
| Stuart I. Greenbaum Ph.D. |
| Media Assistance:
Shula Neuman Director, News and Information, Olin Business School and Department of Economics sneuman@wustl.edu (314) 935-5202 |
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| Stuart Greenbaum |
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| News Stories & Tip Sheets: |
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Showing Stories 1 through 5 of 12. - Show More |
| Expert available to discuss proposed economic stimulus package It's "more political than economic," says business professor (http://news-info.wustl.edu/tips/page/normal/10961.html) Feb. 4, 2008 --
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| No need to panic Subprime mess isn't all bad; situation also offers opportunities (http://news-info.wustl.edu/tips/page/normal/9832.html) Aug. 15, 2007 --
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| What happens in the boardroom doesn't stay in the boardroom Transgressions in corporate governance resonate throughout the enterprise (http://news-info.wustl.edu/tips/page/normal/8928.html) March 5, 2007 --
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| Media advisory Dean Stuart Greenbaum presents his final State of the School Address (http://news-info.wustl.edu/news/page/normal/5265.html) May 9, 2005 --
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| New Olin professorship Hances establish professorship in business (http://news-info.wustl.edu/news/page/normal/931.html) June 22, 2004 -- Beverly and James Hance have established a professorship in the John M. Olin School of Business, it was announced by Chancellor Mark S. Wrighton. The gift of $1.2 million will be combined with $300,000 from the University's Sesquicentennial Endowed Professorship Challenge to create the James and Beverly Hance Professorship in Business. |
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Showing Stories 1 through 5 of 12. - Show More |
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Showing 3 Clips. |
| Cashing in on the market chaos
ABC News Aug. 17, 2007 -- There is opportunity in chaos. People with an appetite for risk can still make money in the rocky financial markets and rest assured many are trying. So how do so-called smart people make money when everyone else is sweating it? Simply stated, they buy things that no one else wants and get a steep discount in the process. WUSTL business professor and former business school dean Stuart Greenbaum comments. |
| Students return to class, this time as consultants for urban schools
Wall Street Journal June 15, 2005 -- MBA students at Columbia University have taken on one of the most daunting of management challenges -- not General Motors, not Morgan Stanley, not American International Group. Their classroom for the spring semester was New York City's mammoth public-school system, which serves 1.1 million children with decidedly mixed results. Columbia isn't the first business school to tackle urban schools. WUSTL business school dean Stuart Greenbaum created a program in the late 1990s to share graduate students and undergraduates with local public schools. He says he hasn't always found it an easy sell. |
| B-School deans: back to basics
MSNBC.com and 1 others May 9, 2005 -- In the tough post-corporate-scandal era, respected academics have been picked instead of prominent business names to head MBA programs. Typical of the new breed is WUSTL accounting and management professor Mahendra Gupta, who is WUSTL's new business school dean. Far from talking about making expensive new additions to the school's facilities or raising tons of new money, his main focus will be nuts-and-bolts improvements, with a heavy emphasis on academics. |
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