BAIRDAIN, BARGHOORN, BARR, BARRETT, in organization and communications; Project Director of a task force to assess the status of PSYOP in Vietnam; Principal Scientist for conduct of basic and applied field research on measurement of effectiveness of PSYOP; and Principal Scientist for a project to create a history of PSYOP in Southeast Asia and develop recommendations on doctrine and guidance for the future; author of many classified publications and coauthor of Program Assessment: Vietnam Field Study, Psychological Operations-Vietnam. President and Chief Scientist, Applied Systems Science Technology, Inc.; has held management postions in the aerospace and computer systems industry, including International Electric Corporation, Computer Sciences Corporation, and International Telephone and Telegraph; Project Director of a project to create a history of PSYOP in Southeast Asia and develop recommendations on doctrine and guidance for the future; Research Director of a task force advising U.S. agencies on conduct and evaluation of PSYOP in Vietnam; Research Director of a Field Team for Psychological Operations; coauthor of Program Assessment: Vietnam Field Study, Psychological Operations-Vietnam. Professor of Political Science, Yale University; Associate Division Assistant, Department of State, 1941-1942; Press Attache, U.S. Embassy, Moscow, 1943-1947; author of The Soviet Image of the U.S.; Soviet Russian Nationalism; Soviet Cultural Offensive; Soviet Foreign Propaganda. Retired; represented London Missionary Society in China from 1924 to 1952; Professor and Counselor, Chung Chi College, Hong Kong, until 1966. Department of State Advisor at John F. Kennedy Center for Military Assistance, Fort Bragg, N.C.; as U.S. Foreign Service Officer, served in Madrid, Mexico City, Managua, Dublin, and Cairo overseas, and in the Office of International Conferences, the Office of East and Southern African Affairs, and at Air Force Headquarters in Washington, D.C. BEELEY, BELOFF, BERGER, BOGART, BOHANNAN, BRANDON, Retired from British Diplomatic Service; UK Gladstone Professor of Government and Public Executive Vice President and General Man- Retired career military officer; Smithsonian Institution, before World War II; in Army of the United States, 1941-1961; assigned to Philippines 1945-1948, 1950-1957; coauthor of Counter-Guerrilla Operations-The Philippine Experience. Professor of Drama and Theater, University of Hawaii; has also taught at University of Connecticut and Michigan State University; assistant cultural attache, USIS, Djakarta, 1955-1956; radio officer, 1956-1957; Japanese language officer, Tokyo, 1958-1958; assistant cultural attache, 1959-1961; author of On Thrones of Gold: Three Javanese Shadow BROMAN, BULLARD, CHOUKAS, CLARKSON, COOPER, Bert H., Jr. Plays, Theatre in Southeast Asia; coauthor of U.S. Marine Corps, 1968-1971; no further in- Director, Research Institute on Communist Affairs and Professor of Public Law and Government, Columbia University; Harvard University, 1953-1960; Department of State Policy Planning Council, 1966-1968; author of The Soviet Bloc, Unity and Conflict, Alternative to Partition, Ideology and Power in Soviet Politics; coauthor of Political Power: USA-U.S.S.R., and Totalitarian Dictatorship and Autocracy. Assistant Professor of Military Science, University of California, Berkeley; formerly, Department of Social Sciences, U.S. Military Academy (West Point); Foreign Area Specialist Training Program in Chinese; 12 years at Foreign Service Institute of Chinese Area and Language Studies, Taiwan; Military Intelligence officer, Seoul, Korea; Political Warfare Staff Advisor, Headquarters, MACV, Vietnam. Provost, Pierce College; previously on soci- Member, Mid-range Amphibious Warfare Analyst in National Defense, Congressional DASBACH, DAUGHERTY, DAVIS, DELANEY Robert Finley in Internal Defense Operations; author of Statistics on U.S. Participation in Vietnam, Oil Shortages and the U.S. Armed Forces, and Cost Overruns in Major Weapons Systems. Adjunct Associate Professor to the Political Science Department, George Washington University. Researcher and scholar in the field of PSYOP; teacher and Executive Secretary, North China American School, Tung Hsien, China, 1932-1935; has taught at Amherst College, West Virginia University, and University of Omaha; Wartime Communications Research Project, Library of Congress, 1941; Chief, Japanese Branch Organization and Propaganda Analysis Section, Special Defense Unit, U.S. Department of Justice, 1941-1942, Japanese language, intelligence and division psywar officer, 1943-1946; Operations Research Office/Research Analysis Corporation, 1949-1967; Operations Analyst assigned to U.S. Eighth Army, 1950-1951; Chief, Plans and Special Projects Sections, PWD/G3, U.S. Eighth Army, Korea; Senior Research Scientist, American Institutes for Research, 19671971, conducting research in psychological operations, psychological factors affecting the strategic posture of selected foreign countries, and the U.S. military assistance program and U.S. military civil affairs; author of U.S. Policy and Programs in Latin America, U.S. Strategic Interests in Tropical Africa, The Military Assistance Officer: Key Factors to be Considered in His Selection and Training, coauthor of A Psychological Warfare Casebook, A Review of U.S. Historical Experience with Civil Affairs, 1776–1954. Professor of Political Science, University of Illinois; taught formerly at University of Wisconsin, Dalhousie University, and Tulane University; author of numerous articles on communications and other aspects of political science. Forrest Sherman Professor of Public Diplomacy, U.S. Naval War College; Foreign Ser DONNELL, John Corwin DUNN, vice Officer, U.S. State Department and USIA, 1950-1963; Public Relations Advisor, ESSO Standard Oil, South America, 19631965; Deputy Assistant Director JUSPAO, 1965-1966; Assistant Director (Research and Public Opinion), USIA, 1967-1968; Director, Edward R. Murrow Center for Public Diplomacy, Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University, 1968-1970; President, Thunderbird Graduate School of International Management, 1970-1971; author of Your Career in the Foreign Service, The Literature of Communism in America; coauthor, American Public Diplomacy: The First Years. Professor of Political Science, Temple University; U.S. Army CIC, 1943-1946; SCAP, Tokyo, war crimes investigator; 1946-1947; Intelligence Analyst, Civil Intelligence Section, Tokyo, 1946-1947; Staff Officer, USIA, 1949-1953; State Department, 1953-1958 (Vietnam, Taiwan, Malaya); taught at Dartmouth College and University of California (Berkeley); staff member, RAND Corporation, Social Science Department, 1964-1965. Professor and Head, Department of Advertising, University of Illinois; has taught at Universities of Wisconsin, Pittsburgh, and Western Ontario; author of Advertising: Its Role in Modern Marketing, International Handbook of Advertising, and Advertising Copy and Communications. DURHAM, (See HOLLANDER, ELLUL, Jacques ESWARA, Harrogadde S. FOOTE, A. Edward Professor of History of Law and Social History, University of Bordeaux; author of numerous works, including Autopsy of Revolution, The Political Illusion, Propaganda: The Formation of Men's Attitudes, and Technological Society. Reader in Psychology, University of Mysore, India. Editor, Educational Broadcasting Review. |