Speakers, Fall 1985

 

Wednesday,
September 11
Robert Hilburn, music critic, Los Angeles Times; author, forthcoming "Springsteen" (1985)
 
Monday,
September 16
Jim Lucke, professor of mathematics, CMC; "Mountaineering in Peru"
 
Thursday,
September 26
John Zinda, professor of physical education and director of athletics, CMC; "Athletic Entrepreneurship: Promoting American Football in Japan" (11:00 a.m.)
 
Thursday,
September 26
"A Japanese Evening: Kinnara Taiko and Martial Arts Demonstration"
 
Monday,
September 30
Chalmers Johnson, Walter and Elise Haas Professor of Asian Studies, U.C. Berkeley; author, Revolutionary Change (1982) and MITI and the Japanese Miracle: The Growth of Industrial Policy, 1925-1975 (1982); "The Japanese Economy: A Different Kind of Capitalism"
 
Tuesday,
October 1
Howard Jacobson '79, executive vice president, Jacobson Trading Corporation; "Japanese-American Economic Prospects: A Young Entrepreneur's Perspective" (11:00 a.m.)
 
Tuesday,
October 1
Taizo Watanabe, counsel general of Japan at Los Angeles; "Japanese-American Economic Prospects: A Diplomat's Perspective" (12:30 p.m.)
 
Tuesday,
October 1
Chong-Wook Chung, professor of international relations, Seoul National University; author, Maoism and Development: The Politics of Industrial Management in China (1980); Glen Fukashima, director for Japan in the office of the United States Trade Representatives; P. Edward Haley, professor of government, CMC; author, Qaddafi and the United States Since 1969 (1984); Leon Hollerman, Dengler-Dykema Distinguished Service Professor, CMC; author, Japan and the United States: Economic and Political Adversaries (1980) and Japan's Dependence on the World Economy: The Approach toward Liberalization (1967); Howard Jacobson '79, executive vice president, Jacobson Trading Corporation; Arthur Rosenbaum, associate professor of history, CMC; "Doing Business with the Japanese" (3:00 p.m.)
 
Tuesday,
October 1
Glen Fukashima, director for Japan in the office of the United States Trade Representatives; "An Economic Report from Tokyo and Washington"
 
Wednesday,
October 2
Hisao Kobayashi, president and chairman of the board, Dai-Ichi Kangyo Bank of California; "Problems and Prospects for Japanese Business in the United States: A Banker's Perspective" (12:30 p.m.)
 
Wednesday,
October 2
Richard Frey P'86, first vice president, Security Pacific National Bank, Los Angeles; Hisao Kobayashi, president and chairman of the board, Dai-Ichi Kangyo Bank of California; Takashi Maruyama, general manager, Industrial Bank of Japan, Los Angeles; Hiroshi Nakanao, deputy director general, Japan External Trade Organization, Los Angeles; "Japanese Business in the United States" (3:00 p.m.)
 
Wednesday,
October 2
Peter Drucker, Marie Rankin Clarke professor of social science and management, Claremont Graduate School; author, The End of Economic Man: A Study of the New Totalitarianism (1939) and The New Society: The Anatomy of the Industrial Order (1982); "Innovation and Entrepreneurship: The Japanese-American Connection"
 
Friday,
October 4
Chong-Wook Chung, professor of international relations, Seoul National University; author, Maoism and Development: The Politics of Industrial Management in China (1980); "East Asia in Transition" (12:00 p.m.)
 
Monday,
October 7
Sue Mansfield, professor of history, CMC; author, The Gestalt of War: An Inquiry into Its Origin and Meaning as a Social Institution (1982); "War, PBS series, Part I: The Road to Total War"
 
Monday,
October 7
Syed Ahmad Gailani, Sunni Muslim leader; Ikram Gran, Afghan resistance member; "Afghanistan Today"
 
Wednesday,
October 9
Douglas Pike, director, Indochina archive, Institute of East Asia Studies; author, War, Peace and the Viet Cong (1969) and History of Vietnamese Communism, 1925-1976 (1978); "Vietnam's War in Cambodia" (12:00 p.m.)
 
Thursday,
October 10
Edward Banfield, professor of political science, Harvard University; author, The Unheavenly City: The Nature and Future of Our Urban Crisis (1970) and The Moral Bliss of a Backward Society (1958); William Kristol, chief of staff to the Secretary of Education, U.S.Department of Education; Charles Kesler, professor of government, CMC, (discussant); "The Federalist's Science of Government"
 
Friday,
October 11
Murray Dry, professor of political science, Middlebury College; David Broyles, professor of political science, Wake Forest University; Patrick Garrity, Naval Postgraduate School; Gordon Lloyd, professor of government, University of Redlands, co-editor of The Essential AntiFederalist (1985), (discussant); "Federalists vs. Anti-Federalists: The Debate Over the Constitution" (9:00 a.m. Bauer Center)
 
Friday,
October 11
William Allen, professor of government, Harvey Mudd College; co-editor, The Essential AntiFederalist (1985) and Works of Fischer Ames (1983); Thomas West, professor of politics, University of Dallas; author, Plato's Apology of Socrates: An Interpretation, With a New Translation (1979); Colleen Sheehan, Claremont Graduate School, (discussant); "Liberty and Legislation: The Nature of American Republicanism" (11:00 a.m. Bauer Center)
 
Friday,
October 11
Harvey Mansfield, professor of government, Harvard University; author, Statesmanship and Party Government: A Study of Burke and Bolingbroke (1965) and The Spirit of Liberalism (1978); Jeremy Raskin, Cornell University; J. Jackson Barlow, contributing author, The New Federalist Papers, (discussant); "The Executive Power and the Republican Principle" (8:00 p.m. Bauer Center)
 
Saturday,
October 12
James Stoner, Groucher College; Ralph Rossum, Alice Tweed Tuohy professor of government and ethics, CMC; author, Reverse Discrimination: The Constitutional Debate (1980) and co-author, The American Founding: Politics, Statesmanship, and the Constitution (1981); Edward Erler, professor of political science, U.C. San Bernardino; author, Equal Protection and Personal Rights (1982) (discussant); "The Judicial Power and the Rights of Man" (10:00 a.m. Bauer Center)
 
Saturday,
October 12
Jack Rakove, professor of political science, Stanford University; author, The Beginnings of National Politics: An Interpretive History of the Continental Congress (1979); Dennis Mahoney, professor of government, CMC; Harry Jaffa, Henry Salvatori professor of political philosophy and American Constitutionalism, CMC; author, Crisis of the House Divided: An Interpretation of the Lincoln-Douglas Debates (1959) and American Conservatism and the American Founding (1982) (discussant); "The Federalist After 1788" (2:00 p.m. Bauer Center)
 
Monday,
October 14
Jack Stark '57, president, CMC; Fritz Weis '65, treasurer, CMC; "War, PBS series, Part II: Anybody's Son Will Do"
 
Tuesday,
October 15
Jack Merritt, professor emeritus of physics, CMC; P. Edward Haley, professor of government, CMC; author, Congress and the Fall of South Vietnam and Cambodia (1982); David Keithly, professor of military science, CMC; "Nuclear Strategy: Arms Control and the Future"
 
Wednesday,
October 16
Kurt Waldheim, former secretary general of the United Nations; "The United Nations: Fascination and Frustration"
 
Thursday,
October 17
Douglass McKenna, computer artist; "Mathemaesthetics"
 
Wednesday,
October 23
Richard Phalan, professor of military science, CMC; "War, PBS series, Part III: Profession of Arms"
 
Thursday,
October 24
Robert O'Neill, Chichele professor of the history of war, Oxford University; author, The German Army and the Nazi Party 1933-39 (1966) and Australia in the Korean War 1950-53 (1981); "War" (3:00 p.m.)
 
Monday,
October 28
Stan Katz, director of education and training, Children's Institute International, Los Angeles; "Child Abuse and Neglect: From Apathy to Hysteria"
 
Tuesday,
October 29
Ian Russ, research fellow and clinical consultant, Children's Institute International, Los Angeles; "From Trauma to Treatment: The Impact of Child Abuse on the Family System (Part I)" (11:00 a.m.)
 
Tuesday,
October 29
Jill Anter Wieder '79, psychologist; director of early intervention program, Maple Center, Beverly Hills; "From Trauma to Treatment: The Impact of Child Abuse on the Family System (Part II)" (12:30 p.m.)
 
Tuesday,
October 29
Marjorie Charlop, assistant professor of psychology, CMC; Jo Kaplan, attorney; dependency section of the Superior Court, Los Angeles; Ian Russ, research fellow and clinical consultant, Children's Institute International, Los Angeles; John Snortum, George C.S.Benson professor of public affairs, CMC; Jill Anter Wieder '79, psychologist; director of early intervention program, Maple Center, Beverly Hills; "Surviving the System: Social Services and the Abused Child" (3:30 p.m.)
 
Tuesday,
October 29
David Kirp, professor of public policy, U.C. Berkeley; author, Just Schools (1983) and Education and the Legal Structure (1971); "Child Abuse and Its Abuses"
 
Wednesday,
October 30
John White, commanding officer, juvenile division, LAPD; "Child Abuse and Neglect" (12:30 p.m.)
 
Wednesday,
October 30
Paul Boland, supervising judge, criminal division, Superior Court, Los Angeles; David Kirp, professor of public policy, U.C. Berkeley; author, Just Schools (1983) and Education and the Legal Structure (1971); Ralph Rossum, Alice Tweed Tuohy professor of government and ethics, CMC; author, Reverse Discrimination: The Constitutional Debate (1980) and co-author, The American Founding: Politics, Statesmanship, and the Constitution (1981); Ian Russ, research fellow and clinical consultant, Children's Institute International, Los Angeles; John White, commanding officer, juvenile division, LAPD; "Justice for All?: The Perpetrators and Victims of Child Abuse" (3:30 p.m.)
 
Wednesday,
October 30
Paul Boland, supervising judge, criminal division, Superior Court, Los Angeles; "Child Abuse and the Future American Society"
 
Monday,
November 4
Theodore Puck, director, Eleanor Roosevelt Institute for Cancer Research; author, The Mammalian Cell As a Microorganism: Genetic and Biochemical Studies in Vitro (1972); "World Health Problems"
 
Tuesday,
November 5
P. Edward Haley, professor of government, CMC; author, Congress and the Fall of South Vietnam and Cambodia (1982); "War, PBS series, Part IV: The Deadly Game of Nations" (5:15 p.m.)
 
Wednesday,
November 6
Paul van Buren, professor of religion, Temple University; author, The Secular Memory of Gospel: Based on an Analysis of Its Language (1963) and The Edges of Language: An Essay in the Logic of a Religion (1972); Clark Williamson, professor of religion, Christian Theological Seminary; author, Has God Rejected His People? (1982) and God is Never Absent (1977); "Jewish-Christian Relations" (12:00 p.m.)
 
Wednesday,
November 6
Stansfield Turner, former director, CIA; author, Secrecy and Democracy (1985); "The CIA and Secrecy" (4:00 p.m. Bauer Lecture Hall)
 
Wednesday,
November 6
Paul van Buren, professor of religion, Temple University; author, The Secular Memory of Gospel: Based on an Analysis of Its Language (1963) and The Edges of Language: An Essay in the Logic of a Religion (1972); Clark Williamson, professor of religion, Christian Theological Seminary; author, Has God Rejected His People? (1982) and God is Never Absent (1977); "Jewish-Christian Relations"
 
Thursday,
November 7
Gaines Post, Jr., professor of history, CMC; author, The Civil-Military Fabric of Weimar Foreign Policy (1973) and The Humanities in American Life: Report of the Commission on the Humanities (1980); "War, PBS series, Part V: Keeping the Old Game Alive" (5:15 p.m.)
 
Thursday,
November 7
"Physical Science and Philosophy: An Informal Symposium"
 
Monday,
November 11
Harold Rood, professor of government, CMC; author, Kingdom of the Blind: How the Great Democracies Have Resumed the Follies That So Nearly Cost Them Their Life (1980); "War, PBS series, Part VI: Notes on Nuclear War"
 
Monday,
November 11
John Finney, Jr., deputy director, Office of Regional Security Affairs, State Department; "Asian Politics: Military Affairs"
 
Tuesday,
November 12
John Finney, Jr., deputy director, Office of Regional Security Affairs, State Department; "Asian Politics: Military Affairs"
 
Monday,
November 18
David Keithly, professor of military science, CMC; "War, PBS series, Part VII: Goodbye War"
 
Monday,
November 18
Peter Duignan, senior fellow, Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace; author, Colonialism in Africa, 1870-1960) (1975) and Africa South of the Sahara (1981); Edward Alpers, professor of history, UCLA; author, Ivory and Slaves in East Central Africa (1975) and co-editor, Walter Rodney, Revolutionary and Scholar (1982); Anton Lowenberg, assistant professor of economics, CMC; William Moses '84, Watson fellow; "South Africa in Crisis: How Should We Respond?"
 
Tuesday,
November 19
Anton Lowenberg, assistant professor of economics, CMC; Peter Duignan, senior fellow, Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace; author, Colonialism in Africa, 1870-1960 (1975) and Africa South of the Sahara (1981); Dean McHenry, Jr., associate professor of government, Claremont Graduate School; author, Tanzania's Ujama Villeges, The Implementation of a Rural Development Strategy (1979); William Moses '84, Watson fellow; Marie-Denise Shelton, associate professor of French, CMC, (moderator); "The Political Economy of Apartheid" (11:00 a.m. Bauer Lecture Hall)
 
Tuesday,
November 19
Peter Duignan, senior fellow, Hoover Institution on War, Revloution, and Peace; author, Colonialism in Africa, 1870-1960 (1975) and Africa South of the Sahara (1981); Anton Lowenberg, assistant professor of economics, CMC; Dean McHenry, Jr., associate professor of government, Claremont Graduate School; author, Tanzania's Ujama Villeges, The Implementation of a Rural Development Strategy (1979); William Moses '84, Watson fellow; P. Edward Haley, professor of government, CMC; author, Qaddafi and the United States Since 1969 (1984) and co-editor, Lebannon in Crisis: Participants and Issues (1979) (moderator); "South Africa: War, Revolution, or Peace?"
 
Wednesday,
November 20
Elie Wiesel, Andrew W. Mellon professor of humanities, Boston University; author, Night (1961) and The Fifth Son (1985); "How I Write" (11:00 a.m.)
 
Wednesday,
November 20
Elie Wiesel, Andrew W. Mellon professor of humanities, Boston University; author, Messengers of God (1976) and Dawn (1961); "The Responsibility of the Modern Writer" (7:00 p.m. Garrison Theater)
 
Thursday,
November 21
Elie Wiesel, Andrew W. Mellon professor of humanities, Boston University; author, A Beggar in Jerusalem (1970) and The Testament (1981); "Why I Write" (11:00 a.m.)
 
Monday,
November 25
P. Edward Haley, professor of government, CMC; author, Qaddafi and the United States Since 1969 (1984) and co-editor of Lebanon in Crisis: Participants and Issues (1979); "War, PBS series, Part VIII: The Knife Edge of Deterrence" (4:15 p.m.)
 
Tuesday,
November 26
Morton Smith, biblical scholar; author, The Secret Gospel: The Discovery and Interpretation of the Secret Gospels According to Mark (1982) and Clement of Alexandria and a Secret Gospel of Mark (1973); "An Evening with Morton Smith"
 
Tuesday,
December 3
William Trogdon, professor of journalism, University of Missouri; author, "Blue Highways: A Journey Into America" (1983) (11:00 a.m.)
 
Tuesday,
December 3
William Trogdon, professor of journalism, University of Missouri; author, "Blue Highways: A Journey Into America" (1983)
 

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