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1 - -
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS/CONTACTS
CENTER FOR INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AND STRATEGIC STUDIES (CISS)
EXECUTIVE LECTURE FORUM LUNCHEON
Jackson, Mississippi
LECTURE AT MISSISSIPPI STATE UNIVERSITY
Starkville, Mississippi
Wednesday, 20 April 1988
8:30 a.m. EDT Depart, National Airport
Contract carrier
11:00 a.m. CDT Arrive, Jackson Municipal Airport
Miller Wills Terminal
Met by Dr. Janos Radvanyi, Director of CISS
Colonel Charles Bond, Project Coordinator, CISS
Drive to Jackson, Mississippi
11:25 a.m.
11:55 a.m.
12:00 noon
12:30 p.m.
1:15 p.m.
1:45 p.m.
2:15 p.m.
2:40 p.m.
Arrive Radisson Walthall Hotel
225 East Capitol Street
Jackson, Mississippi
Phone: (601) 948-6161
Courtesy room available
Arrive, Van Dorn room, Radisson Walthall Hotel
Luncheon, Van Dorn room
Introduction by "Bud" Robinson, Chairman, Board of Deposit
Guaranty National Bank
Address, The Honorable Robert M. Gates
"Traditional Functions of National Intelligence"
(20 minutes of remarks, 15 minutes of questions and answers)
Adjournment
Drive to Jackson Municipal Airport
Depart, Jackson Municipal Airport
Dr. Janos Radvanyi and Colonel Charles Bond will accompany
Arrive, Golden Triangle Regional Airport
Drive to Mississippi State University campus
Starkville, Mississippi
Arrive, Mississippi State University campus
Simrall Engineering Building
Room #220
Meet Dr. Billie J. Ball, Head of Electrical Engineering Dept.
and Dr. Ralph E. Powe, Vice President for Research
Phone: (601) 325-3912
OFFICI
NLY
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UFFAL,1311- VNLI
3:00 p.m.
Arrive, Simrall Auditorium
Introduction by Dr. Ralph E. Powe
Address, The Honorable Robert M. Gates
"Traditional Functions of National Intelligence"
(25 minutes of remarks, 15 minutes of questions and answers)
4:00 p.m. Adjournment
Reception, lobby of Simrall Auditorium
4:45 p.m. Depart, Simrall Engineering Building
5:30 p.m.
Arrive, home of Professor Theodore Remley
Starkville, Mississippi
6:30 p.m. Dinner, undetermined restaurant, Starkville
8 : 00 p.m. Depart, Starkville
Drive to Golden Triangle Regional Airport
8:30 p.m. CDT Depart, Golden Triangle Regional Airport
12:30 a.m. EDT Arrive, Dulles International Airport, 21 April
OFFICIAL USE ONLY
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PAO 88-0133
STAT
18 April 1988
MEMORANDUM FOR: Deputy Director of Central Intelligence
FROM: William M. Baker
Director, Public Affairs Office
SUBJECT: Trip to Jackson, Mississippi and Mississippi
State University, Starkville, Mississippi
1. This is background information for your trip Wednesday, 20 April, to
address the Executive Forum Luncheon sponsored by the Center for International
Security and Strategic Studies (CISS) at the Radisson Walthall Hotel Jackson,
Mississippi. Phone: (601) 948-6161. After the luncheon you are scheduled to
travel to the Mississippi State University campus in Starkville to speak with
students and faculty in the afternoon followed by dinner with Professor
Theodore Remley. Contact phone at the University: (601) 325-2028.
will accompany you on the trip.
2. Arrival: You are scheduled to arrive at 11:00 a.m. at Jackson
Municipal Airport (Miller Wills Terminal) where you will be met by the
Director of CISS, Dr. Janos Radvanyi and Project Coordinatorof CISS, Colonel
Charles Bond, USAF (ret.) (see tab for biographies and separate folder for
further information on Dr. Radvanyi.) Both Dr. Radvanyi and Colonel Bond will
drive with you to the Radisson Walthall Hotel, 225 East Capitol Street,
Jackson, Mississippi. A courtesy room will be available.
3. Address of the Executive Lecture Forum, 12:00 noon - 1:15 p.m.: You
are asked to be at the Van Dorn room at 11:55 a.m. in the Radisson Walthall
Hotel where you will meet with the members of the Executive Lecture Forum.
Lunch will be served at 12:00 noon and your speech on "Traditional Functions
of National Intelligence" is scheduled to begin at 12:30 p.m. Chairman of
the Board of Deposit Guaranty National Bank E. B. "Bud" Robinson will
introduce you. The suggested format is 20 minutes of remarks followed by
15 minutes of questions and answers. Since the program is informal,
Mr. Robinson will not moderate. You will be seated at the head table with the
following:
Mr. E. B. Robinson
(on your left)
Lieutenant Governor Brad
Dr. Donald W. Zacharias
Mr. Mike Moore
etty
leere
,A
Chairman of the Board,
Deposit Guaranty National
Bank
Dye (on your right) State of Mississippi
President, Mississippi State
University
Attorney General, State of
Mississippi
President, Board of Trustees
Commissioner for Higher
Education for Mississippi
E_c)
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urriuiAL U3G UNLI
Adjournment is at 1:15 p.m. A podium and microphone will be available
near your table. DCI Security will tape your remarks for the Agency's
historical records.
Approximately 35 - 40 prominent area businessmen, state government
officials, and members of academia will be in the audience. The media will
not cover the event nor will foreign nationals attend. (See tab for list of
attendees.)
The purpose of the Forum is to provide Mississippi's leading citizens with
a forum for an exchange of views with high government officials on critical
global security issues. Previous speakers have been General James A.
Abrahamson, Air Commodore Sir Frank Whittle, General Pierre M. Gallois, French
Ambassador Emmanuel de Margerie, and Belgian Ambassador Herman Dehennin. The
most recent speaker was Director of NSA William Odom who spoke on "Prospects
for Success for Gorbachev's Economic and Social Reforms." In addition to the
Forum, C1SS also sponsors Research Conferences. Last month a conference was
held on "The China-Japan-United States Triangle: A Forecast for the 1990's
and Beyond." (See brochures in front pocket and also see background tab.)
At approximately 1:45 p.m. you will depart Jackson Municipal Airport
(Miller Wills Terminal) for a 30-minute flight to the Golden Triangle Regional
Airport arriving at 2:15 p.m. and then drive to the Mississippi State
University campus in Starkville. Dr. Radvanyi and Colonel Bond will accompany
you.
4. Lecture, Mississippi State University: You are asked to be at Simrall
Engineering Building room #220 at 2:40 p.m. to meet with Chairman of the
Electrical Engineering Department Dr. Billie J. Ball and Vice President for
Research Dr. Ralph E. Powe. (See tab for biographies.) Dr. Ball, Dr. Powe,
and Dr. Rodvanyi will escort you to the Simrall Auditorium and remain with you
on stage. Your lecture will begin at 3:00 p.m. and the suggested format is 25
minutes of remarks and 15 minutes of questions and answers. Dr. Powe will
introduce you and will moderate the question and answer period. Adjournment
is at 4:00 p.m. A podium and microphone will be available. DCI security will
tape your remarks for the Agency's historical records.
You can expect an audience of 100 - 150 undergraduate students, faculty
members, and members of the community. Since foreign nationals attend the
school and also are members of the faculty, you can expect several in the
audience. Both the electronic and print media will cover the event. This
will include the CBS and NBC affiliates and the Columbia COMMERICAL DISPATCH,
the Starkville DAILY NEWS, and the campus newspaper REFLECTOR. The press will
participate in the question and answer period.
Mississippi State University, founded in 1878, is a state-controlled
institution and land grant college with nine undergraduate schools and
colleges. (See tab for background information.)
OFFICIAL USE ONLY
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STAT
STAT
STAT
STAT
Following the lecture a reception (4:00 - 4:45 p.m.), will be held in the
lobby of the Simrall Auditorium. You are scheduled for cocktails at Professor
Theodore Remley's home and dinner at a restaurant. Departure time from
Starkville will be approximately 8:00 p.m.
DCl/PAO/WMB
Di stributi on:
Orig. - DDCI
1- R
1
1 - D
1 - PAO Registry
1 - PAO Ames
- PAO Chrono
1
STAT 1
1
1
1
STAT 1
- MED(Subjectl
- DCI Security
- Jean
OFFICIAL USE ONLY
William M. Baker
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CURRICULUM VITAE
of
DR. JANOS RADVANYI
SYNOPSIS:
I am a Professor of History (PhD Stanford University) and Director of
the Center for International Security and Strategic Studies at Mississippi
State University, specializing in diplomatic history, Far Eastern and
Contemporary Soviet Studies, international Security Studies, and
international economics.
As a former diplomat, I received training in international law and
economics. my life-long experience extends into the following areas:
Analysis and evaluation of international political and economic
developments.
Research of topics in the international field with special
emphasis on the Soviet Union, Eastern Europe, and East Asia.
High-level participation in economic negotiations.
As Ambassador of Hungary in the United States, political and
economic discussion at the highest level with the Department of
State and the White House.
Sixteen years teaching experience as a full professor and an
academic researcher; author of two major books and numerous
scholarly articles.
Affiliated member of the American and International Associations
for the Advancement of Slavic Studies, member of the
International Institute for Strategic Studies, London, Academic
Associate of the Atlantic Council of the United States,
Washington, D.C., senior advisor to the Technology Applications
Program, Strategic Defense Initiative Program, U.S. Department
of Defense.
Lecturer to professional and academic groups and to the general
public.
Planning and implementation of the CISS various projects which
range from international security to economic development, with
a special emphasis on Japan and the Federal Republic of Germany.
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L/010 L./GI III CI
PAGE 1
LEVEL 1 - 1 OF 4 STORIES
Copyright ii 1981 Facts on File, Inc.;
Facts on File World News Digest
December 25, 1981
SECTION: WORLD AFFAIRS
PAGE: Pg. 945 Al
LENGTH: 4138 words
HEADLINE: Reagan Orders U.S. Sanctions Against Poland;
President Cautions Soviets
BODY:
... Ronald Reagan. He said that he had decided to defect the moment that he
had heard of Walesa's arrest. Spasowski's wife, daughter and son-in-law also
received political asylum.
Spasowski, Poland's most senior diplomat, was serving his second tour of duty
in Washington; he had served in Washington as ambassador from 1955 to 1961. He
was also the highest ranking Communist-bloc diplomat to defect to the U.S. since
Arkady Shevchenko, a top-ranking Soviet official, defected in 1978. The last
major Eastern European defection was in 1967, when Janos Radvanyi resigned as
the Hungarian charge d'affaires and sought asylum. [See 1978, p. 302A2; 1967,
p. 273F2]
The officially controlled Warsaw radio denounced Spasowski's defection and
said that the government had recommended that the country's chief military
prosecutor begin criminal proceedings. The statement also said that the
ambassador was told in February that he would be recalled from his post and that
his "increasingly frequent incompetence" had been aggravated by "psychological
depression connected with his personal affairs."
Soviets Deny Interference -- Charges by the U.S. that the Soviet Union was at
least partially responsible ...
LEVEL 1 - 2 OF 4 STORIES
Copyright ID 1981 The New York Times Company;
The New York Times
December 21, 1981, Monday, Late City Final Edition
SECTION: Section A; Page 1, Column 2; Foreign Desk
LENGTH: 945 words
HEADLINE: DEFECTING POLE SAYS 'BRUTALITY' FORCED HIS MOVE
BYLINE: By BARBARA CROSSETTE, Special to the New York Times
DATELINE: WASHINGTON, Dec. 20
ITV ii vi so
N.c 7 Cc, At%
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lit
PAGE 2
ID 1981 The New York Times, December 21, 1981
BODY:
... mission, would be taking over the functions of the ambassador, Mr.
Mieczkowski replied, That would be the normal routine."
Mr. Spasowski was the highest-ranking Communist-bloc diplomat to defect in
the United States since Arkady N. Shevchenko, the topranking Soviet official in
the United Nations secretariat, sought asylum in April 1978. Mr. Shevchenko is
now reported to be living in seclusion in the Washington area.
The last major defection of a Communist-bloc envoy in Washington occurred in
May 1967 when Janos Radvanyi, the Hungarian charge d'affaires, was granted
asylum. Mr. Radvanyi later said that he had defected because the Hungarian
Government had given the United States false assurances about Hanoi's position
on proposed peace talks on Vietnam.
LEVEL 1 - 3 OF 4 STORIES
The Associated Press
The materials in the AP file were compiled by The Associated Press. These
materials may not be republished without the express written consent of The
Associated Press,
September 15, 1981, Tuesday, PM cycle
SECTION: International News
LENGTH: 810 words
HEADLINE: Poles Push Soviets, but Not Like Hungarians, Czechs Did
BYLINE: An AP News Analysis, By CHARLES J. HANLEY, Associated Press Writer
KEYWORD: Polish-Soviet
BODY:
powerful anti-communist upheaval that an alarmed Moscow hurriedly snuffed
out.
In Czechoslovakia, the liberalization of the "Prague Spring" came more
gradually, but it was just as dangerous -- the Czechoslovak Communist Party
itself was leading the country down the heretical path of reform.
Poland's transformation has been peaceful, in contrast with the Hungarian
uprising. And the Polish party, unlike the Czechoslovak, has put up determined
resistance to much of what Solidarity demands.
The party's status is crucial in comparing the Polish situation with the
earlier episodes, says Janos Radvanyi, a former Hungarian diplomat who
witnessed the revolution and Soviet intervention in Budapest.
"The Communist Party of Poland still has a power base, but in Hungary in 1956
the party completely disintegrated in a matter of a few days," Radvanyi
explained in an interview. "If the Russians didn't invade, Hungary would have
been lost to them, at least as a close ally."
171:w7.1'('
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LI' IVltLj LJ L'L' II
PAGE 3
The Associated Press, September 15, 1981
The Soviets may grumble about "counter-revolutionaries" among Poland's
independent unionists, but for more than ...
LEVEL 1 - 4 OF 4 STORIES
Copyright @ 1980 The Washington Post
February 6, 1980, Wednesday, Final Edition
SECTION: Style; Magazines; D1
LENGTH: 2010 words
HEADLINE: Best Sellers; Worst Sellers;
The Best and Worst;
The Cast of the Red-Hot Covers
BYLINE: By Tom Zito
BODY:
... followed by "Studio 54: The Party's Over"; worst, a cover on the Cuban
nationalist movement in New Jersey.
New West: best, "Goodbye to the Seventies" (humorously run in January of last
year rather than in December); worst, "Secrets of the Track," on horse gambling.
Esquire: best, Gail Sheeby's "The Truth About Today's Young Men," with a
simple all-type cover; worst, "Hollywood versus Harrisburg."
Commissar's Conundrum
With Soviet troops in Afghanistan, Janos Radvanyi, a former Hungarian
ambassador, offers a different side of Russia, this one a delightful
reminiscence of boar hunting with the late Nikita khruschev.
In the February Atlantic, the author recalls a tale told by khrushchev as an
example of stalinist diplomacy:
"It all happened in October, 1943, when the British Foreign Secretary,
Anthony Eden, and the United States Secretary of State, Cordell Hull, traveled
to Moscow to hold talks with Molotov," khrushchev is recalled as saying speaking
of Soviet foreign ...
E) vy
? f ? I \:V/
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BIOGRAPHY
CHARLES W. BOND
Charles W. Bond has been the Project Coordinator of the Center for
International Security and Strategic Studies since August 1987. Mr. Bond
joined the Center after retiring from the U.S. Air Force as a Colonel with
29 years active duty service.
Mr. Bond, a native Mississippian, received his B.S. Degree from the
United States Military Academy in 1958, and his Masters Degree in Public
Administration from Auburn University in 1975. He is a graduate of the
U.S. Air Force's Air War College.
Mr. Bond's Air Force career includes numerous operational assignments
as a pilot and command of several flying units as well as joint duties and
staff assignments. He served with the Organization of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff and Headquarters, U.S. Air Force, with staff responsibilities in
strategic and defense planning and execution. He flew rescue helicopters
in Vietnam in 1969-70 and commanded a heavy bombardment wing in the
Strategic Air Command from 1980-1982. His last duty assignment with the
Air Force was as Professor of Aerospace Studies and Department Head at
Mississippi State University.
Mr. Bond served as a senior fellow with the Center for four years
prior to assuming his present position. He is a member of the
International Institute of Strategic Studies, he teaches national security
related courses at the undergraduate level and is actively engaged in the
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planning and conducting of workshops and conferences on global security
matters.
He is a member of the Air Force Association and served for two years
as the Mississippi Air Force Association's Vice President for Aerospace
Education.
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APR 18 '88 5:250 CENTER FOR INTERNATL SECURITY P . 4
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Career with
Deposit Guaranty
January 1984-Present
January 1982
July 1979
Investment Division
Corporate Planning &
Research Department
July 1967
Other Experience
Summer 1966
Education
Military Service
Business Activities
E. B. Robinson, Jr.
Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer
Deposit Guaranty Corp.IDeposlt Guaranty National Bank
Jackson, Mississippi
Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer
Deposit Guaranty Corp ./Deposit Guaranty National Bank
President and Chief Operating Officer
Deposit Guaranty Corp.IDeposit Guaranty National Bank
President and Chief Operating Officer
Deposit Guaranty National Bank
Execudve Vice President & Division Manager, 1976
Senior Vice President & Division Manager, 1975
Vice President & Investment Department Manager, 1973
Assistant Vice President &Mumeipal Bond Manager, 1972
Investment Officer & Municipal Bond Trader, 1969.70
Assistant Vice President, 1970-72
Joined Deposit Guaranty National Bank as Management Trainee
Irving Trust Company, Investment Department
One Wall Street, New 'Vat City
Harvard University Graduate School of Business Administration
Master of Business Administration, 1967
J. Spencer Love Fellowship Recipient
Davidson College, Davidson, North Carolina
Bachelor of Science, 1963
PM Beta Kappa, Omicron Delta Kappa
The McCallie School, Chattanooga, Tennessee
Salutatorian, /959
United States Army, 1963-65
Headquarters Battery Commander and
AADCP Tactical Director in Air Defense Command
Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta
Board Member
Association of Reserve City Bankers
Member, Government Relations Committee
Bank Capital Markets Association
Past President
Member, Steering Committee. Glass Stegall Reform
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A
Business Activities
(Continued)
Civic & Community
Service
Club Memberships
Personal Information
Date & Place of Birth
Parents
Wife
Children
Church Affiliation
Mississippi Bankers Association
Member, State Legislative Committee
Past Member, Executive Committee
Mississippi Power & Light Company
Member, Board of Directors
Millsaps College Board of Trustees
Chairman, Finance Committee
Jackson Chamber of Commerce
Pot President
St, Andrews Episcopal School
Member, Board of Trustees
Jackson State University Development Foundation
Board Member
Columbia Seminary
Board Member
Andrew Jackson Council, Boy Scouts of America
1988 Sustaining Membership Enrollment Chairman
United Way of the Capital Area
Past President and Former Campaign Chairman
Mississippi Museum of Art
Part Chairman
Council for the Support of Public Higher Education
Treasurer
The Country Club of Jackson, Mississippi
Universiq7 Club, Jackson
Capital City Petroleum Club, Jackson
River Hills Club, Jackson
Harvard Club, New York City
The Wall Street Club, New York City
Metropolitan Club, New York City
Chicago Club, Chicago
September 14, 1941
Centreville, Mississippi
Emerson Barney & Dolly McGehee Robinson
Judy Treppendahl Robinson of Woodville, Mississippi
E. B, Robinson flI (Barney), born February 16, 1966
John Green Robinson, born February 24, 1969
Covenant Presbyterian Church, Jackson
1/88
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Donald W. Zacharias
President
Mississippi State University
Dr. Donald W. Zacharias became the 15th president of
Mississippi State University on September 1, 1985. Since then he
has overseen a restructuring of the university's administration
with the appointment of four new vice presidents, including the
institution's first provost. He also has implemented procedures
to bring increased involvement by the faculty, students and
alumni to the decision-making processes of the university, and
has become one of Mississippi's leading spokesmen for higher
education.
Dr. Zacharias received the Ph.D. in communication from
Indiana University in 1963, and continues to produce scholarly
articles in his academic field. A recently completed article on
the principles of designing an ideal university communication
system is the latest entry in a lengthy record of publications.
He continued to teach while serving as president at Western
Kentucky, and taught a course in communication and group
leadership in the Communication Department at Mississippi State
last year.
He currently serves on two major committees of the National
Association of State Universities and Land Grant Colleges--the
Commission on Arts and Sciences and the Subcommittee on Federal
Student Financial Assistance.
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Dr. Zacharias came to Mississippi State from Western Kentucky
University in Bowling Green, where he had served as president for
six years, from 1979 to 1985. At Western Kentucky, he raised
academic standards, led the development of a strategic plan,
established the first comprehensive development program, and
reorganized the academic structure of the university.
Earlier, he was for five years an administrator in the
University of Texas system, serving as executive assistant to the
chancellor of the 14-campus statewide system and as assistant to
the president at the Austin campus.
He was associate professor and professor of communication at
the University of Texas at Austin from 1972 to 1979, and a
faculty member at Indiana University before that. He won
teaching awards at both universities.
Dr. Zacharias received the B.A. degree from Georgetown
College, and was awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Law by that
Institution in 1983.
He is active in church and civic affairs and spends as much
time as possible with his wife, Tommie, and their three children.
Alan is in medical school, Eric is a student at Mississippi
State, and daughter Leslie is in high school.
2/2/88
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BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION
Mike Moore
Attorney General
Elected state's youngest District Attorney,
19th Judicial District, 1979
Assistant District Attorney, 1977-78
Chosen one of three outstanding young men in
State of Mississippi, 1982
Member of Mississippi Trial Lawyers Association; American
Trial Lawyers Association; American Bar Association;
Mississippi Prosecutors Association; National District
Attorneys Association; National Association of Attorneys
General
Past vice-president of Mississippi Prosecutors; State Director
for Mississippi to National District Attorney's Association
Appointed to the American, Bar Association's Prosecution Function
Committee
Selected to serve on the United States Attorney's Federal-State
Law Enforcement Coordinating Committee
Selected as Outstanding Young Man, Pas-Point Jaycees, 1982
Juris Doctor University of Mississippi Law School, Dec. 1976
Graduated University of Mississippi, B.A. - political science,
1974
Graduated Jackson County Junior College, 1972
Graduated OLV High School, 1970
Mike and his wife, Tisha, are the parents of a son, Kyle
Cameron Moore
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P.7
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?
Brad Dye
Lieutenant Governor
arxritsfort
BIOGRAPHY OP BRAD DYE
Brad Dye was born in Charleston, Mississippi. Graduating
from Charleston High School where he was an Eagle Scout, he went
on to The University of Mississippi to obtain his Bachelor of
Business Administration degree in January, 1957. Two years later,
he was awarded his law degree from the University's School of Law.
While at Ole Miss, Dye served as President of the student body,
was a member of Phi Alpha Delta legal fraternity, and was named
to the Hall of Fame.
In 1950, Dye served as a Page in the U.S. House of Representatives
for Rep. Jamie Whitten. After graduation from law school, he practiced
law with his father in Grenada until 1961.
In 1959, he was elected to the Mississippi House of Representatives
where he served as Vice Chairman of the Judiciary Committee.
Senator James 0. Eastland appointed Dye as an attorney for the
staff of the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee in Washington, D.C.
from 1961 to 1964.
In 1963, he Was elected to the Mississippi State Senate
and in 1965 resigned to accept an appointment by Governor Paul
Johnson as a Commissioner of the Workmen's Compensation Commission.
In 1968, he was named Executive Director of the Mississippi
Agricultural and Industrial Board by Governor John Bell Williams.
In 1971, he resigned that post to enter the race for State Treasurer,
which he won. He served in that position until 1976. He then served
as President of Jackson Savings and Loan Association from January
1976 to March 1979.
In January 1980, Dye was sworn in as the 35th Lieutenant
Governor of Mississippi. In 1983, he won re-election, and
in 1987 he was re-elected to a third term which he is now serving.
Dye is married to the former Donna Bess Bailey of Coffeeville.
They have three sons and are members of Galloway United Methodist
Church where Dye has served on the Administrative Board. He is a
Mason and Shriner, and has worked for the Heart Fund, Cancer Drive,
Red Cross, Boy Scouts, United Way, and as a YMCA Coach of youth sports.
He was Charter Vice President of the Grenada Jaycees and Charter
President of the University of Mississippi Business Alumni Association.
In 1986, he was awarded the James O. Eastland Public Service Award
by the Mississippi Democratic Party. He was a delegate to the National
Democratic Convention in 1980 and led the delegation in 1984.
state Capitoi Building, Room 315 ? Jackson, Mississippi 39204 ? 601-359-3200
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Brad Dye has held the following governmental positions:
Lieutenant Governor
1980
- present
State Treasurer
1972
- 1976
Executive Director of the
1968
- 1971
Mississippi A & I Board
(now Board of Economic
Development)
Commissioner of Workmen's
- 1968
Compensation Commission
,1965
Senator in Mississippi
1964
- 1965
Legislature
Attorney on Staff of U. S.
1961
- 1964
Senate Judiciary Committee
Representative in Mississippi
1960
- 1964
Legislature
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iSSissippi
?louse af Fgpresentatitm
January 1988
FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CONTACT
HOUSE INFORMATION OFFICE 359-3223
SPEAKER TIM FORD
P, 0, Bem tOIS
JACKSON, mISSISSIPPt 39313.1011
FACT SHP:FT
House Speaker Timothy Alan (Tim) Ford, 36, of Tupelo, is starting
his third straight term in the House of Representatives. He was first
elected in 1979 and reelected in 1983 and 1987. He represents House
District 18, Lee and Prentiss counties. The Speaker is a fifth
generation Mississippian and lifelong resident of Lee County. He was
born October 22, 1951, in Winter Raven, Florida, while his father, Dr.
John Mitchell. Ford Sr., was serving as a flight surgeon at Bartow AFB
?but the family returned to Mississippi when Tim was about six months
old. Tim grew up in Baldwyn and was starting quarterback in 1968 for the
Baldwyn High School football team, guiding his team to an 8-2 record his
senior year.
Speaker Ford is a 1973 graduate of the University of Mississippi
with a major in biology and minor in English and chemistry. He enrolled
in Law School at Ole,Miss in 1974 and graduated in 1977. He was
president of the Law School student body. Following law school, he
worked as a law clerk in 1977-78 for Presiding Justice L.A. Smith Jr. of
the State Supreme Court, and was an assistant District Attorney from
1978 to 1980 in the 1st judicial district. Currently, he is a partner in
the law firm of Carnathan, Malski and Ford. He is married to the former
Mary, Foose and they have two children, Ken and Sam.
In 1984-1988, Representative Ford served as chairman of the House
Apportionment and Elections Committee and guided the 1986 election law
reform package to passage in the House. He also was author of the 1984
legislation eliminating the old "dual registration" voting law. Other
committee assignments included Banks and Banking; Insurance; Judiciary
B; and Ways and Means. As a member of the Finance Subcommittee of Ways
and Means, he handled most bills involving revenue bonds. He has been a
strong supporter of education at all levels, economic development,
agriculture, and open meetings legislation. He supported the House rule
changes adopted at the start of the 1987 session.
C..
Prepared by House Information Office
January 1988
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INFORMATION SUMMARY
Billie J. Ball
April 1988
Age and FAmily:
Born 4-8-29, Married, 2 children age 17 and 19
Ilualuaw-gr_NulagAt..thaL
Head, Dept. of Eleotrioal Engineering, Mississippi State University,
1964 - present. Department employees include 28 faculty, 12 staff and 45
graduate teaching and research assistants. Department offers programs
leading to B.S., M.S. and Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering and the B.S. in
Computer Engineering. Department's enrollment includes some 600 Electrical
Engineering and 180 Computer Engineering undergraduate majors and typically
100 graduates students. The Department's level of contract research
activity is $1 to $1,2 million per year.
President, SHY Inc. A Colorado Corporation which has qualified with IRS as
a Sub. Chapter S Corporation, owns real estate and does business in
Virginia.
Secretary, Past President, SCEEE, Inc. An educational non profit Louisiana
Corporation which does business nationally with offices in Florida and
Virginia.
=UAW=
Ph.D., Eleotrioal Engineering, Texas A&M University, 1962
M.S., Eleotrioal Engineering, Mississippi State University, 1959
B.S., Electrical Engineering, Mississippi State University, 1956
B.S., Chemical Engineering, Mississippi State University, 1956
Diploma, Class Valedictorian, Shady Grove High School, Laurel MS, 1947
Previvs Employment:
Associate Professor, Texas AM University, College Station, Texas .
Engineer, Reynolds Metals Co., Sheffield, Alabama
Engineer, Westinghouse Electric Corp., Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Captain, U. S. Army. Radar and communications officer: !Corea; Ft. Bliss,
Texas; Ft. Sill, Oklahoma; Ft. Jackson, South Carolina
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Church, Service, Praessional and Technical
prganizattgn Membershimod
Member, First Baptist Church, Starkville, Mississippi
Member, Rotary International - Starkville, Mississippi Rotary Club
Registered Professional Engineer, State of Mississippi, Registration
No. 2921
Member, past President North American Association of Electrioal Engineering
Department Heads
Member, Past Chairman, Southeast Association of Electrical Engineering
Department Heads Association.
Member, past Subsection President, Educational Activities Board Member,
Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers (an International Technical
Society)
Member, Past Education Committee Chairman, Chemical and Petroleum Division,
Instrument Society of America
Member, past Chairman of Electrical Engineering Division, American Society
for Engineering Education
Member, National Society of Professional Engineers and the Mississippi
Engineering Society
Member, treveral honor societies - Eta Kappa Nu, TAU Beta Pi, etc.
Patents, and Publicatio4aL
Patent # 3,701,024 "Local and National Warning Alarm System" with J. H.
Knowles and D. P. Fitzgerald
References, Publication List, and Committee Experience available on request
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March 8, 1988
Ralph E. Powe
Vice President for Research
Mississippi State University
1. Native of Tylertown, Mississippi
2. Education
B.S. in Mechanical Engineering/ Mississippi State University/ 1967
M.S. in Mechanical Engineering, Mississippi State University, 1968
Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering/ Montana State University, 1970
3. Experience
1962-65 National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Wallops Island/
Virginia
1970-74 Montana State University, Assistant Professor of Mechanical
Engineering
1974-.. Mississippi State University
1974 Associate Professor Mechanical Engineering
1978 Professor of Mechanical Engineering
1979 Associate Dean of Engineering
Director, Mississippi Energy Research Center
1980 Associate Vice President for Research
1986 Vice President for Research
4. Current Professional Positions
Senior Vice President American Society of Mechanical Engineers
Board of Directors/ Mississippi-Alabama Sea Grant Consortium
Board of Directors, Tenn-Tom Development Council
Board of Directors/ Oak Ridge Associate Universities
Board of Directors, Southeastern Universities Research Association
Board of Directors, Oktibbeha County Industrial Development Foundation
Board of Directors, Starkville Area Chamber of Commerce
Chairman/ Advanced Energy Systems Division,
American Society of Mechanical Engineers
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5. Current Responsibilities
As Vice President for Research, Dr. Powe is responsible for the entire
research program at Mississippi State University outside the Division of
Agriculture. This research program is conducted through eight schools and
colleges, as well as several separately organized research institutes.
Funding for the program is in excess of $15 million annually. Dr. Powe
also coordinates economic development activities for the university.
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POSSIBLE ATTENDEES
Mr. William H. Austin, Jr., Board of Trustees
Mr. Thomas D. Bourdeaux, Vice President, Board of Trustees
Ms. Zo Brown, Executive Secretary, Educational TV
Mr. Jimmy Coggins, Insurance Executive
Ms. Ann Homer Cook, Board of Trustee
Mr. Frank 0. Crosthwait, Jr., Board of Trustees
Mr. Emanuel Crystal, Jackson Iron & Metal Co., Inc.
Mr. Dale Danks, Mayor, City of Jackson
Mr. Joe Dove, Public Relations, Mississippi Power & Light
Mr. Patrick Dunne, Executive-Director,-Mississippi Municipal Assoc.
Dr. Glen Eaves, Dean of Arts & Sciences, Mississippi College
Mt. Larry W. Edwards, President, Smith & Edwards Realtors
Dr. Owen Elder, V. Pres. Academic Affairs, Belhaven College
Mr. Bryce Griffis, Board of Trustees
Mr. Demery Grubbs, Associate Director, Mississippi Municipal Assoc.
Dr. George Harmon, President, Milsaps College
Mr. Joe A. Haynes, Board of Trustees
Mr. TAM A. Hickman, Board of Trustees
Mr. Charles C. Jacobs, Jr., Board of Trustees
Mr. Morgan Keegan, Stock Broker
Mr. Leslie B. Lampton, Sr., President, Ergon Inc.
Mr. John R. Lovelace, M.D. Board of Trustees
Mr. Louis J. Lyell, Lincoln National Life Ins, Co.
Dr. James Meredith, Director, Research & Development Center
MS. Diane Miller, Board of Trustees
)7 Mr. Mike Moore, Attorney General, State of Mississippi
Mr. Denton Rogers, Jr., Board of Trustees
Mr. Sidney L. Rushing, Board of Trustees
Mr. Howard E. Stover, President, Clement & Stover Oil Account
Mr. Champ Terney, Lawyer
Mr. Dan White, President, Andrew Jackson Life Ins. Co.
Ms. Betty A,, Williams, President, Board of Trustees
* Dr. W. Ray Cleere, Commissioner for Higher Education, Mississippi State
* - seated at head table
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ATI'ENDEES
Honorable Charles Capps, Mississippi House of Representatives
Mr. Wendell H. Cook, Jr., Lawyer
Guest of Mr. Ccok -
Mr. Richard Dean, Architect
Guest of Mr. Dean
,r Lt. Governor Brad Eye
Major General Arthur Farmer, Adjutant General, State of Mississippi
Honorable Tim Ford, Speaker of Mississippi House of Representative
Dr. Fortenberry, Superintendent of Jackson City Schools
Mr. Stuart C. Irby, Jr., Construction Company
Guest of Mr. Irby
Mr. Donald Lutken, Mississippi Power & Light
Col. Mayo, Chief of Staff, Mississippi National Guard
Mr. W. D. Mounger, Mounger Oil Company
Mr. Willis Puckett, II, Memorial Funeral Home
Mr., J. C. Redd, Retired Executive
,v Mr. E. B. Robinson, Jr., Chairman of the Board, Deposit Guaranty National
Bank
Mr. John Shorkey, Vickers, Inc.
Honorable Cecil Simmons, Speaker Pro-tem
Mr. Ed Snyder, Beech Aerospace
Mr. Jim Stanley, Klingler Electric
Mr. Wayne Taylor, FBI, Jackson, MS
Guest of Mr. Taylor
Guest of Mr. Taylor
Guest of Mr. Taylor
Ms. Sylvia H. Vaughan, President, Hunter Distributing Company
Mr. John C. Vaughey, Transportation Executive
Lt. General Emmett Walker, (Ret.) Former Chief, National Guard Bureau
Mr. J. Kelley Williams, CEO, First Mississippi Corporation
General Louis H. Wilson, USMC (Ret.) Former Commandant USMC
Y Br. Donald W. Zacharias, President Mississippi State University
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STAT
Telefax Cover Sheet
The Center for International Security and Strategic Studies,
Mississippi State University
P.O. Drawer Y
Mississippi State, Mississippi 39762
Fax #: (601) 3254503
TO: Mary Ellen Dean
CIA Public Affairs
1820 N. Fort Meyer Drive
Arlington, VA 222
FROM: Charles W. Bond, Project Coordinator
DATE: April 13, 1988
Here is the suggested press release per our telephone conversation.
Please feel free to make any changes.
As a reminder, distribution of this release will likely result in
newspaper and television Coverage at Mr. Gates' campus address. We are
not sending out a press release for his Jackson address.
c(k-k-- LA,/,-LO
WALL_ GuLA-
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04119
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ADVISORY COUNCIL
CENTER FOR INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
AND STRATEGIC STUDIES,
MISSISSIPPI STATE UNIVERSITY
LIDA IC BARRETT
Dean
College of Arts and Sciences
Mississippi State University
WENDELL H. COOK, JR.
Partner
Wells, Wells, Marble, and Hurst
GENERAL PIERRE M. GALLOIS
French Air Force (retired)
BIRNEY IMES, JR.
Editor and Publisher
Columbus Commercial Dispatch
STUART C. IRBY, JR..
Chairman of the Board
Irby Construction Company
LARRY L. JOHNSON
General Manager
Residence/Community Affairs
South. Central Bell
PAUL LATTURE, JR.
Executive Vice President
Jackson. Chamber of Commerce
JEAN C. LINDSEY
Managing Partner
Brandon Petroleum Properties
ANDREW W. MARSHALL
Director
NET Assessment
Office of the Secretary of Defense
HUGH McGOWAN,
Secretary
National Strategy Information Center, Inc.
PETER MENDE
Minister Counsellor of Press and Public Affairs
Embassy of the Federal Republic of Germany
Washington, D.C.
GILLESPIE V. MONTGOMERY
U. S. House of Representatives
SELZO OTA
President, Chief Executive Officer
Toho Mutual Life Insurance Company
Japan
RALPH E. POWE
Vice President for Research.
Mississippi State University
E.B. ROBINSON, JR.
Chairman of the Board, Chief Executive Officer
Deposit Guaranty National Bank
TOM B. SCOTT, JR.
President, Chief Executive Officer
Unifirst Federal Savings and Loan Association
GENERAL LOUIS H. WILSON
United States Marine Corps (retired)
DONALD W. ZACHARIAS
President
Mississippi State University
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