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Experience Design Finance 2010–2014
A group of Brigham Young University finance students are finding unique ways to use their investing skills while helping those in poverty worldwide.
Not long after putting their pencils down on the last bubble sheet, many Marriott School students say good-bye to their final exams and to Y Mountain, leaving Provo in pursuit of internships and experience. 
Gregory Cornell has had a front row seat to history. After graduating from BYU in finance in 1985, he joined the U.S. Army and served his first four years in Germany at the end of the Cold War.
The Marriott School honored Michael Swenson as its 2011 Outstanding Faculty. Fourteen others were also recognized.
It may sound like the concept for the next reality TV hit: give twenty-five undergrads nearly $1 million and turn them loose. But this is no TV show; this is a typical day in one Marriott School classroom.
Quick thinking and fast fingers earned a team of RMYL students 2nd place at the Park and Recreation Student Quiz Bowl.
Marriott School announces the winners of the 2011 Bateman Awards, the only school-wide awards selected entirely by students.
While many business leaders strive to expand their organization’s reach globally, one Marriott School grad oversees projects that have a more vertical approach—out of this atmosphere, actually.
BYU has been named one of the top 10 U.S. universities researching real estate in the last 10 years.
A BYU study shows that any entrepreneur looking for the best ROI might be better served by a combination of two strategies.
A team of BYU undergrads came home with the first-place title from the inaugural Duff & Phelps National Case Study Competition.
BYU Marriott School's MBA finance program rates among the top 15 in the nation —for two consecutive years.
While California gets much of the attention for up-and-coming technology news, Utah’s own “Silicon Slopes” feature many companies making headlines in the tech world.
Investors looking to hit it big in 2010 may want to consider a new study by three BYU finance professors.