NCAA News Archive - 2001

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National Security Advisor to deliver keynote speech


Dec 17, 2001 3:48:47 PM


The NCAA News

National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice will deliver the keynote speech at the 2002 NCAA Convention in Indianapolis.

Rice will address Convention delegates during the opening business session Sunday, January 13.

Rice will be the first keynote speaker at an NCAA Convention since Olympian Anita DeFrantz in 1999. Donna Shalala, former U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services, delivered the keynote address at the 1998 Convention.

"I am so pleased and honored that Condoleezza Rice has agreed to be our keynote speaker," said NCAA President Cedric W. Dempsey. "Given the effects that the September 11 tragedies have had on all of us and on our member institutions, it is more than appropriate for our National Security Advisor to address the NCAA delegation.

"I'm sure her remarks will help strengthen the NCAA's resolve to move past the tragedies and get back to the business of doing what's right for student-athletes."

Rice is familiar with the campus setting, having completed a six-year tenure in 1999 as Stanford University's provost, during which she was the institution's chief budget and academic officer. As provost, she was responsible for a $1.5 billion annual budget and the academic program involving 1,400 faculty members and 14,000 students.

She became the Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs, commonly referred to as the National Security Advisor, on January 22, 2001.

Rice is a professor-on-leave of political science at Stanford, and she has been a faculty member there since 1981. During that time she has won two of the highest teaching honors -- the 1984 Walter J. Gores Award for Excellence in Teaching and the 1993 School of Humanities and Sciences Dean's Award for Distinguished Teaching.

At Stanford, she was a member of the Center for International Security and Arms Control, a Senior Fellow of the Institute for International Studies, and a Fellow (by courtesy) of the Hoover Institution. Her books include Germany Unified and Europe Transformed (1995) with Philip Zelikow; The Gorbachev Era (1986) with Alexander Dallin; and Uncertain Allegiance: The Soviet Union and the Czechoslovak Army (1984). She also has written numerous articles on Soviet and East European foreign and defense policy, and has addressed audiences in settings ranging from the U.S. Ambassador's Residence in Moscow to the Commonwealth Club to the 1992 and 2000 Republican National Conventions.

From 1989 through March 1991, the period of German reunification and the final days of the Soviet Union, she served in the first Bush Administration as Director and then Senior Director of Soviet and East European Affairs in the National Security Council, and a Special Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs. In 1986, while an international affairs fellow of the Council on Foreign Relations, she served as Special Assistant to the Director of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. In 1997, she served on the Federal Advisory Committee on Gender -- Integrated Training in the Military.

Rice was a member of the boards of directors for the Chevron Corporation, the Charles Schwab Corporation, the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, the University of Notre Dame, the International Advisory Council of J.P. Morgan and the San Francisco Symphony Board of Governors. She was a Founding Board member of the Center for a New Generation, an educational support fund for schools in East Palo Alto and East Menlo Park, California, and was vice-president of the Boys and Girls Club of the Peninsula. In addition, her past board service has encompassed such organizations as Transamerica Corporation, Hewlett Packard, the Carnegie Corporation, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, The Rand Corporation, the National Council for Soviet and East European Studies, the Mid-Peninsula Urban Coalition and KQED, public broadcasting for San Francisco.

A Birmingham, Alabama, native, Rice earned her bachelor's degree in political science from the University of Denver in 1974; her master's from the University of Notre Dame in 1975; and her Ph.D. from the Graduate School of International Studies at Denver in 1981. She is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and has been awarded honorary doctorates from Morehouse College in 1991, the University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, in 1994, and Notre Dame in 1995.


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