Saturday, January 10, 2004

2:30–4:30 p.m.

OFF-SITE SESSION
Armed Forces Interactions with American Science and Technology: From the Revolution to the Twenty-first Century

125.Scientific Influences on the Military
National Museum of American History, Carmichael Auditorium
13th and Constitution N.W., on the National Mall

Chair: John S. Brown, Center of Military History
Papers:

Testing Democracy: First World War I.Q. Testing from Measuring the Military to Selecting the Student Body
Mark Soderstrom, University of Minnesota

The Recovery and Identification of Korean War Dead: Graves Registration and Forensic Anthropology
Bradley Lynn Coleman, Department of State

Catching Spies with Pencils, Paper, and Advanced Technology
Gary A. Trogden, Center of Military History

The Post-Cold War Emergence of Defense Simulation in the 1990s
Sharon Ghamari-Tabrizi, Independent Scholar

Comment: The Audience
Directions: Take Metro Red Line from Woodley Park Station to Metro Center (4 stops). Go to lower platform and take Blue or Orange Line (toward Addison Road or New Carrollton) one stop to Federal Triangle. Exit station. At top of escalator, turn 180 degrees and walk to 12th Street. Turn right on 12th and walk half a block to Constitution. You will see the National Museum of American History across the street to your right. Cross Constitution, turn right, and walk one-half block to entrance. Carmichael Auditorium is immediately to your left after you pass through visitor screening. The guard can direct you.