|
Website - Pages/Links/Favorites
Home
Accounting Certificates
Accounting Courses
Accounting Faculty Websites
Accounting Profession
Business Science Division
Calendar 2013/2014
Calendar 2012/2013
Educational/Informative/Helpful/...
Financial, Economic & Business News
Instructor's Experience & Interests
MySite Login
Tax Forms & Publications
University Business Schools - Local
Video's - Documentary/Educational
My Current
Favorite
Quote/Lyrics/Passage
"There is a vitality, a life force, an energy,
a quickening that is translated through you
into
action, and because there is only one of you
in all of time, this expression is unique.
And if you block it, it will never exist through
any other medium and it will be lost. The world
will not have it. It is not your business
to determine
how good it is, how valuable it is,
nor how
it compares with other expressions.
It is your business to keep it yours clearly
and directly, to keep the channel open.
You have to keep yourself open and aware
to the urges that motivate you.”
(Martha Graham)
Additional Quotes, Proverbs and Axioms
Informative - Enlightening - Instructional
The Richness of Learning-WP
Startups changing textbook markets-CNN$
College more than ‘R O I’-WP
It Takes a B.A. to Find a Job....-NYT
Students Smart on Textbook Buying-CHE
A World Without Work-WP
Must-Have Job Skills in 2013-WSJ
How Wall Street Rigs the Game-TIME
Why Capitalism has an Image Problem-WSJ
Figuring out w/to do with your Life-FORBES
College Affordability Center-USDE
Seeing the Glass Half Full, a Richer Life-NYT
The Campus Tsunami-NYT
Greed for Good-SLATE
Rethinking Value of a Business Degree-WSJ
How To Be Creative-WSJ
Dr. M. Kaku & the World of Tomorrow-WSJ
College is still worthwhile-LAT
Little student interest in STEM majors-WP
School in S.V. uses no Computers-NYT
Want Success? Don't Try So Hard-WSJ
College: A Smart Choice-LAT
Six Clues to Character-PT
College Pays Off-NYT
How China Unfairly Bests the U.S.-LAT
What's a College Education Worth?-WP
Money Lessons for H.S. Grads-WSJ
Ten Biggest Money Wasters-CNN$
Your So-Called Education-NYT
Skating Through Business School-NYT
Accountants Wanted-FORTUNE
To Really Learn, Take a Test-NYT
100 Best Companies to Work For-CNN
Today's 'it' jobs: Accounting & IT-CNN
The Upward Mobility Gap-LAT
Growing Up Digital & Distracted-NYT
Digital Devices Deprive Brain-NYT
Cheaper College Textbooks-NYT
Plagiarism Blurs for Students-NYT
College Degree Value is Growing-NYT
Tools for Thinking-NYT
Accounting Dept. - Class Schedule
Fall 2013
Summer 2013
Spring 2013
|
Video’s - Documentary/Educational
The Retirement Gamble: Retirement is big business in America, but is the system costing workers and retirees more than what they’re getting in return. Most Americans are unaware of the fees they are paying for their 401(k)’s, but over a lifetime, such charges can cost an ordinary American more than $109,000. A toxic mix of too much choice, backwards incentives, and a misplaced faith in the market’s past performance has positioned America’s retirement system for an uncertain future.
http://video.pbs.org/video/2365000843
CNBC Video Gallery: This website features the current, latest, and most up to date business
and
financial news in video format. Each storyline is presented and chronicled on an account
by account basis.
http://www.cnbc.com/id/15839263/site/14081545/?tabid=15839796&tabheader=false
Black Money: The vague and murky world of international
bribery among global
Business Interests and
National Governments is examined.
http://video.pbs.org/video/1114436938/
Breaking the Bank: The inside story of one of the most
controversial
moments in America's
financial crisis - and its ongoing
drama. The
complicated financial and political web threatening
Bank of America
and others is unraveled.
http://video.pbs.org/video/1168339502
Car of the Future: Energy experts and others explain why we need alternative vehicles,
energy efficient cars, and smart private sector and government policies to
encourage
change
in
automobiles of the future and our transportation system.
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/programs/ht/tm/3507-l.html?site=23&pl=qt&rate=hi&ch=1
Inside the Meltdown: How the economy went so bad, so fast and what Henry Paulson,
the Secretary of the Treasury and Ben Bernanke, the Chairman of the Federal Reserve
didn't see, couldn't stop and haven't been able to fix.
http://video.pbs.org/video/1082087546
Ten Trillion and Counting
http://video.pbs.org/video/1099844054/
The Crash of 1929: Captures the unbounded optimism of the age, a time when the stock
market epitomized the false promise of permanent prosperity. The shocking consequences
are examined when reality finally hit on October 29th, ultimately leading to the Great Depression.
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/crash/
The Madoff Affair: Inside the world's recent financially catastrophic global Ponzi scheme -
and how
Bernie Madoff and others got away with it for so long. (2009 Emmy Winner)
http://video.pbs.org/video/1122731028/
The Warning: Long before the recent monetary and economic meltdown, one woman, who led a
major Government agency, tried to caution the Administration, Congress and the Federal Reserve
about the danger to the banking and financial system.
http://video.pbs.org/video/1302794657
Warren Buffett and Bill Gates: Keeping America Great: In an exclusive event, CNBC presents
Warren Buffett and Bill Gates, together, taking questions from students at Columbia
Business School
in New York City. Host Becky Quick talks with the two billionaires, whose values
run as deep
as their wealth.
http://www.cnbc.com/id/15840232/?video=1329393420&play=1
Mind Over Money: This documentary is an entertaining and penetrating exploration of why mainstream economists failed to predict the crash of 2008. The program reveals how our emotions interfere with our decision-making, and explores controversial new arguments about the world of finance. Before the current crash, most Wall Street analysts believed that markets are "efficient"—that investors are reasonable and always operate in their own economic self-interest. Most of the time, these assumptions of classical economics work well enough. But in extreme situations, people panic and conventional theories collapse.
http://video.pbs.org/video/1479100777
|