Nortel Announces Dr. Kristina M. Johnson Appointment to the Board of Directors
2006年11月7日 - 10:00PM
PRニュース・ワイアー (英語)
TORONTO, Nov. 7 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Nortel(x) (NYSE/TSX: NT)
announced that Dr. Kristina M. Johnson, dean of Duke University's
Edmund T. Pratt, Jr., School of Engineering, has been appointed to
the Company's Board of Directors, effective immediately. Johnson
has been with Duke University since 1999. As dean of the Pratt
School of Engineering, she oversees more than 1100 undergraduates,
440 graduate students and 120 tenure track and non-tenure track
faculty. She joined Duke from the University of Colorado, where she
served as a professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering from
1985-1999. Johnson has helped start several companies including
ColorLink, Inc., and sits on several corporate Board of Directors
including Mineral Technologies Inc., Boston Scientific Corporation,
and AES Corporation. She also currently serves on the advisory
boards of the Colorado School of Mines, the Georgia Institute of
Technology School of Engineering, the Duke Childrens' Classic, and
the Institute for Emerging Issues. Johnson received her B.S., M.S.
(with distinction) and Ph.D. in electrical engineering from
Stanford University. She completed a NATO post-doctoral fellowship
at Trinity College in Dublin, Ireland, and was a Fulbright Fellow
in 1991. Johnson has published more than 140 refereed papers and
proceedings, holds forty-three patents, and has pioneered work in
liquid crystal-on-silicon (LCOS) microdisplays, a marriage of LC
electro-optic materials and VLSI technology. "I am pleased to
announce Dean Johnson's appointment," said Harry Pearce, chairman
of Nortel's Board of Directors. "Her insight and experience will
greatly benefit Nortel and contribute to our focus on innovation
and R&D effectiveness." Johnson has also been appointed to the
Nortel Networks Limited Board of Directors. About Nortel Nortel is
a recognized leader in delivering communications capabilities that
enhance the human experience, ignite and power global commerce, and
secure and protect the world's most critical information. Our
next-generation technologies, for both service providers and
enterprises, span access and core networks, support multimedia and
business-critical applications, and help eliminate today's barriers
to efficiency, speed and performance by simplifying networks and
connecting people with information. Nortel does business in more
than 150 countries. For more information, visit Nortel on the Web
at http://www.nortel.com/. For the latest Nortel news, visit
http://www.nortel.com/news. Certain statements in this press
release may contain words such as "could", "expects", "may",
"anticipates", "believes", "intends", "estimates", "targets",
"envisions", "seeks" and other similar language and are considered
forward-looking statements or information under applicable
securities legislation. These statements are based on Nortel's
current expectations, estimates, forecasts and projections about
the operating environment, economies and markets in which Nortel
operates. These statements are subject to important assumptions,
risks and uncertainties, which are difficult to predict and the
actual outcome may be materially different. Further, actual results
or events could differ materially from those contemplated in
forward-looking statements as a result of the following (i) risks
and uncertainties relating to Nortel's restatements and related
matters including: Nortel's most recent restatement and two
previous restatements of its financial statements and related
events; the negative impact on Nortel and NNL of their most recent
restatement and delay in filing their financial statements and
related periodic reports; legal judgments, fines, penalties or
settlements, or any substantial regulatory fines or other penalties
or sanctions, related to the ongoing regulatory and criminal
investigations of Nortel in the U.S. and Canada; any significant
pending civil litigation actions not encompassed by Nortel's
proposed class action settlement; any substantial cash payment
and/or significant dilution of Nortel's existing equity positions
resulting from the finalization and approval of its proposed class
action settlement, or if such class action settlement is not
finalized, any larger settlements or awards of damages in respect
of such class actions; any unsuccessful remediation of Nortel's
material weaknesses in internal control over financial reporting
resulting in an inability to report Nortel's results of operations
and financial condition accurately and in a timely manner; the time
required to implement Nortel's remedial measures; Nortel's
inability to access, in its current form, its shelf registration
filed with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC), and Nortel's below investment grade credit rating and any
further adverse effect on its credit rating due to Nortel's
restatements of its financial statements; any adverse affect on
Nortel's business and market price of its publicly traded
securities arising from continuing negative publicity related to
Nortel's restatements; Nortel's potential inability to attract or
retain the personnel necessary to achieve its business objectives;
any breach by Nortel of the continued listing requirements of the
NYSE or TSX causing the NYSE and/or the TSX to commence suspension
or delisting procedures; (ii) risks and uncertainties relating to
Nortel's business including: yearly and quarterly fluctuations of
Nortel's operating results; reduced demand and pricing pressures
for its products due to global economic conditions, significant
competition, competitive pricing practice, cautious capital
spending by customers, increased industry consolidation, rapidly
changing technologies, evolving industry standards, frequent new
product introductions and short product life cycles, and other
trends and industry characteristics affecting the
telecommunications industry; the sufficiency of recently announced
restructuring actions, including the potential for higher actual
costs to be incurred in connection with these restructuring actions
compared to the estimated costs of such actions and the ability to
achieve the targeted cost savings and reductions of Nortel's
unfunded pension liability deficit; any material and adverse
affects on Nortel's performance if its expectations regarding
market demand for particular products prove to be wrong or because
of certain barriers in its efforts to expand internationally; any
reduction in Nortel's operating results and any related volatility
in the market price of its publicly traded securities arising from
any decline in its gross margin, or fluctuations in foreign
currency exchange rates; any negative developments associated with
Nortel's supply contract and contract manufacturing agreements
including as a result of using a sole supplier for key optical
networking solutions components, and any defects or errors in
Nortel's current or planned products; any negative impact to Nortel
of its failure to achieve its business transformation objectives,
including completion of the sale of its UMTS access business to
Alcatel; additional valuation allowances for all or a portion of
its deferred tax assets; Nortel's failure to protect its
intellectual property rights, or any adverse judgments or
settlements arising out of disputes regarding intellectual
property; changes in regulation of the Internet and/or other
aspects of the industry; Nortel's failure to successfully operate
or integrate its strategic acquisitions, or failure to consummate
or succeed with its strategic alliances; any negative effect of
Nortel's failure to evolve adequately its financial and managerial
control and reporting systems and processes, manage and grow its
business, or create an effective risk management strategy; and
(iii) risks and uncertainties relating to Nortel's liquidity,
financing arrangements and capital including: the impact of
Nortel's most recent restatement and two previous restatements of
its financial statements; any inability of Nortel to manage cash
flow fluctuations to fund working capital requirements or achieve
its business objectives in a timely manner or obtain additional
sources of funding; high levels of debt, limitations on Nortel
capitalizing on business opportunities because of credit facility
covenants, or on obtaining additional secured debt pursuant to the
provisions of indentures governing certain of Nortel's public debt
issues and the provisions of its credit facilities; any increase of
restricted cash requirements for Nortel if it is unable to secure
alternative support for obligations arising from certain normal
course business activities, or any inability of Nortel's
subsidiaries to provide it with sufficient funding; any negative
effect to Nortel of the need to make larger defined benefit plans
contributions in the future or exposure to customer credit risks or
inability of customers to fulfill payment obligations under
customer financing arrangements; any negative impact on Nortel's
ability to make future acquisitions, raise capital, issue debt and
retain employees arising from stock price volatility and further
declines in the market price of Nortel's publicly traded
securities, or any future share consolidation resulting in a lower
total market capitalization or adverse effect on the liquidity of
Nortel's common shares. For additional information with respect to
certain of these and other factors, see Nortel's Annual Report on
Form 10-K/A, Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q and other securities
filings with the SEC. Unless otherwise required by applicable
securities laws, Nortel disclaims any intention or obligation to
update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a
result of new information, future events or otherwise. (x) Nortel,
the Nortel logo and the Globemark are trademarks of Nortel
Networks. DATASOURCE: Nortel CONTACT: Dean Mundy, (919) 997-7938, ;
Jay Barta, (972) 685-2381,
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