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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 11, 1957)
Wednesday, December 11, 1957 PAGE 6 , i ,; ,. ?, • ; -. ••> • •,.- 1>.:-^ . .- » -■ ; ^ ^ ; £— ■ ■ '■ - ■ ■- ' --:vi I..r, ■ ,>„ ....aV 'i * ! i ii.. A r; i a^i , The Battalion <■ College Station (Brazos County) ? Texas You Con Hear Famous Men! 11 The Role of the United States In World Affairs 9V THE PUBLIC IS INVITED THURSDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1957 — 8:00 P. M. M.S.C. BALLROOM General John P. Daley General Daley, the top “missile man” in the United States Army, presently the Director of Special Weapons, office chief of Research and Development of the Depai*tment of Army. In this position he works closely with Dr. Werner Von Braun, ace United States space expert, in the direction of the Army’s efforts in the missile and satel lite field. Previously Daley was assigned to the office of Chief of Staff, Department of Army, as Director of Special Weapons. General Daley was Artillery Commander of the Second Infantry Division in Korea. During the Second World War, he saw extensive service in Europe as an artillery staff officer and commander. A native of Washington, D. C., he graduated from the United States Military Academy in 1931. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1957 — 2:00 P. M. M.S.C. BALLROOM Senator Hubert H. Humphrey Minnesota’s Junior Senator, Hubert H. Humphrey, is one of several outstanding members of our two houses of Congress who has success fully made the transition from professor to politics. Born in Wallace, South Dakota, May 27, 1911, Humphrey entered the academic world as professor of political science at Macalester Col lege in St. Paul. After two terms as mayor of Minneapolis, he be gan his senatorial career following his election in 1948. Recently Humphrey has exerted considerable and distinguished ef forts in the field of foreign relations. He is chairman of the Senate Special Committee on Disarmament and is currently a United States delegate to the United Nations General Assembly. In April and May, 1957, Senator Humphrey made an official tour of the Middle East in his capacity as a key member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. - PANEL DISCUSSION - "What is the Stole of Nuclear Energy in Foreign Policy?" Wednesday, December 11, 1957 — 8:00 p.m. — M.S.C. Ballroom CHARLES L. DUNHAM EUGENE M. ZUCKERT JOSEPH E. JOHNSON “Fact Finding Round Up” SATURDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1957 —t 12:15 P. M. LUNCHEON TALK* M.S.C. BALLROOM Mr. John Scott John Scott of TIME is an author and a correspondent with unusual firsthand experience in global reporting. As a Special Assistant to the Publisher of TIME, Scott brings to the lecture stand a unique point of view on the Role of the United States in World Affairs. Scott’s global assignments for Time began in the summer of 1952, where he spent most of his time getting a close look at the recon struction of Germany and Austria. For tho past five years, he has made extended trips to Europe and the Middle East, with a three- month survey of Latin America in 1955 and a swing through South east Asia in 1957. TIME’S Publisher likes to describe Scott as his “Intellectual Johnny Appleseed.” »Nme: JJmitPit number of tickets available at $3.00 per plate at MSC Dlrertorate Office, VI 6-0721 “The United States and World Affairs” FRIDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1957 — 8:00 P. M. G. R. WHITE COLISEUM Dr. Charles L. Dunham, one of the world’s leading authorities on the medical aspects of atomic energy, is now on duty as Director of the Division of Biology and Medicine of the Atomic Energy Commission. An Illinois native and a graduate of Rush Medical College, Dr. Dun ham saw wartime service as Chief of Preventive Medicine for U. S. Army Forces in the Middle Pacific. Mr. Eugene M. Zuckert, formerly a member of the U. S. Atomic Ener gy Commission, currently combines the practice of law with the pro fession of an atomic energy con sultant. A graduate of Yale Uni versity, he served as > Assistant Secretary of the Air Force before his association with the Atomic Energy Commission. Mr. Joseph E. Johnson is by train ing and education a professor of History, but the demand for his services by the United States Gov ernment and by the Carnegie En dowment for International Peace has been too constant to permit him to practice his profession. He has been president of the Carne gie group since 1950, and from 1944-1947 served as Chief of the Division of International Security Affairs in the Department of State. General Carlos P. Romulo Renowned throughout the World for his statesmanlike contributions toward international cooperation and World Peace, General Romulo has also served his native Philippines in war and peace. With Gen eral MacArthur on Bataan and Corregidor, Romulo also served with him in Australia and in the liberation “of the Philippine Islands. Later he was appointed Secretary of Foreign Affairs, Philippine Am bassador to the United States, and, currently, Philippine repre sentative on the U. N. Security Council and Chairman of their dele gation to the U. N. General Assembly. In 1949-50 he attracted the attention of the entire world by his capable handling of his duties as President of the U. N. Fourth General Assembly. Sponsored By The Great Issues Committee and Student Conference On National Affairs