Entries from March 2007
MFound: The good deed remembered
March 29, 2007 · Comments Off
GAMBLING | Scandal in ‘51 still resonates in Big Apple
SU The Daily Orange (subscription), NY – 17 hours ago
… New York school was no match for the drawing power of the City College of New York, Long Island University, New York University and Manhattan College. …
Categories: MFound
JBlogger: Jasper Christine (2008)
March 29, 2007 · Comments Off
Jasper Christine (2008)
http://quasimodo86.livejournal.com/profile/
http://quasimodo86.livejournal.com/data/rss
Categories: JBlogger
JObit: Girard, Jerry
March 28, 2007 · Comments Off
March 27, 2007 Tuesday 3:11 PM GMT
WPIX sports broadcaster dead at 74
SECTION: STATE AND REGIONAL
DATELINE: VALHALLA N.Y.
Jerry Girard, a WPIX-TV sportscaster for 21 years, has died of cancer. He was 74.
Girard, whose nightly reports were characterized by a dry, caustic sense of humor, died on Sunday at Westchester Medical Center, the station said on its newscast Monday.
He was WPIX’s sports broadcaster from 1974 to 1995, after working as a news writer for the station for seven years.
Girard was “a caring friend and a seasoned professional who looked out for younger colleagues,” the station said.
Born in Gerard Alfred Suglia in Chicago, Girard grew up in the Bronx and attended Manhattan College.
A celebration of his life was scheduled for Saturday at Fred H. McGrath & Son Funeral Home in Bronxville.
He is survived by two sisters.
LOAD-DATE: March 28, 2007
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The Journal News (Westchester County, New York)
March 27, 2007 Tuesday
GWPR Edition
Jerry Girard of Bronxville, former WPIX sportscaster, dies
BYLINE: Nicole Neroulias
SECTION: NEWS; Pg. 2B
BRONXVILLE – Jerry Girard, a New York City sports broadcaster known for his deadpan wit, died Sunday of cancer at Westchester Medical Center. The Bronxville resident was 74.
Girard worked as a weeknight sports anchor on WPIX-TV Channel 11 from 1974 to 1995, when he resigned rather than switch to weekend duty. He was replaced by Sal Marchiano.
“He was very popular with the viewers, very popular in the newsroom,” Karen Scott, news director for WPIX-TV Channel 11, said yesterday. “He was a hard worker, and he definitely knew his sports.”
The Bronx native, born Gerard A. Suglia, went on the air for the first time at the age of 41, after seven years as a news writer for the station. The Manhattan College alumnus’ early radio career included stints in South Carolina, Pennsylvania and Indiana.
In addition to rooting for his beloved Yankees, Girard was a boxing, basketball and horseracing fan. He liked to read and play pool.
Girard lived in Bronxville for many years. During his retirement, he continued actively following professional sports and listening to the music of Frank Sinatra and Ella Fitzgerald, his family said.
He did not have children.
A celebration of his life will be held from noon to 5 p.m. Saturday at Fred H. McGrath & Son Funeral Home, 20 Cedar St., Bronxville.
Friends may make memorial contributions in Girard’s name to: Hospice and Palliative Care of Westchester, 95 S. Broadway, Fourth Floor, White Plains, NY 10601.
LOAD-DATE: March 28, 2007
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The New York Times
March 27, 2007 Tuesday
Late Edition – Final
Jerry Girard, 74, WPIX Sports Broadcaster
SECTION: Section B; Column 5; Sports Desk; Pg. 7
Jerry Girard, a sports broadcaster for WPIX-TV in New York from 1974 to 1995, died Sunday in Hawthorne, N.Y. He was 74.
He died of esophageal cancer at Westchester Medical Center, his family said.
Girard, originally Gerard Alfred Suglia, was born Aug. 6, 1932, in Chicago. He was reared in the Bronx and attended Manhattan College.
He was a disc jockey in Myrtle Beach, S.C.; Gary, Ind.; and Altoona, Pa., before returning to New York as a record librarian at WNEW radio. He moved to WPIX as a news writer before becoming the station’s sports voice.
His nightly television appearances to describe the day’s sports happenings were characterized by frequent acidic commentary, invariably delivered with a straight face.
He is survived by two sisters.
LOAD-DATE: March 27, 2007
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Categories: JObit
JOBIT: Murphy, Edward (????)
March 28, 2007 · Comments Off
JOBIT: Murphy, Edward (????)
http://www.legacy.com/WashingtonPost/DeathNotices.asp?Page=LifeStory&PersonId=86977247
***Begin Quote***
Edward Murphy
MURPHY
EDWARD MURPHY 1924-2007
Edward Murphy of Garden City, NY and McLean, VA, man of the world but always a New Yorker, died March 15, 2007. Loving husband of Eleanor. Survived by Edward Murphy Jr., Maryann Gregg, Francis Murphy, and Laura Kadonoff, and 10 grandchildren. An Electrical Engineer, Edward was an alumnus of Regis High School, Fordham University, and Manhattan College. He served as a Navy Reservist during WWII, and was a career-long Sales and Marketing Executive for Westinghouse. With diplomacy and finesse, he worked, traveled, lived, and made many friends in South Africa, Hong Kong, the Middle East, Paris, and London. Services were held in Garden City, NY on March 20, 2007.
Published in The Washington Post on 3/28/2007.
***End Quote***
Guestbook for your comments is at:
http://www.legacy.com/WashingtonPost/GB/GuestbookView.aspx?PersonId=86977247
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Categories: JObit
JObit: Koellner,Francis (Frank) A. (MC?????)
March 28, 2007 · Comments Off
Staten Island Advance (New York)
March 25, 2007 Sunday
FRANCIS KOELLNER, 89
SECTION: OBITS; Pg. A11
STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. – Francis (Frank) A. Koellner, a lifetime Sunnyside resident, Staten Island history buff and a former chief shipping clerk for Maersk in Newark, N.J., died early yesterday in his home after a long bout with cancer. He was two weeks away from his 90th birthday.
Mr. Koellner was reared across the street from the home in which he died. An avid woodworker, he built the home himself before his family moved there in 1951.
An enthusiast of Staten Island history, he imparted much of his knowledge of the borough to his children and grandchildren, the source of his greatest joy, his family said.
Mr. Koellner was also the oldest active alumnus of the former Augustinian Academy on Grymes Hill, where he graduated in 1936. Afterward, he attended Manhattan College, earning an engineering degree before enlisting in the Army in 1943.
He served as the priority civilian chief in the enlisted reserve in Washington state, and had the rank of sergeant major when he left the reserve in 1946.
Mr. Koellner married the former Katherine Krebbs three years later.
He worked as a sales representative for automobile makers Packard, Cadillac and General Motors before taking a job with Maersk in 1960. He retired in 1991, at the age of 75.
Tom Conway, president of the Augustinian Alumni Association, said Mr. Koellner always attended alumni meetings and was a wealth of knowledge about the Grymes Hill school.
“We were always taught when we went to school to be Augustinian gentlemen,” said Conway. “He truly defined what it was to be an Augustinian gentleman.”
In addition to his wife of 57 years, Mr. Koellner is survived by his daughters, Joyce Flattry and Deborah Bruni; sons Jay and Gregory Koellner and nine grandchildren.
The funeral will be Tuesday from the Harmon Funeral Home, West Brighton, with a mass at 10 a.m. in Our Lady of Good Counsel R.C. Church, Tompkinsville, followed by burial in Moravian Cemetery, New Dorp.
LOAD-DATE: March 26, 2007
Categories: JObit
JNews: Sister Mary Eileen O’Brien (????)
March 28, 2007 · Comments Off
The Journal News (Westchester County, New York)
March 25, 2007 Sunday
RK Edition
Dominican College president committed to human growth
BYLINE: Alice Gomstyn
SECTION: LOWER HUDSON BUSINESS; Pg. 70K
She is the leader of 350 employees at an organization that, in the last fiscal year, took in $33.4 million in revenue. She serves on the board of directors of the Rockland Business Association and in 2000, was named Woman of the Year by the Rockland Business and Professional Women’s Club. She is admired for her management skills and her “results-oriented” approach to her work.
But Sister Mary Eileen O’Brien doesn’t necessarily see herself as a business leader.
“I see myself primarily as a Dominican Sister who is very committed to human growth,” Sister O’Brien said.
“I think that each person,” she said, “is blessed with special gifts and they differ one from another. I remember, many years ago, hearing that most people develop little more than 15 or 20 percent of their potential, and it just seems to me if people are going to be happy and healthy and helpful, it’s so important that we develop as much of our potential as is possible.”
Sister O’Brien is the president of Dominican College. Under her tenure, Dominican – a liberal arts college founded in 1952 by the Dominican Sisters of Blauvelt – has seen the construction of several major facilities, a significant increase in the number of full-time students and the development of six master’s degree programs.
All the while, Sister O’Brien, herself a Dominican College alumna, has racked up an impressive array of honors: In addition to the Rockland Business and Professional Women’s Club award, she’s been recognized by Helen Hayes Hospital, the Rockland Employment Network, the Rockland Economic Development Corporation, the Rockland County Girl Scouts and the Rockland County Association.
This year, she’ll add another distinction to the list: Rockland Business Leader of the Year. The Journal News will present the award on May 2 at a luncheon benefiting Junior Achievement of the Hudson Valley. The nominees for the award were judged on criteria that included vision and innovation, courageous thinking, community involvement and inspiring leadership.
Sister O’Brien, the first college president and the first nun to receive the honor, “stood out from the rest,” said Angela Giustino, president of Junior Achievement of the Hudson Valley.
“She, as a leader, influences other people in their civic duties as well as in business,” said Holly Freedman of the Rockland Economic Development Corporation, which nominated Sister O’Brien. “She is a person of very high integrity who is good for people in business, and in all fields actually, to emulate.”
Sister O’Brien doesn’t seem to dwell on her own success, however, especially when it comes to her work at Dominican College.
“Nothing that’s been accomplished at the college has been done by a single individual, but rather by a group of very dedicated and competent individuals,” she said. “We’ve been very fortunate to have many faculty and administrators who have made a very long-term commitment to the growth of the college.”
A veteran in a changing field
Sister O’Brien’s own commitment to the college has spanned more than 20 years. She’s spent most of that time as the college’s president – a position she’s actually held twice. She joined the college in 1977 as a mathematics lecturer and an assistant to then-president Sister Natalie Casey. When Sister Casey fell ill the following year, the college’s Board of Trustees asked Sister O’Brien to step in as acting president. In 1979, “acting” was dropped from her title and Sister O’Brien began a presidency that would last nine years.
She left the college in 1987 after the Dominican Sisters elected Sister O’Brien to a six-year term as the president of their congregation. In 1994, at the request of then-president Sister Kathleen Sullivan, she returned to Dominican College as the college’s executive vice president. Three years later, she was back in the president’s chair.
For O’Brien, coming back to the college and later, to the presidency, was an experience akin, she said, to that portrayed in a painting that hangs in her office – a copy of Winslow Homer’s “The Veteran in a New Field.”
“There’s a gentleman returning from the Civil War, working in a field of hay, and his gun and water container are on the side and he’s picked up a whole new career,” she said. “I have always felt that my second involvement in the college was as fresh and exciting as the first ever was.”
While her first term focused mainly on the development of the college’s undergraduate programs, her second term has largely revolved around Dominican’s evolution from a small commuter college to a full-service, residential campus.
“The college, as a growing institution, was in a new place,” she said. “The needs were different.”
The college’s enrollment has remained fairly steady over the last decade at about 1,800 students. But the make-up of the student body itself has undergone a dramatic shift. According to Brian Fernandes, Dominican’s vice president for enrollment management, when Sister O’Brien returned to office in 1994, full-time, traditional-age students – those who matriculate shortly after graduating high school – accounted for no more than 40 percent of the student body.
Today, they make up 70 percent of Dominican’s student population.
“Nationally speaking, there have been more high school students graduating,” Fernandes said. Over the years, he said, “the traditional age students provided us with the best opportunity for growth,” he said.
“We’ve never lost focus on our traditional age students,” he added. “It’s just that we have been more active in terms of drawing of more traditional-age students than we have in the past.”
The college’s efforts to attract and accommodate new students – particularly those who want to live on campus – has spurred a flurry of construction and renovation work. In 2000, the college added a second story to the Granito Center – home to the college’s dining hall – for a new college bookstore, health center and a global communications center. In September 2005, the college opened Rosary Hall, a second student dormitory. About a month later, the college dedicated the Prusmack Center for Health and Science Education, a four-story, $13.7-million facility that’s become home to the nursing, physical therapy, occupational therapy, athletic training, math and science programs. A third residence hall is now under construction and is expected to be completed by August.
Fernandes said that Sister O’Brien’s vision for the college helped guide it all.
“If it wasn’t for the fact that she had the vision, saying we have to build,” he said, “I don’t think that we would be able to have the success that we have had in terms of increasing the enrollment.”
But Sister O’Brien brought more than just vision to the college’s expansion efforts – she helped bring dollars.
“We are an institution that is self-sufficient, but at the same time we are not the kind of institution that has huge endowments like some of the other institutions do,” Fernandes said. Sister O’Brien, he said, spearheaded fundraising efforts for projects like the construction of the Prusmack Center as well as academic programs, such as the college’s master’s program in nursing and its new Doctor of Physical Therapy program.
“She’s very successful because when you talk to her and you listen to her passion for this institution and what it’s doing and the impact it has on the community, people are engaged to want to help,” said Dorothy Filoramo, Dominican’s vice president for institutional advancement.
Business of inspiration
Sister O’Brien’s work in education has always been tied to her commitment to her faith. Born in the Bronx and raised in Pearl River, Sister O’Brien first became exposed to the work of Dominican sisters in Goshen, where she attended a Catholic boarding school.
The sisters were her teachers, she said, and she was impressed with their sheer joy and their generosity. She later joined the order and, at its request, went on to teach math at two schools in the Bronx. She made her first foray into education administration in 1972, when she became principal of St. Luke School, a kindergarten-through-eighth grade school in the south Bronx.
It was a challenging place to be.
“Circumstances were not easy,” she said. “The people whose children were in the school were warm and dedicated people. They, in many cases, were poor and struggling with living in an area that was not always so safe.”
Her experiences there taught her an enduring lesson.
“What I learned from the people I worked with and the families I worked with was that when good people with good will work together to accomplish something, it’s possible,” she said. “That’s a strong conviction that I continue to carry.”
Sister O’Brien’s skill at working with others has earned her the admiration of employees and colleagues alike.
“She is results-oriented, but at the same time cares deeply about people, so it makes it easy to work for her,” Fernandes said.
“She’s a real consensus-builder,” said Cliff Wood, the president of Rockland Community College. Wood co-chairs “Forty under Forty” with Sister O’Brien. The program honors Rockland residents under the age of 40 who have exhibited leadership, talent and generosity. When the Forty under Forty panel meets to decide on its annual honorees, Wood said, Sister O’Brien makes sure everyone’s voice is heard.
“She can really lead a discussion and get something done,” he said.
Students, too, have been impressed with Sister O’Brien’s people skills and also by her warmth, said Rafael Ortiz Jr. Ortiz, who graduated in 2004, said Sister O’Brien was always happy to give a word of advice or encouragement.
“She never underestimated anybody,” he said. “Her being there inspired me to do more.”
Inspiring others, whether it be through college programs or civic projects like Forty under Forty, is something Sister O’Brien takes seriously.
“My own feeling is nothing helps another person grow more than being in touch with alive, inspiring, dedicated people,” she said.
“People can be greatly encouraged in their pursuit of generous living,” she said, “by other good people who are committed to the same thing.”
==
Sister Mary Eileen O’Brien
Title: President, Dominican College
Age: 65
Residence: Orangeburg
Family: Parents Philip and Helen O’Brien, West Nyack, two brothers and two sisters
Education: Bachelor of arts, Dominican College. Master’s in mathematics, Manhattan College. Master’s in Adult and Higher Education, Teachers College, Columbia. Doctorate in Educational Administration and Supervision, Fordham University. Nine credits in Spanish, La Javeriana in Bogota, Columbia. Twelve credits in theology, Providence College.
Professional memberships: Association of Catholic Colleges and Universities, Association of Governing Boards, Council of Independent Colleges, National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities, Dominican Higher Education Council, Lower Hudson Valley Catholic Colleges and Universities Consortium, Rockland Business Association Board of Directors, St. Luke’s Educational Foundation Board of Directors, “Forty Under Forty” Co-chair for Rockland County, Bon Secours Charity Health System Board, National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities Board.
Whom do you most admire?
I admire people of vision and courage. I am impressed by people who work to make our world more compassionate and just. Some of the people I admire most are those closest to me – parents, friends, colleagues, members of my religious community. I am also deeply inspired by great people like Jesus, Theilhard deChardin, Nelson Mandela, Jimmy Carter, Catherine of Siena.
What is your biggest regret?
I don’t have too many regrets. However, whenever I fail to reach out to another for advice or assistance, I believe I am the poorer for it. There is so much we can learn from one another and so much we can accomplish together. I love Margaret Mead’s quote: “Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful committed citizens can change the world. Indeed it is the only thing that ever has.”
What do you wish to know more about?
Technology. I have great appreciation for new developments in technology and greatly support its use in the college. I envy young nieces and nephews who grew up with it and can use it so easily.
What do you do to relax?
I find being outdoors very relaxing. Good conversation with family and friends is a joy. I also enjoy reading, keeping current with world events and learning new insights regarding learning and human growth. I thoroughly enjoy a good movie or a good play. I thoroughly enjoyed the film ‘Water’ about the plight of widows in India at the time of Gandhi. I recently saw ‘Translations,’ a Brian Friel play about the English occupation of Ireland in the 1830s. I have a great love of history.
What are you reading now?
I am currently reading Al Gore’s, ‘An Inconvenient Truth.’ I share his concern for the environment. I am also reading Mary Oliver’s latest book of poetry, ‘Thirst.’ She writes beautifully of what she learns from nature.
What was your best day?
I try to make every day my best day.
LOAD-DATE: March 25, 2007
Categories: JNews
JOBIT: Farrelly, Richard J. Sr. (1953)
March 28, 2007 · Comments Off
ACTIONABLE OBIT: EXPIRES 28MAR07 Philly, PA MC1953 Farrelly, Richard J. Sr.
http://www.legacy.com/Philly/DeathNotices.asp?Page=LifeStory&PersonId=86967782
***Begin Quote***
Richard J. Farrelly Sr.
FARRELLY, RICHARD J. SR. March 24, 2007 of Wayne PA and Ocean City N.J.; beloved husband of Patricia C. (nee Dillon); father of Kathleen M. Farrelly, Esq., Richard J. Jr. (Sharon), Marianne Boyle (Thomas), Elizabeth Sur, Esq. (Julian), James P. Farrelly (Dr. Karla Hansen), Regina E. Yoegel (Eric); also survived by 14 grand-children; brother of Thomas P. Farrelly; cousin of Mary Jones, Bernadette Curran, Patricia Connor, Thomas O’Connor and Bessie Cooney. Relatives and friends are invited to Funeral Mass Wednesday 6:30 P.M. Church of St. Katharine of Siena, Aberdeen Ave. & Lancaster Pike, where friends may call after 5 P.M. Int. private. For those who wish to do so, contributions to Manhattan College Engineering Fund, c/o Commerce Bank, 100 E. Swedesford Rd., Devon, PA 19333 would be appreciated. Arrangements by THE DONOHUE FUNERAL HOME, WAYNE PA, 610-989-9600.
Published in the Philadelphia Inquirer & Philadelphia Daily News on 3/26/2007.
***End Quote***
[mcALUMdb: 1953]
Guestbook for your comments is at:
http://www.legacy.com/Philly/GB/GuestbookView.aspx?PersonId=86967782
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Categories: JObit
JNews: Peter J. Martyn (1982)
March 27, 2007 · Comments Off
has a length of 156 characters and resulted in the following TinyURL which has a length of 25 characters:
(Can websites make longer urls? This has to be a record!)
National Stock Exchange Names Peter J. Martyn Vice President of Customer Services and Yizhaq Pinhas Vice President and Director of Development
Last Update: 3:03 PM ET Mar 26, 2007
CHICAGO, March 26, 2007 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ — National Stock Exchange(R), Inc. (NSX(SM)) today announced the appointment of Peter J. Martyn as Vice President of Customer Services and the promotion of Yizhaq “Zak” Pinhas to Vice President and Director of Development.
Mr. Martyn will drive NSX’s customer service initiatives in this newly created position, serving as the liaison between the Exchange’s sales staff and the technology area to see that the needs of NSX customers are met.
Mr. Pinhas joined NSX in March 2006 as Director of Development in NSX’s technology area. He has been instrumental in the design and development of NSX’s new state-of-the art technology platform — NSX BLADE(SM) and the NASD/NSX Trade Reporting Facility.
“The execution of NSX’s new business plan requires a dedicated, best-in-class team to bring it to fruition,” said NSX CEO and Chairman of NSX Holdings, Inc. “In the past year, Zak Pinhas has demonstrated that he is a key player on this team and his contributions continue to grow. The addition of Peter Martyn to our staff brings a new depth of experience to the Exchange and fortifies NSX’s number one commitment to customer service.”
Before joining NSX, Mr. Martyn worked at the Nasdaq Stock Market for 14 years, most recently as Managing Director for Nasdaq Transaction Sales. His experience at Nasdaq focused largely on the areas of customer service, sales and product development, and included positions as Vice President, Nasdaq Trading and Market Services; Vice President, Service Development; and Vice President, SuperMontage Program Management. Earlier in his career he worked as a Manager at JP Morgan/Morgan Guarantee; an Analyst at the National Association of Securities Dealers, and an Analyst at CC PACE (Cabot Consulting Group). He has a Bachelor of Science Degree in Business Administration from Manhattan College, Riverdale, NY.
Mr. Pinhas was Director of the Application Services Group at the Nasdaq Stock Market from 2004 until 2006, when he came to NSX. He worked for Sungard Business Integration, a division of Sungard Data Systems, from 1997 to 2004, most recently as Director of Research and Development. Before that, he served as Software Project Officer for the Israel Air Force, IDF. He has a Master of Science Degree in Computer Science and Bachelor of Science Degree in Mathematics and Computer Science, both from BAR-ILAN University in Israel.
In 2006, NSX implemented a new business strategy, which culminated in the last quarter of the year with the launch of NSX BLADE(SM) and the NASD/NSX Trade Reporting Facility. The new platform was built from the ground up to meet the speed, price and service needs in a post-Regulation NMS environment. It was designed to accommodate the broadest range of users, including OTC Market Makers, ECNs, algorithmic traders and agency brokers.
NSX, the nation’s first all-electronic stock exchange, is the cost-effective provider of exchange services. Having replaced its physical trading floor with a completely automated market in 1980, NSX has been a model of exchange efficiency and a driving force for change in the world of securities exchanges. Founded in 1885, NSX continues to lead the way in
exchange innovation. For more information, visit NSX’s website at http://www.nsx.com.
NASD is a registered trademark of National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc.; NASD/NSX is used under license from NASD.
SOURCE National Stock Exchange(R), Inc.
Bonnie Greenberg of National Stock Exchange(R), Inc., +1-312-786-8307, bonnie.greenberg@nsx.com http://www.nsx.com/
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[MCalumDB: 1982 ]
Categories: JNews
JNews: Servidio, Anthony Jr. (1970)
March 26, 2007 · Comments Off
http://www.forbes.com/businesswire/feeds/businesswire/
2007/03/26/businesswire20070326005882r1.html
Business Wire – Press Release
TABB Group Expands Research Analyst and Client Coverage Teams
to Meet Surging Sell-side and Buy-side Customer Demands
03.26.07, 10:58 AM ET
***Begin Quote***
TABB Group, the financial markets research, advisory and crisis management firm with offices in New York, Massachusetts and Washington, D.C., announced today the addition of two research analysts and a sales director to meet current customer demands and position the company for continued growth in 2007 in the U.S. and Europe. The new staff includes Cliff Webster, a senior analyst in the crisis and continuity services practice, reporting to Alex Tabb, partner and practice leader; Anthony Servidio, Jr., director of sales reporting to Mike Ross, partner and vice president, sales and marketing; and Cheyenne Morgan, an analyst in the securities and capital markets practice, reporting to Bob Iati, partner and research director.
{Extraneous Deleted}
Anthony Servidio, Jr., joins TABB from SAVVIS Communications in New York where as a global account manager he was responsible for sales and management of ten of their top 100 customers, selling IP-centric solution sales of private networks, VPRN, VoIP, client connectivity extranets, collocation, hosting, BCP and security services. From 2002 to 2004, he was a global account executive at Moneyline Telerate in New York selling SAVVIS network services and promoting solutions to hedge funds. He earned a BA in psychology from Manhattan College.
{Extraneous Deleted}
About TABB Group
TABB Group is the premier financial markets research, advisory and crisis management firm. Founded in 2003, TABB has helped senior business, trading and IT management gain a truer understanding of financial markets issues, trends, risks, opportunities and threats through comprehensive research and analysis, counsel, consulting, acquisition due diligence and business continuity strategies and consulting. For more information, visit www.tabbgroup.com.
***End Quote***
[MCOLDB: 1970]
Categories: JNews

