|
|||||||||||
|
|||
On the Internet, Class of 1970: Philippe Dauman & Gilgian Gelzer & Ann MalesterPhilippe P. Dauman is Co-Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of DND Capital Partners, LLC, a private equity firm specializing in media and communications. From January 1996 until May 2000 when Viacom Inc. acquired CBS, he served as Deputy Chairman of Viacom Inc. Mr. Dauman had been Executive Vice President of Viacom since March 1994. He joined Viacom as Senior Vice President and General Counsel in February 1993. Mr. Dauman is a director of Viacom, Inc., Blockbuster, Inc., Genuity Inc., Lafarge Corporation and Viacom's parent company, National Amusements, Inc. Before Viacom, Mr. Dauman was a partner of the New York-based law firm of Shearman & Sterling, where he served as principal outside counsel to Viacom. At Shearman & Sterling, Mr. Dauman was principally engaged in corporate and securities law and was a senior member of the firm's Mergers and Acquisitions Practice Group. Mr. Dauman represented numerous corporate and investment banking clients, whom he advised on corporate structuring and governance matters, in addition to acquisitions, divestitures and other transactions. Mr. Dauman serves on the Board of Trustees of the Museum of the City of New York and the Board of Visitors ofColumbia University Law School. Mr. Dauman earned his bachelor's degree from Yale College in 1974 and his law degree from Columbia Law School in 1978. *********************************************************** L’œuvre de Gilgian Gelzer est d’une intrigante complexité. Elle conjugue des photos, des dessins et des peintures de tous formats. Lesquelles œuvres ne sont en rien figuratives pour autant, bien qu’elles puissent reprendre des formes ou des désequilibres découverts dans des photos d’arbres, de neige ou d’eau. Gelzer développe ses compositions comme un jazzman improvise à partir d’un motif, le tournant et le retournant, y découvrant des possibilités inattendues. A la mine de plomb, il trace des diagrammes organiques ou architecturaux, rehaussés de stries parallèles ou percés de vides ovales. Sur la toile, il privilégie la frontalité, les découpages nets et les couleurs qui s’opposent intensément. Le regard est surpris et arrêté par ces expériences audacieuses, exemplaires du devenir actuel de l’abstraction. "Dans ma peinture, je sens confusément que l'image est là comme une image flottante. Pourquoi ne pas l'accepter? D'autant plus que je suis très intéressé par la peinture figurative. Quelque chose me retient. Je ne me sens pas capable d'installer un objet, une personne ou une photographie pour les peindre. Je ne sais pas choisir ce genre de sujet et quand je peins je n'ai pas d'autre projet que la peinture. Si on croit voir des images dans mes toiles, ce sont des images «hors lexique» qui viennent de l'acte même de peindre." (Gilgian Gelzer) *********************************************************** January 21, 2004 Deputy Bureau of Competition Director Ann Malester Leaving to Enter Private Practice Federal Trade Commission Chairman Timothy J. Muris today announced that Ann Malester, Deputy Director of the Bureau of Competition, is leaving the FTC and entering private practice. “During Ann’s distinguished 26-year career with the FTC, her persuasive advocacy and ability to motivate and lead others have won her admirers throughout the FTC and beyond. We are going to miss her,” Muris said. As deputy director, Malester helped supervise antitrust enforcement activities throughout the agency. From 1991 to 2003, Malester served as the Assistant Director of Mergers I, one of the four merger divisions within the Bureau. She supervised the investigation and litigation of hundreds of mergers and acquisitions during the 1990s. Her division reviewed proposed mergers in a wide range of industries, including the pharmaceutical, biotechnology, medical device, and defense and aerospace industries. Under her leadership, the Commission successfully obtained relief for consumers in mergers such as Amgen/Immunex, Pfizer/Pharmacia, Glaxo/SmithKlineBeecham, and Lockheed/Martin Marietta. Malester participated in a number of the Commission’s leading cases, including two matters that reached the U.S. Supreme Court, FTC v. Ticor Title Insurance Co. and American Medical Association v. FTC. Malester also played a leading role in a number of cases in which the Commission successfully challenged proposed acquisitions in Federal District Court, including FTC v. IMO Industries and FTC v. Alliant Tech Systems. Malester won numerous awards at the FTC, including the Chairman’s Award, the Brandeis Award for best litigator, and the Presidential Rank Award, which is the highest honor given to federal government executives. Malester also served as the FTC’s liaison with the U.S. Department of Defense and served as the Commission’s representative on the Defense Science Board’s Task Force on Vertical Integration and Supplier Decisions in the Defense Industry. SOURCE: http://64.233.167.104/search?q=cache:_-YODZLalhUJ:thetennischannel.tv/dauman.php++%22Philippe+P+Dauman%22+%22+Shearman%22&hl=en, AND http://www.galeriebernardjordan.com/index.jsp?s=1342, AND http://www-texte.culture.fr/Groups/art_contemporain/art |
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||