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I

TRIBAL MAIM
IN A GLOBAL VILLAGE
SOCIAL SCIENCE SEMINAR FEB. 24 AND 25 CASPER COLLEGE • 1972

�SOCIAL SCIENCE SEMINAR

There are no boundaries in a global
village. All problems will become
so intimate as to be one's own. No
problem can arise at one point with­
out affecting all points immediately
and emotionally, and world government
will become a fact even if no one,
due to past prejudices, particularly
wants it, and perhaps even if no one
is particularly aware that it is tak­
ing place. We will all just wake up
one morning and realize that for some
time the world has been acting in
reasonable unison.
ISAAC ASIMOV
"The Fourth Revolution"

�"Tribal Man in a Global Village"

EVENTS

Thursday, February 24
A Seminar Welcome
Dr. Tilghman Aley,
President of Casper College

9:00 a.m.

LECTURE
"A Nev/ Foreign Policy for
the United States"
PROFESSOR HANS MORGENTHAU

Durham
Hall

Following the lecture by
Professor Morgenthau, coffee
and donuts will be served in
the lobby of the Recital Hall
10:45 to 12:00 a.m.

STUDENT SEMINARS

Durham
Hall

A.

"Can the U.S. Really be
Neutral in the IndiaPakistan Problem?"
PROFESSOR JOSEF KORBEL
Donald Tolin, Student
Moderator

AD 298

B.

"America's Role in Latin
America"
PROFESSOR EDWIN LIEUWEN
John Cummings, Student
Moderator

biographical material, pages 6 and 7

- 2 -

�Thursday, February 24, continued
1:45 p.m.
Durham
Hall

LECTURE

"Time Bomb in the Middle
East"
AMBASSADOR RICHARD NOLTE
Following the lecture by
Ambassador Nolte, punch and
cookies will be served in
the lobby of the Recital Hall

3:00 to 4:30 p.m.

Durham
Hall

SEMINAR
"Where Do Our Interests
Really Lie?"

Professor Josef Korbel
Professor Edwin Lieuwen
Professor Hans Morgenthau
Ambassador Richard Nolte
Ambassador Carl Rowan
Mark Cioc, Student Moderator
8:00 p.m.

Durham
Hall

LECTURE
"The United States and
Revolution"
AMBASSADOR CARL ROWAN

The lecture will be fol­
lowed by a question period

Following the lecture and
question period with Am­
bassador Rowan, coffee and
cookies will be served in
the lobby of the Recital
Hall

- 3 -

�Friday, February 25

LECTURE

9:00 a.m.

"China in the Seventies"
PROFESSOR ALLEN WHITING

Durham
Hall

Following the lecture by
Professor Whiting, coffee
and donuts will be served
in the lobby of the Recital
Hall

10:45 to 12:00 a.m.

STUDENT SEMINARS

Durham
Hall

A.

"The American Image
Abroad"
AMBASSADOR RICHARD NOLTE
Brian Clausen, Student
Moderator

AD 298

B.

"East and West Europe:
New Horizons?"
PROFESSOR JOSEF KORBEL
PROFESSOR HANS MORGENTHAU
Robert Schultz, Student
Moderator

biographical materials, pages 6 and 7

- 4 -

�Friday, February 25, continued

1:30 p.m.
Durham
Hall

LECTURE

"United States Policy
in Latin America —
from Priority to Purqatory, 1961 to 1971"
PROFESSOR EDWIN LIEUWEN
Follov/inq the lecture
by Professor Lieuwen,
punch and cookies will
be served in the lobby
of the Recital Hall

3:00 to 4:30 p.m.
Durham
Hall

A CONCLUDING SEMINAR
"Can America Really
Conduct a Successful
Foreign Policy?"

Professor Edwin Lieuwen
Ambassador Richard Nolte
Professor Hans Morgenthau
Professor Allen Whiting
Professor Josef Korbel,
Chairman
7:30 p.m.

All students, faculty,
guests and visitors are
invited to an informal
social hour at the home
of the Kathermans, 2837
S. Poplar. Coffee and
cookies will be served

- 5 -

�SEMINAR GUESTS

PROFESSOR HANS MORGENTHAU

Professor Morgenthau is Professor of Poli­
tical Science at the City University of New York
and Professor of Political Science and Modern
History at the University of Chicago. He came
to the United States from Germany in 1937. He
has served as Consultant to the Department of
Defense and as Senior Fellow of the Council on
Foreign Relations. A prolific writer. Professor
Morgenthau includes among his books the classic
Politics Among Nations.

AMBASSADOR CARL ROWAN

Ambassador Rowan is a nationally-syndicated
newspaper columnist and television commentator.
He served under President Kennedy as Deputy
Assistant Secretary of State, as a member of the
U.S. Delegation to the United Nations and as
Ambassador to Finland. He served as Director
of the U.S. Information Agency under President
Johnson and was thereby involved in all Cabinet
meetings and the National Security Council.

PROFESSOR ALLEN WHITING

Professor Whiting is Professor of Political
Science and Associate at the Center for Chinese
Studies, University of Michigan. He has been a
Deputy Consul General in Hong Kong and has tra­
veled under official auspices throughout the Far
East. Professor Whiting was a Ford Foundation
Fellow in Taiwan, Hong Kong and Japan and has
served on the staffs of Northv/estern University,
Michigan State University, Columbia University
and the Rand Corporation.

- 6 -

�SEMINAR GUESTS, continued

PROFESSOR JOSEF KORBEL
Professor Korbel is the Andrew W. Mellon
Professor of International Studies in the Graduate
School of International Studies, University of
Denver. A native of Czechoslovakia, he has been
the Czechoslovak Ambassador to Yugoslavia and has
served as the Chairman of the United Nations
Commission for India and Pakistan. Coming to
the United States in 1949, he joined the faculty
of the University of Denver and served as Dean of
the Graduate School of International Studies
from 1959 to 1969.

PROFESSOR EDWIN LIEUWEN
Professor Lieuwen is Professor of Latin
American History at the University of New Mexico.
He has been a Consultant to the Department of
State and to the Senate Committee on Foreign
Relations. He v/as a Research Director of a
Rockefeller Foundation grant on the role of the
military in Latin America and he is a Research
Director of a Ford Foundation grant on the pro­
cess of social revolution in Latin America.

AMBASSADOR RICHARD NOLTE
Ambassador Nolte is the Executive Director
of the Institute of Current World Affairs in
New York, a position he has held since 1959. He
was a Consultant and Assistant Director in the
Rockefeller Foundation. Ambassador Nolte was
named by President Johnson to be the U.S. Am­
bassador to the United Arab Republic prior to
the breaking of diplomatic relations between
the two countries.

- 7 -

�SEMINAR PLANNING COMMITTEE AND STUDENT PARTICIPANTS
Richard Albanese
John Bradley
Jacquilyn Brown
Brian Clausen
John Cummings
Julie Darnail
David Hutt
Teresa Mobley

Ray Oltion
Teresa Oneal
Susan Plock
Susan Rogers
David Schultz
Robert Schultz
David Throgmorton
Donald Tolin
Barbara Van Maren

Mark Cioc, Chairman

Jon Brady, Faculty Adviser

A special thank you to the Wyoming Interim
Committee for the Humanities and the National En­
dowment for the Humanities for providing a generous
grant to the Social Science Seminar.
A thank you to the administration and faculty
of Casper College for the continuing support of the
concept and reality of the Social Science Seminar.

Program design by Brenda Schouten

This Seminar has been made possible with a matching
grant from the Wyoming Interim Committee for the
Humanities and the National Endowment for the Hu­
manities.

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