News and Notes

Activities lic of China and the California State University and College system. Professor Esterline is teach- Marvin Alisky, Arizona State University, during ing in the Department of Diplomacy of the the summer of 1975, investigated Portuguese Graduate School of International Law and government-media relations in Lisbon and in Diplomacy. Zurich as an International Press Institute re- Douglas A. Hibbs, Jr., Massachusetts Institute searcher. of Technology, is spending the 1975-76 aca- demic year as a Visiting Fellow at the Center Lawrence R. Alschuler, University of Ottawa, for European Studies, Harvard University, Canada, is returning from four years of teaching where he is completing work on industrial and research on Latin American development at conflict in advanced industrial societies spon- the University of Zurich and from a year's sored by the National Science Foundation. Fulbright professorship at the Fundacion Bariloche, Argentina. Professor Alschuler was Melvin J. Hinich, Virginia Polytechnic Institute formerly with the University of Hawaii. and State University, is spending the academic year 1975-76 as a Sherman Fairchild Dis- Stanley V. Anderson, University of California, tinguished Scholar at the California Institute of Santa Barbara, has been awarded a fellowship Technology. from the federal National Endowment for this Humanities enabling him to further his study of Gerald L. Houseman, Indiana University at Fort prison ombudsman in this country and abroad. Wayne, is teaching in England during the 1975-76 academic year under the auspices of David Baldwin, Dartmouth College, has been the Office of Education's exchange program. named the first John Sloan Dickey Third He will teach at Newcastle Polytechnic and Century Professor in the Social Sciences at Durham Technical College, and will deliver the Dartmouth College. Occasional Lecture at Neville's Cross College. Enrique Baloyra and John Martz, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, have received their Michael C. Hudson, Georgetown University, has second National Science Foundation grant for been awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship for study of electoral politics in Venezuela. 1975-76 to study politics and development planning in selected countries of the Arab John A. W. Bennett, Old Dominion University, attended the 173rd Wilton Park Conference on Middle East. "The Power of Parliament and the Press in Robert W. Hunt, Illinois State University, Nor- Domestic and Foreign Issues," conducted by mal, has received a Fulbright research grant for the British Foreign Office at Wiston House, a study of the psychology of institutionaliza- Steyning, Sussex, United Kingdom. tion in India during the 1975-76 academic year. Adda B. Bozeman, Sarah Lawrence College, Ronald Kahn, Oberlin College, will spend his directed a seminar on "Diplomacy in Interna- sabbatical year at the Center of Urban Affairs, tional History" at Sarah Lawrence College, Northwestern University. He will teach during June 9 to August 1, 1975, under a grant from the fall term at the Department of Political the National Endowment for the Humanities Science at Northwestern. that is designed to stimulate college teaching. Stephen D. Kertesz, University of Notre Dame, Jere Bruner, Oberlin College, will spend his was awarded an honorary LLD by Indiana sabbatical year as a visiting scholar with the University and the special President's award by Department of Political Science at the Universi- the University of Notre Dame at the May ty of Michigan, Ann Arbor. commencements. He retired in August as Pro- fessor Emeritus of Government and Director of Stephen N. Bryant, University of North Caroli- the Institute for International Studies. na, Charlotte, is on leave for the academic year 1975-76 to accept a NASPAA Public Adminis- Shari B. Kharasch has been approved by the tration Fellowship with the Law Enforcement D.C. City Council for membership on the board Assistance Administration. of elections and ethics of the District of Columbia. She will serve as Chairperson of the Hsi-sheng Chi, University of North Carolina, three-member Board. Chapel Hill, has received research leave from the Social Science Research Council for a study Martin D. Levine, Miami University, Ohio, is on of elites in China. leave during 1975-76 to spend at the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Develop- John H. Esterline, California State Polytechnic ment, Washington, D.C. University, Pomona, is an exchange professor for the 1975-76 academic year at National Lawrence D. Longley, Lawrence University, Chengchi University, Taipei, under an educa- recently served as Chairman of the Wisconsin tional exchange agreement between the Repub- State Democratic Party Annual Convention.

452 PS Fall 1975 During the academic year 1975-76, he will be James Soukup, SUNY, Fredonia, during the residing in London, England, where he will be 1975-76 academic year, will serve as Project r teaching political science. Director for a Grant from the Office of Lewis C. Mainzer, University of Massachusetts, Education to study the internationalization of Amherst, will be on sabbatical leave during the General Education. spring semester of 1976. Judith Stiehm, University of Southern Charles McLane, Dartmouth College, has been California, presented by invitation of a South named the Class of 1925 Professor. African newspaper a series of lectures in Africa on the status of women in America, as part of Jerome M. Mileur, University of Massachusetts, the International Women's Year. Amherst, is on sabbatical leave for the academic year 1975-76. Raymond Tanter, University of Michigan, lec- tured during the period January to July 1975 in Donald E. Milsten, University of Maryland, Japan, India, Iran, the Soviet Union and Ger- Baltimore County, has been appointed by the many. Professor Tanter also served as visiting Governor of Maryland to serve on the state's professor of international relations at the He- Panel on Public Policy on Nuclear Energy for brew University of Jerusalem during the spring Electricity Generation. and summer 1975 terms. Peter R. Moody, University of Notre Dame, has Henri J. Warmenhoven, Virginia Common- been awarded a National Fellowship at the wealth University, Richmond, Virginia, sup- Hoover Institution and will be on leave during ported by the Grant-in-Aid Program for Faculty the 1975-76 academic year to do research on of VCU, spent part of the spring and summer in opposition in contemporary China. Europe in order to collect data on the political Tae Y. Nam, University of Arkansas, Pine Bluff, rights of foreign workers, notably those in has received a National Science Foundation Belgium, France, Germany (BRD) and Switzer- grant in the amount of $105,000 for the land. improvement of social science disciplines at the Herbert F. Weisberg, Ohio State University, will University of Arkansas, Pine Bluff, including be a Sherman Fairchild Distinguished Scholar at political science. The grant is for a two-year the California Institute of Technology for the period and it will establish, among other pro- 1975-76 academic year. jects, an Individualized Learning Center util- izing various audio-visual instructional materials and equipment. Also included are projects for New Appointments student research and internship in state and local government agencies. Abdelrahman A. Abdelrahman, assistant Glenn R. Parker, Miami University, Ohio, is on professor, Memphis State University. leave during 1975-76 to serve as Associate Bruce Andrews, assistant professor, Fordham Director of Government Affairs Training at the University. U.S. Civil Service Commission, Washington, D.C. Aryeh Botwinick, assistant professor, Swarth- more College. C. Grant Pendill, Jr., Western Illinois Universi- C. Anthony Broh, assistant professor, Hobart ty, is on leave for the academic year 1975-76 as and William Smith Colleges. chief executive officer of the Citizen Exchange Corps in City, an organization which Jill Clark, assistant professor, Miami University, promotes non-governmental exchanges with the Ohio; formerly of the University of Wisconsin, USSR on a people-to-people level. Milwaukee. James W. Prothro, University of North Caroli- Elizabeth Hope Crighton, instructor, Pomona na, Chapel Hill, has received a Kenan research College. leave. Edward Downey, lecturer, SUNY, Brockport. Alan K. Dowty, associate professor, University Kent Redfield, University of Washington, has of Notre Dame; formerly of Hebrew University, joined the Majority Staff of the House of Jerusalem. Representatives in Springfield, Illinois, by ap- pointment of the Speaker, William A. Red- Thomas S. Engeman, assistant professor, mond. Loyola University of Chicago. Mostafa Rejai, Miami University, Ohio, has Philip S. Gillette, associate professor, Kalama- returned to campus after a leave in 1974-75 zoo College; formerly of Rutgers University. serving as senior research fellow at the Iranian Institute for International Political and Eco- Edward Glab, Jr., assistant professor, University nomic Studies, Tehran. of Texas, Austin. David C. Schwartz, Rutgers University, has Mary T. Hanna, assistant professor, SUNY, received a Research Fellowship and grant from Binghamton. the Earhart Foundation and a Research Award Peggy Ann Heilig, instructor, University of from the Ford Foundation for his work on North Carolina, Charlotte. health, personality and political behavior. Dr. Schwartz has also been appointed Adjunct Jean and Bill Hervey, Allegheny College. Professor of Psychiatry at the Rutgers Medical Walter S. Jones, Edward W. Brooke Professor, School. Northeastern University.

453 News and Notes Mark E. Kann, assistant professor, University of Ronald J. Stupak, senior faculty member and Southern California. professor, Federal Executive Institute; formerly Don E. Kash, George Lynn Cross Professor, of Miami University, Ohio. University of Oklahoma. Lawrence R. Sullivan, instructor, Wellesley Col- Xandra Kayden, assistant professor, University lege. of Massachusetts, Boston. Paul Borsuk, instructor, Wellesley College. Ronald Krannich, assistant professor, Old Do- Richard T. Sylves, assistant professor, Univer- minion University. sity of Cincinnati. Donald Lam pert, assistant professor, Arizona Aron G. Tannenbaum, associate professor, State University. Lander College, Greenwood, South Carolina; Eugene Lewis, George R. Cogar Research Pro- formerly of SUNY, Brockport. fessor, . L. S. Tao, assistant professor, SUNY, Brock- Peter McDonough, lecturer, University of Mich- port; formerly of Ripon College. igan. Marc Tipermas, assistant professor, SUNY, Buf- Ronald I. Meltzer, assistant professor, SUNY, falo. Buffalo. Richard J. Tobin, assistant professor, SUNY, Hans J. Michaelmann, assistant professor and Buffalo. research associate, University of Missouri, St. Edmond True, instructor, SUNY, Fredonia; Louis; formerly of Indiana University. formerly of the University of Connecticut. Arthur H. Miller, lecturer, University of Michi- Thomas M. Uhlman, assistant professor, Univer- gan. sity of Missouri, St. Louis. Edward P. Morgan, instructor, Oberlin College; Richard Webb, instructor, University of Arkan- formerly of Brandeis University. sas; formerly of University of Oregon. Alvin H. Mushkatel, assistant professor, Univer- Gordon Whitaker, assistant professor, Univer- sity of Missouri, St. Louis; formerly of St. sity of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Johns College. J. K. Zawodny, Avery Professor of Internation- Carol Nechemeas, instructor, Arizona State al Relations, Claremont Graduate School and University; formerly of University of Georgia. Pomona College; formerly of University of Martha Brill Olcott, instructor, Colgate Univer- Pennsylvania. sity. Martin Zechman, instructor, University of James E. Piereson, assistant professor, SUNY, North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Albany. Diane Pinderhughes, instructor, Dartmouth Col- Visiting and Temporary Appointments lege. Harold E. Quinley, assistant professor, Manhat- Joanna Banthin, visiting assistant professor, tanville College. SUNY, Binghamton. Robert F. Rich, lecturer, University of Michi- Bruce Bowen, visiting assistant professor, Ari- gan. zona State University; formerly with the Uni- J. Martin Rochester, assistant professor and versity of Michigan. research associate, University of Missouri, St. John Brigham, visiting assistant professor, Louis. SUNY, Albany, 1975-76. Robert Sahr, instructor, SUNY, Fredonia; Silviu Brucan, visiting professor, Dartmouth formerly of M.I.T. and SUNY, Buffalo. College; University of Bucharest. Janet K. Schmidt, instructor, University of Tae Dong Chung, visiting Shansi professor, Notre Dame. Oberlin College; Yonsei University, Seoul, Terry P. Schmidt, assistant professor, Miami Korea. University, Ohio; formerly of University of Richard W. Gable, faculty member, Federal Denver. Executive Institute, U.S. Civil Service Commis- John W. Simon, instructor, Bates College. sion, Charlottesville, Virginia; University of California, Davis. Timothy Gauhan, visiting lecturer, Arizona Richard Skinner, assistant professor, Old Do- State University. minion University. Richard Gaulton, visiting instructor, Colgate Thomas Sloan, assistant professor, Kansas State University. University. Lewis W. Snider, assistant professor, Claremont Jerzy Hauptmann, visiting professor, Graduate School; formerly of University of Hochschule fur Verwaltung-swissenschaften in Michigan. Speyer, West Germany; Park College. William P. Snyder, associate professor, Texas David Hill, visiting assistant professor, Kansas A&M University. State University. 454 PS Fall 1975 J Barbara Jancar, visiting associate professor, Edward A. Goerner, acting chairman, Universi- SUNY, Brockport; formerly of Union College. ty of Notre Dame. Nancy D. Joyner, visiting lecturer, University of Glen Gordon, acting dean, College of Social and North Carolina, Charlotte. Behavioral Sciences, University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Robert Kerstein, visiting lecturer, SUNY, Brockport. Martin Harry Greenberg, director of graduate programs and associate professor, University of Kay A. Knapp, visiting assistant professor, Wisconsin, Green Bay. University of Missouri, St. Louis. David R. Hager, chairperson, Old Dominion John D. Lewis, visiting distinguished professor University. of government, Oberlin College, Fall 1975. Thomas A. Henderson, special assistant, Coun- Gilburt D. Loescher, visiting assistant professor, cil of State Governments. University of Notre Dame. Richard I. Hofferbert, professor and co- Richard Mounts, visiting lecturer, University of director, Center for Comparative Political Re- North Carolina, Charlotte. search, SUNY, Binghamton. Charles Strikwerda, visiting lecturer, Arizona Donald P. Kommers, director, Center for Civil State University. Rights, University of Notre Dame. Kenneth D. Wald, instructor, Memphis State Morris Levitt, director of undergraduate pro- University. gram, Howard University. Lawrence M. Mead, Urban Institute. Ralph E. Miner, chairman, Western Washington Administrative Appointments State College. William D. Muller, acting chairman, SUNY, Latheef N. Ahmed, chairperson, Education and Fredonia. Instructional Techniques Committee, Section on International and Comparative Administra- Mark V. Nadel, Foreign Affairs Officer, Office tion, American Society for Public Administra- of Assistant Secretary for International Affairs, tion, University of Missouri, Kansas City. U.S. Department of the Treasury. Dean Alfange, Jr., acting vice chancellor for Tae Y. Nam, chairman, University of Arkansas, academic affairs and provost, University of Pine Bluff. Massachusetts, Amherst. Julius Emeka Okolo, director of graduate pro- James H. Andrews, director of research, Illinois gram, Howard University. House of Representatives, and director of the John C. Pierce, director, Division of Govern- House Democratic Staff; formerly of Ohio mental Studies and Services, Washington State State University. University. Allan Austin, chairman, State University Col- Richard J. Richardson, chairman, University of lege, Fredonia, 1976. North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Earl Backman, director, International Studies William L. Richter, director, South Asia Center, Program, University of North Carolina, Char- Kansas State University. lotte. Benjamin Rivlin, dean for university and special Alan R. Balboni, chairman, Boston State Col- programs, Graduate School and University Cen- lege. ter, City University of New York. Loren P. Beth, acting chairman, University of John Paul Ryan, senior Research Associate, Massachusetts, Amherst. American Judicature Society; formerly of Vas- George A. Brinkley, director, Institute for sar College. International Studies, University of Notre Lyman Tower Sargent, chairperson, University Dame. of Missouri, St. Louis. Beverley B. Bryant, assistant dean, School of Joel Schwartz, associate chairperson, University Arts and Letters, Old Dominion University. of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Raymond F. Cour, administrative director, Uni- Frank Smallwood, vice president and dean of versity of Notre Dame. student affairs, Dartmouth College. Ivo D. Duchacek, executive officer, Ph.D. Pro- Herbert J. Spiro, Ambassador to Cameroon, to gram, City University of New York. serve concurrently as Ambassador to Equatorial Alan S. Engel, assistant chairman, Miami Uni- Guinea; formerly of the Department of State, versity, Ohio. Policy Planning Staff. Howard Erdman, chairman, Asian Studies Pro- Albert H. Teich, senior research associate, gram, Dartmouth College. SUNY, Albany. Michael J. Francis, director of graduate studies, Frederick S. Tipson, assistant director, Center University of Notre Dame. for Oceans Law and Policy. Susan Aurelia Gitelson, research associate, Thomas Vocino, head, Auburn University, Columbia Middle East Institute. Montgomery.

455 News and Notes Edward Westen, chairman, Central Michigan Enoch Nappen, Monmouth College, New Jer- University. sey: associate professor. Francis O. Wilcox, director general, Atlantic Jeffrey Obler, University of North Carolina, Council. Chapel Hill: associate professor. Jarrell Yarbrough, chairperson, Urban Analysis Michael N. O'Hara, California State College, Concentration, University of Wisconsin, Green Dominguez Hills: associate professor. Bay. Julius Emeka Okolo, Howard University: asso- ciate professor. Promotions Raymond E. Owen, University of : associate professor. Dean Alfange, Jr., University of Massachusetts, Frederic S. Pearson, University of Missouri, St. Amherst: professor. Louis: associate professor. Phillip Althoff, Kansas State University: associ- Claude A. Pomerleau, University of Notre ate professor. Dame: assistant professor. Carlos A. Astiz, SUNY, Albany: professor. L. John Roos, University of Notre Dame: David Baldwin, Dartmouth College: professor. associate professor. Paul A. Beck, University of Pittsburgh: associ- Jerrold G. Rusk, University of Arizona: profes- ate professor. sor. Robert A. Bernstein, Texas A&M University: Lyman Tower Sargent, University of Missouri, associate professor. St. Louis: professor. Robert L. Bock, Western New England College: Joel Schwartz, University of North Carolina, professor. Chapel Hill: professor. Teh-kuang Chang, Ball State University: profes- Robert N. Spadaro, The Chinese University of sor. Hong Kong: visiting associate professor. Susan W. Furniss, Colorado State University: Alan Stern, University of North Carolina, associate professor. Chapel Hill: associate professor. Carol F. Goss, California State College, San James A. Stimson, SUNY, Buffalo: associate Bernardino: associate professor. professor. Howard Erdman, Dartmouth College: profes- John A. Straayer, Colorado State University: sor. professor and Chairman. F. Ted Hebert, University of Oklahoma: associ- Rudolf L. Tokes, University of Connecticut: ate professor. professor. Nish Jamgotch, University of North Carolina, Kurt Tweraser, University of Arkansas: associ- Charlotte: professor. ate professor. Brij B. Khare, California State College, San Otto Ulc, SUNY, Binghamton: professor. Bernardino: professor. J. Peter Vanneman, University of Arkansas: Samuel A. Kirkpatrick, University of Oklaho- associate professor. ma: professor. Arnold Vedlitz, Texas A&M University: assis- tant professor. Fred Kramer, University of Massachusetts, Am- herst: associate professor. Thomas J. Volgy, University of Arizona: associ- ate professor. Paul Kress* University of North Carolina, Chap- el Hill: professor. Robert G. Seddig, Allegheny College: associate professor. Henry Krisch, University of Connecticut: asso- ciate professor. Giles Wayland-Smith, Allegheny College: associ- ate professor. Morris Levitt, Howard University: professor. Naomi B. Lynn, Kansas State University: asso- Brian Weinstein, Howard University: professor. ciate professor. Orion White, University of North Carolina, Gregory Blake Markus, University of Michigan: Chapel Hill: professor. assistant professor. Fred H. Willhoite, Coe College: professor. Lynn Mather, Dartmouth College: assistant T. Phillip Wolf, Indiana University Southeast: professor. professor. Roy L. Meek, Colorado State University: pro- fessor. Retirements Linda B. Miller, Wellesley College: professor. David S. Brown, George Washington University, Clark Murdock, SUNY, Buffalo: associate pro- has retired as Chairman of the Department of fessor. Public Administration. Robert Nakamura, Dartmouth College: assis- Robert C. Hartnett, professor emeritus, Loyola tant professor. University of Chicago. 456 PSFall 1975 Stephen D. Kertesz, professor emeritus of his doctorate of philosophy at American Uni- government and international studies and direc- versity. r tor of the Institute for International Studies, University of Notre Dame. From 1949 until 1956 Donald Brown was a public administrator in the state of Kentucky, J. D. Williams, University of Utah, has retired becoming successively involved in economic after ten years as the founding Director of the development, bookmobiles, and welfare. He Robert H. Hinckley Institute of Politics at the was president of the Kentucky Chapter of the University of Utah. American Society for Public Administration. In 1956 and 1957 he was business consultant to Kentucky Wesleyan College. In 1957-1958 he Corrections was business manager and treasurer of Union College and came to Illinois Wesleyan Univer- Ellis S. Krauss, Western Washington State Col- sity in the latter year as associate professor. In lege, was listed in the Summer 1975 PS as 1965 he became chairman of the department of having been promoted to "professor." This political science and, in 1967, professor. In listing should have read promoted to "associate Illinois, he continued his association with the professor." PS regrets this error. American Society for Public Administration meeting in Kansas City, elected Donald Brown Naomi B. Lynn, Kansas State University, was its president. He retired in 1971 but returned to incorrectly listed in the Summer 1975 PS as the campus to teach courses in public adminis- being affiliated with the University of Kansas. tration at Northern Illinois University and in PS regrets this error. 1975, at Auburn University. It was typical of his reaching mind that Donald In Memoriam Brown would continue his professional develop- ment at a steady pace even as he reached retirement. In 1964 he was a Hill Family Donald P. Brown Foundation fellow in the Institute on the Middle East at Hamline University. In 1965 he Donald Perl Brown, retired chairman of the studied Egyptian civilization in Egypt under a olitical science department, Illinois Wesleyan Fulbright-Hays grant. These experiences University, died suddenly on July 2, 1975 at rekindled an interest in comparative govern- the age of 70. ment and resulted in a new and widely taken Anatole France once wrote that the whole art undergraduate course, administration in devel- of teaching is only the art of awakening the oping countries. In the year before his retire- natural curiosity of young minds for the pur- ment, he instituted a requirement that political pose of satisfying it afterwards. Donald Brown science majors take courses in statistics, compu- was a teacher who always valued, and often ter programming, and research methods. reminisced about, his services as an administra- tor. Believing with Plutarch that the city is the "To know how to suggest," Amiel wrote, "is teacher of the man, Donald Brown sought in the great art of teaching." Donald Brown the classes he taught, and in the internships he skillfully combined the suggestions of need, established and superintended, to bring to public good, service, and the art and science of undergraduate students the same satisfactions administration to create a series of powerful and experiences he himself had encountered, models to lure and lead students. awakening and satisfying green curiosities in the young. The city of Bloomington, Illinois, Robert G. Leh spreading across the flat and fruitful prairie, Illinois Wesleyan University became a training ground for college students who first grappled with, and then learned with assurance the arts of satisfying public need and Franklin L. Burdette dealing with the people that the administrator Franklin L. Burdette, longtime member of the must practice. The street became, under Donald Department of Government and Politics and Brown's direction, a citadel of learning equal to Director of the Bureau of Governmental Re- the classroom. A special mark of his success in search at the University of Maryland, died this activity, and a part of his memorial, is August 8, 1975, at the age of 63. Specializing in found in the lives of his three sons, James, the areas of public policy and political affairs, Mark, and Peter, each of whom he both raised he contributed generously and richly over the as a parent and trained as a teacher to become years to both academia and public affairs. public administrators. Born in Huntington, West Virginia, Professor Before he returned to the state of his birth, and Burdette graduated summa cum laude from after receiving his baccalaureate degree in 1930 Marshall College (1934) and received a master's and his master's degree in 1940 at Northwest- degree from the University of Nebraska the ern University (with previous undergraduate following year. After pursuing additional gradu- work at Knox College), Donald Brown worked ate work at the University of North Carolina with the O.P.A. during World War II and, until and the University of Chicago, he received a 1947 with the U.N.R.R.A. He was instructor in second master's degree and, in 1938, his doctor- government at the University of Maryland, ate from Princeton University. He was awarded 1947-1948, and assistant professor at American an honorary doctor of laws degree by his alma University, 1948-1950. In 1952 he completed mater—Marshall College—in 1959.

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