Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Leslie T. Chang (Chinese: 張彤禾; pinyin: Zhāng Tónghé) is a Chinese-American journalist and the author of Factory Girls: From Village to City in a Changing China (2008). A former China correspondent for the Wall Street Journal, she has been described as "an insightful interpreter of a society in flux." [1]
In the United States, the designation of Certified Public Accountant (CPA) is granted at state level. Individual CPAs are not required to belong to the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA), although many do. NASBA acts primarily as a forum for the state boards themselves, as opposed to AICPA which represents CPAs as ...
AICPA and its predecessors date back to 1887, when the American Association of Public Accountants (AAPA) was formed. [4] [5] The Association went through several name changes over the years: the Institute of Public Accountants (1916), the American Institute of Accountants (1917), and the American Society of Public Accountants (1921), which merged into the American Institute of Accountants in ...
The FICPA was founded in 1905. [5] Walter Mucklow, T.G. Hutchinson and two other Florida accountants envisioned an association that would promote the exchange of ideas, enhance confidence in public accountants among businessmen, and encourage a high standard of efficiency in the science of accounting and the art of bookkeeping.
Jerome Lee (J. Lee) Nicholson (1863 – November 2, 1924) was an American accountant, industrial consultant, author and educator [1] at the New York University and Columbia University, [2] known as pioneer in cost accounting. He is considered in the United States to be the "father of cost accounting."
Ultramares sued the CPA for ordinary negligence. The New York Court of Appeals ruled that CPAs are held accountable for ordinary negligence to their clients and third parties who identify themselves as users of the CPAs reports. [10] The "near privity" approach was established in Credit Alliance Corp. v. Arthur Andersen & Company. [11]
Albertus Magnus College, New Haven (co-ed since 1985) Annhurst College, South Woodstock (co-ed in 1972; closed in 1980) Connecticut College, New London (co-ed since 1969) Diocesan Sisters College, Bloomfield (closed in 1969) Hartford College for Women, Hartford (merged into the University of Hartford in 1991; closed in 2003)
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Help; Learn to edit; Community portal; Recent changes; Upload file