Diversity Awareness Office

 Monthly Review
Diversity Awareness Office Review Quarterly

Monthly Factoid:

More than half of Latinos between the ages of 18 and 24 mistakenly believe that only U.S. citizens can apply for financial aid, while a fraction of those surveyed mistakenly believe that they could only apply for financial aid if their parents were U.S. citizens, according to a survey by the Tomas Rivera Policy Institute..
 

SOURCE: www.diversityinc.com

September

HOLIDAYS

4 - Labor Day

8 - International Literacy Day

13- Fortune Cookie Day

16 - Mexican Independance Day

24 - Vesuvius Day

18- International Peace Day

25 - German Oktoberfest begins. (ends Sept 10)

 

 

September 2006

Diversity Awareness Quarterly

HISPANIC HERITAGE MONTH

THE LAST MONTH BEFORE SCHOOL BEGINS!

September Events

FILM SERIES-

This month the Diversity Awareness Office will begin our film series. Higlighting films that discuss a wide range of multi-cultural topics. This Months films will play on September 21 and 22. We are still finalizing which films we will be showing. They will be updated to our website as soon as they become available.

COMING NEXT MONTH!!! SPEAKER DEBRA DAVIS

On October 11, 2006 we are proud to welcome Debra Davis acclaimed transgender speaker to the MSU campus. Debra Davis is the Executive Director of the Gender Education Center and a Transgender High School Media Specialist (who transitioned on the job in 1998 & retired in 2001 after 32 years in education). Debra will be speaking in SUB Ballroom A on October 11 at 7:30pm. Learn more about Debra at http://www.debradavis.org/



                                                                   

 

 

 

 

 

NEWS

Pepsi's Diversity Push Pays Off
JIA LYNN YANG

On Oct. 1, Indra Nooyi takes the helm at PepsiCo. And with that, the soda and snacks giant becomes the largest U.S. company by market cap to put a woman in charge. The Indian-born Nooyi is only the latest Pepsi alumna to become a FORTUNE 500 CEO. Brenda Barnes, now in charge of Sara Lee, spent 22 years at Pepsi. And in July, Irene Rosenfeld left Pepsi's Frito Lay snacks division to become CEO at Kraft Foods. There are others on the rise too. Dawn Hudson, president and CEO of Pepsi-Cola North America, was ranked No. 41 in FORTUNE's Most Powerful Women list last year.

Maybe it's something in the cola. More likely it's the culture. Since 2001, CEO Steve Reinemund has enforced aggressive hiring and promoting rules. Half of all new hires at Pepsi have to be either women or ethnic minorities. (Half!) And managers now earn their bonuses in part by how well they recruit and retain them. Today 25% of Pepsi's managers are women, up from 22% four years ago. Six of its top 12 execs are now women or minorities.

The diversity push is part of Pepsi's game plan to better understand the disparate tastes of new consumers as it continues to expand globally. That's probably the new CEO's biggest challenge. But Nooyi--who as Pepsi's CFO led its successful acquisition of Quaker Oats--should be up to the job. The thing that got her hired, after all, wasn't being a woman. It was being a sharp strategist.

 

 

 
























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