giving
Jeff Melton and Keary Kinch from the development and external relations department tell us what to expect in the coming year.
It takes a lot to keep McCombs at the top of the business school rankings. See what progress we’re making and how it's changing the way we do business.
Marketing professor Wayne Hoyer explains how companies can generate business while supporting good causes.
If UT operated on tuition and fees alone, classes would end in mid-November. That's why we take this time of year to say thanks to everyone in the Longhorn community for their support.
First-year Executive MBA students Peter Stokes and Jan Boyd felt inspired to give back to military veterans and convinced their companies--Dell Computers and a San Antonio news station--to work together to make it happen. Learn about what they did.
A 60-person McCombs team of students, staff, and faculty rode together in the Livestrong Challenge bike race Oct. 16 and raised $13,443—more than twice the total of last year’s team—to support people affected by cancer.
This spring, students committed $482,000 to support scholarships, competition travel and special programs. To put that in perspective, we had a little fun with the numbers and calculated what else that money could get you, from junk food to luxury cars.
Business leaders today face increasingly complex demands. To address these challenges, McCombs established the Department of Business, Government and Society. Robert Prentice, founding chair and professor of business law, shares his vision for the department.
With more student giving campaigns launching this year than ever before, one campaign volunteer learns about legacy-making and influencing generations to come.
Randal McDonald Jr., BBA '79, and Robert McDonald, BBA '83, attended the first annual Faculty Endowment Luncheon in honor of their late father, the namesake for the Randal B. McDonald Chair in Accounting. They met the holder of the chair, Professor Steven Kachelmeier.


