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                  <text>�Japan:
Tradition and Change
A Social Science Seminar

Casper College
Gertrude Krampert Theatre

April 1 and 2,1991

Seminar Co-Directors
Mr. Jon E. Brady

Dr. James W. O'Neill

"...with partial funding by the Wyoming Council for
the Humanities."

�The seas surround all quarters of the globe

And my heart cries out to the nations of the world.
Why then do the winds and waves of strife
Disrupt the peace between us?

Emperor Mutsuhito
Meiji Emperor 1867 -1912

Truly, the war is no more.

Tak Musahi in a letter to
Mariko Terasaki Miller, November 9,1990

�Monday, April 1
9:00-10:00 a.m.

Mr. Robert M. Immerman
"U.S. - Japan Relations: Origins and
perspectives"

10:00- 10:15 a.m.

Refreshments in the Lobby

10:15- 11:30 a.m.

Panel:
"How Does Its History Drive
Japan?"
Mr. Robert M. Immerman
Professor Peter J. Goias
Professor Thomas C. Kennedy
Mr. Ko Shioya
Moderator: Dr. James W. O'Neill

1:00-2:00 p.m.

Ms. Mariko Terasaki Miller
"Japan-American Relations: A Personal
Odyssey"

2:00 - 2:15 p.m.

Refreshments in the Lobby

2:15 - 3:30 p.m.

Panel:

"The Japanese Mind"

Mr. William Hosokawa
Professor Walter G. Langlois
Ms. Mariko Terasaki Miller
Mr. Takashi Oka

Moderator: Dr. Barbara L. Mueller
7:30 - 8:30 p.m.

Mr. Mitsuya Goto
"The Implications of the U.S. - Japan Relations:
Gan Japan Emulate the U.S. as a World
Leader?"
Questions following the lecture
A Reception in the Lobby
3

�Tuesday, April 2
9:00 -10:00 a.m.

Mr. Ko Shioya
"Why Japan Remains a Political Drawf: an
Anatomy of Japan's Politics"

10:00 -10:15 a.m.

Refreshments in the Lobby

10:15-11:30 a.m.

Panel: "The Economic/Political Equation"

Mr. Mitsuya Goto
Professor Thomas C. Kennedy
Professor Peter J. Goias
Mr. Ko Shioya

Moderator: Mr. David L. Cherry
1:00-2:00 p.m.

Mr. Takashi Oka
"Change and Continuity on an Offshore
Island"

2:00 - 2:15 p.m.

Refreshments in the Lobby

2:15 - 3:45 p.m.

Concluding Panel: "Toward the 21st Century'

Mr. Robert Immerman
Ms. Mariko Terasaki Miller
Mr. Mitsuya Goto
Mr. Takashi Oka
Mr. Ko Shioya

Moderator: Mr. William Hosokawa

4

�Robert M. Immerman
Robert M. Immerman is a Senior Research Associate of the East Asian
Institute of Columbia University. He retired from the Foreign Service in
1990 with the rank of Minister Counselor. Mr. Immerman graduated
from the University of Wisconsin in 1953 with a B.A. in international
relations. He was a Fulbright Scholar at the University of Lyon in France
in 1953-54. He received his Master of Public and International Affairs
from the Woodrow Wilson School at Princeton University in 1956. Mr.
Immerman joined the Foreign Service and spent most of his diplomatic
career in Japan. He served four different tours of duty at the American
Embassy in Tokyo including Labor Attache (1975-79) and Political
Counselor (1980-84). He served as Minister Counselor for Political Affairs
at the United States Mission to the United Nations from 1985-89, and
during the summer of 1989 was a member of the U.S. delegation to the
International Peace Conference on Cambodia in Paris. Before accepting
his present position at Columbia University, Mr. Immerman was
associated with the East Asian Institute as a Visiting Fellow and as a
diplomat in residence. Mr. Immerman is the author of Labor Issues in U.S.Iapart Relations and European-Japanese Relations: Trilateralism's Weakest Link.

5

�Mariko Terasaki Miller
Mariko "Mako" Terasaki Miller is a consultant and lecturer on U.S.Japanese relations. She has a unique vantage point from which to
discuss Japanese-American relations as the daughter of a Japanese
diplomat, Hidenari Terasaki, and Gwen Harold Terasaki, a native of
Tennessee. After the end of the war between the United States and
Japan, Mariko's father was appointed advisor to the Emperor and as the
official liaison between the Emperor and the Supreme Allied
Commander, General Douglas MacArthur. Born in Shanghai, Mariko
received her childhood education in Shanghai, Havana, Peking,
Washington, D.C. and Tokyo. She left Japan in 1949 to pursue her
education receiving a B.A. in liberal arts form East Tennessee State
University in 1953. She married Mayne Miller, an attorney active in
politics, and they moved to Wyoming where Mariko still resides. Since
1981, Mariko has traveled extensively in Japan and spoken to a wide
variety of groups and organizations. In her most recent trip in
December of 1990, Mariko spoke to the Asahi Broadcasting International
Seminar, the Eoreign Correspondents Club, and the Japanese Press Club.
She has also delivered lectures throughout the United States sponsored
by the Embassy of Japan, and most recently, the Council on Foreign
Relations.
6

�Mitsuya Goto
Mitsuya Goto is the Managing Director of the Japan Center for
International Exchange in Tokyo. He is the former General Manager,
International Division of Nissan Motor Co., Ltd., and remains a
consultant to Nissan. Mr. Goto graduated from Wasbash College,
Crawfordsville, Indiana, cum laude, in 1955, with a major in political
science. He did graduate work at the Woodrow Wilson School of
Public and International Affairs, Princeton University, 1955-56. Mr.
Goto was European Representative for the Japan Federation of
Employers' Associations in Geneva, Switzerland, and the permanent
Japanese employer delegate to the conferences of the International
Labor Organization in Geneva, 1964-68. He joined Nissan Motor Co.,
Ltd., in Tokyo in 1969 serving in many capacities in the International
Division of Nissan, including: General Manager, European Corporate
Office in Brussels, 1983-85; General Manager of the newly set up
Nissan Motor Co., Ltd., London Office, 1985-86; and General Manager,
International Division, 1986-88. Mr. Goto is a member of the Advisory
Councils of both the Woodrow Wilson School and East Asian Studies
at Princeton University and is a member of the Dean's Advisory
Council, Indiana University Business School.

7

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JAPAN

X

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International boun (i^ry

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SCHMKUSMOrd

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National capital
Railroad
Road
International airport
VO1C4NO ISLANDS
(KAZAN-Nerrii)

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0

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Boundary repreaaniation Is
I not nacesxrity authoritatiye.

130

8

100

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200 Kilometers

7/85

9

�Ko Shioya
Ko Shioya is an independent author and journalist with regular
writing for the Japanese national magazine Bungei Shunju, as well as
other major periodicals. Born in Japan, Mr. Shioya attended Waseda
University, Department of Law, 1958-62 and the World Press Institute,
Macalester College, St. Paul, Minnesota, 1966-67. From 1962-68, Mr.
Shioya was an Associated Press reporter in Tokyo, Chicago, and New
York. From 1968-86 he was with Reader's Digest in the United States
and Japan and served as Director and Editor-in-Chief, Reader's Digest,
Japanese edition, until 1986. From 1986-88 Mr. Shioya was President
and Representative Director, Hill and Knowlton, Japan and served as
Senior Advisor on International Affairs to Toshio Yamaguchi, former
Cabinet Minister and Director of the International Bureau of the
Liberal Democratic Party. From 1989-90, Mr. Shioya was Publisher and
Editor-at-Large, Business Tokyo, an English-language monthly
magazine published in New York to report on business and the
political environment in Japan. He has published extensively
including Reguiem for the Little Big Magazine, and Japan as Seen by KGB A Paradise for Spies.

10

�Takashi Oka
Takashi Oka is Senior Correspondent in the Washington Bureau,
with a roving assignment, of The Christian Science Monitor. A Japaneseborn U.S. Citizen, Mr. Oka received his B.A. from Principia College,
Elsah, Illinois and his M.A. from Harvard University in international
and regional studies. He has worked as a reporter for The Christian
Science Monitor since 1954. He was in Boston, 1954-59, Hong Kong,
1959-64, Saigon, 1964-66, Moscow, 1966-68, Paris, 1971-74, London,
1974-79, Peking, 1979-84, Tokyo, 1986-90, and has been in Washington,
D.C. since 1990 in his present assignment. From 1969-71, Mr. Oka was
the New York Times Bureau Chief in Tokyo and from 1984-86 was
Editor-in-Chief of Newsweek japan, the Japanese language edition of
Newsweek. In 1946-48, Mr. Oka was a court interpreter at the
International Military Tribunal for the Far East.

11

�Panel Participants
Peter J. Goias
Peter J. Goias is Associate Professor of History, the University of
Denver. He received his A.B. in history and philosophy from Fordham
University in 1958, his M.A. in history from Stanford University in 1964
and his Ph.D. in history and Far Eastern languages form Harvard
University in 1972. While in graduate school he received a Woodrow
Wilson Fellowship, an NDEA Fellowship and a Fullbright Fellowship.
From 1970-72 he was a Lecturer at Sangyo University, Kyoto, Japan. In
1973 he became an Assistant Professor in Chinese history at the University
of Denver. He became an Associate Professor of History in 1976. He is a
member of the Association for Asian Studies. He has been Associate
Director for Summer Workshops on Comparative Cultures, Princeton
Interuniversity Projects in China from 1985 to the present. Professor
Goias has published extensively.

William "Bill" Hosokawa
Bill Hosokaw is Reader’s Representative (ombudsman) Columnist,
Rocky Mountain News, Denver, a position held since 1985. He is Director,
program on Global Business and Culture: Japan, at the University College,
University of Denver. Bom in Seattle, Mr. Hosokawa received his B.A.
from the University of Washington in 1937. Mr. Hoskawa's career in
journalism has included Managing Editor, Singapore Herald, Singapore,
1938-40, a Writer, Far Eastern Review and Shanghai Times, Shanghai China,
1940-41. He was Editor of Heart Mountain Sentinel while in the Heart
Mountain War Relocation Camp, Wyoming 1942-43. From 1946 to 1983
he was with The Denver Post, including Editor of the editorial pages,
executive news director, assistant managing editor and associate editor.
He was Editor of the prize-winning Sunday Empire Magazine for 17 years.
He has published extensively. Mr. Hosokawa was a lecturer in the 1971
Social Science Seminar in Casper.

Thomas C. Kennedy
Thomas C. Kennedy is Professor of History, University of Wyoming, a
position he has held since 1962. He received his B.A. from Antioch
College in 1958, his M.A. from Stanford University in 1959 and his Ph.D.
from Stanford University in 1961. He was Instructor in History at
Stanford University prior to coming to the University of Wyoming. He
teaches courses on Japanese history and civilization at the University. He
had a Fulbright Fellowship for a summer institute on Indian Civilization,
1965. He received a Faculty Fellowship to attend an Institute on East Asia,
Hamline University, 1981, and received a grant for a workshop on
Military History, U.S. Military Academy, West Point, 1982. He is
currently working on a biography of Admiral Husband E. Kimmel. His
publications include Charles A. Beard and American Foreign Policy.

12

�Walter G. Langolis

Walter G. Langlois is Professor of French at the University of
Wyoming. Professor Langlois has his B.A. from Yale College, 1950, his
M.A. from Yale University, 1952 and his Ph.D. from Yale University in
romance languages, 1955. He received a Harvard-Rockefeller PostDoctoral Fellowship in Asian Studies, Harvard University in 1960-61,
He was Exchange Professor of English, Osaka University, Osaka, Japan
from 1984-86. Professor Langlois has a dual background in modern
French literature, and in Asian studies. His French specialty is Andre
Malraux, particularly his Asian novels, and has been teaching
undergraduate courses in the literature and culture of China and japan
for over 30 years, including an honors seminar on Japanese literature.
Professor Langlois is chairman of the Pacific Rim Studies Committee at
the University.

Panel Moderators
James W. O'Neill - Instructor of History, Casper College and the
UW/CC Upper Division Center at Casper. B.A., Reed College; M.A.,
University of Minnesota; and Ph.D. University of Minnesota.
Barbara L. Mueller - Instructor of Anthropology and Sociology, Casper
College. She is the former Assistant to the Dean of Continuing
Education at Casper College. B.A., Drew University; M.A., University of
Arizona; and Ph.D. University of Arizona.

David L. Cherry - Instructor of Political Science, Casper College. B.A.,
Washington and Jefferson College; M.A., Southern Illinois University;
and advanced graduate study at Southern Illinois University and
Northern Arizona University. Mr. Cherry is a Doctoral Candidate at
Northern Arizona University.

William "Bill" Hosokawa - Moderator of the concluding panel.
(Biography on page 12)

Notes
For teachers to receive inservice credit from the Wyoming State
Department of Education check with Ms. Charlene Davis at the entrance
to the theatre.
13

�Appreciations
The Division of Social and Behavorial Sciences extends
appreciation to the administration, faculty, and staff of Casper
College whose support continues to make the seminar possible.

A "thank you" to
David C. Dundas and the Krampert Theatre Department
for technical assistance,
Nancy Madura for arrangements for
the seminar program and poster,
Trevor Howard and Amy Kopperud
for the program design,

Ernie Graham and Steve Welch
for the poster design.
College Relations Department
for publicity and arrangements,
program layout and photography copy,
Jackie Read, Secretary of the Social
and Behavorial Sciences Division,
the Maintenance and Custodial staff.

Our special "thank you" to
the Wyoming Council for the Humanities
for the partial funding of this seminar.

14

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