Podcast appearances and mentions of frank wilkinson

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Best podcasts about frank wilkinson

Latest podcast episodes about frank wilkinson

Bloomberg Opinion
Credit Card Penalties and EV Subsidies

Bloomberg Opinion

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2023 35:06 Transcription Available


We discuss whether credit card penalties are ethical, and whether they should be legal. We also examine electric vehicle subsidies, Donald Trump's take on healthcare, and the intelligence of rats. We speak with Bloomberg Opinion columnists Erin Lowry, Frank Wilkinson, Chris Bryant, and Faye Flam. Amy Morris hosts.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Bloomberg Opinion
Will Americans Push Back on Inflation, and Farmers on America First?

Bloomberg Opinion

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2023 34:40 Transcription Available


Bloomberg Opinion columnist Chris Bryant says we're all being too passive on inflation. What action can consumers take? He joins to explain. Opinion's Adam Minter also joins, discussing how protectionism negatively impacts farmers. Frank Wilkinson and Conor Sen also talk about their recent columns, "Tennessee Gun Politics Are Warped by Racism" and "Major League Baseball's Revolution Has Just Begun." Amy Morris hosts.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

And the Pitch
06. Dodger Stadium's First Pitch & All that Preceded It, w/ Eric Nusbaum

And the Pitch

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2021 29:03


Eric Nusbaum is the author of the book Stealing Home and the co-creator of the Substack newsletter Sports Stories. We talk about the first pitch at Dodger Stadium in 1962 and the tangled story of how it all came to be. We also talk about baseball's westward expansion, public housing, communism, the Red Scare, the communities that formerly sat in Chavez Ravine, the LA Times, ignoring history, Disneyland, Frank Wilkinson, gentrification, killer whales, power, To Kill a Mockingbird and the lasting impact of those communities and the families who lived there. Justin: https://twitter.com/routinelayup Eric: Living a Twitter free life for a while Stealing Home: https://bookshop.org/books/stealing-home-los-angeles-the-dodgers-and-the-lives-caught-in-between-9781541742222/9781541742215 Sports Stories: https://sportsstories.substack.com/ Email podcast ideas: andthepitchpodcast@gmail.com --- This episode is sponsored by ยท Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

And the Pitch
06. Dodger Stadium's First Pitch & All that Preceded It, w/ Eric Nusbaum

And the Pitch

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2021 29:03


Eric Nusbaum is the author of the book Stealing Home and the co-creator of the Substack newsletter Sports Stories. We talk about the first pitch at Dodger Stadium in 1962 and the tangled story of how it all came to be. We also talk about baseball's westward expansion, public housing, communism, the Red Scare, the communities that formerly sat in Chavez Ravine, the LA Times, ignoring history, Disneyland, Frank Wilkinson, gentrification, killer whales, power, To Kill a Mockingbird and the lasting impact of those communities and the families who lived there. Justin: https://twitter.com/routinelayup Eric: Living a Twitter free life for a while Stealing Home: https://bookshop.org/books/stealing-home-los-angeles-the-dodgers-and-the-lives-caught-in-between-9781541742222/9781541742215 Sports Stories: https://sportsstories.substack.com/ Email podcast ideas: andthepitchpodcast@gmail.com --- This episode is sponsored by ยท Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

The Chills at Will Podcast
Episode 63 with Detail-Oriented, Master Storyteller about Sports and Beyond, and Author of Stealing Home: Los Angeles, the Dodgers, and the Lives Caught in Between, Eric Nusbaum

The Chills at Will Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2021 58:34


Show Notes and Links to Eric Nusbaum's Work and Allusions/Texts from Episode 63 ย  On Episode 63, Pete talks with Eric Nusbaum about his freelance writing for such publications as VICE, Sports Illustrated, and ESPN the Magazine. The two then talk in great detail about Eric's powerful new book, Stealing Home: Los Angeles, the Dodgers, and the Lives Caught in Between, which deals with the communities forced to move to make room for Dodger Stadium. This discussion ย  Eric Nusbaum is a writer and former editor at VICE.ย  His work has appeared in Sports Illustrated, ESPN the Magazine, The Daily Beast, Deadspin, and the Best American Sports Writing anthology. Born and raised in Los Angeles, he has also lived and worked in Mexico City, New York, and Seattle. He now lives in Tacoma, Washington with his family. Buy Stealing Home: Los Angeles, the Dodgers, and the Lives Caught in Between (Bookshop.org) ย  Stealing Home Book and Eric Nusbaum Personal Website ย  August 2020 Eric Nusbaum NPR Interview about Book ย  "Dodger Stadium's Shameful Origin Story"-Interesting Info and Background on Abrana and Manuel Arรฉchigaย  ย  At about 1:45, Eric talks about his early days writing for Deadspin At about 3:00, Eric talks about his reading life as a child, living in a โ€œprint-rich environmentโ€ and reading local and legendary Los Angeles Times writers like Jim Murray and Bill Plaschke and Sports Illustrated for Kids and Sports Illustrated At about 6:10, Eric discusses formative moments that led to him becoming a writer At about 6:55, Eric discusses texts and writers that have given him โ€œchills at will,โ€ including the USA trilogy of John Dos Passos At about 8:30, Eric details his Dodger fandom At about 10:45, Eric traces his evolution into a professional writer; he recognizes some of his great and inspiring professors/teachers along the way, including Richard Kenney and Lou Matthews; he also references a huge building block in his writing life-his and Ted Walker and Patrick Dubuque's baseball blog-Pitchers and Poets At about 13:10, Eric describes the piece he wrote that was included in 2010's The Best American Sports Writing-the essay was โ€œThe Death of a Pitcherโ€ At about 13:45, Eric discusses the balance between reading for a pleasure and reading with a critical eye At about 15:00, Eric describes the โ€œsurrealโ€ feeling of writing for magazines that he idolized as a kid At about 16:25, a random note about language and โ€œrealizarseโ€ At about 17:00, Eric talks about his book Stealing Home and the importance of a descriptive subtitle At about 18:00, Eric details how a school visit by Frank Wilkinson and other events started the wheels in motion for Eric to write and publish Stealing Home At about 21:00, Eric outlines some background and history from the book, especially the three neighborhoods-La Loma, Bishop, and Palo Verde-that make up โ€œChavez Ravineโ€ At about 21:50, Eric explains ideas of trust, burden, trauma, and responsibility in making sure that he got the important story correct At about 24:00, Eric talks about the research process and talking to family and friends of those involved in the book's events/history, as well as reconstructing dialogue and events from the 1940s/50s, etc. At about 27:00, Pete and Eric discuss the skillful ways in which Eric wove together so many apparently disparate stories-from that of General Santa Anna, Veracruz, MX, Abner Doubleday, etc. At about 28:45, Eric details the myriad connections between the events of the book and today's world At about 29:50, Eric recounts the anecdotes that link baseball, its origins, and General Santa Anna At about 32:20, Eric gives the rationale for his successful usage of 72 (!) chapters, mostly about โ€œcreating tensionโ€ and why he decided to avoid using academic-style footnotes At about 34:20, Eric reads from page five, the last paragraph in the book's Preface At about 36:50, Eric and Pete discuss the relationship between sports fandom and the need to acknowledge how society's inequities play out in sports as well-i.e., the shameful treatment of Colin Kaepernick, the shameful ways in which Dodger Stadium was built on others' homes At about 41:00, Pete and Eric discuss the shameful and racist histories often associated with early Los Angeles figures, many of whom are still memorialized today in street names, and in the book; Pete shouts out a book about 1900s LA-John Fante's Ask the Dust At about 43:00, Eric and Pete discuss the lack of salient villains in the book's storyline, and Eric discusses his focus on people's motivations in writing the book At about 45:00, Eric talks about the complicated legacy of Frank Wilkinson At about 49:00, Eric details the life in the three neighborhoods razed to make room for Dodger Stadium before the team even thought of moving them At about 52:00, Eric reads the end of the book, focused on Abrana Arรฉchiga, the matriarch of the pioneering family, and a symbol of the neighborhood pre-Dodger Stadium At about 54:25, reads from the last paragraph of Page 208, which serves as a wonderful summary of the myth of sport and its connection to the book At about 56:00, Pete recounts some great recent books, like Eric's, like Pete Croatto's From Hang Time to Primetime: Business, Entertainment, and the Birth of the Modern-Day NBA and Bradford Pearson's The Eagles of Heart Mountain: A True Story of Football, Incarceration, and Resistance in World War II America, that are not just about sports You can now subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts, and leave me a five-star review. You can also ask for the podcast by name using Alexa, and find the pod on Spotify, Stitcher,ย  and on Amazon Music. Follow me on IG, where I'm @chillsatwillpodcast, or on Twitter, where I'm @chillsatwillpo1. You can watch this episode and other episodes on YouTube-you can watch and subscribe to The Chills at Will Podcast Channel. This is a passion project of mine, a DIY operation, and I'd love for your help in promoting what I'm convinced is a unique and spirited look at an often-ignored art form. The intro song for The Chills at Will Podcast is โ€œWind Downโ€ (Instrumental Version), and the other song played on this episode was โ€œHoopsโ€ (Instrumental)โ€ by Matt Weidauer, and both songs are used through ArchesAudio.com.

Sports As A Weapon Podcast
16| STEALING HOME: LA, the Dodgers, and the Lives Caught in Between w/ Eric Nusbaum

Sports As A Weapon Podcast

Play Episode Play 16 sec Highlight Listen Later May 11, 2021 58:54


On May 9, 1959, Los Angeles Sheriff Deputies forcefully removed and arrested Aurora Vargas, daughter of Abrana and Manuel Arรฉchiga. The City of Los Angeles displaced the Arรฉchigaโ€™s and the communities of Palo Verde, La Loma, and Bishop to build a new stadium for the Dodgers. The Dodgers had just arrived in LA from Brooklyn in 1958. The 62nd anniversary of this event was this past Sunday, May 9, 2021. ย ย So, for todayโ€™s episode, I am honored to be joined on the podcast by writer and former VICE editor Eric Nusbaum (@ericnus). In his book, STEALING HOME: Los Angeles, the Dodgers, and the Lives Caught in Between, Eric did a fantastic job recounting the displacement of Palo Verde, La Loma, and Bishop to build Dodger Stadium. Eric rightfully centered the story on the Arรฉchigaโ€™s but connected several other stories as well. For example, Eric tells me about the LA Housing Authority official, Frank Wilkinson. Mr. Wilkinson hand-picked Palo Verde, La Loma, and Bishop as the new site (without asking the residents) for the cityโ€™s ambitious public housing project. Eric also explained how red scare politics derailed the project and Wilkinsonโ€™s life and career. Eric also detailed how Walter Oโ€™Malleyโ€™s Dodgers ended up in Los Angeles and gives us a little history of the LA baseball scene before the teamโ€™s arrival. As a Xicano who grew up a Dodger fan, we should never forget what happened to the three communities.ย  โ€œDodger Stadium should not exist!โ€ -Frank Wilkinson"Stealing Home has a driving plot, a humane heart, and a proud conscience. Read it and enjoy the story, or read it and get mad, or read it and change your mind. Most importantly, read it.โ€ย  ย  ย โ€”Chuck D, Founding member of Public Enemy For more information, please visit www.buriedundertheblue.com. Buried Under the Blue (BUB) is โ€œan indigenous platform bridging the past and present communities through historical context, education, environment, community services, and technology. To empower and educate people to create healthier communities for a united future.โ€ Special thanks to Melissa Arรฉchiga for allowing me to use the video audio from a BUB IG video.ย  Go check out Eric Nusbaumโ€™s latest project, Sports Stories. Eric and illustrator Adam Villacin explore sports and history at the intersection of everything. Subscribe to their newsletter and receive a story every Tuesday! As always, you can listen, subscribe, and download the podcast on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Deezer, ย Amazon Music, iHeart Radio, Stitcher, and Pandora!Follow us on:Facebook: fb.com/SportsasaweaponpodcastIG: @SportsAsAWeaponPodcastTwitter: @sportsasaweaponYouTube: Sports As a Weapon Podcast

The Still Spying Podcast
Our Story: Frank Wilkinson, the FBI, and the Origins of Defending Rights & Dissent

The Still Spying Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 11, 2021 39:13


In our final episode, we explore the Defending Rights & Dissent's own origins. Frank Wilkinson was a public housing advocate who was working on an integrated public housing project in Chavez Ravine, The FBI and HUAC working together, hounded him out of a job and Chavez Ravine became Dodgers Stadium as opposed to public housing. Frank went on to found an anti-HUAC, pro-civil liberties organization that would eventually become Defending Rights & Dissent. The FBI was less than thrilled with his career change. To recount this history, host Chip Gibbons is joined by Kit Gage, the former director of the organization Frank founded and to which Defending Rights & Dissent traces its origins.

JMT Media Podcast
JMT Media Podcast - Episode 28 with Rabs Country Lanes

JMT Media Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 7, 2021 28:28


CEO of JMT Media, Jaclyn Tacoronte, will be hosting her "On The Go" segment at Rab's Country Lanes with owner, Frank Wilkinson. Rab's was listed #1 among the Top 31 Small Businesses on Staten Island by the SIEDC in 2018, recognized by the City of New York as the Staten Island Small business of the Year and as a Health Hero by the SIEDC in 2013. In 2015, Rab's was named one of the Top 50 Small Businesses in NYC by 1010 WINS.We will be discussing the famous bowling alley's conversation to a digital world amongst COVID-19, preparing for re-opening and upcoming events during the Summer season and taking the lane! Make sure to Tune In!#press #marketing #smallbusiness #focusandconquer #socialdistancingisdigitalStaten Island Chamber of Commerce NYC Department of Small Business Services Staten Island Advance NYC Mayor's Office Spectrum News NY1 Visit Staten Island

Mars on Life
The Art of Furious Pressure (45)

Mars on Life

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2020 61:36


Almost without hesitation, we give our 11-minute tangent about Spotify Wrapped and people's obsessions with it. Oy vey. Now onto today's episode: We scrutinize the thought process behind and reaction to "Music," a vanity project by the musician Sia. This film (based on the trailer) about a young woman with autism on the outset feels rather stereotypical and quite tropey. Sia also pulled a Hollywood and did not cast an actress who has autism, and her retorts on Twitter to autistic actors is appalling. Her response to criticism is so Trumpian that it sours what is potentially one of the last film trailers, in a year with so few films, in an otherwise detestable year. Elliot Page came out as trans/non-binary. We express our deepest happiness and support for him, and condemn crusading attempts by misguided men and women about what is "masculine." Finally, Ryan gives his latest book recommendation: "Stealing Home: Los Angeles, the Dodgers, and the Lives Caught in Between," Eric Nusbaum's account about the various gatekeepers and everyday people left at the mercy of the times, politics and racial economic inequality in mid-20th century LA. Notable individuals like Jackie Robinson, Duke Snider, Norman Chandler, Councilmembers Edward Roybal and Rosalind Wyman, Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna, and countless others intersect with the lives of men and women like Abrana Arรฉchiga and Frank Wilkinson who fought back against an already overflowing city. Check it out. You can preorder the paperback edition of "Stealing Home" here: https://bookshop.org/books/stealing-home-los-angeles-the-dodgers-and-the-lives-caught-in-between-9781541742222/9781541742222 Social media: Mars on Life: @marsonlifeshow on Twitter and Instagram Sebastian Schug: @drsebby (Instagram) and Seabass on YouTube Ryan Mancini: @mancinira (Twitter) and @manciniryan (Instagram) Artwork by Zachary Erberich (@zacharyerberichart) "Space X-plorers" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ --- This episode is sponsored by ยท Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/mars-on-life-show/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/mars-on-life-show/support

P&L With Paul Sweeney and Lisa Abramowicz
The Impact of COVID-19 on Business Travel

P&L With Paul Sweeney and Lisa Abramowicz

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2020 29:50


Katie Nixon, CIO of Northern Trust Wealth Management, discusses markets and her current investment outlook. Bloomberg News Industrial, Aerospace and Chemicals Team Leader Brendan Case talks about U.S. Airlines facing the end of business travel as they knew it. Frank Wilkinson, Bloomberg Opinion editor, walks through his column "The War on Masks Is Another Lost Cause. Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Scott Levine breaks down Halliburton and Schlumberger earnings. Hosted by Paul Sweeney and Vonnie Quinn.

Forgotten Australia
Sydney's Red Year โ€” Part Seven: Wicked Beyond Expression

Forgotten Australia

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2020 48:06


1932: had William Moxley actually murdered Frank Wilkinson on orders from Tilly Devine as part of her gang war with Kate Leigh? And had Claude Saywellโ€™s interest in the Tin Hares led to his brains being battered out in his bedroom? For more: www.forgottenaustralia and facebook.com/forgottenoz See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

wicked expression tilly devine frank wilkinson
Forgotten Australia
Sydney's Red Year โ€” Part Five: This Man, This Monster

Forgotten Australia

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2020 46:38


1932: William Moxley goes to trial for the murders of Frank Wilkinson and Dorothy Denzel, Catherine Oโ€™Byrne faces court for shooting her ex-lover dead on a Sydney street and the cityโ€™s tabloid newspapers embark on a war of words over the stalled Saywell โ€œHammer Horrorโ€ case. To see photos and newspaper articles from Forgotten Australia episodes: www.forgottenaustralia.com See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

monster frank wilkinson
P&L With Paul Sweeney and Lisa Abramowicz
China Saber-Rattling Likely, As Trade Tensions Escalate

P&L With Paul Sweeney and Lisa Abramowicz

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2019 31:54


Matt Gertken, Geopolitical Strategist at BCA Research, discusses the conflict between the US and China. Dr. Win Thin, Global Head: Currency Strategy for Brown Brothers Harriman, discusses why the yuan drop is due to market forces, not manipulation. Ben Breitholtz, Data Scientist for Arbor Data Science, discusses how Trumpian uncertainty has become a real problem and a new leading indicator. Frank Wilkinson, Bloomberg Opinion editor, and Anna Edgerton, Bloomberg Congressional reporter, on the Trump Administration and Congressional reaction to the mass shootings. Hosted by Lisa Abramowicz and Paul Sweeney.ย 

Centers and Institutes
Corporate Political Spending

Centers and Institutes

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2018 86:38


Many Americans have lost faith in core institutions, both in public and private alike. Moderated by Professor David Rosenberg, Director of the Robert Zicklin Center for Corporate Integrity, the program includes three experts on the intersection of politics and business, Bruce Freed, Paul N. Roth, and Frank Wilkinson, to discuss the increasing entanglement of these two sectors of society and the possibly devastating effects it might have on some of our most important institutions.

director political corporate spending roth moderated corporate politics corporate integrity frank wilkinson robert zicklin center
Centers and Institutes
Corporate Political Spending

Centers and Institutes

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2018 86:38


Many Americans have lost faith in core institutions, both in public and private alike. Moderated by Professor David Rosenberg, Director of the Robert Zicklin Center for Corporate Integrity, the program includes three experts on the intersection of politics and business, Bruce Freed, Paul N. Roth, and Frank Wilkinson, to discuss the increasing entanglement of these two sectors of society and the possibly devastating effects it might have on some of our most important institutions.

director political corporate spending roth moderated corporate politics corporate integrity frank wilkinson robert zicklin center
SOAS Economics: Seminar series, public lectures and events
Labour, Finance and Inequality: The Changing Nature of Economic Policy in Britain

SOAS Economics: Seminar series, public lectures and events

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2017 107:15


Sue Konzelmann, Birbeck College, University of London, Marc Fovargue-Davies, Birbeck College, University of London XIII SOAS IDP Lecture - Industrial Development and Policy Cluster, Department of Economics Labour, Finance and Inequality is a study of the interaction between politics, economics, social dynamics and the legal framework - and the process of change in the conventional wisdom and the policies informed by it. these are examined against the backdrop of British history from the early twentieth century to the present, to access why change happens, why it doesn't always happen when it might be expected to and relative power of key segments of society on this process. We will also take into account shifts in the relative power of the state and international business and finance, and how this has affected both the policy options available to national governments and their relative effectiveness. Book reference: Sue Konzelmann, Marc Fovargue-Davies, Frank Wilkinson and Simon Deakin (forthcoming) Labour, Finance and Inequality: The Changing Nature of Economic Policy in Britain. Routledge Speaker(s): Sue Konzelmann (Birbeck College, University of London) Marc Fovargue-Davies (Birbeck College, University of London), Antonio Andreoni,(SOAS University of London) Event Date: 07 June 2017 Released by: SOAS Economics Podcast

Understanding Inequalities: new thinking for public policy
Corporate governance, shareholder value and worker rights Simon Deakin, Centre for Business Research

Understanding Inequalities: new thinking for public policy

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2016 18:41


Simon Deakin is a Professor of Law. He specializes in labour law, private law, company law and EU law. His research is concerned, more generally, with the relationship between law and the social sciences, and he contributes regularly to the fields of law and economics, law and development, and empirical legal studies. He is Director of the Centre for Business Research (http://www.cbr.cam.ac.uk/), co-Chair of the Public Policy SRI and a Fellow of Peterhouse. His books include Tort Law (7th. ed. with Basil Markesinis and Angus Johnston, 2012), Labour Law (6th. ed. 2012, with Gillian S. Morris), The Law of the Labour Market: Industrialization, Employment, and Legal Evolution (2005, with Frank Wilkinson), and Hedge Fund Activism in Japan: The Limits of Shareholder Primacy (2012, with John Buchanan and Dominic Chai). He is editor in chief of the Industrial Law Journal and a member of the editorial board of the Cambridge Journal of Economics.

Cambridge Law: Public Lectures from the Faculty of Law
Corporate governance, shareholder value and worker rights Simon Deakin, Centre for Business Research

Cambridge Law: Public Lectures from the Faculty of Law

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2016 18:41


Simon Deakin is a Professor of Law. He specializes in labour law, private law, company law and EU law. His research is concerned, more generally, with the relationship between law and the social sciences, and he contributes regularly to the fields of law and economics, law and development, and empirical legal studies. He is Director of the Centre for Business Research (http://www.cbr.cam.ac.uk/), co-Chair of the Public Policy SRI and a Fellow of Peterhouse. His books include Tort Law (7th. ed. with Basil Markesinis and Angus Johnston, 2012), Labour Law (6th. ed. 2012, with Gillian S. Morris), The Law of the Labour Market: Industrialization, Employment, and Legal Evolution (2005, with Frank Wilkinson), and Hedge Fund Activism in Japan: The Limits of Shareholder Primacy (2012, with John Buchanan and Dominic Chai). He is editor in chief of the Industrial Law Journal and a member of the editorial board of the Cambridge Journal of Economics.

Cambridge Law: Public Lectures from the Faculty of Law
Corporate governance, shareholder value and worker rights Simon Deakin, Centre for Business Research

Cambridge Law: Public Lectures from the Faculty of Law

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2016 18:41


Simon Deakin is a Professor of Law. He specializes in labour law, private law, company law and EU law. His research is concerned, more generally, with the relationship between law and the social sciences, and he contributes regularly to the fields of law and economics, law and development, and empirical legal studies. He is Director of the Centre for Business Research (http://www.cbr.cam.ac.uk/), co-Chair of the Public Policy SRI and a Fellow of Peterhouse. His books include Tort Law (7th. ed. with Basil Markesinis and Angus Johnston, 2012), Labour Law (6th. ed. 2012, with Gillian S. Morris), The Law of the Labour Market: Industrialization, Employment, and Legal Evolution (2005, with Frank Wilkinson), and Hedge Fund Activism in Japan: The Limits of Shareholder Primacy (2012, with John Buchanan and Dominic Chai). He is editor in chief of the Industrial Law Journal and a member of the editorial board of the Cambridge Journal of Economics.

The Lubetkin Media Companies
LOBP#25: Bill Smullen, former Chief of Staff to Colin Powell, PRSA Philadelphia Luncheon Speaker, 11/8/2006

The Lubetkin Media Companies

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2006 74:43


In this podcast we present a PRSA Philadelphia Chapter luncheon speaker presentation, "Managing the Big Kahuna," by F. William Smullen III, Director of National Security Studies at the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs at Syracuse University. The program was recorded November 8, 2006 at the Westin Hotel in Philadelphia. Smullen Speaks at PRSA/Philadelphia: PRSA Chapter President Michele Chierici, APR, left, with Col. Bill Smullen and Frank Wilkinson, APR, of SEI Corp. (Steve Lubetkin Photo)