People in Political Science Activities Felipe Aguero, department of politi- cal science, Ohio State University, is a fellow at the North/South Cen- ter, University of Miami, during 1994-95. Gregory Caldeira, department of political science, was named a Uni- versity Distinguished Scholar at Ohio State University. Harold D. Clarke, Regents Profes- sor of Political Science, University of North Texas, has been ap- pointed co-editor of Electoral Stud- ies with Iain McLean, Nuffield Col- lege, Oxford, and Bo Sarlvik, University of Goteborg. Milton C. Cummings, Jr., professor of political science, Johns Hopkins University, received an honorary Doctor of Letters degree from the State University of New York. The degree was conferred at the winter 1994 commencement at SUNY Plattsburgh, where Cummings has served as a Visiting Distinguished Professor. Parris N. Glendening Parris N. Glendening, associate professor of political science, Uni- versity of Maryland, has been elected Governor of the State of Maryland; formerly County Execu- tive of Prince George's County, Maryland. Richard Gunther, department of political science, Ohio State Uni- versity, is fellow at the Juan March Institute in Madrid, Spain, during 1994-95. Jaroslaw Piekalkiewicz, professor of political science and Russian and East European Studies Program, University of Kansas, was named the first University Distinguished Lecturer of Western Civilization. Piekalkiewicz has recently pub- lished (with Alfred Wayne Penn), a book, Politics of Ideocracy, State University of New York Press, 1995. Garrett Ward Sheldon, professor and chair, department of political science, Clinch Valley College of the University of Virginia will have his book, The Political Philosophy of Thomas Jefferson, become the first English language book on Jef- ferson to be translated into Russian and published in Moscow. After its publication by Republica Press, Sheldon will deliver a series of lec- tures on Jeffersonian political the- ory at Moscow University. Steven A. Shull, research professor of political science, University of New Orleans, will edit a book se- ries "Politics and Policy in Ameri- can Institutions" for Garland Pub- lishing Inc. Kimberly M. Zisk, department of political science, Ohio State Uni- versity, is in her second year of a two-year SSRC/MacArthur Foun- dation Fellowship on Peace and Security in a Changing World. Zisk is spending the 1994-95 year at the Mershon Center at Ohio State Uni- versity. Garrett Ward Sheldon Administrative Appointments Henry S. Bienen, president, North- western University; formerly Wood- row Wilson School, Princeton Uni- versity. Gayle Binion, director, Washington Center for University of California, Santa Barbara. Ann L. Craig, provost, Eleanor Roosevelt College of the University of California, San Diego; formerly director of undergraduate studies, department of political science, University of California, San Diego. James W. Hottois, president, Lewis-Clark State College; for- merly provost and dean of aca- demic affairs, Eastern Oregon State College. John R. Johannes, vice president for academic affairs, Villanova Uni- versity, effective August 7, 1995; formerly professor of political sci- ence and dean, College of Arts and Sciences, Marquette University. Susan Ann Kay, chair, department of political science, Miami (OH) University. 236 PS: Political Science & Politics Activities and Appointments Ruth Mandel Ruth Mandel, director, Eagleton Institute of Politics, Rutgers Uni- versity. Wally Miles, chair, department of political science, San Diego State University. Anthony Mughan, director, under- graduate international studies pro- gram, Ohio State University. New Appointments James Adams, assistant professor, department of political science, University of California, Santa Bar- bara. Ivelaw Griffith, assistant professor, department of political science, Florida International University; formerly John Jay College. Heidi H. Hobbs, assistant profes- sor, department of political science, Florida International University; formerly Central Illinois Univer- sity. Dean Lacy, assistant professor, de- partment of political science, Ohio State University; formerly Duke University. Paul Lewis, assistant professor, de- partment of political science, Flor- ida International University; for- merly Princeton University. William Reno, assistant professor, department of political science, Florida International University; formerly Hamilton College. Randall Schweller, assistant profes- sor, department of political science, Ohio State University; formerly Columbia University. Helene Silverberg, assistant profes- sor, department of political science, University of California, Santa Bar- bara. Margaret Jane Wyszomirski, profes- sor of political science with tenure, and director, Arts Management Program, Weatherhead School of Management, Case Western Re- serve University; formerly director, Graduate Public Policy Program, Georgetown University and direc- tor, Policy Planning, Research and Budget, National Endowment for the Arts. Promotions Ryan J. Barilleaux, professor of political science, Miami University. Peter Digeser, associate professor with tenure, department of political science, University of California, Santa Barbara. Wolfgang Drechsler, professor of public administration and political science, University of Tartu, Estonia. Fernando Lopez-Alves, associate professor with tenure, department of political science, University of California, Santa Barbara. Joel S. Migdal, Robert F. Philip Professor of International Studies, Henry M. Jackson School of Inter- national Studies, University of Washington. Paul A. Rahe, Jay P. Walker Pro- fessor of American History, Uni- versity of Tulsa. Harvey L. Schantz, professor of political science, State University of New York, Plattsburgh. Shannon Ishiyama Smithey, assis- tant professor, department of politi- cal science, University of Pittsburgh. John White, professor, department of political science, Catholic Uni- versity of America. Retirements Haruhiro Fukui, department of po- litical science, University of Cali- fornia, Santa Barbara. Wolfram Hanrieder, department of political science, University of Cal- ifornia, Santa Barbara. John E. Moore, department of po- litical science, University of Cali- fornia, Santa Barbara. A.E. Keir Nash, department of po- litical science, University of Cali- fornia, Santa Barbara. Robert C. Noel, department of po- litical science, University of Cali- fornia, Santa Barbara. Thomas Schrock, department of political science, University of Cal- ifornia, Santa Barbara. Visiting and Temporary Positions Paul R. Abramson, professor of political science, Michigan State University, was a Lady Davis Vis- iting Professor in the department of political science at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem from Octo- ber 1994 through January 1995. The appointment was supported by a grant from the Lady Davis Fellow- ship Trust, Jerusalem. Paul R. Abramson June 1995 237 People in Political Science Stanley Renshon, professor of polit- ical science, The City University of New York, is on sabbatical for 1995 and has been appointed Visit- ing Scholar at the John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University. Renshon will be work- ing with the school's leadership development project on curriculum to improve the quality of decision judgment for public policy develop- ers and decision makers. Awards MacArthur Grants Awarded The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation has awarded nineteen research and writing grants to twenty-three scholars and writers from the U.S. and around the world. The grants, totaling al- most $900,000, are intended to sup- port these individual scholars studying issues of peace and inter- national cooperation. The research and writing grants, which are part of the Foundation's Program on Peace and International Cooperation, are designed to en- courage analysts to explore interna- tional issues and to seek out inno- vative approaches to new policy dilemmas emerging in the rapidly changing world arena. The grants are open to individuals of any na- tionality who have a proven ability to do creative work; recipients have included scholars, journalists, and practitioners, among others. The grants range up to $65,000 for individuals or $100,000 for a two-person team, and extend up to eighteen months in duration. Recip- ients may carry out research at the institution or location of their choice. There are no age, academic affiliation, or geographic restric- tions on recipients. The purpose of the grants is to serve the following goals: • To broaden and strengthen the community of scholars and writ- ers engaged in policy-oriented work on international peace and security. • To encourage the reconceptual- ization of security issues in light of changing international events, and to encourage attention to new developments that have not been adequately understood as peace and security issues. • To foster integrated consideration of emerging relationships among economic, social, political, tech- nological, and environmental as- pects of global change. The twenty-three grant winners are: Nancy Barnes, Maputo, Mozam- bique Anne F. Bayefsky, University of Ottawa Ms. Pascale M. Combelles, Blag- nac, France Beth Osborne Daponte and Timo- thy Cote, University of Pittsburgh and National Institutes of Health Haleh Esfandiari, Potomac, Maryland Jonathan Fox, Massachusetts In- stitute of Technology Warren Goldstein, Amherst, Massachusetts Gennady Gorelik, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Katrin Jellema, Grand Haven, Michigan Michael T. Klare, Hampshire College Nathalie Lebon, University of Florida Thabane Vincent Maphai, Uni- versity of Western Cape Judith Matloff, Johannesburg, South Africa R.T. Naylor, McGill University Kevin J. O'Brien and Lianjiang Li, Ohio State University and Nan- kai University Yezid Sayigh, Oxford, UK Beth Stephens, Center for Consti- tutional Rights, New York, New York Susan Willett and Peter Batchelor, Kings College, London, UK Snjezana Krezo and Dusko Ilic, Sibenik, Croatia and Tokyo, Japan 1995 Pi Sigma Alpha Award Stephen Horn, United States Representative from California's 38th District and a political scien- tist with over thirty-five years of experience as a participant in na- tional policy making and service as a scholar, teacher, and university administrator, has received the Na- tional Capital Area Political Sci- ence Association 1995 Pi Sigma Alpha Award. The award, recog- nizing the outstanding contributions of a political scientist to public ser- vice, was presented March 25, 1995, at Mount Vernon College. Prior to his election to Congress in 1992, Representative Horn served as Trustee Professor of Po- litical Science at California Univer- sity, Long Beach, with a specialty in the legislative process. Congress- man Horn's career began as a polit- ical appointee in the Eisenhower administration, where he was Ad- ministrative Assistant to Secretary of Labor James P. Mitchell. He then served for five years as Legis- lative Assistant to Senator Thomas H. Kuchel of California, who at the time was Deputy Republican Leader (Whip) of the U.S. Senate. During that time, he worked on major legislation, including the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Voting Rights Act of 1965, Medicare, and water policy for the western states. Congressman Horn has also been a Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution and Dean of Graduate Studies and Research at The Amer- ican University. From 1970-1988, he served as President of California State University, Long Beach. In addition, he served part-time for sixteen years as a founding member and past chair of The National In- stitute of Corrections of the U.S. Department of Justice, and for thir- teen years as a member and Vice Chair of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. Carrie Chapman Catt Prize for Research Cheryl Logan Sparks, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill was awarded the Carrie Chapman Prize for Research for "How Grand- mother Won the War: Strategic and Organizational Lessons from the Struggle for Suffrage." Lisa Young, University of Toronto and Visiting Fulbright Scholar at American Uni- versity received honorable mention for "The Relationship between Wo- men's Movements and Political 238 PS: Political Science & Politics