Class Notes
December 2002
by Tony Lee
The September Mini-Reunion in Santa
Fe was a tremendous success. Read Tyler Smith's summary.
Thanks Tyler. I hope all classmates will seriously consider attending the
next Mini in London from June 11 through 15, 2003. Plan to arrive early and
stay late, and combine our class outing with a wonderful vacation in the UK.
Chris Getman and his reunion committee will be meeting in New Haven on
February 8, 2003 at 11 am to plan for our 40th in 2004. This is the most
important planning session for our reunion, and everyone is invited to
participate. Following the planning meeting we'll hear from our summer
fellow, Abhi Sud, followed by cocktails, dinner and the Yale-Clarkson hockey
game. Our next class golf outing will be on Friday, May 9, 2003.
Russell Sunshine reports from Sri Lanka: "I'm working in Colombo as UNDP's
Special Advisor to the Sri Lankan Govt's peace-building process. As you may
have been reading in the media, after 20 years of devastating internal
conflict, February's ceasefire is holding and the peace talks in Thailand
are off to a highly encouraging start.
"UNDP's chief contribution to this momentum is called the Invest-in-Peace
Initiative. We're helping to mobilize private-sector resources ― domestic,
diaspora, and foreign ― to secure the peace and to finance post-conflict
reconstruction. We just facilitated the Prime Minister's trip to NYC that
put him in touch with key international players. Now the hard work begins.
"The Afghanistan recovery is discouragingly slow, in large measure, I
believe, because the US Gov't cynically declines to let an international
security force extend the central government's sphere of control outside
Kabul, in large measure in order to protect Al Qaeda-chasing warlords from
accountability to that same central government. It was especially grim to
hear on CNN last night that Afghanistan's opium production has jumped
10-fold in the past year. So much for crop substitution!"
Russell also expressed great concern over an American preemptive strike and
predicted it would destabilize the already precarious Middle East and
Central Asian regions for 20 terrible years.
I received a sad note from Samuel Albom's sister notifying me that he had
died on June 29, 2002. No other details were provided. Lowell Lee Stokes died in Louisville, KY on September 5, 2002. His obituary is on our class web site.
Our condolences to both families.