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Money, Business and Free Enterprise
Student Handout
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ELISABETH CLAIBORNE ORTENBERG and ARTHUR ORTENBERG
Liz Claiborne and Arthur Ortenberg are the co-founders of Liz
Claiborne Inc., one of the largest apparel companies in the world.
This husband and wife team combine creative brilliance and
managerial innovation. Liz worked for 25 years as a fashion
designer; Arthur ran a textile company.
In 1976, they started
their own apparel business with $50,000 in savings and some
investments from friends and family with the goal to "clothe the
American working woman." Their company had annual sales of $2.6
million the first year. Over the next 10 years, annual revenue
exploded to over $1 billion. Liz and Arthur retired from their
business in 1990 to commit their energies to wildlife and
conservation projects.
MILTON FRIEDMAN, Ph.D.
Dr. Milton Friedman is a Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution
at Stanford University in California. He was an economist for
nearly 40 years at the University of Chicago. He believed that
only the amount of money in existence, and not the manipulation of
it by government through taxes and expenditures, effects the level
of production in an economy. Dr. Friedman is the recipient of the
National Medal of Science, the Presidential Medal of Freedom
(America's highest civilian honor), nearly 20 honorary degrees,
and the Nobel Prize in Economics.
SANDRA L. KURTZIG
Sandra L. Kurtzig is the founder and retired chairman of ASK
Computer Systems in Los Altos, California. She earned degrees from
UCLA and Stanford in mathematics, chemistry, and aeronautical
engineering. Kurtzig later quit her job as the marketing
specialist to launch her own computer software business. Starting
with $2,000, and working out of a spare bedroom in her apartment,
she created the largest public company founded and run by a woman.
From these humble beginnings, Sandra Kurtzig built ASK into one of
the fastest-growing software companies in the United States, with
$400 million in annual sales.
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Business has been defined as an activity concerned with the
supplying and distribution of goods and services. Our guests share
a determination to solve problems or satisfy needs. This program
will focus on the interrelationship between business, government
and society. Our guests will discuss their work as it relates to
international economic issues such as the environmental and social
problems. They will also discuss the steps to success in business
and the role of entrepreneurship in the United States economy.
Most importantly, all guests represent the tremendous difference
one person can make in making the world a better place.
Students may already be familiar with the entrepreneurs of
business leaders who shaped American industry in the 20th century.
Conduct a brainstorming session to review who they are and what
their individual contributions are to the free enterprise system.
1.___________________________
2.___________________________
3.___________________________
4.___________________________
5.___________________________
The following places are important to any discussion regarding
business and economics. Use this assignment as a geography quiz by
locating the places on a map and describe their significance
below:
- Wall Street:
- Fort Knox:
- Chicago Board of Trade:
- Federal Reserve Banks:
- Silicon Valley:
- Pacific Rim:
- Bretton Woods:
On a daily basis, our society struggles with issues that have no
easy answer.
Business makes contributions to society and the quality of life in
ways that are not always obvious. For example, the price of your
admission ticket (even though it may already seem expensive) to
visit a museum or see a play is subsidized by the contributions of
business and individuals.
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Question 1: How has business been successful in helping your community?
- Question 2: Would you prefer that your ticket to the museum not be subsidized
and that the money be spent for necessities in your community such as
health care and housing for the poor? Why or why not?
Studying business and free enterprise may not seem relevant to
your future today, but they represent stepping stones to a
meaningful career. A knowledge of these subjects will help you
decide what is most interesting to you. This is very important
because most people spend one-half of their waking time on the
job. Investigate the following careers related to science and
medicine. Find out what the person does on a daily basis, the
educational and work experience required and where the work must
be performed.
- Accountant
- Developer
- Inventor
- Lawyer
- Architect
- Economist
- Investor
- Teacher
- Banker
- Engineer
- Journalist
- Urban Planner
RICHARD RAINWATER
Richard Rainwater is a legendary financial dealmaker from Fort
Worth, Texas. He graduated from the University of Texas with a
degree in mathematics and earned his MBA from Stanford. As the
chief financial architect for the Bass family, Rainwater launched
an incredible saga in American business history. He was given $5
million to invest during his first year and lost it all. He then
propelled the Bass fortune to more than $5 billion while creating
one of the great American dynasties of the 20th century. In 1986,
"this capitalist cowboy of the '90s" launched his own business,
investing in more than 30 companies and purchasing one million
square feet of office space in Texas.
STEPHEN A. WYNN
Stephen Wynn is Chairman and Chief Executive of Mirage Resorts
Inc. in Las Vegas, Nevada. He became one of the original investors
in the Frontier Hotel, which was sold to the legendary Howard
Hughes. At the age of 31, Wynn gained control of the Golden Nugget
and with "boldness and innovation" transformed the property into
Las Vegas' most luxurious hotel and casino. He then built The
Mirage, one of the most spectacular and successful resorts in the
world. This brilliant entrepreneur recently completed construction
of Treasure Island, the Adventure Resort, with a swashbuckling
pirate theme that stimulates the imagination of its guests.
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