WorldAffairs 2004 Conference Program

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Welcome to the World Affairs Council’s 58th Conference at Asilomar. We look forward to joining you in this beautiful setting to learn from the speakers, to contribute to the discussion, and to enjoy the many social activities that are planned. This year’s conference will examine the United States’ role in the 21st century, a particularly apropos subject during this election year. At the outset, we will present contrasting viewpoints of U.S. foreign policy and their implications. We will also examine how the world views the United States and contrast that with how Americans see themselves. Topics to be discussed over the course of the weekend will include the United States’ involvement in nation building, the role of the United Nations, and our country’s role in the global economy. We will also consider the con- ditions under which Americans are willing to support the projection of American military power abroad. The conference will conclude on Sunday with a discussion of how to reach a consensus on the proper leadership role for the United States in the years and decades ahead. Over 100 students and teachers will be participating in this year’s conference, thanks to the gen- erosity of our donors, whom you will recognize by the red apples on their nametags. If you are a student or teacher, we urge you to introduce yourself to the donors and thank them for making your Asilomar experience possible. We are grateful to the volunteer efforts of so many of you serving as moderators for the plenaries and breakout sessions and as hosts for our numerous social events. Moreover, we thank our speakers for taking time off from their busy schedules to spend the weekend with us. This weekend represents a long tradition for the World Affairs Council and Asilomar. We are fortunate to have you with us to contribute to this legacy. Whether you are an expert leading a discussion of your life’s work or a student learning about U.S. foreign policy for the first time, we are glad to have you with us and look forward to meeting you over the course of the weekend. Sincerely yours, Tom Campbell Jane Wales Chairman of the Board President & CEO

Transcript of WorldAffairs 2004 Conference Program

Page 1: WorldAffairs 2004 Conference Program

Welcome to the World Affairs Council’s 58th Conference at Asilomar.We look forward to joining you in this beautiful setting to learn from the speakers, to contribute

to the discussion, and to enjoy the many social activities that are planned.

This year’s conference will examine the United States’ role in the 21st century, a particularly

apropos subject during this election year. At the outset, we will present contrasting viewpoints of

U.S. foreign policy and their implications. We will also examine how the world views the United

States and contrast that with how Americans see themselves. Topics to be discussed over the

course of the weekend will include the United States’ involvement in nation building, the role of

the United Nations, and our country’s role in the global economy. We will also consider the con-

ditions under which Americans are willing to support the projection of American military power

abroad. The conference will conclude on Sunday with a discussion of how to reach a consensus

on the proper leadership role for the United States in the years and decades ahead.

Over 100 students and teachers will be participating in this year’s conference, thanks to the gen-

erosity of our donors, whom you will recognize by the red apples on their nametags. If you are a

student or teacher, we urge you to introduce yourself to the donors and thank them for making

your Asilomar experience possible.

We are grateful to the volunteer efforts of so many of you serving as moderators for the plenaries

and breakout sessions and as hosts for our numerous social events. Moreover, we thank our

speakers for taking time off from their busy schedules to spend the weekend with us.

This weekend represents a long tradition for the World Affairs Council and Asilomar. We are

fortunate to have you with us to contribute to this legacy. Whether you are an expert leading a

discussion of your life’s work or a student learning about U.S. foreign policy for the first time,

we are glad to have you with us and look forward to meeting you over the course of the weekend.

Sincerely yours,

Tom Campbell Jane WalesChairman of the Board President & CEO

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AGENDA2

Friday, April 30

3:00 - 10:00 pm Registration Administration Building, Lobby

5:00 - 6:00 pm Welcome Reception Seascape

6:00 - 7:30 pm Dinner Crocker Dining Hall

7:00 - 8:00 pm Student Orientation Chapel

8:00 - 10:00 pm PLENARY I Merrill HallThe War on Terror and U.S. Foreign Policy Session Chair: J. Stapleton Roy, Conference Chair; Managing Director, Kissinger Associates; former U.S. Ambassador to China

Opening Remarks by Conference Chair

Dealing with the Present Crisis While Keeping our Eye on the FutureLeon Fuerth, former National Security Advisor to Vice President Al Gore

RemarksRobert Hunter, Senior Advisor, RAND Corporation, former U.S. Ambassador to NATO

The Bush Foreign Policy: A New Bipartisan Consensus?Martin Walker, Editor in Chief, United Press International

10:00 - 11:00 pm Reception Seascape

10:15 pm U.S. Response: A Simulation for Students Heather

Saturday, May 1

7:30 - 8:30 am Breakfast Crocker Dining HallStudent-Mentor Breakfast Seascape

9:00 - 10:40 am PLENARY 2 Merrill HallThe U.S. and its Allies: A World Coming Apart?Session Chair: Chuck Frankel, Third Sector Consultant

East Asia: Firm Alliances in TransitionThomas Hubbard, U.S. Ambassador to the Republic of Korea

Europe and America: Partnership, Amicable Separation, or Nasty Divorce?Charles Kupchan, Associate Professor, Georgetown University; Senior Fellow and Director of Europe Studies, Council on Foreign Relations

Rebuilding Europe: Between Old and NewElena Borislavova Poptodorova, Bulgarian Ambassador to the U.S.

The Continental Divide: Why Neoconservatives & the European Union Don’t See Eye to EyeFederico Rampini, West Coast Correspondent, La Repubblica

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10:40 - 11:00 am Break & Preparation for Breakout Sessions

11:00 - 12:30 pm BREAKOUT SESSIONS

SESSION 1: What Future for the U.N.? ChapelSession Chair: Ann Hanham, Managing Director, Burrill & Company

Future PeacekeepingJean Marie Guéhenno, Undersecretary-General for Peace Keeping Operations, United Nations

The Essential Role of the U.N. in Interventions and Nation BuildingRichard Sklar, Former U.S. Representative for United Nations Reform and Management and Special Representative of the President for Civilian Implementation in Bosnia

SESSION 2: NATO Expansion and European Integration ScrippsSession Chair: Ron Lehman, Director, Center for Global Security Research,Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

RemarksRobert Hunter, Senior Advisor RAND Corporation, Former U.S. Ambassador to NATO

E.U. Enlargement: Implications for Europe and the Atlantic AllianceCharles Kupchan, Associate Professor, Georgetown University; Senior Fellow and Director of Europe Studies, Council on Foreign Relations

European Integration and its Fault LinesFederico Rampini, West Coast Correspondent, La Repubblica

SESSION 3: American Nationalism and America Seen From Abroad Merrill HallSession Chair: David Lyon, President, Public Policy Institute of California

The Two Souls of American NationalismAnatol Lieven, Senior Associate, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

The Growing Divergences between the U.S. and the Rest of the WorldDan Yankelovich, Founder and Chairman, Viewpoint Learning Inc. and Public Agenda.

RemarksMuzamil Jaleel, Kashmir Bureau Chief, The India Express

SESSION 4: The U.S. in the Global Economy HeatherSession Chair: Terry Kramer, President & CEO, Q Comm International

The U.S. in the Global EconomyBarry Eichengreen, George C. Pardee & Helen N. Pardee Professor of Economics and Political Science, U.C. Berkeley

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12:30 - 2:00 pm Lunch Crocker Dining HallLunch for Scholarship Recipients and Donors Crocker Dining Hall

2:00 - 3:30 pm PLENARY 3The Challenge of Nation Building Merrill HallSession Chair: Gail Lapidus, Senior Fellow, Institute for International Studies, Stanford University

RemarksJean Marie Guéhenno, Undersecretary-General for Peace Keeping Operations, United Nations

America’s Role in Nation Building: Germany to Iraq James Dobbins, Director, International Security and Defense Policy Center, Rand Corporation

The Naked Truth About PeacekeepingRobert Perito, Special Advisor, Rule of Law Program, U.S. Institute of Peace

Iraq’s Critical Path to Democracy Building and Nation RebuildingLaith Kubba, President of the Iraq National Group, Senior Program Officer for the Middle East and North Africa, National Endowment for Democracy

3:30 - 3:45 pm Break

3:45 - 5:00 pm Breakout Sessions

SESSION 5: Civil-Military Relations in Foreign Policy Decision Making HeatherSession Chair: Wilford Welch, Co-founder, Cross Cultural Journeys

How to Maintain the Republic when the Military Understands the InformationRevolution Better than its Civilian Leadership?Leon Fuerth, former National Security Advisor to Vice President Al Gore

The Increasing Role of the Department of Defense in Foreign PolicyHarold Smith, Former Assistant Secretary of Defense

The Role of Senior Military Officers in Foreign Policy Decision MakingH.R. McMaster, Colonel, U.S. Army

SESSION 6: Preemptive Intervention and Nation Building: Iraq Merrill HallSession Chair: Janet Sanderson, Diplomat in Residence, U.C. Berkeley; former U.S. Ambassador to Algeria

Post-Conflict Stability and Reconstruction in IraqRobert Perito, Special Advisor, Rule of Law Program, U.S. Institute of Peace

A Critical Assessment of Post Saddam-IraqLaith Kubba, President of the Iraq National Group, Senior Program Officer for the Middle East and North Africa, National Endowment for Democracy

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SESSION 7: Limited Intervention and Nation Building: Afghanistan ChapelSession Chair: Richard Fuller, Senior Director, Country Programs, The Asia Foundation

Progress & Prospects for Nation Building in AfghanistanJames Dobbins, Director, International Security and Defense Policy Center Rand Corporation

Reaping What We Sow: The Implications of Limited Commitment in AfghanistanWilliam Cole, Director, Governance, Law and Civil Society Programs, The Asia Foundation

SESSION 8: Humanitarian Intervention and Nation Building: Bosnia & Kosovo ScrippsSession Chair: Mary Falvey, Falvey Associates

State-Building—Do We Know What We are Doing?Martti Ahtisaari, Former President of Finland and Chairman of International Crisis Group & The Crisis Management Initiative

The Challenge of KosovoJean Marie Guéhenno, Undersecretary-General for Peace Keeping Operations, United Nations

From the Balkans to Iraq: Lessons Learned and IgnoredRichard Sklar, Former U.S. Representative for United Nations Reform and Management and Special Representative of the President for Civilian Implementation in Bosnia.

5:00 - 6:00 pm Sunset Reception Fred Farr, Kiln & Afterglow

6:00 - 7:00 pm Dinner with Speakers Crocker Dining Hall

7:00 - 8:00 pm Annual Meeting of the Membership Merrill Hall

8:00 - 10:00 pm PLENARY 4 Merrill HallAmerican Power, Fiscal Overreach and Public Opinion Session Chair: Tom Campbell, Dean, Haas School of Business, U.C. Berkeley

Deficits, the Dollar and U.S. Influence AbroadBarry Eichengreen, George C. Pardee & Helen N. Pardee Professor of Economics and Political Science, U.C. Berkeley

American Public Opinion: Which Way Is It Heading, and with What Consequences?Dan Yankelovich, Founder and Chairman, Viewpoint Learning Inc. and Public Agenda.

10:00 pm Reception SeascapeBonfire Meadow

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Sunday, May 2

7:30 - 9:00 am Breakfast Crocker Dining Hall

9:00 - 11:00 am PLENARY 5 Merrill HallHegemony, Empire or Leadership: America in the 21st CenturySession Chair: Jane Wales, President & CEO, World Affairs Council of Northern California

An Empire: Its Legitimacy and Responsibility Martti Ahtisaari, Former President of Finland; Chairman of International Crisis Group & The Crisis Management Initiative

America’s Grand Strategy in a World At RiskWalter Russell Mead, Henry A. Kissinger Senior Fellow in U.S. ForeignPolicy, Council on Foreign Relations

11:00 - 11:30 am Final Thoughts and Conclusion by Conference Chair J. Stapleton Roy, Managing Director, Kissinger Associates;former U.S. Ambassador to China

11:30 - 12:00 pm Checkout Administration Building

12:00 pm Boxed Lunch can be picked up Crocker Dining Hall

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The Saturday Luncheonfor Donors and Scholarship Recipients

This year, our Saturday Luncheon for Donors and

Scholarship Recipients will feature WorldQuest,

a trivia competition played at World Affairs Councils

across America. This game tests each team’s awareness

of global issues.

We ask that all donors to the Education Fund and all

Scholarship Recipients arrive at our reserved tables in

the Crocker Dining Hall by 12:30 PM—immediately

after the breakout sessions on Saturday.

You won’t want to miss this event!

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MARTTI AHTISAARIMartti Ahtisaari is Founder and Chairman of theCrisis Management Initiative, an independentnon-governmental organization aiming to respondto new security challenges. Mr. Ahtisaari servedas President of the Republic of Finland from1994to 2000. His presidential election followed a long

and distinguished career with the Foreign Ministry of Finland and theUnited Nations.

From 1992 to 1993, Mr. Ahtisaari was Chairman of the Bosnia-Herzegovina Working Group of the International Conference on theFormer Yugoslavia and served as Special Adviser to the Conference andas the UN Secretary-General’s Special Representative for formerYugoslavia. In 1999 he represented the European Union in three-waytalks with Russia and the United States to negotiate a resolution of theKosovo crisis. Together with Russia’s envoy, Viktor Chernomyrdin, hepresented the terms of the G-8 countries to Yugoslav President SlobodanMilosevic in June 1999 and helped end hostilities over Kosovo.

Upon leaving office as President, Mr. Ahtisaari took on the chairman-ship of the International Crisis Group and the co-chairmanship of theNew York-based EastWest Institute. He is a member of the joint advi-sors’ group for the Open Society Institute and the Soros Foundations.He also serves as Chairman of the Balkan Youth and ChildrenFoundation and the Global Commission of the International YouthFoundation, as well as of the International Governing Board of theWar-Torn Societies Project.

Other post-presidential activities have included chairing an independ-ent panel on the security and safety of UN personnel in Iraq, appoint-ment as UN Special Envoy for the Horn of Africa and personal envoyof the OSCE Chairman for Central Asia, inspection of the IRA’s armsdumps with fellow inspector Cyril Ramaphosa from South Africa, andthe drafting of a report on the human rights and political situation inAustria as a member of the EU’s group of “Three Wise Men”.

Mr. Ahtisaari has been awarded the Franklin D. Roosevelt FourFreedoms Award, the Hessen Peace Prize, the J. William FulbrightAward for International Understanding, the European PeacebuilderAward from the European Center for Common Ground, and theEuro-Atlantic Bridge Prize from the European Foundation for Culture.

TOM CAMPBELL*Tom Campbell became the thirteenth Dean of U.C. Berkeley’s Haas School of Business last year after a distinguished career asCongressman, State Senator, and Stanford LawProfessor. Prior to joining U.C. Berkeley, Tom Campbell had served as a Constitutional

Law Professor at Stanford University since 1983.

He was elected five times to represent the Silicon Valley before theU.S. Congress. Among his legislative achievements are authorship ofthe 1998 Food Bank Relief Act and the 2000 Peace CorpsReauthorization Act. He is also one of our nation’s foremost expertson the War Powers Act. Campbell was elected California State Senatorin 1993. During his two-year term, he earned ratings by theSacramento-based California Journal as the most ethical state senator,the best overall senator, and the state Senate’s best problem solver.

A native of Chicago, Campbell earned his Bachelor’s and Master’sdegrees in Economics from the University of Chicago, and a lawdegree from Harvard in 1976. He returned to the University ofChicago, earning a Ph.D. in Economics in 1980. His dissertation wasthe first quantitative measurement of discrimination against women infederal civil service employment.

WILLIAM COLEDr. Cole joined the Asia Foundation in 1996 andcurrently serves as Director for Governance, Law,and Civil Society. As Director, he is responsible forprogram strategy, design, and evaluation in the areasof democratic governance, the rule of law, humanrights, and conflict management. He participates

in overall strategic planning for the Foundation’s country and regional programs. His duties also include overseeing the Information andCommunications Technology Program. Prior to his current position, Dr. Cole established and served as the Director of the Foundation’s economic policy reform program in Indonesia.

Before joining the Asia Foundation, Dr. Cole worked for the U.S. Agency for International Development, where he served in a range of strategic planning, program design, and management capacities. Following work in Indonesia on both economic and governance programs, he moved to Washington, D.C. where he established and managed the Agency’s Governance and DemocracyProgram for the Near East Bureau. He then established a politicaleconomy strategic planning unit for the Bureau of Europe and the NIS.

Mr. Cole received a B.S. degree in Biology, Chemistry, and Mathematicsfrom Washington and Lee University in Virginia, and an M.A. andPh.D. in Anthropology from Washington University in St. Louis.

JAMES DOBBINSAmbassador Dobbins is currently the Director ofthe International Security and Defense Policy Centerat the Rand Corporation’s Washington office. Hehas held senior White House and State Departmentpositions under four presidents and has servedmost recently as the Bush Administration’s

Special Envoy for Afghanistan. He has previously served as a UnitedStates special envoy for Kosovo, Bosnia, Haiti, and Somalia. He hasheld a variety of State Department and White House posts, includingAssistant Secretary of State for Europe, Special Assistant to the Presidentfor the Western Hemisphere, Special Adviser to the President and Secretaryof State for the Balkans, and Ambassador to the European Community.Through the 1990’s, Ambassador Dobbins supervised peace operationsin Kosovo and Bosnia, managing American relief and reconstructionefforts in the Balkans valued in excess of $1 billion per annum.

BARRY EICHENGREENBarry Eichengreen is the George C. and HelenN. Pardee Professor of Economics and PoliticalScience at U.C. Berkeley, where he has taughtsince 1987. He is also Research Associate of theNational Bureau of Economic Research inCambridge and Research Fellow of the Centre for

Economic Policy Research in London. In 1997-98 he was Senior PolicyAdvisor at the International Monetary Fund. He is a Fellow of theAmerican Academy of Arts and Sciences and is Chair of the BellagioGroup of academics and economic officials.

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He has held Guggenheim and Fulbright Fellowships and has been a Fellow of the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences in Palo Alto and the Institute for Advanced Study in Berlin. Professor Eichengreen has published widely on the history and current operation of the international monetary and financial system. His books include Capital Flows and Crises, Financial Crisesand What to Do About Them, and Golden Fetters: The Gold Standard and the Great Depression, 1919-1939.

MARY FALVEY*Mary Falvey serves as a corporate director and as an advisor to and investor in early-stage technology companies. Ms. Falvey has worked as a management consultant, operating executive,entrepreneur, appointee to senior advisory positions in the federal government, and trustee

in the fields of education, health care, and the performing arts.

Mary Falvey has served on the boards of Golden Gate Bank, SanFrancisco Symphony, the World Affairs Council of NorthernCalifornia, Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra, and Cornell University.She has been a Trustee of the Social Security Trust Funds and a member of the National Commission on Social Security Reform (both of which were Presidential appointments). She has been a member of the Composite Committee of the United States MedicalLicensing Examination and has served as Chair of the Board ofTrustees of San Francisco Performances and the Board of Trustees of the Saint Francis Hospital Foundation.

Ms. Falvey is a graduate of Cornell University and the HarvardBusiness School. She lives in San Francisco.

CHUCK FRANKEL*Chuck Frankel has had extensive involvementwith the World Affairs Council since he joinedits Young Adult Study Group over 40 years ago.As a Peace Corps Country Director, corporatefoundation director, and tour operator-owner, he has lived and traveled extensively in Africa and

Asia. He has been an entrepreneur and a manager of, and consultantto private, public, and non-profit enterprises. He currently serves onthe Boards of the Smithsonian Museum of African Art, the GoldmanSchool of Public Policy, and the National Peace Corps Association, as well as the World Affairs Council of Northern California. He is honorary Consul General of Botswana.

LEON FUERTHLeon Fuerth’s career in government spanned thirty years, including positions in the StateDepartment, the House and Senate staff, and the White House. His most recent governmentservice was as Vice President Gore’s NationalSecurity Adviser for the eight years of the Clinton

Administration, where he served on the Principals’ Committee of theNational Security Council, alongside the Secretary of State, theSecretary of Defense, and the President’s own National SecurityAdviser. During Gore’s years in Congress and in the Senate, Fuerthalso advised him on national security issues. Before beginning hiswork on Capitol Hill in 1979, Fuerth spent eleven years as a ForeignService officer.

After retiring from government service at the conclusion of the ClintonAdministration, Fuerth served as the J.B. and Maurice C. ShapiroProfessor of International Affairs at The George WashingtonUniversity from 2001 to 2003. He currently serves as a ResearchProfessor of International Affairs at George Washington Universityand leads a program for the study of long-range policy analysis, entitled “Forward Engagement.”

RICHARD FULLER*Richard Fuller is Senior Director of CountryPrograms for The Asia Foundation, with primaryresponsibility for overseeing the planning, implementation, and evaluation of the Foundation’sprograms in Asia. In this capacity he providesprogrammatic and policy support to country pro-

grams and supervises and evaluates the performance of theFoundation’s resident representatives in the region. Dr. Fuller joinedthe Foundation in 1984 as a program officer. He has served asAssistant Representative and Representative in Bangladesh andRepresentative in the Philippines and Sri Lanka. Prior to his presentposition he served as Regional Director for South and Southeast Asia.

Dr. Fuller was appointed by the U.S. Ambassador to the Philippinesto serve on the Board of Directors of the Philippine-AmericanEducation Foundation, and has also served on the Board of Trusteesof The International School in Manila. Prior to joining theFoundation, he was a consultant for the Village Development andTraining Program in Bangladesh and was a teacher at the AmericanInternational School in Bangladesh.

Dr. Fuller was a UN-sanctioned observer of East Timor’s first nationalassembly elections in 2001 and a delegate to the International Conferenceon Reconstruction Assistance to Afghanistan in Japan in 2002.

Dr. Fuller earned his B.A. from the United States International Universityin San Diegos and his M.A. and Ph.D. from Florida State University.

JEAN MARIE GUÉHENNOJean Marie Guéhenno was appointed Under-Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations by Secretary-General Kofi Annan in October2000. Mr. Guéhenno came to the post with wide experience in the fields of diplomacy,defense, and international relations, as well as

in administration and management.

He spent a part of his career in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs ofFrance as a member of the Policy Planning staff and later its director,as the head of cultural affairs in the French Embassy in WashingtonD.C., and as Ambassador to the Western European Union. Mr.Guéhenno was a member of the European Commission that produceda White Paper on Defense in 1994. He was appointed Chairman ofthe Institut des Hautes Etudes de Défense National in 1998. He hasalso been a member of the UN Secretary-General’s Advisory Board onDisarmament Matters since 1999.

Mr. Guéhenno was educated at the Ecole Nationale d’Administration(ENA) in Paris. He became a member of the Court des Comptes, (theFrench Audit Office) after his graduation from ENA in 1976. He wasattached to the section of the Court that audits the Ministry of Defense

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until his appointment as the Under-Secretary-General for Peacekeepingoperations. Mr. Guéhenno is Chevalier de la Légion d’Honneur andCommandeur de l’Ordre du Mérite Allemand. He has contributednumerous articles on international affairs and is the author of The Endof the Nation-State.

ANN HANHAM*Ann Hanham is a Managing Director with Burrill& Company, a Life Sciences Merchant Bank basedin San Francisco. Prior to joining Burrill &Company, Dr. Hanham was a Co-founder andVice President of Clinical & Regulatory Affairs at InterMune Pharmaceuticals, and prior to that,

the Senior Director for Oncology Product Development at OtsukaPharmaceuticals and the Medical Director for Celtrix Pharmaceuticals.She has also worked for Becton Dickinson in both regulatory and clinical affairs for the monoclonal antibody program, and as a regulatory toxicologist with the Health Protection branch of Health and Welfare Canada.

Dr. Hanham holds a Ph.D. from the University of British Columbia,an M.Sc. from Simon Fraser University, and a B.Sc. from the Universityof Toronto. She was also Board Certified in Toxicology in 1986. She currently is a member of the Board of Directors of BioMimeticPharmaceuticals, Immunicon, Sention, and Veritas Medicine.

THOMAS HUBBARDThomas Hubbard has served as United StatesAmbassador to the Republic of Korea sinceSeptember 11, 2001. Ambassador Hubbard is acareer Foreign Service officer, having spent muchof his career in Asia, beginning in 1969 in Japan,where he served twice for a total of seven years.

In January 1975, Mr. Hubbard was posted to the U.S. Mission to the OECD in Paris, serving as Energy Advisor. In 1981, AmbassadorHubbard was seconded for one year as Legislative Assistant toCongressman Jim Leach of Iowa. Following this assignment, he directedthe Training and Liaison staff of the State Department’s Bureau ofPersonnel and then served as Philippines Desk Officer in 1984-85. He became Country Director for Japan in June 1985 and held thatposition until 1987.

Mr. Hubbard was appointed Deputy Chief of Mission to the U.S.Embassy in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, in 1987. In 1990, he was postedas Deputy Chief of Mission at the U.S. Embassy in Manila, Republicof the Philippines. From March 1993 to August 1996 he served asPrincipal Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and PacificAffairs in Washington. From July 1996 to August 2000, Mr. Hubbardserved concurrently as U.S. Ambassador to the Republic of thePhilippines and to the Republic of Palau. He resumed his post inWashington as Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian andPacific Affairs in August 2000, which he held until his appointment asAmbassador to the Republic of Korea in 2001.

ROBERT E. HUNTERAmbassador Robert Hunter is Senior Advisor atthe RAND Corporation’s Washington office. He is also President of the Atlantic TreatyAssociation, Chairman of the Council for aCommunity of Democracies, Associate at HarvardUniversity’s Belfer Center for Science and

International Affairs, and Senior International Consultant toLockheed-Martin Overseas Corporation.

From July 1993 to January 1998, Robert Hunter served as U.S.Ambassador to NATO, and also represented the U.S. to the WesternEuropean Union. He was a principal architect of the “New NATO” andled the North Atlantic Council in implementing decisions of the 1994and 1997 NATO Summits. These included implementing the Alliance’sexpansion and internal restructuring, managing NATO-Russia, NATO-Ukrainian, and NATO-WEU relations, and implementing thePartnership for Peace, of which Mr. Hunter was Co-author.

Prior to his appointment to NATO, Ambassador Hunter was VicePresident for International Politics and Director of European Studies atthe Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington,D.C. He has also served as Special Advisor on Lebanon to the Speakerof the House of Representatives and Lead Consultant to the NationalBipartisan Commission on Central America (the KissingerCommission). He was Co-founder of the Center for National Policyand an organizer of the National Endowment for Democracy.

In the 2000 presidential campaign, he was a Senior Foreign PolicyAdvisor to Vice President Al Gore, and he performed a similar role forGovernor Jimmy Carter in 1976, Vice President Walter Mondale from1981 to 1984, Majority Leader Richard Gephardt in 1988, andGovernor Bill Clinton from 1991 to 1992.

Throughout the Carter Administration, Ambassador Hunter served onthe National Security Council staff, as Director of West European Affairsfrom 1977 to 1979, and as Director of Middle East Affairs from 1979 to1981. He was also a member of the U.S. negotiating team for talks onthe West Bank and Gaza, directed the 1978 NATO Summit, and was aprincipal author of the Carter Doctrine for the Persian Gulf.

Among his many publications, Ambassador Hunter is author of TheEuropean Security and Defense Policy: NATO’s Companion or Competitor?,Security in Europe, Presidential Control of Foreign Policy, The SovietDilemma in the Middle East, and Organizing for National Security. Hehas also written for such journals as Foreign Policy, Foreign Affairs, andThe Washington Quarterly, and for numerous newspapers, includingthe Los Angeles Times, the New York Times, and the Washington Post.He regularly speaks in person and appears in television broadcasts inthe U.S. and abroad.

Ambassador Hunter holds a Ph.D. from the London School ofEconomics (LSE). He has taught at the LSE, Georgetown University,Johns Hopkins, Washington College, and George WashingtonUniversity.

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MUZAMIL JALEELMuzamil Jaleel is currently a Visiting Scholar inResidence at the U.C. Berkeley Graduate Schoolof Journalism. He has been covering Kashmir forover a decade and is currently the Chief ofBureau there for The Indian Express. He has alsowritten for The Guardian, The Observer and The

Times of London as well as for the Al Jazeera news website. He hasbeen awarded fellowships by the British Foreign Office, The Times ofIndia, and the Institute of Social Studies in The Hague. In 2003 Mr.Jaleel was awarded the Tolerance Prize by the International FederationJournalists and was also nominated for Federation’s Natali Prize for hishuman rights reporting on the Kashmir conflict.

TERRY KRAMER*Terry Kramer is the President and CEO of Q Comm International, a publicly tradedprovider of electronic transaction processing anddistribution services for prepaid telecommunicationsproducts. Terry has over 15 years of telecommuni-cations experience with companies including

Vodafone/AirTouch where he worked in all major areas of the business, including as President of AirTouch Paging.

Prior To Vodafone AirTouch, Terry was an associate with Booz Allen& Hamilton where he focused on strategy development for consumerproducts and retail organizations. Terry was also a Product Managerand Marketing Research Manager for the Harris Corporation/FarinonDivision, which manufactures microwave communications equipment.

He also advises and sits on the boards of telecommunications companies.He is currently a Board member of FiberTower, a wireless backhaulservices startup located in San Francisco and 724 Solutions, a SantaBarbara based, publicly traded provider of wireless gateways foradvanced data services. He is also a member of the Advisory Board ofSonim Technologies, a provider of wireless push-to-talk applications.

Terry obtained his B.A. in Economics with honors from U.C.L.A. and his M.B.A. from Harvard University. He sits on the Board of theWorld Affairs Council of Northern California and is a member of theHarvard Business School Association of Northern California and theHarvard Club.

LAITH KUBBALaith Kubba was born and raised in Baghdad,Iraq. Over the past two years, he held close con-sultations with senior U.S. Government officialson Iraq. He participated in working groups of theDepartment of State’s Future of Iraq project.Currently, he is the Senior Program Officer for

the Middle East and North Africa at the National Endowment forDemocracy, overseeing projects on both Iraq and Afghanistan. From1991 to1999, he was the Director of International Relations at the Al Khoei Foundation in London.

For many years, Dr. Kubba was an active opponent to SaddamHussein and represented the Iraqi opposition in international andmedia fora. He coordinated the first Iraqi National Congress meetingin Vienna in 1992, was its spokesman, and served on its firstExecutive Committee. He also served on the boards of many Muslimand Arab organization in Britain and the USA, including the Iraq

Foundation and the Arab Organization for Human Rights. In 1994,Mr. Kubba founded the International Forum for Islamic Dialogue, anetwork of liberal Islamists. More recently he founded and headed theIraq National Group, a policy forum for post-war Iraq. Laith Kubbahas a Bachelors degree from the University of Baghdad and a Ph.D.from the University of Wales in the United Kingdom.

CHARLES KUPCHANCharles Kupchan is an Associate Professor ofInternational Relations in the School of ForeignService and Government Department atGeorgetown University. He is also a SeniorFellow and Director of Europe Studies at theCouncil on Foreign Relations. He was Director

for European Affairs on the National Security Council during the firstClinton administration. He is the author of The End of the AmericanEra, Power in Transition, Civic Engagement in the Atlantic Community,Atlantic Security, The Vulnerability of Empire, The Persian Gulf and theWest, and numerous articles on international and strategic affairs.

Dr. Kupchan received a B.A. from Harvard University and M.Phil.and D.Phil. degrees from Oxford University. He has served as a visitingscholar at Harvard University’s Center for International Affairs,Columbia University’s Institute for War and Peace Studies, theInternational Institute for Strategic Studies in London, and the Centred’Etudes et de Recherches Internationales in Paris.

GAIL LAPIDUS*Gail Lapidus is a specialist on Soviet and Post-Soviet society, politics, and foreign policy.Currently, she is a Senior Fellow at the StanfordInstitute for International Studies, where sheheads the project on ethnic conflict in the former Soviet Union. She is also Professor

Emeritus of Political Science at U.C. Berkeley and served as Chair of the Berkeley-Stanford Program in Soviet and Post-Soviet Studiesfrom 1985 until 1994.

Professor Lapidus has authored and edited a number of books onSoviet and post-Soviet affairs, including The New Russia: TroubledTransformation and Women in Soviet Society. A frequent visitor to theU.S.S.R. and its successor states, she is currently working on a bookon the impact of the Soviet legacy on patterns of conflict in the post-Soviet states. In the past few years, Professor Lapidus led two Counciltrips, one to Central Asia, and one to the Caucasus. She is a memberof the Council on Foreign Relations and several scholarly associationsand serves on the Board of the World Affairs Council of NorthernCalifornia. A graduate of Radcliffe College, she received her M.A. andPh.D. from Harvard University.

RONALD FRANK LEHMAN II*Ronald F. Lehman II is the Director of theCenter for Global Security Research at theDepartment of Energy’s Lawrence LivermoreNational Laboratory and Chairman of theGoverning Board of the International Scienceand Technology Center, an inter-governmental

organization headquartered in Moscow. He serves on the U.S.Department of Defense Threat Reduction Advisory Committee. Ambassador Lehman had been Director of the U.S. Arms Controland Disarmament Agency from 1989 to 1993. Previously, he served

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in the Defense Department as Assistant Secretary for InternationalSecurity Policy, in the State Department as U.S. Chief Negotiator onStrategic Offensive Arms, and in the White House as Deputy Assistantto the President for National Security Affairs. He has also served onthe National Security Council staff as a Senior Director, in the Pentagonas Deputy Assistant Secretary, on the Senior Professional Staff of the U.S.Senate Armed Services Committee, and as a district adviser in Vietnamcommissioned in the United States Army Military Intelligence Branch.

In 1995, Ambassador Lehman was appointed to the five-memberPresident’s Advisory Board on Arms Proliferation Policy. Since then,he has served on the Defense Science Board’s Task Forces onGlobalization and Security, on Tritium, and on Defense againstBiological Weapons. He has also served on the National ResearchCouncil’s Committee on Science, Technology, and Health Aspects ofthe Foreign Policy Agenda of the United States and on its Committeeon Alternative Technologies to Replace Anti-Personnel Landmines.

For the Department of Energy he was the U.S.-Snezhinsk WorkingGroup Co-chair for the Joint Russian-American Steering Committee onthe Implementation of the Agreement signed between the Governmentsof the Russian Federation and the United States of America onImplementation of the Nuclear Cities Initiative. Ron was temporarilydetailed to the Administrator of the National Nuclear SecurityAdministration as counter terrorism coordinator after the September 11thattacks. He was Head of the U.S. Delegations to the Fourth ReviewConference of the Non-Proliferation Treaty and the Third ReviewConference of the Biological Weapons Convention, was Deputy Headof Delegation for the Paris signing of the Chemical WeaponsConvention, and was four times a U.S. Representative to the United Nations First Committee.

While at the Defense Department, he was Chairman of the NATOHigh Level Group on NATO Nuclear Forces Policy and was a memberof the Defense Resources Board, the Defense Acquisition Board, andthe Executive Committee of the On-Site Inspection Agency. He alsoserved as an Executive Branch Commissioner-Observer on theCommission on Security and Cooperation in Europe. He is a Trusteeof the World Affairs Council of Northern California.

ANATOL LIEVENA journalist, writer, and historian, Anatol Lievenwrites on a range of security and internationalaffairs issues. He previously was editor of StrategicComments, published by the InternationalInstitute for Strategic Studies in London. There,he also specialized in the former Soviet Union and

in aspects of contemporary warfare. From 1996 to 1997, he was a visitingsenior fellow at the U.S. Institute of Peace. Previously he was a corre-spondent for the Financial Times in Eastern Europe, based in Budapest.

Lieven’s journalism career includes work as a correspondent for TheTimes of London in the former Soviet Union from 1990 to 1996. Priorto 1990, Lieven was correspondent for The Times in Pakistan andAfghanistan. He also worked as a freelance journalist in India. In theautumn and winter of 1989, he covered the revolutions inCzechoslovakia and Romania for The Times. He is the author ofAmbivalent Neighbors: The EU, NATO and the Price of Membership,edited with Dmitri Trenin, Ukraine and Russia: A Fraternal Rivalry, and Chechnya: Tombstone of Russian Power. He is currently working on The Demon in the Cellar: An Anatomy of American Nationalism, duein the fall of 2004.

DAVID LYON*David Lyon is President and CEO of the PublicPolicy Institute of California (PPIC). PPIC was co-founded by William R. Hewlett, Roger W.Heyns, and Arjay Miller to carry out objectiveresearch on public policy issues facing the peopleof California. Prior to assuming leadership of

PPIC in 1994, Dr. Lyon was a Vice President and Corporate Officer at RAND. Dr. Lyon has worked on public policy issues for thirty-fiveyears and holds a B.S. in Urban Planning from Michigan StateUniversity and an M.C.P. and Ph.D. in City and Regional Planningfrom U.C. Berkeley.

Dr. Lyon is Co-editor of the book Urban America: Policy Choices for Los Angeles and the Nation and author of numerous essays, including“Representation Without Taxation: Proposition 13 and Local Governmentin California,” “California Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow: Learningfrom Eastcoastia,” and “From Home Rule to Fiscal Rule: Taking aMeasure of Local Government Finance in California.”

Dr. Lyon is a Trustee of the World Affairs Council of NorthernCalifornia, a board member of the Japan Society of NorthernCalifornia, and a member of the advisory council of the College ofEnvironmental Design at U.C. Berkeley. He sits on the advisory boardof the Asia Society Northern California and the advisory council ofCalifornia Connected. He is a member of the Pacific Council onInternational Policy and the Council on Foreign Relations.

H.R. MCMASTERColonel H.R. McMaster was commissioned inthe United States Army upon graduation fromthe United States Military Academy in 1984. Hismilitary education includes the Airborne andRanger Schools, the Armor Officer Basic andAdvanced Courses, the Cavalry Leader’s Course,

the U.S. Army Combined Armed Services Staff School, the U.S. ArmyCommand and General Staff College and a U.S. Army War Collegefellowship. He has served in numerous command and staff positionsin Armor and Cavalry units in the U.S. and Germany. He command-ed Eagle Troop, Second Armored Cavalry Regiment in Bamberg,Germany and Southwest Asia during Operations Desert Shield, DesertStorm, and the occupation of Southern Iraq. He commanded the 1stSquadron, 4th Cavalry in Schweinfurt, Germany from October 1999until June of 2002. In June 2004 he assumes command of the ThirdArmored Cavalry Regiment at Fort Carson, Colorado.

McMaster holds a Ph.D. in History from the University of NorthCarolina at Chapel Hill. He taught History at the United StatesMilitary Academy from 1994 to 1996. He was a National SecurityAffairs Fellow at the Hoover Institution from 2002 to May 2003 andremains a Research Fellow at Hoover. Since May 2003 he has servedas Director of the Commander’s Advisory Group at U.S. CentralCommand. His award-winning book, Dereliction of Duty: LyndonJohnson, Robert McNamara, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and the Lies thatLed to Vietnam, was published in May 1997. He has published numer-ous articles on historical and national security affairs topics in editedvolumes, newspapers, magazines, and professional journals. His military decorations include the Silver Star Medal.

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WALTER RUSSELL MEADWalter Russell Mead, Henry A. Kissinger SeniorFellow for U.S. Foreign Policy at the Council onForeign Relations, is one of the country’s leadingstudents of American foreign policy. His last book,Special Providence: American Foreign Policy and How ItChanged the World was widely hailed by reviewers,

historians, and diplomats as an important study that will change theway Americans and others think about American foreign policy.Among several honors and prizes, Special Providence received the LionelGelber Award (which The Economist calls “the world’s most importantprize for non-fiction”) for the best book in English on internationalrelations in 2002. The Italian translation won the Premio Acqui Storiaawarded to the most important historical book published in Italian.

Mead’s most recent book, Power, Terror, Peace and War: America’sGrand Strategy in a World at Risk, was published in April of 2004, andin January 2005 Alfred A. Knopf will publish Is God On Our Side?

ROBERT PERITORobert Perito is a Special Advisor in the Rule ofLaw Program at the U.S. Institute of Peace wherehe was previously a Senior Fellow. He is also avisiting lecturer at Princeton University and holdsfaculty appointments at American and GeorgeMason Universities. Before joining the Institute,

he served as Deputy Director of the International Criminal InvestigativeTraining Assistance Program at the U.S. Department of Justice. In thatrole he was responsible for providing policy guidance and program direc-tion for peacekeeping operations in Bosnia, East Timor, and Kosovoand in post-conflict environments in Albania, Croatia, and Macedonia.

Earlier, Perito served for more than 25 years as a Foreign Service officerwith the U.S. Department of State, retiring with the rank of Minister-Counselor. His career included service as Deputy Executive Secretary ofthe National Security Council from 1988-89. He received a PresidentialMeritorious Service Award in 1990 for his leadership of the U.S. delega-tion to the Angola peace talks. Before joining the Foreign Service, Peritoserved as a Rural Development Officer with the Peace Corps in Nigeria.

He holds an M.A. in Peace Operations Policy from George MasonUniversity. He is the author of The American Experience with Police in Peace Operations and Where Is the Lone Ranger When We Need Him?America’s Search for a Post-Conflict Stability Force.

ELENA BORISLAVOVA POPTODOROVAElena Borislavova Poptodorova becameAmbassador of Bulgaria to the United States inFebruary 2002. Her prior positions as a diplomatinclude Director of the Directorate ofInternational Organizations and Human Rightsfrom June 2001 to February 2002 and various

diplomatic posts in Rome and San Marino between 1987 and 1990.She was Member of Parliament from 1990 to 2001. From 1991 to1994, Poptodorova served as Vice Chair of the Bulgarian delegation tothe Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU) and as a member of theCoordinating Committee of Women Parliamentarians of the IPU,responsible for Eastern and Central Europe. From 1994 to 1997, sheserved as a member of the Bulgarian delegation to the ParliamentaryAssembly of the Council of Europe. Poptodorova holds degrees fromthe University of Sofia and the University of National and WorldEconomy in Sofia.

FEDERICO RAMPINIFederico Rampini is the senior West Coast andPacific Rim correspondent of La Repubblica, thelargest national newspaper in Italy. He contributeseditorials and feature stories on political affairs,the economy, technology, globalization, and thePacific Rim. As an economist he publishes news

analysis on national and international issues related to the financialmarkets, monetary policy, and trade relations between the U.S.,Europe, and Asia. In his previous assignment at La Repubblica he wasthe Senior European Correspondent, covering European politicalaffairs and the monetary union and was executive managing editor inMilano. He was also Assistant Managing Editor of Il Sole 24 Ore, thelargest daily financial newspaper in Europe.

As a writer he published many award winning books in Italy on suchsubjects as the crisis of the welfare state and pension system, the growinginfluence of Germany over Europe, the New Economy, and the compe-tition between the American and the European models of capitalism. Hislatest book, published in Italy in February 2002, deals with the impactof the single European currency on Italy and the European economy.

He is a member of the board of Critique Internationale, the foreignaffairs monthly published by the Fondation Nationale des SciencesPolitiques in Paris; a member of the board of Limes, the foreign affairsItalian bi-monthly; and a counselor to Politique Internationale and theInstitut Français des Relations Internationales in Paris.

J. STAPLETON ROYAmbassador J. Stapleton Roy retired from theForeign Service in January 2001 after a careerspanning 45 years with the U.S. Department ofState. A fluent Chinese speaker, Mr. Roy spentmuch of his career in East Asia, where his assign-ments included Bangkok, Hong Kong, Taipei,

Beijing, Singapore, and Jakarta. He also specialized in Soviet affairsand served in Moscow at the height of the Cold War. Mr. Roy rose tobecome a three-time ambassador, serving as the top U.S. envoy inSingapore from 1984 to 1986, the People’s Republic of China from1991 to 1995, and Indonesia from 1996 to 1999. In 1996, he waspromoted to the rank of Career Ambassador, the highest rank in theForeign Service. Ambassador Roy’s final post with the StateDepartment was as Assistant Secretary for Intelligence and Research.

In January 2001, Ambassador Roy joined Kissinger Associates, Inc., astrategic consulting firm, as Managing Director. He works from officesin New York City and Washington, D.C.

Ambassador Roy was born in Nanjing, China of American missionaryparents. In 1956, he graduated magna cum laude from PrincetonUniversity, where he majored in History and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa.

JANET SANDERSON*Ambassador Janet Sanderson, is a career memberof the U.S. Department of State’s Senior ForeignService. Since August of 2003 she has served asthe Department’s Diplomat in Residence (DIR) at U.C. Berkeley. In this capacity she focuses onrecruiting a new generation of leaders for the

State Department and working with foreign affairs groups, the military,professional organizations, and others interested in foreign policy and

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government service. Her area of responsibility includes NorthernCalifornia, the Pacific Northwest, and Hawaii.

Ambassador Sanderson served as U.S. Ambassador to the Peoples’Democratic Republic of Algeria from 2000-2003. During her tenure,U.S.-Algerian relations broadened and deepened in key areas, includ-ing enhanced bilateral political, economic, and military cooperation.Ambassador Sanderson also spearheaded normalization of the U.S.diplomatic presence in Algeria.

Ambassador Sanderson has had extensive experience in the MiddleEast, where she served as Deputy Chief of Mission in Amman, Jordanfrom 1997 to 2000. Her other assignments have included a tour from1993 to 1997 as Economic Minister-Counselor at the U.S. Embassy inCairo, during which time she oversaw the implementation of the US-Egyptian Partnership for Economic Growth and Development.Ambassador Sanderson worked as Economic Counselor at the U.S.Embassy in Amman, Jordan, during the 1990-1991 Gulf War; asPetroleum Attaché in Kuwait from 1982 to 1985, during the Iran-Iraq“Tanker War”; and at the U.S. Embassy in Tel Aviv from 1980 to 1982.

She is the recipient of three Department of State Superior HonorAwards as well as the Department’s Herbert A. Salzman Award forInternational Economic Performance for her work in Cairo. In 2003,the Department of Commerce awarded her its Certificate of Service forher support of American business interests in Algeria.

In Washington, Ambassador Sanderson has worked in the Department’sBureau of Near East Affairs as Kuwait/United Arab Emirates DeskOfficer and in the European Bureau as Organization of EconomicCooperation and Development Desk Officer. She started her ForeignService career in 1978 as the U.S. Vice Consul in Dacca, Bangladesh.

Ambassador Sanderson, a resident of Tucson, Arizona, entered theForeign Service in 1977 after obtaining a B.A. in Government withhigh honors from the College of William and Mary. As part of theDepartment’s Senior Professional Training, she obtained an M.A. inNational Security Studies from the College of Naval Warfare, Newport,RI, in 1993. She speaks French and Arabic.

RICHARD SKLARAmbassador Sklar has a distinguished and honored 40-year career in private and public sector management. He received his bachelor’sdegree in mechanical engineering from CornellUniversity in 1957 and went on to found aCleveland-based manufacturer of construction

equipment, of which he was President and CEO. That company wassold in 1973. He later become president and a principal owner of theSan Francisco based construction management firm of O’BrienKreitzberg, Inc., which, at the time it was sold, was one of the largestmanagement construction firms in North America.

In 1996, Ambassador Sklar was appointed as the President’s SpecialRepresentative for Economic Reform and Reconstruction to carry outcivilian development in Bosnia as part of the U.S. brokered peaceaccords. In 1998, Mr. Sklar was named U.S. Representative forUnited Nations Reform and Management. He then returned to theBalkans as President Clinton’s Special Representative for EconomicReform in Southeast Europe and continues to advise the Governmentof Montenegro on a pro bono basis. More recently, he was named bythen California Governor Davis to lead a task force of engineering.

HAROLD SMITHDr. Smith holds the appointment ofDistinguished Visiting Scholar and Professorwith the Goldman School of Public Policy atU.C. Berkeley where he focuses on the impact of technology on foreign and defense policy.

In 1993, Dr. Smith accepted an appointment with the ClintonAdministration as Assistant to the Secretary of Defense for Nuclear,Chemical, and Biological Defense Programs with responsibilities forreduction and maintenance of the American and NATO arsenals ofnuclear weapons, dismantlement of the chemical weapon stockpile,oversight of the chemical and biological defense programs, manage-ment of counter-proliferation acquisition, and management of treatiesrelated to strategic weapons. He was responsible for implementation ofthe Cooperative Threat Reduction (Nunn-Lugar) program, whichassists the former Soviet Union in the dismantlement of their weaponsof mass destruction and in converting their related industries to commer-cial production. The Defense Special Weapons Agency and the On SiteInspection Agency reported to him. He returned to private life in 1998.

In 1960, after receiving the Ph.D. in Nuclear Engineering from MIT, he joined the faculty of U.C. Berkeley where he published extensively on the optimal control of exotic nuclear systems and on the interactionof radiation with surfaces, including ion implantation of silicon. He retiredas Professor and Chairman of the Department of Applied Science in1976 in order to pursue his interests in managerial consulting and entre-preneurial ventures. The Palmer Smith Corporation, a consulting firmspecializing in management of high technology programs, was establishedand retained by many of the largest defense contractors. He was one ofthe early principals of SAIC, RDA-Logicon, and JAYCOR.

Dr. Smith was awarded a White House Fellowship in 1966 and wasassigned as a Special Assistant to the Secretary of Defense. Since thattime, he has served as an advisor to numerous governmental boardson national security policy, giving particular attention to projectsrequiring a broad range of technical and managerial skills. Of particu-lar note are his chairmanship of the Vulnerability Task Force of theDefense Science Board and a special study for (then) Secretary ofDefense James Schlesinger on the Airborne Warning and ControlSystem (AWACS), i.e. the Smith Report.

Dr. Smith is a Fellow of the American Physical Society and aCommander in the Legion of Honor of France. He has thrice receivedthe highest honor granted by the Department of Defense for civilianservice, the Distinguished Public Service Award, as well as the Director’sAward of the Defense Intelligence Agency, the Exceptional CivilianService Award of the Air Force, and the Commendation of the Secretaryof the Navy. In addition to technical papers, he has published articles ofpublic interest, related to national security, in The New York Times, TheChristian Science Monitor, The Wall Street Journal, US News and WorldReport, and Arms Control Today.

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JANE WALES*Jane Wales is President and Chief ExecutiveOfficer of the World Affairs Council of NorthernCalifornia. She is the former Associate Director ofthe White House Office of Science TechnologyPolicy, and Senior Director of the NationalSecurity Council. Prior to her dual appointment

in the Clinton Administration, Wales chaired the international pro-grams at the Carnegie Corporation of New York and the W. AltonJones Foundation. She was also Director of the Rockefeller BrothersFund’s Project on World Security. She served as Deputy AssistantSecretary of State in the Carter Administration and was NationalExecutive Director of Physicians for Social Responsibility, which sharedin the 1985 Nobel Peace Prize. She began her career as a journalistand has authored two books.

MARTIN WALKERMartin Walker is the Editor in Chief for UnitedPress International. Previously, in his 25 years as a journalist with The Guardian newspaper, he served as Bureau Chief in Moscow and theUnited States, as European Editor and AssistantEditor. A regular broadcaster on the BBC,

National Public Radio, and CNN, and panelist on Inside Washingtonand Capitol Gang Sunday, he is also a Senior Fellow of the WorldPolicy Institute at the New School for Social Research in New York,and a Contributing Editor of The Los Angeles Times and EuropeMagazine. His books include Waking Giant: Gorbachev and Perestroika,The Cold War: A History, Clinton: The President They Deserve, andAmerica Reborn.

WILFORD WELCH*With degrees from Yale, Harvard, and the U.C.Berkeley, Wilford Welch has devoted his profes-sional career to understanding and interpretingglobal trends. As a U.S. diplomat, he played arole during the Nixon Administration in the earlystages of our reconciliation with China. As a busi-

ness strategy consultant at Arthur D. Little Inc. he worked for suchglobal companies as Citibank and Toyota. As president and publisherof The WorldPaper, whose mission is to identify and explore the forcesimpacting political, economic, and business decision-making in theworld, he helped build a publication distributed in 27 countries in sixlanguage editions with a circulation of 2.2 million. Now as the head ofthe Emerging Global Leaders Fellowship Program he is helping trainthe next generation of leaders around the world in conflict resolutionand peace building.

He and his wife Carole Angermeir run Cross Cultural Journeys, anorganization dedicated to bringing the U.S. traveler to some of themost remote places on earth to explore their cultures and indigenouswisdoms. One of their current projects, “Quest for Global Healing”, isa conference in Bali this December that will bring together ArchbishopDesmond Tutu and other concerned global citizens to focus building amore peaceful, sustainable world.

DAN YANKELOVICHNamed by PR Week as one of the ten most influential people of the 20th century in thearena of public affairs, communications, and public relations, Dan Yankelovich has spentmore than forty years monitoring social changeand public opinion in America. He is Director of

Loral Space and Communications Inc. and Director Emeritus of CBS,US West, the Meredith Corporation, Diversified Energies, andARKLA. He is a Trustee of the Kettering Foundation, the JapanSociety, and the Fund for the City of New York, and Special Advisorto the Aspen Institute and Trinity Church. He is Trustee Emeritus andformer Chairman of the Educational Testing Service (ETS) and TrusteeEmeritus of Brown University.

He is the author of ten books, including Coming to Public Judgment,New Rules, and The Magic of Dialogue. In 1958, he founded theresearch firm of Yankelovich, Skelly and White and in the 1970s initiated the New York Times/Yankelovich poll. He was a foundingPresident of the Society for the Advancement of Socio-Economics, and is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He has held professorships or other academic affiliations with Harvard,NYU, the New School for Social Research, U.C. Irvine and U.C. San Diego’s Civic Collaborative. He is the recipient of The ParlinAward for his pioneering work in marketing research, the DinermanAward of the World Association of Public Opinion Research, and theOutstanding Achievement Award from the New York Chapter of theAmerican Association of Public Opinion Research.

* Names followed with an asterisk denote session chairs.

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Thanks to your generous contributions to the Council’s Education Fund, the Schools Program is able toensure that students and their teachers benefit from the same first-rate public programming that helps ourmembers maintain a vital connection with the world around them. Scholarship recipients attend regularCouncil events and often get the opportunity to speak directly with our speakers. Recent scholarship recipi-ents have met with such influential figures as Ann Cooper, Executive Director of the Committee to ProtectJournalists; Philippe Kirsch, President of the International Criminal Court; and Joseph Stiglitz, Nobel Prizewinning economist. The Schools Program also presents students with the opportunity to spend a semesterstudying overseas through the Youth for Understanding program and to attend the Council’s AnnualConference at Asilomar. Thanks to you, over 4,450 students have attended Asilomar throughout the 58-year history of the conference. These students have gone on to careers in diplomacy, politics, business, andeducation. Many are now members of this Council and other Councils throughout the United States, andsome have even gone on to serve as members of our staff and Board of Trustees.

Nine years ago, the Schools Program began awarding Asilomar scholarships to teachers. Since then, over140 educators have attended the Conference on scholarship, and an estimated 15,000 students per yearbenefit from their teachers’ participation in this rich professional development experience. This year, wehave encouraged high school students and teachers to apply in teams in order to enhance the learning expe-rience. As a result, the majority of high school students at this year’s conference will be attending in thecompany of their teachers.

The ten teachers and eighty students receiving scholarships to this year’s Conference will add unique per-spectives to the discussions taking place throughout the weekend. Listen for their questions during the ple-nary sessions and for their remarks in the workshops. We invite you to talk with them during receptionsand meals—they are eager to learn from you.

A perfect opportunity to speak with scholarship recipients will be presented at the Saturday luncheon forEducation Fund donors and scholarship recipients. Donors and recipients will meet at specially markedtables in the Crocker Dining Room for lunch and conversation. In the course of this hour, new friendshipswill be forged, career advice will be given, and a lively discussion of Conference topics will take place. Thisyear’s luncheon will also feature WorldQuest, a game designed to build global awareness and bring togethergroups of teachers, students, and community leaders—an experience not to be missed!

It is not too late to donate to the Education Fund and take part in this special luncheon. You can make acontribution by dropping off your check at the Conference registration in the Administration Building. Inreturn, we will place an apple sticker on your name badge, which signifies that you have joined a specialgroup of Council donors who have made an investment in the future and in the world.

For more information, contact Payal Dalal at (415) 293-4656 or [email protected], or write to: World Affairs Council Schools Program, 312 Sutter Street, Suite 312, San Francisco, CA 94108.

Asilomar and the Education Fund — An Investment in the Future

THE SCHOOLS PROGRAM

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172004 SPECIAL ASILOMAR SCHOLARSHIPS

CAROL MARQUIS MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIPDaniel Spelce - Aptos High School

Carol Marquis devoted her life to education. For ten years, she wasan extraordinary classroom teacher and for over fifteen years, shedirected the World Affairs Council's Schools Program. She was aleader in the California International Studies Project and in state andnational professional organizations devoted to Social Studies. Thisscholarship is to honor her memory and to acknowledge another out-standing educator.

GEORGE BALLOU MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIPSNancy Berry - Sequoia High SchoolAnne Peacock - Piedmont High SchoolMaryann Wolfe - Oakland Technical High School

George Ballou, President of the World Affairs Council from 1979-1981, was a Trustee for more than 15 years and a veteran participantat an even greater number of Asilomar Conferences—his favoriteCouncil activity. He was deeply committed to educating young peopleabout international issues and believed that better-informed teacherswere critical to further that purpose.

RICHARD CASTILE SCHOLARSHIPSSuzanne Aldridge - Piedmont High SchoolTrevor Gardner - Thurgood Marshall Academic High SchoolDonna Hall - Aptos High School

Richard Castile spearheaded the Council's scholarship efforts formany years and continues to be an active member of our ScholarshipCommittee. This endowment was established to honor RichardCastile and other outstanding teachers who have worked hard toencourage student participation in Council activities.

EDITH COLIVER MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIPSShannon May - University of California, BerkeleyBirgit Hinrichs - Las Positas College

Edith Coliver was a stalwart participant in Council programs andcommittees and served as a Trustee. Friends of Ms. Coliver haveestablished two scholarships in her name. A refugee from NaziGermany, Edith was devoted to the promotion of human rights,intercultural dialogue, and world peace. Throughout her 40-year careeras an Asia Foundation officer, she was actively involved in commu-nity organizations in the U.S. and abroad. Our scholarship recipientsare outstanding students who share Edith Coliver’s world vision andintellectual curiosity.

CARLTON DUDLEY MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIPSThomas Gangale - San Francisco State UniversityAnastasiya Denisova - University of California, BerkeleyDinyar Patel - Stanford University

Carlton Dudley was a dedicated and tireless member of the WorldAffairs Council and its Scholarship Committee. In 1995, a memori-al was established in his name to send students to the Council pro-gram he enjoyed the most–Asilomar. This scholarship is for studentswith an active interest in foreign exchange and international affairs.

PHILIP HABIB MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIPSBeverly Dale - Hastings College of the LawBeverly Picache - Monterey Institute of International StudiesHanne Skogly - San Francisco State University

Ambassador Philip Habib was the highest ranking career diplomat inthe State Department. He took a special interest in students whowanted to pursue international careers. Philip Habib served on theCouncil’s Board of Trustees for twelve years. His friends created thisendowment in his memory.

JEFFERSON PEYSER MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIPSChris Pedersen - University of California, Santa CruzJulia Cross - Berkeley High School

Jefferson Peyser was a dedicated and active member of theScholarship Committee. Through his estate, he created this endow-ment for annual scholarships to be awarded to individuals for out-standing service to the Council.

JEAN SCHROEDER MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIPIrene Lu - Stanford University Brock Mendel - Mills High SchoolJoshua Reeves - Stanford University

Jean Schroeder was a longtime supporter of the Schools Program atthe World Affairs Council. She served on the Education Committeefor many years and was also an integral part of the Council’s Boardof Trustees. This year, we honor her memory by sending three out-standing students to Asilomar.

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2004 CONFERENCE SCHOLARSHIP RECIPIENTS

Suzanne Aldridge Piedmont High School

Valerie R. Baugh John O’Connell High School

Nancy Berry Sequoia High School

Sherdren Burnside Castlemont High School

Trevor Gardner Thurgood Marshall Academic High School

Donna L. Hall Aptos High School

Martin J. Langan St. Mary’s High School

Michael Lee Castlemont High School

Anne Peacock Piedmont High School

Christian E. Rideout Oakland Media Academy, Fremont

Daniel Spelce Aptos High School

Martin Steiger Montera Middle School

Ngoc-Diep T. Trinh Contra Costa Community College

Maryann Wolfe Oakland Technical High School

THE WORLD AFFAIRS COUNCIL OF NORTHERN CALIFORNIA HASAWARDED SCHOLARSHIPS TO THE FOLLOWING TEACHERS:

THE WORLD AFFAIRS COUNCIL OF NORTHERN CALIFORNIA HASAWARDED SCHOLARSHIPS TO THE FOLLOWING STUDENTS:

18

Nisha Anand The Urban School of San FranciscoAlia Andrews San Francisco State UniversityAdrianna Marie Bayer Dominican University of CaliforniaZenobia Bell Oakland Technical High SchoolRobin Bellows Oakland Technical High SchoolRicky Bennett Oakland Technical High SchoolNiesha Campbell Castlemont High SchoolDavid Casey Piedmont High SchoolBarbara Chan Castlemont High SchoolDaniel Chan Oakland Technical High SchoolBrian Chao Mills High SchoolShirley Chen Thurgood Marshall Academic High SchoolDevika Chopra Leigh High SchoolGeetanjali Chopra De Anza CollegeThomas Patrick Chupein City College of San FranciscoJosha M. Crabtree San Francisco State UniversityJulia Cross Berkeley High SchoolDiana Csank Stanford UniversityBeverly Dale Hastings College of the LawAnastasiya Denisova University of California, BerkeleyAneliya Dimitrova College of MarinAlison Dorantes Aptos High SchoolJacqueline Danielle España Piedmont High SchoolMax Feld Oakland Technical High SchoolCherie Flowers De Anza CollegeLily Frey University of California, BerkeleyEzra Louis Gale Oakland Technical High SchoolThomas Gangale San Francisco State UniversityYvonne Garcia Castlemont High SchoolAteka Zahir Gunja University of California, BerkeleyTimothy James Haas San Francisco State UniversityMichael Hannon Mills High SchoolPaloma Edwina Hill Stanford UniversityBirgit Hinrichs Las Positas CollegeKerala Hise Oakland Technical High SchoolBenny Ho Oakland Technical High SchoolHai Huang California Polytechnic State UniversitySerena Huang Piedmont High SchoolNiema Jordan Oakland Technical High SchoolDaniel Kilduff Stanford UniversityKatie King University of California, BerkeleyAkira Kobayashi Mills High SchoolAngeline Kong Thurgood Marshall Academic High SchoolMichael E. Kozina St. Mary’s High SchoolThomas Lane Oakland Technical High SchoolSandy Lau Oakland Media Academy, Fremont

Carlin Lee Piedmont High SchoolSimone Lockhart Oakland Technical High SchoolGuo Ming Lu Thurgood Marshall Academic High SchoolIrene C. Lu Stanford UniversityJoanne Lue Mills High SchoolCaleb Nelson Lundy Oakland Technical High SchoolJason Luu St. Mary’s High SchoolSahil Vazir Mansuri Mills High SchoolElizabeth Mattiuzzi University of California, BerkeleyShannon Kathleen May University of California, BerkeleyLuda McQuillin University of California, BerkeleyBrock Mendel Mills High SchoolAndrea Naletto San Francisco State UniversitySean Nero Castlemont High SchoolBao Chau Nguyen Oakland Technical High SchoolAlex Park Oakland Technical High SchoolDinyar Patel Stanford UniversityChris Pedersen University of California, Santa CruzAnanda S. Perkins Chabot CollegeBeverly R. Picache Monterey Institute of Int’l StudiesSavilla L. Pitt Las Positas CollegeRosa Portugal Oakland Technical High SchoolJohnathan Pugh Castlemont High SchoolHarris Qureshi De Anza CollegeJoshua Reeves Stanford UniversityNick Rivera Aptos High SchoolLibaneth Saenz Castlemont High SchoolCheo Saetern Oakland Media Academy, FremontNorullah Sharifi Las Positas CollegeAndrea R. Shearer University of California, BerkeleyRyan Simon Oakland Technical High SchoolHanne Øyen Skogly San Francisco State UniversityAaron Staley Mills High SchoolSéla Michelle Steiger Berkeley High SchoolErin Stratta Santa Clara UniversityRiley Stroud Oakland Technical High SchoolAsha Swaminathan De Anza CollegeTakumi Takashima De Anza CollegeMaile Thompson Mills High SchoolChloe Tietjen Piedmont High SchoolRachel Tietjen Piedmont High SchoolAikol Vela Thurgood Marshall Academic High SchoolCharles Zhou Oakland Technical High School

Page 19: WorldAffairs 2004 Conference Program

192004 CONFERENCE SCHOLARSHIP RECIPIENTS

THE WORLD AFFAIRS COUNCIL OF SAN JOAQUIN HAS AWARDED SCHOLARSHIPS TO THE FOLLOWING STUDENTS:

Hans Carnice University of the Pacific

Emily Gilkinson University of the Pacific

Brandi Rhone University of the Pacific

THE WORLD AFFAIRS COUNCIL OF MONTEREY HAS AWARDED SCHOLARSHIPS TO THE FOLLOWING STUDENTS:

Emily Castillo Monterey Peninsula College

Amaury T. Cooper Monterey Institute of International Studies

David Dobrowski Monterey Institute of International Studies

Stanislaus Lasu Hartnell College

Meghan Lewis California State University, Monterey Bay

Michael MacMillan Monterey Peninsula College

Aaron Nousaine California State University, Monterey Bay

Jeffrey Smallwood Monterey Peninsula College

Lisa L. Thornburgh Monterey Institute of International Studies

THE WORLD AFFAIRS COUNCIL OF SACRAMENTO HAS AWARDED A SCHOLARSHIP TO THE FOLLOWING STUDENT:

Irina Chernikova University of California, Davis

THE WORLD AFFAIRS COUNCIL OF SONOMA COUNTY HAS AWARDED A SCHOLARSHIPTO THE FOLLOWING STUDENT:

Theo Carvalho Almeida Santa Rosa Junior College

Page 20: WorldAffairs 2004 Conference Program

20 THE SCHOOLS PROGRAM - EDUCATION FUND

the Council’s Annual Conference is enriched through the active participation of out-

standing students and teachers from across Northern California. Your generous contri-

butions to the World Affairs Council Education Fund make their attendance possible.

Because of recent budget cuts at the federal, state, and local levels, programs that expose our students to the larger world are

at risk. But the importance of international education—through courses in world history, cultures, and foreign languages

taught by well-trained teachers, and through direct student contact with national and international leaders—is more important

than ever. The Council’s Schools Program works to help fill this gap between supply and demand for international educa-

tion for students and teachers. The Schools Program directly reaches students through the Asilomar Scholarship Program,

the Youth For Understanding overseas exchange program, plus a scholarship program for students to attend regular Council

programs.

For more information about the World Affairs Council Schools Program, please contact Payal Dalal, Schools Program

Officer, at 415-293-4656 or through email at [email protected].

The World Affairs Council gratefully acknowledges the leadership of Dr. Gerald West, Education Committee Chair;

Dr. Milton Chen, Education Fund Chair; Mrs. Nancy van Ravenswaay, Asilomar Scholarship Committee Chair; and the

entire Scholarship and Education Committees.

We also thank the following generous donors who have given to the 2004 Education Fund:

$1,000 AND ABOVEMr. Robert Bridges and Mrs. Alice BridgesMr. A. W. Clausen and Mrs. Helen ClausenMr. John DuffMr. and Mrs. Mortimer FleishhackerMr. John FullertonMr. Saul L. Katz and Mrs. Dorothy KatzMr. and Mrs. Jack KendallLucasfilm Ltd.Mr. and Mrs. Angus A. MacNaughtonMr. Kevin M. PursgloveMrs. Maria W. StarrMr. Rex Vaughan

$500-$999Ms. Muriel W. AdcockDr. Milton Chen and Dr. Ruth CoxMr. Arthur J. Collingsworth, Jr.Dr. and Mrs. Robert A. CorriganMr. Bernie J. Hargadon and Ms. Jill DinwiddieMr. Raymond R. Sullivan and Mrs. Shauna M. RoseMrs. Nicolas ThacherDr. and Mrs. Theodore van Ravenswaay

$200-$499Mr. and Mrs. John AustinMr. Louis deK. BeldenMr. W. Richard BinghamMr. J. D. BonneyMrs. Margaret BrandonMrs. Elsie R. CarrMs. Claudine ChengMs. Christine ClarkMr. Greg DruehlMs. Elizabeth FarnsworthMr. William P. Fuller and Ms. Jennifer L. BeckettMr. and Mrs. William E. HenleyMs. Nancy A. Jarvis and Mr. Stephen R. FarrandMr. and Mrs. J. Burke KnappMs. Cecilia M. McDonnellMs. Jeanne A. McHughMr. Chuck Mink and Mrs. Carol MinkMr. and Mrs. Joseph NadelMr. and Mrs. Jack H. OliveMr. Wayne R. PhillipsMs. Rosemary RoachMr. and Mrs. Wayne A. RobinsMr. Barney T. Rocca, Jr.Dr. and Mrs. Rolf G. SchermanMr. and Mrs. Leon SchillerMr. and Mrs. Arthur B. SchultzMr. and Mrs. William A. SeaveyMr. and Mrs. Max Thelen, Jr.Ms. Marsha Vande BergMr. and Mrs. Jon WeaklyDr. Gerald West

Every year

CONTRIBUTORS TO THE EDUCATION FUND

Page 21: WorldAffairs 2004 Conference Program

21THE SCHOOLS PROGRAM - EDUCATION FUND

UP TO $199Ms. Martha Allshouse-HullMr. and Mrs. Alexander P. AshfordMs. Kerin BakerMrs. Joanna BallouDr. and Mrs. Joseph C. BarbacciaMs. Barbara L. BarckMs. Alice BartholomewMr. and Mrs. Conrad D. BreeceMs. Marilyn BremerMr. Dick CastileChevronTexaco CorporationMs. Lynda CouchMr. and Mrs. Ronald E. DempsterMr. and Mrs. Stephen DocterMr. and Mrs. Philip EhrlichMs. Mary C. FalveyMs. Molly FleischmanMs. Jean FowlerMr. Charles L. Frankel and Mrs. Diane Frankel Ms. Meg FranklinMr. and Mrs. K. B. FriedmanMr. and Mrs. William G. GaedeMs. Erin Pope GarciaMrs. Edna M. GetzMr. and Mrs. Gunther de GrootMr. John HarrymanMr. and Mrs. Arthur J. HaskellMr. and Mrs. Louis C. HaughneyMr. and Mrs. Richard G. HeggieMr. Craig Heimark and Mrs. Libby HeimarkMr. Louis H. HeilbronMr. Paul HertelendyMr. Robert HewettMrs. Margaret HillMr. and Mrs. Albert HillmanMr. and Mrs. Irwin S. HoffMs. Marie F. HoganMr. David P. JanesMs. Eloise JonasMs. Ann JorgensenMr. Jan KalickiMrs. Claudia Kennedy and Mr. Keith KennedyMr. and Mrs. Terry KramerMr. and Mrs. John LenahanLevi Strauss & Co.Mr. James LinfordMr. Sanford Lowengart, Jr.Mr. Clark W. Maser and Mrs. Margaret MaserMs. Virginia McClamMr. Ray MillerDr. and Mrs. Paul MillerMr. and Mrs. Carl MountfordDr. Eva M. Nash IsaacMs. Lela NobleMr. Austin C. Olson

Mrs. Jean PortMrs. Elizabeth G. ProctorMr. and Mrs. Ted L. RauschMr. Frank Rettenberg and Mrs. Sharon RettenbergMr. and Mrs. Mark RobertsonMs. Beatrice RosenthalMr. and Mrs. Robert N. RugglesMr. and Mrs. John W. Rutherdale, Jr.Mrs. Patricia A. Sanders and Mr. Tom SandersMr. and Mrs. William W. SchwarzerMr. and Mrs. Nicholas SkylorDr. and Mrs. Herschel H. SolomonMr. Rufus ThayerMr. Richard TuttleMr. and Mrs. Richard C. WaughMr. and Mrs. Marshall WindmillerMr. John C. Wurr and Dr. Elizabeth SimpsonAmbassador Linda Tsao Yang

*As of April 9, 2004

A SPECIAL THANKS TO OUR DONORS FROM THE MONTEREY, SAN JOAQUIN, AND SACRAMENTO AFFILIATED COUNCILSHoward and Jean AlvordMary ArnnMary BoykenDiane BroussardJohn and Trixie BrownJohn and Alice CarleyJean DerrRobert and Barbara EastmanRuth HartmannKen and Anne HelmsBob and Shirley JasterRodney Kennedy-MinottSherrick KernollRichard KezirianJames Leeper, Jr.Lawrence LevineEdwin and Joan LowryJoyce McDevittGregg and Mildred McKeeDoug and Janet MooersAlbert PalmerMargaret PardeeStan and Kate PattersonBruce and Joan RauchRobert SagemanElwood and Claire SalmonsonSchool of Education, University of the Pacific, Stockton, CASchool of International Studies, University of the Pacific,Stockton, CAPeter and Anne ThorpGabrielle WaltersSuzanne and Glynn Wood

*As of April 9, 2004

Page 22: WorldAffairs 2004 Conference Program

WORLD AFFAIRS COUNCIL EVENT

This is the first in a three-part series of conversations on the role the private sectorin the advancement of public goals.

This event will feature a conversationbetween Robert Reich and Tom Campbell on the topic of preparing for and competingwithin the global economy.

Secretary Reich's new book Reason will bepre-released at the event.

The program will be followed by a VIP dinner with Secretary Reich.

Other programs in the series will be:

• DISCOVERY: Bio-technology's Prospects for Combating Hunger and Disease

• SECURITY: Protecting the Homeland— A Partnership with the Private Sector.

P R E PA R I N G F O R T H E G L O B A L E C O N O M Y

22

A WORLD AFFAIRS COUNCIL SERIES

THE NEW BOTTOM LINEThe Private Sector and Public Goals

ADVISORY COMMITTEE

Michael ArmacostGerhard CasperJohn ChambersJames GaitherF. Warren HellmanMichael McCurryHon William PerryLewis PlattOrville SchellHon. George ShultzRoselyne SwigBrayton Wilbur, Jr.

TOM CAMPBELLDean, Haas School of Business;

former Member of Congress; Chairman,World Affairs Council of Northern California

In partnership with KPIX-TV Channel 5, The San Francisco Chronicle, and KQED-FM. Radio broadcast made possible by Chevron Texaco.

THE FAIRMONT HOTEL950 Mason Street, San Francisco

Check In: 6:30 PMProgram: 7:00 PMDinner: 8:00 PM

THIS PROGRAM:Open seating: $35Preferred seating: $65Preferred seating plus Dinner: $195

FULL PROGRAM SERIES:Open seating: $95Preferred seating: $175Preferred seating plus Dinner $500

PROSPERITY

ROBERT REICHFormer US Secretary of Labor; Distinguished Visiting Scholar,

Goldman School of Public Policy, UC Berkeley; Author of the upcoming book, Reason

Page 23: WorldAffairs 2004 Conference Program

CONFERENCE AT ASILOMAR - CHRONOLOGY 23

1 Dec 47 AMERICAN POLICY IN A DIVIDED WORLD: Monroe Deutsch,Chair; Bernard Drzewieski, Peter Odegard.

2 Dec 48POSITIVE ALTERNATIVES TO COMMUNISM: J. Paul Leonard,Chair; O. Meredith Wilson, Raymond Swing.

3 Dec 49 FACING THE FACTS IN CHINA: Carl Spaeth, Chair; Mary C. Wright,Lucius Porter, Sen. William F. Knowland, Helen Gahagan Douglas, RogerLapham.

4 Dec 50 FREEDOM IN PERIL - THE STRUGGLE BETWEEN THE U.S. &RUSSIA IN EUROPE & ASIA: HOW DO WE WIN IT?: Herbert D.Armstrong, Chair; Julian Towster, Francis Russell, Paul C. Smith.

5 Dec 51AT THE CROSSROADS IN THE MIDDLE EAST: Harley C. Stevens, Chair; Harvey Hall, Christina Harris, Harold Fisher, Edwin Wright, James T. Duce, Walter Levy.

6 Dec 52 OUR FOREIGN ECONOMIC POLICY - ITS IMPACT AT HOME & ABROAD: Charles Wheeler, Chair; Milton Katz, Thomas Blaisdell, Herbert Furth, Daniel Bell, Henry Drath.

7 Oct 53TWENTIETH CENTURY COLONIALISM -OUT OF CHANGES INAN OLD ORDER, NEW PROBLEMS FOR AMERICA: ThomasBlaisdell, Chair; James Yen, Mehdi BenAboud, Gordon Wright,Archibald Campbell, Harold Fisher, Henry Byroade.

8 Apr 54 HOT ISSUES OF THE COLD PEACE - AREAS OF FRICTION WITHTHE COMMUNIST WORLD: Allan Charles, Chair; Ernest Gross,Walter Stoessel, Kenneth Hansen, Robert Blum, Gen. Victor Odlum,Amb. James Barrington.

9 May 55 STRESSES & STRAINS IN THE FREE WORLD - CAN WE CO-EXIST WITH OUR FRIENDS?: C. Easton Rothwell, Chair; MoekartoNotowidigdo, Sen. Mike Mansfield, George V. Allen.

10 Apr 56 U.S. FOREIGN POLICY IN 1956 - WHAT ARE OUR AIMS ANDHOW DO WE ACHIEVE THEM?: Turner McBaine, Chair; Eric A.Johnston, Carl Marcy, George Hellyer, Jesse Tapp.

11 May 57 AID, ARMS, ALLIANCES & AGREEMENTS: HOW CAN THEYBEST SERVE TO SECURE PEACE?: Alvin Rockwell, Chair; Sir PiersonDixon, Henry Wiens, Frank Nash, Whitelaw Reid. 12 Apr 58 THE INTERNATIONAL ATOM - IMPACT OF NUCLEAR ENERGYON WORLD AFFAIRS: Kenneth Pitzer, Chair; Glenn Seaborg, StaffordWarren, C.W. LaPierre, Henry Kissinger, Adm. Lewis Strauss.

13 May 59 THE CHALLENGE OF RISING NATIONS - AMERICA'S RESPONSE:E. Finley Carter, Chair; Howard K. Smith, Sen. John F. Kennedy, TomMboya, Arthur H. Dean, Paul G. Hoffman.

14 May 60 COMPETITIVE CO-EXISTENCE - DILEMMA OF THE 60'S: RobertGordon Sproul, Chair; Walt Rostow, William Kintner, Richard Hottelet,Charles Malik, Stuart Hannon, Paul Bryan, Dean Rusk.

15 May 61 THE AMERICAs - FROM NEIGHBORS TO PARTNERS: Robert C.Kirkwood, Chair: Deane Malott, Herbert Kaplow, Philip A . Ray, IgnacioCopete Lizarralde, Eulalia Lobo.

16 May 62 THE ATLANTIC COMMUNITY: IN REVIEW AND IN RETRO-SPECT: J.E. Wallace Sterling, Chair; Denis Healey, Marshall Shulman,David Shoenbrun, Sir Leslie Munro, James Reston, Pierre Uri, W.Randolph Burgess.

17 May 63 ASIA: CHALLENGE TO THE UNITED STATES: Edward W. Strong,Chair; Kinsley Davis, Robert Scalapino, U. Alexis Johnson, Sir RichardAllen, Robert Boyd, G.D. Birla, J. Burke Knapp.

18 May 64 THE UNITED STATES IN THE WORLD ECONOMY: A REAP-PRAISAL: Ransom Cook, Chair; David Bell, Tom Killefer, MarrinerEccles, John Midgley, Gen. Lucius Clay.

CONFERENCES AT ASILOMAR

C H R O N O L O G Y

Page 24: WorldAffairs 2004 Conference Program

24 CONFERENCE AT ASILOMAR - CHRONOLOGY

19 May 65 PRODUCTION VS. REPRODUCTION: Gen. William Draper, Chair;Sen. Kenneth Keating, Edgar Berman, Father Robert Drinan, HenryHeald, Edward Teller.

20 May 66THE UNITED STATES AND ASIA: Clark Kerr, Chair; HaydnWilliams, Henry Steele Commager, J. Burke Knapp, Joseph C. Harsch,Raul Manglapus, U. Alexis Johnson.

21 May 67THE UNITED STATES AND EUROPE: William Matson Roth, Chair;Walter J. Stoessel, Roland deKergorlay, Miriam Camps, Alfred Puhan,Henry Brandon.

22 May 68 THE UNITED STATES AND THE COMMUNIST WORLDS: RogerHeyns, Chair; Eugene V. Rostow. A.R. Gale, Anthony Hartley, CorneliuBogdan, Robert Scalapino, Sir Denis Brogan.23 May 69 THE MAKING OF AMERICAN FOREIGN POLICY: William MatsonRoth, Chair; Joseph Kraft, Harry McPherson, Jr., Carl Marcy, HansMorgenthau, Bromley Smith.

24 May 70 MASS MEDIA, PUBLIC OPINION, FOREIGN POLICY: Charles J.Hitch, Chair; Douglass Cater, Robert Amory, Robert C. Christopher,William Rivers, Barry Zorthian, Sherman B. Chickering.

25 May 71 NEW ORDER IN EUROPE?: Amb. Fulton Freeman, Chair; GeorgeBall, J. Steven Watson, Gordon Wright, Brewster Morris, WernerImhoof, Ray Cline.

26 May 72 AN AMERICAN FOREIGN POLICY FOR THE 70'S: C. EastonRothwell Chair; Max Frankel, William D. Eberle, John Karefa-Smart,Harlan Cleveland, Alfred Jenkins.

27 May 73 NEW REALITIES OF POWER IN ASIA: Dean McHenry, Chair;Stanley Hoffman, Harrison Salisbury, Edwin O. Reischauer.

28 May 74 SCARCITY, SECURITY, SURVIVAL: CHALLENGES FOR ANINTERDEPENDENT WORLD: Emmett Soloman, Chair; Edward P.Morgan, Philippe de Seynes, Ragaei El Mallakh, Lucius D. Battle, SeyomBrown.

29 May 75 WHATEVER HAPPENED TO THE SUPER POWERS?: Richard Lyman, Chair; Hans Morgenthau, James Grant, Amb. Neville Kanakaratne, Paul Zinner, Sen. Charles Mathias, Kingman Brewster.

30 May 76 REVOLUTIONARY AMERICA IN A WORLD IN REVOLT: PaulZinner Chair; Nathan Glazer, C. Clyde Ferguson, Ali Mazrui, RalphPfeiffer, C. William Kontos.

31 May 77 CHALLENGES TO NATIONAL SECURITY: DEFENSE, DÉTENTE,DISARMAMENT: John H. Bunzel, Chair; Graham Allison, RomanKolkowicz, Bjoern Egge, Herbert Scoville, Les Aspin, Henry Rowen,Joseph C. Harsch.

32 May 78 AFRICA: CRISES OF POWER, DEVELOPMENT & HUMANRIGHTS: Caspar W. Weinberger, Chair; Amb. Franklin Williams, TomFarer, Amb. Paul Bomani, Elliot Berg, Donald Woods, Jack Penn, HelenKitchen.

33 May 79 CHINA, THE SOVIET UNION AND THE UNITED STATES:INTERACTIONS AND IMPACTS IN EAST ASIA: Weldon B. Gibson,Chair; Lucian Pye, Makoto Momoi, George Thomson, RichardHolbrooke, Allen Whiting, Drew Middleton, Donald Zagoria.

34 May 80 CAN THE UNITED STATES STILL LEAD? COPING WITH THEOIL CRISIS: Walter E. Hoadley, Chair; John Grimond, ThomasSchelling, Theodore Eliot, Jr., Donald Mills.

35 May 81 THE U.S. AND LATIN AMERICA: Amb. Philip Habib, Chair; RogerHansen, Alfonso Robelo, Robert Cox, Alan Riding, Thomas Atkinson.

36 May 82 WESTERN EUROPE AND THE UNITED STATES: ALLIANCE INJEOPARDY?: Ira Michael Heyman, Chair; Norman Graebner, FloraLewis, Richard Cooper, Theo Sommer, Walter Stoessel.

37 May 83 THE MIDDLE EAST: CAN WE HAVE EQUITY AND EQUILIBRI-UM?: Donald Kennedy, Chair; Brian Urquhart, Ira Lapidus, CharlesIssawi, Harold Saunders.

38 May 84ARMS CONTROL AND THE U.S.-SOVIET RELATIONSHIP: THESEARCH FOR PEACEFUL SOLUTIONS: Mary Metz, Chair; LeslieGelb, Dimitri Simes, Marion Donhoff, Kenneth Adelman.

39 May 85 THE U.S. AND SOUTHEAST ASIA: FOCUS ON THE ASEANCOUNTRIES: Dorman Commons, Chair; Philip Habib, Tommy Koh,Adm. William Crowe, Jr., Ghazali Shafie, Morton Abramowitz.

40 May 86 INTERNATIONAL TRADE, FINANCE AND INVESTMENT: CANTHE U.S. COMPETE AND COOPERATE EFFECTIVELY?: Chia-WeiWoo, Chair; Lester Thurow, Nicolas Ardito Barletta, Donald Ephlin,William Milam.

41 May 87 THE U.S. IN CENTRAL AMERICA: INTERESTS AND CONFLICT:Robert Maynard, Chair; Abraham Lowenthal, Margaret Daly Hayes,Rainer Steckhan, Jorge Lamport Rodil, Michael Armacost, StephenRosenfeld.

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25CONFERENCE AT ASILOMAR - CHRONOLOGY

42 Apr 88 THE U.S. AND THE U.S.S.R.: CHANGING SOCIETIES, CHANG-ING POLICIES: David Gardner, Chair; Brent Scowcroft, Gail Lapidus,Arthur Hartman, William Odom, Theodore Sorensen, Nicolai Smeliov.

43 Apr 89 THE MIDDLE EAST: TURMOIL AND HOPE: Robert Stevens, Chair;Hirsch Goodman, Judith Kipper, Martin Indyk, Rashid Khalidi, AbbaEban, William Quandt.

44 Apr 90 CHOICES FOR CHINA: Robert Scalapino, Chair; Winston Lord,Dwight Perkins, Stanley Lubman, Michel Oksenberg, Harry Harding,Douglas Paal.

45 Apr 91 THE CHANGING FACE OF EUROPE: Theodore L. Eliot, Jr., Chair;Shirley Williams, Joseph Joffe, Robert Pfaltzgraff, Ivan Tyulin, MarekWierbouski, Richard Buxbaum, Robert Blackwill.

46 May 92 THE UNITED STATES' ROLE IN A NEW GLOBAL ERA: RichardLyman, Chair; Condoleezza Rice, Richard Buxbaum, Victor Li, RobertHunter, Amb. Carla Hills, William Hyland, Jack Mendelsohn, WilliamRusher, Scott Sagan.

47 May 93 THE ENVIRONMENT AND POPULATION: CAN EARTH SUS-TAIN US?: Janet Holmgren McKay, Chair; Timothy Weiskel, EugeneSkolnikoff, Sharon Camp, Piere Landell-Mills, Garrett Hardin, JaimeLerner, Timothy Wirth.

48 Apr 94 U.S., JAPAN AND ASIA: CHANGING SOCIETIES, CHANGINGPOLICIES: Robert Scalapino, Chair; Yoichi Funabashi, HiroshiKitamura, Yuriko Koike, Gerald Curtis, Michel Oksenberg, JamesFallows, Ezra Vogel, Glen Fukushima.

49 May 95 MANAGING WORLD CHAOS: IS AMERICA RESPONSIBLE?:Mary Bitterman, Chair; Chester Crocker, Chas W. Freeman, Jr., EnidSchoettle, Raymond Shonholtz, Jr., Ted Galen Carpenter, Peter Tarnoff.

50 May 96HARD COPY OR HARD NEWS? MEDIA AND FOREIGN AFFAIRS:Robert Corrigan, Chair; Hodding Carter, James Hoge, Haynes Johnson,Barrie Dunsmore, Orville Schell, Sanford Ungar.

51 May 97 CHINA: THE NEXT SUPERPOWER?: Harry Harding, Chair; OrvilleSchell, Ross Munro, Nancy Pelosi, Chang-Lin Tien, Lowell Ditmer,Robert Kapp.

52 May 98 THE GREAT GAME: RUSSIA AND THE FUTURE OF EURASIA:Amb. David J. Fischer, Chair; Coit Blacker, Andrei Melville, GailLapidus, Vitaly Naumkin, William Perry, George Breslauer, MichaelMcFaul, Lilia Shevtsova.

53 May 99 KOREA: ONE PEOPLE, TWO WORLDS: Mary Bitterman, Chair;Michel Oksenberg, David Steinberg, Desaix Anderson, Douglas Paal,Consul General Hitoshi Tanaka, Gordon Flake, Han Seung Soo, KimMyong Chol, Dr. Willaim Perry, Amb. Ronald Lehman, Peter Hayes,Clay Moltz, Chae-Jin Lee, Victor Cha, Neal Keny-Guyer, Meredith Woo-Cumings, Casimir Yost.

54 May 00U.S. INTERESTS, ROLES, AND RESPONSIBILITES IN THE 21STCENTURY: Charles William Maynes, Chair; Coit Blacker, RobertScalapino, Sumit Ganguly, Mary O'Hara Devereaux, Abraham Sofaer,Stephen Stedman, Sandra Coliver, General Lee Butler, RobertMcNamara, William J. Perry, James Gustave Speth.

55 May 01 GLOBALIZATION: GOING GLOBAL IN THE INFORMATIONAGE: William Draper, III, and Jane Wales, Co-Chairs; George Soros,Mark Malloch Brown, Beverly Crawford, Elizabeth Farnsworth, OlafGroth, Jay Harris, Adam Klein, Amb. Ronald Lehman, William J. Perry,Amb. Kamalesh Sharma.

56 May 02THE MANY FACETS OF ISLAM: Orville Schell, Chair; PaulWolfowitz, John Voll, Bruce Lawrence, John Burns, Joel Beinin, HakanYavuz, Barbara Metcalf, Julia Clancy-Smith, James Gelvin, ShibleyTelhami, Ali Gheissari, M. Nazif Shahrani, Vali Reza Nasr, DonaldEmmerson, Ahmad Dallal, Barbara Bodine, Thomas Simons Jr.

57 May 03FROM PAKISTAN TO KAZAKHSTAN - THE GREAT UNKNOWN:Michael Armacost, Chair; Joseph Biden, Olivier Roy, Barnett Rubin,Ashraf Jehangir Qazi, Vitaly Naumkin, Bates Gill, Mustafa Aydin,Steven Mann, Julia Nanay, Daene McKinney, Anara Tabyshalieva,Michael Ochs, Rifaat Hussein, William Courtney, Gen. Jack Sheehan,Martha Brill Olcott.

58 May 04DEFINING LEADERSHIP: THE ROLE OF THE UNITED STATESIN THE WORLD: J. Stapleton Roy, Chair; Leon Fuerth, RobertHunter, Martin Walker, Thomas Hubbard, Charles Kupchan, ElenaBorislavova Poptodorova, Federico Rampini, Jean Marie Guéhenno,James Dobbins, Robert Perito, Laith Kubba, Barry Eichengreen, DanYankelovich, Martti Ahtisaari, Walter Russell Mead.

Page 26: WorldAffairs 2004 Conference Program

The Donor Circle consists of five levels of gift giving beginning at $1,000. As your level of gift givingincreases within the Circle, so do your benefits.

WHAT ARE THE ADVANTAGES OF BEING A MEMBER OF THE DONOR CIRCLE? As a member of the Donor Circle you will meet with world leaders, policy advisors, Nobel and Pulitzer Prize-winners, corporate executives, and our trustees at exclusive receptions and dinners. You will also have the opportunityto sponsor students, perhaps moderate a program, define programming, and host events. Over the yearsmembers of the Donor Circle have become close friends and look forward to seeing each other as theyshare their enthusiasm for learning more about our world. Many of the private receptions and dinners are held in the homes of members of the Donor Circle, which further enhances the feeling of camaraderie.

WHO WILL YOU MEET? These are just a few of the prominent figures who have visited with our Donor Circle: Igor Ivanov, Russian Foreign Minister; John Kerry U.S. Senator and Democratic Presidential Candidate; Joseph Stiglitz, Nobel Prize-winning Economist and former Chief Economist of the World Bank.

Our donors support the Council not only to learn about the changes in the world order, but also to havetheir opinions challenged, make more informed decisions, and to benefit their communities.

The Donor Circle

26

RECENT MAJOR DONOR EVENTS

His Royal Highness Prince Banda bin Sultan binAbdulaziz, Ambassador of the Kingdom of SaudiArabia to the United States

General Richard B. Myers, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

Dr. Nabil Shaath, Foreign Affairs Minister of the Palestinian Authority

Fareed Zakaria, Editor of Newsweek International andAnalyst for ABC’s This Week

Paul R. Krugman, Op-Ed columnist for The New York Times

Page 27: WorldAffairs 2004 Conference Program

WORLD AFFAIRS COUNCIL - BOARD AND STAFF

ADVISORY COMMITTEE

BOARD OF TRUSTEES

STAFF MEMBERS

27

OFFICERS

Kenneth V. Alwyn* Molly Waste Ashford

Nusha AskariRichard C. AtkinsonJoanna R. BallouKristin L. BartokLouis de K. BeldenJennifer K. BergeronW. Richard BinghamCoit D. BlackerA. Lee BlitchJ. Dennis Bonney

* Conrad D. BreeceHarold BrooksCaroline K. Brownstone

* Tom CampbellAnnette J. Campbell-White

* Iris S. ChanPaul CharltonMilton ChenClaudine ChengJeff ClarkeA.W. ClausenRobert A. CorriganJaleh DaieMichael Dasher

* Amy W. de RhamFrederick J. Dorey

* William H. Draper, IIIJohn M. Duff, Jr.Theodore L. Eliot, IIIMargee EnsignMary C. Falvey

Elizabeth FarnsworthJames A. FinkelsteinDavid M. FlahertyCharles L. FrankelWilliam P. FullerWilliam G. Gaede

* Richard N. GoldmanOlaf J. GrothBernie Hargadon

* Louis H. Heilbron* Martha M. Hertelendy

Auren HoffmanRuss Holdstein

* George B. James, IINancy A. JarvisJan H. KalickiJohn KammDana KingAmanda Kirkwood

* Terry KramerRalph A. Kuiper

* Gail W. LapidusChong-Moon LeeRonald F. Lehman, IISally LilienthalJim Losi

* David W. Lyon* Angus A. MacNaughton

Clark W. MaserNagesh S. MhatreMichael NachtNguyen Qui DucJohn F. Nicolai

Betty OverhoffLinda Parker PenningtonMagan C. PatelMary Noel PepysHarriet Meyer QuarréWilliam ReillyFrank RettenbergSkip RhodesElizabeth Rindskopf Parker

* Rosemary RoachFred A. RodriguezRobert A. RosenfeldJames D. RosenthalScott D. Sagan

* Arun SarinMichael SchwabPeter Schwartz

* S. Brooks Shumway* Maria Starr

Jackson StrombergDarian W. SwigPeter TarnoffMax Thelen, Jr.Marsha Vande BergJohn S. Wadsworth, Jr.

* Jane WalesJo Anne WallaceGraham Watson

* Gerald I. WestMason Willrich

* Member, Executive Committee

William J. Perry Co-ChairGeorge P. Shultz Co-Chair

Michael H. ArmacostGerhard CasperJohn ChambersJames C. GaitherF. Warren HellmanMichael McCurryLewis E. PlattOrville SchellRoselyne C. SwigBrayton Wilbur, Jr.

Tom Campbell ChairmanJane Wales President & CEORichard N. Goldman Vice ChairMartha M. Hertelendy Vice ChairArun Sarin Vice ChairAngus A. MacNaughton SecretaryGeorge B. James, II TreasurerWilliam H. Draper, III Immediate Past ChairmanS. Brooks Shumway Vice President & COO

Jane Wales President & CEO

ADMINISTRATIONBrooks Shumway Executive Vice President & COOSusana Rodriguez Assistant to the PresidentJesus Gonzalez Assistant Building ManagerBelen Torres-Gil Asilomar Registrar

FINANCE DEPARTMENTJake Ocampo Director of Finance & TechnologyJun Reina Finance Administrator

MARKETING, MEMBERSHIP, & DEVELOPMENTLeah Weaver Membership CoordinatorPaula Ramsey Director of DevelopmentScott Kleinman Vice President for Marketing, Membership,

and Development

PROGRAM DEPARTMENTSuzy Antounian Vice President for Public ProgramsMichael Lawrence Deputy Director for Public ProgramsMelissa Hanham Program OfficerJosh Jendryka Program AssociateMary Anne McGill Program Officer & Manager of Library ServicesJacob Glenn-Levin Library AssistantKatharine Brewer Global Philanthropy Forum Program OfficerStacey Fish Global Philanthropy Forum Database Manager

SCHOOLS PROGRAMPayal Dalal Schools Program OfficerElizabeth Greigg Schools Program Associate

Page 28: WorldAffairs 2004 Conference Program

Bedros Afeyan Pleasanton CA

Eeva Ahtisaari Helsinki, Finland

Martti Ahtisaari Helsinki, Finland

Suzanne Aldridge Piedmont CA

Nisha Anand San Francisco CA

Katharine Anderson Santa Rosa CA

Alia Andrews San Francisco CA

Carole Angermeir Sausolito CA

Richard Antonchuk Redwood City CA

Barnett F. Baron San Francisco CA

Jane Barrett Berkeley CA

Valerie Baugh San Francisco CA

Adrianna Bayer Roseville CA

Louis de K. Belden San Francisco CA

Zenobia Bell Oakland CA

Robin Bellows Oakland CA

Ricky Bennett Oakland CA

Inka Benton San Rafael CA

Nancy Berry San Francisco CA

J. Dennis Bonney San Francisco CA

Carol Bowen Berkeley CA

Margaret Brandon Portola Valley CA

Conrad D. Breece Lafayette CA

Joan Breece Lafayette CA

Marilyn Bremer Reno NV

Michelle Bricker Berkeley CA

Harold Brooks San Francisco CA

Sherdren Burnside Oakland CA

Niesha Campbell Oakland CA

Susanne Campbell San Jose CA

Tom Campbell San Jose CA

Annette Campbell-White Oakland CA

Hans Carnice Stockton CA

Theo Carvalho Almeida Santa Rosa CA

David Casey Piedmont CA

Emily Castillo Pacific Grove CA

Barbara Chan Oakland CA

Daniel Chan Oakland CA

Brian Chao Millbrae CA

Shirley Chen Daly City CA

Irina Chernikova Sacramento CA

Devika Chopra San Jose CA

Geetanjali Chopra San Jose CA

Paul Christensen San Francisco CA

Thomas Chupein San Francisco CA

Ellen Cianciarulo Moraga CA

A. W. Clausen San Francisco CA

Helen T. Clausen San Francisco CA

Thomas S. Clifton Walnut Creek CA

Barbara Cole San Francisco CA

William Cole San Francisco CA

Amaury Cooper Monterey CA

Simone Otus Coxe Palo Alto CA

Josha Crabtree Concord CA

Julia Cross Berkeley CA

Diana Csank Stanford CA

Mrs. William H. Curtiss Carmel CA

Beverly Dale San Francisco CA

Lois M. De Domenico Piedmont CA

Gunther De Groot Lafayette CA

K De Groot Lafayette CA

Libby Denebeim San Francisco CA

Anastasiya Denisova Berkeley CA

Aneliya Dimitrova San Rafael CA

Catherine Dinnean Peidmont CA

Lawrence Dinnean Peidmont CA

Jill Dinwiddie Charlotte NC

James Dobbins Washington D.C.

Toril Dobbins Washington D.C.

David Dobrowski Monterey CA

Beverly Docter Menlo Park CA

Stephen Docter Menlo Park CA

Alison Dorantes Watsonville CA

Phyllis Draper San Francisco CA

William H. Draper San Francisco CA

Greg Druehl Menlo Park CA

Marilyn Dudley-Rowley Petaluma CA

Peter L. Dwares San Francisco CA

Carol Edlund Walnut Creek CA

Phillip Ehrlich Greenbrae CA

Barry Eichengreen Berkeley CA

Jacqueline Espana Piedmont CA

Mary Falvey San Francisco CA

Henry D. Fearnley Petaluma CA

Violet Feinauer Berkeley CA

Max Feld Oakland CA

Andrew Fleischman San Francisco CA

Molly Fleischman San Francisco CA

Cherie Flowers Campbell CA

Jean Fowler San Francisco CA

Charles L. Frankel San Francisco CA

Diane Frankel San Francisco CA

Lily Frey Berkeley CA

Leon Fuerth Washington D.C.

Michael Fuhrig Hayward CA

Richard Fuller San Francisco CA

Jessica Fullerton Ross CA

John Fullerton Ross CA

Ilsa Gaede San Francisco CA

William G. Gaede San Francisco CA

Ezra Gale Oakland CA

Thomas Gangale Petaluma CA

Yvonne Garcia Oakland CA

Trevor Gardner San Francisco CA

Betty Gerard Palo Alto CA

William Gilbert Berkeley CA

Emily Gilkinson Stockton CA

Janet Grodin Berkeley CA

Joseph Grodin Berkeley CA

Jean Marie Guéhenno Washington D.C.

Michelle Moss Guéhenno Washington D.C.

Ateka Gunja Berkeley CA

Timothy Haas Sacramento CA

Donna Hall Santa Cruz CA

Darrah Hallowitz San Rafael CA

Ann Hanham Woodside CA

Scott Hanham Woodside CA

Michael Hannon Millbrae CA

Bernie J. Hargadon Charlotte NC

Harry Hartzell Palo Alto CA

Susan Hartzell Palo Alto CA

Arthur Haskell Oakland CA

Marjory Haskell Oakland CA

Bea Heggie Orinda CA

Jennifer Heggie Orinda CA

Richard Heggie Orinda CA

Craig Heimark Palo Alto CA

Jake Heimark Palo Alto CA

Sarah Hendrickson Berkeley CA

William E. Henley San Mateo CA

Paul Hertelendy Piedmont CA

Paloma Hill Stanford CA

CONFERENCE PARTICIPANTS28

We are all here

Page 29: WorldAffairs 2004 Conference Program

29CONFERENCE PARTICIPANTS

Albert Hillman Orinda CA

Beverley Hillman Orinda CA

Birgit Hinrichs Pleasanton CA

Kerala Hise Oakland CA

Benny Ho Oakland CA

Marie Hogan Piedmont CA

Lois A Holcomb Aptos CA

Kathleen Holhalek San Francisco CA

Hai Huang San Luis Obispo CA

Serena Huang Piedmont CA

Thomas Hubbard Seoul Korea

Robert Hunter Washington D.C.

Michael Irish San Francisco CA

Josephine A. Jackson Cupertino CA

Muzamil Jaleel Kashmir

Susan Jamart Berkeley CA

Faith Jansen San Francisco CA

Gary Joe San Francisco CA

Jacklyn Jordan San Francisco CA

Niema Jordan Oakland CA

Ann Jorgensen San Francisco CA

Dorthy Katz San Francisco CA

Saul L. Katz San Francisco CA

Jack Kendall San Francisco CA

Linda Kendall San Francisco CA

Claudia Kennedy Sausalito CA

Keith Kennedy Sausalito CA

Marshall Kent Napa CA

Daniel Kilduff Stanford CA

Carolyn Killefer San Francisco CA

Katie King Berkeley CA

Richard Kiwata San Francisco CA

Burke Knapp Portola Valley CA

Betty Knudson Lafayette CA

Akira Kobayashi Hillsborough CA

Angeline Kong San Francisco CA

Michael Kozina Stockton CA

Robert Kozma San Francisco CA

Anita Kramer Piedmont CA

Suzan Kramer Piedmont CA

Terry Kramer Piedmont CA

William Kramer Piedmont CA

Jane Kubba Washington D.C.

Laith Kubba Washington D.C.

Carol Kuiper Los Altos CA

Ralph A. Kuiper Los Altos CA

Sarah Kulberg Oakland CA

Charles Kupchan Washington D.C.

Ray Kutz Orinda CA

Germaine La Berge Oakland CA

Morgan Lambert Oakland CA

Thomas Lane Oakland CA

Martin Langan Stockton CA

Jane C. Langhorne Carmel CA

Gail W. Lapidus Stanford CA

Stanislaus Lasu Salinas CA

Sandy Lau Oakland CA

Charles P. Laurenson Tiburon CA

Polly B. Laurenson Tiburon CA

Barbara Lee San Diego CA

Carlin Lee Piedmont CA

Michael Lee Oakland CA

Sheryl Leighton Novato CA

Douglas G. Levick Atherton CA

Ginger Levick Atherton CA

Gisela Lewald Berkeley CA

Werner Lewald Berkeley CA

Joan Lewis San Francisco CA

Meghan Lewis Seaside CA

Anatol Lieven Washington D.C.

Frances Lilienthal San Francisco CA

Jim Lilienthal San Francisco CA

Sally Lilienthal San Francisco CA

Dean Lindsay San Rafael CA

Mary Lindsay San Rafael CA

James T. Linford San Francisco CA

Anne Lipow Belvedere CA

Arthur Lipow Alameda CA

Gretchen Lipow Alameda CA

Simone Lockhart Oakland CA

Alice Loughry Los Altos CA

Donald C. Loughry Los Altos CA

Kathleen Louie Foster City CA

Janet Lowrey Menlo Park CA

Irene Lu Stanford CA

Guo Ming Lu San Francisco CA

Zoyd R. Luce Dublin CA

Joanne Lue Burlingame CA

Caleb Lundy Oakland CA

Jason Luu Stockton CA

David W. Lyon San Francisco CA

Heidi Lyss Orinda CA

Michael MacMillan Salinas CA

James A. Malloch Portola Valley CA

Suzanne Malloch Portola Valley CA

Shari Malone San Francisco CA

Sahil Mansuri Burlingame CA

Marine Mardirian Pleasanton CA

Fred J. Martin San Francisco CA

Shirlee A. Martin San Francisco CA

Clark W. Maser Ross CA

Margret B. Maser Ross CA

Maria Maslova San Francisco CA

Elizabeth Mattiuzzi Berkeley CA

Shannon May San Francisco CA

Virginia McClam Foster City CA

Michael McDonnell Berkeley CA

Jeanne A. McHugh Kensington CA

H.R. McMaster

Michael McNulty San Francisco CA

Sally McNulty San Francisco CA

Luda McQuillin Berkeley CA

Walter Russell Mead New York NY

Brock Mendel San Mateo CA

Irene Miano Martinez CA

Anja Miller Brisbane CA

Lita Miller Rio Linda CA

Paul Miller Portola Valley CA

Raymond Miller Brisbane CA

Carol Mink Burlingame CA

Charles W. Mink Burlingame CA

Richard P. Mirabella Palo Alto CA

Andrea Naletto San Francisco CA

Burt Nanus Santa Cruz CA

Marlene Nanus Santa Cruz CA

Ruediger Naumann-Etienne Oakland CA

Sean Nero Oakland CA

Bao Nguyen Oakland CA

Nancy Nielsen Berkeley CA

Aaron Nousaine Seaside CA

Claudia O’Callaghan San Francisco CA

Jack Olive San Anselmo CA

Mary Olive San Anselmo CA

Austin C. Olson Berkeley CA

Richard Papel San Francisco CA

Alex Park Oakland CA

Lon Parsons Carmel CA

Dinyar Patel Stanford CA

Robert Payne Salinas CA

Anne Peacock Oakland CA

Chris Pedersen Santa Cruz CA

Robert Perito Washington D.C.

Ananda Perkins San Leandro CA

Diane Perry San Francisco CA

Page 30: WorldAffairs 2004 Conference Program

Georgi Petrov Washington D.C.

Wayne R. Phillips Los Altos CA

Beverly Picache Pacific Grove CA

Larry L. Pippin Stockton CA

Savilla Pitt Pleasanton CA

Erin Pope Garcia Novato CA

Elena Poptodorova Washington D.C.

Jean Port El Cerrito CA

Rosa Portugal Oakland CA

Mary Jo Potter San Francisco CA

Elizabeth Proctor Menlo Park CA

Richard Procunier Danville CA

Johnathan Pugh Oakland CA

Harris Qureshi San Jose CA

Ingrid Radkey Berkeley CA

Dolores Ragusa Dublin CA

Tom Ralph Salinas CA

Federico Rampini San Francisco CA

Joshua Reeves Stanford CA

Gloria Reid San Leandro CA

Kate Rezai Mill Valley CA

John Richardson Redwood City CA

Christian Rideout Oakland CA

Nick Rivera Watsonville CA

Rosemary Roach San Francisco CA

Fred A. Rodriguez San Francisco CA

Robert Ronald San Mateo CA

Trish Ronald San Mateo CA

James D. Rosenthal San Francisco CA

Elizabeth B. Ross Atherton CA

Rena H. Rossi San Francisco CA

William J. Rossi San Francisco CA

Harry Rowe San Francisco CA

Stapleton Roy New York NY

Allison Ruggles San Francisco CA

Robert N. Ruggles San Francisco CA

Libaneth Saenz Oakland CA

Cheo Saetern Oakland CA

Patricia Sanders Palo Alto CA

Tom Sanders Palo Alto CA

Janet Sanderson Berkeley CA

Beulah Schiller Alamo CA

Leon Schiller Alamo CA

Arthur B. Schultz Incline Village NV

Hjordis Schultz Incline Village NV

Eleanor Seelye Santa Rosa CA

Elizabeth Sennett Sausalito CA

Norullah Sharifi Pleasanton CA

Andrea Shearer Hayward CA

Steve Silberstein Belvedere CA

Dale Silver San Francisco CA

Ryan Simon Oakland CA

Elizabeth Simpson San Jose CA

Catharine Skapura Lafayette CA

Robert J. Skapura Lafayette CA

Barbara Sklar San Francisco CA

Richard Sklar San Francisco CA

Hanne Skogly San Francisco CA

Dorothy Skylor San Francisco CA

Nicholas Skylor San Francisco CA

Jeffrey Smallwood Pacific Grove CA

Alice S. Smith Palo Alto CA

Amanda Smith Petaluma CA

Harold Smith Berkeley CA

Mary Smith Oakland CA

Mary Anne Smith Berkeley CA

Norvel Smith Oakland CA

Richard Smith Petaluma CA

Herschel H. Solomon San Francisco CA

Joan Solomon San Francisco CA

Daniel Spelce Santa Cruz CA

Rita Sperry Tiburon CA

Aaron Staley Foster City CA

Maria Starr San Mateo CA

Martin Steiger Berkeley CA

Sela Steiger Berkeley CA

Jack Steller Berkeley CA

Carol Stevens Palo Alto CA

Noel Stevens Palo Alto CA

Erin Stratta Santa Clara CA

Elizabeth Stromberg Mill Valley CA

Jackson C. Stromberg Mill Valley CA

Riley Stroud Oakland CA

John Sulzbach Redwood City CA

Doris Sutter San Rafael CA

Ellie Sutter Oakland CA

John H. Sutter Oakland CA

John O. Sutter San Rafael CA

Asha Swaminathan Los Altos CA

Keyvan Tabari San Francisco CA

Sara Tajeldin San Bruno CA

Takumi Takashima Sunnyvale CA

Joyce Tayer Tiburon CA

Edward L. Taylor Mill Valley CA

Marion Taylor Santa Cruz CA

Dalia Terleckaite Mountain View CA

Jean Louise Thacher San Francisco CA

Rufus G. Thayer Tiburon CA

Phyllis Thelen San Rafael CA

Max Thelen, Jr. San Rafael CA

Maile Thompson San Bruno CA

Lisa Thornburgh San Jose CA

Chloe Tietjen Piedmont CA

Rachel Tietjen Piedmont CA

Lisa Titus Berkeley CA

Darrell Tornow Petaluma CA

Kathleen Tornow Petaluma CA

Ngoc-Diep Trinh Richmond CA

Richard E. Tuttle Mokelumne Hill CA

Sally Tuttle Mokelumne Hill CA

Ann Pike Ulrey Pebble Beach CA

Nancy van Ravenswaay Tiburon CA

Aikol Vela Daly City CA

Martin Walker

Russell Wallace Mill Valley CA

Charles Webster Peidmont CA

Wilford Welch Sausolito CA

Merlon Williamson Orinda CA

Thomas B. Williamson Orinda CA

Marshall Windmiller Alameda CA

Myra Windmiller Alameda CA

Anita Wolf Los Gatos CA

Donald Wolf Los Gatos CA

Maryann Wolfe El Cerrito CA

John Wurr San Jose CA

Daniel Yankelovich San Diego CA

Charles Zhou Oakland CA

*As of April 12, 2004

30 CONFERENCE PARTICIPANTS

Page 31: WorldAffairs 2004 Conference Program

31NOTES

Page 32: WorldAffairs 2004 Conference Program

32 NOTES