Creativity, learning expert Sawyer next up for Assembly Series
Keith Sawyer, PhD, associate professor of education in Arts & Sciences, will deliver the annual Phi Beta Kappa Lecture for the Assembly Series at 4 p.m. Monday, March 26, in College Hall on the university’s Danforth Campus. His talk, “Group Genius: The Creative Power of Collaboration,” is free and open to the public.
Students to get firsthand view of Israeli business and economics during spring break
Eighteen Washington University in St. Louis
undergraduate students will have the opportunity to spend their spring
break in a unique way — a 10-day immersion in various aspects of the
Israeli economy, from innovation to government to high-tech start-ups.
Nowlis installed as August A. Busch Jr. Distinguished Professor of Marketing
Stephen M. Nowlis, PhD, was installed Feb. 23 as the
August A. Busch Jr. Distinguished Professor of Marketing in Olin
Business School. Nowlis joined Olin Business School in July 2010 after spending many years at Arizona State University, where he was the AT&T Distinguished Professor of Marketing.
No Boundaries: Women Leaders of Washington University
“No Boundaries: Women Leaders of Washington University,” an intergenerational discussion group, will be held from 3-4 p.m. on Tuesday, March 6, in Brown Hall Lounge. An RSVP is required by Tuesday, Feb. 28.
Open forum on 2012 election year activities at WUSTL
The Gephardt Institute for Public Service invites student groups,
centers, departments and schools, as well as individual members of the
University community, to join an open discussion about plans for the 2012
election year. The meeting will be held from 4-5:30 p.m. Monday, March 5, in the Multipurpose Room, lower level of
Mallinckrodt Center on the Danforth Campus.
Olin MBA student aims to walk his way into history books
Mike McLaughlin has had a difficult life. The MBA student at Olin Business School at Washington University in St. Louis was emotionally and physically abused as a child at the hands of his mother and stepfather — a tragedy in its own right but one in which he says helped prepare him for his next big challenge: through-hiking the Appalachian and Ozark trails back-to-back.
End of Facebook IPO lock-up period may negatively affect stock price, new study finds
Will stock in Facebook, which recently filed for
initial public offering (IPO), drop significantly following the end of
its IPO lock-up period later this year? It might if the company follows
recent trends, finds a new study by graduate students at Washington
University in St. Louis.
Work & Livable Lives Conference Feb. 27 and 28
Washington University in St. Louis will host the “Work & Livable Lives Conference”
Feb. 27 and 28 to address current employment-related challenges and how
they limit the ability of U.S. households to lead secure and stable
lives, raise children successfully, and contribute to the community. The conference will include panels on household financial fragility,
measurement of economic security, the American Dream, labor and
employment policy, and health policy and employment. All conference events will be held in the Bryan Cave Moot Courtroom of
Anheuser-Busch Hall and are free and open to the public.
Students aim to make campus landscaping more sustainable
A proposal by two WUSTL students to introduce
turf reduction, large bio-swales, more cisterns and even sheep
“lawnmowers” to campus as part of plan to make landscaping more
sustainable at the university won the $5,000 first prize in the annual
Olin Sustainability Case Competition.
Facebook valuation will be high, but justified, expert says
Facebook’s initial public offering (IPO) filing shows real numbers for profit and revenues, which are likely to drive a valuation that could be as high as $100 billion.This astronomical number does require some aggressive assumptions about future growth, but the high valuation may be more justified than for other internet companies, says Mark T. Leary, PhD, assistant professor of finance at Washington University’s Olin Business School.
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