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CHRONOLOGICAL LIST OF WITNESSES—Continued

March 30, 196"

Page

Michaelis, Michael, manager, Washington office, Arthur D. Little, Inc.,

Moor? Vincent J.,^"assistant "director,"Office of" Planning Coordination,
State of New York, Albany, N.Y —- f," Ji^^.v

Schrantz, Roger, director, Policy Planning and Program Development,

Bureau of Management, State of Wisconsin, Madison, Wis .. *oi

Cyert, Dean Richard M., Graduate School of Administration, Carnegie

Institute of Technology, Pittsburgh, Pa jtrt>

STATEMENTS

Alpert, Daniel, dean, Graduate School, University of Illinois, Urbana, 111 206
Archibald, Miss Kathleen, assistant director, Public Policy Research

Organisation, University of California, Irvine, Calif-. - ------------- w»

Harbor, Arthur W., Deputy Assistant Secretary (Arms and Trade Control),

International Security Affairs, Department of Defense— ---------- i-M

Bauer, Kurt W., executive director, Southeastern Wisconsin Regional ^lan-

ning Commission, prepared statement -74

Cyert, Dean Richard M., Graduate School of Administration, Carnegie

Institute of Technology, Pittsburgh, Pa j°o

Prepared statement v_l~: V TMn

Daly, Richard P., president, Aries Corp., McLean, Va., prepared statement- 280

Engler, Richard E., Jr., Human Sciences Research, Inc., McLean, Va.,

prepared statement -.-,- f5J

Geyer, Prof. John C, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md 171

Gilmore, John S., senior research economist, Denver Research Institute,

University of Denver.. —---=. 285

Godall, Don A., legislative action general manager, Chamber of Commerce

of the United States, prepared statement --—-■- - - 289

Grogan, Paul, Director, Office of State Technical Services, Department of

Commerce, accompanied by Martin Robbins, Assistant Director for

Sr>ocifil ProKriiins - - — — - ~

Harr, Karl G., Jr., president. Aerospace Industries Association, accom-

panied by Ward Dennis, Northrup Corp., and H. L. Wheeler, North

American Aviation - "*

Kimball, Dr. Charles N., president, Midwest Research Institute, Kansas

City, Mo V?

Prepared statement - — ; - - a7

Krueger, Dr. Rovert W., president, Planning Research Corp., Los Angeles,

Calif.-Washington, D.C., prepared statement — --— 289

Lekachman, Dr. Robert, chairman, Department of Economics, State

University of New York, Stony Brook, Long Island, New York,

N.Y ------ 90

Michaelis, Michael, manager, Washington office, Arthur D. Little, Inc.,

Washington, D.C 217

Moore, Vincent J., assistant director, Office of Planning Coordination,

State of New York, Albany, N.Y 232

Supplemental statement 24J

Morse, Hon. F. Bradford, a Representative in Congress from the State of

Massachusetts •"

Nelson, Robert, director, public sector projects, Raytheon Co., Lexington.

Mass 213

Ramo, Dr. Simon, vice chairman of the board, TRW, Inc., Cleveland,

Ohio 74

Supplemental statement 88

Roberts, E. R., vice president (development), Aerojet General Corp.,

El Monte, Calif 62

Rowen, Henry, president, Rand Corp., Santa Monica, Calif 161

Schon, Dr. Donald A., president, Organization for Social and Technical

Innovation, Cambridge, Mass H5

Schrantz, Roger, director, policy planning and program development,

Bureau of Management, State of Wisconsin, Madison, Wis 251

Scott, Hon. Hugh, a U.S. Senator from the State of Pennsylvania 69

OENERAL BOOKBINDING CO.

77 H06ST " 005 BB 3 2899

QUALITY CONTROL MARK -. •

STATEMENTS—Continued

Waggoner, Eugene B., president, Consulting Engineers Council, prepared P»e« statement 296

Wallick, Frank, Washington legislative representative, United Automobile,
Aerospace & Agricultural Implement Workers of America, AFL-CIO,
on behalf of Leonard Woodcock, vice president, United Automobile,
Aerospace & Agricultural Implement Workers of America, AFL-CIO.. 187
Supplemental statement 190

Weiler, Dean E. T., Krannert Graduate School of Industrial Administra-
tion, Purdue University, accompanied by Daniel Alpert, dean, the
graduate College, University of Illinois 202

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

Articles, etc., entitled:

"Creative Federalism, Public-Private Collaboration and National
Needs in Research and Development," a study proposal by James
Hodgson, consultant, operations research, Systems Engineering,
Washington, D.C . 369

"Highlights of the Systems Analysis Questionnaire," by Dennis
Brezina and Louise Becker, Science Policy Division, Legislative
Reference Service Library of Congress 362

"Managing the Poverty Program in Detroit" 190

"Managing the Public Business," by Representative F. Bradford
Morse, from the Congressional Record, August 25, 1966 17

"National Commission on Public Management," by Representative
F. Bradford Morse, from the Congressional Record, January 10,
1967 26

"Planning-Programming-Budgeting System: An Annotated Bibliogra-
phy, The," by Robert L. Chartrand, Information Sciences Special-
ist, and Dennis W. Brezina, Research Assistant, Science Policy
Research Division, Library of Congress, Legislative Reference
Service 345

"Private Responsibility for Public Management," from Harvard Busi-
ness Review, March-April 1967, by Hon. F. Bradford Morse, a U.S.
Representative from the State of Massachusetts 353

"Program Budgeting in Wisconsin," paper by John W. Reynolds and
Walter G. Hollander 260

"Six Business Lessons From the Pentagon," from Harvard Business
Review, March-April 1966, by Donald J. Smalter and Rudy L.
Ruggles, Jr 333

"Systems Approach: A Tool of the Congress, The," by Robert L.
Chartrand, Information Sciences Specialist, Science Policy Research
Division, Library of Congress, Legislative Reference Service 325

"Systems Approach: A Unified Concept of Planning, The," from
Aerospace Management, Fall-Winter 1966, by P. G. Thome and
R. G. Willard 297

"Wanted: Space-Age Government," from the Washington (D.C.)

Evening Star, January 16, 1967 27

State Technical Services, Office of, U.S. Department of Commerce:

State, designated agency and official, and working contract 131

Newsletter, November 1966 ^. 139

Major State problems as expressed in 5-year plans t -_.... • 134

Participation by State, offices, agencies, fiscal year 1966 135

SCIENTIFIC MANPOWER UTILIZATION, 1967

TUESDAY, JANUARY 24, 1967

U.S. Senate,
Special Subcommittee On Scientific Manpower

Utilization Of The Committee On

Labor And Public Welfare,

Washington D.C.

The special subcommittee met at 9:30 a.m., pursuant to call, in room 4232, Senate Office Building, Senator Gaylord Nelson (chairman of the special subcommittee) presiding.

Present: Senators Nelson (presiding), Javits, and Dominick.

Committee staff members present: William Spring, special counsel to the subcommittee.

Senator Nelson. The special subcommittee will be in order.

We have as witnesses this morning Congressman Bradford Morse of Massachusetts; Karl Hair, Jr., president, Aerospace Industries Association of America; and Dr. E. R. Roberts, vice president, development, Aero-Jet General Corp., El Monte, Calif.

On June 2 through June 10, and on July 22, 1965, Senator Clark and I conducted hearings on the impact of Federal research and development policies on scientific and technical manpower.

Out of those hearings we developed and drafted S. 2662, a bill to mobilize and utilize the scientific and engineering manpower of the Nation, to employ systems analysis and systems engineering to help fully employ the Nation's manpower resources to solve national problems.

I conducted hearings on this bill in Los Angeles, Calif., on November 19, 1965. On that occasion we heard from the four corporations that did the studies for the State of California.

On May 17 and 18, 1966, we conducted further hearings here in Washington and heard from the various Federal agencies.

On August 12, 1966, Senator Scott introduced a bill, and on the same day, I believe, Congressman Morse introduced a bill in the House.

I discussed this subject sometime last year with Congressman Morse and with Senator Dominick and suggested the idea that perhaps we could work out a hearing and a bipartisan bill that utilized this concept. These hearings are a consequence of those discussions at that time.

At this point in the record, without objection, I order the text of the billsprinted.

(The bills, S. 430 and S. 467, follow:)

[blocks in formation]

IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES

January 17 (legislativeday, January 12), 1967

Mr. Nelson (for himself, Mr. Clark, and Mr. Randolph) introduced the following bill; which was read twice and referred to the Committee on Labor and Public Welfare

A BILL

To mobilize and utilize the scientific and engineering manpower of the Nation to employ systems analysis and systems engineering to help to fully employ the Nation's manpower resources to solve national problems.

1 Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Iiepresenta

2 tives of the United States of America in Congress assembled,

3 That this Act may be cited as the "Scientific Manpower

4 Utilization Act of 1967".

5 Sec. 2. It is the purpose of this Act to facilitate and

6 encourage the utilization of the scientific, engineering, and 1 technical resources of the Nation in meeting urgent problems

8 facing the Nation or localities within the Nation, by promot

9 ing the application of systems analysis and systems engi

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