CHINA TASK FORCE NEWSLETTER

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CIA-RDP81B00701R000100080008-8
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RIPPUB
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S
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17
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December 9, 2016
Document Release Date: 
April 6, 2001
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8
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Publication Date: 
December 8, 1967
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REPORT
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Approved For Rase 2001 /05/0SE 4 81 B00701 1 iO0100080008-8 CHINA TASK FORCE NEWSLETTER OCI-2048-67 8 December 1967 /4Y China Task Force Address: OCI/CTF, Room 5G19 Secretariat: Extension 4028 Black,9376 Red (NOTE: Data in the Newsletter is limited to SECRET classification) INTELLIGENCE PRODUCTION ACTIVITIES .1. The Office of Economic Research will be issuing within the next few days a personnel assignment :List, which will all current assignments in the new China Division. 1A Red 9002, is handling this item. 25X1A 2. The DDI Summer Intern Program for Graduate Students had been approved for the summer of 1968. Of the 18 a roved slots, eight are for China (OCI-2, OER-1, OBGI-3, PEC OSR-1). If you are interested in informing your colleagues l in the academic world of this program, please cal E R DDI Coordinator for Academic Relations, for coordination an 1A any additional information. He is on extension 7510, Rm. 1H1122. 3. Due to a schedule conflict, the OSI China Committee will meet on the second Tuesday of each month, instead of the first Monday as announced in Newsletter #5. PRODUCTION SUPPORT ACTIVITIES 1. During June and July the National Science Foundation awarded $32,200 to the National Federation of Science Abstracting and Indexing Services for acquisition and announcement of journals from mainland China. It also granted $26,000 to the Entomological Society of America for translation and publication .of Vol XIV of the Acta Entomologica Sinica and $35,000 to the American Geological Institute for translation and publication of selected articles from the 1964, 1965, and 1966 issues of Acta Geologica Sinica. NSF has also-granted $12,300 to the Instrument Society of America for support in translating 1967 issues of Acta Automatica Sinica. 2. The Acquisitions Branch of Central Reference Service has received a July issue of a Taipei publication which had not been previously seen here: Ti-ch'ing Yen-chiu: Kung-fei Tui-wai Mao-i-chih Yen-pien (Enemy Intelligence Study-Changes in the Foreign Trade of the Chinese Communists). Also a new Chinese language monthly, Tung-hsi Wen-hua (Eastern and Western Approved For Release 2001/05/01 : C CIA-RDP81 1 B00701 R000100080008-8 Approved For Rise 2001/05/0ST81 B00701 RQW100080008-8 Culture) published by the China Academy, Taiwan, was received. Its contents are mainly historical. (See Attachment A) For further information on both these journals call AB/CRS, Ext. 3404). 3. The Central Broadcasting Station, Taipei, issues a weekly serial Pen-chou Tui Ta-lu Hsin-than Kuang-po Chu-ti (This Week's Main Subjects of PsyWar Broadcasts to the Mainland). CRS/Acquisitions Branch (Ext. 3404) has sample copies. 4. Journey To Kashgariya and Kun-lun (Puteshestviye v Kashgariyu i Kung-lun) by Mikhail Vasil'yevich Pevtsov, initially published in Mosocw in 1949 was issued as a JPRS translation on 5 September 1967 (JPRS 42,430, 442 pp.) 5. The China Branch, FF/PAC Division, Central Reference Service issued an Intelligence Memorandum, Personalities Attendin the 1 October 1967 National Day in Peking, CIA CR M 67-17, 2-6-October 1967 CONFIDENTIAL . The three sections comprising this memorandum are (1) a positional listing using the ranking published by the New China News Agency (NCNA) of those attending Peking's 1967 National Day ceremonies; (2) an alphabetical arrangement of the positional listing; and (3) another alphabetical compilation of those significant absentees from the 1 October 1967 festivities who attended any of the eight cultural revolution rallies from 18 August to 26 November 1966 or the 1 May 1967 (May Day) ceremonies. 6. Attachment B is a list of Chicom serial publications received in AB/CRS for the period 1 September - 15 November 1967. 8. A memorandum dated 18 October, from the Chairman, Information Requirements Advisory Group, established a trial "Procedure for Validation of DD/S&T and DDI Human Source Requirements". The trial period is 1 November 1967-31 January 1968. Copies of the procedure are available in each office. Approved- QIA- For Release 2001/05/01 8EGWTIP B00701 R0001 00080008-8 Approved For Rase 2001/05/&AC0"&P81B00701RW0100080008-8 STATSPEC 9. Mis publishing a combined version of the 1962 an eeing Telephone Directories. (Street addresses were available in the 1962 version; not in 1965,) The report will be issued in three volumes, totaling over 1200 pages. It will be CONFIDENTIAL. Dissemination before Christmas is expected. PERSONNEL ACTIVITIES 25X1A 1. China Division/OCI, visited Japan, ore_ Indonesia, North Borneo and ,___ ;n a ong g p ove r) Philippines on a crowaea schedule (2 Oc m Science Branch, Asia Division, 25X1A 2' toured the Far East in c.o er-November to survey publication exploitation. In Japan he visited UFDEC (USARPAC Foreign Documents Exploitation Center); American Embassy Translation Branch, Tokyo; 6499th Support Group, Det 1; and the Science tion of the t i i ra s n Attache; in Okinawa,USCAR (U.S. Civil Adm 25X1A 25X1 C Monitoring ute, the USARMLO; ii La _in Saigon, the Embassy's Internal Af=fairs Section; Public Affairs Office), MACV, CDEC (Combined S int U O (J . . o JUSPA 25X1C Document Exploitation Center) and the Station Translating Section; in Bangkok, the Embassy's Political Scc;i:ion and the USIS Press Officer. 25X1A 3. Resources Branch, China Division, OER, toured Japan, Taiwan and Hong Kong 30 Sep - 23 Oct 1967 to observe technological measures being used to stimulate agricultural production to secure first-hand knowledge of research on Chicom agriculture, and to discuss nutritional in Hong Kong, the Pres te General; Union ' 1A IA 5X1 C Approved For Release 2001/05/01B00701 R000100080008-8 Approved For Rase 2001 /05/C8E? 81B00701A 0100080008-8 methods on which a more effective evaluation of Chicom food d tions ra American Consulate General, John Wenmons, Agriculture Attache, and Allen Whiting, Consular General. r Fenton Babcoc , y Nethercut and Ross Carr, Political and Economic officers of the Mr. Huffman o I" ? = or. Quentin ac we o e Naval ea.i ca Research Unit #2; Taichung Population Studies Center and Agricultural Experiment Station; Institute of International Relations; David Dean, Political Section, American Embassy; m Technical Group; Horig Kam: Richard k A Health u i 1 Agricultural Attache; Dr. Kominz of the National Ins consumption could be made. Among the persons an ope he talked with and visited were: Tokyo: John Gregory, Economic Officer of the American Em Sassy; James Frink, Assistant te of tt 25X1A trip report delineates some interesting comments on agriculture and nutrition in Asia. A copy is on file in the Secretariat. brought with him some of the publications of the Insti u e o International Relations, Republic of China: a. Chinese Communist Affairs Monthly, Oct 1967 (Forwarded to AB/CRS) 25X1A b. Issues and Studies, Oct 67 (English) (Forwarded to AB/CRS) c. Issues and Studies, Oct 67 (Chinese) (Forwarded to AB/CRS) d. Catalog of Current Research Publications on Modern China e. Index of Research Papers Prepared and Published by the Institute of International Relations (Items 4 and 5 are in the CTF Secretariat filed under Bibliographies and may be seen in Room 5G19). of the 25X1A 4. China Branch, Theater Forces Division, USA ME eeks assignment on the West Coast to review missile production facilities and Vandenburg Air Force Base, 25X1A 5, of the China/Far East Branch, Regions na ysi , OSR,-will .be returning in early December from a six-wee and consultation with intelligence facilities 25X1A Ray's main field of in eres is 25X1A a vance w . Approved For Release 2001/05/01 S QIF,$1 B00701 R000100080008-8 Approved For Release 2001/05/01 : ? + EM00701R000 080008-8 returned to Asia Division on 3 October following completion of fifteen months advance Chinese training at the 25X1A C 25X1A 7. is returning for 25X1A (no relation) has left for7__yy V111vCi 25X1A 25X1A is also continuing in the 25X1A is filling another Chin 5X1A STATSPEC 8. Two new China specialists have joined the FR/Par. 25X1A Intelligences an MA from UCLA and 5X1A 25X1A an MA rom Univ. of California, Berkeley. ACADEMIC ACTIVITIES 1. During the 1966-67 school year there were 303 graduate students concentrating on East Asian Studies at Columbia University. 100 of these had completed all the requirements for the doctorate except the dissertation. Of the 203 at the pre-oral level 126 were specializing in China: 25 in traditional China and 101 in 19th and 20th century China. Of'the 100 preparing dissertations, 56 were writing on China: 11 on traditional and 45 on modern. In the East Asia Institute itself (a three year certificate program) there were 31 first year students, 24 second year, and 23 third year. This total of 78 is a 16 increase over total enrollment in the previous year. Among recent activities of the Contemporary China Studies Committee at Columbia is the initiation of the Research Project on Leadership in Communist China, with Donald Klein as Director. Its first products will be two book-length studies, one on leadership in the economic field by Richard Diao and one in foreign affairs by Mr. Klein. The committee is also supporting projects by Richard Sorich to compile a documentary volume on the Chinese commune and to publish a union list of major Chinese-language sources on Chicom law; Cecil Johnson's study of Chinese Communist policy toward Latin America; O. Edmund Chubb's study of Sino-Soviet Relations; Chiang Yung-ching's study of Chinese relations with Ho Chi- minh in the 1930s and 1940s; William Hwang's study of the Chinese Writers' Union; C. Martin Wilbur's study of the Chinese Revolution in the 1920s; Carl Riskin's study of the Chinese economy; Donald Zagoria's work on Chinese and Soviet policy on Vietnam; and A. Doak Barnett's study of govern- ment and politics in Communist China. Approved For Release 2001/05/91E6tff 81 B00701 R000100080008-8 Approved For ease 2001 /05&E( -LP81 B00701 3800100080008-8 Four memoirs in Columbia Oral History Project are in various stages of completion; General Chang Fa-K'uei, General Li Tsung-jen, Dr. V.K. Wellington Koo, and Franklin Lien Ho. (Extracted from: Annual Report of the East Asian Institute, Columbia University) 2. The biographic files of the American Consulate General, Hong Kong, are being microfilmed, as we reported earlier. Copies will be deposited in the Union Research Institute, Hong Kong; Columbia University; and at Stanford University with John Lewis as custodian. The project of microfilming is now near- ing completion. 3. The current membership of the Joint Committee on Contemporary China is Walter Galenson (Cornell), Fred Mote (Princeton), Bob Scalapino (U. of Cal.), George Taylor (U. of Washington), Ezra Vogel (Harvard), and Albert Feuer- werker (Michigan). 4. The support of centers for Chinese language and area studies by the office of Education, HEW, under the National Defense Education Act of 1958 is summarized in Attachment C (unclassified). 5. Rutgers University is inaugurating a Far East Department, to be headed by Dr. Ardath Burk, formerly of the Government Department and a specialist on Japanese govern- ment. 6. Dr. Lucien Pye, MIT, will be moving to Princeton University. No further data available at present. 7. David S. Nivison, Professor of Chinese and Philosophy, Stanford,was awarded the Prix Stanislas-Julien in. May 1967 for his recent book The Life and Thoughtof Chang'Hsue'h- ch'eng. The Prix Stanislas-Julien is awarded annually, since 1873, for "the best work concerning China" in the Western World. 8. In addition to the Ford Foundation grants for Chinese programs, mentioned in Newsletter #3 (Berkeley $900,000; Columbia $1,200,000; Cornell $500,000; Harvard $1,500,000; Michigan $900,000; and $500,000 to help establish a China Materials Development Center) Ford also made four grants for Chinese studies programs in Britain: University of Leeds $50,000; Contemporary China Institute, London University $325,000; School of Oriental and African Studies, London University $175,000; and London School of Economics $280,000. There was also a $250,000 grant Approved For Release 2001/05/01:C CIA-RDH1 B00701 R000100080008-8 CRET Approved For ease 2001/05I Q?- P81800701Q000100080008-8 to the National Committee on United States-China Relations to stimulate public discussion about contemporary China. This is a total of $6,580,000 for China programs. 9. The Social Sciences Research Council's Committee on Exchange with Asian Institutions has appointed Marius B. Jansen, Professor of History, Princeton, for a research assignment on Japanese influences on the Chinese and Benjamin I. Schwartz, Professor of History and Government, Harvard, for research on Chinese intellectual history. Both appointments are in Tokyo and are parts of a program to facilitate participation of American social scientists in development of research and communication with scholars at the Toyo Bunko (Oriental Library), Tokyo and The Institute of Modern History Academia Sinica, Taipei. 10. A new journal devoted "solely to the publication of translations of high literary value" will make its debut in the spring of 1968. Titled K'uei Hsing,' A Repository of Asian Literature in Translation, each issue wi.il consist of about 200 pp. of translations from litera- ture, history, and folklore of East Asia. It will be edited by Liu Wu-chi, Professor and Chairman of the East Asian Languages and Literature Department at Indiana Uni- versity and Friedrick Bischoff. 11. The Secretariat has on file in Dutch the program and speech summaries of the "China Week held in Amsterdam 9-14 October. Offical participants were Owen Lattimore, K. S. Karol, Stuart Schram, Han Suyin, Edgar Snow, Professor W. F. Wertheim, E. P. J. Cammelbeech, W. L. Brugsma, Drs. Fenna v.d. Burg, Dr. P. G. J. Korteiveg, O. Heldring, Theo Stibbe, Dr. P. Baehr and Dr. L. v.d. Land. 12. News from the Center for Chinese: Studies, Uni- versity of California, Berkeley: a. Noriyuki Tokuda, of the Asian Economic Research Institute (Ajia Keizai Kenkyu-jo) has joined the Center for at least one year. He will be completing a study on Yenan Communism. b. Also joining the center are two Australians, Neal and Deirdre Hunter, who left China in April 1967 after having taught English for 21 months at the Shanghai Foreign Language Institute. They will write a book on Communist China. c. The Center is planning four monographs this year, three of which have been decided upon: Approved For Release 2001/05/0'?.19 81 B00701 R000100080008-8 Approved For FRpase 2001 /05/0 E&81B00701RO0100080008-8 (1) Chinese youth movement, by James Townsend, Professor of Political Science. (2) The Ssu-ch' ing /four cl.earanc'es7 campaign, by Richard Baum and F. Teiwis. 25X1A (3) An analysis of a sixteen volume collection of Chicom historical vignettes entitled flung-ch'i P'iao-piao - The Red Flaa Flutters, '7417) has revewecLibrary'of ;ongress , o ings of these vignettes.? d. The Center hopes to sponsor a scholarly conference on Communist China in Berkeley sometime in 1969. Main subject may be the Chinese army. 13. Ohio State University.is offering a Chinese Language Study Tour to Taiwan for the Spring.Quarter.2 March - 7 June, 1968. It includes a short period at Ohio State and 8 Yeeks in Taiwan. Prerequisite: 15 semester hours (25 quarter hours) accruable by 25 March. Cost is approximately $1650. Application address available from CTF Secretariat. 14. New Asia College in Hong Kong is working on the completion of a Cantonese Dictionary to be used in conjunc- tion with its language program. (No further details available at present.) 15. The National Bureau of Standards has published A Grammar for Component Combination in Chinese Characters, by B. Kirk Rankin, et al. it is available rom GPO for 60 cents. (NBS Technical Note 296; 117 pp.) 16. On 18 November 1967, the Institute of Sino-American Studies, held a seminar in San Francisco on US-China Relations (jointly sponsored by the Hoover Institution, the American Academy of Asian Studies and the American-Asia Friendship Foundation. The program consisted of 4 panel discussions, 2 of them on US-China Relations,. Past and Present, and one panel each on Existing Pro ems in US-C ina Relations and Future US-China Relations. Participants included Hugh Baker, San Francisco State College; Tinn Hugh Yu (Host), Institute of Sino-American Studies; W. Glenn Campbell, Hoover; Edszen N. Landrum, American Academy of Asian Studies; Edward T. Le Fevour, Mills College; Franz Michael, George Washington U.; Richard Donald, Dept. of State; George Taylor, Univ. of Washington, Theodore Chen, U. of S. California; Shih-hsiang Chen, U. of California, Berkeley; Samuel Griffith, Hoover; Lisa Hobbs, San Francisco Examiner; Jay McCullough, San Jose State College; Stefan Possony, Hoover; Pung Fai Tso, Univ. of Santa Clara and Foothill College; Yuan-li Wu, U. of San Francisco. Approved For Release 2001/05/01 sRtk B00701 R000100080008-8 Approved For Rase 2001/05/0'I 9XRi3P81B007014WO0100080008-8 A similar seminar was held in 1966 on the subject China's Cultural Heritage and. Foreign Relations. Participants included most of those list61-above, plus Vincent Shih, U. of Washington; Robert Scalapino, U. of California, Berkeley; David Rowe, Yale University; Karl Brandt, Stanford U.; S. T. Tung; Wm. S. McBirnie, Glendale United Community Church; and Paul Walp, Inst. of Sino-American Studies. The transcript of th.L.s seminar was recently published and a copy is available for loan from the CTF Secretariat. (Material received from 25X1A 25X1A 17. The National Committee on United States China Relations, 777 United Nations Plaza, New York, New York, 10017 has issued a compact bibliography on China, titled An Arrn6tated'Guide to Modern China. It lists sixty-six monographs plus six periodicals under eleven headings: (1) China: Background and General Survey; (2) Communist Rise to Power, (3-9 all devoted to Communist China); (3) General; (4) Industry and Economy; (5) Agriculture; (6) Social; (7) Mao Tse--tung; (8) Military; (9) Foreign Policy; (10) American-Chinese Relations; and (11) Periodicals. Bibliography sells for 25 cents. 18. Academic Meetings Held and Forthcoming: A. Meetings Held .(l) The annual Upstate New York Conference on Asia was he.. at-- Syracuse University on 6-7 October. (2) The Western Regional Conference of the Association of Asian Studies was held at the Univ. of New Mexico, 20-21 October. Seventeen colleges from seven states were represented. (3) Attendence at the 27th International Congress of Orientalists in Ann Arbor, August 13-19 is now reported as 2600, including 150 from Japan, 99 West Germany, 77 Great Britain, 72 Argentina, and 61 France. (4) The Sixteenth Midwest Conference on Asian Affairs was held at the University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas, 10-11 November. B. Forthcoming (1) International Conference on Asian History, University of Malaya, Aug 5-10, 1968. Particulars available from Hon. Secretary, Organization Committee Approved For Release 2001/05/01SftA1B00701R000100080008-8 Approved For Rase 2001/05/OC1'-R81B00701100080008-8 of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur. Some information may be available from Professor Allan Cole, Fletcher School oil-Law and Diplomacy and Robert Van Niel, University of Hawaii, who are American representatives of the conference's organization committee. (2) Southeast Regional Conference of Associa- tion of Asian Studies Durham, 26-27 January 1967. -10- Approved For Release 2001/05/01 s ,,10 1 B00701 R000100080008-8 Approved For Rase 2001 /05/ Gk- 'J 81 B00701 X0100080008-8 Attachment A CTF Newsletter #6 Tung-hsi Wen-hua (Eastern and Western'CU'lt'ure) A new monthly periodical, Tung-hsi Wen-hua (Eastern and Western Culture), began publication in July 1967 by the China Academy, Taiwan. The periodical is in Chinese but, the first issue at least, carries an English table of con- tents, which possibly reflects the tenor of appears below. Contents the journal. It Foreward Articles Chang Chi-yun The Characteristics of the Chinese People Chang Chi-yun 1 New Spirit Wang Yun-wu 12 A Comparative Study of Chinese and Western Cultures John C. H. Wu 18 Chinese Literature F. T. Cheng 24 Shen Kua, the Statesmanand Scientist of North Sung Dynasty Y. C. Koo 25 Early Chinese and Ryukyu Cultural Relation- ship and Its Influence on Japan Yang Chung-kuei 35 A New Approach to the Pacific W. G. Goddard 41 Chinese Study in Japan Hyo Kinoshita 44 Symposium on Chinese Law, A Report Pan Wei-ho 48 Book Reviews Life of Lin Tse-hsu (1785-1850) Orient Lee 17 A New Edition of the History of the Yuan Dynasty Chang Hsing-tang 55 An Outline History of Chinese Dress Pao Tsun-pang 57 Appendix Some Regulations and Rules of the China Academy 59 Approved For Release 2001/05/0g ,; "81 B00701 R000100080008-8 Approved For Re se 2001 /05/01 'PM1 800701 R @100080008-8 Attachment B CTF Newsletter #6 1967 CHICOM SERIALS RECEIPTS Novem er (1 September-7' apers No. of 'I'ssues 'Received News p 1. CHIN-JIH HSIN-WEN 9 (July) (Peiping) 27 (August) 20 (September) 2. CHUNG-KUO HSIN-WEN (Canton) 76 (1 Aug-15 Oct) 3. HSIN-CHIANG JIH-PAO (Uri mchi ) 1 (9 July) 4. JEN-MIN JIH-PAO (Peiping) 74 (19 Aug-31 Oct) 5. KUANG-MING JIH-PAO (Peiping) 74 (19 Aug-31 Oct) 6. NAN-FANG JIH-PAO (Canton) 2 (22, 25 Apr) 7. PEI-CHING JIH-PAO (Peiping) 41 (20 Jun-14 Aug) 8. WEN-HUI-PAO (Shanghai) 36 (8 Jul-13 Aug) Journals 1. CHIEH-'FANG-CHUN HUA-PAO (Peiping) S/Monthly 1 (No. 15) 2. CHIEH-FANG-CHUN WEN-I (Peiping) S/Monthly 4 (No. 7-11) 3. CHINA PICTORIAL (Peiping) Monthly 3 (No. 8-10) 4. CHINA RECONSTRUCTS 2 (No. 7-8) (Peiping) Monthly -12- Approved For Release 2001/05/01 Sr R [ 1 B00701 R000100080008-8 Approved For Rele 2001/05/01 : ?I~(`RDP`8'fB00701R00Q,0080008-8 5. CHINESE LITERATURE (Peiping) Monthly 1. (NN,o. 8) 6. CHINA'S MEDICINE (Peiping) Monthly 2 (No. 5-6) 7. HUNG-CH' I (Peiping) Irregular 3 (No. 12-14) 8. JEN-MIN HUA-PAO (Peiping) Monthly 2 (No. 9-10) 9. JIN-MIN CHUGOKU (Japanese) (Peiping) Monthly 1 (No. 9) 10. NUNG-TS'UN CH'ING-NIEN (Peiping) Monthly 4 (No. 11-14) 11. NUNG-YEH CHI-HSIEH CHI-SHU (Peiping) 1 (No. 4) 12. NUNG-YEH CHI-SHU (Peiping) Monthly 3 (No. 5-7) 13. PEKING INFORMA (Spanish) (Peiping) Weekly 10 (No. 34-40, 42-44) 14. PEKING INFORMATION (French) (Peiping) Weekly 10 (No. 33-40, 42-43) 15. PEKING REVIEW (Peiping) Weekly' 11 (No. 35-45) Approved For Release 2001/05/0 Eeit!81 B00701 R000100080008-8 Approved For Releee 2001/05/01 00701 R00W0080008-8 Attachment C CTF Newsletter #6 NDEA Language and Area Centers The National Defense Education Act (NDEA) of 1958 provided for federal assistance, through the Office of Education of the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, to academic language and area cen- ters. The aim was to encourage colleges and universities to introduce instruction in hitherto neglected and uncommonly taught languages deemed to be of critical importance to the US. Under terms of the act, the federal government would provide up to 50% of the cost of establishing and operating approved area centers during a seven-year period 1958-1965. The program was subsequently extended through June 196.8. By the end of the 1967-1968 school year, a total of over $25 million in federal aid will have been granted to 106 NDEA centers established at 63 colleges and universities. The language and area centers concentrate on the non-Western parts of the world. The curriculum of a center is not limited to language instruction; each center seeks to offer a cohesive area program, com- bining several pertinent academic disciplines, with attention focused on a single world region. Chinese language and area instruction is offered at at least 26 of the NDEA centers, listed below: Center Year of First Total Assistance University of Arizona r eder_al Aid Through June 168 Tucson, Arizona 85721 1960 $ 260,136 Prof. Earl H. Pritchard Director, Language and Area Center in Oriental Studies Brown University 1965 Providence, Rhode Island 02912 71,000 Prof. Jerome B. Grieder Acting Director, East Asia Language and Area Center University of Chicago 1959 Chicago, Illinois 60637 299,092 Prof. Edwin McClellan Director, Far Eastern Language and Area Center University of Colorado Boulder, Colorado 80304 7967 21,395 Prof. Donald S. Willis Director, Language and Area Center for East Asia -14- Approved For Release 2001/,/,Q~,? 81 B00701 R000100080008-8 Approved For Rase 2001/05/ - 81 B00701 Y0100080008-8 Columbia University 1960 573,122 New York, N.Y. 10027 Prof. Wm. Theodore de Bary Director; East Asian Language and Area Center Cornell University 1960 327,416 Ithaca, New York 14850 Prof. Knight Biggerstaff Acting Director, East Asian Language and Area Center Dartmouth College 1965 88,000 Hanover, New Hampshire 03755 Profs. Ernest Young & Jonathan Mirsky Co-Directors, Language and Area Center for East Asia Earlham College 1965 87,256 Richmond, Indiana 47375 Prof. Jackson H. Bailey Director, Language and Area Center for East Asia Harvard University 1959 714,021 Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138 Prof. Donald H. Shively Director, Language and Area Center for East Asian Studies University of Hawaii 1960 441,357 Honolulu, Hawaii 96822 Prof. Charles B. Neff Director, Asian Studies Language and Area Center University of Illinois 1965 89,000 Urbana, Illinois 61803 Prof. Solomon B. Levine Director, Asian Studies Language and Area Center University of Iowa 1960 183,654 Iowa City, Iowa 52240 Prof. Y. P. Mei Director, Center for Far Eastern Studies University of Kansas 1959 267,671 Lawrence, Kansas 66045 Prof. Thomas R. Smith Director, Language and Area Center for East Asian Studies -15- Approved For Release 2001/05/01 O"1B00701R000100080008-8 Approved For Reese 2001/05/01'? i 1 BOO701 RO$100080008-8 Manhattanville College of 1965 the Sacred Heart Purchase, New York 10577 Mother Adele M. Fiske Director, Language and Area Center for East Asia 50,566 University of Michigan 1960 290,833 Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104 Prof. Charles O. Hucker Director, Far Eastern Language and Area Center Oakland University 1965 70,479 Rochester, Michigan 48063 Prof. Clyde B. Sargent Director, Language and Area Center for East Asia Oberlin College Oberlin, Ohio 44074 Prof. Paul B. Arnold Director, East Asian Language and Area Center 77,065 University of Pittsburgh 1960 248,309 Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15213 Prof. Yi-t'ung Wang Director, East Asian Language and Area Center Princeton University 1965 122,917 Princeton, New Jersey 08540 Prof. Frederick W. Mote Director, Language and Area Center for East Asia University of Rochester 1967 23,692 Rochester, New York 14627 Prof. Robert B. Hall Director, Language and Area Center for East Asia University of Southern California 1960 287,410 Los Angeles, California 90007 Prof. Theodore H. E. Chen Director, East Asian Studies Center Stanford University 1959 527,090 Stanford, California 94305 Prof. Patrick D. Hanan Director, Chinese-Japanese Language and Area Center Approved For Release 2001/05/ -16- Approved For Rel a 2001/05/01 : 1 800701 R0QQ~00080008-8 University of Texas 1960 182,388 Austin, Texas 78712 Prof. Edgar C. Polome Director, Language and Area Center for Asian Studies University of Washington 1959 719,537 Seattle, Washington 98105 Prof. Lyman H. Legters Director, Far Eastern and Russian Language and Area Center. Washington University 1965 98,935 St. Louis, Missouri 63130 Prof. Henry Fenn Acting Director, Language and Area Center for Chinese and Japanese Yale University 1965 136,851 New Haven, Connecticut 06520 Prof. Hugh T. Patrick Director, Language and Area Center for East Asian Studies. Total federal. funds -- $6,259,192 -17- Approved For Release 2001/0 ' V "`. P81 B00701 R000100080008-8