News

Spring always brings a bevy of dynamic and high-profile speakers to our college. This year went above and beyond.
Whether it's watching students and alumni grow over the years or exploring new research tactics, Angela Davis knows that accounting is more than just numerical.
Two MBA students and a pair of law students got real-world experience assessing marketing potential for a new neurosurgery tool and learned some things about themselves along the way.
“Sports Marketing Goes Global” was the theme of the second Warsaw Workshop of the year, which took place at Autzen Stadium.
The back of a person taking a photograph.
Between debuting the first of its international workshops and receiving official approval for its new master's degree program, it's been a busy spring for the University of Oregon Sports Product Management program.
Jeff Martens '00 caught the entrepreneurship bug during his college experience in the Lundquist Center for Entrepreneurship. That drive and passion continues throughout his career.
The consul general of Israel paid a visit to two of Assistant Professor Katie Mercurio’s marketing classes last month to discuss branding Israel.
After more than a decade of dedicated service, James C. Bean is moving on to become provost of Northeastern University in Boston.
The Warsaw Sports Business Club’s Youth Movement field day just keeps growing bigger, bolder, and brighter—and now it's expanded to two universities in Oklahoma.
Organized and run entirely by undergraduates, this year’s SPRNG Conference drew nearly 100 attendees to the UO White Stag Block in Portland.

For a third year running, the Civil War Shark Tank brought an entrepreneurial twist to the traditional rivalry between Oregon’s premier public universities.

The inaugural Fred P. Thompson Lecture brought together a panel of experts to tackle a topic of vital importance: the national retirement crisis.
Organized by Warsaw Sports Business Club members, this year's KIDSPORTS Invitational brought 274 young Oregonians to Matthew Knight Arena.
Associate professor of management Andrew Nelson's new book charts the emergence of computer music at Stanford University from 1960 to the present day.
We are delighted to announce that Shirley and James Rippey have funded a new professor of practice for the Cameron Center for Finance and Securities Analysis.