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

Photo: Matt Writtle |
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Petr Vochozka
The director of Illusion Softworks, a computer game producer,
was named "Entrepreneur of the Year" in the competition
called Zavináč 2002, which was held by The Czech Internet
Academy Association. The award showed the academy's appreciation
for Vochozka's success on the local and international market. |
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Photo: Vlad. Weiss |
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Gabriel Berdár
The CEO of the Czech and Slovak branches of Dell won the tender
that was recently held to find a new CEO for Český Telecom.
Berdár's main task in his new post will be to prepare the
firm for privatization. |
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Photo: René Jakl |
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Jan Hřebejk
This noted film director's new "retro" film Pupendo
became the most successful Czech film of all time, by box-office
numbers. In the first week after its opening, 108,000 viewers
saw the film, resulting in sales that reached a record CZK
11.9 million. |
PEOPLE DOWN

Photo: ČTK |
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Jiří Šedivý
As a chairman of the Housing & Construction administration
board, the former Czech army general bet on the wrong horse.The
government decided to annul the contract for a highway from
Lipník to Ostrava, and the police are investigating possible
corruption related to this case. |
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Photo: ČTK |
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Martin Muchka
The Radio and Television Council chairman was called off from
his post, along with the other Council members. The MPs believe
that the Council is to blame for the CZK 10 billion fine
that this country must pay for TV Nova's failed arbitration. |
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Photo: Foto archiv |
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Radomír Lašák
The CEO of eBanka has had his share of problems. The bank ended
2002 with losses of CZK 250.1 million, while the previous
year it ended with CZK 6,4 million profit. The negative result
was caused by lower revenues in the first half of the year
and the decline of interest rates. |
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| Photo: Libuše Rudinská |
Vendula Mráčková: Youth has the
green light
"We teach children how to do business," says Vendula
Mráčková (28), the director of Junior Achievement Czech Republic,
a non-profit organization. Some time ago she left her positions
teaching in a kindergarten and at the British International School,
striking out on a new career course. She managed to conjoin her
love of children with a new challenge, becoming first the marketing
director and later the director of the educational organization,
which traces back in time to 1919. "At that time American
businessmen knew that school graduates had problems finding direction
in ordinary life, so they founded a sort of school as a game, where
children learned to do business through practical examples and
discussions," Mráčková explains. In 1992 the Junior Achievement
program was established in the Czech Republic, thanks to the shoe
magnate Tomáš Baťa, who was famed for his "Baťa Work Schools".
In the course of ten years 160,000 elementary and secondary school
children have completed these courses. Mráčková sees the undeniable
advantages of this program in the fact that Junior Achievement
children are taught by means of an entertaining, interactive method,
deducing answers to questions themselves. Secondary school students
even establish and manage real firms, and they have to resolve
financial cash flows, marketing issues, and personal conflicts. "Mr.
Baťa is the greatest driving force," Mráčková says respectfully. "Even
in his nineties he has energy to pass on to others, and he never
refuses to meet with students to share his practical experience." The
director, who relies on a team of only five people, reveals her
goal: "We want to awaken business sense in children, to teach
them independence. If we can do that, I'll be satisfied."
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Photo: Libuše Rudinská |
Leo Crlík: Czech Euromanager
AT FIRST GLANCE Leo Crlík looks like many of his university peers.
But this modest, optimistic young man from Otrokovice has already
achieved success the like of which they can only dream of. Last
year he received the prestigious Euromanager title in the largest
international management simulation competition, in which both
students and professionals with practical experience vied. According
to the organizer, the British consulting firm Recruitment International,
over 260,000 entrants took part in this simulation game, which
has a tradition dating back 24 years. Last year was the first
time the Czech Republic participated, which made it all the more
surprising that Czechs won the world final in Paris. Crlík attributes
his team's global success to its more audacious and aggressive
approach to the management of the virtual firm than that shown
by the other teams, including those made up of professional managers.
Does Crlík think that Czech college students are comparable with
their western counterparts? "This is a highly individual matter
relating to one's motivation to actively concern oneself with practice
while still a student," he responds frankly. That could be,
as he already has practical experience with PricewaterhouseCoopers.
He completed his high school education in the US and he speaks
three major languages, and in order to broaden his horizons he
has traveled through most of the world. When he graduates from
the Czech University of Technology and the Institute of Economics,
he would like to work at optimizing corporate management. The Euromanager
title should open many doors for him, because according to Recruitment
International, one of the competition's main goals is mediating
contacts between employers and potential employees. Now companies
must decide how to make use of these young prospects.
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