You and a guest will go to dinner with James "Jim" Luce at one of his favorite restaurants, Yasha Ramen, in New York City.
Jim Luce began his career as an Assistant Eurobond Portfolio Manager with Daiwa Bank on Wall Street upon his return from studying and working in Tokyo in 1983 at the age of 23.
He left Wall Street following an appearance on the Donahue Show discussing religious addiction and the need for an "anonymous" organization to help those recovering from religious addiction, including followers of the TV evangelists such as Jerry Falwell, Pat Robertson, and Jimmy Swaggart. Luce co-founded Fundamentalists Anonymous, and with the help of Hank Luce and the Henry Luce Foundation, raised $1.1 million from 1985-89 helping build support groups across the U.S. for recovering fundamentalists. He also testified in Congress against the TV evangelists.
Luce returned to Wall Street working with Merrill Lynch in the World Financial Center, leaving just before 9/11. He then served as right-hand man to the founder of a Lazard Frères spin-off in Rockefeller Center, handled all arrangements with his counterpart in Paris.
Jim writes for the Huffington Post and the Daily Kos on Thought Leaders and Global Citizens. Luce wrote the lead story in the Philanthropy section of the New York Times in 2007 on this organization and has been profiled in the New York Post and Toastmaster's Magazine. He has written about his experiences in Haiti for the BBC. He holds a B.A. in East Asian Studies from the College of Wooster and studied at both Waseda University, Tokyo, Japan, and Centro de Estudiar Colombino-Americano, Bogotá, Colombia. He was an American Field Service (AFS) exchange student to Germany in high school and lived in Paris as a child. Jim typifies the spirit of Waseda University as reflected in its motto gensei wo wasurenu or 'Not Forgetting the Real World.'
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