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DESCRIPTION:PENTAGON PAPERS WHISTLEBLOWER DANIEL ELLSBERG TO UNVEIL NEW BOOK, 
 \nSECRETS: A MEMOIR OF VIETNAM AND THE PENTAGON PAPERS\n\nPanel of 
 distinguished scholars joins former Pentagon official \nand Nixon target at 
 next Independent Institute Policy Forum\n\nWHAT:    The Independent 
 Institute, the World Affairs Council of Northern California, and the 
 Richard and Rhoda Goldman School of Public Policy at the University of 
 California, Berkeley present an evening with Daniel 
 Ellsberg:\n\n“Secrecy, Freedom and Empire:\nLessons for Today from 
 Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers”\n\nWHO:      \n\n  -- DANIEL ELLSBERG is 
 the world-renowned, former Pentagon official and whistle-blower who made 
 headlines around the world in 1971 when he released the Pentagon Papers at 
 the height of the Vietnam War. In addition to his widely acclaimed, new 
 book, SECRETS, he is the author of RISK, AMBIGUITY AND 
 DECISION.\n\nPanelists:\n\n  -- BARTON J. BERNSTEIN is Professor of History 
 at Stanford University; author of THE TRUMAN ADMINISTRATION: A Documentary 
 History; and editor of TOWARDS A NEW PAST: Dissenting Essays in\nAmerican 
 History, POLITICS AND POLICIES OF THE TRUMAN ADMINISTRATION, and 
 TWENTIETH-CENTURY AMERICA: Recent Interpretations.\n\n  --  EDWIN B. 
 FIRMAGE is Samuel D. Thurman Professor of Law at the University of Utah; 
 co-author of TO CHAIN THE DOG OF WAR: The War Power of Congress in History 
 and Law; and co-editor of THE INTERNATIONAL LEGAL SYSTEM and RELIGION AND 
 LAW: Biblical, Jewish and Islamic Perspectives.\n\n  -- DAVID R. HENDERSON 
 is Professor of Economics at the Naval Postgraduate School; author of THE 
 JOY OF FREEDOM: An Economist's Odyssey; and editor of the FORTUNE 
 ENCYCLOPEDIA OF ECONOMICS.\n\nWHEN:    Tuesday, October 23, 2002, 8:00 
 p.m.\n        Doors and bookstore open at 7:00 p.m.\n        Program begins 
 at 8:00 p.m.\n        Author book signing after the program\n\nWHERE:    
 Zellerbach Auditorium\nBancroft Way & Telegraph Avenue\nBerkeley, 
 California\n\nDirections: Driving and parking directions available online 
 at http://facilities.calperfs.berkeley.edu/facilities.html.\nOr take BART 
 to the Downtown Berkeley station.\n\nCOST:    $18.00/person ($14.00/person 
 for Independent Institute and World Affairs Council Members; $10.00/person 
 for students )\n\nRSVP:    Order tickets through Cal Performances at (510) 
 642-9988 or online at calperfs.berkeley.edu (limited seating)\n\nURL:    
 http://www.independent.org/tii/forums/events.html\n\nThe Independent 
 Institute (www.independent.org) is a non-politicized, scholarly public 
 policy research and educational organization that hosts Independent Policy 
 Forums to encourage discussion of critical 
 issues.\n\n*****************************************\n\nThe Independent 
 Institute Presents:\n\nAn Evening with DANIEL ELLSBERG (please see bio 
 below*)\n\n"SECRECY, FREEDOM AND EMPIRE: Lessons for Today from Vietnam and 
 the Pentagon Papers"\nOctober 23, 
 2002\nhttp://www.independent.org/tii/forums/021023ipf.html\n\nCo-sponsored 
 by the World Affairs Council of Northern California and the Richard and 
 Rhoda Goldman School of Public Policy, University of California, 
 Berkeley\n\nDaniel Ellsberg began his Vietnam-era career as a U.S. Marine 
 company commander, a Pentagon official, and a staunch supporter of U.S. 
 global interventionism. But, in October 1969, Ellsberg--fully expecting to 
 spend the rest of his life in prison--smuggled out of his office and made 
 public a seven-thousand-page top secret study of\ndecision-making in 
 Vietnam, the Pentagon Papers.  At this upcoming Independent Policy Forum, 
 Ellsberg will tell the story of his becoming the most important 
 whistle-blower of the last fifty years, risking his career and his freedom 
 to expose the deceptions and\ndelusions of U.S. leaders from Truman 
 onward.\n\nBased on his new book, SECRETS, Ellsberg will provide an 
 insider's view of the secrets and lies that have shaped decades of U.S. 
 foreign policy to the present. His exposure began on his first day at the 
 Pentagon, August 4, 1964, which was also the day of the infamous Gulf\nof 
 Tonkin incident. In time, the more he learned from top decision-makers, 
 confidential documents, and reports of secret maneuvers, the more skeptical 
 he became about the conduct and impact of U.S. foreign policies.\n\nThe 
 release of the Pentagon Papers set in motion a chain of events that 
 included a landmark Supreme Court decision, the arrest and trial of 
 Ellsberg, the crimes of Watergate, and the end of the Nixon presidency and 
 the Vietnam War.\n\nAs the U.S. pursues the current War on Terrorism, 
 Ellsberg's insights into governmental intoxication with power could not be 
 more timely or important.\n\n\nPraise for Daniel Ellsberg and his new book, 
 SECRETS:\n\n"In Secrets, Daniel Ellsberg not only shows he is a brilliant 
 policy analyst, but he has written with breathtaking excitement of how he 
 released the top secret Pentagon Papers, which electrified the nation\nby 
 exposing the official lies, fantasies, and tragedies of our war in 
 Vietnam."\n    -- BEN H. BAGDIKIAN, former Assist. Managing Editor, 
 Washington Post\n\n"A riveting inside account . . . a chilling tale of life 
 at the\nbureaucratic top, and what profound compromises it takes to stay 
 there."\n    -- SEYMOUR HERSH, Pulitzer Prize Winner\n\n"Daniel Ellsberg 
 demonstrated enormous courage during a difficult and turbulent time . . ., 
 courage which undoubtedly saved American lives . . . and helped to hold 
 politicians accountable for mistakes they refused to admit."\n    -- 
 SENATOR JOHN F. KERRY\n\n"This is an honestly and lucidly told narrative by 
 someone who single-handedly changed the course of history. Its message of 
 the menace of secrets rings true today."\n    -- DANIEL SCHORR, Senior News 
 Analyst, National Public Radio\n\n"Secrecy is the greatest threat to 
 democracy. It masks the accountability of government officialdom. . . . 
 Ellsberg reveals the immorality of past leadership. Little has changed 
 since."\n    -- SENATOR MIKE GRAVEL (Ret.)\n\n"Daniel Ellsberg takes us 
 back to a time and place in our recent history when a single courageous act 
 was imperative for democracy-government by the people, for the people-to 
 exist. The most important exposé of Washington since the Pentagon Papers 
 themselves,\nSecrets is essential reading for any American who wants to 
 understand true patriotism."\n    -- MARTIN SHEEN, Actor and 
 Activist\n\n"Makes a remarkable and riveting story that still shocks 30 
 years later. . . . Ellsberg creates page-turning human drama and suspense. 
 . . . Ellsberg raises serious ethical questions about how citizens, 
 politicians, the press and officials act when confronted with government 
 actions they consider immoral and perhaps illegal."\n    -- PUBLISHERS 
 WEEKLY\n\n"Secrets is a well-crafted, windmill-tilting autobiography by the 
 famed cold warrior turned antiwar activist. . . . When portions of the 
 so-called Pentagon Papers were released by the New York Times and other 
 publications, he [Ellsberg] writes, sitting president Richard Nixon at 
 first seemed happy to have support for his don't-blame-me argument, then 
 worried that secret documents from his own administration would be leaked 
 to the media-which, Ellsberg writes, set in motion the chain of spying that 
 ended in the Watergate affair and Nixon's resignation. Throughout, Ellsberg 
 is convinced of the justice of his cause-as will be many of his readers, on 
 seeing the evidence amassed here of the criminality of our recent politics. 
 Thoughtful, full of righteous indignation-rightly so-and likely to be of 
 great interest to students of the Vietnam War and domestic\nresistance 
 thereto."\n    -- KIRKUS REVIEWS\n\n"If our nation could absorb its lessons 
 we might all face a better future."\n    -- HOWARD ZINN, Professor of 
 Political Science, Boston University\n\n\n*In 1971, DANIEL ELLSBERG made 
 headlines around the world when he released the Pentagon Papers through the 
 New York Times and Washington Post. A native of Detroit, he earlier 
 graduated from Harvard University, served as a company commander in the 
 U.S. Marine\nCorps for two years, and then returned to Harvard to complete 
 his doctoral degree in economics. In 1959, he joined the RAND corporation's 
 Economics Department as an analyst, and in 1964 he was recruited to serve 
 in the Pentagon under Secretary of Defense Robert\nMcNamara during the 
 Johnson Administration. Following a two-year stint in Vietnam for the State 
 Department, Dr. Ellsberg eventually returned to RAND. In 1973, during the 
 Watergate scandal, John\nEhrlichman and G. Gordon Liddy were indicted along 
 with two White House officials in connection with the burglary in 1971 of 
 the office of Dr. Ellsberg's psychiatrist. In addition to his new book, 
 SECRETS,\nhe is the author of RISK, AMBIGUITY AND DECISION, and his 
 scholarly articles have appeared in the Quarterly Journal of Economics, 
 Economic Journal, and American Economic Review.\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2004/02/03/12003.php
SUMMARY:Daniel Ellsberg lecture: "Secrecy, Freedom and Empire"
LOCATION:Zellerbach Auditorium\nBancroft Way & Telegraph Avenue\nBerkeley, CA
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2004/02/03/12003.php
DTSTART:20021024T020000Z
DTEND:20021024T050000Z
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