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General Lucius DuB. Clay will discuss the running of occupied Germany in a series of three Godkin lectures beginning Monday, March 27.
Clay, who resigned as Commander of the United States Forces in Germany last May, will speak on March 27, 28, and 29 in New Lecture Hall on the "Administration of Germany as a Part of the Fight for Freedom."
Clay will speak at the University for the second time since he returned to the United States. He made an address at alumni exercises in Tercentenary Theatre on June 23 after receiving an honorary Doctor of Laws degree at Commencement.
Clay was deputy to General Dwight D. Eisenhower during the war. He rose to the post of Commander of the U.S. Forces in Germany in 1947 following a period as Deputy Military Governor of the American zone of that country.
Established in 1903, the lectures present discussions "upon the essentials of free government and the duties of the citizen."
The lectures honor the memory of Edwin L. Godkin, editor of the New York Evening Post and of the Nation and a leading post-Civil War writer.
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