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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 November 2022
I am deeply touched by your invitation to receive the Pi Sigma Alpha Award. To be added to a list that includes Ernest Giffith, Francis Wilcox and Scotty Campbell is, of course, a great honor.
I assume that one of the reasons I have been singled out for this award is because I am on that short list of surviving political scientists in a city dominated at the highest levels by lawyers, economists and engineers.
Recently, I read Bruce Adams' article in the November/December 1979 Public Administration Review titled, “The Limitations of Muddling Through: Does Anyone in Washington Really Think Anymore?” In the article, Adams suggests that the political decision-making process is characterized by individuals who are “running themselves ragged on a series of marginal, short-run issues and problems.”
The following remarks were presented at the annual spring conference of the National Capital Area Political Science Association where Dr. Shalala, Assistant Secretary for Policy Development, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, and President-Elect of Hunter College, was presented the Association's 1980 Pi Sigma Alpha Award for outstanding contributions to the interface between political science and public service.