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Panel of UC Profs Present on Finance, Economy
A Chance to Ask Experts
Written By Christine Leogrande
Members of UC's business and economics faculty present panel discussion
Contact - cleogrande@utica.edu
Utica, NY (02/12/2008) - It’s a chance to find out what some of our area’s experts on finance are thinking about the economy.Members of Utica College’s business and economics faculty will present a panel discussion, “Money Woes: What Are We In For?” on Wednesday, Feb. 20 at 2 p.m. in Boehlert Hall Conference Center at the college. The program is free and open to the public.
Tax cuts, rebates, the mortgage crisis and the Federal Reserve are just some of the topics that will be discussed. The panelists will take questions from the audience following their presentations.
Presenting will be: Charles Whalen, Ph.D., director and professor of business and economics, on “From Bubble to Bust”; James Heian, Ph.D., associate professor of accounting, on “The Trouble With High Finance”; William Blanchfield, Ph.D., professor of economics, on “The Economic Problem and the Federal Reserve Response”; Kunpeng Li, M.S., assistant professor of management, on “Ripples Along the Supply Chain”; Herbert Rau, Ph.D., associate professor of marketing, on “Management Failures”; Hartwell Herring, Ph.D., professor of accounting, on “The Push for Tax Cuts”; and Richard Fenner, Ph.D., associate professor of economics, on “Rebate Dedux: Fiscal Policy Options for Dealing with the Downturn.”
The discussion will be moderated by Stephen Neun, Ph.D., dean of the School of Graduate and Extended Studies.
The seminar is sponsored in part by the Mohawk Valley Center for Economic Education of Utica College. Refreshments will be served. For more information, contact the School of Business and Justice Studies at (315) 792-3060.
About Utica College – Founded in 1946, Utica College is a comprehensive private institution that grants the Syracuse University baccalaureate degree and the Utica College master’s and doctoral degrees. The College, located in central New York, approximately 90 miles west of Albany and 50 miles east of Syracuse, currently enrolls approximately 3,000 undergraduate and graduate students in 32 undergraduate majors, 26 minors, 13 master’s and two doctoral degree programs.
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