ADDRESS OF THE AMERICAN ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP89G00720R000800150009-8
Release Decision:
RIPPUB
Original Classification:
U
Document Page Count:
21
Document Creation Date:
December 27, 2016
Document Release Date:
September 13, 2013
Sequence Number:
9
Case Number:
Publication Date:
October 13, 1988
Content Type:
MEMO
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MEMORANDUM FOR:
FROM:
SUBJECT:
13 October 1988
Deputy Director of Central Intelligence
William M. Baker
Director, Public Affairs Office
Address of the American Association for the
Advancement of Science
1. This is background information for your address of the American
Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) Colloquium on Science, Arms
Control and National Security on Friday, 14 October. The breakfast meeting
will be from 8:00 a.m. - 9:15 a.m. at the Capital Hilton Hotel, 16th & K
Streets, NW, Washington, D.C. Phone: 393-1000. will attend the
program.
2. Arrangements for Your Address of the AAAS Breakfast Meeting: You are
asked to be at the Association's registration desk in the upper lobby on the
second floor of the hotel at 7:45 a.m. Staff members will meet you and escort
you to the Congressional Senate Room. Your host, Vice President of System
Planning Corporation, Sidney N. Graybeal, will escort you to the head table.
(See tab opposite for biography.) Breakfast will be served at 8:00 a.m. and
your remarks on "Recent Developments in the Soviet Union and Implications for
US Security Policy" are scheduled to begin at approximately 8:30 a.m.
Mr. Graybeal will introduce you. The suggested format is 30 minutes of
remarks followed by 15 minutes of questions and answers. A podium and
microphone will be available near your table.
You will be seated with Mr. Graybeal and other members of the Committee on
Science, Arms Control and National Security. (See tab opposite for list.)
Since seating is not on an assigned basis, a head table seating list is not
available. DCI Security will tape your remarks for the Agency's historical
records. The meeting also will be taped by the Association for publication in
their proceedings, and we will have an opportunity to review the proceedings
prior to publication.
Audience: You can expect 200 - 250 scientists, academicians, and
students. Approximately two-thirds of the audience will be representatives
from high technology defense-related industries and DOD. Staffers from
Senator Edward Kennedy's and Senator Tom Harkin's offices also will attend.
Since members from the Soviet, Yugoslav, Czechoslovak, Bulgarian, Finnish,
Canadian, Australian, and Brazilian embassies were invited you could expect
diplomats from these countries to be in the audience.
FOR OFF ISE ONLY
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Media: Although the TV, radio and print press including members of the
foreign press have been invited to attend the Colloquium, the Association does
not know at this time who will cover your address. (See tab opposite for list
of invited media and the press release.) According to the Association,
reporters primarily from journals such as AVIATION WEEK & SPACE TECHNOLOGY
will be present. TV coverage is not anticipated, but the VOICE OF AMERICA
will attend. The media which will be seated with the rest of the audience may
ask questions in the question and answer session but the Association said the
reporters seldom participate.
Background: The AAAS founded in 1848 is the largest general scientific
organization representing all fields of science. The organization has a
budget of $35,000,000 and a membership of 132,000 individuals and 300
scientific societies. The AAAS publishes the weekly journal SCIENCE. The
Program on Science, Arms Control and National Security has the responsibility
within the AAAS to develop and focus the scientific, technical, and
organizational resources of the Association on effective approaches toward
conflict resolution, control of nuclear weapons, and improvement of national
security assets. (See background tab opposite for further information.)
The program for the third annual Colloquium on Science, Arms Control, and
National Security is "Science and Security: Issues of Technology and Arms
Control for the 1990s." In its first two years, the Colloquium has
established itself as a major event in the scientific and defense policy
communities.
Previous speakers have included Paul Nitze, General James Abrahamson,
Kenneth Adelman, and Les Aspin. The Colloquium's program this fall includes
Senator Albert Gore, Provost of MIT John Deutch, Assistant Secretary of
Defense Ronald Lehman, Associate Director of Lawrence Livermore National
Laboratory Michael May, Vice President of Kissinger Associates
Brent Scowcroft, and Director Emeritus of the Linear Acellerator Center at
Stanford University Wolfgang Panofsky. (See tab opposite for program.)
William M. Baker
FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
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COMMITTEE ON SCIENCE, ARMS CONTROL, AND NATIONAL SECURITY
Mr. Sidney N. Graybeal
(Chairman)
Vice President
System Planning Corp.
1500 Wilson Blvd.
Arlington, VA 22209
(703) 841-2800
Dr. Ashton B. Carter
Associate Director
Center for Science &
International Affairs
Associate Professor of
Public Policy
The JFK School of Govt.
Harvard University
79 John F. Kennedy St.
Cambridge, MA 02138
(617) 495-1405
Mr. Dick Clark
Senior Fellow
Aspen Institute for
Humanistic Studies
1333 New Hampshire
Ave., N.W.
Suite 1070
Washington, D.C. 20036
(202) 466-6410
Ambassador Jonathan Dean
Arms Control Advisor
Union of Concerned
Scientists
1616 P St., N.W.
Suite 310
Washington, D.C. 20036
(202) 332-0900
Dr. Brewster C. Denny
Graduate School of
Public Affairs, DP-30
University of Washington
Seattle, WA 98195
(206) 543-4920
Dr. Gloria C. Duffy
President
Global Outlook
405 Lytton Ave.
Palo Alto, CA 94301
(415) 321-3828
Dr. Robert R. Everett
President (Retired)
The MITRE Corporation
Burlington Road
Bedford, MA 01730
(617) 271-2529
Dr. Alton Frye
Washington Director
Council on Foreign
Relations
11 Dupont Circle, N.W.
Suite 900
Washington, D.C. 20036
(202) 797-6460
Admiral Noel Gayler
East/West Issues
2111 Mason Hill Dr.
Alexandria, VA 22306
(703) 765-7866
Dr. Michael May
Associate Director
Lawrence Livermore
Natl. Laboratory
L-019, P.O. Box 808
Livermore, CA 94550
(415) 422-4608
Mr. Rodney W. Nichols
Exec. Vice President
The Rockefeller Univ.
1230 York Avenue
New York, NY 10021
(212) 570-8052
Dr. Joseph S. Nye, Jr.
The JFK School of Govt.
Harvard University
79 John F. Kennedy St.
Cambridge, MA 02138
(617) 495-1148
Dr. Eberhardt Rechtin
President Emeritus
Aerospace Corporation
P.O. Box 92957
Los Angeles, CA 90009
(213) 336-5872
Mr. John B. Rhinelander
Shaw, Pittman, Potts, &
Trowbridge
,2300 N Street, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20037
(202) 663-8048
Dr. Condoleezza Rice
Dept. of Political Sci.
Stanford University
Stanford, CA 94305
(415) 723-2843
Ms. Cynthia Roberts
Dept. of Political Sci.
Hunter College
695 Park Avenue
New York, NY 10021
(212) 772-5495
General Brent Scowcroft
Vice Chairman
Kissinger Assoc., Inc.
1875 Eye St., N.W.
Suite 440
Washington, D.C. 20006
(202) 861-0006
Dr. Alvin Trivelpiece
(ex-officio)
Executive Officer, AAAS
1333 H St., N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20005
(202) 326-6440
Mr. William T. Golden
(Board Liaison)1
40 Wall Street
New York, NY 10005
(212) 425-0333
Dr. W. Thomas Wander
Program Head, AAAS
Program on Science,
Arms Control, &
National Security
1333 H St., N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20005
(202) 326-6490
February 1988
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OCT 06 '88 15:14 SCIENCE NAG ? P.2
PRESS PRE-REGISTERED FOR AAAS 1988 ARMS CONTROL coLuxenum AS OF 10-6-88
Johann Aeschlimann. BASLER ZEITUNG (Switzerland)
Seth"Arenatein. DEFENSE DAILY
Sely Arndt FEDERATION OF AMERICAN SCIENTISTS
Caleb Baker NAVAL WARFARE REPORTS
Tim Beardsley SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN
Ted Bonniit WORLD SPACE REPORT
Dan Charles NEW SCIENTIST
Marty Cohen JANE'S DEFENCE GROUP
Maj, Henry Collins USIA
Tom Cremins SPACELINE
Paug Denig USIA .
Theresa Foley AVIATION WEEK & SPACE TECHNOLOGY
Victor Franzusoff VOICE .OF AMERICA
Paul Jaszka DEFENSE ELECTRONICS
Jim Reiman USIA
Hugh.Lucas JANE'S DEFENCE WEEKLY
Jenifer Mackby UNITED NATIONS
Suzan C. Mazur freelance
Nancy J. Myers BULLETIN OF THE ATOMIC SCIENTISTS
Llyod Neighbors USIA
Colin Norman SCIENCE
L. Pal* JOURNAL OF COLLEGE SCIENCE TEACHING
Kathleen Peters NMK JAPAN BROADCASTING CORP.
Elizabeth Pond CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR
John Roberts VOICE OF AMERICA
Masami Shimizu NIHON KEIZAI SHIMBUN (Japan Economic Journal)
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OCT 06 '88 15:15 SCIENCE MAC P.3
Press Pre-Registered for AAAS 1988 Arms Control Colloquium as of 10-6-88, page 2
?
R. Jeffrey Smith WASHINGON POST
Bruce Van Voorat TIME MAGAZINE
John Waring freelance
Wei Guoqiang XIN HUA NEWS AGENCY
David B. Wood NEWHOUSE NEWS SERVICE
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OCT 06 '88 15:15 SCIENCE MG P.4
.??Nt????
AAAS
American Association for the Advancement of Science, 1333 H Street, N.W., Washin on, D.C. WOOS
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
(Mailed 13 September 1988)
CONTACT: Joan Wrather
(202) 326-6440
TECHNOLOGY AND ARMS CONTROL IN 19906 TO BE FOCUS OF AAAS
COLLOQUIUM -- 13-14 OCTOBER 1988
Washington, D C As a new decade and a new administration begin,
what will be the key arms control issues? How will the balance between
nuclear and conventional forces be resolved? What will be the effect of deep
reductions in strategic nuclear forces? Will the United States and the Soviet
Union be able to build on the arms control agreements of the 19800 Row will
advances in technology affect arms control issues?
These are the issues to be addressed at the third annual American
AesoCiation for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) Colloquium on Science, Arms
Control, and National Security.
"Science and Security: Technology and Arms Control for the 1990s" will be
held Thursday and Friday, 13 and 14 October 1988, at the Capital Hilton Hotel
in Washington, D.C.
In addition to plenary sessions, small groups will focus on European
security after INF, changing Soviet military doctrine, ASAT weapons/arms
control, verifying arms control agreements, nuclear testing, and technology
advances in strategic defenses.
- over -
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OCT 06 '88 15:16 SCIENCE MAG P.5
.; ?
Technology and Arms Control Colloquium, page 2
Featured speakers will include John Deutch, provost, Massachusetts
Institute of Technology; Robert Gates, deputy director, Central Intelligence
Agency; Senator Albert Gore, Jr., (D-Tenn); Ronald Lehman, assistant secretary
of defense for international security policy; Michael May, associate director,
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory; Brent Scowcroft, vice chairman,
Kissinger Associates; and Wolfgang Panof sky, director emeritus, Stanford
Linear Accelerator Center, Stanford University.
Some 400 participants from science, government, business, and citizen
groups are expected to take part in both the plenary sessions and the smaller
group discussions during the Colloquium.
A preliminary program for. "Science and Security; Technology and Arms
Control for the 1990s" is enclosed.
The American Association for the Advancement Of Science (AAAS) formed in
1848, is the country's leading general scientific organization. It currently
has more than 132,000 individual members and nearly 300 affiliated scientific
and engineering, societies and academies of science. The AAAS publishes the
weekly journal Science.
PIO
NOTE TO JOURNALISTS: Members of the press are invited to attend the
Colloquium. There is no registration fee for press personnel, but pre-
registration is requested. Please fill out the attached form and return it to
the AAAS Office of Communications or call the contact number on the
letterhead. Those wishing to make meal reservations must so indicate on the
registration form and enclose remuneration (make checks payable to AAAS).
Seating spice will be available for reporters who only wish to hear luncheon
and breakfast speakers; they need not make meal reservations. A final program
will be distributed to press personnel who register in advance of the
Colloquium.
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. .00T 06 '88 15:17 SCIENCE MAG P.6
AAAs comoqum ON SCIENCE, ARMS CONTROL, AND NATIONAL SECURITY
RETURN BY 3 OCTOBER TO:
...111.111????????11,
PRESS PEE?REGISTRATION FORM
Joan Wrather, AAAS,
Office of Communications,
133311 Street, N.W.,
Washington, D.C. 20005
I will attend the AAAS Colloquium on Science, Arms
Control, and National Security, 13 and 14 October
1988, at the Capital Hilton Hotel, Washington, D.C.
NAME: ------
AFFILIATION:
MAILING
enclose payment for the following meals:
Lunch, Thursday, 13 October 1988 ($25)
Breakfast, Friday, 14 October 1988 ($9)
Lunch, Friday, 14 October 1988 ($25)
1 will not attend the Colloquium, but would be interested in
receiving more information.
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. . OCT 06 '88 15:17 SCIENCE MAG P.7
t.
Third Annual AAAS Colloquium on Science, Arms Control 4fk National Security
? Science and Security:
Technology and Arms Control
for the1990s
13-14 October 1988
Capital Hilton Hotel + Washington, DC
Schedule of Events
Thursday, October 13
8:00 a.m. REGISTRATION
9:00 a.m. PLENARY SESSION: The U.S. Defense Technology Base: Issues for the 1990s.
Panelist: John Deutch, Provost, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; John
Zysman, Co-Director, Berkeley Roundtable on the International Economy;
Alexander Flax, President Emeritus, Institute for Defense Analysis.
11:00 a.m. PLENARY SESSION: Qualitative Factors in the Nuclear and Conventional
Force Balance. Panelists: Jasper Welch, Member, Board of Directors, Science
Applications International Corporation; Sir Ronald Mason, Professor of
Chemical Physics, University of Sussex, England; Charles Zraket, President,
MITRE Corporation.
12:30 p.m. LUNCHEON ADDRESS: A START Agreement and Beyond: Implications for
American Nuclear Fortes and Strategy. Speaker. Member of Congress, to be
announced.
2:00 p.m. PLENARY SESSION: Deep Reductions in Strategic Offensive Nuclear Forces:
Implications for Force Structure, Stability, and National Security. Panelists:
Ronald Lehman, Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security
Policy, U.S. Department of Defense; Michael May, Associate Director,
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Brent Scowcroft, Vice Chairman,
Irminger Associates.
4:45 p.m. OPEN FORUM: Issues in Science, Arms Control, and National Security.
Colloquium panelists and members, AAAS Committee on Science, Arms
Control & National Security.
6:00 p.m. RECEPTION
Continued on back
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. OCT 06 '88 15:18 SCIENCE MAG P.8
Friday, October 14
7:30 a.m. REGISTRATION
8:00 a.m. BREAKFAST ADDRESS: The Future of U.S.?Soviet Relations. Speaker:
Robert Gates, Deputy Director, Central Intelli,gence Agency.
9:30 a.m. SMALL GROUP DISCUSSIONS ? Block L
European Security After INF. Panelists: Jonathan Dean, Arms Control
Adviser, Union of Concerned Scientists; Peter Lyddon, Assistant Director,
Defence Polity, British Ministry of Defence.
Changing Soviet Military Doctrine and Its Impact on Force Structure and
Arms ControL Panelists: Raymond Garthoff, Senior Fellow, Brookings
Institution; additional panelist, to be announced.
ASAT Weapons and Arms Control. Panelists: John Pike, Associate Director,
Space Policy, Federation of American Scientists; Henry Cooper, Chief
Negotiator, Nuclear and Space Arms Talks, U.S. Department of State.
11:15 a.m. SMALL GROUP DISCUSSIONS ? Block
Verifying Arms Control: Implementation of Major Agreements in the 1990s.
Panelists: Sidney Graybeal, Vice President for Strategic Policy, System
Planning Corporation; Sally Horn, Director, Verification Policy, Office of
Nuclear Forces and Arms Control Policy, U.S. Department of Defense.
Strategic Defenses: Technology Advances and the ABM Treaty in the 1990s.
Panelists: Ashton Carter, Associate Director, CSIA, John F. Kennedy School of
Government, Harvard University; Louis Marquet, Director of Optics and
Infrared Programs, Atlantic Aerospace Electronics Corporation.
Nuclear Testing: Technical Requirements for and Implications of New
Limits. Panelists: Thomas Cochran, Senior Staff' Scientist, Natural Resources
Defense Council; Robert Barker,Assistant to the Secretary of Defense (Atomic
Energy), U.S. Department of Defense.
1:00 p.m. CLOSING LUNCHEON ADDRESS: Scientists and Security: The Role of Science
in Making National Security Policy. Speaker: Wolfgang Panofsky, Director
Emeritus, Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, Stanford University.
2:30 p.m. COLLOQUIUM ADJOURNS
The American Association for the Advancement of Science
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ification by the board. Conducts research in the evaluation of competency for
professional practice in the safety professions. Compiles statistics. Maintains
small library. Committees: Examination; Maintenance of Certification; Pro-
fessional Concerns. Publications: (1) Newsletter, 3/year; (2) Directory, bi-
ennial (with annual supplement); also publishes technical reports. Affiliated
With: American Industrial Hygiene Association; American Society of Safety
Engineers; Socity of Fire Protection Engineers; System Safety Society
(sponsoring organizations). Convention/Meeting: two board of directors
meetings per year - always Febuary and September, Tampa - St. Petersburg,
FL and Los Alamos, NM.
*6725* AMERICAN SOCIETY OF SANITARY ENGINEERING
(Sanitation) (ASSE)
P.O. Box 40362 Phone: (216) 835-3040
Bay Village, OH 44140 Gael H. Dunn, Exec.Sec.
Founded: 1906. Members: 2700. Local Groups: 32. Plumbing officials,
sanitary engineers, plumbers, plumbing contractors, building officials, archi-
tects, engineers, designing engineers, physicians, and others interested in
health. Conducts research on plumbing and sanitation and develops perfor-
mance standards for components of the plumbing system. Sponsors disease
research program and other studies of water-borne epidemics. Committees:
Adequate Plumbing Requirements; Air-Conditioning Water Supply and Waste;
Buildings (Hot Water, Steam and Gas); Cross-Connections; Drainage; Energy;
Health Protection and Disease Prevention; Mobile Homes and Parks; Plumbing
and Disease Organisms; Pressure and Temperature Control Valves; Rainwater.
Disposal; Sewage Disposal; Sterilization of Food and Drink; Swimming Pools;
Utensils; Water Conservation. Publications: (1) News Letter, monthly; (2)
Year Book; also publishes Cross-Connection Control Booklet, Performance
Standards, Plumbing Dictionary, and Plumbing Inspection Manual. Formerly:
American Society of Inspectors of Plumbing and Sanitary Engineering. Con-
vention/Meeting: annual - 1987 Las Vegas, NV; 1988 Portland, ME; 198
New Orleans, LA.
*6726* CONFERENCE OF STATE HEALTH AND ENVIRONMENTAL?
MANAGERS (Sanitation) (CSSE)
One Deerfield Dr. Phone: (518) 273-791
Troy, NY 12180 Dr. Meredith Thompson, Exec. Of fic
Founded: 1920. Members: 171. Chief sanitary engineering and enviro
mental officials of departments of health and environmental agencies in t
states, territories, and possessions of the United States and assistants an
associates of such officials. To coordinate the public health and environment
engineering and sanitation activities of official state and territorial health
natural and human resources, and environmental organizations and provide f
policy determination and exchange of information. Conducts research an
surveys; compiles information on agency personnel compensation. Attend
congressional hearings and provides testimony; cooperates with state an
federal agencies through committees. Committees: Air; Environmenta
Planning and Program Development; General Envirbnmental Health; India
Health; Milk and Food Protection; Occupational Health; Personnel Manage
ment; Radiological Health; Solid and Hazardous Waste; Swimming Pools an
Bathing Beaches; Training and Personnel; Waste Water; Water Supply. Pub
lications: (1) Committee Reports, annual; (2) Directory of State Environmen
tal Concerns, annual; (3) Proceedings, annual; (4) Joint Publications, periodic
also publishes guidelines and manual. Formerly: (1985) Conference of Stat
Sanitary Engineers. Convention/Meeting: annual conference.
*6727* INTER-AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF SANITARY AND
ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING (Sanitation) (AIDIS)
18729 Considine Dr. Phone: (301) 492-768
Brookeville, MD 20833 Dr. Richard F. Cole, Sec.-Treas.
Founded: 1946. Members: 5000. Sections: 25. Sanitary engineers in gov-
ernment, private business, and educational institutions throughout the West-
ern Hemisphere. Promotes study and solution of sanitary engineering and en-
vironmental problems as a necessary condition for economic and social de-
velopment in the Americas and for advancing hemispheric understanding;
establishes uniform standards for permanent protection of health of all the in-
habitants of the Wrstem Hemisphere. Presents awards. Publications: (1)
Ingeniera Sanitaria in English and Spanish), quarterly; (2) Newsletter, quar-
terly; (3) Directory, periodic. Formerly: Inter-American Association of Sani-
tary Engineering; (1981) Inter-American Association of Sanitary Engineering
and Environment. Convention/Meeting: biennial international congress (with
exhibits).
*6728* ACADEMY OF APPLIED SCIENCE (AAS) ,
Two White St. Phone: (603) 225-2072
Concord, NH 03301 Howard S. Curtis, Exec.V.Pres.
Founded: 1962. Members: 300. Staff: 4. Local Groups: 11. Scientific and
educational organization dedicated to the advancement and recognition of
scientific creativity. Membership includes: persons who have made a signifi-
cant and creative contribution in applied science, engineering, technological
management or administration; persons interested in applied science and en-
gineering, or in advancing and encouraging scientific and technological
creativity; and firms, agencies, organizations, or institutions that are engaged
in, or interested in, the advancement of applied science, creative engineering,
and management. Sponsors Junior Science and Humanities Symposia in 43
regions throughout the U.S. Special projects include underwater and Loch Ness
research. Sponsors competition; presents awards. Offets specialized educa-
tion; conducts research programs; publishes monographs. Conducts confer-
ences. Programs: Research Engineering and Apprenticeship.
*6729* ACADEMY FOR INTERSCIENCE METHODOLOGY (AIM)
1313 E. 60th St. Phone: (312) 667-0240
Chicago, 11 60637 Martin E. Persky, Exec.Dir.
Founded: 1961. Members: 20. Staff: 20. State Groups: 2. Research sci-
entists who conduct research and educational programs in interdisciplinary ar-
eas including science, mathematics, and computer systems. Publishes re-
search reports. Convention/Meeting: semiannual technical meeting.
*6730* AFRICAN SCIENTIFIC INSTITUTE (Science) (ASI)
P.O. Box 12161 Phone: (415) 653-7027
Oakland, CA 94604 Lee 0. Cherry, Exec.Dir.
Founded: 1967. Budget: Less than $25,000. Nonmembership. Encourages
minority youth to pursue careers in science and engineering. Serves as a fo-
rum for the exchange of technical information and expertise. Sponsors Sci-
ence and Technology Awareness Program to assist people in feeling com-
fortable with science and the technology surrounding them and the African
Relief Fund to minimize the crises of drought and famine in Africa by utilizing
available technology, conducting research on Africa's resources, and en-
couraging coordinated efforts between other groups concerned with Africa.
Compiles statistics. Maintains placement service and speakers' bureau. Pub-
fications: (1) SciTech (newsletter), monthly; (2) Blacks in Science Calendar,
nni LA F4)rmerly: (1975) Dignity Institute of Technology. Convention/
a
Meeting: None.
*6731* AMERICAN ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF
SCIENCE (AMS) ?
1333 H St., N.W. Phone: (202) 326-6400
Washington, DC 20005 William D. Carey, Exec. Officer
Founded: 1848. Staff: 250. Budget: $35,000,000. The largest general
scientific organization representing all fields of science. Membership includes
135,000 individuals and 285 scientific societies, professional organizations
and state and city academies (many of which sponsor junior academies of
science). Objectives are to further the work of scientists and to improve the
effectiveness of science in the promotion of human welfare. Conducts sem-
inars and colloquia on scientific issues. Present's the AAAS-Westinghouse
Science Journalism Awards, Newcomb-Cleveland Award, AAAS Prize for
Behavicral Science Research, AAAS Scientific Freedom and Responsibility
Award, and the AAAS-Philip Hauge Abelson Prize. Holds annual Sysmposium
and lecture. Committees: Arid Lands; Climate; Opportunities in Science; Public
Understanding of Science and Technology; Science, Arms Control, and Na-
tional Security; Science, Engineering and Public Policy; Scientific Freedom and
Responsibility. Sections: Agriculture; Anthropology; Astronomy; Atmospheric
and Hydrospheric Sciences; Biological Sciences; Chemistry; Dentistry; Engi-
neering; Geology and Geography; History and Philosophy of Science; Industrial
Science; Information, Computing and Communication; Mathematics; Medical
Sciences; Pharmaceutical Sciences; Physics; Psychology; Social, Economic,
and Political Sciences; Social Impacts of Science and Engineering. Publica-
tions: (1) Science, weekly; (2) Science Books and Films, 5/year; (3) Science
Education News, quarterly; (4) Handbook, annual; (5) Research and Develop-
ment in Federal Budget, annual; also publishes Symposium Volumes,
compendia from science and general reference works.
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF SCIENTIFIC WORKERS
(Science) (AASW)
c/o Prof. Robert J. Rutman
School of Veterinary Medicine
University of Pennsylvania Phone: (215) 898- : : .9
Philadelphia, PA 19174 Prof. Robert J. Rutman, Exec.Sec.
Founded: 1946. Scientists concerned with the national and international re-
lations of science and society and with organizational aspects of science.
Maintains regular communication and contact with scientists all over the
world. Publications: Scientific World, quarterly.
*6733* AMERICAN COMMITTEE FOR THE WEIZMANN INSTITUTE OF
SCIENCE (ACWIS)
515 Park Ave. Phone: (212) 752-1300
New York, NY 10022 Jeannette Krauss, Assoc.Dir.
Founded: 1944. Regional Groups: 12. Organized for the purposes of:
establishing the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, Israel; broadening
awareness of its purposes; raising funds for its development as an institution
for fundamental scientific research addressed to the progress of mankind.
Holds annual dinner. Publications: Weizmann World (newsletter), 2-3/year.
*6734* AMERICAN MISCELLANEOUS SOCIETY (Science) (AMSOC)
c/o Dr. John Knauss
Graduate School of Oceanography -
University of Rhode Island
Kingston, RI 02881 Dr. John Knauss, Exec. Officer
Informal group of prominent scientists who hold private discussions on a va-
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American Association for the Advancement of Science
Program on Science, Arms Control, and National Security
Dear Colleague:
Technology and Arms Control for the 1990s, the third annual AAAS Colloquium on Science,
Arms Control, and National Security, will be held on October 13? 14, in Washington, DC. For
each of its first two years, this annual conference has gathered together some 400 government
policymakers, scientists, academics, and other interested parties, to examine the interaction of
science and security. Major sessions at this year's meeting will feature:
Top-level U.S. and foreign government officials such as Ronald Lehman, assistant
secretary of defense for international security policy, Robert Gates, deputy director
of the Central Intelligence Agency, and Peter Lyddon, assistant director of
Britain's Defence Policy Staff.
Nationally recognized experts such as John Deutch, MIT, Brent Scowcroft,
Kissinger Associates, Jonathan Dean, Union of Concerned Scientists, Michael
May, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, and Wolfgang Panofsky, Stanford
University, will present their views in this important forum.
The importance of this colloquium lies in the unique ability of the AAAS to examine, in a broad
and balanced way, issues at the intersection of science/technology and arms control/national
security policy. As we enter into the 1990s, the new presidential administration must consider
how to best utilize the advances in technology and build upon the arms control agreements of
the 1980s.
Plenary sessions will focus on The US. Defense Technology Base in the 1990s,
Reductions in Strategic Offensive Nuclear Forces, and Qualitative Factors in the
Nuclear and Conventional Force Balance. Major addresses will discuss The Future
of US. ?Soviet Relations, and The Role of Science in Making National Security
Policy. Small group sessions will provide you the opportunity to discuss the issues
with panelists in a more informal setting. (See the enclosed colloquium program
schedule for more details.)
On behalf of the AAAS Committee on Science, Arms Control, and National Security, I
encourage you to be part of this timely national meeting. I look forward to seeing you in
Washington.
Sincerely yours,
Alvin W. Trivelpiece
Executive Officer
American Association for the Advancement of Science
1333 H Street, NW, Washington, DC 20005 (202) 326-6490
Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/13: CIA-RDP89G00720R000800150009-8
Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/13: CIA-RDP89G00720R000800150009-8
Third Annual AAAS Colloquium on Science, Arms Control & National Security
Science and Security:
Technology and Arms Control
for the1990s
13-14 October 1988
Capital Hilton Hotel + Washington, DC
Schedule of Events
Thursday, October 13
8:00 a.m. REGISTRATION
9:00 a.m. PLENARY SESSION: The U.S. Defense Technology Base: Issues for the 1990s.
Panelists: John Deutch, Provost, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; John
Zysman, Co-Director, Berkeley Roundtable on the International Economy;
Alexander Flax, President Emeritus, Institute for Defense Analysis.
11:00 a.m. PLENARY SESSION: Qualitative Factors in the Nuclear and Conventional
Force Balance. Panelists: Jasper Welch, Member, Board of Directors, Science
Applications International Corporation; Sir Ronald Mason, Professor of
Chemical Physics, University of Sussex, England; Charles Zraket, President,
MITRE Corporation.
12:30 p.m. LUNCHEON ADDRESS: A START Agreement and Beyond: Implications for
American Nuclear Forces and Strategy. Speaker: Member of Congress, to be
announced.
2:00 p.m. PLENARY SESSION: Deep Reductions in Strategic Offensive Nuclear Forces:
Implications for Force Structure, Stability, and National Security. Panelists:
Ronald Lehman, Assistant Secretor), of Defense for International Security
Policy, U.S. Department of Defense; Michael May, Associate Director,
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratog; Brent Scowcroft, Vice Chairman,
Kissinger Associates.
4:45 p.m. OPEN FORUM: Issues in Science, Arms Control, and National Security.
Colloquium panelists and members, AAAS Committee on Science, Arms
Control & National Security.
6:00 p.m. RECEPTION
Continued on back
Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/13: CIA-RDP89G00720R000800150009-8
Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/09/13: CIA-RDP89G00720R000800150009-8
?
The 1988 Arms Control Colloquium Reader:
Technology, Security, and Arms Control
for the 1990s
All registrants for the colloquium receive two publications, the 1988 Arms Control ColloqUium Reader
before or at the meeting, and the 1988 Colloquium Proceedings of all panel discussions. The essays
contained in the Colloquium Reader function as an valuable adjunct to the meeting through their
detailed analysis of the issues to be explored in the colloquium sessions. A short description of the Col-
loquium Reader follows.
I. Defense Technology
Preliminary Table of Contents
Ill. Arms Control Issues for the 1990s
U.S. Defense Technology Base: Issues for the
1990s
ALEXANDER FLAX, National Academy of Engineering, Relat-
ing Military R&D to the Cit4lian Economy
Office of Technology Assessment, What Is the Defense
Technology Base?
CUFFORD DUNCAN, Dept. of Defense, Office of Strategic
Development
Qualitative Factors in the Nuclear and Convention-
al Force Balance
ALEX GUCKSMAN, Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace
JACQUES GANSLER The Analytic Sciences Corporation,
Improving Weapons Acquisition
JOSEPHINE STEIN, Office Of Technology Assessment
II. U.S.-Soviet Relations
The Future of U.S.-Soviet Relations
JERRY HOUGH, Brookings Institution
SERGEY ROGOV, Soviet Academy of Sciences, Institute of
the United States and Canada, D?nte Is Not Enough
For a New Model of Soviet-American Relations
Changing Soviet and U.S. Military Doctrines: Their
Impact on Force Structure and Arms Control
GEN. WILUAM ODOM, National Security Agency,
Soviet Force Posture: Dilemmas and Directions
MICHAEL MCCGWIRE, Brookings Institution, Rethinking
War: The Soviets and European Security
V. NAZARENKO, Soviet Academy of Sciences, Institute of
the United States and Canada, Soviet and U.S. Military
Doctrines and Arms Control
START and Beyond: Implications for American
Nuclear Forces and Strategy
FRANK JENKINS, Science Applications International Corp.
JOHN STEINBRUNER, Brookings Institution, The Effect of ?
Strategic Force Reductions on Nuclear Strategy
ANDFEY KOKOSHIN, Soviet Academy of Sciences, Institute
of the United States and Canada, A Soviet View on Radi-
cal Weapons Cuts
European Security After INF
ROBERT BLACKWILL, Kennedy School of Government, liar-
yard University, The Military Aspects of European
Security After INF
DAVID RIVI