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The Edwin L. Cox School of Business is an American business school that is part of Southern Methodist University (SMU) in Dallas, Texas.The SMU Cox School of Business is headquartered in four buildings on SMU's 210-acre main campus five miles north of downtown Dallas and has a second campus in Plano, Texas.
Albert C. Black Jr. (born July 24, 1959) is an American businessman who was CEO and chairman of On Target Supplies and Logistics, a company he founded in 1982. Black was the first African American chairman of the Dallas Regional Chamber [1] in Dallas, Texas.
Cox spent his career in oil and gas exploration. [3] He served as CEO of the Edwin L. Cox Company, an investment company. [3] Cox served on the board of directors of Halliburton and the American Petroleum Institute. [3] In 1990, he was inducted into the Texas Business Hall of Fame. [3]
W. Michael Cox (born August 7, 1950) is an American economist, speaker, and consultant. An outspoken libertarian, he comments on society, politics, and the benefits of a free market society. Cox is currently the Director of the O’Neil Center for Global Markets and Freedom at Southern Methodist University's Cox School of Business.
The auction, scheduled for Friday, had attracted 42 bidders and an opening bid of $16.5 million for prime properties that were owned and marketed by Grove developer Doug Cox, who is accused of ...
She gained an MBA from the Cox School of Business at Southern Methodist University and a PhD in communications from the University of Texas at Austin. [1] Scott held academic appointments in advertising, art, women's studies and communications at the University of Illinois. In 2006 she joined the Saïd Business School at Oxford University. [2]
In 2007, O'Neil started donating to his alma mater, Southern Methodist University and funded a chair in business journalism at SMU's Meadows School of the Arts, he then endowed a professorship in markets and freedom and created the William J. O'Neil Center for Global Markets and Freedom at the university's Cox School of Business. [3]
Right now we're starstruck by the price, too: The cushy Adidas Adilette comfort slides are down to $22 (was $35) and the sweet shower slides go as low as $13 (was $30) as part of Amazon's big ...