year for
discussion of a wide variety of topics.
The last two years have witnessed
important changes in the United States
government regulations governing
overseas travel and in the travel industry
generally. The Council has responded by
strengthening its program to meet
increased competition and a new set of
circumstances. In addition to offering
affinity charters, the Council's Travel
Department offers a wide variety of non-
affinity charters and low to medium
priced programs as well as luxury tours.
As part of this program, over 4,000
Council members travel each year and
participate in the briefings, seminars,
and lectures that precede and follow
departures. The Council remains strong
in the travel field because of a long-
established record of high quality and
reliability, because considerable
resources are devoted to providing
unusally appealing travel opportunities,
and because of the outstanding leader-
ship provided by Travel Director
Loesken van der Poel.
Finances
The Council financial structure is strong,
reflected in a greatly enlarged program
and budget. The program budget has
tripled since the beginning of the
decade and now regularly totals over $1
million per year. The continuing high
level of general membership, the
successful travel program, substantially
increased corporate support and grants
from domestic and foreign foundations
have enabled the Council to avoid any
deficits, a position that has been main-
tained over the last decade. Under the
leadership of John D. Gray, Chairman of
the Board, corporate financial support
has increased substantially.
In addition to the support the Council
has received from national foundations
in the United States and from European
foundations, we are now turning to local
foundations for support for the
community-oriented aspects of our
work. The Field Foundation of Illinois
has taken the lead with a substantial
grant received in the summer of 1977.
We are also asking assistance from indi-
viduals capable of higher levels of
support. With this in mind, we have
introduced a new category of general
membership--that of Contributing
Member--in the hope that a substantial
percentage of Council members will be
able to increase their financial support.
I would like to express my special thanks
to John D. Gray for his strong support as
Chairman of the Board, to Augustin S.
Hart for his continued leadership as
Chairman of the Board (1974-1975) and
Chairman of the Advisory Board from
1976 to the present. I also want to thank
the members of the Board, Patrons and
Sponsors and other members who have
contributed so much to the success of
the Council's work. Among those whose
devoted service over the past two years
warrants special recognition, I would
like to mention two Board members
who have left the Chicago area this past
year. First, Lawrence C. McQuade, who
served as Vice Chairman and Chairman
of the Program Committee and did
immensely valuable work during a
period of five years in which the
Council's popular and professional
programs were strengthened; second,
Peter T. Jones, who made an
outstanding contribution as Assistant
Treasurer, again over a period of five
years, working closely with the
Treasurer, David J. Rosso, in maintaining
the strong financial position of the
Council.
I would also like to thank the members
of the Staff who worked so diligently to
develop and implement the expanding
program. During the past year there has
been a change in program leadership
with Arthur Cyr succeeding Ian David
Mellon. After making a major
contribution to the work of the Council
over a period of six years, David Mellon
left the Chicago area to take a position
overseas. His successor, Dr. Cyr,
brings to the Council's program a
distinguished record at Harvard, the
Ford Foundation, and UCLA and has
already demonstrated an ability to
provide the kind of professional leader-
ship required. I want to thank my
colleague, Paul Kedrok, who has made a
substantial contribution to the
administrative and operational side of
the Council during the past five years as
a Program Officer and as the Director of
Administration and Operations.
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Detente and the
Atlantic Nations:
The Atlantic Conference
The third in the series of biennial
Atlantic Conferences sponsored by the
Chicago Council on Foreign Relations
was held from November 18-21 at Sea
Island, Georgia. As with earlier meet-
ings, this gathering provided an oppor-
tunity for prominent and influential
leaders from government, politics,
academia and other professions to
discuss important international issues
candidly in a setting removed from
public attention.
The papers produced for discussion
at the November 1976 Atlantic
Conference were published by the
Council in the spring of 1977 under
the title Detente and the Atlantic
Nations. The publication was
disseminated both nationally and
internationally as well as being
made available to Council members.
The book resulting from the conference,
entitled Detente and the Atlantic
Nations, contains the papers discussed.
They include: "U.S. Relations with
Europe and Latin America in an Age of
Detente," by Robert Hunter, Foreign
Policy Advisor to Senator Edward
Kennedy, who now has responsibility for
Western Europe on the National Security
Council staff; "The Implications of
Detente for Latin America: A Latin
American View." by Mariano Grondona,
Director of the Carta Politica in Buenos
Aires, Argentina; "The Political and
Strategic Implications for Western
Europe of U.S.-Soviet Accomodation,"
by Michel Tatu, Foreign Editor of
Le Monde; and "The Implications of
Detente for Canadian Foreign Policy,"
by Albert Legault, Director General of
the Quebec Center of International
Relations.
The overall planning of the conference
series is handled in cooperation with
a Steering Committee composed of
senior leaders from North America, Latin
America, and Western Europe. The
Chicago Council on Foreign Relations
has responsibility for the administration,
planning and implementation of the
international series and the Council's
President serves as the Conference
Director.
Senators Adlai Stevenson (D-Illinois) and
Charles McC. Mathias (R-Maryland)
currently serve as Co-Chairmen of the
conference series. Their introduction to
the conference book provides a useful
summary of the discussions at Sea Is-
land:
"The Atlantic Conference meetings
bring together.... individuals from the
three regions to address issues that are
commonly shared. While there is
recognition that solutions to many of
the political and economic problems of
Western countries can best be found on
a bilateral basis, the conference permits
a multilateral approach to discussion of
those subjects that affect the entire
Atlantic community. Meetings, there-
fore, focus on themes of interest to the
nations of the three regions, rather than
attempting to deal with issues in more
isolated terms....
"By 1976 it had become clear that the
policy of detente between the United
States and the Soviet Union had also
affected the state of affairs between the
United States and both Western Europe
and Latin America. Consequently, it was
decided to devote the 1976 Atlantic
Conference meeting to this topic. Earlier
Atlantic Conferences have reflected the
fact that economic issues have achieved
increased international political impor-
tance. The 1976 session illustrated that
more traditional security and strategic
considerations still play a significant
role in relations among the three re-
gions....
"Several major conclusions emerged
from the discussions at the Sea Island
conference. Perhaps the most significant
was the strong impression that detente is
indeed a term that lacks precise
definition despite the fact that the sub-
ject has generated a great deal of inter-
national attention. Although detente is
frequently construed to apply primarily
to military and related diplomatic
agreements between the United States
and the Soviet Union, it must also be
understood in a broader context, one
having serious implications for diverse
policy areas and relations between the
United States and individual countries
of Western Europe and Latin America.
No matter how significant the specific
accords between the two superpowers
may be, the process of private
negotiation through which they were
reached has complicated relations
among the United States and other
Western nations. In this sense, the term
detente, in practical usage, encompasses
both the narrow field of superpower
strategic accomodation and the related
broader changes in relationships among
a number of nations.
"The discussion, reflecting a major
theme of the papers, included consider-
able attention to the changing character
of the international system. There was
general agreement that divisions among
different nations and alliances are
becoming more complex. Both Western
European allies and Latin American
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neighbors of the United States have
been growing more uncertain and
restive concerning the policies and gen-
eral reliability of the superpowers...
"While there was general agreement
among conference participants that
detente has been an important develop-
ment in terms of overall impact on inter-
national affairs, there were differences
of opinion about the value of the
specific agreements that have been
reached between the United States and
the Soviet Union. Some of the partici-
pants felt that the SALT accords
represent certain achievements that have
helped to control the arms race and
bring friendlier relations between the
United States and the Soviet Union.
Others argued that these agreements
have been oversold, that they have not
restricted the arms race in any signif-
icant sense, and that the Cold War
continues to characterize relations
between the two most powerful
antagonists in the international system."
Island, Georgia, November 18-21, 1976.
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Ii i I I
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Detente and the
Atlantic Nations:
The Atlantic Conference
From left: Jorge Chavez Quelopana, Director,
Centro Altos Estudios Militares, Peru; Eduardo
Fernandez, Opposition Leader (COPEI) and Louis
Esteban Rey, Federal Deputy, both of the
National Congress, Venezuela.
From left: Zbigniew Brzezinski, Director,
Research Institute on International Change,
Columbia University; Karl Kaiser, Director of
Research & Studies, Forschungsinstitut der
Deutschen Gesellschaft fur Auswartige Politik
E.V.; Thierry de Montbrial, Chief of the Policy
Planning Staff, French Ministry of Foreign
Affairs; and Eduardo Frei Montalvo, former
President of Chile.
James Hoge, Editor-in-Chief, Chicago Sun-Times I Chicago Daily News; Senator
Adlai Stevenson III; and Mrs. John D. Gray.
Authors of the Atlantic Conference papers from left: Mariano Grondona, Director, Carta
Politica, Argentina; Robert E. Hunter, Foreign Policy Advisor to Senator Edward M.
Kennedy; Albert Legault, Director, Quebec Center of International Relations,; and
Michel Tatu, Foreign Editor, Le Monde, France.
Left, Richard N. Gardner, Henry L. Moses
Professor of International Law & Organiza-
tion, Columbia University and Zbigniew
Brzezinski.
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From right: Mark MacGuigan, Member of
Parliament, Canada; Tomas Rosa,
President, Portugese Radio and Tele-
vision; and Marcos P. Vianna, President,
National Bank of Economic Development,
Brazil.
Journalists participating in the
Conference included: (from left)
Philip L. Geyelin, Editorial Page
Chief, The Washington Post; Theo
Sommer, Editor-in-Chief, Die Zeit;
Harold Evans, Editor, The Sunday
Times; London; James Hoge,
Editor-in-Chief, Chicago
Sun-Times I Chicago Daily News;
and Maxwell McCrohon, Managing
Editor, The Chicago Tribune.
From left: Mrs. Joseph E. Slater; Helmut Sonnenfeldt, Counsellor, U.S. Department of
State; John Diebold, President, The Diebold Group, Inc.; and Karl Carstens, Leader of
Parliamentary Opposition (CDU /CSU) Bundestag, Federal Republic of Germany.
Left, Francisco Orrego Vicuna, Director, Instituto de
Estudios Internacionales, Universidad de Chile and Council
President and Conference Director John E. Rielly.
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fie' r Policy 0ssues
and the U.S. Eectuen
The climax of the United States bi-
centennial year included national
elections, which resulted in a new
President and other new leadership
entering the senior ranks of the Execu-
tive branch of government. The
American Presidential race involved a
large number of candidates and there
were many others as well running for
lesser national offices. After a wrenching
decade of involvement in Southeast
Asia, the Watergate scandals at home,
and the growth in complexity of inter-
national relations and in the number of
nations in the international system, the
electorate was faced with an important
choice among proponents of new
policies and defenders of past
performance.
The rhetoric of the campaign-including
promises and predictions-and more
thorough and dispassionate analysis as
well, was heard at the Council meetings
where candidates, foreign policy
specialists, and others appeared
regularly to discuss international re-
lation issues, conflicts, and possible
solutions. The debate over detente,
related issues of defense and dis-
armament, and the continuing unrest
and instability in the Middle East and
Africa claimed most attention. Even as
the "old problems" remained unsolved,
new ones arose to command attention;
sovereignty over the Panama Canal,
majority rule in Rhodesia, Cuban
involvement in Angola, and the
emphasis in the U.S. and elsewhere on
the preservation of basic human rights
around the world are some examples.
Council members were exposed to a
considerable range and diversity of
points of view. Columbia University
Professor Zbigniew Brzezinski (now
President Carter's Special Assistant for
National Security Affairs) and journalist
and author William F. Buckley, Jr. were
featured in a two-part evening series
held in the northern suburbs in October
and November 1975. An NBC panel of
correspondents met at Rosary College in
west suburban River Forest for "NBC
News World Report" in January 1976. At
this meeting over 700 members heard
Garrick Utley, Tom Brokaw, Carole
Simpson, Robert Jamieson, Steve
Delaney, Richard Valariani and
moderator Jane Pauley put the year 1975
in perspective.
Presidential Candidates and Foreign
Policy Series
Candidates for the Republican and
Democratic Presidential nominations
who appeared on a Council platform
included President Gerald Ford,
Governor Jimmy Carter and R. Sargent
-Shriver.
Before 2,500 Council Members on
March 12, 1976, in the Grand Ballroom
of the Palmer House, President Ford
defended his defense budget request, his
attempts to reduce the arms race
through the Vladivostok agreement, the
strengthening of foreign intelligence
operations, and the Sinai Agreement
concluded in September 1975. He told
the audience "We stand for strength -
our national strength that makes both
peace and freedom secure for ourselves
and for others - because that kind of
strength is right and will certainly
prevail".
On March 15, 1976, Governor Jimmy
Carter outlined his four basic principles
for U.S. foreign policy. He told a noon
Council audience that first, policies
Governor Jimmy Carter of Georgia, Democratic Presidential Nominee, addressed the
Council at a noon meeting March 15, 1976 as part of the "Presidential Candidates and
Foreign Policy" series.
should be open, honest, compassionate
and emerge from public debate and
Congressional participation; second,
people of other nations should be
treated with dignity and respect; third,
U.S. moral authority should be restored
in the search for peace, arms control,
and support of humanitarian aspirations
of the world's peoples; and fourth,
policies should aim at building a just
and peaceful world order. Governor
Carter in this speech went on record as
favoring the Trident submarine program
but was against production of the B-1
manned bomber.
Sargent Shriver's speech to the Council
in February 1976 focused on internation-
al economics. He proposed that the U.S.
take the lead in rebuilding a stable inter-
national economic order, urging "policy
coordination in energy, raw materials,
development and finance" and greater
integration of third world countries into
the economic system.
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President Gerald R. Ford with Council Board Chairman Augustin S. Hart (left); Board Member William 0. Beers (far left) and Council
President John E. Rielly (right) at the reception preceding the President's address to the Council on March 12, 1976.
Observations from the Fourth Estate
Henry Brandon, veteran Washington
correspondent of the Sunday Times of
London, in an address before a Lecture
Forum Series meeting in February 1976,
blamed a lack of consensus in the U.S.
on foreign policy for diminished
American power worldwide. "This
missing consensus divides the Congress,
the press, and the nation and causes
confusion about American foreign
policy around the world," said Brandon.
Max Frankel of the New York rimes
addressed the same series in April and
claimed that the main theme of the
presidential candidates regarding
foreign policy seemed to be criticism of
Secretary of State Kissinger rather than
discussion of the issues. On national
security matters, Frankel criticized the
notion that nuclear strength was the
largest factor, saying "Our national
security has always been our wealth, re-
sources, trade, talent, and people."
rime magazine's Editor-in-Chief Hedley
Donovan addressed the Council's annual
meeting in June 1976. He singled out
detente with the Soviets as the most
complex foreign policy issue of the
presidential campaign and noted that
"The hyperbole surrounding detente
obscures the fact that detente was not a
whole transformation of our relations
with the Soviets, but rather a
worthwhile, modest improvement of
that relationship which included
prospects for some further steps toward
strategic arms limitations and improved
trade."
The Secretary of State Speaks
for Himself
Henry Kissinger addressed a special
Council luncheon at the Palmer House
in July 1976 and warned that American
foreign policy would be a factor con-
tributing to world instability if its
objectives and ideals changed every four
years as a result of national elections.
"Whether the process producing policy
is solitary or done by committee, the
nation will have to continue to engage
itself in managing the transition from
the post-war international order based
primarily on defense against aggression
to a new international system which
adds to security the needs of economic
cooperation and political consensus on
a global scale."
Election Aftermath
"The Morning After" was assessed by
Robert Hunter at a north suburban
luncheon meeting held the day
following the Presidential elections in
November 1976. Senator Edward
Kennedy's foreign policy advisor noted
that in running U.S. foreign policy the
"who" changed with the preceding day's
results but the "what" remained the
same because the key issues facing the
new administration would continue to
be a new arms control agreement with
the Soviets, the emerging relationship
with the People's Republic of China and
stabilizing relations between the have
and have-not nations in a global
economy. Ford Foundation President
McGeorge Bundy addressed the De-
cember 1976 Lecture Forum audience on
the dangers on the international scene
confronting the new Administration. He
warned of impending confrontation in
the Middle East, deteriorating economic
relations between the U.S. and its allies
Great Britain and Italy and especially,
"the unchained threat of nuclear
proliferation."
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Foreign Policy Issues
and the U. S. Election
William F. Buckley, Jr., Editor, National
Review, at the north suburban evening
lecture in Northfield, November 6, 1975.
McGeorge Bundy, President, Ford
Foundation, addressing the December
Lecture Forum Series meeting In 1976.
Henry Brandon, Associate Editor and
Washington Bureau Chief, The Sunday
Times, London, at the February 3, 1976
Lecture Forum Series meeting.
"NBC News World Report" team at the January 11, 1976 meeting in River Forest, Illinois.
Speakers included Tom Brokaw, Garrick Utley, Steve Delaney, Richard Valariani, Carole
Simpson, Robert Jamison and moderator Jane Pauley.
Secretary of State Henry Kissinger
addressing a Council luncheon July 6,
1976 in the Grand Ballroom of the Palmer
House in Chicago.
Max Frankel, Editorial Page Editor, The
New York Times addressed the April 6
meeting of the Lecture Forum Series In
1976.
Zbigniew Brzezinski, Director of Columbia
University's Research Institute on Interna-
tional Change, speaking at an evening
lecture In Northfield, Illinois, October 30,
1975.
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The Corporate
Service Program of the Council
In recent decades, and especially during
the last decade, the city of Chicago has
become increasingly important as a
center of international trade and
commerce. Consequently, the business
community has assumed an expanding
role in the overall program of the
Council on Foreign Relations. In 1974 a
specific Corporate Service Program was
launched to address the needs
and interests of business executives and
firms in the Midwestern region. During
the past two years the program has
developed considerable impetus. A
number of meetings have been held
under this rubric, and - as indicated
elsewhere in this report - corporate
contributions to the Council have risen
sharply. Among the benefits of
corporate membership are invitations
to additional private consultations,
lunches, and dinners for visiting
business and government leaders,
complimentary individual memberships
in the Council, and a complimentary
subscription to the journal Foreign
Policy.
Meetings held recently indicate the
range of concerns presently of strong
interest to the business community and
to the Corporate Service Program. In
March 1977 a major half-day conference
was held on the theme of "Bribery,
Sensitive Payments, and Federal
Regulations." Featured speakers
included Stanley Sporkin, Director of
Enforcement for the Securities and
Exchange Commission, and Stanley
Marcuss, then Counsel to the Senate
International Finance Subcommittee,
who has since become Deputy Assistant
Secretary of Commerce for Domestic
and International Business.
Other Corporate Service sessions have
addressed such topics as the complex
and controversial trading relationship
between the United States and Japan,
the investment climates in Canada and
Australia, recent economic
developments in West Europe, and
credit and related problems in doing
business with the Soviet Union and
Eastern Europe. Speakers and other
featured participants at these meetings
have included Robert Ingersoll, former
Ambassador to Japan and a leader of the
Chicago business and professional
community; Harald Malmgren, a key
trade official in the Johnson and Nixon
Administrations; three senior
economists from the Japan Economic
Research Center; John Howard, Minister
for Business and Consumer Affairs in
Canada; Peter Such man, Deputy
Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for
Tariff Affairs; and Mario Barone,
Managing Director of the Banco di
Roma.
These major meetings have been
complemented by various private
consultations for corporate members of
the Council. Visiting officials who have
been hosted at such consultations
include Congressman Albert C. Ullman,
Chairman of the House Ways and Means
Committee; Ralph Pfeiffer, Jr., Chairman
of IBM World Trade Americas/Far East
Corporation; Senator William Proxmire
Chairman of the Senate Banking
Committee; Congressman Henry Reuss,
Chairman of the House Banking
Committee; and Congressman Dan
Rostenkowski of the House Ways and
Means Committee.
Stanley Sporkin, Director, Enforcement
Division of the Securities and Exchange
Commission, spoke at the March 8, 1977
conference on "Bribery, Sensitive
Payments & Federal Regulation."
A half-day conference sponsored by the
Council's Corporate Service Program
considered "United States and Japan:
Partners or Competitors in International
Trade?" on November 10, 1976 (above).
Speakers included Hisao Kanamori of the
Japan Economic Journal (left) and Harald
Malmgren, trade consultant, Washington,
D.C.
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Arms Control
International Security
and Detente
Few issues compete in international
importance with those concerning war,
peace; security, and military
competition. The Chicago Council on
Foreign Relations has become
increasingly involved in analysis of this
subject. Different topics under the arms
and security rubric have been addressed
by a number of speakers in the course of
the last two program years.
Former Defense Secretary James
Schlesinger, appearing before a north
suburban Council dinner meeting in
March, 1976, warned that detente with
James Schlesinger, former Secretary of
Defense, addressing the March 10, 1976
north suburban dinner meeting on
"Defense & Detente."
Paul Wamke, attorney and defense
specialist addressing a noon meeting
December 16, 1976 on the topic of U.S.-
Soviet and U.S.-China affairs.
the Soviets had not meant any cessation
of military growth by the Warsaw Pact
nations and that the U.S. defense budget
was declining in real dollars as well as
percentage of GNP while the Soviet
capabilities were growing. Paul Warnke,
former Assistant Secretary of Defense for
International Security Affairs and now
Director of the Arms Control and Dis-
armament Agency, addressed a noon
Council meeting in December 1976.
Regarding reevaluations of U.S.
estimates of Soviet military spending,
Warnke asserted that "The Soviets have
just about what we always thought they
had; the surprise is that it is costing
them twice as much as we had
surmised."
Views from the Senate
A noon Council audience in October
1976 heard Senator John Culver (D-lowa)
deplore rapidly escalating arms sales
worldwide saying "The end result of the
massive build-up of indiscriminate arms
sales around the world has definitely not
increased stability and security, but has
more often created tension, insecurity,
and the heating up of traditional hos-
tilities." He suggested that western
nations develop forums and procedures
for cooperation in limiting arms sales
and the exportation of high-technology
systems, particularly to developing
nations.
Senator John Tower (R-Texas) told the
February 1977 Lecture Forum meeting
that he felt liberals were responsible for
a "new isolationism" in world affairs and
called Americans "naive" regarding
Soviet intentions. He advocated in-
creased military spending by the U.S. to
maintain superiority, adding that "Not
only must we maintain our military
capability, but also maintain the will to
use it." In the opening lecture of that
series in September, Senator Frank
Church (D-Idaho) called for a nuclear
weapons curb in the face of the energy
shortage which was causing worldwide
demands for nuclear reactors. Church
warned that "Today we confront the
worst peril yet in the unhappy history of
man against the bomb ... the lure of
enormous profits becomes overriding
and considerations of arms control and
environmental safety - even the spectre
of nuclear war itself - give way."
Detente was discussed by Senator Adlai
Stevenson I I I (D-Illinois) and Charles
McC. Mathias (R-Maryland) at an
October 1976 Council dinner in the
northern suburbs. Stevenson argued that
detente as an objective was not arguable
"but as a method it is a failure" and
Mathias countered that he himself was
an "absolute believer" in detente and
that "without a relaxation of tensions
the world cannot weather the next 30
years."
The Military Perspective
Exponents of military viewpoints at
Council meetings included Generals
Alexander Haig and George Keegan and
Admirals Gene La Rocque and Elmo
Zumwalt. General Haig, Supreme Allied
Commander for Europe, appeared at a
western suburban dinner meeting in
December 1976 and noted that "I would
be less than frank if I didn't
acknowledge that detente has caused
problems for NATO members" and he
stressed the importance of the
"relentless growth of the Soviet military
as a clear threat."
Negotiating Security
in the Face of Competition
In November 1976, Fred C. Ikle, Director
of the Arms Control and Disarmament
Agency, warned from a Council platform
that the new administration in
Washington must learn two important
lessons from the past 20 years of negoti-
ating experience: "Agreements for the
sake of agreements are not likely to
encourage progress and we should be
wary of expecting to achieve rapid
results by substituting unilateral action
for difficult and protracted negotia-
tions." Marshall Shulman of Columbia
University, Special Consultant to
Secretary of State Vance on Soviet
Affairs, addressed a north suburban
dinner meeting in May 1977 and warned
of U.S. complacency toward Soviet
military competition and noted that the
relative instability of new weaponry had
increased in recent years.
The Council sponsored a major one-day
conference in April 1977 entitled "Issues
in European Security", providing an
opportunity to bring together specialists
from the Midwest and beyond. Professor
Sam C. Sarkesian of Loyola University
chaired the proceedings and papers
were presented by Professors Bernard
Brodie and Roman Kolkowicz of UCLA,
Professor Morton Kaplan of the
University of Chicago, and Dr. Steven
Canby of Washington. Professors Jeremy
Azrael and Morris Janowitz of the
University of Chicago served as
commentators.
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Senator John Tower
(R.-Tex.) discussed U.S.
defense needs at the
February 1 Lecture Forum
Series meeting in 1977.
f~, 3"fN
Council Board members meet with James
Schlesinger at a reception preceding the March 10
dinner. (From left) Mr. & Mrs. Richard L. Thomas,
James Schlesinger, Mrs. J. Harris Ward, and Mrs. &
Mr. Edmund A. Stephan.
Senator John Culver
(D.-Iowa) addressed
a noon Council
meeting on arms
sales on October 22,
1976.
Board member James F. Berg (left) greets guest
speaker Donald Rumsfeld (right), Secretary
of Defense, at the January, 1977 Council Board of
Directors meeting. (Center left & right) Even T.
Collinsworth, Jr. and John E. Rielly.
Senators Charles McC. Mathias, Jr.
Senator Frank Church (D-Idaho) meets
General Alexander M.
(R.-Md.) and Adlai E. Stevenson III
with members following his September
Haig, Supreme Allied
(D-III.) debated the merits of detente at
21 Lecture Forum Series address in
Commander, Europe, at
the October 8 dinner meeting In
1976.
the December 1, 1976
Wilmette, Illinois In 1976.
Council dinner In Oak-
brook, Illinois.
Marshall Shulman, Consultant to the
Secretary of State on Soviet Affairs, meets
with Council Sponsors and Patrons prior
to his address on Soviet Affairs at a May 25
Council dinner meeting In Wilmette,
Illinois.,
"European Security In the 1 J70's" was the topic of discussion at this Council
conference held April 29, 1977.
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The Middle East:
Search for a Settlement
Ashraf Ghorbal, Ambassador of the Arab Republic of Egypt to the U.S. addressing the April
13, 1977 noon Council meeting. Panelists included (left) M. Cherif Bassiouni, Law
Professor, De Paul University and Michael McGuire, Foreign Editor, The Chicago Tribune.
Nearly 30 years have elapsed since the
creation of the state of Israel and yet
that nation's relations with its Arab
neighbors continue to be a source of
imminent confrontation not only for
Middle Eastern countries but the world's
larger powers as well. The last two years
have witnessed considerable efforts by
some of the parties involved to convene
a Geneva Conference designed to
provide a permanent peaceful
settlement.
Issues in the Middle East continue to be
of priority interest to Council members.
In October 1975 Senator Joseph Biden
(D-Del.) addressed the North Suburban
Luncheon Lecture Series and criticized
Secretary of State Kissinger's concept of
the United States as the "watchman of
the free world" and announced at that
meeting that the U.S. public should be
told of the commitments involved in the
Sinai Accords. As a member of the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee,
Biden said he would personally disclose
the contents of the Accords if the
Committee refused to do so. On the
same topic, Newsweek's Paris Bureau
Chief Arnaud de Borchgrave told the
Lecture Forum meeting the following
month that the Sinai Accords were
"over-simplified and oversold" and
"bought time at an enormous cost to the
U.S. Treasury with limited hopes of
peace." From the same platform in
December, Senator Jacob Javits (R-N.Y.)
called for Western European
governments to get involved in Middle
East diplomacy and to support
moderates over extremists, saying "a
first step might be overt support for the
Sinai agreement between Israel and
Egypt."
Journalist Edward R. F. Sheehan in
February 1977 urged an immediate
convening of a Middle East peace
conference in Geneva. Sheehan's peace
conference agenda as outlined to the
North Suburban Luncheon meeting
included solving the problem of a
Palestinian homeland, returning Arab
lands occupied since 1976 by Israel and
"providing absolute guarantees of
Israel's sovereignty within recognized
borders." The following month a
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Senator Jacob Javits Senator Joseph R.
(R.-N.Y.) speaking at Biden (D.-Del.) at the
the December 2, 1975 North Suburban
Lecture Forum Series Luncheon Lecture
meeting. Series opening lecture
on October 3, 1975.
Dr. Frederick Gottheil of the University of Illinois
(left) and Dr. Hassan Haddad of St. Xavier College
debated the United Nations resolution on Zionism at
a Council Forum meeting February 11, 1976.
downtown noon lecture audience heard
another journalist, Stephen Rosenfeld of
the Washington Post, declare that "the
rhythm of wars can be broken in the
Middle East" and that "time was not on
the side of the Israelis." Rosenfeld
warned that delaying a settlement
allowed Arab military capabilities to
grow stronger. In April Egypt's
Ambassador to the U.S., Ashraf Ghorbal,
spoke at a noon meeting and renounced
the continuation of a step-by-step
approach to a Mideast settlement, say-
ing "a total settlement must now be the
order of the day because peace cannot
wait ... no one can afford to be a hawk
in the Middle East, we must all be
doves."
Prince Saud Ibn-Faisal, Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, Saudi Arabia, Is
introduced at the October 1, 1975 Chicago Committee luncheon by Chairman
John D. Gray.
The Council Forum meetings on the
Middle East in the past two years
included a debate on the United
Nation's resolution on Zionism and dis-
cussion meetings focusing on the
fighting in Lebanon and the future of
Iran. "OPEC: Case Study of a Cartel" was
the topic for a March dinner meeting in
1977 and an evening devoted to
Egyptian films was held in April of that
year.
Invitational dinner meetings focusing on
the Mideast for Council Sponsors,
Patrons and Contributing Members, and
others included speakers such as Joseph
Lapid, Editor of Israel's Maariv, Arab
spokesman Clovis Maksoud, Former
Secretary General of Israel's Labor Party
Aric Eliav, and Israeli Army General Arie
Shalev.
The Chicago Committee met in October
1975 with Saudi Arabia's Minister of
State for Foreign Affairs, Prince Saud
Ibn-Faisal, for a discussion of OPEC and
in May of 1976 with Iran's ambassador
to the U.S., Ardeshir Zahedi. A one-day
research workshop in March 1977 in
concert with the Council for European
Studies, a national university
consortium, addressed "International
Affairs in the Mediterranean Area" and a
Committee on Foreign Affairs weekend
conference in May 1977 at the
Woodstock Center focused on the topic
"The Minimum Terms for Peace in the
Middle East."
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The State
in Europe
The State in Europe, published by
the Council in 1977, resulted from a
four-part research study group held
in the spring of the year.
The Council's program has included
increasing attention to the range of
economic, political, social, and military
issues which make Europe a significant
region in international relations gener-
ally and to United States foreign policy
specifically. In recent years, the
character of the relationship between
Europe and the U.S. has grown more
uncertain as post-World War II
dependence on American power has
waned and post-Vietnam War
questioning of the role of the U.S. in the
international system has grown. The
future of such organizations as NATO
and the European Community inevitably
leads into a series of important, complex
questions. Europe remains, both
historically and currently, an area of
direct military confrontation between
the U.S. and the Soviet Union. Detente
and accommodation between these two
nations, combined with the Soviet
military buildup in recent years, mean
that the security environment in which
Europe lives has changed in several
ways.
European specialists have addressed our
audiences in both invitational and
public meetings. A few of the most
notable have been Piero Bassetti, former
President of the region of Lombardy in
Italy; Roy Jenkins, President of the
Commission of the European
Community; the Ambassadors to the
U.S. from France and West Germany;
Thierry de Montbrial, Chief of the Policy
Planning Staff at the French Foreign
Ministry; and Cesare Merlini of the
Italian Institute for International Affairs
(IAI). The Council was also pleased to
host a group of Europeans visiting the
U.S. under the auspices of the American
Council for Young Political Leaders.
Several in-depth substantive projects
were undertaken during the 1976-77
program year. A workshop on
international affairs in the Mediter-
ranean was cosponsored with the
Council for European Studies. Presenta-
tions were made by Professor Steven
Warnecke of the City University of New
York and Stefano Silvestri of IAI. A one-
day conference was held on "Issues in
European Security." A major four-part
study seminar was sponsored in the
spring on "The State in Europe,"
resulting in a Council publication under
that title. Chaired by Professor Kenneth
Dam of the University of Chicago Law
School, this series provided an oppor-
tunity to examine the different inter-
national, supranational, and subnational
forces which bear on the viability of the
nation-state in contemporary Western
Europe. Papers were delivered by Pro-
fessors James Caporaso and John
Coverdale of Northwestern University,
Leon Epstein of the University of
Wisconsin, Catherine Kelleher of the
University of Michigan, Frank Tachau of
the University of Illinois, and Aristide
Zolberg of the University of Chicago.
Fernand Speak, Head of the Commission
of the European Community's Delegation
to the U.S., addressed the Council Forum
on February 3, 1977.
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ILI;II III i I I 111.1.. I I I i
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Philip Windsor (left) of the London School of Economics and
Adalbert de Segoznac, Washington Bureau Chief, France Soir,
addressed a noon Council meeting September 16, 1975.
Participants in the Council's research study group on "The State
in Europe" held in the spring of 1977.
George Ball (left) former Under Secretary of State, with Council
Officers Richard L. Thomas (center) and Hermon Dunlap Smith
prior to Ball's address to the Lecture Forum meeting
March 2, 1976.
Garret Fitzgerald, Ireland's Minister of Foreign Affairs (second
from right) at the Chicago Committee luncheon October 2, 1975.
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Japan and the
New Asia
Japan and the New Asia, published
by the Council in 1976 resulted from
a study group held in the winter of
1975-76.
Council Board members and guests at the dinner preceding Edwin 0. Reischauer's
address to the north suburban meeting In Wilmette on September 22, 1976. Reischauer
(third from left) was formerly U.S. Ambassador to Japan.
Participants at the second session of the "Japan and the New Asia" study group held
December 9, 1975 featuring guest speaker Allen S. Whiting (third from right).
Japan's continuing importance in world
economic affairs has resulted in partic-
ular prominence for that country in the
Council's professional programs. Since
the early 1970's, the Council has
organized special study groups, confer-
ences, and other meetings on Japan's
international role. During the 1975-76
program year, the third special study
seminar on Japan was held. This effort,
directed by Professor Ikira Iriye of the
University of Chicago, was entitled
"Japan and the New Asia." The study
group addressed in turn Japan's relation-
ships with China, the Soviet Union, and
the United States. Essays were written by
Professors James Morley and Marshall
Shulman of Columbia University, Profes-
sor Allen Whiting of the University of
Michigan, and Yukio Matsuyama, Chief
of the Washington Bureau of Asahi
Shimbun.
Beginning in the fall of 1976, another
special series of meetings was held on
Japan's economic situation, especially in
regard to the United States. The audi-
ences were composed primarily of
American and Japanese business
executives and these gatherings rein-
forced and were in turn assisted by the
Council's developing Corporate Service
Program. Speakers included Noboru
Hatakeyama of the Japan Trade Center
in Chicago, Dr. Harald Malmgren, a
trade policy official in the Johnson and
Nixon Administrations, Professor Hugh
Patrick of the Yale Growth Center, Peter
Suchman, Deputy Assistant Secretary of
the Treasury, and Ryohei Suzuki, Execu-
tive Director of the Japan Trade Center
in New York.
Asian concerns received broad attention
in the Council's popular membership
program as well. Speakers in this vein
included Professor Edwin Reischauer of
Harvard University and arms control
specialist Paul Warnke.
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Looking East
After Vietnam
The end of the United States' direct
involvement in the Vietnam War in
Southeast Asia brought with it unique
problems and new questions. How does
a great power deal with small develop-
ing nations, often ideologically hostile,
following a protracted military struggle?
What policies toward the Asian coun-
tries, especially a divided Korea and a
united Vietnam, would be consistent
with rapprochement with China and a
continuing special relationship with
Japan? How should the U.S. maintain its
presence in the Pacific in the face of a
complex and changing situation?
Many Council guests addressed these
issues in general and specific terms in
the 1975-77 program years. Council
President John E. Rielly traveled to
China as a member of a delegation of
heads of American foreign policy institu-
tions and related his observations at a
noon Council meeting in November
1975. On China's role in Asia he noted:
"Now that the U.S. has withdrawn from
southeast Asia, China's principal
concern is to prevent the Soviet Union
from filling the vacuum created by
American withdrawal."
Richard Holbrooke, managing editor of
Foreign Policy quarterly, (and now
Assistant Secretary of State for East Asia
and the Pacific), addressed the
December 1975 north suburban
Luncheon-Lecture meeting on the topic
of Post-Vietnam policy in Asia. He
described the end of the war there as a
"liberating event for the U.S." and said
that now the U.S. should provide "lead-
ership without hegemony in the area."
In January 1976 "Soviet Interests in the
Pacific: A Soviet View -A Japanese
View" was the theme under discussion
at a noon meeting with Professor David
Joravsky of Northwestern University and
Professor Tetsuo Najita, director of the
University of Chicago's Center for Far
Eastern Studies. Professor Edwin O.
Reischauer of Harvard University and
former ambassador to Japan addressed a
north suburban dinner meeting in
September 1976. His talk concerned the
current mood in in Japan following the
Lockheed revelations and the aftermath
of the oil embargo. He noted that
"Japan's stability depends on the world's
stability; if there are no wars in other
parts of the world interfering with
Japan's supply lines and if there is no
reduction in trade, Japan will continue
to flourish." At a luncheon meeting in
the same suburban area in October,
author David Halberstam supported the
entry of Vietnam into the United
Nations, declaring that "We are bad
losers; if 800 million Chinese pose no
threat in the UN balance, what could 30
million Vietnamese change?"
Council members heard reports from
elsewhere in the east when India's
Foreign Minister Y.B. Chavan defended
India's "state of emergency" as necessary
to prevent violence and anarchy and
accused the foreign press of playing a
political role as an "opposition party" to
Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. One
month later in November 1975, the
Council Forum heard political
anthropologist Ralph Nicholas of the
University of Chicago discuss "The
Future of Democracy in India."
Democracy took its course in India, and
in January 1977 the Committee on
Foreign Affairs hosted a dinner at which
Lloyd and Susanne Rudolph, political
science professors from the University of
Chicago, discussed "India After the
Emergency: The Shape of the New
Regime."
Richard Holbrooke,
Managing Editor, Foreign
Policy, addressing the
December 9, 1975 meeting
of the North Suburban
Luncheon Lecture Series.
The Chicago Committee's focus on Asia
included presentations by Adam Malik,
Foreign Minister of Indonesia, discussing
"The Emerging Balance of Power in
Southeast Asia" and Wall Street Journal
editorial page editor Robert Bartley
replying to the query "What does China
Really Want?", in addition to a two-part
luncheon series on "China: Policies,
Perspectives, Projections."
The Council's annual meeting in June
1977 brought author Roxane Witke,
whose interviews with Mao Tse-tung's
widow were recently published. The
granting of the interviews by Chiang
Ch'ing were considered an indiscretion
in China which, added to other charges,
brought about the political downfall of
the woman who was considered the
most powerful force behind China's
Cultural Revolution of the 1960's. In the
summer of 1977, a delegation from the
People's Republic of China's Foreign
Affairs Institute visited the Council at a
special luncheon hosted by Council
President Reilly.
Y.B. Chavan, Foreign
Minister of India spoke at
an evening Council lecture
October 8, 1975.
Roxane Witke, author of
Comrade Chiang Ch'ing,
addressing the Council's
annual meeting, June 7,
1977.
Delegates from the Chinese People's Institute for Foreign Affairs in Peking were hosted
at a Council luncheon in July, 1977. (Above Right) Council Board member Mrs. Kenneth
Montgomery (center) with the head of the delegation Hao Te-ch'Ing (right) and Mr.
Montgomery (left).
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Crisis in Africa: Majority Rule
and Minority Rights
The last several years have seen world-
wide attention focused on several
African nations engaged in internal
political struggles. Support for various
factions have ranged from Soviet aid to
Ethiopian insurgents to the introduction
of Cuban troops in Angola. In addition,
the United States and Great Britain have
engaged in serious efforts to bring about
a peaceful transition of power from
minority white to majority black rule in
Rhodesia and Namibia. Council meet-
ings have addressed these African issues
in a variety of meetings and forums.
The Chicago Tribune's photojournalism
team of James Yuenger, Clarence Page
and Ernie Cox, Jr. reported on their two
months in southern Africa to a noon
Council audience in September 1976
and discussed "Africa: Crisis in Black
and White." Ethiopian anthropologist
Asmaron Legesse spoke before the
March 1977 north suburban luncheon
meeting where he deplored the colonial
and outdated African educational
system and the badly managed land
reform programs, both of which he said
contributed to the mass of jobless
peasants and students creating the
unrest in African cities.
Bryceson, Tanzanian member of parlia-
ment, Yaakov Keinan, Israeli Consul in
Chicago and former diplomat in Africa,
Dr. Christopher Mojekwu of Lake Forest
College and Canon Richard Young of St.
Stephen's House. In October of that
year, Congressman Steven J. Solarz (D-
New York) addressed the Forum on
"Rhodesia at the Eleventh Hour." The
Chicago Committee heard State
Department spokesman William E.
Schaufele, Jr., Assistant Secretary of State
for African Affairs discuss U.S. foreign
policy toward Africa in May 1977.
Former prime minister of Southern
Rhodesia Garfield Todd spoke before an
invitational luncheon meeting in June
1977.
Chicago Council members were invited
to participate in the University of
Chicago Extension Division's 1976 series
"Africa: Understanding the Issues," an
eight part lecture-discussion program for
which Council members' fees were
discounted.
Senator Dick Clark (D-lowa) addressed
the March 1977 Lecture Forum meeting
on the subject of peace in Africa
emphasizing that South Africa was the
key to peaceful transitions of power in
both Rhodesia and Namibia. "Majority
rule will come," said Clark, "and U.S.
policy should be to urge that the
transition take place in a peaceful way."
In April 1977, the outspoken U.S. Am-
bassador to the United Nations Andrew
Young met with members of the Chicago
press for a news briefing sponsored by
the Council.
The Council Forum's panel discussion
program in May 1976 "African Leader-
ship: Personalities and Challenges"
included guest panelists Derek
United Nations Ambassador Andrew Young met with members of the Chicago press for a
briefing at the Council on April 13, 1977.
A panel discussion on African leadership
sponsored by the Council Forum on May 6,
1976 featured (far left) Derek Bryceson,
M. P. of Tanzania and Yaakov Keinan,
Israeli Consul in Chicago. (Left) Other panelists
included The Reverend Canon
Richard Young of St. Stephen's House and
Professor Christophen MoJekwu of Lake
Forest College (right).
Senator Dick Clark (D.-Iowa) addressed the
March 8 Lecture Forum Series meeting in
1977 on U.S. policy toward southern
Africa.
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The Chicago
Committee
The Chicago Committee, established in
1962, is the senior invitational body of
the Chicago Council on Foreign Rela-
tions, with a membership including 450
business, legal, academic, and other
professional leaders from Chicago and
the surrounding Middle West. In the last
two years, the Committee has heard a
wide range of speakers from this country
and abroad. Chicago Committee ses-
sions are off-the-record, which permits
maximum candor in interchanges be-
tween our visitors and the audience.
During the fall of 1975, a special two-
part luncheon series was held on Great
Britain. Ambassadors Peter Ramsbotham
and Elliott Richardson discussed respec-
tively "Britain, the European Community
and the U.S.A." and "Transatlantic
Relations - the United States and Great
Britain." In early 1976, a special series
was held on China's role in international
affairs. The first meeting was entitled
"China, Japan, Taiwan: Their Inter-
relationship and U.S. Options in that
Area" and included presentations by
Professors Michael C. Oksenberg and
Allen S. Whiting of the University of
Michigan and Professor Peter Van Ness
of the Graduate School of International
Studies at the University of Denver.
The second session, on "China as an Oil
Power-The Impact of Asia" featured
Selig Harrison, senior associate at the
Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace. Other speakers during that
program year included Senators Hubert
Humphrey (D-Minn.) and John Culver,
(D-Iowa), Former Defense Secretary
James Schlesinger, journalists William F.
Buckley, Jr. and Max Frankel, and
Congressman Henry Reuss (D-Wisc.)
During 1976-77, Chicago Committee
meetings were designed to cover the
gamut of major foreign policy issues and
areas. Guest speakers appropriately
ranged widely in terms of both
credentials and topics. They included
Anne Armstrong, U.S. Ambassador to
the Court of St. James; McGeorge
Bundy, President of the Ford Founda-
tion; John Connally, former Secretary of
the Treasury and Governor of Texas;
Professor Richard Gardner, Columbia
University; General Alexander Haig,
Supreme Commander, NATO; Senator
Charles Mathias (R-Md.); Alice Rivlin,
Director of the Congressional Budget
Office; Professor Marshall Shulman,
Columbia University; Congressman
Albert Ullman (D-Ore.), Chairman of the
Ways and Means Committee; and
Admiral Elmo Zumwalt.
Elliot L. Richardson, U.S. Ambassador to Great Britain and former cabinet officer at the
October 6, 1975 luncheon, with Committee members James Berg (left) and Charles Meyer
(right).
Congressman Albert C. Ullman
(D.-Ore.) Chairman of the House
Ways and Means Committee
addressing a luncheon May 27, 1977.
U.S. Ambassador to the Court of St. James Anne
Armstrong at the Committee's meeting October
20,1976.
Roy Jenkins, President, Commission of
the European Community (left) at the
luncheon April 20, 1977 with Chicago
Committee Chairman John D. Gray.
C. Fred Bergsten, Assistant Secretary of
the Treasury for International Affairs,
speaking to the Committee on April 22,
1977 at a luncheon in the Mid-America
Club.
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Committee on
Foreign Affairs
The Committee on Foreign Affairs
undertakes a program series for a mem-
bership drawn from among the younger
business and professional leadership of
the Chicago area. This program is
designed for individuals with professional
interest in international affairs and
foreign policy questions. Through
monthly off-the-record invitational
meetings, featuring notable American
and foreign visitors to the city,
Committee members receive an
opportunity to discuss a wide range of
topics with key decision-makers,
analysts, and opinion leaders.
Foreign guest commentators have
included Adalbert de Segonzac,
Washington bureau chief of France Soir
and Philip Windsor of the London
School of Economics, both of whom
offered critiques of United States foreign
policy. Y.B. Chavan, the Foreign
Minister of India, spoke on the emergen-
cy measures instituted by the Ghandi
government.
Among American political figures, the
Committee has played host to Senator
Joseph R. Biden (D.-Del.), Senator
Edmund Muskie (D.-Maine), Paul C.
Warnke, just prior to his becoming
Director of the Arms Control and
Disarmament Agency, and Richard
Holbrooke of Foreign Policy, who has
since joined the Carter Administration in
the State Department. Journalists who
have addressed the Committee include
Robert Bartley of the Wall Street
Journal; Arnaud de Borchgrave, senior
editor, Newsweek; Stephen Rosenfeld,
editor of the editorial page, Washington
Post; and James Yuenger and Clarence
Page of the Chicago Tribune.
In addition to dinner meetings, the
Committee also sponsored two seminars
and two weekend conferences during
the 1975-77 program period. A two-part
series discussed the People's Republic of
China-both from the standpoint of
internal politics and of relations with the
United States.
A three-part program on Euro-
Communism included talks on the
Communist party movements in Italy,
Spain, and Portugal and related matters
by Dr. Stefano Silvestri of the Italian
Institute for International Affairs, Profes-
sor Philippe Schmitter of the Political
Science Department of the University of
Chicago, and Stephen Rosenfeld of the
Washington Post.
The first Committee weekend
conference at Woodstock, Illinois,
addressed the topic "The Retreat of
American Power: Myth and Reality."
Professor John Stoessinger of the City
University of New York, and David
Haworth, Washington correspondent of
The London Observer, joined
Ambassador Abdullah Addou of the
Somali Republic to discuss the role of
the United States in the world.
At a second Woodstock Conference in
1977 on "The Minimum Terms for Peace
in the Middle East," participants examin-
ed the acceptable conditions for peace
among the various combatants.
Participants included: Ehud Avriel,
Israeli Consul General in Chicago; Wolf
Blitzer, Washington correspondent,
Jerusalem Post; Dr. Walid Khalidi of the
American University in Beirut; Senator
Joseph R. Biden (D-Del.); Mohammed
Hakki, Minister Counselor of the
Egyptian Embassy in Washington, and
Dr. Michael C. Hudson, Executive
Director, Center of Contemporary Arab
Studies, Georgetown University.
Robert Bartley, Editorial Page Editor, The Wall Street Journal, addressing a dinner
meeting of the Committee on Foreign Affairs April 26, 1977.
Committee on Foreign Affairs Executive Committee members Kenneth W. Dam (right)
Philip A. Odeen (center) and Chairman James Hoge (left).
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Council
Forum
In nearly 100 programs during the. past
two years, the Council Forum has
reviewed a broad range of international
political, economic, and cultural issues.
Through an evening lecture format,
designed generally for younger Council
members, the Forum has sponsored
weekly evening meetings providing
opportunities for informal discussions
with experts from the Chicago area's
universities and business community, as
well as knowledgeable visitors from
outside Chicago. During the 1975-1977
program period, the Forum addressed
such global problems as starvation,
terrorism, human rights, human shelter,
and the new international economic
order. Many individual nations and their
relations with the United States received
attention in such programs as:
"Canadian Nationalism," "Japan
Rearmed," "Democracy in India,"
"Communist Gains in Italy," "Economic
and Political Problems in Britain,"
"African Leadership," and others that
focused on Turkey, China, Mexico,
Cuba, Iran, Yugoslavia, Rhodesia, and
Ireland.
Ambassador Fernand Spaak, head of the
delegation to the United States of the
European Community; Dr. John L.
McLucas, Secretary of the Air Force; Dr.
Ulf Lantzke, Executive Director of the
Paris-based International Energy
Agency; James Keogh, Director of the
United States Information Agency, and
Victor Isakov, Counselor of the Soviet
Embassy in Washington, were among
the international officials who appeared
before Forum audiences during the
1975-1976 program years.
Weekend conferences were held on
"International Intelligence Gathering,"
"U.S.-China Relations," "Who Should
Make American Foreign Policy?" and
"Manners and Mores of the 1960's as
Lee McFadden, Chairman of the Professor John Searle of the
Council Forum's Steering University of California and
Committee, 1975-77. panelist on public television's
"World Press" at a Forum
meeting February 17, 1977.
From left: David Rosso, Council Treasurer and attorney; Dale
Butland, Council Program Officer; and Philipe Schmitter of the
University of Chicago at the second session of the Forum's
discussion series on multinational corporations held in the spring
of 1977.
Reflected in Foreign Films." Three-part
seminars explored "Detente: Who
Benefits?" and "The Multi-national Corp-,
oration." An evening film series
developed the theme "Film as
Propaganda" and council members saw
private showings at the International
Film Festival and the Film Center of the
Art Institute. Further cultural programs
included "Mexican Art," "African
Music," and evenings of Scottish Folk
Songs and Irish Music and Dance.
The Forum organized weekend trips to
New Orleans, Ottawa, and Montreal as
well as tours of Greek, Lithuanian,
Polish, and Ukranian neighborhoods in
Chicago. Highly popular cocktail parties
are held seasonally as social activities.
Each year, members meet in private
homes over several weeks to participate
in discussion groups utilizing the
materials of the Great Decisions
Program.
Businessman Keki Bhote
spoke to the Forum on the
third world in the United
Nations on September 21,
1976.
Ulf Lantzke, Executive Director,
International Energy Agency, at
a Forum lecture November 10,
1976.
Afaf Mahfouz (at podium) Cultural Attache at the Egyptian
Embassy, Washington, D.C., at a Council Forum dinner preceding
an evening of Egyptian films co-sponsored by the Art Institute and
the Forum on April 12, 1977.
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Secondary Education
Program for Teachers
Council efforts to strengthen awareness
of and information about international
affairs include a specific program to
bolster instruction at the secondary
school level in the Chicago area.
A variety of important topics was
considered in the secondary education
seminar series during the period 1975-77.
Robert Oxnam, Program Director of the
China Council of the Asia Society, led
off a set of discussions on "The Politics
and Culture of Modern China." The
1976-77 program year was a particularly
active one for the education program,
with three separate series and one
special individual meeting held. The
three seminars, each of which involved
four dinner meetings, dealt with
Southeast Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, and
Latin America. In addition, a special
meeting was held on developments in
Japan in conjunction with the Japan
Trade Center of Chicago. Featured
speakers at these sessions, all of which
were well attended, included Professors
Philip Foster of the Comparative Educa-
tion Center and Aristide Zolberg of the
Political Science Department of the
University of Chicago, James Yuenger
and Clarence Page of the Chicago
Tribune, four faculty members and other
.specialists on Southeast Asia affiliated
with the Program in Asian Studies
Education of the University of Michigan,
Professor Robert Scott of the Political
Science Department of the University of
Illinois at Urbana, and others.
Alexandor Barros, Department of Political
Science, University of Chicago, at the third
session of the four-part series for teachers
on "Politics In Latin America" held on April
20,1977.
Teachers listening to Michael Aung Thwin, Political Science Department, University of
Michigan, at the second session of a four-part seminar on Southeast Asia In December,
1976.
Secondary school teachers meet regularly at the Council
dinner-seminars to exchange Ideas and hear speakers on various
international topics related to their classroom work.
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Council Travel
Department
The educational objective of the
Chicago Council on Foreign Relations is
quite naturally augmented by the broad-
ranging schedule of travel programs
offered by the Travel Department.
Overseas travel is an appropriate means
for providing dramatic first-hand
exposure to and appreciation of world
conditions.
During the period 1975-1977 almost
8,000 members participated in over 100
Council trips. In addition to the low-cost
air-transportation-only charter flights,
the Travel Department offered members
a wide choice of other itineraries from
which to choose. These encompassed
ocean cruises to intriguing ports-of-call,
self-drive car tours which provided
maximum independence upon arrival at
the destination, deluxe fully-escorted
travel opportunities designed to meet
the needs of even the most
discriminating traveller, and individually
tailored and planned trips. Council
travel programs explored important
regions and fascinating corners of the
world including Africa, Egypt, India, the
Orient, Western and Eastern Europe,
Central and South America, and other
areas.
Prior to the departures of many trips,
participating members had the opportu-
nity to attend briefings at the Council.
Films, slides, and guest lectures provide
a political, cultural, and economic
overview and preview of the country or
region to be visited. The meetings also
give travellers an opportunity to meet
one another. In certain instances, for
example, a briefing may include dinner
at an ethnic restaurant representing
cuisine indigenous to destination
countries. All of these pre-trip arrange-
ments result in well informed travellers
and encourage a relaxed and friendly
atmosphere throughout the tour.
Most often upon arrival, Council tour
participants are briefed on local politics
and economic conditions by the U.S.
Ambassador or a staff member from the
American embassy in foreign countries.
Frequently local representatives from
the government, political, cultural, or
business sector will provide visitors with
up-to-date information.
Fast-paced modern life, with rapid
scientific and technological changes,
has greatly increased the already
complex nature of international affairs.
The observant traveller abroad is better
able to comprehend the political envi-
ronment in which we live. The Chicago
Council on Foreign Relations, through
an extensive travel program, continues
to provide unique means for its
members to follow the current interna-
tional situation.
Travel briefings at the Council precede most travel programs such as this meeting prior
to the departure of the Council's Archaeological tour of the Greek Islands. At right,
Council Travel Director Loesken van der poet and (standing far left) guest speaker
Reverend Raymond V. Schoder.
Travellers return to the Council for a
nostalgic slide review of their African
Safari tour which took place in February
and March, 1977.
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Clifton Utley
Honored by Council
The Council paid tribute to Clifton M.
Utley and his wife Frayn with the
inauguration of the "Clifton M. Utley
Lecture Series" in November 1975. A
formal dinner hosted by A. Robert
Abboud, Chairman of the First National
Bank of Chicago and Council board
member, was held in conjunction with
the lecture. The inaugural lecture in this
series was given by John Chancellor,
anchorman for the NBC Nightly News
and former colleague and protege of
Clifton Utley.
Clifton Utley was the executive director
of the Chicago Council on Foreign
Relations from 1931 until 1942 when he
Clifton and Frayn Utley at the dinner in
their honor November 11, 1975.
joined NBC affiliate WMAQ in Chicago.
He attained national stature as a
newscaster and analyst with particular
expertise in foreign affairs. He continued
his close relationship with the Council,
serving as a director and member of the
advisory board. His wife Frayn also
served on the Council's board.
In attendance at the special invitational
dinner were a number of friends of the
Utleys, many of whom are among
Chicago's most prominent and
influential civic leaders. John
Chancellor's address on foreign policy
and communications was followed by a
reception at the First Chicago Center.
John Chancellor greets Mrs. Jane Dick
prior to delivering the inaugural "Clifton
Utley Lecture."
Chicago newsman Floyd Kalber of
WMAQ-TV with Clifton Utley, who started
his television career with that same
station.
A. Robert Abboud, John Chancellor and
Ellen Klemperer join in a toast to Clifton
Utley at the dinner which was hosted by
Abboud.
A reception for the Utleys followed John
Chancellor's address at the First Chicago
Center.
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The
Chairman's Message
The Chicago Council on Foreign
Relations is completing another active
two-year period. It is a particular
pleasure to be able to report that the
Council has maintained a stable
membership and an ambitious program
despite the severe economic recession
that occurred during this period. During
the past two years considerable progress
has been made in expanding our work
and diversifying the ways in which we
serve the greater Chicago community
and surrounding Middle West.
While the Council's national and inter-
national reach has broadened, we
remain principally a Chicago institution,
with the mission of providing
international affairs education to this
city and region. The fact that Chicago
has become an increasingly important
center of international trade and
commerce, especially in commodities,
heavy industrial manufacturing and
related areas has heightened the
significance of foreign affairs to the
business community here. In direct
Chairman
John D. Gray
President
John E. Rielly
Vice Chairmen
Richard E. Burow
Alexander Hehmeyer
Arthur E. Rasmussen
E. Norman Staub
Richard L. Thomas
Mrs. Albert Wohistetter
Treasurer
David I. Rosso
Assistant Treasurer
Peter T. Jones
* Robert T. McNeill
Secretary
Mrs. Bernard G. Ziv, Jr.
The Council is indeed fortunate that so
many of Chicago's outstanding leaders
in business, journalism, finance, and
academia serve as active members of
the board of directors. Their interest,
support, and dedication are of inestima-
ble value.
As your Chairman, I would like to
commend the Council's President and
his associates on an outstanding per-
formance. John Rielly has now served six
years as Executive Director and
President. Under his leadership, the
Council has gained national and inter-
national recognition as one of the
leading private foreign policy organiza-
tions in the United States. During the
past six years, the Council's program has
tripled in size and membership has
increased substantially. The Council has
never had a budget deficit.
We look forward to continuing progress
during the next two years.
John D. Gray
Chauncy Harris
Stanley G. Harris
Harold H. Hines, Jr.
James Hoge
Philip Hummer
D. Gale Johnson
Paul R. Judy
Harvey Kapnick
Arthur L. Kelly
Donald P. Kelly
Edward Klinenberg
Irving Kupcinet
Mrs. Herbert C. Loth, Jr.
Robert H. Malott
response to this development, the
Council has launched a Corporate
Service Program designed to address
policy issues bearing on international
business concerns and problems. In this
connection, it is gratifying to report that
corporate contributions have increased
markedly over the past two years,
supplementing income from other
sources. This strong support from the
business community is deeply appreciat-
ed.
The advent of a new national Admini-
stration in Washington brings a new set
of officials to government and plans for
new approaches and departures in
public policy. At the same time, many
of the most significant issues confront-
ing our nation remain the same
regardless of whether the Executive
Branch is in the hands of Democrats or
Republicans. During this period of
continuity and transition, the Chicago
Council on Foreign Relations will
continue the process of program
expansion and development.
Janet L. Abu-Lughod
Roger E. Anderson
Karl D. Bays
William O. Beers
James F. Bere
Robert G. Biesel
Joseph L. Block
Samuel Casey, Jr.
Even T. Collinsworth, Jr
Stanton R. Cook
Wesley M. Dixon, Jr.
Stephen P. Durchslag
John F. Gallagher
Lucius Gregg
Charles Marshall
Louis E. Martin
Aloysius A. Mazewski
William J. McCarter
Lee McFadden
Mrs. Charles A. Meyer
Mrs. Newton Minow*
Mrs. Kenneth
Montgomery
Philip A. Odeen
Frank C. Osment
Sen. Charles H. Percy
George Polli*
Robert C. Preble, Jr.
Augustin S. Hart
Chairman
Charles A. Bane
Melvin Brorby
President: John E. Rielly
Program Director: Arthur Cyr
Director of Administration and Operations: Paul L. Kedrok
Director of Travel: Loesken van der Poel
Director of Publications and Public Relations: Nora Carey Dell
Program Officer: Dennis Allred
Program Officer: Dale Butland
Program Officer: Irene Hill
Edmond I. Eger Herbert V. Prochnow
Walter T. Fisher Alex R. Seith
Richard A. Hoefs Hermon D. Smith
Edward D. McDougal, Jr. Richard H. Templeton
George A. Ranney, Sr.
Richard Rosenzweig
Arthur Schultz
Charles B. Stauffacher
Edmund A. Stephan
Sen. Adlai E. Stevenson III
James H. Stone
Robert H. Strotz
Howard I. Trienens
J. W. Van Gorkom
Maynard P. Venema
Omer G. Voss
Mrs. I. Harris Ward
Clifton M. Utley
Robert E. Wieczorowski
Robert Wilcox
Louis Leonard Wright
Secretary to the President: Norma Newkirk
Membership Secretary: Linda Crance
Secretary to the Program Director: Cynthia Kurek
Administration: Marianne Barton, Michael Hoesley, Jerry Larkin,
Karen Olson, Rita Pionke
Travel Department: Brenda Barrett, Francoise Friedman, Rebecca Howe
Laura Seastrand, Anna Whedoger
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Council
Programs
Mrs. Razie Liebow, North Suburban Committee Chairwoman (1975-76), and Mrs. Nancy
Loth (right) Committee Chairwoman (1976-77) talk with Dr. Stan Ruby, Argonne
Laboratories, after a Background Seminar session which preceded the
December 1975 luncheon.
The Council holds an annual meeting to
elect its officers and directors In the spring
of each year. Arthur E. Rasmussen, Chair-
man of the Nominating Committee in 1975,
chairs this annual meeting, introducing
the new directors.
In General... General Membership
Programs for the Council's more than
22,000 members number nearly 100 per
year, including downtown, suburban,
and Council Forum meetings. These
meetings range from the popular down-
town Lecture Forum Series and First
Chicago Center Noon Series to evening
lecture meetings and smaller dinner
meetings in the city and suburbs.
Conferences, seminars, and college
courses for interested members are also
co-sponsored by the Council with local
universities.
Council Forum programs are organized
by the Council staff in consultation with
a volunteer Steering Committee. The
Council Forum is for younger adult
members and meets some 40 times a
year. The Forum sponsors meetings with
local speakers with expertise on various
topics as well as cultural programs
involving foreign films, literature, and
customs. Forum conferences, seminars,
and dinner meetings complement the
regular Council programming designed
for larger groups.
The Education Department
programming is primarily aimed toward
teachers, who in turn discuss interna-
tional issues with their students. Other
programs involve students, teachers, and
parents.
Travel Department programming
includes charter flights and tours world-
wide, which are preceded by informa-
tive briefings at the Council. Members
are made aware of economic, social,
and political affairs of the foreign
country to be visited, and Council
travellers are often hosted by American
and foreign officials at receptions and
meetings overseas.
Publications of the Council include its
bi-monthly magazine, World Events, and
a paperback series of books evolving
from study groups held at the Council.
The Council cooperates closely with
Foreign Policy quarterly, particularly in
seeking articles from Midwest writers.
The President of the Council serves on
the editorial board of Foreign Policy.
The Council also publishes articles and
reports generated by specific projects on
an ad hoc basis.
In Particular ... Corporate Service pro-
gramming is geared to Midwest corpora-
tions that support the Council
financially. These meetings involve
discussions with leaders in business,
finance, and economics who have an
international viewpoint. This program
involves luncheon meetings as well as
seminars and conferences.
Chicago Committee programming
includes some 30 meetings annually for
Chicago's senior business, academic,
and other professionals in off-the-record
sessions with world leaders.
Committee on Foreign Affairs program-
ming involves younger Chicago profes-
sionals who meet 15 times a year for
dinner discussions, special seminars,
and conferences on international issues.
A capacity audience of Council members
and their guests at Rosary College
auditorium in Oakbrook gathered to hear
an NBC panel give a news wrap-up of
world events in January, 1976.
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Sponsors, Patrons
Contributing Members
John Connally, former Secretary of the Treasury (left)
meets with Council Sponsors, Patrons and Contributing
Members at dinner prior to his lecture on March 24, 1977.
Sponsors and Patrons of the Council are
longstanding categories of supporters
who contribute over and above the
standard fifteen dollar membership fee.
Sponsors give one hundred dollars each,
and Patrons fifty dollars. In return for
this additional financial support, the
Council has endeavored to include
Sponsors and Patrons in a number of
special invitational programs. Normally
these sessions are private receptions,
luncheons and dinners. They provide a
much more intimate atmosphere than
the larger public meetings sponsored by
the Council, and in consequence these
supporters are afforded opportunities to
meet with prominent guests on a one-to-
one, individual basis.
While the Council continues to
encourage members to become
Sponsors and Patrons, a new
category was recently established.
Contributing Members are those who
pay twenty-five dollars per year to help
An invitational luncheon preceding the NBC program in Oakbrook in 1976 gave Council
contributing members an opportunity to talk with individual members of the news panel
such as Tom Brokaw (third from left).
General Alexander M. Haig (far left) at the dinner-lecture in December, 1976
where Patrons and Sponsors met with him earlier at a private reception.
support the work of the Council. Reflect-
ing the strong interest in the activities of
the organization on the part of many of
our citizens, this new category has
grown very rapidly. By the summer of
1977, there were over one thousand-two
hundred Contributing Members and the
total is continuing to climb. As with
Patrons and Sponsors, these Council
supporters are invited to special private
meetings with visiting speakers.
Programs for these membership
categories have included cocktail
receptions with General Alexander M.
Haig, Supreme Allied Commander,
Europe; Senator Charles McC. Mathias,
Republican of Maryland; Edwin 0.
Reischauer, Professor at Harvard
University and former U.S. Ambassador
to Japan; and Marshall Shulman,
Professor of Government at Columbia
University and Special Consultant to the
Secretary of State on Soviet Affairs.
Dinners have featured Newsweek
Magazine's Periscope Panel of corre-
spondents Arnaud de Borchgrave,
Malcolm MacPherson and Lloyd
Norman; John B. Connally, former
Secretary of the Treasury and Governor
of Texas; Francisco Sa Carneiro,
President of the Social Democratic Party
of Portugal; and Roxane Witke,
Professor of History at the State
University of New York and author of
the bestseller Comrade Chiang Ch'ing.
In this period of inflation and resulting
severe cost pressures, the Council is
particularly pleased and grateful that so
many members have elected to become
supporters of the organization at a level
well above that of regular dues. This sort
of extra assistance is increasingly
important to our ability to maintain an
active and diverse program of public
education and information on
significant topics and issues in foreign
affairs.
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Sponsors of the
Chicago Council
on Foreign Relations
Mr. A. Robert Abboud
Mr. & Mrs. lohn Foster
Mr. & Mrs. Richard F. Kosobud
Mr. & Mrs. Gilbert Osgood
Mr. Hermon Dunlap Smith
Mrs. Albert Arenberg
Mr. & Mrs. Reuben A. Foster
Mrs. David H. Kraft
Mr. George W. Overton
Mr. lames W. Smithson
Mr. Donald Baker
Mr. Lee A. Freeman
Mrs. lay K. Kraus
Mrs. Walter Paepcke
Mr. Edmund A. Stephan
Mr. & Mrs. Harry L. Bauer
Mr. Donald N. Frey
Mr. &`Mrs. Milton I. Krensky
Mr. & Mrs. Roy Papp
Mrs. David B. Stern, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Edward H. Bennett, Jr.
Mrs. Herbert A. Friedlich
Mr. Marshall S. Leaf
Mr. James R. Peck
Mr. Gerald I. Stern
Mr. Howard F. Bennett
Mr. Benjamin I. Ciegiss
Mrs. Jules W. Lederer
Mr. Albert Pick, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. D. Stoken
Mrs. Charles Benton
Mr. William B. Graham
Mr. Morris I. Leibman
Mr. Bert R. Prall
Mr. Robert Stuart, Ir.
Mr. Fred L. Bernheim
Mr. Martin M. Gaon
Mrs. Glen A. Lloyd
Mr. Robert C. Preble, Jr.
Mr. Carroll Sadler
Mr. Robert G. Biesel
Mr. William M. Hales
Mr. Earle Ludgin
Mr. & Mrs. R. Pritzker
Mr. Irwin Swartzberg
Mr. Joseph L. Block
Mr. & Mrs. Sol Hammerman
Mr. Brunson Mac Chesney
Mr. Joseph Prokop
Mr. Richard L. Thomas
Mary & Leigh Block Charitable Fund
Mr. David K. Hardin
Mr. George Makris
Mr. & Mrs. W.E. Puttkammer
Mr. Howard I. Trienens
Mr. & Mrs. P. D. Block, Jr.
Mr. Irving 13. Harris
Ms. Irl H. Marshall
Mr. William Redfield
Miss Ana Urdea
Mr. & Mrs. Richard E. Burow
Mr. Stanley C. Harris, Jr.
Mrs. Frank D. Mayer
Dr. & Mrs. Earl Renfroe
Mr. Herbert Van Stratten
Mr. Frank C. Callahan
Mr. & Mrs. Augustin S. Hart
Mr. Edward F. McCartin
Mr. David W. Rewick
Mr. Thomas Van Stratten
Mr. & Mrs. Hammond E. Chaffetz
Mr. & Mrs. Richard A. Hoefs
Mr. Edward D. McDougal
Mr. & Mrs. Roy E. Ricks
Mr. John W. Von Holdt
Mr. John B. Coleman
Mr. & Mrs. William D. Horne, Ir
Mrs. Robert C. McNamara
Mr. David I. Rosso
Mr. David M. Weil
Mr. Even T. Collinsworth, Ir.
Mr. William I. Howell
Mr. & Mrs. William I. Meyers
Mr. Arthur Rubloff
Mrs. lohn Paul Welling
Mr. Stanton R. Cook
Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence Howe
Mr. Anthony L. Michel
Mr. & Mrs. Julien M. Saks
Mr. & Mrs. Robert B. Wilcox
Mr. Ronald O. Decker
Mr. James H. Hughes
Ms. Robert D. Michels
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur W. Schultz
Mr. David A. Willis
Mrs. Edison Dick
Mr. Robert S. Ingersoll
Mr. Glory Mosier
Mr. Hugh I. Schwartzberg
Mr. S. Richard Wynn
Mr. & Mrs. I. S. Dorfman
Mr. Arthur L. Kelly
Mr. & Mrs. Bernard Nath
Mr. Leonard B. Sax
Mr. Daniel I. Edelman
Mrs. Meyer Kestnbaum
Mr. Murray Nissman
Mr. Alex R. Seith
Mr. Walter T. Fisher
Mr. Gerhard K. Kluge
Mrs. John Nuveen
Mr. & Mrs. Henry Sheehan
Miss Ruth E. Forbes
Mr. Philip M. Klutznik
Mr. Francis E. O'Connor
Mr. & Mrs. Gordon H. Smith
Patrons of the Chicago Council on Foreign Relations
Mr. Robert L. Adler
Ms. Ruth Digirolamo
Mr. Edward H. Hickey
Mr. Robert P. McNeill
Mrs. Myrthe E. Sengstacke
Mr. Alan I. Altheimer
Mr. Wesley Dixon
Mr. Barnet Hodes
Mrs. Durham Mead
Dr. Sic] I. Shafer, M.D.
Mr. Ahmet D. Arsan
Mr. Robert G. Donnelley
Mrs. W. Press Hodgkins
Mr. lames R. Mitchell
Mr. & Mrs. Solomon B. Smith
Mr. William H. Avery
Mr. & Mrs. lames R. Donnelly
Mr. & Mrs. Edwin E. Hokin
Mr. W. W. Mojden
Dr. & Mrs. Daniel Snydacker
Mrs. T.C. Babcock
Mrs. Lyman Drake
Mrs. Irvin E. Houck
Mr. Albert A. Morey
Mr. Lester Solodyna
Mr. Judson C. Ball
Mr. & Mrs. Edward A. Duckett
Mr. lames P. Hume
Mrs. Barbara Morrison
Mrs. I. V. Spachner
Ms. Mildred Barr
Mr. & Mrs. Louis C. Duncan
Mrs. Henry Irwin
Mr. & Mrs. Patrick I. Muldouney
Mr. lack D. Sparks
Mrs. Louise F. Barry
Ms. Gertrude S. Enelow
Mr. & Mrs. Elmer Kaplan
Mr. & Mrs. Lester Munson
Mrs. Robert E. Spiel
Mrs. lames H. Becker
Mr. Sig Feiger
Mr: & Mrs. Charles R. Kaufman
Mr. & Mrs. Lewis E. Neill
Mr. Charles B. Stauffacher
Mr. lack D. Beem
Mr. Gershon I. Feigon
Mr. Richard A. Kent
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur C. Nielsen Jr.
Mr. Alfred C. Stepan, Jr.
Dr. Herbert Bessinger
Mr. lames B. Forgan
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Kestnbaum
Mr. Martin T. O'Donnell
Mr. Sam Stern
Bertrand Goldberg Assoc.
Mrs. Joseph I. Freed
Mr. & Mrs. Neil I. King
Mr. Warren H. O'Neill
Mr. lames H. Stone
Mr. & Mrs. William McCormick Blair
Mr. Ulrich C. Freyberger
Mr. Harry Kinser
Mr. Cecil Partee
Mr. Lloyd Stone
Mr. Irving Blackman
Mrs. Beatrice Friedman
Mr. Clyde E. Klepper
Dr. Willard Pheteplace
Mr. Edward I. Stransky
Mrs. E. F. Blettner
Mr. loseph M. Gabriel
Mr. Leo B. Kneer
Mr. Frederick G. Pick
Mrs. Harold E. Strauss
Mr. Max S. Bloom
Mr. Alvin I. Gilbert
Mr. Martin Koldyke
Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence K. Pomeroy
Mr. John Strohm
Mr. George W. Blossom III
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas I. Godfrey
Mrs. David H. Kraft
Mrs. George A. Poole
Mr. & Mrs. N. R. Suleiman
Mr. Alan S. Boyd
Mr. & Mrs. W. M. Goldschmidt
Stan Krajcovic M.D.
Mrs. Robert C. Prehle, Jr.
Mr. Frank L. Sulzberger
Mr. & Mrs. lack Brickhouse
Mrs. Sydney Smith Gordon
Mr. Raymond I. Kruk
Dr. & Mrs. Theron G. Randolph
Ms. Ethel B. Taub
Mr. Melvin Brorby
Mrs. Louis Guenzel
Mr. Irving Kupcinet
Mr. & Mrs. lack Rapaport
Mr. Rodger M. Tauman
Mr. Baird Brown
Mr. Paul W. Guenzel
Mr. Randy Kurtz
Mr. & Mrs. William Rohan
Mr. & Mrs. 13. Russell Thomas
Judge L. Sheldon Brown
Mr. Leo Guthman
Mr. & Mrs. Howard Landau
Mr. Richard S. Rosenzweig
Mr. John R. Trelease
Mr. & Mrs. Roy Butter
Mr. I. Parker Hall
Mr. Edward H. Levi
Mr. Norman Ross
Mr. William D. Weaver
Mrs. Elizabeth H. Cahn
Mrs. Marian S. Harris
Mr. & Mrs. lames E. Levis
Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth W. Rowe
Mrs. Edward K. Welles
Mr. Charles Chomsky
Mr. Samuel A. Hassan
Ms. Natalie Linden
Mr. Carlos Ruival
Mr. Paul I. Wisner
Mr. Morton Chukerman
Mrs. Jerome Hasterlick
Mrs. Edward I. Loewenthal
Mr. & Mrs. M. Schlesinger
Mr. & Mrs. Albert Wohlstetter
Mr. Steve Conway
Mr. Noboru Hatakeyama
Mr. William H. Lowe
Mr. Lee Schooler
Mrs. Arnold R. Wolff
Mr. Ray Dancer
Mr. & Mrs. Bernard Hattis
Mr. Carl Eugene Lund
Mrs. Charles P. Schwartz
Mr. John D. Yondorf
Mr. & Mrs. Anthony L. Depersio
Mr. & Mrs. Robert L. Hess
Mr. George R. McCoy
Mr. Jerome I. Seavey
Foundation and Institute Support
Corporate Sponsors
(Minimum Contribution $1,000)
The Aspen Institute for Humanistic Studies
The Cargill Foundation
The Creole Foundation, Venezuela
Allstate Insurance Company
Gould, Inc.
Fiat, S.p.A., Italy
American Hospital Supply Corporation
Harris Trust & Savings Bank
The Field Foundation of Illinois
Amoco Foundation, Inc.
Hart Schaffner & Marx
The Ford Foundation
Arthur Andersen & Co.
Walter E. Heller International Corporation
The Gulbenkian Foundation, Portugal
Baxter Travenol Laboratories, Inc.
Inland Steel Company
The Japan Trade Center of Chicago
The Becker & Warburg-Paribas Group, Inc.
International Harvester Company
The Johnson Foundation
Borg-Warner Corporation
International Minerals & Chemical Corporation
The Krupp Foundation, Federal Republic of Germany
Bliss & Laughlin Industries, Inc.
Kraft, Inc.
The Lilly Endowment
Chicago Title & Trust Company
Morton-Norwich Products, Inc.
The John I. McCloy Fund
The Chicago Tribune
Natural Gas Pipeline Company of America
The Thyssen Foundation, Federal Republic of Germany
Consolidated Foods Corporation
Northwest Industries, Inc.
The Tinker Foundation
Continental Illinois National Bank & Trust Company
The Northern Trust Company
Ernst & Ernst
Price Waterhouse & Co.
Special Contributors (Up to $600 annually)
Esmark, Inc.
The Quaker Oats Company
A. B. Dick Foundation Marsh & McLennan
Field Enterprises, Inc.
G.D. Searle & Co.
Maremont Corporation IS. Pryor
FMC Corporation
Sears, Roebuck & Co.
Foote, Cone & Belding Chicago Bridge & Iron
The First National Bank of Chicago
Sunbeam Corporation
CATX Corporation
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Mrs. Richard L. Abbott
Mr. Gerald W. Bialka
I. H. Cameron
Dr. & Mrs. Edwin I. De Costa
Mr. Jerome G. Abeles
Dr. & Mrs. Vincent E. Blank
Mr. & Mrs. D. F. Campbell
Mr. & Mrs. Howard D. Dellard
Mrs. Lester S. Abelson
Mrs. Raymond P. Bilger
Mr. & Mrs. Charles B. Cannon
Mr. Peter P. Demay
Mr. Gary B. Ackerman
Mr. Martin R. Binder
Mr. & Mrs. Tom Carey
Mr. Dennis G. Dempsey
Mr. & Mrs. Julius Adams
Mr. & Mrs. Frank L. Bixby
Mr. & Mrs. George T. Carlin
Miss Margaret A. Detrick
Dr. & Mrs. Howard Adilman
Mr. Abraham Blachman
Mrs. Evelyn F. Carlson
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Mr. David E. Albertson
Dr. Harold A. Black
Mr. & Mrs. Vincent F. Carney
Ms. Cordelia W. Devol
Mr. Arthur A. Allan
Mr. Leo Blackburn
Mrs. Piedad Carrera
Mr. Donald E. De Voto
Mr. & Mrs. Miguel I. Allerio
Mr. & Mrs. W.H. Blankley
Mr. Walter G. Carsch
Mr. Robert Diamant
Mrs. Richard H. Alschuler
Aspacia M. Blase
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Mr. Roy S. Diamond
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Miss Susan M. Bleier
Miss Barbara Cartwright
Mr. Leon 1. Di Biasio
Ms. Ethel Avk Amel
Mr. Andrew K. Block
Mr. Thomas I. Casey
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Mr. Donald B. Diggle
Dr. Marlene Andalman
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Mr. J. Richard Dirks
Mrs. Corliss D. Anderson
Mrs. Louis Blosten
Mr. Benjamin Cate
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Mrs. Joseph m. Blumenthal
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Mr. Arthur Dixon
Mr. Donald B. Anderson
Mr. Charles K. Bobinette
Mr. Robert L. Champion, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. George Dobric
Mr. Warren L. Anderson
Mr. & Mrs. Hyman H. Bobrow
Mr. & Mrs. Douglas K. Chapman
Mr. Robert F. Domagala
Mr. & Mrs. Stanley A. Aniol
I.S. Bogen
Miss Vera C. Chapman
Miss Martha Donnelly
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Mr. James P. Dorr
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Miss Carol Borson
Mrs. G. L. Christopher
Dr. Charles P. Dowsett
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Mrs. Rico G. Bosca
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Miss Antonia Artese
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Mr. Lester Asher
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Andre A. Aufrere
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Mrs. Edward W. Claar
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Sr. Mary Balkus
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Mrs. Frieda Cogswell
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Mr. Norman D. Barfield
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Mr. Merle L. Elam
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P. 0. Elbert
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Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Elesh
Mrs. Dorothy Barth
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Hyacinth E. Coney
Mr. William Elfenbaum
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Miss Mary Joan Conroy
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Mr. Jacob Baskin
Mr. & Mrs. Stanton Brody
Mr. Thomas I. Considine
Mr. Morton Engle
P. Baucke
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Dr. Perry T. English
Jr.
Miss Mary Stephanie Bauer
Mr. & Mrs. Jerry Brosilow
Fernita L. Cook
,
Mr. Bernard E. Epton
Mr. William L. Bax
J. G. Brown
Mr. & Mrs. Granger Cook, Jr.
Ms. Leona A. Erickson
Adrian B. Baydoun
Miss Edith Brown
Mr. Colin D. Cooper
Dr. James D. Ertle
Mrs. Walter G. Bay[
Mrs. Gardner Brown
Mrs. L. K. Cooper
Mr. Manfred Esser
Mr. Wm. Howard Beasley, III
Mr. Gerard S. Brown
Dr. Richard Cooper
Mr. Leonard C. Everson
Mr. & Mrs. A.D. Becker
Mrs. Murray C. Brown
Mrs. Geoffrey P. Cooper-Stanton
Dr. & Mrs. Eric W
Fantl
Mr. Herbert W. Becker
Miss Ruth Brown
Mr. James M. Copenhaver
.
Mr. & Mrs. WM
M
Farnsworth
Miss loan R. Beckert
Mr. & Mrs. Richard G. Brown
Mr. & Mrs. I. Joseph Corbett
.
.
Mr
Edwin J
Faster
Donald Beemer Associates
Mrs. William G. Brown
Mrs. Doris C. Corboy
.
.
Mr
M
R
Feeney
Mr. William 0. Beers
Mr. John D. Brundage
Mr. lack H. Cornelius
.
.
.
Mr. David J
Feinberg
Mr. Paul Begich
Mr. Herbert R. Brussee
Mrs. Walter G. Cornett, I I I
.
Mr
Donald J
Fennelly
Mrs. Benjamin Behr
Mr. Dan Brusslan
Mr. & Mrs. I. I. Couturier
.
.
Mr. Nello V
Ferrara
Mr. Larry Belcaster
Mr. Russel Bruzek
Mr. James S. Cox
.
Mrs
Karen R
Field
Mr. Dennis A. Bell
Mr. Robert H. Buchen
Dr. & Mrs. Lawrence M. Cox
.
.
Ms
Brenda Fields
Mrs. Frank S. Bellis
Dr. & Mrs. WM. B. Buckingham
Dr. James W. Crawford
.
Mr. S. M. Fields
Ms. Myra Beniger
Mr. Louis J. Buffardi
Mr. Glen F. Cray, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs
Patrick S
Filter
Mr. & Mrs. Fred G. Benner
Mr. Kenneth M. Bunning
Miss Ruth K. Crum
.
.
Mrs
Rona Finch
Mr. & Mrs. Marshall Bennett
Ms. Gretchen Burbach
Mr. Jules Crystal
.
Ms
Esther Fink
Mr. & Mrs. Toni Benson
Ms. Antoinette M. Burchard
Dr. Ulisse P. Cucco
.
Dr
Jack P
Fink
Mr. V. Jon Bentz
Mr. Robert Burdette
Mr. & Mrs. Charles A. Cummins
.
.
Ms
Martha C
Fink
Mrs. Angela A. Berezecka
Mr. Ted Burger
Mr. & Mrs. R. J. Cunningham
.
.
Mr
Raymond E
Finnegan
Mr. lack H. Berg
Ms. Betty Burns
Ms. Rita 1. Curry
.
.
Mrs
Dorothy B
Fischer
Ms. Nancy K. Berg
Mr. & Mrs. David S. Buyher
Mr. & Mrs. S. J. Cutler
.
.
Mrs. Jacob M
Fishman
Mrs. George Berger
Ms. loan Byas
Ms. Linda E. Davidson
.
Mrs
Leslie Fishman
Mr. & Mrs. Edwin A. Bergman
Mr. Philip P. Byers
Lee Davis
.
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Flank
Mr. Edward W. Bergmann
Mr. Peter C. B. Bynoe
Mr. & Mrs. Charles W. Davis
Mr. John W
Fletcher
S
Mr. Stuart Bernstein
Mrs. Morton D. Cahn
Mrs. lack C. Davis
.
.
Ms. Mary E. Flynn
Mr. Lawrence R. Beverage
Mr. E. F. Camara
Mr. Thomas A. Dean
Mr. Daniel James Foley
Mrs. Leslie Bezark
Mr. Barton F. Cameron
Mr. & Mrs. Robert de Blois
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Mr. Seely P. Forbes
Mrs. Floraloise A. Goodkind
Mrs. Howard Hirsch
Mr. John T. Kimbell
Hebe M. Forgione
Mr. Charles H. Goodman
Mr. & Mrs. I. Arthur Hirsch
Mr. Shinkichi Kiuchi
Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. Forman
Mr. & Mrs. lames H. Goodman
Mr. Richard B. Hirsch
Ms. Lucille Kleppel
Mr. Daniel F. Foster
Mr. Paul W. Goodrich
Mr. Richard L. Hirsch
Mr. Harold Kletnick
Dr. Samuel H. Fraerman
Mr. Paul W. Goodrich
Mr. & Mrs. Morris Hirsch
Ms. Florence Klick
Mr. Maurice A. Frank
Mr. Lowell H. Goone
Ms. Geraldine B. Hletko
Mr. Guy Howard Klopp
Mr. & Mrs. Jerome D. Franklin
Miss Rose Goren
Mr. Barnet Hodes
Mr. & Mrs. Richard I. Kohan
Mr. Herbert Franks
Dr. & Mrs. Samuel P. Gotoff
Mr. & Mrs. Ralph M. Hogan
Mr. & Mrs. Allen Koplin
Mr. Jeffrey Freed
Mr. Lee Gottlieb
Mrs. John A. Holabird
Mr. Edward F. Kornblith
Ellen & Gerald Freedman
Mr. & Mrs. Richard H. Gottlieb
Mr. & Mrs. Marshall M. Holleb
Dr. Robert I. Kovarik
W. M. Freeman
Mr. Joseph Grant
Mr. William C. Holmeide
Mr. Henry W. Kraebber, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Norman Freeman
Mr. O. A. Granum
Mr. Arthur Holzheimer
Mr. Stanley P. Kramer
Mr. Thomas F. Frey
Mr. & Mrs. H. Richard Grauman
Mr. Carl Holzheimer
Mr. George H. Krauspe
Mr. Robert A. Friedli
Mr. & Mrs. Herbert S. Graver
Mr. William L. Hood, Jr.
Mrs. Shirley P. Kravitt
Mrs. Arthur Friedman
Mr. Marcus D. Grayck, ESQ
Mr. & Mrs. John R. Hoppe
Mr. John F. Kretchmar
Dr. E. L. Friedman
Ms. Joyce E. Greene
Mr. lames E. Horan
Mr. & Mrs. Ronald V. Krizek
Mr. Jerome I. Friedman
Mr. Norman I. Greene
Mr. Donald R. Horder
Mrs. Genevive Krol
Mr. Robert S. Friend
Mr. Walter Greene
S. K. Horn
Mr. Joseph Krone
Mr. & Mrs. Gordon H. Fromm
Mr. & Mrs. Warren H. Greene
Mr. John T. Horton
Mr. Walter T. Kuhlmey
Mr. Joseph A. Fruestick
Mr. L. Bradford Gregg
Mrs. Franklin Horwich
Mr. & Mrs. Duane Kullberg
Mr. Jonathan M. Fuchs
Mr. Sydney E. Gregory
Mr. & Mrs. James K. Hotchkiss
Mr. Stephen Kutz
Ms. Eileen Fuerstenberg
Miss L. Berenice Gremmels
Mrs. Irvin E. Houck
Mr. Abraham Kwate
Ms. Kathy Fujii
Miss Paula E. Grespan
Ms. Crystal M. Hudson
Miss Ella A. La Beau
Mr. Ralph Fujimoto
Mr. & Mrs. George Price Grieve
Mr. John Gardner Huff
Mr. William Ladany
Mrs. Sandra L. Fulscher
Ms. losephina B. Gross
Miss Helen L. Huffman
Mr. & Mrs. W. A. Lahrmann, Jr.
Mr. Clair W. Furlong
Mr. & Mrs. Richard Grossman
Mrs. Richard N. Hult
Dr. Robert E. Lahti
Mr. Wallace I. Gaarsoe
Mr. Larry Grote
Mr. & Mrs. Harry A. Hunsberger
Mrs. Katherine W. Lambert
Leslie Gable
Mr. Herbert A. Guerin
Mr. William O. Hunt
Mr. Milton Lambert
Mr. lack B. Gable
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Dr. Frank L. Hussey
Mr. Thomas P. Lamberty
Mrs. Frank Gall
Mrs. Frederick Haag
Mr. John A. lacopi
Mr. I. I. Lane
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Miss loan M. Habryl
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Mr. Gilbert Lang
Mrs. Leo H. Garman
Mr. Lawrence Haddad
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Mr. Richard A. La Point
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Ms. Christine A. Irwin
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Mrs. Betty N. Geiger
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Mr. Hans D. Isenberg
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Mr. Nicholas G. lannes
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Mr. Larry Jarchow
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Mrs. Louis Levy
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Mr. Guy R. Justis
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Mr. Herbert Kahn
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Mr. Forest Jay Lightle, Jr.
Ms. Maude E. Clore
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Mr. Paul A. Karas
Ms. Rena S. Lillard
Mr. John P. Gnaedinger
Dr. F. Herz
Mr. Bernard Karlin
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Mr. & Mrs. H. G. Lines
Mrs. William Gold
Mr. John Hibben
Mr. Alan D. Katz
Mr. W. H. Link
Mrs. Herman Goldberg
Mr. Edward H. Hickey
Mrs. Bernard Katz
Mr. Ely Lionheart
Mr. & Mrs. Irving H. Goldberg
Mr. & Mrs. F. F. Hickey
Mr. Arthur Kay
Mr. & Mrs. C. A. Lippitz
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Dr. Freda S. Kehm
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Ms. Laurie Livingston
Mr. & Mrs. Seymour Golden
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Mr. Harold H. Hines, Jr.
Mr. James 1. Kenny
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Mr. & Mrs. Sidney Mathias
Mr. Irving B. Naiburg
R. L. Porter
Miss Opal Rouse
Mrs. William Bradford May
J. Nasti
Mrs. Henry Porterfield
Mr. Robert Rousse
Mr. Roland Maye
Mr. & Mrs. I. H. Nathan
Mr. & Mrs. John J. Portman
Mr. William J. Royal
Mr. Frank Mayer
Mr. & Mrs. Robert B. Nathan
Ms. Rosalie Poss
Miss Agnes Rozehnal
Mr. Larry Mayer
Mr. & Mrs. Samuel A. Nathan
Mrs. Wm. K. Poulsom
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas H. Ruben
Mrs. Robert B. Mayer
Miss by Nazarian
Mr. Robert W. Powell
Dr. & Mrs. Philip G. Rubens
Mrs. lack P. Mayotte
Mr. & Mrs. Herbert Nechin
Mrs. David Presman
H. Rubin
Mr. Aloysius A. Mazewski
W. R. Neely
Mr. Richard H. Prins
Mr. Joseph O. Rubinelli
Mr. N. E. Mc Cabe
Mrs. Lorraine E. Nelsen
Ms. Audrey G. Pritzker
Mr. George A. Rubinstein
Ms. Flone Mc Caffrey
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Mrs. Cindy Pritzker
Ms. Flonza Rudd
Mr. & Mrs. lames C. Mc Call
Mr. George R. Nelson
Ms. Virginia S. Prodromos
Mr. Carlos Ruival
Mr. John T. Mc Cart, IV
Miss Sharon Neste
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Mr. B. Arthur Russell
Mr. lack Mc Donald
Miss Emily lean Newcomb
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Mr. Robert F. McDonald
Mr. & Mrs. Albert H. Newman
Mr. Richard H. Pusateri
Miss Mileva Ruvarac
Mr. George C. Mc Elroy
Mr. & Mrs. Albert H. Newman
Mr. Walter A. Pyhrr
Ms. Anne V. Ryson
Ms. Laurie McGeorge
Mr. & Mrs. E. H. Newman
Ms. Loretta Pyrdek
Mr. Donald E. Saballus
Mrs. 1. P. McGoldrick
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Miss Marsha Lee Quale
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Ms. Anita M. McGovern
Mr. Stephen R. Nichols
Dr. Lillian Questiaux
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Dr. & Mrs. W. M. Nickey, Jr.
Ms. Judith Quinn
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Dr. Sanford E. Rabushka
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Mr. Donald Mc Lean
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Mr. Joseph Radov
Mrs. Richard H. Samuels
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Ms. Cheryl H. Raff
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Mrs. K. W. Rajecki
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Mr. John W. Noble, Jr.
Mr. Paul J. Randolph
Mrs. John W. Sargent
Dr. W. Harrison Mehn
Alan T. & Jane R. Nolan
Mr. & Mrs. William O. Ranky
Mr. foram Sassower
Mr. Harmon Meigs
Mr. Kenneth L. Nolan
Mr. George Ranney
Mr. Charles Satinover
Mrs. Bernard Meitzer
Mr. D. Hamilton Norton
Mr. Geo. A. Ranney
Jr.
Dr. John L. Savage
Mr. Richard Mellen
Ms. Jane Novak
,
Mr. Waldo Ranson
Mr. & Mrs. Morris Saxner
Mr. & Mrs. H. E. Mendenhall, Jr.
Mr. Ted F. Novak
Mr. Gary P. Ratner
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Miss Marion F. Merrill
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,
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Mr. Max Schiff, Jr.
Mrs. Ralph Michaels
Mr. Hans Oesau
Miss Marie K. Remien
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Jr.
Manly Michaelson
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Eli Resnick
,
Mr. A. Bruce Schimberg
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Mr. Norman H. Schglegel
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Chicago Council
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Contributing Members
Mr. John Schlimmer
Mrs. W. I. Schloesser
Mr. Lajos Schmidt
Miss Hildegarde A. Schorsch
Mr. Louis I. Schorsch
Dr. & Mrs. Sidney Schreiber
Mrs. Karl Schultz
Mr. Carl Schultz
Mr. Erwin E. Schulze
Mr. Theodore G. Schuster
Judge & Mrs. Ben Schwartz
Dr. & Mrs. L. I. Schwartz
Mrs. David Sciaky
Mrs. John M. Scroggins
Mr. John M. Searles, Sr.
Lotte Sears
Mr. Everett L. Secord
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Mr. & Mrs. Herbert E. Selkoe
Mr. Ezra Sensibar
Mrs. I. R. Sensibar
Dr. & Mrs. Endel Sepp
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Ms. Evelyn F. Shaevel
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Mr. lames A. Shapiro
Mr. & Mrs. Louis Shapiro
Ms. Ruth Kane Shapiro
Mr. Robert Lee Shapiro
Dr. Sherman Shapiro
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Mrs. Sharon Sharp
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Mr. Seymour S. Smith
Mr. William S. Smith
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Mr. William M. Snyder, Jr.
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Ms. Susan Soble
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Miss Pauline Solomon
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Miss Wendy Sonnenschein
Mr. William Solomon Sorgon
Dr. & Mrs. Rodolfo M. Soria
Mr. Marvin A. Sotoloff
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Mr. Wilson F. Souders
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Mr. & Mrs. Richard Spiwak
Mr. lames F. Spohn
Mr. lack C. Staehle
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Miss Marie Steiner
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Miss Dorothy E. Stroba
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Noel Tetrev
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Lynn R. Ungerleider
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Dr. Harry K. Waddingtbn
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W. W. Walker
Mr. Alton Walker
Mr. & Mrs. Edwin F. Walker
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Mrs. Jon Clarence Walters
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Adm. Alban Weber
Mrs. P. I. Weber
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Rabbi & Mrs. Karl Weiner
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THE CHICAGO COUNCIL ON FOREIGN RELATIONS
116 South Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60603
Editor: Nora Carey Dell
Design: Joseph Szwarek, Creative Productions, Inc.
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The Chicago Council
on Foreign Relations
116 South Michigan Avenue
Chicago, Illinois 60603
0
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at --Is
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Congressman Albert C. Ullman, Chairman of the
U.S. House of Representatives Ways and Means
Committee (right) with Executive Committee
Chairman John D. Gray at the meeting
on May 27, 1977.
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i ne u.nicago t-ommaree is a group or senior
business and professional leaders from the
Chicago area concerned with the serious
problems confronting the United States.
The Committee meets regularly:
To present to the members distinguished
leaders in our own and foreign governments,
as well as leading personalities in business,
the press and academic circles, for off-the-
record discussions of vital issues affecting
the international relations and foreign
policies of the United States;
To analyze and discuss the ideas presented;
To conduct other related activities selected
by the Executive Committee to further
inform members on world affairs.
The Committee is sponsored by the Chicago
Council on Foreign Relations, a nonpartisan
organization founded in 1922 to inform
citizens of this area through addresses by
leading statesmen, discussion groups and
other activities, of significant international
issues and their bearing on American
foreign policy.
Page
Statement of Purpose .............. 4
Executive Committee ............... 5
Meetings 1976-77 ................. 7
Directory of Members 1977 ......... 11
I I I
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Chairman of The Committee
John D. Gray
Chairman of the Board
Hart Schaffner & Marx
Vice Chairman
Arthur M. Wood
Chairman of the Board
Sears, Roebuck and Co.
Secretary
Edmund A. Stephan
Senior Partner
Mayer, Brown & Platt
A. Robert Abboud
Chairman of the Board
The First National
Bank of Chicago
Roger E. Anderson
Chairman of the Board of Directors
Continental Illinois National Bank
and Trust Company of Chicago
William O. Beers
Chairman of the Board
Kraftco Corporation
James F. Bere
Chairman & Chief Executive Officer
Borg-Warner Corporation
Hugh M. Campbell
Partner
Price Waterhouse & Co.
Stanton R. Cook
Chairman & Publisher
Chicago Tribune Company
Harvey Kapnick
Chairman
Arthur Andersen & Co.
Brooks McCormick
President & Chief Executive Officer
International Harvester Company
Robert H. Malott
Chairman of the Board &
President
FMC Corporation
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Newton N. Minow
Partner
Sidley & Austin
E. Norman Staub
Vice Chairman
The Northern Trust Company
Charles B. Stauffacher
President & Chief Executive Officer
Field Enterprises, Inc.
John E. Swearingen
Chairman of the Board
Standard Oil Company (Indiana)
Roberta Wohlstetter
Author & Scholar
Program Director
John E. Rielly
President
The Chicago Council on Foreign
Relations
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September 15, 1976
Luncheon
THE HONORABLE NICHOLAS F. PARKINSON
/I~
Ambassador of Australia to the United States
"Australian-American Relations in the 1970's"
\~~
September 20, 1976
Luncheon
His EXCELLENCY IHSAN SABRI CAGLAYANGIL
Minister of Foreign Alairs, Turkey
"Turkey's Role in the Mediterranean and Beyond"
rr:3
V,
4
September 22, 1976
0)
Luncheon
1
EDWIN O. REISCHAUER
Professor, Harvard University and former
U. S. Ambassador to Japan
"A Time of Doubt in Japan"
October 8, 1976
Luncheon
THE HONORABLE CHARLES MCC. MATHIAS
United States Senator
Republican-Maryland
"Foreign Policy Issues and the Campaign"
V
October 20, 1976
LUNCHEON
THE HONORABLE ANNE ARMSTRONG
U.S. Ambassador to the Court of St. James
"View of United States Foreign Policy
from Grosvenor Square"
October 29, 1976
Luncheon
RICHARD COOPER
Professor of Economics, Yale University
"Trends in the World Economy"
November 9, 1976
Luncheon
RICHARD N. GARDNER
Henry L. Moses Professor of International
Law and Organization, Columbia University
"Human Rights and the Shaping of United States
Foreign Policy"
7
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November 12, 1976
Luncheon
His EXCELLENCY JACQUES KosCIUSKO-MORIZET
Ambassador of France to the U.S.
"French-American Relations"
December 1, 1976
Luncheon
GENERAL ALEXANDER M. HAIG
Supreme Allied Commander, Europe
"Western Security and NATO in the 1970's"
December 7, 1976
Luncheon
MCGEORGE BUNDY
President, The Ford Foundation
"Foreign Policy Issues in the Next Administration"
December 14, 1976
Luncheon
GEORGE P. SHULTZ
President, Bechtel Corporation
"Some Economic Problems in the
Next Four Years"
January 17, 1977
Luncheon
CESARE MERLINI
Director, Italian Institute for
International Affairs
"Italian Communism and Italian Party Politics"
January 24, 1977
Luncheon
NEWSWEEK Magazine's Periscope Panel:
Arnaud de Borchgrave, Senior Foreign
Correspondent
Malcolm MacPherson, London Correspondent
Lloyd Norman, Pentagon Correspondent
"Foreign Policy in the Carter Administration"
January 27, 1977
Luncheon
E. R. ZUMWALT, JR.
Admiral, United States Navy (Retired)
"Defense Policy and the New Administration"
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March 16, 1977
Luncheon
His EXCELLENCY BERNDT VON STADEN
Ambassador of the Federal Republic of
Germany to the U.S.
"America and Germany in A Shrinking World"
March 23, 1977
Luncheon
THIERRY DE MONTBRIAL
Chief of the Policy Planning Staff`
Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Paris, France
"The Energy Crisis: Past and Future"
March 24, 1977
Luncheon
THE HONORABLE JOHN B. CONNALLY
Attorney, Vinson, Elkins, Searls,
. Connally & Smith
"Vital Issues"
March 29, 1977
Luncheon
PAUL A. VOLCKER
President, Federal Reserve Bank of New York
"Some Reflections on the International
Monetary Scene"
April 19, 1977
Luncheon
H. JOHANNES WITTEVEEN
Managing Director, International
Monetary Fund
"The IMF's Role in the Present International
Monetary Situation"
April 20, 1977
Luncheon
THE RIGHT HONORABLE Roy JENKINS
President, Commission of the
European Community
"Trade and Politics: Europe and America"
April 21, 1977
Luncheon
MAJ. GENERAL GEORGE J. KEEGAN, JR. USAF (ret.)
Executive Vice President, United States
Strategic Institute
"Perceptions of the Strategic Balance"
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April 22, 1977
Luncheon
C. FRED BERGSTEN
Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for
International Affairs
"The Foreign Economic Policy of the
United States"
April 26, 1977
Luncheon
ROBERT L. BARTLEY
Editor, Editorial Page, Wall Street Journal
"What Does China Really Want?"
May 3, 1977
Luncheon
FRANCISCO SA CARNIERO
President, Partido Social Democrata
"Portugal and Atlantic Area Relations"
May 4, 1977
Luncheon
THE HONORABLE WILLIAM E. SCHAUFELE, JR.
Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs
"United States Foreign Policy Toward Africa"
May 18, 1977
Luncheon
ALICE RIVLIN
Director, Congressional Budget Office
"The Budget Office and International Affairs"
May 25, 1977
Luncheon
MARSHALL SHULMAN
Director, Russian Institute, Columbia
University and Consultant to the Secretary
of State I
"Current United States-Soviet Relations"
May 27, 1977
Luncheon
THE HONORABLE ALBERT C. ULLMAN
Chairman, Ways and Means Committee
United States House of Representatives
"Energy, Trade and Foreign Policy"
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Membership in The Chicago Committee
is by invitation only.
Charles Aaron
Senior Partner
Aaron, Aaron, Schimberg & Hess
A. Robert Abboud
Chairman of the Board
The First National Bank of Chicago
K. Brooks Abernathy
Chairman & Chief Executive Officer
Brunswick Corporation
Leland Adams
President
Amoco International Oil Company
Robert Z. Aliber
Professor of International
Economics & Finance
The University of Chicago
John D. Ames
Limited Partner
Bacon, Whipple & Co.
Roger E. Anderson
Chairman of the Board of Directors
Continental Illinois National Bank
& Trust Company of Chicago
Dwayne O. Andreas
Chairman of the Board &
Chief Executive
Archer Daniels Midland Company
Norbert F. Armour
Chairman of the Board
Carson Pirie Scott & Co.
Edwin C. Austin
Partner
Sidley & Austin
William H. Avery
Partner
Sidley & Austin
Jeremy Azrael
Professor of Political Science
University of Chicago
Donald J. Bachner
President - International Group
Illinois Tool Works, Inc.
George R. Baker
Executive Vice President
Continental Illinois National Bank
& Trust Co. of Chicago
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Stuart S. Ball
Partner
Sidley & Austin
Charles A. Bane
Partner
Isham, Lincoln & Beale
Guy Barbier
Partner
Arthur Andersen & Company
Steven J. Barnes
Executive Vice President
President, International Division
McDonald's Corporation
William C. Bartholomay
Vice Chairman of the Board
Frank B. Hall & Co. of Illinois
Robert O. Bass
President
Borg-Warner Corporation
M. Cherif Bassiouni
Professor of Law
DePaul University
Carol Edler Baumann
Director
Institute of World Affairs
The University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee
Karl D. Bays
Chairman of the Board & Chief Executive Officer
American Hospital Supply Corporation
J. Grant Beadle
President & Chief Eexcutive Officer
Union Special Corporation
Harry G. Beckner
Chairman
Jewel Food Stores
Jack D. Beem
Partner
Baker & McKenzie
William O. Beers
Chairman of the Board
Kraftco Corporation
B. E. Bensinger
James F. Bere
Chairman & Chief Executive Officer
Borg-Warner Corporation
Frank L. Bixby
Partner
Sidley & Austin
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Edward McC. Blair
Managing Partner
William Blair & Company
William McCormick Blair
Partner
William Blair & Company
Edward F. Blettner
Honorary Director
The First National Bank of Chicago
Charles M. Bliss
President
Harris Trust & Savings Bank
Joseph L. Block
Honorary Director
Inland Steel Company
Philip D. Block, Jr.
Honorary Director
Inland Steel Company
George W. Blossom, III
Vice President
Corroon & Black of Illinois, Inc.
Archie R. Boe
Chairman of the Board
Allstate Insurance Company
Charles P. Bowen, Jr.
Honorary Chairman
Booz, Allen & Hamilton, Inc.
Arthur S. Bowes
Retired
Alan S. Boyd
Judson B. Branch
William T. Branham
Chairman of the Board, President
& Chief Executive Officer
Field Enterprises Educational Corporation
James J. Brice
Co-Chairman
Arthur Andersen & Co.
Roger T. Briggs
Financial Vice President
Esmark, Inc.
Herbert C. Brook
Partner
Lord, Bissell & Brook
Robert E. Brooker
Melvin Brorby
Senior Vice President
Needham, Harper & Steers Advertising, Inc.
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Cameron Brown
President
Cameron Brown, Ltd.
H. Templeton Brown
Partner
Mayer, Brown & Platt
D. J. R. Bruckner
Vice President for Public Affairs
Director, Center For
Policy Study
The University of Chicago
John H. Bryan, Jr.
President & Chief Executive Officer
Consolidated Foods Corporation
A. C. Buehler, Jr.
Chairman
Victor Comptometer Corporation
Thomas F. Bull
General Partner
Hay Associates
Richard E. Burow
President
Kroehler Manufacturing Company
William E. Callahan
Executive Vice President
International Harvester Company
Jack L. Camp
Hugh M. Campbell
Retired Partner
Price Waterhouse & Co.
J. Melfort Campbell
Vice President, International Operations
Allstate Insurance Company
Robert G. Campbell
President
CBS Musical Instruments
William G. Caples
Counsel
Vedder Price Kaufman & Kammholz
Arthur I. Caplin
President
Marpro, Inc.
John J. Cardwell
President
Consolidated Foods Corporation
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Raymond N. Carlen
Senior Vice President
Inland Steel Company
Everitt A. Carter
Chairman of the Board
OAK Industries, Inc.
Samuel B. Casey, Jr.
President & Chief Executive Officer
Pullman Inc.
Hammond E. Chaffetz
Partner
Kirkland & Ellis
E. Laurence Chalmers, Jr.
President
The Art Institute of Chicago
Ronald J. Chinnock
Senior Vice President
Chinnock & Doughty, Inc.
Richard C. Christian
Chairman of the Board
Marsteller, Inc.
Weston R. Christopherson
President
Jewel Companies, Inc.
Donald Clark
President
Household Finance Corporation
David Clements
Managing Partner - Scandinavia
Arthur Andersen & Co.
Franklin A. Cole
Chairman
Walter E. Heller International Corporation
John B. Coleman
President
John B. Coleman & Company
Even T. Collinsworth, Jr.
President & Chief Executive Officer
Bliss & Laughlin Industries, Inc.
John C. Colman
Chairman, Finance Committee
Beeline Fashions, Inc.
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Frank W. Considine
President & Chief Executive
Officer
National Can Corporation
Stanton R. Cook
Chairman and Publisher
Chicago Tribune
John E. Corbally
President
University of Illinois
Gordon R. Corey
Vice Chairman
Commonwealth Edison
Thomas H. Coulter
Chief Executive Officer
Chicago Association of Commerce and
Industry
Lester Crown
President
Material Service Corporation
Edward Cummings
Executive Vice President
Continental Illinois National Bank
and Trust Company of Chicago
Tilden Cummings
President (Retired) & Director
Continental Illinois National Bank
and Trust Company of Chicago
Arthur I. Cyr
Program Director
The Chicago Council on
Foreign Relations
John D'Arcy, Jr.
Senior Vice President
The Quaker Oats Company
Kenneth W. Dam
Green Professor of International Legal Studies
University of Chicago Law School
Milton F. Darr, Jr.
President
La Salle National Bank
Sidney Davidson
Arthur Young Professor of Accounting
Director of Business Research
The University of Chicago
Edgar G. Davis
Vice President, Corporate Affairs
Eli Lilly and Company
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0. C. Davis
President
Peoples Gas Company
Charles H. Davison
Managing Partner-Midwest Region
Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Co.
Leo C. de Grijs
Senior Vice President
Continental Illinois National Bank
& Trust Company of Chicago
Louis F. Dempsey
Executive Vice President
The Northern Trust Company
Terry Diamond
Loeb, Rhoades & Co.
Albert B. Dick III
Chairman
A. B. Dick Company
Clyde E. Dickey, Jr.
Partner
Arthur Andersen & Co.
Wesley M. Dixon, Jr.
Vice Chairman
G. D. Searle & Co.
Thomas A. Donahoe
Partner
Price Waterhouse & Co.
Edward S. Donnell
Chairman & Chief Executive Officer
Montgomery Ward & Co.
James R. Donnelley
Vice President-Financial &
Legal Sales Division
R. R. Donnelley & Sons Company
James F. Donovan
Trustee
Central Manufacturing District
James H. Douglas
Counsel
Gardner, Carton & Douglas
Kenneth J. Douglas
Chairman of the Board
Dean Foods Company
Kingman Douglass, Jr.
General Partner
Kuhn, Loeb & Co.
Robert M. Drevs
Chairman of the Board
Peoples Gas Company
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John E. Drick
Honorary Director
The First National Bank of Chicago
Edward W. Duffy
President
United States Gypsum Company
Louis C. Duncan
Executive Vice President
Household Finance Corporation
R. Gregory Durham
President
Lyon & Healy, Inc.
Daniel J. Edelman
President
Daniel J. Edelman, Inc.
John A. Edwards
President
Liquid Carbonic Corporation
Walter V. Elisha
President
Jewel Companies
G. R. Ellis
Chairman & Chief Executive Officer
Household Finance Corporation
R. Winfield Ellis
Honorary Director & Adviser
to the Board
Blunt Ellis & Simmons Incorporated
E. Stanley Enlund
Chairman of the Board &
Chief Executive Officer
First Federal Savings and Loan
Association of Chicago
William G. Ericsson
Chairman of the Board
Mercantile National Bank of Chicago
A. Thomas Etcheson
Vice Chairman
Lake Shore National Bank
Ralph Falk II
Chairman, Executive Committee
Baxter Travenol Laboratories, Inc.
Richard J. Farrell
Vice President-Law and Public Affairs
Standard Oil Company (Indiana)
Richard J. Ferris,
President & Chief Executive Officer
United Airlines, Inc.
18 1
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Wayne Fickinger
Executive Vice President & Director
J. Walter Thompson - U. S. Western Division
Marshall Field
Publisher
Chicago Sun Times and
Chicago Daily News
Bernard M. Filler
President
Capital B Corporation
Lawrence S. Finkelstein
Professor of Political Science
Northern Illinois University
Walter T. Fisher
Counsel
Bell, Boyd, Lloyd, Haddad & Burns
Reuben A. Foster
Vice Board Chairman
L. B. Foster Company, Inc.
Carol Fox
General Manager
Lyric Opera of Chicago
Stanley M. Freehling
Partner
Freehling & Co.
Gaylord Freeman
Honorary Chairman
The First National Bank of Chicago
Donald N. Frey
Chairman of the Board
Bell & Howell Company
William Gaines
President
The Institute of European Studies
John F. Gallagher
Vice President-International Operations
Sears, Roebuck and Co.
John P. Gallagher
Chairman of the Board &
President
Chemetron Corporation
Sister Ann Ida Gannon
Former President
Mundelein College
Wilbur H. Gantz
President
Travenol Laboratories International
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Ray Garrett, Jr.
Partner
Gardner, Carton & Douglas
George P. Garver
President (Retired)
Natural Gas Pipeline Company of America
John S. Gates
Becker Securities Inc.
C. J. Gauthier
Chairman
Northern Illinois Gas Company
Frank Gibney
Vice President
Encyclopaedia Britannica, Inc.
Gerald Gidwitz
Chairman, Board of Directors
Helene Curtis Industries, Inc.
Joseph L. Gidwitz
Chairman & Chief Executive Officer
Consolidated Packaging Corporation
Thomas A. Gies
Executive Vice President, E. B. Inc. &
President, E. B. International
Encyclopaedia Britannica, Inc.
Malcolm D. Gilchrist
Consultant (Retired)
Betty Glad
Professor of Political Science
University of Illinois - Urbana
James J. Glasser
President & Chief Operating Officer
GA TX Corporation
Paul W. Goodrich
Chairman of the Board (Retired)
Chicago Title and Trust Company
Gidon Gottlieb
Leo Spitz Professor of International Law
University of Chicago
Jerome S. Gore
President & Chief Executive Officer
Hart Schaffner & Marx
James P. Gorter
Partner
Goldman, Sachs & Co.
Bruce J. Graham
Partner
Skidmore, Owings & Merrill
Donald M. Graham
Mayer, Brown & Platt
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William B. Graham
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Baxter Travenol Laboratories, Inc.
John D. Gray
Chairman of the Board
Hart Schaffner & Marx
Richard Gray
Richard Gray Gallery
John K. Greene
Partner
William Blair & Co.
George Findley Griffiths
Chairman of the Board (Retired)
Interlake, Inc.
Leo S. Guthman
President
Bradveco
Robert P. Gwinn
Chairman of the Board
Sunbeam Corporation
Charles R. Hall
Executive Vice President
Continental Illinois National
Bank & Trust Company of
Chicago
J. Parker Hall
Financial Consultant
Claire V. Hansen
President
Duff & Phelps, Inc.
Robert A. Hanson
Executive Vice President
Deere & Company
Everette B. Harris
President
Chicago Mercantile Exchange
Irving B. Harris
President
Standard Shares, Inc.
Mortimer B. Harris
Chairman
Harris-Crestline Corporation
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Stanley G. Harris, Jr.
Vice Chairman of the Board
Harris Trust and Savings Bank
A. S. Hart
Vice Chairman
The Quaker Oats Company
William E. Hartmann
Partner
Skidmore, Owings & Merrill
Alexander Hehmeyer
Counsel
Isham, Lincoln & Beale
Ben W. Heineman
President
Northwest Industries, Inc.
Robert A. Helman
Partner
Mayer, Brown & Platt
Hugh J. Helmer
First Vice President (Retired)
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
Paul Henderson
Executive Vice President
Chicago Branch
Banque Nationale de Paris
Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C.
President
University of Notre Dame
Edward H. Hickey
Partner
Bell, Boyd, Lloyd, Haddad & Burns
Stanley E. G. Hillman
Vice Chairman
IC Industries, Inc.
Harold H. Hines, Jr.
Executive Vice President
Marsh & McLennan, Incorporated
Gordon Hjalmarson
Chairman,
President & Chief Executive Officer
Scott Foresman & Company
Richard A. Hoefs
Partner
Arthur Andersen & Co.
James Hoge
Editor-in-Chief
Chicago Sun-Times/Daily News
22 1
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Everett L. Hollis
Senior Partner
Mayer, Brown & Platt
Stephen Y. Hord
Partner
Brown Brothers Harriman & Co.
Eugene Hotchkiss II
President
Lake Forest College
James K. Hotchkiss
Chairman
Hotchkiss & Peckenpaugh, Inc.
John A. Howard
Director
Rockford College Institute
William Howlett
Chairman of the Board
Ward Foods, Inc.
Philip Wayne Hummer
Partner
Wayne Hummer & Co.
William B. Hummer
Partner
Wayne Hummer & Co.
Robert M. Hunt
President & Chief Executive Officer
Chicago Tribune
James H. Ingersoll
Vice President-External Affairs
Borg-Warner Corporation
Donald P. Jacobs
Dean, Graduate School of Management
Northwestern University
Leon O. Jacobson, M.D.
Joseph Regenstein Professor
Biological & Medical Sciences
The University of Chicago
H. Thomas James
President
The Spencer Foundation
Edgar D. Jannotta
Assistant Managing Partner & Partner
In Charge of the Corporate
Finance Department
William Blair & Company
23
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D. Gale Johnson
Provost and Eliakim Hastings Moore
Distinguished Service Professor of Economics
The University of Chicago
Elmer W. Johnson
Partner
Kirkland & Ellis
George E. Johnson
President
Johnson Products Co., Inc.
Herbert F. Johnson
Chairman Emeritus
S. C. Johnson & Son, Inc.
John H. Johnson
President and Publisher
Johnson Publishing Company, Inc.
William B. Johnson
Chairman & Chief Executive Officer
IC Industries
Paul R. Judy
President & Chief Executive Officer
i The Becker Warburg Paribus Group
C. Chester Jung
Chairman of the Board
California Cold Storage & Distributing Co.
Harvey Kapnick
Chairman
Arthur Andersen & Co.
John E. Kasch
Vice President
Standard Oil Company (Indiana)
Gerard M. Keeley
Senior Vice President
Continental Illinois National Bank
and Trust Company of Chicago
Daniel E. Kelly
President
Kelly, Tims & Andrus Inc.
James S. Kemper, Jr.
Chairman
Kemper Insurance Companies
Kenneth P. Kinney
Vice President
The Northern Trust Company
Clayton Kirkpatrick
Editor & Vice President
Chicago Tribune
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Philip M. Klutznick
Partner
Klutznick Investments
Thomas J. Klutznick
President & Chief Executive Officer
Urban Investment & Development Co.
Martin J. Koldyke
President
Frontenac Company
Richard Kosobud
Professor of Economics
University of Illinois at Chicago Circle
Ferd Kramer
Chairman of the Board
Draper and Kramer, Inc.
John M. Kuhn
Senior Vice President
General Binding Corporation
Sigmund W. Kunstadter
Bernard J. Lachner
President
Evanston Hospital
Jewel Lafontant
Counsel
Lafontant, Wilkins & Fisher
Charles W. Lake, Jr.
Chairman & President
R. R. Donnelley & Sons Company
William N. Lane
Chairman & Chief Executive Officer
General Binding Corporation
Arthur E. Larkin
Chairman & Chief Executive Officer
Keebler Company
Leonard H. Lavin
President
Alberto-Culver Company
Steven Lazarus
President-Artificial Organs Division
Baxter Travenol Laboratories, Inc.
Warren W. Lebeck
President
Chicago Board of Trade
Morris I. Leibman
Partner
Sidley & Austin
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Richard A. Lenon
President & Chief Executive officer
International Minerals & Chemical
Corporation
Edward H. Levi
Glen A. Lloyd Distinguished
Service Professor
The University of Chicago
Melvin K. Lippe
Partner
Antonow & Fink
John O. Logan
Chairman of the Board
Universal Oil Products Company
Alvin W. Long
President & Chief Executive Officer
Chicago Title and Trust Company
Vernon R. Loucks
President & Chief Operating Officer
Baxter Travenol Laboratories, Inc.
John J. Louis, Jr.
Chairman of the Board
Combined Communications Corp.
Earle Ludgin
Chairman, Executive Committee
Stern Walters/Earle Ludgin, Inc.
Sister Candida Lund
President
Rosary College
John D. Mabie
President
Mid-Continent Capitol, Inc.
Raymond W. Mack
Provost
Northwestern University
Robert H. Malott
Chairman & Chief Executive Officer
FMC Corporation
Charles Marshall
President
Illinois Bell Telephone Company
Kenneth Mason
President and Chief Operating Officer
The Quaker Oats Company
William J. McCarter
President
WTTW-Chicago Public Television
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Archibald McClure
Executive Vice President
Diversified Businesses
The Quaker Oats Company
Brooks McCormick
President
International Harvester Company
Maxwell McCrohon
Managing Editor
Chicago Tribune
Edward H. McDermott
Counsel
McDermott, Will & Emery
William J. McDonough
Executive Vice President
International Banking Department
The First National Bank of Chicago
Foster G. McGaw
Honorary Chairman & Founder
American Hospital Supply Corporation
Neil McKay
Vice Chairman of the Board
of Directors & Cashier
The First National Bank of Chicago
Robert McLellan
Vice President
FMC Corporation
Henry W. Meers
Vice Chairman
White, Weld & Co., Incorporated
Charles J. Meloun
Vice President-Central Region
General Electric Co.
Ronald McK. Melvin
President
Blunt Ellis & Simmons
Charles A. Meyer
Vice President-Corporate Planning
Sears, Roebuck and Co.
Donald C. Miller
Vice Chairman
Continental Illinois National Bank and
Trust Company of Chicago
Thomas H. Miner
President
Thomas H. Miner & Associates, Inc.
Newton N. Minow
Partner
Sidley & Austin
27
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Alfred F. Miossi
Executive Vice President
Continental Illinois National Bank
and Trust Company of Chicago
M. G. Mitchell
Chairman & President
Chicago Bridge & Iron Company
William G. Mitchell
Chairman of the Board
Beatrice Foods Co.
Kenneth F. Montgomery
Partner
Wilson & Mcllvaine
Albert A. Morey
Retired Chairman
Marsh &McLennan Inc.
Frank J. Morgan
Executive Vice President
international Grocery Products
The Quaker Oats Company
Graham J. Morgan
Chairman & Chief Executive Officer
United States Gypsum Company
Lee L. Morgan
President & Chief Operating Officer
Caterpillar Tractor Co.
Norval Morris
Dean of the Law School
The University of Chicago
Richard M. Morrow
President
Amoco Chemicals Corporation
William J. Mueller
Vice Chairman
Arthur Andersen & Company
Philip Mullenbach
Economist & Investment Manager
William Blair and Company
Thomas R. Mulroy
Senior Partner
Hopkins, Sutter, Mulroy, Davis
& Cromartie
Alfred 0. Munk
Manager, Foreign Affairs
Standard Oil Company (Indiana)
C. F. Murphy, Jr.
President
C. F. Murphy Associates
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William F. Murray
Chairman of the Board
Harris Trust and Savings Bank
Robert D. Musgjerd
President, Pay Line Group
International Harvester Company
George V. Myers
President
Standard Oil Company (Indiana)
Richard T. Newman
Senior Vice President
Burton J. Vincent, Chesley & Co.
Gordon Nicholson
Vice Chairman
Arthur Andersen & Company
Thomas L. Nicholson
Partner
Mayer, Brown & Platt
Edward J. Noha
Chairman of the Boards & Chief
Executive Officer
The CNA Insurance Companies
William S. North
Chairman of the Board
Union Special Corporation
Ned A. Ochiltree, Jr.
President & Chief Executive Officer
The Ceco Corporation
Michael J. O'Connor
Chairman of the Board
The Coca-Cola Bottling Company
of Chicago
Philip A. Odeen
Vice President, Corporate Services
Wilson Sporting Goods Co.
Richard B. Ogilvie
Partner
Isham, Lincoln & Beale
Eric Oldberg, M.D.
President
Chicago Board of Health
Bruce F. Olson
Chairman of the Board and
Chief Executive Officer
Sundstrand Corporation
W. Irving Osborne, Jr.
Frank C. Osment
Executive Vice President
Standard Oil Company (Indiana)
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James Otis
Otis Associates
Leslie Paffrath
President
The Johnson Foundation, Inc.
Frank Peck
President & Chief Executive Officer
Wilson Sporting Goods
The Honorable Charles H. Percy
United States Senator
United States Senate
Donald S. Perkins
Chairman of the Board
Jewel Companies, Inc.
John H. Perkins
President
Continental Illinois National Bank
and Trust Company of Chicago
Lawrence B. Perkins
Architect
Perkins & Will Architects, Inc.
Daniel Peterkin, Jr.
Chairman, Retired
Morton-Norwich Products, Inc.
Martha Peterson
President
Beloit College
William J. Pfeif
President & Chief Operating Officer
Sunbeam Corporation
Colonel Martin Philipsborn
Lawyer
Seigel & Philipsborn
B. E. Phillips
President & Chief Executive Officer
Clark Equipment Company
Albert Pick, Jr.
Honorary Chairman
Pick Hotels Corporation
John H. Platts
Chairman of the Board &
Chief Executive Officer
Whirlpool Corporation
Donald L. Porth
Executive Vice President
Culligan International Company
30
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Robert T. Powers
Chairman of the Board
Nalco Chemical Company
Bert R. Prall
Retired Chairman
Chicago-Tokyo Bank
Robert C. Preble, Jr., C.L.U.
President
Preble Associates
William Wood Prince
President
F. H. Prince & Co., Inc.
Herbert V. Prochnow
Former President
The First National Bank of Chicago
Wm. Lee Pryor
/'resident
Pryor Corporation
William J. Quinn
Chairman of the Board
& Chief Executive Officer
The Milwaukee Road
Nicholas J. Radell
Vice President & Director
Cresap, McCormick & Paget, Inc.
James A. Rahl
Owen L. Coon Professor
Northwestern University School of Law
George A. Ranney
Arthur E. Rasmussen
Former Chairman & Chief
Executive Officer
Household Finance Corporation
William M. Redfield
John S. Reed
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
i Santa Fe Industries, Inc.
Robert W. Reneker
William H. Rentschler
Chairman and Consultant
Renbrook Corporation
Don H. Reuben
Senior Partner
Kirkland & Ellis
Robert P. Reuss
Chairman & President
Central Telephone & Utilities Corporation
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David W. Rewick
Partner
Ernst & Ernst
John E. Rielly
President
The Chicago Council
on Foreign Relations
Milton J. Rosenberg
Professor of Psychology
& Behavioral Sciences
The University of Chicago
Richard Rosenzweig
Executive Vice President
Playboy Enterprises, Inc.
Richard N. Rosett
Dean
Graduate School of Business
University of Chicago
Norman Ross
Vice President, Public Affairs
The First National Bank of Chicago
David J. Rosso
Partner
Isham, Lincoln & Beale
Arthur Rubloff
Chairman, Executive Committee
Arthur Rubloff & Co.
David S. Ruder
Dean, Law School
Northwestern University
Lloyd I. Rudolph
Professor of Political Science
The University of Chicago
Susanne Hoeber Rudolph
Professor of Political Science
The University of Chicago
Rudy L. Ruggles
Counsel
Chadwell, Kayser, Ruggles, McGee
& Hastings
S. M. Salvino
President
Natural Gas Pipeline Company of
America
S. V. Sample
Vice President
Sunbeam Corporation
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Sam C. Sarkesian
Professor & Chairman
Department of Political Science
Loyola University of Chicago
Samuel Wm. Sax
Co-Chairman
American-Israeli Bank Limited
Henry B. Schacht
Chairman of the Board & Chief Executive Officer
Cummins Engine Company, Inc.
Philip H. Schaff, Jr.
Chairman of the Board
Leo Burnett Company, Inc.
J. Thomas Schanck
President & Chief Executive Officer
Signode Corporation
Lajos Schmidt
Partner
Baker & McKenzie
Robert F. Schnoes
President & Chief Operating Officer
IC Industries, Inc.
Robert A. Schoellhorn
President & Chief Operating Officer
Abbott Laboratories
John Schubert
President
D'Arcy, McManus & Masius, Inc.
Arthur W. Schultz
Chairman of the Board
Foote, Cone & Belding
David C. Scott
Chairman, Chief Executive Officer & President
Allis-Chalmers Corporation
Irving Seaman, Jr.
Vice Chairman of the Board
Sears Bank & Trust Company
D. C. Searle
Chairman
G. D. Searle & Co.
William L. Searle
Vice Chairman
G. D. Searle & Co.
Robert F. Seebeck
Senior Vice President
Russell Reynolds Associates, Inc.
Alex R. Seith
Partner
Lord, Bissell & Brook
33
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Jeffrey R. Short, Jr.
President
I. R. Short Milling Company
John W. Simmons
Chairman, President &
Chief Executive Officer
Morton-Norwich Products, Inc.
Edward Byron Smith
Chairman of the Board
The Northern Trust Company
Goff Smith
President & Chief Executive Officer
Amsted Industries Incorporated
Gordon H. Smith
Partner
Gardner, Carton & Douglas
Harold Byron Smith
Chairman, Executive Committee
Illinois Tool Works, Inc.
Harold Byron Smith, Jr.
President
Illinois Tool Works, Inc.
Hermon Dunlap Smith
President
The Field Foundation of Illinois, Inc.
James E. Smith
Executive Vice President
First Chicago Corporation
John F. Smith, Jr.
Solomon Byron Smith
Director
Nortrust Corp.
Robert S. Solinsky
Honorary Chairman of the Board
National Can Corporation
I D. Jin Song
Gould, Inc.
Beryl W. Sprinkel
Executive Vice President & Economist
Harris Trust and Savings Bank
Justin A. Stanley
Partner
Mayer, Brown & Platt
E. Norman Staub
Vice Chairman
The Northern Trust Company
Vice President International
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Charles B. Stauffacher
President & Chief Executive Officer
Field Enterprises, Inc.
Sydney Stein, Jr.
Limited Partner
Stein Roe & Farnham
Alfred C. Stepan, Jr.
Chairman & Chief Executive Officer
Stepan Chemical Company
Edmund A. Stephan
Senior Partner
Mayer, Brown & Platt
The Honorable Adlai E. Stevenson III
United States Senator
United States Senate
George J. Stigler
Professor
The University of Chicago
John F. Stolle
Executive Vice President
Field Enterprises, Inc.
Jerome H. Stone
Chairman of the Board
Stone Container Corporation
Roger W. Stone
President
Stone Container Corporation
Harold E. Strauss
President
Financial Consultants Company
Robert H. Strotz
President
Northwestern University
Robert Stuart
Chairman of the Board
National Can Corporation
Robert D. Stuart, Jr.
Chairman & Chief Executive Officer
The Quaker Oats Company
Allen P. Stults
Chairman of the Board
American National Bank and Trust
Company of Chicago
Carroll H. Sudler
President
Sudler & Company
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John W. Sullivan
Chairman & President
Skil Corporation
Frank L. Sulzberger
Retired
Charles E. Swanson
President
Encyclopaedia Britannica, Inc.
John E. Swearingen
Chairman of the Board
Standard Oil Company (Indiana)
Philip W. K. Sweet, Jr.
President
The Northern Trust Company
Stanley Tamkin
Senior Vice President
Container Corporation of America
Richard H. Templeton
Limited Partner
Stein Roe & Farnham
Michael Tenenbaum
President
Inland Steel Company
Richard L. Thomas
President
The First National Bank of Chicago
T. M. Thompson
Chairman of the Board & Chief Executive
Officer
General American Transportation Corp.
Robert N. Thurston
Senior Vice President-Corporate Affairs
The Quaker Oats Company
Michael E. Tobin
President
Midwest Stock Exchange, Inc.
Dempsey J. Travis
President
Travis Realty Co.
John G. Trezevant
Executive Vice President
Field Enterprises, Inc.
Howard J. Trienens
Partner
Sidley & Austin
George S. Trimble
President & Chief Executive Officer
Bunker Ramo Corporation
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I John T. Trutter
Vice President
Illinois Bell Telephone Company
Robert Wood Tullis
Partner
(sham, Lincoln & Beale
7 Fred L. Turner
Chairman of the Board
McDonald's Corporation
T. L. Tyler
President-International Division
Clark Equipment Company
Chester B. Vanatta
Office Managing Partner
Arthur Young & Company
Henry G. Van der Eb
Chairman & Chief Executive Officer
Container Corporation of America
J. W. Van Gorkom
President
Trans Union Corporation
Fred H. Veach
Executive Vice President,
Corporate Development
Montgomery Ward
Blair Vedder, Jr.
M. P. Venema
Burton J. Vincent
Chairman
Capitol Food Industries, Inc.
Harold L. Vincent, Jr.
Vice Chairman
Booz, Allen & Hamilton, Inc.
Omer G. Voss
Executive Vice President
International Harvester Company
Charles R. Walgreen III
Chairman
Walgreen Co.
William S. Watchman, Jr.
President
Swift & Company
Morrison Waud
Senior Partner
Gardner, Carton & Douglas
E. Leland Webber
President
Field Museum of Natural History
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Harry Weese
Chairman
Harry Weese & Associates
Rolf A. Weil
President
Roosevelt University
Robert H. Wellington
Executive Vice President
AMSTED Industries Incorporated
Douglas B. Wells
President
Libby, McNeill & Libby
Harold F. Werhane
Chairman & Chief Executive Officer
Culligan International Company
B. Kenneth West
Executive Vice President
Harris Trust & Savings Bank
Richard F. Whitehead
Vice Admiral USN (Retired)
Consultant
Katy Industries, Inc.
Robert B. Wilcox
President
Property-Casualty Insurance Council
Edward J. Williams
Chairman, President &
Chief Executive Officer
McGraw Edison Company
Emory Williams
Chairman of the Board
& Chief Executive Officer
Sears Bank & Trust Company
John T. Wilson
President
The University of Chicago
Ernest R. Wish
Managing Partner, Chicago Office
Coopers & Lybrand
Robert J. Witt
Chairman & Chief Executive Officer
Hart Schaffner & Marx Retail Stores
Samuel W. Witwer
Partner
Witwer, Moran, Burlage & Atkinson
Albert Wohlstetter
University Professor
The University of Chicago
Roberta Wohlstetter
Author & Scholar
38
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Arthur M. Wood
Chairman of the Board
Sears, Roebuck and Co.
Robert A. Woods
Partner
Stein Roe & Farnham
Harry N. Wyatt
Partner
D'Ancona, Pflaum, Wyatt & Riskind
Austin L. Wyman, Sr.
Blaine J. Yarrington
Executive Vice President
Standard Oil Company (Indiana)
William T. Ylvisaker
Chairman of the Board
Gould, Inc.
Bernard G. Ziv, Jr.
President
Ziv Investment Company
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i NOTES
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HE CHICAGO COMMIT i-,E
Sponsored by The Chicago Council on Foreign Relations
116 South Michigan Avenue. Chicago 60603
(312) 726.3860
Chair--cm c!
The Com:aitlee
JOHN D. GRAY
Chai:..cn
Hart Scharer & Marc
Vice_Chcirn:an
ARTHUR M. WOOD
Chairman of the Board
Sears. Roebuck & Company
Secretary
EDMUND A. STEPHAN
Senior Partner
Mayer, Brown and Platt
A. ROBERT ..BBOUD
Chairman of the Board
The First National Bank of Chicago
ROGER I- ANDERSON
Chairman of the Board
Continental Illinois National Bank
and Trust Company of Chicago
WILLIAM O. BEERS
Chairman of the Board
Krafteo Corporation
TAMES F. SERE'
Chairman & Chief Executive Officer
Borg-Warner Corporation
HUGH M. CAMPBELL
Partner
Price, Waterhouse and Co.
STANTON IL COOK
Chairman & Publisher
Chicago Tribune Company
HARVEY KAPNICK
Chairman
Arthur Andersen & Co.
BROOKS McCORMICK
President & Chief Executive Officer
International Harvester Company
ROBERT H. MALOTT
Chairman & President
FMC Corporation
NEWTON N. MINOW
Partner
Sidley & Austin
E. NORMAN STAUB
Vice Chairman
The Northern Trust Company
CHARLES B. STAUF?ACHER
President & Chief Executive Officer
Field Enterprises. Inc_
JOHN I:. SWEA.RLNGEN
Chairman of the Board
Standc>:d Oil Company (Indiana)
ROBERTA WOHLSTETTER
Author & Consultant
Program Director
TORN E. RIELLY
President
Chicago Council on Foreign Relations
"Managing the Intelligence Community"
by
Adm. Stansfield Turner
Director, Central Intelligence Agency
Monday, November 14, 1977
12:00 noon - 2:00 p.m.
The Mid-America Club
Chairman: John D. Gray
Chairman pf the Board
Hart, Schaffner & Marx
Guests
Charles Aaron
Senior Partner
Aaron, Aaron, Shimberg
& Hess
William H. Avery
Partner
Sidley & Austin
Jeremy R. Azrael
Professor; Department of
Political Science
University of Chicago
harles A. Bane
Partner
Isham, Lincoln & Beale
Cherif Bassiouni
Professor of Law
DePaul.University
Cal Bauer
.Partner
Arthur Andersen & Co.
World Headquarters Group
J. Grant Beadle
President & Chief
Executive Officer
Union Special Corporation
Harry G. Beckner
Chairman
Jewel Food Stores
Jack D. Beem
Partner
Baker & McKenzie
Frank L. Bixby
Partner
Sidley & Austin
Joseph L. Block
Honorary Director
Inland Steel Company
Charles P. Bowen, Jr.
Honorary Chairman
Booz, Allen & Hamilton,'Inc.
#rthur S., Bowes
Retired
William T. Branham
Chairman of the Board,
President & Chief Executive
Officer
Field-Enterprises
Educational Corporation
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Herbert C. Brook
Partner
Lord, Bissell & Brook
Cameron Brown
President
Cameron Brown, Ltd.
John J. Cardwell
President
Consolidated Foods Corporation
onald J. Chinnock
Seni or Vice President
Chinnock & Doughty, Inc.
Franklin A. Cole
Chairman
Walter E. Heller Interna-
tional Corporation
Even T. Collinsworth, Jr.
President & Chief Executive
Officer
Bliss & Laughlin Industries, Inc.
Thomas H. Coulter
Chief Executive Officer
Chicago Association of
Commerce. and Industry
Tilden Cummings
President (Retired) &
Director
Continental Bank
Arthur, Cyr
Program Director
Chicago Council on
'Foreign Relations
John D'Arcy, Jr.
Senior Vice President
Quaker Oats Company
Leo C. de Grijs
Senior Vice President
Continental Bank
Louis F. Dempsey
Executive Vice President
The Northern Trust Company
Terry Diamond
Loeb, Rhoades & Co.
Albert B. Dick III
Chairman
A.B. Dick Company
Thomas A. Donahoe
Partner
Price Waterhouse & Co.
James R. Donnelley
Vice President
R.R. Donnelly & Sons Company
Kenneth J. Douglas
Chairman of the Board
Dean Foods Company -
Robert M. Drevs
Chairman of the Board
Peoples Gas Company
s. William Drews
Walter V. Elisha
President
Jewel Companies
E. Stanley-Enlund
Chairman of the Board & Chief
Executive Officer
First Federal Savings an d
Loan Association of Chicago
Ralph Falk II
hairman, Executive Committee
,,,~Baxter Travenol Loboratories, Inc.
Lawrence S. Finkelstein
ofessor of Political Science
Northern!,Illinois University
Walter T. Fisher
Counsel
Bell, Boyd, Lloyd, Haddad & Burns
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ZC. Fuller
Vice President, Planning
Amoco International Oil Co.
George P. Garver
President (Retired)
Natural Gas Pipeline
Company of America
Frank Gibney
1ce President
Encyclopaedia Britannica
Betty Glad
Professor of Political Science
University of Illinois at
Urbana
Paul W. Goodrich
Chairman of the Board (Retired)
Chicago Title and Trust Co.
Richard Gray
President
Richard Gray Gallery
John K. Greene
Partner
William Blair & Co.
Claire V. Hansen
President
Duff & Phelps, Inc.
Irving B. Harris
President
Standard Shares, Inc.
A.S. Hart
Vice Chairman
'Quaker Oats Company
Neil F. Hartigan
President
Real Estate Research Corp.
ichard D. Harza
President
Harza Engineering Company
Central Intelligence Agency
Alexander Hehmeyer
Counsel
Isham, Lincoln & Beale
Robert- A. Helman
Partner
Mayer, Brown & Platt
Paul Henderson
Executive Vice President
Banque Nktionale de Paris
Herb Hetu
Director of Public Relations
Central Intelligence Agency
Edward H. Hickey
Partner
Bell, Boyd, Lloyd, Haddad & Burns
Stanley E.G. Hillman
Vice Chairman
IC Industries, Inc.
Richard A. Hoefs
Partner
Arthur Andersen & Co.
Philip Wayne Hummer
Partner
Wayne Hummer & Co.
The Honorable Robert S. Ingersoll
Deputy Chairman
Board of Trustees
University of Chicago
H. Thomas James
President
The Spencer Foundation
William B. Johnson
Chairman & Chief Executive
Officer
IC Industries
STAT
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Gerard M. Keeley
Senior Vice President
Continental Bank
Daniel E. Kelly
President
Kelly, Tims & Andrus, Inc.
Personal Aide to the Director
Central Intelligence Agency
Clayton Kirkpatrick
Editor
Chicago Tribune
Martin Koldyke
President
Frontenac Company
Richard F. Kosobud
Professor of Economics
University of Illinois
Circle-Campus
Ferd Kramer
Chairman of the Board
Draper and Kramer, lb c.
John M. Kuhn
Senior Vice President
General Binding Corporation
Bernard J. Lachner
President
Evanston Hospital
Edward H. Levi
Professor of Law
University of Chicago
John J. Louis, Jr.
Chairman of the Board
Combined Communications Corp.
Robert H. Malott
Chairman and Chief
Executive Officer
FMC Corporation
Philip Mullenbach-
Economist & Investment. Manager
William Blair and Company
Alfred 0. Munk
Manager, Foreign Affairs
Standard Oil Company (Indiana)
Philip A. Odeen
ice President
Wilson Sporting Goods Co.
W. Irving Osborne, Jr..
Chairman of the Board (Retired)
Pullman, Incorporated
James Otis, Jr.
President
Otis Associates
Frank L. Peck
President and Chief
Executive Officer
Wilson Sporting Goods
Ro ert C. Preble, Jr.
yesident
Preble Associates
Nicholas J. Radell
Vice President & Director
Cresap, McCormick & Paget, Inc.
Arthur E. Rasmussen*
Former Chairman & Chief
Executive Officer
Household Finance Corporation
John S. Reed
Chairman & Chief Executive
Officer
Santa Fe Industries, Inc.
Robert W. Reneker
Chairman & Chief Executive
Officer (Retired)
Esmark, Inc.
William R. Rentschler
Chairman and Consultant
Renbrook Corporation
David W. Rewick
Partner
Ernst & Ernst
STAT
John E. Rielly
President
Chicago Council on Foreign Relations
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Norman Ross
Vice President, Public `?fairs
First National Bank of Chicago
David S. Ruder
Dean, 'Law School
Northwestern University
Sam C. Sarkesian
Professor & Chairman
Department of Political Science
Loyola University of Chicago
Philip H. Schaff, Jr.
Chairman of. the Board
Leo Biirnett Company, In
Irving Seaman, Jr.
Vice Chairman of the Board
Sears Bank & -Trust' Company
Harold Byron Smith, Jr.
President
Illinois Tool Works, Inc.
Harold E. Strauss
President
Financial Consultants Company
oyd I. Rudolph
Professor of Political Science
Susanne Hoeber Rudolph
Professor & Chair
Department of Political Science
University of Chicago
Northwestern University
obert H.Strotz
President
Carroll H. Sudler
._ President
Sudler & Company
Philip W.K. Sweet, Jr.
President
The Northern Trust Company
Richard H. Templeton
Limited Partner
Stein, Roe & Farnham
Central Intelligence Agency
b4
-5-
0
Michael E. Tobin
President
Midwest Stock Exchange, Inc.
John G. Trezevant
Executive Vice President
Field Enterprises, Inc.
Robert Wood Tullis
Partner
Isham, Lincoln & Beale
Mrs. Stanfield Turner
J.W. Van'Gorkom
President
Trans Union Corporation
Harold L. Vincent, Jr.
Vice Chairman
Booz, Allen & Hamilton, Inc.
Omer G. Voss
Executive Vice President
International Harvester. Company
Harry Weese
Chairman
Harry Weese & Associates
Robert H. Wellington
Executive Vice President
AMSTED Industries Incorporated
Richard F. White11ead
Vice Admiral USN (Retired)
/onsultant
Katy Industries, Inc.
berta Wohlstetter
Robert A. Woods
Partner
Stein Roe & Farnham
Harry N. Wyatt
Partner
D'Ancona, Pflaum, Wyatt & Riskind
Bernard G. Ziv, Jr.
President
Ziv Investment Company
STAT
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COUNCIL ON FOREIGN RELATIONS
Chicago, Illinois
14 November 1977
Admiral Turner
Mrs. Turner
Mrs. Drews
Mr. John E. Rielly, President, CFR
Mr. John D. Gray, Chairman of the Board, CFR
There will be two other people at the head table--
as of now unnamed. They will be top people from CFR.
Top People at Chicago CFR
Mr. John E. Rielly, President, Chicago CFR
Mr. John D. Gray, Chairman of the Board, Hart, Schaffner &
Marx and Chairman of the Board, Chicago CFR
Mr'. Arthur Cyr, Program Director, Chicago CFR
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4 November 1977
MEMORANDUM FOR: DCI
FROM:
SUBJECT:
Illinois/Indiana Trip
Tentative schedule is as attached. Questions:
a. Will the F-~ attend the address at NSUC?
to the church or ride in car provided by Chicago office?
As on other trips, we will have two cars and two drivers
at our disposal.
STAT
STAT
STAT
STAT
STAT
Ride in official car.
b. Monday morning -- Will Mrs. Turner come down from
Winnetka with you? I might suggest having a car pick Mrs.
Turner up at in sufficient time for her to be
at the Standard Oil Building at 1200 for the reception.
Perhaps we could have the same car stop and pick up Mrs_.
Attachment
Very respectfully,
STAT
STAT
will attend.
. Call and ask them.
If yes, would you prefer t
system to grow in other ways- have become a world
n
power based on their military might. L rg
condition of rough military parity, the value of
intelligence today is great. Real advantages can
accrue from acurately knowin what your R,otential_
adversary's stren is and what he intends to do
with it. He seldom tells you this, but he does
give it away in many small ways, which, when watched
over a long period of time, and pieced together-,
can give you real advantages. It is the kind of
leverage that can turn the tide of battle.
If you look past the military scene, there are
other similar situations:
Economics - 30 years ago - economically
independent - today interdenendn_e - energy situation
lose shirt if not smart - power blocks - raw materials/
trade leverage.
-Politics - world different - from U.S. domination
to situation today, even smallest evolving nations
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0
are ping and do not want to be dictated
to either by the U.S. or Soviet Russia. We must
be smart, understand pol/econ/cultural artit~udes~
ev _!Sir
or we will be out-maneuvered.
At same time we must achieve this
intell in manner will not undermir? princi
and standards of n?r cnri ei y. Thus a second major
effect of the President's has been to make the
oversight proceTs more comprehensive.
Oversight
(1) Personal interest of President/VP
(2) Senate Select Committee
(3)
and .1 in Senate
New House Committee
- benefits of 1 committee in House
(4) Legal requirement for
covert operations
(2) Security leaks
- Risk in all of this:
(1) Timidity - least common denominator
STAT
STAT
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C. Next several years critical - I'm confident, but alert
Need understanding and support of Congress - which
mtrtrrrs public. Hence, we are carefully reappraising
our policies regarding secrecy and openness-, looking
for ways in which we can be more forthright with
the public and at the same time ensure adequate
secrecy to carry out our operations.
As a first step, we have tried to be more
accessible to 4he media.
- Good Morning America - 60 Minutes
- Interviews
2. We are also attempting to make more of
product accessible to the public. The publication
of unclassified studies is one of our most important,
substantative initiatives. It stems from a c-onviction
that the. Intelligence Community is working for the
American people and that they deserve to share our
results whenever that is possible. We intend to
publish in unclassified form the maximum amount of
intelligence analysis that we can.
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To date we have published several major studies
which I believe make an important contribution to
public
- World Steel Outlook
- World Energy Situation
Soviet/Chinese Energy Prospects
Buil 'ng on these studies we have been looking at
other asp cts of the Soviet econom ike:
demographic actors,
This has led to a recently completed study for the
Joint Economic Committee of Congress on Soviet Economic
Problems and Prospects. Let me describe - f avor what can share
From the mid-1960`s until very recently, CIA
viewed Soviet economic performance as adequate to allow
the simultaneous achievement of the Soviet government's
most important
objectives - i.e.,
o to catch up militarily with the US;
o to provide regular, if unspectacu r
improvements in living conditions; and
o to sustain investment needed for fairly
rapid economic. growth.
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This study thoroughly re-examines these
assumptions and comes to the conclusion that Soviet
prospects are more 4jjA4 than at any time since Stalin
death.
1. Dead end on productivity policy of increasing
inputs of labor and capital.
a. Decreasing rate of growth of
man owed - what there will be
from traditionally rural, areas;
precipitous labor shortage - 1960
birth rates;
b. Rapid depletion of cheap, conveniently
located mineral reserves:
c. Oil shortage caused by policy of increased
output vice dP rmpnt.of new sources.
- 5 year plan acknowledges - but predicts productivity up
- Don't believe can do -no sin prod/effic improving
econ doctrine diff to change
- Instead difficult pragmatic choices
1. intense debate over military expenditures -
manpower and investment
2. reduce oil exports to E. Europe, worsening
already diff economic situation and threatening
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Decisions likely - period leadership change
One of the most important points which comes out of
all this, I believe, is that these policy decisions
which the Soviets must make in the near future, seem
on the surface remote to our lies. Yet, they will
hence imports technology - alternative -
borrow more__,
impact on us in fundamental ways:
In the c u r first oil study, I replied to
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political stability.
3. reduced hard currency earning capability and
1. If the size of the Soviet Armed Forces should be
affected, what does that mean in terms of our Armed
Forces and the expenditures on the weapons of the 1980's
which we are now funding?
2. If there is increased competition for finite energy
reserves, what will that do to pr c To the availability
of fuel? How should that influence our energy decisions?
3. If economies of E. Europe are in for trouble
is there greater potential for tension in Eu rope?
One of the side benefits of publishing this type
of study is the exchanges it leads to with our critics.
serious critic and invited them to detail their
criticisms. Those who did, were invited to spend a day
with the authors of our study. It was an excellent
exchange and. of a type which I hope will occ~
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As we continue to make public more studies, I want to encourage
future dialogues with both the academic and business communities.
Same time, let me assure you, however, that we cannot and will
not open everything up. An essential ingredient of intelligence
operations is the ability to preserve secrets. Some of the
information behind both the Soviet oil and economic forecasts
was derived from secret sources which would be jeopardized in the
future were we to reveal than.
Thus, we cannot forget that while we move to improve the
dialogue with the public and build public understanding and
support for what we do in the defense of our country, we must
ask and obtain the public's understanding in preserving that
level of secrecy which is essential to these activities.
In short, we are working in two directions at once.
By declassifying information that need not be classified we
are attempting to promote greater respect for genuinely
secret information.
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0
-1t-
On the other side of the coin, we are drawing a tighter
protective circle around that information or those activities
which are truly secret.
Model combines openness/secrecy.
Model combines effectiveness/control.
Confident, evolving model under which is preserved secrecy necessary.
Perform in ways which strengthen our open and free society.
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0
U IVEBS Y
Greencastle, Indiana 46135
December 15, 1977
Admiral Stansfield Turner
The Director of Central Intelligence
Washington, D. C. 20505
Dear Stan:
I imagine that you may have seen the article in the "Chronicle of
Higher Education" already concerning your appearance at DePauw.
But I thought that I would send along a xerox copy of it in any case.
As you may know, this is a very important journal--indeed the most
important journal--in higher education for you to have your views
appear. I know that your comments will reach a wide and generally
receptive audience.
I also am happy to see the exceptionally good rendering of the
DePauw sweatshirt.
Sincerely,
Richard F. Rosh er
President
RFR:af
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L/
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"The worst has come,' writes an
official- of Carleton College. As
proof, he cites a questionnaire sent
to department chairmen by the asso-
ciate dean of academic affairs.
"The following data." said an ac-
companying note, "is of exquisite
importance for purposes of a statisti-
cal analysis of the developmental
progress of faculty profundity in pri-
vate higher education in the Upper
Midwest. Please survey your depart-
ment, fill out the attached form in
triplicate, include a copy in your next
Departmental Review, file two (2)
copies in Drawer 29 in the library,
and send one copy together with ten
(10) dollars in cash to the associate
dean of the college."
The questionnaire followed:
1. DEPARTMENTAL PHYSICAL DATA
A.I. Compute the numerical total
of the 3-digit telephone numbers of
the faculty . and chairperson of your
department.
A.2.? Determine the average shoe
size of the members 'of your depart-
ment. (To facilitate uniformity, all
sites should be* expressed in the
European digital system.)
A.3. Divide the number of junior-
senior majors in your department by
1.A.2.
A.4. Multiply your result from
I.A.3 by I.A.1 and divide by the last
four digits of the chairperson's social
security number. (Program directors
may substitute the last five (5) digits
of their home phone numbers for the
divisor in I.A.4?)
B.I. Add the numerical value of
I.A.4 to your per-diem rate for your
next departmental retreat. d 3115
III FBI Releases Documents
on Dispruption of Left
The Federal Bureau of Investi-
gation last week released almost
of documents on
s
000
cal scientist was denied tenure-
reportedly at least in part because
of his cooperation with the
C.I.A.-Admiral Turner called
such an attitude "very discourag-
Moss that the material in question
was, confidential and could be re-
leased only if the member institu-
.
tions agreed.
page
53,
"Cointelpro," its program of dis- ing and very improper: '
ruption aimed at student and oth- He also criticized universities
er dissident groups during the that forbid associations between
1960's and early 1970's. faculty members and the intclli-
The documents contained few gcnce
has a re community. that any iversi-"if a new revelations about F.B.I. ac- ty - gulation
tivities on college campuses or nal contact must be reported,.
against student groups, although clearly that's fine," the C.I.A. di-
they did provide new details in rector said, "but there have been
some cases. cases where they have singled out
They were released as the re- intelligence. 1 think that's dis-
suit of a request by eight report- criminatingagainst the individ.
right
ers under the Freedom of Infor- u al's right to with assmtation
whom and
con-
requested Act. The reporters had ducts his business."
requested copies of all 68,000
pages of files on the Cointelpro
operation, but the F.B.I. held back ^ Employees Give S1-Million
15,000 on grounds of national se- to Michigan State
F It and staff members at
u
curity.
Cointelpro was halted officially
in 1971, but a Senate committee
found some evidence that it may
have been continued after that
date. One memo released last
week appeared to support that
possibility. it said the primary
purpose of the cutoff order was
"to afford additional security to
our sensitive techniques and oper-
ations ' ?. -
y
ac
Michigan State University have
donated more than 3I-million to-
ward a $17-million fund-raising
goal. Officials said 60 per cent of
the university's faculty and staff
members had contributed. Most
of the money will be used for a
new performing-arts center-
w House Panel Subpoenas
NCAA Enforcement Records
The House Subcommittee on
Oversight and Investigations has
subpoenaed records of the Na-
tional Collegiate Athletic Associ-
ation. The subcommittee is inves-
tigating the N.C.A.A.'S enforce-
ment procedures.
Rep. John E. Moss. a Califor-
nia Democrat who chairs the sub-
committee. said the subpoena was
issued because the N.C.A.A. had
refused to comply with the sub-
committee's request for the rec-
ords. Walter Byers. executive di-
rector of the N.C.A.A.. told Mr.
B.2. pay $40 per house an UEPAUW NEWS ISUREAU
per hotel. Stonsfreld Turner at Depauw
II. GENERAL QUESTIONS
The following data must be sup-. a CIA's Use of Scholars
plied in'precise form according to the .. Defended by Turner
following specifications. No alter- In a recent address at Depauw
ation in format will be tolerated. ' 'University in Indiana, Stansfield
Follow these directions to the letter: Turner, director of the fended his
A.I. GA i fangelse! GA direkt till Intelligence gency, defended
s'
scholar
fangelset utan att passers g'd. ? agency's past
ands pris i en services and indicated that such
A.2. Ni hat vunnit skonhetstfivling. Inkassera kr. 200. contacts would continue. .
A.3. GA VIDARE TILL ST: ERIKSGA- Admiral Turner said it was un-
OM NI PASSERAR GA, FAR NI reasonable
scholar working with the Central
000
The quti
mation oni
the area, 1'
been the
for severs
Student
.black inst
questions;
prevent ti
,
er
a
INKASSERA KR. 4. Intelligence Agency is necessarily uiring s^ Ex-Aid
$ 1 .. .....,o ,tat;rnlty in tabu- ..~ .._e ,.e.,. much to re- - stop him from req_ - i g students tud sit in Trai
Wing Approved For Release 2009/07/15 :CIA-RDPO5S00620R000401170001-8 ?'..-" 1
Ie La'
Th
PuI
r
Faculty m
CA
Faculty
The subcommittee is seeking -
the case histories of several insti-
tutions disciplined by the associ-
ation for rules violations. . .
In a letter to Mr. Byers, Mr.
Moss warned the N.C.A.A. not to
underestimate the investigatory
powers of Congress or the seri-
ousness of the purpose of the
subcommittees investigation.
^ Student-Voting Suit
Filed in Texas
The Texas attorney general has
sued the tax assessor-collector in
near Houston, to
County
ll
-W
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The E ----'tor of Central Intelligence
Washington. D. C 20505
21 November 1977
Dear Dick,
Thanks so very much from both Patricia and
me for a most enjoyable day on your beautiful
campus. The luncheon was delightful and I'm
thankful for the opportunity to discuss with
members of the academic community my role and
the CIA's relationship with the academic com-
munity. It was a step in what I hope will be
ever improving relations between the intelligence
community and academia.
Pat certainly appreciated Donna taking her
in tow while I went off to play tennis. And my
thanks to you for the sweatshirt -- I will wear
it often on the courts here in Washington.
Thanks again for such a perfect day. It
was good to see you again and that you are so
comfortable in the new saddle.
Yours,
STANSFIELD TURNER
Dr. Richard Rosser
President
DePauw University
Greencastle, Indiana 46135
C
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DEPAUW UNIVERSITY"
GREENCASTLE, INDIANA
46135
Admiral Stansfield Turner
Director of Central Intelligence
The Central Intelligence Agency
Langley, VA 23365
Dear Admiral Turner:
7-,/-&/ D
November 16, 1977
How can we thank you enough for your visit to the DePauw Uni-
versity campus on last Friday, November 11? You gave an excellent address,
you answered questions not only following your address but also at the time
of the luncheon and again at a news conference in a very sincere, straight-
forward, open, and friendly fashion. Naturally, there were some things that
you could not easily discuss, and I am sure the audience and the questioners
recognized the sensitivity of these issues. Nevertheless, you generated an
atmosphere of friendliness, openness, reliability, and trust which we were
very happy, to feel.
We were very glad that you were willing to have a news confer-
ence as part of your visit, and I have heard a great deal of favorable comment
on the impression that you made. there. (Needless to say, we:-were very proud
of the fact that you were willing to wear a DePauw sweat shirt during this con-
ference, and it did show up on the television news. I hope our friends at
Wabash College were not too chagrined!)
In addition, we were very glad to meet your, wife, and we hope
that she enjoyed the trip here as much as you, apparently, did. Also, we were
pleased to meet the members of your staff, all of whom made an excellent im-
pression on all the neon1e with whom they dealt. We are particularly indebted
to
enjoyed talking to him, to
Then, we appreciate very
for making all the arrangements for your visit, and I
Herbert Hetu.
was willing to
come to the campus before nd and to help make the final arrangements for your
visit.
We hope that you enjoyed your game of tennis with
and we were glad that you felt free to use the University courts. Since
left the next morning for a meeting in San Francisco, I have not yet been
able to talk to him and find out who won! .
Enclosed are some clippings that appeared in the Greencastle
STAT
STAT
STAT
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C
newspaper, the Indianapolis papers, and also the local campus student paper.
Even though you may receive these from other sources, I thought you would be
interested in getting other copies.
All in all we were very pleased with your visit and only hope that
it went as well from your point of view as from ours. We are honored that this
is the first college campus that you have visited in your capacity as Director of
Central Intelligence, and we hope that this will mark the beginning of a number
of such invitations. If you and perhaps other members of your staff make appear-
ances on other college campuses such as you made here, I think that the result
will be to..help greatly to dispel. the present unfortunate feelings of doubt that
many Americans have about how intelligence is handled in this country.
Please thank everyone on your staff who had any connection with
your visit here. And, most particularly, we extend to you our heartfelt thanks
for coming.
Sincerely,
ax, w- J_a~
Arthur W. Shumaker
Professor of English and
Director of Convocations
AWS:msc
Encls.
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November 14, 1977
Admiral Stansfield Turner .
The Central Intelligence Agency
Langley, Virginia 23365
ITT
C
It was a special delight to have you and Pat here last Friday. I
know how difficult it is for you to get away for this kind of activity,
but it is bound to pay off in the long run. We have a new generation
which represents the possibility of much more responsible and saner
leadership in the next several decades, and it is vital that they have
some appreciation for the intelligence function. I think that you
argued your case with great skill, and I was genuinely pleased and
relieved to see how well you were received.
I saw the TV coverage Friday night and can report that it was well
edited and given priority placement in local news programs. We did
not make the national networks, but perhaps you were not interested
in doing so!
STAT
Richard F. Rosser
President
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qtr-- v'w^'
$AN FAO] COU1E TD
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STAT
STAT
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Aid Adal t nsfi d Turner
1entr I ~~ I--nttte''lligence Agency
June 8, 1977
After we had talked by telephone yesterday I suddenly remembered
that I had not mentioned to you the fact that I need the title of Admiral Turner's
address which he will give here on November 11. I wonder, therefore, if you
could send it in addition to biographical material and two or three glossy photo-
graphs.
It may be that the Admiral may not wish to confine himself to a title
chosen now when the address will be given in November. However, we have
discovered that if we can publish the title of the address that a speaker is
going to use this will increase attendance at the program; and since I have
to get all the material to the printer, in about a month, so that the brochure
can be ready for distribution at the beginning of the fall semester, I am afraid
that I need something now. Perhaps the Admiral could select some sort of
title that would be broad enough that if he wished to change his entire address
from what he might be thinking of giving now to something different he would
still be able to use the same title. At any rate, I hope that he can give me
something that I can print.
Thank you very much for sending all these items to me and thanks
again for telephoning me yesterday.
Sincerely,
G w-
Arthur W. Shumaker
Professor of English and
Director of Convocations
DEPAUW UNIVERSITY
GREENCASTLE, INDIANA
46135
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The Director of Central Intelligence
1Vi hingon.D.C.2Ui0> -
.1 JUN' 1977
STAT
STAT
Dear Professor Shumaker,
Just a short note to reconfirm that I accept with pleasure
your invitation for me to present a convocation address at
DePauw University on 11 November 1977.
As You mentioned in your correspondence
I received a letter from
extending an invitation to stay at their home while in Green-
castle. Unfortunately, as I have already told her, I will be
leaving for Chicago shortly after my remarks and the question
and answer session.
In your letter of March 16th you raise the question of
an honorarium. Regulations prohibit government officials from
accepting honoraria so there is no problem there.
My staff will continue to be in touch with you to coordinate
the final details.
Thanks again and I look forward to seeing you in November.
Yours si ncerel
STANSFIELD TURNER
Professor Arthur W. Shumaker
Director of Convocations
DePauw University
Greencastle, Indiana 46135
STAT
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n
DEPAUW UNIVERSITY
GREENCASTLE, INDIANA
46135
STAT
STAT
May 31, 1977
Aide to Admiral Stansfield Turner
The Central Intelligence Agency
Langley, Virginia 23365
About two weeks ago my office mate here at DePauw University,~
to be out of the office you had called to say that Admiral Turner will-.be able to
give a convocation address here next fall on Friday, November 11, and that you
would be in touch with us later by letter concerning this date.
told me that while both my secretary and I had chanced
STAT
STAT
I hope that understood this message correctly, for we have STAT
received no letter since that time. Perhaps one is now on the way.
At any rate, I would appreciate it very much if you could write us confirm-
ing this date, for I have reserved it on our convocation calendar and am filling up
other dates that I think I mentioned to you when we first talked. We are overjoyed
that Admiral Turner is coming, and we simply want to be sure that we have under-
stood the arrangEm-erit correctly.
If this date is now certain, would you please send us biographical material
from which I can write up this program for a brochure which we publish at the begin-
ning of each semester giving details about all our chapel and convocation programs?
This brochure is then distributed to the members of the administration, faculty, stu-
dent body, to a number of residents in this area, and to the mass media. Also, I
will need two or three glossy photographs of the Admiral, and I would appreciate it
very much if you could also give me the exact title of his address which I can insert
in the brochure. We find that if we give the title of the address there is usually
more student interest in the speaker.
Thank you very much for all these kindnesses. I will be glad to attempt to
answer all the questions that you might have relative to the Admiral's appearance
here. We will need to know whether he desires housing and if so for what night
or nights. In addition, as I think I said before, we will give a luncheon in his
honor immediately after his address, to which we will invite interested members
of the administration, faculty, and student body; and we would appreciateit very
much if he would be willing to engage in a brief question and answer period at the
close of this luncheon. Furthermore, as the time approaches, we would need to
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know his travel plans so that we can provide transportation between the Indian-
apolis Airport and Greencastle and return.
You can be sure that we will attempt to make the Admiral's visit to this
campus fully satisfactory and enjoyable both from his point of view as well as
from ours.
Sincerely,
6,4,T U/ - A"
Arthur W. Shumaker
Professor of English and
Director of Convocations
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C IIK VIIL..LVI VI \.\11t101 IIIRIIIjV.I . V
Washineton. D. C. 20505
1 0 MAY 1977
In any event, I am certainly looking forward to seeing you
and want to thank you again for your note.
Yours,
STAT
Dear Merilyn,
I'm sorry to be so late in responding to your last letter.
I am just now finalizing plans for a trip to the Midwest this
fall. My staff has been in touch with Professor Shumaker saying
I do intend to accept and am looking at 7 October or 11 November.
As the trip is shaping up, I should be responding-to him shortly
to propose 11 November. I am certainly looking forward to speak-
ing at De Pauw and presenting the other side of the coin you
mentioned.
Thank you for the kind offer for me to stay with you and
Norm. I'm afraid, though, the way the trip is shaping up I
won't be able to spend the: night in Greencastle.
Mrs. Norman J. Knights
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STAT
STAT
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DEPAUW UNIVERSITY
GREENCASTLE, INDIANA
46136
April 29, 1977
Aide to Admiral Stansfield Turner
The Central Intelligence Agency
Langley, Virginia 23365
Thank you so much for telephoning today in regard to our invitation to Admiral
Turner to give a convocation address here at DePauw University next fall. I am
very sorry that I did not happen to be in the office at the time, for I would have
liked to have talked with you.
We appreciate very much your efforts in
seeing whether Admiral Turner will be able to come to DePauw to give this ad-
dress. I presume that you have my letter of invitation written to Admiral Turner
on March 16.
According to my secretary, Mrs. Margaret Chase, with whom you talked, you
are attempting to organize or coordinate various speaking engagements here in
the midwest for Admiral Turner during the fall, and your-are considering October
7 as a possible date when he could come to DePauw. I will hold this date open
for Admiral Turner,,hoping that it will turn out to be satisfactory. As I think I
said in my letter of invitation, our convocations are regularly held from 11 till
11:50 a.m. on Fridays, which is a class hour cleared particularly for convoca-
tions. We hope, therefore, that the Admiral can come either for Friday, October
7, or for some other Friday. Nevertheless, since in order to complete our con-
vocation program it is necessary to schedule other events, I hope that you will
be able to let us know shortly what he can do. If October 7 is not satisfactory,
please suggest some other time, and we will do our best to arrange our schedule
to fit his convenience. We are very anxious to have him:
STAT
I think that the Admiral has received a letter from STAT
here in Greencastle, who was a schoolmate of his many years ago, re- STAT
peating the invitation that I have given and inviting Admiral Turner to stay at
her home when he is here to give his address.
STAT
The couple have a lovely home just outside Greencastle and would love
to entertain the Admiral there. Of course, if he would prefer, we will be happy
to house him in one of the specially decorated guest rooms of the University.
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We would leave it up to him as to what he would prefer to do.
Any special arrangements that you would like to make concerning the visit
of the Admiral here we would be happy to attempt to comply with.
Again, thank you so much for your efforts in our behalf. I hope that I may
hear from you shortly.
Sincerely,
Arthur W. Shumaker
Professor of English and
Director of Convocations
0L+
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c:t (It. - , uT)
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DEPAUW UNIVERSITY
GREENCASTLE, INDIANA
46135
Admiral Stansfield Turner
Director of the Central Intelligence Agency
Langley, Virginia 23365
March 16, 1977
Several persons here at DePauw University have suggested your name as a
possible convocation speaker for the 1977-78 academic year. Also, Mrs.
who, I believe, was one of your high-school class- STAT
mates, has also expressed to me a sincere desire to have you come to the Uni-
versity for an address. Therefore, I would like to extend to you a sincere invi-
tation to give an address to the faculty and student body of the University along
with a good many people from Greencastle and from out of town on a date that is
mutually convenient. ays that she is writing a personal note to STAT
you for this same reason.
Since you may not have had occasion to learn much about DePauw University,
I would like to remark that we are a co-educational institution related to the Meth-
odist Church, consisting of the College of Liberal Arts, the School of Nursing, and
the School of Music with the College of Liberal Arts being by far the largest of the
three colleges. The University was founded in 1837, and we believe we have al-
ways maintained a reputation for high academic excellence. We have a well-
selected student body of approximately 2, 200 and a highly trained faculty of about
150. We are a residential college situated in an attractive town of about 8, 500
inhabitants located midway between Indianapolis and Terre Haute, Indiana.
We attempt to present only the very best in our convocation series; and in the
past few years we have had the privilege of hearing such people as the Honorable
Harold Macmillan, former Prime Minister of Great Britain; Mr. Charles Bohlen,
former Ambassador and former Deputy Undersecretary of State; Her Excellency, Dr.
Angie Brooks, President of the United Nations Genera l'Assembly, 24th Session;
Mr. William H. Buckley, author and television personality; the Honorable Henry
A. Blackmun, Justice of the U. S. Supreme Court; Dr. Russell Kirk, critic, essayist,
and historian of ideas; Senator Margaret Chase Smith; Mr. David Brinkley, tele-
vision news commentator; His Excellency, Dr. Miguel; A. Burelli, Ambassador from
Venezuela to the United States; Senator Sam Irwin; Senators Birch Bayh and Richard
Lugar; Dr. Vernon Jordan, Executive Director of the National Urban League; and
many others.
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C C~
If you could come, I or someone else would meet you at the Indianapolis
Airport, which is 35 miles from Greencastle, and drive you to the campus,where
you would be housed in one of specially decorated guest rooms, and would return
you to the airport in order to make your return flight. We would be responsible
for meals and general hospitality,
Convocations are normally held from 11 to 11:50 a.m. on Fridays. We would
suggest that you might like to come the Thursday afternoon or evening before,
stay overnight, address the convocation at 11:00 o'clock, stay for a luncheon
which we would give in your honor immediately following the convocation and to
which we would invite interested members of, the faculty, administration, and
student body, and conclude with a brief question and answer period. If you would
rare to hnlri a news conference at any time while you are hprt- _ wt- ???-1A 1,^ ??^r??
which is a beautiful house situated on the outskirts of Greencastle, it STAT
would be perfectly satisfactory with us.
Of course, the choice of your subject would be entirely up to you, but we
presume that you might like to speak about the place of the CIA in the national
government and in the world today.
Would you please let us know at your early convenience whether you can come
and also what honorarium you would desire. As I think I do not need to tell you,
private colleges have been hard hit financially recently, and DePauw is no* ex-
ception, although we have always stayed in the black. We will pay your ex-
penses, and we will try to give you a suitable honorarium.
As far as dates are concerned, could we suggest as a starter all Fridays:
September 16, October 7, or November 11?
We will be greatly honored if you would find that you can accept our invitation
to come to the campus.
Sincerely,
l V G/ _ i't.v.~
Arthur W. Shumaker
Professor of English and
Director of Convocations
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L! it l
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L.l .;.1'(Jv.
g reencastle
prepared by PUBLIC SERVICE INDIANA area development department
Greencastle, county seat of Putnam County, is located 40 miles west of
Indianapolis and 35 miles east of Terre Haute. U.S. 40 is 5 miles south,
U.S. 36 is 9 miles north and Interstate 70 is 7 miles south of the city.
Zlf ACA 1950 1960
1970
city 6,888 8,506
8,852
county 22,960 24,927
26,932
45
77 o
,JO[ Ln S 1 ES
product
employment
International Business
Machines Corp.
Data Processing Cards
875
Mallory Capacitor Company
Capacitors
600
Angwell Curtain Company
Draperies
125
Lone Star Industri^s, Inc.
Cement
150
Greencastle Manufacturing Co.
Metal Stampings
80
The France Stone Co.
Crushed Stone
30
manufacturing employment in county 2 , 300
unions IBEW (Electrical), IUOE (Operating Engineers), ULGCW (Lime Gypsum & Cement)
indiana employment security division office 141 West Georgia Street
Indianapolis, Indiana 46225
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eml lspo I all?T/fl
rail ConRail Corporation and L. & N. Railroads
highway Interstate 70; U.S. Highways 36, 40 and 231; Indiana Highway 43.
truck Clairmont, Interstate System, Key Line and Motor Freight
air City-County Airport; commercial service at Indianapolis International Airport
barge None
W1119ies
electric
gas
water
telephone
Public Service Indiana
Indiana Gas Company, Inc.
Municipal service with deep well source.
General Telephone Company of Indiana, Inc.
gore me and seryices
planning and zoning
law enforcement
fire protection
waste removal
sewerage
Mayor and five member city council. Fifth Class City.
Planning Commission and Board of Zoning Appeals.
Chief and ten man force.
Chief and eleven firemen.
Municipal sanitary land-fill. Weekly collection.
Municipally owned sewage treatment plant. 3 MGD capacity
35% usage.
Wixes Payable in 1977, subject to approx. 20% Property Tax Replacement Credit:
local property taxes are assessed
property taxes city $9.28 per $100 on a base of 1/3 true cash value...
township $6.84 per $100 current rates for adjacent townships
state sales tax 4% on all sales at retail. available on request...
food products exempt.
educci ti?rnall f icilirties
Teacher Ratio
Total Students
Four Elementary Schools
1:24
1,066
One Junior High School
1:16
358
One Senior Hi h School
t
1:19
701
Special Educa
ion and Home Bound Education
13
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colleges / wre i versilles
DePauw University
Greencastle
- -
Wabash College
Crawfordsville
27 miles
Rose Hulman Institute of Technology
Terre Haute
30 miles
Indiana State University
Terre Haute
35 miles
Indiana University-Purdue University at Indianapolis
40 miles
voca or call schools
Greencastle High School offers vocational courses and adult education.
Indiana Vocational and Technical College Campuses are located in Indianapolis
and Terre Haute.
c?mT/ 1unIicaliro s
newspapers
radio
television
Banner-Graphic (daily)
WXTA - FM; WGRE - FM (university owned and operated)
Six area stations provide major network coverage.
Cable TV also available.
medical fiedlilles
hospitals Putnam County Hospital beds 85
physicians 10 dentists 8 registered nurses
other facilities Three nursing homes
Operation Life emergency ambulance service.
iioooonIIIIIIIiooiiiiuuuuuuiiooiniuoooiiuniinollllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIoiiooooiiiioooooooiniounnnannnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnoononnnnoononnolllllll1111111oiiiioiiitooiiooooooiiooooIIIIIIllooIIoonun
Mo els / hotels
One hotel and six motels provide 209 rooms to serve the area.
ho sing
Five subdivisions under development offer housing in all price ranges.
Five new apartment buildings constructed in recent years.
One apartment building and one multiple unit complex for retired and elderly.
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cliches
Most major denominations are represented among the twenty local churches.
fCoan cl i sV glans
Central National Bank
First Citizens Bank & Trust Company
Greencastle Federal Savings & Loan Association
Assets
$56,251,000
$33,920,000
$30,927,000
Feueaylop~
Two city parks, including a public swimming pool, playgrounds and picnic area.
Windy Hill Country Club, private, with golf course and swimming pool.
Allenhill Par-3 public golf course.
Depauw University, considered one of the outstanding small colleges in the
nation, has a campus of more than 60 acres in the center of the city. The
university is composed of the College of Liberal Arts, School of Music, School
of Nursing, Performing Arts Center and Science Center. It has an active
competitive sports program.
~kewsi 16h s s
for industrial site or other information write or phone:
Gerald S. Dailey
Area Development Manager
Public Service Indiana
1000 East Main Street
Plainfield, Indiana 46168
Mrs. Winifred R. Neal
Executive Secretary
Greencastle Chamber of Commerce
14 South Indiana Street
Greencastle, Indiana 46135
phone 317 - 653-4517
100 acre Industrial Park with adjoining rail, located on East Tenth Street,
south of State Highway 240. City utilities.
PUBLIC
SERVICE
R 3/77
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ENCOUNTER SERIES
DEPAUW UNIVERSITY
Novo 9., 10:00 a.m. WEDNESDAY CHAPEL
THE BLAMER LECTURESHIP ON CHRISTIAN MISSIONS
DR. GEORGE OGLE
Missionary to South Korea
Gobin Church
From the time of his arrival In South Korea, the Reverend Dr. George Ogle
made the government of the Republic of Korn uneasy as a result of his defense of
laborer?s rights and his interest in the growing labor union movement of that country
As a result of his investigations into the Korean CIA and his protest of death sen-
tences given to South Korean union organizers of labor, Dr. Ogle was questioned,
harassed., and imprisoned by the KCIA.
After he served as the spokesman for American missionaries in their appeal to
the United States Government for justice for Korean labor leaders, police surrounded
Ogle?s house in Seoul. In Bevan hours Dr. Ogle and his family were packed and en-
palled from the country. Known as the missionary who knew too much," Dre, Ogle
wti:ll share his experiences in the mission field through the Seamer Lectureship on
Christian Missions,
Nov. 11? 11:00 a.m.
FRIDAY CONVOCATION
ADMIRAL STANSFIELD TURNER
Director of Central Intelligence
"NATIONAL INTELLIGENCE"
Theatre, PAC
Admiral Stanfield Turner, United States Navy, was sworn in as the Director of
Cca ntral Intelligence on March, 1977, In this position he heads the IIntelligence Com-
munity (the foreign intelligence agencies of the United States) as well as directing
the Central Intelligence Agency,
A native of Highland Park, Illinois, Admiral Turner entered Amherst College in
1941 and two years later was appointed to the United States Naval Academy. After
graduation in 1946 he served one year at see before entering Oxford University as a
Rhodes Scholar for wcffk on a Master?s degree in philosophy, politics, and economics,
Following his Oxford experience he held a variety of sea assignments in the Navy, in
eluding command of a minesweeper, a destroyer, and a guided missile frigate. His
shore assignments included the Politics=Military Policy Division in the Office of the
Chief of Naval Operations, the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Systems
Analysis, the Advanced Management Program at the Harvard Business School, and the
position of E aecutive Assistant and Naval Aide to the Secretary of the Navy.
He was promoted to Rear Admiral in 1970 and shortly thereafter assumed command
of a Carrier Task Group of the Sixth Fleet, After that he directed the Systems Analysis
Division of the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations. In 1972 Admiral Turner be-
come President of the Naval Was College with the rank of Vice Admiral. During his
tenure there he instituted major revil3ions in the Curriculum to strengthen its academic
content. In 1974 he became commander of the United Stes Second Fleet and the
NATO Striking Fleet Atlantic. Hei.:e%arved in that capacity until Aueust,1975, when he
was named to become Commander in Chief, Allied Fences Southern Europe. Upon 3-.
sunning that position, he was promoted to the rank of Admiral. He hold this commend
until his departure on March 2, 1977, to assume his present duties
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ENCOUNTER SERIES
DEPAUW UNIVERSITY
Novo 9., 10:00 a.m. WEDNESDAY CHAPEL
THE BLAMER LECTURESHIP ON CHRISTIAN MISSIONS
DR. GEORGE OGLE
Missionary to South Korea
Gobin Church
From the time of his arrival In South Korea, the Reverend Dr. George Ogle
made the government of the Republic of Korn uneasy as a result of his defense of
laborer?s rights and his interest in the growing labor union movement of that country
As a result of his investigations into the Korean CIA and his protest of death sen-
tences given to South Korean union organizers of labor, Dr. Ogle was questioned,
harassed., and imprisoned by the KCIA.
After he served as the spokesman for American missionaries in their appeal to
the United States Government for justice for Korean labor leaders, police surrounded
Ogle?s house in Seoul. In Bevan hours Dr. Ogle and his family were packed and en-
palled from the country. Known as the missionary who knew too much," Dre, Ogle
wti:ll share his experiences in the mission field through the Seamer Lectureship on
Christian Missions,
Nov. 11? 11:00 a.m.
FRIDAY CONVOCATION
ADMIRAL STANSFIELD TURNER
Director of Central Intelligence
"NATIONAL INTELLIGENCE"
Theatre, PAC
Admiral Stanfield Turner, United States Navy, was sworn in as the Director of
Cca ntral Intelligence on March, 1977, In this position he heads the IIntelligence Com-
munity (the foreign intelligence agencies of the United States) as well as directing
the Central Intelligence Agency,
A native of Highland Park, Illinois, Admiral Turner entered Amherst College in
1941 and two years later was appointed to the United States Naval Academy. After
graduation in 1946 he served one year at see before entering Oxford University as a
Rhodes Scholar for wcffk on a Master?s degree in philosophy, politics, and economics,
Following his Oxford experience he held a variety of sea assignments in the Navy, in
eluding command of a minesweeper, a destroyer, and a guided missile frigate. His
shore assignments included the Politics=Military Policy Division in the Office of the
Chief of Naval Operations, the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Systems
Analysis, the Advanced Management Program at the Harvard Business School, and the
position of E aecutive Assistant and Naval Aide to the Secretary of the Navy.
He was promoted to Rear Admiral in 1970 and shortly thereafter assumed command
of a Carrier Task Group of the Sixth Fleet, After that he directed the Systems Analysis
Division of the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations. In 1972 Admiral Turner be-
come President of the Naval Was College with the rank of Vice Admiral. During his
tenure there he instituted major revil3ions in the Curriculum to strengthen its academic
content. In 1974 he became commander of the United Stes Second Fleet and the
NATO Striking Fleet Atlantic. Hei.:e%arved in that capacity until Aueust,1975, when he
was named to become Commander in Chief, Allied Fences Southern Europe. Upon 3-.
sunning that position, he was promoted to the rank of Admiral. He hold this commend
until his departure on March 2, 1977, to assume his present duties
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DePauw University
PUBLIC OCCASIONS
A part of your education at DePauw
Fall Semester - 1977
ENCOUNTER SERIES
Sept. 9 Symposium on The Future of DePauw, President
11 a.m. Richard Rosser, Dean Robert Farber, Professors
Gerald Warren, James George and students Nancy
Woodhouse and Rob Lukemeyer
Theatre, Performing Arts Center
Sept. 14 Dr. Harold W. Manner, authority on Laetrile drug
10 a.m. research and controversy and Chairman, Depart-
ment of Biology, Loyola University, Chicago, A
Scientist Looks at His Faith
Gobin Church
Sept. 16 Faculty Lecture: Dr. John Bittner, Assistant Pro-
11 a.m. fessor, Communication Arts and Sciences, The
Day the First Amendment Died
Theatre, Performing Arts Center
Sept. 21 Dr. Stephen Crites, Professor and Chairman,
10 a.m. Department of Religion, Wesleyan University,
The Gospel Story: Myth or Literal Truth
Gobin Church
Sept. 23 Panel on How to Study at DePauw, Dean W.
11 a.m. McK. Wright, Professors Paul Kissinger, Keith
Opdahl, John C. Wright, and students Denise
Harvey and Steven Yount
Theatre, Performing Arts Center
Sept. 28 Dr. F. Thomas Trotter, General Secretary, Board
10 a.m. of Higher Education and Ministry, United Meth-
odist Church, The Renewal of Wonder
Gobin Church
Sept. 30 Energy Symposium, Jules Bergman, science editor,
11 a.m. ABC News
Theatre, Performing Arts Center
Oct. 5 David Baker, Professor of Jazz, Indiana Univer-
10 a.m. sity, with the DePauw Jazz Ensemble and Choir,
The Beatitudes
Gobin Church
Oct. 7 Faculty Lecture: Dr. Sarah J. Williams, part-time
11 a.m. Instructor in Music, Celebrating the 600th Anni-
versary of Guillaume de Machaut
Theatre, Performing Arts Center
Oct. 12 Paul Anderson Guinness Book of World Records'
10 a.m. "strongest man in the world," Christ in My Life
Bowman Gym
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Oct. 14 Dr. Jerome C. Hixson, philologist, author, teach-
11 a.m. er, and authority on the history of DePauw,
DePauw's Fourth Dimension
Meharry Hall
Oct. 19 Students Carol Funk and Mark Graham, program
10 a.m. of worship and music, Who Gives a Hoot?
featuring Mustard Seed
Gobin Church
Oct. 28 Dr. Otis R. Bowen, Governor of Indiana, A View
11 a.m. from the State House
Theatre, Performing Arts Center
Nov. 2 Scenes from Godspell, presented by Duzer Du
10 a.m. Gobin Church
Nov. 4 Dr. John Jakes, best-selling novelist and author of
11 a.m. the American Bicentennial Series, Publishing-
Last of the Luke-Warm Rebels
Theatre, Performing Arts Center
Nov. 9 Dr. George Ogle, controversial missionary ex-
10 a.m. pelled from South Korea, presents the Beamer
Lectureship on Christian Missions, The Liberty of
the Cross
Gobin Church
Nov. 11 Admiral Stansfield Turner, Director of the Central
11 a.m. Intelligence Agency, National Intelligence
Theatre, Performing Arts Center
Nov. 16 Thanksgiving Celebration
10 a.m. Gobin Church
Nov. 30 Gary Roberts, A Kaleidoscope of Sharing
10 a.m. Science Center Auditorium
Dec. 2 Dr. William E. Griffith, Ford Professor of Political
11 a.m. Science at the Massachusetts Institute of Tech-
nology, Soviet-American Regional Competition:
Europe, the Middle East and Africa
Theatre, Performing Arts Center
Dec. 7 Christmas Communion, DePauw Festival Chorus
10 a.m. and Choir present The Christmas Story
Gobin Church
Dec. 7 Butler University Ballet presents The Nut-
3 p.m. &
cracker Suite
7:30 p.m.
Theatre, Performing Arts Center
Dec. 9
Christmas Convocation, University Symphony
Sept. 30 -
Oct. 1
11 a.m.
Orchestra, Orcenith Smith, Music Director
Kresge Auditorium, Performing Arts Center
Oct. 8-15
Nov. 18
THE PERFORMING ARTS SERIES*
Kresge Auditorium, Performing Arts Center
Sept. 17 Cincinnati Early Music Consort
7:30 p.m.
Oct. 8 Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra, John Nelson
7:30 p.m. conductor, Alan Marks, pianist
Nov. 5 Dimitri, Europe's celebrated pantomime clown
7:30 p.m.
*Ticket required
ART CENTER EXHIBITIONS
Aug. 28 - Sept. 21 Forerunners of the American Print
Renaissance: 1920-50. Selections from
the collections of Louis Freedenberg
and Martin Barooshian
Sept. 25 - Nov. 9 Selections from DePauw's permanent
art collection, celebrating the 100th
anniversary of the Art Department
Nov. 13 - Nov. 23 All-Campus Student Art Exhibit. A
competition open to all DePauw
students.
Nov. 30 - Dec. 20 DePauw Art Staff Exhibition: Ray H.
French, William Meehan, David Her-
rold, Robert Kingsley, Gerald Boyce
Jan. 8 - Jan. 18 25th annual Art League Exhibition by
residents of Putnam County
FILM SERIES'
Sept. 8, 9, 10 Let's Do It Again
Sept. 15, 16, 18 A Clockwork Orange
Sept. 22, 23, 25 Harry and Tonto
Oct. 6, 7, 8 Mother, Jugs and Speed
Oct. 27, 28, 29 The Duchess and Dirtwater Fox
Nov. 3, 4, 5 Funny Lady
Nov. 10, 11, 12 Dog Day Afternoon
Nov. 171, 18, 19 Lucky Lady
Dec. It, 2, 3 Outlaw Josey Wales
*Tickets are $1.00. A season ticket is on sale at the Union Di-
rector's office. Schedule subject to change without notice.
TThis showing in Kresge Auditorium, Performing Arts Center,
at 7 p.m. All other showings in Student Union ballroom at
7 and 9:15 p.m.
SPECIAL EVENTS
Energy Symposium, Energy: A Realistic Appraisal
(Dads' Weekend Program)
Inauguration Events
Career Fair, Ballroom, Student Union Building
Radio station WGRE-FM, 91.5, broadcasts many of these
Public Occasions programs.
THEATRE ARTS PRESENTATIONS*
Theatre, Performing Arts Center
Oct. 14, 15, 28, 29 Lindsay and Crouse, Life With Father
Nov. 11, 12, 18, 19 Jean Anouilh, Antigone
*Ticket required
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SCHOOL OF MUSIC CONCERTS
Sept. 25
7:30 p.m.
Sept. 28
7:30 p.m.
Oct. 1
7:30 p.m.
Oct. 5
7:30 p.m.
Oct. 9
7:30 p.m.
Oct. 15
7:30 p.m.
Oct. 30
3:00 p.m.
Nov. 2
7:30 p.m.
Nov. 9
7:30 p.m.
Nov. 13
7:30 p.m.
Nov. 14
7:30 p.m.
Nov. 16
7:30 p.m.
Nov. 20
3:00 p.m.
Nov. 20
7:30 p.m.
Nov. 30
7:30 p.m.
Dec. 4
7:30 p.m.
Dec. 8
7:30 p.m.
Dec. 9,
10, 11
6:00 p.m.
Dec. 11
3:00 p.m.
Dec. 13
7:30 p.m.
University Symphony Orchestra, Mary Heller,
piano
Kresge Auditorium, Performing Arts Center
Faculty Recital, Herman Berg, violin
Kresge Auditorium, Performing Arts Center
University Concert Band
Kresge Auditorium; Performing Arts Center
Faculty Recital, John Sox, clarinet
Recital Hall, Performing Arts Center
Faculty Recital, Tom Fitzpatrick, voice
Recital Hall, Performing Arts Center
University Symphony Orchestra, Concert Choir,
Festival Chorus, The Century Singers, Carmina
Burana
Kresge Auditorium, Performing Arts Center
Faculty Recital, Robert Grocock, trumpet
Kresge Auditorium, Performing Arts Center
Faculty Recital, Mary Heller, piano
Recital Hall, Performing Arts Center
University Chamber Symphony Orchestra
Kresge Auditorium, Performing Arts Center
University Symphony Orchestra
Kresge Auditorium, Performing Arts Center
Faculty Woodwind Quintet
Recital Hall, Performing Arts Center
University Brass Choir
Kresge Auditorium, Performing Arts Center
Faculty Recital, Glenn Sherman, piano
Kresge Auditorium, Performing Arts Center
University Concert Choir
Kresge Auditorium, Performing Arts Center
Faculty Recital, Alice Hopper, voice
Recital Hall, Performing Arts Center
University Jazz Ensemble
Kresge Auditorium, Performing Arts Center
University Band
Kresge Auditorium, Performing Arts Center
An Elizabethan Christmas Dinner
The Century Singers
Ballroom, Student Union Building
University Woodwind Chamber Ensemble
Recital Hall, Performing Arts Center
Festival Chorus, University Concert Choir,
University Jazz Ensemble
Kresge Auditorium, Performing Arts Center
Requests for more information about the Encounter Series
should be communicated to Dr. Arthur W. Shumaker, Direc-
tor of Convocations, 307 Asbury Hall, 653-9721, ext. 260, or
to Dr. W. Fred Lamar, University Chaplain, University Chris-
tain Center, 653-9721, ext. 278.
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Monon tradition recalls bell brawl, close call
By Steve Simpson
The annual DePauw-Wabash clash has
always been something more than an inter-
collegiate football game.
The rivalry for the Monon Bell has never
failed to be intense. At times the emotions
have been enough to empty the stands,
resulting in a free-for-all.
The game itself has been most impressive-
ly marked by Wabash's success in snatching
defeat from the jaws of victory, according to
assistant football coach Ted Katula. He is
able to recount, with uncanny accuracy,
numerous instances of Wabash's failure in
the stretch.
On two occassions in recent years, the
game has ended on the Wabash six-inch line,
with a disappointed team going home to
Crawfordsville, said Katula. DePauw has
succeeded in bouncing back from pronounced
halftime deficits, to take command in the last
four or five minutes.
The long-time coaching pair of Katula and
Tom Mont are able to boast a 12-5-1 edge
over Wabash in 18 years. Katula emphasizes
that no matter how poorly DePauw per-
forms, Wabash seems to consistently make a
series of crucial errors in the very most
undesirable stages of the game.
Another characteristic of the Monon Bell
classic is its unpredictability. Season records
are discarded, and the contest is normally
remarkably close. Good DePauw teams have
lost to mediocre Wabash teams, and shaky
DePauw line-ups have won against Wabash's
best.
It is really almost enough for a football
coach to beat Wabash to be insured of long-
evity. Previous losses pale against a win over
Wabash. The Monon Bell game is widely
considered to be the single most important
athletic contest of the year on this campus.
There are many other activities that
characterize the build-up toward the contest.
There are some legitimate ones-such as the
ever-popular Monon Bell stage (which
evolves into a DePauw-Wabash roast
immediately following Happy Hour), and a
few that are somewhat less legitimate-such
as campus vandalism.
Although the legitimacy is questionable,
the vandalism is pretty much brought about
by tradition. And the deans are always
sweating it out.
e DePauw
Rush system to see changes
ED, NOTE: The rush system at DePauw, as it currently exists, was one of the major concerns of President Rosser when he took office, and one of
the issues he promised to deal with first.
As a result, the CCC subcommittee on Greek institutions, Panhel, and KTK, have all begun an evaluation process of the current system, and
possible options. The following stories are reports on what the three groups have discovered, and what recommendations are likely to evolve from
their deliberations.
Women ? s
By Kim Fell
Following Rosser's suggestion that rush not take
place during the first three weeks of first semester,
Panhel has begun to re-evaluate the restructure
the rush system, said Nelle Barnhart, Panhel
adviser. "Panhel will be looking into a lot of the
processes that relate to rush," she added.
The early rush period has caused concern among
the administration about "the impact on the
adjustment of the new student," she said. Panhel
and the administration have questioned whether it
is necessary to rush a new student in her first
weeks on campus and what effect early rush has on
the student's adjustment to DePauw as an
academic institution.
"The concern has lasted longer this year," she
newly-elected Panhel President Karen Chestnut.
Panhel has begun evaluating the system with
particular attention to the upcoming spring rush,
but Chestnut says these efforts will benefit the fall
rush program as well.
The National Panhellenic Council (NPC) offers
suggested policies for collegiate Panhel groups in
its "How to Guide for College Panhellenics."
Although NPC serves only as an advisory board,
not a central governing body, the handbook says,
"NPC approves an early rush period."
According to NPC, this policy is more beneficial
to both the rushee and the chapter than a deferred
rush. "Early pledging affords the fraternity
chapters an opportunity to assist the new student
in her adjustment to the campus, to make friends
quickly, to become oriented to college soon after
matriculation, . . . and encourage suitable activi-
ties ... in conjunction with her academic work," the
guide states.
Increased tension because of anticipation of a
later rush and problems of lower income for the
chapter are two of NPC's reasons for rejecting the
deferred rush policy.
NPC also suggests a "less-structured rush."
Although the handbook warns that informal rush
requires more organization, it states, "The less
formal program in which enjoyable and relaxed
association between sorority women and
rushees develop is so well planned that it appears
Men's
By John Banker
and Mark Kollar
Despite the problems caused by the current
mens' housing situation Dean of Students, William
McK. Wright says there is considerable concern
expressed by various segments of the University
about the effects of rush on incoming freshmen.
One of the major points that has come under
criticism is the distraction from the orientation
program caused by rushing the first week. "Some
freshmen become more concerned with rush than
they are with registration or the other events of
the first week," said Wright.
The dean added that the University is trying to
find ways of making rush more informal, and taking
some of the pressure off the freshmen. "Rush week
becomes DePauw hysteria," Wright said.
He also added that the University must find a
housing solution for the first week, since the
University would have to house the rushees
without depending on the Greencastle community.
While Wright speculated that there might be
some minor changes in the rush process, he said
any major overhaul of the current system would
probably have to wait until the 1979-80 school year.
Petra Munro, a member of the CCC subcom-
mittee on Greek Institutions, agreed with Wright
about rush interference with University functions
early in the semester, and said the subcommittee is
not only concerned with effects of rush on
orientation, but on academics, and the psycho-
logical effects on the freshmen.
One of the major problems, according to Munro is
the emphasis the University inadvertently places
on rush and Greek life-half of the orientation
booklet given to incoming students is concerned
with rush and the fraternities and sororities, she
said.
The attitude of the older students toward in-
dependent life contributes to the social pressures
the freshmen feel when they first arive.
"When the freshmen get here they very quickly
pick up a negative feeling about the dorms from the
students already here. That makes getting into a
fraternity or sorority even more imperative,"
natural ... and results are great!" Munro added.
(Continued on page 7)
Dave Taylor helps clear the brush Saturday at the Wheeler Mission
Camp on the SNu-Mason work project. -photo by Meeker
Six students charged $68
for under-age drinking
By John Taylor
Six DePauw students arrested
during Wednesday night's bar
raids were each fined $25 plus
$43 court costs yesterday after
pleading guilty to charges filed in
Greencastle criminal court.
The three 19-year-olds and
three 20-year-olds charged with
the "crime of unlawful possession
of alcoholic beverages by a
minor" were arraigned in Put-
nam County Circut Court under
presiding Judge William Hamil-
ton.
Under the Indiana statute, the
students could have been fined
up to $50 each and sentenced for
up to 30 days in the county jail,
according to Hamilton.
He added since no fake ID's
were used by the students, the
penalty was not as severe as it
could have been.
Prosecuting Attorney James
Note: The next issue,
The DePoon, is not to
be taken seriously.
Houck said, "We have to treat
DePauw students like any other
Putnam County resident." He
said this was the first incident of
this type involving University
students this year, although
there have been a "number of
alcohol-related cases involving
non-students of the same age."
The students, five of whom
were taken from Charlie Brown's
and one from Old Topper Tavern,
said in court that no one had
checked for identification at
either establishment.
Hamilton said there is some
discrepancy as to who served the
student at Topper's since the
student said he could not identify
that person.
He added a waitress may be
charged for serving minors at
Charlie Brown's.
The Indiana Alcoholic Bev-
(Continued ot, page 2)
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T H E D E P A U W
It-i-y-aUs debate government
That all government should be
abolished will be the topic of
Tuesday night's debate between
Wabash and DePauw.
The debate will be parliamen-
tary style with audience partici-
pation and will be in the
Fluttering Duck at 7 p.m.
Monon traditions
(Continued from page 1)
The bell itself has a colorful
history. Theft of the bell by the
have-nots is demanded by tradi-
tion, and the attempts have good
records of success. Both schools
have tried to maintain a secure
hold on the elusive bell, but that
has not always been enough.
The bell-when housed by De-
Pauw-has found itself lodged in
a warehouse, and several of the
campus fraternities. (SAE is
hoping to get a grip on the bell
Saturday afternoon, with all
good luck prevailing.)
Much of the scheming for the
Judy
Judy
Judy
HAPPY
BIRTHDAY
BIRTHDAY
BIRTHDAY!
Debating for DePauw will be
Mark Small and Steve Knodell.
On the negative from Wabash
College will be Andre Gouveia
and Marshall Green.
There will be a return match at
Wabash Thursday afternoon at 4
p.m. in the Little Giant room.
Refreshments will be served.
thefts have been quite elaborate.
Upon one notable occasion, a
former DePauw president was
hoodwinked by a group of
Wabash men posing as a Mexican
ambassador and his entourage.
The contingent was led to the
bell, and it was later found
missing.
Halftime at the contest used to
be a signal for the DePauw
freshmen to meet the Wabash
freshmen on the fifty-yard line
for an unfriendly little brawl. But
things have calmed down some-
what-at least recently-due
largely to a tighter security
force. Also conducive to the
mass hysteria has been Wabash's
persistence-if not fetish-with
the theft of the tiger tail.
It is apparent that the Monon
Bell classic has a rich and colorful
history, but it also is able to
expect a good future. There is
now a push toward the expansion
of the Monon Bell activities and
traditions. But all of the tradi-
tions, activities, and intensity are
due to culminate at the opening
kick-off.
Local politicos
to talk at UB
Three local politicians will
participate in an open panel
discussion tomorrow night at
6:30 in UB 212.
G.E. Warren, Greencastle city
councilman, will speak on the
subject of Greencastle govern-
ment, while City Council Chair-
man C.D. Coppinger will discuss
the role of party politics at the
city level. Albert Soloman,
Putnam County Republican
chairman, will talk about the
Republican Party's role in county
politics.
A brief question and answer
period will follow the open
symposium sponsored by the
College Republicans. Refresh-
ments will be served.
?- ~- Bars busted
(Continued from page 1)
erage Commission (ABC) may
take administrative action a-
gainst the license holders, said
Houck.
Houck added the six convic-
tions of the misdemeanor will go
on record in Putnam County
only.
Hamilton said the incident
should have no bearing on appli-
cations for jobs or graduate
schools since the offense is a
misdemeanor.
G~a~us Calendar
TODAY
Seminary Information Day
2:30-5:30 p.m. Seminary Information Day
County Fair" - UB Ballroom
Women's volleyball. DePauw, Indiana
State University ' B," Vincennes Uni-
versity - Here
6 p.m. Huttle Club dinner - UB 208
7 p.m. Dinner for seminary representa-
tives - UB Terrace Room
7:30 p.m. Fellowship of Christian Ath-
letes - UB 221n
8 p.m. League of Women Voters meeting
- Barbara Silander, 615 Anderson
TOMORROW
Seminary Information Day
10 a.m. Chapel: George Ogle, missionary
expelled from South Korea, presents
the Beamer Lectureship on Christian
Missions: "The Liberty of the Cross"
- Gobin Church
12 noon Beamer Lectureship luncheon -
1-4 p.m. Placement interviews: Georgia
Institute of Technology, College of In-
dustrial Management. Grad. Manage-
ment Program, Dean Richard Teach in-
terviewing - 110 Asbury Hall
1:20-5:20 p.m. Seminary interviews-call
Fred Lamar, ext. 278, for appointments
- UB 207, 208, 212, Music Lounge, &
TV Lounge
6:30 p.m. College Republicans - UB 212
6:30 p.m. Meeting for all education
seniors - UB 221
7:30 p.m. DePauw University Chamber
Symphony Orchestra Concert -
Kresge Auditorium
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10
9 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Placement interviews:
Murphy Company-Wayne Menzies in-
terviewing (preference to December
graduates) - UB 208
12 noon-4 p.m. Voting for Delta Gamma
Beautiful Eyes contest - UB Lounge
12:30 p.m. Joint Archives Committee
luncheon - UB 207
5:30 p.m. Tri-Delt Founders' Day -
Tri-Delt
6 p.m. Fiji faculty dinner - Fiji
7 & 9:15 p.m. UB movie: 'Dog Day After-
noon" - UB Ballroom
7:30 p.m. Campus Crusade for Christ
MONON DELI. WEEK
DePauw Student Union Presents:
meeting - University Christian Cen.
ter
9 p.m. Hub entertainment, ''Captain Amer.
ica" episode No. 4 and cartoons -
The Hub
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 11
9-11:30 a-m. Placement interviews: Kran-
nert School of Management, Purdue
University. Pam Hill interviewing -
UB 221
9:15 a.m. Housemothers meeting -
UB 221
11 a.m. Convocation. Stansfield Turner,
director of the Central Intelligence
Agency - "National Intelligence" -
The Theatre
12 noon 4 p.m. Voting for Delta Gamma
Beautiful Eyes contest - UB Lounge
Women's volleyball: Small College State
Tournament - Huntington College
3 p.m. Community Concerns Committee
meeting - UB 212
'Godspell' chapel
cancelled wed.
The Duzer Du - DePauw
Repertory Theater production of
"Scenes From Godspell," sched-
uled for chapel last Wednesday,
was cancelled because of a
possible conflict with the Winter
Term production of Godspell,
said Dave Swiental, Repertory
Theater member. It was not until
three weeks before the sched-
uled production that the Duzer
Du - DePauw Repertory Theater
decided not to perform the pro-
gram, said Swiental. In the three
weeks remaining they were
unable to find a replacement
chapel.
N
"An Evening with Billy Joe
At Kresge Auditorium
Ticket Sales Begin Wednesday, November 1
At The P.A.C. Box Office
$6.00-All Seats Reserved
Approved For Release 2009/07/15: CIA-RDP05SO062OR000401170001-8
Approved For Release 2009/07/15: CIA-RDP05SO062OR000401170001-8
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER'.8, 1977
Margaret Chase Smith, former senator from Maine, made a personal
visit to the campus Saturday to talk with students and
administrators. Smith is a former Woodrow Wilson fellow here at
DePauw. -photo by Davidson
'Antigone' and Joel;
two timely events
By Christopher Portelli
Two shows will occupy two
stages in the PAC Friday night, a
situation that could mean as
much as a half-hour tone-down of
piano man Billy Joel's music,
according to PAC director Ted
Giatas.
The DePauw Theater pro-
duction of "Antigone" is schedul-
ed to open its four-performance
run Friday at 8 p.m. in The
Theatre of the PAC. "An Even-
ing with Billy Joel," a concert
sponsored by the UB Boards,
begins at 9 p.m. in Kresge
Auditorium. "Antigone" had
been slated for that time long
before the concert organizers
were given the okay to stage Joel
in Kresge, said Giatas.
The concurrent performances
bring up one of many problems
faced by having all three major
performing facilities (The Thea.
ter, Kresge Auditorium and
Recital Hall) grouped together,
said Giatas. Although the set-up
has its advantages, a case like
this highlights the disadvantages
he added.
"Antigone," a production that
runs for about an hour and a half,
will still be in performance when
Joel's first set is scheduled to
begin. Since the two performing
Gobin presents
George Ogle
George Ogle, visiting pro
fessor of Christian Mission at the
Chandler School of Teology of
Emory University at Atlanta,
will speak on "The Liberty of the
Cross" at tomorrow's 10 a.m.
chapel in Gobin Church.
Ogle served as United Metho-
dist missionary to Korea from
1954 to 1974, working as a
teacher and consultant in labor
and industrial relations. Known
as "the missionary who knew too
much," Ogle was arrested by the
Korean CIA because of his active
support of Korean workers and
political prisoners. He was de-
ported from Korea in 1974.
halls are close together, there
has been speculation that Joel's
music would be heard in The
Theatre.
However, said Giatas, "every
measure" will be taken to ensure
that one show does not interfere
with the other. A sound test will
be run before curtain time in the
Theater. Any sound carryover
problem that might be found will
be solved by adjusting the
decibel level of Joel's audio
equipment-which is extensive
enough to require removing rows
of seats in Kresge to make room
for it-to accomodate "Antigone"
until that performance has
ended.
"Fortunately for both sides, it
will only be a matter of 20 to 30
minutes of concurrent perform-
ance," said Giatas.
THE DEPAUW PAGE3
COIA director to speak at convo
United States Navy Admiral
Stansfied Turner, director of the
Central Intelligence Agency, will
speak on "National Intelligence"
at Friday's 11 a.m. convocation in
The Theater of the Performing
Arts Center. Turner also heads
the Intelligence Community (the
foreign intelligence agencies of
the United States).
A native of Highland Park, Ill.,
Turner entered Amherst College
in 1941 and was appointed to the
United States Naval Academy
two years later. After graduat-
ing in 1946, he served one year at
sea and then entered Oxford
University as a Rhodes Scholar
to work on a Master's degree in
philosophy, politics and eco-
nomics.
He then held a variety of sea
assignments, including command
of a minesweeper, a destroyer,
and a guided missile frigate. His
shore assignments included the
Politico-Military Policy Division
in the Office of the Chief of Naval
Operations, the Office of the
Assistant Secretary of Defense
for Systems Analysis, the Ad-
vanced Management Program at
the Harvard Business School,
and Executive Assistant and
Naval Aide to the Secretary of
the Navy.
He was promoted to Rear
Admiral in 1970, and shortly
afterwards assumed command of
a Carrier Task Group of the
Sixth Fleet while serving aboard
the aircraft carrier USS Inde-
pendence. Following the assign-
ment, he directed the Systems
Analysis Division of the Office of
the Chief of Naval Operations.
Turner became president of
the Naval War College with the
rank of vice admiral in 1972. In
1974, he became commander of
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KEYCHAIN CREATIONS
the United States Second Fleet
and NATO Striking Fleet At-
lantic. In 1975 he was named
commander in chief of the Allied
Forces Southern Europe. He was
promoted to the rank of Admiral
upon assuming that position, and
held that command until his
departure March 2, 1977, to
assume his present position.
World Brie
S
AN EARTHEN DAM collasped in Toccoa, Georgia, leaving 37
persons dead, two missing and presumed dead, and 60 injured. The
wall of water tumbled down on Toccoa Falls Bible College at 2 a.m.,
catching the small campus asleep.
First Lady Rosalynn Carter flew to the area Sunday to inspect
the damage. The dam burst came after two days of torrential rains,
and three days after the dam had been inspected. Georgia Gov.
Buzzbee said that the 84 other earthen dams in the state would be
inspected.
MR. NEW YEAR'S EVE, GUY LOMBARDO, died Saturday at
the age of 75, in Houston's Methodist Hospital, of a lung ailment, with
heart and kindney complications. Lombardo was admitted to the
hospital on Oct. 27, and last Wednesday slipped from serious to
critical, but stable condition.
Lombardo's body is to be returned to Long Island for funeral
services and burial. In New Hampshire, the bandleader's brother said
the Royal Canadians will continue, adding, "the show must go on."
RECENTLY RELEASED STATISTICS showed unemployment
rose from an adjusted rate of 6.9 percent in September, to 7 percent
in October.
BRITISH AND UN ENVOYS met with Rhodesian Prime
Minister Ian Smith, but reports the stalemate over the transition to
majority rule still exists. The British representative said their was
agreement on the eventual aim, but said Smith was still opposed to
majority rule through universal sufferage.
The Carter administration said it would be willing to drop
charges against Tungson Park, in return for the names of the
Congressmen involved in influence-buying scandal. The administra-
tion was critical of the Seoul Korean government for not giving more
cooperation to the US investigators.
ALSO CONCERNING SOUTH KOREA. The Center for Inter-
national Policy said in a recently released report that Korea has the
fifth largest army in the world and is capable of defending itself.
The report says the South Korean regular army outnumbers the
north Koreans by 140,000, and the reserve army is 900,000 men
stronger. The report concludes that because the Koreans are able to
defend themselves, there is no need for the Carter administration to
make security override human rights in the US dealings with the
Asiah country.
And a final note, the great Buffalo Bills running back O.J.
Simpson is sidelined for the remainder of the NFL season.
Speculation is that the Juice may call his pro career to an end,
because of the knee injury.
The Downtown Part of The Campus
26 EAST WASHINGTON STREET
Approved For Release 2009/07/15: CIA-RDP05SO062OR000401170001-8
For all ages!
A new car deserves a new keychain. Even a
new set of roller skates deserves a place
for a skate key! Great gift-giving for all ages.
Students serve
as part-time
bros, sisters
By Ann Daly
Big Brothers and Big Sisters
are not found just in fraternity
houses, but also in the Green-
castle community.
Big Brothers and Big Sisters is
a group of about 25 DePauw
students, each paired with a child
from the community to serve as a
part-time surrogate sibling.
Although some plans are made
for the organization, the DePauw
student is responsible for plan-
ning most of the individual activi-
ties with the youngster.
Such activities may include
going to a DePauw football
game, window-shopping at G.C.
Murphy, or studying together.
Even though the Big Brothers
and Big Sisters are checked
every so often, emphasis is on
the individual's responsibility to
see the child.
Last Tuesday, the local
children participating arrived at
Sigma Chi for a haunted house-
style Halloween party.
The organization serves just as
a means of establishing the pro-
gram, said Brown. "It's one-to-
one relationship," she added.
"It's what you want to make it."
Approved For Release 2009/07/15: CIA-RDP05SO062OR000401170001-8
T H E D E P A U W
hest-selling lakes ret urns to alma mater
--from the podium across the table
By Jean Rudolph
Publishing is a "red hot industry" that is
becoming "lukewarm," according to John Jakes,
noted author of the American Bicentennial series of
novels, at Friday's 11 a.m. convocation in The
Theater of the Performing Arts Center.
Speaking on "Publishing - Last of the Lukewarm
Rebels," Jakes said the publishing industry has
long been and still remains a "vigorous medium of
thought and unpopular opinion" relatively free
from outside pressure. However, he said the "rebel
streak" in writing "is in danger of being watered
down."
Jakes said that a growing "trend to bigness" in
publishing could affect what Americans are allowed
to read and to decide on public issues. The merger,
acquisition, and control of publishing companies by
By Sherrie Swan
John Jakes puts away an average of four pounds
of peanut butter every week. Admittedly, the
best-selling author has a wife and daughter at home
to help him out, but he says, "I think the whole
human race could survive on beer, peanut butter
and milk."
Though he only "smoked Trues with a water-pie
filter," Jakes, like many who make a living behind a
typewriter, was formerly victimized by the
"physical association of writing with tobacco." But
after being hospitalized last July for the removal of
a portion of a lung, Jakes, who said "I'd rather be
alive than have another best-seller," switched to a
less worrisome vice.
the conglomerate is beginning to make publishing a major industry
subject to outside pressure, he said.
Publishing has always been a force for social change, Jakes said,
and generally the changes have been positive. But "bigness has
indeed come to publishing," Jakes said. Large corporations have come
in and taken up "yet another profitable entity."
Jakes said it has been estimated that seven mass paperback houses
account for about 70 percent of the volume in the book industry. He
said the efforts of the conglomerate structure to increase their profits
may result in the difficult or controversail book to be left behind -
either because it's not popular or "on orders from above." This may
lead to the disappearance of the publishing philosophy that if a book is
"good" but not expected to sell, it should be published anyway, he
said.
Jakes, a 1953 graduate of DePauw, has published approximately
200 short stories and over 50 books of fiction and non-fiction. He is
now completing the seventh book in his Bicentennial series, which has
over 20 million copies in print.
Jakes, whose historical novel series on the American Bicentennial
has been the receipt of great critical acclaim and has over 20 million
volumes in print, told a journalism class Wednesday afternoon that
"writing started out as a hobby." While still an undergraduate of
DePauw, he sold his first short story and later his first book.
After going on to receive his Master's at Ohio State, Jakes went
into advertising and continued to write, publishing over 200 short
stories and 50 books. Since being approached by a literary packager
in 1971 to put together the eight-volume series, Jakes has begun
writing full-time, putting in between 12-14 hours a day in his
basement office.
His only concession to the resulting lack of privacy from the success
of the series was to have an unlisted phone number installed, though
he recalled a Sunday morning when "several, dear elderly ladies"
rang the doorbell, presenting him with copies of his books which he
duly autographed to the "clicks of an Instamatic."
Writing is an "endless challenge," says Jakes. "You always hope
that the next book in your head is the best one. The only satisfied
author is one that is no longer writing."
There Is Still Plenty 4#
Hub Entertainment fln Tap
Friday, November 4 . . .
Thursday, November 10
Saturday, November 12
Thursday, November 17
Saturday, November 19
? . . Live Jazz Concert at 9:00
Captain America & Cartoons at 9:00
. Collegians at 9:00
Captain America & Cartoons at 9:00
Dance Contest - Live Broadcast on
WGRE -- Disc Jockeys will act as
Judges
AT THE HUB
Approved For Release 2009/07/15: CIA-RDP05SO062OR000401170001-8
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1977
Approved For Release 2009/07/15: CIA-RDP05SO062OR000401170001-8
1 L1 LI Li # r L] U TV
Bev Gutermuth relaxes in the Dells as she paints the scenic area.
-photo by Davidson
Clinical psychologist Marx
counsels, provides services
By Annemarie DeSanto
After two months of keeping
office hours next to campus
security headquarters, clinical
psychologist Daniel Marx says he
spends most of his time counsel-
ing students.
Students visited Marx's office
most frequently during mid-
terms, he said, when he saw
approximately 25 to 30 students
each week. During test time,
anxiety about exams and concern
over grades tend to amplify
normal problems, he said, adding
that the number of students he
sees has decreased since fall
break.
While test anxiety is one of the
most frequently-discussed pro-
blem, Marx says another leader,
particularly among female stu-
dents, is concern about eating
and dieting. In response to sug-
gestions by Freshman Quad
RA's, Marx's office organized a
nutrition and dieting seminar
that was presented last Wednes-
day.
Students also frequently come
in to discuss social problems, said
Marx. The fraternity-sorority
system has both pros and cons,
he said-while it fosters many
social activities and provides an
atmosphere in which to develop
one's personality, it also creates
conflicts between houses which
can cause problems.
Besides providing counseling
services, the office has organized
programs such as the diet and
nutrition seminar for the benefit
of students. Another seminar,
which will deal with contracep-
tion, will be presented Wednes-
day, Nov. 30 at 7 p.m. in 318
Harrison Hall. Marx says he also
plans a seminar on the mental
health needs of students, for
faculty members.
In his office, Marx has started
a library consisting of materials
covering subjects ranging from
test anxiety to women's rights.
He said he strongly urges stu-
dents to feel free to come and
talk to him or to take advantage
of the materials in his library.
While Marx says he is general-
ly pleased with the campus'
reaction to his office services, he
added he thinks there may still
be a hesitation among some stu-
dents to come to his office.
Marx says he encourages sug-
gestions from students, RA's and
faculty members about how his
office may better serve the needs
of DePauw.
Poli Sci club
elects officers;
seeks awareness
Officers were elected at a last
week's meeting of the newly-
formed Political Science Club.
They are president, Steve
Steckler; treasurer, Lynne
Robinson; and secretary, Rich
Kaufman. The faculty advisor is
0. Ralph Raymond, political
science professor.
According to the club's consti-
tution, its purpose is to promote
a "greater political understand-
ing" among students. The club is
open to all students. All political
science majors are automatic
members.
Meetings are Mondays at 3
p.m. in 105 Asbury Hall.
CAREER COURSE
CHANGED
Career Course Changed
The course in career plan-
ning offered by the Dean of
Students office that usually
meets in recital hall has been
rescheduled to meet in room
115 of the science and math
center this Tuesday and
Thursday at 6:30 p.m.
Grad school is 'go' for students
By Melissa Young
DePauw graduates rank above
the national average in attending
graduate schools, according to
John Mohr, director of the
Career Planning and Placement
Center. However, he said, the
number of graduates able to gain
admittance into "big name" pro-
fessional schools like Harvard
and Yale is decreasing.
This has resulted from an
overall tightening of graduate
school admissions caused partial-
ly by what Mohr calls a "continu-
ing press for students to get
advanced training in most pro-
fessional careers." Besides the
increasing number of applica-
tions for graduate school, Mohr
said many schools are reducing
the number of students they
accept because of the tighter job
market. They want to be sure
their graduates will be able to
find employment after they
complete their studies.
Mohr said many schools use a
"formula system" in choosing
prospective students. This sys-
tem consists primarily of weight-
ing test scores and under-
graduate grade point average in
varying combinations. The im-
portance of test scores in admit-
tance can also vary between
graduate programs within an
institution depending on what
tests are required.
According to Mohr, the figures
for the immediate admission of
DePauw graduates into graduate
programs has not changed much
over the last 20 years. The only
major change has been the near
doubling of the number of women
continuing their educations.
(Refer to table below.) However,
Mohr said, these figures would
be higher if they included stu-
dents who waited several years
before going to graduate school.
When asked if there are disad-
vantages to getting an advanced
degree, Mohr said there is the
danger of a person appearing
"over-educated" for a job. Some
employers may not want to pay
the extra money for a person
with a graduate degree when
they could hire someone with
less education for less money.
But, Mohr said, most good firms
will hire a person with an
advanced degree despite this be-
cause they would be getting a
"more qualified" employee.
GRAD SCHOOL ENTRANTS
Following are the per-
centages of students entering
graduate school immediately
after graduating from De-
Pauw.
Year Men Women
1956 43 16
1972 45 16
1975 51 28
1976 45 27
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Greencastle, Ind.
Phone 013-3184
10" 14"
SMALL LARGE
PLAIN (CHEESE & TOMATO) .............................. 2.00 3.30
SAUSAGE ........................................................................ 2.20 4.00
..........
PEPPERONI ............................................................. 2.35 ......... 4.15
MUSHROOM ....... ......................................................... 2.35 4.15
..........
ANCHOVY ................................................................... 2.20 4.00
..........
COMBINATION (any 2 of above) ................................ 2.50 4.30
ONION ..................................................................... 2.10 3.50
..........
GREEN PEPPER ........................................................ 2.10 .......... 3.50
DELUXE ......................................................................... 3.05 .......... 5.10
I NEW' BARBEQUE ............ .............. ..... ........... ....... 2.35 ......... 4.15
ABOVE PRICES
INCLUDES SALES TAX
Approved For Release 2009/07/15: CIA-RDP05SO062OR000401170001-8
Approved For Release 2009/07/15: CIA-RDP05S00620R000401170001-8
Dimitri didn't have much to say Saturday as he performed in a packed
Kresge auditorium. Dimitri is an expert mime.
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Applications Are Due
By November 11
T H E D E P A U W
Dmitri's act: silence was golden
By Christopher Portelli
Dimitri, the world's celebrated
mime, musician, comedian,
clown, entertained a packed
Kresge auditorium Saturday
night in a style and quality
beyond description. Whether
juggling, singing, yodeling, or
leaping into space, the master
entertainer never ceased to
amaze.
It's hard to criticize this unique
form of performance because of
its rarity. There really is nothing
to compare with Dimitri's in-
tricate combination of mime,
music, and mayhem. A stu-
dent and co-worker of Marcel
Marceau, Dimitri has since
established himself as a form of
entertainment in his own right.
In two hours that passed like
minutes, Dimitri gave a varied
and colorful program. Full of
surprises and always original and
fresh in his "silent" delivery,
Dimitri kept the audience laugh-
ing, clapping and falling off their
seats. "Never a dull moment" is
too trite a phrase to capture the
mood of the time spent being
enthralled by such a performer.
The stage was never a barrier
for this clown, as Dimitri proved
by leaping into the front row of
seats to "recover" his instru-
ments or ask the help of a lucky
member of his audience. But just
"what" did Dimitri "do?" It can't
be put into words. To make an
attempt, he made people laugh.
In a word, Dimitri is laughter
personified.
When it was all over, the
enthusiastic crowd was soon on
its feet and brought Dimitri back
for eight curtain calls. During
one of the last, the master
brought back a chair, sat down,
and applauded his crowd! In the
words of his teacher and friend
Marcel Marceau.
Antigone history:
long line of conflict
By Shelley Scott
DePauw's upcoming produc-
tion of "Antigone" carries a long
and interesting history of adapta-
tions. At a time when conflict
between the laws of the state and
the rights of the individual were
evident in ancient Greece,
Sophocles wrote the tradegy
"Antigone."
During the Nazi occupation of
France in World War II, French
playwright Jean Anouilh adapt-
ed Sophocles' play. In his inter-
pretation he maintained the con-
flict between the individual and
the tyranny of the State present
in the original; however, he
directed symbolic references to
the Nazi regime and the op-
pressed French people.
Despite the camouflaged sym-
bolism that carries with it the
hope of giving moral support to
Anouilh's countrymen, the play
was allowed to be staged.
The style of performance
featured minimal use of scenery
and props, shifting the emphasis
of the play towards language,
character and theme rather than
action.
In the course of the Amerian
translation of the play, the
grounds of tension become those
of philosophical values rather
than the political values of the
French original. The central
issue is the meaning of life itself
and the impossibility of holding
onto one's purity in a world that
demands and brings about com-
promise.
Beverly Whitaker Long
directs the production that
features Janet Baranko as the
rebellious Antigone, Carter
"Dimitri delivers to us his
heart ... Under the spotlights he
appears, with his poetic coun-
tenance, bright as a star."
After his breathtaking one-
man-show it was this writer's
pleasure to shake Dimitri's hand
and wish him well on his con-
tinuing America tour.
Wabash to hear
Keith as her lover Haemon and
Larry Sutton as the disciplined Medieval music
King Creon.
Sharon Ivey is Antigone's
sister Ismene, Tody Williams,
Mark Fields and Paul Case are
the three card-playing guards.
Greg Padgett plays the all-
knowing chorus, Kim Boehm is
the messenger and Kim Sedmak
is Eurydice.
"Antigone" will be performed
in The Theater in the PAC Nov.
11, 12, 18 and 19. Tickets are $2
and are available at the box office
at the PAC from 1 to 4 p.m. on
weekdays and 9 to noon on
Saturdays. Tickets can be re-
served in advance by calling ext.
351.
The next attraction in Wabash
College's "Arts'78" series will be
the "Music for a While" group
Wednesday, Nov. 9 at 8 p.m. in
Ball Theater of the Humanities
Center on the Wabash campus.
Music for a While performs
music from the Medieval period.
Its members are all recognized
masters of this idiom, several
being one-time members of New
York Pro Musica before the
formation of the present group.
Music for a While will perform
"La Fontaine Amoureuse," a
collection of works by com-
poser/poet Guillaume de
Machaut. Machaut who died in
1377, left behind poetry and
music that makes him an extra-
ordinary figure in the history of
both these arts.
In "La Fontaine Amoureuse,"
a dramatization of Machaut's life,
Machaut becomes an allegorical
figure of the artist, whose self is
made of many elements. The
program begins with Machaut
"unselving" in the prologues,
until he is himself, a poet and
musician, in joyful celebration of
his art. The story then pro-
gresses chronologically through
Machaut's life, into his waning
years.
Tickets for the performance
may be obtained at the Humani-
ties Center box office. Tickets
are $3 for adults and $2 for
non-Wabash students.
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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1977
womens' rush
(Continued from page 1)
DePauw Panhel currently is
seeking to make rush more
informal by eliminating unneces-
sary rules while retaining
"enough structure to avoid dirty
rush" said Barnhart.
Panhel is also attempting to
find more "creative" ways of
"deformalizing the parties," said
Barnhart. "They are trying to
experiment with something dif-
ferent for spring rush."
Panhel is evaluating the quota
system in each house as well.
Barnhart said Panhel would like
to see each house participate in
spring rush, which would mean
more accurate estimates of house
openings would have to be made.
Panhel is also hoping to devise
a better bid-matching system
and a better way of delivering
these bids. The efficiency of
these systems would be bene-
ficial to filling the quota of each
house as well, states on NPC
booklet.
Five Panhel committees are
currently preparing several new
proposals as alternatives to all
these aspects of rush, which will
be reported to Panhel at its
Thursday meeting.
"Panhel is trying to be
attentive to the concerns ex-
pressed by the people on
campus," said Barnhart. Panhel
is seeking students' ideas for new
options, said Chestnut. "It's
really important that we get
input from everybody on
campus-not just the administra-
tion, not just the Panhel presi-
dent-everybody."
mess' rush
(Continued from page 1)
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THE DEPAUW
U. of Utah moves t o
lower grade inflation
A new regulation at the Uni-
versity of Utah may be one of the
first moves of its kind in the
country to help "cool off some of
the high grading practices,"
according to Pete Gardner, vice
president for academic affairs for
the University of Utah.
Beginning with the current
quarter, letter grades on student
transcripts will be followed by
the average grade all students
received in the class. It will be a
numerical equivalent based on a
four-point scale and will appear
on both the report card and
transcript.
"This is not a mechanism for
solving the problem, but a step in
that direction," said Gardner.
"The grade which prospective
employers or professional school
admission committees are seeing
on a student's transcript is not an
accurate measure of his achieve-
ment."
"The new procedure-recom-
mended by the University
Senate-will better reflect a stu-
dent's scholastic ability. It will
allow students to evaluate their
relative performance realistical-
ly, and also will be of value to
honor societies, seriously con-
cerned with academic achieve-
ment."
Gardner says the real impact
of the new regulations will be felt
in the graduate schools where
entrance requirements are high-
ly competitive.
THEATRE BOARD SEEKS
HOUSE MANAGER
The Theatre Board is accept-
ing applications for a paid
position as house manager for
second semester. Interested stu-
dents should submit letters of
application stating qualifications
to 106E PAC by Thursday, Nov.
10.
Library
receives grant
Roy 0. West library received a
$73,612 grant from the Council
on Library Resources and the
National Endowment for the
Humanities.
The five-year grant will be
used to explore new ways to use
library resources in the edu-
cational process, and will enable
the library to continue to expand
the current library instruction
program for freshmen. It also
will permit the employment of
additional library personnel and
the purchase of media equipment
and supplies to support library-
related classroom instruction.
Funds also will be available to
individual and groups of class-
room faculty to work with a
librarian and an instructional
developer in creating library-
related academic programs.
AC slots open
Academic Council is accepting
applications for positions on the
Council. Applications are avail-
able in the Student Council
office, and are due Friday, Nov.
11. Interviews will begin Tues-
day, Nov. 14.
REPRESENTATIVE
University of Southern California
To Be On Campus
Tuesday, November 15
Graduate Study Information
All Fields of Letters, Arts & Sciences
WHEN DO CHEERLEADERS
SAY BUDWEISER??
It isn't until the students
change their opinion of the dorms
that there can be a de-emphasis
of rush and Greek life, she said.
Munro said the subcommittee
had discussed several options to
the current system, one being
to have rush the week before
orientation, and the other being
to keep the freshmen in tempor-
ary housing for another week,
and rush after the orientation
week.
KTK President Craig Hutchin-
son said he has reservations
about altering the present sys-
tem, and fears that some of the
weaker houses might be jeopar-
dized by tampering with the
current system. Hutchinson says
rush as it is now run does not
distract students too much from
orientation. Freshmen have
enough free time during the
week, and to delay rush until
school started would be a
"fiasco," he said.
The KTK president said he
opposes the idea of a lottery to
place freshmen randomly in the
houses until rush started on the
grounds that it would run into
contractual problems with the
houses, and undermine the
meaning of "fraternity."
Hutchinson said the major
problem isn't that the Greeks are
so strong or over-emphasized,
but that the alternatives are too
weak. "I am wholeheartedly
against de-emphasizing rush or
the Greeks," he added.
THIS wy I'M STANDING ON
IS WOMIN6 AGAIN. j
WHY CAN'T I EVER GET 17HE 86 GUY
WHEN WENWKETHESE PYRAMIDS!?
IF I G0T ANY KINDA VOICE LEFT
AFTER THIS GAME, I'M GONNA YELL
"GIMME A B...
GIMME A U...
GIMME A D...
udweis
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T H E D E PA U W TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1977
The DePauw
Eklitorials Comment
Rush evaluation needed
The evaluation, and possible overhauling of the rush
system is one of the toughest and most important decisions
facing the University this year, and it looks like there is an
honest effort being put forth to have the best interests of in-
coming students protected.
The most salient of these should be allowing the
freshmen enough time to make the decision of where they
want to live on fact and not hearsay, and to allow them the
easiest transition to college life possible.
And throwing rush at them in the opening weeks of the
first semester seems to be the greatest evil they could be
dealt.
For the women, delaying rush isn't that difficult. But
the proposed delay of just three weeks hardly seems long
enough to really make any difference, and may serve to
solidify rather than squelch the rumors that float around.
For the men, moving rush week forward or backward
one week doesn't change the central issue. The only solution
is to adopt the lottery system, and give the freshmen a
semester to decide where they want to spend the balance of
their undergraduate career.
With the lottery, all incoming men would be randomly
assigned to fraternities for a period of time, and rush would
be held later in the semester.
It seems that if the true interests of the freshmen are
considered, the University would opt to allow the freshman
men the time to become settled in a new environment, with
the new demands that are placed on them.
The adjustment to college life is probably difficult
enough without the added taxation of pledge programs, and
everything else that goes with the Greek life.
And the lottery might be a beginning to breaking down
the barriers that exist between living units, and take away
much of the competition that often is more destructive than
constructive.
Most universities allow their freshmen the chance to
find their niche on the campus, and to deny DePauw
freshmen the same opportunity is unfair.
Yes, it will change the complexion of the fraternities
and sororities, but until the University can provide enough
housing to keep the freshman men in their own "quad," it is
the only solution.
The question boils down to one of whether Rosser, and
the University, are going to be tied to the past by the size
and control the Greeks have had, or whether the University
can break from its past and move DePauw in the only sensi-
ble direction
Sign prank dangerous
Editor:
In the November 4 issue of The
DePauw was a picture featuring
a highway bridge weight limit
sign gracing the front lawn of a
campus sorority. While I am sure
this little gambit had no mali-
cious intent, it did carry with it
some potnentially tragic over-
tones,
Most DePauw students
probably are unaware that just
three or four weeks ago a large
truck loaded with crushed stone
broke through a county bridge
and fell several feet. The truck
and bridge were demolished to
the tune of many thousands of
dollars, and it was only through
exceptional good fortune that the
driver was not killed or seriously
injured. Investigation confirmed
that a weight limit sign had been
illegally taken from that site
onlya day or so previously.
Putnam County must spend,
literally, thousands of dollars for
appropriate road signs, the vast
majority of which are required
by law. It costs a small fortune
simply to replace those which are
"pilfered" or destroyed. While
this is an unneccessary and un-
fortunate economic cost, more
important is the serious threat to
the safety of those who use
our roads. Most road signs serve
a legitimate safety purpose, and
anyone tampering with them can
be contributing to the develop-
ment of highway injury and
death statistics.
Norman J. Knights
Member, Putnam County Council
Illiterates-9 Digest
By Mark Kollar and John Taylor
The pipe organ in the Episco-
pal chapel at the University of
Miami (Florida) campus has been
hitting quite a few "high notes"
lately and for good reason. Last
week 14 pipes valued at $600
were reported stolen.
University officials said they
think a student may be stealing
the pipes, which range in length
"from three and one-half feet to
the size of a cigarette holder," to
use as marijuana smoking
"bongs."
"Some students have told me
that the pipes could be used as
bongs," said Rev. Henry Minich.
He added he was also told that by
using the pipes for bongs a pot
smoker "could inhale an extra
strong dose."
David Wike, U. of M.'s own
Grover Vaughan, said that this
year bongs and other marijuana
paraphernalia have been out-
lawed in the University dorms.
Rumor has it that DePauw's
NORML chapter will be meeting
Letter
at Gobin to discuss reorganiza-
tion.
RESEARCH DEPT: Green-
castle has yet to report any
missing organ pipes, but in the
late 60's the perils of pot
apparently hit the Old Gold.
"Pot is all over this campus,"
said former Putnam County
Sheriff Robert Albright in a 1970
interview with The DePauw.
"The administration here is
gutless and they won't get rid of
the hippies," said Albright.
"Those hippies are walking
around pushing pot, and the
administrators don't do anything
about it," he added.
"I believe in good government
and law and order, and while I'm
here those damn hippies are not
going to get away with any-
thing," he said.
"Long hair signifies belli-
terence and hatred of this
country, and I'm going to fight
it," said Albright.
All right put this in your pipe
and smoke it.
Debate continues: a three-sided argument?
Editor:
In her recent commentary,
Chris Boeke characterized the
clash between the S.D.S. and the
College Republicans as "The
Great Fiasco," a title more
appropriate, I think, to her
editorial than our little exercize
in rhetoric. While claiming to
criticize, she has merely carried
on the debate on behalf of the
College Republicans, and with it
the same weakness inherent in
any argument that would call
America a completely free soci-
ety. It is true that O'Donavan
and Haag were mistaken in
saying that freedom is all in the
mind, for indeed it is not.
However, it is just as mistaken to
say that freedom is entirely a
matter of institutions and civil
rights. It is this approach that
characterizes Ms. Boeke's
critique.
The fact is, that so long as
Americans are conditioned to
think and act in a highly specific
manner, exercizes of civil liberty
are largely meaningless. Free-
dom involves both the unin-
hibited creation of alternatives
as well as choosing among them.
The primary argument of the
S.D.S. in the debate was that
America was not free precisely
because the system effectively
limited the creative conscious-
ness by continually reinforcing
specific modes of thought that
can only support oppressive
economic and political
machinery.
In essence, Ms. Boeke
chastises the Republican de-
baters for not using her argu-
ment, and ends up indicting the
entire debate for missing the
point. Rather, it is her conception
of freedom that misses it. Her
myopic approach to the issue, as
well as the debate, is under-
standable, if unfortunate, and is
typical of the American frame of
IRS STONES BUSINESS-
MAN: Texan entrepreneur Bill
Holt could not understand why
the government would not allow
him to file a business loss in his
recent income tax report.
Government authorities sized
approximately one ton of mari-
juana from his pick-up truck
which had just returned from
sunny Mexico, and this bust
obviously caused a new "low" to
his relatively "high" business.
Holt figured he'd deduct the
value of the marijuana the
authorities confiscated as a
business loss. Needless to say,
Uncle Sam did not agree.
As most students know, the
infamous excise men have been
camping out in Greencastle this
past week. For a safe time, try
this .. .
DRINK OF THE WEEK: To
make a Juvenile Juice mix two
shots unsweetened pineapple
juice with Hawaiian Punch and
7-Up. Guaranteed for a no-buzz,
no-bust evening.
mind. Perhaps if she had listened
more closely, to the debate than
her own preconceptions, her
insight into the American sys-
tem, as well as the accuracy of
her critique, might have been
considerably improved.
-Steve Steckler
Step right up, freshmen
. Here's your first ride
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eu--vt the Experts
The Experts collected their second straight victory, and evened
the season at the 4-4 mark, heading into the year's grand finale. John
Faulker, the pride of Delt and the scourge of DG, took this week's
prize, after pontificating at Toppers with Park last week.
Unfortunately Park pontificated too much, and the clear headed
sports editor of the paper took his first victory of the year.
This week for the Monon Bell Classic is dinner for two at the
Putnam Inn. Of course the editor of the paper goes with the victor for
the free eats.
If you want to enter the pick of the pros will be posted in the pub
building, and entries will have to be in by 5:00 Friday. Good guessing,
and happy eating!
THIS WEEK'S SCHEDULE, NOVEMBER 12
)CIRCLE YOUR CHOICES)
Pick Score of DPU Game
Wabash at DePauw
Ball State
Rice at Baylor
California at Oregon
Villanova at Holy Cross
Texas Tech at SMU
Kansas at Nebraska
Indiana at Ohio State
Michigan at Purdue
Dartmouth at Penn
Mississippi State at LSU
Miami, Ohio at Kent State
Oregon State at UCLA
Mississippi at Tennessee
Harvard at Yale
Georgia Tech at Navy
Manchester at Defiance
Ashland at Indiana Central
Hanover at Findlay
Rose-Hulman at Southwestern
All blanks must be received by 5 p.m. Friday afternoon at the
Publications Building, or mailed to P.O. Box 512, Greencastle,
Ind. 46135, postmarked no later than November 11, 1977.
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1977
Commentary
Mini-Monon asks for trouble
The idea of a "Mini-Monon"
representing DePauw and
year's Monon Bell Classic is one
see the football field green.
In scheduling the event, which
they foresee as an annual affair,
Junior Board and Campus Board
are not only disregarding the
warnings of IM Board that all-
star games are an unneccessary
chance for injury, but they are
taking this chance even further
by creating a whole new set of
game.
These new rules, which include
double blocking, permission for a
written for this touch football
game, and permission to wear
soccer cleats in place of the usual
tennis shoes or bare feet can only
serve to add extra ferocity and
speed to the action. A regular IM
enough minor and major injuries
The usual rivalry of the Monon
an altercation around the football
field to complement the mostly
Morton. rivalry seems only to
provide the opportunity for 60
Wabash men to go out and hit
unprotected heads under the
Perhaps the game, with paid
professional referees, will not be
a slugfest. Maybe. But in a year
because of the chance of injury in
a basically needless game, the
idea that this game will be a
President Rosser, in his letter
Friday's issue of The DePauw,
has already said all the hitting on
Saturday should be confined to
One can only hope that Fri-
day's game will not provide the
avoid, a day early.
DePauw Theatre Presents
ANTIGONE
8:00 p.m.
Nov. 11th,12th,18th, & 19th
Tickets available at box office
in Performing Arts Center
(Ext. 351)
"A Classic"
SILMARLLION
HAS
ARRIVED
Pick Up YOUR
Copy While
They Last
YOUR
DEPAUW
BOOK STORE
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IM all-stars
play Wabash
By John Norris
DePauw has many traditions
that provide excitement for the
students. This year's Monon Bell
looks to be more exciting because
of a new event called Mini Monon
Bell.
The football game is a regular
IM game and will be refereed by
paid professionals. The two
teams are composed of 30
all-stars from DePauw and 30
from Wabash with the winner
receiving a traveling trophy. The
players will be allowed to wear
soccor spikes, they can double
block, run in a two-point con-
version, and leave their feet to
tackle.
"These rule changes should
add a larger element of excite-
ment," said coach Joe Argan-
game going to be a slug test,
added Arganbright. At half time,
President Richard Rosser and
nine other faculty members will
challenge nine students to a tug
war, donations for the Guatemala
TOMORROW
A discussion of the Bakke
"reverse discrimination" case,
posiums sponsored by the As-
sociation of Afro-American Stu-
dents, will be tomorrow at 8 p.m.
at the Afro-American House.
OIT LOTTERY
Any junior or senior whL
wishes to request permission to
live out-in-town for Winter Term
and second semester may regis-
ter for the lottery by filing a
request form by Dec. 1.
Forms are available in the
Dean of Student's office.
Classified Ads
LOST: Golden retriever puppy. Answers to
"Brickmason." If found, please call Bill
Caskey at 6535091.
LOST: (Old Gold Weekend) Gold 1976 class
ring with SAE insignia and a small diamond.
The name John W. Bower and degree B.A. are
inscribed on the inside. If found, contact
Becky Bower at 653.5185. Reward.
Attention all College Republicans: Don't
forget tomorrow's local politican panel,
business meeting and refreshments - 6:30
p.m. in room 212, US.
Anyone who would like to purchase the cam-
pus, please contact DoDo, Nerd, OJ and Crazy
Disa or Ma. We'll make you an offer you can't
refuse.
Fun and good times! Friday at 4 check out
Topper's for Gong Show with the gang-you'll
get gone ...
Lost in Asbury Hall ... Two books; Boethious'
The Consolation of Philosophy" and
Anouilh's "Antigone." Please contact Chris
Boeke 653.4178.
Name
------------------------------------------------------
Address
-----------------------------------------------------
Phone
-------------------------------------------------------
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Men's IM volleyball bumped into action Thursday. Playoffs are
-photo by Davidson
Tigers, Little Giants
face-off for 84th time
Head coach Bob Bergman will
lead his team into his first Monon
Bell game Saturday against a
Wabash team that is riding an 8-1
season record towards a prob-
able bowl bid, if they can defeat
the floundering Tigers.
"We knew they'll be tough,
and have everything going for
them," says Bergman, "but this
is the kind of game where you
can throw out the record, and
that's what we're hoping for."
Throwing the record out, and
hoping maybe the Tigers' only
chance this weekend. After
coming off a 41-0 demolishing at
the hands of Butler, they face a
team that crushed Centre 32-0
last Saturday, behind one of the
country's top Division III
quarterbacks Dan Harvey.
"He's the one that makes them
go," says Bergman. But the head
coach adds that the Little Giants
will try to establish their running
game first, and that is what the
Old Gold will be concentrating
their defense upon, as they enter
the game.
If the Tigers' run defense is up
to form this week, the secondary
will be spending a long day
attempting to track down
Harvey's missles, and stopping
any number of good Giant
running backs, after various 15
yard gains.
As for the Tigers' offensive
plans, Bergman says the Tigers
will not be doing anything
different this week than they
have in the past. The head coach
did say the team would be
working on its passing game this
week, and while there might be a
rotation at quarterback at some
time during the game, it will not
be the same as last week's
musical QB.
As for coaching in his first
Monon Bell Classic, Berman says,
"I'm not sure anyone can antici-
pate what coaching a Monon
game is until you do it, so we'll
just have to wait and see."
Soccer hems for NCAA Regionals
By John Faulkner
Despite a 2-1 overtime loss at
the hands of MacMurray College
on Saturday, Page Cotton's Tiger
squad will be traveling to
Wooster, Ohio to face the Fight-
ing Scots in the first round of the
NCAA Division III Midwest
Regional.
If the Tigers can get past the
Scots, they may have a chance
for revenge against MacMurray,
as DePauw would face the
winner of the MacMurray-Whea-
ton game the next weekend.
Cotton said the MacMurray
game was a "disappointing loss,"
but "finding out we're going to
the tournament deadens the
blow."
The Black and Gold jumped
out in front 15 minutes into the
game when Dick Whitney found
that net from 20 yards out for an
unassisted goal. The score was
the first this season by an
Illinois-Indiana Soccer Con-
ference team against MacMur-
ray.
The Tigers were playing "real
well," according to Cotton, until
Dick Larson was sidelined by a
twisted ankle five minutes after
DePauw's initial score. "After
that we lost control of the
midfield, and our momentum,"
said Cotton.
The score was still 1-0 at the
half, but the Tigers had missed
two golden opportunities, when
one shot hit the post, but
bounced out. Craig Nelson was
thwarted on a breakaway at-
tempt by a stellar save by the
MacMurray netminder. That
was what probably won the game
for them," said the Tiger coach.
Halfway through the second
half, Rich Mufuka knotted the
score on a goal Cotton called,
"not a clean score, just one of
those that bounced around and
went in." Regulation ended with
the score still tied at one apiece.
Five minutes into the first of
two ten minute overtimes, Mac-
Murray struck for the game
winner. The next 15 minutes saw
the Tigers scramble in futile
pursuit of a score against the
league leaders, who continued to
play their patented strong de-
fensive game.
The Old Gold's appearance in a
post-season tourney marks the
first time that Cotton has led a
team in pursuit of a national
championship. "Our situation is
like the baseball team last
spring. It's great for the guys to
get into competition on the
national level, and get some
national recognition," says
Cotton.
Butler bowls Tigers 41-0
By John Banker
Saturday's humiliation at the
Butler Bowl was enough to make
anyone a believer in euthanasia,
as the Tigers rolled over and
played dead while the Butler
Bulldogs streaked past them for
a 41-0 football victory.
The weak Tiger offense be-
came non-existent in the second
half, and the game of musical
quarterbacks proved to be no
more successful than sticking to
one. Rich Boling, Tim Werner
and Steve Hinding were able to
complete only four of 22 passes,
Field hockey ends season with 'good game'
By Jane Brazes
DePauw's field hockey team
wrapped up a 3-12 season at
Taylor last weekend, playing
their best games of the year,
according to coach Judy Jenkins,
even though they lost both of
their State Tournament contests.
In the first game, the Tigers
went down 3-0 to the Franklin
team that went on to semi-finals
to lose there against Indiana
State, the group that eventually
finished at the top of the pile.
DePauw's second game pitted
the Tigers against a powerful
Indiana University squad and
finished with a hard-fought 3-0
tally on the Hoosiers' side of the
score sheet. Indiana went to the
final round of play, finishing
second to ISU by a 1-0 decision in
the tiebreaker. "IU was probably
the best team there," said De-
Pauw co-captain Louisa Witten.
"We all played really well."
DePauw was "playing up to the
caliber of Indiana," added
Jenkins, which contributed to
the effort that made the offense
look the best it has been all year.
Indiana's goals all came on hard-
driven, well-placed shots.
It was the end of the season for
the team that started as a group
of mostly rookie players. In
addition to the four seniors-
Nancy Brown, Peggy Ferguson,
Sue Hays and Sheryl Roberts-
the team will also lose sophomore
nursing student Becky Russell
next year. However, said
Jenkins:"It's an enthusiastic
team, so I expect the rest of them
to be back next year.
"Even though we didn't have a
winning season, the dedication,
effort and spirit made this the
Women
and the Tiger offense only
generated a measly 161 total
yards.
Meanwhile, the Bulldogs, to
the glee of the Dads' Day crowd,
were piling up 422 yards, passing
and running for six touchdowns,
totaling 198 yards through the
airlanes and 224 yards on the
turf.
The same problems that have
plagued the ballclub all year
were the reasons for the second
worst defeat in the DePauw-
Butler series history. Penalties,
best team I've coached since I've
been at DePauw," she added.
Recruiting letters and phone
calls have already been going out
to prospective high school
seniors, said Jenkins, even
though no formal committments
have been made.
Jenkins said she is also en-
couraging team members to
participate in summer hockey
camps to develop their playing
skills.
spikers win two, lose one
The proverbial home court
advantage worked for two out of
three games for DePauw's
women's volleyball team in a
four-team contest Saturday
morning in Bowman gym.
Playing quick-thinking, hustl-
ing games, DePauw downed a
tough Butler squad in two
games, 15-9 and 16-14. The
Tigers dealt the same blow to
Anderson in the second match,
beating them 15-3 and 15-11.
However, the Tiger spikers
"We were moving better and
faster in the first game than in
slowed down in the third set
against the lost 15-11, 15-11.
the last two weeks of play," said
DePauw coach Barbara Feder-
man. "We were playing well, but
then we fell apart in the third
match."
Tonight, DePauw hosts Vin-
cennes, the Indiana State "B"
team and St. Mary of the Woods
in a four-team series beginning at
6:30.
Thursday the team travels to
Huntington for the first round of
State Tournament play. DePauw
meets Earlham at 9:30 a.m. and
Valparaiso at 11 a.m. Thursday.
The top two teams of the three
will move into single-elimination
tournament play beginning at
3:30 p.m. Friday. Finals will be
Saturday.
turnovers, sloppy blocking and
tackling, and the inability to
move the ball through the air
sent the Tigers back to Green-
castle with their third shutout of
the season, all of them coming on
the road.
Butler jumped into the lead in
the first quarter on a 22-yard
pass with 7:04 left in the first
period, after the Bulldogs re-
covered a Randy Veatch fumble.
The two second-quarter scores
were also set up by Tiger
mistakes. With 11 minutes to go
in the half, Werner coughed up
the ball on the Tiger 8-yard line,
setting up Butler's second tally of
the afternoon two plays later
when Bulldog quarterback and
the game's leading rusher, Ed
Thompson, got six of his 144
yards for the score.
Boling s6t up the final touch-
down of the half when he
fumbled on the DePauw 20, and
Butler's Bruce Scifes took the
ball over on the next play to give
the Bulldogs a 21-0 halftime lead.
The Tiger offense was com-
pletely shut down by the
Bulldogs in the second half, as
they were only able to manage
one first down in the final 30
minutes.
In desperation, the Tigers took
to the air, but were unable to get
anything rolling, with three of
their last nine possessions ending
in turnovers. The Tigers never
posed a scoring threat, with their
deepest penetration of the day
and the half being to the Butler
32.
While DePauw was trying to
decide whether it was coming or
going, the Big Blue rolled on for
240 yards and 20 points in the
final half, boosting their record
to 4-5.
The Tigers close out the
season this weekend in the
annual frolic with Wabash for the
Monon Bell. Gametime at Black-
stock is 1:30.
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Coach Bergman goes over the game
plan with this week's star quarter-
back, freshman Steve Hinding.
-photo by Steiner
ABC Sports to televise game
By John Banker
Well folks, if your friends back home
ever tell you DePauw isn't the big times,
all you have to do is ask them how many
schools have ABC Sports televising their
games.
That's right, believe it or not, ABC
Sports in New York selected the annual
grudge match between DePauw and
Wabash to be one of their games to be
shot across the air waves.
Some first impressions might be that
Wabash has pulled the wool over a very
naive DePauw, or that the television crew
got lost on their way to Lafayette, or
South Bend.
But the facts are that through the
contractual agreement between the
NCAA and ABC Sports, the home of
Howard Cosell is required to televise two
Division III games a year.
The first game was earlier in the
season, as the voice of college football
covered the Baldwin Wallace-Wittenberg
game in Ohio.
Wednesday, ABC notified DePauw they
had the dubious honor of taking their 1-8
record against Wabash on regional tele-
vision.
Tom Mont, athletic director, said the
opportunity was "great" and will be good
exposure for DePauw. Mont, who was a
member of the NCAA's Division III
football committee, said he had written
ABC two years ago about the possibility of
televising the game, but he got no
response from the network.
Mont speculates that ABC picked the
game because "they know it is a big game
in the Midwest."
The play-by-play will be handled by Jim
Lampley, who in past seasons has spent
time patrolling the sidelines for the
nationally televised game. The color
commentator will be Ric Forzano; the
technical crew from New York.
The game is being televised by Channel
13 in Indianapolis, and then will be sent to
interested affiliates from there.
So that all the frozen Monon Bell
spectators and disinterested TV viewers
can catch the big football clash of the day
(the battle for the Big 8 crown between
Oklahoma and Colorado in Boulder), the
DePauw game has been moved up from a
1:30 kick-off time to 12:40.
Air time on WGRE with the pre-game
show is 12:10.
The DePauw
Deadline Dec. 1
DePauw University, Greencastle, Indiana Friday, November 11, 1977
Second semester OIT available
The Dean of Students' office
has released a statement on the
procedure for applying for out-in-
town (OIT) status fof Winter
Term and second semester.
Juniors and seniors who wish to
request OIT status should follow
the procedure below, according
to Pat Domeier, chairman of the
OIT committee.
? Obtain, fill out, and return a
request form available in the
Dean of Students' office. Dead-
line for filing a request is Dec. 1.
? When the form is returned
to the Dean of Students' office,
seniors will participate in the
senior lottery, juniors will parti-
cipate in the junior lottery.
Numbers will be drawn at the
time the request form is re-
turned to the Office. Numbers
may be drawn by proxy.
? Seniors must have obtained
senior status (23 courses com-
pleted) by the first day of
classes this fall. Juniors must
have obtained junior status (15
courses completed) by the first
day of class this fall.
? Those who draw the lowest
numbers will be granted permis-
sion with the four percent guide-
line established by the Board of
Trustees. Any participating
senior will be granted permission
before any number drawn by a
junior will be considered.
Because ABC is
televising the game
Saturday,
kick-off will be at
12:40 PM, not 1:30
? If additional spaces are
available after the Dec. 1 dead-
line, the same lottery priority
will be utilized. Any junior or
senior submitting a request after
Dec. 1 will be granted permission
on a first come/first serve basis
until the four percent quota is
filled.
All OIT permissions will be
granted only for the remainder of
the academic year.
Any student granted OIT
permission is subject to all Uni-
versity rules and regulations as
stated on the request form, in the
University Bulletin, in the Stu-
dent Handbook, or in any com-
munications established by the
Office of the Dean of Students.
Mini Monon
kicks off today
The first annual "Mini Monon"
game kicks off today at 4:30 on
McKeen field, featuring De-
Pauw's IM all-stars against the
intramural standouts from
Crawfordsville.
Halftime entertainment in-
cludes a tug-of-war between Old
Gold champs Alpha Chi-Sigma
Chi and a strongbody line
starring President Richard
Rosser, professors James Gam-
mon and Robert Sedlack and the
five finalists in the Homecoming
Queen competition: Becky Falb,
Julie Horton, Connie Landis,
Laura Murdoch and Marcie
Stults.
THIS IS FOR REAL
If you don't believe
anything else in this is-
sue - and you shouldn't
-believe this. Page one
of this issue is news;
"The DePoon" satire be-
gins on page two.
The Tigers practiced hard last week preparing for this week's game
in order to recapture the Bell. -photo by Steiner
Rosser tightens security
tomorrow at Blackstock
President Richard
Rosser says we want to
"put our best foot for-
ward" this Saturday with
ABC Sports here for the
Monon Bell Game. The
DePauw president also
said security will be step-
ped up at Blackstock, an
student found with
alcohol will be stopped at
the gate.
"I expect the students
to act like mature people,
and conduct themselves
in a responsible way,"
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Rosser added.
"Let's everyone have a
good time, and cheer the
Tigers on to their 40th
victory over Wabash."
Rosser added.
FINANCIAL AID MEETING
There will be an all-campus
meeting Wednesday, Nov. 16 at 7
p.m. in the UB ballroom for all
financial aid recipients. Financial
aid director James N. Struck will
discuss many aspects of financial
aid, including how and when to
apply for what programs, and
how to reapply for the 1978-79
academic year.
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125 years of imitating
a newspaper
Benji, recruited from the back alleys of Greencastle to bring to
DePauw the "diversity" called for so often, has been discovered to be
the culprint in the dramatic decline of average SAT scores of the
freshman class. The canine's scores were 4 math, 90 verbal. ("He
learned to speak in obedience school, which helped him on the
verbal," said assistant admissions director Elaine Shedd.) Because he
graduated from Curt's Canine Corral obedience school in the upper
five percent of his class, he was automatically awarded a $1500
University honor scholarship. -photo by Meeker
University to employ
students as tattletales
'y Jane Brazes
Students employed by the Uni-
versity on the federally sup-
ported work-study program have
been assigned to positions as
undercover excise agents at
Topper's, Charlie Brown's and
713 bars. Word of the move was
leaked yesterday by a high-
ranking administrative source,
who added, "Yes, this is a plot.
We figure, if we can't get'em for
on-campus drinking, we'll get'em
at the bars."
Under the program, 21-year-
old students on work-study
grants will be strategically
positioned at each bar for six-
hour shifts. Although they will
"probably not" be working the
beat every day of the week, they
will be there often enough to tip
off a few surprise raids each
month, according to the source.
For every under-age student
convicted as a result of their
efforts, the University will
reward the work-study agents
their choice of one pitcher of beer
or two shots. "We know they'll
have to catch a lot of kids, if they
want to keep drinking," said the
source. "Six hours is a long time
to sit there if you have to spend
your own money."
The idea to pose the "excise"
agents came from the Uni-
versity, the source reported.
"We're still marveling over the
brilliance of the whole set-up.
After all, who knows the under-
age students better than the 21-
year-olds?" The University had
no trouble finding "agents," he
added: "What DePauw student
wouldn't do anything for a free
beer?"
Bar owners Charlie Brown and
Tony Harmless were incensed
when told of the University
action, and threatened to refuse
to serve anyone suspected of
being an agent.
"We've already got quite a few
leads," said Harmless. "We've
been watching the regulars-
especially the ones who show up
for Monday night football and
don't leave til closing Sunday
morning."
demonstrators harrass AAUP profs
By Chris Boeke
While the American Associa-
tion of University Professors
(AAUP) was holding its meeting
in the Duck last night, non-
members demonstrated outside
chanting and carrying placards
reading "Down with the AAUP"
and "Elitists don't unionize-
we're not factory members."
According to one professor,
who wished to remain anony-
mous, the AAUP is "just a bunch
of Commie union organizers.
When things get out of hand like
this, you never know what will
happen next. Maybe the admini-
stration will start the American
Association of University Ad-
ministrators, or worse yet, the
students may get ideas!"
A nationwide organization
with local chapters on various
campuses, AAUP gives pro-
fessors an opportunity to meet
and discuss topics of concern to
the faculty.
Approximately 30 DePauw
professors belong. to AAUP.
Membership is voluntary.
The AAUP discussed a slate of
topics for this year's meetings
and according to Fred Silander,
AAUP president, decided to plan
a faculty talent show.
The show will be performed
senior week, "because it will take
us that long to get the thing
together," said Silander. He
added it also gave AAUP some-
thing to talk about this year.
Alan Pankratz, AAUP mem-
ber and chairman of the talent
show, said non-AAUP faculty
members would be allowed to
participate in the show.
"We don't hold any grudges,"
said Pankratz. "Anyway, we all
know that the faculty, by its very
nature, is divisible."
Small talk
on life, death
convinces few
By Chris Boeke and
Sherrie Swan
Billed as "A Little Small Talk,"
Thursday night's debate at the
Goose on "Resolved: There is
Death after Life" drew a throng
of over 315 students to hear
Mark Small pitted against F. Lee
Bailey, Billy Graham, Jeanne
Dixon, William F. Buckley and
Madelene Murray O'Hare. Oui G.
Bord moderated the event which
was sponsored by the Chaplain's
Living Unit Council (CLUC).
Small said he really didn't
mind taking on this illustrious
assemblage all single-handedly
since a single hand was all that
he had at the time anyway.
"Now we're all familiar with
people who will bite your head
off, but you'll never believe what
happened to me. A rabid
Republican incensed by one or
some of my remarks from the
last debate, took a good nip at my
knuckle. It'll be out of commis-
sion for quite a while," said
Small, brandishing a plastered
fist.
Parliamentary procedure
reigned while each debater
delivered an eight-minute speech
to establish his/her position. The
two-hour free-for-all directly fol-
lowing these remarks found both
speakers and audience express-
ing their opinions and unpenting
their hostilities.
O'Hare opened the debate by
advocating that Congress outlaw
death entirely. "It violates my
rights, it's unconstitutional, and
furthermore, it's against my
religion!" she said.
Graham cited passages from
his best-selling book on angels.
At the conclusion of his remarks,
(Continued on page 5)
Sarah Palmer attempts to use witchcraft in putting a spell on the ball
W.T. projects offered;
Florida, Dad are top slots
By Dave Mull
Four new Winter Term pro-
jects have been announced by
the University for January of '78.
They are the following:
? Florida Studies: This project
deals with the varied scientific
and sociological aspects of
Florida. Independent projects
include: the effect of ultra-violet
radiation on PABA-treated skin,
the sociological and physiological
effects of frequenting establish-
ments which serve alcoholic
beverages, and the physiological
effect of THC on the brain.
? Working for Dad: This pro-
ject concerns the ease with which
students can avoid the problems
of nepotism and gain employ-
ment in their rich industrialist
fathers' factories during the
month of January. The societal
effect of putting a poor blue-
collar worker on unemployment
is ignored.
? Theory of Shoveling Snow:
This on-campus project is de-
signed to teach students how to
coerce little townies into moving
enormous amounts of snow for
small change. It is shown that
this theory can be applied to
other seasonal manual labor such
as raking leaves. Other impli-
cations of being a member of the
"power elite" are also explored.
? Wine tasting: This is an
independent, on-campus project
that people dumb enough to stay
on-campus for Winter Term don't
even have to sign up for. Various
brands of wine will be sampled,
sampled and sampled again for
flavor, bouquet and drinkability.
Drinkability will be judged by
how long it takes to drink an
entire bottle.
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Senate okays
NORML
Student Senate yesterday an-
nounced that it would recognize
NORML (Northern Ohioans for
the Restoration of Morality in
Libraries) as an on-campus
organization. The group's pur-
pose, as stated in its constitution,
is to remove all "lewd,
suggestive and otherwise
Communist-inspired propaganda
from our libraries."
Although Senate does not
necessarily concur with the
organization's aims, said Chair-
man Mike McCracken, "sanc-
tioning of this organization
proves that Student Senate is
doing its best to encourage
diversity in campus organiza-
tions while at the same time
promoting the values that should
be upheld by a staunch Metho-
dist school like DePauw." Mc-
Cracken added that any books
removed from Roy 0. West
Library by NORML will be sold
through the Student Senate
Book Co-op.
In other action, Senate voted
to draft a formal letter to be sent
to the Board of Trustees re-
questing immediate action in
setting up special-interest hous-
ing. One suggestion is to put
Romance languages majors on
third floor Longden, German &
Russian majors on second floor
and Greek language majors on
first floor. "Since DePauw is a
microcosm of the world, we hope
this will promote, in our own
little way, international under-
standing and harmoney," reads
the conclusion of the rough draft.
Senate welcomed its former
chief Rob Lukemeyer, now
relegated to serving only as
Student Body President, with a
hearty round of applause as he
conducted an honorary adjourn-
ment. "Well, I guess that's about
it," he said, as the crowd rose to
its feet approvingly.
Cam pus Calendar
TODAY
1-4 p m Placement interviews Indiana Home
for the Insanes and Going Crazy, I.M. Wacky
interviewing - U8 500
3 p m. Meeting for all University assistants to
define "assistantship'' - UB Lounge
330 p.m Football slugfest - the team will be
divided into two halves, which will play
each of her to get ready for tomorrow's
game All players must wear spikes on their
shoes. - IM field
9 p.m -1 a m Hub entertainment Five sopra-
nos peeling bananas - The Hub
9 p.m Campus Crusade for Christ house-
dance: "Jesus is Just All Right With Me,"
Band Pontius Pilot and the Five Romans.
Communion will be served - Gobin
Church
TOMORROW
10 am Football team pre-game meal -
Charlie Brown's
11 a.m. Reunion for all students busted at the
bars last week Topper's Bar
12 noon DPU Marching Band leaves Music
School for Blackstock - Performing Arts
Center
1.30 p m OPU Marching Band arrives at Black
stock Blackstock
2 pm Football: DePauw - Wabash, kick-off de-
layed because of pregame meal - Here
4.30 p.m Victory Keg sponsored by the Glub
Club - UB Fish Pond
9 p.m Hub entertainment Louis Fontaine
with slides of his recent European trip -
The Hub
SUNDAY, NOV. 13
2 - 4 p m Excise men's holiday -free bowl-
ing - UB Bowling Lanes
3 pm Music broadcast - Richard Rosser,
trumpet - WGRE - 91.5 FM
8 p m Theatre production. Anne T Govey's
..Outtahere - - The Theatre
After Sundown Admissions guests begin
arriving - Living units
MONDAY, NOV. 14
7:30 p.m. Debate: "Is Harvard the DePauw of
the East?" - The Fluttering Duck
7:30 p.m. Ait,Noody's class in sketching -
Art Center
9 p.m. Admissions guests leave-they've
seen enough - U.S. 231
TUESDAY, NOV. 15
3 a m. All campus study break - IGA
POLI-SCI MEETING MONDAY,
IMPORTANT
Professor 0. Ralph Raymond
will discuss the aspects of the
1968 riot at the Democratic
convention in Chicago from the
British standpoint. The guest
speakers will be the former
candidate for President on the
Yippee Ticket Pigasus (the 164-
lb. pig), and Winston Churchill's
great niece twice removed. Don't
miss it.
HEALTH AND SAFETY
SEMINAR
Joke or hazard:
The risks involved in tying
someone's shoelaces to a desk
while watching a movie on
"Mating Whales." 7:45 p.m.
Sunday in Operation Life Van
#13.
PAGE 3
Queen Elizabeth II royally
blows off AcademicCouncil
By John Tatooles
Academic Council (AC), a stu-
dent regulatory council that
oversees what the other councils
of the school are doing, meets
regularly Sunday nights under
the leadership of chairman
Nancy Woodhouse. Once again
this week it appears that there is
nothing to report-or is there?
Next week's AC-sponsored
Career Fair opens Friday, Nov.
13. Woodhouse expressed her
great regret that Queen Eliza-
beth II had to decline her
invitation. However, AC reports
that Idi Amin Dadda, Miss Lillian
Carter, Jimmy Hoffa and Robert
Calvert will be present at one of
the booths to speak on "the
perfect political personality."
AC has submitted a formal
request to "Playboy" for equal
time for DePauw in a layout
similar to the "Girls of the Big
Ten" feature. "I know we have
girls who are bigger than size
10," said Woodhouse.
Other AC plans in the making
include a scheme for running the
earth, but they are only in the
planning stages, stressed Wood-
house.
THINGS ARE STILL COOKING
AT THE HUB
Saturday, November 12
. Collegians at 9:00
Thursday, November 17 . Captain America & Cartoons at 9;00
Saturday, November 19 . . Dance Contest - Live Broadcast on
WGRE - Disc Jockeys will act as
Judges
THE HUB
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PAGE 4
By Jane Brazes Under the new structure, leaf- snow-shoveling-a transition
the President; make no rakers and paper towel changers that could occur "any day now,"
about it," said Richard rank at the bottom of the according to the former Chief.
as he railroaded his I I-' "W 'll 11 11 1
l
b
Grover gets demoted to clean-up
"I am
mistake
Rosser
proposed reorganization of Uni-
versity maintenance staff
through a department meeting
yesterday.
As the meeting of the 30-odd
staff members began around a
bonfire of maple leaves gathered
from University grounds, Rosser
handed out dittoed sheets ex-
plaining his proposal for reshuf-
fling the organization. We have
to define responsibilities around
here," he said. "Until this time, a
lack of authority has resulted in
20-minute coffee ' - :I:s and
three-beer lunches for some-I
won't, say whom-of the crew."
FILL BY RUDY
Louis Fontaine, director of
admissions, is planning a re-
cruiting trip to Hawaii next week
to search out prospective stu-
dents.
"If I recruit just 10 Hawaiians,
my trip will be paid for, and the
rest is pineapple juice," he said.
Fontaine said he plans to visit
beaches, palm forests, and
volcano sites in addition to
several high schools. "I know
that the students are there," he
insisted. "Aloha."
paysca e, wi
e tree-trimmers, e
e ready, he added. I m
sidewalk sandblasters and East going to keep this bunch on their
College bell-polishers are near toes."
the top of the hierarchy in their
high-risk positions.
Former Chief of Campus
Security Grover Vaughan will
head the maintenance depart-
ment. (The Security force was
disbanded last week, having
nothing to do because of the
"wonderful spirit of community"
Rosser says has developed at
I)ePauw and has eliminated
campus crime altogather.)
Vaughan will report directly to
the President, keeping him up-to-
date on any major changes in
operating policy such as con-
verting the staff from a group
with leaf-ranking emphasis to
FOR THE BIRDS
Attention all bird lovers:
The president of the Audobon
society will give clues and tips on
the migration patterns of the
crow, tukki, and sparrow birds
Sunday at the Hub. There will
be a chicken dinner served also.
For tickets contact the head cook
at the Hub. 653-0987.
The one...
The only...
The original
4i)
100's
The President has directed
Vaughan to begin drafting a
maintenance employee evalua-
tion, to be completed sometime
after the flowers are planted and
dug up in Mom's Weekend
exercises. Although he has not
yet formulated a definite outline,
Vaughan said major areas of
evaluation will be classified
under the headings of "Con-
tributions in the Professional
Fields," "Continuing Develop-
ment of Talents and Techniques"
and "Service to DePauw Above
and Beyond the East College
Bell-Tower."
Rosser said he plans to
circulate the evaluations among
the entire staff to provide
feelings of good cheer and a few
laughs at the next department
meeting. "If somebody has been
goofing off, I want everybody to
know about it," he said. "If this is
the only way to make each
member of the DePauw com-
munity accountable, this is the
way we'll do it."
The it ]tive and now famous casuals, created by Bass with tough leather
uppers i bouncy sole of natural gum rubber that wears the Bass name
proudly ! leaves a fashion footprint wherever you go. Comfort, durability
and great food looks ... combined with shoemaking know-how and tradi-
tional craftsmanship.
Dark
Brown
$34.00
and Rosser recently reshuffled maintenance positions
accountable to his superiors and responsible for his
-photo by Meeker
Guests think students study
Boy, did we fool them
Fill By Rudy
DePauw admissions guests are
having trouble figuring out
exactly. what DePauw is like,
according to a recent poll.
"No one will talk to me," was
the most common complaint.
"They just keep reading and
underlining stuff with yellow
pens," explained one high school
senior.
One young lady said, "The girl
I was staying with asked if I'd
want to order a pizza after she
finished her accounting assign-
ment. I waited until 3 a.m. and
then gave up on her and went to
bed."
Another visitor summed up his
impressions, saying, "They must
really party hard here on the
weekends if they have that much
homework on Sundays and
Mondays."
RESTAURANT
OPEN:
Monday-Saturday _______5:30 a.m.-9:00 p.m.
Sunday ________________6:00 a.m.-9:00 p.m.
Breakfast Anytime
"Where Friends Meet To Eat
WOW!
GOT SOMETHING NEW AT MAMA'S
You Should Try Her
SUBMARINES
It's Loppin' Good
The Bootery
HOURS:
Sun. 5-11, Mon.-Thurs. 5-1, Fri.-Sat. 5-2
653-8402 653-8403
MAMA N U NZ
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Woody needs assistant
Bergman on the way?
Word from the placement "I have no plans to move on at
office is that football coach Bob
Bergman has been attending
Dean Mohr's resume and inter-
viewing classes. When asked
why, Bergman said, You never
know when the big moment may
come-and you've got to be
ready for it."
When asked if he was con-
cerned about his job being in
jeopardy, the coach retorted,
"No but the offensive unit should
be."
-There is life
(Continued from page 2)
this point, right now I'm only
concerned with building a pro-
gram that can compete with
Greencastle High, and won't get
the hell kicked out of us," he
added.
When asked about next fall's
recruiting program, Bergman
said, "Lou Fontaine found us
some good prospects over in
Europe, particularly one soccer-
style kicker," Bergman con-
cluded.
after death
he invited members of the
audience to "Come on down, and
I will tell you about the Biggest
Deal of your life."
"Before this matter can be
discussed with any semblance of
rationality," said Buckley, "we
must define our terms. Actually,
the mode of one's existence can
be either life-or death-like, de-
pending upon one's conception of
these words."
Small, who maintained all
along that he could have debated
either side of the question con-
vincingly, said, "Since I've never
known anyone who's personally
experienced death after life, I
must disagree with the said
resolution."
"If no one can really say that
he's dead and back it up with a
substantial amount of evidence,
then it follows that there is
obviously life after life, I mean,
nobody has ever rung my door-
bell to say 'Man, there's death
after life, 'cause I've been there
and I know."'
"I would just like to sum up
this whole ball of wax by saying
that. this quality of existence is
totally anarchistic and has more
to recommend it than life around
here. Being alive after life, after
all, will hopefully not include ads
for Wilkinson razors."
THE I)EP00N
Marx gets thin;
Roof gives drugs
"Our 'psych' is sick," an
nounced Dr. Roger Roofs office
today, commenting on the ad-
mittance of Dan Marx, clinical
psychologist, to DePauw's health
clinic.
Roof said it was an extreme
case of malnutrition coupled with
an undetermined psychosomatic
illness-very typical of someone
in his position.
STAFF NEEDS BACK-RUB
By Rudy
The DePauw student news-
paper is now interviewing for the
position of staff masseuse.
"We need a full-time back-
rubber over here," said editor
John Banker, "especially on
Sundays."
The new staff member will get
paid as much as an assistant
news editor, but will be expected
to be at the Pub Building giving
back massages constantly.
"The masseuse will have to
work hard or be fired," said the
editor. "Everyone around here
can be replaced, but me."
Fascists grabbing for power
By Chris Boeke
DePauw's College Fascist Club
resolved to boycott all political
science classes except those
taught by Frank Darling at the
College Fascist meeting
Wednesday night.
"We're sick of being exposed
to those liberal, democratic
views all the time," said CF veep
John Taylor. "We know what's
right, so we don't want to be
confused by the facts."
Tim Casaday, president of the
College Fascists, said that not
only did he advocate boycotting
most of the poli-sci classes, but
has suggested infiltrating the
newly-formed Political Science
Club.
"There's no reason why people
can't belong to more than one
organization on campus, and
anyway, we want to be sure
they're not planning any moves
to overthrow our organization,"
Casaday commented.
Sources close to the president
have informed The DePauw that
the CF has set up an intricate
(bugging, wiretapping and black-
mail) espionage system and has a
special slush fund to finance
these covert activities.
"C,F is paranoid about losing
its power base here on the
DePauw campus," said the uni-
dentified source. The source
explained the CF saw the Poli-
Sci Club as an effort to under-
mine its influence on young
minds.
The College Fascists also dis-
cussed scheduling another de-
bate. Some of the topics men-
tioned were "How Free is
America, part II" and "Resolved:
The Left is Never Right."
Guest speakers for the year
included Liz Ray on "Oppor-
tunity Costs" and Generalissimo
Franco. "But," said Casiady, "the
last thing we heard on him is that,
he's still dead." Another sug
gestion was Earl Butz speaking
on "Some of My Best Friends are
Colored People."
"Since I didn't know what else
to do, I put him on antibiotics,"
said Roof.
Marx said the pressure of con-
forming to the DePauw com-
munity had been too much for
him. "Being an outsider is really
tough," he explained. "Students
and faculty are nice, but you
never can tell what they're really
thinking."
Marx said when he had gotten
depressed, he decided to run an
experiment to boost his spirits.
"It usually works, ask any psych
major," he said.
Marx said he was trying to
simulate some of the conditions
felt by his patients and then
realized that maybe he was
overweight. "I figured that it
might be the reason I wasn't
being accepted around here,"
Marx said.
Marx admitted that it had
gotten a little out of hand, and
planned some group therapy
sessions for when he returns to
work. "I thought we could meet
in the Hut) for lunch."
Marx will return to his office
Monday morning, he said. Any
emergencies should contact the
DePauw security right next door
to Marx's office. "Grover likes to
listen to students' problems, and
his office is in a convenient
location," Marx said.
MONON BELL WEEKEND
DePauw Student Union Presents
"AN EVENING
WITH BILLY JOEL"
Friday, November 11th, 9:00 p.m.
At Kresge Auditorium
Tickets Are On Sale At
Performing Arts Center Box Office
$6.00 - All Seats Reserved
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Editorial
I was so shocked to learn that ABC is com-
ing this weekend, and will be sharing the
pressbox with me, I am speechless. - J B B
Illiterates' Digest
By John Taylor and Mark Kollar
ED. NOTE: These selections
were taken from the following
bestsellers in Roy 0. West:
"They Hop and Crawl," "A Guide
to Textiles," and Encyclopedia
Americana.
SELECTED SHORTS ... It is
highly desirable that the
:'iaterials used for underwear
p, )ssess certain characteristics
such as: washability; colors '
are fast to washing and perspira-
tion; yarns strong enough to
withstand considerable strain,
particularly in men's and boy's
wear; a thread count high
enough to prevent slippage at
seams; small percentage of
shrinkage; the ability to absorb
perspiration and to allow it to
evaporate quickly; the ability to
keep the body either cool or
warm as needed in different
climates and seasons of the year.
This might now be a good place
to say a few words in defense of
the much maligned reptile, the
milk snake. The annual loss in
this country from the depreda-
tions of rodents has been con-
servatively placed at five
hundred million dollars. We have
long recognized the value of our
wild birds in combatting these
enemies, and in most cases have
given them ample protection
both by law and public senti-
ment, but many of us lose sight of
the fact that our snakes are daily
doing the same sort of work, and
in some cases more thoroughly
than most other animals.
AND NOW A WORD FROM
OUR MASTER MOSQUITO
MATING EXPERT: It may take
place between isolated pairs of
auults, or it may occur within a
group composed of an extremely
large number of males. Such
swarms are usually formed over
small prominences in the land-
sca )e such as bushes, fence
post, or even over the heads of
sitting ., .,a?ding people. Each
male flies about in this cloud in
an apparently aimless, zigzag
fashion. Females of small num-
bers are attracted to the squad of
the swarm, fly into it, are seized,
and drop from the swarm with
their male companions. Next
time you swat a mosquito think
twice.
On the serious side, for this
weekend's activities, try this.
DRINK OF THE WEEK: To
make a Bell Ringer mix six shots
of Yukon Jack with six shots of
tequilla. Down before the game
and smile pretty for the ABC
camera.
gbrts aka ovl,
Letters
Fans, Foes write to our Dear Ed.
Dear DePauw: Dear Editor:
Thanks for the easiest week- I did it all for a Greater
end we've had in a long time. DePauw.
-Roone Arledge
Producer, ABC
DePauw Theatre Presents
ANTIGONE
8:00 P.M.
Nov. 11th,12th,18th, & 19th
Tickets available at box office
in Performing Arts Center
(Ext. 351)
"'A Classic""
Dear Editor:
I want to make it perfectly
clear that I'm just another one of
the kids. I really identify with all
of you, and feel as much a part of
this campus as anybody else.
Just because my Dad is presi-
dent, don't think I get any easy
breaks. Longden Hall is a long,
long way from Carnegie.
-Ed Rosser
Dear Editor:
I hope you'll all smile real big
for ABC tomorrow. This could
look good for my next Designs-
it's good to remind the alumni
that we're still around. I regret
that I will not be able to see it on
my own television set, but the
broadcast won't make it out to
Hyannis Port.
-William R. Kerstetter
Dear Editor:
Where have you been all my
life? I've looked everywhere I
can think of-ATO, the library,
OIT-but no dear editor. Please
let me know soon. I can't live on
dreams forever.
-Name withheld by request
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How come nobody respects me? Why can't I get a date?
-photo by Davidson
Champs Alpha Chi ready
for a repeat in p-puff
Alpha Chi Omega, this year's
powder puff champion is already
tuning up for next season. "I
have the girls on an extensive
weight training program, pump-
ing iron three days of the week,"
says head coach Mark Boling.
The other days of the week,
the girls can be found down on
the Blackstock practice field
scrimmaging Bob Bergman's
Fighting Tigers without pads.
"The girls really like to stick it to
the guys, and I can tell you that
it's certainly reciprocal on the
guys part also," says Bergman.
"If you thought that we were
manhandlers this year, just wait
until you see what we do to the
opposition next year," says
Boling.
The Alpha chapter will imple-
ment their seven man "crush"
offense next year, according to
Boling. "I've had them hitting the
sled, and they really make that
baby scoot," he said.
As for the defense, they're on a
strict training diet of raw meat
and eggs, ording to Lucia
Bolt, the girls. usemother. "I'm
just trying to ket -1 my girls lean
and mean," she sa, I
Pledges are also u;cluded in
the new training regime, as they
join their older sisters for their
daily workouts, and head over to
the House for highlight and
inspiration films.
The Baby Bruisers say they
may win all their games by
forfeit next season, as they will
strike terror in the hearts of
their opponents. "I think we'll
just blow everyone off ",?I(.'
said iloiing.
Margaret
Says:
We are known for our
quality fashion fabrics,
selected by us direct-
ly from the best known
mills in the U.S. and
abroad. Quality costs
a little more, but its
worth it. We are in
business to service and
assist you at the low-
est possible prices.
Betsy Ross
Fabric
Coaches seek foreign
By John Faulkner
Following in the international
footsteps of the renowned re-
cruiter Lou Fontaine, the athletic
department as well as various
campus groups are expanding
their recruiting sights beyond
the cornfields of Indiana.
"The way we figure it, we've
done this well using mostly Mid-
westerners who didn't know
what a soccer ball was until
junior high," said Page Cotton,
head soccer coach, "so, I'm going
to jet down to Rio de Janiero to
scout out some real feet."
Over at SNu, the loss of Jon
Beasley may be felt this Little
Five, but some fast planning for a
trip to France to recruit future
star bike riders should head off
any long-term drought in the
winner's circle.
Back at Bowman, football
coach Bob Bergman has decided
to take Fontaine's European lead
also, and will head off for
England immediately following
tomorrow's season finale to scout
out and recruit the American
rugby crop living in England.
"I've heard that rugby builds
character and good athletes.
Well, I keep saying that we have
character, but I'll be darned if I
could call them good athletes,"
said Bergman.
Would You Like
To Be Involved
In Student
Government?
Yes You ! ! !
-Academic Council Is Taking Applications
-All Interested Persons - Please Apply
-Applications Are Available In Student
Government Office, I East College
Applications Are Due
By November 11
Bergman said the tab for the
trip will come from part of the
TV revenue from tomorrow's
Monon Bell game, as well as the
cut back of the normal recruiting
schedule in southern Indiana, an
area which has not been any "Old
Gold" mine for the Tigers in
recent years.
"The way I've got it figured,
three backs and a pulling guard
will pay for the trip, and all the
rest is dirty jocks," said the
paedotribe.
As for the women's basketball
team, which won't be seeing
hardwood for the second con-
secutive season this fall, Bar-
bara Federman, pseudo-women's
basketball coach said, "We sure
haven't been able to get any
female roundballers here in the
talent
PAGE 7
Midwest, so we'll he going to
Russia to pick up a few players
there, I hear they have nice long
legs. And they call this basket-
ball country."
All in all it will be a busy
recruiting season for all of the
slumping DePauw teams, or
those that are hoping ^or
improvement. But only time and
mileage will tell how successful
the coaches will be.
GOOSE A MOOSE
Myth or Fact:
Does scratching a wild moose
between the eyes cause instant
memory lapse. Find out Monday
in the PAC at 12 noon. Following
the discussion there will be
refreshments and games.
JIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIL
Get
Down to
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The basic hand-crafted, haarnd-sewn now
in rough, tough rawhide. Give it
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this - and getting down to basics is the
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side, the kunuies OIdM