LETTER TO(SANITIZED), COORDINATOR FOR ACADEMIC AFFAIRS, THE CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY, FROM ROBERT F. RANDLE, DIRECTOR OF
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP86B00985R000400160024-6
Release Decision:
RIPPUB
Original Classification:
K
Document Page Count:
63
Document Creation Date:
December 19, 2016
Document Release Date:
December 4, 2006
Sequence Number:
24
Case Number:
Publication Date:
November 15, 1984
Content Type:
LETTER
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CIA-RDP86B00985R000400160024-6.pdf | 2.68 MB |
Body:
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Columbia University in the City of New York I New York, N. Y. 10027
INTERNATIONAL FELLOWS PROGRAM 1420 International Affairs Building
420 West 118th Street
November 15, 1984
Coordinator for Academic Affairs
The Central Intelligence Agency
1016 Ames Bldg.
Washington DC
20505
This is just a short (and somewhat belated) note to thank
you for taking the time to arrange a briefing at the Central
Intelligence Agency for the International Fellows of Columbia
University. Messrs. Gates, made quite
an impression on this year's group of Fellows. hey were all
interesting and thought-provoking.
We owe you a special thanks for all of your help in setting
up this year's program and making it a success. We look forward
to working with you and your staff to arrange a similar briefing
at the CIA again next year.
Yours truly,
Robert F. Randle
Director
RFR/tjco
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F FROM:
Deputy Chief
Hdgs.
DATE 6 December 1984
COMMENTS (Number each comment to show from whom
to whom. Draw a line across column after each comment.)
FORM 610 IISE PREVIOUS
-79 EDITIONS GPO : 1903 0 - 411
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ROUTING AND RECORD SHEET
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? obert M, Gates
Deputy tune
? Room~77E44, Hdgs.
ROUTING AND RECORD SHEET
OFFICER'S
INITIALS
DATE
6 December1984
COMMENTS (Number each comment to show from whom
to whom. Draw a line ocross column after each comment.)
FIRM 61 0 uEDI~TIEvZO."S GPO : 1983 0 - 411-632
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THE
INTERNATIONAL
FELLOWS
PROGRAM
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY
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THE
INTERNATIONAL
FELLOWS
PROGRAM
COLUMBIA UNIVEPoSITY
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Content
STATEMENT OF PURPOSE
THE PROGRAM
Officers
The Foundations
Facilities
ADMISSION
CURRICULUM
Lecture and Seminar Course
BRIEFINGS AND ACTIVITIES
GUEST SPEAKERS
THE INTERNATIONAL FELLOWS ALUMNI
L
Dr. Marshall D. Shulman, Director of the W. Averell Harriman Institute for Advanced Study
of the Soviet Union, at work in his office.
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'
Statement of
Purpose
The International Fellows Program was conceived in the belief that the respon-
sibilities of the United States in world affairs require new approaches to the
education of its future leaders. The Program was established in 1960 to do a
specific job: to produce leaders in many different fields-law, business,
journalism, social science, government, and others-with the desire, the ability,
and the training to act effectively in the international arena.
The International Fellows are selected from among the most promising students
in the professional and graduate schools of the University. Of the 1,200 or so
Fellows appointed since 1960, more than half graduated from college with honors
or as members of Phi Beta Kappa, and over a quarter held major, nationally-
awarded, graduate fellowships.
While mastering their chosen disciplines, the Fellows receive through the
Program rigorous exposure to international politics and to United States foreign
policy. Outstanding scholars and officials come to the University to speak, and
intensive briefing trips to the White House, the Congress, the United Nations, and
various national and international agencies are arranged. The organizing
principles of the Program have remained constant over the years, but the content
of the instruction has been continuously revised and updated. A course of
lectures and briefings is offered that reflects the latest understanding of inter-
national relations.
One of the objectives of the Program, and of the individuals, foundations, and
corporations that support it, is to inspire a commitment to public service among
the Fellows. It is with pleasure and pride that we see the graduates of the Program
assuming important positions in our society. Many are already serving in interna-
tional aspects of their chosen professions--in government, business, journalism,
economic consulting, law, medicine, teaching, and others. If some of the Fellows
achieve positions of leadership, and if they all continue their interest in international
affairs, this Program will have fulfilled its purpose.
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The International Fellows
Program
Officers
MICHAEL I. SOVERN, LL.B., LL.D., President of the University
HARVEY Picker, M.B.A., Sc.D., Dean of the Faculty of International and Public
Affairs
ROBERT F. RANDLE, LL.B., Ph.D., Assistant Dean and Lecturer in the School of
International and Public Affairs, Director of the International Fellows Program
The Foundations
The International Fellows Program was initiated at Columbia University in 1960
under the terms of a generous grant from the Edward John Noble Foundation. A
number of other foundations have endorsed the Program's objectives by provid-
ing financial support. A complete list of these supporting organizations follows:
The George F. Baker Trust
The Bing Fund
The Compton Foundation, Inc.
Continental Oil Company
Crown Zellerbach Foundation
Houston Endowment, Inc.
Inland Steel-Ryerson Foundation
IBM
The International Nickel Company
The Johnson Foundation
Merck Sharp & Dohme International
Henry and Lucy Moss Fund
The Edward John Noble Foundation
Ellis L. Phillips Foundation
The Prospect Hill Foundation
Charles S. Raizen Foundation
The Reader's Digest
The Richardson Foundation
The Singer Company Foundation
Alfred P. Sloan Foundation
Sonhil Fund
The Starr Foundation
Time/Life International
William C. Whitney Foundation
The Wyomissing Foundation
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Facilities
For its unique course of study, the Program draws upon the facilities of one of
the world's leading universities and upon the unparalleled resources that New
York City offers to the student of international affairs.
Since its inception the Program has derived substantial benefit from its close
association with the School of International and Public Affairs. In 1964 the Program
was officially integrated with the School, thereby permitting the Fellows to draw
further upon its faculty and its other resources. In setting policy for the Program,
Dean Randle has the assistance of a committee drawn from the Faculty of Interna-
tional and Public Affairs.
The International Fellows Program is housed in the fifteen-story International
Affairs Building. This building is the major center of international studies and
activities at Columbia University. In addition to the School of International and Pub-
lic Affairs and the International Fellows Program, the building houses the Depart-
ments of Political Science, Economics, and Geography; the eight Regional Institutes;
the Institute of War and Peace Studies; the Research Institute on International
Change; and a 600,000-volume library devoted to all aspects of international affairs.
An auditorium with a capacity of 500 and the Kellogg Conference Center on the top
floor have enabled the School to expand its conference activity and increase the
number of distinguished visitors.
The Program enjoys the use of these facilities and also occupies the International
Fellows Seminar Room on the fifteenth floor. The Fellows meet here for their weekly
discussions and assemble informally before lectures to greet guests over coffee.
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Admi&sion
Qualifications for Admission
The aim of the Program is to educate future leaders of the United States effec-
tively. It is therefore open to anyone who has been admitted to a graduate de-
gree program in Columbia University and who plans to pursue a career in inter-
national aspects of government service, teaching, business, or the professions.
Fellows are selected by a committee appointed by the Director of the Program.
Admission is based on consideration of the applicant's entire collegiate and
graduate school record; on evidence of character, motivation, and professional
promise; on the recommendations of instructors; and particularly on evidence of
demonstrated ability and potential for leadership in a chosen field and in inter-
national affairs.
Note: Students in the School of Law and the College of Physicians and Surgeons
may not enter the Program before their second year of graduate study.
Admission Procedure
An applicant for admission should write to the International Fellows Program,
Room 1420, International Affairs Building, Columbia University, New York, N.Y.
10027, for an application form and for further instructions. If not already enrolled
or admitted to a graduate degree program at Columbia, the applicant should also
write to the admissions office of the appropriate University division (e.g., the
School of Law, the Graduate School of Arts & Sciences, the Graduate School of
Business, the School of International and Public Affairs, etc.) for a bulletin and
application forms.
Application may be made before mid-April for participation in the Program
beginning the following September.
Curriculum
Each International Fellow follows a program of study prescribed by the gradu-
ate school or department of the University in which he or she is enrolled. Fellows
are strongly encouraged to take the elective courses that will be the best prep-
aration for service in the international aspects of their professions. As part of their
individual programs, the Fellows take a one-year lecture-seminar course,
described below, which forms the core of the International Fellows Program. The
number of credits received for the course is determined by the Committee on
Instruction of the school or department concerned.
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Lecture and Seminar Course
IFP W6045x-W6046y-The United States in World Affairs-is a lecture and semi-
nar course given for the International Fellows exclusively. In the twenty or so
years in which the course has been offered, its academic directors have sought
to provide the Fellows with the best instruction in world affairs and U.S. foreign
policy. The Fellows have had the opportunity to discuss the issues among them-
selves, and with leading scholars, publicists, and public figures. Each year, guest
lecturers are chosen to present their expertise on a variety of topics in inter-
national politics and American foreign relations.
Fhe subject matter of the course has evolved to reflect the growing complexity
of the modern world, and our growing awareness of that complexity. An early
concentration upon security issues in the last years of the Cold War has been in-
creasingly augmented with surveys of regional problems and with investigations
of the global problems of human welfare. Recently the Fellows looked at aspects
of world energy affairs, and sessions have been scheduled on oil, food, and the
problems of less-developed countries, as well as the philosophical problems of
justice and human rights in world politics.
In addition to the lectures, the Fellows select a seminar group to satisfy the course
requirement. In the seminars, the students learn a technique of writing foreign
policy analysis papers and give briefings on topics within their own areas of
expertise.
The Director of the Program has also been a member of the Columbia faculty.
Since 1972 the course has been directed by Robert F. Randle, Lecturer in Inter-
national Affairs at Columbia University. He is the author of Geneva 1954: The
Settlement of the Indochinese War, and The Origins of Peace: A Study of
Peacemaking and the Structure of Peace Settlements. He was the principal edi-
tor of From War to Peace: Essays in Peacemaking and War Termination, the
fourth book published by the International Fellows Program. Mr. Randle is
assisted by members of the Columbia faculty, visiting professors from other uni-
versities, and guest lecturers with long experience in the formulation and con-
duct of domestic and foreign policy. The course is complemented by special
briefing trips and activities during the year.
The Fellows meet in a lecture session each Tuesday afternoon from 4 to 6 p.m.
and in one seminar session each week during both terms. Washington briefings
are on a Thursday and a Friday each term (usually in late October and again in
early April). Other briefings are ordinarily scheduled on Friday afternoons.
The lecture series for the current academic year appears in the enclosed insert.
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w Nqw
Briefing Trips and Special
Activities
Washington, D.C.
Over the years, the Fellows have made two-day briefing trips to Washington,
one in the fall and one in the spring.
The fall visit has usually focused upon the Executive Branch. The Fellows have
met with several top officials at the Department of Defense, including the Service
Secretaries. At the State Department, the Fellows have been briefed by the Assis-
tant Secretaries of State and on occasion, the incumbent Secretary of State. At
the White House, the Fellows have met with Assistants to the President for eco-
nomic matters, manpower, and special projects, and senior staff members of the
National Security Council.
The spring trip concentrates, in part, upon the role of Congress in the formulation
of foreign policy, and the Fellows meet several prominent members of the Senate
and House, including senior members of the Foreign Relations and Foreign Affairs
Committees.
The main Washington objectives are Capitol Hill, the White House, the Pen-
tagon, the State Department, and the Treasury, but the Program also visits other
relevant institutions in the D.C. area, including the World Bank, the Central Intelli-
gence Agency, the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, the International
Monetary Fund, and the Washington Bureau of the New York Times. The
Fellows have also met with officials from the Organization of American States and
ministers at various embassies.
The United Nations
A major feature of the Program has always been a unique series of briefings at
the United Nations and the U.S. Mission to the U.N. The experience provides the
Fellows with as many geographical and ideological perspectives on the work of
the organization and on U.S. foreign policy, as can be scheduled in one day.
Other Trips and Activities
Because of the New York location of the Program, the International Fellows
have been able to visit corporations and organizations active in the field of inter-
national affairs. Each year, for example, the Fellows visit the Rockefeller Founda-
tion to discuss its role in international development.
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The John Allen Love Memorial Award
John Love was an International Fellow in the class of 1965-66. He had received
his Bachelor of Arts degree with high honors in political science from Michigan
State University in 1965. He was a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Public
Law and Government at Columbia when he met an untimely death. It was to
honor his memory that the Fellows in the Class of 1965-66 established an annual
award for demonstrated excellence in creative scholarship.
The first award was made to John C. Farrell, IFP '66-'67; succeeding recipients
have been John R. Romagna, Nicholas A. Robinson, Lynn E. Davis, Richard L.
Storatz, Calvin M. Mew, Naomi Williams, Norman Graham, Laurell Kendall, Joanne
Adlerstein, Gordon Bertolin, Barry Davidoff, Gordon Epstein, Mary Sue Ginsberg,
Thomas Milo Somers, Ruth G. Ornelas, Marc Sievers, Jonathan L. Katz, and Elizabeth
Gibbons. Awards for each year are made early in the autumn term.
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V"01 -
peakecs
Over the years, a great number of scholars and statesmen have given
generously of their time and ideas, and have shared their insights and judgments
in meetings with the Fellows. The following is only a partial list but clearly sug-
gests the array of talent the Program has been able to put before the Fellows.
Guests are listed with their titles at the time they spoke.
From the United States Government
The Executive Branch
GENERAL CREIGHTON ABRAMS LYNN DAVIS
Chief of Staff of the Army Deputy Assistant Secretary of
RICHARD ALLEN
National Security Council Director
Defense for International Security
Affairs
MICHAEL H. ARMACOST SEYMOUR M. FINGER
Planning and Coordination Staff, Senior Adviser to the Permanent
State Department (and a former Representative to the United
International Fellow) Nations
WILLIS E. ARMSTRONG
Assistant Secretary of State for
Economic Affairs
ALFRED ATHERTON
Assistant Secretary of State for Near
Eastern and South Asian Affairs
GEORGE W. BALL
Under Secretary of State
W. TAPLEY BENNET, JR.
Deputy Permanent Representative to
the United Nations
ELLSWORTH BUNKER
Ambassador-at-Large
GEORGE BUSH
Ambassador and Permanent
Representative to the United
Nations
JOHN CRIMMINS
Assistant Secretary of State for
Inter-American Affairs
PETER M. FLANIGAN
Assistant to the President
GERALD R. FORD
Vice President of the United States
HENRY H. FOWLER
Secretary of the Treasury
CHARLES FRANKEL
Assistant Secretary of State for
Educational and Cultural Affairs
RICHARD FROEHLKE
Secretary of the Army
RICHARD N. GARDNER
Deputy Assistant Secretary of State
for International Organizational
Affairs; U.S. Ambassador to Italy
WILLIAM S. GAUD
Deputy Director of the Agency for
International Development
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LESLIE GELB
Director, Bureau of Political-Military
Affairs, State Department
ARTHUR J. GOLDBERG
Ambassador to the United Nations
MARSHALL GREEN
Assistant Secretary of State for East
Asian and Pacific Affairs
GENERAL ALEXANDER M. HAIG
Deputy Assistant to the President
for National Security Affairs
W. AVERELL HARRIMAN
Under Secretary of State
JOHN M. HENNESSY
Assistant Secretary of the Treasury
for International Affairs
CHRISTIAN A. HERTER
Special Representative of the
President for Trade Negotiations
JOHN HOLDRIDGE
National Security Council (Far East)
TOWNSEND HOOPES
Deputy Assistant Secretary of
Defense for International Security
Affairs
LAWRENCE HOUSTON
General Counsel of the CIA
THOMAS HUGHES
Director of Intelligence and
Research, State Department
HUBERT H. HUMPHREY
Vice President of the United States
WILLIAM HYLAND
National Security Council (Europe)
NICHOLAS de B. KATZENBACH
Attorney General of the United
States
ROBERT F. KENNEDY
Attorney General of the United
States
ANTHONY LAKE
Director, Policy Planning Staff, State
Department
JOHN LEHMAN
Secretary of the Navy
HAROLD F. LINDER
President of the Export-Import Bank
'INSTON LORD
Director of Planning and
Coordination, State Department
ADMIRAL THOMAS H. MOORER
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
(DAVID PACKARD
(Deputy Secretary of Defense
RAYMOND K. PRICE
Special Assistant to the President
EDWARD V. PROCTOR
Deputy Director for Intelligence of
the CIA
W.W. ROSTOW
Special Assistant to the President
for National Security Affairs
DEAN RUSK
Secretary of State
Dean Harvey Picker (right) of the School
of International and Public Affairs
presides over a seminar in Lehman suite.
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HAROLD SAUNDERS
National Security Council (Middle
East and South Asia)
JOHN SAWHILL
Deputy Administrator, Federal
Energy Office
CHARLES SCHULTZE
Director of the Bureau of the
Budget
ROBERT SEAMANS
Secretary of the Air Force
FRANK SHAKESPEARE
Director of the United States
Information Agency
WILLIAM SIMON
Administrator, Federal Energy Office
JOSEPH J. SISCO
Assistant Secretary of State for Near
East and South East Asian Affairs
HELMUT SONNENFELDT
Counselor to the Secretary of State
CYRUS VANCE
Deputy Secretary of Defense
GEORGE VEST
Assistant Secretary of State for
European Affairs
JOHN W. WARNER
Secretary of the Navy
PAUL C. WARNKE
Assistant Secretary of Defense for
International Security Affairs
GENERAL WILLIAM C.
WESTMORLAND
Chief of Staff of the Army
CHARLES YOST
Permanent Representative to the
United Nations
The Legislative Branch
Senators
BIRCH BAYH (Ind.)
WILLIAM BROCK (Tenn.)
JAMES BUCKLEY (N.Y.)
CLIFFORD CASE (N.J.)
LAWTON CHILES (Fla.)
JOHN SHERMAN COOPER (Ky.)
ALAN CRANSTON (Cal.)
ALFONSE D'AMATO (N.Y.)
PETER DOMINICK (Colo.)
ALLEN J. ELLENDER (La.)
J. WILLIAM FULBRIGHT (Ark.)
BARRY GOLDWATER (Ariz.)
CHARLES GOODELL (N.Y.)
MICHAEL GRAVEL (Alaska)
CLIFFORD HANSEN (Wyo.)
BOURKE B. HICKENLOOPER (Iowa)
HENRY JACKSON (Wash.)
JACOB JAVITS (N.Y.)
EDWARD KENNEDY (Mass.)
EUGENE McCARTHY (Minn.)
GEORGE McGOVERN (S.D.)
MIKE MANSFIELD (Mont.)
KARL MUNDT (S.D.)
EDMUND MUSKIE (Me.)
CLAIBORNE PELL (R.I.)
CHARLES PERCY (III.)
WILLIAM PROXMIRE (Wisc.)
HUGH SCOTT (Pa.)
LEVERETT SALTONSTALL (Mass.)
JOHN STENNIS (Miss.)
STUART SYMINGTON (Mo.)
STROM THURMOND (S.C.)
JOHN TUNNEY (Cal.)
LOWELL WEICKER (Conn.)
HARRISON WILLIAMS (N.J.)
Representatives
BELLA ABZUG (N.Y.)
WILLIAM ANDERSON (Tenn.)
LESLIE ARENDS (III.)
JONATHAN BINGHAM (N.Y.)
SHIRLEY CHISHOLM (N.Y.)
JOHN CONYERS (Mich.)
RONALD DELLUMS (Cal.)
CHARLES DIGGS (Mich.)
DANTE FASCELL (Fla.)
MILLICENT FENWICK (N.J.)
DONALD FRASER (Minn.)
PETER FRELINGHUYSEN (N.J.)
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Navol Now
F. EDWARD HEBERT (La.)
HENRY HELSTOSKI (N.J.)
EDWARD KOCH (N.Y.)
ALLARD K. LOWENSTEIN (N.Y.)
WILBUR D. MILLS (Ark.)
OTIS PIKE (N.Y.)
OGDEN REID (N.Y.)
JOHN RHODES (Ariz.)
DONALD RIEGLE (Mich.)
BENJAMIN ROSENTHAL (N.Y.)
EDWARD ROYBAL (Cal.)
SAMUEL STRATTON (N.Y.)
FRANK THOMPSON (N.J.)
MORRIS UDALL (Ariz.)
CLEMENT ZABLOCKI (Wisc.)
The Judicial Branch
CHIEF JUSTICE EARL WARREN
OF THE SUPREME COURT
ASSOCIATE JUSTICE BYRON R.
WHITE OF THE SUPREME COURT
From the United Nations
and from Other
Governments
CHIEF S.O. ADEBO
Ambassador and Permanent
Representative of Nigeria
EMMANUEL Y. AGORSOR
Counselor, Permanent Mission of
Ghana to the U.N.
A BASNAYAKE
Counselor, Permanent Mission of
Ceylon to the U.N.
YVON BEAULUE
Permanent Representative of Canada
to the U.N.
WILLY BRANDT
Chancellor of the Federal Republic
of Germany
NOEL J. BROWN
Political Affairs Officer of the U.N.
LORD CARADON
Minister of State for Foreign Affairs
and Permanent Representative of
the United Kingdom to the U.N.
FRANK W. COTTRELL
Acting Director, Department of
Trusteeship of the U.N.
FRANCOIS de la GORCE
Deputy Permanent Representative of
France to the U.N.
PAUL-MARC HENRY
Associate Director, Bureau of
Operations, U.N. Special Fund
MARTIN HILL
Deputy to the Under Secretary and
Personal Representative of the
Secretary-General to the Specialized
Agencies of the U.N.
KENNETH D. JAMIESON, C.M.G.
Deputy Representative of the United
Kingdom to the U.N.
RUPERT JOHN
Human Rights Officer of the U.N.
S.A. KARIM
Observer of Bangladesh to the U.N.
MAJOR GENERAL PADHMA B.
KHATRI
Permanent Representative of Nepal
to the U.N.
THANAT KHOMAN
Foreign Minister of Thailand
YAKOV ALEKSANDROVICH MALIK
Deputy Minister for Foreign Affairs
and Permanent Representative of
the U.S.S.R. to the U.N.
JOHN A. MILES
Special Assistant to the Under
Secretary in the Department of
Trusteeship and Non-Self-Governing
Territories of the U.N.
TORU NAKAGAWA
Permanent Representative of Japan
to the U.N.
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C.V. NARASIMHAN
Under Secretary for General
Assembly Affairs and Chef de
Cabinet of the U.N.
EDWIN OGEBE CGBY
Permanent Representative of Nigeria
to the U.N.
JOSE LUIS PARDOS
Second Secretary, Permanent
Mission of Spain :o the U.N.
VLADIMIR PETROWSKY
Special Assistant to the Under
Secretary in the Department of
Political and Security Council Affairs
of the U.N.
E.R. RICHARDSON
Ambassador and Permanent
Representative of Jamaica to the
U.N.
JOSE ROLZ-BENNETT
Second Secretary, Permanent
Mission of Spain _o the U.N.
CURTIS ROOSEVELT
Chief, Section for Non-
Governmental Organizations of the
U.N.
P.H.G. WRIGHT
Director General, British Information
Services
Other Distinguished
Speakers
DEAN ACHESON
Former Secretary of State
GAR ALPEROWITZ
The Cambridge Institute
RICHARD J. BARNET
Co-Director, Institute for Policy
Studies
A. DOAK BARNETT
Fellow at The Brookings Institution
EUGENE R. BLACK
President of the World Bank
SEYOM BROWN
Fellow at The Brookings Institution
WILLIAM F. BUCKLEY, JR.
Editor of "National Review"
McGEORGE BUNDY
President of the Ford Foundation
DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER
Former President of the United
States
GEORGE SHERRY
Senior Political Adviser of the U.N.
ARNOLD SMITH
Assistant Under Secretary of State
for External Affairs, Canada
G. COLERIDGE TAYLOR
First Secretary, Permanent Mission of
Sierra Leone to the U.N.
U THANT
Secretary-General of the U.N.
BRIAN URQUHART
Principal Officer, Offices of the
Under Secretaries for Special
Political Affairs of the U.N.
JANE WEIDLUND
Program Officer, Financial
Management Section of the Special
Fund of the U.N.
R. BUCKMINSTER FULLER
MORTON HALPERIN
Fellow at The Brookings Institution
J. GEORGE HARRAR
President of The Rockefeller
Foundation
CARROLL HASKINS
President of the Carnegie Institution
of Washington
MALCOLM W. HOAG
The Rand Corporation
IVAN ILLICH
Centro Intercultura1 de
Documentacion
HERMAN KAHN
Director of the Hucson Group
LAURENCE KRAUSE
Approved For Release 2006/12/04: CIA-RDP86B00985R000400160024-6
Approved For Release 2006/12/04: CIA-RDP86B00985R000400160024-6
SOL M. LINOWITZ
Former U.S. Ambassador to the
OAS
HENRY OWEN
Director of Foreign Policy Studies at
The Brookings Institution
FRANK PACE
President of the International
Executive Service Corps
MARCUS RASKIN
Co-Director of The Institute for
Policy Studies
JAMES RESTON
The New York Times
DAVID ROCKEFELLER
Chairman of the Board of Chase
Manhattan Bank
ELEANOR ROOSEVELT
EUGENE ROTBERG
Senior Vice President
World Bank
DAVID F. SCHOENBRUN
KALMAN H. SILVERT
Program Adviser to The Ford
Foundation
DAVID S. SMITH
U.S. Ambassador to Sweden
(Former Director of the International
Fellows Program)
FERNANDO BELAUNDE TERRY
Former President of Peru
From Columbia University
ZBIGNIEW BRZEZINSKI
Director, Research Institute on
International Change
AMITAI ETZIONI
Professor of Sociology
WILLIAM T.R. FOX
Bryce Professor of the History of
International Relations; Director,
Institute of War and Peace Studies
LOUIS HENKIN
Hamilton Fish Professor of
International Law and Diplomacy
ROGER HILSMAN
Professor of Political Science
JACOB C. HUREWITZ
Professor of Political Science;
Director, Middle East Institute
MARGARET MEAD
Adjunct Professor of Anthropology
MARSHALL D. SHULMAN
Professor of Political Science;
Director, Russian Institute
BARBARA WARD
Albert Schweitzer Professor of
International Economic
Development
HOWARD WRIGGINS
Professor of Political Science;
Director, Southern Asian Institute
From Other Universities
GRAHAM ALLISON
Professor of Political Science,
Harvard
KARL W. DEUTSCH
Professor of Political Science,
Harvard
RUPERT EMERSON
Professor of International Relations,
Harvard
STANLEY HOFFMANN
Professor of Political Science,
Harvard
FRED CHARLES IKLE
Professor of Political Science,
Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
MORTON KAPLAN
Professor of Political Science,
University of Chicago
PETER B. KENEN
Professor of Economics, Princeton
ROBERT O. KEOHANE
Professor of Political Science,
Stanford
HENRY A. KISSINGER
Professor of Government, Harvard
Approved For Release 2006/12/04: CIA-RDP86B00985R000400160024-6
Approved For Release 2006/12/04: CIA-RDP86B00985R000400160024-6
Dr. Warner R. Schilling, a frequent guest speaker in the IFP lecture series, is James T.
Shotwell Professor of International Relations at Columbia and Director of the Instltutc? of
War and Peace Studies.
HAROLD LASSWELL
Ford Foundation Professor of Law
and the Social Sciences, Yale
SEYMOUR MARTIN LIPSET
Professor of Government and Social
Relations, Harvard
ARNO J. MAYER
Professor of History, Princeton
HANS J. MORGENTHAU
Professor of Political Science,
University of Chicago
JOSEPH NYE
Professor of Political Science,
Harvard
LIJCIAN W. PYE
Professor of International Relations,
Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
EDWIN O. REISCHAUER
Professor of Far Eastern Languages,
Harvard
RICHARD ROSECRANCE
Walter S. Carpenter Jr. Prof