Board of Trustees — US-Asia Institute

TRUSTEES

TRUSTEES EMERITUS

+ Kent Lucken

CHAIRMAN, TRUSTEE EMERITUS
*Managing Director, Citi Private Bank *

Kent Lucken is a Managing Director at Citi Private Bank in Boston and serves as the firm’s North American Head of Financial Sponsors, where he leads Citi’s engagement with global private equity and infrastructure funds. Prior to joining Citi, he worked at Robertson Stephens, a leading technology-focused investment bank.

Mr. Lucken is a fourteen-year veteran of the U.S. Foreign Service, where he completed diplomatic assignments at the U.S. embassies in Italy, the Soviet Union and Russia, Georgia, Croatia, Bosnia and Slovenia. Following the collapse of the Soviet Union, he served as the first U.S. diplomat in the newly independent Republic of Georgia. He also participated in the Dayton peace talks while assigned to the former Yugoslavia.

Mr. Lucken served as a Foreign Policy Advisor for Governor Mitt Romney’s 2008 and 2012 presidential campaigns, worked as a Political Advisor for two Iowa Caucuses, and helped lead national security transition planning for the Romney campaign. Since 2017, he has served on the Advisory Group for the Belfer Center’s Defending Digital Democracy Project.

Mr. Lucken is the former Chairman and President of the U.S.-Asia Institute, a Washington, D.C. based non-profit focused on building stronger relations with Asia, and he currently serves on the boards of the Boston Institute of Contemporary Art and Iowa State University’s Board of Governors. He has represented the U.S. as an OSCE International Observer at national elections in the Republic of Georgia and Kyrgyzstan, and he has been a featured commentator on foreign affairs for the The New York Times, National Public Radio, and The Boston Globe, and he’s lectured at the Harvard Kennedy School.

Mr. Lucken earned his Master’s in Public Administration from Harvard Kennedy School, and graduated with a BA in Political Science from Iowa State University. His wife, Kristen, is a faculty member at Brandeis University, and they have two sons.

+ Kaytaro G. Sugahara

CHAIRMAN, TRUSTEE EMERITUS
Past President & CEO, Fairfield Maxwell Ltd.

Kaytaro G. Sugahara (K.G.) is past president and CEO of Fairfield Maxwell Ltd having retired in 2016. Prior to joining Fairfield-Maxwell Ltd as Vice President of the company’s Marine Division, he worked for the Douglas Aircraft Corporation in their Missiles and Space System Division. At Fairfield Maxwell, Mr. Sugahara was promoted to Senior Vice president in 1970, to Executive Vice President in 1975, and became President in June of 1979.

During the time Mr. Sugahara has been with the company, Fairfield-Maxwell, which celebrated its 50th Anniversary in 2007, expanded its worldwide presence in both the shipping and geophysical industries. Fairfield’s shipping business started with crude oil tankers, its crude fleet expanding to over two million tons deadweight. Through its subsidiaries, Fairfield has been in the refrigerated and bulk cargo businesses and currently is a major player in the chemical tanker business as well as a long-term carrier for Toyota Motors.

He also was a Member of the Board of Fairfield GeoTechnologies (formerly Fairfield Industries), the largest and oldest wholly American owned company in the geophysical industry. Fairfield GeoTechnologies gathers seismic data using its self-designed and manufactured equipment, processes this data in its advanced computer facility and now dominates the shallow water Gulf of Maxico market.

Mr. Sugahara was a member of the State Department Far Eastern Advisory Committee and a member of the President’s Council of the California Institute of Technology. He is also Chairman of the Board of Hexagon Curling International which was the sponsor of the World Curling Championships.

Mr. Sugahara is also the oldest member of the Sugahara Clan started by his father, Kay Sugahara. Kay Sugahara was an early supporter of the US-Asia Institute and Chairman of the Institute’s Board of Trustees from 1981 until 1988. Kay Sugahara led the Institute’s first trade mission to the People’s Republic of China in September of 1981 and put into place many innovative programs that increased understanding between the U.S. and Asia. Kay Sugahara’s son, Kaytaro G. Sugahara, and granddaughter, Lisabeth Sugahara, continue the family tradition into the third generation as trustees at the US-Asia Institute. Great-granddaughter Madeline Clough was formerly the US-Asia Institute’s Program Director.

K.G. graduated from California Institute of Technology in 1961 with a Bachelor of Science in Engineering.

+ Nancy Tom

CHAIRMAN, TRUSTEE EMERITUS
Retired, Founder and Executive Director, Center for Asian Arts & Media, Columbia College

Nancy Tom served as a director and advisory committee member of the US-Asia Institute and organized the first National Asian-American Conference Gala in Washington D.C in the 1980’s when then-President Jimmy Carter served as keynote speaker.Ms. Tom has dedicated her life to promoting awareness of Asian-American issues, art and cultures. In 1997, she founded the Center for Asian Arts and Media at Columbia College in Chicago in order to highlight the contributions of Asian-Americans to this country’s culture and history. She is also committed to philanthropic activities and supporting other Asians in the arts. After the death of her husband in the early 80s, she founded the Chan Tom Memorial Fund Foundation. In 2001, she established the Helen Fong Dare Scholarship, for Columbia College students, in honor of her mother.

She is an independent curator and has handled special arts events for the City of Chicago and various Asian-American organizations. At the age of 71, Ms. Tom has found a new passion for film/video, producing and directing her first documentary, “Number One: The Helen Fong Dare Story” and producing many short videos. Recently Nancy created The Other Side: Chinese and Mexican Immigration to America, an arts exhibition examining the Chinese Exclusion Act through visual arts and frank discussion on a historical topic with ongoing implications. It opened in Pasadena, California at the USC Pacific Arts Museum in February 2014 and was named one of the Top 10 exhibits in Los Angeles in 2014. It opened to a record crowd of more than 3,000 guests at Houston’s Asia Society in March 2015.

Ms. Tom is a trustee of Columbia College Chicago, a board member of the Illinois Humanities Council, a member of four Cultural Committees of the City of Chicago’s Department of Cultural Affairs: Public Art, International Sister Cities, Multicultural Voices, and the International Program. In addition, she has served as a member of the Asian Advisory Council to former Governor George Ryan, the Council on Foreign Relations, Asia Society Committee, the Art Institute of Chicago’s Education Department and on the advisory board of many nonprofit Asian organizations.

Ms. Tom has spoken at numerous conferences, symposiums and panel discussions. Most recently, she was the Keynote Speaker at the Working Mother Media’s annual women of color conference and a selection panelist for the 2005 Thomas Jefferson Awards.

She has received numerous awards and honors for her community work in Chicago. In 1997, she received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Organization of Chinese Americans-Chicago. The OCA once again honored her in 2004 with the Woman Risk Taker and Enabler Award. In 1998, she was selected by Today’s Chicago Woman as one of the “100 Women Making a Difference.” In 2003, she received a milestone award from the Asian American Institute. In 2013, Ms. Tom was named a White House Champion of Change for doing extraordinary work in the arts to create a more safe, equal, and prosperous future for their communities and the country.

+ Marlon Young

CHAIRMAN/TRUSTEE EMERITUS
Senior Advisor and Associate Partner, Cambridge Family Enterprise Group

Marlon P. Young is a Senior Advisor and Associate Partner at Cambridge Family Enterprise Group, a highly specialized international advisory firm serving family enterprises. Based in New York, Mr. Young advises multigenerational family enterprises of various sizes and industries throughout North America, South America and Asia, assisting them in achieving their family, ownership, and organizational goals. Before joining Cambridge Family Enterprise Group, Mr. Young was CEO and Regional Head of HSBC Global Private Bank–Americas, a position he held for more than a decade. Prior to HSBC, Mr. Young held leadership roles within Citigroup for 25 years. His international banking experience involved assignments in Thailand, Singapore, Hong Kong, and the Philippines.

Mr. Young was Chairman of the US-Asia Institute from 2004-2014. He has received numerous awards due to his dedication and volunteer work including the U.S. President’s Volunteer Service Award. He is an active volunteer in Junior Achievement, Green Chimneys, and the Doe Fund. He is frequently invited to speak on diversity and leadership by not-for-profit institutions; including, the Asia Society, the International Leadership Foundation (ILF) and Ascend.

Mr. Young holds a master’s degree in business management from the Asian Institute of Management in Manila, Philippines, and a bachelor’s degree from the University of South Dakota.

You can download the one-pager detailing information of the US-Asia Institute’s Leadership HERE.