Speakers, Fall 1984

 

Monday,
September 10
Toney Anaya, governor, (D-New Mexico); "Fiesta California: Chicanos and Contemporary American Politics"
 
Thursday,
September 13
Robert Dorian, magician, mentalist, clairvoyant; "An Evening with Robert Dorian"
 
Tuesday,
September 18
Robert Nichols, CEO, RWC Capital Management Company; "Entrepreneurship: Portfolio and Mutual Fund Management"
 
Monday,
September 24
Dan Stanford, chairman, Fair Political Practices Commission; Jerry Simpson, executive director, California Medical Political Action Committee; "Political Practices"
 
Wednesday,
September 26
Arthur Schawlow, Nobel laureate in physics (1981); professor of physics, Stanford University; co-author, Microwave Spectroscopy (1955); "Invention of the Laser"
 
Tuesday,
October 2
Tom Hammond, CEO, The Hammond Company; "Entrepreneurship: Meeting Banking and Financial Services"
 
Monday,
October 15
Ed Rollins, manager, Reagan-Bush campaign; "Campaign Politics" (12:00 p.m.)
 
Monday,
October 15
Michael Graber '74, mountaineer and photographer; "Expeditions to Antarctica and Afghanistan"
 
Tuesday,
October 16
Mickey Kantor, California campaign manager, Mondale-Ferraro campaign; partner, Manatt, Phelps, Rothenberg, and Tunney, Los Angeles; "California Politics"
 
Wednesday,
October 17
Charles Hession, author, John Maynard Keynes: A Personal Biography of the Man Who Revolutionized Capitalism and the Way We Live (1984); "John Maynard Keyes"
 
Thursday,
October 25
John Dodds, editor and publisher, Belvedere books; "The Biography"
 
Monday,
October 29
David Dreier '75, U.S. House of Representatives (R), (CA-33rd district); "The Upcoming Election" (4:00 p.m.)
 
Tuesday,
October 30
Fritz Duda, CEO, The Fritz Duda Company; "Entrepreneurship: Land Development"
 
Wednesday,
October 31
Rolf Rendtoroff, professor of theology, Heidelberg University; "Jewish-Christian Relations in Germany: A New Epoch" (Bauer Center)
 
Thursday,
November 1
Steve Davis, professor of philosophy and religion, CMC; author, The Debate About the Bible: Inerrancy Versus Infallibility (1977) and Faith, Skepticism, and Evidence: An Essay in Religious Epistemology (1978); John Roth, Russell K. Pitzer professor of philosophy and religious studies, CMC; editor, Philosophy of Josiah Royce (1982); Steve Smith, professor of philosophy, CMC; author, Satisfaction of Interest and the Concept of Morality (1975) and editor, Ways of Wisdom: Readings on the Good Life (1983); Christopher Ives, professor of religion, CMC; Alfred Balitzer, assistant professor of government, CMC; author, A Nation of Associations (1981) and A Time for Choosing: The Speeches of Ronald Reagan (1983); Alan Heslop, Don H. and Edessa Rose professor of state and local government; director of the Rose Institute of State and Local Government, CMC; author, World Capital Shortage (1978); Charles Kesler, professor of government, CMC; "Political Science and Philosophy: An Informal Symposium"
 
Wednesday,
November 7
John Stockwell, former chief of station and National Security Council coordinator, CIA; author, "In Search of Enemies" (1978) (12:00 p.m.)
 
Wednesday,
November 7
Theo Brenner, president, Franklin College, Switzerland; "Amarcord"
 
Monday,
November 12
David Saperstein, Rabbi; director of Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism; Robert Reilly, presidential special assistant; "Does America Have a Spiritual Mission?"
 
Tuesday,
November 13
John Anderson, former Illinois congressman, (R-16th district); "Religion in Politics"
 
Wednesday,
November 14
Bjorn Ekblom, ambassador; permanent representative of Finland's mission to the U.N.; "Economic and Social Affairs Between Industrialized and Developing Countries" (12:30 p.m.)
 
Wednesday,
November 14
John Anderson, former Illinois congressman, (R-16th district); David Saperstein, Rabbi; director of Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism; Robert Reilly, presidential special assistant; "Religion in Politics"
 
Monday,
December 10
David Ronfeldt, research staff, political science department, RAND Corporation; author, Atencingo: The Politics of Agrarian Struggle in a Mexican Ejido (1973) and Modern Mexican Military: A Reassessment (1984); Philip Koldewyn, professor of modern languages, CMC, author, Carlos Fuentes and the Nature of Myth (1981) and Voluntary Associations in Neugen, Argentina (1984); (moderator); Nathaniel Davis, professor of humanities, Harvey Mudd College; former U.S. Ambassador to Chile (commentator); Henry Rowen, senior fellow, Hoover Institution; editor, Options for U.S. Energy Policy (1977) (commentator); "The Caribbean Basin: The Basin's Importance to the United States" (9:15 a.m. Bauer Center)
 
Monday,
December 10
Edward Gonzalez, professor of political science, UCLA; Philip Koldewyn, professor of modern languages, CMC, author, Carlos Fuentes and the Nature of Myth (1981) and Voluntary Associations in Neugen, Argentina (1984); (moderator); Nathaniel Davis, professor of humanities, Harvey Mudd College; former U.S. Ambassador to Chile (commentator); Henry Rowen, senior fellow, Hoover Institution; editor, Options for U.S. Energy Policy (1977) (commentator); "The Caribbean Basin: Cuba and Soviet Roles in the Basin" (9:45 a.m. Bauer Center)
 
Monday,
December 10
Caesar Sereseres, professor of political science, U.C. Irvine; author, The Mexican Military Looks South (1984) and The Highlands War in Guatemala (1985); James Wilkie, professor of history, UCLA; author, The Mexican Revolution (1910-1963): Federal Expenditure and Social Change (1967) and Measuring Land Reform in Bolivia and Venezuela (1974) (moderator); Alexander Drehsler, correspondent, (discussant); John Waghelstein, research associate, Army War College, (discussant); "Low Intensity Conflict in Central America: Its Implications for the Region" (1:45 p.m.)
 
Monday,
December 10
Frances Mossman, Brigadier General, USAF Reserve; James Wilkie, professor of history, UCLA; author, The Mexican Revolution (1910-1963): Federal Expenditure and Social Change (1967) and Measuring Land Reform in Bolivia and Venezuela (1974) (moderator); Alexander Drehsler, correspondent, (discussant); John Waghelstein, research associate, Army War College, (discussant); "Central America: Military Balance Highlights" (2:15 p.m.)
 
Monday,
December 10
Constantine Menges, special assistant to the President; senior director for Latin American affairs, National Security Council; author, Spain: The Struggle for Democracy Today (1978); "Central America and the Caribbean in the 1980s: Security Perspectives and Prospects" (8:30 p.m.)
 
Tuesday,
December 11
Susan Kaufman Purcell, director, Latin American program, Council on Foreign Relations; Jane Jacquette, professor of political science, Occidental College, (moderator); Mark Rosenberg, director, Latin American and Caribbean Center, Florida International University, (commentator); Eduardo Ulibarri, editor, La Nacion, Costa Rica, (commentator); "Security Perspectives of Key Basin Actors: The Contadora States" (9:00 a.m. Bauer Center)
 
Tuesday,
December 11
Richard Millet, professor of history, Southern Illinois University; Jane Jacquette, professor of political science, Occidental College, (moderator); Mark Rosenberg, director, Latin American and Caribbean Center, Florida International University, (commentator); Eduardo Ulibarri, editor, La Nacion, Costa Rica, (commentator); "Security Perspectives of Key Basin Actors: The Central American Actors" (9:30 a.m. Bauer Center)
 
Tuesday,
December 11
Anthony Maingot, professor of sociology, Florida International University; co-author, The Military in Latin American Sociological Evolution (1969); Jane Jacquette, professor of political science, Occidental College, (moderator); Mark Rosenberg, director, Latin American and Caribbean Center, Florida International University, (commentator); Eduardo Ulibarri, editor, La Nacion, Costa Rica, (commentator); "Security Perspectives of Key Basin Actors: The Caribbean States" (10:00 a.m. Bauer Center)
 
Tuesday,
December 11
Luigi Einaudi, Inter-American affairs, State Department; P. Edward Haley, professor of government, CMC; author, Qaddafi and the United States Since 1969 (1984) and Revolution and Intervention: The Diplomacy of Taft and Wilson with Mexico, 1910-1917 (1970) (moderator); Abraham Lowenthal, professor of international relations, USC; author, The Dominican Intervention (1972) (commentator); Roberto Murray, president, Fundacion Salvadorena Para el Desarollo Social y Economico, El Salvador, (commentator); Francisco Villagran, Interamerican Bank, (commentator); "The United States and the Basin in the 1980s" (1:00 p.m.)
 

Marian Miner Cook Athenaeum

Claremont McKenna College
385 E. Eighth Street
Claremont, CA 91711

Contact

Phone: (909) 621-8244 
Fax: (909) 621-8579 
Email: