Complete coverage on

University of Southern California

Latest Stories

Credit card security breach hits California campus updated: Fri Jun 29 2012 11:19:00

The University of Southern California is warning students and faculty about a credit card security breach following the hacking of a software system on the campus.

Fortune: Aaron Levie: The best advice I ever gotupdated: Thu Mar 15 2012 06:26:00

"Mark Cuban was an early investor in Box. At the time, we wanted to build two competing models for letting businesses and people share files: peer-to-peer based and cloud based. We didn't know which would succeed. Mark advised us not to hedge our bets; it's counterintuitive -- you learn not to put all your eggs in one basket. If you hedge, you take away resources from one activity for another, so it dramatically decreases your chance of succeeding in the area that will win.

Are depressed kids bully magnets?updated: Wed Feb 08 2012 07:56:00

Psychologists, not to mention parents, have long observed that kids who seem depressed tend to have trouble getting along with -- and being accepted by -- their peers.

Did bullying drive teen to suicide?updated: Wed Feb 08 2012 07:56:00

Dr. Drew talks to the family of 15-year-old Amanda Cummings, whose suicide may have been the result of bullying.

Part-time cop nabbed arson suspectupdated: Sun Jan 08 2012 07:13:00

A part-time police officer who earns a $1 a year arrested the man suspected in a series of fires in Los Angeles.

Los Angeles reserve deputy is reluctant -- and private -- heroupdated: Sun Jan 08 2012 07:13:00

Call it good timing, divine intervention or just dumb luck.

Hundreds of unknown remains laid to rest with dignity in L.A.updated: Wed Dec 07 2011 19:30:00

Beneath a simple gray stone marker that reads "2008," on a gentle slope at the Los Angeles County Crematory and Cemetery, lie the unclaimed remains of the poor, the homeless, the addicted and the lonely.

Stroke at 22: Honoring the lessons 20 years laterupdated: Fri Nov 11 2011 07:13:00

Lying in the back of the ambulance, unable to move my right arm or leg, I began bargaining with God.

The changing face of America's youthupdated: Wed Jul 06 2011 19:12:00

The United States is walking a path to greater diversity. And younger people are leading the way.

CNNMoney: Facebook COO: Men run the worldupdated: Wed May 18 2011 05:19:00

What if men ran half of households around the world and women ran half the companies? Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg thinks the world would be a better place.

More medical complications for hospitalized Giants fanupdated: Fri May 06 2011 19:40:00

Doctors are concerned that Bryan Stow, the San Francisco Giants fan who was severely beaten outside the Los Angeles Dodger Stadium in late March, is accumulating fluid in his brain, according to physicians and his family's website.

Money Magazine: Cut the tax bite of gifting a variable annuityupdated: Wed Apr 20 2011 11:47:00

Q: A variable annuity that I've owned for many years has risen a great deal in value. Can I gift it to my kids? -- Anthony Cupo, Fayetteville, Ind.

Beaten Giants fan put back in comaupdated: Mon Apr 18 2011 05:49:00

A San Francisco Giants fan who was beaten outside the Los Angeles Dodgers' stadium late last month was put back in a medically induced coma during the weekend after suffering seizures, a hospital spokeswoman said.

That 'Gmail Motion' prank? These folks made it realupdated: Mon Apr 04 2011 16:37:00

Maybe there aren't as many fools out there as Google thought.

US Nuclear Plants In Damage controlupdated: Sat Mar 26 2011 09:43:00

TVA officials reassure public with rare look inside a nuclear plant. David Mattingly reports.

CNNMoney: Tax cut stew for Christmasupdated: Sun Sep 26 2010 18:41:00

It's official: Now that resolution on the Bush tax cuts has been postponed until after the Nov. 2 mid-term elections, lawmakers have punted nearly every major time-sensitive tax issue until the end of the year.

CNNMoney: 100-plus tax breaks on the lineupdated: Wed Aug 25 2010 10:00:00

When it comes to putting off assignments, college students have nothing on Congress.

SI.com: Frank Deford: Is cheerleading a sport?updated: Wed Jul 28 2010 15:25:00

Two things that people love to ask me are: Is such-and-such really a sport? And: Are people who do such-and-such really athletes? Usually, I can tell, the people who ask me: say, are race car drivers really athletes? ... don't like auto racing -- and they are very piqued at me when I say, yeah, definitely I think race car drivers are athletes. Just because you are sitting down doesn't mean you can't be an athlete. As there are different artists, so too different athletes.

SI.com: Is cheerleading a sport?updated: Wed Jul 28 2010 15:19:00

Two things that people love to ask me are: Is such-and-such really a sport? And: Are people who do such-and-such really athletes? Usually, I can tell, the people who ask me: say, are race car drivers really athletes? ... don't like auto racing -- and they are very piqued at me when I say, yeah, definitely I think race car drivers are athletes. Just because you are sitting down doesn't mean you can't be an athlete. As there are different artists, so too different athletes.

One pair of 3D glasses to rule them allupdated: Mon May 10 2010 12:04:00

The good news about the 3D TVs coming out this spring and summer is that they'll come packed with two pairs of 3D lenses. The bad news? Those plastic glasses work only with the brand of TV with which they're shipped.

Psychologists: Memorials can trigger more suicidesupdated: Mon Mar 22 2010 10:23:00

When college students take their lives, as apparently happened recently at Cornell University, the instinctual reaction, to mourn publicly and officially, may be the wrong thing to do, psychologists say.

Online dating liars: Why they do itupdated: Mon Mar 08 2010 22:54:00

Worried that the 27-year-old man making more than $70,000 as profiled on an online dating service isn't so young or taking home that much cash?

For jobs, look to university spin-offsupdated: Fri Jan 29 2010 19:27:00

On Monday, President Obama will post his much-anticipated federal budget for fiscal year 2011. And as America reviews the plan, few issues will be as critical as how it addresses job creation.

Obama taps Los Angeles airport police official for top TSA jobupdated: Thu Sep 10 2009 20:32:00

President Obama said Thursday he intends to nominate a top Los Angeles International Airport police department official to head the Transportation Security Administration, the agency charged with protecting airplanes and other forms of transportation from terrorists.

Fortune: The surfin' CEOupdated: Fri Jul 10 2009 09:44:00

We had a vacation house in Newport Beach, Calif., so I was always in and around the water and loved to surf. My dad was an importer, and on a trip to Japan he brought me home a movie camera. I started filming surfers at the local beach and then editing and splicing my own little surf movies. When I went to the University of Southern California's school of business, I helped pay my way by showing surf movies up and down the coast for $1 a ticket. "

Scientists warn of Twitter dangersupdated: Tue Apr 14 2009 23:10:00

Rapid-fire TV news bulletins or getting updates via social-networking tools such as Twitter could numb our sense of morality and make us indifferent to human suffering, scientists say.

Scientists warn of rapid -fire media dangersupdated: Tue Apr 14 2009 10:35:00

Rapid-fire TV news bulletins or getting updates via social-networking tools such as Twitter could numb our sense of morality and make us indifferent to human suffering, scientists say.

Developer explores the softer side of video gamesupdated: Mon Mar 23 2009 10:22:00

Kellee Santiago wants to tap into the kinder, gentler side of gaming.

Do you prefer a male or female boss?updated: Mon Mar 16 2009 09:21:00

A famous George Carlin observation goes, "Have you ever noticed that anybody driving slower than you is an idiot, and anyone going faster than you is a maniac?"

Early lives of 10 V.P. wivesupdated: Wed Sep 10 2008 11:14:00

As the election approaches, we're learning more than we ever wanted to know about the presidential and vice presidential candidates. You even hear a lot about the potential first ladies -- I have somehow picked up the fact that Barack and Michelle Obama saw movie "Do the Right Thing" on their first date.

Who should pay for mom and dad's care?updated: Wed Aug 20 2008 12:30:00

When Stephen Leach gave up his Rockaway, New Jersey, condo at age 48 to move back in with Mom and Dad, it was out of need -- his parents', not his.

Team sees challenges of providing safe waterupdated: Fri Aug 15 2008 13:55:00

One of the greatest learning experiences thus far was visiting the slums.

Students work to improve water quality in Indiaupdated: Thu Aug 14 2008 18:41:00

The World Health Organization reports that 88 percent of the 1.8 million deaths resulting from diarrhea can be attributed to unsafe water or inadequate hygiene or sanitation.

Time.com: 125,000 Gorillas Found in Congoupdated: Tue Aug 05 2008 11:00:00

Wildlife researchers said Tuesday that they've discovered 125,000 western lowland gorillas deep in the forests of the Republic of Congo, calling it a major increase in the animal's estimated population

Students teach kids dangers of 'gutka' in Indiaupdated: Mon Aug 04 2008 11:37:00

What are you doing on your summer vacation? If you are an innovative student from the University of Southern California, the answer might be going to India, providing innovative water treatment measures to mitigate the spread of waterborne diseases, or educating locals on how to prevent oral cancer.

SI.com: Brian Cazeneuve: Faith, father help guide Felix to success on the trackupdated: Fri Apr 25 2008 15:31:00

It is early morning at the large cafeteria hall of the Sunrise Ministry in Auburn, Calif., and Professor Paul Felix is giving an Olympic performance in the face of poor conditions. The volume on his body microphone is jumping from faint resonance to raised screeching to silence, and the veteran pastor isn't fond of his handheld mic. "Can we fix this?" he asks. "I like to talk with my hands."

Time.com: Strokes in Middle-Aged Women Tripleupdated: Wed Feb 20 2008 16:35:00

Strokes have tripled in recent years among middle-aged women in the U.S., an alarming trend doctors blame on the obesity epidemic

SI.com: Arash Markazi: A mock discussion between LSU, Georgia and USCupdated: Wed Jan 09 2008 12:17:00

College football is more like politics than any other sport in America. Think about it. This year's national champion, for instance, wasn't decided so much on the field but in the filibustering done by coaches, pollsters and assorted talking heads leading up to the game.

Time.com: A Link Between Anxiety and Heart Attacksupdated: Tue Jan 08 2008 11:00:00

Anger, depression and stress can all raise the risk of heart disease -- but a new study shows that chronic anxiety may be even more harmful

Defibrillation delaysupdated: Thu Jan 03 2008 13:27:00

A new study says hospitals often don't deliver defibrillation within the recommended time. CNN's Dr. Sanjay Gupta reports.

Next time you have a Big Mac attack . . .updated: Tue Nov 20 2007 14:20:00

Get something else to eat instead! Nutrition experts weigh in on what's healthy at airports.

CNNMoney: Most affordable college football townsupdated: Tue Nov 06 2007 06:04:00

Muncie, Indiana, ranks as the most affordable big football town for housing in the United States, according to an annual survey released Tuesday by Coldwell Banker.

Time.com: A Memoir of Schizophreniaupdated: Mon Aug 27 2007 16:00:00

Noted academic Elyn Saks hid her illness for years. Now in a new book she opens up about what it's like to have a severe mental illness

People.com: Mom of Matt Leinart's Son Speaks Outupdated: Wed Jul 25 2007 14:02:00

Matt Leinart's ex-girlfriend, Brynn Cameron, reveals that when it comes to parenting, she's the star quarterback.

People.com: Matt Leinart Says Fatherhood 'Puts Things in Perspective'updated: Thu Jul 12 2007 19:53:00

Arizona Cardinals quarterback Matt Leinart may be a bruiser on the grid, but fatherhood has turned him into a big softie.

Virtual war, real therapyupdated: Wed May 16 2007 06:52:00

The mental scars of war are often far more debilitating than the many physical injuries that servicemen and women pick up during combat. But a new virtual war simulation may help veterans recover from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

Money Magazine: Subprime bailout? $120 billionupdated: Fri Apr 13 2007 12:16:00

Want to pick up the check for every homeowner who got saddled with a risky mortgage? It's a big one - on the order of $120 billion.

Brain-damaged people give insights into moralityupdated: Wed Mar 21 2007 23:00:00

It's wartime, and an enemy doctor is conducting painful and inevitably fatal experiments on children.

Neuroscience probes new frontiersupdated: Mon Mar 05 2007 07:16:00

The mysteries of the human mind have tantalized and frustrated philosophers, poets and -- more recently - psychologists for centuries, yet new breakthroughs in neuroscience could mean the brain is finally starting to give up its secrets.

Could Gore's road to the Oval Office begin in Hollywood?updated: Fri Feb 23 2007 15:40:00

We've seen plenty of political moments at the Oscars before. But on Sunday, we could see the most unusual political moment ever.

SI.com: The 10 Spot: Feb. 22, 2007updated: Thu Feb 22 2007 09:53:00

1. Some baseball traditionalists are upset that MLB is replacing the traditional wool caps with a new polyester blend. But what's the big deal? Why should the hats be all-natural when the hat sizes aren't?

Today's Buzz storiesupdated: Tue Jan 16 2007 14:21:00

Jennifer Aniston is rejoining Courteney Cox on prime time, but this time they're anything but friends.

Fortune: LEADING INDICATORSupdated: Mon Nov 27 2006 00:01:00

NCAA BY THE NUMBERS

Fortune: Liberal arts vs. business degreeupdated: Tue May 09 2006 10:42:00

Few topics we've addressed here recently have inspired as much reader comment as the column a couple of weeks ago, in answer to a newly minted English major who wondered if her degree would turn out to be useless in the job market.

Business 2.0: Why Employees Should Lead Themselvesupdated: Fri Feb 03 2006 04:27:00

The Orpheus Chamber Orchestra is known principally for the musical accomplishments of its 28 members. Based in New York City, the Grammy Award-winning ensemble performs Mozart and Stravinsky to rav...

Money Magazine: Pop Goes the Bubble?updated: Wed Feb 01 2006 00:01:00

Rory Moore, semiretired and a self-described "Dabbler" in real estate, bought his neighbor's house in Los Banos, Calif. last May for $499,000. Make a few fixes, he figured, and flip it a couple of months later for a six-figure profit. But then the property, listed at $699,000 in July, failed to attract even one buyer in the first 30 days. "I could feel it in my gut that the market was changing," says Moore, 54. "The market had been crazy here, with 25% appreciation in a year. I could see the handwriting on the wall." By December, Moore had dropped his asking price twice, to $565,000, and he was dangling incentives like covering a year's worth of gas or utilities and 12 months of lawn service. He's given up the notion of making a profit on any deal. In fact, he's eager to be rid of the place: "I don't want to get stuck with a property that's a financial drain on the family. We'll do what we have to do to get it sold."

Money Magazine: Real Estate: The state of the bubbleupdated: Thu Jan 19 2006 11:07:00

Rory Moore, semiretired and a self-described dabbler in real estate, bought his neighbor's house in Los Banos, Calif. last May for $499,000. Make a few fixes, he figured, and flip it a couple of months later for a six-figure profit.

CNNMoney: Texas is the BC$ champ, tooupdated: Wed Jan 04 2006 11:13:00

Two college football powerhouses met in the national championship game Wednesday night, and one of the programs was superior in more ways than one.

CNNMoney: Dodging college football playoffsupdated: Fri Dec 09 2005 11:18:00

Imagine Congress holding hearings to examine what to do about cheap gasoline prices or a U.S. trade surplus, or even more unbelievably, an efficient government program.

Money Magazine: Get Rich in Real Estate Without Leaving Homeupdated: Fri Jul 01 2005 00:01:00

If you've dreamed of investing in real estate but don't want to miss out on the kids' Little League games, partnerships may be the answer.

CNNMoney: Get rich without leaving homeupdated: Thu Jun 16 2005 15:39:00

If you've dreamed of investing in real estate but don't want to miss out on the kids' Little League games, partnerships may be the answer.

CNNMoney: Real estate geek watchupdated: Thu Nov 04 2004 10:11:00

SALEM, Ore. (CNN/Money) - Forget Trump. Next week, student teams from a dozen business schools will test their real estate savvy in the third annual Real Estate Challenge.

USC student groups steer registration drivesupdated: Thu Sep 23 2004 11:09:00

When this year's incoming freshman class moved into their dorms during the University of Southern California's orientation week, they were able to meet new roommates, buy textbooks -- and register to vote.

Some USC Greens grapple with 'spoiler' effectupdated: Thu May 27 2004 09:12:00

Benjamin Beatty, a University of Southern California alumnus, voted for former Green Party candidate Ralph Nader in the 2000 presidential election and is definite he made the right decision -- then.

Dueling Democrats fire up USC studentsupdated: Mon Mar 01 2004 11:59:00

Editor's note: Campus Vibe is a feature that provides student perspectives on the 2004 election from selected colleges across the United States. This week's contributor is Gina Goodhill, student reporter at the Daily Trojan, the University of Southern California student newspaper. The views expressed in this article are not necessarily those of CNN, its affiliates or the University of Southern California.

Young athletes and health risksupdated: Fri Feb 27 2004 14:28:00

With the obesity epidemic on the rise, U.S. teenagers are encouraged to participate in sports, but a recent study reported in the American College of Cardiology says that for some teens, playing sports without proper medical screening can be deadly.

Money Magazine: What's next for real estateupdated: Wed Feb 18 2004 16:07:00

Worried about a housing bubble in your hometown? Well, just think how Los Angelenos must feel. Los Angeles and its environs are coming off back-to-back years of 20 to 30 percent increases in home prices.

Business 2.0: Digital Memories to Last a Lifetimeupdated: Mon Sep 01 2003 00:01:00

In 1945, scientist Vannevar Bush famously proposed the idea of the Memex, a mechanized recording system for the mind. It's taken almost six decades, but researchers are finally closing in on techno...

Fortune: This Hangover Is Brought to You By...updated: Mon Sep 03 2001 00:01:00

This fall, Chris Barrett and Luke McCabe will become the first corporate-sponsored college students. First USA Bank will pay their tuition at Pepperdine University and the University of Southern Ca...

Fortune: Is Spielberg's Vision 20/20?updated: Mon Jul 23 2001 00:01:00

A.I., Steven Spielberg's new film about a robot who can love, seems to have about as much verisimilitude as his dinosaur movie. It features Jude Law as a robot gigolo, and David, a disturbingly lif...

Fortune: What Does Rich McGinn Do Now?updated: Mon Nov 27 2000 00:01:00

After three years as CEO of Lucent, Rich McGinn, 54, is out of a job. Under his leadership the company soared and then crashed--hard. In the past year, Lucent lost business to competitors like Nort...

Fortune: WOULD YOU PAY $125,000 TO GET FROZEN? THE UNCERTAIN FUTURE OF THE CRYONIC SUSPENSION INDUSTRYupdated: Mon Nov 24 1997 00:01:00

The prospect of freezing people and later thawing them out has long factored large in the American imagination. It's a staple of science fiction novels. It's been a plot device in numerous movies, ...

Money Magazine: HOW FUND COSTS DRAG DOWN GAINSupdated: Tue Jul 01 1997 00:01:00

If you could single out one piece of information that would give you the best insight into a mutual fund's chances of outperforming its peers, what would you choose? Five-year performance? One-year...

Money Magazine: HOW THE TAX CODE HURTS WOMEN--AND WHAT YOU CAN DO ABOUT ITupdated: Sun Jun 01 1997 00:01:00

Here's one more reason to dislike the federal income tax code: It discriminates against women. Ed McCaffrey, author of the new book Taxing Women (University of Chicago, $29.95) and a University of ...

Fortune: WANTED: AGING BABY-BOOMERS OLD WORKERS, IT SEEMS, ARE MORE LOYAL AND LESS COSTLY THAN GENERATION XERS.updated: Mon Sep 30 1996 00:01:00

Turning 50 this year? So are Bill Clinton, Linda Ronstadt, Connie Chung, Sylvester Stallone ... (and let's not forget Cheech Marin). Never mind all the stuff you may have heard about how unemployab...

Fortune: 'YOU CAN HAVE IT ALL'updated: Mon Mar 04 1996 00:01:00

William Davidson has spent six years studying some 70 businesses that have achieved major business breakthroughs--spectacular gains in growth, speed, service, efficiency, or product development. A ...

Money Magazine: SMART MOVES FOR LATE STARTERS THESE TIPS--VALUABLE FOR ALL ASPIRANTS--CHART A SHORTCUT TO SUCCESS FOR HIGH updated: Tue Sep 05 1995 00:01:00

As students begin their senior year of high school, most parents think that their kids are already lagging behind in the college admissions game. (If your child is savvy enough to want to get an ea...

Fortune: KISSING OFF CORPORATE AMERICA SAYS THE PRESIDENT OF THE KELLOGG SCHOOL'S CLASS OF 1995: "I DON'T KNOW ANupdated: Mon Feb 20 1995 00:01:00

Daniel Grossman squirmed on the horns of a career dilemma. The small toy company he worked for had been taken over by industry titan Mattel, and he had been offered a great job at the new parent. A...

Fortune: THE TROUBLE WITH TEAMS They're a major innovation in organizing work, and everybody loves them -- in theory. In practice it's anupdated: Mon Sep 05 1994 00:01:00

CORPORATE AMERICA is having a hot love affair with teams. And why not? When teams work, there's nothing like them for turbocharging productivity. Beguiling examples abound: Scores of service compan...

Money Magazine: Are you ready for retirement? Take this exclusive MONEY quiz to find out. updated: Tue Mar 15 1994 00:01:00

Your finances may be in great shape. Your friends and co-workers may be encouraging you. But are you emotionally ready for retirement? Our quiz, prepared by retirement specialist Helen Dennis at th...

Fortune: REENGINEERING THE MBA In search of the ideal MBA, business schools are changing their courses -- and the kinds of students they updated: Mon Jan 24 1994 00:01:00

IT'S A BIT like watching a scientist develop a drug to cure a serious illness. But the patient is American business, the hoped-for cure is a new, improved MBA, and the scientist at the moment is Jo...

Fortune: NEW HOPES FOR THE INNER CITY Having learned from mistakes of the past, today's urban reformers rely less on government and more updated: Mon Sep 06 1993 00:01:00

A JANITOR hauling trash from a Brooklyn apartment building this spring found one bag suspiciously heavy and opened it to find the body of a small boy, 3 to 5 years of age. He was dressed in pajamas...

Money Magazine: ARE YOU A CANDIDATE FOR EARLY RETIREMENT? updated: Tue Jun 01 1993 00:01:00

To learn whether you have the temperament and financial wherewithal to retire early, take this 10-question quiz, prepared with the assistance of Helen Dennis, a retirement consultant and lecturer a...

Fortune: WHY IT STILL PAYS TO BUY A HOUSE updated: Mon May 03 1993 00:01:00

After a rewarding love affair with homeownership in the Seventies and Eighties, some people feel they've been jilted in the Nineties. Those who bought at the top in California and the Northeast suf...

Money Magazine: ADVICE FOR NEW GRADSupdated: Thu Apr 01 1993 00:01:00

If job hunting were baseball, Steven Froot, 25, would have gone down swinging. Strike one came when, seeking any job the baseball team had available, the 1990 Florida State graduate sent his resume...

Fortune: HOW TO BEAT THE JOB MARKET ODDS JUST-IN-TIME HIRING FOR RECENT MBAsupdated: Mon Jun 15 1992 00:01:00

Faced with a stagnant job scene, unemployed managers, career changers, and freshly minted college graduates are finding new ways to hunt for work. Big corporations still look good to many, who floo...

Fortune: ECONOMIC INTELLIGENCE WILL THE BUSTERS BE SPENDERS?updated: Mon May 04 1992 00:01:00

Marketers worried about consumer frugality in the years to come will be pleasantly surprised by the emerging baby-busters -- as materialistic a crowd as you could hope for, says demographer Richard...

Fortune: THE BABY BOOMLET IS FOR REAL The trend started with women beating the biological clock, but it won't stop with them. More young updated: Mon Feb 10 1992 00:01:00

NOTICED many pregnant women in your office the past few years? Lots of strollers in the local park? It's what number crunchers call anecdotal evidence -- you see something that looks like a trend, ...

Fortune: THE BEST MANAGEMENT BOOKS OF 1991 No breakthrough treatises this year, but these four should help you look ahead, perfect allianupdated: Mon Jan 27 1992 00:01:00

It's New Year's resolution time. You're back in the office, a little apprehensive about tough times but all the more dedicated to honing your organizational skills for the year ahead. And there, st...

Fortune: JOHNSON'S TURNAROUND TIPSupdated: Mon Sep 09 1991 00:01:00

In just 27 months at Gerber and 18 at Campbell, David Johnson has established himself as one of corporate America's turnaround masters. Speaking in the cadence of his native Australia, he shared so...

Fortune: DEALING WITH THE PROBLEM BOSS Tough times make bad chiefs worse. The standard wisdom on them may not go far enough. Ready for thupdated: Mon Aug 12 1991 00:01:00

Captain Queeg. Mr. Dithers. Harold Geneen. Frank Lorenzo. Just about everyone carries with him an image, cartoon or otherwise, of the boss from hell. A disconcerting proportion of employees -- near...

Fortune: INSIDE SCOOPupdated: Mon Mar 12 1990 00:01:00

Those 60-hour weeks can really wear down a manager, even in the soothing environs of Vermont. So Fred ''Chico'' Lager, 35, is retiring as CEO of Ben & Jerry's Homemade, the $60-million-a-year compa...

Fortune: LEADERSHIP: BEYOND THE OBVIOUS A best-selling USC professor picks some unusual role models to demonstrate what it takes to motivupdated: Mon Oct 09 1989 00:01:00

With all the books on the subject, most readers can cite by rote the basic traits that make a leader -- vision, integrity, willingness to accept risk. Warren Bennis has taken up the challenge of ge...

We recommend

From around the web