Three Elected to Caltech Board of Trustees
Caltech president David Baltimore recently announced the election of
three new members to the Institute’s Board of Trustees. They are
John E. Bryson, chairman, president, and chief executive officer of Edison
International; A. Michael Lipper, founder and chief executive officer
of Lipper Advisory Services Inc.; and Donald W. Tang, vice chairman of
Bear, Stearns & Co. Inc.
Bryson is a graduate of Stanford University and Yale Law School. His
company is based in Rosemead, California, and is the parent company of
Southern California Edison, Edison Mission Energy, and Edison Capital.
He joined Edison in February 1984, and was elected chairman and CEO of
Edison International and Southern California Edison in 1990.
Prior to joining Edison, Bryson was a partner in the law firm of Morrison
& Foerster. From 1979 to 1982 he served as president of the California
Public Utilities Commission, and before that, he was chairman of the California
State Water Resources Control Board.
Earlier, he served as a cofounder and attorney for the Natural Resources
Defense Council.
Bryson is a director of the Boeing Company, the W. M. Keck Foundation,
and the Walt Disney Company. He is cochair of the Pacific Council on International
Policy and serves or has served on a number of educational, environmental,
and other nonprofit boards, including as chairman of the California Business
Roundtable and as a trustee of Stanford University.
A native of New York and a resident of New Jersey, Lipper founded Lipper
Analytical Services Inc. in 1973 as an investment firm dedicated to the
analysis of funds and brokerage firms. He sold it to Reuters Group PLC
in 1998, and Reuters has transformed the firm into Lipper Inc.
Lipper is also a managing member of L&S Partners, a private financial
services hedge fund. He is president of Lipper Advisory Services, a registered
investment adviser, utilizing mutual funds for institutional investors.
He also continues to accept a limited number of consulting assignments
dealing with funds and brokerage firms, through Lipper Consulting Services
Inc.
He was president of the New York Society of Security Analysts for the
1993 – 94 term, and for many years was chairman of the organization's
investment strategy forum/portfolio management committee. In May 2003
he was reelected to the organization's board as its treasurer.
Lipper has been a regional director of the Financial Analysts Federation
and was a founding member and director of the International Society of
Financial Analysts of the Association for Investment Management and Research.
He is a past chairman of the specialty firms advisory committee (now known
as the New York Firms Committee) of the New York Stock Exchange. Lipper
chairs the investment committees for the New Jersey Performing Arts Center
and the Atlantic Health System.
Tang is a native of Shanghai, China, and has been affiliated with Bear
Stearns since 1992. Originally assigned to the Los Angeles office as senior
managing director, he went to Hong Kong as president and chief executive
officer of Bear Stearns Asia, where he built and managed the firm's four
Asian offices.
He was elected to the board of directors in 1997, and assigned to Chicago
in 1999 as head of the Midwest region. In 2001, he returned to Los Angeles
to assume his current Asia and West Coast responsibilities, and in May
2004 received his new appointment as vice chairman. Prior to his Bear
Stearns career, Tang held senior positions at Lehman Brothers and Merrill
Lynch.
Tang is a trustee of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, a member of
the RAND Center for the Asia Pacific Policy advisory board, and chairman
of RAND's banking reform committee on China. He is also chairman of the
Asia Society of Southern California, a member of the board of trustees
of the Asia Society, and a trustee of the California Science Center Foundation.
Tang is a member of the boards of United Friends of the Children and
the United Way of Greater Los Angeles, a member of the business advisory
board of the California NanoSystems Institute, a member of the Committee
of 100, and a member of the Pacific Council on International Policy.
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