MEMO TO RON ESTES FROM DAVE GRIES

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP83T00951R000100020024-9
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RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
3
Document Creation Date: 
December 20, 2016
Document Release Date: 
April 12, 2007
Sequence Number: 
24
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
February 19, 1982
Content Type: 
MEMO
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PDF icon CIA-RDP83T00951R000100020024-9.pdf265.08 KB
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. Approved For Release 2007/04/12 : CIA-RD 009518000100020024-9 THE DIRECTOR OF CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE National Intelligence Council 19 February 1982 brought to my attention. It apparently refers to pre-Korean War CA Ops in China. STAT STAT STAT TIME SCHEDULE FOR PANELS Panels and soecial events at the Annual Meeting will be scheduled according to the following time schedule. For the time and room assignments, consult the Ft~g-cn, which will be mailed in mid-February via third-class mail. Friday, April 2 AM ?9:30-11:30 AM (Pcner'.s) PM 1:30-4:45 PM (Back-to-back panels) or 2:00-4:00 PM 5:30-7:30 PM Saturday, April 3 AM 8:30-11:30 AM 9:30-11:30 AM PM 1:30-3:30 PM 1:30-4:45 PM 2:00-4:00 PM 5:00-6:00 PM 6:00-7:00 PM (Panels) AAS Annual Reception (Panel. on Butmeee Studies) (Pane,F,a ) (Panel on Regional and Global Politics of South Asia) (Back-to-back panels) (Pane-Is) Presidential Address Annual Membership Meeting Sunday, April 4 AM 9:30-71:30 AM (Panefa) PM 1:30-3:30 PM (Panels) TIME SCHEDULE FOR PANEL SESSIONS AND INDIVIDUAL PAPERS AT THE 1982 AAS ANNUAL MEETING Friday, April 2, AM Symposium: Mao Zedong- Reassessed. Parris H. Chang. Pakistan: A "Front-Line" State? Robert La Porte, Jr. Human Rights and Political Prisoners. in Southeast Asia. Kit Machado. Painting-Recitation in Asian Traditions: Religio-Secular Communication, Semiotics, forming Arts. Barbara Ruch. Indian Law and Courts in Tneir Social and Environment. Susanne Hoeber Rudolph. 10 Japanese Labor Policy under Authoritarianism, 1931- 1945. Gordon M. Berger. 11 individual Papers (Southeast Asia and China). Friday, April 2, PM 12 Cities of Colonial South Asia: Structures, Problems and Policies. Frank F. Conlon and Dilip K. Basu. 13 Southeast Asian Curers: Change and Continuity. Clark E. Cunningham. 14 Symposium: Teaching in China-What We Give, What We Get. Steve Thorpe. 15 China and Latin An erica: tions. Flora Botton. 16 Modern Asia and the Media. Linda S. Wojtan. 17 Politico-Economic issues in Contemporary Thailand. 18 19 20 21 Intellectual Diversity in Song China. James T.C. Liu. Symposium: State Granaries and Food Supply in Qing China, 1650-1850. Albert Feuerverker. Mainland Southeast Asian Archaeology in the 1980s. .4ilhelm G. Solheim, II. Japanese Literature in Cor..oarative Perspective: The Pedagogical Challenge. Masao Miyoshi. Clark. D. t.eher. Early Korean-Japanese Gari K. Ledyard. Studying Indian Muslims: A `, Imtiaz Ahmad. C.M. haim. Comparative Models and Rela- Tne Changing Significance of Popular History, 960-1937. Tho..as H.C. Lee. Issues in and the Per- Saturday, April 3, AM 23 The Past, Present and Future (?) in Burruese Studies: A State of the Art Panel. John P. Ferguson. 24 Scholars and Journalists on Southeast Asia: that Can They Learn from Each Other? A Roundtable. Donald Emmerson. 25 Language Learning in Situ: Intensive Language Programs in East Asia. Mei-Ling Hsu. 26 Approaches to the Word-Image Relationship in Asian Painting. Vishakha Desai and Maribeth Graybill. 27 The State and Art of Post-Mao Chinese Literature. Winston L.Y. Yang. 28 Pro-Poor Policies for South Asia. Sylvia Vatuk. 29 Political and Economic Struggles in China: Two Lines or Three? Dorothy J. Solinger. 30 Recent Trends in Japanese Policy-Making: Responses to the Shocks of the Seventies. Margaret A. McKean. 31 Ethics in South Asia: The Secular'and the Sacred. Dipankar Chatterjee. 32 Anguna: A New Genre of Japanese Theatre? David G. Goodman. 33 Collection Development in East Asian Collections: Trends and Problems. Richard C. Howard. 34 Individual Paper Sessions (China). Saturday, April 3, PM 35 Regional and Global Politics of South Asia. Robert Goheen. 36 Modern Theatre in India. Dinesh C. Mathur. 37 Language Structures and Chinese Literary Traditions. Yan-shuan Lao and Timothy Light. 38 Risk-Minimizing Strategies of Multinational Corpora- tions in Southeast Asia. William S. Turley. 39 Central Intelligence Agency Covert Operations. 1l/ Morton H. Halperin. 40 One Hundred Years of Korean-American Relations, 1882- 1982. Fred H. Harrington. 41 Recent Research on Guangzhou. Stanley Rosen. 42 Buddhist-Shinto "Syncretism": New Perspectives and Interpretations. Robert Lee. 43 Early Chinese Divination: The YAjing and Its Context.. Richard Kunst. 44 Asian Studies for Non-Asian Minorities. Constance M. Wilson. 45 Individual Paper Sessions (Japan). 46 Presidential Address. Paul Wheatley. Sunday, April 4, AM 47 Focus on Kenji Mizoguchi: The Man and His Films. Peter Grilli. 48 Politics, Law and Religious Endowments in British India. Bernard S. Cohn. 49 Spoken Drama in the People's Republic of China Today. Edward M. Gunn. 50 Investments by Asian Developing Countries. Krishna Kumar.' 51 Recent Chinese Historiography. Li Yu-ping. 52 Interpretive Approaches to Insular Southeast Asian Languages and Cultures. Richard McGinn. 53 Roundtable: The Koryo Officialdom: A Comparison with China and Japan. Hugh H.W. Kang. 54 The Making of the Chinese Working Class. Tang Tsou. 55 Who Was Listening to Vyasa's Song? An Exploration of South Asian Tests and Their Audiences- A.K. Ramanujan. 56 Individual Paper Sessions (China). Sunday, April 4, PM 57 Ideology, Consciousness and Legitimations of the Social Order in Peasant Societies. Benedict I:erkvliet. 58 Symposium: Japanese Intellectuals in Republican China: Fashioning a Mission. Ernest P. Young. 59 Problems of Merit and Wealth: Buddhism, Cosmology and the Thai Political Economy. Lucien M. Hanks. 60 Basic Issues in Japanese Language Pedagogy in the 19SOs. Tazuk . lioirane. 61 Approaches to Teaching Chinese Civilization. indic.iJual PaperA6 iffla hf'"E~ WO 2007/04/12: CIA-RDA `3 Qd0 b1 'd000100020024-9 ASSOCIATION FOR ASIAN STUDIES, INC. VOL. XXVII, NO. 3 1982 ANNUAL MEETING UPDATE This issue of the NewaLetten contains the preliminary schedule of panel sessions and announcements on meetings in conjunction. Please refer to the November issue for in- formation and application or reservation forms concerning the following: Paul Wheatley, President, University-of Chicago Ainslie T. Embree, Vice-President, Columbia University ASSOCIATION NEWS ? Pre-registration (also see page 3) ? Palmer House Hotel reservations (also see page 3 and 24) ? Placement ? Group flights to Chicago The Pnagnam will be mailed third class/printed matter in mid-February SPECIAL MEMBERSHIP MEETING Notice is hereby given of a special Membership Meeting to be held at the AAS Secretariat office, 1 Lane Hall, Univer- sity of Michigan, Ann Arbor, on February 22, 1982, at 9:00 AN for the purpose of counting votes cast in the election of the Association's Vice-President, Board of Directors, council members, and 1983 Nominating Committee. The Secretary-Treasurer will at that time excercise his proxy in casting votes sent to him by members in the form of ballots, as those ballots have been marked by members. AAS READING LISTS The following reading lists are now available in the fol- lowing units at the per-unit prices indicated. These prices reflect the actual costs of photocopying, postage, and handling. Members are urged to send copies of their reading lists and syllabi to the AAS Secretariat. The next summary listing of materials available will be included in the May Newa- .fettepc. (Please--if possible-do not send us lists repro- duced from purple ditto masters; our machine cannot copy them!) The Ad Hoc Committee on Constitutional Revision, chaired by Joseph W. Elder, University of Wisconsin, will present to the AAS Membership Meeting in Chicago a series of con- stitutional changes recommended by the Board of Directors. These changes relate to nominating procedures, membership categories, and a dues increase. Members are urged to attend this session. (The March Newa.te ten will contain a report on the proposed changes.) In accordance with the AAS Constitution, "All proposed amendments shall be discussed at the first Membership Meeting following the proposal, after which they shall be submitted by the Board of Directors to the membership at a special Membership Meeting in the manner provided in Article V, Section l(e).* After allowing sixty days for returns they shall be considered adopted, if approved by a majority of those casting ballots." (Article VII, Section Amendments to the Constitution may be proposed "(a) by the Board of Directors; (b) by members attending the Annual Membership Meeting [Article V, Section 1(e)]; or (c) by petition signed by three percent of the membership in good (Continued on page 2] AM NE .ETTER DEADLINE The deadline for receipt of copy for the March issue of the NewoZ..tteJt. is January 29, 1982. STABLE OF CONTENTS Association News .. _ t 34th Annual Meeting _..'Time Schedule for Panels : 4' Details of Meetings in Conjunction ..:..:_:... _._ 5 Hotel Reservation Form .. ................:.:....24 Miscellaneous News ........................ ......... 8 Exhibits and Performances--....... .. ...................... 11.-. Study Programs ............................................. 11 Conferences and Meetings ... ............ .........14 Grants and Fellowships ................... ..............15 AAS.ProfesoiAn el-f?ersonnel Registry ...................18 Publications and Resource Materials ...................20 Late Announcements ..............................19, 19,24 _RnP ,~TnnQF1 Rnnn1 nnn2nn24-A China ($5.00) - Suzanne Barnett, "Chinese Civilization" (to about 1800), history, 9 pages. ? Suzanne Barnett, "China since 1800," history, 9 pages. ? Suzanne Barnett, "Misunderstanding China," history, 6 pages. ? Suzanne Barnett, "Murder, Law, and Popular Culture in China," history, 5 pages. Approved For 7 1 : CI