Saturday, February 28, 2009

UVA Top Business School

BusinessWeek's Top 10 Undergraduate Business Schools

1. University of Virginia (McIntire)

2. Notre Dame (Mendoza)

3. University of Pennsylvania (Wharton)

4. University of Michigan (Ross)

5. Brigham Young University (Marriott)

6. University of California Berkeley (Haas)

7. Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Sloan)

8. Cornell University

9. Emory University (Goizueta)

10. University of Texas at Austin (McCombs)

Sunday, February 22, 2009

Terps Shock #3 Tar Heels

Greivis Vasquez did something no Maryland player had done since 1987, and the Terrapins pulled off an upset that was almost as remarkable. Vasquez had a career-high 35 points and 11 rebounds and 10 assists - Maryland's first triple-double in 22 years - and the Terrapins rallied from a 16-point deficit to shock No. 3 North Carolina 88-85 in overtime Saturday, ending the Tar Heels' 10-game winning streak. "I just have no words to describe this feeling right now," Vasquez said. ...read more here...

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Longest Commutes

Forbes magazine's analysis found four of the 12 longest average commutes in the nation come from this region, including Dale City, Virginia, at #12; Clinton, Maryland, at #11; Fort Washington, Maryland, at #8; and Linton Hills, Virginia, just outside of Bristow, as #1. The commute averages 46.3 minutes. The national average for a commute is 25 minutes.

To some Washington area commuters who spend more than an hour in the car each way, 46 minutes might not seem like a lot. But it's an average that includes people with five- and 10-minute commutes. The 46.3 minute average is longer than commutes in the New York City, Los Angeles and Chicago areas.

What these communities have in common is their distance not only from the District, the region's traditional jobs core, but also from the suburban job centers that have emerged over the past 30 years. It illustrates just how many Washington area workers have embraced the tradeoff between a long commute and affordable suburban living. The crisscrossing across the region from home to work to home again is one of the key reasons why the Washington area has the second-worst traffic congestion in the country, behind Los Angeles.

Saturday, February 07, 2009