LETTER TO MR. REED D. AUERBACH FROM(Sanitized) ASSOCIATE COORDINATOR FOR ACADEMIC RELATIONS AND EXTERNAL ANALYTICAL SUPPORT CENT
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Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP86B00985R000400120006-0
Release Decision:
RIPPUB
Original Classification:
K
Document Page Count:
46
Document Creation Date:
December 16, 2016
Document Release Date:
October 6, 2004
Sequence Number:
6
Case Number:
Publication Date:
November 7, 1980
Content Type:
LETTER
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CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20505
November 7, 1980
STATOTHRS
TAT!
Mr. Reed D. Auerbach
New York, New York 10027
I would like to extend an apology first for the delay in
responding to your request to me during the briefing here on
23 October for the Columbia University International Fellows.
It took some time for me to obtain the information you inquired
about.
I have enclosed two information sheets on the Graduate Studies
Program, which should answer most of your questions about the
program.
Sincerely,
STATINTL
Associate Coordinator for
Academic Relations and
External Analytical Support
Enclosures
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The United States in World Affairs
Sept. 9 ROBERT F. RANDLE, Columbia
Introduction to the Program
Sept. 16 DAVID P. CALLEO School of Advanced
International Studies, Johns Hopkins
European-American Economic Relations
Sept. 23 ROBERT H. LEGVOLD, Council on Foreign
Relations
Soviet-American Relations
Sept. 30 ROBERT F. RANDLE, Columbia
Nuclear Deterrence and SALT
Oct. 1 ROGER HILSMAN, Columbia
(Dinner) U.S. Foreign Policymaking
Oct. 7 JACOB C. HUREWITZ, Columbia
Middle East International Politics
Oct. 21 GERALD L. CURTIS, Columbia
Japanese-American Relations
Oct. 28 CHARLES GATI, Union
East Central Europe and World Politics
Nov. 7 BILLY C. CHRISTENSEN, IBM
(Luncheon) IBM's Business Policies
Nov. 11
Nov. 18
Nov. 25
JEAN HERSKOVITS, SUNY-Purchase
Sub-Saharan Africa and the United States
AINSLIE T. EMBREE, Columbia
South Asia and the United States
RIORDAN J. ROETT, School of Advanced
International Studies, Johns Hopkins
Perspectives on United States-Latin American
Relations
Dec. 4 THOMAS P. BERNSTEIN, Columbia
(Luncheon) Sino-American Relations
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Major Concerns in World Affairs
Jan. 20 ROBERT F. RANDLE, Columbia
Organizational Meeting
Jan. 27 JOHN W. SEWELL, Overseas
Development Council
World Politics and the Developing Countries
Feb. 3 DONALD J. PUCHALA, Columbia
Global Food Interdependence
Feb. 10 The World Bank
Economic Problems of the Developing Countries
Feb. 13 HARVEY PICKER, Columbia
(Luncheon) Aspects of the Transfer of Technology
Feb. 17 WILLIAM DIEBOLD, Council on Foreign
Relations
International Trade Relations
Feb. 24 Exxon Corporation
World Energy Problems
March 3 KENNETH LIPPER, Salomon Brothers
Development and Industrial Policy
April 21 PETER KENEN, Princeton
(Dinner) International Economic Policies
Staff of the Program (1980-1981)
Robert F. Randle, Director
Zelda Angiel, Secretary
Bela Szigethy, Assistant
Jeffrey S. Klenk, Assistant
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the 9,thrnahbntil lloivs
Nancy J. Albaugh
M.S. candidate, Graduate School of Journalism
B.A. (English), SUNY-Albany, 1976.
Robert T. Amis
J.D. candidate, School of Law
B.A. (economics and political science), Yale College, 1978; M.Sc.,
London School of Economics, 1979.
Dawn D. Arno
Ed.D./M,B.A. candidate, Teachers College/Graduate School of
Business
G.L.E.M. (music), London College of Music, 1970; M.A./M.Ed.,
Teachers College, 1979.
Reed D. Auerbach
M.I.A. candidate, School of International Affairs; Certificate
candidate, Russian Institute
B.A. (government), Franklin and Marshall College, 1980.
Stanley C. Bark
M.I.A, candidate, School of International Affairs
B.A. (Russian), University of Kansas, 1976; M.A., University of
Kansas, 1979.
Frances Clarity
M.I.A. candidate, School of International Affairs
B.S.F,S. (international politics/law and organization), Georgetown
University, 1979.
William R. Conroy
M.I.A. candidate, School of International Affairs
B.A. (political science), University of Maine, 1980.
Jonathan E. Delott
J.D. candidate, School of Law
B.A. (government/history), University of Virginia, 1979.
Richard M. Devens
Ph.D. candidate, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences
B.A, (international studies/economics), American University,
1976; M.A., American University, 1979.
Elizabeth A. Diamond
M.F.A. candidate, School of Arts
B.A. (political science/international relations), Wellesley College,
1976.
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Jeanne F. Downen
M.I.A. candidate, School of International Affairs
B.A. (political science), SUNY-Brockport, 1978.
Jeffrey P. Eagleson
M.I.A. candidate, School of International Affairs
B.A. (history/political science), Ohio Wesleyan University, 1978.
Allen Elsendrath
M.I.A. candidate, School of International Affairs
B.A. (political science), University of Wisconsin, 1978;
Certificate/Diploma, Madurai University, India, 1979.
Thomas G. Evans
M.I.A. candidate, School of International Affairs
B.A. (government), Beloit College, 1979.
Alfonso Fernandez
J.D. candidate, School of Law
B.S.F.S. (international economics), Georgetown University, 1978;
M.B.A., University of Pennsylvania, 1980,
Lawrence C. Friedman
J.D./M.P.A. candidate, School of Law/Woodrow Wilson School
of Public and International Affairs
B.A. (comparative literature/political science), Columbia College,
1978.
Gary N. Gamer
M.I.A. candidate, School of International Affairs; Certificate
candidate, Institute of Latin American and Iberian Studies
B.S. (international business), University of Oregon, 1977.
Jeff M. Garrity
M.B.A. candidate, Graduate School of Business
B.A. (American history), Harvard College, 1976.
Edward L. Gibson
M.I.A. candidate, School of International Affairs
B.A. (international relations/French), Clark University, 1977.
Timothy J. Gilfoyle
Ph.D. candidate, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences
B.A. (urban studies), Columbia College, 1979; M.A., Graduate
School of Arts and Sciences, 1980.
Mark D. Hibbs
M.I.A./M.S. candidate, School of International Affairs/Graduate
School of Journalism; Certificate candidate, Institute on Western
Europe
B.A. (European history), Cornell University, 1973.
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A. Cory Highland
M.I.A. candidate, School of International Affairs; Certificate
candidate, Institute of Latin American and Iberian Studies
AS,, South Georgia College, 1977; B.A. (international relations),
Temple University, 1979.
John R. Hupper, Jr.
J.D. candidate, School of Law
B.A. (political science), Amherst College, 1977.
Ann D. Jordan
J.D. candidate, School of Law
B.A. (anthropology), School of General Studies, 1979.
Nicolas J. Kahale
M.B.A. candidate, Graduate School of Business
B.A. (economics), American University, 1975; M.Sc., University of
London, 1976.
Jonathan L. Katz
M.Phil. candidate, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences
B.A. (political science), University of Pittsburgh; M.A., Graduate
School of Arts and Sciences, 1979.
Donald G. Kilpatrick
J.D. candidate, School of Law
B.A. (history), Yale University, 1977.
Glenn S. Kolleeny
J.D. candidate, School of Law
B.A. (Russian), Columbia College, 1976.
Mary E. Landergan
J.D. candidate, School of Law
B.A. (English/psychology), Wellesley College; B.A./M.A., Dublin
University College, 1979.
Christopher P. Laszlo
M.I.A. candidate, School of International Affairs
B.A, (economics), Swarthmore College, 1980.
Garry W. Martin
J.D. candidate, School of Law
B.A. (government), Harvard College, 1979.
Gary L. Mathews
M.I.A. candidate, School of International Affairs
B.A. (Classics), Harvard College, 1976.
John M. Myers
Ph.D. candidate, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences;
Certificate candidate, East Asian Institute
B.A. (political science), Columbia College, 1979.
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Chadwick C. Nehrt
M.B.A. candidate, Graduate School of Business
B.A. (international relations), University of Pennsylvania, 1976.
Garth D. Neuffer
M.I.A. candidate, School of International Affairs
B.A. (political science/human biology), Stanford University, 1979.
William R. Nojay
J.D./M.B.A. candidate, School of Law/Graduate School of
Business
'V
B.A. (computer science/political science), Colgate University,
1978.
Constantine G. Papavizas
M.I.A. candidate, School of International Affairs
B.A. (government), Georgetown University, 1978.
George A. Raffini
M.I.A. candidate, School of International Affairs
B.S. (international relations/economics), American University,
1979.
Leslie K. Rider
M.I.A. candidate, School of International Affairs
B.S.F.S. (humanities/international affairs), Georgetown University,
1978.
Lesley A. Rimmel
M.I.A. candidate, School of International Affairs; Certificate
candidate, Russian Institute
B.A. (British history), Yale University, 1977.
Elizabeth T. Robinson
M.S. candidate, Graduate School of Journalism
B.A. (history/philosophy/literature), Wesleyan University, 1979.
Madelyn C. Ross
M.I.A. candidate, School of International Affairs;
Certificate candidate, East Asian Institute
B.A. (Chinese history/politics), Princeton University, 1979.
Jocelyn F. Samuels
J.D. candidate, School of Law
B.A. (English literature), Middlebury College, 1977.
Richard J. Scaldini
M.B.A. candidate, Graduate School of Business
B.A. (French literature), Tufts University, 1969; M.Phil./Ph.D., Yale
University, 1976.
(continued on page 7)
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James R. Schiffman
M.I.A. candidate, School of International Affairs; Certificate
candidate, East Asian Institute
B.A. (economics), Cornell University, 1971; M.A., University of
Colorado, 1974.
Adnan A. Siddiqi
M.I.A. candidate, School of International Affairs
B.A. (political science), Columbia College, 1980.
Violet L. Simsic
M.B.A. candidate, Graduate School of Business
B.A. (French), University of Pennsylvania, 1976.
Sichan Siv
M.I.A. candidate, School of International Affairs
Licence es Lettres (English), University of Phnom Penh, 1975.
Delia B. Spitzer
J,D. candidate, School of Law
B.A. (international relations), Universidad Catolica de Cordoba,
1978.
Bruno M. Stern
M.B.A. candidate, Graduate School of Business
B.A. (economics), University of Sussex, 1975.
Margery A. Suckle
M.I.A. candidate, School of International Affairs
B.A. (international relations), University of Pennsylvania, 1979.
Phillip R. Sutter
M.I.A. candidate, School of International Affairs
B.A. (political science), University of California at Davis, 1979.
Adam I. Topolansky
M.I.A. candidate, School of International Affairs; Certificate
candidate, Institute on East Central Europe
B.A. (political science), University of Connecticut, 1979.
Neale X. Tranguch
M.I.A. candidate, School of International Affairs; Certificate
candidate, Institute on Western Europe
B.S. (international relations), Bucknell University, 1979.
Jace G. Weaver
J.D./M.I.A. candidate, School of Law/School of International
Affairs
B.A. (international affairs), Columbia College, 1979.
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Con~en~s
STATEMENT OF PURPOSE
5
THE PROGRAM
6
Officers and Academic Advisers
6
The Foundations
6
Facilities
7
ADMISSION
8
CURRICULUM
8
Lecture and Seminar Course
9
BRIEFINGS AND ACTIVITIES
10
GUEST SPEAKERS
12
THE INTERNATIONAL FELLOWS ALUMNI
19
House Minority Leader John Rhodes spoke to the Fellows at a recent Washington
briefing,
3
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Statement of
TUT0,50
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 1,000 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 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 international
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 interna-
tional affairs, this Program will have fulfilled its purpose.
5
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The International Fellows
Ciovram
Offices s
WILLIAM J. McGILL, Ph.D., L.H.D., LL.D., President of the University
HARVEY PICKER, M.B.A., Sc.b., Dean of the Faculty of International Affairs
ROBERT 17. RANDLE, LL.B., Ph.D., Assistant Dean and Lecturer in the School of
International Affairs; Director of the International Fellows Program
Academic Advisers
WILLIAM T.R. FOX, M.A., Ph.D., Bryce Professor of the History of International
Relations
LOUIS HENKIN, LL.B., L.H.D., University Professor
HARVEY DICKER, M.B.A., Sc.D., Dean of the Faculty of International Affairs
The Foundations
The IntE:rnational Fellows Program was initiated at Columbia University in 1960
under the terms of a generous grant from the Edward John Noble Foundation. A
number cf other foundations have endorsed the Program's objectives by provid-
ing financ al support. A complete list of these supporting organizations follows:
The Geor;e F. Baker Trust
the Bing i:und
The Compton Foundation, Inc.
Continental Oil Company
Crown Zellerbach Foundation
Houston Endowment, Inc.
Inland Steel-Ryersor Foundation
IBM
The Interrational Nickel Company
The Johnson Foundation
Merck She rp & 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 Affairs. In 1964 the Program was offi-
cially 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 International
Affairs, including Professors William T. R. Fox and Louis Henkin and Dean Harvey
Picker.
The International Fellows Program is housed in the fifteen-story International
Affairs Building. This building is the major center of international studies and acti-
vities at Columbia University. In addition to the School of International Affairs and
the International Fellows Program, the building houses the Departments of Poli-
tical Science, Economics, and Geography; the eight Regional Institutes; the Insti-
tute 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 Inter-
national Fellows Seminar Room on the fourteenth floor. The Fellows meet here for
their weekly discussions and assemble informally before lectures to greet guests
over coffee. This room also houses a small but focused collection of international
materials, including current periodicals, that have proved to be a useful supple-
ment to the University libraries themselves.
The International Fellows have visited the Ford Foundation offices in New York City many
times. McGeorge Bundy, when he was president of the Foundation, often chaired the
briefings. Z
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h 1mzision
Qualifications for Admission
fhe airi 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,rspects of government service, teaching, business, or the professions.
Fellows are selected by a committee appointed by the Director of the Program.
Admissic n 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
demonst ated ability and potential for leadership in a chosen field and in inter-
national e ffairs.
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 14'?0, International Affairs Building, Columbia University, New York, N.Y.
10027, fo - 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 he admissions office of the appropriate University division (e.g., the
School of Law, the Graduate School of Arts & Sciences, the Graduate School of
Business, >_tc.)for a bulletin and application forms.
Application may be made before mid-April for particioation in the Program
beginning the following September.
Gfil'rll f
culum
Each International Fellow follows a program of study prescribed by the gradu-
ate schoo 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 Follows Program. The
number o credits received for the course is determined by the Committee on
Instructior 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.
The 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 one of three seminar groups to
satisfy the course requirement. In the autumn term, one group focuses on the
theories and concepts of international politics; the second and third deal with
American foreign policy issues. The focus of the seminar groups in the spring
term is decided in accordance with the interests of the Fellows and the Director.
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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Briefing Trips and Special
Orient ation
The In ernational Fellows Program begins with a short orientation session held
immediately after classes start at Columbia in the fall.
The United Nations
A major feature of the Program has always been a unique series of briefings at
the UnitE d 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.
Washington, D.C.
over tie years, the Fellows have made two-day briefing trips to Washington,
one in thl! fall and one in the spring.
The fat visit has usually focused upon the Executive Branch. The Fellows have
met with several top officials at the Department of Defense, including the Service
Secretarii:s. 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 mE,tters, manpower, and special projects, and senior staff members in the
office of the Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs.
I he spi ing trip concentrates upon the role of Congress in the formulation of
foreign policy, and the Fellows then meet several prominent members of the
Senate and House, including senior members of the Foreign Relations and Foreign
Affairs Committees.
The man Washinqton 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