RONALDS, RUBIN, SARAL, SCHRAMM, SIMPSON, Howard Russell SMITH, retired career (21 years) naval intelligence officer; author of Vietnamese Communism and the Protracted War; coauthor of Communism in Vietnam. Deputy Executive Director, Radio Liberty; News Manager and Program Manager, Radio Liberty, 1952-1966; Deputy Director (Programs), Voice of America, 1966-1971. Professor of Governmental Affairs, School of Public Communication, Boston University; has also taught at Skidmore and Brooklyn colleges and Rutgers University; Chief, Research Design Unit, U.S.I.A., 1968-1969; author of Political Television, Report to the Government of Massachusetts (on Reporting and Public Information), Report to the Secretary of the U.S. Air Force on the Information Function in USAFE, Report on Presidential Debates and American Politics, Public Relations and the Empire State. Formerly Head, Department of Mass Communications, Literacy House, Lucknow, India; Editor and Information and Publications Officer, Government of Uttar Pradesh, India; Editor of Nava Yuvak for five years; author of twelve books in Hindi. Currently with the East-West Center; formerly Professor, Director of Institute of Communications Research, Stanford University; also taught at Universities of Illinois and Iowa; director, Education Division, Office of War Information, 1942-1943. Newspaper writer, staff artist, 1950-1951, 1956; press service correspondent and freelance writer, 1955-1956; State Department, 1951-1952; career USIA officer, assigned to Vietnam (1954-1956; Advisor to Prime Minister and to Political Warfare Section ARVN, 1964-1965), Nigeria, France, and Algeria. Professor of Sociology, Florida State Unisity. Deputy Director, Federal City Council (Washington, D.C.); U.S. Marine Corps, 1957-1960; Social Science Analyst, USIA, 1964-1967 (Chief, European Research Division, 19651967); Director, Public Affairs, Office of Economic Opportunity, 1967-1969. STONE, SZALAY, Lorand Bertalan ΤΑΝΑΚΑ, THEBAUD, Charles C. Assistant Professor of Journalism, University of Wisconsin. Career officer, USIA; currently, Program Co- Formerly Staff Officer, Deputy Chief of Staff, (Colonel, U.S. Army, available. Ret.) THORNTON, Thomas Perry Member, Policy and Coordination Staff, U.S.. TOO, C. C. TUCK, Robert L. VALYUZHENICH, A. VALERIANO, WATSON, Francis M., Jr. WECHSLER, Irving Robert WHELAN, Joseph G. WONG, YAMASHITA, Hopkins universities; coauthor of Grobianische tischzuchten; editor, The Third World in Soviet Perspective; coeditor, Communism and Revolution. Head, Psychological Warfare Section, Malaysian Government. Director, Program Operations Division, Radio Liberty; Policy Director, Radio Liberty, 19611966; Foreign Affairs Analyst, Department of the Army and U.S. Air Force. Soviet analyst; no further information available. Army of the United States; 1946-1957, Armed Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, Princeton University; career Army officer, 1935-1957; coauthor, Strategic Psychological Operations and American Foreign Policy. Media researcher, writer, and lecturer, National Media Analysis, Inc.; Deputy Manager, Cultural Information Analysis Center and Chief, Fort Bragg Field Office, American Institutes for Research; author of Revolution in Executive Perspective, An Analytical Introduction to the Underground Press; editor TUPART monthly reports on the underground press, 1971. Senior Analyst, Evaluation and Analysis Staff, Office of Research, USIA; taught at Harvard, 1935-1943; Office of War Information, 19441945; State Department, 1945-1953; career USIA officer from 1953, occupying several policy guidance positions. Senior Specialist, International Affairs, Congressional Research Service, U.S. Library of Congress; Staff Member, Far Eastern Commission, State Department, 1946; author of numerous reports published by the U.S. Congress on Soviet affairs. Research Sociologist, specializing in Chinese sociology. Instructor, Human Behavior Branch, Psycho K. Stanley YOH, YU, ZARTMAN, I. William logical Warfare Department, U.S. Army Special Warfare School; foreign assignments with U.S. Army in Thailand, Japan, and Okinawa. Airborne officer during World War II; Provost Marshal of U.S. Forces in Austria after the war, organizing Four Power International Patrol; Director, Department of Troop Information and Education, Armed Forces Information School, 1947-1949; NATO Plans Section, Joint American Military Advisory Group to Europe, 1950-1952; faculty, Army War College, 1953-1956; Deputy Chief, U.S. Military Advisory and Assistance Group to Cambodia, 1956-1957; Commanding General, U.S. Army John F. Kennedy Center for Special Warfare and Commandant, U.S. Army Special Warfare School, 1961-1965; Senior Member, United Nations Command Military Armistice Commission in Korea, 1965; Assistant Deputy Chief of Staff for Military Operations (Special Operations), 1965-1966; Assistant Chief of Staff for Intelligence, DA, 1966-1968; Deputy Commander in Chief and Chief of Staff, USARPAC, 1969 until retirement. Lecturer and consultant on Special Warfare; Advisor to President Diem, Republic of Vietnam, 1955-1963; worked with Maj. Gen. Lansdale as a special team counterinsurgent organizer, fighter, and advisor in Vietnam, 1965-1966; during 1937-1945, organized an anti-Japanese underground that included thieves and pickpockets of Shanghai; also organized bandits into a paramilitary guerrilla force. Professor of Political Science, University of Illinois; also taught at University of North Carolina and Stanford University; Advisory Editor, Journal of Asian Studies; author, Party Politics in Republican China; coauthor, The Chinese Anarchist Movement. Professor and Head of department of Political Science, New York University; also taught at University of South Carolina; Executive Secretary, Middle East Studies Association; author of International Relations in the New ZORTHIAN, Barry R. PROJECT DIRECTOR Daniel Carroll THE EDITORS McLaurin, Ronald De ROSENTHAL, Carl F. SKILLINGS, Sarah Africa Africa; Problems of New Power: Morocco, Destiny of a Dynasty, Government and Politics in Northern Africa; coauthor, African Diplomacy, State and Society in Independent North Africa. Vice President, Time Incorporated, President of Time-Life Broadcast, Inc.; news reporter and editor, 1936-1942, 1946-1947; broadcast news writer, 1947-1948; Voice of America, 1948-1961; Deputy Public Affairs Officer, USIS, India, 1961-1964; Minister-Counselor, Republic of Vietnam, 1964-1968 (Director, JUSPAO). Former Principal Research Scientist, American Institutes for Research; substantial experience in politico-military affairs during military career; Chief, Asia Branch, Cultural Information and Analysis Center, American Institutes for Research; Project Director for the Ethnographic Study Series and several other classified and unclassified research projects. Research Scientist, American Institutes for Research; Assistant for Africa, Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense (International Security Affairs), 1968-1969; Management Assistant, Office of the Secretary of Defense, 1967-1968; author of and contributor to studies on the analysis of foreign policy, international politics, and social and international conflict. Research Scientist, American Institutes for Research, while at American Institutes for Research, conducted studies on insurgency and collective violence, civic action, and psychological operations; author of a number of classified or limited publications in these fields; author of Phases of Civil Disturbances: Problems and Characteristics, Social Conflict and Collective Violence in American Institutions of Higher Education. Research Associate, American Institutes for Research; Research Analyst, U.S. Army Security Agency; General Assistant, United |