<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1" ?>
<!--  RSS generated by UTSA Today on Thu, 09 Feb 2012 17:37:31 PST -->
<rss version="0.91">
<channel>
<title>UTSA Today - College of Business</title>
<link>http://www.utsa.edu/today/</link>
<description>UTSA Today News</description>
<language>en-us</language>
<category>College of Business</category>
<copyright>Copyright The University of Texas at San Antonio</copyright>
<docs>http://backend.userland.com/rss</docs>
<lastBuildDate>Thu, 09 Feb 2012 17:37:31 PST</lastBuildDate>
<managingEditor>tim.brownlee@utsa.edu</managingEditor> 
<webMaster>ruben.ortiz@utsa.edu</webMaster>


<!-- Story Number 1--><item>
<link>http://utsa.edu/today/2012/01/eduniversal.html</link>
<title>Seven UTSA master's programs recognized by Eduniversal international group</title>
<teaser>UTSA business, liberal and fine arts, public policy colleges receive honors</teaser>
<description></description>
<pubDate>2012-01-30 11:00:00.0</pubDate>
</item>
<!-- Story Number 2--><item>
<link>http://utsa.edu/today/2012/01/citebootcamp.html</link>
<title>Crash course: UTSA hosts technology entrepreneurship boot camp Jan. 28</title>
<teaser>Entrepreneurs can learn how to build tech companies from the ground up</teaser>
<description></description>
<pubDate>2012-01-26 18:00:00.0</pubDate>
</item>
<!-- Story Number 3--><item>
<link>http://utsa.edu/today/2012/01/delavina.html</link>
<title>UTSA College of Business dean steps down to return to teaching</title>
<teaser>Lynda de la Vina will refocus her efforts in area of entrepreneurship</teaser>
<description></description>
<pubDate>2012-01-20 16:00:00.0</pubDate>
</item>
<!-- Story Number 4--><item>
<link>http://bit.ly/z8g8cg</link>
<title>Retired UTSA faculty member Fredric Cooper dies Jan. 12</title>
<teaser>Engineer, inventor, teacher taught business finance and investing courses</teaser>
<description></description>
<pubDate>2012-01-18 10:00:00.0</pubDate>
</item>
<!-- Story Number 5--><item>
<link>http://utsa.edu/today/2012/01/sichansiv.html</link>
<title>Former U.N. Ambassador Sichan Siv speaks Jan. 18 at business breakfast</title>
<teaser>Register online to attend talk on challenges of doing business in Asia and Pacific</teaser>
<description></description>
<pubDate>2012-01-17 14:34:00.0</pubDate>
</item>
<!-- Story Number 6--><item>
<link>http://utsa.edu/today/2012/01/billmorrow.html</link>
<title>Quarri Technologies Executive Chairman Bill Morrow donates to UTSA</title>
<teaser>Gift of $10K and 100,000 stock shares will support UTSA network security R&amp;D</teaser>
<description></description>
<pubDate>2012-01-13 12:00:00.0</pubDate>
</item>
<!-- Story Number 7--><item>
<link>http://bit.ly/t2nTYA</link>
<title>UTSA College of Business faculty member Rolando Quintana dies Dec. 12</title>
<teaser>Respected management science and statistics professor came to UTSA in 2003</teaser>
<description></description>
<pubDate>2011-12-15 14:45:00.0</pubDate>
</item>
<!-- Story Number 8--><item>
<link>http://utsa.edu/today/2011/12/techcomp.html</link>
<title>Logicorp team wins UTSA $100,000 Student Technology Venture Competition</title>
<teaser>UTSA technology competition is nation's largest for undergraduates</teaser>
<description></description>
<pubDate>2011-12-13 15:35:00.0</pubDate>
</item>
<!-- Story Number 9--><item>
<link>http://business.utsa.edu/news/2011/cybersecurity.aspx</link>
<title>UTSA College of Business partners with Raytheon for cybersecurity solutions</title>
<teaser>Five-year agreement to address challenging, high-impact problems</teaser>
<description></description>
<pubDate>2011-12-12 13:00:00.0</pubDate>
</item>
<!-- Story Number 10--><item>
<link>http://business.utsa.edu/news/2011/100_best.aspx</link>
<title>UTSA College of Business recognizes 100 Best Business Students</title>
<teaser>From 5,000+ students, 100 epitomize the top 2 percent</teaser>
<description>(Dec. 7, 2011) -- The College of Business recognized the 100 Best business students during a reception Tuesday night attended by university administrators, alumni and business and community leaders.  With over 5,000 undergraduate students in the College of Business, the 100 Best Business Students epitomize the top two percent of all business students in the college.The College of Business has placed a renewed focus on academic, professional development and career services for our students, said Dean Lynda de la Vi&amp;#241;a.  We are transforming business students into business professionals.  And, as this event showcases tonight, this has been a success.Honorees were junior and senior business majors who were nominated by faculty and staff.  The students were chosen based on their record of outstanding academic achievement, leadership and professional development.  Each student received a lapel pin that denoted their honor and will serve as ambassadors for the college.Tonight we celebrate excellence in our student body and recognize the top business students and perhaps the top students at UTSA, said President Ricardo Romo.  UTSA is providing enriching educational experiences for our students that result in student success.As a group, the 100 Best have an average grade point average of 3.7.  One third of the students are members of the Honors College and participated in the college international immersion program.  Ten percent of the students are veterans or serve in the Reserve Officer Training Corps and 70 percent of the students completed an internship or held a professional position while also being active in a student organization.Representing this distinguished class of students four of the honorees shared their personal stories. Student speakers were Andrea de la Garza, a junior majoring in finance; Lakecia Pitts, a senior majoring in small business and entrepreneurship; Mario Telles, a senior majoring in economics; and Derek Trimm, a senior majoring in real estate finance and development.Attending UTSA as a second generation Roadrunner has proven to be the best decision that I could have possibly made, said de la Garza. UTSA is more than just a university.  For me, UTSA represents pride in one&apos;s city, home and culture.Telles shared how the college&apos;s Center for Student Professional Development prepared him for a recent grueling interview with the FDIC in Washington, D.C.  Following a three-day interview, Telles was one of 23 individuals nationwide selected for a position as a financial institution specialist with the FDIC. This experience was a good measure of everything I had learned as a student at UTSA.  The assessments were difficult, but since I had performed similar tasks as a student I felt comfortable, confident and prepared, said Telles.The UTSA College of Business has been an unbelievable home and resource for me, said Trimm, the former president of the student body. From the staff in the CSPD to the awesome counseling and professional coaching to the great professors in the Real Estate Finance and Development program, my educational experience has truly been an unmatched investment. Trimm, who will graduate next spring, will participate in the Bill Archer Fellowship program in Washington, D.C. this spring and has already accepted a job offer to work at Marathon oil company.This is the inaugural year for the college&apos;s 100 Best business student recognition.</description>
<pubDate>2011-12-07 12:20:00.0</pubDate>
</item>


</channel>
</rss>



