Nomination of Melissa Foelsch Wells To Be United States
Ambassador to Mozambique
October 7, 1986
The
President today announced his intention to nominate Melissa Foelsch
Wells, of New York, a career member of the
Senior Foreign Service, Class of Minister-Counselor, as Ambassador to the
People's Republic of Mozambique. She succeeds Peter Jon
de Vos.
Mrs.
Wells entered the Foreign Service in 1958 after working in various secretarial
positions, including secretary to the Bolivian Ambassador in Washington, DC. From 1958 to 1961, she
was an analyst in the Bureau of Intelligence and Research in the Department.
She was assigned in 1961 as consular/visa officer at the U.S. Embassy in
Port-of-Spain, Trinidad. Following that assignment, in 1964 - 1966 she
was economic officer at the U.S. Mission to the Organization for Economic
Cooperation and Development in Paris, France. From 1966 to 1970, she
served as economic officer in London, England, and then returned to Washington in 1971 as personnel
officer for the Board of Examiners. She became Chief of the Business Relations
Branch in the Bureau of Economic Affairs, 1972 - 1973. In 1973 she was detailed
to the Department of Commerce as Deputy Director for Major Export Projects. In
1975 she was assigned as commercial counselor at the U.S. Embassy in Brasilia, Brazil, and served there until
she was appointed in 1976 as the U.S. Ambassador to Guinea-Bissau and Cape Verde. In June of 1977 she
was appointed the United States Representative on the Economic and Social
Council of the United Nations with the rank of Ambassador. In 1979 Mrs. Wells
left the Foreign Service to become Resident Representative of the United
Nations Development Program in Uganda and Special
Representative to the United Nations Secretary General for relief operations in
Uganda. From 1982 to 1986, she
was Director, IMPACT Program, in Geneva, Switzerland.
Mrs.
Wells graduated from Georgetown University (B.S.F.S., 1956). She
is married, has two children, and resides in New York City. Mrs. Wells was born November
18, 1932,
in Tallinn, Estonia.
Accordance of the
Personal Rank of Ambassador to Robert H. Frowick
While Serving as Deputy Chief of the United States Delegation to the Conference
on Security and Cooperation in Europe
October 7, 1986
The
President today accorded the personal rank of Ambassador to Robert H. Frowick, of Texas, a career member of the
Senior Foreign Service, Class of Minister-Counselor, in his capacity as Deputy
Chief of the United States delegation to the
Vienna Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe Follow-up Meeting.
Mr.
Frowick began his career as an intelligence analyst
at the Department of Defense, 1957 - 1958. He joined the Foreign Service and
was assigned as consular/political officer at the American consulate in Montreal, 1960 - 1962. Mr. Frowick returned to the Department in 1962 for a year, and
from 1963 to 1964, he took Romanian language training at the Foreign Service
Institute. He was assigned as political officer in Bucharest, Romania, 1964 - 1966. From Romania, he was detailed to the
advanced academic degree program at Yale University for a year. In 1967 he
served as an intelligence research specialist in the Bureau of Intelligence and
Research. From 1969 to 1973, he was political-military affairs officer, U.S. Embassy
in Paris, and returned in 1973 -
1975 as political-military affairs officer in the Bureau of European Affairs.
Mr. Frowick was a visiting fellow at Stanford University, 1975 - 1976. He became
deputy chief of mission, U.S. Embassy in Prague, Czechoslovakia, in 1976, to be
followed as political counselor at the U.S. Embassy in Rome, 1979 - 1982. Since
1982 he has been political counselor at the United States Mission to NATO in Brussels, Belgium.
Mr.
Frowick graduated from Indiana University (A.B., 1953; M.A.,
1957) and Yale University (M.A., 1959). He served
in the United States Air Force, 1953 - 1956. Mr. Frowick's
foreign languages are French, Romanian, and Italian. He is married to the
former Ann Louise Powell, and they have six children. Mr. Frowick
was born December 12, 1929, in Des Moines, IA.
Accordance of the
Personal Rank of Ambassador to Samuel G. Wise, Jr., While Serving as Deputy
Chief of the United States Delegation to the Conference on Security and
Cooperation in Europe
October 7, 1986
The
President today accorded the personal rank of Ambassador to Samuel G. Wise,
Jr., of Maryland, in his capacity as
Deputy Chief of the United States delegation to the
Vienna Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe Follow-up Meeting.
Mr.
Wise began his career in the Foreign Service in 1955. He served as vice consul
in Palermo, Italy; Noumea, New Caledonia, and Oberammergau, Germany, 1955 - 1959. Mr. Wise
returned to the State Department for a year before his assignment as consul and
second secretary in Moscow. He served there until
1963, when he became consul in Trieste. Mr. Wise served in
various assignments in the State Department in Washington from 1966 to 1970, when
he went to Prague, Czechoslovakia, as First Secretary. In
1971 he went to Rome, Italy, as First Secretary.
From 1974 to 1975, Mr. Wise attended the National War College at Fort McNair. He returned to the
Department in 1977, when he was assigned to the Commission on Security and
Cooperation in Europe, Washington, DC. Mr. Wise retired from
the Foreign Service in 1981 and since that time has been deputy staff director
of the Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe, United States
Congress.
Mr.
Wise graduated from the University of Virginia (B.A., 1951) and Columbia University (M.I.A., 1953). He is
married, has four children, and resides in Bethesda, MD. Mr. Wise was born May
11, 1928,
in Chicago, IL.
Nomination of Martin
Anderson To Be a Member of the General Advisory
Committee of the United
States Arms
Control and Disarmament Agency
October 7, 1986
The
President today announced his intention to nominate Martin Anderson to be a
member of the General Advisory Committee of the United States Arms Control and
Disarmament Agency. He would succeed Shirley N. Pettis.
He
joined the faculty of the Graduate School of Business at Columbia University, where he taught until
1968. During 1968 he was the director of research of the Nixon Presidential
campaign and later served as a Special Assistant to the President until March
1971, when he went to the Hoover Institution. Since 1971 Mr. Anderson has been
a senior fellow, Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace, Stanford University. He was on leave from
Stanford and served as an Assistant to the President for Policy Development,
the White House, 1981 - 1982; a senior adviser in the Reagan-Bush campaign of
1980; and in the office of the President-elect.
Mr.
Anderson graduated from Dartmouth College (A.B., 1957), Thayer
School of Engineering and Amos Tuck School of Business (M.S.), and
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Ph.D., 1962). Mr. Anderson is married
and currently resides in Portola Valley, CA. He was born on August
5, 1936,
in Lowell, MA.
Nomination of Lee H. Henkel, Jr., To Be a Member of the Federal Home Loan Bank
Board
October 7, 1986
The
President today announced his intention to nominate Lee H. Henkel,
Jr., to be a member of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board for a term expiring June
30, 1989.
He would succeed Donald I. Hovde.
Mr.
Henkel is currently a senior partner, Troutman,
Sanders, Lockerman & Ashmore
in Atlanta, GA. Previously,
he was chairman of the board of Sands Investments, Inc., in Myrtle Beach, SC; General Counsel of the
U.S. Treasury Department; and Chief Counsel for the Internal Revenue Service
from 1971 to 1973.
Mr.
Henkel graduated from Duke University (A.B., 1949 and J.D.,
1952). He is married, has three children, and resides in Atlanta, GA. Mr. Henkel was born September
16, 1928,
in Charleston, WV.
Appointment of Edwin L.
Harper as a Member of the Commission on Executive, Legislative, and Judicial
Salaries
October 7, 1986
The
President today announced his intention to appoint Edwin L. Harper to be a
member of the Commission on Executive, Legislative, and Judicial Salaries for
the period of the 1987 fiscal year of the Federal Government. He would succeed
Lloyd Norton Cutler.
Since
April of this year, Mr. Harper has been a senior vice president and chief
financial officer, Campbell Soup Co. in Camden, NJ. Previously, he was
executive vice president and director, Dallas Corp., 1983 - 1986; and Assistant
to the President, the White House, 1981 - 1983.
Mr.
Harper is married, has two children, and currently resides in Bryn Mawr, PA. He was born on November
13, 1941,
in Belleville, IL.