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UW-Stevens
Point news release News Services, Stevens Point WI 54481-3897 Phone: 715-346-3046 Fax: 715-346-2042 E-mail: news@uwsp.edu www.uwsp.edu/news Back to News releases | News release archive | UWSP Home Released:
April 17, 2003 |
MEDIA ADVISORY: Laird Youth Leadership Day
|
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld will be unable
to attend Laird Youth Leadership Day at the University of
Wisconsin-Stevens Point on April 28. |
Who:
The keynote speaker will be Senator John Warner (pictured left) of Virginia
and chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee. (See
Biography) Senator Warner will be available to the media at
about 1:30 p.m., Heritage Room, University Center, following his keynote
address to high school participants.
When: Media representatives may meet with all of the session leaders from 8:15 to 9 a.m., Monday, April 28, in Room 125A.
Schedule: The session leaders and schedule are as follows:
8 - 9 a.m. Registration, Concourse, Refreshments � LaFollette Lounge
9- 9:20 a.m. Opening Session, Alumni Room, Melvin Laird, John Laird, Thomas George
Art Leadership Award Presentation, Paul and Karen Yank
9:20- 9:50 a.m. Presentation, Alumni Room, Governor James Doyle, "National Security vs. Civil Liberty"
10 - 10:50 a.m. Workshops
- The Arts, John Milbauer, assistant professor of piano and accompanying, University of California-Chico
- Diversity and Family,
Gerard Randall, CEO of the Private Industry Council, member of the UW System Board of Regents- Education,
Ann Lydecker, chancellor, University of Wisconsin-River Falls- Environmental Leadership,
Michael Dombeck, Global Environmental Management Pioneer Professor and UW System Fellow of Global Conservation at UWSP, former chief of U.S. Forest Service- Ethics and Leadership,
Ray Nass, former president of Joerns Healthcare- Justice,
Shirley Abrahamson, Chief Justice, Wisconsin Supreme Court- Ann Walsh Bradley, Justice, Wisconsin Supreme Court
- Government Regulations
, Janet Steiger, former chair, Federal Trade Commission and U.S. Postal Rate Commission- The Media,
Erin Davisson, anchor, WFRV-TV in Green Bay, 1982 graduate of UWSP- Medicine
, Dr. Michael Curtis, Saint Michael�s Hospital/Ministry Health Care in Stevens Point, medical director for Portage County EMS System- Teamwork,
Bill Carollo, NFL official and executive director, NFL Referees, Association and IBM International Account Executive10:55 � 11:45 a.m. Workshops, morning schedule repeats
11:45 � 12:15 p.m. Luncheon, Melvin R. Laird Room
12:15 � 1:30 p.m. Keynote, Melvin R. Laird Room, Senator John W. Warner, chairman of Senate Armed Services Committee
1:40 � 2:30 p.m. Workshops, morning schedule repeats
2:30 p.m. Adjourn
JOHN WILLIAM WARNER, Republican from Virginia,
was first elected to the United States Senate on November 7, 1978. On November
5, 1996, he was reelected to serve his fourth six-year term.
A historical note: the Senate of the United
States was established by the Constitutional Convention in 1787 and convened for
the first time in 1789. Since that eventful day in history, Virginia, as one of
the first 13 states, has had a larger number of senators serving in comparison
to other states later admitted. A total of 51 persons have served the
Commonwealth in the U.S. Senate. Virginians, however, have re-elected only four
of the 50 to represent them for as many as four consecutive terms � Senator
Warner is grateful to be one!
Senator Warner has had the good fortune � the
privilege � to have been a public servant in seven different positions, with
cumulative service of over thirty five years. His first opportunity began during
World War II when in January, 1945, at age 17, he enlisted in the U.S. Navy. He
served on active duty until the summer of 1946 and was honorably discharged as
Petty Officer 3rd Class, electronic technician's mate.
He then attended Washington and Lee University,
from which his father graduated in 1903. He was awarded a B.S. degree in basic
engineering sciences in 1949. Warner then entered the University of Virginia Law
School.
At the outbreak of the Korean War in the summer
of 1950, Warner interrupted his studies and commenced a second tour of active
military duty, beginning in October 1950, this time in the United States Marine
Corps. A year later, October 1951, as a first lieutenant in communications, he
volunteered for duty in Korea and served as a ground officer with the First
Marine Air Wing. Following Korean active service he remained in the Marine Corps
Reserve for 10 years and was promoted to rank of Captain. Upon his return from
Korea, Senator Warner finished his law degree at the University of Virginia.
The Senator has always acknowledged his
gratefulness for the opportunity to serve with, and work on behalf of, the men
and women of the armed forces. He owes his college and law education to a
grateful nation that provided G.I. Bill opportunities to millions of veterans
during that period.
In 1953, he was appointed a law clerk to the
late Chief Judge E. Barrett Prettyman of the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, an
opportunity sought by many of his class as a challenging way to start their
legal careers. In 1956, he was appointed an assistant U.S. attorney and served
four years in the trial and appellate divisions. He entered private law practice
in 1960.
Senator Warner's next public service began as
the U.S. Senate confirmed his presidential appointment to be Under Secretary of
Navy in February 1969. During a critical, intense period of the war in Vietnam,
he served in the Department of Defense for over 5 years, completing his service
as the Secretary of Navy in 1974.
During that period he also had special
assignments in the field of diplomacy. Two being the representative for the
Secretary of Defense to the Law of the Sea Talks in Geneva (1969-73), and
subsequently; later he was principal negotiator and signatory for the United
States of the "Incidents at Sea Executive Agreement" between the
United States and the former Soviet Union (1970-72). This Executive Agreement is
still in effect today and has been used as a model for similar agreements
between other nations covering the operational directives for naval ships and
aircraft in international sea lanes throughout the world.
Following his work in the Navy Department,
Senator Warner was confirmed by the U.S. Senate to a position representing the
Executive Branch in a wide range of bicentennial programs and activities in the
50 states during 1974-76.
Senator Warner's public service continued with
his election in 1978 to the U.S. Senate. In 1998, he was selected as Chairman,
Senate Armed Services Committee, a post he held for 2 � years. He is now the
top ranking minority member of the committee. He is also the second most senior
Republican member of the Environment and Public Works Committee and a member
(former Chairman) of the Senate Committee on Rules and Administration.
For eight years, 1987-1995, Senator Warner
served on the Senate Intelligence Committee. The last two years, from 1993 to
1995, he was Vice Chairman of the Committee.
He was a trustee, from 1967 to 1972, of the
Protestant Episcopal Cathedral of Mount St. Albans in Washington, D.C., and from
1968 to 1979 he was a member of the Board of Trustees of Washington and Lee
University. Senator Warner is a member of the Virginia chapter of Veterans of
Foreign Wars, and the American Legion.
Senator Warner was born February 18, 1927. He is
the grandson of John W. and Mary Tinsley Warner of Amherst County, Virginia, and
the son of the late Martha Budd Warner and the late Dr. John W. Warner, a
physician and surgeon.
Senator Warner lives in Alexandria, Virginia and
has three grown children and two grandchildren.
Senator John Warner � Biography http://warner.senate.gov/text/abouttxt.htm
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