A Critique of Obamanomics
By Jarrett Dieterle
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By Jarrett Dieterle
A University of Richmond marketing class is getting hands-on experience while it develops several potential marketing schemes for a Merle Norman makeup studio that's expected to open in The Shops at Willow Lawn on Oct. 13.
The Senate passed a revised version of the $700 billion rescue package on Wednesday night that aims to bail out the crippled U.S. financial system -- a move that could send a boost of confidence to Wall Street after the rejection of a similar House bill on Monday sent global markets plummeting.
While none of the presidential candidates, John McCain and Barack Obama, delivered the KO, the first Presidential Debate did sharpen the contrast between the two and gave Obama an edge on not just the economy, but also foreign policy and national security -- considered by many to be John McCain's strong points.
3136 W Cary St
By Jerry Giordano
By Emma Anderson
The blog recently posted with the title "Battlefield Shifts to the Economy" may seem factually sound and intellectually logical on the surface; but the underlying argument beneath the complicated tax talk is false. The following is a rough outline of how the argument veered off track.
A response to "What Are the Issues?" (Opinion, Thursday, Sept. 18, 2008)
The financial crisis, which the Wall Street Journal described today as the worst economic hit since the early 1930s, is beginning to drastically change the tide of presidential campaigns.
E. Claiborne Robins School of Business economics professor and Rigsby Fellow Dean Croushore has been named interim director of the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia's new Real-Time Data Research Center.
An economy in recession, a housing market in crisis, a war on two fronts, a world on the brink of irreversible climate crises, an ongoing genocide, and an ever present threat of terrorism and disease, require better than partisan politics and unilateralism on the world stage. More importantly, it requires more from you and me -- from us.
By Michael Kolbe
The number of students choosing to major in philosophy has risen dramatically over the past few years, according to the New York Times, but the trend has had only a small effect on numbers at the University of Richmond.
If you asked sophomore Luke Filipos about his average day at work last summer and this coming summer, his response would not make any reference to sitting in an office from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
A few weeks ago I found myself among 500 business leaders. Their professions ranged from quirky entrepreneurs to Fortune 50 executives. They had taken time out of their busy schedules to attend the annual Boston College Center for Corporate Citizenship Conference. They spent three days networking, attending workshops and discussing the future of corporate social responsibility (CSR, as it is known in business circles).
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said that federal and state regulators must act quickly to implement the reforms necessary to rescue the sinking U.S. economy during a speech at the Jepson Alumni Center April 10.
The three most important things to manage in life are experience, change and time, the senior vice president of Right Media LLC said at the Robins School of Business honors convocation Tuesday morning.
The faculty at the E. Claiborne Robins School of Business has approved new academic standards for entrance to the business school and has sent a proposal to the University Faculty Senate to be voted on, according to Dean Jorge Haddock.
His words move the world's economic markets.