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Released: 15-Jul-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Hospitality Executive of the Year Selected
Penn State College of Health and Human Development

Harrison A. (Skip) Hartman, Jr., vice president and managing director for Loews L'Enfant Plaza Hotel in Washington, D.C. and regional vice president of Loews Hotels, will receive the 1999 Hospitality Executive of the Year Award from Penn State.

Released: 15-Jul-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Emotions, Events Dictate Job Satisfaction
Purdue University

Job satisfaction can change with the time of the day. That is one reason why typical measures of job satisfaction -- such as surveys and polls -- are not very useful, says a Purdue University expert on organizational psychology.

Released: 13-Jul-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Study Finds Biotech Crops Increase Yields
US Newswire (defunct; sold to PR Newswire)

The first-ever analysis of biotechnology's impact on crop protection and benefits to farm production will be released Tuesday by the National Center for Food and Agricultural Policy (NCFAP).

Released: 9-Jul-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Global Companies, Leadership Development Needed
Conference Board

While "leadership" has become a hot corporate issue, most U.S. and European companies can be considered novices in leadership development, according to a report released today by The Conference Board.

Released: 9-Jul-1999 12:00 AM EDT
CEO Confidence Continues to Increase
Conference Board

Chief executives' confidence in the nation's economy increased for the third consecutive quarter, The Conference Board reports today.

Released: 9-Jul-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Software and Computers for Computer Science Education
University of California San Diego

Computer science and engineering students at UC San Diego will study computer science, software engineering, multimedia Web design, and database design this Fall using a newly outfitted Microsoft Windows NT Laboratory.

Released: 8-Jul-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Lack of Self-Awareness Leads to Derailment
Dick Jones Communications

Managers who are fired tend to overestimate their abilities. By contrast, self-objectivity could be essential to their success or recovery.

Released: 7-Jul-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Cigarette Price Increases Will Cut Youth Smoking by 26 Percent
Virginia Tech

The decision by manufacturers to raise the price of cigarettes last year will have a significant impact on whether young people take up smoking and how much tobacco farmers grow in the future, according to a Virginia Tech study released this week.

Released: 7-Jul-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Electronic Commerce Concentration
University of Rochester Simon Business School

The William E. Simon Graduate School of Business Administration will offer a new M.B.A. concentration in electronic commerce starting in Fall 1999.

Released: 3-Jul-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Longer Cotton May Open New Markets for Texas Crop
Texas Tech University

Researchers at Texas Tech University are touting a longer staple cotton that could open new markets for the Texas crop. The new breed may allow cotton farmers to broaden their demand base and markets for the crops before they are ever produced.

Released: 2-Jul-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Crime Hate Higher with Gambling
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

Regardless of how you roll the dice, casino gambling is a loser when it comes to crime, a University of Illinois economist says.

Released: 2-Jul-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Big Money, Perks Don't Always Motivate
Purdue University

Good managers intuitively know that different things motivate different employees, says a Purdue University human resource expert, but putting a tailored plan into action is not as easy as it sounds.

Released: 2-Jul-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Older Women Hone Financial Management Skills
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

Women in midlife and older are finding help honing their financial knowledge and decision-making skills by taking a University of Illinois Extension program, according to a survey of those who completed the eight-week course in its first four years.

Released: 2-Jul-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Business Tip Sheet from UAB
University of Alabama at Birmingham

1. Steps Toward Web Regulation 2. U.S. and German Unions United Over Big Three Contracts 3. Addressing the Dress Code Without Getting Sued

Released: 30-Jun-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Tracking Lifelong Learning
 Johns Hopkins University

Researchers at The Johns Hopkins University have worked with companies and community colleges across the country to help teach current and future workers the skills they will need and to document knowledge and skill in a "career transcript" that will follow the student throughout his or her working life.

   
Released: 30-Jun-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Consumers Will Lift U.S. Growth Rates
Conference Board

Driven by robust consumer spending, the U.S. economy will grow even more strongly this year and into 2000 than previously projected, according to a Conference Board analysis.

Released: 30-Jun-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Consumer Confidence Up 8th Consecutive Month
Conference Board

The Conference Board's Consumer Confidence Index rose again in June, scoring its eighth consecutive monthly gain.

Released: 30-Jun-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Workplace Education Program Benefits
Conference Board

The vast majority of today's employers have benefited economically and employees have increased their skills through workplace education programs, according to a report released by The Conference Board and The Conference Board of Canada.

   
29-Jun-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Depression Treating Drugs, Record Setting Pharmacy Cost Rise
Express Scripts

America's growing use of depression-treating drugs like Prozac, Zoloft and Paxil made antidepressants the biggest contributors to a record-setting pharmacy benefit cost increase of 16.8 percent last year, according to a study by the country's largest independent pharmacy benefit manager, Express Scripts, Inc.

   
Released: 26-Jun-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Don't Rush To Tax, Regulate Internet
Texas A&M University

As a federal commission begins discussing possibly taxing online commerce, a Texas A&M University marketing professor cautions against rushing to regulate Internet-based business.

Released: 25-Jun-1999 12:00 AM EDT
USDA to Recognize EU Free of Animal Diseases
US Newswire (defunct; sold to PR Newswire)

The U.S. Department of Agriculture announced it is proposing to recognize regions in the European Union as free of hog cholera, foot-and-mouth disease, and swine vesicular disease.

Released: 25-Jun-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Web Site Takes Trauma out of Travel
Purdue University

A travel advice Web site designed by a company headquartered at the Purdue Research Park is now easily accessible to American On Line's 17 million customers.

Released: 25-Jun-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Forget Minimum Wage and Expand Tax Credits
Cornell University

Minimum wage hardly helps poor workers; instead, we should expand the Earned Income Tax Credits that targets workers with low family incomes, says a Cornell University professor who testified on minimum wage policy before a U.S. House of Representatives Committee.

   
Released: 22-Jun-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Watermelon Ripeness Sensor, Savings for Growers
University of Delaware

Green watermelons--a serious economic threat to farmers and a disappointment for consumers--may be quickly and automatically rejected by a new machine invented by four University of Delaware engineering students. The computer-controlled ripeness sensor ultimately could result in huge savings for the global watermelon industry.

   
Released: 18-Jun-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Students Tap Power of Web-Investing
Purdue University

Purdue University students are cashing in on a course that teaches them the ins and outs of investing, particularly on-line investing, at an early age.

Released: 18-Jun-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Milk Check-off Funds Better Spent on Ads
Cornell University

Six years ago, an economics journal suggested that milk producers who pay "check-off" allocations may be better served spending that money on research, rather than on milk promotion and marketing. Now, Cornell University agricultural economists say that the mathematical model used in that study may be incorrect due to erroneous assumptions, and in some cases money spent on consumer promotion will pay off better.

Released: 16-Jun-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Counties with Casino Gambling Experience Increased Crime Over Time
University of Georgia

Nearing the June 18 release date for the final report of the National Gambling Impact Study Commission, a new, non-sponsored university study concludes that counties with casino gambling have an 8 percent higher crime rate on average than counties without casinos. The study found that higher crime rates donít occur immediately, but typically begin emerging in the third year after a casino opens in a community.

   
Released: 15-Jun-1999 12:00 AM EDT
St. John's University to Combat Sweatshops Worldwide
St. John's University

St. John's University announced today that it is joining forces with two major organizations established to combat sweatshops and the exploitation of apparel workers worldwide, committing funds to support this cause at levels exceeding any other college or university in the country.

Released: 15-Jun-1999 12:00 AM EDT
U.S. Industry Driving The Growth In Research & Development Spending
National Science Foundation (NSF)

Research and development (R&D) spending in the United States reached an estimated $220.6 billion in 1998, says a new National Science Foundation (NSF) report.

Released: 15-Jun-1999 12:00 AM EDT
More price fixing scandals to come, expert says
Purdue University

The U.S. Department of Justice is investigating 30 price-fixing cases, and many involve food additives, feed supplements and vitamins, says Purdue University ag econ professor John Connor, an expert on price-fixing cartels. He says news about agribusiness price-fixing scandals will become more common in coming months.

Released: 12-Jun-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Guide to National Employment Law
University of Maine

The University of Maine's Bureau of Labor Education has released "A National Guide to Employment Law," a user-friendly guide to the multitude of laws that cover American workplaces.

Released: 11-Jun-1999 12:00 AM EDT
New Head of Purdue's Krannert School
Purdue University

Richard A. Cosier, dean of the business school at the University of Oklahoma, will be the next dean of the Purdue University School of Management and the Krannert Graduate School of Management.

Released: 11-Jun-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Consumer buying binge drives down savings rate
Wake Forest University Babcock Graduate School of Management

American consumers remained on a buying binge while maintaining a record-low savings rate during 1999's first quarter, says the director of Wake Forest University's Center for Economic Studies.

Released: 8-Jun-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Accountability Is Not a Social Panacea
Carnegie Mellon University

Some of the talk about making people and organizations more accountable may amount to just that -- talk with little real payoff, a Carnegie Mellon University study shows.

   
Released: 2-Jun-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Business School Top Tier
University of Illinois Chicago

The University of Illinois at Chicago College of Business Administration is one of only 370 U.S. colleges and universities to have earned accreditation from the AACSB, the International Association for Management Education.

Released: 29-May-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Digital Age Communication: What Lies Ahead?
Temple University

Scholars and industry leaders will explore the implications of the digital age at a Bell Atlantic-Temple University Conference June 3-5 at Temple's SugarLoaf Conference Center in Philadelphia.

Released: 29-May-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Pharmacies of the Future Improve Care, Boost Sales
University at Buffalo

An innovative program that operates community pharmacies jointly through the University at Buffalo School of Pharmacy and Tops Markets, Inc. has resulted in better care for patients and better use of pharmacists'skills, and in some cases, a significant increase in business in the pharmacies.

Released: 27-May-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Political Skills More Critical to Job Success
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

As business organizations become "flatter" in structure, an employee's ability to work with others is increasingly critical to job success, says a University of Illinois scholar who has developed a scale to measure an employee's interpersonal savvy.

Released: 27-May-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Web Site Analysis of Financial Risks and Strategies
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

Wanting to protect the family's financial health, but unsure what to do? A big chunk of the puzzle is identifying and managing risks, and many middle-of-the-road wage earners don't understand the game, says a University of Illinois Extension educator.

Released: 26-May-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Major Conference on Technology and Ethics
Boston College, Carroll School of Management

How can privacy be protected in the digital age? Who should regulate the Internet? What are the ethics of business in cyberspace? These and other timely topics are the focus of a multidisciplinary conference on ethics and technology to be held at Boston College June 4-5.

Released: 26-May-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Business is for Gifted Students Too
Baldwin Wallace University

As hot as business courses are in college, college-bound high-schoolers still take college prep courses, and the "business track" remains associated with low achievement--but not at the Talented and Gifted Business Administration Summer Institute at Baldwin-Wallace College in Berea, Ohio.

Released: 26-May-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Free List of Undervalued Stocks on the Web
Cornell University

Students in associate professor Rob Bloomfield's equity research course at Cornell University's Johnson Graduate School of Management have posted on the World Wide Web a semester's worth of carefully researched stock information on companies they have identified as good investments largely ignored by professional analysts at investment firms.

Released: 25-May-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Conference to Explore Potential of Industry Clusters
Sandia National Laboratories

Some 300 business leaders and public officials from New Mexico, Arizona, Colorado, Texas and Utah will explore the potential of technology-driven industry clusters during the Conference on the Southwest as a Region of Innovation: Steps Toward the Next Generation Economy, June 17-18 at the Albuquerque Convention Center.

Released: 21-May-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Euro Will Weaken before Strengthening
Conference Board

The euro may weaken before rebounding toward the end of the year and into 2000, as European economic growth picks up and interest rates rise, according to an analysis released today by The Conference Board.

Released: 21-May-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Master's Program for Industrial Professionals
Purdue University

Using a first-of-its kind combination of distance learning technologies and hands-on-research experiences, Purdue University is putting a master of science degree within reach of business and industry professionals across the country.

Released: 21-May-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Information Labels for Electricity
University of Maine

There are labels for everything we buy, from clothes to long-distance telephone service. In the near future, electricity customers in Maine and elsewhere will see new information labels developed on the basis of a research project involving the University of Maine, a Maine-based non-profit organization and three federal agencies.

Released: 21-May-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Higher Interest Rates Predicted
Georgia State University, J. Mack Robinson College of Business

Rapid consumer spending coupled with a decrease in housing construction this year is increasing the possibility of higher interest rates by the Federal Reserve by its August meeting, according to the latest projections by Dr. Donald Ratajczak, director of the Economic Forecasting Center at Georgia State University.

Released: 21-May-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Controversial "Slotting Fees" Examined
University of Notre Dame

A new study coauthored by a University of Notre Dame marketing professor provides the first comprehensive academic analysis of "slotting fees" -- the controversial practice of retailers and wholesalers requiring a payment from manufacturers before agreeing to allocate shelf or warehouse space to the manufacturers' product.

Released: 20-May-1999 12:00 AM EDT
NBA Draft Lottery--Are Teams Losing to Win?
Baylor University

With Saturday's National Basketball Association draft lottery looming, two Baylor University economists have released their findings on tournament incentives in pro basketball, specifically the time-honored notion that teams "lose to win."

   
Released: 19-May-1999 12:00 AM EDT
A Virtual Factory at Stanford Business School
Stanford Graduate School of Business

Stanford Business School faculty members have taken technology as a teaching aid to a new level. They have developed a "virtual factory," which students manage 24 hours a day by computer to learn operations concepts such as capacity planning and inventory management.



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