Now that Ken Lay has been convicted in the Enron scandal, the question for the University of Missouri at Columbia is: What should it do with the $1.1-million-plus he donated in 1999 to endow a ...
As lawyers for Enron Corp.'s former leaders prepare to start their defense next week, another potentially more dangerous trial looms for founder Kenneth L. Lay. Subscribe to read this story ad-free ...
HOUSTON, July 12 -- -- HOUSTON, July 12 -- Former Enron Corp. executive Kenneth L. Lay, the business visionary who became a symbol of corporate greed, was memorialized Wednesday for his devotion to ...
Wanted: an international-economics professor who doesn’t mind filling an endowed chair named after somebody convicted of accounting fraud. The University of Missouri at Columbia is having a difficult ...
R. Neal Batson, the court-appointed examiner who led an 18-month, $90 million investigation of the bankrupt Enron Corp., said yesterday that Kenneth L. Lay, its former chairman, should have known of ...
Kenneth L. Lay, who rose from humble roots to found what was, at the time, the seventh-largest publicly traded company in Enron, only to later become a symbol of corporate greed and malfeasance, died ...
That's the question the Chronicle of Higher Eductation blog is asking now that a jury of Lay's peers has found him guilty. Back in 2002, the Chronicle reported that Missouri had found it difficult to ...
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