Ciervo Resources Incorporated since Jun 2006
President
Education:
University of Texas of the Permian Basin 2007 - 2008
MA, HistoryMaster's Thesis written on oil and gas leasing since 1945.
University of Texas of the Permain Basin 2004 - 2007
BA, History
Skills:
Document Drafting Minerals Natural Gas Leases Due Diligence Contract Negotiation Energy Industry Land Acquisition Petroleum Negotiation Divestitures Gas Energy Lease Administration Supervisory Skills Real Estate Leadership Oil and Gas Industry Mergers Team Building Strategic Planning Management Contract Management Acquisitions Project Management Operations Management Public Speaking Program Management Analysis Military Project Planning Team Leadership Customer Service Research Mineral Exploration Sales Pipelines Oil/Gas Budgets Leadership Development Training Process Scheduler Drilling Joint Ventures Oil and Gas Mergers and Acquisitions Mineral Rights Operating Agreements A%26D Chain of Title Business Relationship Management Land Management
Interests:
Social Services Children Economic Empowerment Civil Rights and Social Action Politics Education Disaster and Humanitarian Relief Human Rights
Languages:
English
Certifications:
American Association of Professional Landmen, License #75706 License #75706 Certified Professional Landman
Dr. Buck graduated from the University of Texas Medical School at Houston in 1985. He works in Old Town, ME and specializes in Pediatrics. Dr. Buck is affiliated with Eastern Maine Medical Center and St Joseph Hospital.
Dr. Buck graduated from the University of Minnesota Medical School at Minneapolis in 1985. He works in Saint Cloud, MN and specializes in Family Medicine.
Dominican School Taipei GA 1969-1971, Chaffins Elementary School Holden MA 1971-1972, Indian Hill School Worcester MA 1972-1973, St. Patrick School Brooklyn NY 1973-1976
Community:
Mark Burns, Mary Schwab, Alan Craig, Scott Lin, George Hayes
portraits from time to time), my first thought upon seeing the new Newsweek cover photo of Michele Bachmann was, "What an awful photograph." Technically speaking, that is. I've done better work in my home studio, and I'm not nearly the photographer Christopher Buck is (the freelancer who took that shot).Given that the Newsweek editors had at least one better photo to choose from (and knowing Christopher Buck's work, probably more), there are only two explanations for why they chose the awful shot they did. One: they don't know a good photo from a bad one (highly unlikely), or 2: they deliberately w