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PEOPLE >
UP&DOWN
Written by: Monika Mudranincová
PEOPLE UP

Photo: ČTK |
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Jack Stack
The CEO of Česká spořitelna received the Bank of the Year 2003
award in London, which it won in the contest "The Banker
Awards 2003". The international jury appreciated its
financial stability, profitability and successful transformation
into a modern financial institution. |
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Photo: ČTK |
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František Dohnal
The winner of the best and the worst information provider contest,
organized by Open Society, is the region of Vysočina. A regional
representative said that his clerks have always been very
forthcoming for citizens requiring information. |
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Photo: Archiv |
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Ladislav Bartoníček
Standard & Poor's Agency confirmed the high rating of Česká
pojišťovna BBB - with a stable outlook. The rating, which went
up by one grade, is based on long-term results and a strong
market position, says ČP's general director. |
PEOPLE DOWN

Photo: ČTK |
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Petr Kott
This ODS deputy did not take part in the voting for governmental
reform, because he was allegedly too drunk. Kott was expelled
from the party and asked by his colleagues to give up his
mandate at the Chamber of Deputies. He refused. |
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Photo: ČTK |
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Pavel Řežábek
The head of the Czech Consolidation Agency, sold allegedly "bad
debts" worth roughly CZK 39 billion to a private EC Group
for CZK 3.4 billion a year ago. A Czech Television report suggested
that many of them could have been easily collected. |
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Photo: MF Dnes |
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Antonín Šrom
The former head of the Opava Regional Authority was sentenced
to five years in prison for attempting to cheat the state
out of a CZK 19 million loan. In 2000 he asked the Ministry
of Social Affairs for a subsidy to build a hospice, which
in reality he wanted to use for other purposes. |
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| Photo: Tomáš Kubeš |
Karel Doubner: Transcontinental
inspiration
THIS YEAR the realization of an unusual project began in Shanghai,
China - the construction of a Czech Quarter. The designer is Karel
Doubner (52), an architect and the president of Obec architektů
(Community of Architects), under whose leadership 400 apartments,
40 villas, a hotel, offices, a shopping center and a restaurant
serving Czech beer on tap will be created in Shanghai. "Four
other Czech architects (Franta, Milunič, Chválek, and Fuchs) and
I have prepared examples of all sorts of styles. Historical cubistic,
Art Nouveau, and Gothic houses will be arranged side by side in
a small area, thus perhaps inspiring Shanghai residents to visit
Prague," he says.
The first stimulus for the prestigious project was last year's
visit by Chinese politicians and entrepreneurs to Prague and the
way they were charmed by the local architecture. The investor,
Mr. Tu Haiming of Shanghai Hodoor Real Estate Development, wanted
to bring a new quality to the Chinese metropolis and continue in
the tradition of building European "national" quarters
(the city already has its French and German areas).
Doubner likes art, and gets involved by creating an opportunity
for artists, who exhibit their works in an extensive gallery that
is part of his architecture office. Just as the Asians were inspired
by Prague, he too has found inspiration in the Orient. He discovered
that in India people wear different colors to feel good. He tried
out the custom and says it works - it helps him deal with stress
and fatigue. He also relaxes while roller blading, meditating,
and studying about cathedrals. The latter is related to another
of his great wishes for the future - to build a cathedral in Shanghai.
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Photo: Tomáš Kubeš |
Jiří T. Kotalík : Guardian of
the family silver
A BOHEMIAN IN BLACK, Jiří T. Kotalík (52) has been the general
director of the National Trust Institute, which every investor
realizing new construction or reconstruction in protected landmark
areas must deal with. The author of over eighty professional publications
on the history of architecture, art, and the protection of cultural
heritage and the organizer of many domestic and foreign exhibitions
(including the highly successful Ten Centuries of Architecture
cycle) came to the institute from an institution of no less prestige
- the Academy of Fine Arts, of which he was the director for six
years. As his employees claim, he has brought a breath of fresh
air to the medieval masonry of the feared office, as well as an
openness to new influences and experiments. He took the job as
a challenge - his greatest endeavor is to ensure greater prestige
for conservationists in society, and to spread awareness that cultural
landmarks also play an economic role.
Kotalík is no tedious official who would most like to preserve
the status quo. This is one reason he became the curator of the "Karlín-Zone
A" project, the creation of the iconoclastic artist Jiří Sozanský.
During the event's ten months, Karlín will be the venue of exhibitions,
concerts, and presentations of works of art in public spaces. "The
project should pay tribute to the neighborhood of the city that
was worst afflicted by last year's flooding," says this man
who has passed his love of history on to his son. His wife, an
art historian, also works in the landmark preservation field.
When he finds the time, Kotalík visits theaters, goes to movies,
and attends concerts. He also rides his bicycle or splits wood
at his cottage in the Lužické mountains. But he likes cross-country
skiing best of all. "There's nothing more beautiful than following
the trails in new-fallen snow and touring our lovely Czech countryside," he
says dreamily.
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