NEWS AND NOTES

ACTIVITIES EVERETT CATALDO, RICHARD JOHNSON, LY- LOEVY, Goucher College, staff advisor to Com- MAN KELLSTEDT, LESTER MILBRATH and ALBERT mittee on Legislative Branch; HUGH NICHOLS, SOMIT, SUNY at Buffalo, have received a staff advisor to Committee on Local Govern- $30,000 research grant from the Office of Eco- ment; DAVID G. PHILLIPS, U.S. Office of Edu- nomic Opportunity. cation, acting director of research and staff advisor to Committee on Style, Drafting and HARRY ECKSTEIN, ANATOL EAPOPORT, BRUCE Arrangements; and RICHARD SMOLKA, Ameri- RUSSETT and WILLIAM RIKER delivered the can University, staff advisor to Committee on Wrather lectures at the University of Texas Suffrage and Elections. during February, 1968. A. M. ABBASS, Southern University ROBERT HOLT, University of Minnesota, has received a grant from the Agricultural Devel- at Carbondale, is currently on leave and is opment Council which will be used to support visiting the Middle East. one aspect of a research project designed by ORVILLE ALEXANDER, Southern Illinois Uni- him and JOHN TURNER, also of the University versity at Carbonale, served as director of the of Minnesota. 1967 Oxford summer seminar for the Univer- sity of Oxford. HAROLD K. JACOBSON and ERIC STEIN, Uni- versity of Michigan and University of Michi- SAMUEL H. BARNES, University of Michigan, gan Law School respectively, were awarded is spending the current academic year at the the University of Michigan Press Prize for University of as a Fulbright lecturer. 1967 for their book, Diplomats, Scientists and Politicians. VICTOR BASIUK, Case Institute of Technol- ogy, spent the summer of 1967 in Washington DAVID C. SCHWARTZ, University of Pennsyl- as a consultant to the White House staff, ad- vania, chaired the Foreign Policy Research In- vising on the formulation of marine programs stitute Conferences on Revolution Studies, Oc- and policies as an instrument of American for- tober 20-21, 1967 and February 9-10, 1968. eign policy. Other participants included JAMES C. DAVIES, FRED FREY, IVO FEIRABEND, TED GURR, FELIKS WENDELL BEDICHEK, Lamar State College of GROSS, WILLIAM R. KINTER, ROBERT STRAUSZ- Technology, served as a consultant to the HUPE and RAYMOND TANTER. Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations during the past summer. Political scientists elected as delegates to the Maryland Constitutional Convention were: DONALD G. BISHOP, Syracuse University, FRANKLIN BURDETTE, University of Maryland; spent a year's leave of absence teaching at ROYCE HANSON, American University; HOW- Tunghai University in Taiwan and lecturing ARD PENNIMAN, Georgetown University; and at a number of universities in the Far East. CLINTON I. WINSLOW, Goucher College. PENNI- MAN was chairman of the Committee on Style, HILLMAN M. BISHOP, City College, CUNY, Drafting and Arrangements. was on sabbatical leave during the 1967 fall term. Political Scientists serving on the staff of RUFUS P. BROWNING, Michigan State Uni- the Maryland Constitutional Convention were: versity, received an American Council of NEAL FOLSE, administrative assistant to Com- Learned Societies post-doctoral grant, sup- mittee on Suffrage and Elections; ROBERT ported by International Business Machines, for

Spring 1968 67 research on "Quality of collective decisions in Ivo K. and ROSALIND FEIERABEND, San Diego political bargaining." State College, have received a research grant from the National Science Foundation. BEN G. BURNETT, Whittier College, is on sabbatical leave during the second semester, STANLEY FEINGOLD, City College, CUNY, is 1967-68. on leave during the current academic year and is doing research in Japan. SOON SUNG CHO, University of. Nebraska, will do research in the Far East during the JAMES C. FINLAY, S. J., Fordham Univer- summer of 1968. He has a research grant from sity, is on sabbatical leave during the current the Far Eastern and Russian Institute of the academic year. He is a postdoctoral research University of Washington. fellow at Yale University. J. LEIPER FREEMAN, Vanderbilt University, SAMUEL I. CLARK, Western Michigan Uni- conducted two seminars at the U.S. Depart- versity, spent the 1967 summer in India. ment of Agriculture Training Center, Front IRVING 0. DAWSON, Lamar State College of Royal, Virginia, in October. Technology, has been awarded a research WILLIAM R. GABLE, Arizona State Univer- grant by The Equal Employment Opportunities sity, delivered a series of lectures at the Commission. National Chengchi University in Taiwan on the occasion of its 40th anniversary in May, RAYMOND H. DAWSON, University of North Carolina, received a Danforth Foundation na- 1967. tional award for excellence in teaching. WILLIAM GOODMAN, Southern Illinois Uni- versity, Edwardsville, is on leave during 1967- JOHN M. DEGROVE, Florida Atlantic 68. University, has been appointed by President Johnson to the National Commission on Urban CHARLES GOODSELL conducted research in Problems. The Commission will report to the Peru during the summer of 1967 under a grant President and Congress in 1968. from the SSRC.

FRANCIS C. DELUCIA, part-time lecturer in MORTON GORDEN, University of Pennsylva- Urban Affairs at American University, was nia and staff member of the Foreign Policy recently appointed Chief of the newly establ- Institute, is currently holding a series of fac- ished Small Communities Branch in the ulty seminars in the development of theory Department of Housing and with computer techniques. Urban Development. WILLIAM B. GWYN, Tulane University, is in ALEX N. DRAGNICH, Vanderbilt University, England during 1967-68 as head of Tulane- presented the opening lecture in Newberry Newcomb Junior Year Abroad Program. College's lecture series on the role of the U.S. BERTIL HANSON, Oklahoma State University, in world affairs. returned to his post in the fall of 1967 after a JEAN M. DRISCOLL, North Park College, is year at Oslo University in Norway. on sabbatical leave during 1967-68 and is WILLIAM HARDENBERGH, Southern Illinois working with the urban studies program at University, Carbondale, was chief of party for . a delegation for exploration of an academic association with the University of Bangalore, Ivo D. DUCHACEK, City College, CUNY, was India, last summer. on leave fall term. SAMUEL HENDEL, City College, CUNY, has JOSEPH DUNNER has returned to Yeshiva been elected chairman of the Academic Free- University from the University of Cologne, dom Committee and a member of the board of Germany, where he was visiting professor dur- directors of the American Civil Liberties Un- ing the summer of 1967. He also headed a re- search team in Israel during the summer. C. LEONARD HOAG, Middlebury College, is on SAMUEL J. ELDERSVELD, University of Michi- sabbatical leave during 1967-69. He will be gan, has been appointed to the Special conducting research and working as associate Commission on the Social Sciences, newly military historian in the Office of the Chief of created by the National Science Foundation. Military History in Washington, D.C.

68 P.S. ALLAN W. HORTON has been appointed exec- EARL LATHAM, Amherst College, is the reci- utive director of the American University pient of the first literary prize to be awarded Field Staff Inc. He will assume his duties on by the Harry S. Truman Institute. The $1,000 October 1,1968. David Demarest Lloyd prize was awarded to Professor Latham for his book The Communist GARY HOSKIN, SUNY at Buffalo, conducted Controversy in Washington, From the New research in Venezuela in October, 1967. Deal to McCarthy.

ROBERT J. HXJCKSHORN, Florida Atlantic ARPAD J. VON LAZAR, The Fletcher School of University, has been appointed to the Republi- Law and Diplomacy, has received a partial can Coordinating Committee's Task Force on grant from the American Philosophical Society Federal State and Local Relations. to complete research projects in Argentina and Chile. KAREL HULICKA, SUNY at Buffalo, con- ducted research in the U.S.S.R., Central East- DONALD B. LEIFFER, San Diego State Col- ern Europe and the Balkans from July 1967 to lege, has a leave of absence and is serving in January 1968. Kuala Lumpur on a Ford Foundation project administered by the University of Pittsburgh. JACK ISAKOFF, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, was chairman of the Illinois Com- WERNER LEVI, University of Hawaii, served mission on State Government (Executive as senior specialist at the East West Center Branch) which submitted its report in 1967. during the spring and summer terms, 1967. HERBERT MAZA, director of the Institute for ROBERT S. JORDAN has returned to George Washington University after a two years' American Universities, has been elected presi- leave of absence as Littauer visiting professor, dent of the Association of Overseas Educators. head of the department and dean of the Fac- JAMES L. MCCAMY, University of Wisconsin, ulty of Economic and Social Studies, Fourah served as a Knapp University Scholar with Bay College, University of Sierra Leone. the University of Wisconsin Center System during the 1967 fall term. CONRAD JOYNER, University of Arizona, re- ceived the E. Harris Harbison Prize of $3,000 DONALD J. MCWHERTER, SUNY at Brock- for distinguished teaching from the Danforth port, has returned to full-time teaching after Foundation. He was also elected to the Tucson two years as assistant to the associate dean. City Council in November, 1967. EDWARD W. MILL, Occidental College, spent VIRGINIA KEMP, SUNY at Geneseo, will be parts of August and September, 1967, in Viet- on leave the spring semester, 1968-69, to com- nam observing the national elections there. plete a study of Post World War II Congres- sional Policy Toward China. RICHARD M. MILLS, Fordham University, spent the past summer in Russia on the Citi- JOHN W. KINGDON, The University of Mich- zen Exchange Program. igan, will be on leave during the calendar year JAMES W. MORLEY, Columbia University, is 1969 in Washington, D.C. under a SSRC on leave for two years to serve in the Ameri- grant. can Embassy in Japan.

GEORGE KLEIN, Western Michigan Univer- TERRY NARDIN, SUNY at Buffalo, presented sity, spent the 1967 summer in Yugoslavia. a paper at the Fifth North American Peace Research Conference at Harvard University in STANLEY KOCHANEK, Pennsylvania State November. University, is in India during the 1967-68 aca- demic year. M. V. NAIDU, Brandon University has re- ceived an SSRC (Canada) grant. LIONEL H. LAING, University of Michigan, gave a seminar in March, 1967, at the Univer- JOSEPH L. NOGEE, University of Houston, at- sity of Victoria, British Columbia. tended a conference on Computers and International Relations at Oak Ridge, Tennes- MANFRED LANDECKER has returned to South- see from October 30 to November 10. The ern Illinois University, Carbondale, after conference was sponsored by the Carnegie En- spending a year at the Deutsche Gesellschraft dowment for International Peace and the fur Auswartige Politik in , Germany. Atomic Energy Commission.

Spring 1968 69 JOHN K. C. OH, Marquette University, spent PETER P. REMEC has returned to Fordham the summer of 1967 in Japan and Korea on re- University from a sabbatical year on the Ful- search grants from the University and the bright exchange program at the University of Relm Foundation. Rajasthan, Jaipur, India. THOMAS J. O'LEARY, Williams College, is on JAMES M. RHODES, Marquette University, re- leave during the 1967-68 academic year and is turned to teaching in February, 1967 after re- serving as visiting professor in the Institute search leave in Germany. of Administration at the University of Chile. MARIAN RIDEWAY, Southern Illinois Univer- A. F. K. ORGANSKI, University of Michi- sity, Carbondale, is conducting research while gan, attended the I.P.S.A. meeting in Brussels on sabbatical leave. and participated in a panel. BENJAMIN RIVLIN, Brooklyn College, NORMAN D. PALMER, University of Pennsyl- CUNY, has been appointed a member of the vania, served as chairman of the National Research Liaison Committee of the African Screening Committee to recommend Fulbright Studies Association; he has also been ap- awards under the auspices of the Institute of pointed to the Board of Trustees of the Insti- International Education. tute for Mediterranean Affairs. RICHARD L. PARK, University of Michigan, is JAMES ROACH, University of Texas, has been on the civilian faculty of the National War elected vice-chairman of the Board of Foreign College during 1968-69. Scholarships and appointed to a three-year term on the U.S. National Commission for HOWARD PENNIMAN, Georgetown Univer- UNESCO. sity, served as a consultant to the presidential observers on the 1967 elections. J. WILLIAM ROBINSON, Whittier College, is on sabbatical leave during the academic year ROBERT L. PFALTZGRAFF, JR., University of 1967-68. Pennsylvania, participated in the conference WILLIAM C. ROGERS, director of World Af- on Computers and International Relations at fairs Center, University of Minnesota, was Oak Ridge, Tennessee, October 30-November elected to the following positions in the fall of 1967. 1967: secretary-treasurer, Society for Citizen LARRY L. PIPPIN, Elbert Covell College, Education in World Affairs; secretary, Inter- spent the 1967 summer doing research in Guat- national Affairs Section of the Adult Educa- emala under a grant from the University of tion Association of the U.S.A.; chairman, the Pacific. World Affairs Section, National University Extension Association; and vice-president, In- RONALD PLATT, Lamar State College of ternational Education Association. Technology, has been elected chairman of the Texas Liberal Democrats. ALVIN Z. RUBINSTEIN, University of Penn- sylvania, delivered a paper at the 31st Ameri- JOHN DUNCAN POWELL, Center for can Assembly, Arden House, Columbia Uni- International Affairs, Harvard University, has versity in April 1967; also was awarded a been appointed director of research of the grant-in-aid by the American Philosophical So- Center for Rural Development, Cambridge, ciety. Massachusetts. HAROLD SARE, Oklahoma State University, QUESTIN L. QUADE, Marquette University, spent the 1967 fall term in India. attended the seventh conference on Christian approaches to defense and disarmament at RICHARD S. SAUL, Boston University, will be Friedewald Castle, Bonn, Germany, in Septem- on a teaching assignment at Boston Universi- ber. ty's Graduate Overseas Program at Brussels, Berlin and Heidelberg, January 1968-June MICHAEL D. REAGAN, University of Califor- 1969. nia, Riverside, has been awarded a SSRC fel- lowship and will be on leave during 1967-68. ROBERT A. SCALAPINO, University of Califor- nia, Berkeley, has been appointed by the Presi- CHARLES M. REHMUS, University of dent to the U.S. Advisory Commission on In- Michigan, presented a paper at the First ternational Educational and Cultural Affairs. World Congress of the International Indus- trial Relations Association in Geneva in Sep- ROBERT A. SCHOENBERGER, University of tember, 1967. Michigan, has received a Rackham Faculty re-

70 P.S. search fellowship for spring and summer for Advanced Study of the Brookings Institu- terms, 1968. tion. PAUL SEABURY, University of California, CARL R. VANN is on leave from Oakland Berkeley, has been appointed by the President University and is serving as Senior Research to the Board of Foreign Scholarships. Scholar, Social Development Division, United Nations, 1967-68. FREDERICK SHAW, Baruch School, City Col- lege, CUNY, has been commissioned by the JACK E. VINCENT, Florida Atlantic Univer- National Municipal League to write a history sity, has been awarded a research grant. of proportional representation in American cities. JOHN P. VLOYANTE, Colorado State Univer- sity, is on leave of absence during 1967-68. His JOSEF SILVERSTEIN, Rutgers-The State Uni- research in Europe was funded by a grant versity, is a Fulbright lecturer at the from the Graduate School of International University of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur, during Studies of the University of Denver. the present academic year. ROBERT WARD, University of Michigan, will HERBERT A. SIMON, Carnegie-Mellon Univer- be at the Center for Advanced Study in the sity, has been appointed to the President's Sci- Behavioral Sciences, Stanford, July 1968 to ence Advisory Committee for a 4-year term. July 1969. He also has been appointed by the President for a six-year term to the National J. DAVID SINGER, University of Michigan, is Council on the Humanities, which advises the spending the 1967-68 year in Geneva at the National Endowment for the Humanities. Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, and teaching at the Graduate Institute of In- STEPHEN L. WASBY, Southern Illinois Uni- ternational Studies. versity, was appointed to the Illinois Obscenity Laws Study Commission. ROBERT E. SOCAS, Fordham University, was a 1967 summer lecturer at the Pentagon. EDWARD J. WILLIAMS, Marquette University, received a university research grant for work CLARENCE N. STONE, Emory University, has in Chile and Venezuela during the 1967 sum- returned from Washington, D.C., where he spent a year as an A.P.S.A. congressional fel- mer. low. J. K. ZAWODNY, University of Pennsylvania had a 1967 summer grant from the American FRANK TACHAU, Rutgers-The State Univer- sity, directed an NDEA Institute at the Uni- Council of Learned Societies and the SSRC. He will spend the spring term, 1968, at the versity during the 1967 summer. Harvard Center for International Studies and NORMAN C. THOMAS, University of Michi- has been invited to become a senior member gan, is spending the current academic year in associate of St. Antony's College, Oxford Uni- Washington as a guest scholar at the Center versity in 1968-69.

STAFF CHANGES

NEW APPOINTMENTS STEPHEN ARIANAS, instructor, Rutgers-The State University. PHILLIP ABBOTT, instructor, Rutgers-The State University. MICHAEL BAER, assistant professor, Univer- sity of Kentucky. HAYWARD R. ALKER, JR., professor, M.I.T.; „ . „ JoHN BAKER as formerly of Yale University. T, ' ^tant professor, Southern Illinois University.

WILLIAM ANDERSON, instructor, Northern II- JAMES BARR0SJ assistant profeSsor, Barnard hnois University. ColIege> Columbia University. JAMES H. ANDREWS, instructor, Ohio State JAMES D. BELL, JR., instructor, Vanderbilt University. University.

RONALD E. ANHORN, instructor, Carthage G. WILLIAM BENZ, assistant professor, Lake College. Forest College; formerly of Trinity College.

Spring 1968 71 MARSHALL BEEMAN, assistant professor, City LYLE S. DOWNING, assistant professor, Loui- College, CUNY. siana State University at Baton Rouge; for- merly of Emory University. WILLIAM BIGLOW, instructor, University of North Carolina. W. RAYMOND DUNCAN, associate professor, PETER GIDON BOCK, assistant professor, SUNY at Brockport; formerly of Boston Uni- Brooklyn College, CUNY; formerly staff edi- versity. tor for Political Science, International STEPHEN L. ELKIN, assistant professor, Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences. University of Pennsylvania. J. CUDD BROWN, professor, Pennsylvania JOHN T. ELLIFF, assistant professor, Bar- State University; formerly of AID and Sono- nard College, Columbia University. ma State College. JOSEPH ELLIOTT, STEVEN R. BROWN, assistant professor, Kent J. assistant professor, State University. Texas A & I University; formerly of North- western State College of Louisiana. DOYLE W. BUCKWALTER, assistant professor, Brigham Young University. DONALD E. EPSTEIN, assistant professor, University of Waterloo. RONALD BRUNNER, assistant professor, Uni- versity of Michigan. DAVID H. EVERSON, instructor, Southern Illi- nois University. JAMES D. L. BYRNES, assistant professor, Emory University. RICHARD M. FONTERA, associate professor, University of Wisconsin, Green Bay. ROBERT E. CALVERT, instructor, DePauw University; formerly of P.A.U.W. JOSEPH F. FREEMAN, III, instructor, Emory University. ERIC H. CARLSON, instructor, University of Nebraska. WOLF D. FUHRIG, associate professor, MacMurray College; formerly of Michigan YONG-WHA CHAI, instructor, Tulane Univer- State University. sity. JOHN R. GARGAN, assistant professor, Kent HUNG-TI CHU, professor, Texas Technologi- State University. cal College. WILLIAM H. GERLACH, assistant professor, INIS CLAUDE, professor, University of Columbus College; formerly of Eastern Ken- Virginia (Center for Advanced Studies) ; for- tucky University. merly of University of Virginia. ROBERT S. GETZ, associate professor, SUNY JOSEPH I. COFPEY, professor, Graduate at Brockport; formerly of Kent State Univer- School of Public and International Affairs, sity. University of Pittsburgh; formerly of the of- fice of National Security Studies at Bendix JAMES GIFFORD, instructor, SUNY at Stony Aerospace Systems Division. Brook. HARRIS SAUL COHEN, lecturer, Brooklyn Col- PHILIP S. GILLETTE, instructor, Skidmore lege, CUNY. College. GITELMAN, RICHARD DALE, assistant professor, Southern Zvi assistant professor, the Uni- Illinois University. versity of Michigan. ANDREW GLASSBERG, instructor, SUNY at HENRY DELFINER, assistant professor, Uni- versity of Wisconsin, Kenosha. Stony Brook. M. LAL GOEL, instructor, Niagara Univer- WILLIAM M. DICKSON, associate professor, sity. Western Washington State College; formerly of Commission of Economic Development of VERNON M. GOETCHEUS, assistant professor, Alaska. Columbia University. KATHRYN B. DOHERTY, lecturer, Rutgers- ROGER GOLDSTEIN, assistant professor, South- The State University. ampton College, Long Island University.

72 P.S. LELAND M. GOODRICH, James T. Shotwell C. RICHARD HOFSTETTER, assistant professor, professor of international relations, Columbia Ohio State University. University. DONALD R. HOLT, instructor, Western Michi- CHARLES T. GOODSELL, associate professor, gan University. Southern Illinois University. JACK W. HOPKINS, assistant professor, Emo- JAMES L. GRANT, assistant professor, SUNY ry University; formerly of Georgia State Col- at Brockport; formerly of University of Chi- lege. cago. LARRY G. HUFFORD, instructor, Texas A & I FOREST GRIEVES, assistant professor, West- University. ern Illinois University; formerly of University of Arizona. WILLIAM H. HUNT, assistant professor, Vir- ginia Polytechnic Institute; formerly of Uni- RODGER S. GUNN, assistant professor, versity of Kentucky. Eastern Kentucky University. MICHAEL HUR, assistant professor, Adams JANE GURGANUS, assistant professor, East- State College. ern Kentucky University. CHARLES E. JACOB, associate professor, Rut- MAUNG MAUNG GYI, assistant professor, gers-The State University; formerly of Vassar Bates College. College. GERALD L. HALLWOKTH, assistant professor, MERRILL A. JACOBS, instructor, Oklahoma Illinois State University. State University. JANE HAMMOND, instructor, Western Illinois DANIEL J. JURKOVIC, assistant professor, University; formerly of Indiana University. Carthage College. ROBERT W. HANSEN, assistant professor, JOEL JUTKOWITZ, assistant professor, San University of Waterloo. Diego State College. WILLIAM HARADER, instructor, Northern Illi- FREDERICK W. KEITHLEY, instructor, Kent nois University. State University. JOHN HARBESON, assistant professor, Uni- CATHERINE MCARDLE KELLEHER, assistant versity of Wisconsin, Racine. professor and research associate, Barnard Col- LEROY F. HARLOW, associate professor, lege, Columbia University. Brigham Young University. HENRY KENNEDY, instructor, Oakland Uni- FREDERICK H. HARRIS, JR., associate profes- versity. sor, Virginia Polytechnic Institute; formerly J. GARY KEPL, instructor, Western Washing- of Georgia State College. ton State College; formerly of University of GLENN B. HAVEL, instructor, Lamar State California at Santa Barbara. College of Technology. JOHN E. KERSELL, associate professor, Uni- versity of Waterloo;. formerly of McMaster CLAUDE E. HAWLEY, professor, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, City University of University. New York. JAMES H. KLEIN, assistant professor, SUNY Louis D. HAYES, assistant professor, Uni- at Brockport; formerly of Princeton Universi- versity of Montana; formerly of the Univer- ty. sity of Wisconsin, Milwaukee. H. R. KOLLAI, associate professor, University JAMES F. HERNDON, associate professor, of Missouri, St. Louis. Virginia Polytechnic Institute; formerly of IRMA LANG, assistant professor, University University of North Dakota. of Mississippi. ALAN HERSHFIELD, assistant professor, Uni- WILLIAM E. LEVANTROSSER, associate profes- versity of Kentucky. sor, Hofstra University; formerly of Henry KENNETH HOFFMAN, associate professor, Ford Community College. Morehead State University; formerly of Ad- HARLAN LEWIN, assistant professor, San rian College. Diego State College.

Spring 1968 73 PAUL LEWIS, assistant professor, Tulane WALDO B. MEAD, assistant professor, Illinois University; formerly of Louisiana State Uni- State University. versity. THEODORE W. MECKSTROTH, instructor, Ohio CHARLES H. LONGLEY, assistant professor, State University. Bucknell University. BERNARD MENNIS, assistant professor, Uni- THOMAS MACKIE, instructor, Allegheny Col- versity of Pennsylvania. lege. Louis S. MEYER, associate professor, Edin- ALVIN MAGID, assistant professor, SUNY at boro State College; formerly of University of Albany; formerly of University of Kentucky. Wyoming.

C. PETER MAGRATH, Dean of the College of N. DAVID MILDER, instructor, Ohio State Arts and Sciences and professor of political University. science, University of Nebraska, June, 1968; formerly of Brown University. MICHAEL M. MILENKOVITCH, assistant pro- fessor, Lehman College, CUNY; formerly of VINCENT L. MARANDO, assistant professor, Hunter College, CUNY. University of Arizona; formerly of Michigan State University. ROY E. MILLER, instructor, Southern Illinois University. GERALD MARYANOV, associate professor, Northern Illinois University; formerly of Uni- RONALD C. MOE, assistant professor, San versity of Iowa. Diego State College. ALPHEUS THOMAS MASON, Henry L. and DONALD R. MORRIS, instructor, Vanderbilt Grace Doherty professor, University of Vir- University. ginia ; formerly of Princeton University. WILLIAM H. MOSELEY, lecturer, Western MYRON MAST, assistant professor, Lamar Washington State College; formerly of Shore- State College of Technology. line Community College.

HARRY G. MATTHEWS, associate professor, WILLIAM D. MULLER, assistant professor, University of Chattanooga; formerly of SUNY at Fredonia; formerly of Texas Techno- Northern Arizona University. logical College. DOROTHY MCBRIDE, E. interim assistant, SANJEEVA NAYAK, assistant professor, South- Florida Atlantic University. ampton College, Long Island University. STEVEN MCCARL, assistant professor, Uni- BETTY A. NESVOLD, assistant professor, San versity of Denver. Diego State College. JOSEPH D. MCGOLDRICK, professor, Baruch MAURINE B. NEUBERGER, adjunct professor, School, City College, CUNY; formerly of Boston University. Queens College. PETER NIXDORFP, assistant professor, Uni- DANIEL G. MCHARGTJE, professor, Southern Illinois University; formerly of University of versity of Kentucky. Michigan and Ford Foundation. JOHN C. H. OH, associate professor, CARROLL MCKIBBON, assistant professor, Wisconsin State University, Whitewater; for- University of Nebraska. merly of University of Wisconsin, Green Bay. LELAN MCLEMORE, instructor, Lamar State JOHN M. ORBELL, assistant professor, Uni- College of Technology. versity of Oregon; formerly of Ohio State University. BARCLAY D. MCMILLEN, instructor, Kent State University. MICHAEL ORMOND, assistant professor, Cali- fornia State College at Long Beach. ROBERT J. MCSHEA, assistant professor, Bos- ton University. MARGARET OSLUND, professor, John Jay Col- lege of Criminal Justice, CUNY. WILSON CAREY MCWILLIAMS, assistant pro- fessor, Brooklyn College, CUNY; formerly of JAMES OZINGA, instructor, Oakland Univer- Oberlin College. sity.

74. P.S. JOANN P. PAINE, assistant professor, THOMAS 0. SCHLESINGER, assistant profes- Southern Illinois University. sor, SUNY at Fredonia.

DAVID L. PALETZ, assistant professor, Duke GLENN R. SCHRAM, assistant profe&sor, University. Marquette University.

DAVID F. PAULSEN, associate professor, BARRY M. SCHUTZ, assistant lecturer, Uni- Louisiana State University at Baton Rouge; versity of Lancaster. formerly of University of Arizona. Louis M. SEAGULL, assistant professor, Uni- ROBERT S. PECKHAM, assistant professor, versity of Pennsylvania. Alfred University; formerly of Maxwell School, Syracuse University. ROBERT SEDDIG, assistant professor, Alle- gheny College. JOHN A. PEELER, assistant professor, Buck- nell University. RONALD C. SEMONE, associate director, Legal, Legislative and Civil Rights Training, General ELLIS PERLMANN, assistant professor, Flint Management Training Center, U.S. Civil Serv- College, University of Michigan. ice Commission.

JAMES PETRAS, assistant professor, Pennsyl- AHMED SHEIKH, assistant professor, Penn- vania State University. sylvania State University.

LARRY L. PIPPIN, associate professor, Elbert W. PHILLIPS SHIVELY, assistant professor, Covell College, University of the Pacific. University of Oregon. ROBERT PUTNAM, assistant professor, Uni- SONDRA SILVERMAN, assistant professor, versity of Michigan. Brooklyn College, CUNY; formerly of Austra- KAREN EIDE RAWLING, assistant professor, lia National University. University of Waterloo. DALJIT SINGH, assistant professor, Adams CHARLES M. REDENIUS, instructor, Western State College. Michigan University. GILES WAYLAND SMITH, assistant professor, ALAN REED, assistant professor, University Allegheny College. of Nebraska. JOE SPRNGER, instructor, Southampton Col- HERBERT REID, assistant professor, Universi- lege, Long Island University. ty of Kentucky. CHRISTIAN SOE, assistant professor, Califor- EDWARD F. RENWICK, assistant professor, nia State College, Long Beach. Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge; for- merly of University of Southwestern Loui- FRANCIS STARNER, associate professor, Uni- siana. versity of North Carolina. HOWARD M. RIEGER, assistant professor, LELAND STAUBER, assistant professor, SUNY at Geneseo. Southern Illinois University.

RANDALL B. RIPLEY, associate professor, JAMES A. STEGENGA, associate professor, Ohio State University. Purdue University; formerly of Ohio State University. RIORDAN ROETT, assistant professor, Vander- bilt University. K. LARRY STORRS, instructor, Vassar College.

MARVIN L. ROGERS, lecturer, Rutgers-The EDWARD S. T. SU, associate professor, Texas State University. A & I University; formerly of Lake Superior State College. PETER ROMAN, instructor, Northern Illinois University. JAMES SUNDBERG, assistant professor, West- ern Illinois University; formerly of University CHARLES S. ROOKS, assistant professor, Lake of California, Berkeley. Forest College; formerly of Duke University. DONALD G. TACHERON, senior specialist and STEPHEN L. ROZMAN, instructor, University chief of government and general research divi- of Nebraska. sion, Legislative Reference Service, Library of

Spring 1968 75 Congress; formerly Associate Director of VISITING AND TEMPORARY American Political Science Association. APPOINTMENTS

RAYMOND TANTER, associate professor, Uni- WILLIAM BOYER, Kansas State University; versity of Michigan; formerly deputy director Fulbright professor, Andhra University, India. of Behavioral Sciences at the Pentagon. WILLARD L. BEAULAC, retired Foreign Serv- RICHARD W. TAYLOR, professor, Kent State ice career officer; diplomat-in-residence, South- University. ern Illinois University, Carbondale. PETER BECHTOLD, assistant professor, Uni- WILLIAM TUOHY, assistant professor, Uni- versity of Oregon. versity of California, Davis. WALLACE H. BEST, professor, San Diego JACK VANDERSLIK, assistant professor, State College. Southern Illinois University. THOMAS H. BROSE, Simon Fraser Univer- RICHARD VEATCH, assistant professor, Uni- sity; lecturer, University of Liverpool. versity of Winnipeg. ORLANDO M. CARVAHLO, Universidad Federal JOEL G. VERNER, assistant professor, Illinois de Minas Gerais, Brazil; professor, Vanderbilt State University. University.

EUGENE V. WALTER, professor, Boston GEORGE E. G. CATLIN, professor, Michigan University. State University. SOON SUNG CHO, University of Nebraska; GARY L. WAMSLEY, assistant professor, Van- distinguished foreign lecturer, University of derbilt University. Oregon, winter and spring terms, 1968.

JOHN WATERBURY, assistant professor, Uni- JAMESON W. DOIG, associate professor, John versity of Michigan. Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY.

CONRAD WEILER, instructor, Northern Illi- ROBERT E. DOWSE, lecturer in Politics, Uni- nois University. versity of Exeter; professor SUNY at Geneseo, 1968-69. MICHAEL A. WEINSTEIN, assistant professor, Virginia Polytechnic Institute. L. G. E. EDMONDSON, University of Water- loo; professor, Makerere University College, MARILYN W. WHISLER, SUNY at Brockport; Uganda. formerly of University of Wisconsin, Madison. HENRY W. EHRMANN, Dartmouth College; professor, Free University of Berlin, spring ALLEN WILCOX, instructor, University of and summer terms 1967. Nevada. HERBERT EMMERICH, professor, University HOWARD E. WOLPE, assistant professor, of California, Berkeley, spring quarter 1968. Western Michigan University. EERNEST J. GOODMAN, State University Col- SHERMAN WYMAN, assistant professor, Uni- lege, Oneonta, N.Y.; associate professor, Ju- versity of Denver. lius Maximilians University, Wuerzburg, Ger- many, winter term, 1968. ALAN J. WYNER, instructor, Ohio State Uni- versity. SEBASTIAN DE GRAZIA, professor, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY. DAVID W. ZIEGLER, instructor, Western F. H. GUILD, professor and senior consultant Washington State College; formerly of Har- for Public Affairs Research Bureau, Southern vard University. Illinois University, Carbondale. ISRAEL S. ZIONY, lecturer, Baruch School, THOMAS HARPER, instructor, Tulane Univer- City College, CUNY. sity. LAWRENCE ZIRING, associate professor, MARTIN 0. HEISLER, University of Mary- Western Michigan University. land ; professor, University of Kentucky.

76 P.S. KAREL HULICKA, SUNY at Buffalo; profes- ALBERT L. STURM, Florida State University; sor, Institute D'Etudes Americains Paris, professor, University of Nebraska, second spring term, 1968. semester, 1967-68. HENRY S. KARIEL, University of Hawaii; DAE-SOOK SUH, Univeristy of Houston; as- professor, University of California, Santa sociate professor, University of Texas, fall Cruz, winter and spring terms, 1968. term, 1967. GENERAL SAID UDDIN KHAN, former com- E. H. VALSANJ assistant professor, American mander of U.N. forces in Indonesia; lecturer, University in Cairo, 1967-June, 1969. Claremont Graduate School. QUINCY WRIGHT, professor, University of LEE KOPPELMAN, executive director of Nas- Michigan, winter term, 1968. sau-Suffolk Regional Planning Board; lec- turer, SUNY at Stony Brook. ARNOLD S. ZANDER, lecturer, University of Wisconsin, Green Bay and Manitowoc. DAVID LEVITAN, associate professor, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY. ADMINISTRATIVE APPOINTMENTS LESTER B. MASON, Bloomfield College; pro- fessor, Illinois State University. LYNN F. ANDERSON: acting director, Insti- tute of Public Affairs, University of Texas. HERBERT MAZA, Institute for American Uni- versities; dean, City College, CUNY, summer WILLIAM G. ANDREWS: professor and term, 1967. chairman, SUNY at Brockport; formerly of Tufts University. R. JUDSON MITCHELL, University of Chatta- nooga; assistant professor, Emory University. ALLEN B. BALLARD: assistant dean, College of Arts and Sciences, City College, CUNY. FRANCIS W. O'BRIEN, University of Lausanne; professor, Emory University. ROBERT H. BIRKBY: associate dean, College of Arts and Sciences, Vanderbilt University. WALTER J. OLESZEK, assistant professor, Col- gate University. C. PAUL BRADLEY: chairman, University of Michigan, Flint College. STEFANO PASSIGLI, University of Padua, Ita- ly; associate professor, University of Michi- PHILIP M. BURGESS: director, Behavioral gan. Sciences Laboratory, the Ohio State Univer- sity. PERTTI PESONEN, professor of political science and dean of faculty, University of REV. FRANCIS CANAVAN, S.J.: acting chair- Tampere, Finland. man, Fordham University. MARY JEAN PEW, Immaculate Heart College, DONALD M. CASTLEBERRY, dean of Graduate Los Angeles; associate professor, University Studies, San Francisco State College. of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa. FRANK C. DARLING: professor and head, De Pauw University; formerly of the University RICHARD J. RICHARDSON, Western Michigan of Colorado. University; University of Hawaii, 1967-68. HERBERT A. DEANE: acting dean, Graduate RIKI ROBBINS ROSENBERG, Harvard Univer- Faculties, Columbia University. sity; professor, National Taiwan University, 1967-68. GEORGE D. EASTMAN: professor and director, Institute of Government Research and Service, GIACOMO A. SANI, adjunct associate profes- Kent State University. sor, Ohio State University, 1967-69. SCOTT E. EDWARDS: acting chairman, Cali- ARCHIBALD W. SINGHAM, associate profes- fornia State College, Hayward. sor, University of Michigan. JOHN W. ELLSWORTH: chairman, Southern RICHARD F. STAAR, Emory University; Illinois University, Edwardsville. professor, National War College, 1967-68. ROBERT S. FRIEDMAN: chairman, Pennsylva- WILLIAM STESLICKE, associate professor, Co- nia State University; formerly of the Univer- lumbia University, 1967-69. sity of Michigan.

Spring 1968 77 WILLIAM R. GABLE: professor and director RAYMOND J. PHILLIPS, JR.: head, Social Sci- of the Institute of Public Administration, Ari- ence Department, Agriculture and Technical zona State University; formerly of the College, Delphi, N.Y. University of Michigan. ROLLIN B. POSEY: dean, School of Public WILLIAM C. GIBBONS: chairman, Texas A & Administration, University of Wisconsin, M; formerly Department of State. Green Bay; formerly of New College, Sara- sota, Florida. HUBERT S. GIBBS: director, Overseas Pro- gram, Boston University. FRANCIS M. RICH, JR.: associate professor and chairman, Appalachian State University; DONALD R. HALL: research specialist, Insti- formerly of the University of Georgia. tute of Government Research, University of Arizona. CHARLES SHELDON, associate professor and chairman, Southampton College of Long Island CHARLES V. HAMILTON: professor and University. chairman, Roosevelt University; formerly of Lincoln University. BALJIT SINGH: assistant dean of the College of Social Science, Michigan State University. DOUGLAS I. HODGKIN: acting chairman, Bates College. GLENN H. SNYDER: chairman of the Center for International Security and Conflict Stud- DAVID KENNEY: director of the Public Af- ies, SUNY at Buffalo. fairs Research Bureau, Southern Illinois Uni- versity. HIRAM S. STOUT: dean, School of Public and International Affairs, George Washington Uni- FRANK L. KLINGBERG, director of Graduate versity. Studies in Government, Southern Illinois Uni- versity, Carbondale. DAVID B. TRUMAN: vice-president and provost, Columbia University. JAMES R. KLONOSKI: head, University of Oregon. DONALD S. VAUGHAN: professor and direc- tor, Bureau of Governmental Research, Uni- SOL LEBOVITZ: chairman, Social Sciences, versity of Mississippi. Bryant College. MAMERTO VENTURA: chairman, University H. R. MAHOOD: acting chairman, Memphis of the Philippines. State University. CLAUDE E. WELCH: dean of University Col- GERARD J. MANGONE : vice president for Aca- lege, SUNY at Buffalo. demic Affairs and provost, Temple University; formerly of Maxwell School, Syracuse Univer- sity. PROMOTIONS (with new rank) ROBERT J. MCNEILL: professor and director, CHARLES F. ANDRAIN, San Diego State Graduate Administration Program, Capitol College: associate professor. Campus, Pennsylvania State University; for- IVAN AVAKUMOVIC, University of British Co- merly of Wayne State University. lumbia: professor. M. V. NAIDU: associate professor and DONALD G. BAKER, Southampton College, chairman, Brandon University, Manitoba, Can- Long Island University: professor. ada. SAMUEL H. BARNES, University of Michi- ALLAN D. NELSON: associate professor and gan: professor. chairman, University of Waterloo. THOMAS J. BENNETT, Marquette University: WILLIAM J. NEWMAN: acting dean, College associate professor. of Liberal Arts, Boston University. ROBERT H. BIRKBY, Vanderbilt University: JAMES K. OLSEN: professor of political sci- associate professor. ence and dean of College of Arts and Sciences, Illinois State University; formerly of Kent ARNOLD J. BORNFRIEND, City College, State University. CUNY: assistant professor. GEORGE PEEK: dean, College of Liberal Arts, RICHARD W. BOYD, Indiana University: as- Arizona State University. sistant professor.

78 P.S. Louis F. BRAKEMAN, Denison University: GREGORY D. LESSIG, Edinboro State College: professor. assistant professor. AUDKEY CHAPMAN, Barnard College, Colum- GEORGE N. MCKENNA, City College, CUNY: bia University: assistant professor. assistant professor. JOHN P. CRECINE, University of Michigan: GEORGE A. MISNER, III, Agricultural and associate professor. Technical College, Delphi, N.Y.: assistant pro- fessor. JAMES A. DATOR, Virginia Polytechnic Insti- tute : associate professor. BEEMAN MUSTAFA, Kent State University: assistant professor. JOHN T. DORSEY, Vanderbilt University: professor. HUSAIN MUSTAFA, Kent State University: associate professor. MORGAN D. DOWD, SUNY at Fredonia: as- sociate professor. RANDALL H. NELSON, Southern Illinois Uni- versity, Carbondale: professor. ALEX T. EDELMAN, University of Nebraska: professor. CHARLES R. NIXON, U.C.L.A.: professor. Ivo K. FEIERABEND, San Diego State JOHN K. C. OH, Marquette University: as- College: professor. sociate professor.

ALAN FIELLIN, City College, CUNY: as- JAMES W. PERCEY, Bloomsberg State Col- sociate professor. lege : associate professor. JOSEPH R. FISZMAN, University of Oregon: LAWRENCE PETTIT, Pennsylvania State associate professor. University: associate professor. DOUGLAS S. GATLIN, Florida State Univer- RICHARD J. RICHARDSON, Western Michigan sity: associate professor. University: associate professor.

ROBERT S. GETZ, Kent State University: as- CAREY RICKABAUGH, Oklahoma State Univer- sociate professor. sity : assistant professor. DANIEL GOLDRICH, University of Oregon: ALBERT H. ROSE, S. M., University of Day- professor. ton : professor emeritus. RAYMOND HABIBY, Oklahoma State Univer- MARY HELEN SAWYER, Memphis State Uni- sity : associate professor. versity : associate professor. CHONG-DO HAH, Lawrence University: as- JOSEPH SILVERSTEIN, Rutgers-The State sistant professor. University: professor.

ROBERT HAYES, California State College, GEORGE O. TOTTEN, III, University of South- Long Beach: associate professor. ern California: professor. JOE HUANG, Tougaloo College: associate pro- WALTER W. TOXEY, Louisiana State Univer- fessor. sity at Baton Rouge: associate professor. TAE JIN KAHNG, San Diego State College: CHARLES WESTON, Western Illinois Univer- associate professor. sity: assistant professor. CATHERINE KELLEHER, Barnard College, Co- HERBERT R. WINTER, Rhode Island College: lumbia University: assistant professor. associate professor. JAMES D. KITCHEN, San Diego State Col- L. HARMON ZEIGLER, University of Oregon: lege: professor. professor. STANLEY KOCHANEK, Pennsylvania State University: associate professor. RETIREMENTS AND RESIGNATIONS WALTER S. G. KOHN, Illinois State Univer- DONALD BLAISDELL, City College, CUNY, re- sity: professor. tired in June, 1967. ALLEN B. LEE, Washington and Lee: profes- LAWRENCE H. CHAMBERLAIN, Columbia Uni- sor. versity, retired in June, 1967.

Spring 1968 79 GUY H. FOX has resigned from Michigan sity. He headed the Bureau of Public Ad- State University to accept a position as Public ministration from 1948-1967. Administration Advisor in the Overseas Devel- STUART A. MACCORKLE, University of Texas, opment Program of the Ford Foundation. His relinquished his duties as professor and direc- assignment is in , Lebanon. tor of the Institute of Public Affairs on Au- gust 31,1967. RALPH M. GOLDMAN has resigned as associ- ate dean of the faculty, San Francisco State LAWRENCE K. PETTIT resigned from Penn- College and has returned to full time teaching sylvania State University January 1, 1968, to and research. accept a position with the American Council SOLLY A. HARTZO, Carthage College, retired on Education's Commission on Federal Rela- in June, 1967. tions in Washington, D.C.

LASHLEY G. HARVEY, Boston University, re- CARL J. SCHNEIDER, University of Nebraska, tired in July, 1967, after twenty-one years of has resigned as chairman and professor. service with the rank of professor emeritus. From 1949 until his retirement he occupied the EDITH WINNINGHAM, University of North Maxwell chair of government at the Univer- Carolina, has retired.

IN MEMORIAM

The death of Professor DANIEL M. BERMAN country—can ill afford to lose such a man, in New Delhi, India, on November 19, 1967, particularly in this era of professional and of- was in the most literal sense a tragedy, not ficial timidity and private conformity. only for his family, friends, and American Dan Berman received his B.A. from Rutgers University colleagues, but for the political sci- University in 1947 and his M.A. from the ence profession as a whole. University of Wisconsin in 1948. After obtain- Born in Paterson, New Jersey, on June 15, ing his Ph.D. from Rutgers in 1957, he taught 1928, Dan Berman was 39 years old when ad- at the State University of New York (Fredo- renalin failure terminated his already impos- nia) during 1957-1958, and at Washington Col- ing record of versatile achievement. Aside lege (Maryland) during 1958-1961. Joining from having written dozens of articles and American University's School of Government several books, he had, among other things, de- and Public Administration as associate profes- voted his efforts to numerous libertarian sor in 1961, he became full professor in 1964. causes, served on many national and local or- He won high respect as a brilliant lecturer, ganizations and committees, delivered talks and, as Academic Director in American Uni- and participated in panels on college campuses versity's Washington Semester Program, he throughout the country, been a staff consultant became known for engaging in enlightening to the United States Senate Subcommittee on verbal skirmishes with the public and private Constitutional Rights, and often appeared on a officials who met with his students. Despite, or Washington radio station's late-night discus- perhaps because of, such encounters, these sion program. speakers—"big names" and otherwise—contin- ued to meet with his classes, no doubt enjoying But quantitative assessments alone can re- and benefiting from the sessions as much as veal neither the full extent of Dan Berman's did the students. contributions nor the enormity of his loss. For his was a creative, penetrating, truly critical On sabbatical leave during 1967-1968, Dan mind— one which refused to accept the plati- Berman, accompanied by his wife and daugh- tudes and pleasantries that so frequently mas- ter, spent the summer of 1967 in Dublin work- querade as "intellectual discourse." Regardless ing on the manuscript of a forthcoming text- of the circumstances—whether in his academic book in American Government. He and his role or not, whether with friend or stranger family then departed for India, where he was — he never hesitated to attack and demolish to study the Indian judicial system, supported the rationalizations and hypocritical argu- by a grant from the Indian Institute of the ments that are too commonly employed to de- University of Pennsylvania. His previous fend the status quo. The war in Vietnam was awards included a Congressional Fellowship one of his primary targets in recent years. for 1959-1960 from the American Political Sci- The political science discipline—indeed the ence Association, and a National Convention

80 P.S.