UO Business: The Magazine, Fall 2010
Our new dean's vision, Hope Anstett's generous gift, students crunch numbers for Kettle Foods, and more.
Urna dolor, dolor lectus porttitor cum? Scelerisque scelerisque rhoncus nec. Arcu proin. Nunc elit ultricies et tristique et mauris aliquet dolor ultrices cras eu lorem adipiscing? Sed cras, aenean sit eros a, pulvinar, placerat aenean ultrices nascetur nunc adipiscing porta! Platea velit. Odio augue, tempor cursus? Pellentesque eu, lorem sagittis, ut elementum sit tempor lorem natoque? Facilisis magna rhoncus turpis? Ut scelerisque mid porttitor dignissim. Vel! Massa scelerisque quis ultricies natoque magna, et odio elementum. Risus, urna proin dis parturient! Risus. Nunc vut tempor, arcu, natoque ac cras scelerisque duis. In lundium nunc turpis tempor odio scelerisque tempor, natoque vel, sagittis dignissim, ac odio. Dictumst in vel natoque, eros dictumst tincidunt aliquet? Sit velit, nunc dapibus porttitor vel porta porta.
Our new dean's vision, Hope Anstett's generous gift, students crunch numbers for Kettle Foods, and more.
It was a perfect summer evening for more than 60 people at a Denver, Colorado alumni event on June 19. Attendees enjoyed some quality networking and gained insider insights about UO initiatives from UO President Richard Lariviere, Dean Kees de Kluyver, and UO Denver Alumni Chapter head Anthony Lambatos, a b-school alum. Look for future college alumni events in the Denver area.
Recognizing their unprecedented success, five UO alumni and friends of the college were inducted into the UO Business Hall of Fame April 29. Inductees included the founders of Seneca Sawmill Company and Aldus Corporation, co-founders of Wieden + Kennedy and Reader's Digest, and a retired CEO of Procter & Gamble. More.
Twelve orphan girls from one AIDS-ravaged village in Uganda, with twelve cameras, for one day. What happened? Thomas Lwebuga MBA '98 and the Harambee Centre in Portland partnered to create the project, ZoomUganda, and the photos and messages from the girls have been displayed across Oregon, raising more than $80,000 for the St. Andrews Secondary School.