In fact, Xerox was the perfect corporate name, in harmony with its major product.
Yung describes himself as a former U.S. Marine and said he hoped to educate and interest other Marines about "the opportunities available on the Internet" and to inform them "against corporate evils that attempt to harvest their sacrifices and financial security in the name of corporate, Wall Street, and real estate profit, " the 2011 complaint said.
Instead, he lured his company into a bidding war and forced the board to make a rash decision about retention in the name of corporate competition.
In addition, he cuts money for student loans, supports the importing of cheap goods and the outsourcing of our middle class jobs and attacks our environment in the name of corporate profits.
Europe is home to some of the biggest name brands and corporate giants in the world.
Would anyone deny our long history of endless examples of public endangerment at the hands of corporate crimes committed in the name of improved profits crimes that remained hidden from an unknowing public until government forced it to our attention by moving to repair the problem?
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There is a long list of other factors such as the debt-ceiling debate in Washington, the possibility of a global recession, and the outlook for corporate earnings, to name just a few that will have a far bigger impact on the stock market this year than how stocks perform during January.
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Activist investors, then called corporate raiders, have been part of the American business environment since the 1980s, when the fictional Gordon Gekko attacked corporate boards and executive vice-presidents in the name of public shareholders.
The school has also attached its name to local traditions, such as the Corporate Challenge arm of the Escape from Alcatraz Triathlon.
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Enter the Avis Budget Group, whose corporate name sounds nearly like a parody of a plodding, if well-capitalized big competitor.
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The expansive charitable efforts the league engaged in over the last week demonstrate its serious commitment to using its brand name, corporate partners and star players to make the world a better place.
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Accenture doesn't say why it picked Bermuda when it changed its name, "rebranded, " and went public on the New York Stock Exchange in 2001. (In one of the best bits of luck in corporate history, Accenture lost its fight to keep the Andersen name.) But taxes, to hear Accenture tell it, had nothing to do with the decision.
The UK Post Office will change its corporate name to Consignia, in an attempt to reflect its more commercial and international approach to business.
They already believe that their corporate goodwill is therefore enhanced by the current name value of a Derrick Jeter.
To be safe, Philip Morris aims to change its corporate name to Altria to show the public that it's more than a tobacco company.
Some NFL teams do not seek a corporate sponsor based on the legacy of the name of the field (an example being Lambeau Field).
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Some experts worry that the imbalance gives corporate executives an excuse to load up on debt or skimp on dividends in the name of sound capital allocation.
This followed an odd series of events at the 2013 CES in which CBS corporate seized control of its subsidiary CNET and refused to allow its journalists to name the Hopper Sling one of the best products featured at the show.
Currently, the site has a number of big-name corporate sponsors, including Roche and Intel, who underwrite parts of it.
In cases like these, the Chinese acquirer is looking to establish and develop its corporate name recognition abroad.
Now name one famous billionaire CEO who came up through the corporate ranks and relaxes with similarly adventurous hobbies.
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The name change goes hand-in-hand with a corporate revolution at the Post Office.
"One minute Bale's Patrick is a cowering corporate geek and self-described empty shell, the next an arrogant, name-dropping smoothie, the next a hysterical wimp unable to distinguish reality from fantasy, " it said.
Ms Badger's father was a retired corporate safety director who carried out paid appearances as Santa Claus, under the name Happy Santa, according to the newspaper.
"Their name is on the door and I think they take more than a corporate interest in the success of the company--they take a family pride in it, " says New York-based media investment banker Ken Marlin of Marlin Associates.
Given the many economic headwinds facing the U.S. economy (high unemployment, low consumer spending, increasing commodity prices and the fear of tightening credit given the ongoing sovereign debt crisis in Europe to name a few) prospects for increased corporate earnings stemming from increased sales seem difficult.
Stephen Kitson, corporate communications director at Kia Motors UK, said the implications of the Provo's name were equally unintended.
In December, as the network bounced back, Comcast appended NBC's peacock logo on top of its corporate name in a new logo of its own.
And he thinks that in the name -- for the purpose of greater competitiveness and job creation, we have to address our corporate tax structure.
Suffice it to say that there needs to be a massive change in the corporate culture there, and President Obama could make that happen today, and probably should have years ago in the name of good government (or even barely adequate government, to be more accurate).
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