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COMMANDANT'S ANNUAL REPORT 1965 - 1966 The Judge Advocate General's School United States Army Char\ollcsvillc, Virginia
Transcript

COMMANDANT'S

ANNUAL REPORT

1965 - 1966

The Judge Advocate General's School

United States Army

Char\ollcsvillc, Virginia

"Since] visited your school ...• I have been filled with admiration for the splendid work you are doing. Our numbers in Australia are too small to permit our undertaking a similar systcm of edu" cation-at least on the comprehensive scale of Charlottesville. How­ever, my visit broadened my horizon as to the role of the military lawyer. and as a result our training programme for RAAF lawyers and reservists has widencd considerably. ]n addition. J draw heavily on the wealth of experience which ] ;'1m able to find in writing!S emanating from your school. ...

"Your school has lifted the slUdy of military law to a standard hitherto unknown, and I assure you that 1 am most grateful to be able to share the resultant knowledge which YOLI are so generously making available to me."

PHILIP II. N. OPAS

The J !ldge Advocate CI'neral Royal Australian Air Force.

"'Ve note with justifiable pride that the School continues to magnificently accomplish its assigned mission."

CHRISTI NO S. CARREON

Lieutellant Colollel, JAGS Execu.tive Officer The Judge Advocate General's Office Armed Forces of the Philippines

"The School is probably the only purely graduale law school in the United. States .... Its curriculum probably covers a much wider range than the graduate department of any regular law school, because it gives advanced courses, not only in the ordinary branches of the law, but also in numerous phases of military law as well as some aspects of foreign law....

"Unforlunately. the public generally and the legal profession in particular are not sufficiently aware of the outstanding work done in the School. ..."

ALEXANDER HOLTZOFF

United States District fudge United Stales District Court

for the District of Columbia

FOREWORD

1966 marks the fifteenth consecutive year of continuous operation of The Judge Advocate General's School in Charlottesville, Virginia. This annual Report is published as a chronicle of the development and activities of the School. Its purpose is not only to describe operations during the past fiscal year and the various courses of instruction offered here, but also to serve as a record of the School, its Staff and Faculty, students. and enlisted personnel.

As an additional purpose, this Report serves to inform military lawyers of the services available at the School.

We at the School are ever mindful that the continued success of the School to a large extent depends upon the support of military lawyers in the field. It is our hope that this unstinting support will continue in the future as it has in the past. To this end, your suggestions. criticisms. and comments on how the School may better accomplish its missions are earnestly solicited.

~cra~ "JOHN W. BURTCHAELL

Colonel, fACC Commandant

ii

COMMANDANT'S ANNUAL REPORT

FISCAL YEAR 1966

Table of Contents

Page Section I-History of The Judge Advocate

General's School ___________________________________________________ _

Section Il-Organization of The Judge Advocate General's School ____________________________________________________ 3

The Academic Department __________________________________________ 3

The Nonresident Training Department 3

The Plans and Publications Department__________________ 4

The Office of the School Secretary ___________ . ______ ._____ ._____ 5

Section III-Academic Activities _____________________________________________________ 6

General _______________________________ .___ ._. __ .________________ ... ______________ .__ 6

Judge Advocate Officer Career Course ________ ._____________ 7

Judge Advocate General (Special) Course ___ .. _____________ 12

Procurement Law Course _____________________________________ .. _____ 14

Military Justice Course ______________________ .____________________ .__ 14

International Law Course __ .___ .________________ . ____ ._____________ 15

Civil Law Course .. _. _____ .__________________________________ .__ .__________ 16

Foreign Law Course _________________ .. ____________________ .______________ 16

Military Affairs Course ____ .________________________________ .__________ 16

Law Officer Seminar _________ .. __________________ .. ____________ .. _________ 17

Judge Advocate Officer (Reserve Component) Course __ ._____________ .. __________ 18

Guest Speaker Program ___________________________________ .__________ 18

Text Preparation Program ________ ._______________ .___________ ._____ 18

Thesis Lending Library ___________________________________ .__________ 20

Foreign Student Orientation Program _____ ._______________ 20

III

Section IV-Nonresident Training .................................................. 21

Individual Training and

Nonresident Materials

General ............................................................................. 21

Extension Course Division .......................................... 21

Career Management Division .............................. 23

Preparation Division ............................................ 25

Section V-Plans and Publications ................................................ 27

General ............................................................................ 27

Publications .................................................................... 27

Special Activi ties ......................................... ................. 3I

Section VI-Administration ................ .............................. .................. 35

General ............................................................................ 35

Facilities of the School .................................................. 35

Quarters ............................................................................ 37

Messing ............................................................................ 37

Officers' Open Mess ..................................................... 37

Bookstore ....................................................._.................. 38

Logistical Support ....................................................... 38

Adjutant's Office ............................................................ 38

Medical and Dental Facilities ...................................... 39

Athletic Facilities .......................................................... 39

The Alumni Association ............................................. 39

Section VII-Combat Developments Command, .J udge Advocate Agency ........................................ 40

Section VIII-Appendices ...................................................................... 41

Appendix I (Organization Chart) ............................ 41

Appendix II (Organizational Roster of the School) ........................................................ 42

IV

Appendix III (Changes in Military Personnel, FY ] 966) ............................................. 44

Appendix IV (Background Statements

Appendix V (FY ] 966 Course Cycle Chart) ......................................................... 4R

Appendix VI (Resident Students,

Appendix VII (FY 1967 Course

Appendix VIII (Thesis Topics) ................................ 5R

Appendix XIV (Lectures

of Officer Personnel) .. ................ ..... .... .............. 47

FY ]966) ................................................................. 49

Cycle Chart) .......................................................... 50

Appendix IX (Awards) ............................................. 65

Appendix X (Guest Speakers) .................................. 67

Appendix Xl (Distinguished Visitors) .................... 73

Appendix Xll (Text Book Program) ...................... 74

Appendix XIII (Visits to Reserve Units) .................. 76

Outside TJAGSA) ............................................... 79

v

MAJOR GENERAL

ROBERT H. MCCAW

The Judge Advocate General, U. S. Army

COLONEL

JOHN \N. BURTCHAELL

Commandant, The Judge Advocate

General's School

HISTORY OF THE JUDCE ADVOCATE CENERAL'S

SCHOOL

Although judge advocates have served the United States Army since 1775, no effort was made to provide them with formal training in military law until the opening days of World War II. In preced­ing years, newly appointed judge advocates were trained empirically, but the Army's swift expansion soon emphasized the need for instructing attorneys entering- the Corps in the manifold aspects of their new specialty.

In February 1942, as the uniformed lawyer's biwden increased in complexity, specialized and refresher training courses for active duty personnel were commenced at the National University Law School, Washington, D. C. In August 1942, operations were transferred to The Judge Advocate General's School, physically located at the Uni­versity of Michigan Law School, Ann Arbor, Michigan, and commanded by Colonel Edward H. Young, JAGC. In the follow­ing months, hundreds of officers were trained at Ann Arbor. By June 1944 over two-thirds of the active duty streng-th of the Judge Advocate General's Corps were graduates of the School. The end of the war, however, substantially reduced the need for trained military lawyers, and in 1946 the School, which had been initiated only on a temporary basis, was discontinued.

Nevertheless, plans were soon being devised in the Office of The Judge Advocate General to implement the recommendation of a committee, appointed in 1946 to study the administration of military justice, that provision be made for the training of Army lawyers in military law. The passage of the Unifm'm Code of Military Justice and the coming of the Korean conflict accentuated the need for judge advocate trall1ll1g facilities. As a consequence, another temporary training- facility was established at Fort Myer, Virginia, again under the guidance of Colonel Young. Approximately 200 officers attended several five-week courses in basic military law taught by five officer-instructors.

By this time, the decision had been made to establish a permanent branch service school. Although the advisability of locating the School wthin 200 miles of 'Vashington was recognized, sites as far away as Fort Crockett, Texas, and Fort Rodman, Massachusetts, were considered. In the spring of 1951, a survey was made of the facilities offered by the University of Virginia, and on 2 August 1951 the present Judge Advocate General's School was established. At present, The Judge Advocate General's School is a class II activity of the Office of the Judge Advoca te General.

COLONEL TOXEY H. SEWELl" Actill.!!,' C01I1771({I1r/rmt

Colonel Charles L. Decker was appointed as first Commandant. He served until IS June 1955 when he was succeeded by Colonel Nathaniel B. Rieger. Colonel Rieger was in turn succeeded by Colonel John G. O'Brien who served from I March I%7 to 1:3 :\Iay 1961. Colonel John F, T. Murray was Commandant from I July 1961 to 31 December 19M. Colonel John W. BurtchaelI, the present Commandant, began his tour of duty on 1 January 1%5 and retired on 30 June 1966.

2

ORCANIZATION OF THE JUDCE ADVOCATE CENERAL'S SCHOOL

The Judge Advocate General's School, U. S. Army, is located on the grounds of the University of Virginia in Charlottesville. Its function is to orient the Army lawyer to the fundamentals of military law, to provide current training m~lterial, and to inform him of the latest developments in the law. Formal instruction and legal publi ­cations, including texts, periodicals, and extension courses, are used to fulfill this purpose.

The Judge Advocate General's School operates on a year-round basis. Over 9,lOO students have graduated from courses offered at the School in its 15 years of operation at Charlottesville. During Fiscal Year 1966, R40 students were graduated from courses offered a t the School.

The Judge Advocate General's School is composed of three de­partments and the Office of the School Secretary.

The Academic Department. This department conducts resident instruction for all active Army and reserve judge advocates, as well as some Naval and Air Force officers. It also prepares academic texts. Resident courses include the Judge Advocate General (Special) Course, for the orientation of newly commissioned judge advocates, and the Judge Advocate Officer Career Course, which covers the field of military law in greater depth. The department also conducts' several specialized courses, generally two weeks in length, including courses in military justice, procurement law, inter­national law, civil law, military affairs, civil affairs law, a combi­nation resident and nonresident reserve course, and refresher courses for reserve component officers. The department is composed of the International and Comparative Law, Military Affairs, Military Justice, Military Training, and Procurement Law Divisions.

The Nonresident Training Department. This department is responsible for developing nonresident training programs to insure the continued high level of professional legal competence required of military lawyers. In this connection, the department administers the judge advocate portion of the Army extension course program and prepares and distributes the judge advocate nonresident train­ing material used in extension courses, USAR schools, and staff training materials used by the Judge Advocate General Service Organization (JAGSO) Detachments, the Judge Advocate Sections of USAR, and National Guard units. The department also provides liaison through periodic staff visits with the USAR School Judge Advocate Branch Departments, the JAGSO Detachments, and Na­tional Guard units. The department is composed of the Individual Training and Career Management Division, the Extension Course Division and the Nonresident Materials Preparation Division.

3

Officer Personnel, Staff and Fac1l1ty, TJAG School. First TOW, left to right: Vr. COL. MORRISON, LT. COL. HAGAN, LT. COL. CUMMING, LT.

COL. KINNEY, COL. BURTCIIAELL, Lr. COL. PECKH,\M, LT. COL.

HARRINGTON, Lr. COL. THORNILEY, LT. COL. ZALONIS, LT. COL.

HOWARD. Second row, left to right: CAPT. ADAMKEWICZ, lvLq. PECK,

LT. COL. VAN HOOK, CAPT. THORNOCK, CAPT. DurUIAM, MAJ. AU,EY,

Vr. CDR. TOMS, LT. COL. BARRI':TT, CAPT, STEIN, CAPT. BONANNO,

Third TOW, left to right: CAPT. CROlJCH, CAPT. MONACO, CAPT,

PELLETIER, LT. NEWlTT, LT, TRACEY, LT. RABINE, CAPT. BYERS, CAPT.

LILLY, LT. BALL, LT. COPELAND, LT. ;\'flTCHELL, CAPT. \VHALEN.

The Plans and Publications ])ejJarl7nent. This department is responsible for the conduct and coordination of research in the military legal field; prompt dissemination of the results of the research to members of the Judge Advocate General's Corps; formulation of policies and procedures to aid in maintaining a superior level of staff work by judge advocates; special projects activities such as the Judge Advocate General's Conference and the conference for common subjects legal instructors; the preparation of permanent and periodical military legal publications, including the AiilitaTY Law Review and the Judge Advocate J~ega'l Service; the development and preparation of common subjects and quasi­legal instructional material including training films; and the plan­ning and execution of an annual logistical exercise. The de­partment consists of the Plans and Publications Divisions.

The Office of the School Secretary. This office formulates policies and, upon approval, executes policies concerning personnel, adminis­tration, security, management, and logistics. These responsibilities include the proper allocation and use of personnel, efficient use of physical facilities, budget preparation and review, and analysis and control of fiscal matters.

4

ElIlis/ed Persoll II el, Staff and Faculty, T]AG School left to right: Sp5 EDWARDS, SGT. MAJOR POLSTER, SFC MILLER, SFC \IAYNARD.

Civilian employees of T]AG School. Front row, left to right: MRS.

PREBLE, MRS. PARKINSON, MRS. ALLEN. Second row, left to right: MISS GROSS, MRS. GRYCZT, MRS. MACFARLANE, MISS RIDDLE. Third row, left to right: MRS. CROXTON, MRS. MARRS, MRS. HEAVENER, MRS.

JENKINS, MRS. CHAMBERS, MRS. HEAD, MISS MARSHALL, MRS. CASTIEL.

Fourth row, left to right: MR. \'\THITE, MRS. HUFFMAN, MISS NEWMAN,

MISS BROWN, MISS ANERK, MRS. RAGSDALE, MRS. MOORE, MRS.

NORTON, MR. MERRITT, MRS. ELVERSTON.

5

ACADEMIC ACTIVITIES

General. During Fiscal Year 1966, 14 resident courses were con­ducted with 840 students in attendance. (See Appendix V for the FY 1966 schedule of courses.) Attending these courses were 683 Army commissioned officers, 13 Navy and Marine Corps oflicers, 59 Air Force oHicers, 80 civilians, and Sallied oflicers from Argentina and Iran. (See Appendix VI for a breakdown of students in residence at the School during FY 1966.) Civilian personnel from government agencies outside of the Department of Defense represented at the School during Fiscal Year 19G6 included the Post Office Department, Federal Aviation Agency, the Small Business Administration, the National Aeronautics and Space Agency, the General Accounting Office, the Department of Commerce, the National Security AgenC) and the National Science Foundation. Of the 683 Army officers

attending courses, 271 were active duty personnel while the remaining 412 were reserve com­ponent ofllcers.

Courses conducted during Fiscal Year 1966 included the nine-mon th Judge Advocate Ofli­cer Career Course (S-18-C22); two cycles of the ten-week Judge Advocate General (Special) Course (SF-8101); the two-week Judge Ad \/oca te Officer Refresher (Reserve Component) Course

LT. COLONEL (S-18-C9); three cycles of the EDWIN M. SCHMIDT three-week Procurement Law

Director, Course (SF-F6); the two-week Academic Departmcl1 t l\Iilitary Justice Course (SF-Fl);

the two-week I nternational Law Course (SF-F3); the two-week Civil Affairs Law Course (SF-F4); the two-week Civil Law Course (SF-FS); the two-week Military Affairs Course (SF-F2); the two-week Foreign Law Course (SF-F7); and a two-week Law Officer Seminar. Courses scheduled to be con­ducted during Fiscal Year 1967 are set forth in a chart in Appendix VII.

The official source of information concerning courses of instruc­tion offered at all Army service schools, including The .Judge Advo­cate General's School, is the U. S. Arm)' Formal Schools Catalog (De­partment of the Army Pamphlet 350-10.) That catalog provides detailed information for staff officers, commanders, and personnel officers who are concerned with the selection of individuals for school attendance; for commissioned oflicers, both active and reserve, of the

6

armed forces and civilian employees of the Government who are interested in attending particular courses; and for others who may wish to acquaint themselves with the Army's training opportunities. In addition, Army regulations govern related matters such as at­tendance by military personnel from foreign countries. These authorities should always be consulted for the latest official infor­mation. Quotas for all the numbered courses mentioned above are handled by the United States Continental Army Command, Fort Monroe, Virginia. Particular inquiries concerning this School may be addressed to the Commandant, The Juclge Advocate General's School, United States Army, Charlottesville, Virginia, 22901.

Judge Advocate Officer Career Course. In this course. selected judge advocates are educated for leadership in the broad fields of military law. This course offers a year of graduate legal study in all areas of law relevant to mili tary legal practice. It is fully ac­credited by the American Bar .-\ssociation as meeting the highest standards required for a graduate legal study program. It is open to high I\' CJ ual ifiecl anc! caref ull y selectee! career judge advoca tes or legal specialists of the armed forces of the United States and allied natiollS. The course is intended to deepen and broaden a philo­sophical appreciation of the role of law in its application to all phases of military life through recognition of the continual impact of legal principles and standards at all levels of command, and thus to prepare the officer student to render legal sen' ices to higher

Lr. COLO:\EL LT. COLO:\EL

JAMES L. CC;\!;\!!:\G JA:\IES R. HAGAN

Chi!'!, PrOClirCIIICIl t Chief, Mi1itary Justice Divisioll Law Divisioll

7

Lr. COLO:--;EL

LT. COLONEL DWAN V. KERIG

JOHN A. ZALONIS, JR. Chief, Inlernatiollal anri Chief, M£litary Affairs Division COllljJarativc Law Divisioll

commanders under varying conditions of present and future military operations and organizations.

The curriculum of this thirty-four-il'Cck course (Scptembcr-;\fay) includes the study of military criminal law and practicc. the phi­losophy of penology, public contract law, statutory and rcgulatory controls and directives for procurcment, taxation, miliwry adminis­trative law concerning military and civilian pcrsonncl, invcstigative powers, administrative board procedures, administration of military reservations, non-appropriated fund actIn ties, property, claims. litigation, individual Icgal assistance, civil affairs, domestic emcrgen­cies, international law, the legal aspects of counterinsurgency, com­parative law, and jurisprudence.

In addition, successful completion of the course requires the sub­mission of a thesis of graduate level quality that makcs a substantial contribution to military legal scholarship. This requirement is rc­garded as the heart of the Career Course. Topics and scope notes for theses written by members of the Fourtcenth Career Course Illay be found in Appendix VilI. Several will be published in forth­coming issues of the Military Law Review.

The Fourteenth Career Class began on 7 Septembcr 1965 and graduated on 13 May 1966. There were !ll students in attendance: 24 U. S. Army judge advocates, 2 U. S. Navy law specialists, 2 U. S. Marine Corps law specialists, and 3 foreign military lawyers: 2 from Iran and 1 from Argentina. Thc design of the course fcII into a two semester format-that part of thc curriculum coming prior to

8

Christmas recess and that part following the recess. These two semesters will be described in the following paragraphs:

a. First Semester (7 September - 17 December 1965).

(1) lVIiiitary Jllstice Instrllction. During the first s'::mester, 94 hours of classroom instruction were presented on military justice subjects. This included instruction 011 evidence, procedure, criminal law, jurisdiction, and initial and appellate review. In addition, guest speakers provided presentations on ethics, penology, psychiatry, and crime laboratory techniques. This classroom instruction was supplemented by twenty hours of seminars dealing with the right to counsel and with wire-tapping and electronic eavesdropping. The entire military justice instruction was concluded by a four hour essay-type examination.

(2) Procllrcrnen t Law instructioll. The Career Class received 51 hours of classroom instruction dealing with all aspects of procure­ment law. Twenty-six additional hours were devoted to seminars on such subjects as the role of the Comptroller General and the effect of sociological and economic policies on competition. A four-hour final examination was given.

(3) Thesis Program. At the beginning of the semester, the students were issued a list of approximately one hundred suggested thesis topics covering a wide spectrum of military law. Students could choose one of the suggested topics or could submit one of their own creation for approval by the teaching division most directly related to the subject. Every student was required to select a topic by 12 October 19G5. Upon the approval of his selection, a thesis

LT. COLONEL

JAMES M. VAN HOOK

Chief, Military Training Division

FIRST . LIEUTENANT

JOEL H. RABINE

Assistant to the Director

9

Members of the Fourteen th Career Class. First row, left to right: CAPT. MULLINS, MAJ. DRIBBEN, COL. KHAfnl-NooRI (han), COL.

EKHTERAI (han), MAJ. CERDA (Arp;entina), CAPT. HANSEN, CAPT.

FONTANELLA. Second row, left to 1·ight: LT. BROMBERG (USN), LT.

GRUNAWALT (USN), CAPT. McKAY, CAPT. MOWRY, CAPT. BROWN,

CAPT. MURDOCK, CAPT. RODRIGUEZ. Third row, left to right: MAJ.

DAVIS, MAJ. \!\TRAY (USMC), MAJ. FERRELL (USMC), MAJ. CONBOY,

MAJ. NOBLE, CAPT. VVILLEY, CAPT. COMEAU, CAPT. \VILLIAMS. Fourth row, left to right: CAPT. HINRICHS, CAPT. McBRIDE, CAPT. BRANNEN,

CAPT. WAGNER, CAPT. HENSON, CAPT. MORROW, CAPT. ROBERTS, CAPT.

NICHOLAS.

adviser was assigned to him. During the semester, two weeks were scheduled solely for thesis research.

(4) The Judge Advocate General's Conference. Career Class students attended all sessions of The Judge Advocate General's Conference, which was held at the School during the period 20-23 September 1965.

b. Second Semester (3 January - 13 May 1966)

(1) Military Affairs Instruction. The Military Affairs Division presented one hundred and eleven hours of classroom instruction on such subjects as personnel law, legal assistance, military reservations, and claims. The students also participated in twenty hours of seminars and took a four-hour essay-type examination.

10

(2) 111 terna tional and Com j)ara tive Law Instrllction. One hundred hours of classroom instruction were allocated to the Inter­national and Comparative Law Division. In this time were talks by guest speakers who were invited to lecture in the international law field. Among the many participants were Dr. Hranko M. Peselj, Attorney at Law; 1\11'. Charles F. Baldwin, Diplomat in Residence, University of Virginia; and ;vIr. Eeiljalllin A. Fleck, Officer in Charge of Korean Affairs, Department of State. The students also partici­pated in ten hours of seminars and took a four-hour examination.

(3) Military Trainillg. During the second semester, the Mili­tary Training Division presentee! 01 hours of instruction which dealt with di\'ision operations and common subjects. In addition to formal instruction, the class attended Exercise Blue Chip at Fort Bragg, l\'orth Carolina, during the period 14-]0 October 1965. The exercise consisted of demonstrations of weapons, tactics, and equip­men t.

(-1) Thesis Progralil. One week in January and March was scheduled for uninterrupted thesis research. The first draft of the thesis was due 14 February I%6. Bet ween 1'1 February and 11 :\Iarch I%6, thesis orals were conducted. Each student was allotted two hours in which to discuss the main points of his thesis and submit to questioning by a faculty committee composed of the Director..\cademic Department, the division chief concerned, and the student's thesis adviser. Other class members were permitted but not required to attend, as 'I'ere other members of the faculty and staff.

The completed thesis was due on ,1 April 1966. It was evaluated in turn by the thesis adviser, division chief, and De­partment Director, and a fmal grade was determined. The thesis was allotted a weight of 30~~ in determining each student's final overall grade in the Career Course.

(6) Gradlilitioll. The Fourteenth Career Course graduated on

A mcmber of tllc Career Clllss orall',' defcnding his thesis before lI1r:mbers of tite fO(lIlty.

11

13 May 1966. The speaker at the graduation exercise was Captain Anthony L. DeVico, U. S. Navy, Commanding Officer of the U. S. Naval Justice School.

Judge Advocate General (Special) Course. In this IO-week course, conducted twice a year primarily for offi.cers newly commissioned in the Judge Advocate General's Corps, training is proYided in the fundamentals of military law. The content of the course stresses those areas of military practice with which newly appointed judge advocates are most likely to be concerned in their first duty assign­ments. Accordingly, the course is deyotecl primarily to the funda­mentals of military criminal law and practice in order to equip the graduate with a working knowledge of the duties of trial and de:ense counsel before general courts-martial. Instruction is also given on the provisions of the Soldiers' and Sailors' Civil Relief Act, problems of domicile as affected by military status, domestic relations, immigration, adoption, wills, insurance, personal taxation, family financial problems, debt counseling, sui ts [or and against sen'icemen, and the mechanics of the Army's legal assistance program. The course also includes those laws and regulations concerning many aspects of the military personnel process, including appointment, enlistment, promotion, reduction, retirement, discharge, pay, death and disability benefits, and matters of practice and procedure before administrative boards concerned with such matters. Special attention

is also given to the problems o[ the administratiolJ of military resen'atiolls, including the powers and duties of a post commander to regulate traffic, make arrests, regulate ingress and egress, cleal with property both public and private, and manage and control the operation of such non appro­priated fund activities as post exchanges, commissaries, clubs, and other associations. A sub­stan tial block of instruction is also given on those laws and regu­lations covering claims [or and against the Government. How­ever, the course includes only an

CAPTAIN introductory coverage of the law ANTHONY L. DEVICO of public contracts, civil affairs,

Commandant, U. S. Naval and international law. A gradu­School of Justice, add1'esses the ate of the Special Course is ex­Fourteenth Ca1'eer Class. pected to return to the School at

12

A member of the Fourteenth Career Class conducts a seminar.

a later time for instruction on these subjects by attendance at an appropriate short course, as described below, should his duties so require.

For the students who attended the Special Course who had no prior military experience, attendance at a two and one-half week Officer Training Course at Fort Lee was required as a prerequisite to attendance at the Judge Advocate Special Course. The primary purpose of this requirement was to increase the newly commissioned officer's appreciation of the problems of military command and acquaint him with military customs, courtesies and traditions.

JAGEX, a command post exercise begun in 1960, was conducted again this year for the Forty-third and Forty-fourth Special Classes. Play of that exercise requires one and one-half days. Students are divided into small groups and organize themselves into typical post judge advocate offices. A Career Class student assigned to each group acts both as the staff judge advocate and as the group controller to supervise and pace the play, introduce problems, furnish advice, and review and critique player solutions for accuracy, completeness, and practicability. Problems likely to be encountered in the day-to-day operations of a post judge advocate office were prepared by the four law-teaching divisions of the department. Realism was further heightened by the introduction of several "live" problems using staff and faculty personnel as actors.

A continuing feature of the instructions given Special Course stu­dents is the moot coun program. This program is designed to give newly commissioned judge advocate officers practical experience in military trial practice and procedure. Moot courts are simulated general courts-martial based on factual situations prepared by faculty members. The positions of trial and defense counsel,

13

members of the court, and witnesses are filled by members of the Special Course. Each student has at least one opportunity to act as trial or defense counsel. The law officer's part is normally played by a member of the staff and faculty.

The speaker at the graduation exercises for the Forty-third Special Class was Colonel 'William H. Blackmarr, Army Staff Judge Advo­cate, Second U. S. Army, and for the Forty-fourth Special Class was Colonel Lewis F. Shull, Army Staff Judge Advocate, Fourth U. S. Army. Awards given to members of the Forty-third and Forty-fourth Special Classes are found in Appendix IX.

Procurement Law Course. The three-week course was given three times in Fiscal Year 1966. This course concentrates on the legal aspects of government procurement. These include a study of the general principles of government contract law, legal principles pertaining to appropriated funds, procurement policies, types of contracts, procurement by formal advertising and by competitive negotiation, mistakes in bids, modification of contracts, cost princi­ples, subcontracts, price revision, disputes, claims, remedies, termi­nation for default or convenience, taxation, labor law, and the utilization and disposition of government property.

This course enjoys an outstanding reputation throughout the Government. Although some of the other short resident courses also utilize guest lectures, one of the distinctive features of this course is its extensive use of guest speakers who are in key positions in govern­ment procurement and can thus speak with added authority as specialists in their fields. About 35 per cent of the students attending these courses in FY 66 were civilian attorneys employed by the various departments of the Department of Defense and other agencies of the Government. Approximately 30 per cent were Army reserve judge advocates on active duty training. The remainder were active Army, Navy, or Air Force officers.

This course is open to lawyers who are civilian employees of the Government engaged in or about to be assigned to procurement duties, and to commissioned officers of the active armed forces or a reserve component who are lawyers. Although they are encouraged to attend the entire three weeks, Army reserve judge advocates enrolled in the Judge Advocate Officer Career (Reserve Component) Course are permitted to attend the first two weeks of this course in satisfaction of the requirement of that course for the study of procurement law.

Military Justice Course. This two-week course is designed to pre­pare lawyers to perform duties involving the application and interpretation of military criminal law. The curriculum includes the study of the law of evidence, substantive crimes, defenses and instruc­

14

Fhe Procllrement Law C01lrse, attended by active Army and reserve officers, members of other services, and civilian attorneys, meets in the Special Class Room in Clarh Hall.

tions, procedure, the jurisdiction of courts-martial, punishments, and appellate review of court-martial records.

This course is open to lawyers who are civilian employees of the Government engaged in or about to be assigned to duties requiring a knowledge of military criminal law and practice, and to com­missioned officers of the active armed forces or a reserve component who are lawyers. Army reserve judge advocates enrolled in the Judge Advocate Officer Career (Reserve Component) Course may attend this course in satisfaction of the requirements o[ that course [or the study of these subjects. In FY 1966, the student body attending this course was predominantly composed of Army resen'e judge advocates on active duty training.

International Law COllrse. This two-week course is concerned with the interpretation and application of international law. Coverage is more or less equally divided between the study of those fundamental principles of international law that govern the peaceful relations between nations and those concerning the international law of war.

This course is open both to lawyers and non-lawyers who are civilian employees of the Government or commissioned officers of the active armed forces or a reserve component whose actual or antici­pated assignment is to duties requiring a knowledge of international law. Army reserve judge advocates enrolled in the Judge Advocate Officer Career (Reserve Component) Course may attend this course in satisfaction of the requirements of that course for the study of international law. In FY 1966, the student body attending this course was predominantly composed of Army reserve judge advocates on active duty training.

15

Civil Law Course. This two-week resident course is concerned with:(:l~ims, litigation, domestic emergencies, legal assistance, and th~administ:ration of military reservations.

Thi~ course is open .to lawyers. who are civilian employees of the Government engaged in or abouttq be assigned to duties requiring such knowledge and to commissioned officers in. the active Armed Forces or a reserve component who are lawyers. Army reserve judge advocates enrolled in the Judge Advocate Officer Career (Reserve Component) Course may attend this course in satisfaction of the requirements of that course for the study of these subjects. In FY 1966, the student body attending this course was predominantly composed of Army reserve judge advocates on active duty training.

Civil Affairs Law Course. This two-week resident course is con­cerned with the legal aspects of civil affairs with particular reference to international law as it may be pertinent to civil affairs in foreign territories.

This course is opened to employees of the Government with an actual or an anticipated assignment to duties requiring knowledge of the legal aspects of civil affairs. The course is opened to both active or reserve component officers of the armed forces. It is not necessary that one be a lawyer to attend. Army reserve judge advo­cates enrolled in the Judge Advocate Officer Career (Reserve Com­ponent) Course may attend this course in satisfaction of the require­ments of that course for the study of these subjects. In FY 1966 the student body attending this course was pretlominan tly composed of Army reserve judge advocates on active duty training.

Foreign Law Course. This twocweek resident course is concerned with foreign law, with particular reference to the legal systems of those areas in which United States forces are or may be stationed.

Active or reserve officers of the armed forces, and lawyer or non­lawyer employees of the Government with actual or anticipated assignment to duty requiring a knowledge of the legal aspects of civil affairs may attend.

FY 1966 was the first time that this course was offered under its present name, and it was very well received. This class had the greatest number of students in FY 1966, almost all of which were Army reservists on active duty for training. Army reserve judge advocates enrolled in the Judge Advocate Officer Career (Reserve Component) Course may attend this course in satisfaction of the requirements of that course for the study of these subjects.

Military Affairs Course. This two-week course provides instruc­tion in military administrative law. The curriculum includes a study of the organization of the United States [or national security,

16

COL01':EL TOXEY H. SEWELL, Director of the Academic Department, presents a diploma to a member of the Fourteenth Career Class dur­ing graduation ceremonies.

delegation of authority, administrative due process, and the laws and regulations governing the many aspects of the personnel process, including appointment, enlistment, promotion, reduction, discharge, pay, death and disability benefits, and matters of practice and procedure before aclministrative boards concerned with such matters.

This course is open to lawyers who are civilian employees of the Government engaged in or about to be assigned to duties requiring knowledge of military administrative law, ane! to commissioned offi­cers of the active armed forces or a reserve component who are lawyers. Army reserve judge advocates enrolled in the Judge Advo­cate Officer Career (Reserve Component) Course may attend this course in satisfaction of requirements of that course for such subjects. In FY 1966, the studen t body attending this course was predomi­nantly composed of Army reserve juclge advocates on active duty for training.

Law Officer SeminaL This two-week seminar is concerned with the study of recent developments in the military justice field. Emphasis is placed on the role of the law officer in the administration of trials, pretrial procedure, evidence, motions, defenses, guilty pleas, instructions, and punishments. Round table seminar discussions are a prominent portion of the program.

17

Participation in this seminar is limited to judge advocates or legal specialists of the active armed forces assigned or about to be assigned to law officer duties and to Army reserve judge advocates who are mobilization designees to the Army Field Judiciary. At­tendance is controlled by The Judge Advocate General of the Army. This seminar is not one of the courses listed in the U. S. Army Formal Schools Catalog.

Judge Advocate Officer (Reserve Component) Course. This two­week-survey course provides refresher training in all areas of law pertinent to military legal practice. Emphasis is placed on current trends and developments. It is part of the program of continuing legal education for reserve component officers and is attended only by these officers. In FY 1966 Air Force reserve component officers comprised most of the student body; the remainder were Army reserve component officers.

This course is not a credit course for branch qualification of reserve officers. No attempt is made to cover subjects in depth, and the content of the curriculum is subject to continuous revision.

Guest Speaker Program. During the course of each academic year, a large number of eminent guest speakers present lectures of interest to the faculty and student body. The subjects of their addresses cover such widely diverse topics as judicial philosophy and practice, electronic warfare, psychiatry and the law, law in limited inter­national conflict, procurement by barter and the gold flow re­striction, and Soviet interpretation of International Law.

Each speaker is selected for his experience, his recognized status as an authority in his field, and the importance of his subject as it bears upon the practice of military law. Among those who ad­dressed various courses at The Judge Advocate General's School dur­ing FY 1966 were: The Honorable Alexander HoltlOff, United States District Judge, District Court for the District of Columbia; Professor Charles F. Baldwin, Diplomat in Residence, University of Virginia; Professor William V. O'Brien, Professor of International Law and Chairman, Institute of World Polity, Georgetown University; Mr. John J. Phelan, Jr., Deputy General Counsel, Department of the Navy; Dr. Lawrence E. Chermak, Counsel for Navy Comptroller, Department of the Navy; and Mr. Gilbert A. Cuneo, lecturer, writer, and Chairman of the Government Contracts Committee, Adminis­trative Law Section, American Bar Association.

A complete list of the guest speakers who addressed various courses conducted at the School during FY 1966 is contained in Appendix X.

Text Preparation Program. Long range plans were formulated and work begun in FY 1961 upon an ambitious program to prepare

18

"-­o

"-­o

19

a series of textbooks dealing with military law for publication as Department of the Army pamphlets. The volumes would form the foundation of both 'the resident and nonresident instruction. It was recognized ~ti:he. outset that the task would be a formidable one requiring a number of years to complete and that it would absorb a very substantial part of the total intellectual energies of every member of the resident faculty. The task of revision and expansion of these texts would never be complete at anyone time. However, the program was necessary in that written materials were not avail­able from other sources.

During FY 1966, two new pamphlets were added to the twelve already published. These were Volume I on Private Law in. the Civil Law System (DA Pam 27-160-1) and Military Justice-Juris­diction (DA Pam 27-174). The four pamphlets yet to be published are still in various stages of preparation.

Thesis Lending Library. The thesis lending library is part of the University of Virginia Law Library. Copies of theses written by members of Judge Advocate Officer Career Courses are available on a temporary loan basis from this library. A catalog of theses is also available upon request.

Foreign Student Orientation Program. The Military Training Division provides a detailed information program for the orientation of foreign students who attend the School. The program's objective is to give the foreign military students, in addition to their military training, a balanced understanding of United States society, institu­tions, and ideals. To accomplish this objective, the students visited historical and industrial points of interest, observed civilian trials and met the lawyers amI judges engaged in the trials, observed an Army general court-martial, toured a TV station and newspaper plant, watched films depicting highlights of the history and geography of the United States, and visited Washington, D. c., anel New York City.

20

NONRESIDENT TRAINING

General. The Judge Advocate General's School does not support the active Army alone. One of its major responsibilities is to insure that reserve component judge advocate officers, not on extended active duty, will be afforded adequate training to enable them to assume judge advocate assignments in the event of mobilization willi a minimum of delay. The principal mission of the Nonresident Training Department is to accomplish this through a variety of programs admnistered by its three major divisions.

Extension Course Division. The School offers a wide variety of correspondence courses.

a. The Judge Advocate Officer Career Course, when completed, will currently qualify a judge advocate officer educationally for promotion through the grade of colonel in the Judge Advocate General's Corps.

(1) The Judge Advocate Officer Career Extension Course (5-18-E24), offered to commissioned officers of the armed forces

whose actual or anticipated assignment is the Judge Advocate General's Corps or his service's equivalent, may be completed entirely by correspondence subcourses, if the officer wishes, or partially by short resident courses offered at The Judge Advocate General's School. A minimum of 70 credit hours must be completed during an enrollment year; and at least 30 of those credit hours must be completed by correspondence. The E-24 course is especially suitable for lawyers whose circumstances preclude at­ LT. COLONEL

tendance of short resident courses JOHN C. KINNEY

at The Judge Advocate General's Director, Nonresident School or of regular USAR Training Department school evening assemblies.

(2) The Judge Advocate Officer Career (Reserve Com­ponent) Course (5-18-C24), offer­ed only to commissioned officers of the armed forces whose assign­ment is [0 the Judge Advocate General's Corps or his service's equivalent, is also a form of correspondence course consisting of seven phases, a minimum of three of which must be com­pleted by short residen t courses offered at The Judge Advocate General's School. The C-24 course must be completed in not more than four years. Minimum phase

21

completion requirements are imposed, depending on the number of years of enrollment in the C-24 course, to assure completion in time.

b. The Judge Advocate Basic Indoctrination Extension Course, designed to provide a basic understanding of the military system, is required of newly commissioned JACC officers (without concurrent call to active duty) who have not completed the equivalent of an officer basic or orientation course. Regulations and policy permit a newly commissioned reserve component JACC officer to enroll simul­taneously in the Judge Advocate Basic Indoctrination Extension Course and a Judge Advocate Officer Career Course in order to assure his immediate educational qualification for promotion to captain.

c. Specialization Extension Courses, available to reserve com­ponent judge advocate officers who have completed a Judge Advo­cate Officer Career Course, provide for study in depth of selected subjects in international law, military justice, military affairs, and procurement law.

d. Special Extension Courses provide training in military-leg:!l and related subjects to certain military personnel who are not judge advocate officers.

(1) Military Law for Commanding Officers provides training in military law to assist field grade officers with command responsi­bilities.

(2) The Legal Administrative Technician Course provides trammg to personnel holding or preparing for the military occu­pational specialty of Legal Administrative Technician.

(3) The Legal Clerk Course provides training to enlisted per­sonnel holding or preparing for the military occupational specialty of Legal Clerk (MOS 71D).

e. Miscellaneous enrollments are also allowed to enable all active duty and reserve component military personnel and civilian em­ployees of the Federal Government, whose actual or prospective duties require knowledge of the subject matter, to complete extension subcourses offered by the School, even though they may not meet the eligibility requirements of any of the above-mentioned courses.

As of 30 April 1966, the breakdown of extension course enroll­ments was as follows:

By Service or Specialization Component E~24 C-24 and Special Misc. Total ACtive Army 9 1 166 135 311 USAR 209 83 93 181 566 NC 61 16 20 36 133

22

LT. COLONEL CAPTAIN

ROBERT IV. MORRISON DAVID STEIN

Cliil'f, Individual Trainillg alld Chief, Extellsion Extellsioll Course Division; /lrt­ COllrse Division illg Chief, Nonresident Ma­terials Pre/)omtion Divisioll

USAF 2 o 12 III 125 USN & USMC 2 o 7 23 32 Others 9 o 7 93 109

Individual Training and Career Management Division. The Non­resident Training Department is concerned with both the operation of the entire Army reserve program, as it affects judge advocate members of the reserve components, and the specific individual career and training problems of each judge advocate reservist.

a. Operation of the Reserve Program.

(1) The Nonresident Training Department in Fiscal Year 1965 responded to requests by Department of the Army and USCONARC to make comments and suggestions regarding proposed regulatory changes affecting USAR schools, extension course programs, Judge Advocate General Service Organizations, mobilization designees, common subjects instruction, educational qualifications of reservists, and mission, organization and training of Army reserve units and personnel.

(2) On 7-9 February 1966, the Nonresident Training Depart­ment sponsored the fifth annual Judge Advocate General's Reserve Component Training Conference in Charlottesville. Topics of discussion included reserve records, extension courses, reserve retire­ment, mobilization designees, the selection of judge advocate officers and their assignment to units, training requirements, JAG Detach­ments, training of enlisted men assigned to JAG Detachments and

23

Sections, the Selected Reserve Force, the USAR school program, and legal assistance by judge advocate reservists not on extended active duty. Proposals made as a result of the conference are now being implemented.

(3) This year's issue of the Judge Advocate Legal Service devoted exclusively to reserve component affairs was published on 17 November 1965. Topics discussed in that issue included recent developments affecting the careers of judge advocate reservists, a concise explanation of the rules and exceptions relating to mandatory removal of reservists from active status under the provisions of the United States Code, and some practical observations on retirement points and retired pay.

b. Career Problems of Individual Judge Advocate Reservists.

(1) One of the principal functions of the Nonresident Training Department is to provide advice and information to individual judge advocate reservists on such matters as military.legal education, pro· motion, retirement points, active and inactive duty training, USAR school training, assignments ami transfers, mobilization designation assignments, and maintenance of an active status in the reserves.

(2) To facilitate the above advisory functions, the Nonresident Training Department maintains records on each reserve component judge advocate. The sources of information for such records range from questionnaires periodically sent by the School to judge advo· cate reservists to MRU rosters provided to the School by each Army through the efforts of the Executive Officer for Reserve Affairs for each Army.

(3) While much of the advice given to reservists is in the form of a response to a written inquiry, the Nonresident Training De­partment has, since 1964, required each judge advocate reservist attending a short resident course at the School to appear for an interview with a member of the Individual Training and Career Management Division. Such interviews have often alerted reservists to important career management and training matters of which they were not aware.

c. Training of Judge Advocate Reservists. (I) Reserve Training Projects. In addition to the administra­

tion of the Judge Advocate extension course program, the Nonresi­dent Training Department sponsors other special programs for reserve judge advocates who have completed the career course.

(a) The Military-Legal Thesis Program enables reservists to write a scholarly article on a military-legal subject, for which retirement points are awarded. The purpose of the program is to encourage the preparation and publication in civilian or military journals of scholarly articles or treatises on military jurisprudence by judge advocate reservists. During this fiscal year, nine judge advo­

24

cate officers participated in the program, while one other expressed an interest.

(b) The Legal Area Specialist Program. This program, offered to judge advocate reservists with a foreign language pro­ficiency, provides training projects, consisting of the translation of legal codes, treatises, cases, and other civilian or mili tary-Iegal ma­terials from a foreign language into English or vice versa. During this fiscal year, seven judge advocate reservists participated in the program, while three others expressed an interest. One valuable by­product of the program is that two of the participants with special qualifications and experience accepted invitations to present instruc­tion for the School's short resident courses in International Law and Foreign Law.

(c) Miscellaneous training projects, ranging from military­legal instruction to an investigation of the feasibility of utilizing tape recorded materials to supplement USAR school military-legal instruc­tion, were also assigned to three judge advocate reservists.

(d) Mobilization Designation Training. The Nonresident Training Department performs the administrative functions relating to judge advocate mobilization designees, assigned to the School, who perform ANACDUTRA at the School with the Academic De­partment and other departments.

Nonresident Materials Preparation Division. The Nonresident Training Department prepares programs of instruction and catalogs of nonresident instructional material. The department, in cooper­ation with the Academic Department, also supervises the preparation of non-resident training material for the USAR School Judge Advo­cate Officer Career Courses, the USAR School Common Subjects Courses, the USAR School Reserve New Developments Course, the USAR School Staff Judge Advocate Operations Course, Staff Train­ing Problems for JAG Detachments and Judge Ach'ocate Sections of reserve units, and judge advocate extension subcourses, including the Common Subjects Subcourses, for which The Judge Advocate General's School has monitoring responsibility.

a. Staff Liaison Visits. To monitor effectively the training programs and instructional material prepared for judge advocate reservists, the Nonresident Training Department conducts staff liaison visits to selected units and USAR schools at their training sites during their inactive duty training and ANACDUTRA. Purposes of the visits include determination of availability and utilization of instructional or training materials, evaluation of facilities, quality and effectiveness of instruction and training, quali­fications of instructors, and the provision of reserve career counsel­ing. During the fiscal year, special emphasis was given to visits to Staff Judge Advocate Sections of units of the Selected Reserve Force. (See Appendix XIII for a listing of visits.)

25

b. Extension Courses. As part of a program of continuous up­dating of extension courses, the Nonresident Training Department, in cooperation with the Academic Department, revised 10 sub­courses and updated the Military Justice Specialization Course related to right to counsel. In support of the Army's common sub­jects program for extension courses, the Nonresident Training De­partment also distributed student text materials to service schools throughout the country for the following subjects and in the quanti­ties indicated:

Legal Aspects of Counterinsurgency (CSS 255) -10,810 Basic Military Administrative Law (CSS 256) -13,000 Martial Law (CSS 257) -9,900 Military Justice (CSS 258) -10,810

c. USAR School Courses. (1) Judge Advocate Officer Career Course under Annex AL to

USCONARC Training Directive. The Nonresident Training De­partment provided instructional materials for reserve duty and active duty training of 261 reservists enrolled in USAR School Judge Advo­cate Officer Career Courses throughout the country.

(2) The Common Subjects Program. Materials for all military­legal subjects taught in USAR schools under the Common Subjects Program were also distributed by the Nonresident Training De­partment. Over 9,000 student texts were distributed in the program. The department also provided the ANACDUTRA materials for the 133 judge advocate reservists enrolled in the Common Subjects Program.

(3) New Developments Course. The Nonresident Training De­partment, during the last fiscal year, assumed primary responsibility for the drafting and distribution of 750 pages of completely revised and updated textual material and instructors' guides for the USAR School Judge Advocate Reserve New Developments Course, which was offered as a graduate course to 90 reserve component judge advo­cates who had previously completed a Judge Advocate Officer Career Course. Subject matter included military justice, military affairs, procurement law, and international law.

d. Unit and Staff Training. To implement the staff training program envisioned by Appendix VIII to Annex AA to the USCONARC Training Directive, the Nonresident Training De­partment provides to JAG Detachments and Staff Judge Advocate Sections of reserve units over 250 practical legal problems. The department also published a booklet listing the Army Regulations and Directives that should be contained in an adequate SJA library. For ANACDUTRA of JAG Detachments during 1966, the depart­ment has prepared and distributed a Command Post Exercise entitled, "PENSWORD I" with a scenario providing an African locale.

26

PLANS AND PUBLICATIONS General. The Plans and Publications Department has overall

responsibility for accomplishing the School's mission in conducting and coordinating legal research and its dissemination to Army judge advocates. The fulfillment of this function has resulted in The Judge Advocate General's School becoming a center for the development of scholarship in the field of military law.

The department distributes the results of this legal research by various means. It prepares and publishes diverse permanent and periodic military publications. It also uses training films as an ad­ditional method of acquainting Army personnel with the military legal system and with the services provided by the .Judge Advocate General's Corps.

The department prepares an integrated course of instruction in mili tary legal subjects for use in Army service schools, supervises the instruction in military law given ROTC students, plans and conducts the Judge Advocate General's Conference as well as smaller specialized conferences for senior judge advocates. It also coordinates the judge advocate phase of LOGEX, the annual logistical exercise for service school and reserve component personnel.

Publications.

(1) 1udge Advocate Legal Service. This Department of the Army pamphlet series is designed for rapid dissemination of new develop­

ments in the field of military law to active and reserve com­ponent Army judge advocates. The Legal Service is printed locally in Charlottesville in order to facilitate its needed immediate distribution, and to give the School closer supervision over printing and distribution. The mailing lists undergo constant reVISIOn, and obsolete address plates are updated or discarded.

All cases decided by the United States Court of Military

LT. COLONEL Appeals are reported in the ROBERT D. PECKHAM Legal Service, reaching Army Director, Plans and lawyers in the field much earlier

Publications Department than the printed advance sheets. In addition, important decisions

of the boarcIs of review, significant civilian decisions, administrative opinions of The Judge Advocate General and the Comptroller

27

CAPTAIN CAPTAIN

ROBERT D. BVERS LAWRENCE A. MONACO, JR.

Chief, Plans Division Editor, Military Law Review, and Chief, Publications Di­vision

General, and administrative matters of importance to the .J udge Advo­cate General's Corps are included in the Legal Service. A section on "Grants and Certifications of Review" keeps judge advocates in­formed of the problems being considered by the U. S. Court of Military Appeals.

Between 1 July 1965 and 30 June 1966, 34 issues of the Judge A dvocate Legal Service were published and distributed. A non­cumulative semi-annual index, including a table of cases and a topical index, was used for the first time. Recently the Legal Service has sought to extend its coverage of civilian court decisions, military affairs, and Comptroller General decisions.

(2) Procuremen t Legal Service. This publication provides prompt information on current developments in government contract law to

armed forces legal personnel engaged in procuremen t activities. It includes digests of opinions of The Judge Advocate General of the Army, decisions of the Comptroller General of the United States, decisions of the Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals, and decisions of the federal courts. During the period 1 J uly 1965-~0 .June 1966, eight issues of the Procuremen t Legal Service were pre­pared and forwarded to Department of the Army for printing.

(3) Milita1"y Law Review. Initial distribution of this Department of the Army pamphlet is made to all active Army judge advocates and to judge advocate members of the reserve components in a ready status. Issues of the Review are also sold to interested civilian agencies and individuals by the Superintendent of Documents.

28

While the Mz'litary Law Review is published as a Department of the Army pamphlet, its format is identical to that of a civilian law review. Contributions for the Review continue to be received from the judge advocates in all three armed services, foreign military and civilian lawyers, members of the staff and faculty, law school pro­fessors, reserve component judge advocates and civilian attorneys.

A military justice issue of the Law Review is being planned for January 1967. It will commemorate the fifteenth anniversary of the' Uniform Code of Military Justice and will include articles on the Court of Military Appeals, the law officer, and evidentiary problems. During the past fiscal year, a reprint of selected articles [rom Volumes 1-10 of the Law Review was published, in order to insure an adequate supply of those valuable early articles for which there is a continuing demand.

The Military Law Review exchange program, which has secured for the JAG School library legal periodicals from all over the world. was expanded by the addition of several new exchange agreements.

(4) Common Subjects. The department is responsible for the preparation and review of common subjects lesson plans in military legal subjects for use in Army service schools and USAR Schools. Some of these common subjects are "Martial Law," "l\Iilitary Justice," "Legal Aspects of Counterinsurgency," and "Basic Military Administrative Law." Non-judge advocate instructors in military justice at Army service schools were brought to TJAGSA for a resident short course in military justice. The Plans and Publications Department supplemented this course with two seminar-conferences in which problem areas in military justice were given special at­tention.

(5) Legal Clerk's Hanhbooh. CAPTAIN

This text, designed to serve as a RICHARD E. CROlJCH

step-by-step guidebook for legal Editor, Judge Advocat(' clerks, has been completed for I.ega! Senn'ct' publication. The text will be used in the field for nonresident instruction, and may be used in any future legal clerk resident course established at TJAGSA.

(6) Review of Publications. The department plays an impor­tant part in this program, in con­junction with USACDC Judge Advocate Agency and the Aca­demic Department. Publications reviewed over the past year in­clude FM 41-10, Civil Affairs Op­emtio17s; FM 22-100, lvlilitary

29

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JAG School and JAG Corps exhibits, such as the one shown here in the will dow of a Charlottesville departmell t store, are designed and disj)layed by the Departmen t.

Leadership; FM 1-5, The Aviation Company; and FM 19-20, Military Police Investigations.

Special Activities.

(1) The Judge Advocate General's Conference. The 1965 Judge Advocate General's Conference was held during the period 20-23 September 1965 at The Judge Advocate General's School. The conference enabled senior judge advocates from throughout the world to meet and discuss important new developments in military law. Lieutenant General Harvey Fischer, Deputy Commander, United States Continental Army Command, was the keynote speaker. The Honorable Stephen Ailes, former Secretary of the Army, was the principal speaker at the Conference banquet. In addition, selected speakers from the Office of the Judge Advocate General and from major continental and overseas commands addressed the conferees on legal problems of current interest.

(2) LOGEX. The School was charged with the responsibility of planning and supervising the judge advocate play of LOGEX 1966. The judge advocate sections in this Army-wide logistical exercise were manned by the members of the 2d and 10th Judge Advocate Detachments, from Vvashington, D. c., and New Orleans, Louisiana,

31

respectively; by the judge advocate section of the 3lOth Logistical Command and twenty-two individually selected reservists. In addition, the School provided extensive. pre-LOGEX instruction for all JAG participants. The judge advocate play was again highlighted by a successful moot court-martial, which aroused considerable interest among LOGEX participants of all branches. This year's play featured the integration of active duty and reserve judge advo­cate personnel. The play by the judge advocate officers also demon­strated the value of the Judge Advocate General's Corps to the other branches of the Army.

(3) The Judge Advocate General's Corps Display. During the last year, a Judge Advocate General's Corps display, which consists of illustrated panels depicting various activities and functions of the Corps, was displayed during Armed Forces Week in Charlottesville, Virginia, and at LOGEX 1966. The exhibit attracted considerable attention at these events and materially aided in informing the civilian community and the military of the functions of the Corps.

(4) Enlisted Evaluation Program for MOS Codes TID and E. The department, together with the Enlisted Evaluation Center, is re­sponsible for conducting the enlisted evaluation program for legal clerks and court reporters, MOS Codes 7lD and E. The purpose of the program is to determine the qualification of an individual for his particular grade and his eligibility for proficiency pay and pro­motion. The scores achieved by the individual are the composite result of a commander's evaluation report, a pencil and paper test, and, in the case of court reporters, a performance test in reporting and transcribing.

Major structural alterations in the Court Reporter (71E) per­formance test were undertaken this year, one of which involves the scoring procedure to be used. It is expected that this year's test will enable a proper sampling of each reporter's work to be analyzed for more reliable scoring. In addition, the balance of legal clerk and court reporter test items in relation to other areas in the pencil and paper tests will be improved. The new tests for 1967 are now in the yearly preparation cycle.

(5) Law Day USA. The School has the responsibility for coordi­nating the Law Day activities of the Department of the Army. This year Law Day chairmen were appointed at each Army installation, command, and activity, and these chairmen were placed on the mail­ing list for the American Bar Association's Law Day materials. In addition, the School mailed to the chairmen display materials il­lustrating the activities of the Judge Advocate General's Corps.

(6) Court Reporter Classes. The School continued to monitor the instruction of Army court reporters conducted by the United States Naval Justice School, Newport, Rhode Island.

32

LT. GEN HARVEY H. FISCHER, Deputy Commanding General, USCONARC, arriving to address the JAG Conference, is greeted by his escort officer, COL. CHASE.

LT. LEONARD BALL, Test Project Officer, Plans Division, explains the design of an MOS 7iD enlisted evaluation test at the JAG Confer­ence. A voice recording of extracts from an actual record of trial is used in the court-reporter performance test.

33

(7) Planning. The School conducts, coordinates and supervises research in the field of military law and prepares miscellaneous studies for internal use as well as for. the entire Judge Advocate General's Corps. Additionally, the School assists in the development of broad, long range continuity plans and procedures for the Corps.

(8) Public Information Officer. The department has assumed the functions of public information for the School. Several Army programs have been placed on local radio stations, and press releases have been issued describing class graduations, visitors to the School, and awards received by the staff and faculty.

(9) Survivor's Assistance. The department is responsible for rendering assistance to the next of kin of deceased active or retired servicemen. In this connection, a standard operating procedure has been developed to aid in rendering prompt, effective assistance.

(10) Army Field Judiciary Conference. The fifth annual confer­ence for offkers of the Army Judiciary was held immediately after The Judge Advocate General's Conference. This conference brought together the Army's law officers for the purpose of discussing problems having special applicability to the Army Judiciary. Members of Army boards of review also participated.

(11) Service School Military Justice Instruction. A closed circuit television tape presenting military justice instruction was written and directed by the department. This pilot project in progressive instruction on military justice is designed to overcome the problems non-JAG service school instructors encounter when teaching this specialized subject. An examination for use in conjunction with the taped instruction was also designed. Further research and study in this area is expected to result in dramatic changes in the programs of instruction in technical and specialized subjects and may well have Army-wide impact.

34

ADMINISTRATION

General. The Office of the School Secretary, under the direction and guidance of the Commandant, is responsible for all matters per­taining to administration, personnel, finance, billeting, transpor­tation, logistics, and security.

This office administers the following programs: records adminis­tration, reports control, voting, and command management.

It handles the official correspondence of the School, controls classified material, maintains personnel records and record files, prepares training aids, and reproduces materials published by the School.

Finally, the office is responsible for coordinating supply activities, preparing all budget and fiscal programs, operating the School Library, and coordinating with the University of Virginia in arrang­ing suitable classroom facilities.

Facilities of the School.

(I) The Judge Advocate General's School Building. This structure, dedicated on 26 September 1956, is a three-story red brick building of Georgian architecture. It contains 43 offices and 26 furnished rooms which are used as living quarters for personnel on temporary duty at the School. There is also a supply room, a book­store, and a suite which is available for visitors to the School. The Judge Advocate General's School Officers' Open Mess consists of a snack bar area, a lounge, and an outdoor patio on the fourth floor of the building. LT. COLONEL

Among the offices located in GEORGE B. BARRETT, JR. School Secretar;'the School building are the Office

of the Commandant, Office of the School Secretary, the Plans and Publications Departmen t, the Nonresident Training Depart­men t, several offices of the Aca­demic Department, and the Office of the Combat Develop­ments Command, Judge Advo­cate Agency.

(2) Clark Hall. Located di­rectly opposite the JAG School Building, Clark Memorial Hall houses the University of Virginia Law School. The JAG School

35

FIRST LIEUTENANT FIRST LIEUTENANT

FLOYD D. COPELAND MARTIN J. TRACEY, JR.

Adjutant Assistan t Adjutant

utilizes two classrooms in this building on a full-time basis. One of these is designed to accommodate 96 students, and the other has a seating capacity of 60. The larger room is used principally for the Special Classes, and the smaller room is occupied nine months of the year by the Career Class. Both rooms are used year-round and are available in the evenings for study purposes.

(3) Libraries. The School generally furnishes each student with the basic textbooks and other classroom materials which he will need during a course. However, where additional references are required, and for general research purposes, students attending The Judge Advocate General's School are encouraged to utilize the School Library, the Law Library of the University of Virginia, and the Alderman Library, the general library of the U niversi ty.

The JAG School Library contains a selected collection of civilian and military law reporters, statutes, books, and periodicals, as well as related materials in the fields of military history, military tactics, leadership and discipline, and international law. A full-time librarian has been added to the civilian staff. The library has been completely reorganized and relocated in three rooms on the second floor of the JAG School Building.

The Law Library, in Clark Hall, contains over 150,000 volumes. It has an extensive collection of published reports of the American federal and state courts, the reports of the courts of the United Kingdom, treatises, digests, encyclopedias, and indices and citator services. It also contains the statutes of the United States, of the several states, and of Great Britain. The Library receives every

36

current legal periodical of general interest printed in the English language. The program of The Judge Advocate General's School requires frequent recourse to the Library; the use of the Library is subject to regulations, copies of which are available at the circulation desk.

The Alderman Library has about 1,360,000 volumes and a particu­larly fine collection of official Government publications. It has been designated by the United States Government as a depository [or public documents.

Quarters. Visiting officers' quarters are available in The Judge Advocate General's School Building. Assignment of rooms may be obtained through the Billeting Officer. Linens. towels. maid service. and other conveniences are provided.

The JAG School is authorized to lease 40 sets of quarters to be utilized as government quarters in lieu of BAQ. These units are occupied by enlisted personnel and company grade officers stationed at the School, and the remaining units are occupied by student officers o[ the Career Class and their families. The School Secretary and the University Housing Division maintain lists of available apartments and houses in the Charlottesville area.

Messing. Government messing facilities are not available at The Judge Advocate General's School. However, there is a snack bar in the Officers' Open Mess. A complete renovation of the food service facili ties is planned for the summer of 1966. There are also available a number of dining halls and snack bars operated by the University of Virginia, as welJ as many convenient commercial restaurants.

o fficed Opcn M css. The top floor of The Judge Advocate General's School Building is set aside as the Officers' Open Mess.

A tYi)icrzl set of g:ovcrnment lcased q lIarters is shown above.

37

CAPTAIN MRS. R. VI\'I.·\:\ HEBERT

LARRY J. ALLEN Librarian Chief of Logistics

The rooms are furnished with large comfortable chairs and sofas of the Jeffersonian style, writing tables, a tcle\'ision set, piano, radio, and other accessories. These rooms are open daily [or the use of all members. In the evening hours, refreshments and snacks are avail­able.

During the year, the Mess sponsors a full program of actn'lues and social even ts for the benefi t of its members, including dances, buflets, picnics, class receptions, social hours, and bridge nights.

Bookstore. A small bookstore is operated in the west end of the JAG School Building on the first floor. Various drug items, uniform equipment, stationery supplies, cigarettes and tobacco, souvenir items, gifts, and books are ayailable for purchase. Uniforms may be ordered through the Bookstore. Various catalogs are also available for ordering particular items at a discount.

Logistical SujJjJuri. CO\ernment storage facilities are nol available nor is there a transportation officer assigned to the School. However, the Chief of Logistics can provide necessary assistance and advice in arranging for shipment and/or storage of householcl goocls, con­current travel, and other items of logistical support, subject to available time and facilities.

Adjutant's Office. The Adjutant's Office is responsible for the processing of all incoming and outgoing personnel. Billeting arrange­ments and assistance are also handled by this office. The School Mail Room is operated by the Adjutant.

The School has no finance officer. However, the Adjutant IS

38

available to provide necessary assistance and advice in matters relat­ing to pay and allowances. This office also maintains the School's personnel and health records and prepares travel and per diem vouchers for students.

Medical and Dental Facilities. The Judge Advocate General's School is satellited on Fort Lee, Virginia, for medical and dental care, where a complete Army hospital is located. Locally, a contract surgeon located in the Student Health Center of the University of Virginia provides out-patient services for military personnel. Finally, because of the distance from a U. S. Army hospital, dependents of military personnel stationed at the JAG School are entitled to full coverage of all benefits provided under Medicare.

Dental care and eye examinations for military personnel assigned to the School are available from any local dentist and eye doctor on an individual contract basis. However. there are no provisions for such care [or dependents.

Drugs are generally available from the stocks maintained at the Student Health Center and by means of a mail service with the Fort Lee Hospital Pharmacy.

Athletic Facilities. Assigned and attached military personnel and all studen ts are permi tted to lise all a thletic facilities of the Uni­versity of Virginia, including the tennis courts, bowling alleys, swimming pools, and all the indoor facilities at the University's ivlemorial Gymnasium. Both the School and the Intramural De­partment of the University have a limited amount of athletic equip­ment for the use of students and the staff and faculty, and lockers in the University Gymnasium may be rented on a limited basis by personnel attached to the JAG School. Addi tional golf, tennis, bowl­ing, and swimming facilities are also available in the Charlottesville area.

In addition to providing athletic equipment and facilities, the School sponsors a bowling league and a golf league which provide organized recrea tion for the staff and faculty and the Career Class. Tournaments in handball, squash, and other individual sports are conducted by the School for personnel stationed here.

The Alumni Association. The Association of Alumni of The Judge Advocate General's School, U. S. Army, was established by the Commandant on 15 January 1963. To date there are over 2,000 members. All students, past and present, and members of the staff and faculty are eligible for membership. The School Secretary is also the Secretary of the Associa tion, and all inquiries or requests for membership should be addressed to him.

39

COMBAT DEVELOPMENTS COMMAND JUDGE ADVOCATE AGENCY

The U. S. Army Combat Developments Command Judge Advocate Agency completed its first two and one·half years on 30 June 1966. Located at The Judge Advocate General's School, this agency assists the Combat Developments Command in providing answers to three questions vital to the Army, viz., How should the Army fight? How should the Army be equipped? How should the Army be organized? 'This agency is one of nine separate field agencies under the USACDC Combat Service Support Group at Fort Lee, Virginia, \I'hose over­all development mission is primarily directed toward logistical and administrative support of the Army in the field.

Through the medium of this agency, the .Judge AdH)Glte General's Corps is able to participate more fully in combat developments from concept to implementation by furnishing guidance and initiating action to improve legal services for the Army in the field.

The Combat Developments Command product includes studies (CO-STAR, TASTA-70), doctrinal literature (field manuals) and tables of organization and equipment (TOE's), During the year ending 30 .June 196(i, the agency revie\l'ed, commented on, or other­wise contributed to, nearly 100 such developmental actions. Agency efforts to include enlisted legal clerks at separate battalion and group level in new TOE have been reasonably successful.

MAJOR ALFRED M. McNAMEE

C01I1JI1({lIdcr, Combat DevclojJ­1I1cnts Command, Judge Advo­cate Agency

40

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APPENDIX II

ORGANIZATION AL ROSTER

THE JUDGE ADVOCATE GENERAL'S SCHOOL

(As of 30 June 1966)

Commandant ........................................ COLONEL JOHN W. BURTCHAELL

Acting Commandant ................................ COLONEL TOXEY H. SEWELL

OFFICE OF THE SCHOOL SECRETARY

School Secretary ...... LIEUTENANT COLONEL GEORGE B. BARRETT, JR.

Adjutant ................................ FIRST LIEUTENANT FLOYD D. COPELAND

Assistant Adjutant ........ FIRST LIEUTENANT MARTIN .J. TRACEY, JR.

Chief, Logistics .............. __ .............. __ ......... __ . CAPTAIN LARRY .J. ALLEN

ACADEMIC DEPARTMENT

Director ............................ LIEUTENANT COLONEL EDWIN M. SCHMIDT

Assistant to the Director .......... FIRST LIEUTENANT JOEL H. RABINE

Procurement Law Division

Chief ............. __ ........... __ LIEUTENANT COLONEL JAMES L. CUMMING

Instructors ............ LIEUTENANT COLONEL JAMES R. HARRINGTON

CAPTAIN WILLIAM E. STEFFEN

CAPTAIN JOSEPH A. DUDZIK

FIRST LIEUTENANT JOHN F. MITCHELL

Military Affairs Division

Chief ........................ LIEUTENANT COLONEL JOHN A. ZALONIS, JR.

Instructors ................................................ MAJOR DARRELL L. PECK

MAJOR WAYNE E. ALLEY

CAPTAIN GRAHAM C. LILLY

Military Justice Division

Chief ................................ LIEUTENANT COLONEL JAMES A. HAGAN

Instructors ................ LIEUTENANT COLONEL KENNETH A. HOWARD

CAPTAIN EDWARD S. ADAMKEWICZ, JR.

CAPTAIN DONALD W. HANSEN

Military Training Division

Chief ........................ LIEUTENANT COLONEL JAMES M. VAN HOOK

Instructor .................................. CAPTAIN THOMAS F. DURHAM, III

42

International and Comparative Law Division

Chief .................................. LIEUTENANT COLONEL DWAN V. KERIG

Instructors .................... LIEUTENANT COMMANDER JAMES E. TOMS

CAPTAIN GEORGE A. PELLETIER

NONRESIDENT TRAINING DEPARTMENT

Director ................................ LIEUTENANT COLONEL JOHN C. KINNEY

Individual Training and Career Management Division

Chief ....................... LIEUTENANT COLONEL ROBERT W. MORRISON

Project Officer ...................................... CAPTAIN JACK F. BONANNO

Extension Course Division

Chief ................................................................ CAPTAIN DAVID STEIN

Nonresident Materials Preparation Division

Acting Chief ............ LIEUTENANT COLONEL ROBERT W. MORRISON

Project Officer ................ FIRST LIEUTENANT JOHN G. NEWITT, JR.

PLANS AND PUBLICATIONS DEPARTMENT

Director ........................ LIEUTENANT COLONEL ROBERT D. PECKHAM

Plans Division

Chief ........................................................ CAPTAIN ROBERT D. BYERS

Project Officer .................... FIRST LIEUTENANT LEONARD F. BALL

Publications Division

Chief and Editor, Military Law Review ........ CAPTAIN LAWRENCE A. MONACO, JR.

Editor, Judge Advocate Legal Service ................................ CAPTAIN RICHARD E. CROUCH

43

APPENDIX III

CHANGES IN MILITARY PERSONNEL

THE JUDGE ADVOCATE GENERAL'S SCHOOL

(As of 30 June 1966)

ARRIVALS

LIEUTENANT COLONEL KENNETH A. HOWARD, Military Justice Di­vision, on 2 July 1965.

LIEUTENANT COLONEL EDWIN M. SCHMIDT, Director, Academic De­partment, on 4 June 1966.

LIEUTENANT COLONEL JOHN A. ZALONIS, Chief. Military Affairs Di­vision, on 15 February 1966.

CAPTAIN ROBERT D. BYERS, Chief, Plans Division, on 5 January 1966.

CAPTAIN JOSEPH A. DUDZIK, Procurement Law Division, on 25 June 1966.

CAPTAIN DONALD W. HANSEN, Instructor, Military Justice Division, on 14 May 1966.

CAPTAIN WILLIAM E. STEFFEN, Procurement Law Division, on 27 May 1966.

CAPTAIN DAVID STEIN, Chief, Extension Course Division, on 30 December 1966.

FIRST LIEUTENANT LARRY J. ALLEN, Chief of Logistics, on 7 October 1965.

FIRST LIEUTENANT FLOYD D. COPELAND, Individual Training and Career Management Division, on 29 December 1965.

FIRST LIEUTENANT JOHN F. MITCHELL, Procurement Law Division, on 17 December 1965.

FIRST LIEUTENANT JOHN G. NEWITT, JR., Nonresident Materials Preparation Division, on 17 December 1965.

FIRST LIEUTENANT JOEL H. RABINE, Academic Department, on 5 January 1966.

SERGEANT FIRST CLASS (E-7) GLENN O. MAYNARD, Extension Course Division, on 1 January 1966.

SERGEANT FIRST CLASS (E-7) .lAcon E. MII.LER. Plans Division, on 20 July 1965.

SERGEANT FIRST CLASS (E-7) WILLIAM S. PILKINGTON, Logistics Office, on 12 April 1966.

STAFF SERGEANT (E-6) CHARLES O. SWAFFORD, Academic Department, on 8 April 1966.

SPECIALIST FOUR (E-4) GARY L. GRANT, Office of the School Secretary, on 31 May 1966.

44

DEPARTURES

COLONEL JOHN W. BURTCHAELL, Commandant, retired on 30 June 1966.

COLONEL DAVID M. CHASE, Commander, Combat Developments Command, Judge Advocate Agency, departed on 12 June 1966 for reassignment to Allied Forces Southern Europe, Naples, Italy.

LIEUTENANT COLONEL HAROLD D. CUNNINGHAM, JR., Chief, Nonresi­dent Materials Preparation Division, departed on 1 July 1965 for reassignment to White Sands Missile Range, White Sands, New Mexico.

LIEUTENANT COLONEL AUSTIN J. GERBER, Chief, Military Justice Division, retired on 30 September 1965.

LIEUTENANT COLONEL EDWARD A. METCALF, III, Chief, Military Affairs Division, departed on 11 July 1965 for reassignment to USAADMAC, Corpus Christi, Texas.

LIEUTENANT COLONEL ROBERT M. THORNILEY, Procurement Law Division, departed on 31 May 1966 for reassignment to U. S. Army Element, U. S. Military Command, Vietnam.

LIEUTENANT COLONEL KENNETH L. YOUNGBLOOD, Chief, Military Affairs Division, departed on 1 April 1966 for reassignment to U. S. Army Vietnam.

MAJOR PETER H. COOK, School Secretary, departed on 13 August 1965 for reassignment to Student Detachment, U. S. Army Command and General Staff College, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.

MAJOR JAMES E. NOBLE, Nonresident Training Department, de­parted on 28 August 1965 [or reassignment to Student Detach­ment, The Judge Advocate General's School.

MAJOR ROBERT L. WOOD, Military Justice Division, departed on 14 August 1965 for reassignment to Student Detachment, First United States Army, with station at Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University, Medford, Massachusetts.

CAPTAIN PETER M. ANDERSON, Academic Department, was released from active duty on 5 January 1966.

CAPTAIN VVILLIAM S. BACH, Military Justice Division, was released from active duty on 31 December 1965.

CAPTAIN JACK M. MARDEN, Chief, Plans Division, departed on 27 July 1965 for reassignment to Headquarters, U. S. Army Intelligence Command, Fort Holabird, Maryland.

CAPTAIN THOMAS C. MARKS, JR., Individual Training and Career Management Division, departed on 1 July 1965 for reassignment to Headquarters 4th Terminal Command, Fort Eustis, Virginia.

CAPTAIN WILLIAM J. McNICHOLS, Procurement Law Division, was released from active duty on 4 January 1966.

45

CAPTAIN BERNARD J. A. MOROSco, Editor, Military Law Review, was released from active duty on 1 September 1965.

CAPTAIN JOHN R. THORNOCK, Chief, Publications Division, departed on 4 June 1966 for reassignment to U. S. Army Vietnam.

CAPTAIN THOMAS J. WHALEN, Nonresident Materials Preparation Division, departed on 1 June 1966 fat reassignment to Head­quarters 125th Transportation Corps Terminal Command, Fort Eustis, Virginia.

CAPTAIN GLENN M. WOODWORTH, Military Justice Division, was released from active duty on 21 January 1966.

CAPTAIN RICHARD C. WYDICK, Military Affairs Division, was released from active duty on 2 January 1966.

FIRST LIEUTENANT CLARK A. ABSHER, Logistics Officer, was released from active duty on 9 September 1965.

FIRST LIEUTENANT ANTHONY O. ARCUNI, Assistant Adjutant, was released from active duty on 6 August 1965.

FIRST LIEUTENANT STEPHEN DAVIS, Extension Course Division, was released from active duty on 3 January 1966.

FIRST LIEUTENANT MICHAEL R. SONNENREICH, Individual Training and Career Management Division, was released from active duty on 9 October 1965.

MASTER SERGEANT (E-7) JOHN W. ELKINS, Academic Department, departed on 1 March 1966 for reassignment to Richmond U. S. Army Reserve Center, Richmond, Virginia.

SERGEANT FIRST CLASS (E-7) JACOB E. MILLER, Plans Division, de­parted on 15 June 1966 for reassignment to First Cavalry Di­vision (Airmobile), Vietnam.

SERGEANT FIRST CLASS (E-7) WILMER E. VANDEGRIFF, Logistics Office, departed on 13 January 1966 for reassignment to U. S. Army Element, Defense Intelligence Agency, Washington, D. C.

SERGEANT FIRST CLASS (E-7) JOSEPH G. WIEGAND, Plans Division, de­parted on 2 August 1965 for reassignment to Headquarters and Headquarters Company, U. S. Army Area Command, Munich, Germany.

STAFF SERGEANT (E-6) JOSEPH S. AARON, Office of the School Secretary, departed on 4 April 1966 for reassignment to 26th Signal Battalion, Heilbronn, Germany.

SPECIALIST FOUR (E-4) JOHN M. STANLEY, Office of the School Secretary, was released from active duty on 30 July 1965.

46

APPENDIX IV

OFFICER PERSONNEL

STAFF AND FACULTY

THE JUDGE ADVOCATE GENERAL'S SCHOOL

(As of 30 June 1966)

Col. John W. Burtchaell, JAGC, Commandant. B.S., 1941, U. S. Military Academy; LL.B., 1951, University of California. Judge Advocate Section, Hqs., 6th Army, 1951-1952. Judge Advocate Section, Hqs., 8th Army, Korea, 1952-1953. Staff Judge Advocate, 3rd Infantry Division, Korea, 1953. Judge Advocate Section and Assistant Staff Judge Advocate, Anti-Aircraft Artillery and Guided Missile Center, Fort Bliss, Texas, 1954-1955. Assistant Chief, Legislative Division, Office of Secretary of the Army, 1956-1958. Member, Assistant Chief, and Chief, Military Affairs Division, Office of the Judge Advocate General, 1958-1962. Staff Judge Advocate, Hqs., U. S. Army, Alaska, 1962-1964. Deputy Commandant and Commandant, The Judge Ad­vocate General's School, U. S. Army, 1964-date. Member of the Bar of California.

Colonel Toxey H. Sewell, JAGC, Acting Commandant. B.S., 1942, LL.B., 1948, University of Alabama; LL.M., 1954, George Washing­ton University. Judge Advocate Section, Far East Command, Japan, 1948-1952. Military Affairs Division, Office of the Judge Advocate General, 1952-1956. Judge Advocate Section, U. S. Army, Caribbean, Canal Zone, 1956-1958. Chief, Lands Division, Office of the Judge Advocate General, 1958-1962. Chief, Military Affairs Division; Direc­tor, Academic Department; and Acting Commandant, TJAGSA, 1962­date. Member of the Bars of Alabama and Georgia.

Lieutenant Colonel John C. Kinney, JAGC, Director, Nonresident Training Department. AB., 1941, University of California; LL.B., 1949, Hastings College of Law. Claims Division, Office of the Judge Advocate General, 1950-1952. Judge Advocate Section, X Corps, Korea, 1952-1953. Judge Advocate Section, Southwestern Command, Japan, 1953-1954. Litigation Division, Office of the Judge Advocate General, 1955-1959. Command and General Staff College, 1960. Judge Advocate Division, USAREUR, 1961-1963. Armed Forces Staff College, 1964. Director, Nonresident Training Department, TJAGSA, 1964-date. Member of the Bars of California, the U. S. Supreme Court, Court of Claims, and U. S. Court of Military Appeals.

Lieutenant Colonel James L. Cumming, JAGe, Chief, Procurement

47

Law Division. A. B., 1939, LL.B., 1941, University of Georgia. Pro­curement Inspections Division, OTIG, San Francisco Field Office, 1952-1956. Chief, Fraud Branch, Litigation Division, OTJAG, 1956­1959. Chief, Legal Assistance Branch, Judge Advocate Division, USAREUR, 1959-1960. Executve Officer, Judge Advocate Section, Southern Area Command, Germany, 1960-1962. Chief and Instructor, Procurement Law Division, TJAGSA, 1962-date. Member of the Bar of Georgia.

Lieutenant Colonel Edwin M. Schmidt, JAGC, Director, Academic Department. B.A., 1942, St. Ambrose College; J.D., 1947, State Uni­versity of Iowa. Military Affairs Section, Office of the Judge Advocate General, 1950. Law Officer, Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri, 1950­1954. Staff Judge Advocate 1st Cavalry Division, and Chief, Military Justice, Central Command, Tokyo, Japan, 1954-1957. Chief, Military Affairs, Headquarters Fifth Army, 1957-1959. Instructor and Assistant Professor of Law, U. S. Military Academy, 1959-1963. Deputy Staff Judge Advocate, Headquarters U. S. Army Southern Command, 1963­1966. Director, Academic Department, TJAGSA, 1966-date. Member of the Bar of Iowa.

Lieutenant Colonel George B. Barrett, Jr., JAGC, School Secretary. A.B., 1942, University of Notre Dame; LL.B., 1954, Columbia Univer­sity. Staff Judge Advocate Section, 1st Army, 1954-1955. Judge Advo­cate Section, Iceland Defense Force, 1956. Assistant Professor of Military Law, U. S. Military Academy, 1957-1960. Ninth Career Class, TJAGSA, 1960-1961. Chief, Military Justice Division, Head­quarters VII Corps, 1961-1964. USACGSC, Associate Course, 1964. Assistant to the Director, Nonresident Training Department and School Secretary, TJAGSA, 1964-date. Member of the Bars of Kentucky, the U. S. Supreme Court, U. S. Court of Claims, Tax Court of the United States, and U. S. Court of Military Appeals.

Lieutenant Colonel Robert D. Peckham, J AGC, Director, Plans and Publications Department. B.S., 1947, U. S. Military Academy; LL.B., 1955, Harvard University. Assistant Staff Judge Advocate, Fort Dix, New Jersey, 1955-1956. Chief of International Affairs Section, Headquarters, SETAF, Verona, Italy, 1956-1957. Command Judge Advocate, Logistical Command, Livorno, Italy, 1957-1959. Instructor and Assistant Professor of Law, U. S. Military Academy, 1959-1963. Deputy Judge Advocate, United Nations Command and U. S. Forces, Korea, 1963-1964. Director, Plans and Publications Department, TJAGSA, 1 964-date. Member of the Bar of the District of Columbia.

Lieutenant Colonel Dwan V. Kerig, JAGC, Chief, International and Comparative Law Division. LL.B., University of Texas, 1950. Fifth Career Course, TJAGSA, 1956-1957. Instructor, TJAGSA, 1957­

48

1960. M.A., Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, 1961. Served in Judge Advocate positions in Heidelberg and Munich, Germany, 1962-1965. Chief, International and Comparative Law Division, TJAGSA, 1965-date. Member of the Bars of Texas and the U. S. Court of Military Appeals.

Lieutenant Colonel James R. Harrington, JAGC, Instructor, Pro­curement Law Division. LL.B., 1949, University of Tennessee. Office of the Judge Advocate General, 1950-1951. Assistant Staff Judge Advocate, Southern Area Command, Munich, Germany, 1951-1954. Government Trial Attorney, Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals, 1954-1958. Member, USAREUR Board of Contract Appeals, 1958-1961. Judge Advocate, Dugway Proving Grounds, Dugway, Utah, 1961-1963. Instructor, Procurement Law Division, TJAGSA, 1963­date. Member of the Bar of Tennessee.

Lieutenant Colonel James R. Hagan, JAGe, Chief, Military Justice Division. LL.B., 1949, University of Texas. Defense Appellate Divi­sion, 1951-1953. Assistant Staff Judge Advocate, I Corps, Korea, 1953­1954. Assistant Staff Judge Advocate, III Corps, Fort Hood, Texas, 1954-1958. Defense Appellate Division, 1958-1959. Eighth Advanced Class, TJAGSA, 1959-1960. Military Justice Division, Office of the Staff Judge Advocate,USARHAW /25th Infantry Division, 1960. Chief, Military Justice Division and Deputy Division Staff Judge Ad­vocate, 25th Infantry Division, 1960-1963. Chief, Individual Training and Extension Course Division, 1963-1965. Chief and Instructor, Military Justice Division, TJAGSA, 1965-date. Member of the Bar of Texas.

Lieutenant Colonel John A.. Zalonis, Jr., JAGC, Chief, Military Affairs Division. B.S. Engineering, 1947, University of Maryland; LL.B., 1950, Harvard; M.A., 1951, Boston College. Military Justice Division and Chief, Procurement, Claims, and Litigation Division, Office of the Staff Judge Advocate, Headquarters, 2d U. S. Army, Fort George G. Meade, Maryland, 1959-1962. Office of the Staff Judge Advocate, U. S. Military Assistance Command, Vietnam, 1963­1964. General Law Branch, Military Affairs Division, OTJAG, 1964­1965. Chief and Instructor, Military Affairs Division, TJAGSA, 1966-date. Member of the Bars of Maryland, the U. S. Supreme Court, and U. S. Court of Military Appeals.

Lieutenant Colonel Kenneth A. Howard, JAGC, Instructor, Mili­tary Justice Division. LL.B., 1950, Emory University. Government Appellate Division, 1951-1954. Chief, Military Justice, Transporta­tion Major Port, Newfoundland, Greenland and Labrador, 1954-1955. Chief, Military Justice, Fort Benning, Georgia, 1955-1959. Chief, Military Justice, 3rd Armored Division, Frankfurt, Germany, 1959­1962. Executive Staff Judge Advocate, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas,

49

1962-1965. Instructor, Military Justice Division, TJAGSA; 1965-date. Member of the Bars of Georgia and the U. S. Court of Military Appeals.

Lieutenant Colonel Robert W. Morrison, JAGC, Chief, Individual Training and Career Management Division. A.B., 1948, Harvard University; LL.B., 1949, University of Illinois. Enlisted service, 1943· 1944. Graduate, Officer Candidate School, Fort Benning, Georgia, 1944. Platoon Leader, Fort George G. Meade, Maryland, 1944·1945. Reports Officer, Office of Military Government, Bavaria, 1945-1946. Assistant Staff Judge Advocate, Headquarters, Third Army, Europe, 1946-1947. Legal Officer, Munich Military Post, 1947. Reserve Officer service not on active duty, 1947-1951. Assistant Staff Judge Advocate, Headquarters, Fort Custer, Michigan, 1951. Seventh Regular Class, TJAGSA, 1951. Assistant Staff Judge Advocate, Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri, 1951-1952. Assistant Staff Judge Advocate, Headquarters, Second Logistical Command, Korea, 1953. Legal Officer, United Nations Command Military Armistice Commission, Korea, 1953. Reserve Officer service not on active duty, 1953-1957. Military Justice Division, Office of the Judge Advocate General, 1957-1961. Assistant Chief and Chief, Military Justice, Headquarters, Seventh United States Army Support Command, Europe, 1961-1964. Chief, Plans Division, and Individual Training and Career Management Division, and Acting Chief, Nonresident Materials Prepartion Division, TJAGSA, 1964-date. Member of the Bars of Illinois and the U. S. Court of Military Appeals.

Lieutenant Colonel James M. Van Hook, Armor, Chief, Military Training Division. B.S., 1949, Virginia Military Institute. ROTC Instructor, St. Lawrence University, 1955·1957. Troop Commander and Staff Officer, 14th Armored Cavalry Regiment, Germany, 1957­1961. Staff Officer, Headquarters, Third Army, 1961-1963. Advisor to 5th Infantry Regiment, Royal Thailand Army, 1963-1964. In­structor and Chief, Military Training Division, TJAGSA, 1964-date.

Major Darrell L. Peck, JAGC, Instructor, Military Affairs Division. B.A., 1952, LL.B., 1954, Marquette University. Instructor in Law, University of Washington Law School, 1954-1955. Twenty-second Special Course, TJAGSA, 1956. Assistant Staff Judge Advocate, Fort Meade, Maryland, 1956-1957. Assistant Staff Judge Advocate, 4th Infantry Division, Fort Lewis, Washington, 1957-1959. Chief, Mili­tary Affairs Division, Judge Advocate Section, SETAF, 1959-1963. Twelve Career Course, TJAGSA, 1963-1964. Chief, Individual Train­ing and Extension Course Division, 1963. Instructor, Military Affairs Division, TJAGSA, 1964-date. Member of the Bars of Wisconsin and Washington, the U. S. Supreme Court and the U. S. Court of Military Appeals.

50

Lieutenant Commander James E. Toms, U. S. Navy, Instructor, International and Comparative Law Division. B.S.L., 1954, University of Minnesota; LL.B., 1957, William Mitchell College of Law, St. Paul, Minnesota. U. S. Naval Justice School, Newport, Rhode Island, 1958. Assistant Staff Legal Officer, U. S. Naval Air Station, Quonset Point, Rhode Island, 1958-196l. Staff Legal Officer, Commander Fleet Air Bermuda and U. S. Naval Station Bermuda, 1961-1964. Thirteenth Career Class, TJAGSA, 1965. Instructor, International and Comparative Law Division, TJAGSA, 1965-date. Member of the Bars of Minnesota and the U. S. Supreme Court.

Major Wayne E. Alley, JAGC, Instructor, Military Affairs Division. B.A., 1952, LL.B., 1957, Stanford University. Thirtieth Special Class, TJAGSA, 1959. Assistant Staff Judge Advocate, U. S. Army Artillery and Missile Center, Fort Sill, Oklahoma, 1959-1960. Assistant Staff .Judge Advocate, Headquarters, U. S. Army Ryukyu Islands, 1960­1964. Thirteenth Career Class, TJAGSA, 1965. Instructor, Military Affairs Division, TJAGSA, 1965-date. Member of the Bars of Oregon, California, and the U. S. Court of Military Appeals.

Captain Edward S. Adamkewicz, Jr., JAGC, Instructor,. Mili­tary Justice Division. University of Illinois; LL. B., 1957, DePaul University. Twenty-ninth Special Class, TJAGSA, 1959. Assistant Staff Judge Advocate, Headquarters, 1st Region, U. S. Army Air Defense Command, 1959-1961. Assistant Staff Judge Advocate, 504th Administrative Company, 4th Armored Division, 1961-1964. Project Officer, Academic Department, TJAGSA, 1964. Thirteenth Career Class, TJAGSA, 1965. Instructor, Military Justice Division, TJAGSA, 1965-date. Member of the Bars of Illinois, the U. S. Supreme Court and the U. S. Court of Military Appeals.

Captain William E. Steffen, JAGC, Project Officer, Procurement Law Division. B.S., 1957; LL.B., 1959, Northwestern University. Thirty-first Special Class, TJAGSA, 1960. Law Instructor, Military Police School, Fort Gordon, Georgia, 1960-1962. Chief, Military Affairs, 3d Armored Division, Frankfurt, Germany, 1962-1964. Recorder, Board of Inquiry, Judge Advocate Division, Headquarters, USAREUR, Heidelberg, Germany, 1964-1966. Project Officer, Pro­curement Law Division, TJAGSA, 1966-date. Member of the Bars of Illinois and the U. S. Court of Military Appeals.

Captain Robert D. Byers, .JAGC, Chief, Plans Division. B.A.]., 1959, State University of Iowa. Thirty-second Special Class, TJAGSA, 1960. Assistant Staff Judge Advocate, 4th U. S. Infantry Division, Fort Lewis, Washington, 1960-1963. Chief, Military Affairs, Head­qaurters SACOM, Munich,· Germany, 1964-1965. Assistant Execu­tive Officer, Headquarters, USAREUR, Heidelberg, Germany, 1965­

51

1966. Chief, Plans Division, TJAGSA, 1966-date. Member of the Bars of Iowa and the U. S. Court of Military Appeals.

Captain David Stein, AGC, Chief, Extension Course Division. Uni­versity of Kansas. Company Commander, Co D, 21st Bn, USATCA, Fort Knox, Kentucky, 1959-1962. Chief, Administrative Services, 8th Infantry Division, Bad Kruznach, Germany, 1962-1965. Chief, Ex­tension Course Division, TJAGSA, 1965-date.

Captain Donald Wayne Hansen, JAGC, Instructor, Military Justice Division. B.A., 1955; LL.B., 1958, University of Colorado. Thirty­first Special Class, TJAGSA, 1960. Assistant Staff Judge Advocate, Fort Jackson, South Carolina, 1960-1961. Chief, Military Justice, Headquarters, U. S. Army, Camp Zama, Japan, 1962-1965. Four­teenth Career Class, TJAGSA, 1966. Instructor, Military Justice Division, TJAGSA, 1966-date. Member of the Bars of Colorado, the U. S. Supreme Court, and the U. S. Court of Military Appeals.

Captain Thomas F. Durham, III, Infantry, Instructor, Military Training Division. B.S., 1959, Mississippi State University. Com­pany Commander, 2d Battle Group, 187th Infantry, lOlst Airborne Division, Fort Campbell, Kentucky, 1959-1961. Company Commander and Adjutant, 2nd Battalion, 35th Infantry, 25th Infantry Division, Schofield Barracks, Hawaii, 1961-1964. Instructor, Military Training Division, TJAGSA, 1965-date.

Captain George A. Pelletier, Jr., JAGC, Instructor, International and Comparative Law Division. B.B.A., 1961, LL.B., 1962, Univer­sity of Notre Dame; LL.M., 1963, Harvard University. Student Offi­cer, The United States Army Infantry School, 1963. Thirty-ninth Special Course, The Judge Advocate General's School, 1964. Project Officer, Individual Training and Extension Course Division, and Instructor, International and Comparative Law Division, TJAGSA, 1964-date. Member of the Bars of Texas and the U. S. Court of Military Appeals.

Captain Graham C. Lilly, JAGC, Legal Assistance Officer and Instructor, Military Affairs Division. B.S., 1960, Virginia Polytechnic Institute; LL.B., 1963, University of Virginia. Student Officer, U. S. Army Infantry School, 1964. Fortieth Special Class, TJAGSA, 1964. Project Officer, Plans Division; Editor, JALS; and Legal Assistance Officer and Instructor, Military Affairs Division, TJAGSA, 1964-date. Member of the Bars of Virginia and the U. S. Court of Military Appeals.

Captain Lawrence A. Monaco, Jr., JAGC, Editor, Military Law Review, and Chief, Publications Division. A.B., 1960, Princeton University; LL.B., 1963, Georgetown University. Student Officer, U. S. Army Armor School, 1964. Fortieth Special Class, TJAGSA,

52

1964. Project Officer, Nonresident Materials Preparation Division; Editor, JALS and Military Law Review; and Chief, Publications Division, TJAGSA, 1964-date. Member of the Bars of Virginia, the District of Columbia, and the U. S. Court of Military Appeals.

Captain Larry J. Allen, QMC, Logistics Officer. B.S., 1961, Mis­sissippi State University. The United States Army Quartermaster School, 1962. Platoon Leader, Company A, 56th Quartermaster Battalion, Kaiserslautern, Germany, 1962-1963. Commanding Officer, 7th Army Troops Markmanship Detachment, Kaiserslautern, Ger­many, 1963-1965. Logistics Officer, TJAGSA, 1965-date.

Captain Richard E. Crouch, JAGC, Editor, JALS. B.A., 1962, B.C.L., 1964, College of William and Mary. Student Officer, The United States Army Infantry School, 196·1. Forty-first Special Class, TJAGSA, 1965. Project Officer, Plans Division, and Editor, JALS, TJAGSA, 1965-date. Member of the Bars of Virginia and the U. S. Court of Military Appeals.

Captain Jack F. Bonanno, JAGC, Project Officer, Individual Train­ing and Career Management Division. B.S., 1960, LL.B., 1963, University of San Francisco; LL.M., 1964, Georgetown University. Student Officer, The United States Army Infantry School, 1964. Forty-first Special Class, TJAGSA, 1965. Project Officer, Individual Training and Career Management Division, 1965-date. Member of the Bars of California and the U. S. Court of Military Appeals.

First Lieutenant Leonard F. Ball, AGC, Project Officer, Plans Division. B.B.A., 1961, LL.B., 1964, University of Oklahoma. Stu­dent Officer, The United States Army Adjutant General's School, 1965. Project Officer, Plans Division, TJAGSA, 1965-date. Member of the Bars of Oklahoma and the U. S. Court of Military Appeals.

First Lieutenant Martin J. Tracy, AGC, Assistant Adjutant and Bookstore Officer. B.A., 1961, LL.B., 1964, Fordham College. Student Officer, The United States Army Adjutant General's School, 1965. Assistant Adjutant and Bookstore Officer, TJAGSA, 1965-date.

First Lieutenant John F. Mitchell, JAGC, Instructor, Procurement Law Division. B.A., 1962, Vanderbilt University; LL.B., 1965, Emory University. Forty-third Special Class, TJAGSA, 1965. Instructor, Procurement Law Division, TJAGSA, 1965-date. Member of the Bars of Georgia, the lJ. S. COllrt of Military Appeals, and the U. S. Court of Claims.

First Lieutenant John G. Newitt, Jr., JAGC, Legal Editor, Non­resident Materials Preparation Division. B.A., 1963; LL.B., 1965, Wake Forest. Forty-third Special Class, TJAGSA, 1965. Legal Editor, Nonresident Materials Preparation Division, 1966-date. Member of the Bars of North Carolina and U. S. Court of Military Appeals.

53

First Lieutenant F. Dean Copeland, AGC, Adjutant.B.A., 1961, University of Mississippi; B.A.]., 1963, Oxford University; LL.B., 1965, Yale. The United States Army Adjutant General's School, 1965. Project Officer, Individual Training and Extension Course Division, TJAGSA, 1965. Adjutant, TJAGSA, 1966-date.

First Lieutenant Joel H. Rabine, JAGC, Assistant to the Director, Academic Department. A.B., 1963; LL.B., 1965, Syracuse University. The United States Army Infantry School, Fort Benning, Georgia, 1965. Assistant to the Director, Academic Department, 1965-date. Member of the Bars of New York and the U. S. Court of Military Appeals.

UNITED STATES COMBAT DEVELOPMENTS COMMAND

JUDGE ADVOCATE AGENCY

Major Alfred A. McNamee, JAGe, Acting Commander, United States Army Combat Developments Command, Judge Advocate Agency. B.A., 1958, University of Florida; LL.B., 1961, Wake Forest. Thirty-eighth Special Class, TJAGSA, 1963. Assistant Staff Judge Advocate, lOlst Airborne Division, Fort Campbell, Kentucky, 1963­1964. Staff Judge Advocate, U. S. Army Support Command, Viet Nam, 1964-1965. Deputy Commander and Acting Commander, United States Army Combat Developments Command, Judge Advo­cate Agency, 1965-date. Member of the Bars of North Carolina, the U. S. Supreme Court, Tax Court of the United States, and the U. S. Court of Military Appeals.

54

APP

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APPENDIX VIII

THESIS TOPICS AND SCOPE

FOURTEENTH CAREER CLASS

MAJOR BARNEY L. BRANNEN, 'Warranties in Department of Defense Contracts for the Purchase of Supplies. A study of the existence and extent of express and implied warranties in Department of Defense supply contracts. Warranties in Government contracts for the sale of Government property have been excluded from discussion. Be­cause of the different circumstances of performance in construction contracts, analysis of warranties used therein has been omitted.

LIEUTENANT BRUCE L. BROMBERG, USN, Radar under the Revised Rules of the Road. A study of the obligations of vessels using radar, to determine the effect of the revised International Regulations for Preventing Collisions at sea upon them.

CAPTAIN TERRY W. BROWN, The Crowder-Ansell Disp·ute: The Emergence of General Samuel T. Ansell. A study of the conflict between Major General Enoch H. Crowder and Brigadier General Samuel T. Ansell, its historical background. development, and impact on the Articles of War of 1920 and the Uniform Code of Military Justice with particular emphasis on the concepts of General Ansell and their influence upon subsequent military jurisprudence.

MAJOR CARLOS H. CERDA (Argentina), A Look at the Argentine Military System. A study of the Argentine Military Justice System. The study includes a brief historical background, the sources of the military legislation, the jurisdictional limitations of the military justice, the organization of military tribunals and the procedures. Comparison is made with the provisions of the United States military law with regard to the principal subject matters of both military legal systems.

CAPTAIN ROBERT F. COMEAU, Court-Martial Procedure: A Maze of Formality. A critkal analysis of the procedure in trials by general court-martial under the Uniform Code of Military Justice, with a consideration of the historical basis and present utility of selected practices. Appendix Sa, Manual for Courts-Martial, 1951, is the basic vehicle, and a proposed trial guide, reflecting current law and practice as modified by pending legislation, the end product of this study.

MAJOR JOSEPH B. CONBOY, Article 92-Lawful General Orders and Regulations. A detailed study of article 92, of the Uniform Code of Military Justice. Particular emphasis is placed on the problem of what qualifies a commander to issue lawful general orders and

58

regulations. Also considered in some depth are two other questions. Are there really two article 92(1) type offenses? Should knowledge be presumed where a valid general order or regulation exists? Finally, changes are suggested in the method the Army uses to publish and promulgate its regulations.

MAJOR THOMAS H. DAVIS, The "Mere Evidence" Rule in Search and Seizure. A study and critique of the application of the rule which prohibits the admission in evidence of merely evidentiary material which has been seized during a lawful search; including analysis of the background and development of that rule and its application and limitation by the courts.

MAJOR CHARLES P. DRIBBEN, The First Amendment and the Practice of Religion in the Armed Forces. The principles of religious freedom and the separation of church and state contained in the First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States and their relation to, and effect upon, the Defense Establishment: the extent of any limitations upon servicemen respecting the free exercise of religion guaranteed by the First Amendment.

COLONEL Mos HAFALLAH EKHTERAI (Iran), Organization of The Office of The Judge Advocate General in the United States, Federal Judicial System, and Court-Martial Procedure. To familiarize the beginning student with matters pertaining to the administration of military justice with which the student officer is likely to come into contact and also to serve as a practical guide to court-martial pro­cedures. This thesis contains information relating to court-martial functions, examines the required considerations of the vanous com­manders following the commission of an offense as well as the procedural treatment of offenses in the American court-martial system. Included for better understanding of the general subject of courts and courts-martial, is a basic consideration of the federal judicial system in the United States intended to familiarize those foreign lawyer students who are not acquainted with common law principles or the practice of military law in the United States.

MAJOR BENJAMIN B. FERRELL, USMC, Legal Control of Resources in a Counterinsurgency War. A study of statutes, regulations, amI enforcement means used in counterinsurgency operations for the control of resources, with particular emphasis accorded to the methods used in Malaya and Viet Nam.

CAPTAIN DAVID A. FONTANELLA, Privileged Communication-The Personal Privileges. A study and analysis of the law of privileged communication in the military, to include the historical bases for the rules, a comparison of the· military rules with those in civilian jurisdictions, and recommendations concerning changes to. the

59

Manual for Courts-Martial or the Uniform Code of Military Justice desirable for bringing the military rules in line with modern times.

LIEUTENANT COMANDER RICHARD J. GRUNAWALT, USN, The Acquisition of the Resources ot the Bottom ot the Sea-A New Frontier of International Law. An examination of the means whereby States have sought to acquire dominion over the resources of the bed of the sea and its subsoil, with particular emphasis on the inherent difficulties in applying recognized principles of terri­torial acquisition, coupled with an analysis of those provisions of the 1958 Geneva Convention on the Continental Shelf pertaining to the extension of a coastal State's "sovereign rights" over such resources down to and beyond a depth of 200 meters. The thesis alSo examines the problems which have not been resolved by the 1958 Convention, as well as the practical necessity of their solution. Suggested solutions are offered.

CAPTAIN JAMES T. GULLAGE, Estate Planning tor the Military. An examination of the present federal laws providing for compensation and benefits for the survivors. of deceased military personnel as inte­grated into the overall pattern of estate planning; an analysis of the federal estate tax consequences of these benefits and a discussion of estate planning considerations involved in participation in the Re­tired Serviceman's Family Protection Plan as well as suggestions on the avoidance of certain estate problems encountered by members of the military.

CAPTAIN DONALD W. HANSEN, The Commander's Judicial Functions-Their History and Future. To examine in depth the historic relationship between the commander and the military justice system, including an analysis of selected judicial functions of the commander under the Uniform Code of Military Justice. The thesis will also consider what relation the commander's exercise of judicial functions bears to his responsibility for maintaining good order and discipline in the command, and whether this current relationship is so tenuous as to justify removing him entirely from the arena of military justice. In addition, analysis will be given to an evalu­ation of the objections, criticisms and alternatives proposed by the opponents of the commander's military justice function.

CAPTAIN HUGH E. HENSON, JR., The Hung Jury: A Court-Martial Dilemma. A critical analysis of the problems arising in the military system from a failure of a court-martial to agree either on the findings or the sentence of the court. Concerning findings, the thesis will consider the situation where the court is divided with a majority which is less than two· thirds voting for conviction, and that majority continues to vote for reconsideration. Concerning sentences, the thesis will analyze the problems arising from the interrelationship

60

of article 52, article 106, and article 118(1) and (4) of the Code, with paragraph 76b of the Manual. The thesis will consider the problem of the law officer's duty to instruct the court-martial that it may return a sentence of no punishment. Concerning both find­ings and sentences, the thesis will consider the place of the so­called Allen charge in the military sphere, will consider and make recommendations regarding the action of the law officer in this area, to furnish guidelines for determining how far the law officer may go in preventing a hung jury without crossing over into the area of coercion, and will consider any possible problems of double jeopardy. Finally, the thesis will consider the desirablity of statutory amendments in this area in order to avoid the problems discussed.

MAJOR ROBERT M. HINRICHS, Proprietary Data and Trade Secrets under Department of Defense Contracts. A study of the protection available to government contractors and subcontractors for their trade secrets and proprietary data. The common law, statutory, and administrative remedies are examined, including those based on tort theories, contract and confidence theories, eminent domain theories and public policy. Particular emphasis is given to the pro­visions of the Armed Services Procurement Regulations concerning rights in technical data.

COLONEL ABDOLLAH KHAJEH-NoORI (Iran), Affirmative Defenses in the Criminal Law of Iran. A comprehensive study of the major affirmative defenses recognized in the civil and milita:rY law of Iran. Particular emphasis is given to self-defense, insanity, and intoxcation, and the substantive rules governing their application and disposition at the trial, including a comparative analysis with the Uniform Code of Military Justice.

CAPTAIN VICTOR G. McBRIDE, JVIortgage Foreclosures and the Soldiers' and Sailors' Civil Relief A ct. An analysis of the cases deal­ing with real property and chattel mortgage foreclosures in which section 302 of the Soldiers' and Sailors' Civil Relief Act of 1940 as Amended has had some effect; including the types and extent of relief afforded servicemen who find themselves unable to comply with their previously contracted for mortgage obligations because of the material effect of military service.

MAJOR JACK G. McKAY, Re: The Powers over Military Justice, Their Interplay and Significance. A study of the powers over military justice; i.e., the President's, Congress', the Supreme Court's and the Court of Military Appeals'; and the interplay between them with particular emphasis accorded the Court of Military Appeals' power to adjudicate Constitutional issues, and the scope and content of collateral review of military tribunals by the regular federal courts.

61

CAPTAIN CECIL R. MORROW, JR., Informal Entry into the Military Service. An analysis of the legal requirements for an effective entl y into the military, by enlistment and induction, where the regular formalities are partially or totally missing. The historical back­ground is examined, as well as the similarities, distinctions and intermixtures of the two methods.

CAPTAIN RICHARD E. MOWRY, The Supremacy Clause as a Re­striction upon State Regulation of Government Contractors. A study of the Supremacy Clause as a restriction upon state regulation and taxation of a government contractor with particular emphasis accorded to the rules to be applied in determining a government contractor's immunity from state regulation.

MAJOR WILLIAM R. MULLINS, The International Responsibility of a State for Torts of its Military Forces: The Developing Law of Article VIII, NATO-SOFA. A study of Article VIII, NATO-SOFA, in operation. The study includes the historical background of state responsibility and the place of Article VIII in the law of inter­national claims. The provisions of Article VIII are analyzed in respect to their effectiveness in practice and in implementing U. S. policy. Changes are suggested in certain provisions of the Article which in practice have given rise to problems of interpretation and application. Comparison is also made with the claims provisions of selected recent bilateral Status of Forces Agreements entered into by the United States.

CAPTAIN THOMAS E. MURDOCK, The Extent to Which the Federal Government Can Utilize the Insurance Coverage of Its Employees in Defense and Settlement of Automobile Accident Claims Occurring During the Course of the Employee's Government Service. A study of the effect of the 1961 Amendments to the Federal Tort Claims Act regarding exclusiveness of remedy and the certification of scope of employment by the Attorney General as applied to auto­mobile accident cases.

MAJOR TALBOT J. NICHOLAS, The Defendant's Standing to Object to the Admission of Evidence Illegally Obtained. A study of the rationale of the rule excluding evidence obtained by an illegal search and seizure and its relation to the criminal defendant's stand­ing to invoke the rule in objecting to the admission of such evidence.

MAJOR JAMES E. NOBLE, The Judge Advocate General Service Organization. A study of its history, structure, mission, employment, and training. The Organization is examined with respect to its com­patibility with the active Army. Some problems incident to mobili­zation of JAGSO teams are discussed.

62

CAPTAIN NORMAN L. ROBERTS, Private and Public Internationa'l Law Aspects of Government Contracts. This paper is a study of the law governing United States military procurement conducted outside the United States. Emphasis is placed on the recognition of the sources of law which apply to offshore contracts and the relationship between these rules and public and private international law. Spe­cific topics discussed include the remedies available to resolve disputes arising out of offshore contracts, the effect offshore pro­curement has on the doctrine of sovereign immunity, and the problem of the proper choice of law to be applied in determining the contracting parties' respective rights and responsibilities.

MAJOR SIMON Y. RODRIGUEZ, The Role of the Staff Judge Advo­cate in the Dominican Republic Stability Operation. An analysis of the Staff Judge Advocate's role in the Dominican Republic Stability Operation in 1965 setting forth some of the problems encountered in the fields of Military Justice, Claims, Military Affiairs and Procurement, International Law and Civil Affairs; a consideration of the International Law and Civil Affairs missions and responsi­bilities of the Staff Judge Advocate as a member of the Organization of American States' Inter·American Peace Force where he is desig­nated as the Force Civil Affairs Officer; contingency planning of the Staff Judge Advocate in order to accomplish his mission in stability of peacekeeping operations emphasizing civil affairs and the necessary knowledge of the tactical and administrative operations in order to render advice and caution in matters involving breaches of international laws or commitments.

MAJOR KEITH A. WAGNER, Second Chance-Dual Evidentiary Hear­ings on Contract Claims Against the Government. A study of the finality of decisions of administrative boards of contract appeals in the light of recent Court of Claims decisions concerning the "scope of review" and "scope of trial" in applying the statutory standards for review, as well as the confusion which has arisen from equating the concepts of fmality and jurisdiction. Also con­sidered are administrative discussions concerning the amendments of certain contract clauses, proposed legislation to amend the '''Tunderlich Act, and judicial proceedings in relation to the "scope of trial" on review.

CAPTAIN JOHN L. ""VILLEY, Choice of Law and Federal Tort Claims Act: Time for a Change. A study of current problems relating to selection of rules of law to be applied in suits against the United States under the Federal Tort Claims Act. A critical analysis of Richards v. United States, as applied in recent cases involving multi­state torts, to include an evaluation of the legal, economic and political impact of a proposed change in the method of resolution of conflict of laws problems.

63

CAPTAIN JACK H. VVILLIAMS, An American's Trial in a Foreign Court: The Role of the Military's Trial Obseroer. A study of current policies and practices of the United States Armed Forces regarding trials of U. S. personnel in foreign courts, from the stand­point of the requirements proposed by the Senate Resolution of IS July 1953 and the NATO Status of Forces Agreement. An analysis is made of the world-wide operation of the trial observer system, and an inquiry is made into the role of the trial observer, not only as it is expressed in U. S. policy, but also as it appears in actual practice.

MAJOR R. E. WRAY, USMC, Entrapment-A Word of Legal Art Represening a Special Defense within the Penumbrae of the Constitu­tionally Protected Umbrella. A comprehensive study and analysis of the principles of the doctrine of entrapment in federal and mili­tary practice, including inter alia: the offenses to which the doctrine may relate; the procedural problems involved; the need for judicial regulation of entrapping activity in advance of its commencement; and the development of entrapment from an affirmative defense into a right protected by the Ninth Amendment to the United States Constitution.

APPENDIX IX

ACADEMIC AWARDS

FISCAL YEAR 1966

CAREER AND SPECIAL CLASSES

American Bar Association Certificate for Professional Merit (highest over-all academic standing) :

MAJOR THOMAS H. DAVIS (14th Career) FIRST LIEUTENANT JOE B. BROWN (43d Special) fIRST LIEUTENANT CIRO A. GAMBONI (44th Special)

Law'rers Cooperative Publishing Company Book Award (highest over-all academic standing) :

MAJOR THOMAS H. DAVIS (14th Career) FIRST LIEUTENANT JOE B. BROWN (43d Special) FIRST LIEUTENANT CIRO A. GAMBONI (44th Special)

Federal Bar Association Cash Award (highest over-all academic standing) :

MAJOR THOMAS H. DAVIS (14th Career) FIRST LIEUTENANT JOE B. BROWN (43d Special) FIRST LIEUTENANT CIRO A. GAMBONI (44th Special)

Commandant's Certificate of Achievement and Book Award (second highest over-all academic standing) :

LIEUT. COMDR. RICHARD J. GRUNAWALT, USN (14th Career) FIRST LIEUTENANT JOHN G. KESTER (43d Special) CAPTAIN FRANCIS W. JOYNT (44th Special)

Judge Advocates Association Certificate of Achievement (highest standing in Military Affairs subjects) :

MAJOR THOMAS H. DAVIS (14th Career) FIRST LIEUTENANT JOE B. BROWN (43d Special) FIRST LIEUTENANT PAUL A. BIBLE (44th Special)

65

The Judge Paul W. Brosman Award, A Certificate of Achievement from the Judges, United States Court of Military Appeals (highest standing in Military Justice subjects) :

MAJOR JACK G. McKAY (14th Career) FIRST LIEUTENANT JOE B. BROWN (43d Special) FIRST LIEUTENANT CIRO A. GAMBONI (44th Special)

Federal Bar Association Certificate of Achievement (highest standing in Procurement Law subjects) :

MAJOR THOMAS H. DAVIS

FIRST LIEUTENANT LOUIS M. PARKER

FIRST LIEUTENANT JOHN F. DARCY

Commandant's Certificate of Achievement International Law subjects):

CAPTAIN DAVID A. FONTANELLA

FIRST LIEUTENANT ROBERT P. KENNEDY

FIRST LIEUTENANT LOUIS M. PARKER

FIRST LIEUTENANT JOEL P. SCHIFF

FIRST LIEUTENANT KARL J. UEBEL

Commandant's Certificate of Achievement (Career Class Only) :

CAPTAIN TERRY W. BROWN

CAPTAIN JACK H. WILLIAMS

(14th Career) (43d Special)

(44th Special)

(highest standing 111

(14th Career) (43d Special) (43d Special)

(44th Special) (44th Special)

(Outstanding Thesis)

(14th Career) (14th Career)

66

APPENDIX X

GUEST SPEAKERS-JULY 1965 - JUNE 1966

THE JUDGE ADVOCATE GENERAL'S SCHOOL

Speaker

Mr. Charles F. Baldwin Diplomat in Residence University of Virginia

Professor Gordon B. Baldwin Assistant Dean and Professor of

Law Wisconsin Law School

Major Talmadge Bartelle Chief, Foreign Law Branch Office of the Judge Advocate General

Colonel William H. Blackmarr Staff]udge Advocate Second United States Army

Colonel Earl V. Brown Executive, Office of the Chief

] udicial Officer Office of the Judge Advocate General

Captain Geoffrey E. Carlisle, USN Director, International Law Di­

VISIOn

Office of the]uclge Advocate General Department of the Navy

Mr. Daniel F. Carney Commissioner, United States Court

of Military Appeals

CWO Douglas A. Caywood Questioned Documents Examiner U. S. Army Criminal Investigation

Committee U. S. Army Military Police School

Dr. Lawrence E. Chermak Counsel for Navy Comptroller Department of the Navy

Topic

The OPeration and Function of an A merican Embassy

Research in the Law of War

Law In Africa

Graduation Address, 43d Special Class

Law Officer Observations

Naval Operations and Inter­national Law in South East Asia

Operations of the United States Court of Military Ap­peals

Criminal Investigation

Obligation and Expenditure of Appropriated Funds

67

Speaker

Colonel David F. Condon, USMCR Commissioner Court of Military Appeals

Colonel Claude L. Crawford (Ret.) Doctoral Candidate University of Virginia Law School

Mr. Gilbert A. Cuneo Sellers, Conner & Cuneo Attorneys & Counsellors Washington, D. C.

Mr. Samuel Dash Director, Institute of Criminal Law

and Procedure Georgetown University Law Center

I Mr. Albert J. Esgain

Chief, International Law Branch Office of the Judge Advocate General

Miss Frances Farmer Law Librarian U niversi ty of Virginia

Major Zane E. Finkelstein Chief, Torts Branch Litigation Division Office of the Judge Advocate General

Mr. Benjamin A. Fleck Officer in Charge Korean Affairs Office of East Asian Affairs Department of State

Professor Lawrence D. Gaughan University of Virginia Law School

Lt. Colonel Rhett G. Harris Munitions Command, USA Edgewood Arsenal

Colonel Ralph Herrod Chief, Law Committee Department of Resident Instruction U. S. Army Military Police School

Topic

CivN Affairs Operations m Vietnam

An Introduction to the European Economic Com­munity

Disputes and Appeals

Ethics of the Defense Lawyer

Immunities from .Turis­diction

Legal Bibliography, Intro­duction to the University of Virginia Law Library

Recovery of Medical Costs from Liable Third Party Persons Pursuant to PL 87­693

The Functions of an Ameri­can Consulate in a "Status of Forces" Coun try

Structure of Foreign Govern­ments, The Law of Persons in the Civil Law System

The Latest Developments in Chemical and Biological Weaponry

Criminal Investigation

68

Speaker Topic

Honorable Alexander Holtzoff Judicial Functions and Pro· Judge, U. S. District Court for the cedures

District of Columbia

CWO James R. Johnson Criminal Investigation Instructor, Polygraph Section Criminal Investigation Committee U. S. Army Military Police School

Lt. Colonel Irvin M. Kent Current Concepts of Civil Chief, Concepts and Doctrine Di· Affairs Operations;

VISIOn

U. S. Army Combat Developments Command

Civil Affairs Agency New Concepts in Civil Affairs Fort Gordon, Georgia

Colonel George F. Meyer Military Affairs Problems Chief, Military Affairs Division Office of the Judge Advocate

General

Lt. Colonel Carl G. Moore Law Officer Observations U. S. Army Judiciary Office of the Judge Advocate General

Colonel William M. Myers Litigation Activities Chief, Litigation Division Office of the Judge Advocate General

Lt. Colonel Shelton R. Nelson Labor Deputy Labor Advisor Office of the Assistant Secretary Departmen t of the Army

Mr. Frederick Neuman Cost Principles zn Govern· Defense Contract Audit Agency ment Contracts Washington, D. C.

Dr. Eli Nobleman Legal Advice and Lega'l Ad· Professional Staff Member vzsors In Civil Affairs Oper. U. S. Senate Committee on Govern· ations

ment Operations

Dr. William V. O'Brien Recognition of States and Chairman, Institute of World Governments} Individual and

Polity Collective Military Inter· Georgetown University vention in International Law

and Relations

69

Speaker Topic

Captain Travis W. Parker Criminal Investigation Commanding Officer U. S. Army Criminal Investigation

Laboratory U. S. Army Military Police School

Dr. Branko M. Peselj Law In the Soviet Union Attorney at Law Adjunct Professor of Law Georgetown University

Mr. John J. Phelan, Jr. Competetive Negotiation Deputy General Counsel Department of the Navy

Mr. Conrad D. Philos Administrative Due Process Chief, Civilian Personnel Law Di- in Civilian Personnel Actions

vision Office of the Judge Advocate General

Mr. S. J. Pomrenze Records Administration Records Administration Branch Office of the Adjutant General

Mr. A. Tyler Port Extraordinary Contractual Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Actions

Army (I & L) Logistics Department of the Army

Mr. William O. Quesenberry Patents and Data Director of Navy Patents Department of the Navy

Lt. Colonel Bernard A. Ramundo Soviet Criminal Law Assistant, Directorate of Foreign

Rights Affairs Department of Defense

Lt. Colonel Joseph H. Rouse Claims Activities in Domini­Acting Chief cian Republic and Vietnam U. S. Army Claims Service

Dr. Edmund H. Schwenk German Criminal Law and Attorney-Advisor Procedure Office of the Judge Advocate U. S. Army, Europe

70

Speaker

Major Ruben W. Shay U. S. Army Special Warfare School

Colonel Lewis F. Shull Army Staff Judge Advocate Fourth United States Army

Mr. Lou Spector Chairman, Armed Services Board

of Contract Appeals

Professor Richard E. Speidel University of Virginia Law School

:vr r. Kendon L. Stubbs Reference Librarian Alderman Library University of Virginia

Colonel William J. Tiffany, Jr. Chief, Psychiatry and Neurology

Consultant Office of the Surgeon General

Professor Walter J. Wadlington University of Virginia Law School

Mr. Harry "'Tanman Chief, Employee Relations Section Personnel Management Branch Office of the Ch ief of Sta ff

Mr. J. E. Welch Deputy Counsel General Accoun ting Office

Colonel George F. Westerman Chief, 1nternational Affairs Di­

vision Office of the .Judge Advocate General

Mr. Raymond J. Williams Executive Secretary Army Board for Correction of Mili­

tary Records

7]

Topic

Special Forces OPerations

Graduation Address, 44th Special Class

Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals

Taxation

Legal Bibliography, Intro­d1lction to Alderman Library

Psychiatry and the Law

Personal Status and Family Relationships, Marriage and Divorce in the Civil Law System

Civilian Personnel: Adverse A ctions, Appeals and Griev­(mcr's

Government Contracts and the Role of the Comptroller General

Vietnamese Law in Action, The New DOD Status of Foras Dirertiv('

Boards of Officers

Speaker

Professor Mason Willrich University of Virginia Law School

Colonel John S. Wilson Labor Advisor Office of the Assistant Secretary Department of the Army

CWO William C. Wilson Instructor, Criminal Investigation

Subjects Criminal Investigation Committee U. S. Army Military Police School

Topic

United Nations Peace-Keep­ing Operations

Labor

Criminal Investigation

72

APPENDIX XI

DISTINGUISHED VISITORS-FISCAL YEAR 1966

Lieutenant General Ben Harrell, Commanding General, U. S. Army Combat Developments Command, 2 August 1965.

Lieutenant General Harvey H. Fischer, Deputy Commanding General, U. S. Continental Army Command, 20 September 1965.

Major General Kenneth G. Wickham, Commanding General, U. S. Army Combat Developments Command Combat Service Support Group, 15 October 1965, 12 January 1966.

Brigadier General H. C. Newton (Ret.) and Colonel M. Gates, members of the Department of the Army Board to Review Army Officer Schools, R November 1965.

Brigadier General Lawrence .J. Fuller. Assistant Judge Advocate General, 8 December 1965.

Colonel Johng Koo Kim, Assistant Judge Advocate, OTJAG; Colonel In Duk Kim, Staff Judge Advocate, FROKA; Colonel Kwang Hwan Joo, Chief of Legal Service Division, OTJAG; Colonel Joe Ok Oh, Chief of Common Court-Martial; Colonel Young Kuk Kim, Chief of Common Court-Martial Prosecution; all officers of the Judge Advocate General's Corps, Army of the Republic of Korea, 31 January 1966.

Colonel Nguyen Mong Bich, Director of Military Justice; Major Phan The Ngoc, Chief of Legal Bureau and Legal Assistance; Ministry of Defense, Republic of Viet Nam. 7 February 1966.

Major General Robert H. McCaw, The Judge Advocate General, 4 June 1966.

73

APPENDIX XII

STATUS OF DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY PAMPHLETS

(As of 30 June 1966)

Number Title

Planned Not Yet

Published

Date and Edition of Published Pamphlets

Expected Completion

Date

27-150 Procurement Law 1st Ed .luI 61

27-151 Cases and Materials on Government Contracts

1st Ed Sep 61

27-153 Procurement Law 1st Ed May 61

27-160-1 Private Law in the Civil Law System

1st Ed Aug 65

27-160-2 Foreign Legal Systems (Criminal Law)

X FY 67

27-161-1 International Law (General Principles)

1st Ed Jun 64

27-161-2 International Law (War)

1st Ed Oct 62

27 -161-3 International Law (War)

X FY 67

27-162 Claims 1st Ed Jun 62

27-163 Legal Aspects of Civil Affairs

X FY 67

27-164 Military Reservations and Navigable Waters

2d Ed Oct 65

27-166 Soldiers' and Sailors' Civil Relief Act of 1940, as Amended; Selected Cases and Materials

1st Ed Mar 62

74

Date and Planned Edition of Expected Not Yet Published Completion

Number Title Published Pamphlets Date

27-171 Military Justice- X FY 67 Military Criminal Law

27-172 Military .lustice- 2nd Ed Evidence Jun 62

27-173 Military Justice- 1st Ed Procedure Jun 64

27-174 Military Justice- 1st Ed Jurisdiction .lun 65

27-175-1 Military J ustice- 1st Ed Initial Review Jun 62

27-187 Military Affairs 1st Ed May 63

75

APPENDIX XIII

VISITS TO RESERVE UNITS-FISCAL YEAR 1966

I. Selected Reserve Force Units

28th Infantry Division (ARNG)

38th Infantry Division (ARNG)

47th Infantry Division (ARNG)

49th Infantry Brigade (Sep) (ARNG)

67th Infantry Brigade (Mech) (ARNG)

69th Infantry Brigade (Sep) (ARNG)

II. JAG Detachments

3d JAG Detachment 4th JAG Detachment 9th JAG Detachment 12th JAG Detachment 13th-16th JAG Detachments 19th and 21st JAG

Detachments 75th-80th JAG Detachments 117th, 128th, 134th JAG

Detachments 142d JAG Detachment 147th JAG Detachment 148th JAG Detachment 170th, 171st, 173dJAG

Detachments 185th and 192d JAG

Detachments 193d-196th JAG

Detachments

III. Other Troop Program Units

30th Infantry Division (ARNG)

Harrisburg, Pa. 6 Mar 66

Indianapolis, Ind. 16 Apr 66

St. Paul, Minn. 5 Dec 65

Alameda, Calif. 22 May 66

Lincoln, Neb. 20 Nov 65

Topeka, Kan. 21 Nov 65

Boston, Mass. 4 Nov 65 New York, N. Y. 27 Apr 66 Cleveland, Ohio 10 May 66 Columbia, S. C. 15 Jan 66 Houston, Texas 13 Mar 66

San Antonio, Tex. 17 Mar 66 Torrance, Calif. 22 May 66

Ft. Snelling, Minn. 6 Dec 65 Fairmont, W. Va. 12 Apr 66 Louisville, Ky. 13 Dec 65 Columbus, Ohio R May 66

Birmingham, Ala. 17 Mar 66

Atlanta, Ga. 14 Mar 66

Knoxville, Tenn. 13 Mar 66

Raleigh, N. C. 9 Jan 66

76

49th Infantry Division (ARNG) Alameda, Calif. 22 May 66

70thr Training Division Detroit, Mich. 9 May 66 75th Maneuver Area

Command Houston, Tex. 14 Mar 66 87th Maneuver Area

Command Birmingham, Ala. 17 Mar 66 98th Training Division Rochester, N. Y. 26 Apr 66 157th Infantry Brigade (Sep) Upper Darby, Pa. 6 Mar 66 304th Civil Affairs Group Philadelphia, Pa. 7 Mar 66 307th Civil Affairs Group St. Louis, Mo. II Dec 65 422d Civil Affairs Company Greensboro, N. C. 16 Jan 66 425th TC Cmd Mtr Trans Oak Park, Ill. 18 Apr 66 5010 U.S. Army Garrison Louisville, Ky. 13 Dec 65

IV. USAR School fA Branch Departments

Atlanta, Georgia 14 Mar 66 Boston, M assach uset ts 4 Nov 65 Chicago, Illinois 19 Apr 66 Cleveland, Ohio 10 May 66 Fairmont, West Virginia 12 Apr 66 Fort Douglas, Utah 23 May 66 Fort Hayes, Ohio 13 Apr 66 Fort Snelling, Minnesota 6 Dec 65 Hempstead, New York 28 Apr 66 Grand Rapids, Michigan 14 Apr 66 Greensboro, N. C. 17 Jan 66 Greenville, South Carolina 13 Jan 66 Houston, Texas 16 Mar 66 Knoxville, Tennessee 16 Mar 66 Madison, W'isconsin 8 Dec 65 Milwaukee, "Visconsin 7 Dec 65 New York, N. Y. 3 Nov 65 St. Louis, Missouri 15 Dec 65 San Antonio, Texas 17 Mar 66 Seattle, Washington 24 May 66 Topeka, Kansas 22 Nov 65

V. M isce llaneous

Naval Justice School, Newport, Rhode Island 1328th JAGC-USAR Training Center,

New York, N. y,

2

25

Nov

Apr

65

66

77

VI. ANACDUTRA

First U. S. Army ANACDUTRA, Fort Devens, Mass.

(Springfield host school; 4th JAG Detachment)

24-25 Aug 65

Second U. S. Army ANACDUTRA, Fort Lee, Virginia

(Lexington host school) 17 Aug 65

ANACDUTRA Fort Meade, Maryland (9th & 10th JAG Detachments)

24 Aug 65

Third U. S. Army ANACDUTRA Fort McClellan,

Alabama

13-14 .Tul 65

(Greenville host school); 11th & 12th JAG Detachments)

Fourth U. S. Army ANACDUTRA Fort Bliss, Texas (Lubbock host school; 1st & 2d JAG Detachments)

8-9 .Tul 65

Fifth U. S. Army ANACDUTRA Fort Sheridan, Illinois (Omaha host school; 8th JAG Detachment)

18-20 Aug 65

Sixth U. S. Army ANACDUTRA Presidio of San Francisco,

Calif.

6-7 Jul 65

(Boise host school; 5th and 6th JAG Detachments)

78

APPENDIX XIV

LECTURES GIVEN OUTSIDE TJAGSA BY STAFF AND

FACULTY MEMBERS-FISCAL YEAR 1966

Speaker, Location and Date

Captain George A. Pelletier, Jr. U. S. Army Engineer School 3 August 1965

Lt. Colonel James A. Hagan Fort Eustis, Virginia 26 August 1965; 28 February 1966

Captain George A. Pelletier, .If. Naval War College 25 August - 3 September 1965

Lt. Colonel Kenneth A. Howard U. S. Coast Guard Training Center 17 October 1965

Lt. Colonel James A. Hagan U. S. Coast Guard Training Center 18 October 1965

Captain Glenn M. Woodworth U. S. Coast Guard Training Center 19 October 1965

Colonel Toxey H. Sewell Industrial College of the Armed

Forces 25 October 1965

Lt. Colonel James R. Harrington Industrial College of the Armed

Forces 8, 15 November 1965; 17 January, 7

February 1966

Lt. Colonel Robert M. Thorniley Industrial College of the Armed

Forces 29 November 1965; 3,10, 31

January 1966

Topics

l:egal Aspects of Counter­Insurgency

Role of the Commander or Staff Officer in the Adminis­tration of Military Justice

Served as consultant on International Law and par­ticipated in Seminar on International Law

Criminal Law

Evidence

Procedure

Jurisprudence

General Principles, Modifi­cations, Disputes

A ppropridtions, Policies, Termination for Default

79

Speaker, Location and Date

Colonel Toxey H. Sewell University of North Carolina 6 ])ecenaber 1965

Lt. Colonel J anaes L. t::.:umming Industrial College of the Armed

Forces 13, 20 ])ecember 1965; 20, 24

January 1966

Captain Lawrence A. Monaco, Jr. U. S. Arnay Element, School of

Music 13 - 15 ])ecenaber 1965

Captain John R. Thornock U. S. Arnay Element, School of

Music 13 - 15 ])ecember 1965

Lt. Colonel J anaes L. Cumming University of Gerogia 3 February 1966

Lt. Colonel ])wan V. Kerig ])uke University 18 - 19 February 1966

Lt. Colonel ])wan V. Kerig Industrial College of the Armed

Forces 21, 28 February; 7, 14, 21, 28

March; 11 April 1966

Lt. Colonel ])wan V. Kerig Aberdeen Proving Ground 23 February 1966

Lt. Colonel Robert ]). Peckham Industrial College of the Armed

Forces 4 April 1966

Captain George A. Pelletier, Jr. Industrial College of the Armed

Forces 18 April 1966

80

Topics

Soviet Law

Methods, Types of Con­tracts, Termination for Con­venzence

Military Justice

Military Justice

Types of Government C(J1l­tracts

Participated in conference on International Law of Propa­ganda

Nature and Sources of Inter­national Law, Reception of International Law into National Law, States and Governments and Recog­nition, International Agree­ments, Jurisdiction, State Re­sponsibility

Legal Asp-ects of Counter­insurgency

Status of Forces Agreements

War Law

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