PROPOSED REMARKS FOR WILLIAM H. WEBSTER DIRECTOR OF CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY GUEST SPEAKER PROGRAM HEADQUARTERS AUDITORIUM 6 JANUARY 1988
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CIA-RDP99-00777R000301840001-8
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Publication Date:
January 6, 1988
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STAT
STAT
SUBJECT: (Optional)
Guest Speaker Program - Mr. George F. Will
ROUTING AND RECORD SHEET
Director of Training and
Education
TO: (Officer designation, room number, and DATE
building)
Deputy Director for
Administration , ., ;;
1987
Director, Public Aff
Office
7B24 Headquarter-,
Executive Registry
7E12 Headquarters
Director of Central
Intelligence
.7D69 Headquarters
Director of Training
and Education
1026 COC
FORM L 1 0 USEEDITIOPREVIOUSS
N
1-79 v
OFFICER'S
INITIALS
COMMENTS (Number each comment to show from whom
to whom. Draw a line across column after each comment.)
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ADMINISTRATIVE IN USE ONLY
Distribution
Orig. - Judge
STAT
1 -
1-
1-
1 -
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STAT
1 -
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1 - Ames (Hold Copy)
1 - ER
1 - PAO
STAT
1 -
(Chrono)
Judge:
PAO 87-0194
You are scheduled to introduce George F. Will, the noted newspaper
columnist and television commentator, when he speaks at the Headquarters
Auditorium on 6 January at 2:00 p.m. Mr. Will's topic will be "The Year 1988:
Political Dynamics." Attached are proposed introductory remarks, biographical
information provided by Mr. Will's office, and the original invitation sent to
Attachments:
As stated
ADMINISTRATIU&-r TERNAL USE ONLY
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/30: CIA-RDP99-00777R000301840001-8
PROPOSED REMARKS
FOR
WILLIAM H. WEBSTER
DIRECTOR OF CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE
AGENCY GUEST SPEAKER PROGRAM
.HEADQUARTERS AUDITORIUM
6 JANUARY 1988
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IT IS MY PLEASURE THIS AFTERNOON TO INTRODUCE
MR. GEORGE F. WILL-= SYNDICATED COLUMNIST, NETWORK
TELEVISION COMMENTATOR, AND AUTHOR. I LOOK FORWARD TO
HEARING MR. WILL'S VIEWS ON THE POLITICAL DYNAMICS WE CAN
EXPECT IN THE YEAR 1988.
MOST OF US IN THIS AUDIENCE ALREADY HAVE VIEWS ON THE
POLITICAL SITUATION. BUT MR. WILL, UNLIKE MOST OF US, HAS
BEEN INVITED TO EXPRESS HIS VIEWS. TODAY, HE BRINGS US
THE ADVANTAGE OF HIS CONSIDERABLE EXPERIENCE--EXPERIENCE I
WILL SUMMARIZE BRIEFLY FOR YOU.
MR. WILL. EDUCATED AT TRINITY COLLEGE AND OXFORD AND
PRINCETON UNIVERSITIES, TAUGHT POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY AT
MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY AND THE UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO.
AFTER TEACHING, HE SERVED AS A SENATE STAFFER, THEN LEFT
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TO BECOME A CONTRIBUTOR TO NE EE
K MAGAZINE. IN 1977,
HE WON A PULITZER PRIZE FOR COMMENTARY IN HIS NEWSPAPER
COLUMNS. HIS SYNDICATED COLUMN NOW APPEARS TWICE WEEKLY
IN MORE THAN 400 NEWSPAPERS. AND HE EXPRESSES HIS
VIEWS--ELOQUENTLY AND FORCEFULLY-- ON TELEVISION AS WELL,
APPEARING REGULARLY ON ABC NEWS AND DISCUSSION PROGRAMS.
MR. WILL, A PROLIFIC WRITER, HAS MOST RECENTLY PUBLISHED
THE MORNING AFT R? AMERICAN SUCCESSES AND EXCESSE
1981-1986 AND IHE NEW SEASON.
MR. WILL, YOUR ACCOMPLISHMENTS AND TALENT ARE
.IMPRESSIVE. THIS PROGRAM SHOULD PROVE A GOOD MATCH, FOR I
CAN THINK OF NO OTHER AUDIENCE AS WELL SUITED TO
APPRECIATE YOUR TALENT OR TO ENGAGE YOU IN DEBATE, AS'THE
ONE YOU ARE ABOUT TO ADDRESS.
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George F. Will, whose newspaper column has been syndicated by
the Washington Post Writers Group, since 1974, today .appears in more
than 400 papers. In 1976 he became a regular Newsweek contributor,
providing the backpage essay twice a month. In the same year he won a
Pulitizer Prize for commentary for his, newspaper columns. Mr. Will has
also garnered top honors for his Newsweek columns, including a
finalist citation in the Essays and Criticism category of the 1979
National Magazine Awards competition. He was also the recipient of a
1978 National Headliners Award for his "consistently outstanding
special feature columns" appearing in the magazine while a column he
wrote on New York City's finances earned him a 1980 Silurian Award for
Editorial Writing. In January of 1985, The Washington Journalism
Review named Mr. Will "Best Writer, Any Subject."
In addition to his magazine and newspaper writing, Mr. Will is
also an author and television network broadcast commentator. He is a
Contributing Analyst with ABC TV News appearing as a commentator on
"World News Tonight with Peter Jennings" since September of 1984 and
has been a regular member of ABC's Sunday morning "This Week with
David Brinkley" since 1981.
Two collections of his,Newsweek and newspaper columns have
been published: in 1978 "The Pursuit of Happiness and Other Sobering
Thoughts," (Harper & Row) and in 1982 "The Pursuit of Virtue and Other
Tory Notions," (Simon & Schuster). A third book, entitled "Statecraft
as Soulcraft", (1983,Simon & Schuster) is a work of political
philosophy, that originally appeared as the Godkin Lecture at the John
F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard in 1981.
Mr. Will was born in Champaign, Illinois, educated at Trinity
College in Hartford, Oxford and Princeton universities. Prior to his
entering journalism, Mr. Will taught political philosophy at Michigan
State University and the University of Toronto and served on the staff
of the United States Senate. Until becoming a columnist for Newsweek,
Mr. Will was Washington editor of the National Review, the leading
conservative journal of ideas and political commentary.
Mr. Will lives in Chevy Chase, Maryland with his wife,
Madeleine and their two sons and one daughter.
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1 II the. world. In plain language, inter-
II JOe Bn?wn Jr., born in a.South.Caml na
..
Georgia; brothel, describes -with: coau-.
thor Tucker. his.early years: as`a street
asa parolee to gain :a livelihood. as a
musician, . his four marriages. and his
many friendships with celebrated per-
sons in American public life (Martin Lu-
ther King Jr, Hubert Humphrey, Adam
Clayton Powell, among others), his
cept for some passages that dwell exces-
sively with details of recording sessions
and business trips, this spirited account
of an unusual life is both involving and
inspirational. Photos not seen by PW
ON CAMERA: My 10,000 Hours- on
Television Hugh Downs. Putnam, $17.95
ISBN 0-399-13203-I
A performer who has appeared.on na-
tional commercial network television of-
tener than anyone else, Downs,- we're
told here, had a conventional rise to me-
dia prominence.. He began on radio in
Lima, Ohio, in 1939, moved to Detroit
the following year, to Chicago in 1943
(where he was introduced to TV) and to
New York in 1954. After working on
the Home Show with Arlene Francis and
Caesar's Hour with Sid Caesar, he
achieved fame as Jack Paar's announcer
on the Tonight Show. Next came the
game show Concentration, the Today
Show, semi-retirement and a return to
television on 27/20. Although few read-
ers will care to learn what Paar was real-
like or why a nocturnal version of
Concentration failed in prime time, they
will find interesting Downs's unusual
adventures, like scuba diving for sunken
treasure and soloing in a glider, and his
philosophy of broadcasting, which in-
volves an honest and direct approach to
viewers rather than the creation of an
on-stage persona. Photos not seen by
PW. (Wovrrnber 7)
TROOPER: True Stories from a Proud
Tradition David Moran wit{ Dick Rad-
ford Quinlan (131 Beverly St., Boston,
Mass. 02114), $17.95
n Massachusetts the state police may be
'led on by local forces to assist
-frequently in small towns, infre-
in cities. Thus Moran, who
Ir 20 years as a Massachusetts
South Boston to enforce integration. His
account of those years, told with the aid
;. of. freelance writer Radford, provides -a
memorable prcture of the. routine of po-
lice. work. There . areoccasional mo-
ments of. high drama, but more typical
are incidents. like: that of a slipshod med-
ical .examiner who almost certified a
murder as being the. result of a heart
attack, that of the robbers who missed
$100,000 in cash in their victim's home
and that of the still-unsolved disappear-
ance of a Harvard graduate student.
Photos not seen by Ply. (November 10)
BATTLESHIP AT WAR: The Epic Story
of the USS Washington Ivan Musicant.
Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, $19.95 ISBN
0-15-110400-X . .
This is a lively and stirring .account of
the life of the Washington, from its com-
missioning just months before. Pearl
Harbor, through major battles (during
one, its guns sank a Japanese battleship),
to the day in 1961 when it was sold for
scrap. Musicant follows the ship and its
crew: through the Murmansk convoys,
the campaigns of the Solomons, Micro-
nesia, the Marianas, the Philippines, Iwo
Jima and Okinawa, during.which the
Washngton survived torpedoes, kamika-
te attacks, a typhoon and a collision with
another battleship. Though the focus is
mainly on the crew, the author discusses
technical aspects in detail: navigation
and ship-handling difficulties, problems
of engineering, damage control and
gunnery. The battles are seen largely
through-the participants' eyes, and the
sense of immediacy throughout the nar-
rative is striking. Photos. (November 10)
THE PALACE FILE Ngryen Tien Hung
and Jerrold L. Sdiecter. Harper & Row,
$22.95 ISBN 0-06-015640-5
At the core of this disturbing book are
31 unpublished letters from Presidents
Nixon and Ford revealing a secret com-
mitment to sustain South Vietnam after
the Paris Peace Accords, a commitment
that was not honored. South Vietnam's
President Thieu entrusted the letters to
Hung, a dose adviser, who brought
them to America shortly before the fall
of Saigon and eventually showed them
to Schecter, a former Time diplomatic
editor. In their collaborative effort,
Hung and Schecter have placed the let-
ters in their contemporary context, sup-
ported by subsequent interviews and
Rung's memories of meetings in the
Palace in Saigon. The book reveals
Thieu's profound fear of betrayal dating
Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/30 :
mac/rina after itwas'.all_ too late. -ale
book is a scathing` indictment of U.S.
policy :in Vietnam, told lai:gely. from the
point of view of the Saigon government.
Photos: Comaiizave Book Club dual main
selection; author tour. (1ltovember 12)
WHITE SHROUD: Poems 1980-1985
Allen Ginsberg. Harper & Row, $13.95
ISBN 0-06-055014-7
In a poem like "World Karma," which
twits the cultural neuroses of. Russians,
Chinese, Spanish, French and Ameri-
cans, the beat vocabulary supports and
inflames the apocalyptic vision; wit and
anger are fused, as in Ginsberg's best
work. But such moments are few in this
latest gathering of his verse. The laun-
dry-list chants lack resonance; travel-
ogues from China are affected; short lyr-
ics read like one-liners; blues and. rock
songs (accompanied by songsheets) will
appeal only to a select audience. Over-
all, these are the tired gestures of a poet
preoccupied with his own celebrity, sex-
uality and creeping age. Yet when Gins-
berg hurls a Buddhist diatribe at-Jerry
Falwell or. rails against the numbness of
the average person in a regimented, bu-
reaucratized society, he makes spar ks
fly. (November 12) \
THE MORNING AFTER: American
Successes and Excesses, 1981-1986 N
George F. Will Free Press, $19.95 ISBN 0-
02-934430-1
Will, a skeptical stylist whose conserva-
tive ruminations on American life have
made him a leading syndicated colum-
nist, offers a collection of his work in the
Reagan era. Writing out of a "realism
about mankind's limitation," he takes
crisp, telling looks at crime, politics, mil-
itary ventures, legal controversies-the
issues.and events of a."bittersweet" peri-
od when a conservative President did
not produce a conservative revolution in
U.S. life. Pulitzer Prize-winner Will
(Stateanfi as Soulb- ft) ranges widely,
celebrating standards and craftsmanship
where he finds them (in Senator Henry
Jackson's career, in Elmore Leonard's
novels), deploring the "superficial'.'
(yuppies, campus causes), and wrestling
with personal crises, such as his nine-
year-old son's question, "What's a vir-
gin?" 50,000 first prvuin& $50,000 ad/
o; BOMC alternate, author:'
por~ 13)
(N
TRUMAN CAPOTE: Dear Heart; Old
BuddyJohniMaholm Brinrun. Dela0orte/
Seymour Lawrence, $16.95 IS BR 0-385
CIA-RDP99-00777R000301840001-8
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Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/30: CIA-RDP99-00777ROO0301840001-8
Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/30: CIA-RDP99-00777R000301840001-8
Ccntml Intclli once AtCncy
STAT
STAT
Mr. George F. Will
The Washington Post
1150 15th Street, N.W.
Washington, D. C. 20071
?~5.-_2--? 803
7 JAN 1986
OTE 85-4028/5
Several times a year, we invite distinguished guest
speakers to address some 300 to 500 employees of the Central
Intelligence Agency. Our objective is to improve our employees
understanding of national and international issues as well as
to provide them an intellectual stimulus. Among recent guests
have been Ambassador Jeane Kirkpatrick,-Carl Sagan,
.Art Buchwald, and Ambassador Vernon Walters. I believe the
program, now in its twelfth year, has been very successful.
I would be pleased if you could be our guest speaker here
at the CIA Headquarters. I'suggest 30 September or 1 October
1986 but will be happy to accommodate your. schedule if these
'dates are not convenient.
The program normally consists of a lecture of
approximately 30 to 45 minutes, followed by a 20 to 30 minute
question period. Lectures are usually scheduled from 2:00 to
3:15 p.m. The guest speaker honorarium is $500. Your thoughts
about the Government and the Media, Arms Control, the Geneva
Summit, or any other topical issue of your choice, would be of
keen interest to our audience.
able to accept this invitation.
our Dean of Conferences, will be pleased
any aspects of the
with your staff.
/s/ Wiliam J. Casey
William J. Casey
Director of Central Intelligence
Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/30: CIA-RDP99-00777R000301840001-8