Monthly Archives: February 2015

Women’s History Month Walking Tour – Women’s eNews

AN INVITATION FROM WOMEN’S eNEWS

We would love it if you could join us in March for Women’s eNews “Women’s History Month Walking Tour,” which kicks off this Sunday, March 1, at 11 a.m. (Details below). The tours will also take place every Sunday in March at 11 a.m. Betsy Wade ’52 and James Boylan teamed up for the research and the writing to develop the tour, so I know it will be first-rate!

 The March 1, 2015, tour begins at 11:00 a.m. and ends at 12:30 p.m. Meet in the lobby of 6 Barclay Street, New York, NY, 10007. Tour tickets are $20; seniors $15; students free.

For reservations or more information, contact Meagan Lee Butler, 1-212-244-1720, openingtheway@womensenews.org or visit the tour’s official web page: www.womensenews.org/openingtheway

On Sunday, March 1, at 4 p.m., Women’s eNews will host a screening of  “Iron-Jawed Angels,”  followed by a panel discussion. The film portrays Alice Paul’s strategy and sacrifice to gain women’s suffrage in the United States. The panelists are Tanya Melich, author of the “Republican War against Women,” and  Glynda Carr from Higher Heights for America, which is dedicated to increasing the voting power of African American women. Snacks and drinks will be served.

* Donations accepted for the 4 p.m. film presentation at Women’s eNews HQ, 6 Barclay, 6th floor.

  For reservations or more information, contact Meagan Lee Butler,  1-12-244-1720, openingtheway@womensenews.org or visit the tour’s official web page: www.womensenews.org/openingtheway

Women’s eNews is an award-winning nonprofit news service (registered as a 501(c)3 with the IRS) – and dedicated to coverage of women’s rights, women’s health and other topics with significant impact on the lives of women and girls.

INVITE: Panel on Labor Rights and Human Trafficking

To commemorate the UN World Day of Social Justice 2015 you are kindly invited to attend a panel discussion on labor rights and human traffickingat Columbia University hosted by the International Labour Organization (ILO) and moderated by University Professor Joseph Stiglitz. (cocktail reception to follow).

When: Thursday February 19, 2015 from 3:00-5:30pm
Where: The Calder Lounge (Uris Hall, Columbia Business School)

The Speakers will be:

Moderator – Professor Joseph Stiglitz

Beate Andrees – Head, ILO Special Action Programme on Forced Labour
Yves Veyrier – Secrétaire confédéral, Force Ouvrière
Marcia Eugenio – Director, Office of Child Labor, Forced Labor, and Human Trafficking,U.S. Department of Labor

Please join us for this lively discussion and observance of the World Day of Social Justice.

If you are planning to attend, please send an RSVP to st2936@columbia.eduas space is limited.

“Social justice is an underlying principle for peaceful and prosperous coexistence within and among nations. We uphold the principles of social justice when we promote gender equality or the rights of indigenous peoples and migrants. We advance social justice when we remove barriers that people face because of gender, age, race, ethnicity, religion, culture or disability.

Observance of World Day of Social Justice should support efforts of the international community in poverty eradication, the promotion of full employment and decent work, gender equity and access to social well-being and justice for all.”

 

INVITE: PANEL – Where are all the gay CEO’s

How many CEOs are willing to be publicly identified as gay?
In April 2014, Apple CEO Tim Cook told the world, “I’m proud to be gay.”  

How many other CEOs can you name saying the same?

 Join the Bernstein Student Leadership and Ethics Board and Cluster Q for:

 “And then there were two:”

Where are all the gay CEOs?

Thursday, February 12th
12:30 p.m. – 2:00 p.m.
Warren Room 310

Lunch will be provided
Register Here

 For more background about LGBTQ issues in the business world, please read this New York Times article HERE

 On August 14, 2014, C1 Financial CEO Trevor Burgess rang the opening bell of the New York Stock Exchange to celebrate his company’s first day of trading. A short time later, he received a message from Jason Grenfell Gardner, the CEO of pharmaceutical company IGI Laboratories. It read: “And then there were two.”

There are over 5,000 publicly traded companies in the US. But Grenfell-Gardner and Burgess remain two of only three CEOs who are willing to be publicly identified as gay.

So where are all the others?

Come listen to author and New York Times business columnist, James B. Stewart, Trevor Burgess and Jason Grenfell-Gardner share their experiences and give their views on one of the most powerful, lingering taboos of the American C-suite.

James B. Stewart, Bloomberg Professor of Journalism, Columbia Graduate School of Journalist; Author and New York Times Columnist

Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and bestselling author James B. Stewart combines the skills of an investigative reporter with the style and sensibility of a novelist, examining events in finance, law, and politics that shape American society. The San Francisco Examiner called him “the journalist every journalist would like to be” and The Daily Beast named him one of the 15 “most important writers on business and economics.” Stewart’s New York Times column, “Common Sense,” appears weekly in the Business Day section. He provides skillful coverage of corporate America and Wall Street, often exploring the use and abuse of power at the highest levels of business and government. The author of 11 books, Stewart’s New York Times bestseller, DisneyWar, about Michael Eisner’s reign at the company, won the Gerald Loeb Award for Best Business Book. His other bestsellers include Blood Sport and Den of Thieves, the definitive account of 1980s Wall Street insider trading scandals. A Harvard-educated lawyer, Stewart is the Bloomberg Professor of Business Journalism at the Columbia Journalism School.

Jason Grenfell-Gardner, President and Chief Executive Officer of IGI Laboratories, Inc.

Mr. Grenfell-Gardner is the President and Chief Executive Officer of IGI Laboratories, Inc. (NYSE MKT: IG), where he is transforming the organization into a leading specialty generic pharmaceutical company. Prior to joining IGI, Mr. Grenfell-Gardner spent over eight years at Hikma Pharmaceuticals, PLC, and its subsidiaries including West-Ward Pharmaceuticals in the United States. He served in a number of roles, most recently as SVP of Sales and Marketing. Before joining Hikma, Mr. Grenfell-Gardner worked throughout Central and Eastern Europe as a partner at Trigon Capital, a boutique investment bank, focused on mergers and acquisitions. During his time in that region, Mr. Grenfell-Gardner served as Chairman of the Board of Sanitas Pharmaceuticals, as well as other board positions. He holds an MA (Hons) in Economics from the University of St Andrews in Scotland and an MBA from INSEAD.

Trevor R. Burgess, President & Chief Executive Officer of C1 Bank

Mr. Burgess is the President, Chief Executive Officer and Director of C1 Bank and its parent C1 Financial (NYSE: BNK) having founded its predecessor in 2009. In 2013, he was named the Ernst & Young Florida Entrepreneur of the Year in the Financial Services Category and in 2014 was named American Banker’s Community Banker of the Year. Mr. Burgess is a co-inventor of the technology for which C1 Bank has filed seven patent applications. Prior to joining the Bank, Mr. Burgess worked as a Managing Director for Morgan Stanley, where, among other responsibilities, he executed initial public offerings as an investment banker in the Equity Capital Markets division. Prior to his nearly ten years at Morgan Stanley, Mr. Burgess worked as a management consultant at Monitor Company. He earned his bachelor’s degree from Dartmouth College in 1994.  Trevor and his husband Gary live in St Petersburg, Florida with their daughter Logan.

***

The purpose of the Bernstein Student Leadership and Ethics Board is to foster a culture and safeguard a tradition of principled leadership throughout the Columbia Business School community. The Board fulfills its purpose by developing, implementing and monitoring programs that cultivate leadership, build character, and promote ethical decision making, which, in turn, enable Columbia Business School students to become productive, moral, and caring participants in their companies and communities.

Cluster Q is Columbia Business School’s LGBTQ association. As a proactive and dynamic student group on campus, Cluster Q strives to foster a positive learning environment and build a professional network for all students, faculty, administrators, alumni, and significant others regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity/expression. Cluster Q hosts Ally Week bi-annually to educate the Columbia Business School Community on LGBTQ issues and to support an inclusive environment. Cluster Q also leads a variety of events and workshops, attends conferences, and fosters connections with professionals throughout the business and LGBTQ community.

INVITE: Overseas Press Club of America

Event Name:  Toujours la Différence: Why French and American Satirical Cartoonists Are Different. Are Pictures Multilingual?

Event Date and Time:  12 February 2015 – 6:30pm – 8:00pm

Event Location:  Club Quarters, 40 West 45th Street

Event City:  New York

Event Fee:  FREE

The horrific attacks on journalists at the French magazine Charlie Hebdo have underlined differences in the French and American approach to satire. While defending the right to freedom of expression, many American media declined to publish cartoons from the French magazine that mocked the prophet Mohammed.

Join the OPC Feb. 12 for a discussion on how the French and Americans views of deliberately offensive humor vary and why, and whether there should be limits on satirical cartoons and writing.

Panelists are: Signe Wilkinson of the Philadelphia Daily News, a three-time winner of the OPC’s Thomas Nast award for best cartoons on international affairs and the first female cartoonist to win the Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Cartooning; Guénola Pellen, editor-in-chief of France-Amérique; Felipe Galindo, aka FEGGO, a Mexican cartoonist working in the U.S. and published in The New Yorker, The New York Times and many others; Asra Nomani, A Muslim feminist author, former Wall Street Journal reporter and the author of Standing Alone: An American Woman’s Struggle for the Soul of Islam.

Moderating the discussion is Jacqueline Albert-Simon, U.S. Bureau Chief for Politique Internationale and a governor of the OPC.

The program begins at 6:30 pm. Stop by for a reception at 6:00 p.m.

Please RSVP by emailing patricia@opcofamerica.org or calling the OPC at 212 626-9220.