Class Notes
October 2002
by Tony Lee
Hundreds of our classmates are
dedicating thousands of hours to non-profit, educational and community
projects here and abroad. As our business and professional careers wind
down, I expect our volunteer efforts will become a bigger part of our lives.
Be sure to send me information about your experiences so I can share them
with classmates.
You may recall in the April, 2002 notes that Paul Manchester was working
with a local community organization to keep Colonel Sanders out of Four
Corners, Virginia. I just got an update from Paul that they won. They raised
$12,000 in petition drives and bake sales for a legal fight and created a
web site, aptly named
www.geocities.com/nochicken2002. You can read all about it on our class web site. Paul also wrote to say he had been elected to the Board of the
Yale Club of Washington: "Before you congratulate me, I should point out
that there were five candidates for five positions, thus it was not exactly
a highly contested election. The main responsibility of Board Members is to
organize at
least two events for the upcoming year. I didn't have to go outside the
Class of '64 to do this, as Bob Kaiser and Gus Speth have both agreed to
address the Club."
Gus Speth was recently awarded the international environmental Blue Planet Prize
by the Tokyo-based Asahi Glass Foundation. The prestigious prize has been
awarded annually since 1992 to two individuals or organizations that have
made major contributions to global environmental conservation. Dean Speth
received the prize for "a lifetime of creative and visionary leadership in
the search for science-based solutions to global environmental problems and
for pioneering efforts to bring these issues, including global climate
change, to broad international attention."
I exchanged a series of nice emails with Tom Roderick. He has worked for 20
years with Educators for Social Responsibility: "Founded in 1982 by
educators concerned about the danger of nuclear war, ESR Metro continues to
educate young people about nuclear weapons and other controversial issues.
We run ongoing programs in conflict resolution and intercultural
understanding in more than a hundred New York City public schools each year.
And we've been helping schools address needs arising from the September 11
attacks. I've been executive director since 1983.
"My book, A School of Our Own: Parents Power and Community at the East
Harlem Block Schools, was published in November 2001. The book provides an
action portrait of these path-breaking community schools, and shows why they
had such a strong positive impact on people's lives. My wife Maxine Phillips
is managing editor of Dissent Magazine. Our daughters Emma Rose (17) and
Anne Marie (14) attend public schools in New York City."
From Jon Auerbach: "Jim Leitner '75 and I have established some interesting
Internships for undergraduates, and I pass this along in the event you are
desperate for news." [I am.] The accompanying press release announced a Yale
College internship program starting this year which will take students
across the Atlantic Ocean to the stock exchanges and brokerage communities
of Bulgaria, Croatia, Greece, Hungary and Turkey where they will study how
capital markets function abroad. Five students have been selected for the
initial 2002 program. The objective is to give qualified Yale College
students a unique experience learning about the rapidly evolving
international markets, and for this knowledge to be of great value to them
and the organizations they work for after graduation. Jon adds: "This is our
version of the Peace Corps, as capitalism is the 21st Century tool for
leveling the global playing fields." There was a high degree of competition
for the five places available this year.
Ed Gaffney writes from Albuquerque: "My wife Susy completed her M Div at
Brite Divinity School at TCU, and is ordained by the United Church of
Christ. After spending the summer as chaplain at a cub scout camp in Oregon,
she is now a resident chaplain at a hospital in Albuquerque. I am still at
Los Alamos and doing numerical modeling of phenomena associated with a
possible volcanic intrusion into a nuclear storage repository."
Bob Charles' daughter Lisa and her husband each skippered a boat in the
Volvo Around the World Sailing Race. They passed through Baltimore-Annapolis
in April.
Margie and I spent 10 glorious days camping and hiking in Glacier National
Park, Montana this summer with 10 friends. The park is spectacular, and we
saw many flowers and animals. If you enjoy the outdoors and hiking, put it
on your list. We're creating a web site of our best photos. If you want to
see them, drop me a line. And while you're at it, send me some news.