- Vanessa Small
Vanessa Small covers corporate philanthropy and charity for the Giving page of Capital Business. She also spotlights newly appointed executives in the New at the Top column, which chronicles their journeys to the top. Small was born and raised in Orange County, Ca. and graduated from Howard University.
Nonprofits honored for best practices
As the Center for Nonprofit Advancement hosts its Excellence in Nonprofit Management award, in partnership with The Washington Post, here is a look at some of best practices put in place by the charities selected as finalists.
New at the top: Duff Scudder
The new chief financial officer at LeapFrog Solutions once lost his job over his concerns about a filing.
D.C. area bankruptcies for May 20
These firms recently filed with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court’s local court clerk’s offices.
New at the top: Mike O’Neill
The new chief executive of MedicaSoft has held many positions in the information technology world.
- D.C. area bankruptcy filing for May 13
- GWU students help small groups raise money
- D.C. area bankruptcy filings for May 6
- New at the top: Success is ‘all about the people who work for your company’
- New at the top: ‘It is important to make moves when they are right for you’
- Share Our Strength attracts corporate dollars
- New at the top: An appetite for high risk
- Volkswagen gives cars to volunteer fire department
Market Foolery Featured Podcasts
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MarketFoolery: 05.22.2013
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke tells Congress that it's too soon for the Fed to end its stimulus program. JPMorgan Chase Chairman and CEO Jaime Dimon gets a vote of confidence from shareholders. And ESPN deals with the rising cost of sports programming.
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MarketFoolery: 05.21.2013
Home Depot hits a new high on better-than-expected earnings news. Best Buy slips. And HHGregg plummets. Our analysts discuss those stories and debate the future of solar stocks.
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MarketFoolery: 05.20.2013
Yahoo buys Tumblr for $1.1B. Campbell’s Soup reports strong 3rd-quarter earnings. And JC Penney gets two very different price targets from competing Wall Street analysts.





