New Bookmarks
Year 2004 Quarter 2:  April 1 - June 30 Additions to Bob Jensen's Bookmarks
Bob Jensen at Trinity University

For earlier editions of New Bookmarks, go to http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookurl.htm 

Click here to search Bob Jensen's web site if you have key words to enter --- Search Site.
This search engine may get you some hits from other professors at Trinity University included with Bob Jensen's documents, but this may be to your benefit.

Once again Trinity University receives a top ranking --- http://www.trinity.edu/departments/public_relations/news_releases/usnews_ranking2003.htm 

 

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Choose a Date Below for Additions to the Bookmarks File

June 25, 2004     June 10, 2004  

May 15, 2004    May 1, 2004 

April 8, 2004     April 1, 2004     

 

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June 25, 2004

Bob Jensen's New Bookmarks on June 25, 2004
Bob Jensen at Trinity University 

I am transitioning to the mountains of New Hampshire for an eight-month sabbatical leave.  Since this is a research leave, I'm not certain I will find the time to put out future editions of New Bookmarks until I return to teach at Trinity University in January 2005.

New:  
Year 2004 92 Spring Pictures from the White Mountains --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/NHcottage/NHcottage.htm 

For my generation:  I especially remember "those?"  (Turn up your speakers full blast) --- http://www.singingman.us/DYR.htm 
The home page is at http://www.singingman.us (with more songs)

NOVA: World in the Balance (Population Time Bomb) --- http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/worldbalance/

American soldiers are taking abuse --- http://www.chromedomezone.com/ 


Quotes of the Week

We should never believe statistics we didn't falsify ourselves.
Pierre Steffen, a Boeing VP, going for (and getting) a laugh at a Global Aviation RFID Forum in Atlanta.

What would life be if we had no courage to attempt anything?
Vincent Van Gogh

You can give without loving, but you cannot love without giving.
Amy Carmichael

It is the province of knowledge to speak and it is the privilege of wisdom to listen.
Oliver Wendell Holmes as quoted in a recent message from Mark Shapiro

For me, CBS has become "the enemy within", and I hope never to watch the network again. I think most Americans ought to reflect on the results of their irresponsible and unpatriotic behavior and perhaps narrow their viewing options by one network. The next time America or Americans suffer at the hands of terrorists, thank CBS.
Pat Boone, "CBS and 60 Minutes Modern Benedict Arnolds," NewsMax, May 24, 2004 --- http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2004/5/24/132813.shtml 

The truth—as we all so bitterly know—is that the IT world is filled with certified, credentialed and accredited idiots. I bet you've hired a few. I know I have. The fact that someone has an aptly named BS from Harvard topped off with a misleadingly named master's from MIT does not a good developer (or employee) make. We have to ask ourselves why we make the assumptions we do about individuals with "elite" credentials. The answer says far more about our personal biases than their professional attitudes, aptitudes and skills. Shame on us.
Michael Schrage, "Hiding Behind Certification," CIO Magazine, June 15, 2004 --- http://www.cio.com/archive/061504/itwork.html 

Big Sellers From Wiley

The publisher (Wiley) said the year-on-year growth was partially driven by the strong second half performances of the publisher's U.S. professional/trade titles, which included bestsellers in finance (Hirsch & Hirsch/Stock Trader's Almanac and Mauldin/Bull's Eye Investing), real estate (Allen/Multiple Streams of Income), and leadership (Kouzes & Posner/Leadership Practices Inventory and Lencioni/Five Dysfunctions of a Team. In addition, Testosterone, Inc., an examination of CEO misbehavior by Christopher Byron, sold well.  Accounting and finance textbooks also contributed to the company's growth, such as Kieso/Intermediate Accounting, 11th edition and Kimmel, Weygandt, and Kieso/Financial Accounting, 3rd edition.
SmartPros,
"Accounting Products Contribute to Wiley's Record Growth," June 17, 2004 --- http://www.smartpros.com/x43978.xml 

A countryman between two lawyers is like a fish between two cats.
Benjamin Franklin.as quoted by Mark Shapiro --- http://irascibleprofessor.com/comments-06-22-04.htm 

A California jury awarded a sixth grader $500,000 when school officials didn't silence a classmate's "lewd insults and threats." I'm all for disciplining obnoxious kids, but a half million bucks for an eleven-year-old's insults is ridiculous.
Peter Berger, "Hidden Costs - Education in the Age of Lawyers.," --- http://irascibleprofessor.com/comments-06-22-04.htm  

WordPerfect also has a few features Microsoft Office still lacks. For instance, when you are considering changing the font, size or alignment of a selected block of text, the program instantly gives you a preview, right in the document, of what the change will look like.  WordPerfect Office can also quickly and easily save any document in Adobe's PDF file format, a universal, cross-platform file type.  And WordPerfect maintains its famous "reveal codes" feature, which allows you to dig into any section of text and make minute changes to formatting by altering the underlying computer codes. I'm not a fan of this feature, but some types of users, especially lawyers, seem to love it, and Microsoft has nothing that really matches it.  Plus, WordPerfect Office is cheaper than Microsoft Office. Its student and teacher edition, which like Microsoft's is really aimed at any home user, can be bought for about $90.
Walter Mossberg, "Microsoft Office Rivals Include One to Avoid And a Good Alternative," The Wall Street Journal, June 24, 2004, Page B1 --- http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,personal_technology,00.html 

Tablet PCs have come a long way. Their fast processors and huge memory chips provide high-quality handwriting recognition. Funny thing, though, writes columnist Simson Garfinkel: just about every tablet PC on the market today has a keyboard hidden underneath the writing surface. Just lift up the screen, and—voilà!—you have a traditional (albeit expensive) laptop computer. In fact, Garfinkel notes, tablet PCs seem to "spend a large part of their lives serving as traditional laptops, with the stylus snug in its holster while the keyboard gets a vigorous workout."  
Simson Garfinkel ---  http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/garfinkel0704.asp?trk=nl 



Bob Jensen's April-June 2004 Updates on Frauds and the Accounting Scandals --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud063004.htm 

Bob Jensen's threads on scams and scam protections are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm 

Updates on the leading books on the business and accounting scandals --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud.htm#Quotations 

I love Infectious Greed by Frank Partnoy ---  http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud.htm#Quotations 

Fraud Detection and Reporting --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm

Charity Frauds --- Fraud Detection and Reporting --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm 

Most of us trash spam mail in less that the 0.4 seconds that it took for the Lakers to score a game-winning basket against the spurs.  Such is not the case for the blind when it comes to deleting spam.
"
Blind Get Earful of Spam Daily," by Amit Asaravala, Wired News, June 18, 2004 --- http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,63934,00.html?tw=newsletter_topstories_html 




Question
How can an Excel spreadsheet be turned into a Flash file?

Answer from Richard Campbell

This is a link to a demo of a product called Excelsius. You can convert an Excel spreadsheet to a highly interactive Flash file. Each of the demos is powered by an underlying Excel file.

http://www.infommersion.com/demos.html 

Richard J. Campbell 
mailto:campbell@rio.edu 


Bob Jensen tutorial on how to convert Excel spreadsheets into DHTML interactive Web documents is at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm#Excel 


Question
What is Excel Macrame?

Answer from Richard Newmark

I clicked on a broken link and wound up on a really interesting blog at http://j-walkablog.com/blog. Here is some excel art. I did not know that there was such a thing as excel art.

 

Excel Art

This Excel file is worth a look. It's called excel_art.xls (for best results, right-click the link and download the file). The sheet uses 65,565 cells (279 rows and 235 columns), and the workbook has no data or macros. The image is formed by coloring the cell backgrounds. --- http://j-walkblog.com/blog/docs/excel_art.xls 

If you like that, you might also like superman.xls, which uses an entirely different technique: colored ASCII characters.

And finally, no discussion of Excel art would be complete without a link to Debbie Gewand's work.

--------------------------------------

Richard Newmark
Associate Professor of Accounting
Monfort College of Business
Colorado State University
Greeley , Colorado 80639
http://student1.mcb.unco.edu/phduh


Critical Shortage of Accounting Phds

June 12, 2004 message from Glen Gray

I though members of this list would find this article interesting. I find it particularly interesting because our state is trying to get to retire early.

Glen L. Gray, PhD, CPA
Dept. of Accounting & Information Systems
College of Business & Economics
California State University, Northridge
Northridge, CA 91330-8372

http://www.csun.edu/~vcact00f 

"Dude, Where's My Teacher?," by Jerry Ascierto, California CPA, June 2004

 With enrollment increasing, university officials face the daunting task of recruiting accounting educators as they combat budget cuts and a high cost of living. Who will teach the next generation of CPAs?

Sounding the Alarm Bludgeoned Budgets High Costs, Low Wages A Narrowing Pipeline Old Folks Home Clinically Speaking A Seller's Market Just like slide rules and inkwells, accounting educators are becoming a vanishing breed. While enrollment in undergraduate accounting programs has risen in recent years—and increasing numbers of candidates are sitting for the CPA Exam—the number of accounting doctorates awarded annually are at their lowest level in decades. Only 86 accounting doctorates were awarded nationally in 2002, according to the Hasselback Accounting Faculty Directory. That's a steep decline from 199 degrees awarded on average between 1992-94. The demand for educators looks to only increase in the coming years as a generation of baby boomer professors retires. This situation has reached what many in accounting academia believe to be crisis proportions. The Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business expects that by 2007, the shortage of business doctorates—including accounting—in the United States will be 1,142; by 2012, that shortage is expected to more than double to 2,419.

As business schools nationwide scale back doctoral programs, "the demand for accounting educators is going to get severe very quickly," says CPA Janice Carr, professor of accounting at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo and co-chair of CalCPA's Accounting Education Committee. 

The problem is exacerbated by California's high cost of living and vanishing state budget, which make recruiting accounting educators more challenging for the state's schools. 

And as the profession slowly begins to redouble its efforts to attract students to academia, many educators in California's schools are left to wonder: Who will teach tomorrow's CPAs?

Sounding the Alarm 
Carr has been sounding this alarm for several years at the state and national level, through her work on CalCPA's Accounting Education Committee and on AICPA Council. 

Undergraduate enrollment has steadied since its decline in the late 1990s, with the AICPA pouring significant resources in attracting the best and brightest into the profession, "and that's well and good," says Carr. "But if there's nobody there to teach them, we have a problem. As a profession, we've dropped the ball in terms of recognizing the need." 

When outlining career opportunities to accounting students, "we talk about becoming an industry accountant, a government accountant or a public accountant. But we haven't marketed academia as an opportunity over the years," Carr says. "We've overlooked it, and it's going to come back to haunt us." 

The profession is finally beginning to listen. The AICPA will soon partner with the American Accounting Association, an organization of accounting educators, and the National Association of State Boards of Accountancy to address the problem, says Beatrice Sanders, director of the AICPA's Academic and Career Development division. 

And CalCPA is re-instating its doctoral grant program, which was discontinued in the mid-1980s when demand for new accounting educators seemed low. A proposal is being finalized that would award up to three doctoral candidates enrolled in either California or out of state schools a $10,000 annual stipend, for a maximum of three years. The doctoral student would have to commit to teaching in a California college or university for two years after receiving their doctorate as a condition of the fellowship.

Continued in the article

June 17, 2004 Christine Kloezeman [ckloezem@GLENDALE.EDU

Is it only accounting doctorates or all business doctorates? 
There are so many more options out there now.

June 17, 2004 reply from Bob Jensen

Hi Christine,

I inserted the following module in the April 1, 2004 edition of New Bookmarks. It concerns business doctorates in general and steps the AACSB is taking to study the problem --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book04q2.htm 

Bob

 

Question
How bad will the shortage of doctoral faculty in collegiate business education become?

Answers
In September 2003, the AACSB issued the results of a survey that paint a pretty bleak picture of supply of doctoral faculty relative to increasing demand --- www.aacsb.edu/dfc 

Sustaining Scholarship in Business Schools
Executive Summary/September 2003

FINDINGS

Unless decisive action is taken to reverse declines in business doctoral education, academic business schools, universities, and society will be faced with an inevitable erosion in the quality of business education and research.

In recent years, the production of new business doctorates has decreased.  In the US, for example, business doctorates declined from 1,327 in 1994-95 to 1,071 in 1999-2000, or more than 19 percent.  The percentage of doctorates produced by AACSB-accredited institutions also has decreased, to 84 percent in 1999-2000 from 92 percent a decade earlier.  Today, the number of doctorates produced by accredited schools is at its lowest level since 1987.  Although there are some examples of new programs and marginal increases in enrollment in various parts of the world, local demand has outstripped supply in virtually all countries.

Within five years, the US shortage of business Ph.D.'s is expected to be 1,142; and in 10 years, the shortage will reach 2,419.  Although considerable uncertainty about these projections must be acknowledged, the findings take into account an in-depth review of current Ph.D. enrollments, projected demand for business education, faculty retirements, and the typical hiring patterns of Ph.D.'s by accredited and non-accredited schools.

The DFC concluded that doctorally trained individuals are the most essential element in assuring the continued rigor of business education and research conducted in academic, business, and public policy institutions.  Ensuring adequate supply must, therefore, be a primary concern from an industry-level perspective.  From a school perspective, many deans, department chairs, and program directors face unfilled positions after each hiring season.  They confront salary escalation that far exceeds market changes or salary trends in other academic fields and must deal with internal management challenges posed by salary inversion.

Demand for doctoral faculty will continue to increase as the number of MBA providers and students expands globally, business schools strive to meet global standards for quality, and demographic trends drive up undergraduate business enrollment and the proportion of faculty likely to retire.

Substantial increases in production are not expected because of funding and incentive issues.  A DFC survey of US program directors and deans suggests that about 80 percent of funding for doctoral programs derives from business schools' own resources.  Endowments and university sources, such as fellowships and assistantships, constitute the remainder.  Federal and corporate funding supports only a small fraction of the costs.  In some instances, costs are somewhat offset by assigning teaching responsibilities to Ph.D. students.  Funding models are more variable outside the US, but generally doctoral students are more likely to be self-funded or employed in junior faculty positions.

Unlike other business school programs, such as the MBA, there are few financial or reputational incentives to invest in Ph.D. programs.  The advantages to enlarging a Ph.D. program are intangible--increased faculty satisfaction, for example.


Spring 2004 Hiring Outlook

The average starting salary offer for accounting majors is $42,155, an increase of 1.9 percent over last year, according to a quarterly report published by the National Association of Colleges and Employers (NACE).  This is sumarized at http://www.smartpros.com/x43831.xml .  Additional salary information is at http://www.naceweb.org/info_public/salaries.htm 

Employers expect to increase hiring of college graduates by 11.2% --- http://www.naceweb.org/press/display.asp?year=&prid=191 

Also see http://www.naceweb.org/press/display.asp?year=&prid=192 

Bob Jensen's threads on accounting careers are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#careers 


I was fortunate to spend two years in the CASBS think tank just above the Stanford University campus (on Stanford land).  This is really a great place to reflect on your work and your life.

-----Original Message----- 
From: Cynthia Brandt [mailto:cynthia@casbs.stanford.edu]  
Sent: Wednesday, June 23, 2004 5:00 PM 
To: CASBS_Fellows-casbs@casbs.stanford.edu  
Subject: New CASBS website

Dear Friends of CASBS,

The Center has a new website! It is available at both www.casbs.org  and http://www.casbs.org/ 

We redesigned the site to provide more information about the Center's mission, programs, and impact for academic audiences as well as for the public.

For functions such as nominations and panel ratings, you will need to click on the link called "LOG-IN" at the top right corner. That will connect you to the Center's internal site.

I hope that you will take a few minutes to review the site and send us your feedback. As you will see on the pages under the tab called "News", we are making a real effort to keep up-to-date on your recent research and publications. Please send us a note whenever you have new research to report or when the media cover your work, and we'll post it on the site.

Many thanks to those of you who allowed us to use your photos or quotes on the new site. I think you'll agree that your words and images convey how special the Center really is.

All my best, Cynthia

Cynthia Brandt 
Director of Development Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences 
75 Alta Road Stanford, CA 94305-8090

cynthia@casbs.org 
 (650) 321-2052

 

 


The Education Arcade 
It’s early afternoon on a Sunday at Boston’s Museum of Science. About a dozen young students are huddled in teams, peering at Pocket PCs, their parents listening nearby. There’s a palpable sense of urgency among the team members; everyone’s shouting at once. One self-assured fifth grader steps in and takes charge of her group. She has figured out what to do with the technology and begins organizing her troop into attack formation. These boisterous students are playing Hi-Tech Who Done It!, part of an MIT research project called the Education Arcade that aims to make computer and video games a valuable component of teaching. http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/atwood0604.asp?trk=nl 

Bob Jensen's threads on games and learning are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/thetools.htm#Edutainment 


An Exercise in Valuation

"Putting a Value on Google," by Scott Kessler, Business Week, June 11, 2004 --- http://www.businessweek.com/investor/content/jun2004/pi20040611_9275_pi076.htm 

S&P takes a hard look at the search giant's fundamentals -- and at the valuations of its peers -- to find an answer

Amid an enormous level of interest in the Google IPO -- from investors, the media, and seemingly every other person you talk to at cocktail parties -- we at Standard & Poor's Equity Research Services decided to take an unbiased look at the company and its competitive position (see BW Online, 6/11/04, "Google: What Lies Beyond Search?"), including commissioning a proprietary survey of Internet users (see BW Online, 6/14/04, "Search Users Weigh In on Google").

Continued in the article

Bob Jensen's threads on valuation are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/roi.htm 


Emile Berliner and the Birth of the Recording Industry (multimedia history)  http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/berlhtml/berlhome.html 

Bob Jensen's bookmarks for history and entertainment are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob2.htm#History 


"Pinsker on Office Hours," Guest commentary by Sanford Pinsker, June 15, 2004 --- http://irascibleprofessor.com/comments-06-15-04.htm 

I am surely not the only professor who has marveled at the fact that most students avoid coming to office hours -- that is, unless a paper has just been returned or one is due during the next class meeting. After a few years of, let us say, spotty office hour attendance, I learned to think of myself as Thoreau and my office as Walden Pond. I may have been "alone" but I was not lonely. There were books to read, book reviews to write, and not least of all, thoughts to think.

Still, I hoped to do better by my students. As it turns out, I didn't -- at least not for those who wanted to use office hours as a place to lobby, or if you prefer, plead, for a higher grade. Most of the time their supplications had little to do with the course at hand -- which is, after all, why I was there -- but with a few touches of ingenuity, I managed to make office hours, let us say, "interesting." What follows, then, are some of the most effective ploys I developed over the years -- for my students as well as myself.

With respect to discussions of papers that received a lower-than-expected grade, I let "model papers" do most of the heavy lifting. In each group of papers there is usually a stand-out job, one written by a student who combines talent with hard work. No doubt this student could have done a better than reasonable job by banging it out the night before the due date, but that is precisely what this student doesn't do. The thoughtfulness and dead-on writing makes it clear that this student takes a justifiable pride in the work he or she turns in.

I block out the student's name and before I return the papers I mention that a "model paper," one that may not be perfect (whatever that might mean) is available in the English department office. Students who would like to talk with me about their papers must read the model paper before our chat. Most of the time, I tell them, just reading the model paper will be enough, but if it isn't, I'm happy to have a face-to-face discussion, especially if it's aimed at improving one's work on the next paper.

I never cease to marvel at the number of angry -- and unproductive -- sessions I've avoided with this policy firmly in place. Occasionally a student will insist that his or her paper is at least as good as the "model paper," and possibly even better. There is really nothing to do for this student other than to point him or her toward the counseling office where there are people professionally trained to deal with delusion. For better or worse, I am not, and I need to save my time for students who want help in writing effective papers.

Continued in the article


June 22, 2004 message from Dan Stone [jis@uky.edu

I am pleased to announce the electronic release of the Spring 2004 of the Journal of Information Systems. Accessing the issue requires only a few mouse clicks: begin by going to: http://aaahq.org/index.cfm , then click on "publications," "AAA Electronic Publications," "browse publications," "Journal of Information Systems," "JIS Spring 2004".

This JIS issue features six main articles, two book reviews, and a discussant's and author's reply related to one article.

In "Accounting Information Systems Research Opportunities Using Personality Type Theory and the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator" Professors Wheeler, Hunton, and Bryant argue the usefulness of Personality Type Theory (PTT) for accounting systems research. More specifically, they argue for the value of the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) as a personality measure and "discuss how AIS researchers can use PTT to complement and extend current research initiatives."

In an extended reply to Professors Wheeler et. al., Professor Lampe concurs with the value of personality constructs to accounting systems research but argues that two personality measures that are not discussed in the Wheeler et al. paper (i.e., the Millon Inventory of Personality Styles (MIPS), and the Big Five Traits of Personality) are most frequently used in psychology and are stronger psychometrically. Professor Lampe's comments include a valuable discussion of psychometric issues in measuring personality. In their reply to Professor Lampe, Professors Wheeler et al. argue that the MBTI is the best personality measure available to accounting systems researchers.

In "Development of the Journal of Information Systems from the Editors' Perspectives" Professors Hutchison, Lee, and White interview current and former JIS editors and conduct content analyses to examine the creation and development of the Journal of Information Systems (JIS). In addition to providing historical analysis of JIS, the paper also suggests potential future directions for the journal and accounting systems research.

Professors Rose, Rose, and Strand Norman apply prospect theory to the evaluation of information technology (IT) investment decisions in "The Evaluation of Risky Information Technology Investment Decisions". Their experiment provides evidence that risk-seeking evaluators rate IT investment decisions more favorably than do risk-averse evaluators, and, that risk preferences, decision domain (a well or poorly performing division), and perceived outcomes (gain or loss) jointly effect the evaluation of IT investment decisions.

Professors Wright, Jindanuwat, and Todd present a comprehensive and integrated computational model for successful audit planning in "Computational Models as a Knowledge Management Tool: A Process Model of the Critical Judgments Made during Audit Planning". Their model, which is focused on the sales and collection cycle of a manufacturing client, opines "on a client's going concern status, applicable levels of inherent, control and planned detection risk, and appropriate levels of statement- and account-level materiality. Most importantly, the model validly identifies the cause of significant fluctuations given causal hypotheses."

Professors Weidenmier and Herron present a case study and analysis of the usefulness of two generalized audit software packages (ACL and IDEA) for classroom use in "Selecting an Audit Software Package for Classroom Use". They argue that effective classroom presentation of generalized audit software provides both practical knowledge and facilitates learning of audit concepts and procedures.

In "Accounting for the Development Costs of Internal-Use Software" Professors Savage, Callaghan, and Peacock critique existing accounting standards for internal-use software expenditures (i.e., Statement of Position 98-1). They argue that this standard undercapitalizes these expenditures and they propose an alternative that specifies "the conditions under which capitalization or expensing should occur for internally developed software."

Finally Cheryl Dunn (Book review editor) presents book reviews by Professor Robert Zmud of two classic books by C. West Churchman, and by Shawn Windle (a product manager at PeopleSoft) of "Business Process Management: The Third Wave".

Enjoy!!!!

Dan Stone, 
Editor of the Journal of Information Systems

 


June 14, 2004 message from Ethical Performance [list_admin@ethicalperformance.com

Five areas of social responsibility considered most important by Marks & Spencer's customers have been used as the basis for the retail company's first corporate social responsibility report.

The report, verified by Ernst & Young, focuses on key CSR subjects identified in a survey of the company's prime stakeholders as having the most impact on the Marks & Spencer brand.

The subject areas, each covered in detail in the report, are: ethical trading, animal welfare, community programmes, sustainable raw materials and responsible use of technology.

The web-based version of the report can be found at http://www2.marksandspencer.com/thecompany/ourcommitmenttosociety 


Question
What's "affinity fraud?"

Answer:  See below

A key fund-raiser for Harvard University used his connection to the school to defraud benefactors out of millions of dollars, showing how sophisticated professional investors can be just as vulnerable as amateurs.

"Harvard Parents Got a Hard Lesson In Investing Perils:  A Key Fund-Raiser for School Is Convicted of Bilking Wealthy Donors, Alumni." by Randall Smith, The Wall Street Journal, June 11, 2004, Page A1 --- http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108690562744434417,00.html?mod=home_whats_news_us 

Karen Fleiss had good reason to trust Gregory Earls.

Both had children at Harvard College and they knew each other as donors to the Harvard Parents Fund, which Mr. Earls headed for a time with billionaire Robert Bass. Mr. Earls was a deal maker with a penchant for high-risk investments; Ms. Fleiss was a hedge-fund manager.

So when he asked her to invest in one of his companies in 1998 -- and intimated that Mr. Bass might, too -- she opened her hedge fund's checkbook, eventually putting almost $1.8 million into the venture.

"He had a Southern accent and a big smile, and he would say, 'Karen, I have a deal for you,' " she recalls. "By the time he was finished, it sounded like the deal of a lifetime."

It wasn't. When she cashed out, all she had to show for her investment was $50,000. Ms. Fleiss was one of three wealthy Harvard parents and alumni who recently testified about being bilked by Mr. Earls. The authorities say he stole much of the money they invested with him, siphoning off cash as he passed it through another company he controlled. In the ledgers, the skimmed funds were camouflaged as legal, management or accounting fees.

All told, prosecutors say, Mr. Earls defrauded more than 100 investors of $13.8 million. They say Mr. Earls diverted $1.2 million to an education trust fund for his own children, and $4.3 million more to other personal accounts.

The Harvard connection and other fund-raising activities gave Mr. Earls "access to a pool of potential investors who were very wealthy, and he knew how to talk those people into investing with him," prosecutor William Stellmach said at the trial.

In April, Mr. Earls was convicted of 22 counts of fraud in Manhattan federal court after one investor took his suspicions to prosecutors. In court, Mr. Earls acknowledged moving investors' money to various accounts he controlled -- which he attributed to "sloppy business practices" -- but denied stealing.

His lawyer, Barry Coburn, said in court that Mr. Earls couldn't have had criminal intent to steal because he kept records of the amounts diverted. The investors "lost their money because the Internet bubble expanded and expanded and popped," Mr. Coburn argued. They didn't have "some kind of money-back guarantee."

Mr. Coburn says his client declines to comment on the details of his case. "Mr. Earls has been convicted by a jury," Mr. Coburn says. "It would not be appropriate in my view for us to respond to particular factual allegations in this context given that Mr. Earls is facing sentencing."

As described by prosecutors, Mr. Earls's scam appears to be a variation of "affinity fraud," in which victims are lulled into dropping their guard by mutual ties to the same religious organization or ethnic group. Mr. Earls cultivated important contacts through his work for the Harvard Parents Fund and the Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Washington, D.C. -- and used data supplied by Harvard to assess likely investors.

The case shows that sophisticated professional investors can be just as vulnerable as amateurs. Much of the money Mr. Earls stole came from a handful of wealthy Harvard benefactors, including a former aide to junk-bond impresario Michael Milken. Even Harvard found itself short-changed. Mr. Earls reneged on three separate pledges totaling $275,000 that he made while he headed the parents fund, a school official testified at his trial.

Mr. Earls, 59 years old, grew up in Bluefield, W.Va., and attended the University of Virginia. In the 1970s, after stints as a gym teacher, mutual-fund salesman and stockbroker, he recruited others to invest with him in projects including movies, theaters, apartments and microwave-oven retailers. The 1980s saw him organizing investment groups that bought stakes in numerous enterprises.

In the mid-1990s, Harvard's development office took notice of Mr. Earls as a potentially productive fund-raiser for the Harvard Parents Fund. He was a big donor to the school, and three of his four children eventually enrolled there. His lawyer says in an interview that recruiting investors wasn't the principal motive for his unpaid volunteer work.

Harvard fund-raising officials are angry about what happened. "The fact that someone would volunteer their time for a nonprofit and then use that opportunity to line their own pockets is an outrage," says Andrew Tiedemann, communications director for alumni affairs and development at Harvard. "We have never seen anything remotely like this in Harvard history."

One of Mr. Earls's most important fund-raising assignments was Robert Bass, one of the well-known Bass brothers from Texas, who had made numerous high-profile investments in the 1980s. The two men met in connection with Harvard Parents Fund activities, and Mr. Bass's daughter Chandler, who entered Harvard in 1996, became "good friends" with Mr. Earls's daughter Kate, Mr. Bass testified.

Continued in the article

Bob Jensen's threads on fraud are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm 

Consumer fraud protections are discussed at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm


Most derivatives like forward, futures, and swap contracts are acquired at zero cost such that historical cost accounting is meaningless.  The exception is a purchased/written option where a small premium is paid/received to buy/sell the option.  Thus if the derivative financial instrument contract is defaulted a few minutes after being transacted there are generally zero or very small damages.  Such is not the case with traditional non-derivative financial instruments like bonds where the entire notional amounts (thousands or millions of dollars) change hands initially such that enormous damages are possible immediately after the notional amounts change hands.  In the case of of a derivative contract, the notional does not change hands.  It is only used to compute a contracted payment such as a swap payment.

For example, in the year 2004 Wells Fargo Bank sold $63 million in bonds with an interest rate "derived" from the price of a casino's common stock price.  The interest payments are "derivatives" in one sense, but the bonds are not derivative financial instruments scoped into FAS 133 due to Condition b in Paragraph 6 of FAS 133.  In the case of bonds, the bond holders made a $63 million initial investment of the entire notional amount.  If Wells Fargo also entered into an interest rate swap to lock in a fixed interest rate, the swap contract would be a derivative financial instrument subject to FAS 133.  However, the bonds are not derivative financial instruments under FAS 133 definitions.

"What Goes On in Vegas Reaches Wall Street:  Wells Fargo Sets Derivatives On Stations Casinos Inc. With $63 Million Bond Offering," by Joseph T. Hallinan, The Wall Street Journal, June 11, 2004, Page C1 --- 

Talk about leveraging your bets: Would you believe a bond whose value is tied to the stock performance of a casino?

In the increasingly complicated world of financial derivatives, Wells Fargo & Co. has come up with just such a wrinkle. The San Francisco bank has issued $63 million in 10-year notes whose return will be determined not by the actions of Alan Greenspan or the price of Treasury bills but by the stock price of a Las Vegas casino operator, Station Casinos Inc. (which isn't involved in issuing the derivatives).

For Wells, which has reported consistently strong growth in recent years, it means cheap money. Initially, the bank will pay holders of the note interest at a rate of just 0.25% annually. Over time, the holders may get more money, depending on the performance of the stock. So far this year, Station shares have soared about 60%. At 4 p.m. yesterday, Station was down five cents to $48.95 in New York Stock Exchange composite trading.

Wells said it crafted the unusual deal after one of its customers -- an institutional investor it declines to name -- approached the bank. The investor wanted exposure to Station's stock without actually owning it, says Nino S. Fanlo, Wells's treasurer.

The notes are callable by Wells after three years. When the bonds are cashed, holders may receive 17.6 times the closing price of the stock, or, if the stock price falls, they are guaranteed a return of principal. The notes may be resold to other investors. Banks and others previously have issued notes tied to a stock index or to a basket of stocks. But the Wells Fargo notes, registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission, are considered unusual. Wells says this is the first time it has issued a note tied to the performance of a single stock

Continued in the article

Bob Jensen's threads on hedges and hedge accounting are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm 


From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Educators' Review on June 16, 2004

TITLE: Calpine Raises Cash to Pay Debt, Turn Profit 
REPORTER: Steven D. Jones 
DATE: Jun 15, 2004 
PAGE: C3 
LINK: http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108724453234036647,00.html  
TOPICS: Accounting, Cash Flow, Debt, Early Retirement of Debt, Asset Disposal

SUMMARY: Calpine Corp. has revealed a plan that will significantly change its balance sheet and statement of cash flows. Questions focus on evaluating the plan and the related accounting.

QUESTIONS: 
1.) Outline each economic event that is described in the article. For each event, briefly explain the economic significance of the event.

2.) Assume that Calpine Corp. continues with the plan that is described in the article. Explain how each component of the plan would impact the financial statements.

3.) Why would bondholders be concerned about disposing of assets?

4.) What is a hedge? Into what type of hedge transaction did Calpine Corp. enter? Why did Calpine Corp. enter into the hedge transaction? Is net income changed by changes in market value of the asset underlying the hedge transaction? Is net income changed by changes in market value of the electricity in Calpine's long-term sales contracts? Support your answers.

Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island 
Reviewed By: Benson Wier, Virginia Commonwealth University 
Reviewed By: Kimberly Dunn, Florida Atlantic University

"Outside Audit: Calpine Takes Basic Approach to Power Game," by Steven D. Jones, The Wall Street Journal, June 15, 2004, Page C3 --- http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108724453234036647,00.html 

Calpine Corp., one of the main actors in California's long-running energy soap opera, is working from a script that sounds like it came right out of a business textbook: raising cash, reducing debt and aiming to put out a more profitable product.

As any soaps fan knows, however, plots can turn unexpectedly.

Calpine, based in San Jose, is raising nearly $1 billion in cash from asset sales, and in the bargain positioning itself to profit from more volatile electricity prices in the year ahead.

In a series of deals, including the sale of a large block of Canadian gas, Calpine will raise cash to finish power plants and meet obligations for maturing debt and hybrid securities that begin coming due this fall.

At the same time, the energy company is reducing how much electricity it has tied up in long-term supply contracts to 51% of output for the remainder of the year from 65% a year ago.

The change means that Calpine has more megawatts to sell on the open market this summer, when consumer demand is projected to grow 2.5% nationwide and swell as much as 6% in California

Combined, the moves mean Calpine is poised to boost cash from asset sales and increase cash flow if market prices for electricity move higher this summer. Calpine has 88 power plants generating 22,000 megawatts and another 10 plants nearing completion.

The strategy isn't foolproof: Those gas reserves are real assets, and thus are a comfort to bond holders, who may fret at their disposal. Also, if it is a cool summer, the market price for electricity would understandably suffer, and Calpine, which had a weak first quarter, would too.

The independent power generator burned through about $400 million in cash in the first quarter. It had $1.4 billion in liquidity at the end of the quarter, but it also plans about $900 million in capital spending and faces two maturing debt obligations totaling about $570 million in the next two years. In addition, the first $225 million of a type of hybrid convertible security that Calpine sold comes due this fall, and many investors are likely to want to cash out.

Calpine traded at nearly $50 a share when those hybrid securities were first sold five years ago. At 4 p.m. yesterday in New York Stock Exchange composite trading, it stood at $3.98, up five cents.

Wall Street and investors are acutely concerned with how Calpine manages its ready cash, as even the company notes. "The whole issue on Calpine has been liquidity," says Bob Kelly, the chief financial officer. "One way to get that off the table is to build our cash balance."

For Calpine, building cash is in large part about the difference between fuel costs and the price it receives for electricity it generates. For example, if it costs Calpine $35 for the gas to generate a megawatt of electricity that the company sells for $50, then it earns $15.

Five years ago, when prices and demand for electricity were high, Calpine prospered by selling long-term power contracts. To hedge those contracts, the company locked in fixed gas prices partly by purchasing Canadian gas fields.

Since then, gas prices have risen, but electricity demand and prices haven't kept pace. Sometimes Calpine customers, many of them utilities, could come out ahead by relying on Calpine's fixed-price power, shutting off their own generating plants and selling their gas for a profit on the open market.

Now Calpine is going back to customers with an offer to provide the generating capacity only. Or, as in the earlier example, the utility pays $15 for the generating capacity and provides the gas at its own expense. While that may appear to be a small change, it makes a big difference on the balance sheet, because Calpine no longer needs as much gas in the ground as a long-term hedge.

"Our profit margin doesn't change," says Mr. Kelly. "We get the capacity value of the megawatts just the same as we do now, but we have removed the energy side of the trade so we are long gas. That frees up the opportunity to sell the gas."

Calpine has 230 billion cubic feet of natural gas in Alberta on the block. Mr. Kelly estimates the company paid about $1.25 per thousand cubic feet for that gas and recent Canadian deals suggest the company could now get $2 per thousand cubic feet. At that price, Calpine's Alberta gas reserves represent a 60% return on a three-year investment.

But the deal looks even better from a balance-sheet perspective, since Calpine intends to pay off some bank debt and then use most of the proceeds to buy back bonds that are trading for about 60 cents on the dollar. Put it all together: Calpine bought gas for $1.25, will sell it for $2 and use the cash to repay nearly $3 of debt.

"We've doubled our money in 2½ to three years," says Mr. Kelly. "People ought to be happy."

Yet the enthusiasm on Wall Street has been restrained. Calpine shares have gained little since the plan was announced June 10, and its bonds have lost ground, trading down another 25 cents yesterday.

The tepid response is tied to the view that the gas on Calpine's balance sheet is a core asset, with some creditors seeing billions of cubic feet of gas as a cushion against a hard landing for their bonds.

"That's not the way to look at it," counters Mr. Kelly. "If anyone is looking at gas as security on the bonds, then they ought to sell the bonds."

The other key to Calpine's current restructuring is higher power prices that will spur cash flow, and for that Calpine could use a heat wave. Consumers weather cold with natural gas and other sources of energy, but most rely on electrically powered air conditioners to beat the heat. Too many cool and breezy days, however, and air conditioners get turned off.

Bob Jensen's threads on accounting for derivative financial instruments are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm 


PwC provides a summary of major issues in the hot debate over how to account for stock options --- http://www.pwcglobal.com/extweb/pwcpublications.nsf/docid/F108DCCEFCCF1D5385256E9A006C7005 

Bob Jensen's threads on accounting for stock options --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory/sfas123/jensen01.htm 


Question
How can you download an entire Website?

One answer
HTTrack Website Copier 3.32-2 http://www.httrack.com/ 

HTTrack is a free (GPL, libre/free software) and easy-to-use offline browser utility.

It allows you to download a World Wide Web site from the Internet to a local directory, building recursively all directories, getting HTML, images, and other files from the server to your computer. HTTrack arranges the original site's relative link-structure. Simply open a page of the "mirrored" website in your browser, and you can browse the site from link to link, as if you were viewing it online. HTTrack can also update an existing mirrored site, and resume interrupted downloads. HTTrack is fully configurable, and has an integrated help system.

WinHTTrack is the Windows 9x/NT/2000/XP release of HTTrack, and WebHTTrack the Linux/Unix/BSD release. 

See the download page.


Peabody Essex Museum (art history site founded in 1799) ---  http://www.pem.org/homepage/ 


Where "Big Brother" still decides what you may read and learn!

"Vietnam Orders Net Clampdown," Wired News, June 8, 2004 --- http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,63764,00.html?tw=newsletter_topstories_html 

Vietnam has ordered local governments nationwide to closely monitor Internet use and enforce regulations aimed at cracking down on "bad information" sent or read on the Web, an official said Tuesday.

The move comes after the communist country sentenced several dissidents to long prison terms over the past two years for using the Internet to criticize the government and promote democracy.

Continued in the article

The official Viet Nam weekly news site is at http://vietnamnews.vnagency.com.vn/ 

Disney's Nemo is a big success in Viet Nam theatres --- http://snipurl.com/NemoInVietNam 


The Atlantic Online's Poetry Pages (history, literature) --- http://www.theatlantic.com/unbound/poetry/ 
Includes audio readings of poems.

THE ATLANTIC ONLINE ( www.theatlantic.com ) has a two-fold mission: first, to serve as The Atlantic Monthly's home on the Internet, presenting the magazine's digital edition and continually building a useful online archive; second, to serve as the home of Atlantic Unbound, an online journal that extends the magazine's coverage of books, literature, and culture. Each month The Atlantic Online offers the contents of The Atlantic's print edition—augmented with links to related articles, other Web sites, and/or special online sidebars—alongside a weekly update of original Web-only features in Atlantic Unbound. The site offers access to back issues of The Atlantic from November 1995 (when the magazine first appeared on the Web) to the present, as well as hundreds of articles selected from the magazine's extensive archive. The Atlantic Online is also home to an interactive forum, Post & Riposte. Below is an overview of the site, with links to all of its principal pages.


IBM recently completed its acquisition of PricewaterhouseCoopers' global management consulting and information technology services business, PwC Consulting. As a result, PwC Consulting is no longer a part of the PricewaterhouseCoopers network of firms, and is now a part of the IBM Global Services business unit.  IBM (including IBM Global Services) and PricewaterhouseCoopers are not the same organization, and neither governs or is affiliated with the other, or any affiliate, subsidiary or division of the other --- http://www-1.ibm.com/services/us/index.wss/home 

PwC, however, intends to enter new lines of consulting and continue tax consulting.  The PwC Advisory Service site is at http://www.pwcglobal.com/Extweb/service.nsf/docid/3EC79B0CC612B1D485256E6D00507050 

Question
Do you think this type of consulting meets the independence test?

"PwC Launches New Performance Risk Management Service," AccountingWeb, June 17, 2004 --- http://www.accountingweb.com/cgi-bin/item.cgi?id=99330 

PricewaterhouseCoopers announced this week a new Performance Risk Management (PRM) advisory service for CEOs, CFOs and board directors. The new PRM service will help corporations improve the quality and adequacy of management reporting, especially in the area of identifying risks that could impact short and long term performance. The service will be supported by risk management software licensed from Metapraxis Limited. PRM provides a fresh approach to reporting, analyzing, predicting, and monitoring key business and financial metrics, allowing management to focus their attention on steps to improve performance and thus shareholder value. The service introduces greater transparency between the finance and business communities through the adoption of common views of key metrics.

"US companies are aggressively evaluating their core processes to improve efficiency and enhance controls to meet the requirements of Sarbanes-Oxley. They now appreciate the need to sustain these core processes and evaluate performance risk. The monitoring of performance risks on a timely basis will become an essential business requirement," said Fred Cohen, a partner with the US firm of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP.

June 22, 2004 reply from John Corless [corlessj@CSUS.EDU

Rather than focusing on other services provided to audit clients to determine independence, we should focus on how big the fees from any one client are to any one partner’s total fees. Even where only audit work is done, if the audit fee exceeds 20% of the total fees for any one partner, I think independence is compromised.

John Corless
Professor of Accountancy
CSU-Sacramento
Sacramento, CA 95819-6088

Bob Jensen's threads on PwC's auditing scandals are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm#PwC 


"Make a Date, Meet a Mate Online," Reuters, Wired News, June 12, 2004 --- http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,63827,00.html?tw=newsletter_topstories_html 

Rick, a website developer from Columbus, Ohio, remembers his divorce nearly four years ago with an extra tinge of bitterness: His ex-wife remarried the same day to a man she met via the Internet.

"After we decided to split, we were still living together for awhile and she got online," Rick, 29, said. "They ended up meeting and two days after that, she was wearing his ring."

Rick later tried his own luck at a Web dating forum, but said a promising flirtation with a woman turned sour after several weeks of e-mail contact. He finally met a new love online, but not at a dating site -- the unsuspecting sweetheart sent him a message to compliment a music disc he had recorded.

"It's blossomed very naturally as opposed to anything else I've experienced online," he said.

While the Internet has arguably increased the chances of meeting potential mates, it carries its own share of heartbreak and growing complaints about false profiles, bad behavior and ill-suited matches.

A number of online daters and Internet sites are taking matters into their own hands, critiquing these services and warning their peers of the pitfalls of Web hook-ups.

Some review sites, like Date Seeker, compare the attributes of dating services, give tips for online dating safety and recommend ways to tweak a profile for better results. They distinguish between sites like Match.com or eHarmony, which purport to seek meaningful matches for the single gal and guy, versus more casual encounters at Lavalife or ethnically targeted sites like JDate for Jewish singles.

Online daters can find reader polls on favorite dating sites, a breakdown of broad and specialty sites and personal testimonies. At least 29 million Americans, or two out of five singles, used online dating services last year, and that market is expected to keep growing over the next five years.

But amid the triumphant tales of e-mails that end in wedding bells, a growing number of online daters are voicing complaints. At eDateReview, some of the most popular match-up sites garner lukewarm ratings.

The most frequent complaints are that far more men are online than women and a lack of protection against sexual predators or cheating lovers, said Michael Kantor, an information technology project manager in Arlington, Virginia, who runs the site.

"Men lie about their availability, whether they have a steady girlfriend or wife, and women tend to lie mostly about their looks," Kantor said.

One of 27 critiques of the site comes from a reviewer named Rich, who gives Match.com a two-star rating out of five potential stars.

"I've come to this conclusion -- there are not a whole lot of good-looking women on these dating sites," he wrote. "'Average' (in a profile) means fat, 'extra pounds' means bring a defibrillator to the date."

A reviewer identifying herself as Natalie closed her account at eHarmony after a match that didn't click, saying: "I'll take my chances on meeting my next date the conventional way."

Online dating sites say their membership rules require honest representation and prohibit harassment or abusive behavior. Some recognize that credibility problems could harm a business estimated to grow from $398 million in 2004 to $642 million within four years, according to Jupiter Research.

"We employ a lot of people that spend a lot of time reviewing the content posted on the site," said Tim Sullivan, chief executive of top dating site Match.com. "We're a brand that tends to attract people seeking a serious relationship."

Sullivan said that each month, as many as 3,000 profiles are rejected right off the bat, while another 2,000 are removed because of complaints of dishonesty from other members. A six-person "fraud and abuse" team investigates more serious breaches.

Sullivan said Match.com was testing a pilot program in Dallas this month offering members a chance to get a professional "certified" photo posted online, bearing a Match.com stamp with the date it was taken.

Nate Elliott, Jupiter Research's analyst of online dating, said the grievances were just a sign of how mainstream the practice has become.

"The things people do online to deceive people are the same things they do offline," Elliott said. "The point of connection is on a website instead of a bar or a gym."


From the Scout Report on June 11, 2004

The Kissinger Telcons (history, government) http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB123/index.htm 

The National Security Archive at George Washington University has developed a fine reputation for its electronic briefing books and other publications, many of which have arisen from requests filed under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). Released in late May 2004, this 123rd electronic briefing book in the ongoing series includes ten telcons (transcripts of telephone conversations) from the files of Henry Kissinger's collection at the Library of Congress. The subjects covered in these intriguing documents include talks on how to spin the My Lai massacre in Vietnam, the bombing of Cambodia ordered by President Nixon, and conversations with Alexander Haig. Some of the other telcons released as part of the electronic briefing book include conversations with Motion Picture Association president Jack Valenti and Chase Manhattan Bank chairman David Rockefeller. The final document of note here is a helpful finding aid to the Kissinger telcons, created by the Nixon Presidential Materials Staff of the National Archives and Records Administration.

 


Facing Up to Multivariate Data

The Future of Faces These days, all the hot-shot graphics folks are trying to figure out how to create realistic human faces with computer imagery. But photorealism can be pretty creepy. http://www.technologyreview.com/blog/blog.asp?blogID=1444&trk=nl 

In 1971 was at Stanford University when Herman Chernoff developed the interesting theory for depicting multivariate data as features of faces that could be compared visually by humans.  I later applied his computer program in a AAA monograph: Jensen, R.E. (1976). Phantasmagoric accounting: Research and analysis of economic, social and environmental impact of corporate business, Studies in Accounting Research #14 (Sarasota, FL: American Accounting Association, Chapter 6)

Shane Moriarity later applied this program in a financial reporting experimentr.  
Moriarity, S. (1979). "Communicating financial information through multidimesional graphics," Journal of Accounting Research 17, Spring, 205-224.

For more on this see http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/00jensen/research/232wp/232wp.doc and http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/00jensen/research/232wp/232head.doc 

June 11, 2004 reply from Jagdish Gangolly [JGangolly@UAMAIL.ALBANY.EDU

Bob,
 
Nowadays it is very easy to draw these faces. I give drawing them for financial data as a routine exercise
in my graduate statistics course (I usually ask the students to take paired samples of
companies that failed/did not fail, and try various permutations of features/data to determine which assignment
of data to features seem to produce reasonable fit.
 
There are many programs that help draw these (S-Plus, my favourite, has 'faces' routine; 'faces' in SAS even draws
asymmetric faces). Some standalone programs that   do the same include:
 
http://people.cs.uchicago.edu/~wiseman/chernoff/
http://hesketh.com/schampeo/projects/Faces/chernoff.html
 
Some tutorials on faces are:
 
Visualization Techniques of Different Dimensions http://seamonkey.ed.asu.edu/~behrens/asu/reports/compre/comp1.html

Scientific Visualisation: A Practical Introduction: A one day course http://www.epcc.ed.ac.uk/computing/training/document_archive/SciVis-course/SciVis.book_1.html

 
Jagdish

From Syllabus News on June 15, 2004

U. Miami Partners with Local K-12 for Online High School

The University of Miami has partnered with a local private K-12 school to start an online high school, the Miami Herald reported. The Sagemont School last fall approached UM with plans for a partnership that would let UM professors do research on online education, while Sagemont gets the benefit of the university's name on its program, officials at both schools said.

The newly inaugurated University of Miami Online High School now has 225 students in 40 countries, most of them professional athletes and performers who travel often and wouldn't be able to attend a traditional high school. The virtual school serves ninth through 12th grades, and next year will start to offer eighth grade as well. It is fully accredited and offers college-level courses that earn the students college credits.


Department of Kudos: Virginia Tech, MIT, eCollege Honored

Virginia Tech received a 21st Century Achievement Award in Science for its development of a 2,200 processor supercomputer from a cluster of 1,100 Power Mac G5 computers. Called System X, the system is currently the world’s third fastest computer. The award was sponsored by information tech journal Computerworld.

“The goal of the Virginia Tech project was to develop novel computing architectures that reduce their cost, time to build, and maintenance complexity. As a result, institutions with relatively modest budgets can now afford to build a premier supercomputer," said Hassan Aref, dean of Virginia Tech's College of Engineering.

Also, MIT and Sapient Inc. were also honored for their work to develop MIT OpenCourseWare (MIT OCW), which was named as the best application of IT in the field of education. MIT OCW offers free and open online access to the educational materials from 701 MIT courses, spanning MIT's five schools and all 33 of its academic disciplines. Anne Margulies, executive director of MIT OCW, said that since the launch of the MIT OCW pilot in 2003, the Web site has received traffic from users in more than 215 countries, city-states and territories, “making it a truly global initiative.”

Finally, course management system developer eCollege was named “Technology Company of the Year” by the Colorado Software and Internet Association, which has handed out the award for the last 10 years.

An independent panel of judges made up of 30 technology executives evaluated eCollege on the following criteria: Mission and Vision, Market Size and Strategy, Solid Business Practices, R&D, Product Innovation and Relevance, Influence on Industry Growth, Financial Growth, Culture, Employee Retention, Community Involvement, and Contributions to Customer Success. The 2004 CSIA award was presented during a ceremony held at the University of Denver.

 


On university campuses, students cherish their facebooks -- paper booklets that serve as student directories with mug shots. Now, a bunch of Harvard students are taking the concept nationwide with a student-focused social network --- http://www.thefacebook.com/ 

Thefacebook is an online directory that connects people through social networks at colleges. We have opened up Thefacebook for popular consumption at:

BC • Berkeley • Brown • BU • Chicago • Columbia • Cornell • Dartmouth • Duke Emory • Florida • Georgetown • Harvard • Illinois • Michigan • Michigan State MIT • Northeastern • Northwestern • NYU • Penn • Princeton • Rice • Stanford Tulane • Tufts • UC Davis • UCLA • UC San Diego • UNC UVA • WashU • Wellesley • Yale

Your facebook is limited to your own college or university.

You can use Thefacebook to: 

"College Facebook Mugs Go Online," by Rachel Metz, Wired News, June 9, 2004 --- http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,63727,00.html?tw=newsletter_topstories_html 

Maya Chard-Yaron, 19, was poked about 10 times last week. But rather than getting annoyed at the unsolicited jabs, Chard-Yaron kind of enjoyed it -- especially since friends and acquaintances were doing the poking through a social-networking website, Thefacebook.

On Thefacebook, poking is a way of saying "hi" to would-be contacts, a method to strike up a conversation without adding the person as a friend.

And there's quite a bit of poking going on. Chard-Yaron, a Southern Californian who will be a junior at Columbia University in the fall, is one of about 250,000 students at 34 colleges across the United States intrigued by Thefacebook. Unlike social websites like Friendster and orkut, Thefacebook is meant only for college students and alums.

"I know it sounds stupid but when I log onto Thefacebook and I see this person poked me I think, 'Aww,' 'cause I miss them," she said.

Thefacebook is modeled after schools' traditional facebooks -- booklets with names, photos, interests and other information about students. The site started in February and is expanding rapidly. Engineered and initially intended just for students at Harvard University, Thefacebook's creators -- all five of them Harvard students -- hope to have their site available to about 200 American colleges by fall.

By registering on Thefacebook, students can compile lists of friends, send messages, list their classes and summer vacation plans, and divulge as much -- or as little -- personal contact information as they like.

Mark Zuckerberg, a 20-year-old Harvard student, came up with the idea in January. Harvard has facebooks for different residential houses, but students can't search those they don't belong to, Zuckerberg said. He said he thought it would be a good idea to put an all-school facebook online, where students could access others regardless of where they lived. By early February, after about a week of programming time, Zuckerberg's site was up and running at Harvard.

With an early pool of about 4,000 students, Thefacebook grew at the school to where it now boasts about 95 percent of the student population as members, Zuckerberg said.

"When it took off at Harvard I thought it'd be cool to make it a multi-school thing," he said.

In mid-February, Thefacebook's creators opened the site to students at other colleges, and the site's popularity kept rising.

"We've had to run to catch up with the number of users," said Chris Hughes, another Thefacebook collaborator.

Zuckerberg was surprised at his site's success initially.

"I expected that a few people would do it at Harvard and they'd tell their friends, but I didn't expect it would take hold as this all-inclusive directory," he said.

Some changes are also in store for Thefacebook users. Zuckerberg wants to enable users to offer more information about themselves, like extra pictures or their own websites. For now, however, students are just having fun discovering the site's capabilities.

Chard-Yaron is one of many whose friends e-mailed her a link to the site, asking her to join. At first, Chard-Yaron thought it was "weird" and "sketchy," but she created an online profile for herself anyway this spring, before exams and papers got underway. She said now she checks the site daily.

The site's founders are banking on its long-term health. Though the costs of running it have increased from about $85 to almost $3,000 a month, Thefacebook is now self-sufficient, thanks to an influx of ad revenue, Hughes said. Ads from search powerhouse Google will pay for the site for a while, Zuckerberg said.

The founders also aren't paying themselves, but they will hire a few people to help with the summertime expansion, Hughes said.

There have also been offers of outsider investments and even a few interested in buying the site, Zuckerberg said, but the founders turned down several buyout offers (they wouldn't say who made the offers or for how much). They aren't interested in cashing out just yet.

"We've had a few approaches," Hughes said, "but we like what we're doing to the site."


Question
What services are available to help you create a Weblogs and blogs?

Answer from Kevin Delaney

"Blogs Can Tie Families, And These Services Will Get You Started," by Kevin J. Delaney, The Wall Street Journal, June 10, 2004, Page B1 --- http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,personal_technology,00.html 

Online Web logs, or blogs, have long been a bastion of techy types, those prone to political rants, and assorted gossips. But now they're making inroads among families who want to keep up on each other's doings.

Blogs are personal Web sites where you can post things, including photos, stories and links to other cool stuff online. They resemble a journal, with information arranged chronologically based on when you post it. The simple form is a major virtue -- you don't have to think too hard about how to organize your blog.

I've used a variety of Web sites in recent years to share photos of my children with their grandparents and other family far way. Lately, I've wondered if it wouldn't be better to put photos, digital videos and other links I want to share with my family on one Web site, making it easier to manage and access them from afar.

With this in mind, I've been testing three of the most popular blogging services, which are available free or for a small monthly fee.

Blogger, a free service from Google at www.blogger.com, promises you can create a blog in "three easy steps." After selecting a user name and password, I chose a name and a custom Web address. Then I selected a graphic look -- "Dots," a simple design with a touch of fun that seemed right for a family site -- from 12 attractive templates. After that, Blogger created my blog. Within a few minutes, I was able to put a short text message on the site and have Blogger send e-mails to alert my wife and father of the blog's existence.

Blogger, like the other services, lets you further customize the organization and look of your site and put several types of information on it. Sending text to the blog is as easy as sending an e-mail. (In fact, Blogger and the other services I tested even let me post text to my blog using standard e-mail.) A Blogger button on Google's toolbar software, which must be downloaded and activated separately, offers the useful option of posting links to other Web sites on your blog as you surf the Web. Another nice feature lets you designate friends or family members who can post to the main blog.

To put photos on any blog hosted by Blogger, you have to download another free software package from Picasa called Hello. Hello blocks connections to computers operating behind what's known as a proxy server, which is a pretty typical corporate configuration. As a result, I couldn't upload photos from my work PC, though I was able to do so from home.

Blogger lacks some advanced features other services offer. But its main shortcoming is that it doesn't let you protect your site by requiring visitors to use a password to enter. I don't want strangers to look at photos of my kids or search notes I'm writing for family members. A Google spokeswoman declined to comment on any plans for such a feature, citing restrictions related to the company's planned initial public offering.

TypePad from Six Apart, at www.typepad.com, provides a higher-powered service for creating blogs that does let you password protect your site. You can also upload a broader range of files, including video clips. But the tradeoff is a level of complexity that is unnecessarily frustrating.

The company offers three monthly subscription rates starting at $4.95. It costs $8.95 a month for the version that allows you to create photo albums, a feature that I consider essential for a family blog. Albums allow you to avoid filling up the main blog site with strings of photos. If you choose to password protect your blog, though, TypePad won't let you link your blog directly to photo albums. It's a surprising shortcoming, and Six Apart doesn't disclose it on its site. Its support staff gave me complicated instructions for another way to make such a link, but they never worked for me.

Six Apart Chief Executive Mena Trott says the photo-album-linking problem is a bug the company is working to fix. She acknowledges that parts of the service could be easier to use, and says improvements will be made. She also says that in practice Six Apart lets most users exceed the company's miserly limits on blog storage space, which are 100 megabytes for the $8.95-a-month plan.

AOL's Journals service, which requires an AOL subscription, is about as simple to use as Blogger. It allows you to restrict public access to your blog and provides nice albums for grouping photos. If you do decide to restrict access, your visitors will have to register with AOL. That registration is free, though, and many people already have an AOL "screen name" because they use the company's instant messaging service.

But other advanced features, such as the button in Blogger for easy linking to Web sites, are missing. In addition, the layout templates aren't nearly as attractive graphically as Blogger's and TypePad's. AOL says it's working on all of these issues, and expects to add a Web linking button and phase out the registration requirement later this year.

I'm not completely satisfied with Journals, and I would be happy to use Blogger or TypePad if they manage to work out their issues with photo albums and passwords. In the meantime, though, I've chosen AOL's Journals to create my family blog.

"WEBLOGS COME TO THE CLASSROOM," by Scott Carlson, The Chronicle of Higher Education, November 28, 2003, Page 33

They get used to supplement courses in writing, marketing, economics, and other subjects

Increasingly, private life is a public matter.  That seems especially true in the phenomenon known as blogging.  Weblogs, or blogs, are used by scores of online memoirists, editorialists, exhibitionists, and navel gazers, who post their daily thoughts on Web sites for all to read.

Now professors are starting to incorporate blogs into courses.  The potential for reaching an audience, they say, reshapes the way students approach writing assignments, journal entries, and online discussions.

Valerie M. Smith, an assistant professor of English at Quinnipiac University, is among the first faculty members there to use blogs.  She sets one up for each of her creative-writing students at the beginning of the semester.  The students are to add a new entry every Sunday at noon.  Then they read their peers' blogs and comment on them.  Parents or friends also occasionally read the blogs.

Blogging "raises issues with audience," Ms. Smith says, adding that the innovation has raised the quality of students' writing;

"They aren't just writing for me, which makes them think in terms of crafting their work for a bigger audience.  It gives them a bigger stake in what they are writing."

A Weblog can be public or available only to people selected by the blogger.  Many blogs serve as virtual loudspeakers or soapboxes.  Howard Dean, a Democratic presidential contender, has used a blog to debate and discuss issues with voters.  Some blogs have even earned their authors minor fame.  An Iraqi man--known only by a pseudonym, Salaam Pax--captured attention around the world when he used his blog to document daily life in Baghdad as American troops advanced on the city.

Continued in the article.

Bob Jensen's threads on weblogs and blogs are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245glosf.htm#Weblog 


"Who's Seeding the Net With Spyware?  Young surfers pick up paychecks for posting misleading pitches armed with invasive programs.," by Emily Kumler, PC World , June 15, 2004 --- http://www.pcworld.com/news/article/0,aid,116512,00.asp 

It's tough enough sometimes to figure out where you picked up that spyware, but have you ever wondered who planted that digital parasite?

It's likely a young man, maybe a college student, just making a few bucks spreading pop-up ads that contain a package unwelcome by many. And it's a growing cottage industry

How It Works Spyware follows your Internet surfing habits and serves up advertisements. You typically pick up spyware by clicking on links, which may not make it clear that you're downloading a "bonus" program when you read an ad or download a program you want.

The Federal Trade Commission defines spyware as "software that aids in gathering information about a person or organization without their knowledge and which may send such information to another entity without the consumer's consent, or asserts control over a computer without the consumer's knowledge." The federal government and several states are considering antispyware laws, and Utah recently enacted one.

FTC and industry leaders have urged Congress to resist spyware legislation, instead pushing for the industry to adopt self-regulatory practices. They fear that proposed laws define the practice too vaguely, and would prohibit other marketing practices that benefit consumers. But some lawmakers worry that the tech industry will not regulate spyware aggressively enough to protect consumers.

Meanwhile, computer users continue to face the side effects of spyware on their systems: bogged-down Internet connections, identity theft, lost documents, system problems, and potential loss of privacy.

Who's Behind It The people distributing the links for spyware downloads are paid about 15 cents every time an unsuspecting surfer clicks on their misleading bait.

"Friends signed me up one night, after we'd been drinking," says one twenty-something man, who plants spyware for pay. "They said it was an easy way to make some money."

"All I had to do was sign up and post fake ads, saying things like 'to see my picture click here.' Then when they clicked, it told them they had to download software to see the pictures."

But the user downloaded no pictures; instead, they got the greeting, "Come back later to see my photo." The ad is bogus, but the contamination of the computer is real.

He says open forums and other unregulated sites are the best places to post ads, because large numbers of people are likely to click on the phony links.

"You have to move around," he says, noting that if users complain, he'll be kicked off a site, or a section of a site. For example, he will just move to a different part of a classified advertisement site, he says. "It's really easy, so reposting your ad is not a big deal."

At 15 cents per hit, he got checks every two weeks for a few hundred dollars each.

"I could have made a lot more," he says, adding that he really isn't doing it anymore. "All I had to do was put more ads up and I would have doubled or tripled my profits."

What's the Risk? The foot soldiers who spread spyware may also become victims of the companies behind the software.

Many companies paying individuals to spread spyware post a disclaimer on their own Web site. It often contains a clause telling readers that if they commit fraud the company has the right to pull their paycheck.

However, the new Utah Spyware Control Act and other privacy laws sometimes invoked to combat spyware consider posting spyware to be fraud.

The spyware spreaders may not be reading the disclaimer themselves. But they do understand the company is paying them to trick people into downloading software, the young man says.

Does he feel any remorse for contaminating the computers of naive users? "Look, they're perverts if they click on my ads," he says, noting that the ads imply pornographic pictures await. "I say some nasty stuff, so, no, I don't feel bad." Anyone online should have a spyware blocker, spam blocker, and a firewall anyway, he said. "If they don't, they're just stupid."

A Challenging Battle Placing ads online can be a tempting and easy way to make money from home, notes Ray Everette-Church, chief privacy officer for antispam product vendor Turn Tide.

"It is very successful," Everette-Church says. "Hundreds of thousands of dollars a month is generated in this tiered structural referral." He is serving as an expert witness for the plaintiffs in an ongoing adware case arguing against pop-up ads.

Millions of Americans online haven't protected their PCs, and pursuing perpetrators of spyware is more complicated than in other criminal investigations, according to Mozelle Thompson, an FTC commissioner.

"It's hard to identify how many companies are engaged in dangerous spyware, or spyware in general," Thompson says. "The definition of spyware is too broad."

The surreptitious nature of spyware makes it more difficult to track who, where, and how the spyware is disseminated, Thompson told a House subcommittee at a recent hearing.

"Consumer complaints, for instance, are less likely to lead directly to targets than in other law enforcement investigations, because consumers often do not know that spyware has caused the problems or, even if they do, they may not know the source of the spyware," he said at the April hearing.

How to protect against spyware intrusions into your computer --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/000start.htm#SpecialSection 


June 23, 2004 message from Irv Gleim [irvin_gleim@gleim.com

The IMA will make substantial changes to the CMA Exam beginning July 1, 2004. These changes will include a new essay section that incorporates material from all four exam sections. In addition, CPAs will no longer be waived from the financial accounting and reporting material, and will instead be waived from economics and business applications topics.

However, there is good news; the current exam will be available until December 31, 2007, allowing plenty of time for completion. BUT, you must apply by June 30, 2004. In other words, APPLY NOW! Click the link below to open the online registration form.

https://www.imanet.org/forms/examregform.asp 

Gleim will continue to provide up-to-date materials throughout the current exam's duration. Gleim will also release a new edition for the revised exam this summer so that we will be able to meet all of your students' certification needs. You can view more information on Gleim's CMA Review and see how we will prepare your students to PASS by visiting the link below:

http://www.gleim.com/accounting/cma?lj062204

Bob Jensen's threads examination review courses are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#010303CPAExam 


From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Educators' Review on June 11, 2004

TITLE: Outside Audit: Goodyear and the Butterfly Effect 
REPORTER: Timothy Aeppel 
DATE: Jun 04, 2004 
PAGE: C3 
LINK: http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108629544631828261,00.html  
TOPICS: Accounting Changes and Error Corrections, Pension Accounting, Restatement

SUMMARY: Goodyear Tire & Rubber has announced the amount of its restatement from problems identified in 2003. The company as well has announced further restatements due to changes in the discount rate it uses for pension liability calculations.

QUESTIONS: 
1.) For what reason is Goodyear Tire & Rubber restating earnings for the last five years?

2.) What accounting standards require restatements of past financial results? Under what circumstances are restatements required? What other types of accounting changes are possible? How are these categories of accounting changes presented in the financial statements?

3.) In general, what adjustment is Goodyear Tire & Rubber making to its accounting for defined benefit pension plans?

4.) Discuss the details of the change in accounting for the defined benefit pension plan. Specifically, define the discount rate in question and state how it is used in pension accounting.

5.) Had the company not uncovered the issues identified under question #1, do you think they would be making the changes identified in questions #3 and #4? Why or why not?

6.) Do you think that changes in the discount rate used in pension accounting are made by other companies? When do you think companies might change this rate? In general, what type of accounting treatment would you recommend for such a change? Support your answer.

Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island 
Reviewed By: Benson Wier, Virginia Commonwealth University 
Reviewed By: Kimberly Dunn, Florida Atlantic University

"Outside Audit: Goodyear And the Butterfly Effect:  A Valuation Rate Is Shaved By Half a Point and Presto, $100.1 Million Goes Poof," by Timothy Aeppel, The Wall Street Journal, June 4, 2004, Page C3 --- http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108629544631828261,00.html

There's a costly oddity tucked into Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co.'s recent earnings restatement.

As part of a larger revision reaching back five years, the U.S.'s largest tire maker changed the interest-rate assumptions associated with its domestic retirement plans. The upshot: By slicing half a point off a rate used to value the company's obligations to its pension fund and other post-retirement benefit plans, Goodyear also lopped off a total of $100.1 million in earnings over that period.

This may be the first time a major company has restated earnings for this reason, although it was just one of several accounting issues the Akron, Ohio, tire maker addressed in its restatement announced May 19. Goodyear has identified a series of accounting irregularities over the past year and is the target of a continuing investigation by the Securities and Exchange Commission.

"I have a feeling that while they were scrubbing, they decided to scrub everything," says Jack Ciesielski, publisher of Analyst's Accounting Observer.

Keith Price, a Goodyear spokesman, says the change doesn't mean Goodyear sought to inflate earnings in the past by using an inappropriately high discount rate. Most of the reduction in earnings was the result of Goodyear having to record additional tax expenses, he notes. Mr. Price says Goodyear decided to change its methodology for calculating the rate it uses going forward and, since a broader restatement was already under way, chose to extend the new approach into the past as well.

The root of Goodyear's problem appears to be that it used an uncommon way of calculating the so-called discount rate it assumes for its traditional pension plan. A discount rate is simply an interest rate companies use to convert future values into their present-day terms. Companies calculate the pension-fund discount rate at the end of every year in order to project cash outflows in their retirement plans. The number changes from year to year. But it also tends to get buried in financial footnotes and overlooked.

The higher the discount rate, the less the current value of a company's future obligations to its retirees under its plans. So, in Goodyear's case, the older, higher discount rate lowered the company's projected benefit payments -- which also had the effect of raising its pretax income.

Goodyear's old method of setting the rate was to use a six-month average of corporate-bond rates. That's unusual, though not a violation of generally accepted accounting principles, says Mr. Ciesielski.

The more common and accurate approach is to pick a discount rate based on rates at a point in time near to when the calculations are being done. That provides a better snapshot of reality, especially in an era when rates are falling, as they have in recent years.

Sure enough, Goodyear's old methodology resulted in discount rates that were higher than those used by most other companies during the period in question. For instance, in its restatement, Goodyear cut the rate it used in 2001 to 7.5% from 8%. But a study by Credit Suisse First Boston notes that the median discount rate used by S&P-500 component companies that year was a far lower 7.25%. In fact, the study found only seven companies used rates of 8% or higher in 2001.

Goodyear's numbers are now more in line with other companies' and shouldn't require further adjustment, say analysts. But like many old-line companies with a relatively large cadre of older workers and retirees, Goodyear is expected to face pension problems for years to come, since its plans are underfunded by about $2.8 billion.

While Goodyear's pension concerns are not unique, Mr. Ciesielski says it is unlikely other companies will rush to restate earnings to reflect a new discount-rate assumption. Besides, coming up with the rate is still far from an exact science.

David Zion, CSFB's accounting analyst, says even companies that use identical methodologies can arrive at sharply different discount rates. Those with fiscal years ending in June would have different rates than those with years ending in December, for example. And multinational companies face another complication: "The discount rate for a Japanese pension plan will be different than the discount rate in Turkey," Mr. Zion points out.

In its restatement, Goodyear decreased overall pretax income by $18.9 million for the past five years as a result of its reassessment of the discount rate. And since Goodyear's pension plan is underfunded, the cut in the discount rate also magnified that negative condition. As a result, Goodyear had to add $160.9 million in liabilities to its balance sheet. The new liabilities forced Goodyear to record $81.2 million in additional tax expenses for 2002.

This restatement comes at a time Goodyear's accounting is still under heavy scrutiny. The company launched an internal probe last year after it said it found problems in internal billing and the implementation of a new computer system. It later said it had identified serious misdeeds by top managers in Europe and cases in which U.S. plants understated workers' compensation liabilities.

Bob Jensen' threads on accounting theory are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory.htm 


Question
When is it unlawful for a legally married couple to file a joint tax return?

Answer
In response to an inquiry about tax filings, the Public Advocate  of the United States, Inc. received a letter from the IRS  confirming that it is unlawful for same-sex couples to file their taxes under any married status, even if the jurisdiction  in which the couple lives, recognizes such a union.

http://www.accountingweb.com/item/99326     

June 16, 2004 reply from Richard Newmark

Bob,

I wonder if Massachusetts same sex couples can file jointly on their Massachusetts state tax returns.

Rick

--------------------------------------

Richard Newmark
Associate Professor of Accounting
Monfort College of Business
Colorado State University
Greeley, Colorado 80639
http://PhDuh.com 

 

June 18, 2004 reply from Bob Jensen

It seems unlike that same-sex married couples can file Mass. Joint returns since the income tax in Mass. is based on the Federal Return where they cannot file joint tax returns.

California said no in AB 205

In 2003, California's legislators extended many of the state-granted spousal rights and responsibilities to domestic partners with Assembly Bill 205. The bill provides many of the rights and responsibilities heterosexual couples have to same-sex couples, including child visitation and custody rights and responsibility for debts to third parties. However, AB 205 does not include, for example, the ability for gay couples to file jointly on their state income tax --- http://www.californiaaggie.com/article/?id=2514 

 


Hi Robert,

I added your document to http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory/WalkerToFarrington.htm 

I would not say that we are so much timid as we are squashed by lobbying pressures from industry.

Bob Jensen

Bob

I wish to ask you a favour again. I have written the attached as a submission to a review of the New Zealand Financial Reporting Act 1993. It is currently under review due to the imminent adoption of the IASB's standards. It has thrown New Zealand's application of differential reporting into confusion. My submission deals with the way in which accounting must be the pivot upon which creditor protection functions. What I would hope Americans find interesting is the degree to which we have played out your laws - the corporate solvency test and GAAP - in a way you are too timid to do.

The Government's discussion document to which the submission is a response is on this link:

http://www.med.govt.nz/buslt/bus_pol/bus_law/corporate-governance/financial-reporting/part-one/media/minister-20040315.html 

The letter is self-contained aside from the specific commentary at the end. Could you find space for it on your web-site?

Robert B Walker




Some old ones and some new ones forwarded by Auntie Bev

Ramblings of a retired mind

I was thinking about how a status symbol of today is those cell phones that everyone has clipped on. I can't afford one, so I'm wearing my garage door opener. Now everyone thinks that I'm cool, too.

I was thinking that women should put pictures of missing husbands on pop cans!

I was thinking about old age and decided that it is when you still have something on the ball but you are just too tired to bounce it.

I thought about making a fitness movie for folks my age and call it, "Pumping Rust".

I have gotten that dreaded furniture disease.... that's when your chest is falling into your drawers!

You know when people see a cat's litter box, they always say, "Oh, have you got a cat?" Just once I wanted to say, "No, it's for company!"

Employment application blanks always ask who is to be notified in case of an emergency. I think you should write, "A good doctor!"

Does a clean house indicate that there is a broken computer in it?

Why is it that no matter what color of bubble bath you use, the bubbles are always white?

Why do people constantly return to the refrigerator with the hopes that something new to eat will have materialized?

Why do people keep running over a string a dozen times with their vacuum cleaner, then reach down, pick it up, examine it, then put it down to give their vacuum one more chance?

Why is it that no plastic garbage bag will open from the end you first try?

Is it true that the only difference between a yard sale and a trash pickup is how close to the road the stuff is placed?

In winter, why do we try to keep the house as warm as it was in summer when we complained about the heat?

Why do old men wear their pants higher than younger men?

How come we never hear any "father-in-law" jokes?

If at first you don't succeed, shouldn't you try doing it like your wife told you to?

Why is it that men can react to broken bones as 'just a sprain' and deep wounds as 'just a scratch', but when they get the sniffles they are deathly ill 'with the flu' and have to be bedridden for weeks?

I was thinking about how people seem to read the Bible a whole lot more as they get older then it dawned on me, they were cramming for their finals. As for me, I'm just hoping God grades on a curve rather than pass/fail.


Forwarded by Auntie Bev --- Who's On First? --- http://susie1114.com/WhosOnFirst.html 


While driving to Concord, NH yesterday, Bob and Erika got silly in the car.  We dreamed up the following additions to the senior citizen's glossary.

Varicose veins = geriatric tattoos

Farts = prune tunes

Drool = cool

Nose pickin' = finger lickin'

I think we're losing it!


Golf quips forwarded by Auntie Bev

A man comes home from work and is greeted by his wife dressed in a sexy little nightie. "Tie me up," she purrs, "and you can do anything you want." So he ties her up and goes out for a round of golf. ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

A golfer asked his friend, "Why are you so late?" The friend replied, "It's Sunday. I had to toss a coin between going to church or playing golf and it took 25 tosses to get it right!" 
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

A gushy reporter told Jack Nicklaus, "You are spectacular, and your name is synonymous with the game of golf. You really know your way around the course. What's your secret?" Nicklaus replied, "The holes are numbered." ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

A young man and a priest are playing together. At a short par-3 the priest asks, "What are you going to use on this hole, my son?" The young man says, "An 8-iron, father. How about you?" The priest says, "I'm going to hit a soft seven and pray." The young man hits his 8-iron and puts the ball on the green. The priest tops his 7-iron and dribbles the ball out a few yards. The young man says, "I don't know about you father, but in my church when we pray, we keep our head down." ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

An American went to Scotland and played golf with a newly acquainted Scottish golfer. After a bad tee shot, he played a "Mulligan" which was an extremely good one. He then asked the Scot, "What do you call a Mulligan in Scotland?" "We call it hitting 3." 
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Police are called to an apartment and find a woman holding a bloody 5-iron standing over a lifeless man. The detective asks, "Ma'am, is that your husband?" "Yes," says the woman. "Did you hit him with that golf club?" "Yes, yes, I did." The woman begins to sob, drops the club, and puts her hands on her face. "How many times did you hit him?" "I don't know, five, six, maybe seven times... just put me down for a five."


Forwarded by Dr. D

Actually Taken From Classified Ad's In Newspapers:

 FREE YORKSHIRE TERRIER. 8 years old. Hateful little dog.  Bites!

 ----------------------------------

 FREE PUPPIES: 1/2 Cocker Spaniel, 1/2 sneaky neighbor's dog

 -----------------------------

 FREE PUPPIES.. Part German Shepherd, part stupid dog

 ------------------------------

 GERMAN SHEPHERD 85 lbs. Neutered. Speaks German. Free

 -------------------------------------

 FOUND: DIRTY WHITE DOG. Looks like a rat ..... been out a while. Better be a reward.

 -----------------------------------

 COWS, CALVES NEVER BRED... Also 1 gay bull for sale

 -------------------------------

 NORDIC TRACK $300 Hardly used, call Chubby

 -------------------------------------

 GEORGIA PEACHES, California grown - 89 cents lb.

 -----------------------------------------

 NICE PARACHUTE: Never opened - used once

 -----------------------------------------

 JOINING NUDIST COLONY! Must sell washer and dryer $300


Received from Noelle

Physicians: a. The number of physicians in the U.S. is 700,000. b. Accidental deaths caused by Physicians per year are 120,000. c. Accidental deaths per physician is 0.171. (Statistics courtesy of U.S.Dept. of Health & Human Services)

Now think about this:

Guns: a. The number of gun owners in the e U.S. is 80,000,000. b. The number of accidental gun deaths per year (all age groups) is 1,500. c. The number of accidental deaths per gun owner is 0.000188.

Statistically, doctors are approximately 9,000 times more dangerous than gun owners.

Remember, "Guns don't kill people, doctors do."

FACT: NOT EVERYONE HAS A GUN, BUT ALMOST EVERYONE HAS AT LEAST ONE DOCTOR.

Please alert your friends to this alarming threat. We must ban doctors before this gets completely out of hand!!!!!

Out of concern for the public at large, I have withheld the statistics on lawyers for fear the shock would cause people to panic and seek medical attention!


Forwarded by Paula

A burglar broke into a house late one night. He shone his flashlight around, looking for valuables, and as he picked up a CD player to place in his sack, a strange, disembodied voice echoed from the dark saying, "Jesus is watching you."

He nearly jumped out of his skin, clicked his flashlight off and froze. When he heard nothing more after a bit, he shook his head, promised himself a vacation after the next big score, then clicked the light back on and began searching for more valuables. Just as he pulled the stereo out so he could disconnect the wires, clear as a bell he heard, "Jesus is watching you."

Freaked out, he shined his light around frantically, almost dropping it in horror. Looking for the source of the voice, his flashlight beam came to rest on a parrot off in the corner. "Did you say that?" He hissed at the parrot. Yep," the parrot confessed, then squawked, "I am just trying to warn you."

The burglar relaxed. "Warn me huh? Who the heck are you?" "Moses," replied the bird. "Moses?" the burglar laughed. "What kind of stupid owner would name a parrot Moses?"

The bird promptly answered, "Probably the same owner who named that large Rotweiller, racing towards you, Jesus..."


Forwarded by Dick Haar

An Uncertain Baptism (PG-13)

 

Three little boys were concerned because they couldn't get anyone to play with them. They decided it was because they had not been baptized and didn't go to Sunday school.

So they went to the nearest church. Only the janitor was there. One said, "We need to be baptized because no one will come out and play with us. Will you baptize us?"

"Sure," said the janitor. He took them into the bathroom and dunked their heads in the toilet bowl, one at a time. Then he said, "Now go out and play."

When they got outside, dripping wet, one of them asked, "What religion do you think we are?"

The oldest one said, "We're not Katlick, because they pour the water on you. We're not Bablist because they dunk all of you in it. We're not Methdiss because they just sprinkle you."

The littlest one said, "Didn't you smell that water?"

"Yes. What do you think that means?"

"That means we're Pisscopalians."


Forwarded by Dr. B

WHAT IS A GRANDPARENT?

(taken from papers written by a class of  8-year-olds)

Forwarded by Charles Greulich

"I once wanted to become an atheist but I gave up . . . they have no holidays."
    - Henny Youngman
"Look at Jewish history. Unrelieved lamenting would be intolerable. So, for every ten Jews beating their breasts, God designated one to be crazy and amuse the breast beaters. By the time I was five I knew I was that one."
    - Mel Brooks

"The time is at hand when the wearing of a prayer shawl and skullcap will not bar a man from the White House unless, of course, the man is Jewish."
    - Jules Farber

"Even if you are Catholic, if you live in New York you're Jewish. If you live in Butte, Montana, you are going to be goyish even if you are Jewish."
    - Lenny Bruce

"The remarkable thing about my mother is that for thirty years she served us nothing but leftovers. The original meal has never been found."
    - Calvin Trillin

"Even a secret agent can't lie to a Jewish mother."
    - Peter Malkin

"My idea of an agreeable person is a person who agrees with me."
    - Benjamin Disraeali

"It's so simple to be wise. Just think of something stupid to say and then don't say it."
    - Sam Levenson

"God will pardon me. It's His business."
    - Heinrich Heine

"I went on a diet, swore off drinking and heavy eating, and in fourteen days I had lost exactly two weeks."
    - Joe E. Lewis

"Bankruptcy is a legal proceeding in which you put your money in your pants pocket and give your coat to your creditors."
    - Sam Goldwyn

"A spoken contract isn't worth the paper it's written on."
    - Sam Goldwyn

"I don't want to achieve immortality through my work. I want to achieve immortality through not dying."
    - Woody Allen
"A politician is a man who will double cross that bridge when he comes to it."
    - Oscar Levant

"Too bad that all the people who know how to run this country are busy driving taxis and cutting hair."
    - George Burns

"Liberals feel unworthy of their possessions. Conservatives feel they deserve everything they've stolen."
    - Mort Sahl

"A committee is a group that keeps minutes and loses hours."
    - Milton Berle

"I don't want any yes-men around me. I want everybody to tell me the truth, even if it costs them their jobs."
    - Sam Goldwyn

"Television is a medium because it is neither rare nor well done."
    - Ernie Kovacs

Forwarded by Paula

 

GREAT TRUTHS

GREAT TRUTHS THAT LITTLE CHILDREN HAVE LEARNED:

1) No matter how hard you try, you can't baptize cats. 2) When your Mom is mad at your Dad, don't let her brush your hair. 3) If your sister hits you, don't hit her back. They always catch the second person. 4) Never ask your 3-year old brother to hold a tomato. 5) You can't trust dogs to watch your food. 6) Don't sneeze when someone is cutting your hair. 7) Never hold a Dust-Buster and a cat at the same time. 8) You can't hide a piece of broccoli in a glass of milk. 9) Don't wear polka-dot underwear under white shorts. 10) The best place to be when you're sad is Grandpa's lap.

GREAT TRUTHS THAT ADULTS HAVE LEARNED:

1) Raising teenagers is like nailing Jell-O to a tree. 2) Wrinkles don't hurt. 3) Families are like fudge...mostly sweet, with a few nuts. 4) Today's mighty oak is just yesterday's nut that held its ground. 5) Laughing is good exercise. It's like jogging on the inside. 6) Middle age is when you choose your cereal for the fiber, not the toy.

GREAT TRUTHS ABOUT GROWING OLD

1) Growing up is mandatory; growing old is optional. 2) Forget the health food. I need all the preservatives I can get. 3) When you fall down, you wonder what else you can do while you're down there. 4) You're getting old when you get the same sensation from a rocking chair that you once got from a roller coaster. 5) Its frustrating when you know all the answers but nobody bothers to ask you the questions. 6) Time may be a great healer, but it's a lousy beautician. 7) Wisdom comes with age, but sometimes age comes alone.

THE FOUR STAGES OF LIFE:

1) You believe in Santa Claus. 2) You don't believe in Santa Claus. 3) You are Santa Claus. 4) You look like Santa Claus.

SUCCESS:

At age 4 success is . . . not peeing in your pants. At age 12 success is . . . having friends. At age 16 success is . . . having a driver's license. At age 20 success is .. . . having sex. At age 35 success is . . . having money. At age 50 success is . . . having money. At age 60 success is . . . having sex. At age 70 success is . . . having a driver's license. At age 75 success is . . . having friends. At age 80 success is . . . not peeing in your pants.

Pass this on to someone who could use a laugh.

Always remember to forget the troubles that pass your way BUT NEVER forget the blessings that come each day.


Forwarded by Paula

A story from Minnie sotah near Wes konson

One dark night outside a small town in Minnesota, a fire started inside the local chemical plant and in a blink it exploded into massive flames.

The alarm went out to all the fire departments from miles around. When the volunteer fire fighters appeared on the scene, the chemical company president rushed to the fire chief and said, "All of our secret formulas are in the vault in the center of the plant. They must be saved and I will give $50,000 to the fire department that brings them out intact."

But the roaring flames held the firefighters off. Soon more fire departments had to be called in as the situation became desperate.

As the firemen arrived, the president shouted out that the offer was now $100,000 to the fire department who could bring out the company's secret files.

From the distance, a lone siren was heard as another fire truck came into sight. It was the nearby Norwegian rural township volunteer fire company composed mainly of Norwegians over the age of 65.

To everyone's amazement, the little run-down fire engine, operated by these Norwegians, passed all the newer sleek engines parked outside the plant.....and drove straight into the middle of the inferno!

Outside the other firemen watched as the Norwegian oldtimers jumped off and began to fight the fire with a performance and effort never seen before. Within a short time, the Norsk old timers had extinguished the fire and saved the secret formulas.

The grateful chemical company president joyfully announced that for such a superhuman feat he was upping the reward to $200,000, and walked over to personally thank each of the brave, though elderly, Norsk fire fighters.

The local TV news reporters rushed in after capturing the event on film asking, "What are you going to do with all that money?"

"Vell," said Ole Larson, the 70-year-old fire chief, "da furst ting ve do is fix da brakes on dat damn truck!"


Forwarded by a distant relative Barb Hessel).  For Sven, Ole, and Lena stories, try the following:
       http://www.newnorth.net/~bmorren/olelena.html  (with music)

 

   Subject: Fw: Ole and Lena

   OLE & LENA'S HONEYMOON

   Ole and Lena got married. On their honeymoon trip they were nearing Minneapolis when Ole put his hand on Lena's knee.

   Giggling, Lena said, "Ole, you can go farther than that if you vant to." So Ole drove to Duluth.

 

   OUTHOUSE PROBLEMS

   When Ole accidentally lost 50 cents in the outhouse, he immediately threw in his watch and billfold. He explained, "I'm not going down dere yust for 50 cents."

 

   THAT'S HER!

   A Norwegian appeared with five other men in a rape case police line-up. As the victim entered the room, the Norwegian blurted,

   "Yep, dat's her!"

 

   SWIM COMPETITION

 A Swedish woman competed with a French woman and an English woman  in the Breast Stroke division of an English Channel swim competition. The Frenchwoman came in first, the Englishwoman second. The Swede reached shore completely exhausted. After being revived with blankets and coffee, she remarked, "I don't vant to complain, but I tink dose other two girls used der arms."

 

   FAMOUS INVENTIONS

The Swedes invented the toilet seat.

Twenty years later the Norwegians invented the hole in it.

 

   VE COULDN'T AFFORD MORE

   Two Norwegians from Minnesota went fishing in Canada and returned with only one fish. "The way I figger it, dat fish cost us $400" said the first Norwegian. "Vell," said the other one, "At dat price it's a good ting ve didn't catch any more."

 

   FINGERNAILS

   One day Lena confided to her friend Hilda that she had finally cured her nervous husband, Ole, of his habit of biting his nails.

   "Good gracious," said Hilda, "How did yew ever dew that?" "It vas really simple," was Lena's reply. "I yust hid his false teeth."

 

   THE RELATIONS

   Ole and Lena were getting on in years. Ole was 92 and Lena was 89.  One evening they were sitting on the porch in their rockers and Ole reached over and patted Lena on her knee. "Lena, vat ever happened tew our sex relations?" He asked. "Vell, Ole, I yust don't know," replied Lena.

"I don't tink ve even got a card from dem last Christmas."

 

   MUSIC SOLUTION

  Ole bought Lena a piano for her birthday. A few weeks later, Lars inquired how she was doing with it. "Oh," said Ole, "I persvaded her to svitch to a clarinet." "How come?" asked Lars. "Vell," Ole answered, "because vith a clarinet, she can't sing.

 

   THE PRANK CALL

 The phone rings in the middle of the night when Ole and Lena are in bed and Ole answers. "Vell how da hell should I know, dats two tousand miles from here" he says and hangs up. "Who vas dat?" asks

   Lena. "I donno, some damn fool wanting to know if da coast vas clear.


The younger genereration --- http://www.bottlejockey.com/ 


For my generation:  I especially remember "those?"  (Turn up your speakers full blast) --- http://www.singingman.us/DYR.htm 
The home page is at http://www.singingman.us (with more songs)




And that's the way it was on June 25, 2004 with a little help from my friends.

Jesse's Wonderful Music for Romantics (You have to scroll down to the titles) --- http://www.jessiesweb.com/

I highly recommend TheFinanceProfessor (an absolutely fabulous and totally free newsletter from a very smart finance professor) --- www.FinanceProfessor.com 

 

Bob Jensen's bookmarks for accounting newsletters are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#News 

News Headlines for Accounting from TheCycles.com --- http://www.thecycles.com/business/accounting 
An unbelievable number of other news headlines categories in TheCycles.com are at http://www.thecycles.com/ 

 

Jack Anderson's Accounting Information Finder --- http://www.umsl.edu/~anderson/accsites.htm

 

Gerald Trite's great set of links --- http://www.zorba.ca/bookmark.htm 

 

Paul Pacter maintains the best international accounting standards and news Website at http://www.iasplus.com/

 

The Finance Professor --- http://www.financeprofessor.com/about/aboutFP.html 

 

Walt Mossberg's many answers to questions in technology --- http://ptech.wsj.com/

 

How stuff works --- http://www.howstuffworks.com/ 

 

Household and Other Heloise-Style Hints --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob3.htm#Hints 

 

Bob Jensen's video helpers for MS Excel, MS Access, and other helper videos are at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/ 
Accompanying documentation can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/default1.htm and http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm 

 

Click on www.syllabus.com/radio/index.asp for a complete list of interviews with established leaders, creative thinkers and education technology experts in higher education from around the country.

 

Professor Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-999-7347 Fax: 210-999-8134  Email:  rjensen@trinity.edu  

 

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June 10, 2004

Bob Jensen's New Bookmarks on June 10, 2004
Bob Jensen at Trinity University 

I transitioned to the White Mountains of New Hampshire for an eight-month sabbatical leave.  Since this is a research leave, I'm not certain I will most likely put out fewer editions of New Bookmarks.  However, courtesy of Go-To-My-PC, I am issuing the first edition of New Bookmarks from the Sugar Hill where the absolutely beautiful Lupin Festival is now in progress --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/NHcottage/NHcottage.htm

For my generation:  I especially remember "those?"  (Turn up your speakers full blast) --- http://www.singingman.us/DYR.htm 
The home page is at http://www.singingman.us (with more songs)

NOVA: World in the Balance (Population Time Bomb) --- http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/worldbalance/

American soldiers are taking abuse --- http://www.chromedomezone.com/ 


Quotes of the Week

Faster horses, younger women, older whiskey, and more money --- I have a lot of happiness!
To be without some of the things you want is an indispensable part of happiness.
Bertrand Russell

While some American scientists worry that the United States may be losing some of its edge, there is a recognition here that something basic has to change if Europe is to regain the luster it lost some time ago.
Richard Bernstein (See below)

CDs and DVDs Not So Immortal After All --- 
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/disc_rot
 

Experts continue to urge Congress to cut the growth of Social Security, warning that the nation faces unsustainable deficits if action isn't taken. What do you think?
"This certainly is bad news for the elderly, coming as it does on the heels of the Federal Aging and Ice Floes Act."
Julie Hunt, Teacher, The Onion --- http://www.theonion.com/wdyt/index.php?issue=4018 

In essence, the U.S. tax code gives [U.S. multinationals] more in tax breaks for foreign operations than it collects in revenues.
J
ohn D. McKinnon (See below)

We forget our faults easily when they are known to ourselves alone.
François Duc de La Rochefoucauld

A tragic indicator of the values of our civilization is that there's no business like war business.
Douglas Mattern

He is the most neglected, first because he was a relentless climber (and nobody has unalloyed views about ambition), second because he was a great champion of commerce (and nobody has uncomplicated views about that either) and third because his most bitter rivals, Thomas Jefferson and John Adams, outlived him by decades and did everything they could to bury his reputation. So there is no Hamilton monument in Washington, but at least we now have Ron Chernow's moving and masterly ''Alexander Hamilton,'' which is by far the best biography ever written about the man.
David Brooks, "'Alexander Hamilton': Rich Uncle of His Country," The New York Times, April 25, 2004 --- http://www.nytimes.com/2004/04/25/books/review/25BROOKST.html?ex=1084248000&en=1c2863909e077120&ei=5070 

In war-time, truth is so precious that she should always be attended by a bodyguard of lies.
Winston Churchill

Yet, seldom if ever does one feel there is anything mean-spirited in Gielgud's opinions. It's simply that he is gloriously, appallingly, hilariously truthful about those who practiced an art that he took with unerring seriousness -- and not least about himself, whom he variously accuses of having a ''beaky'' nose, of being insufficiently energetic to play Macbeth and of a tendency to '' 'hold the pose' and sit down with my knees together.''
Benedick Nightingale, "John Gielgud's Candid Correspondence," May 16, 2004 --- http://www.nytimes.com/2004/05/16/books/review/16NIGHTIN.html 

Should we say the same thing about audited financial statements?
Everything you read in newspapers is absolutely true, except for that rare story of which you happen to have first-hand knowledge.
Erwin Knoll



Bob Jensen's April-June 2004 Updates on Frauds and the Accounting Scandals --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud063004.htm 

Updates on the leading books on the business and accounting scandals --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud.htm#Quotations 

I love Infectious Greed by Frank Partnoy ---  http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud.htm#Quotations 

Fraud Detection and Reporting --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm

Charity Frauds --- Fraud Detection and Reporting --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm 




Question
How can hidden data be removed from WORD doc files, including hidden identifying information in papers sent out for refereeing?

Answer from Richard Campbell

Here is the link to a free Microsoft utility:

http://tinyurl.com/2qaax 

Richard J. Campbell 
mailto:campbell@rio.edu
 

Bob Jensen's threads on network and computing security are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/000start.htm#SpecialSection 


Grade Inflation versus course evaluations --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/assess.htm#GradeInflation 


From the AACSB
Fall 2003 Business Faculty Mean Salaries by Faculty Rank and Carnegie Classification ---- http://www.aacsb.edu/publications/enewsline/Vol-3/Issue5/dd-salaries-rank-carnegie.asp 


Working Women 1870-1930 (History from Harvard) --- http://ocp.hul.harvard.edu/ww/ 

This is the prototype of the Open Collections Program Women Working project. This site will provide access to digitized books (over 2000), manuscripts (10,000 pages) and images (1,000) from the collections of Harvard University Libraries and Museums on the topic of women in the U.S. economy from 1870-1930


Women at Work in the 21st Century

"One-in-Five Women Are Paid Less and Have Fewer Career Opportunities," The AccountingWeb, June 7, 2004 --- http://www.accountingweb.com/cgi-bin/item.cgi?id=99267 

Pay disparity continues to be a concern for one-in-five women who say they are paid less than men with similar talents and experience. The same amount of women reported they have fewer opportunities for career advancement than men at their current organizations, according to a new CareerBuilder.com survey. The CareerBuilder.com "Men and Women at Work 2004" survey of men and women was conducted from April 6 to April 19, 2004.

When asked why they think men are paid more, four-in-ten women attribute it to favoritism shown by men in management to other men in the organization. Twenty-four percent of men say women are paid more because of their seniority on the job.

In terms of overall satisfaction with compensation, 54 percent of women say they are unhappy with pay compared to 49 percent of men. The desire to be better compensated may be why 63 percent of women and 57 percent of men say they are unwilling to accept a pay cut, even if it was in exchange for a more satisfying job.

How well one is paid often corresponds with how high one has climbed up the company ladder. While women feel they have fewer opportunities for career advancement than men, four-in-ten men and women agree that career advancement opportunities are lacking at their present employers.

While almost half of both men and women are satisfied with their career progress to date, three-in-ten men and women are dissatisfied.

"Thirty-one percent of both men and women are dissatisfied with their career progress, which is often measured by pay and title," said Rosemary Haefner, Vice President of Human Resources for CareerBuilder.com. "To enhance job satisfaction and retain key workers, employers need to ensure that their compensation is competitive within their industry and region and carve out promising career paths for their workers."

When asked about interactions in the workplace, around half of men and women said they are not bothered by behaviors of the opposite sex. However, ten percent of men say they are annoyed by women who talk excessively or gossip and 8 percent feel that women use their feminine attributes to their advantage. Eleven percent of women are bothered by men who exhibited some form of sexual harassment (inappropriate behavior, sexual comments or unwanted physical contact) and seven percent say they are irritated by men who act arrogant or superior.

Continued in the article

Things are a bit better for women in public accounting --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#careers 


"Can't stop the pop-ups," by Stefanie Olsen, Wired News, June 4, 2004 --- http://news.com.com/Can%27t+stop+the+pop-ups/2100-1024_3-5226273.html?tag=nefd.lede 

Google's pop-up blocker, included as part of the Web search engine's popular browser plug-in, "worked fantastically well for about two months, blocking everything," said Haigh, a photographer from the United Kingdom. "Then the odd pop-up started to appear, mainly on highly ad-displaying sites based in the United States."

"I know they are on the increase because they are annoying me again," he said, adding that he's received three this week.

Pop-up purveyors are finding ways around popular new filters that aim to stomp them out, the latest sign of an Internet arms race over one of the most effective and controversial Web advertising formats around.

Google, America Online, Yahoo, EarthLink, Microsoft and a slew of niche software developers have begun offering consumers easy-to-install, free blocking software. As much as 30 percent of the Internet population uses a pop-up guard, according to estimates from ad technology companies. That number is set to soar when Microsoft releases an update to its Windows XP operating system later this summer that is expected to include a pop-up blocker for its Internet Explorer Web browser, which serves about nine in 10 people who surf the Web.

Because IE so thoroughly dominates the browser market, ad executives and Internet watchers believe the changes could finally burst the bubble for pop-ups.

But marketers intent on preserving and extending the lucrative format have already developed workarounds that are duping existing blockers, setting the stage for a major battle for control over consumer PC screens.

"Relatively quickly (IE) will displace all other pop-up blockers, then people will try to figure out how to get around that," said Richard Smith, a privacy and security expert.

At stake is the future of a form of online advertising that many ad executives say is among the highest performers for Internet marketers--despite severe negative reactions from a majority of Web users.

Continued in the article


Future of the Web

The Web seems to have been with us for a long time, but its life story is just beginning. Where is it headed? A Wired News interview with IBM's Dr. Stuart Feldman

"The Unfolding Saga of the Web," by Michelle Delio, Wired News, May 12, 2004 --- http://www.wired.com/news/infostructure/0,1377,63419,00.html?tw=newsletter_topstories_html 

Arpanet was designed so people could share applications, not information. The idea was that I could sit in my office in UCLA and log on to use some program running on some big supercomputer across the country that was less powerful than your wristwatch probably is. But e-mail turned out to be the killer app, not application sharing.

Now we're moving back -- and forward -- toward sharing applications. The big change will be services, being able to do most of what you need and want to do in your life on the Web. We've already seen that happen with travel and banking. We're starting to see it with health care. Government Web services is about five years out. But eventually we'll be able to conduct much of the business of our lives online.

WN: Once our lives are online, will privacy become more of an issue, or will people just surrender the information because it makes their lives easier?

Feldman: People will definitely give up some control in exchange for convenience. But that will be an individual decision. It always amazes me how much information people are willing to give up just to get a discount or news of a sale. We give out so much information without really thinking about it, and for the most part it doesn't seem to matter much to that many people. But those who are particularly paranoid will be able to protect their privacy.

Privacy is something that each person needs to protect for themselves. It's a common-sense thing. You should know when to "pull down the blinds" when you aren't comfortable with certain information or activities being public. Security is something that probably has to be handled by experts, though. When regular people try to secure their network or computer they usually mess it up. So we'll see more security services as connectivity becomes ubiquitous and we move more and more critical information online. The underlying net will be much more secure, or at least portions of it will be.

WN: Just portions?

Feldman: Security in the future will probably involve ways of determining who or what your computer is connecting to. There will be "safe neighborhoods" online and not-so-safe ones. You'll be free to go where you want, but at least you'll always know where you are. Now it's sometimes hard to tell if you're in a good or bad neighborhood.

But it won't be all serious, I promise. There is meta fun coming too. The thing we don't know yet is what will happen when all these new features begin to interact. There are so many possibilities.

Some terminology such as ARPANet and World Wide Web are defined at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245gloss.htm 


No Wires, No Rules
New wireless technologies will soon reconfigure the Web using radio spectrum that doesn't cost a dime

"No Wires, No Rules," by Heather Green, Business Week, April 28, 2004 --- http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/04_17/b3880601.htm?c=bwwireless_051304&n=link1&t=email 

High-speed Internet access has been as rare as sunshine in winter in Campsie, a tiny village on the northern coast of Northern Ireland. The town is located in a sparsely populated rural area, which makes it too expensive to install traditional broadband technology. And the town is too far from larger cities like Londonderry to use their Internet facilities.

The people of Campsie shouldn't give up hope, though. Earlier this year, British telephone giant BT Group PLC (BT ) invited about 100 Web surfers in the village and three other rural areas to sign up for a promising new wireless Internet service. BT has installed a series of radio towers that beam signals across the countryside to small antennas on the sides of customers' homes. The system is about as fast as traditional broadband but much cheaper to set up. Why? BT is using less-expensive equipment and a free, unlicensed part of the radio spectrum, avoiding billions of dollars in fees. If the test in Campsie goes well, BT may roll out the service to consumers across Britain by next year. "This will revolutionize society, just as mobile telephony revolutionized society in the 1980s," says Mike Galvin, director of Internet operations at BT.

It's just one example of how the unlicensed portion of the radio spectrum is turning into a hothouse of technological innovation. For years, these radio frequencies were neglected, the lonely domain of cordless phones and microwave ovens. In the past few years, however, engineers at institutions from Massachusetts Institute of Technology to Dutch giant Royal Philips Electronics (PHG ) have been hard at work on a grander vision for the unlicensed radio frontier. That tinkering is what sparked the creation of Wi-Fi, the wildly popular wireless Net technology that took off last year with the support of chip giant Intel Corp. (INTC ).

Wi-Fi is just the first step, though. Hard on its heels are four equally innovative technologies -- WiMax, Mobile-Fi, ZigBee, and Ultrawideband -- that will push wireless networking into every facet of life, from cars and homes to office buildings and factories. These technologies have attracted $4.5 billion in venture investments over the past five years, according to estimates from San Francisco-based investment bank Rutberg & Co. Products based on them will start hitting the market this year and become widely available in 2005. As they do, they will expand the reach of the Internet for miles and create a mesh of Web technologies that will provide connections anywhere, anytime. "Now you have a toolbox full of wireless tools that can help with each problem, whether it's reaching a couple of inches or a couple of miles," says Ian McPherson, president of Wireless Data Research Group, a market research firm in San Mateo, Calif.

These technologies will usher in a new era for the wireless Web. They'll work with each other and with traditional telephone networks to let people and machines communicate like never before. People in what have been isolated towns, be it in Ireland or Idaho, will find themselves with blazingly fast Net connections. Zooming down the highway, you'll be able to use a laptop or PDA to check the weather or the traffic a few miles ahead. Back at home, couch potatoes will be able to dish up movies from their PC and transfer them to the flat screen in the living room -- without any wires at all. And tiny wireless sensors will control the lights in skyscrapers, monitor utility meters in suburban neighborhoods, even track toxicity levels in wastewater. This will give rise to the Internet of Things, networks of smart machines that communicate with each other.

What are the technologies behind this vision of the future? ZigBee, along with its radio standard, is the technology that coordinates communication among thousands of tiny sensors. These sensors can be scattered throughout offices, farms, or factories, picking up bits of information about temperature, chemicals, water, or even motion. They're designed to use little energy because they'll be left in place for five or 10 years and their batteries need to last. So they communicate very efficiently, passing data over radio waves from one to the other like a bucket brigade. At the end of the line, the data can be dropped into a computer for analysis or picked up by another wireless technology like WiMax. Products based on ZigBee, which has been nurtured by giants Philips and Motorola, are expected to start hitting the market later this year.

HUGE HOT SPOTS
WiMax is similar to Wi-Fi. Both create "hot spots," or areas around a central antenna in which people can wirelessly share information or tap the Net with a properly equipped laptop. While Wi-Fi can cover several hundred feet, WiMax has a range of 25 to 30 miles. That means it can be used as an alternative to traditional broadband technologies, which use telephone and cable pipes. It's an early version of WiMax that's bringing the Net to Campsie. WiMax can't be used right now if you're moving, say in a car. But backers of the technology, including Intel and Alcatel (ALA ), plan to have a mobile version out within a few years. A similar standard, known as Mobile-Fi, will be available two or three years from now. It will let people surf the Net at speeds even faster than their home broadband links today -- while they're racing along on a train or in a car.

Ultrawideband serves a very different purpose. The technology lets people move massive files quickly over short distances. In the home, that will allow users to zap, say, an hourlong Sopranos show from a PC to the TV without any messy cords. On the road, a driver who has his laptop in the trunk receiving data over Mobile-Fi could use Ultrawideband to pull that information up to the handheld computer in the front seat. Although the standard hasn't been finished yet, Motorola already is selling chips based on an early version of the technology.

One reason for this flurry of innovation now is the nature of unlicensed spectrum. Traditionally, a big company like AT&T Wireless (AWE ) paid billions of dollars to the federal government for an exclusive license to use a swath of the radio waves. That allowed the company to provide mobile-phone service to its customers without any interference, but it blocked other players from using the same radio frequencies. By contrast, most of these technologies use unlicensed spectrum. That means that anyone -- really, anyone -- can try out any idea they can imagine on those frequencies. Think of it as open-mike night at the local pub. "The licensed world tends to move in this fairly ponderous way, but with unlicensed spectrum people can try out other things and learn there is a whole market sitting out there," says Kevin Werbach, an independent technology strategy consultant.

Wi-Fi set the pattern for stardom that these emerging technologies hope to emulate. A group of companies got together to establish a standard for the technology, touching off a virtuous cycle. High volumes brought the cost of Wi-Fi gear down, low costs boosted demand, and strong demand led to even higher volumes. Now, Intel, which stoked the frenzy with a $400 million marketing push last year, sells its Wi-Fi chips to computer makers for $20 each, down from $45 a year ago. Some 54 million laptops, PDAs, and other devices with Wi-Fi are expected to be sold this year, according to researcher In-Stat/MDR, four times as many as in 2002.

For all their promise, these new technologies face steep challenges. Giants are battling over the exact standards for Mobile-Fi and Ultrawideband, and a final resolution may not come before 2006. Until that happens, equipment makers won't be able to start mass production, meaning costs won't be driven down by economies of scale. Mobile-Fi, which is planned for licensed spectrum, may be subsumed by WiMax once it adds mobile capabilities.

What's more, these innovations aren't emerging in a vacuum. Cellular companies already are rolling out technology that will let their customers get speedy Net connections on their mobile phones or laptops. This third-generation, or 3G, gear will compete directly with WiMax and Mobile-Fi. Verizon Wireless installed its 3G networks in Washington, D.C., and San Diego last year, and it plans to add 98 more markets by the end of 2005. Other cellular companies are providing similar service in the U.S., Europe, and Asia. The 3G technology may be slower than WiMax, but it has the benefit of being reliable -- and available. "WiMax, all of a sudden, has caught a lot of attention, but we have been commercial for two years," says John Hambidge, senior director of marketing at IPWireless Inc., which makes 3G equipment. "We have a huge time-to-market advantage."

Even if WiMax and its brethren can compete with 3G, another challenge looms: a spectrum shortage. As all these devices begin chattering away over the same radio frequencies, they may begin to bump into each other. To avoid such a shortage, Intel (INTC ), Microsoft (MSFT ), and other tech companies are lobbying the Federal Communications Commission for more spectrum. Their target? The major TV broadcasters, including ABC (DIS ), NBC (GE ), and CBS (VIA ), which are sitting on vast amounts of spectrum for transmitting TV programs. The FCC long has supported the development of technologies for unlicensed spectrum, but it's unclear whether the commission wants to take on the powerful broadcasters, especially in an election year. "The broadcasters hate it, but as demand just keeps going up, it gets harder and harder to defend policies that are restricting supply," says Michael Calabrese, program director at the New America Foundation, a public policy institute in Washington that advocates providing more spectrum for these new technologies. "Over the long haul, I am optimistic."

AUTOMATION ACCELERATION
One reason for such optimism is that these technologies offer benefits that could ripple through the economy. The wireless Internet promises to spur productivity by collecting data that could never be tracked before and by making information available exactly when it's needed. It will speed automation, allowing people stuck behind, say, a cash register to do more productive work. Already, J.C. Penney salespeople use Wi-Fi to check inventory and prices. Now the technology is moving into construction, rescue services, health care, and other markets. Combined, these technologies are expected to reach $17.3 billion in sales by 2007, up from $3.3 billion in 2003. "The next wave of personal productivity at work is about mobility, people wanting to get access anywhere," says Sean M. Maloney, executive vice-president and general manager of Intel's communications group.


Continued in the article

Bob Jensen's threads on wireless technologies are at http://www.trinity.edu/~rjensen/245glosf.htm#Wireless1 


Congratulations to Paula Bevels Thomas, an accounting professor at Middle Tennessee State University, who is the recipient of the 2004 Distinguished Achievement in Accounting Education Award from the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants --- http://accountingeducation.com/news/news5121.html 

Past recipients are listed at http://www.aicpa.org/members/div/career/edu/winners.htm 


A Machine-To-Machine "Internet Of Things" Facilitating machine-to-machine communication could be a $180 billion business by 2008 -- and mobile-phone companies are scrambling for a piece of the action.

"A Machine-To-Machine 'Internet Of Things'," by Andy Reinhardt, Business Week, April 26, 2004 --- http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/04_17/b3880607.htm?c=bwwireless_051304&n=link2&t=email 

For years, tech visionaries have spun dreams of a world of connected, communicating machines -- what they call the Internet of Things. Some gurus predict that within a few years, there could be more gizmos chattering away over the Net than there are people. New wireless technologies such as Wi-Fi and ZigBee that can link computers, consumer electronics, vehicles, and millions of other devices are vastly speeding the process. "This is going to be very big," says Ian Barkin, managing director of researcher FocalPoint Group in San Francisco. By 2008, he figures, machine-to-machine (M2M) communication could drive a $180 billion annual business in hardware, software, and services, up from about $34 billion today.

These talkative devices need an on-ramp to the Internet to share their information. And that's where mobile-phone companies see opportunity. Equipment makers such as Nokia Corp. (NOK ) and Sony Ericsson Mobile Communications are churning out tiny cellular radios that cost as little as $30 -- half the price of a few years ago -- that can be built into everything from cars to home heart monitors. Once fitted, the devices could send status reports or cries for help. Large mobile operators such as Sprint PCS Group (PCS ) and Singapore Telecommunications (SGTSY ) are waking up to the market. FocalPoint thinks carriers could score $2.5 billion in revenues this year and $10 billion in 2008 from transmitting M2M data.

Nobody has pursued machine-to-machine communications harder than France Télécom's (FTE ) mobile subsidiary, Orange. On Apr. 8, the company rolled out an ambitious program called M2M Connect that offers lower data prices and a suite of software tools to help European companies jump on the M2M bandwagon. It's a big step from a few years ago, when overpriced services and immature technology made M2M a nonstarter for carriers. Philippe Bernard, vice-president of Orange Business Solutions, figures M2M applications could hit 20% of the company's data traffic in three years.

Large corporations already are discovering new applications for wireless. Nestlé (NSRGY ) is installing hundreds of ice-cream vending machines in France and England that send daily reports on their sales and notify drivers if they're running low on Maxibon sandwiches or Extrême cones. Canadian train and plane maker Bombardier Inc. (BBD.B ) has fitted 1,000 railcars in Britain with radio devices that transmit reams of preventive maintenance data. And Dutch giant Royal Philips Electronics (PHG ) wants to put wireless links in all of its products, from entertainment gear to medical systems. It's even developing technology that links light fixtures using ZigBee radios. That will let companies monitor and control usage without building costly wired networks. ZigBee systems can even be tied into the mobile network. That way, if the lights are left on over the weekend, the building manager could be notified with a text message on his mobile phone -- and he could message back to turn them off.

Making big M2M applications fly is still tricky. The toughest problem is tying scads of connected gizmos into legacy corporate-data systems. Solving this problem is spurring companies to collaborate. Software giant SAP (SAP ) struck a partnership with Coca-Cola Enterprises Inc. (CCE ) in February to help it link a new automated bottle-delivery system to its central databases. And Nokia is teaming with Hewlett-Packard Co. (HPQ ) to develop computer systems that are better able to track and manage wireless-enabled assets.

In the end, companies likely will harness a mix of wireless systems. Packages in the back of a truck might talk to the driver using a ZigBee network, sending a warning if something tips over or breaks. At the loading dock, signals could be gathered and sent to tracking systems via Wi-Fi. On the road, the data would phone home over the cellular network. It's that enticing mix of local and remote communications, all seamlessly linked together, that's inspiring a rush to construct the new Internet of Things.

Continued in the article


"US to ban up-skirt voyeur photos," by Lucy Sherriff, The Register, May 13, 2004 --- http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/05/13/us_bans_knicker_shots/ 

The US moved closer today to banning so-called "up-skirt" photography, under the proposed Video Voyeurism Prevention Act.

The bill specifically bans deliberately taking pictures of an unconsenting "individual's naked or undergarment clad genitals, pubic area, buttocks, or female breast...under circumstances in which that individual has a reasonable expectation of privacy regarding such body part or parts".

Translating from the wonderfully colourful legalese, this means that if you go outside, no one is allowed to stick a camera up your skirt and take a picture. It also says you have a right to privacy in places where you would normally take your clothes off without being watched, such as hotel rooms, changing areas in gyms and clothes shops and so on.

It was proposed last year in response to the increase in covertly-taken snap of bums and cleavage posted to porn websites. Taking the pictures has become easier as camera phones and similar technology gets more accessible.

Voyeuristic photographers armed with camera phones have become such a problem in some areas that gym chains have banned members from using mobile phones.

Continued in the article


"Super-Scanner Sizes Up Clothes Horses," Information Week,  May 13, 2004 --- http://www.informationweek.com/story/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=20300757 

A new digital scanner plots 200,000 data points on a person to help produce, designers claim, better custom-made clothes than a human can create. By Jay Cohen, Associated Press

A five-by-nine foot box that resembles a small recording studio may symbolize the future of the troubled American textile industry. The machine--a digital scanner that can register more than 200,000 data points on the body--generates patterns for custom-made clothing that is faster and cheaper to make than any that could be turned out by a Hong Kong tailor.

Developed by TC2, a Cary firm funded by the textile apparel industry and taxpayers, the machine offers hope for an industry that has been devastated by free trade and lower overseas labor costs.

The idea behind the body scanner is to condition consumers to expect custom-fitted clothing delivered fast and cheaply - something that could make American-based apparel manufacturers more competitive with overseas manufacturers who are less equipped to respond quickly to American fashion trends.

"We're really providing value to the industry by showing them how to cut down that product development time," said Jim Lovejoy, director of industry programs at TC2. "We asked our board, I think it was about three years ago now, 'What can we do to help your business? What would be the key thing?'

Continued in the article


New England Ruins (photography, American history, travel) ---  http://photos.dobi.nu/ 

Bob Jensen's threads on travel are at 


Boston College Center for International Higher Education --- http://www.bc.edu/bc_org/avp/soe/cihe/ 

Bob Jensen's helpers for finding colleges are as follows:

     If you know the name of the college, type it in at http://www.google.com/advanced_search?hl=en 

     For college and scholarship finder links, go to http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob2.htm#Scholarships 

     For distance education programs go to http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/crossborder.htm 


I used an ADAM CD in one module of my dog and pony show on education technology --- http://education.adam.com/default.htm 
ADAM is still widely used in medical schools, college anatomy courses, and even in high schools.


Monitor on Psychology (helpful for finding careers in psychology) --- http://www.apa.org/monitor/ 


Question
Who seriously buys a fake diploma?

Answer
I previously noted how teachers sometimes by fake diplomas in order to get higher pay --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm#DiplomaMill 

Now it turns out that many of our bureaucrats are also shelling out for fake diplomas and transcripts.  More than 400 government employees, including many high-ranking officials, received fake degrees from diploma mills, according to congressional investigators. The findings spur calls for better means to vet academic credentials.

"U.S. Officials Sport Fake Degrees, by Ryan Singel, Wired News, May 13, 2004 --- http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,63436,00.html?tw=newsletter_topstories_html 

At least 28 high-ranking government officials, including three managers responsible for emergency operations at nuclear facilities, have fake degrees from so-called diploma mills, according to a government report issued Tuesday.

The General Accounting Office, Congress' investigative arm, told a Senate committee Wednesday that it found 463 government employees who received degrees from three unaccredited schools: Kennedy-Western University, California Coast University and Pacific Western University.

The investigation, which was prompted by a request from Senate Governmental Affairs Committee Chair Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine), found that these schools -- which charge a flat fee for a degree -- received at least $170,000 in government tuition-reimbursement funds.

The GAO noted that although it was able to identify 28 high-level employees from eight different agencies who had degree-mill diplomas, "this number is believed to be an understatement."

The report (PDF) singled out three National Nuclear Security Administration employees who have top-secret security clearances and "emergency operations responsibilities."

One bought a degree from known diploma mill LaSalle University in Louisiana (not the legitimate LaSalle University in Pennsylvania). Another held a degree from the unaccredited Chadwick University, while the third received a Ph.D. in engineering administration from the unaccredited Columbia Pacific University in 1985, though he completed his class work at the fully accredited George Washington University.

Differences between diploma mills and legitimate though unaccredited schools are not easily defined.

The worst diploma mills simply sell diplomas and fake transcripts, typically for a fee of $1,000 or more. But unaccredited schools range from legitimate distance-learning programs that include course work, tests and teacher feedback to "schools" that grant degrees solely based on life and work experience.

Somewhere in between are schools that give substantial credit for life experience but require some course work, such as submitting book reports.

California officials shut down Columbia Pacific University, which was based in Marin County, California, in 1999, but California considers degrees awarded by the school before 1997 valid.

On Tuesday, during the first of two days of hearings before the Governmental Affairs Committee, Collins said the investigation calls into question the trustworthiness and character of these employees.

"We have clear evidence that tax dollars are being wasted on bogus degrees from unaccredited institutions that the federal government does not even recognize. It is also cause for great concern that federal officials who hold high-ranking positions, and security clearances in some instances, have degrees from diploma mills," Collins said. "It calls into question their qualifications and abilities to do their jobs."

Paul DeSaulniers, a senior special agent at the GAO, told the committee that high-level employees with fake degrees could also be vulnerable to blackmail.

The most recent high-profile diploma-mill scandal came in June 2003 when the Homeland Security Department put Laura Callahan, an associate deputy in the Chief Information Office, on paid administrative leave, pending an investigation into whether the Hamilton University bachelor's, master's and Ph.D. degrees listed on her resume were legitimate.

Hamilton University is a Wyoming-based diploma mill that claims to be accredited by the American Council of Private Colleges and Universities, an organization that shares the same server as the diploma mill and seems only to accredit that school.

Callahan has since resigned, according to the GAO report.

Continued in the article

Bob Jensen's threads on diploma mill frauds are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm#DiplomaMill 


May 13, 2004 message from Linda Kidwell, On Leave at Charles Stuart University, Australia [lkidwell@CSU.EDU.AU

What a great teaching moment we had in Australia last night! There's a reality TV series here, entitled My Restaurant Rules, that involves 5 couples opening their own restaurants. The producers paid the start-up costs, and the 5 compete for who gets to keep their restaurant at the end.

Of course the restaurants are doing a bang up business while they're on TV, but last night the three remaining couples each got a visit from the accountant. He asked for balance sheets, budgets, sample daily P&Ls, and various other information. All three couples looked totally at sea. Although they are apparently required to produce weekly profit statements, they have all fallen behind in their bookkeeping as they struggle to run their businesses, and they had no clue about some of the things he was talking about. He was explaining to one that if they win and keep the restaurant, their primary threat would be losing control of their finances. It was just a great lesson in the importance of understanding a little basic accounting. I just wish I had it on tape!

Linda Kidwell


Malicious programs called browser hijackers install a lot of nasty stuff on people's computers -- primarily hard-core, borderline-illegal pornography. Some victims are facing firings, divorces and even criminal prosecution.

"Browser Hijackers Ruining Lives," By Michelle Delio, Wired News, May 11, 2004 --- http://www.wired.com/news/infostructure/0,1377,63391,00.html?tw=newsletter_topstories_html 

Browser hijackers are doing more than just changing homepages. They are also changing some peoples' lives for the worse.

Browser hijackers are malicious programs that change browser settings, usually altering designated default start and search pages. But some, such as CWS, also produce pop-up ads for pornography, add dozens of bookmarks -- some for extremely hard-core pornography websites -- to Internet Explorer's Favorites folder, and can redirect users to porn websites when they mistype URLs.

Traces of browsed sites can remain on computers, and it's difficult to tell from those traces whether a user willingly or mistakenly viewed a website. When those traces connect to borderline-criminal websites, people may have a hard time believing that their employee or significant other hasn't been spending an awful lot of time cruising adult sites.

In response to a recent Wired News story about the CWS browser hijacker, famed for peddling porn, several dozen readers sent e-mails in which they claimed to have lost or almost lost jobs, relationships and their good reputations when their computers were found to harbor traces of pornography that they insist were placed on their computers by a browser hijacker.

In one case a man claims that a browser hijacker sent him to jail after compromising images of children were found on his work computer by an employer, who then reported him to law enforcement authorities.

"The police raided my house on Sept. 17, 2002," said "Jack," who came to the United States from the former Soviet Union as a political refugee, and has requested that his name not be published. "Nobody gave me a chance to explain. I was told by judge and prosecutor that I will get years in prison if I go to trial. After negotiations through my lawyer I got 180 days in an adult correctional facility. I was imprisoned for 20 days and then released under the Electronic Home Monitoring scheme. I now have a felony sex-criminal record, and the court ordered me to register as a predatory sex offender for 10 years."

Jack originally believed that the images found on his computer were from a previous owner -- he'd bought the machine on an eBay auction. But he now thinks a browser hijacker may have been responsible.

"When I used search engines, sometimes I got a lot of porn pop-ups," Jack said. "Sometimes I was sent to illegal porn sites. When I tried to close one, another five would be opened without my will. They changed my start page, wrote a lot of illegal porn links in favorites. The only way to stop this was turn the (computer's) power off. But when I dialed up to my server again, I started with illegal site, then got the same pop-ups. There were illegal pictures in pop-ups."

Several of the URLs that CWS injects into Internet Explorer's favorites list also appear in the arrest warrant and other materials from Jack's hearing. CWS works as Jack described -- changing start pages, adding to favorites, popping up porn. But CWS was first spotted several months after Jack's arrest, so it seems unlikely that this particular hijacker is the cause of his problems.

Security experts who were asked to review Jack's claims said it is possible that a browser hijacker could have been the reason porn images were found on Jack's computer. But they also pointed out some discrepancies in the story.

Some of the images were found in unallocated file space, and would have to have been placed there deliberately since cached images from browsing sessions wouldn't have been stored in unallocated space.

Continued in the article

May 3, 2004 reply from Andrew Priest [a.priest@ECU.EDU.AU

There are numerous software tools around to combat this sort problem. Personally I use Ad-aware but there are others. For example you will find a range at http://www.tucows.com/webbrowser_adwarecleaner_default.html .

Cheers Andrew

You can also download free from http://download.com.com/3001-8022-10214379.html 

May 11, 2004 reply from Richard Campbell [campbell@RIO.EDU

"Six Steps to Greater Computer Security"  (with audio)

See http://www.virtualpublishing.net/compswf/step1.html 

Richard J. Campbell 
mailto:campbell@rio.edu
 

This following reply from Paula may be of interest to some of you. She tells how she protects her computer. Paula retired from Trinity's development office and now lives online almost as much as I live online. You can thank her for much of the humor in New Bookmarks.

I must warn you, however, that my security site she refers to is not kept up to date very well. Please do not rely on this for the latest and greatest news.

Bob

-----Original Message----- 
From: Paula 
Sent: Tuesday, May 11, 2004 4:48 PM 
Subject: FW: How Nasty Stuff Gets Into Your Computer

How does nasty stuff get into your computer? How can you protect your computer from "browser hijackers," spyware, Cookies that collect your personal information, etc.? Also, learn how to "opt out" of DoubleClick's cookies and how to send e-mail anonymously. This website was created by Bob Jensen, who is a distinguished professor at Trinity University in San Antonio: A Special Section on Computer and Networking Security http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/000start.htm#SpecialSection  Yes, there is a lot of information here! 

What I do personally to protect my computer: I have Norton Anti-Virus, BlackIce Firewall, and Ad-Aware installed. Norton and Ad-Aware can be scheduled to run daily, weekly, etc. 

In addition, my ISP provides a firewall, spam blocker, and pop-up blocker. If you have any questions about computer security, you should be able to find answers on Bob's website. 

Paula 
"Kwitchyerbellyakin." - Irish saying

May 12, 2004 reply from David Coy [dcoy@ADRIAN.EDU

I received the following from out IT guys here at Adrian College. FYI

David Coy 
Adrian College

----- Original Message ----- 
From: Brad Maggard 
To: David Coy 
Sent: Wednesday, May 12, 2004 12:05 PM Subject: 
Re: How Nasty Stuff Gets Into Your Computer

There is no way to actually defend yourself against such programs other than simple smart web browsing. Whenever a window pops up that asks you to agree to any sort of disclaimer or install any sort of program, you must read carefully - and I would only suggest agreeing to the major players (Microsoft, Macromedia, Quicktime, etc)

Once your computer has fallen victim to a browser hijacker, it must be removed using several utilities available on the net. there is a program called "CWShredder" that takes care of "CWS" (cool web search) which is probably the most destructive of them all. Other hijackers can be taken care of by a program called "Hi-Jack This" which removes several of the known hijacking aplications on the net.

Ad-Aware, available at www.lavasoft.de , is another tool to remove Mal-ware and Ad-ware.

All of this stuff can be found by doing a google search on the aforementioned removal utilities.

-Brad

May 12, 2004 reply from Scott Bonacker [lister@BONACKERS.COM

I would also suggest using a HOSTS file.

See links at: http://www.smartin-designs.com/ 

Scott E Bonacker, CPA 
820 E. Primrose 
Springfield, MO 65807 
Phone 417-883-1212 Cell 417-830-3441 Fax 417-883-4887

 

May 11, 2004 reply from computer scientist John Howland [jhowland@ariel.cs.trinity.edu

It is a never ending source of amazement to me that millions of people put up with this kind of problem when none of it is necessary if you use a Unix system such as Mac OSX or Linux.

Why do you do it? Suppose that when you bought a new Toyota or Ford or BMW you also had to go out and buy all these (sometimes) expensive accessories and (sometimes) have to pay someone to install them just in order to be able to use (drive) your new car. Moreover, these accessories become obsolete (sometimes in a few months/days/hours) and need to be re-purchased and installed.

In the automotive field we have laws which protect consumers. Where are the computer consumer protection laws?

Microsoft says that security fixes are a couple of years away. Do you believe they will meet that schedule? They have been significantly late on every major project introduction in the history of the company.

Again, it is a no-brainer to simplify one's digital existence by avoiding Microsoft products completely. Plus, there is a hidden bonus for those that so choose. It is significantly less expensive!

John

May 13, 2004 reply from David R. Fordham [fordhadr@JMU.EDU

Bob, I really like John Howland's analogy with the cars.

So I'll answer John: the reason I put up with it is, the places I want to go are accessible only by car. My migrating to Linux or other "non-Microsoft" operating system would be like my buying a boat! Sure, I suppose there are restaurants, shopping malls, vacation spots, and other "applications" which I can get to by boat, some of which are every bit as good as the shopping malls, restaurants, and so forth that I can drive to. But there are many more choices accessible by car, and what's more, the upkeep on a boat has its own headaches, and I'd have to learn marine navigation, which is probably similar to, but still different from, navigating by car. I don't mean to denigrate boat owners, they are some fine people, and they have their reasons for preferring the marine way of life. But given the national network of roads, the interchangeability and standardization, I'll put up with some flat tires, potholes, alignment troubles, and dusty dirt roads for the convenience of occasionally getting on the Interstate and boogying to the huge selection of applications I can get to by car but not by boat...

Follow the analogy?

(Ironically, one of my greatest pleasures is canoeing around the Okeefenokee Swamp Wilderness Area, a place accessible only by boat!)

And the "R." in my name stands for Ronald... as in "Captain Ron", for those of you who remember the movie...

David R. Fordham 
PBGH Faculty Fellow 
James Madison University

Bob Jensen's threads on computing and network security are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/000start.htm#SpecialSection 


"Microsoft to Battle Spyware," by Amit Asaravala, Wired News, May 13, 2004 --- http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,63440,00.html?tw=newsletter_topstories_html

Nearly half the world's computers may soon have built-in protection against debilitating infections of spyware and other unwanted software, thanks to Microsoft's update of the Windows XP operating system.

Expected to be released this summer, the Windows XP Service Pack 2 update will contain no fewer than five new security features designed to ward off the unauthorized installation of software via the Internet, according to Microsoft officials. The company hopes the features will not only quell the growing number of complaints from consumers about Windows XP's susceptibility to spyware, but will also save businesses millions of dollars in tech support calls.

Almost 50 percent of the world's computers run Windows XP, according to IDC Research. The operating system's users have been hit especially hard by spyware and some versions of adware, which collect information about computer users and, in some cases, use that information to pepper the desktop with advertising. The programs often work their way onto computers by hitching rides with unrelated software packages or exploiting security holes in Microsoft's Internet Explorer browser.

"People are feeling out of control and frustrated," said Jeffrey Friedberg, Microsoft's director of Windows privacy. "Millions of dollars are being spent" by Microsoft and other companies to help consumers remove spyware and other deceptive software from their computers, he said. "It's a huge support issue. People have problems and they call their support staff, they call us, they call their ISP."

In an attempt to cut down on calls like these, Microsoft will upgrade Internet Explorer to make it more difficult for users to accidentally download and install spyware programs. The most noticeable of these changes will be the addition of a pop-up blocker, a feature that has existed in competing Web browsers for years.

The blocker will prevent websites from opening new windows on users' computers without permission. Opening new windows on top of other windows is one way malware developers trick Internet users into downloading software that they don't want. It is also the primary technique used by some spyware programs to serve ads to users.

Other changes to Internet Explorer will focus on the security of ActiveX objects, programs that can access almost any portion of the operating system, including the hard drive and user settings. Spyware developers often use ActiveX objects to write files to users' Start folders and to add advertiser-sponsored toolbars to their desktops.

One update would make it more difficult for users to downgrade their Internet security settings to the lowest setting. This will prevent ActiveX objects from being downloaded without first displaying a warning. Another update will suppress downloads of ActiveX objects unless the user explicitly initiates them. Current versions of the browser let website developers initiate downloads.

Other updates include a redesigned security warning and the addition of a Never Install option that allows users to permanently ban a software publisher's ActiveX programs from being downloaded. "This is a change we're making because of the feedback we've received," said Friedberg. "We have had an Always Install option, but users didn't have a way to completely block a software publisher that they don't trust."

Security experts generally welcome the changes, but some wonder why they took so long. "Why this was never in there in the first place, I don't know," said Russ Cooper, editor of the popular NTBugtraq security mailing list and "surgeon general" of TruSecure. "Why somebody could bury something in your desktop setup that you couldn't find, I never understood in the first place."

Still, Cooper said he believes the changes are a step in the right direction. "I do think it'll have an effect on spyware," he said. "You're not going to get rid of it altogether, but at least we'll be able to say to people, 'Look, just install Service Pack 2 and your problems will go away.'"

Bob Jensen's threads on computing and network security are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/000start.htm#SpecialSection 


"Online intrusions more than criminal," by Hiawatha Bray, The Boston Globe, May 10, 2004 --- http://www.boston.com/business/technology/articles/2004/05/10/online_intrusions_more_than_criminal/ 

You should never put any personal information on the Internet that you wouldn't want to see in the newspapers. That's the government's job.

With hardly any fuss, federal, state, and local governments routinely publish on the Internet a variety of sensitive information about us. File for bankruptcy lately? It's probably on there. Did you contribute money to John Kerry's campaign? That's online too. Here's hoping you paid up your property taxes and haven't fallen behind on child support; otherwise there may be an Internet page with your name on it.

As the state's courts wrangle over whether to publish the names of sex offenders online, it's just as well to remember that sex offenders are not the only ones who are forfeiting a measure of privacy. Of course, hardly anyone sheds a tear for the released rapist whose criminal record will be on public display for the rest of his days. Sex offenders rarely know when to quit, and keeping people safe from them matters far more than the offenders' right to be let alone.

Yet it sometimes seems that the convicted creeps have a stronger lobby than the rest of us. The Committee for Public Counsel Services, an organization of Massachusetts public defense attorneys, has fought like a tiger against listing the state's sex offenders online, as 42 other states do. Indeed, the committee persuaded a judge last month to order a halt to the practice.

There's not nearly as much complaint about the other instances in which government agencies publish data that many would rather keep under wraps. Chalk it up to a healthy ambivalence. Americans instinctively favor open government. We want the public's business done out in the open. And so a vast amount of information about the government's dealings with citizens has always been made available to the public, at courthouses, tax assessors' offices, and other such places. Anybody could read the stuff. To read all about the travails of your friends and neighbors, you just had to show up.

Only now, thanks to the Internet, you can forget about the showing-up part. Just log in. It's like having the county clerk's office in your living room. Or your own set of stocks--those wooden hitching posts that 17th-century Puritans set up on public streets. People found guilty of minor crimes were locked in the stocks for a few hours of humiliation.

Throughout the country, governments have reverted to the Puritan custom by running what might be called shame sites-- Web pages that list names and photos of various miscreants. Delinquent property taxpayers, for instance, or deadbeat parents. Last week Massachusetts posted the names of nearly 1,500 individuals and businesses owing at least $25,000 in taxes. And like many other states, Massachusetts has a website listing those who haven't kept up with their child support payments. 

Continued in the article


From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Educators' Review on May 14, 2004

TITLE: Yahoo, Google and Internet Math 
REPORTERS: Scott Thurm and Kevin J. Delaney 
DATE: May 10, 2004 
PAGE: C1 
LINK: http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108415195909406432,00.html  
TOPICS: Earnings Quality, Financial Analysis, Financial Statement Analysis, Internet, Revenue Recognition, Accounting

SUMMARY: Differences in accounting at Yahoo Inc. and Google Inc. make it difficult to compare the financial performance of the two companies. Questions focus on revenue and expense recognition principles.

QUESTIONS: 
1.) What is revenue? What is an expense? Describe the revenue recognition and matching principles.

2.) Explain the primary and secondary qualities of decision usefulness. What property (or properties) of decision usefulness is (are) being compromised by different accounting methods at Yahoo and Google?

3.) Explain the different accounting methods being used for revenue and expense recognition at Yahoo and Google. What differences result in the financial statements?

4.) Explain the difference between recognizing revenue at the gross amount and recognizing revenue at the net amount. Using authoritative guidance, explain when each method is appropriate.

Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island 
Reviewed By: Benson Wier, Virginia Commonwealth University 
Reviewed By: Kimberly Dunn, Florida Atlantic University

"Yahoo, Google and Internet Math," by Scott Thurm and Kevin J. Delaney, The Wall Street Journal, May 10, 2004, Page C1 --- http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108415195909406432,00.html 

Revenue Is Counted Differently By the Web-Search Powerhouses, Creating Confusion for Investors

Yahoo Inc. reported first-quarter revenue of $758 million. Looked at another way, Yahoo said revenue totaled $550 million. Rival Google Inc. said its first-quarter revenue totaled $390 million. Or maybe it was really $652 million.

Confused? Pity the investors trying to place a value on Google for its highly anticipated initial public stock offering.

For guidance, many look at Yahoo, another Internet company with a similar business to Google's and which has been public since 1996. But Yahoo and Google don't count revenue the same way, making it hard to compare many aspects of the two companies' finances. Google uses a more-conservative definition that has the effect of damping its revenue and increasing its profit margins.

The differences demonstrate that accounting standards may be "generally accepted," but they aren't always uniformly interpreted. And details about revenue-recognition policies buried in the fine print of financial statements can trip up less-than-seasoned investors.

In this case, the difference revolves around the way that Yahoo and Google treat revenue from small-text advertisements that they place on other companies' Web sites. The two Internet companies effectively act as technological intermediaries and quasi-advertising agencies, bringing together Web publishers and advertisers. Yahoo and Google get paid each time an Internet user clicks on an ad, then give some of that money to the Web publisher on whose site the ad appeared. (Yahoo and Google also accept ads for their own sites, and both companies account for them in the same way.)

In accounting terms, however, that is where the similarities end. Yahoo counts as revenue the "gross" amount it is paid. It counts its payment to the publisher as an expense, labeled as a "traffic acquisition cost." Google, by contrast, counts as revenue only the "net" amount remaining, after it pays the Web publisher.

Here's how it works in practice: XYZ Corp. places ads on the sites of UVW Corp., through Yahoo, and RST Corp., through Google. Both ads generate $5 in revenue, with $3 going to the publishers. Yahoo would count $5 revenue and book a $3 expense. But Google would record only $2 in revenue.

Experts say the difference shows how accounting practices are still evolving in relatively new forms of commerce such as the Internet. There isn't a universal right answer, they say; the proper accounting depends on the specifics of the advertising contracts.

"Financial reporting in this area is fluid right now," says Paul R. Brown, an accounting professor at New York University's Stern School of Business.

Indeed, until Jan. 1, the same distinction between "gross" and "net" revenue could be seen within two units of InterActiveCorp, the New York-based Internet company.

InterActiveCorp's Expedia travel-agency unit reports revenue on a "net" basis, after paying airlines and hotels. But InterActiveCorp's Hotels.com unit traditionally reported revenue on a gross basis, recording the entire price of a hotel room, including the portion it paid to the hotel operator. Hotels.com switched to reporting net revenue beginning this year, according to a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

In the case of Yahoo and Google, the proper accounting treatment depends on whether the company is merely an "agent" facilitating a deal, or a "principal" that stands to lose money, if, for example, an advertiser fails to pay.

A Yahoo spokeswoman says the company reports gross revenue "based on our interpretation of the accounting guidance and our contractual terms." In SEC filings, Yahoo says it must use gross revenue because it is "the primary obligor" to the publishers.

Although it uses "gross" revenue in its financial reporting, Yahoo stresses its "net" revenue in presentations to analysts and investors. The spokeswoman says Yahoo considers the net figure "of more transparent economic value to investors."

Analysts generally agree. "We actually take a net revenue perspective on their numbers," says Jeetil Patel of Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Mr. Patel says using net revenue makes it easier to understand Yahoo's different businesses and compare current with past results.

Continued in the article

Bob Jensen's threads on revenue accounting are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/eitf01.htm 


From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Educators' Review on May 27, 2004 

TITLE: Google Search: How Does It Value Its Shares? 
REPORTER: Scott Thurm 
DATE: May 13, 2004 
PAGE: C1 
LINK: http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108439355400909719,00.html  
TOPICS: Financial Accounting, Financial Analysis, Financial Statement Analysis, Stock Options

SUMMARY: Jack Ciesielski, publisher of Analysts' Accounting Observer, used Google's disclosures of compensation expense and deferred compensation from its employee stock option plans to estimate the value corporate officers place on their soon-to-be-issued stock.

QUESTIONS: 

1.) In general, summarize the two ways in which Mr. Ciesielski estimated the value placed on Google shares by corporate officers.

2.) What disclosures did Mr. Ciesielski use to estimate the value placed on Google shares by corporate executives? In general, what standards and laws require these disclosures? What specific SEC requirement provided useful information in the disclosures for the first quarter of this year?

3.) Focus on the method of estimation using the deferred compensation account and the SEC requirement reflected in the accounting during the first quarter of this year. Where is "deferred compensation" under stock option plans included in the financial statements? What amount is included in that account? How could Mr. Ciesielski determine that Google added $75.4 million to that account?

4.) Focus on the estimation using the Black-Scholes formula. What is that formula designed to estimate? What inputs must be used to make this estimate? How could Mr. Ciesielski, and Professor Larcker, run this model "backwards"?

5.) What advantage in the marketplace can an analyst obtain by being able to use accounting information in such a clever way as Mr. Ciesielski has done?

Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island 
Reviewed By: Benson Wier, Virginia Commonwealth University 
Reviewed By: Kimberly Dunn, Florida Atlantic University

Bob Jensen's threads on valuation are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/roi.htm 

Bob Jensen's threads on employee stock options are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory/sfas123/jensen01.htm 


The Banker's Glossary --- http://www.capitalaccessarkansas.org/glossary/bankglos.doc 


While some American scientists worry that the United States may be losing some of its edge, there is a recognition here that something basic has to change if Europe is to regain the luster it lost some time ago.
Richard Bernstein, "Halls of Ivy May Receive Miracle-Gro in Germany," The New York Times, May 9, 2004 --- http://www.nytimes.com/2004/05/09/international/europe/09HEID.html 

But there is also a recognition that Heidelberg University, founded in 1386, is not as great as it used to be, and that illustrates a problem becoming more and more widely acknowledged in Germany and elsewhere in Europe. Over the last few decades, on the higher rungs of higher education, the United States has been outpacing pretty much everybody, especially in science and technology.

While some American scientists worry that the United States may be losing some of its edge, there is a recognition here that something basic has to change if Europe is to regain the luster it lost some time ago.

"It is definitely the case that we have not kept up the reputation we had in the past," said Peter Hommelhof, Heidelberg's rector. He quickly added that Heidelberg did a good job of educating its students, despite classes that are too big and financing that is too low, and that it had had major successes in the sciences, medicine and law, three of its strongest areas.

Still, there are many signs that at the very elite level, the international upper crust, Heidelberg, like the rest of Germany, has fallen behind.

In recognition of that problem, Chancellor Gerhard Schröder and the education ministers of the 16 German states have announced a plan to form a group of what are being called elite universities (and elite departments at other colleges) with about $300 million from the German government, starting in 2006.

"It is our common goal to raise the performance of German universities and research to an international top level in the next few years," said the federal education minister, Edelgard Bulmahn, acknowledging that in fact, they are not at the international top level at the moment.

In other countries such a proposal might seem like either a good idea or an inadequate one, but the principle of it would not shake the foundations of the culture. In Germany, where an egalitarian ideal has an almost theological status, the very idea of an elite has a subversive tinge.

"This became especially predominant in university policy in the 1970's, based on Supreme Court decisions that meant there was a development toward mass universities," Mr. Hommelhof said, speaking of the egalitarian ideal.

In 1972, the German courts ruled that any graduate of a gymnasium, the more academically oriented part of the German high-school system, had a right to a university education entirely paid for by the state. At Heidelberg this led to a jump in enrollment, from fewer than 10,000 students to more than 30,000, before it settled to its current level. "The whole notion of an elite was practically taboo," Mr. Hommelhof said.

Not everybody is happy with the idea of elite institutions, in large part because the government's proposal would involve not just money but, in the sharpest departure from the egalitarian ideal, also a much higher degree of selection of some students over others.

That idea has produced a few scattered demonstrations and placards like the one declaring, "Elite for Everybody." But there is little of the continuing, vociferous opposition that other changes, like cutbacks in pensions or medical benefits, have provoked, probably because of a dawning realization that the country has, academically speaking, been living on its past glories.


"The B-School at Company X," by: Sharon Shinn, BizEd from the AACSB, May/June 2004, pp. 32-37 (not free online)

Corporate universities are focused, committed to employee education, and here to stay.  Traditional business schools must learn how to work with them in creative and productive partnerships.

About ten years ago, when corporate universities were exploding onto the scene, sentiment was deeply divided between fear that such institutions would rob business schools of all their students and conviction that corporate universities would be a brief and passing phase.  It turns out that neither expectation was true.  Today's corporate university is an entrenched part of the business landscape, working hard to satisfy both its students and the CEOs of its parent organizations by providing targeted education that can demonstrably improve performance in the workplace.  Today's corporate university also draws heavily on the expertise of traditional four-year universities--and some people believe that broader and stronger partnerships between schools and businesses will shape the future of company-based education.

While the phrase "corporate university" has been used to mean everything from a revamped training department to a degree-granting branch of a major corporation, it's possible to come up with a more exact description.  One good definition comes courtesy of Mark Allen, director of executive education at the Graziadio School of Business and Management at Pepperdine University, Culver City, California, and co-author of The Corporate University Handbook.  He believes a corporate  university must be a strategic tool that helps the parent organization achieve its mission through educational activities.  What's key, he stresses, is that whatever training or learning is involved be tied directly to the strategic mission of the company.

In other words, nobody goes to Corporate U just to kill a few hours.  Such a school offers learning with a purpose--improving a specific employee's performance in a specific area of the job in a way that's measurable.

THE CORPORATE GOALS

Corporate universities exist to fulfill four main goals: to teach topics like leadership and communication to executives; to standardize skills and knowledge for certain jobs within the company; to help the company as a whole develop a unified culture; and to develop strong networks among employees.

Developing "soft skills" is something corporate universities do very well, says Mike Morrison, dean of associate education and development at University of Toyota in Torrance, California.  "Part of it is, we have to," he says.  "Once people are in the work environment, they see that the work world is very relational.  Problem-solving skills, creativity and innovation are in much higher demand, and the ability to self-design work is critical."

Also critical is the ability to provide mission-specific education with instant relevance.  Tom Doyle, director of Menlo Worldwide's Menlo University in Dayton, Ohio, says, "Each of our courses is aligned with the strategic products, services, or value propositions that we take to the marketplace.  There are no electives.  You don't have to have a physical education unit to get through."

Just as important to many corporations is that their universities help them create a single image of the company or a standardized protocol.  Sometimes, as with Menlo University, the school is a consolidation of a disparate collection of training programs that used to be centered in different departments or physical locations.

Continued in the article

Bob Jensen's threads on education are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/0000start.htm 

 


I encountered two BizEd sites.  Only one of these seems to be from the AACSB.

 

A service for students and educators on business and economics related subjects. The site contains:

Current Topics
A magazine style section with features, daily economics and business news, sample exam questions and a searchable archive of key economics and business issues and events.

Learning Materials
Subject by subject resources including notes, worksheets glossaries and more.

Data
Data sets and data skills materials.

Company Info
Frequently asked questions about various companies, company data and links to company case studies.

Virtual Worlds
Large-scale learning resources developed exclusively by Biz/ed including a Virtual Factory and Virtual Economy.

Internet Resources
A searchable and browsable catalogue of over 4300 quality checked Internet resources.

Educators
A section specially designed to help support teachers and lecturers in schools, colleges and higher education.

Bob Jensen's threads on resources for educators are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/0000start.htm 

 

 


From the ECCH newsletter called ECCHO, Spring 2004, Page 1 --- http://www.ecch.cranfield.ac.uk/europe/pdffiles/about/ECCHO/ECCHO32.pdf 

 

ECCH IS PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE THAT agreement has been reached with Harvard Business School Publishing (HBSP) to include inspection copies of HBS cases, enabling users to preview them on-line from 1 April 2004. This development marks a significant enhancement of COLIS, ECCH’s on-line case bibliography. In addition to Harvard Business School cases, registered, authorised, COLIS users will be able to view inspection copies of article reprints from Harvard Business Review, including HBR OnPoint editions, as well as HBSP newsletters: Balanced Scorecard Report, Harvard Management Update, Negotiation and Strategy & Innovation. Features 4 Insight into the world’s most comprehensive case collection A new series presents the ECCH collection and how to access it 6 Case development in Europe – An historical perspective Part two of our series about the origins of case studies 16 Drawing out the characters in cases – the ‘cartoon series’ Using cartoons to accentuate the role of the individual in corporate decision-making 18 Developing European cases – A Polish perspective Dr Mariusz Trojanowski of the Faculty of Management, Warsaw University highlights.

The ECCH home page is at http://www.ecch.cranfield.ac.uk/ 


You may or may not like Google's search results. You may disagree with its search methods. But with Google, the search results you see are strictly those that its search methodology yields. By contrast, at major competitors like Yahoo and Microsoft's MSN, the first search results you see are there, at least in part, because companies paid to place them there.
Walter Mossberg (see below)

 

"Clean Image Is So Key To Google's Success, Why Take Gmail Risk?," Walter Mossberg, The Wall Street Journal, May 6, 2004, Page B1 --- http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,personal_technology,00.html 

Truckloads of ink and gigabytes of Internet space are being devoted these days to discussing the merits of Google, the Web's leading search engine. Most of these articles aren't focusing on how Google functions for its users but on its value as an investment in light of the company's announcement last week that it is going public.

I don't give stock tips, and I have no idea whether investing in Google is a good idea. But I want to focus for a few moments here on why Google's stock offering is a big deal in the first place: It's because the company has created a service that works brilliantly for consumers.

Google's initial success was built on its breakthrough search technology, which produced more useful search results, much more quickly, than anyone else. Some analysts believe that edge is waning or is gone. I still think Google is the best, but in any case, there's another secret to Google's success: honesty.

Of all the major search engines, Google is the only one that's truly, scrupulously honest. It's the only one that doesn't rig its search results in some manner to make money.

You may or may not like Google's search results. You may disagree with its search methods. But with Google, the search results you see are strictly those that its search methodology yields. By contrast, at major competitors like Yahoo and Microsoft's MSN, the first search results you see are there, at least in part, because companies paid to place them there.

Google makes money in a traditional way that users understand. It sells ads. These ads are clearly labeled and easily distinguished from the real, unbiased search results. They are triggered by whatever search term a user enters, and they run down the side of the page and, occasionally, across the top. The ones across the top are shaded in color, just to make extra sure nobody confuses them with search results.

This separation of advertising and editorial content is the same one that has been used for a couple of hundred years in newspapers and magazines. People get the distinction.

Continued in article

Bob Jensen's search helpers are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/searchh.htm 


Chaos Seems to Aid Learning
A computer simulation shows that chaotic nerve signals may play a key role in learning motor skills, providing a potential boost for robotics and communications technologies.
http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/rnb_050304.asp?trk=nl


Feelings, for all my life I'll feel it.
Feelings, wo-o-o feelings, Wo-o-o, feelings again in my arms. Feelings...
--- http://www.theromantic.com/lovesongs/feelings.htm 

"A Killer Amp -- for Your Desk Chair," by Walter Mossberg, The Wall Street Journal, May 12, 2004, Page D9 --- http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108431409770808574,00.html?mod=gadgets%5Fprimary%5Fhs%5Flt 

Device Attaches to a Seat To Let Users Literally Feel The Vibes of Music, Games May 12, 2004; Page D9 Is this a great country, or what? Thanks to technology, you soon will be able to not only hear your favorite music and the sound effects of videogames, but to actually feel these sounds, and not just in your heart and soul.

An outfit called Guitammer Co., from Westerville, Ohio, has developed a $150 home gadget that actually transmits sounds as vibrations through your body, starting from the bottom up. The product's name says it all: the ButtKicker Gamer. This gizmo attaches to the bottom of your chair and sends low-frequency sound waves from music or games through the chair's back and, especially, its seat -- hence the name.

If you've ever been in or near a car with an obnoxiously powerful sound system, or if you've ever stood close to the stage at a rock concert, you know what these vibrations feel like. This thumping sends rippling beats throughout your body, sometimes rattling your bones -- and it's especially noticeable in songs with a prominent bass line.

The ButtKicker started as an onstage device to help musicians, especially drummers and bass players, follow the bass line at rock concerts. An expensive and very powerful home-theater version already is being sold in some Best Buy and specialty outlet stores for installation in couches, chairs and even floors.

On August 1, Guitammer will release a more mainstream version of its product: the ButtKicker Gamer. The Gamer is considerably smaller and lighter than the home-theater version and will be sold in a $149.95 package that includes its separate amplifier. Last week, my assistant Katie Boehret and I got an exclusive opportunity to try it out. We tested the ButtKicker Gamer with some input from friends and visitors around the office.

The ButtKicker has a clamp on one end and a bulging electronic piece on the other. The clamp portion resembles an extra-large wrench -- a nine-inch straight piece with a tightening clasp at one end. This piece wouldn't open far enough to screw onto the thick center posts of our office chairs, so Guitammer shipped a chair to us that had a thinner post and we used that. The company insists most office chairs and desk chairs people use with PCs at home have the thinner type of post.

Continued in the article


Good accounting career information magazine --- http://www.newaccountantusa.com/default.html 

Bob Jensen's threads on accounting careers are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#careers 


May 5, 2004 lead from Jim Borden
Macromedia Breeze --- http://www.macromedia.com/resources/education/special/breeze/hed_ctr.html?trackingid=DMYD_ABPV 

Sometimes technology that's supposed to help you ends up complicating your life. But not Breeze. With Breeze, you can use Microsoft PowerPoint to create engaging multimedia presentations for your students and publish them on the web.

With student and session tracking tools, and a centralized, searchable content library, Breeze makes it possible for anyone on campus to develop materials that reach students whenever and wherever you need.

What's more, the Breeze Live module extends the Breeze platform with capabilities such as live and recorded video and audio, screen sharing, and application sharing, so you can hold meetings and deliver lectures over the web.

May 5, 2004 reply from Richard J. Campbell [campbell@RIO.EDU

have had a demo – it is good but verrrrrrrrrrry pricey. A hint of that is the absence of pricing info on the MACR web site.  I will be doing a demo using www.webtrain.com later (after grading exams) next week. Webtrain is much more affordable.

Richard J. Campbell
School of Business
University of Rio Grande
Rio Grande, OH 45674

Bob Jensen's threads on course authoring software are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/290wp/290wp.htm 


High-profile events are triggering a rush of gamblers to legal and illegal Internet gambling sites that have sprouted on the Web.
"More Gamblers Flock to the Web," by Peter Grant, The Wall Street Journal, June 8, 2004, Page D6 --- http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108664760388431004,00.html?mod=gadgets%5Fprimary%5Fhs%5Flt 

High-profile sporting and racing events are triggering a rush of gamblers to legal and illegal Internet gambling sites that have sprouted on the Web.

Although it is illegal in the U.S., about $85 million is expected to be bet online on the National Basketball Association playoffs now under way, according to Christiansen Capital Advisors LLC, a market-research firm that tracks gambling. That's up from the $74 million bet on the playoffs last year, partly because of the popularity of the Los Angeles Lakers, who are playing the Detroit Pistons for the championship.

Meanwhile, Web bets poured in amid the hoopla over Smarty Jones's pursuit of horse racing's first Triple Crown since 1978, which culminated in the colt's second-place finish in the Belmont Stakes on Saturday.

But even without Smarty Jones and the Lakers, online gambling is booming. The 1,800 or so Internet gambling sites world-wide are expected to rake in $7.46 billion this year after paying out winnings, up from $5.69 billion in 2003, according to Christiansen Capital. About half of that comes from the U.S.

Currently, the only online gambling that's clearly legal is betting on horse races in the 18 states that have passed laws specifically allowing it. Betting on basketball, baseball and other sporting events online is against the law. The legality of Internet casino games and other online gambling is murkier, though the U.S. Department of Justice has taken the position in both the Clinton and Bush administrations that practically all of it is prohibited.

Even so, betting possibilities have greatly expanded since Internet gambling was first introduced in the mid-1990s. Back then most of the wagering was on professional sports such as football, baseball and basketball, and the bets were limited to which team would beat a point spread. Now bets can be placed on a wide range of casino games such as poker and blackjack, and such obscure sports as sumo wrestling and hurling.

During this year's Super Bowl, BetonSports.com gave gamblers 735 different options for placing their bets, including the length of the national anthem, number of yards rushed, the most successful advertisement and who would win the coin toss. BetonSports.com also has been accepting bets on the winner of the TV's "American Idol," as well as the presidential election. (President Bush currently is a 3-to-2 favorite.)

All online gambling businesses, except many horse-racing sites, are based offshore and out of reach of the Justice Department. But regulators have figured out ways to make betting from the U.S. more difficult. American Express Co. and some banks that issue MasterCard and Visa cards refuse to let them be used for Internet gaming. Regulators also have put pressure on companies that advertise sports betting and casino sites. Earlier this year, Google Inc. and Yahoo Inc. banned the ads.

Last year, the House of Representatives and the Senate Banking Committee approved different bills that would prohibit electronic payments for online gambling. The legislation has been bogged down by disagreements among mainstream gambling factions, like Indian tribes and casino owners. But backers predict it will be resurrected next year.


I doubt that you really want to know this!  Do you suppose they would also be interested in accounting videos?  Maybe I no longer have to give mine away for free at my Web site.

Pornographers to Ring Up More Profit, International Herald Tribune, May 4, 2004 --- http://www.iht.com/articles/518178.html 

Amsterdam, home of one of Europe's most renowned red-light districts, is not a surprising location to exhibit X-rated products for sale.  But there were some strange bedfellows at a conference there last month: executives from some of the world's largest and most respected mobile phone companies mingling with sex-shop owners, publishers of pornography and producers of hard-core videos.

Until recently, risqué mobile phone services have been limited mostly to racy pictures and "adult" chat, both by text and by voice.  But now that third-generation networks and cellphones that offer video are on the European market, established mobile carriers are looking to make money from pornography.

At the Amsterdam conference, called Adult Online Europe, executives from Vodafone, Orange, mm02 and Virgin Mobile, among others, explored how to get involved while remaining good corporate citizens and fencing off the content from young people.

Gartner, an industry research company, estimates that sexual content over mobile phones will generate $1.5 billion in revenue in Western Europe next year, or about 5.1 percent of the total market for mobile data.

Vodafone Group, the British company that is and one of the world's largest mobile operators, has introduced what it calls "risqué" content via its Vodafone Live portal in 10 out of the 16 markets where the portal is available.  Other mainstream mobile phone operators and content providers are gearing up.  For Vodafone, content now ranges from off-color jokes to photos of topless women, but more hard-core material is expected to follow.

"It is a big commercial opportunity, so it is fair to say that commercial operators will have to exploit this opportunity in some way," said Tina Southall, head of content standards for Vodafone.  Her position was created nine months ago to help the company develop a responsible approach to racy fare.

Sexual content represents "one of the few possibilities for mobile operators to make significant revenues, even if they don't want to admit it," said Berth Milton, chief executive of Private Media Group, a Barcelona company that distributes pornography.

"Operators have put billions of euros into 3G networks, so they need to generate revenues even more than the content providers," Milton said.

Netcollex, a British company that offers both soft and hard pornography over cellphones, said that in 12 months it had signed up 67,000 customers, who pay $2.65, plus transmission charges, to see a short video clip.

Pricing for such services is on a par with other mobile data services, but demand is expected to be higher than many other categories.  Already, Mobitel, whose 3G phone service started in December in Slovenia, said that its most popular content in February included sports, erotic videos and film clips.


What a sham it is!

In essence, the U.S. tax code gives [U.S. multinationals] more in tax breaks for foreign operations than it collects in revenues.
John D. McKinnon (See below)

From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Educators' Review on May 7, 2004

TITLE: U.S. Overseas Tax is Blasted
REPORTER: John D. McKinnon
DATE: May 05, 2004
PAGE: A4 LINK: http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108370777246501914,00.html 
TOPICS: Tax Laws, Taxation

SUMMARY: A study undertaken by Congress's Joint Committee on Taxation concludes that the U.S. government, if it were to switch to a territorial approach to taxation, would collect "$60 billion more over 10 years than the current system would raise." "In essence, the U.S. tax code gives [U.S. multinationals] more in tax breaks for foreign operations than it collects in revenues..."

QUESTIONS:
1.) What is the overall objective of current U.S. tax law with respect to multinational corporations? What is the objective of tax breaks and deductions allowed against income earned by multinationals in other countries?

2.) How is it possible that the current status of U.S. tax law results in a system which costs the U.S. government more than it collects in tax revenues from this system? How would a "territorial approach" to taxation differ from this current system?

3.) Tax law is designed not only to raise revenues for the government but also to encourage behavior beneficial to society and the economy. How do some argue that current tax law influences corporate decisions in locating operations and resultant job growth prospects?

4.) Others argue that changes to current tax law would do more harm than good in influencing job growth in the U.S. economy. What are the factors that argue against changing the current tax law in this area? Specifically comment on how these factors influence U.S. job growth prospects.

5.) A spokesman for Eli Lilly, the pharmaceutical company, says his employer considers a variety of factors in deciding where to locate operations. Suppose that you are a top manager considering opening a new operation to serve a foreign market that covers several countries. List all factors that you expect to consider in your decision making process.

6.) What "added bonus for companies' reported profits" comes with income earned in low-tax countries which management commits to reinvest in those countries? Through what mechanism does this decision influence reported profits? That is, specifically describe what income statement accounts are influenced by this decision and why the accounting reflects this influence.

Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
Reviewed By: Benson Wier, Virginia Commonwealth University
Reviewed By: Kimberly Dunn, Florida Atlantic University

--- RELATED ARTICLES ---
TITLE: Review & Outlook: Export Tax Follies
REPORTER: WSJ Editors
PAGE: A14
ISSUE: May 05, 2004
LINK: http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108371159350602084,00.html

Bob Jensen's threads on the sham called the U.S. Corporate Tax code are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#TaxAvoidance


NASA, We Have a Problem

PricewaterhouseCoopers, the agency's auditor, issued a disclaimed opinion on NASA's 2003 financial statements. PwC complained that NASA couldn't adequately document more than $565 billion — billion — in year-end adjustments to the financial-statement accounts, which NASA delivered to the auditors two months late. Because of "the lack of a sufficient audit trail to support that its financial statements are presented fairly," concluded the auditors, "it was not possible to complete further audit procedures on NASA's September 30, 2003, financial statements within the reporting deadline established by [the Office of Management and Budget]."

[The General Accounting Office] said the Arthur Andersen audits were audit failures," says Gregory Kutz.  "They had given NASA clean audit opinions for five years."

"NASA, We Have a Problem," by Kris Frieswick, CFO Magazine, May 2004, pp.54-64 --- http://www.cfo.com/article/1,5309,13502,00.html?f=home_magazine 

Can Gwendolyn Brown fix the space agency's chronic financial woes?

The National Aeronautics and Space Administration has long been criticized for its inability to manage costs. During the 1990s, faced with flat budgets and ambitious program goals, NASA adopted a management approach of "faster, better, cheaper." But by the decade's end, the approach was blamed for a number of mission failures. Meanwhile, the cost of the International Space Station (ISS) spiraled billions of dollars over budget. Embattled administrator Daniel Goldin resigned in 2001 after nearly 10 years on the job, and NASA named Sean O'Keefe, a self-described "bean counter," as Goldin's replacement. Fourteen months later, the loss of the Columbia space shuttle and its seven astronauts shook the agency to its core.

Then, last January, President George W. Bush unveiled a grand "vision" of landing astronauts on the moon by 2020, and on Mars sometime thereafter. The vision gave NASA a new sense of mission, lifted its morale, and raised expectations of steadily increasing budgets. But the vision also came under fire from critics who wondered fire from critics who wondered why the country needed to go to Mars, and how it could afford it.

Two weeks later, troubling new doubts were raised about NASA's financial management. PricewaterhouseCoopers, the agency's auditor, issued a disclaimed opinion on NASA's 2003 financial statements. PwC complained that NASA couldn't adequately document more than $565 billion — billion — in year-end adjustments to the financial-statement accounts, which NASA delivered to the auditors two months late. Because of "the lack of a sufficient audit trail to support that its financial statements are presented fairly," concluded the auditors, "it was not possible to complete further audit procedures on NASA's September 30, 2003, financial statements within the reporting deadline established by [the Office of Management and Budget]."

Ironically, the PwC audit report was posted on the NASA inspector general's Website on March 11 — the same day that O'Keefe testified before a Senate appropriations subcommittee regarding the agency's FY 2005 budget request. But no one seemed to notice, or care.

NASA says blame for the financial mayhem falls squarely on the so-called Integrated Financial Management Program (IFMP), an ambitious enterprise-software implementation. In June 2003, the agency finished rolling out the core financial module of the program's SAP R/3 system. NASA's CFO, Gwendolyn Brown, says the conversion to the new system caused the problems with the audit. In particular, she blames the difficulty the agency had converting the historical financial data from 10 legacy systems — some written in COBOL — into the new system, and reconciling the two versions for its year-end reports. Brown says that despite the difficulties with both the June 30 quarterly financial-statement preparation and the year-end close, the system is up and running, and she has confidence in the accuracy of the agency's financial reporting going forward.

Continued in the article (this is a very long article)

Bob Jensen's threads on Andersen's audit failures are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudEnron.htm 


DERIVATIVES JUNKIES ARE YOUR BANKERS

In spite of the history of enormous losses in speculation in derivative financial instruments and the newer corporate and banking policies restricting the use of derivatives to safe speculations, many companies still cannot resist the temptations to gamble big time in derivatives markets.

"When Bankers' Bets Go BadWith a load of derivatives to unwind, banks may face serious trouble from rising rates," by Mara Der Hovanesian, Business Week, June 14, 2004, pp. 78-79 --- http://www.businessweek.com/@@y4MltmUQz2Pg7RMA/premium/content/04_24/b3887084_mz020.htm 

Has your conservative commercial bank suddenly become a day trader placing big bets on interest rates? These days, the odds are it has. At the end of last year banks had a gross $71 trillion worth of derivatives on their books, based mostly on interest rates, according to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC). That's double the amount of five years ago. Much of the activity is designed to protect the value of the mortgages they hold. But increasingly, banks are trading simply to make some money on the side.

The tactic can be rewarding. National City Corp. (NCC ), a Cleveland bank, said it earned $295 million pretax from interest-rate swaps in the first quarter. Winston-Salem's BB&T Corp. (BBT ) began hedging its mortgage servicing business with derivatives last summer. It posted a $4 million loss in the first quarter, a tenth of what it would have been without the hedging. Meanwhile, the nation's largest thrift, Washington Mutual Inc. (WM ), also has been "opportunistic" in its buying and selling of mortgage securities, says bank analyst David A. Hendler of CreditSights Inc.: "It was trading Treasury and mortgage-backed securities and taking gains when it could."

The gusher of easy money could be drying up. Earlier this year many banks arranged their portfolios to benefit from low interest rates, betting that those rates would stay down most of the year. So they were caught off guard when rates spiked from their March lows. Many were left holding low-yielding securities and were hit by losses on complex derivative contracts that take time to unwind. "They played the trading game for quite a while, and it worked," says Ron Papanek, market strategist for New York's RiskMetrics Group. "Now they're looking down the barrel of a Fed move." Adds Peter Nerby, a senior bank analyst at Moody's Investors Service (MCO ): "It's going to be a lot tougher for people to make money."

Or worse. The runup in rates in 1994 wreaked havoc on banks' securities holdings. Banks were socked with losses totaling about $16 billion, according to the OCC. Big regional banks such as Chicago's Bank One Corp. (ONE ) and PNC Bank Corp. (PNC ) of Pittsburgh took sizable hits. Cleveland-based KeyCorp (KEY ) lost $865 million, mostly in interest-rate swaps, by the third quarter of that year.

DAMAGE REPORTS
Similar strains are starting to reappear. Shares of New York Community Bancorp Inc. (NYB ), the nation's third-largest thrift, have been in a tailspin because of higher rates. The bank had doubled profits in the past year via a string of successful mergers, but on Apr. 21 it reported that its securities portfolio had unrealized losses of nearly $131 million. The company's shares have fallen 11%, to $23, since then, and it has hired investment bankers to shop the bank around. "We're considering strategies that make the most sense if rates are going up much more aggressively and sooner than anticipated," says the company's chief executive, Joseph R. Ficalora. "The [securities] portfolio is very large, and there's a large amount of leverage. We're looking at ways to deal with it."

Banks are loath to talk about their use of derivatives before they have to do so. So until second-quarter results are released in July, even institutional investors will be in the dark about how badly April's runup in rates hurt bank profits. "It's hard for an outsider to analyze all these derivative positions," says James K. Schmidt, portfolio manager of the $2.4 billion John Hancock Regional Bank Fund (FRBAY ). "We have to take it on faith that these are sophisticated institutions, and presumably they are using derivatives in a rational manner."

Although Warren E. Buffett once complained that all derivatives were "toxic waste," they do fulfill a useful function. Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan argues that their widespread use spreads risk among different market players, including nonfinancial companies, making the financial system a lot safer. All the same, Greenspan reminds banks that they need to keep pace with changes in the market and "readjust accordingly." Bank executives who aren't nimble enough to sidestep rate shocks could find themselves facing big losses or, worse, a quick sale to a larger -- and savvier -- competitor.

Bob Jensen's threads of derivatives financial instruments scandals are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#DerivativesFrauds 

Bob Jensen's tutorials on derivatives financial instruments accounting are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm 


From the Scout Report on May 7, 2004

World Bank: Anticorruption ---  http://www1.worldbank.org/publicsector/anticorrupt/index.cfm

In its many different guises, corruption around the world tends to affect the poor, who are often the most reliant on the provision of public services, and are also least likely to be able to pay the extra costs associated with bribery and fraud. The World Bank has identified corruption as "the single greatest obstacle to economic and social development," and thusly has set up this anticorruption website to serve as an online resource for policy-makers, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), and other interested parties. On the site, the World Bank lays out its strategy for combating corruption, which includes increasing political accountability, strengthening civil society participation, and improving public sector management. The site also contains a number of helpful resources, such as toolkits for assessing government performance in this area, and information and reports on various regional and country-based approaches to dealing with corruption. The site is rounded out by a calendar of events and key strategy documents, such as "Reforming Public Institutions and Strengthening Governance, A World Bank Strategy."


May 5, 2004 message from 

Here's a webzine for those who want "real poetry" - of all sorts except blank verse:

http://www.poetryrenewal.com/ 

Their Mission Statement: Poetry Renewal will refresh and renew the standards and disciplines that have been lacking in much of poetry in the last fifty to 150 years. We will give an outlet for more disciplined verse that has been disrespected by late twentieth century academics. We will not be iconoclasts. We will uphold the poetic traditions and disciplines that sustained our civilization for thousands of years. We will be praising and featuring those who make a study of and apply the art and craft of poetry.

Roberta Lipsig 
Professor Emerita 
Formerly at SUNY Oswego now in Gainesville FL (
Hey Bob, I went in the opposite direction from you.)

 


Five Killer Patents
Technology Review selects five of the most important U.S. patents issued in 2003. These inventions—which range from a safer lung biopsy technique to software for fighting telephone-transaction fraud—will profoundly influence their fields for years to come.
http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/patents0504.asp?trk=nl


Question
What is moral hazard?  How is a new reward policy by Microsoft creating moral hazard?

Answer
Moral hazard arises when a system or policy within government, corporations, families, law, or elsewhere creates an opportunity to gain from being immoral and/or unethical.  In many cases the hazard invites an illegal act for personal gain.  The best known moral hazard is an insurance contract.  For example, during the S&L crisis it was reported that some owners of luxury cars who had lost their jobs and could no longer afford high car payments were leaving them parked on San Antonio streets in high crime areas with the keys in the car.  This was an open invitation to have the cars stolen just to collect insurance money in a city where thousands of cars are stolen each month and disappear south of the Rio Grande.  

Where's the moral hazard?  The moral hazard arises when it was more profitable to simply collect insurance money than to take the time, cost, and risk of selling in a down market.  Arson is frequently committed because of the moral hazard of fire insurance.  Life insurance sometimes creates a moral hazard for murder or faked suicide.

Much of the recent looting of corporations by top management was caused by moral hazard arising from lax oversight by "gatekeepers" such as auditors, audit committees, and boards of directors.  Lax punishment of white collar crime is a huge source of moral hazard --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraudconclusion.htm#CrimePays 

Another similar type of moral hazard is caused by lax law enforcement.  Near the south Texas border, children from Mexico who steal vehicles in Texas are seldom prosecuted.  Instead they are returned to Mexico and reappear the next day attempting to steal more vehicles.  Adults use very young children in organized gangs because children are less likely to be prosecuted.

Microsoft is creating somewhat of a moral hazard with a new policy of offering rewards for the capture of hackers.  The reward $250,000 is probably pretty good pay for teenagers in countries where penalties are very lax for first-time teenage offenders.  Germany is one of those countries with lax penalties.  

If I were a teenager hacker in Germany, I might think about raising some hell for Microsoft and then have my friends or parents turn me in for the reward.  Chances for probation are very high, and the reward collected may be enough to finance my college education.

It is not clear that Microsoft really "won one."

"In Virus Wars, Microsoft Wins One," by Nick Wingfield, The Wall Street Journal, May 10, 2004, Page A3 --- http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108401726263605863,00.html?mod=home_whats_news_us 

Firm's Cash-Reward Offer Yields Its First Arrest Sasser Suspect in Germany

Microsoft Corp. claimed a breakthrough in the war against computer viruses, after the software company's cash-reward program led to the arrest of a German teenager believed to be responsible for the disruptive "Sasser" and "Netsky" programs.

After a whirlwind three-day effort to validate a tip from informants, authorities in the German state of Lower Saxony on Friday arrested an 18-year-old engineering student at a local technical school. The suspect, who wasn't identified by name, later confessed, German police said.

Microsoft said its Munich offices received the tip by telephone from acquaintances of the suspect. Executives at the Redmond, Wash., company said the informants will together collect a $250,000 reward from Microsoft if the suspect is convicted. The company wouldn't identify the informants or give much additional information about them, other than to say there was more than one person and fewer than five.

"For us, this is something of a defining moment in demonstrating our ability to combat malicious code in collaboration with the authorities," said Brad Smith, Microsoft senior vice president and general counsel.

The arrest is the first time a suspect has been nabbed under a reward program that Microsoft launched in November, setting up a $5 million fund, in conjunction with Interpol, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Secret Service. Writers of viruses, worms and other disruptive programs typically target computers running Microsoft's dominant Windows operating system and other software. The increasingly debilitating impact of the malicious programs has started to hurt Microsoft's software sales to corporations.

Security flaws in its software have proved difficult for Microsoft to eliminate. But if more hackers prove willing to snitch on each other for money, virus writers could be deterred by the threat of jail time from releasing their creations. Files found on suspects' computers also could lead to additional arrests, and provide other information to help security experts block malicious code.

Sasser began infecting computers across the Internet just over a week ago. Unlike other malicious programs, which typically infect computers after users click on attachments to e-mail messages, Sasser doesn't require a user to take any action. Instead, the worm scans the Internet for vulnerable computers, infects them and uses those machines to search for other potential targets. Sasser doesn't erase files on a user's computer, but it does slow down computers, causing them to crash in some cases.

Security experts believe Sasser has infected millions of computers globally on the Internet. Last week, it infected a third of Taiwan's post-office branches, and 20 British Airways flights were each delayed about 10 minutes Tuesday due to Sasser troubles at check-in desks, according to the Associated Press.

Despite the arrest of its suspected creator, Sasser is expected to continue its disruptions. "It's a bit like Pandora's box -- once the box has been opened, you can never put it away," said Graham Cluley, a senior technology consultant at Sophos Inc., a security software firm in Lynnfield, Mass. "We believe the worm will carry on infecting people for months to come."

Early yesterday, not long after the German suspect's arrest was announced, a new variant of the Sasser began infecting computers in Portugal, France and other European countries, according to executives at PandaLabs, a security software firm. "This fact confirms our fears that he is not the only person programming the Sasser and Netsky worms, but rather it is an organized group of delinquents," said Luis Corrons, head of PandaLabs.

Security experts had previously suspected that a group called Skynet was responsible for both Sasser and Netsky, a program released early this year that has been followed by many variants. A message contained in a recent variant, Netsky.AC, claimed responsibility for the group.

Microsoft said it received the tip Wednesday from the informants, who were aware of the reward program. Company investigators in Europe and the U.S. began working feverishly to verify technical information provided by its informants to prove that the suspect was the creator of the Sasser worm, the company said. Once it verified the information from the informants, which it declined to describe, Microsoft said it notified German police.

Continued in the article

Bob Jensen's threads on moral hazard and white collar crime are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraudconclusion.htm#CrimePays 


Interest rate swap derivative instruments are widely used to manage interest rate risk, which is viewed as a perfectly legitimate use of these hedging instruments.  I stumbled on to a rather interesting doctoral dissertation which finds that firms, especially banks, use such swaps to manage earnings.  The dissertation from Michigan State University is by Chang Joon Song under Professor Thomas Linsmeier.

"Are Interest Rate Swaps Used to Manage Banks' Earnings," by Chang Joon Song, January 2004 --- http://accounting-net.actg.uic.edu/Department/Songpaper.pdf 

This dissertation is quite clever and very well written.  

Previous research has shown that loan loss provisions and security gains and losses are used to manage banks’ net income. However, these income components are reported below banks largest operating component, net interest income (NII). This study extends the literature by examining whether banks exploit the accounting permitted under past and current hedge accounting standards to manage NII by entering into interest rate swaps. Specifically, I investigate whether banks enter into receive-fixed/pay-variable swaps to increase earnings when unmanaged NII is below management’s target for NII. In addition, I investigate whether banks enter into receive-variable/pay-fixed swaps to decrease earnings when unmanaged NII is above management’s target for NII. Swaps-based earnings management is possible because past and current hedge accounting standards allow receive-fixed/pay-variable swaps (receivevariable/ pay-fixed) to have known positive (negative) income effects in the first period of the swap contract. However, entering into swaps for NII management is not costless, because such swaps change the interest rate risk position throughout the swap period. Thus, I also examine whether banks find it cost-beneficial to enter into offsetting swap positions in the next period to mitigate interest rate risk caused by entering into earnings management swaps in the current period. Using 546 bank-year observations from 1995 to 2002, I find that swaps are used to manage NII. However, I do not find evidence that banks immediately enter into offsetting swap positions in the next period. In sum, this research demonstrates that banks exploit the accounting provided under past and current hedge accounting rules to manage NII. This NII management opportunity will disappear if the FASB implements full fair value accounting for financial instruments, as foreshadowed by FAS No. 133.

What is especially interesting is how Song demonstrates that such earnings management took place before FAS 133 and is still taking place after FAS 133 required the booking of swaps and adjustment to fair value on each reporting date.  It is also interesting how earnings management comes at the price of added risk.  Other derivative positions can be used to reduce the risk, but risks arising from such earnings management cannot be eliminated.

Bob Jensen's threads on FAS 133 and IAS 39 are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm 


An elaborate game created last year by the McCombs School of Business at the University of Texas at Austin teaches students about handling the delicate balance of business and ethics, and the sometimes high moral price of too much cost cutting.

"A Delicate Balance," by Scott McCartney, The Wall Street Journal, May 10, 2004, Page R7 --- http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108379356955403126,00.html?mod=gadgets%5Fprimary%5Fhs%5Flt 

For one business-school class, a simulation game provided
a painful lesson in the price of obsessive cost cutting

For the young executives at computer-maker InfoMaster Ltd., the company budget was on the line. Terrorism threats were swirling in Jakarta, Indonesia, and the company had to either shut down production there for one quarter and harden security or keep churning out hot-selling products.

The executives opted for production over protection. Soon after, a bomb exploded at the plant.

"I just killed 350 people," said a dazed David Marye, InfoMaster's 25-year-old chief ethics officer. "I made a bad call, and people died. It's going to be hard to sleep tonight."

Luckily for Mr. Marye, both InfoMaster and the terrorist attack were fictitious, part of an elaborate game created last year by the University of Texas at Austin's McCombs School of Business. Three made-up student-run companies competed in the cutthroat computer-hardware industry, all trying to maximize revenue, keep costs down and beat back competitors. But the prizes -- $11,000 and the chance to perform in front of a high-level, real-world executive panel -- were real.

While the Sim City for the business world appeared to be about the bottom line, the real intent was to teach students about handling the delicate balance of business and ethics, and the sometimes high moral price of too much cost cutting. The results were eye opening -- and painful. Idealistic students, who started the game preaching virtue, succumbed to the everyday challenges of making their numbers and whipping the competition. Buying cheaper components or hiring cheaper workers would allow more production. Not spending resources on training or quality control would let them get new products to markets faster, but there might be a price to pay down the road. The game proved so realistic that some students were stunned that, under pressure, they readily chose corner-cutting paths they had vowed never to take.

The Texas program was created after the WorldCom scandal broke, as officials looked for ways to teach better behavior to M.B.A. students. The academics knew that while students talk like angels in ethics classes, they behave avariciously in finance classes. "Ethical issues aren't being addressed in financing, marketing and accounting classes," says Steve Salbu, the associate dean for graduate programs and founder of the school's business-ethics program. "We needed to try to do something we think might be effective."

Applying Pressure

Steven Tomlinson, a finance lecturer who has a background in theater, pushed to put students under pressure and throw choices at them. He hired Allen Varney, an Austin-based designer of video and board games, and consulted with a soap-opera scriptwriter and corporate executives. Scripts were written, rules devised and software created to track decisions.

The result was the Executive Challenge, a three-day game played late last year, where teams of about two dozen students were divided into three companies, with each given a limited amount of production capacity and a set of workers with varying skills. A company could borrow money, and it could spend cash to increase capacity or add products or workers. But it also had to take care of existing projects and decide whether to spend precious resources on corporate-culture projects such as diversity training and quality programs.

A three-month financial quarter typically lasted 30 minutes, forcing companies to communicate and make decisions in rapid-fire fashion. The game offered both individual and corporate shortcuts and lures. Early on, players might get away with ignoring problems and postponing expenses, but then the problems grew like weeds. A team could opt for lower quality for a quarter or two, only to discover later that its computer batteries exploded -- a scenario taken from Dell Inc.'s history.

"The game is all about temptation," Mr. Varney says. "Business-school students, as a breed, are overconfident, and the game really plays to that."

Going in, students suspected that the game would likely test their ethics since they had just come off a week of traditional ethics training. On the first day, all three made-up companies -- InfoMaster, General Data Machines Inc. and Starr Computing Co. -- spent money on corporate-culture initiatives at the expense of new products, surprising Mr. Varney, the game designer. "All those goody-goodies are doing the corporate-culture initiatives," he said, "which makes no sense in dollars and cents."

Textbook Traits

Indeed, the teams created their companies around textbook traits like collaborative decision making and promises to share prize money equally. Fearful of repercussions, executives decided to pay themselves little if any salary. "They were remarkably socialistic," Dr. Tomlinson says.

InfoMaster even created an ethics team with leaders from different departments, headed by Mr. Marye, who worked as an analyst for Houston-based Enron Corp. before seeking a master's degree.

Yet as the revenue race tightened, behavior changed. On the second day, each company learned that it had hired an employee who had stolen software from a competitor and that the stolen code was now used in the company's highest-margin products. General Data and Starr both opted to turn themselves in and try to negotiate licenses. InfoMaster, despite its ethics team, took the path of least resistance, hoping not to get caught.

General Data proved consistent with its choices -- for the most part. Faced with a toxic-waste issue at a river near one of its plants, it opted to dredge the river and make the issue public, even though it didn't believe it was responsible for the pollution. But doing the right thing came at a price. The company was in last place in revenue after the first day.

"Ben and Jerry would not do well at this game," Mr. Varney says, referring to the socially concerned ice-cream entrepreneurs.

Much as the game's creators expected, student executives began routinely opting for less-expensive options by the end of the second day. General Data was hit with a sexual-harassment complaint against its vice president of sales, and it chose to postpone action while investigating the allegation. At the time, the company was short of cash and was trying to aggressively ramp up product development to catch competitors. Besides, a previous complaint had turned out to be unfounded.

This time, though, the investigation discovered that the complaint was credible, and major. "We thought we did the right thing," said Jay Manickam, a former consultant for Andersen and Deloitte & Touche who was General Data's chief executive. "But this is apparently going to be a hit."

Continued in the article

Bob Jensen's threads on edutainment and learning games are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/thetools.htm#Edutainment 


Google is now beta testing a News Alert System that includes news alerts about scams in various regions of the U.S. --- http://www.google.com/newsalerts?q=%22Better+Business+Bureau%22&hl=en 

Better Business Bureau Sets More Records, Releases Its Top Ten --- http://www.dayton.bbb.org/topten2004.html 

The first list reflects the most called or inquired about industries. The second lists the industries which received the most complaints during the year.

 

Top Ten Inquiries
1. Home Improvement Contractors
2. Mortgage Companies/Brokers
3. Residential Roofing Contractors
4. Residential Heating & A/C Companies
5. Window Companies
6. Home Builders
7. Plumbing Contractors
8. Franchised Car Dealers
9. Tree Cutting/Trimming Companies
10. Charities

 

Top Ten Complaints
1. Mortgage Companies/Brokers
2. Home Improvement Contractors
3. Franchised Car Dealers
4. Credit Card Offers & Plans
5. Financial Services
6. Residential Roofing Contractors
7. Residential Heating & A/C Companies
8. Tree Cutting/Trimming Companies
9. Home Furnishing Stores
10. Work-At-Home Offers
      Auto Repair - Mechanical

Financial services is new to the top ten lists with a dramatic 900% increase in complaints. The 90 complaints in this industry can all be contributed to one company in our service area, which does business nationwide. The complaints against this company concern a wide variety of issues, including advertising, sales, delivery, repair or service, guarantee or warranty, product quality, refund or exchange, contract, customer service and credit or billing issues. Donna Childs, CAE, BBB President & CEO, says, "It is vital that consumers read contracts and ask questions. If you don't know what something means, ask for clarification. And, always read the fine print."

Mortgage companies and brokers continue to be high on both lists. This can be contributed to the fact that interest rates are still attractive. The 36% increase in inquiries on companies in this industry is due to consumers checking around to find reputable companies to do business with. Unfortunately, complaints are up 50% in this industry also. This increase may be attributed to a high demand in this industry. Companies are having a difficult time keeping up with the volume of business.

The home improvement industry and related industries like heating & A/C, windows, plumbers and roofing contractors continue to be among the most complained and inquiried about industries. Though they are still on the top ten lists, some of these industries have seen a decrease in activity. Donna Childs says, "Roofing contractors have seen a 29% decrease in the number of complaints filed in their industry and a 33% decrease in the number of inquiries. This can be attributed to the fact that the majority of roofing jobs generated from the 2001 hail storms have been completed and the activity in this industry is falling back to normal levels."

Work-at-home offers were new to the top ten complaint list. Again, this was due to one company operating in our service area. The company involved has a pattern of unanswered complaints concerning unfulfilled contracts, selling practices and advertising practices.

Donna Childs says, “Ads promoting assembly work, chain letters, envelope stuffing, multi-level marketing, online business and medical insurance claims processing are tempting, but many people are victimized by work-at-home schemes like these and are losing more money than ever. In fact, the Federal Trade Commission reports work-at-home schemes were one of the top ten consumer frauds that it received complaints about in 2002." She continues, "It’s important to keep in mind that any work-at-home offer requiring an upfront fee or purchase is probably not legitimate. If you send money to one of these, you will probably never see your money again or earn money by working at home. Avoiding work-at-home opportunities is the easiest way to save your money. But, if you are considering an offer, investigate before you commit or pay fees. Ask questions and get ten references from people successful in the venture in your area. Don’t feel pressured to make a decision."

Also new to the lists are tree cutting and trimming companies and home furnishing stores. Complaints against tree cutters and trimmers varies from missed appointments, incomplete work and failure to call customers back. Donna Childs says, "One of the common complaints the BBB hears involves stump removal. One of these contractors may cut down a tree in a yard and promise to come back and take out the stump. Time goes by, call after unreturned call, the stump is still in the yard, leaving a frustrated consumer."

Home furnishing stores complaints involve warranty issues. For example, a customer has a couch delivered and the customer notices it is ripped upon arrival. The customer is upset because instead of replacing the couch the company sends someone out to fix it. This action may be covered by the warranty, but the consumer is upset because they wanted a new couch, not one that has been repaired.

Donna concludes, “The bottomline is you need to know who you are doing business with. So, before you do business with a stranger, check with a friend…your Better Business Bureau." Put the BBB to work for you by visiting www.dayton.bbb.org or calling (937) 222-5825 or (800) 776-5301, 24/7.

Additional information about the industries on the Better Business Bureau's top ten follows.

 

Better Business Bureau Top Ten Inquiry List
2003 Ranking
Number Of Inquiries
In 2003
2002 Ranking
Increase (Decrease)
Over 2002 Numbers
1. Home Improvement Contractors 8,975 2 (1%)
2. Financial - Mortgage Companies/Brokers 7,420 4 36%
3. Roofing - Residential Contractors 7,068 1 (33%)
4. Heating & A/C - Residential - Install/Service 5,746 3 5%
5. Windows - Installation/Service 4,417 5 27%
6. Home Builders/Contractors 3,109 6 6%
7. Charities 2,622 8 20%
8. Auto Dealers - Franchised - New & Used 2,431 10 21%
9. Garden/Lawn-Tree Cutting/Trimming 2,349 NEW 22%
10. Charities 2,320 7 5%

 

Better Business Bureau Top Ten Complaint List
2003 Ranking
Number Of Complaints
In 2003
2002 Ranking
Increase (Decrease)
Over 2002 Numbers
1. Financial - Mortgage Companies/Brokers 117 5 50%
2. Home Improvement Contractors 110 2 12%
3. Auto Dealers - Franchised - New & Used 102 4 19%
4. Credit Card - Offers/Plans 91 3 (4%)
5. Financial Services 90 NEW 900%
6. Roofing - Residential Contractors 83 1 (29%)
7. Heating & A/C - Residential - Install/Service 61 6 39%
8. Garden/Lawn-Tree Cutting/Trimming 57 NEW 63%
9. Home Furnishing Stores 53 NEW 51%
10. Work-At-Home Offers 44 NEW 193%
      Auto Repair - Mechanical 44 9 16%

 

 
2003
2002
Increase (Decrease)
Over 2002 Numbers
Instances of Service 314,624 232,456 35%
Total Complaints 2,876 2,808 2%

The Better Business Bureau of Dayton/Miami Valley, Inc. is a private, nonprofit association founded in 1925. The Bureau serves the Miami Valley, including Montgomery, Greene, Clark, Darke, Miami, Preble, Shelby and northern Warren Counties.

Bob Jensen's helpers for frauds and scam prevention are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm 


James Joyce: The Brazen Head ---  http://www.themodernword.com/joyce/index.html 


From Syllabus News on June 8, 2004

UC Irvine Computer Science School Gets Extreme Make-Over

The University of California, Irvine, said its School of Information and Computer Science will be renamed the Donald Bren School of Information and Computer Sciences, honoring the Orange County businessman and philanthropist who made a $20 million gift to ICS last December that equaled the largest gift ever to UCI.

The school will celebrate its new name and the promise of a new dedicated computer science building, today at a June 9 campus ceremony.

At the ceremony, ground will be broken for the school's new, six-story, 138,000-square-foot research and classroom facility. The building is being financed by the recent passage of the state’s Proposition 55 and Proposition 47 initiatives, which authorized funds to build, repair and improve the state's public education facilities. It is scheduled for completion in 2006 and will be named Bren Hall.

The $20 million gift, from Bren, who is chairman of the Irvine Co., provides more than $18 million to create 10 endowed chairs for distinguished faculty, and enables ICS to compete for the world's top computer scientists. The balance of the gift creates an endowed fund for excellence, enabling ICS to develop and advance interdisciplinary and university-industry collaborations emphasizing new research and enhanced technology transfer efforts.

 


"Pfizer to Pay $420 Million in Illegal Marketing Case," by Gardiner Harris, The New York Times, May 14, 2004 --- http://www.nytimes.com/2004/05/14/business/14drug.html?adxnnl=1&adxnnlx=1084625069-/wSuN5bzAP1sLrmecAbZvw 

Pfizer, the world's largest pharmaceutical company, pleaded guilty yesterday and agreed to pay $430 million to resolve criminal and civil charges that it paid doctors to prescribe its epilepsy drug, Neurontin, to patients with ailments that the drug was not federally approved to treat.

Of that settlement, $26.64 million will go to a former company adviser who brought a lawsuit under a federal "whistleblower" law.

The company encouraged doctors to use Neurontin in patients with bipolar disorder, a psychological condition, even though a study had shown that the medicine was no better than a placebo in treating the disorder. Other disorders for which the company illegally promoted Neurontin included Lou Gehrig's disease, attention deficit disorder, restless leg syndrome and drug and alcohol withdrawal seizures.

Although doctors are free to prescribe any federally approved drug for whatever use they choose, pharmaceutical companies are not allowed to promote drugs for nonapproved purposes. Neurontin was initially approved to treat epileptic seizures in patients who had failed to improve using other treatments, but it has become one of the biggest-selling drugs in the world, with sales last year of $2.7 billion. Nearly 90 percent of the drug's sales continue to be for ailments for which the drug is not an approved treatment, according to recent surveys.

"This illegal and fraudulent promotion scheme corrupted the information process relied upon by doctors in their medical decision-making, thereby putting patients at risk," said the United States attorney in Boston, Michael Sullivan, in a statement yesterday.

Pfizer, in a statement yesterday, said that the illegal marketing had been conducted by Warner-Lambert before Pfizer acquired that company in 2000.

"Pfizer has cooperated fully with the government to resolve this matter, which did not involve Pfizer practices or employees," the company said.

Pfizer took a $427 million charge in January against its fourth-quarter 2003 earnings to pay for the expected settlement. The government calculated that the company's illegal promotions brought it $150 million in ill-gotten gains. A standard multiplier was used to come up with the $430 million fine.

The case is one of many undertaken in recent years by federal prosecutors in Boston and Philadelphia who are examining efforts by drug companies to market their drugs for unapproved uses and pay doctors for prescriptions. And while the pharmaceutical industry recently adopted voluntary guidelines that have eliminated many of the gifts and payments once routinely dispensed to doctors, the industry's aggressive promotions continue.

Continued in article

Bob Jensen's threads on corporate fraud are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud.htm 


May 6, 2004 message from Mike Gasior [mike@afs-seminars.com

LIVING IN A WAL-MART WORLD

Let me first say, that in the past five years or so, I have grown into a total and complete fan of the Wal-Mart experience. It has now come to the point that if I know Wal-Mart sells a particular item; I won't even bother to shop around for the lowest price. I'll simply head on over to Wal-Mart and make the purchase with reasonable confidence that I'm getting the best deal.

I've grown somewhat sick of the cultural elitists who look down their noses at both Wal-Mart and the people who shop there, claiming the costs to society outweigh the benefits of cheap motor oil and dog food. Frankly, I wish these complainers would keep their whiny opinions to themselves and continue to purchase their Brie and Chardonnay wherever they do their shopping while allowing me to accumulate cheap TV's, DVD's and CD's to my hearts content. After all, cheap stuff is cheap stuff.

To understand what a monster Wal-Mart has become, consider the following facts:

--Wal-Mart produces EIGHT times more revenue every year than Microsoft.

--That amount of revenue is a teeny bit more than the Gross Domestic Product of Sweden.

--Wal-Mart now has as many supercenters (stores that combine a complete regular Wal-Mart with a complete supermarket) as it has regular retail stores and Wal-Mart is now the largest grocer in America. Wal-Mart is also the third largest pharmacy in the U.S.

--Wal-Mart intends to open another thousand of these supercenters during the next five years.

--Arkansas has a population of about 2.7 million people and has more than 85 Wal-Mart stores.

--The New York City Metropolitan area has over 8.0 million people and no Wal-Mart stores.

--Los Angeles has a population of around 9.0 million people and has one Wal-Mart.

--Wal-Mart sells more stuff every year than Kmart, Sears, Target, Walgreens, JCPenney and Kroger...COMBINED!

--82% of everyone in the United States bought at least SOMETHING at Wal-Mart in 2002.

--One out of every three diapers sold in America is sold at Wal-Mart.

--If Sam Walton were still alive today (he died at 74 in 1992) he would easily be the richest person in the world with a fortune about double the size of Bill Gates.

--In 42 years of operation, Wal-Mart has NEVER grown less than 10% in a year and their sales are already up 11.6% in 2004.

So there may always be those people who look down on lowly Wal-Mart, but they should spend more of their apparent free time looking for a better run business than this one.

 

Added comment by Bob Jensen

I think there is one Wal-Mart store in Northern New Hampshire ( Littleton ) that serves northern Vermont , parts of Maine , and southern Quebec .

The parking lot is nearly always filled to capacity. 

Shoppers have to take turns to go down the aisles. 

You might as well take a book along while you’re waiting to check out.  

Over half the shoppers are from outside New Hampshire partly because this is the only Wal-Mart in the region and partly because New Hampshire has no sales tax.

Sigh from http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/NHcottage/NHcottage.htm

 




May 5, 2004 reply from Bob Jensen

Hello again Roberta,

I've no objection to your having moved to Florida in retirement (where you can keep your driver's license even if you go blind and/or gaga), but I'm real sorry that you became a Gator.  Now you will have to do undignified things on Saturday afternoons during football season.

I wish you all the very best health, happiness, and losing seasons.

Here are a few starting lines that you might work into poems

********************

This one was published in a Canadian Journal, but the author is from your (former) home state.  Good thing you left New York

First rule of accounting --- http://www.camagazine.com/index.cfm/ci_id/6181/la_id/1.htm 

Accounting is boring so says everyone,
I beg to differ, once you've begun.
The theory makes sense, it's merely a tool,
Debits equal credits, that's the first rule.
Debits and credits are names for location,
It's really that simple, not cause for vexation.
A debit goes on the left, in dollars, not sense,
An increase to assets or an expense.
A credit goes on the right, that's its position,
A liability or income, by definition.
Cash is an asset, most folks would agree,
Though it can't be replenished by plucking a tree.
So start with the cash or similar thing,
For the hint it provides so your hands you won't wring.
"It's not quite that simple," you protest, you demur,
"You're positively right," I allow, there's more to be sure.


Barb Babij, New York


Forwarded by Dick Haar

A man staggers into an emergency room with a concussion, multiple bruises, two black eyes and a five iron wrapped tightly around his throat. Naturally the doctor asks him what happened.

"Well, it was like this," said the man.  "I was having a quiet round of golf with my wife when at a difficult hole we both
 sliced our balls into a pasture of cows. We went to look for them and while I was rooting around I noticed one of the cows had something white at its rear end.
  I walked over and lifted up the tail and sure enough, there was a golf ball with my wife's monogram on it------stuck right in the middle of the  cow's butt.  That's when I made my big mistake."

 "What did you do?" asks the doctor.

"Well, I lifted the cow's tail and yelled to my wife. Hey, this looks like yours!"

"I don't remember much after that," he moans.


Forwarded by Team Carper

A tough old cowboy once counseled his grandson that if he wanted to live a long life, the secret was to sprinkle a pinch of gunpowder on his oatmeal every morning.

The grandson did this religiously and lived to the age of 110.

He left behind 4 children, 20 grandchildren, 30 great-grandchildren, 10 great-great-grandchildren - and a fifty-foot hole where the crematorium used to be.


Corporate lessons forwarded by Inga Munsinger

Corporate Lesson 1

A man is getting into the shower just as his wife is finishing up her shower when the doorbell rings. After a few seconds of arguing over which one should go and answer the doorbell, the wife gives up, quickly wraps herself up in a towel and runs downstairs. When she opens the door, there stands Bob, the next door neighbor. Before she says a word, Bob says, "I'll give you $800 to drop that towel that you have on." After thinking for a moment, the woman drops her towel and stands naked in front of Bob. After a few seconds, Bob hands her 800 dollars and leaves. Confused, but excited about her good fortune, the woman wraps back up in the towel and goes back upstairs. When she gets back to the bathroom, her husband asks from the shower, "Who was that?" "It was Bob the next door neighbor," she replies. "Great!" the husband says, "Did he say anything about the $800 he owes me?"

Moral of the story: If you share critical information pertaining to credit and risk with your shareholders in time, you may be in a position to prevent avoidable exposure.

Corporate Lesson 2

A priest was driving along and saw a nun on the side of the road. He stopped and offered her a lift which she accepted. She got in and crossed her legs, forcing her gown to open and reveal a lovely leg. The priest had a look and nearly had an accident. After controlling the car, he stealthily slid his hand up her leg. The nun looked at him and immediately said, "Father, remember Psalm 129?" The priest was flustered and apologized profusely. He forced himself to remove his hand. Changing gear, he let his hand slide up her leg again. The nun once again said, "Father, remember Psalm 129?" Once again the priest apologized "Sorry sister but the flesh is weak." Arriving at the convent, the nun got out gave him a meaningful glance and went on her way. On his arrival at the church, the priest rushed to retrieve a bible and looked up Psalm 129. It said, "Go forth and seek, further up, you will find glory."

Moral of the story: If you are not well informed in your job, you might miss a great opportunity.

Corporate Lesson 3

A sales rep, an administration clerk and the manager are walking to lunch when they find an antique oil lamp. They rub it and a Genie comes out in a puff of smoke. The Genie says, "I usually only grant three wishes, so I'll give each of you just one. " Me first! Me first!" says the admin. clerk. "I want to be in the Bahamas, driving a speedboat, without a care in the world." Poof! She's gone. In astonishment, "Me next! Me next!" says the sales rep. "I want to be in Hawaii, relaxing on the beach with my personal masseuse, an endless supply of pina coladas and the love of my life." Poof! He's gone. "OK, you're up," the Genie says to the manager. The manager says, "I want those two back in the office after lunch."

Moral of the story: Always let your boss have the first say.

Corporate Lesson 4

A crow was sitting on a tree, doing nothing all day. A small rabbit saw the crow and asked him, "Can I also sit like you and do nothing all day long?" The crow answered: "Sure, why not." So, the rabbit sat on the ground below the crow, and rested. All of a sudden a fox appeared, jumped on the rabbit and ate it.

Moral of the story: To be sitting and doing nothing, you must be

sitting very high up.

Corporate Lesson 5

A turkey was chatting with a bull. "I would love to be able to get to the top of that tree," sighed the turkey, but I haven't got the energy." "Well, why don't you nibble on some of my droppings?" replied the bull. "They're packed with nutrients." The turkey pecked at a lump of dung and found that it actually gave him enough strength to reach the lowest branch of that tree. The next day, after eating some more dung, he reached the second branch. Finally after a fourth night, there he was proudly perched at the top of the tree. Soon he was promptly spotted by a farmer, who shot the turkey out of the tree.

Moral of the story: Bull$hit might get you to the top, but it won't keep you there.


Forwarded by the Cha Cha Lady

Did you hear about the two blondes who froze to death in a drive-in movie? They went to see "Closed for the winter," ***************

Why did the blonde resolve to have only 3 children? She heard that 1 out of every 4 children born in the world was Chinese. ***************

Bambi (a blonde) goes to the local novelty shop and finds a pair of x-ray glasses. She checks them out, and isn't fully convinced, but as usual, the store assistant comes along and closes the deal. On her way home, Bambi puts on her new x-ray glasses and, bingo! She sees everyone in the street naked. She takes them off for a moment, and everyone has their clothes on. Puts the glasses back on...everyone is naked! "Cool!" As she arrives back home, she is eager to show her new toy to her husband, but can't find him. She goes up to the bedroom and finds her husband and the young woman from next door naked in bed. She takes the glasses off, and the two are still naked. She put them back on, and they are still naked. Bambi then says: "Darn, I just paid fifty bucks for these and they're already broken!" 
****************

A blonde hurries into the emergency room late one night with the tip of her index finger shot off. "How did this happen?" the emergency room doctor asked her. "Well, I was trying to commit suicide," the blonde replied. "What?" sputtered the doctor. "You tried to commit suicide by shooting your finger off?" "No, Silly!" the blonde said. "First I put the gun to my chest, and I thought: I just paid $6,000.00 for these breast implants, I'm not shooting myself in the chest." "So then?" asked the doctor. "Then I put the gun in my mouth, and I thought: I just paid $3000.00 to get my teeth straightened, I'm not shooting myself in the mouth." "So then?" "Then I put the gun to my ear, and I thought: This is going to make a loud noise. So I put my finger in the other ear before I pulled the trigger." 
*****************

Did you hear about the near-tragedy at the mall? There was a power outage, and twelve blondes were stuck on the escalators for over four hours. 
*****************

A blonde was driving home after a game and got caught in a really bad hailstorm. Her car was covered with dents, so the next day she took it to a repair shop. The shop owner saw that she was a blonde, so he decided to have some fun. He told her just to go home and blow into the tail pipe really hard, and all the dents would pop out. so, the blonde went home, got down on her hands and knees and started blowing into her tailpipe. Nothing happened. So she blew a little harder, and still nothing happened. Her roommate, another blonde, came home and said, "What are you doing?" The first blonde told her how the repairman had instructed her to blow into the tail pipe in order to get all the dents to pop out.

The roommate rolled her eyes and said, "Uh, like hello! You need to roll up the windows first." 
****************

A blonde went to an eye doctor to have her eyes checked for glasses. The doctor directed her to read various letters with the left eye while covering the right eye. The blonde was so mixed up on which eye was which that the eye doctor, in disgust, took a paper lunch bag with a hole to see through, covered up the appropriate eye and asked her to read the letters. As he did so, he noticed the blonde had tears streaming down her face. "Look," said the doctor, "there's no need to get emotional getting glasses." "I know," agreed the blonde, "but I kind of had my heart set on wire frames," 
****************

A blonde was shopping at a Target Store and came across a silver thermos. She was quite fascinated by it, so she picked it up and brought it over to the clerk to ask what it was. The clerk said, "Why, that's a thermos.....it keeps things hot and some things cold." "Wow!" said the blonde, "that's amazing....I'm going to buy it !" So she bought the thermos and took it to work the next day. Her boss saw it on her desk. "What's that?" he asked . "Why, that's a thermos.....it keeps hot things hot and cold things cold," she replied. Her boss inquired, "What do you have in it?" The blonde replied, "Two popsicles, and some coffee."


Forwarded by Mindy Brent

SPELL CZECH

Eye halve a spelling chequer. It came with my pea sea. It plainly marques four my revue miss steaks eye kin knot sea.

Eye strike a key and type a word and weight four it two say Weather eye am wrong oar write. It shows me strait a weigh.

As soon as a mist ache is maid, it nose bee fore two long And eye can put the error rite. Its rarely ever wrong.

Eye have run this poem threw it, I am shore your pleased two no. Its letter perfect in it's weigh. My chequer tolled me sew.

source unknown


Over the Hill Swingers (Set to Music) --- http://webs.lanset.com/lindenschmitt/epix/OverTheHillSwing.htm 

How To Tell If You're Over The Hill (forwarded by The Cha Cha Lady)

You no longer laugh at Preparation H commercials.

Your arms are almost too short to read the newspaper.

You buy shoes with crepe rubber soles.

The only reason you're still awake at 2 A.M. is indigestion.

People ask you what color your hair used to be.

You enjoy watching the news.

Your car must have four doors.

You no longer think of speed limits as a challenge.

You have a dream about prunes.

You browse the bran cereal section in the grocery store.

You start worrying when your supply of Ben Gay is low.

You think a CD is a certificate of deposit.

You have more than 2 pair of glasses.

You read the obituaries daily.

Your biggest concern when dancing is falling.

You enjoy hearing about other peoples operations.

You wear black socks with sandals.

You know all the warning signs of a heart attack.

You dance slow to this song --- http://webs.lanset.com/lindenschmitt/epix/OverTheHillSwing.htm 


 For my generation:  I especially remember "those?"  (Turn up your speakers full blast) --- http://www.singingman.us/DYR.htm 
The home page is at http://www.singingman.us (with more songs)




And that's the way it was on June 10, 2004 with a little help from my friends.

Jesse's Wonderful Music for Romantics (You have to scroll down to the titles) --- http://www.jessiesweb.com/

I highly recommend TheFinanceProfessor (an absolutely fabulous and totally free newsletter from a very smart finance professor) --- www.FinanceProfessor.com 

 

Bob Jensen's bookmarks for accounting newsletters are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#News 

News Headlines for Accounting from TheCycles.com --- http://www.thecycles.com/business/accounting 
An unbelievable number of other news headlines categories in TheCycles.com are at http://www.thecycles.com/ 

 

Jack Anderson's Accounting Information Finder --- http://www.umsl.edu/~anderson/accsites.htm

 

Gerald Trite's great set of links --- http://www.zorba.ca/bookmark.htm 

 

Paul Pacter maintains the best international accounting standards and news Website at http://www.iasplus.com/

The Finance Professor --- http://www.financeprofessor.com/about/aboutFP.html 

 

Walt Mossberg's many answers to questions in technology --- http://ptech.wsj.com/

 

How stuff works --- http://www.howstuffworks.com/ 

 

Household and Other Heloise-Style Hints --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob3.htm#Hints 

 

Bob Jensen's video helpers for MS Excel, MS Access, and other helper videos are at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/ 
Accompanying documentation can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/default1.htm and http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm 

 

Click on www.syllabus.com/radio/index.asp for a complete list of interviews with established leaders, creative thinkers and education technology experts in higher education from around the country.

 

Professor Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-999-7347 Fax: 210-999-8134  Email:  rjensen@trinity.edu  

 

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May 15, 2004

Bob Jensen's New Bookmarks on May 15, 2004
Bob Jensen at Trinity University 

I don't know just when you will next hear from me!
I am transitioning to the mountains of New Hampshire for an eight-month sabbatical leave.  Since this is a research leave, I'm not certain I will find the time to put out future editions of New Bookmarks until I return to teach at Trinity University in January 2005.  I have scheduled getting a cable connection to the Internet on May 17, but who knows how long it will take to get me back online again.  I will be traveling a great deal on my sabbatical research project on macro hedging.  Plus there's a year's backlog of "honey-do's" waiting for me in the White Mountains --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/NHcottage/NHcottage.htm 

My threads on grade inflation and teaching evaluations are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book04q2.htm#GradeInflation
I have a recommendation for
Trinity University that I placed in two new paragraphs added to my previous conclusions.

For earlier editions of New Bookmarks, go to http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookurl.htm 

Click here to search Bob Jensen's web site if you have key words to enter --- Search Site.
This search engine may get you some hits from other professors at Trinity University included with Bob Jensen's documents, but this may be to your benefit.

For my generation:  I especially remember "those?"  (Turn up your speakers full blast) --- http://www.singingman.us/DYR.htm 
The home page is at http://www.singingman.us (with more songs)

Frontline: The Invasion of Iraq --- http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/invasion/

Links to Terrorism:  Build a Web site, go to jail --- http://www.reason.com/sullum/043004.shtml 

NOVA: World in the Balance (Population Time Bomb) --- http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/worldbalance/


Quotes of the Week

Faster horses, younger women, older whiskey, and more money --- I have a lot of happiness!
To be without some of the things you want is an indispensable part of happiness.
Bertrand Russell

Marketers held a conference to find out what women do online. The answer: everything except the one crucial thing -- look for cleaning products.
Katharine Mieszkowski, "You surf just like a woman" Salon, May 5, 2004 --- http://www.salon.com/tech/feature/2004/05/05/just_ask_a_woman/index_np.html 

Even Porn Addicts Are Suddenly Afraid To Go To Porn Sites (although you can get hit from elsewhere)!
Known as bot software, the remote attack tools can seek out and place themselves on vulnerable computers, then run silently in the background, letting an attacker send commands to the system while its owner works away, oblivious. The latest versions of the software created by the security underground let attackers control compromised computers through chat servers and peer-to-peer networks, command the software to attack other computers and steal information from infected systems.
Robert Lemos , CNET News.com, April 30, 2004 --- http://news.com.com/2100-7349_3-5202236.html?tag=nefd.lede 
How can you protect against  bot software and spyware?  Go to  
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/000start.htm#SpecialSection
 

Finally, thanks to Alan Greenspan for coining the phrase "infectious greed" in July 2002, just as I was abandoning hope of finding a pithy title that captured both the financial theme and the viral metaphor of this book.  
Frank Partnoy in Infectious Greed:  How Deceit and Risk Corrupted the Financial Markets (Henry Holt Company, 2004, Page 460)
Note:  The above book by Partnoy is a great place to learn more about modern corporate fraud, including Enron.  I suggest that you first read his U.S. Senate testimony at http://www.senate.gov/~gov_affairs/012402partnoy.htm 

An infectious greed seemed to grip much of our business community. ... It is not that humans have become any more greedy than in generations past.  It is that the avenues to express greed have grown so enormously.
Alan Greenspan, testimony before the Senate Banking Committee, July 16, 2002 

Behind every fortune there lies a great crime.
Honore de Balzac  (as quoted by Frank Partnoy in Infectious Greed:  How Deceit and Risk Corrupted the Financial Markets (Henry Holt Company, 2004))  
More quotations Honore de Balzac (1799 - 1850) from are at http://www.quotationspage.com/quotes/Honore_de_Balzac

In all, four months in a minimum-security prison seemed like a small price to pay for the millions of dollars Mozer made. In 2001, Mozer was enjoying his wealth--relaxing, and raising his eight-year-old daughter. He spent much of his time managing his own money and playing golf. Mozer's treatment raised an interesting question: what would most people have done in his situation--assuming they knew in advance they would be caught and spend four months in a low-security prison--if they also knew that, afterward, they would retire as a multimillionaire, all before their fortieth birthday?   Compared to Mozer, his supervisors received mere slaps on the wrist. Gutfreund, Strauss, and Meriweather paid fines of $100,000, $75,000, and $50,000, respectively--just a few days' pay, at their salaries.
Frank Partnoy, Infectious Greed (Henry Holt and Company, 2004, Page 109) with respect to derivatives fraud at Salomon.
Bob Jensen's threads on slaps on the wrist for white collar crime are at "White Collar Crime Pays Big Even If You Get Caught" at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraudconclusion.htm#CrimePays

Most of us enter the investment business for the same sanity-destroying reasons a woman becomes a prostitute:  It avoids the menace of hard work, is a group activity that requires little in the way of intellect, and is a practical means of making money for those with no special talent for anything else.
Richard New, The Wall Street Jungle (as quoted by Frank Partnoy in FIASCO:  The Inside Story of a Wall Street Trader (Penquin Books, 1997))

Viagra is Not Holding Up as Well as Expected
Pfizer's net income fell 50% from the year-earlier quarter, when the No. 1 global drug maker benefited from a big one-time gain. Revenue rose 47%, although sales of Viagra fell 12%.
The Wall Street Journal, Page A1, April 20, 2004 --- http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108238804574686629,00.html?mod=home_whats_news_us 

The most solid pleasure in this life is the empty pleasure of illusion.
Giacomo Leopardi

Begin somewhere;  you cannot build a reputation on what you intend to do.
Liz Smith

Hey, I'm King Bob When I Do the Hula
Claiming to be Hawaiian royalty, a Pennsylvania woman has become a thorn in the side of the IRS, which has repeatedly sent her refunds and personal information belonging to the rightful heir. In the latest blunder, the IRS sent the Pennsylvania woman a $2.1 million tax refund that should have gone to the rightful heir. 

http://www.accountingweb.com/item/99095
 

Nearly half of all privately held firms in the U.S. (10.6 million) are owned 50 percent or more by women, says a new Center for Women's Business Research study sponsored by Wells Fargo & Company. 
AccountingWEB, "Women-Owned Businesses Growing Twice National Average," May 4, 2004 ---  http://www.accountingweb.com/item/99089 

Pays to go bankrupt!
MCI predicted a net loss for this year and reported a massive $22.2 billion profit for 2003 as a result of accounting adjustments related to the bankruptcy.
Shawn Young, The Wall Street Journal, April 30, 2004, Page B3 --- http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108327600038897861,00.html?mod=technology_main_whats_news 

Become the change you want to see in the world.
Mahatma Gandhi

Employers Expect to Increase College Hires by 11.2 Percent
AccountingWEB, April 27, 2004 --- http://www.accountingweb.com/cgi-bin/item.cgi?id=99045 

Freedom is hammered out on the anvil of discussion, dissent and debate.
Hubert H. Humphrey as quoted by Mark Shapiro at http://irascibleprofessor.com/comments-04-26-04.htm 

The wealth of the poor is represented by their children, that of the rich by their parents.
Massimo Troisi

A mathematician, a physicist, and an engineer were traveling through Scotland when they saw a black sheep through the window of the train. "Aha," says the engineer, "I see that Scottish sheep are black." "Hmm," says the physicist, "You mean that some Scottish sheep are black." "No," says the mathematician, "All we know is that there is at least one sheep in Scotland, and that at least one side of that one sheep is black!"
Courtesy of http://www.math.utah.edu/~cherk/mathjokes.html and forwarded by Malcolm McLelland 

The Museum of Bad Art --- http://www.museumofbadart.org/ 

Their new 'infrasized meals,' where you can get one-third the food for an extra 99 cents, are definitely a step in the right direction.
Donna Alexander, Lab Assistant on Food Testing at McDonald's, The Onion

The March for Women's Lives this past Sunday was the largest in American history. The power of the pro-choice movement, our strength in numbers and our energy and commitment can not be ignored! A million women and men, a third of who were under the age of 35, said no more!!! During the March, we pledged ourselves to creating a world where no one can question our freedom to choose, our access to abortion and birth control, our right to benefit from lifesaving research, or our medical privacy.
Jennifer Bilbrey in an email message on April 27, 200f from Nancy.Mifflin@ppfa.org 

AACSB sent out an e-mail yesterday announcing that it is moving its headquarters from St. Louis to Tampa after a recommendation from a consulting firm. It cites a board member saying, "St. Louis has served us well for a long time, but the location is no longer the right image and fit for the organization moving forward." Imagine the money that has, and will be spent, on that. And, the money comes from our dues.
Dick Burr, Trinity University

A Chinese man has paid the equivalent of $1.1m for a mobile phone number.  The unnamed buyer shelled out a whopping nine million yuan for 135 8585 8585, which is apparently pronounced as "let me be rich, be rich, be rich, be rich" in Chinese.
Lester Haines, The Register, April 13, 2004 --- http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/04/13/mobile_phone_number/ 
Reply from Stephen Field at Trinity University

Hi Bob. In Mandarin, that list of numbers might be understood homophonically to mean: “Let me out, catch me, catch me, catch me, catch me.”

On the other hand, in the Wu dialect of Chinese (north of Shanghai) it means, literally: “Let me get (rich), me get, me get, me get, me.” The word for “rich” is not even there, but there is a common phrase fa-cai (fa-choi in Cantonese), that means “Get rich.”

As for your office number, only the 4 is unlucky. Chinese avoid it like the plague! My extension 7615 sounds like: “Chi remains and comes to me.” Chi (or qi), as you know, is the Chinese metaphysical concept of life energy.

Technology Tea Time
The same tannins in green tea that cause stains to form on your mugs and teapots could save the hard-drive manufacturing industry some serious dough, says a team of researchers.
Amit Asaravala, Wired News, April 29, 2004 --- http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,63268,00.html?tw=newsletter_topstories_html 

Chinese embrace on-line shopping.
The Globe and Mail, April 15, 2004 --- http://www.globetechnology.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20040414.gtchina0414/BNStory/Technology/ 

Wealthy investors who bought questionable tax shelters to lower their tax bills are finding that they can't hide from state and federal regulators. The IRS and California tax regulators are going to court to obtain client lists from accounting firms or insurers to identify investors who bought the shelters. The strategy appears to be working. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/99022 

Is U.S. Losing the Innovation Race?
A report that Europe and Asia are forging ahead of the U.S. in scientific publications, and in the granting of science and engineering PhDs, raises troubling questions.
http://www.technologyreview.com/blog/blog.asp?blogID=1387&trk=nl




Bob Jensen's April-June 2004 Updates on Frauds and the Accounting Scandals --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud063004.htm 

Updates on the leading books on the business and accounting scandals --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud.htm#Quotations 

I love Infectious Greed by Frank Partnoy ---  http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud.htm#Quotations 

Fraud Detection and Reporting --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm

Charity Frauds --- Fraud Detection and Reporting --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm 

This one is vicious!
"IRS Warns Taxpayers of Fradulent Email," SmartPros, May 3, 2004 --- http://www.smartpros.com/x43425.xml 

The Internal Revenue Service on Friday warned consumers about an identity theft operation that tries to elicit personal information from taxpayers by sending emails alleging they're the subject of a tax investigation.

Neither the Treasury Department nor the Internal Revenue Service send emails to taxpayers about issues related to their accounts.

The official-looking email tells recipients they can dispute the tax fraud charge by logging onto a web site and providing detailed personal information like Social Security numbers, credit card numbers and driver's license numbers.

Identity thieves use individuals' personal data to create false identification documents, to purchase goods and to apply for loans, credit cards or other services in the victim's name.

The Internet service provider that hosted the fraudulent web site shut it down at the request of the Treasury Department's inspector general for taxes. The IRS warns that new versions could surface.

Taxpayers who receive suspect emails should call the Treasury Department toll-free fraud hot line at 1-800-366-4484, or the IRS at 1-800-829-1040.

Updated Warnings on Identity Theft --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm#IdentityTheft 

Selected works of FRANK PARTNOY
Bob Jensen at Trinity University

 

1.  Who is Frank Partnoy?

Cheryl Dunn requested that I do a review of my favorites among the “books that have influenced [my] work.”   Immediately the succession of FIASCO books by Frank Partnoy came to mind.  These particular books are not the best among related books by Wall Street whistle blowers such as Liar's Poker: Playing the Money Markets by Michael Lewis in 1999 and Monkey Business: Swinging Through the Wall Street Jungle by John Rolfe and Peter Troob in 2002.  But in1997.  Frank Partnoy was the first writer to open my eyes to the enormous gap between our assumed efficient and fair capital markets versus the “infectious greed” (Alan Greenspan’s term) that had overtaken these markets.

Partnoy’s succession of FIASCO books, like those of Lewis and Rolfe/Troob are reality books written from the perspective of inside whistle blowers.  They are somewhat repetitive and anecdotal mainly from the perspective of what each author saw and interpreted. 

My favorite among the capital market fraud books is Frank Partnoy’s latest book Infectious Greed: How Deceit and Risk Corrupted the Financial Markets (Henry Holt & Company, Incorporated, 2003, ISBN: 080507510-0- 477 pages).  This is the most scholarly of the books available on business and gatekeeper degeneracy.  Rather than relying mostly upon his own experiences, this book drawn from Partnoy’s interviews of over 150 capital markets insiders of one type or another.  It is more scholarly because it demonstrates Partnoy’s evolution of learning about extremely complex structured financing packages that were the instruments of crime by banks, investment banks, brokers, and securities dealers in the most venerable firms in the U.S. and other parts of the world.  The book is brilliant and has a detailed and helpful index.

 

What did I learn most from Partnoy?

I learned about the failures and complicity of what he terms “gatekeepers” whose fiduciary responsibility was to inoculate against “infectious greed.”  These gatekeepers instead manipulated their professions and their governments to aid and abet the criminals.  On Page 173 of Infectious Greed, he writes the following: 

Page #173

When Republicans captured the House of Representatives in November 1994--for the first time since the Eisenhower era--securities-litigation reform was assured.  In a January 1995 speech, Levitt outlined the limits on securities regulation that Congress later would support: limiting the statute-of-limitations period for filing lawsuits, restricting legal fees paid to lead plaintiffs, eliminating punitive-damages provisions from securities lawsuits, requiring plaintiffs to allege more clearly that a defendant acted with reckless intent, and exempting "forward looking statements"--essentially, projections about a company's future--from legal liability.

The Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 passed easily, and Congress even overrode the veto of President Clinton, who either had a fleeting change of heart about financial markets or decided that trial lawyers were an even more important constituency than Wall Street.  In any event, Clinton and Levitt disagreed about the issue, although it wasn't fatal to Levitt, who would remain SEC chair for another five years.

 

He later introduces Chapter 7 of Infectious Greed as follows:

Pages 187-188

The regulatory changes of 1994-95 sent three messages to corporate CEOs.  First, you are not likely to be punished for "massaging" your firm's accounting numbers.  Prosecutors rarely go after financial fraud and, even when they do, the typical punishment is a small fine; almost no one goes to prison.  Moreover, even a fraudulent scheme could be recast as mere earnings management--the practice of smoothing a company's earnings--which most executives did, and regarded as perfectly legal.

Second, you should use new financial instruments--including options, swaps, and other derivatives--to increase your own pay and to avoid costly regulation.  If complex derivatives are too much for you to handle--as they were for many CEOs during the years immediately following the 1994 losses--you should at least pay yourself in stock options, which don't need to be disclosed as an expense and have a greater upside than cash bonuses or stock.

Third, you don't need to worry about whether accountants or securities analysts will tell investors about any hidden losses or excessive options pay.  Now that Congress and the Supreme Court have insulated accounting firms and investment banks from liability--with the Central Bank decision and the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act--they will be much more willing to look the other way.  If you pay them enough in fees, they might even be willing to help.

Of course, not every corporate executive heeded these messages.  For example, Warren Buffett argued that managers should ensure that their companies' share prices were accurate, not try to inflate prices artificially, and he criticized the use of stock options as compensation.  Having been a major shareholder of Salomon Brothers, Buffett also criticized accounting and securities firms for conflicts of interest.

But for every Warren Buffett, there were many less scrupulous CEOs.  This chapter considers four of them: Walter Forbes of CUC International, Dean Buntrock of Waste Management, Al Dunlap of Sunbeam, and Martin Grass of Rite Aid.  They are not all well-known among investors, but their stories capture the changes in CEO behavior during the mid-1990s.  Unlike the "rocket scientists" at Bankers Trust, First Boston, and Salomon Brothers, these four had undistinguished backgrounds and little training in mathematics or finance.  Instead, they were hardworking, hard-driving men who ran companies that met basic consumer needs: they sold clothes, barbecue grills, and prescription medicine, and cleaned up garbage.  They certainly didn't buy swaps linked to LIBOR-squared.

 

The book Infectious Greed has chapters on other capital markets and corporate scandals.  It is the best account that I’ve ever read about Bankers Trust the Bankers Trust scandals, including how one trader named Andy Krieger almost destroyed the entire money supply of New Zealand.  Chapter 10 is devoted to Enron and follows up on Frank Partnoy’s invited testimony before the United States Senate Committee on Governmental Affairs, January 24, 2002 --- http://www.senate.gov/~gov_affairs/012402partnoy.htm

The controversial writings of Frank Partnoy have had an enormous impact on my teaching and my research.  Although subsequent writers wrote somewhat more entertaining exposes, he was the one who first opened my eyes to what goes on behind the scenes in capital markets and investment banking.  Through his early writings, I discovered that there is an enormous gap between the efficient financial world that we assume in agency theory worshipped in academe versus the dark side of modern reality where you find the cleverest crooks out to steal money from widows and orphans in sophisticated ways where it is virtually impossible to get caught.  Because I read his 1997  book early on, the ensuing succession of enormous scandals in finance, accounting, and corporate governance weren’t really much of a surprise to me.

From his insider perspective he reveals a world where our most respected firms in banking, market exchanges, and related financial institutions no longer care anything about fiduciary responsibility and professionalism in disgusting contrast to the honorable founders of those same firms motivated to serve rather than steal.

Young men and women from top universities of the world abandoned almost all ethical principles while working in investment banks and other financial institutions in order to become not only rich but filthy rich at the expense of countless pension holders and small investors.  Partnoy opened my eyes to how easy it is to get around auditors and corporate boards by creating structured financial contracts that are incomprehensible and serve virtually no purpose other than to steal billions upon billions of dollars.

 

Most importantly, Frank Partnoy opened my eyes to the psychology of greed.  Greed is rooted in opportunity and cultural relativism.  He graduated from college with a high sense of right and wrong.  But his standards and values sank to the criminal level of those when he entered the criminal world of investment banking.  The only difference between him and the crooks he worked with is that he could not quell his conscience while stealing from widows and orphans.

 

Frank Partnoy has a rare combination of scholarship and experience in law, investment banking, and accounting.  He is sometimes criticized for not really understanding the complexities of some of the deals he described, but he rather freely admits that he was new to the game of complex deceptions in international structured financing crime.

2.  What really happened at Enron? --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudEnron.htm#FrankPartnoyTestimony 

 

3.  What are some of Frank Partnoy’s best-known works?

Frank Partnoy, FIASCO: Blood in the Water on Wall Street (W. W. Norton & Company, 1997, ISBN 0393046222, 252 pages). 

This is the first of a somewhat repetitive succession of Partnoy’s “FIASCO” books that influenced my life.  The most important revelation from his insider’s perspective is that the most trusted firms on Wall Street and financial centers in other major cities in the U.S., that were once highly professional and trustworthy, excoriated the guts of integrity leaving a façade behind which crooks less violent than the Mafia but far more greedy took control in the roaring 1990s. 

After selling a succession of phony derivatives deals while at Morgan Stanley, Partnoy blew the whistle in this book about a number of his employer’s shady and outright fraudulent deals sold in rigged markets using bait and switch tactics.  Customers, many of them pension fund investors for schools and municipal employees, were duped into complex and enormously risky deals that were billed as safe as the U.S. Treasury.

His books have received mixed reviews, but I question some of the integrity of the reviewers from the investment banking industry who in some instances tried to whitewash some of the deals described by Partnoy.  His books have received a bit less praise than the book Liars Poker by Michael Lewis, but critics of Partnoy fail to give credit that Partnoy’s exposes preceded those of Lewis. 

Frank Partnoy, FIASCO: Guns, Booze and Bloodlust: the Truth About High Finance (Profile Books, 1998, 305 Pages)

Like his earlier books, some investment bankers and literary dilettantes who reviewed this book were critical of Partnoy and claimed that he misrepresented some legitimate structured financings.  However, my reading of the reviewers is that they were trying to lend credence to highly questionable offshore deals documented by Partnoy.  Be that as it may, it would have helped if Partnoy had been a bit more explicit in some of his illustrations.

Frank Partnoy, FIASCO: The Inside Story of a Wall Street Trader (Penguin, 1999, ISBN 0140278796, 283 pages). 

This is a blistering indictment of the unregulated OTC market for derivative financial instruments and the million and billion dollar deals conceived in investment banking.  Among other things, Partnoy describes Morgan Stanley’s annual drunken skeet-shooting competition organized by a “gun-toting strip-joint connoisseur” former combat officer (fanatic) who loved the motto:  “When derivatives are outlawed only outlaws will have derivatives.”  At that event, derivatives salesmen were forced to shoot entrapped bunnies between the eyes on the pretense that the bunnies were just like “defenseless animals” that were Morgan Stanley’s customers to be shot down even if they might eventually “lose a billion dollars on derivatives.”
 
This book has one of the best accounts of the “fiasco” caused almost entirely by the duping of Orange County ’s Treasurer (Robert Citron) by the unscrupulous Merrill Lynch derivatives salesman named Michael Stamenson. Orange County eventually lost over a billion dollars and was forced into bankruptcy.  Much of this was later recovered in court from Merrill Lynch.  Partnoy calls Citron and Stamenson “The Odd Couple,” which is also the title of Chapter 8 in the book.Frank Partnoy, Infectious Greed: How Deceit and Risk Corrupted the Financial Markets (Henry Holt & Company, Incorporated, 2003, ISBN: 080507510-0, 477 pages)Frank Partnoy, Infectious Greed: How Deceit and Risk Corrupted the Financial Markets (Henry Holt & Company, Incorporated, 2003, ISBN: 080507510-0, 477 pages)

Partnoy shows how corporations gradually increased financial risk and lost control over overly complex structured financing deals that obscured the losses and disguised frauds  pushed corporate officers and their boards into successive and ingenious deceptions." Major corporations such as Enron, Global Crossing, and WorldCom entered into enormous illegal corporate finance and accounting.  Partnoy documents the spread of this epidemic stage and provides some suggestions for restraining the disease.

"The Siskel and Ebert of Financial Matters: Two Thumbs Down for the Credit Reporting Agencies" by Frank Partnoy, Washington University Law Quarterly, Volume 77, No. 3, 1999 --- http://ls.wustl.edu/WULQ/ 

4.  What are examples of related books that are somewhat more entertaining than Partnoy’s early books?

Michael Lewis, Liar's Poker: Playing the Money Markets (Coronet, 1999, ISBN 0340767006)

Lewis writes in Partnoy’s earlier whistleblower style with somewhat more intense and comic portrayals of the major players in describing the double dealing and break down of integrity on the trading floor of Salomon Brothers.

John Rolfe and Peter Troob, Monkey Business: Swinging Through the Wall Street Jungle (Warner Books, Incorporated, 2002, ISBN: 0446676950, 288 Pages)

This is a hilarious tongue-in-cheek account by Wharton and Harvard MBAs who thought they were starting out as stock brokers for $200,000 a year until they realized that they were on the phones in a bucket shop selling sleazy IPOs to unsuspecting institutional investors who in turn passed them along to widows and orphans.  They write. "It took us another six months after that to realize that we were, in fact, selling crappy public offerings to investors."

There are other books along a similar vein that may be more revealing and entertaining than the early books of Frank Partnoy, but he was one of the first, if not the first, in the roaring 1990s to reveal the high crime taking place behind the concrete and glass of Wall Street.  He was the first to anticipate many of the scandals that soon followed.  And his testimony before the U.S. Senate is the best concise account of the crime that transpired at Enron.  He lays the blame clearly at the feet of government officials (read that Wendy Gramm) who sold the farm when they deregulated the energy markets and opened the doors to unregulated OTC derivatives trading in energy.  That is when Enron really began bilking the public.

 

 




ACCPAC Accounting Software Free for Public Schools --- http://www.smartpros.com/x43386.xml 


Even Porn Addicts Are Suddenly Afraid To Go To Porn Sites (although you can get hit from elsewhere)!
Known as bot software, the remote attack tools can seek out and place themselves on vulnerable computers, then run silently in the background, letting an attacker send commands to the system while its owner works away, oblivious. The latest versions of the software created by the security underground let attackers control compromised computers through chat servers and peer-to-peer networks, command the software to attack other computers and steal information from infected systems.
Robert Lemos , CNET News.com, April 30, 2004 --- http://news.com.com/2100-7349_3-5202236.html?tag=nefd.lede 
How can you protect against  bot software and spyware?  Go to  
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/000start.htm#SpecialSection
 

"What's That Sneaking Into Your Computer?" by David Bank, The Wall Street Journal, April 26, 2004

New types of insidious programs called "spyware" are burrowing into PCs, wreaking all sorts of problems. These small programs that install themselves on computers to serve up advertising, monitor Web surfing and other computer activities, and carry out other orders are quickly replacing spam as the online annoyance computer users most complain about. Here's what's being done to combat them.

John Gosbee was sitting up in bed on a cold night, surfing the Internet with his laptop on his knees. Suddenly, the computer's CD-ROM tray popped open, seemingly on its own.

"What on earth is going on?" Mr. Gosbee, of Mandan, N.D., said to himself. "It was like it was possessed," he recalls.

His laptop emitted a high-pitched "Uh-oh."

Uh-oh is right. The pranks were a setup for the message that appeared on his screen: "Dangerous computer programs can control your computer hardware if you fail to protect your computer right at this moment!" That was followed by a plug for a program called Spy-Wiper that promised to clean out any rogue software.

As if that wasn't alarming and annoying enough, the very next day the computer at Mr. Gosbee's one-man law office was similarly hijacked. The CD and DVD trays both opened; only one closed. Then came the same ad for Spy-Wiper, which kept popping up on both machines.

"I was getting ticked," Mr. Gosbee says.

As Mr. Gosbee and countless other computer users have discovered: It's a war out there. While malicious hackers are spreading viruses all over the global computer network, advertisers and scam artists are propagating other pests that are arguably even more annoying. They're called spyware -- and the implications for consumers are only beginning to be felt.

Indeed, spyware -- small programs that install themselves on computers to serve up advertising, monitor Web surfing and other computer activities, and carry out other orders -- is quickly replacing spam as the online annoyance computer users most com- plain about. The outrage has grown to the point that politicians are threatening legislative controls on the tactic. But in their most benign form these programs have a powerful appeal to advertisers, and some marketers are banking on the idea that people eventually will grow accustomed to some use of such invasive software.

"Snoops and spies are really trying to set up base camp in millions of computers across the country," said Sen. Ron Wyden, an Oregon Democrat, at a March hearing on proposed legislation he is co-sponsoring to tackle the problem. A Republican co-sponsor, Sen. Conrad Burns of Montana, said at the hearing: "I'm convinced that spyware is potentially an even greater concern than junk e-mail, given its invasive nature."

Continued in the article

May 3, 2004 reply from Andrew Priest [a.priest@ECU.EDU.AU

There are numerous software tools around to combat this sort problem. Personally I use Ad-aware but there are others. For example you will find a range at http://www.tucows.com/webbrowser_adwarecleaner_default.html .

Cheers Andrew

Bob Jensen's threads on security are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/000start.htm#SpecialSection


May 7, 2004 message from Todd Boyle

"The relationship stockholders have to the modern corporation looks very little like ownership. Stockholders have no tangible relationship to the thing owned, take no responsibility for its misuse, and play no part in its upkeep. As CFO magazine notes, only a quarter of market value for S&P 500 companies comes from tangible assets. So talk about "ownership" is more and more nonsensical, as our legal system has recognized. "Sophisticated lawyers these days don't use the "ownership" term," Margaret Blair of the Brookings Institution in Washington told me several years ago. "The corporation is a nexus of contracts. It's not a thing that can be owned."

What helped knock the ownership idea out of currency was the 1932 book by Adolf Berle and Gardiner Means, The Modern Corporation and Private Property, which first noted the separation of ownership and control in corporations. This separation dissolved the unity of private property, so no one "owned" the corporation any more, Berle and Means wrote. This "released management from the overriding requirement that it serve stockholders."

(quoted from Marjorie Kelly on http://www.teamproduction.us/Kelly.htm  ) see also http://www.divinerightofcapital.com/more.htm )

Now my 2 cents: until the externalities are booked in the ledger, the ledger is wrong,

Todd Boyle xcpa stuff that counts www.ledgerism.net 

Bob Jensen's threads on corporate governance are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud.htm#Governance 


Part of a May 6, 2004 message from Roberta Lipsig, SUNY Oswego [rlipsig@OSWEGO.EDU

By the way, if anybody is interested, besides being an editor of Poetry Revival - and working (his family needs some income) my son published a poetry collection, Shake Hands With the Serpent. It's available at  http://books.lulu.com/lipsig /, as well as amazon.com, bn.com. 


Martha goes to jail for what amounts to shoplifting a bag of peanuts while the bank robbers make clean get away!

Rebecca Mark's Secret Recipes for Looting $100 million From Corporations You Manage --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraudenron.htm#RebeccaMark 
Her Secret:  Have Very, Very Expensive Style in Private Jets and Offices Fit for a King (Queen?)

I accidentally stumbled on Julian Pye's Photo Diary --- http://www.photodiary.org/index.html 

At this point the diary contains 1741 entries, most of the earlier are done with Nikon Coolpixes (N950, N995, N4500), a Canon S110, and most of the later ones with a Canon D30 and a Canon 10D. The really old ones have been scanned in from older photos, mostly taken with my Nikon 801 SLR, even earlier ones with my dad's Canon F1 and my first own camera, a Minolta AF-1.... And I'll just add more and more as time goes along..... Please check back from time to time and also leave lots of comments if you want ;-)

Note the keywords at http://www.photodiary.org/keywords.html 

Actually I was looking for Websites on Enron's scandalous Rebecca Mark --- http://www.photodiary.org/ph_c_4837.shtml 

What eventually happened to Rhyolite and its past glory is similar to what happened to ENRON in 2001. Peter Cooper is now the administrator of the Houston based company which was headed by former Navy veteran Ken Lay, a swindler. Skilling made a killing. Remember Rebecca Mack.

 

Rebecca Mark's timely selling of her Enron shares yielded $82,536,737.  You can read 1997 good stuff about her in http://www.businessweek.com/1997/08/b351586.htm and 2002 bad stuff about her (with pictures) at http://www.apfn.org/enron/mark.htm 

Rebecca Mark-Jusbasche has held major leadership positions with one of the world's largest corporations.  She was chairman and CEO of Azurix from 1998 to 2000.  Prior to that time, she joined Enron Corp. in 1982, became executive vice president of Enron Power Corp. in 1986, chairman and CEO of Enron Development Corp. in 1991, chairman and CEO of Enron International in 1996 and vice chairman of Enron Corp. in 1998.  She was named to Fortune's "50 Most Powerful Women in American Business" in 1998 and 1999 and Independent Energy Executive of the Year in 1994.  She serves on a number of boards and is a member of the Young President's Organization.

She is a graduate of Baylor University and Harvard University.  She is married and has two children.
http://superwomancentral.com/panelists.htm

If Mark had taken a bitter pleasure in Skilling’s current woes—the congressional grilling, the mounting lawsuits, the inevitable criminal investigation—no one would have blamed her. And yet she was not altogether happy to be out of the game. Sure, she had sold her stock when it was still worth $56 million, and she still owns her ski house in Taos. Her battle with Skilling, however, had been a wild, exhilarating ride.
TIME TABLE AND THE REST OF THE STORY:
http://www.msnbc.com/news/718437.asp

Rebecca P. Mark-Jusbasche, now listed as a director, bagged nearly $80 million for her 1.4 million shares. Rebecca was just Rebecca P. Mark without the hyphenated flourish in 1995, though I shouldn't say "just" because she was also Enron's CEO at the time, busily trying to smooth huge wrinkles in the unraveling Dabhol power project outside Bombay. That deal, projected to run to $40 billion and said to be the biggest civilian deal ever written in India, hinged on a power purchase agreement between the Maharashtra State Electricity Board (MSEB) and Enron's Dabhol Power Corp. (a JV led with project manager Bechtel and generator supplier GE).

There had been a lot of foot-dragging on the Indian side and Becky was there to light a fire. A memorandum of understanding between Enron and the MSEB had been signed in June '92 – only two weeks, as it happened, before the World Bank said it couldn't back the project because it would make for hugely expensive electricity and didn't make sense.

According to the state chief minister's account given two years later, the phase-one $910 million 695 MW plant was to run on imported distillate oil till liquefied natural gas became available. By the time the phase-two $1.9 billion 1320 MW plant was to be commissioned, all electricity would be generated by burning LNG – a very sore point with World Bank and other critics, given the availability of much cheaper coal.

In the event, by December '93, the power purchase agreement was signed, but with an escape clause for MSEB to jump clear of the second, much bigger plant.

State and union governments in India came and went, and for every doubt that surfaced, two were assuaged long enough for Indian taxpayers to sink deeper into Enron's grip.

Soon they were bound up in agreements to go ahead with the second phase of the project -- which now promised electricity rates that would be twice those levied by Tata Power and other suppliers. Unusually for this kind of project, the state government, with Delhi acting as a back-up guarantor, backed not just project loans but actually guaranteed paying the monthly power bill forever -- all in U.S. dollars – in the event the electricity board, DPC's sole customer, defaulted.

"The deal with Enron involves payments guaranteed by MSEB, Govt. of Maharashtra and Govt. of India, which border on the ridiculous," noted altindia.net on its Enron Saga pages. "The Republic of India has staked all its assets (including those abroad, save diplomatic and military) as surety for the payments due to Enron."
http://www.asiawise.com/mainpage.asp?mainaction=50&articleid=2389 

From Pipe Dreams by Robert Bryce (NY:  Public Affairs, 2002, pp. 199-189)

It didn't work.  By the summer of 2000, Azurix's losses, once a torrent, were a geyser.  A few months earlier, an algae bloom in an AGOSBA water treatment plant had fouled the city of Buenos Aires's drinking water.  The entire city was in an uproar over the taste and smell of the tap water.  Revenues from Argentina, once a sporadic stream, were now a bare trickle.

The handwriting was on the wall.  And on August 25, 2000, Mark resigned as chairman and CEO of Azurix and gave up her seat on Enron's Board of Directors.  Her string of business failures has likely assured that she will never get another job in corporate America.  The woman who prefers clothes from Armani and Escada is all dressed up with nowhere to go.  Not that she needs to go anywhere, mind you.

Three months before she quit Azurix, she sold 104,240 Enron shares, a move that brought her total stock-sale proceeds to $82.5 million.  Counting all the salary, stock options, and no-payback loans that she got from Enron, Mark probably banked somewhere in the neighborhood of $100 million.  That's a truly staggering sum when you consider that her misguided deals in India, Argentina, and elsewhere cost investors at least $2 billion.

But those failures were in the past.  None of them mattered.  She was rich, gorgeous, and married again.  Her new husband was Michael Jusbasche, a rich Bolivian-born businessman.  The two were moving into her house in River Oaks and would continue supporting a few local causes.  The failure of Azurix was no longer a concern.  In early 2002, Mark told Vanity Fair that the company "wasn't a disaster.  We couldn't survive as a public company because we didn't have earnings sufficient to support the growth of the stock."

Oh.

So Azurix wasn't a disaster.  It just didn't have "earnings sufficient to support the growth of the stock."  That's a beautifully crafted phrase to describe a dog of a company that should never have gone public in the first place.  In the end, Mark's vision--the commoditization of water, water trading, yet more fawning profiles of her in the business press--landed with a stinging belly flop.  And Azurix, the company that was to "become a major global water company" lasted as a publicly traded entity for just twenty-one months.

The bath Enron took on Azurix would prove very costly.  Mark's debacle had been financed with--what else?--off-the-balance-sheet entities, so that Enron didn't have to reflect Azurix's debts on its balance sheet.  And those interlinked entities, called Marlin and Osprey, would play a pivotal role in drowning Enron.  There's no doubt the Azurix mess was poorly thought out, but Rebecca Mark and her team weren't really corrupt.  Misguided maybe.  They made some bad judgments and didn't pay attention to expenses.  Perhaps their idea was just ahead of its time.  But they never purposely misled investors or committed fraud.  That would not be the case at another overhyped Enron venture, Enron Broadband Services.

Bob Jensen's threads on Enron are now at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudEnron.htm 

Also see Ken Lay's secret recipes for legally looting $184,494.426 from corporations you manage --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraudenron.htm#SecretRecipes 


The Original Tipping Page --- http://www.tipping.org/TopPage.shtml 

This page is the first of its kind, and probably still the only one and the most complete. There is no right or wrong when it comes to tipping, just common sense. Also note that tipping is an option, not a must. There are circumstances that are obviously not as simple as black and white. Use your judgement when deciding to tip or not to tip.

Also check out How travel stuff works --- http://travel.howstuffworks.com/  

Bob Jensen's helpers for travel are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob3.htm#Travel 


Is grade deflation hitting the Ivy League?  Not yet in most Ivy's, but yes at Princeton.

"Deflating the easy 'A'," by Teresa Méndez, Christian Science Monitor, May 4, 2004 --- http://www.csmonitor.com/2004/0504/p12s02-legn.html 

Princeton students fear that a tough stance on grades may harm campus culture - and limit their appeal to graduate schools.

When Adam Kopald exits Princeton University's gothic gates as a graduate in June 2005, he will not have a GPA. Nor will he be assigned a class rank. He may not even know the grades of his closest friends. 

It's this lack of competition, say Princeton students, that has made for a much less cutthroat environment than one might expect from one of the country's most academically elite universities.

Some students argue that that's been a good thing for their school, where they say they strive to do their own best work rather than to outdo one another - but it's a luxury they now fear losing.

A new grading policy, to go into effect next year, will reduce the number of A-pluses, A's, and A-minuses for all courses to 35 percent, down from the current 46 percent. A's given for independent work will be capped at 55 percent.

"There's definitely going to be a competition that didn't exist before," says Mr. Kopald, a history major. "Because any way you cut it, there are only 35 percent of people who are going to get A's."

At a time when campuses are clamoring to appear more interested in the whole person, students' mental health, and well-rounded development, some wonder if the message being sent by instituting quotas isn't contradictory.

School administrators, however, argue that grade inflation cannot be ignored. Princeton first examined the problem six years ago.

"Our feeling then was that we could just let it go, and over the next 25 years everyone would be getting all A's," says Nancy Weiss Malkiel, dean of the college. "But would that really be responsible in terms of the way we educated our students?"

According to Dean Malkiel, the goals of 35 percent and 55 percent will align the number of A's granted with figures from the late 1980s and early '90s.

Other schools have tried to address grade inflation, using measures like including contextual information on transcripts, says Malkiel. And in 2002, Harvard limited students graduating with honors to 60 percent. But as far as Malkiel knows, this is the first widespread move to stem the trend of upward spiraling grades that dates back to the 1970s.

What caused grades to inflate

Experts blame grade inflation on everything from fears of the draft during the Vietnam War to a consumer mentality that expects higher marks in exchange for steeper tuition.

But some professors say students today are increasingly bold about haggling for higher marks. Often it's easier to give an A-minus instead of a B-plus than to argue.

Malkiel also says a broader culture of inflation may be a factor. Everything from high school GPAs to SAT scores have been on the rise.

But not all see the phenomenon of rising grades as a bad thing. William Coplin, a professor at the Maxwell School at Syracuse University, feels strongly there are a number of reasons why grade inflation is not just acceptable - but good.

He says that students learn in the classroom less than half of what they need to know for real life. Distributing higher grades gives them room to explore other areas of interest and to develop as people.

"Most students do not see college as a place to develop skills. They see it as a place to get a degree and have a high GPA," he says. "The truth is, skills are more important than GPA." Professor Coplin worries that attempting to stamp out grade inflation is simply "making the kids even crazier about grades."

Annie Ostrager, a politics major at Princeton, isn't convinced that grade inflation is a problem either.

"I personally have not perceived my grades to be inflated," says the junior. "I work hard and get good grades. But I don't really feel like grades are flying around that people aren't earning."

But most Princeton students acknowledge there is a problem - although many doubt that quotas are the best solution.

Matt Margolin, president of the student government, estimates that 325 of the 350 e-mails he has received from Princeton students express frustration with the new grading policy.

Princeton isn't alone in the battle against inflated grades. A study last year found that A's accounted for 44 to 55 percent of grades in the Ivy League, MIT, Stanford, and the University of Chicago.

Will Princeton stand alone?

Yet by drawing public attention to Princeton in particular, students worry it may come to be seen as the most flagrant example.

"Putting it in the public light like this has really damaged the image of a Princeton transcript," says Robert Wong, a sophomore studying molecular biology.

Malkiel has assured students this isn't true. In conversations with admissions officers at graduate schools, employers, and fellowship coordinators across the country, she says she has been told "that they would know going forward that a Princeton A was a real A." They even suggested that tougher grading will ultimately benefit Princeton students.

But not everyone is convinced.

"I would like to go to law school, so my eye has been on this proposal very carefully," says Mr. Margolin, a junior and a politics major. "My understanding is that law school decides your fate based mostly on GPA and LSAT scores."

"A call for an end to grade inflation," by Mary Beth Marklein, USA Today, May 2, 2002 --- http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2002-02-05-grade-inflation.htm 

At Harvard University, a recent study found that nearly half of all grades awarded were A or A-minus.

A tenured professor is suing Temple University, saying he was fired because he wouldn't make his courses easier or give students higher grades.

And now, a new report prepared by the American Academy of Arts & Sciences says it's time to put an end to grade inflation.

Concerns about grade inflation, defined as an upward shift in the grade-point average without a corresponding increase in student achievement, are not new. The report cites evidence from national studies beginning as early as 1960. And while it is a national phenomenon, authors Henry Rosovsky, a former Harvard dean, and Matthew Hartley, a lecturer at the University of Pennsylvania, say the phenomenon is "especially noticeable" in the Ivy League.

They blame the rise of grade inflation in higher education on a complex web of factors, including:

An administrative response to campus turmoil in the 1960s, and a trend, begun in the 1980s, in which universities operate like businesses for student clients.

The advent of student evaluations of professors and the increasing role of part-time instructors.

Watered-down course content, along with changes in curricular and grading policies.

"At first glance (grade inflation) may appear to be of little consequence," the authors write. But it "creates internal confusion giving students and colleagues less accurate information; it leads to individual injustices (and) it may also engender confusion for graduate schools and employers." They say schools should establish tangible and consistent standards, formulate alternative grading systems and create a standard distribution curve in each class to act as a yardstick.

Rosovsky and Hartley's report is available at www.amacad.org/publications/occasional.htm

May 4, 2004 reply from Hertel, Paula [phertel@trinity.edu

I just now heard on NPR an interview with one of the Princeton faculty who voted for the new policy to limit A’s to 35%. She (a professor of economics) pointed out that one of the biggest factors in establishing grade inflation is the perception of faculty that course evaluations will be lower if grades are lower. We should add that, even if the perception is wrong, it’s existence and influence does our students no favor in the long run.

It’s the nature of the course evaluations that must change!

Paula

 

May 4, 2004 reply from Bob Jensen

Trinity University professors may have too much integrity to allow student evaluations to inflate grades. However, we do have marked grade inflation caused by something. Research studies at other universities found that tough graders take a beating on course evaluations:

Duke University Study --- http://www.aas.duke.edu/development/Miscellaneous/grades.html 

Lenient graders tend to support one theory for these findings: students with good teachers learn more, earn higher grades and, appreciating a job well done, rate the course more highly. This is good news for pedagogy, if true. But tough graders tend to side with two other interpretations: in what has become known as the grade attribution theory, students attribute success to themselves and failure to others, blaming the instructor for low marks. In the so-called leniency theory, students simply reward teachers who reward them (not because they're good teachers). In both cases, students deliver less favorable evaluations to hard graders.

University of Washington Study --- http://www.washington.edu/newsroom/news/k120497.html

"Our research has confirmed what critics of student ratings have long suspected, that grading leniency affects ratings. All other things being equal, a professor can get higher ratings by giving higher grades," adds Gillmore, director of the UW's office of educational assessment.

The two researchers' criticisms, which are counter to much prevailing opinion in the educational community, stem from a new study of evaluations from 600 classes representing the full spectrum of undergraduate courses offered at the UW. Their study is described in a paper being published in the December issue of the Journal of Educational Psychology and in two papers published in a special section edited by Greenwald in the November issue of the American Psychologist.

Rutgers University --- http://complit.rutgers.edu/palinurus/ 

An article that drew a lot of responses in the media. Among other things, the author claims that "Some departments shower students with A's to fill poorly attended courses that might otherwise be canceled. Individual professors inflate grades after consumer-conscious administrators hound them into it. Professors at every level inflate to escape negative evaluations by students, whose opinions now figure in tenure and promotion decisions."

Archibold, Randal C. "Just Because the Grades Are Up, Are Princeton Students Smarter?" The New York Times (Feb 18, 1998), Sec: A P. 1.

A long article following a report on Princeton’s grade inflation. Includes a presentation of possible reasons for the phenomenon.

Goldin, Davidson. "In A Change of Policy, and Heart, Colleges Join Fight Against Inflated Grades." The New York Times (Jul 4, 1995), Sec: 1 P. 8. 

The article presents the tendency of elite institutions to follow Stanford and Dartmouth’s lead in fighting Grade Inflation. Brown stands out in refusing the trend by making the transcripts reflect achievements only. The rational: "'When you send in your resume, do you put down all the jobs you applied for that you didn't get?' said Sheila Blumstein, Brown's dean. 'A Brown transcript is a record of a student's academic accomplishments.'"

University of Montana --- http://www.rtis.com/reg/bcs/pol/touchstone/november97/crumbley.htm 

The mid-term removal of a chemistry instructor at the University of Montana in 1995 because he was "too tough" illustrates the widespread grade inflation in the United States. Grade inflation will not diminish until the root cause of grade inflation and course work deflation is eliminated: widespread use of anonymous student evaluations of teaching (SET). If an instructor calls a student stupid by giving low marks, it is unlikely the student will evaluate the instructor highly on an anonymous questionnaire.

 As more and more research questions the validity of summative SET as an indicator of instructor effectively, ironically there has been a greater use of summative SET. A summative SET has at least one question which acts as a surrogate for teaching effectiveness. In 1984, two-thirds of liberal arts colleges were using SET for personnel decisions, and 86% in 1993. Most business schools now use SET for decision making, and 95% of the deans at 220 accredited undergraduate schools "always use them as a source of information," but only 67% of the department heads relied upon them. Use of SET in higher education appears frozen in time. Even though they measured the wrong thing, they linger like snow in a shaded corner of the back yard, refusing to thaw.

 

Mixed opinions voiced in The Chronicle of Higher Education (not usually backed by a formal study) --- http://chronicle.com/colloquy/98/evaluation/re.htm 

CONCLUSIONS

Causes of grade inflation are complex and very situational in terms of discipline, instructor integrity, pedagogy, promotion and tenure decision processes, course demand by students, pressures to retain tuition-paying students, etc.  I suspect that if I dig harder, there will be a few studies attempting to contradict the findings above.  

One type of contradictory study does not impress me on this issue of grade inflation.  That is a study of the instructors rated highest by students, say the top ten percent of the instructors in the college.  Just because some, or even most, of those highly-rated instructs are also hard graders does not get at the root of the problem.  The problem lies with those instructors getting average or below evaluations that see more lenient grading as a way to raise student evaluations.

One thing is absolutely clear in my mind is that teaching evaluations are the major cause of system-wide grade inflation.  My opinion is in part due to the explosion in grade inflation that accompanied the start of anonymous course evaluations being reported to administrators and P&T committees.  In the 1960s and 1970s we had course evaluations in most instances, but these were always considered to be private information owned only by the course instructors who were generally assumed to be professionally responsible enough to seriously consider the evaluation outcomes in private.  

There are no simple solutions to grade inflation.  The Princeton 35% cap on A grades is not a solution if some members of the faculty just refuse to abide by the cap (and faculty are a know to be proudly independent).  Grades are highly motivational and, as such, motivate for different purposes in different situations.  Student evaluations of faculty serve different purposes and, as such, motivate faculty for different purposes in different situations.

I have no solution to recommend at the moment for grade inflation.  But I would like to recommend that my own university, Trinity University, consider adopting an A+ grade with a cap of 10% (not rounded) in each class.  For example, a class with 19 students would be allowed to have one A+ student;  a class with 20 students could have two A+ students.  The A+ would not be factored into the overall gpa, but it would be recorded on a student's transcript.  This would do absolutely nothing to relieve grade inflation.  But it would help to alleviate the problem of having exceptional students in a class lose motivation to strive harder for the top grade.  One of the problems noted in the Duke, Washington, and Rutgers studies is that exceptional students don't strive as hard after they are assured of getting the highest grade possible in the class.  Why not make them strive a little bit harder?

It was just plain tougher in the good old days.  Some sobering percentages about grade inflation --- http://www.cybercollege.com/plume3.htm 

In 1966 at Harvard, 22% of all grades were A's. In 2003, that figure had grown to 46%. In 1968 at UCLA, 22% of all grades were A's. By 2002, that figure was 47%.

The so-called Ivy League schools, MIT, Stanford, and the University of Chicago, averaged 50% A's (in recent years).

The most immediate effect of giving almost 50% A's is that exceptional students see little reason to try to excel. They know they can "coast their way" to an A without really being challenged.

 

Awarding students A's for C+ work robs the best and the brightest.
Prof. Roger Arnold --- http://www.cybercollege.com/plume3.htm  

May 4, 2004 reply from David R. Fordham [fordhadr@JMU.EDU

RIGHT on!

Back when I was program director, it was empirically demonstrable that grade distribution, (as well as time of day, number of empty seats in the classroom, and male-vs. female professor-vs. student, -- all individually, let alone collectively), were able to overpower individual identity when it came to student evaluations of faculty.

I never, ever, referred to them as Student Evaluations of Faculty. I always referred to them as “Student Perceptions”. I used them as ONE (and a minor one at that) of many factors in evaluating faculty. One of the more valid, in my mind, measures of faculty performance is feedback from 5-year+ alums. Although delayed, such feedback says much more about the quality of “education” than anything which could be generated contemporaneously. This is the major reason for my contempt for “assessment programs” of the form in which they are currently being promoted by the Asinine Administrators Compelling Sales of Bullexcrement… (I may not have the full name of the organization completely correct, since they recently changed their official moniker, but I’m hoping everyone will forgive my mistake and go with the acronym.)

As always,

Argumentative, Assertive, Contrary, Scathing, and Bullheaded,

David R. Fordham
PBGH Faculty Fellow
James Madison University

May 4, 2004 reply from Linda Kidwell from the University of Niagara (visiting this year Down Under)

I stumbled into a different approach here in Australia during my visiting year. There are percentage parameters for grade distribution at some universities. For example only a small percentage can be awarded HD (A), and there's a maximum percentage that can receive Fs. There's essentially a bell curve expectation. I had a bit of trouble first term here because my grade distribution was too high for the faculty guidelines.

I have mixed feelings about it. I consider it a violation of academic freedom in part, though perhaps suggested guidelines are good. And if I have a particularly good class, I don't want to artificially lower their grades. On the other hand, it does take some of the grade pressure off -- I never find myself tempted to curve a tough exam, and I don't automatically round upward for those borderline grades. So it's a mixed bag!

What I'd like to see is a bit more concern over the granting of latin honors in the US. When I was a student at Smith, only the top 2 students earned Summa Cum Laude, the next 25 or so got Magna, and next 50 got Cum Laude (I'm guessing at the latter 2, but you get the idea). So you really had to be among the best to earn it. At Niagara, my home institution, it is based on GPA. In business we have tougher grading standards (tougher courses too?) than other areas. As a result, a small percentage of our business students earn latins, but a staggering 70% of the education majors get them. Are all the brilliant students really in the school of education? Every year at commencement the business and arts & science faculty roll their eyes as those honors are announced. I think it cheapens the whole honor, and it is unfair to students in the areas that don't inflate grades. It's also unfair to those education students who really are top-flight.

Linda Kidwell

May 5, 2004 reply from Robert Holmes Glendale College [rcholmes@GLENDALE.CC.CA.US

Some time ago I mentioned to the list that I agreed to meet with some of the students in my on-line course for extra instruction. At least one of you said that since not everyone could come to my office, I was being unfair to the class by allowing the students who could come to my office to have added help. I thought at the time how could I be unfair by helping students? My school does not have a maximum or minimum limit on the number of A's or B's we assign to students. We are expected to assign grades based on mastery of the subject, not by rank in the class. When grades are assigned by rank in the class, then giving one student the benefit of my time and denying it to others is unfair. Those who can come to my office are better able to beat the students who can not come. I do not like the idea of the competitive model. I do not want to frustrate students who are eager for learning because it is not fair to the rest of the class. I would much rather see students helping each other to the benefit of both instead of withholding knowledge in order to beat their classmates. It is probably easier to assign grades when you just add up the points and the first X% get A's and so on, but I would hope most of us know what we want the students to get from our classes, and those who get it should be rewarded and those who don't get it should not be rewarded, no matter how many of each are in a particular class. As the college bound population grows, the "top" schools in the country should be having more high quality applicants to choose from, and they should find that more students are mastering the subject matter, and thus receiving higher grades on average.

May 5, 2004 reply from Bob Jensen

Hi Robert,

As usual, you raised an interesting point.  I think most of us are accustomed to motivating our top students to reach for the stars.  We want to graduate students who can get into the top graduate schools, leading CPA firms, top corporations, etc.  We want to bring honors to our university by watching students get outside honors such as Rhodes Scholarships and medals for CPA examination scores.

One of the best ways to motivate top students is grade competition. Top students generally strive for the top grade in a class and the highest gpa in the college. But they may not strive any harder than it takes to get the top grade in a class, at least that's what the studies from Duke, Washington, and Princeton are telling us.

Now the Australian system that Linda Kidwell describes with a bell-curve grade distribution and a limit of say 2% for that Highest Honors designation is aimed at motivating the best students in the class to obtain the highest honor possible on their transcripts.  These top students work night and day to earn their star designations.

Your grading system is not designed to motivate top students to be highest honor students.  There is no grade incentive for an exceptional student in your class work any harder than it takes to earn the same grade with half the effort that it takes an average student to work extra hours with you for the same A grade.  

But your system may have turned some student's life around, a student who never thought it was possible to earn an A grade in an accounting class.  You have thus met what is probably your main goal as an educator.  And you have not achieved grade inflation by simply dumbing down your course.

I guess what we conclude from your system is that there are different grading scales for different purposes.  Perhaps there is more student objection to grade inflation in the Ivy League schools because these students are reaching for the highest stars required to gain entry into elite graduate programs or some other elitist future where only the highest stars have an entry opportunity.

Your A students, on the other hand, may have a longer-run shot at the top because you helped coax them out of the starting gate.  

I guess I can't find fault with this except that I hope you kick ass when you encounter an exceptional student.


May 5, 2004 reply from Chuck Pier [texcap@HOTMAIL.COM

As a follow-up to my commentary on the number vs. letter grading system, when I first got to Appalachian State I was thrilled that we used the + & - system because I felt I could provide differentiation for the students and not lump the students with a acore of 80 with the students that scored an 89. However, what I have realized as I approach the end of my second year here is that the more divisions we have in the grading scale, the more boundary lines we create. The more boundary lines we create, the more students are disappointed about missing the next level and the more they will ask or pester you to help them. After all, "we are only talking about a point or two!"

This time of the year is always the most stressful for me. Does it get any better after we've been doing it for a while? (One of David's rhetorical questions.) ;>)

Chuck

Charles A. Pier 
Assistant Professor Department of Accounting 
Walker College of Business Appalachian State University 
Boone, NC 28608 
email:
pierca@appstate.edu 

May 7, 2004 reply from Randy Elder [rjelder@SYR.EDU

I've followed the thread on grade inflation with much interest. It is a topic that I have great interest in, and here are some observations.

1. Relation between grades and evaluations - I think that the faculty perception that grades influence evaluations is a much greater problem for grade inflation than the actual relation, which I don't believe is that strong. An even greater problem is that bad teachers use grading difficulty as an excuse for their evaluations.

2. Student evaluations - I also believe that we place way too much reliance on student evaluations. Evaluations aren't going away, but there is minimal effort to evaluate the actual effectiveness of teachers.

3. Grading policies - Some of the discussion has focused on grading on the "curve". I find that professors either grade using some sort of curve, or using a fixed evaluation criteria. I much prefer the latter, as it does not place students into competition with each other. More importantly, it allows students to better know where they stand in the course, and attribute their performance to their own effort. My courses always have a fixed number of points, and I inform students of the minimum cutoffs for each grade level.

4. Sample exams - In the Syracuse University Whitman School of Management, it is policy to make some sample exam material available. The reason is to provide equal access, on the assumption that there are old exams floating around in frat houses. The theory is to give students an idea of the types of questions to be asked. I also encourage students to use it as a diagnostic tool. Unfortunately, I believe most students misuse the sample exams and focus on the answers, rather than the knowledge to be tested.

5. Grading information - At SU, we have historically not made much grading information available, unlike my experience at public universities. We are moving toward much greater availability of this information. I hope that this will eliminate some posturing about grades (prof who claims to be tough but isn't; belief that prof X gets good grades only because he grades easy, etc.) We also hope to provide some grading guidelines that will serve to reduce some grade inflation.

Randy Elder
Associate Professor and Director
Joseph I. Lubin School of Accounting
Martin J. Whitman School of Management
Syracuse University
Syracuse, NY 13244-2130
Email: rjelder@som.syr.edu 
Phone: (315) 443-3359
Fax: (315) 443-5457

After I asked Randy to elaborate on his Point 5 above regarding grading information disclosure, he replied as follows on May 10, 2004:

Bob,

Thanks for the compliment. I wasn't sure that my remarks were that thoughtful as I was reading AECM messages on a LIFO basis and discovered lots more good input on the subject after my post.

We do not make grade information available to students. However, I believe it may be helpful to do so as it eliminates misinformation that is passed around informally and on the web (you might want to check out the site www.ratemysuclass.com). This web site is spreading to other universities.

We make summarized grading information available to department chairs to share with faculty. We have tried to focus on courses by omitting faculty names. The accounting department has established grading guidelines by course level, and I expect the School of Management to do the same in the near future. I emphasize that these are guidelines, and faculty can deviate from them.

I have been a strong advocate of having such policies, and was influenced by my time as a doctoral student at Michigan State, and year visit at Indiana. As a doctoral student, I wanted to make sure that my grading conformed to grading by full-time faculty. I was directed to a file that had a complete grading history for every course. At Indiana, the department shared a 10-year grading history for every course. During my visit at Indiana, the AIS department adopted grading guidelines that we modeled ours after.

Randy

May 11, 2004 reply from Bob Jensen

Hi Randy,

I follow rate-my-class ( http://www.ratemysuclass.com/browse2.cfm?id=111  ) only as a curiosity.

It is an illustration of the evils of self-selection and bias. Some professors actually encourage selected students to send in evaluations. Naturally these tend to be glowing evaluations.

Most courses reviewed suffer from self-selection bias of disgruntled students. Most reviews tend to be negative. The number of students who send in reviews is miniscule relative to the number who take the courses. I mean we're talking about epsilon here!

Disgruntled students also seem to have a competition regarding who can write the funniest disparaging review.

Fortunately, the site seems to be ignored where it counts.

Bob Jensen

May 12, 2004 reply from David R. Fordham [fordhadr@JMU.EDU

Another one is:

www.ratemyprofessor.com 

I use it as an example of how gullible people are... taking Internet sites as Gospel without considering where the data comes from...

David R. Fordham 
PBGH Faculty Fellow 
James Madison University

May 5, 2004 reply from Jagdish Gangolly [JGangolly@UAMAIL.ALBANY.EDU

Bob,

I think it is important to provide incentives to be the best. It is also important to provide incentives to be NOT at the bottom.

In the old days, at Cambridge University, at least in the Mathematical Tripos, the students were graded into four classes: senior wrangler (only one student could be this), wranglers, senior optimes, and junior optimes. During the commencement, the student at the bottom of the totem pole would be required to carry the "wooden spoon" (for a picture of it click on http://www.damtp.cam.ac.uk/user/sjc1/selwyn/mathematics/spoon.html ), to signify that (s)he was good mainly for stirring the oats.

While draconian, the wooden spoon provided sufficient incentives to the students not to be the one to carry it. The tragedy is that nowadays many students might carry it with pride (to be called not-a-geek or nerd).

Jagdish

May 5, 2004 reply from Bob Jensen

Hi Jagdish,

I loved the link at http://www.damtp.cam.ac.uk/user/sjc1/selwyn/mathematics/spoon.html 

But I have one question:

Wooden spoon too quick 
Make student much to sick

Wooden spoon too late 
Make student out of date

Wooden spoon on time 
Make student want to climb

Main question when I teach a goon 
Where is it best to place that spoon?

Thanks,
Bob Jensen

May 5 reply from Jagdish Pathak

I find the very grades by themselves faulty in the scenario of those schools where very best are chosen to be privileged students, viz. ivy league ones. It is absolutely wrong to have more than one grade in such schools in my view. All of us are aware that these schools admit only the top rung of SAT and what value addition is done in four years by the school, if these students come out lesser than 'A' grade?
I believe there is a way to differentiate these all potential 'As' and that is by differentiating 'A' grade itself. The very best or the top 5-10% may automatically would acquire AAA, the major middle group would acquire 'AA' and the rest minority may get 'A'.There can be a theoretical provision for a 'B' or 'F' which will be a 'B' or 'F' like anywhere else and student may attempt in only one additional chance to make it into higher AAA or AA or A grade.

How does it sound? Please forgive me if I have sounded a bit judgmental.

Jagdish Pathak, PhD
Assistant Professor of Accounting Systems
Accounting & Audit Area
Odette School of Business
University of Windsor
401 Sunset
Windsor, N9B 3P4, ON
Canada

May 5, 2004 reply from Bob Jensen

Hi Jagdish,

I think a “rose by any other name is a rose.”

I’m not certain whether AAA/AA/A/B/C/D/F is much different that 6/5/4/3/2/1/0 in the eyes a student in a class.  An ordinal ranking with seven categories is an ordinal ranking with seven categories by any other name.

Other ordinal rankings by any other name may be somewhat different.  Whether ranks have two scales (P/F), three scales (H/M/L), five scales (A/B/C/D/F) or a ranking of N students (1/2/3/…/N) changes the nature of the competition.  The more ranking categories, the more intense the competition becomes to get the highest possible grade.  For example, in the U.S. Military Academy, the top ranking graduates down to the bottom ranking graduates are all determined, and this makes for some intense competition to be the top graduate (although the lower ten prospective graduates may decide to compete in a race to the bottom just for the distinction of being last after earning a decent rank becomes hopeless).

Another problem is one of aggregation across courses.  For example, an ordinal scale of A/B/C/D/F becomes a cardinal scale carried out to two decimal points when we transform a set of grades into a something like a gpa = 3.47.  We have thereby created a cardinal way to rank graduates on a continuum when the inputs to the cardinal outcomes are only ordinal A/B/C/D.F grades for every course.

Students are most interested in how rankings affect them in later life.  For example, suppose Big Four accounting firms will only interview students with a gpa of 3.30 or above.  In that case, weaker students will advocate more grade inflation so they can make the cut.  Top students will advocate grade deflation so that the pool of students having a gpa higher than 3.30 smaller.  For example, suppose grade deflation leaves a pool of 10 qualified graduates whereas grade inflation leaves a pool of 40 qualified graduates.  If only nine winners are going to be chosen from the pool, then top students have better odds with grade deflation.

One problem we are having at the K-12 level, is that students are aspiring for less.  I will forward Steve Curry’s opinion on this.

 Bob Jensen

May 5, 2004 reply from Steve Curry

The five letter grades were supposed to be a scale with C meaning average. A and B were above average, D and F were below average. The youth and college kids I work with at church are not interested in this scale. (Nor the related 100-point scale, nor the 4.0 GPA scale.) The parents want the A, the kids themselves are much more in the pass/fail mindset. It’s like the joke what do you call someone who graduated at the bottom of the class in medical school? Doctor. Whether this is an overall societal trend, I cannot say. It may be useful to find out. If so, our evaluations of them and their evaluations of us need to change.

When the mandatory faculty evaluations were introduced back in 1987, I heard one professor argue that there should only be one question: “Did you learn anything?” From what I’ve seen in the teens I know, this simple evaluation is what they want. When the pass/fail kids become the pass/fail parents and teachers, the various scaled systems may not survive. If change is to occur, it will be long and painful.

Another question arises: How important is evaluation in the first place? Certainly education that is preparing students for life needs to evaluate whether the student has learned what is necessary but what about the part of education that is learning for learning’s sake? Someone who wants to become a banker certainly needs to be taught amortization and there needs to be an evaluation to see if they understand the concept and its application before they are certified. But is it really necessary to evaluate a person who takes a history course simply because they love the story? Evaluating the former is easy. Give them some numbers and see if they get it right (pass/fail). The latter is more difficult. Which details does the instructor think are important? This subjectivity lends itself more to a scaled evaluation but the basic question is if evaluation is even necessary at all. Back to the simple question “Did you learn anything?”

All this may help explain the rise of technical training in our society where you either get the certificate or you don’t. Maybe Career Services may have some insight as to whether campus recruiters even look at the transcript. In my first job out of college, the phone company never requested a transcript, they just asked if I had a degree. Have our recent graduates encountered the same?

That we even have a concern over grade deflation (a few years ago we were discussing grade inflation and the Lake Wobegon Effect) draws into question the credibility of our current evaluation system in the first place. If average truly is average then the average grade should have been, should be, and should always be a C. If it isn’t, this suggests the evaluation system is not accurate or impartial. It also implies it is not fair.

Stephen Curry Stephen.Curry@Trinity.edu
Information Technology Services Phone: 210-999-7445
Trinity University   http://www.trinity.edu\scurry 
One Trinity Place 
San Antonio, Texas 78212-7200

May 5, 2004 response from akonstam@trinity.edu 

I have never understood faculty be interested in having lower grades in the class. Grade inflation might be caused by: 

1. Better students. Should not the better students at Harvard get better grades. When we change our average student SAT from 1000 to 1250 should they not get better grades.

2. Maybe teaching and teaching tools have become more effective.

3. Are all courses equally hard and should they be. Do we really think art courses and calculus courses need to be equally difficult?

With deference to Bob Jensen's studies their are two many variables in producing better grades to pin down the cause effectively.

 Aaron Konstam 
Computer Science Trinity University 
One Trinity Place. San Antonio, TX 78212-7200

May 5, 2004 reply from Bob Jensen

Aaron wrote the following:

****************

1. Better students. Should not the better students at Harvard get better grades. When we change our average student SAT from 1000 to 1250 should they not get better grades.
**************

Hi Aaron,

I think your argument overlooks the fact that the people raising the most hell over grade inflation are the best students currently enrolled in our universities, especially students in the Ivy League universities.  If 50% of the students get A grades at Harvard, the Harvard grade average becomes irrelevant when Harvard graduates are attempting to get into law, medical, and other graduate schools at Harvard and the other Ivy League graduate schools.  Virtually all the applicants have A grades.  Where do admissions gatekeepers go from there in an effort to find the best of the best?

The uproar from top students at Princeton was a major factor leading to Princeton 's decision to put a cap on the proportion of A grades.  

Some years back the Stanford Graduate School of Business succumbed to pressures from top MBA students to cap the highest grades in courses to 15% of each class.  This became known as the Van Horne Cap when I was visiting at Stanford (Jim Van Horne was then the Associate Dean).  The reason the top students were upset by grade inflation was that they were not being recognized as being the best of the best in order to land $150,000 starting salaries in the top consulting firms of the world.  Those consulting firms wanted the top 10% of the graduates tagged "prime-grade" for market by Stanford professors.  (Recruiters also complained that all letters of recommendation, even those for weaker students, were too glowing to be of much use.  This is partly due to fear of lawsuits, but it's also a cop out.)

*******************
And now, a new report prepared by the American Academy of Arts & Sciences says it's time to put an end to grade inflation.

"Deflating the easy 'A'," by Teresa Méndez, Christian Science Monitor, May 4, 2004 --- http://www.csmonitor.com/2004/0504/p12s02-legn.html  
*******************


May 6, 2004 message from Paul Fisher [PFisher@ROGUECC.EDU

The BBC did a small piece on the four-minute mile this morning. It is interesting that 30-40 years ago that barrier was thought to be impossible to break, yet now runners are not considered "world-class" unless they can do so regularly. Does that mean our tracks are shorter? Stopwatches slower?

We should be improving our instructing ability and our students grades should be reflecting that. I know that my courses are taught much better today than twenty years ago, and I would be surprised if any instructor would say that their teaching skills have degraded over the years.

That does not mean I don't see the internal problems with SAT and other measurements that may inhibit student learning, yet maintain instructor status.

Paul

May 6, 2004 reply from Bob Jensen

Hi Paul,

You said: 

***************************** 
"We should be improving our instructing ability and our students' grades should be reflecting that. I know that my courses are taught much better today than twenty years ago, and I would be surprised if any instructor would say that their teaching skills have degraded over the years." 
****************************

Near the bottom of this message you will read a less optimistic quote from Ohio State University: 

*************************** 
The massive number of undergraduates who are effectively illiterate (and innumerate) leads to a general dumbing down of the curriculum, certainly the humanities curriculum. 
***************************

It is absolutely clear that we are not "improving our instructing ability" in K-12 education where our TV-generation graduates are on a race for the bottom and are demonstrating an immense lack of motivation in public schools. They are winning a speed test in terms of hours spent in class (maybe 4-5 hours) per day vis-à-vis my school days when we spent nearly eight hours per day (8:00-12:00 a.m. and 1:00-4:30 p.m.) in class minus two recess breaks.

NB:  
Especially note the last paragraph at the bottom of this message which compares U.S. versus Japanese school children.  The last line reads "A little Japanese respect for hard work might work wonders for this generation of American slackers who refuse to recognize their own ignorance with anything other than praise."      

It is also doubtful for our college graduates when employers tell us how badly communication skills have declined in our graduates, especially grammar and creative writing skills of the TV-generation. I think the media has greatly expanded student superficial knowledge about a lot of things, but so much of it seems so shallow. Ask your college's older writing composition instructors if writing skills have improved over the years? Ask the instructor's in the basic math/stat course if math skills have improved?

I think that more of our graduates might be able to run the four-minute mile, and their term papers may be equally fast-paced Google pastes that set speed records but not quality records.

How well do you think our college graduates would do on this supposed 1895 test for eighth graders --- http://skyways.lib.ks.us/kansas/genweb/ottawa/exam.html 

If you get a chance, compare the reading book currently used in the fifth grade of your school district with the turn-of-the-century McGuffey Reader ---- http://omega.cohums.ohio-state.edu/mailing_lists/CLA-L/1999/12/0092.php 

The recent anecdotes about the inability of undergraduates to read what grade school students used to read before WW II should hardly come as a surprise. The new 1998 NAEP writing assessments, how available at the National Center for Educational Statistics, show in correlation with the reading assessments that the majority of US students lack the skills for reading any advanced literature.

In his press release, Gary W. Phillips, the Acting Commissioner for the NCES, stated that the average or typical US student is not a proficient writer (where "proficient" is a descriptive skill category of the NAEP) and has only partial mastery of the knowledge and skills required for solid academic performance in writing. This is true, he noted, at the national level for all three grades (4th, 8th and 12th). Only 25% had reached the proficient achievement level, while a mere 1% in each grade had reached the advanced achievement level. I note that the skills required for basic, proficient and advanced are very generous. By the English standards of a century ago, "advanced" would probably not even qualify for "basic."

Here is a summary of the percentage of students at or above each achievement level by gender:

Gender Advanced Proficient Basic

Male 0 14 70 Female 1 29 86.

The discrepancy between male and female proficiency should ring alarm bells throughout the educational world. The gap here nearly guarantees poor male performance at the university. As a gross description, the data show that 23-38 percent of US students fall below grade level in writing. If one compares the writing assessments with the reading assessments, a fairly close correspondence between the two is evident. Here is a summary of the percentage of students at or above each achievement level in reading by year of assessment:

Year Advanced Proficient Basic

98 6 40 77 94 4 36 75 92 4 40 80.

What this tells us is what everyone who teaches writing knows quite well: writing is a form of book talk. Failure in reading assures failure in writing.

It is, as a consequence, hopeless to tackle the writing problem without first solving the reading problem. Indeed, I'm quite confident that a massive improvement in reading skills would, by itself, produce a significant improvement in writing skills. The NAEP assessments suggest modest improvement in reading at the fourth grade level (though skewed by the failure of some states to include the results from students with learning disabilities), but they are far too small for the enormous amount of money that has been spent to improve the skill. Since private schools consistently outperform public schools by a large margin at all grade levels in both reading and writing assessments, there are clear advantages in relative freedom from the educational bureaucracy and greater control over discipline and content. It is very unlikely, in my opinion, that the public schools will ever work very well unless the socio-economic disparity between the poor and the middle class (shrinking though it is) can be eliminated or at least reduced. The NAEP results show another important correspondence, that between parental education and writing skill. Parents with a college degree impart more social capital--including discipline and higher expectations--to their children than parents with only a high school degree or no degree.

The massive number of undergraduates who are effectively illiterate (and innumerate) leads to a general dumbing down of the curriculum, certainly the humanities curriculum. Heroic efforts must be made simply to convey the semantic meaning of a passage children once read in McGuffy's Reader. A healthy respect for their own deficiencies coupled with the will to learn and a relentless courage to fight through to understanding would help these weak students enormously. Unfortunately, a very large proportion are simply disengaged from any kind of serious, disciplined and steady application to studies as a study by UCLA's Higher Education Research Institute shows (_The American Freshman: National Norms for Fall 1995_, ed. Sax et al. (Los Angeles: HERS, 1995)). More and more students entering college have spent less time at homework than ever before, talked less to teachers outside class, participated less actively in clubs and visited a teacher's home less frequently. They want everything presented to them in an easily graspable, attractive package--like a TV sitcom. Many claim to be bored in class and are hostile to long or complex reading assignments (whole classes indeed will revolt on occasion), but expect good grades for mediocre work. The alienated and disengaged are often proud of their ignorance. A student who claims to have read all of Othello I.i, which is after all a very modest assignment, without understanding a word of it has not availed himself of a good annotated edition, of dictionaries and of references works. He also lacks a decent sense of shame. More significantly, he hasn't displayed the will to keep working at the scene until some understanding breaks clear. 

In all my years of teaching Shakespeare at the undergraduate and graduate levels, as in my years teaching him in high school, I never encountered such a completely blank mind. Certainly not in Japan, where I'm currently teaching a seminar in Shakespeare with students who labor unremittingly to follow the syntax and meaning. A little Japanese respect for hard work might work wonders for this generation of American slackers who refuse to recognize their own ignorance with anything other than praise.

 


As far as the laws of mathematics refer to reality, they are not certain; and as far as they are certain, they do not refer to reality.
Albert Einstein.
I suspect this quote could easily be modified to apply to academic accounting research.

How could a school district be unaware of such an important law?  The law itself is probably a poor law that will ultimately turn the Algebra course into a color-the-equation course for students not bound for college.  The fact of the matter is that the algebra coloring books could just not be printed by the time the law went into effect.

May 2, 2004 message from Dr. Mark H. Shapiro [mshapiro@irascibleprofessor.com

The Los Angeles Times recently reported that some 200 school districts in California had been granted waivers from the new graduation requirement that compels every high school student in the "golden state" to pass Algebra 1 before receiving his or her diploma. The school districts that were granted waivers complained that they were unaware of the new law, and that it would be unfair to penalize their students who were about to graduate because of the failings of these districts. 

For students not interested in going on to college, wouldn’t it be better to substitute the Algebra course for a course combining Excel financial functions with the basic mathematics of finance so that students would understand how interest rates are calculated on loans and the basics of how they might be cheated by lenders, investment advisors (read that mutual fund advisors), and employers? For those students, the best thing they could learn in my opinion is at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudDealers.htm
The course could also include some basic income tax fundamentals like interest and property tax deductions and the calculations of after-tax costs of home ownership and the senseless cost of purchasing vehicles you cannot afford.

Students who change their minds, after graduation, and decide to go on to college will just have to pick up the Algebra later on when they have perhaps matured enough to see some relevance of algebra and other mathematics courses in their education.  I was an Iowa farm boy who did not take calculus, linear algebra, differential equations, finite mathematics, and mathematical programming until I was in a doctoral program.  This turned out to be a brilliant move, because I looked like a genius to some of my competitors in the program who forgot much of the mathematics they studied years earlier and had long forgotten.  For example, one of our statistics qualifying examination questions in the doctoral program required integrating the normal distribution (not an easy thing to do) by shifting to polar coordinates.  I looked brilliant because I’d only recently learned how to integrate with polar coordinates.  My engineering counterparts had long forgotten about polar coordinates --- http://mathworld.wolfram.com/PolarCoordinates.html

But please, please do not ask me anything today about polar coordinates?  Many things learned in doctoral programs are not relevant to life later on.

Bob Jensen

May 3, 2004 reply from Patricia Doherty [pdoherty@BU.EDU

-----Original Message----- 
From: Patricia Doherty 
Sent: Monday, May 03, 2004 9:12 AM 
Subject: Re: Mathematics versus Reality versus Curriculum

"…wouldn't it be better to substitute the Algebra course for a course combining Excel financial functions with the basic mathematics of finance so that students would understand how interest rates are calculated on loans and the basics of how they might be cheated by lenders, investment advisors (read that mutual fund advisors), and employers? …"

In order to understand these, a student needs many of the concepts taught in Algebra I, such as the way equations work. Algebra I is really a pretty basic math course where they spend a lot of the first months reviewing basic math like fractions and decimals. These seem to me like things students need to understand spreadsheets and compound interest. Perhaps a DIFFERENT algebra course should be offered for those who are college-bound, and those who may not be. The latter would take a course more oriented to the "practical" needs you cite, whereas the former (who also, by the way, need these things) would take a more challenging, accelerated course, more along the lines of the Algebra I you are probably thinking of.

p

I love being married. It's so great to find that one special person you want to annoy for the rest of your life. Author unknown.

Patricia A. Doherty 
Instructor in Accounting Coordinator, 
Managerial Accounting 
Boston University School of Management 
595 Commonwealth Avenue Boston, MA 02215

May 3, 2004 reply from Bob Jensen

Hi Pat,

Actually, I found that by using Excel's financial functions my students grasp the concepts and the models before they learn about the underlying equations. They are deriving amortization schedules and checking out automobile financing advertisements long before they must finally study the underlying mathematical derivations.

When we eventually derive the equations, the mathematics makes more sense to the students. Sometimes they claim that they understood it better before learning about the math. It's a little like learning to appreciate poetry before delving into such things as meter and iambic pentameter --- http://www.sp.uconn.edu/~mwh95001/iambic.html 

I'm not sure at the first-course level in high school that it is really necessary to delve under the hood and understand the equations like we teach them in college. I certainly don't think that many high school students who never intend to go to college get much out of learning how to solve quadratic equations and other topics in Algebra 1. They have less interest because they don't see much use to them unless they are proceeding on to calculus and college.

Thanks,

Bob

May 4, 2004 reply from Gadal, Damian [DGADAL@CI.SANTA-BARBARA.CA.US

-----Original Message----- 
From: Gadal, Damian 
Sent: Tuesday, May 04, 2004 9:07 AM 
Subject: Re: Mathematics versus Reality versus Curriculum

I thought about this most of last night, and what I've been advocating is not failing our youth. That to me means not dumbing down our education system.

The car analogy doesn't work for me, as cars were engineered with end-users in mind, as were phones, computers, radios, televisions, etc.

I don't think we should put the roof on the house before building the foundation.

DPG 
Waterfront Accounting

May 4 reply from Bob Jensen

I think the real distinction is whether you think failure to require Algebra I for all students is necessarily dumbing down the entire education system. Many nations (especially in Germany and Japan) have flexible educational curricula to serve different needs of different students.

Alternative curricula may be equally challenging without being a "dumbing down."  Dumbing down arises when a course in any given curriculum is made easier and easier just so more students can pass the course.

Having alternative courses is not in and of itself a "dumbing down." For example, replacing Algebra I with "foundations of the mathematics of finance" or "foundations of music composition" would not necessarily be "dumbing down." Dumbing down any given course means taking the hard stuff out so that more students can pass. Replacing one hard course with another hard course is not dumbing down and may improve education because the alternate curriculum is more motivating to the student.

If you want to read more about how to "dumb down" math couses, go to http://www.intres.com/math/ 

*********************************************** 
The Old Adobe Union School District in Petaluma, California has adopted a new math program: MathLand. The net result of this action is to dumb-down the math curriculum and turn the math program into a math appreciation program. This site is dedicated to informing parents in Petaluma, California about the issues involved.

Children grow older and the protest continues against the use of the CPM Algebra I program being used at Kenilworth Junior High of the Petaluma Joint Unified District. This program is so deficient it doesn't cover even half of the California State Content Standards for Algebra I.
**************************************

 

May 2, 2004 reply from Michael O'Neil, CPA Adjunct Prof. Weber [Marine8105@AOL.COM

As a teacher of Algebra A (yes, Algebra A: the first half of Algebra I) I can tell you that you do not even know how bad it is in public schools. I am also a CPA and teach an accounting and consumer finance class in high school. Yes, I fail most of my students. Most of my Algebra A students have already failed Pre-Algebra. They are very lazy, and given their low academic level, many of them are discipline problems.

Despite having standards and trying to TEACH them the material I was not given tenure and then told flat out by the principal (a young man with little teaching experience) that he did not have to give me a reason, and he would not give me a reason. This despite my yearly evaluation having no negative areas--satisfactory in all areas.

California will let schools use accounting as a math class but will not give me credit toward my Math credential. So in theory it might be that in a school accounting would be a 12th grade class, and I would not be able to teach it, despite a MPAcc and CPA.

It will be interesting when schools show a high pass rate in Algebra I and no correlation to the Exit exam.

Mike ONeil

May 5, 2004 reply from XXXXX

I won't even start the story of what the Headmaster told me about the Cs in my Spanish class I gave to three students missing most of the semester due to their parents' taking them on repeated ski trips to Colorado and the students not only not turning in assigned-the-week-before homework, but clearly (matching their tests to the key) failing two of the three exams in the class. My Cs were not even honest in regards to cumulative work done, and pushing the packet. 

These students, according to the Headmaster, needed at least Bs in the class, for reasons I did not need to know. I discovered, after that reason was given that these parents were funders of the new gym and were pledged to give more. Keep in mind that this private school, in (City X), was and still is known for having more students test higher on SATs than other private schools in town. This school also requires 5 years of Latin to get out, and it's a joke to see the helpless ones struggle with Latin the first time (of course never having taken a foreign language in school before) when their rich parents transfer them in from other private schools or HISD to begin to learn Latin and keep a required B in those classes to graduate. 

Their parents whine that the kids are having too much homework, etc. What a mess. And that was one of the very best schools (City X) had/has to offer. I, needless to say, did not return to teach there the next year. And to teach in HISD, although teachers are needed, requires a handgun license and proficiency in martial arts as well as private bodyguard just to be defended against the classroom population. This week's NewYorker has such a cartoon (copy over at the library; hysterical). 

Bob, thanks for letting me vent here. Community colleges offer some hope, but there is such a time delay because of remedial work needed. Home schooling early might work in some cases. And to think these people are our country's future leaders. In closing, I certainly know that it is more difficult to learn as an adult than as a child or adolescent...

Happy Wednesday...

Very best, 
XXXXX


April 30, 2004 message from Carolyn Kotlas [kotlas@email.unc.edu

"How do instructors learn to teach online? What are their perceptions as they enter this new learning environment for the first time?" To find out, Dianne Conrad, assistant professor of adult education at the University of New Brunswick, interviewed five instructors in a Canadian university who were teaching online courses for the first time. Her interviews showed that the instructors drew upon their fact-to-face teaching experience, but that they "revealed very little awareness of issues of collaborative learning, of learners' social presence, or of the role of community in online learning environments." The details of Conrad's qualitative study are available in "University Instructors' Reflections on Their First Online Teaching Experiences" (JOURNAL OF ASYNCHRONOUS LEARNING NETWORKS, vol. 8, issue 2, April 2004) at http://www.aln.org/publications/jaln/v8n2/v8n2_conrad.asp.

The Journal of Asynchronous Learning Networks (JALN) [ISSN 1092-8235] is an electronic publication of The Sloan Consortium (Sloan-C). Current and back issues are available at http://www.aln.org/publications/jaln/.

For an account of online teaching from a veteran instructor, see "Less is More: Designing an Online Course" (DEOSNEWS, vol. 13, issue 4, April 2004; http://www.ed.psu.edu/acsde/deos/deosnews/deosnews.asp) by R. Thomas Berner, professor emeritus of journalism and American studies at the Pennsylvania State University

YourLearning.com --- http://www.yourlearning.com/churchillreport.html 

The report may be beneficial for individuals who are involved in online learning developments in healthcare education in the USA and other countries. The institutions visited during the fellowship may find it useful to read own and others case studies, to compare and reflect on the developments and implications on teaching and learning in healthcare. The report may be useful for other institutions in the USA, to add to the picture of diversity in online learning developments within USA. .


How one business educator (in Organization and Management) more than doubled her salary by staying home.  She does not worry about tenure, but the work is very tedious and time-consuming.

"For Online Adjuncts, a Seller's Market Part-time professors, in demand, fill many distance-education faculties,"  by Dan Carnevale, The Chronicle of Higher Education, April 30, 2004, pp. A31-A32.

Ruth Achterhof won't say how many courses she teaches, for fear that her employers will think the workload is too much for her to handle.

But the work is enough to earn her about $90,000 per year, she says.

"I'm afraid my schools will go, 'Holy smoke!  How does she do that?'"

Because she does all of her teaching on-line, Ms. Achterhof can handle many more courses, at many more colleges, than she could face to face.  She is an adjunct professor of business and management at four institutions, in three states, moving among her teaching duties with the click of a mouse while her black Labrador lies curled at her feet.  She hardly ever sees a campus, spending much of her time at home here in a 100-year-old cottage next to a small lake.

Being a virtual adjunct, she says, means never having to play office politics or worry about ticking off her supervisors.  And if any gig goes sour, it's easy for her to pick up another one.

"It's good to have backup schools because you don't ever know if a dean is going to change or if I'll make a faux pas," she says.  "So it's OK if I lose one."

But she is in no danger of losing any of her jobs right now.  In fact, Ms. Achterhof and other online adjuncts are in high demand, as colleges increasingly turn to part-time faculty members to help expand their distance-education programs.

The strategy saves money for colleges, most of which are dealing with tight budgets.  Also, full-time faculty members are often reluctant to make the leap from the familiar setting of the lecture hall to the un-known arena of the virtual classroom.

Some critics say, however, that the quality of distance-education programs might be threatened by the presence of so many part-timers.  And faculty unions argue that increases in part-time faculty jobs, even if on-line, further limit the prospects of both full-time faculty members and adjuncts who want permanent teaching positions.

LONG HOURS

Ms. Achterhof is perhaps an extreme example of what some are calling a new breed of adjunct professor.  She did not start her career in academe.  She used to own and run a cafe called Andre's, in Grand Haven, Mich.  Later she earned her master's in educational leadership and her doctorate in organization and management and taught traditional courses for a few years at Baker College.  She was offered $35,000 a year to teach there permanently, but in the late 1990s she found that online teaching was a better fit--and more lucrative, too.

Now she makes more money and can set her own schedule, teaching courses like "Leadership Development" and "Negotiation and Dispute Resolution" to students who log on at their convenience.

Most of her days are spent reading e-mail messages in her small, wood-paneled home office.  A vast majority are students' responses to study questions, or student essays or other assignments for her to grade.

She quickly scrolls through the messages and types a response to each one.  Occasionally she takes a break to do laundry, wash the dishes, or fix her husband some lunch.

The quantity of her correspondence is impressive.  Her "sent" folder shows that she shipped out 2,554 e-mail messages between February 2 and March 18--an average of about 56 messages a day.  Just about all of them are sprinkled with typographical smiley faces or other emotions.

"Super great job.  Good use of terms," she tells one student.

It helps that she can type 60 to 70 words per minute and read 1,200 words per minute.  Otherwise she doesn't know how she could complete all of her work.

On Mondays and Tuesdays she starts her virtual teaching at about 8:30 a.m. and doesn't finish until around 11 p.m.  "On Mondays and Tuesdays I am in my computer chair 14 hours a day," she says.  "I tend to get grouchy as the day goes by."

The time she spends at her desk declines throughout the week, down to about four hours on Fridays and Saturdays.  "Saturday is the day I try to get my mood back," she says.  Sunday is a day of rest.  Then it's Monday again.

How does she juggle the tasks?  Organization.

She has lists of tasks for each class, and she makes check marks as she completes each item.  A rolling rack of file folders sits next to her, one for each course she teaches.  She has her tests and discussion questions ready to go for the whole semester, so she can cut and paste each one into the appropriate course Web site when the time comes.

Continued in the article

 

Some professors teaching at major universities are opting to teach online instead of going to classrooms.  For example, read about and listen to Amy Dunbar (University of Connecticut) by scrolling down the document at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/002cpe/02start.htm#2002 

Bob Jensen's threads on ideas for teaching online are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/thetools.htm#Ideas 

Bob Jensen's threads on resources for instructors are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/newfaculty.htm#Resources 

Bob Jensen's threads on tools and tricks of the trade are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/thetools.htm 

Bob Jensen's main education technology page is at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/0000start.htm 


Tom Hicks brought me up to date on wireless home firewall computers.  He recommends Linksys products such as the one at http://www.linksys.com/splash/wcg200_splash.asp 

The Linksys Wireless-G Cable Gateway is the all-in-one solution for Internet connectivity in your home. The Cable Modem function gives you a blazing fast connection to the Internet, far faster than a dial-up, and without tying up your phone line. 

Connect your computer to the Wireless-G Cable Gateway via USB, or take advantage of the built-in 4-port 10/100 Ethernet Switch to jump start your home network. You can share files, printers, hard drive space and other resources, or play head-to-head PC games. Connect four PCs directly, or daisy-chain out to more hubs and switches to create as big a network as you need. The built-in Wireless-G Access Point allows up to 32 wireless devices to connect to your network at a blazing 54Mbps, without running cables through the house. It's also compatible with Wireless-B devices, at 11Mbps. The Gateway's Router function ties it all together and lets your whole network share that high-speed Internet connection. 

To protect your data and privacy, the Wireless-G Cable Gateway features an advanced firewall to keep Internet intruders and attackers out. Wireless transmissions can be protected by powerful data encryption. Safeguard your family with Parental Control features like Internet Access Time Limits and Key Word Blocking. Configuration is a snap with any web browser. With the Linksys Wireless-G Cable Gateway at the heart of your home network, you're connected to the future.


Personalized Pet Service
Petfinder will help you find a pet --- http://www.petfinder.com/ 

Potential adopters can search the site by type and/or breed of animal they're interested in, with results sorted by proximity to the searcher's ZIP Code.

Animal shelters and rescue groups create individual Web pages, usually with a photograph, for each available animal.

Experts say that the return rate for animals adopted through Petfinder is lower than for those adopted at a shelter, where it's easier for people to fall in love with (or take pity on) an animal that might not be right for them.


Free Press: Beginner's Guide to Media Reform --- http://www.mediareform.net/ 

Media must not be considered just another business: they are special institutions in our society. Information is the lifeblood of democracy — and when viewpoints are cut off and ideas cannot find an outlet, our democracy suffers.


From Syllabus News on April 27, 2004

Online University Consortium Flaks Traditional Degree Programs

A consortium of traditional universities has produced a report that – not surprisingly – indicates traditional universities are the preferred choice for online education and degree programs over for-profit providers. The Online University Consortium, whose members include Penn State, the University of Oregon, Ohio University, and the University of Southern California, said a survey it conducted showed companies prefer candidates with degrees from traditional universities two-to-one over for-profit providers. OIC also pointed to market research by Eduventures, a for-profit educational research firm, that concluded that, “as the market matures, brand strength will increasingly favor non-profit institutions.”

According to the report, traditional universities command significant brand equity, and will threaten market share of for-profit businesses, because students identify them as a familiar provider from which they will choose an online program for traditional reasons. “For-profit providers enjoyed an initial surge in popularity partly because of convenience," notes Greg Eisenbarth, the Consortium's Executive Director. "However, the market has shifted dramatically with the country's most respected universities now offering quality online degree programs for greater choice and flexibility."

The studies can be found at: http://info.101com.com/default.asp?id=6743 

Bob Jensen's threads on online training and education alternatives are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/crossborder.htm 


"University of Illinois at Springfield Wants to 'Mirror' All Classroom Programs Online," by Dan Carnevale, The Chronicle of Higher Education, April 16, 2004, Page A32.

Officials of the University of Illinois at Springfield say they are working toward creating an online "mirror campus" that will offer all 39 of the degree programs that are available in the university's classrooms. The plan is one of the most ambitious online projects undertaken by a mainstream institution.

The Alfred P. Sloan Foundation gave the university a $1.21-million grant last month to pay for converting courses into online formats and for hiring more faculty members to teach them. The university is also spending at least $400,000 on the current phase of the project.

By fall the Springfield campus will have eight degree programs online, made up of about 175 online courses. The grant money will pay for eight more online degrees, to be available in three years. Officials hope to have all 39 degrees available online in about 10 years.

EXPANDING ACCESS

The Springfield campus is not, however, becoming a virtual institution. All on-campus courses and degrees will remain available. The mirror campus is meant to give students the option of taking any course either by going to a classroom or by lounging on a futon with a laptop.

"The key word here is access," says Burks Oakley II, the university's associate vice president for academic affairs. "One of the key things about this grant is keeping online in the mainstream."

While there are many virtual institutions in the United States, there appear to be no mainstream institutions that have tried to put all of their degree programs online. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology has promised to put teaching materials from all its courses online but not the courses themselves, meaning that outsiders may see the materials but not take the courses for credit.

The University of Illinois at Springfield is a midsize institution, with about 4,500 students. It has 20 undergraduate degree programs, 18 master's programs, and a doctoral program. Comparatively few freshmen and sophomores attend the institution, as most students enroll for upper-division and graduate courses.

Bob Jensen's threads on online training and education alternatives are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/crossborder.htm 


"Virtual schools, real concerns," Amanda Paulson, The Christian Science Monitor, May 4, 2004 --- http://www.csmonitor.com/2004/0504/p11s02-legn.html 

Advocates of virtual learning say it opens new horizons, particularly for students in rural communities where choices are limited, or for those with special needs due to illness or serious involvement with athletics.

But critics worry about the lack of face-to-face interaction. Even more contentious, particularly with all-day virtual schools, is the difficulty of providing good oversight, and the question of giving state money to an outside district or charter school.

Continued in the article


Note that among the professions, women accountants are leading the way!  Let’s hope they clean up the messes left behind by the men.  Women physicians and business managers are on the move up.

 

Women are soaring in private business ownership and the accounting profession.  There doing better in management and salaries. 

But in the law profession it's somewhat downhill.  I guess women are just too honest.
"Do female execs have cleaner hands?" by Stacy Teicher (Stanford University), Christian Science Monitor, March 15, 2004 --- http://www.csmonitor.com/2004/0315/p14s03-wmgn.htm  Evidence suggests a link between women and ethical behavior. But they embezzle more often. In a post-Martha Stewart world, corporate America sifts conflicting claims. By Stacy A. Teicher | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor.

Women-Owned Businesses Growing Twice National Average --- http://www.accountingweb.com/cgi-bin/item.cgi?id=99089 

AccountingWEB.com - Apr-30-2004 - Nearly half of all privately held firms in the U.S. -- 10.6 million -- are owned 50 percent or more by women, says a new Center for Women's Business Research study sponsored by Wells Fargo & Company (NYSE: WFC).

According to the study, "Women-Owned Businesses in 2004," between 1997 and 2004 the number of women-owned firms with employees were estimated to grow over 28 percent, nearly three times the rate of all privately held firms, and twice the national rate of all firms. Employment grew over 24%, more than twice the rate of all firms, while revenues increased about 39%.

"Women-owned firms are growing, and increasing their employment faster than the general market," said Joy Ott, Regional President for Wells Fargo in Montana and National Spokesperson for Wells Fargo's Women's Business Services program. "These firms are driving growth in the American workplace, while generating revenues at a similar rate to all firms. This is a powerful statement about this fast-growing segment of American small business owners."

"Businesses that are 50 percent or more women-owned are growing at twice the rate of all firms, 17% vs. 9%. These businesses are a critical component of the national economy, not only in terms of their sheer numbers, but also in terms of their impact on employment and revenue generation," said Sharon Hadary, Executive Director, Center for Women's Business Research. "As employers of 19.1 million people, these women-owned firms spend over half a trillion dollars annually on just payroll and benefits."

The latest and most complete snapshot of women-owned businesses in the U.S. also highlights the top 10 fastest growing states for women-business owners. Based on an average rank 1997 to 2004 growth rates in the number, employment and sales among privately held, 50 percent or more women-owned firms, these states are:

1. Utah
2. Arizona
3. Nevada
4. Idaho
5. Kentucky
6. New Mexico (tied)
7. South Carolina
8. North Carolina
9. Arkansas
10. Oregon

The study results offer the most comprehensive view of the growth and expansion of women-owned businesses, tracking information like composition, spending habits and core industries of women entrepreneurs nationwide. It is the latest resource underwritten by Wells Fargo as part of its Women's Business Services program, an outreach and education program aimed at building relationships with women business owners by sponsoring key community organizations and market research.

Measuring its progress with a new public goal to lend $20 billion to qualified woman-owned businesses within ten years, Wells Fargo has lent more than half a billion dollars since re-establishing the goal in September 2003, and is now tracking at 150 percent of its pro-rated objective. Since the program's inception in 1995, Wells Fargo has lent more than $16 billion to women business owners nationwide.

May 4, 2004 reply from Don Mathis (Trinity University Library.

Very interesting. Have you seen this article? 
Don Mathis

http://money.cnn.com/2004/04/23/pf/women_occupations/index.htm 

CNN Money, 27 April 2004

Woman's work? Almost anything
Women continue to make headway in arenas traditionally associated with men.
By Jeanne Sahadi, CNN/Money senior writer

New York (CNN/Money) This year, for the first time in the history of Harvard University, the number of women offered admission to the incoming undergraduate freshman class outpaced the number of men.

That's just one indication of how far women have come in their quest to achieve educational and professional parity with men.

Women now earn more associate's, bachelor's and master's degrees than their male counterparts. In the academic year 2001-02, 57 percent of bachelor's degrees and 59 percent of master's degrees were awarded to women, according to data from the National Center for Education Statistics.

Women also earned nearly half of the Ph.D.s (46.3 percent) as well as first professional degrees (47.3 percent), which include medical, law and dental degrees.

In fact, women's presence is growing in a number of arenas that traditionally have been associated with men.

Counting the number crunchers

Accounting is a good example of a field where women have been reaching the majority both educationally and professionally.  According to the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, 57 percent of undergraduate degrees in accounting were awarded to women in 2002.

Today, women account for roughly 59 percent of accountants, up from about 39 percent in 1983, according to data from the federal government's Current

Population Survey.

Accounting giant KPMG is recruiting accordingly. In 2003, 52.3 percent of KPMG's hires from college campuses were women and overall 48 percent of its new hires for its accounting and tax professionals staff were women.

That swell in the ranks isn't visible in the boardroom yet. But the numbers are improving.

Only 13 percent of KPMG's U.S. partners are women, but that's double what it was in 1998. And among the partners to be named this year, 22 percent are women, according to KPMG.

More women doctors on tap

In the field of medicine, women are also continuing to make large strides. Even though they only accounted for 25.2 percent of all physicians in 2002, that's up from 17 percent in 1990.

And given their growing numbers in medical school and graduate training programs, it's very possible women will make up roughly 45 percent of all physicians by 2025, according to Edward Salsberg, director of workforce studies at the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC).

In the 2002-03 year, women accounted for 45 percent of all medical school graduates. And this year, for the first time, women made up the majority of applicants to medical school, according to the AAMC.

Among the specialties, women in 2002 made up the majority of residents in pediatrics, family practice, obstetrics and gynecology, psychiatry and dermatology, according to the Journal of the American Medical Association.

Women lawyers see small drop

The picture in law is not quite as bright. Women account for roughly 28 percent of all lawyers, according to CPS data. But that's down from the 29 percent reported in 2002.

Also slightly down is the number of women enrolling in law schools. For a few years the percentage hovered around 49 percent, but for the 2003-04 year, that percentage slipped to 48 percent, according the American Bar Association.

Nevertheless, women accounted for 49 percent of summer associates in 2003, according to research from the National Association of Law Placement. And women earned 49 percent of the JDs awarded last year.

At the staff level, NALP found women attorneys account for 43 percent of associate or staff/senior attorney positions. But in terms of making partner, women account for only 16.8 percent of partners at law firms nationwide. Even though that represents a small increase from 2002, relative to total headcounts at the firms, women remain underrepresented at the partner level.

Businesswomen make big strides

In business, women's representation is stronger than ever, but the number of women at the top is still not proportional to their ranks.

They account for 50.5 percent of managerial and specialty positions, according the CPS. But among Fortune 500 companies, women only represent 15.7 percent of corporate officers, 13.6 percent of board directors, 8 percent of those with the highest titles and 5.2 percent of the highest earners, according to the research firm Catalyst.

And among Fortune 500 CEOs? Only 1.6 percent a total of eight - are women.

Among privately owned businesses, more women than ever are at the helm.

Nearly half (46 percent) of all privately held U.S. businesses are majority owned by women, according the Center for Women's Business Research.

On the earnings front --- http://money.cnn.com/2004/04/20/news/economy/women_earnings/index.htm 

Even though there still exists a significant wage gap nationally between women and men in the labor force, an analysis of Current Population survey data by the Employment Policy Foundation, a public policy research group, found that the proportion of women earning six figures tripled between 1991 and 2001.

The EPF found that in 2001, one in every 48 women working full-time earned over $100,000. That's up from one in 143 in 1991.

The number of women earning over $60,000 almost tripled during the same period.

The numbers of men earning more than $60,000 and more than $100,000 also rose, but at much slower rates.

At the same time, the number of women earning less than $20,000 dropped by one-fifth.

Bob Jensen's threads on accounting careers are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#careers 


Who is most likely to commit a fraud within an organization?

I found this KPMG study outcome most interesting.

The fact that most of fraudsters are males from the "Finance Department" (which probably includes accounting) does not surprise me.  What surprised me at first was their seniority and age, but then perhaps the internal controls are weaker at the higher levels of management.  

What may be a surprise to you is the fact that many persons who knew enough to blow the whistle did not blow the whistle.  This didn't surprise me, however, since whistle blowing has few rewards relative the trouble it can get you into.  Since Sarbanes-Oxley, however, there will be greater opportunities for anonymous whistle blowing.  However, Sarbanes-Oxley is not likely to change the corporate culture overnight (if ever?) as long as whistle blowing is not rewarded --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraudconclusion.htm#CrimePays 

"Long-Serving, Male Execs Most Likely to Commit Company Fraud," AccountingWEB, April 27, 2004 --- http://www.accountingweb.com/cgi-bin/item.cgi?id=99078 

A study conducted by by KPMG has revealed some interesting information about the typical perpetrator of a fraud, why they steal and who they target. Seventy-two percent of cases involve men only. Over half of company fraud involves two to five people. Forty percent of fraud involves employees from the finance department.

The analysis examines 100 of the fraud cases that KPMG has been called in to investigate over the past two years, from which a profile of a fraudster has been created. Alex Plavsic, national head of fraud investigations at KPMG, said: “One of the alarming findings from the study was the seniority of the perpetrators - we found that directors or senior managers committed almost two thirds of the 100 cases surveyed." “Fraud can have a devastating effect on a business, both from a financial and reputational perspective, which is why most companies try to keep the discovery of fraudulent activity as quiet as possible.”

Who? The analysis found that many of the perpetrators were long serving employees - 32 percent of them had been working for their companies for between 10 and 25 years. And they were not operating alone - in more than half of all the cases (51 percent) two to five parties were involved in the fraud, compared with only one in three cases carried out solely by the perpetrator. The number of people involved in some of the cases (more than five people in ten percent of them) is indicative that fraud can be endemic within some departments and consequently more difficult for outsiders to detect. In one case analysed, 207 individuals were involved in a single fraud.

In 72 percent of cases, the fraudsters were found to be male-only. Female-only fraudsters were identified in seven percent of cases and both male and females were involved together in some 13 percent of cases. In the remainder of cases, no perpetrator was identified. The age of the principal fraudster was typically between 36 and 45 (41 percent of cases). 29 percent of cases involved those aged between 46 and 55. Those aged between 18 to 25 made up only one percent of perpetrators.

The finance department is the most likely business area that the fraudster targeted or was responsible for (40 percent of cases). Procurement was the next most likely area (12.5 percent), while one in ten frauds occurred in the sales area.

How? A weak control environment was the primary reason. In half of the cases surveyed, this was the weakness exploited by the fraudster. In nearly one in three incidents it was the perpetrator abusing their key authorities. Just over one in ten frauds were achieved by the fraudster operating in alliance with others to circumvent controls. While the finance department is often perceived as guardian of control, it remains the top opportunity and target for fraudsters.

And if company directors are hoping that their internal controls are robust enough to pick up fraud they are likely to be disappointed - only one in four were detected by a management review. 31 percent of frauds were discovered following an employee blowing the whistle, an anonymous tip-off or a report by an external third party. Whistle-blowing is an important weapon in the fight against fraud, despite this, the survey found that while four in ten employees were aware of or suspected that a fraud was occurring, they took no action.

Why? Personal gain was the most likely reason (41 percent) for committing fraud. External pressures were also a trigger for fraudulent activity with one in eight cases caused by the perpetrator getting into financial difficulties. In nearly 33 percent of the cases the amount stolen was more than £1 million while in 26 percent of the cases, it was more than £100,000.

How do companies respond? Dismissal of the perpetrator was the most common response with 55 percent of the fraudsters being fired. However, in just under one in five cases no sanction was taken and this may be because of concerns about the reputational impact of fraud becoming known.

This is borne out by the fact that in 69 percent of cases there was no publicity surrounding the investigation or subsequent sanction, while only six percent of companies chose to publicise the fraud.

On a positive note, in a third of cases, businesses had recovered or were taking action to recover cash or assets following a fraud. Alex Plavsic adds: “This study has highlighted some worrying findings, and particularly demonstrates the need for companies to continually review their internal controls. Regular testing of key controls against the risk of fraud will identify any weaknesses in the system, which could easily be exploited by potential fraudsters."

“Internal controls can only be effective if companies have the right culture in place. A breakdown in the control framework and the integrity of individuals, is when fraud is most likely to be perpetrated.”

Bob Jensen's threads on corporate fraud are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud.htm 

I remind readers that women do not always have clean hands.  Read about Rebecca Mack at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudEnron.htm 


Battle of the Sexes

A KPMG study found that “Long-Serving, Male Execs Most Likely to Commit Company Fraud.” AccountingWEB, April 27, 2004 --- http://www.accountingweb.com/cgi-bin/item.cgi?id=99078 

But women embezzle more often according to Stacy Teicher. "Do female execs have cleaner hands?" by Stacy Teicher (Stanford University), Christian Science Monitor, March 15, 2004 --- http://www.csmonitor.com/2004/0315/p14s03-wmgn.htm 

The highly superficial deductive conclusion would be that if we promoted more women to executive positions, higher-level frauds would increase in frequency.

Counter argument: If we paid women better there would be less need to embezzle.


I am seeking examples of interactive online testing prior to 1999.  A company is making an absurd claim that it's 1999 patent gives it exclusive rights to virtually every type of test given online.  We need to document examples of online testing prior to 1999.  Please send examples to rjensen@trinity.edu  

Ellen K. Waterman, director of distance learning at the Denver institution, says she was stunned to see that somebody claimed to own the rights to online testing itself. The patent claims made by Test Central are so broad, she says, that they seem to cover any type of testing in cyberspace.

The documentation describes the invention as relating "generally to a method of making a test and posting the test on-line for potential test-takers." The patent cites general examples of types of online tests that are protected, including multiple-choice and short-answer tests.

COMPANY CLAIMS TO OWN ONLINE TESTING
By Dan Carnevale
The Chronicle of Higher Education
March 26, 2004, pp. 31-32

You can read the article at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/OnlineTestingClaims.htm 

Also see http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/260wp/260wp.htm 

May 1, 2004 reply from John Schatzel [jschatzel@STONEHILL.EDU

Hey Bob,

I believe that I have been doing online testing with TechTutor(tm) since 1995. I see it as an instructional technology enhancement to a course and not as distance education per se. The tool does, however, tutor students on several topics (including system basics, the Internet, operating systems, networking, establishing and authoring web sites, E-commerce, WebTrust, SysTrust, XML, Web services and XBRL). It also administers multiple choice questions in a random fashion and calculates grades. TechTutor(tm) works over the Internet using the same Shockwave technlogy that I used to develop my Real Audit (tm) simulation. I having been doing this stuff for a very long time and can't imagine how anyone would think that they should or in fact be able to patent Internet-based testing in general. If you need to see the software, go to http://realaudit.com  then the Tutorials menu, then click here to purchase (skip the ordering part of course) and just click Download here after order. After you download and install the software (there are two versions: basic (the first 6 topics) and advanced (the last 6 topics listed above)) just let me know and I will set up an account for you to check it out. Hope this helps,

John Schatzel 
Stonehill College

 


The U.S. patent system has reached its limits, says a new study from the National Research Council. The findings echo what critics of the system have been saying all along.
Wired News, April 28, 2004 --- http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,63248,00.html?tw=newsletter_topstories_html 


Patent Litigation: The Sport of Kings
Patent litigation is a growth industry. During the twelve-month period ending September 9, 2003, U.S. patent owners filed 2,788 patent infringement lawsuits, a 13 percent increase over the same period five years earlier. Similarly, in 2003 the United States issued 187,487 patents, a 22 percent increase over 1999. Indeed, patent litigation has become the sport of kings. Sure, there are staggering legal fees and the risk of a company imploding. But Douglas J. Kline, a leading patent litigator, says that patent lawsuits are not as bad as you think.
http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/wo_kline042804.asp?trk=nl


May 1, 2004 message from Scott Bonacker [lister@BONACKERS.COM

This is from an anti-spam listserv.

"BTW - note the META and MISC in the subject line. They use these codes to let participants know what is in the message so if you aren't interested you can just skip reading it. See http://www.claws-and-paws.com/spam-l/posting.html#topics-how for key to topics."

Scott E Bonacker, CPA 
820 E. Primrose 
Springfield, MO 65807 


Most Companies Get an "F" in Fraud Prevention http://www.accountingweb.com/item/98709 

Enron had a code of conduct. Enron had a hotline. And in the end, Enron had fraud. Today, companies operate with a false sense of security because they either don't have a fraud prevention program or the program they have is a legal, yet ineffective "fig leaf." "One key to fraud prevention is to create an atmosphere where employees feel confident in reporting wrongdoing without being victimized, even if executives appear to be involved," explains Toby Bishop, president & CEO of the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners (ACFE), the largest anti-fraud association in the world. "If companies don't have effective fraud prevention programs, they are at risk of failure," says Bishop.

Years ago, working as a consultant, Bishop tested the effectiveness of an existing fraud prevention program for a major utility company. Management thought their program was working and wanted confirmation. Bishop's firm surveyed a statistical sample of employees to assess their feelings about management's commitment only to discover that employees in one division did not believe management wanted to "do the right thing," says Bishop.

"If employees perceive their company's fraud controls to be weak or if they think management is only giving lip service to ethical behavior, fraud is inevitable," Bishop warns.

In 2002 fraud prevention was one of the goals addressed in the Sarbanes-Oxley Act (SOX), legislation that affects how public organizations and accounting firms deal with corporate governance, financial reporting and public accounting. The effect of SOX has been far reaching, leading to voluntary changes in private companies and mandatory changes in public companies. But is it preventing fraud? "It may not be as effective as people expected," Bishop answers.

Over the past 18 months Bishop has taught several thousand participants how to use the ACFE's Fraud Prevention Check-Up, a tool that identifies major gaps in organizations' fraud prevention processes. None of the participants thought their organization would pass the test, which means they are at significant risk of fraud.

Bishop says while Sarbanes-Oxley invokes a basic framework for internal controls, including anti-fraud controls, additional specifics are needed to address controls to prevent fraud. "There is a definite gap in the standards used to establish fraud prevention controls, if companies use them at all."

Bob Jensen's threads on corporate fraud are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud.htm 


Kurzweil's Rules of Invention
More than 30 years of experience have given prolific inventor Raymond Kurzweil a few insights into how to ensure that your inventions have their day in the sun. First, he writes, learn the seven stages in the evolution of a technology: precursor, invention, development, maturity, false pretenders, obsolescence, and antiquity. And focus above all else on getting the timing right.
http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/kurzweil0504.asp?trk=nl


Great feedback messages on SurveyMonkey.com as a tool for conducting surveys --- http://www.surveymonkey.com/

Are there any negatives?

Bob Jensen

-----Original Message-----
From:
Davis, Charlene
Sent: Monday, April 26, 2004 12:44 PM

Subject: RE: SurveyMonkey.com

My senate subcommittee also used SurveyMonkey.com for a recent faculty survey and I can tell you that not only does the survey look sharp, the initial set up is fairly easy and the results are available in a variety of downloadable file formats.

Dr. J. Charlene Davis
Associate Professor of Marketing
Department of Business Administration
302 Chapman Center
Trinity University
One Trinity Place
San Antonio, Texas 78212

-----Original Message-----
From: Specht, Linda B.
Sent: Monday, April 26, 2004 11:40 AM
Subject: SurveyMonkey.com

You are probably already aware of this survey tool site, but I was not.  It is really reasonable and the resulting survey is very professional in appearance.  If you have not already answered the survey sent out by our DSS office, do so for an example of the site’s survey.  The pricing is also great.  See below.  I wish I had known about this site earlier this semester when my online survey of accounting programs went out.

Linda

Professional Subscription

A professional subscription is only $19.95/month, and includes up to 1000 responses per month.  If you exceed 1000 survey responses in any given month, there is an additional charge of $0.05 per survey response.  There are no long-term contracts, and you can cancel at any time.  As a professional subscriber, you have access to all of the advanced features of SurveyMonkey.  You can create an unlimited number of surveys, with an unlimited number of pages and questions.  In addition, all of your surveys are completely unbranded.

Basic Subscription

A basic subscription is totally free and includes all of the basic features of SurveyMonkey.  It's a great option for individuals, students, and anyone who doesn't need the advanced features of SurveyMonkey.  Unlike other services, there are no annoying banner ads on your surveys.  In addition, all of your survey responses remain absolutely private.  Please note that basic subscribers are limited to a total of 10 questions and 100 responses per survey.

April 26, 2004 reply from Kevin Kimball [KimballK@BYUH.EDU

Two weeks ago I had created a survey in MC Word that I was to use in assessing my student's perceptions of the BYU-Provo (Norm Nemrow) CD approach to teaching introductory financial accounting. Realizing what a pain it had been in the past to format a Word document to work with our Scantron testing facility (i.e. lining up the words with the bubbles) I decided to try out SurveyMonkey.

Within a couple hours, I was able to register for a one month license for >$20, create my survey, refine it, and make it available to my students on-line. Within 1/2 hour of making it available, I was already able to see the results from several students who had already taken it. This was much, much better than formatting my Word survey in a Scantron format, making copies of the survey, taking class time to administer the survey, running the survey over to the testing center, running back to get the results, etc. etc.

Not only can I review the results and download them for further analysis but I can also make them available to any other interested party through a web link.

So far I have found no negatives, I even saved a few trees and $.

Sincerely,

Kevin Kimball 
Assoc. Professor of Accounting 
Brigham Young University - Hawaii 

kimballk@byuh.edu 

 

April 27, 2004 reply from Dan Stone [dstone@UKY.EDU

I've used surveymonkey over the past year for research, departmental, and class surveys. Before surveymonkey I was designing and implementing surveys in Inquisite (which I do not recommend).

I like surveymonkey and will continue to use it. It is much more efficient than designing and implementing on-line surveys without this tool. Some important advantages: no browser compatibility problems + easy access to data in multiple formats.

Negatives:

1. copying and moving multiple survey sources into a single survey is a big pain. I've asked for this functionality from the surveymonkey developer. It is not there yet. Maybe in the next version? 

2. setting the parameters can be difficult. I've mis-set parameters and lost data because of this. But hey, this is my fault for inadequately testing my own survey!!!!

Best,

Dan Stone


"New BLS Guide Outlines Accounting Trends and Job Outlook," SmartPros, April 21, 2004 --- http://www.smartpros.com/x43328.xml 

An increase in the number of businesses, changing financial laws and regulations, and increased scrutiny of company finances will drive the growth of accountants and auditors, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

The 2004-2005 Occupational Outlook Handbook for accountants and auditors outlines working conditions, employment, training, earnings and more.

The new edition emphasizes the impact that new legislation will have on the industry through 2012. BLS predicts an increased need for accountants and auditors "to address changes in legislation related to taxes, financial reporting standards, business investments, mergers, and other financial matters."

In addition, BLS says "the growth of international business also has led to more demand for accounting expertise and services related to international trade and accounting rules, as well as to international mergers and acquisitions."

Specific trends predicted in the handbook include the following:

The handbook also reveals that accountants and auditors held about 1.1 million jobs in 2002 and earned an average annual salary of $47,000. Approximately 1 out of 10 accountants or auditors were self-employed, and one out of five wage and salary accountants worked for accounting, tax preparation, bookkeeping and payroll services firms.

For the complete guide, available online, go to http://www.bls.gov/oco/ocos001.htm 

Bob Jensen's threads on accounting careers are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#careers 


Commentary of the Day - April 26, 2004: Actualizing in Our Classrooms. Guest commentary by David B. Shields --- http://irascibleprofessor.com/comments-04-26-04.htm 

Let me pause and report that I'm no lightweight in "Robert's Rules of Order". Matter of fact in many quarters I am regarded right much of a guru in the House of Robert, and Rooster has been quick to seek me out whenever he encounters a bit of confusion in the performance of his duties as SOB parliamentarian.

I've also been trained extensively in the behavioral sciences and have been trying of late to employ more of Carl Rogers' 'client-centered', non-confrontational techniques, especially when dealing with Rooster. Rogers maintained that the human "organism" has an underlying "actualizing tendency", which aims to develop all capacities in ways that maintain or enhance the organism and move it toward autonomy. In Carl's mind then it only followed that the therapist should never be seen as a threat or to be judging, and the best way to do that was to sit listening and offering only an occasional "Hmmm" in the exchange. Each person thus, according to Carl, would wind up 'maximizing his or her fundamental mandate to fulfill his or her potential.'

In all fairness I might pause further to point out that the theories of Carl Rogers had a major impact on public education in America, and much of our schools' reluctance to expect much out of their students, much less demand it, can be laid squarely at Carl's doorstep. In fact, these Rogerian theories, along with their educational offshoots, in large measure account for the teacher we so often see sitting on his or her duff in the classroom handing out busywork and going, "Hmmm!" The kid will educate himself if we just don't get in the way don't you know?

Needless to say, parents of ignorant and unruly kids love this kind of teacher and point with pride to their offspring bouncing off the walls in the classroom "actualizing." And I don't need to tell you what these parents do if anybody attempts to discipline their children or call them down. But still I've found the Rogerian model especially helpful with Rooster. So I repeat: I often employ the technique with him.

Continued in the commentary


"The Kingmaker," by Alan Deutschman, Wired Magazine, May 2004 --- http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/12.05/mossberg.html 

Walt Mossberg makes or breaks products from his pundit perch at a little rag called The Wall Street Journal

Walt Mossberg is walking through a convention hall at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas when a man starts screaming at him. The screamer, Hugh Panero, blames Mossberg for his company's recent problems: falling stock price, a sudden plunge in consumer interest. Mossberg is annoyed but hardly intimidated. As the author of the weekly "Personal Technology" column in The Wall Street Journal, he's used to dealing with disgruntled execs. He lets Panero shout. A crowd is gathering. Finally, Mossberg yells back, "I don't give a fuck about your stock price!"

In truth, Mossberg liked Panero's company, XM Satellite Radio, which beams more than 100 channels of music - rock, hip hop, jazz, country, you name it - directly to cars nationwide. The early reviews were enthusiastic, and investors loved the stock. But Mossberg hated the special radios that drivers needed to buy from the company to get the signal. In his column, he slammed the spotty reception and said the radios were poorly designed, hard to use, and too expensive. On the morning the column appeared, just five days before the conference opened, XM's stock fell 8.5 percent. Reuters reported that Mossberg's column was driving down the price.

Waiting for a flight back to Washington after the conference, Mossberg is eating a Burger King breakfast at Las Vegas-McCarran International Airport when Panero walks by. This time the entrepreneur is calm. The two men realize they're on the same plane and arrange to sit together in first class. (Mossberg got his ticket using upgrade coupons.) Once they're in the air, Panero admits that Mossberg is right about XM's hardware. A few months later, XM rolls out a new line of price-slashed radios with better controls for scrolling channels, plus larger screens for identifying the songs and artists. A year after the original review, in January 2003, Mossberg writes a column wholeheartedly recommending the new offerings.

XM is only one of dozens of companies that have redesigned products in response to Mossberg's unsparing criticism. RealNetworks overhauled its RealJukebox player. Intuit revamped TurboTax. Mossberg even forced Microsoft to scrap Smart Tags, which would have hijacked millions of Web sites by inserting unwanted links to advertisers' sites. Few reviewers have held so much power to shape an industry's successes and failures. Mossberg evokes comparisons to Robert Parker on wine and Frank Rich during Rich's controversial tenure as the Broadway critic of The New York Times. At least one grad school thesis has been written on Mossberg's clout. "He's one of the most trusted and influential voices in technology," says Yahoo! cofounder Jerry Yang.

Disarmingly bright, blunt, fervent, and combative, Mossberg was an investigative reporter for two decades before becoming a tech pundit, and he has a heady sense of his ability to keep the industry chieftains in check. His MO: posing as the champion of the "normal" or "average" tech consumer, though he's hardly one himself. Close friend and Journal reporter Kara Swisher calls him "a freakish geek."

Still, his success comes from demystifying the digital realm for readers who aren't regular Slashdot contributors. He's on a mission to remake the tech world according to his own fetish for simplicity, reliability, effectiveness, and great design. Chances are he has influenced the look, feel, and performance of your laptop, mobile phone, and MP3 player.

Mossberg's been a fiery crusader since the opening line of "Personal Technology," which debuted in 1991: "Personal computers are just too hard to use, and it isn't your fault." His quest has earned him legions of fans, but he's also angered many, who think he's arrogant, curmudgeonly, and subjective - and who wonder how deeply he understands the nitty-gritty of technology. His latest enemies: open source partisans, who chafed when he picked Microsoft Office over StarOffice, an open source darling.

The detractors and the wounded multiply, but Mossberg keeps expanding his valuable franchise. Unfazed by a 1997 heart attack and subsequent quadruple bypass, he does three weekly columns in addition to a weekly appearance on CNBC's Power Lunch and a monthly column for Smart Money. And, with Swisher, he hosts D: All Things Digital, the annual $2,995-a-person, three-day executive conference in early June at the Four Seasons resort in Carlsbad, California.

Continued in the article

The main link to Walt Mossberg's writing is at http://ptech.wsj.com/ 

 


Remember when you could print pictures directly from the camera?  We are almost there once more with digital photography that does not require downloading to a PC.  I’m going to order the Epson PictureMate as soon as it becomes available online (sometime in May) --- http://reviews-zdnet.com.com/Epson_PictureMate/4505-3156_16-30732997.html

 

On balance, we thought the Epson's photos were a bit better, at least for the lighting conditions in our test. Features were crisper and more natural-looking. The Olympus photos were a little redder and darker, but still very good.
Walt Mossberg

 

"New Ways to Print Digital Photos on the Go," by Walter Mossberg, The Wall Street Journal, April 28, 2004, Page D4 --- http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,the_mossberg_solution,00.html 

Most inkjet printers aimed at consumers can make decent prints from digital photos, but the process is often a hassle. It can require buying various types and sizes of photo paper, and swapping out your printer's regular paper, or even its ink cartridges. And then there's the software you often need to master. The whole process can be discouraging.

But there's an alternative: little photo printers that churn out snapshot-size prints directly from a camera or a memory card, without involving a computer or software at all. These tiny printers have become so popular that people even bring them to parties to print pictures of the revelry right on the spot.

Last April, I reviewed two of these small photo printers -- the Hewlett-Packard Photosmart 230 (now upgraded to the 245) and Kodak's EasyShare Printer Dock 6000. Since then, other companies have jumped into the fray with dedicated snapshot printers of their own. This week, my assistant Katie Boehret and I reviewed two of the recent entries: the Epson PictureMate and the Olympus P-10. These two cost $199 each, the same price as the H-P but $50 more than the Kodak.

Like the Hewlett-Packard and Kodak photo printers, the Epson and Olympus use different printing technologies. The Epson, like the H-P, is an inkjet printer, and uses a printing process similar to most general-purpose home printers. The Olympus uses a process called dye-sublimation, like the Kodak that we reviewed a year ago, and its ink is applied via a colored ribbon.

Ink and paper costs for each of these printers are important to note because even though the printers themselves cost only $199 each, expensive supplies can add up. Epson and Olympus sell ink and special 4x6 glossy photo paper together in one package, but while Epson's pack of 100 sheets and an ink cartridge costs $29, the Olympus pack of 100 sheets and the ink ribbon costs $49. Both printers come with a small sample of ink and paper -- the Epson comes with enough of both for 20 photos, and the Olympus has supplies for five.

Continued in the article


Great site from the Science Museum of Minnesota

Robots + US --- http://www.robotsandus.org/ 

The April 22, 2004 edition of the Scout Report states the following:

Created by the good people at the Science Museum of Minnesota (with generous support from the National Science Foundation) the Robots and Us website is an interactive and multi-sensory educational teaching tool that helps young people learn about the ways in which robots (and humans) move, think, and exist throughout the process of experiencing the world. Visitors will start out their journey in the virtual Low Life Labs, where they can proceed to the main activities directly or get help. Upon entering the main activities area, visitors may move to one of the four main labs: Moving, Sensing, Thinking, or Being. Each area contains a series of activities for visitors, along with a brief description of the concept and idea that each activity is actively exploring. The Sensing section is quite good, as it contains a number of interesting and intelligent activities, such as CAPTCHA, which allows individuals to try out examples of programs that can generate and grade tests that most humans can pass, but current programs can't.


The New York Times History of New York City --- http://www.nytimes.com/specials/nyc100/contents.html 


"Watch for New Labels As You Go Shopping For a New Desktop PC," by Walter Mossberg, The Wall Street Journal,  April 22, 2004, Page B1 --- http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,personal_technology,00.html 

A big change is brewing in the way buyers will be shopping for Windows PCs. This annual spring buyer's guide to desktop computers will help you navigate the new territory.

For many years, Intel, the leader in making processor chips -- the brains of personal computers -- has mainly labeled its products based on one factor: the clock speed at which the chip runs. And for years, I have advised my readers that this speed rating is a poor gauge of performance or value.

Starting next month for laptops and in June for desktops, Intel is introducing a new processor-labeling system that will de-emphasize clock speed. Instead, it will rank processors by numbers based on a combination of clock speed and other factors that make some chips more capable or versatile than others. These factors include things such as the size of the chip's "cache," a special kind of onboard memory that helps make processing more efficient; and the speed of the "front-side bus," a data pathway inside the PC.

The main processor names, like Pentium and Celeron, will be retained. But various models of the processors will be assigned three-digit model numbers. Top-of-the-line chips will get model numbers in the 700s, midrange models will have numbers in the 500s, and low-end models will be numbered in the 300s. So, a label might say "Pentium 4 Processor 550," or something like that.

PC labels will still report the clock speed, but it will be a detail beneath the new model numbers. This naming change will roll out gradually, and won't cover most PCs until the end of the year.

Now on to the buyer's guide. This guide is designed to help buyers of Windows PCs wade through the confusing array of models and configurations on the market. Apple's Macintosh computers are also excellent choices, but there are too few models to require a buyer's guide.

As always, my advice is aimed at mainstream users doing common tasks such as word processing, Web surfing and e-mail, personal finance, simple home photo and video editing, digital music and basic games. Hard-core gamers or folks doing big video productions need bigger, faster PCs than those specified here.

You should be able to get a bare-bones, name-brand Windows computer for $400 to $500, without monitor. Brand-name Windows models with more ample features start at $600 to $700. Media Center models, with built-in TVs, are $1,000 and up.

Continued in the article along with a nifty glossary at http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,personal_technology,00.html 


 

Jim Maher's updated summary of finance and accounting articles --- http://www.financeprofessor.com/summaries/summaries.htm 

 

Mini Summaries (glorified abstracts) from past FinanceProfessor.com newsletters!  GREAT for class.  Note some links are no longer valid as once the articles are publish in paper format, some journals remove the link.  However, that said, the links are still worth your time!  Great way to stay abreast of what is going on!


Think of what this might do for grading records.

From MIT's Emerging Technologies on April 26, 2004

Microsoft’s Magic Pen
If Jian Wang had his way, everything would be digital. “I hate printers—they turn digital things into analog,” he jokes, wading through a sea of cubicles at Microsoft Research Asia in Beijing. Stopping at a desk, Wang picks up a rectangular, silvery pen about the size of a magic marker and scribbles some corrections on a paper document. But this is no ordinary pen. A few seconds later, his comments appear on a nearby computer screen—superimposed on the electronic version of the document in the exact spot where he wrote on the hard copy. Wang’s pen captures handwriting and lets users make changes to digital files—on paper. This “universal pen,” as Wang calls it, could transform the way people interact with computers. Wang’s digital pen also reflects an ongoing transformation in the process of invention at some large corporate labs—a hybridization of the lone inventor and traditional corporate R&D.

http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/huang0504.asp?trk=nl

Garfinkel: The Paper Killer
Optical character recognition software is finally good enough that it can reliably scan paper documents—and let you get rid of them. And the cost of OCR is far lower than that of the alternative: hiring a typist. Columnist Simson Garfinkel is sold on the technology.

http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/garfinkel0504.asp?trk=nl

Bob Jensen's threads on resources are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/newfaculty.htm#Resources 


Islamic Finance
From Jim Maher's many wonderful helpers --- http://www.financeprofessor.com/islamicfinance/islamic%20finance.htm 

Roughly 20% of the world's population is Islamic.  While some in the Western world think this population is only in the Middle East, the religion is truly global: from the Middle East, to Afghanistan, to the US, to Indonesia, and every where in between.  While the extremists are the ones in the news each day, the vast majority of Moslems are peaceful, respect other religions, and do not hate business nor finance.  Attention to Islamic finance obviously accelerated since 9-11, but it is worthy to note that an Islamic finance was  meeting was actually scheduled for 9-12 in the WTC and that the Islamic Finance movement was already growing very rapidly.   According to estimates in the Wall Street Journal Islamic finance is roughly a $150 billion dollar market. 

So what is Islamic Finance? and how is it different from the traditional Finance we are familiar with in the Western World?

There are two key differences: 

  1. The first and most famous (and on which we will focus the bulk of our attention) is the no-interest rule.  That is, you can not earn interest on a loan nor be required to pay interest on loans. 
  2. The second difference is that money is to be invested only in worthy causes.  This is largely equivalent to the western concept of socially responsible investing. 
The Quran is the holy book of Islam (you can think of it as their bible if it makes it easier for you).  In it, believers find the verses that forbid Riba (or interest).  Alarijhi Bank has created a site (in both English and Arabic) that has the 4 key verses upon which the no-interest principle is based. 

Many of the differences in Islamic Finance (especially Islamic banking) revolve around this no interest principle.  For example, Islamic banks must take equity positions in homes rather than taking a traditional mortgage.  Others examples include essentially profit sharing plans, leasing, and repurchase plans.  These allow the Financial Institution to make money while satisfying the no-interest principle. 

The second difference between Islamic finance and traditional finance is the emphasis on socially responsible investing.  While in the western finical tradition there are many investors who  invest in "socially responsible" means, Socially Responsible investing is not as wide spread as it is within the Islamic tradition. 

Islam takes a holistic view of the person.  Thus someone who is good does good things.  This includes investing responsibly to assure that the money does not go 
for "bad" purposes.  These "bad" purposes include the usual subjects such as drugs, weapons, alcohol , porno and of course terrorism.  Again this is really no different than traditional socially responsible investing. 

Continued in the article


Are you a psychopath and/or a manager?

Take Two Quizzes:  I passed Number 1 (I'm probably a psychopath).  I failed Number 2 (I'm probably a lousy manager.)

Quiz Number 1 (forwarded by Dick Haar)
Read this question, come up with an answer and then scroll down to the bottom for the result. This is not a trick question. It is as it reads. Most people do not get the correct answer, but I got this one..

A woman, while at the funeral of her own mother, met this guy whom she did not know. She thought this guy was amazing, so much her dream guy she believed him to be, that she fell in love with him right there but never asked for his number and could not find him. A few days later she killed her sister. Question: What is her motive in killing her sister? (Give this some thought before you answer)

 

 

 

 

Answer to Quiz Number 1
She was hoping that the guy would appear at the funeral again. If you answered this correctly, you think like a psychopath. This was a test by a famous American Psychologist used to test if one has the same mentality as a killer. Many arrested serial killers took part in the test and answered the question correctly. If you didn't answer the question correctly good for you. Since I passed, the evidence must be anecdotal.

Number 2 Quiz  (from the May 3 issue of Fortune Magazine)
"How to Encourage Bright Ideas
," by Anne Fisher, Fortune, May 3, 2004 --- http://www.fortune.com/fortune/careers/articles/0,15114,611322,00.html 

Companies run on ideas, but how do you get people to generate them? Think you're adept at making the most of your employees' brainpower? Try this little quiz. (Answer true or false to each statement.)

1. Big ideas are where the action is.
2. Managers are in the best position to come up with ideas on how to do things better.
3. Small ideas aren't worth managers' time.
4. Without rewards, employees won't offer ideas.
5. The best way to encourage innovative thinking is to promise financial rewards based on the monetary value of the ideas.
6. An informal approach to gathering ideas works best.
7. Suggestion boxes are an effective way to encourage new ideas.
8. Creativity is essential to innovation.
9. Along with good ideas come a lot of bad ones that waste everyone's time.

 

 

 

Answer to Quiz Number 2

If you answered true to any of the above, think again. All those notions, while popular, are also wrong, according to Alan Robinson and Dean Schroeder, a couple of B-school profs who've done creativity consulting at hundreds of companies. In a new book, Ideas Are Free (Berrett-Koehler, $24.95), Robinson and Schroeder explain why, using short, vivid case studies from dozens of companies—maybe even yours.

What's the matter, you may wonder, with offering financial incentives for great cost-cutting or revenue-boosting ideas? Well, it seems that such schemes can backfire in all sorts of ways, sometimes by encouraging fraud and sometimes just by needlessly tangling with tender egos. Consider: A worker in a European wireless company stumbled across an error in the billing software that was costing $26 million a year. He suggested a simple fix, but his boss blocked it. Why? The company's reward system would have entitled the employee to a fat check and a lot of fanfare—and what boss wants that kind of attention drawn to his mistakes? "Money is an easy, measurable way to recognize people for good ideas," notes Schroeder. "But most people offer ideas because they want to see problems get solved, and they want to be perceived as valuable members of a team. You don't need to bribe them."

The widespread belief that blockbuster ideas are the only ones that matter is costing companies a wealth of competitive advantage, the authors say. "I've had CEOs tell me, 'I don't care about the small stuff,' " says Robinson. "It's like baseball. The home-run hitters get all the glory, but if you look at the stats, it's the singles and doubles that win the most games." And don't expect those hits to come only from the "creative" team; any practical-minded, observant player will have his share of RBIs. Okay, but if you're looking to encourage those singles and doubles, why not rely on the ol' suggestion box? "Usually the managers reviewing the stuff in the box aren't close enough to the work to know whether an idea is any good or not," says Schroeder. "Smart companies set up a forum where people can discuss ideas, so you get input from everyone who's actually involved. If you value employees' ideas, why not talk with them?" Now there's a novel idea.


Maine Folklife Center (history) --- http://www.umaine.edu/folklife/ 

The mission of the Maine Folklife Center at the University of Maine is to enhance understanding of the folklife, folklore, and history of Maine and Atlantic Canada, to encourage appreciation of the diverse cultures and heritage of the region, and thereby to strengthen and enrich our communities. The Center is a valuable part of the University's research and public service programs.

Bob Jensen's bookmarks on history are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob2.htm#History 


An Oldie But Goodie About CAPM --- An Innovation that Won a Nobel Prize for Its Inventor(s)

"Revisiting The Capital Asset Pricing Model," by Jonathan Burton, Dow Jones Asset Manager, May/June 1998 --- http://www.stanford.edu/%7Ewfsharpe/art/djam/djam.htm 

Modern Portfolio Theory was not yet adolescent in 1960 when William F. Sharpe, a 26-year-old researcher at the RAND Corporation, a think tank in Los Angeles, introduced himself to a fellow economist named Harry Markowitz.. Neither of them knew it then, but that casual knock on Markowitz's office door would forever change how investors valued securities.

Sharpe, then a Ph.D. candidate at the University of California, Los Angeles, needed a doctoral dissertation topic. He had read "Portfolio Selection," Markowitz's seminal work on risk and return—first published in 1952 and updated in 1959—that presented a so-called efficient frontier of optimal investment. While advocating a diversified portfolio to reduce risk, Markowitz stopped short of developing a practical means to assess how various holdings operate together, or correlate, though the question had occurred to him.

Sharpe accepted Markowitz's suggestion that he investigate Portfolio Theory as a thesis project. By connecting a portfolio to a single risk factor, he greatly simplified Markowitz's work. Sharpe has committed himself ever since to making finance more accessible to both professionals and individuals.

From this research, Sharpe independently developed a heretical notion of investment risk and reward, a sophisticated reasoning that has become known as the Capital Asset Pricing Model, or the CAPM. The CAPM rattled investment professionals in the 1960s, and its commanding importance still reverberates today. In 1990, Sharpe's role in developing the CAPM was recognized by the Nobel Prize committee. Sharpe shared the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences that year with Markowitz and Merton Miller, the University of Chicago economist.

Every investment carries two distinct risks, the CAPM explains. One is the risk of being in the market, which Sharpe called systematic risk. This risk, later dubbed "beta," cannot be diversified away. The other—unsystematic risk—is specific to a company's fortunes. Since this uncertainty can be mitigated through appropriate diversification, Sharpe figured that a portfolio's expected return hinges solely on its beta—its relationship to the overall market. The CAPM helps measure portfolio risk and the return an investor can expect for taking that risk.

More than three decades have passed since the CAPM's introduction, and Sharpe has not stood still. A professor of finance at the Stanford University Graduate School of Business since 1970, he has crafted several financial tools that portfolio managers and individuals use routinely to better comprehend investment risk, including returns-based style analysis, which assists investors in determining whether a portfolio manager is sticking to his stated investment objective. The Sharpe ratio evaluates the level of risk a fund accepts vs. the return it delivers.

Sharpe's latest project is characteristically ambitious, combining his desire to educate a mass audience about risk with his longtime love of computers. Technology is democratizing finance, and Sharpe is helping to push this powerful revolution forward. Through Financial Engines, Sharpe and his partners will bring professional investment advice and analysis to individuals over the Internet.

What do you think of the talk that beta is dead?

The CAPM is not dead. Anyone who believes markets are so screwy that expected returns are not related to the risk of having a bad time, which is what beta represents, must have a very harsh view of reality.

"Is beta dead?" is really focused on whether or not individual stocks have higher expected returns if they have higher betas relative to the market. It would be irresponsible to assume that is not true. That doesn't mean we can confirm the data. We don't see expected returns; we see realized returns. We don't see ex-ante measures of beta; we see realized beta. What makes investments interesting and exciting is that you have lots of noise in the data. So it's hard to definitively answer these questions.

Would you approach a study of market risk differently today than you did back in the early 1960s?

It's funny how people tend to misunderstand the CAPM's academic, theoretical and scientific process. The CAPM was a very simple, very strong set of assumptions that got a nice, clean, pretty result. And then almost immediately, we all said, let's bring more complexity into it to try to get closer to the real world. People went on—myself and others—to what I call "extended" capital asset pricing models, in which expected return is a function of beta, taxes, liquidity, dividend yield, and other things people might care about.

Did the CAPM evolve? Of course. Are the results more complicated shall just expected return is a linear function of beta relative to the Standard & Poor's 500-Stock Index? Of course. But the fundamental idea remains that there's no reason to expect reward just for bearing risk. Otherwise, you'd make a lot of money in Las Vegas. If there's reward for risk, it's got to be special. There's got to be some economics behind it or else the world is a very crazy place. I don't think differently about those basic ideas at all.

What about Harry Markowitz's contribution to all of this?

Markowitz came along, and there was light. Markowitz said a portfolio has expected return and risk. Expected return is related to the expected return of the securities, but risk is more complicated. Risk is related to the risks of the individual components as well as the correlations.

That makes risk a complicated feature, and one that human beings have trouble processing. You can put estimates of risk/return correlation into a computer and find efficient portfolios. In this way, you can get more return for a given risk and less risk for a given return, and that's efficiency a la Markowitz.

Continued in the interview

Gatekeepers Didn't Get It in the 1990s and Still Don't Get It

Brooksley Born, chair of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission --- suggested that government should at least study whether some regulation might make sense, a stampede of lobbyists, members of Congress, and other regulators --- including Alan Greenspan and Robert Rubin --- ran her over, admonishing her to keep quiet.  Derivatives tightened the connections among various markets, creating enormous financial benefits and making global transacting less costly --- no one denied that.  But they also raised the prospect of a system-wide breakdown.  With each crisis, a few more dominos fell, and regulators and market participants increasingly expressed concerns about systematc risk --- a term that described a financial-market epidemic.  After Long-Term Capital collapsed, even Alan Greenspan admitted that the financial markets had been close to the brink.  
Frank Partnoy, Infectious Greed (Henry Holt and Company, 2004, Page 229)

Throughout 1994 and 1995, Brickell (the banking industry's pit bull in Washington) and Levitt (Head of the SEC) worked to protect the finance industry from new legislation.  In early 1994, lobbyists waited for investors to calm down from the shock of how much money-fund managers and corporate treasures had lost gambling on interest rates.  When legislation was introduced, Brickell fought it and Levitt gave speeches saying the financial industry should police itself.  The issues were complicated, and the public --- once angered by the various scandals ---  ultimately lost interest.  Instead of new derivatives regulation, Congress, various federal agencies, and even the Supreme Court created new legal rules that insulated Wall Street from liability and enabled financial firms to regulate themselves.   Under the influence of Levitt and Brickell, regulators essentially left the abuses of the 1990s to what Justice Cardozo had called the "morals of the market place."
Frank Partnoy, Infectious Greed (Henry Holt and Company, 2004, Page 143)

One of the world's most widely known and respected economists, Henry Kaufman is almost single-handedly responsible for founding the spectator sport known as "Fed watching." He began a 26-year career at Salomon Brothers in 1962, when he was probably the only Wall Street employee with a doctorate. There he built one of the most prestigious securities research departments and became a senior partner and vice chairman. In the last 30 years, he has been one of the most vocal critics of insufficient financial oversight and regulation, and his pronouncements and prognostications have often moved markets. We interviewed Dr. Kaufman in his New York office, where he heads his own international economic consulting firm.
Wall Street Wisdom ---
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/feature/-/41979/102-2649781-5248131 

"Remarks by Chairman Alan Greenspan Before a conference sponsored by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Washington, D.C. October 14, 1999 --- http://federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/speeches/1999/19991014.htm 

Measuring Financial Risk in the Twenty-first Century

During a financial crisis, risk aversion rises dramatically, and deliberate trading strategies are replaced by rising fear-induced disengagement. Yield spreads on relatively risky assets widen dramatically. In the more extreme manifestation, the inability to differentiate among degrees of risk drives trading strategies to ever-more-liquid instruments that permit investors to immediately reverse decisions at minimum cost should that be required. As a consequence, even among riskless assets, such as U.S. Treasury securities, liquidity premiums rise sharply as investors seek the heavily traded "on-the-run" issues--a behavior that was so evident last fall.

As I have indicated on previous occasions, history tells us that sharp reversals in confidence occur abruptly, most often with little advance notice. These reversals can be self-reinforcing processes that can compress sizable adjustments into a very short period. Panic reactions in the market are characterized by dramatic shifts in behavior that are intended to minimize short-term losses. Claims on far-distant future values are discounted to insignificance. What is so intriguing, as I noted earlier, is that this type of behavior has characterized human interaction with little appreciable change over the generations. Whether Dutch tulip bulbs or Russian equities, the market price patterns remain much the same.

We can readily describe this process, but, to date, economists have been unable to anticipate sharp reversals in confidence. Collapsing confidence is generally described as a bursting bubble, an event incontrovertibly evident only in retrospect. To anticipate a bubble about to burst requires the forecast of a plunge in the prices of assets previously set by the judgments of millions of investors, many of whom are highly knowledgeable about the prospects for the specific investments that make up our broad price indexes of stocks and other assets.

Nevertheless, if episodic recurrences of ruptured confidence are integral to the way our economy and our financial markets work now and in the future, the implications for risk measurement and risk management are significant.

Probability distributions estimated largely, or exclusively, over cycles that do not include periods of panic will underestimate the likelihood of extreme price movements because they fail to capture a secondary peak at the extreme negative tail that reflects the probability of occurrence of a panic. Furthermore, joint distributions estimated over periods that do not include panics will underestimate correlations between asset returns during panics. Under these circumstances, fear and disengagement on the part of investors holding net long positions often lead to simultaneous declines in the values of private obligations, as investors no longer realistically differentiate among degrees of risk and liquidity, and to increases in the values of riskless government securities. Consequently, the benefits of portfolio diversification will tend to be overestimated when the rare panic periods are not taken into account.

The uncertainties inherent in valuations of assets and the potential for abrupt changes in perceptions of those uncertainties clearly must be adjudged by risk managers at banks and other financial intermediaries. At a minimum, risk managers need to stress test the assumptions underlying their models and set aside somewhat higher contingency resources--reserves or capital--to cover the losses that will inevitably emerge from time to time when investors suffer a loss of confidence. These reserves will appear almost all the time to be a suboptimal use of capital. So do fire insurance premiums.

The above is only a quotation from the speech.

UNEQUAL TREATMENT:  Rotten to the Core

"Playing Favorites:  Why Alan Greenspan's Fed lets banks off easy on corporate fraud," by Ronald Fink, CFO Magazine, April 2004, pp. 46-54 --- http://www.cfo.com/article/1,5309,12866||M|886,00.html 

The module below is not in the above online version of the above article.  However, it is on Page 51 of the printed version.

UNEQUAL TREATMENT

IF THE FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD AND THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE Commission pursue the same agenda, why were Merrill Lynch & Co. and the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (CIBC) treated so differently by the Corporate Fraud Task Force--a team with representatives from the SEC, the FBI, and the Department of Justice (DoJ) set up to prosecute perpetrators of Enron's fraud--than were Citigroup and J. P. Morgan Chase & Co.?  After all, all four banks did much the same thing.

Under settlements signed with the SEC last July, Citigroup and Chase were fined a mere $101 million (including $19 million for its actions relating to a similar fraud involving Dynegy) and $135 million, respectively, which amounts to no more than a week of either's most recent annual earnings.  And they agreed, in effect, to cease and desist from doing other structured-finance deals that mislead investors.  That contrasts sharply with the punishment meted out by the DoJ to Merrill and CIBC, each of which not only paid $80 million in fines, but also agreed to have their activities monitored by a supervising committee that reports to the DoJ.  Even more striking, CIBC agreed to exit not only the structured-finance business but also the plain-vanilla commercial--paper conduit trade for three years.  No regulatory agency involved in the settlements would comment on the cases, though the SEC's settlement with Citigroup took note of the bank's cooperation in the investigation.

But Brad S. Karp, an attorney with the New York firm Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP, suggested recently that the terms of the SEC settlement with its client, Citigroup, reflected a lack of knowledge or intent on the bank's part.  As Karp noted more than once at a February conference on legal issues and compliance facing bond-market participants, the SEC's settlement with Citigroup was ex scienter, a Latin legal phrase meaning "without knowledge."

However, the SEC's administrative order to Citigroup cited at least 13 instances where the bank was anything but in the dark about its involvement in Enron's fraud.

As Richard H. Walker, former director of the SEC's enforcement division and now general counsel of Deutsche Bank's Corporate and Investment Bank, puts it, all the banks involved in Enron's fraud "had knowledge" of it.  Yet Walker isn't surprised by their disparate treatment at the hands of regulators.  "The SEC does things its way," he says, "and the Fed does them another."  *Ronald Fink and Tim Reason

Bob Jensen's threads on "Rotten to the Core" are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm 

Bob Jensen's threads on Derivative Financial Instruments fraud are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#DerivativesFrauds 


"Continuing Dangers of Disinformation in Corporate Accounting Reports," by Edward J. Kane, NBER Working Paper No. W9634 --- http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=396694# 
 --- 

 

Abstract: Insiders can artificially deflect the market prices of financial instruments from their full-information or 'inside value' by issuing deceptive accounting reports. Incentive support for disinformational activity comes through forms of compensation that allow corporate insiders to profit extravagantly from temporary boosts in a firm's accounting condition or performance. In principle, outside auditing firms and other watchdog institutions help outside investors to identify and ignore disinformation. In practice, accountants can and do earn substantial profits from credentialling loophole-ridden measurement principles that conceal adverse developments from outside stakeholders. Although the Sarbanes-Oxley Act now requires top corporate officials to affirm the essential economic accuracy of any data their firms publish, officials of outside auditing firms are not obliged to express reservations they may have about the fundamental accuracy of the reports they audit. This asymmetry in obligations permits auditing firms to continue to be compensated for knowingly and willfully certifying valuation and itemization rules that generate misleading reports without fully exposing themselves to penalties their clients face for hiding adverse information. It is ironic that what are called accounting 'ethics' fail to embrace the profession's common-law duty of assuring the economic meaningfulness of the statements that clients pay it to endorse.

 


From techLEARNING News on May 4, 2004

HOT TOPIC: Technology and Cheating

Seventy percent of the 12- to 17-year-olds who participated in an ABCNEWS Primetime poll say at least some of their peers cheat on tests, with roughly 33% admitting that they themselves have cheated. Two in three students say that at least some students have handed in homework or papers copied from another student or downloaded from the Internet. Technology appears to make cheating easier. Take our InstantPoll: http://news.techlearning.com/cgi-bin4/DM/y/egsJ0FHYLa0E2V0B7Kk0AV

to tell us what you think about technology and cheating. Read more about the Primetime poll and news special at http://news.techlearning.com/cgi-bin4/DM/y/egsJ0FHYLa0E2V0CV820Al

Bob Jensen's threads on cheating are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/plagiarism.htm 


From techLEARNING News on May 4, 2004

 

Laptops Replace Textbooks

The Forney (TX) Independent School District is joining the ranks of schools equipping students with laptop computers - with a slight twist. In the fall, every fifth and sixth grader at Johnson Elementary School will receive a laptop computer loaded with digital versions of the textbooks used throughout the district. Read more to see if you might want to use digital textbooks too.

Source: USA Today http://news.techlearning.com/cgi-bin4/DM/y/egsJ0FHYLa0E2V0CV8x0Av


 

"The Next Chapter In Electronic Books," by Arik Hesseldahl, Forbes, April 26, 2004 --- http://www.forbes.com/personaltech/2004/04/26/cx_ah_0426tentech.html 

The electronic book is one of those technological concepts from the 1990s that seems somewhat of a leftover. It's never really taken off the way it potentially could: It makes so much sense.

Books--especially the great beefy ones worth reading--are bulky. Their size makes them inconvenient. And with all this electronic equipment we lug around--laptops, personal digital assistants and the like--there's no reason they couldn't be used to carry the text of books.

 

Last month, Sony (nyse: SNE - news - people ) and Royal Philips Electronics (nyse: PHG - news - people ) teamed with privately held E Ink to announce the Librié, which is set to go on sale in Japan this month. It looks a bit like a PDA but its display uses E Ink's electronic ink technology that it says offers a "paper-like" reading experience comparable to newsprint.

Getting the display's appearance just right has been a key problem in the evolution of the e-book concept. Paper is ideal for most eyes, electronic displays simply aren't. Paper requires no technical knowledge; electronic devices invariably include instruction manuals--printed on paper.

E Ink's electronic paper display is reflective and can be read in the sunlight and in conditions of dim light. It presents a resolution of 170 pixels per inch, similar to newspaper. The gadget uses four AAA batteries but only uses power when a page is turned and the image presented on the display changes. The companies say a user can turn 10,000 pages before those batteries have to be replaced.

The device itself is about the size of a paperback book and can store the contents of about 500 books at a time. And therein is the basic strength of the e-book. While information is increasingly available in digitized form, we're still using a lot of paper, still buying books and still carrying them around. Cramming all our reading into a light electronic device that is easy on the eyes makes sense for the reader as long as it's easy to use. If nothing else, it would reduce the size of carry-on luggage on long flights.

Last year, BarnesandNoble.com (nasdaq: BNBN - news - people ) stopped selling e-books for download from its Web site amid underwhelming sales. Also last year, Gemstar (nasdaq: GMST - news - people ) stopped selling its Softbook e-book devices and discontinued sales of e-book content.

If the e-book is going to be a hit, a few things have to happen. First there has to be a good selection of material to read, and, for publishers, that means taking the risk that their best titles may wind up being distributed for free on the Internet.

PDA users are already downloading books. Palmsource (nasdaq: PSRC - news - people ) sells e-books for use on handheld devices running the Palm operating system. Bob Woodward's Plan of Attack is available for download for $14.99. Microsoft (nasdaq: MSFT - news - people ) also sells e-books for its Microsoft Reader software on PDAs running Windows Mobile. But last year the security on Microsoft's software was cracked.

The recording industry has struggled with this problem in ways both overt and subtle: It has sued batches of pirate downloaders but also circulated its own falsely labeled music files intended to frustrate and dissuade would-be pirates.

The right device--like an iPod from Apple Computer (nasdaq: AAPL - news - people )--coupled with a good music-download service--like Apple's iTunes Music Store--are proving to be a success. And while Apple has lately been chasing the creators of a software program called Playfair--which has defeated Apple's digital rights management scheme, dubbed Fairplay, and limits how music purchased from iTunes can be used--publishers learn a lot from the iTunes experience.

If Sony's new reading device turns out to be the iPod of electronic readers, then publishers will have to develop the reader's equivalent of iTunes.

Bob Jensen's threads on electronic books are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ebooks.htm 

 


How do instructors give "open-book" exams without giving students full access to other computer files and even the wireless Web?

 

This is a mixed blessing for students.  It makes storage, transport, and searching more convenient, but it is difficult to read page after page on the screen.  And printing the pages is expensive.  As pointed out in the article, there is not a used book market.

 

"College Books Move Online," by Charles Goldsmith and Jeffrey A. Trachtenberg, The Wall Street Journal, April 23, 2004, Page B3 --- http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108266691905691021,00.html?mod=technology%5Fmain%5Fwhats%5Fnews 

Faced with mounting criticism that the cost of new textbooks is too high, and vexed by students who buy cheaper used texts, Pearson PLC is making 300 of its most popular U.S. college textbooks available in a Web-based format for half the price of the print versions.

Beginning this autumn, specialized texts such as "Educational Research" and "Social Psychology," which normally retail in hardback for about $100, can for the first time be bought online for about $50.

"A lot of students have affordability problems," says Will Ethridge, president of Pearson's college-text unit.

Such price resistance poses a threat to the $3.4 billion-a-year U.S. college-textbook industry -- as students either buy used versions, seek cut-rate deals through foreign Web sites or do without.

Pearson's new strategy, if successful, will transform the college-textbook industry, which has been under attack from parents and students stunned by the rising cost of higher education. Complaints about high prices have become so bad that at a recent annual meeting, the American Association of Publishers handed out a pamphlet justifying the industry's prices, and the issue has become a heated topic at educational conferences.

The prospect of online textbooks would seem to raise piracy concerns, but Pearson, which is based in the United Kingdom, is confident that the system is secure.

"There is a sophisticated security protocol developed two years ago that protects the intellectual content from file sharing or access by unauthorized subscribers," says Wendy Spiegel, a spokeswoman for Pearson Education, based in New York. "This is not downloadable. It is a Web-based book with the full function of the Web. You can print it section by section, but not at one sitting. It won't continuously print for you. We envision that students will print out the parts of the chapter that they need that day. If you are a crook, you could duplicate a printed book much easier."

Those who have seen early prototypes of the online texts describe them as attractive and intriguing, and note that publishers have a significant incentive to see that Web-formatted books go mainstream. The traditional four-color hardcover book already is loaded up with related CD-ROMs and links to additional Web sites -- thus boosting costs.

Web-based books may well provide the solution. By transferring content to the Internet, publishers will be able to slash inventory costs, eliminate returns, reduce shipping expenses, and perhaps put a significant dent in the used-textbook business. Further, if they are able to pass along those savings, they should be able to lure back budget-minded students.

Pearson last year generated 19% of its revenue and 30% of its operating profit from college publishing. But executives have expressed concern that price resistance poses a future pothole. By the company's research, about a third of students say they don't buy all of their required texts, while half say they are likely to buy a lower-cost version online assuming a savings of at least $25.

Although textbook prices have been rising 2% to 3% a year, well below college-tuition increases, texts are a conspicuous billboard of college inflation, given that students pay for them directly. According to the College Board, the average tuition and fees at a four-year private U.S. college was $19,710 in the 2003-2004 school year, up 6% from the previous year.

A spokeswoman for the National Association of College Stores, representing more than 3,000 college retailers, says the group didn't expect online versions to rapidly displace print editions. "Most students in higher education still prefer a physical textbook" given that they grew up on such texts since childhood, she says.

One book retailer suggests that interactive books won't represent a significant price break for students, who usually sell their books at the end of the semester.

Mark Oppegard, chief executive of closely held Nebraska Book Co., which sells used and new college textbooks, notes that a student who bought a $100 new textbook could sell it back for $50 at the end of the semester. A student who bought a used book for $75 could get $37.50 for it. "The interactive books don't represent a real savings," he says. "Let's see how well they are received."

Publishing-industry officials say educational publishers typically make between $15 and $20 profit from a book with a retail list price of $100, after subtracting costs for author royalties, printing, distribution and retailers' take. In a goodwill gesture to college bookstores, Pearson said it would offer retailers a cut of revenue from online sales if stores direct students to the publisher's Web site.

Continued in article

April 25, 2004 reply from Laurie Padgett, New Piper [padgett8@BELLSOUTH.NET

I have to say that I have both experienced the "memorize" for a test method in my undergraduate studies and the "open book" test method for graduate studies. If I were asked which method was better I would have to most definitely say the open book method. Yes, studying for a test is important but I really feel that cramming for a test to "memorize" material really did nothing and half the time I did not remember it. The open book method was a whole different approach. We had 4 to 7 days to complete the test which resulted in 7 to 10 pages of typed responses to open ended questions. It made me think, read, and learn much more than a standard regular exam. There is no comparison. I strongly feel that the open book method offered more learning.

Laurie

From Syllabus News on April 27, 2004

Pearson, O’Reilly, Stake Out Digital Textbook Market

Two educational publishing leaders have formed a joint venture to introduce to the college text book-buying market this fall a series of digital textbooks they claim will save students half off print prices.

Educational publisher Pearson Education and O'Reilly Media, Inc., famous for its computer reference titles, formed Safari Books Online. Under its SafariX Textbooks Online program, the firm will offer 300 SafariX WebBooks this year. The company said the WebBooks will offer the benefits of the Web, allowing students to print pages, make annotations, take notes, search the full text, and add bookmarks to organize their study, anywhere they have browser access.

Pearson said its decision to offer a WebBook alternative to printed texts is supported by research into the changing educational needs of college students, faculty and authors, as well as a recognition of their concerns about the rising cost of a college education. In preliminary findings of a Student Monitor survey conducted by the company, half of all the students said they are likely to purchase a low cost online text, assuming a savings of $25. Of those students surveyed, 31 percent said that they do not buy 100 percent of their required texts.

Bob Jensen's threads on electronic books are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ebooks.htm 


Problems in Marketing Electronic Books

May 4, 2002 message from TXeBookAuthor@aol.com

Dear Mr. Jensen:

I received a copy of one of your articles about eBooks from a friend who works at Trinity University. It was an excellent presentation and very insightful in all aspects except marketing. I thought perhaps you might want to hear a real world perspective from someone who has been through the eBook "wars" almost since their inception.

I am a Time Warner iPicturebooks author. My fantasy series, beginning with episode one, THE SCYTHIAN STONE, has done quite well both with mass marketers like Amazon.com (where it is currently ranked in the 3000 range) and in foreign markets like Mobipocket.com (#7 in their European fantasy eBook rankings). Sales figures are, by contract, confidential, but I can say that this title has done well despite the ups and downs eBooks have gone through over the last five years. During that time, I have learned some very important lessons about how to market electronic titles. I thought I would share my perspective with you and your readers.

Most eBook articles I have read forget to consider the most important aspect of this burgeoning concept--the MARKET for eBooks. Young readers are the market for them, as I see it, thus any eBook must be produced with that demographic in mind. Kids need colorful, fast reads with lively action and lots of character driven dialogue. Kids WANT to read, but most older books are written for the adult readers who have $24 to spend on a printed book. Most potential eBook customers are young, savvy Internet buyers who have their parents' credit card or $10 in their Paypal account or an Amazon coupon to spend. Price point thus becomes a huge issue along with this demographic. On the web, if you keep it cheap, kids will seek--that's where eBooks have their greatest advantage.

As for marketing to the rest of the web masses, another advantage is that you can post a new title for $8 retail and if it doesn't sell well, you can lower it by a dollar a month until you find its optimum price point. With the far lower cost of production and distribution per unit, you can market an eBook for as little as $1.00 if necessary to move it and there is never a problem with returns. Yes, they can be illegally copied. But then, is that really a bad thing for a kid to share a book with a friend or two who might BUY the next one in your series?

Sharing, in a way, actually builds a market that might not have been there before. I know. I've seen it firsthand. Emails I receive from customers attest to the fact that kids often send a copy of my first episode to a friend who is now waiting anxiously for the second book in the series so they can BUY a copy for themselves. These are readers I might never have attracted, if not for the lending effect. I'm sure, in the short run, this has cost me thousands of dollars in lost sales, but I prefer to look at this as a form of flattery, not thievery.

From my experience as a Time Warner eBook author, the great untapped market for electronic books is the 8 to 18 year olds who have Internet access from pl aces like Bangladesh, Bali, and Botswana where there are far fewer bookstores, limited copies of English language books and an exchange rate that makes the dollar king. The scary thing is, nobody yet knows the true size of this arena or where it will take eBooks in the future. I'm betting that with a good handheld reading device made available for under $50, within the next five years eBooks will become a staple addition to the entertainment and educational reading world.

Thank you for your article and your time. I look forward to your reply.

Jon Baxley
A Time Warner iPicturebooks
Author THE SCYTHIAN STONE series

http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B00005R217

http://hometown.aol.com/wasp1946/

Bob Jensen's threads on electronic books are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ebooks.htm 

 


From Syllabus News on May 4, 2004

Books-in-Print publisher R.R. Bowker said its Web site, ulrichsWeb.com, would offer users an option to search for any publication that is available via open access. The firm called open access publishing “a fast-growing trend that brings academic and scholarly research - much of it peer-reviewed - directly to anyone with an Internet connection.” Open access journals from SPARC, PLoS, Biomed Central, the Directory of Open Access Journals, and other sources will now be included in ulrichsWeb.com.

Bowker will create an "Open Access" icon that displays on the search results page to alert users that a particular publication is available via open access. To connect users to these new resources, Bowker has added a "Click for Open Access" button on full citation screens that gives users one-click access to that publication's full-text content on the Web.

The main link is at http://www.bowker.com/bowkerWeb/ 


This is a Great Article on How We Can All Author and Use XBRL:  The Future of Financial Reporting!
It is filled with references and links to applications.

"Tap Into XBRL’s Power the Easy Way," by Jeffrey W. Naumann, The Journal of Accountancy, May 2004, pp. 32-45 --- http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/may2004/naumann.htm  

XBRL—a specialized form of XML (extensible markup language)—is becoming more familiar to creators and users of electronic financial statements, but few people have actual hands-on experience with it. So, to bring XBRL to a wider business audience, Microsoft Corp. has released the Microsoft Office Tool for XBRL—a free, but important, enhancement—for the 2003 versions of Excel and Word. Along with the AICPA and more than 200 other organizations, Microsoft is a member of XBRL International Inc. (www.xbrl.org), a nonprofit group that promotes use of the extensible business reporting language to improve financial reporting.

This article explains how to obtain, install and use the tool to create an XBRL-compliant Microsoft Office file. It also explains what XBRL is and why it’s important to CPAs, their clients and employers (see “XBRL: A Business Reporting Standard” and “Why XBRL Matters”).

XBRL: A Business Reporting Standard To appreciate the tool’s usefulness, it’s important to have some understanding of XBRL, which is the XML-based standard for identifying—and improving the accuracy and electronic communication of—complex financial information. XBRL is a computer programming add-on that tags each segment of business information with an identification code or marker. XBRL International Inc., a nonprofit global consortium of more than 200 companies, associations—including the AICPA—and government agencies, has developed XBRL as a royalty-free, open software specification (www.xbrl.org/whatisxbrl). Version 2.1—the most current specification, or full description, of XBRL—is available for review and comment at the organization’s Web site, which also contains information on the different roles XBRL can play in various business contexts.

Users can download the enhancement from the Microsoft Web site (www.microsoft.com/office/solutions/xbrl) at no charge and easily install it. Immediately afterward, they can create or use worksheets and documents that employ XBRL to speed data input, ensure accuracy, eliminate ambiguity by specifying the precise nature of each data element and thus simplify the exchange of financial information. The tool benefits not just CPAs but all participants in the financial reporting process, including reporting entities, regulators, financial institutions, rating agencies and individual and institutional investors, and improves data sharing among the various systems—financial, tax and other—they use.

An example of the growing support for XBRL was the 10-year, $39 million contract the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. awarded in 2003 to Unisys Corp., which, with the assistance of PricewaterhouseCoopers, Microsoft Corp., EDGAR Online Inc. and other technology companies, will use XBRL and other tools to modernize and streamline federal bank regulators’ collection, processing and distribution of banks’ quarterly financial reports.

 
Why XBRL Matters
There are several reasons why CPAs—who often must follow relatively inflexible processes—could benefit from a new means of working with financial data. Among these motivations are their need for greater

Accuracy. Imprecise, inconsistent and unreliable values are common results of transferring data in ambiguous formats, such as those in which values are separated by commas or other characters. Because XBRL transcends the limitations of such data formats, it eliminates errors that occur during data re-entry and it minimizes the risk of losing “metadata,” or verbal descriptions of individual data elements.

Efficiency. Because XBRL data contained in one document or system can be easily shared with another without being rekeyed, exchanging information is swift, easy and error-free, resulting in immediate productivity improvements for all involved parties. In addition, XBRL can be used with software and data on any computer operating system or hardware equipment.

Transparency. Due to the consistency of their formatting and identification, XBRL data do not vary from the time and place of their creation to their eventual destination and use—whether it be public record or another purpose. XBRL therefore can help CPAs play a strong role in helping public companies satisfy the strict financial reporting obligations the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 has imposed on them. Section 409 of the act requires companies to “disclose to the public on a rapid and current basis…information concerning material changes in the financial condition or operations of the issuer.” CPAs can provide a valuable service to their clients or employers by helping them implement XBRL-based reporting capabilities that automatically facilitate compliance by aggregating such information for review and distribution.

 

 

BE A CREATOR, A USER OR BOTH 
The Microsoft Office Tool for XBRL enables users to both create and use documents formatted in XBRL. Many participants in the financial reporting process likely will employ one of these functions more often than the other. For example, producers of quarterly earnings reports will benefit from the tool’s creation functions, such as those used to characterize earnings data by “tagging” them with a contextual format—known as a taxonomy—that corresponds to a series of principles or definitions, such as U.S. GAAP. On the other hand, analysts of existing financial information will find it advantageous to use the tool to, for example, compare several of a company’s earnings statements. Of course, both capabilities are available to everyone using the tool.

Exhibit 1 depicts the current way—without XBRL—electronic financial information flows from an organization’s finance department to regulators, analysts, investors and other interested parties. Companies first submit plain-text financial reports to the SEC. They then convert those documents’ data into hypertext markup language (HTML) format and post them on the Web for public viewing. Finally, companies reconvert those data into various formats that enable investors and financial analysts to scrutinize key performance indicators and other criteria. This fragmented process is both labor-intensive and error-prone.

Continued at http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/may2004/naumann.htm 

May 4, 2004 reply from Saeed Roohani [sroohani@COX.NET

Bob,

This is very timely and informative article, XBRL is moving towards implementation, slowly but surely. A few years ago, I remember Liv Waston at EDGAR Online saying that universal product code (UPC) standard, technology and infrastructure were all available almost 30 years PRIOR to UPC become a standard at local stores. As of now XBRL projects are being implemented by regulators in U.S, the U.K., Japan, Australia, South Africa, and Netherlands. Neal Hannon will demonstrate the new MS XBRL Tool discussed in the article, hands-on, at Bryant College XBRL Conference - May 27 (afternoon) - May 28 (Friday Morning) in Rhode Island.

Also, I would like to take advantage of the opportunity to remind interested individuals about the conference, http://web.bryant.edu/~xbrl/index.html . Participants in this conference are faculty, XBRL tool vendors, and firms interested in XBRL.

Saeed Roohani

Bob Jensen's threads on XBRL are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/XBRLandOLAP.htm#TimelineXBRL 


May 3, 2004 message from Neal Hannon [nhannon@COX.NET

This just in from Microsoft.  I have the tool on my PC and will be writing a short tutorial for upcoming seminars in Mass, RI, Florida and Chicago over the next few months. 
The use of XBRL is taking off in three areas.  First, governmental regulators around the globe are looking to the business reporting markup language.  Projects are underway in the US, the UK, Japan, Australia, South Africa, and the Netherlands.  Projects are proposed for Canada, South Africa, Singapore, Korea, Germany and a few others.  Second, XBRL is very prominent in the adoption of International Accounting Standards, scheduled for over 90 countries in 2005.  XBRL has the power to automatically translate language and currency.  Third, internal projects are underway to convert corporate data into XML to feed business performance reporting into balanced scorecards and strategy maps.  See the web sites of Cognos.com and ipedo.com for verification.  In addition, the 4th quarter will see mandatory XBRL reporting for banks sending Call Report information to the FDIC.  (for more information on this project, visit http://www.ffiec.gov/find/ for more information.
 
In short, XBRL will soon be a major part of our thinking about all financial reporting, both externally and internally
for companies around the globe.
 
See http://nerc.imanet.org for information on the May 21 seminar in Worcester.
 
Neal J. Hannon, CMA 
XBRL Editor, Strategic Finance Magazine
University of Hartford   (860) 768-5810
(401) 769-3802 (Home Office)
 

From: Rob Blake [mailto:robblake@microsoft.com
Sent: Monday, May 03, 2004 3:33 PM
To: xbrl-int@yahoogroups.com; XBRL-US@yahoogroups.com
Cc: Jon Clemens
Subject: [XBRL-US] Microsoft Office Tool for XBRL Prototype Now Available!

I’m pleased to announce the availability of the Microsoft Office Tool for XBRL Prototype, an update to the XBR  add-in for Microsoft Office that we released to the XBRL community in November 2003 at the XBRL International Conference in Seattle . The primary site for learning more about the application can be found at http://www.microsoft.com/office/solutions/xbrl/default.mspx. This site also contains instructions on how to access and download the application, which can be found freely available on Microsoft’s BetaPlace site at http://beta.microsoft.com.

The Microsoft Office Tool for XBRL can be used with Microsoft Office Professional Edition 2003, specifically Microsoft Office Word 2003 and Microsoft Office Excel 2003, to create and analyze documents in XBRL format. It builds upon the November release by adding new and enhanced functionality including more complete Context support as well as new support for label roles and multiple languages.  The prototype is an application that Microsoft hopes will facilitate feedback from customers and partners about the XBRL needs in the market.  Upon hearing that feedback, Microsoft will make a determination on how best to deliver any follow-on to the prototype to most closely match the market’s needs.

Any questions or comments on the Microsoft Office Tool for XBRL should be directed to Jon Clemens (jclemens@microsoft.com), Planning Manager for the Microsoft Office Tool for XBRL, and me.  Thanks in advance for your interest in the software, and I look forward to seeing more than a few of you next week in New Zealand .
Cheers!

Rob Blake
Director, Emerging Technologies
Microsoft Corporation

Bob Jensen's threads on XBRL are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/XBRLandOLAP.htm#TimelineXBRL 


Dan Gode (NYU) sent me the following link.

"XBRL: A case study in complexity A noble attempt to help expose financial dealings via XML asks too much of developers," by Jon Udell, InforWorld, April 30, 2004 --- http://www.infoworld.com/article/04/04/30/18OPstrategic_1.html 

Accounting isn't my strong suit. So I read Following the Moneyto learn what a team of financial academicians think really happened with Enron and WorldCom, and what should be done about it.

Subtitled TheEnron Failure and the State of Corporate Disclosure,the book introduced me to a realm of standards wonkery that's way outside my comfort zone. Will the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) merge U.S. GAAP (Generally Accepted Accounting Principles) with the International Accounting Standards Board's (IASB's) IFRS (International Financial Reporting Standards), or will IFRS instead supersede GAAP? Beats me. Web services has nothing on these guys when it comes to slinging acronyms.

I reached more familiar ground when I read the authors’ recommendation that XBRL(eXtensible Business Reporting Language) should play a crucial role in future reform. Their proposed regulatory initiatives include “encouraging, possibly requiring, public firms to file their financial statements, prospectuses, and other relevant information in XBRL formats in order to accelerate the use of XBRL by companies, investors, and analysts.”

Speedier information flow, transparency — what’s not to like? I wonder, though, if the authors have actually read the 151-page XBRL spec. Here's a taste:

"4.10 Equality predicates relevant to detecting duplicate items and tuples. There are several different senses that are relevant to detection of duplicates in XBRL instances: Identical, Structure equal (s-equal), Parent equal (p-equal), Value equal (v-equal), [XPath]-equal (x-equal), Context equal (c-equal) and Unit equal (u-equal). These different equality predicates are polymorphic and formally defined in a recursive fashion. They are all symmetric predicates, i.e. the result of X (predicate) Y = the result of Y (predicate) X."

Uh-oh. I thought BPEL4WS(Business Process Execution Language for Web Services) was a brain exploder, but it's a walk in the park compared to this stuff. The XBRL spec describes how the parts of an XBRL instance interrelate, using state-of-the-art XML technologies such as XLink and XPointer. And it talks at length about the syntax and semantics of “taxonomies” that abstractly define chunks of financial reports. No sign of any actual financial data, though. And the link to a sample page at xbrl.org, returned a “404 Not Found.” I’m not surprised. The poor bloke whose job it was to produce that sample must have suffered a polymorphic recursive brain meltdown.

This isn’t what the authors had in mind when they endorsed XBRL. They’re right to point out that financial data published on the Web today in HTML and PDF formats resists transformation and analysis. And they’re right to say that “XML permits the tagging of individual data elements, and thus allows the users to rearrange or manipulate them.” But you can’t get from the Model T of today’s HTML and PDF reports to the intergalactic cruiser of XBRL in one turn of the evolutionary crank.

Consider RSS. In 1999 I published my first RSS feed. It was (and is) an XML format so simple that I could (and sometimes still do) write it by hand. Five years later, RSS is wildly popular, as XML formats go. But hordes of people who should be using it have yet to figure it out. If the RSS spec looked like the XBRL spec, nobody ever would — except vendors who regard Sarbanes-Oxley compliance as a growth industry. If we really want transparent data flow, let’s keep it simple.

May 8, 2004 reply from Roger Debreceny [roger@DEBRECENY.COM
Accounting data is complex -- and needs a complex standard (specification) or other guidance (eg FRTA) to represent it. But users will be hidden from the complexity by the tools. Don't expect to see "accounting data" explicitly stated in the XBRL spec .. it is the eXtensible Business Reporting Language that is designed to allow the representation of information including, but not limited to, accounting data.

It is always easy to be critical of standards .. But the test of standards is not the complexity of the standards themselves, but the ability of the standards to be turned into useable products. Here is part of ETSI TS 151 Digital cellular telecommunications system (Phase 2+); General Packet Radio Service (GPRS); Service description; Stage 2 (downloaded at random)
 

6.3.1 Administration of the SGSN - MSC/VLR Association

The SGSN - MSC/VLR association is created at the following occasions:

 

- Combined IMSI / GPRS attach.

- GPRS attach when the MS is already IMSI-attached.

- Combined RA / LA update when the MS performs IMSI attach and is already GPRS-attached.

 

Combined RA / LA update when an IMSI and GPRS-attached MS changes from an area of network operation mode II or III to an area of network operation mode I.

The association is initiated by the SGSN. The SGSN creates an association by sending a BSSAP+ message concerning a particular MS to the VLR. To get the VLR number, the SGSN translates the current RAI to a VLR number via a translation table. During a CS connection, an MS in class-B mode of operation cannot perform GPRS attach nor routeing area updates, only MSs in class-A mode of operation can perform these procedures. If a GPRS attach was made during a CS connection, the association shall be initiated by a combined RA / LA update after the CS connection has been released.

 

The association is updated on the following occasions:

- When an MS changes VLR.

- When an MS changes SGSN.

 

The association is not updated during a CS connection.

 

When the MS is in idle mode (see GSM 03.22), the association is updated with the combined RA / LA updates procedure.

 

In relation with a CS connection, the association is managed in the following way:

 

MS in class-A mode of operation:

An MS in class-A mode of operation makes RA updates but no combined RA / LA updates during the CS connection. In

the case when the MS changes SGSN, the SGSN (according to normal RA update procedures, see subclause "Inter SGSN Routeing Area Update") updates the HLR and the GGSN, but not the VLR, about the new SGSN number.

 

In the case when the MS changes MSC during the CS connection, the subscriber data still remains in the old VLR until the CS connection is released and a combined RA / LA update or LA update is made. The association is also not updated during the CS connection.

 

After the CS connection has been released, a combined RA / LA update is performed (if there has been a change of RA, or if a GPRS attach was performed and the new cell indicates network operation mode I), and the association is updated according to combined RA / LA update procedures, see subclause "Combined RA / LA Update Procedure". If the new cell indicates network operation mode II or III, then the MS performs an LA update.

 

I am pretty confident that the number of AECM subscribers that can provide a clear (or even unclear <g>) interpretation of this part of TS 151 or any other part of the standard is a null set. But I can buy a phone in Singapore that will effortlessly stream GRPS data and do that seamlessly in seventy or more countries world wide. The technology is complex -- the interface is not. 

 

Accounting data is complex -- and needs a complex standard (specification) or other guidance (eg FRTA) to represent it. But users will be hidden from the complexity by the tools. Don't expect to see "accounting data" explicitly stated in the XBRL spec .. it is the eXtensible Business Reporting Language that is designed to allow the representation of information including, but not limited to, accounting data.

 

Mr. Udell is just plain wrong in his analysis.

 

Roger 

May 8, 2004 reply from Paul Polinski [pwp3@CASE.EDU

Roger: I'm not sure that the argument is that simple. There are two transparencies at issue here - accounting transparency (which seeks to make more plentiful and representative disclosures to stakeholders) and data/information (d/i) transparency (which seeks to hide the complexity of the information system storing data and generating information, for the ease of use of end users).

Your point is well taken that in order to provide accounting transparency, the financial reporting system and its components must necessarily be complex. However, writing a standard in a way that fully reflects this complexity, and defending it in the name of data/information transparency, may not be the best way to win converts and encourage adoption.

The Internet and its related apps have been designed to largely incorporate d/i transparency for users. With this transparency indeed has come ease of use for many tasks. However, it has also created a lot of mistrust of the Internet and various apps because users are forced to, relatively blindly, rely on the programming skills and intentions of individuals and corporations. Some choose not to trust at all, and many others have found their trust misplaced, sometimes by presumably reputable individuals or companies. The latest controversy with electronic voting machines serves as a timely example.

I think the point the author wanted to make was that it appeared that the complexity of the standard appeared to 'fly in the face' of the notion of accounting transparency. Financial statement users, not being able to grasp in any way the reporting mechanism being used, would be put in yet another position of 'blind trust' of the developers of the standard and interfaces (who are adding another layer or two to the reporting process). They would have to trust that the data and information are tagged reliably and properly, and that the back-end applications that provide context for the numbers for analysis are also reliable. I'm not sure that this is an 'easy sell.'

Bob Jensen's threads on XBRL are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/XBRLandOLAP.htm#TimelineXBRL 

TheEnron Failure and the State of Corporate Disclosure, by Robert E. Litan, The Brookings Institute, April 2002 --- http://www.brookings.edu/comm/policybriefs/pb97.htm 

The failure of the Houston-based Enron Corporation poses some of the toughest policy challenges of any financial collapse in recent memory. The current situation is not comparable to the savings and loan crisis or the banking disasters of the 1980s, which were nearly a decade in the making before Congress finally took action. By comparison, the disclosure problems that have surfaced in the Enron case have been apparent only in the past several years, especially the growing numbers of earnings restatements and the rising concern about "earnings management" expressed by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and others. More importantly, whereas in the savings and loan and banking cases there were clear policy options that Congress could implement (notably the system of prompt corrective action for enforcing capital standards), there are very few options in the current corporate crises, and there appears to be only a limited consensus on which ones ought to be adopted.

However, there are several steps lawmakers can take to ensure that the public is not left in the dark about a company's financial health. In addition to continuing its extensive fact-finding mission on what happened at Enron, Congress should revisit rules on standards-setting in the accounting industry, tighten up enforcement and monitoring of accounting practices of both firms and their auditors, and make sure that any future laws give broad guidance to the SEC to allow for future developments in a rapidly changing corporate environment.

 
POLICY BRIEF #97

Improving the disclosure system is a complex task with few clear answers. According to former Federal Reserve Board Chairman Paul Volcker, now chairman of the trustees of the International Accounting Standards Board, the growing complexities of business-reflected in a dizzying array of new financial instruments and corporate organizational structures-pose increasingly difficult challenges for any system of disclosure. The fact is that for many kinds of transactions, there are no single "right" answers, which helps explain why the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) often takes so long to set new standards or refine earlier ones, and why International Accounting Standards are framed in a more generic fashion. The lack of specifics allows accountants greater discretion in deciding how to justify various transactions.

As it considers how to improve the setting and enforcement of disclosure standards, Congress should be mindful that markets and regulators have already engaged in extensive "self-correction" in the wake of the Enron affair. A number of companies (including General Electric, America's largest in terms of market capitalization) already have delivered more disclosure; corporate boards, and their audit committees in particular, are paying closer attention to accounting issues and the choice of auditors; accounting firms have tightened up on their audits; financial analysts and credit rating agencies, chastened by their past performance, have become more discriminating; and the SEC is apparently doing the best it can with limited resources to scrutinize corporate financial statements for possible problems.

What Should Congress Do?

So, is there any room left for Congress to act? One reason for it to do so is to ensure that market-driven improvements in disclosure remain in place after the furor over Enron dies down. Another reason for congressional action is that the Enron failure, coupled with several major accounting misadventures in earlier years, have exposed weaknesses in the disclosure system that call for correction.

But Congress should also tread carefully. Markets move fast, legislation does not. What gets adopted today will live for many tomorrows-until something new happens that motivates new legislation. For this reason, any legislation that Congress adopts should give broad guidance to the SEC, and in this way allow for significant flexibility for policy to adapt to constantly changing circumstances.

Accounting Standards

The immediate accounting problem exposed by Enron's failure was the weak consolidation rule prescribed for highly leveraged "special purpose entities" (SPEs), or partnerships that were formed to carry out various projects whose assets and liabilities were not shown in Enron's balance sheet. Enron failed in part because of losses arising out of the many SPEs that it had created.

The rule for some time has been that sponsors of an SPE need not consolidate it so long as outside investors contribute a majority of its capital and that investment constitutes at least 3 percent of the SPE's assets. Leaving aside the fact that Enron appears to have misled its auditor, Andersen, about the amount of outside investments in SPEs (thus wrongfully avoiding consolidation), it is now clear that the 3 percent test was much too weak. FASB has since rightly raised the threshold to 10 percent.

The more difficult, larger issue relates to FASB's standard-setting process itself. FASB is slow to set standards-although the incredibly quick revision to the SPE rule, announced in March, is a notable exception-and when it does, it is often subject to political interference. Changing the funding of FASB from its current practice of accepting voluntary contributions from accounting firms and companies to some sort of mandatory assessment system, as some have suggested, would solve neither of these problems, although it might diminish any perception that FASB must tailor its views to those of its funders.

FASB's slow standard-setting could be addressed more directly by having the SEC impose deadlines on rule changes, with the threat that the SEC would take action on its own by a certain date if FASB did not, an idea floated by former SEC Chief Accountant Lynn Turner. Of course, the option of SEC taking over the standards-setting function is not ideal, because it could interfere with the other functions the commissioners perform and could not guarantee better outcomes. But the simple threat of occasional SEC rulemaking could be a powerful incentive for FASB to remain vigilant and act faster.

The downside of more active SEC involvement, however, is that it could result in even greater political interference in FASB's activities than already exists. There is a respectable view that politics is inherent in any rulemaking process, including the setting of accounting standards, and thus it is something that the public should accept. At the same time, however, the main purpose of accounting standards-at least for publicly held companies-is to protect the interests of investors, not accountants and not the firms themselves. Accounting standards should help investors understand all relevant financial facts that will enable them to make projections about future cash flows. Where the standards are altered or not implemented out of concern for affected firms rather than investors, the outcome may not be socially desirable. In theory, putting more investor or public representatives on FASB could help rectify the imbalance. In practice, however, if Congress wants the rules to benefit narrow interests, then there is little that even a more balanced FASB can do.

Similarly, moving the standards-setting function to the SEC is not a panacea because Congress still oversees the SEC. The same would be true if FASB members were chosen directly by the Commission. As long as the SEC oversees FASB in some way and Congress oversees the SEC, it is virtually impossible to remove politics from accounting standards-setting.

In principle, the only option that would have a chance of at least making some difference is to move standard-setting to an international body like the International Accounting Standards Board and thus accept international accounting standards (IAS), which the United States thus far has refused to do, largely out of the belief that U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) is superior to IAS. This is not the rationale for moving to international standards that is typically cited. Instead, the case for IAS rests largely on the view that a single set of accounting standards worldwide would eliminate discrepancies in accounting standards across countries, thereby facilitating cross-border movement of capital. In addition, removing sources of uncertainty generated by differences in national accounting conventions should reduce the cost of capital. In the wake of Enron, others also have argued that a system like the IAS that allows accountants more discretion is superior to the heavily rules-based system of U.S. GAAP, which seemingly invites circumvention.

But perhaps the most important potential advantage of replacing U.S. GAAP with IAS is that it would dilute the political power of narrow interests in this country to influence the outcome of the standard-setting process. Take, for example, the fight over expensing stock options, which FASB was about to implement several years ago before it was stopped by a powerful lobbying campaign from the U.S. high-tech community. If standards were set solely by the IASB, our high-tech firms would make their views felt, but they could well run into significant opposition from standard-setters from other countries. Unfortunately, it is for just this reason that moving toward IAS would almost certainly arouse strong opposition in this country.

A better approach would be "constrained competition" in standard-setting. Under this approach-which appears to be gathering greater support within the academic community-U.S. law would give firms listing their shares on our stock exchanges a choice between using U.S. GAAP or IAS. Once some of the key differences between the standards are substantially narrowed, there would be no need for firms that choose IAS to undergo the expense of reconciling the differences between the two standards. The remaining differences between the standards would continue to exist, but would be of lesser magnitude. Then the two standards would simply compete, but the discrepancies would not be so large as to produce widely divergent results for most companies. In that way, investors would get the benefits of both greater harmonization (but not complete identity) of the two standards and the benefits of competition.

Enforcement
However much accounting standards may be perfected, investors will not be protected if auditors do not properly enforce the standards. In light of the rising numbers of auditing problems in recent years, culminating with Andersen's widely publicized failures with respect to its audit of Enron, attention has been focused on verification of financial statements. Policymakers should concentrate on two basic approaches, which are not mutually inconsistent, but ideally should be reinforcing: improved monitoring or oversight of auditors and improved incentives for auditors to carry out their work properly.

Monitoring
The most frequently discussed reform of the existing enforcement system is the creation of an independent body reporting to the SEC that would set and enforce auditing standards. SEC Chairman Harvey Pitt has outlined, and the Bush administration has basically endorsed, a proposal for a new Public Regulatory Board (replacing the previous Public Oversight Board) that would have authority to set auditing standards and to investigate and punish wayward auditors, even while charges are pending. Most of the members of the PRB would be independent of the accounting industry, while the functions of the Board would be financed by assessments on accountants and the firms they audit. Critics have said the proposal does not go far enough.

A better option, for a number of reasons, is to lodge the investigation and enforcement functions within the SEC, while leaving the preparation and refinement of audit standards for the auditing profession to an organization like the PRB.

First, proponents of an independent body cannot credibly assert that the job of overseeing auditors is more complex than overseeing the stock exchanges, investigating fraud or insider trading, or carrying out the rest of the Commission's statutory agenda. If the reason for contracting out the supervision of auditors is that the SEC is short of staff and resources, as it clearly is, there is an easy answer to that problem: give it the necessary resources and finance it by an assessment on accounting firms, the firms they audit, and/or investors.

If the reason for creating an independent board is to shelter it from political interference, then that argument is not sufficiently compelling. The SEC has effectively contracted out the setting of accounting standards to the FASB, but that has not prevented affected interests from influencing what the FASB does. In fact, precisely because enforcement is an inherent government function that is carried out for other industries by federal agencies, Congress quite properly exercises its oversight responsibilities over those enforcement efforts. It would be no different if the SEC were to oversee the auditing profession directly.

The only potentially plausible argument for creating the PRB is that the enforcement of auditing standards requires an understanding of the intent behind the standards, and so the two functions should be lodged in the same organization. And since the thought of having the SEC write audit standards seems to many like a non-starter, better to have both jobs carried out by an entity like the PRB under the SEC's oversight. But this too, is faulty logic. Many regulatory agencies write complex rules that they then enforce, so SEC could do both. Or it could rely on an entity like the PRB, which it would oversee, to write a first draft

Continued in the article

Bob Jensen's threads on Enron are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudEnron.htm  

 

 


Let me begin this module with a paragraph from "The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly: World Bank Land Policies," Land Research Network, February 17, 2004 --- http://www.landaction.org/display.php?article=177 

The next rung on the ladder, or a rung associated with these two steps, is granting land titles that are alienable. Alienable means that you can sell the land, or you can use it as collateral at a local bank when you apply for credit, and therefore can also lose it if you default on a bank loan. It can also be your contribution to a joint venture with a private company, if you are a farmer or landholder—you’re investing your alienable land title, and most likely your labor, and the company is investing working capital. Of course if the business doesn’t work out, then everybody losses, including the farmers whose land titles are now alienable, and who lose their land. For the Bank, all of this is part of ‘facilitating land markets.’ When economies go through rapid growth ‘bubbles,’ land values can experience drastic short-term rises, inducing many small farmers to sell their now alienable land for what seems like a lot of money. Or when crop prices are depressed, farmers may sell because cash crop production is no longer profitable. All too often, however, the cash received for the land runs out quickly, and the family fails to find a substitute means of sustenance, rapidly becoming destitute. While they had the land at least they could eat, but without land or employment, they have nothing.

April 3, 2004 message received from XXXXX

Mr. Jensen -

I'm a young lawyer in Washington, D.C. I have been doing some research concerning SFAS 133. First, thank you for the wonderful material you have on the internet. It is both informative and helpful. As I am just learning to navigate the standard, I'm hoping you can answer an SFAS 133 question for me: when first dealing with the rules change, what benefit was there for an entity (say, a bank) to treat a security as alienable as opposed to inalienable? In other words, would the entity receive some sort of accounting benefit under SFAS 133 if the security was alienable (as opposed to inalienable)? Thanks very much for your time and help.

Best regards,

XXXXX

May 4, 2004 reply from Bob Jensen

Hi XXXXX,

Let me begin by saying that I am not an attorney.  Nor am I an expert on the question that you asked.  It would seem, however, that an alienable title is one that is pledged as collateral on a loan such that the land owner is no longer has a perfectly clear right to sell or otherwise pass that title along free and clear of the pledged value.

My bottom line opinion the distinction "security was alienable (as opposed to inalienable)" is of no consequence to hedge accounting alternatives, although it may affect footnote disclosures regarding credit risk.    Both alienable and inalienable securities may subject to fair value risk or cash flow risk due to changes in interest rates.  There can be hedge accounting relief for both types of hedged risk under rules of FAS 133, but these options do not vary with the distinction of alienable or inalienable.

Not once is the term alienable used in FAS 133.  A bank that made a loan that is pledged with with real estate collateral might be concerned about the fall in value of that collateral.  In a sense, the price of the real estate becomes an "underlying" if the bank decides to hedge the fair value of that collateral.  However, real estate is not subject to the typical underlying price risk conceived in FAS 133 where there is an implicit assumption that prices change frequently in trading markets such as commodity prices and interest rates.  

Real estate is different in many respects.  Whereas corn traded on the CBOT is standardized for each bushel traded, real estate is always unique and cannot be standardized.  Secondly, corn prices change hour-by-hour, whereas real estate values fluctuate much less frequently and are difficulty to monitor on a day-to-day basis.  

It would seem that banks would seldom hedge pledged real estate collateral.  They might hedge some other types of collateral such as pledged notes receivable that are subject to changes in value with underlying interest rates.  FAS 133 generally conceives of fair value hedging of notes receivable by the owner or by the prospective owner based upon some type of firm commitment to own them in the future.  It is somewhat different if a bank does not own the collateral but elects to hedge the value of that collateral on a loan outstanding.  I doubt that hedge accounting would be allowed for such a hedge under FAS 133 rules.  Changes in the value of the collateral would never be booked as long as the loan itself is not deemed a bad debt.  FAS 133 focuses on price and interest rate risk rather than credit risk.  Hence, any change in the value of a hedge of collateral value would have to be posted to current earnings in my viewpoint.  No hedge accounting would be allowed for a hedge of collateral.

Under the original Paragraph 531 of FAS 133, there is a requirement to make disclosures of concentrations of credit risk and collateral.  

Hope this helps a little.

Bob Jensen

May 4, 2004 reply from XXXXX

Thanks very much for your response. I've been trying to wrap my head around some of these accounting issues. I'm sure you're incredibly busy and breadth and depth of your response was very generous (not to mention, very helpful). Thank you.

I am looking at a situation where an entity was receiving a servicing fee from another party for servicing that other party's mortgage loans. By contract, the entity could not sell the servicing fee. But it seems as if that entity may have desired to treat that servicing fee as something that it could sell to a third party in order to get favorable treatment under SFAS 133. Does that make sense? When adjusting for the new SFAS 133 standard, is there favorable treatment under SFAS 133 if the entity could treat the servicing fee as something that it could sell (as opposed to something that it could not sell)? This is the last time I will bother you. Thank you again for being so very generous with your time. I very much appreciate your help.

With best regards,

XXXXX

May 4, 2004 reply from Bob Jensen

In the context that you now put it, it would seem that the above argument is probably correct if interest rate fluctuation risk is being hedged in a fair value hedge but not a cash flow hedge.  

If the fee itself varies with interest rates, then it is possible to hedge the cash flow risk due to changes in interest rates.  In that case, I think it would be possible to get hedge accounting treatment whether it was alienable or inalienable since the risk being hedged is cash flow.  But if the fee itself is fixed there is no cash flow risk to hedge.  The only risk in that case is fair value risk.

To be designated as a hedged item for fair value hedge accounting under FAS 133 rules, the fixed mortgaging service fee contract value itself could be subject to interest rate risk.  If interest rate fluctuations change the value of a fixed-fee service contract, then any fair value hedge of the interest rate risk might get favorable hedge accounting treatment.  But if the service contract itself cannot be sold at differing values, then it is not subject to value changes due to interest rate risk and cannot be a hedged item for hedge accounting  purposes.  

Footnote 8 to Paragraph 21 of FAS 133 notes mortgage servicing rights may qualify as hedged items.  However, I think the implicit underlying assumption is that the servicing rights be subject to value-change risk, which would not be the case if they could not be sold.

A firm commitment that represents an asset or liability that a specific accounting standard prohibits recognizing (such as a noncancellable operating lease or an unrecognized mortgage servicing right) may nevertheless be designated as the hedged item in a fair value hedge. A mortgage banker's unrecognized "interest rate lock commitment" (IRLC) does not qualify as a firm commitment (because as an option it does not obligate both parties) and thus is not eligible for fair value hedge accounting as the hedged item.  (However, a mortgage banker's "forward sale commitments," which are derivatives that lock in the prices at which the mortgage loans will be sold to investors, may qualify as hedging instruments in cash flow hedges of the forecasted sales of mortgage loans.)


Information Technology Sites, From Smart Stops on the Web, Journal of Accountancy, May 2004, Page 23 --- http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/may2004/news_web.htm 

THE INTERNET
SMART STOPS ON THE WEB
 
TECHNOLOGY SITES

For IT Educators and Leaders
www.techlearning.com
Here, CPAs who specialize in IT professional development can find helpful resources such as tips on needs assessment for offices or classrooms and articles including “Data Can Drive Development.” Users also can read software reviews and find links to general search engines as well as to an encyclopedia with more than 20,000 IT terms.

Free Online Resources
www.eweek.com
CPA IT professionals can register for free at this Web stop and enroll in gratis e-seminars on topics such as best practices for enterprise data integration, information security and wireless LAN deployment. Users seeking to advise clients on application storage management systems will want to give them the quick quiz “Do You Need to Automate?” before proceeding.

Read to Keep Up
www.technologyreview.com
In addition to providing free either two hard copies of the magazine or a digital issue, Technology Review offers visitors to its Web site a free subscription to the newsletter Technology Review Update. Other gratis offerings include the sections Predictive Markets, where users can predict future outcomes of IT issues to win prizes, and Research News, which has links to information on industry innovations.

Less Search Time, More Results
www.keepmedia.com
CPAs looking for IT articles from the past 12 years can register here for a free seven-day trial. Users can search more than 150 publications, store favorite articles directly online at this site, keep track of what they’ve looked at—saved or not—and let KeepMedia find other articles based on their previous choices. A general search on the word technology returned more than 14,000 results.

Telecommuting Technology
www.langhoff.com
CPAs working from home or remote locations can find case studies and statistics on this trend through the frequently-asked-questions section at June Langhoff’s Telecommuting Resource Center. Also, visitors can look through the business travelers’ survival guide to find tips and links to airlines, ATM locations and business services for mobile users. Companies interested in starting a work-at-home program can research the costs and get links to model telecommuting agreements and policies.

“The Silly Con Valley Report”
www.mikeslist.com
Don’t be fooled by this Web site’s light tone: Useful nuggets of information, including the latest reports on software designs, how to thwart spam and a 300-Gb hard drive, can be found beneath all the humor. Also, users can read up on the latest in broadband and handheld technology and Windows XP through the newsfeed links as well as join up for a free weekly e-newsletter.

Bob Jensen's education technology threads are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/0000start.htm 

Bob Jensen's accounting software bookmarks are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#AccountingSoftware 

Bob Jensen's threads on resources for educators are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/newfaculty.htm#Resources 

Also see http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/thetools.htm 


Count Us In --- http://www.abc.net.au/countusin/default.htm 

Australian Broadcasting Corporation's Online division provides games to help children understand numbers.


Children's Literature --- http://www.childrenslit.com/ 

The Children's Literature Comprehensive Database (CLCD) is an acquisition, research, and reference service that offers 900,000 MARC records and more than 150,000 reviews of children's books--all full text searchable from 27 review sources. CLCD B&N Bookstore As a subscriber to the CLCD you are entitled to an additional 5% discount on all of your bookstore purchase plus free shipping with the purchase of two or more items.


April 20, 2004 message from Ankita Mishra [ankita@chambal.com

We saw your website http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/book99b.htm  on net and found it really informative in the field of books and related areas.You have listed some very useful book related websites like Amazon.com, isbn.nu, etc which are a very good resource for students and all book readers.

We are writing to inform you that we also have a similar web site , http://www.chambal.com  , where we compare prices of books across such major online book sellers in real time. We even find book prices on eBay.

We would appreciate if you could add our website link also to your collection of links. If you decide not to add our link for some reason, your feedback would be really helpful for us in making our site more informative and useful.

Best regards, 
Ankita

I posted the chambal.com link at the more current site module for finding books at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/searchh.htm#Books 


April 22, 2004 message from Rob [rob@coursejunction.com

Bob,

We’ve created a free site that allows anyone to search for a course or list a course for free. The name of the site is http://www.coursejunction.com . We offer a number of high quality courses and would appreciate a link from your continuing education contact page.

Our link instructions are here: http://www.coursejunction.com/link2us.cfm  . Please feel free to email me with any questions.

Thank you,

Rob

CourseJunction.com is an online community that brings course providers and course participants together. Any one can list their courses on CourseJunction.com and anyone can search for a course on CourseJunction for free. http://www.coursejunction.com 

I added this message to http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/crossborder.htm#Training 


"Websites Tattle on Tax Scofflaws," Wired News, April 27, 2004 --- http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,63238,00.html?tw=newsletter_topstories_html 

To those for whom civic duty alone is not enough motivation to pay taxes, states are rolling out a new weapon: shame.

A growing number of states are hoping to humiliate delinquent taxpayers by putting their names online. Used in at least 13 states and sporting zingy names like CyberShame and DelinqNet, the websites are giving state tax collectors a surprisingly useful tool for gathering old taxes.

"We're trying to shame people," said Danny Brazell of the South Carolina Department of Revenue, which attributes $5.5 million in newly collected taxes to its website, Debtor's Corner, started in 2001.

"To have your neighbors be able to see your debt, that would be embarrassing of course, and that's the whole idea."

Some of the state websites are getting thousands of hits a day. It's a bit of legal snooping designed to "out" tax evaders.

In Georgia, the latest state to try online shaming, the debtor's list includes two celebrities. The estate of the late rapper Tupac Shakur owes $85,260, and the estate of the late TLC member Lisa "Left Eye" Lopes owes about $550,000.

In two months, Georgia's list has brought in $1.2 million. It's a small sum for a state that estimates $1.6 billion in unpaid taxes, but every bit helps.

"We don't have the assets to go out and chase these 420,000 people ourselves," said Department of Revenue spokesman Charles Willey.

The public humiliation tactic isn't new, just in a new forum. Governments used to post debtors' names in town squares or newspapers.

"Humiliating folks to shame them into paying what they owe goes back a long time. It's proven to be fairly successful," said Sujit CanagaRetna, an Atlanta-based fiscal analyst for the Council of State Governments.

With many states in the red, "they're fishing for all kinds of strategies to reduce these shortfalls," he said.

Privacy advocates warn the tax-evader lists could harm the innocent. States do not post debtors' names until a lien has been placed against them in court, meaning they've ignored several notices to pay back taxes and their tax information becomes public record. But some fear there aren't adequate safeguards to make sure people get pulled from the list if they've settled up.

"There's always the question of what happens if the government is wrong," said Pete Sepp, spokesman for the Alexandria, Virginia-based tax watchdog group National Taxpayers Union. "This kind of information can ruin the financial reputations of people for years."

In Louisiana, home of the CyberShame site, people about to be listed are notified in advance. Fear of being on the website has brought in $315,000 over the last three years from people who settled up before being listed.

"These are people who have purposely avoided paying their fair share, and we've exhausted all options to collect," revenue spokesman Danny Brown said. "But once their minister, their next-door neighbor, brother, friends, all them know about it, they're much more amenable to paying what they owe."

May 2, 2004 reply from Saeed Roohani [sroohani@COX.NET

Bob,

I think we should take advantage of the Internet to cut down on illegal activities whether civil or criminal. Business information disclosed on the web has value to others, so as information about people who abuse the system and assume not many people will know. BTW, I could not use the sites, were unavailable.

To expand this a bit more, I think disclosures on Internet may discourage some professionals from unethical behavior. We should look for proper ways to do this.

Saeed Roohani
Bryant College.


"Hedge Fund Strategies Combining Futures & Options," by John Person, Chicago Board of Trade Newsletter, April 2004.

This article illustrates how professional traders, specifically hedge funds, utilize options to hedge investments and generate additional income --- http://www.cbot.com/cbot/pub/cont_detail/0,3206,1180+18713,00.html 

It is often said Bulls make money, Bears make money and Pigs get slaughtered, and sometimes spread traders take all of the money home!

In essence that is what hedge funds do at times - spread or hedge their investments in the derivatives markets.  Fund managers know how to leverage their leverage and manage risk by knowing exactly how to spread off positions and parlay profitable trades into huge winners.

Commercials are hedgers, they are using the derivative markets to reduce or eliminate risk. Speculators, on the other hand, accept that risk in return for big gains. Hedge funds, or large speculators, apply every technique in the realm of trading strategies to earn above average returns by implementing risk management trading tools. 

Spreading and the use of option strategies are just a few techniques used by hedge funds that can achieve these goals for the highest maximum returns with better risk controls.

The purpose of this article is to heighten your awareness to the various strategies, and to illustrate how professional traders, specifically hedge funds, utilize options as additional income trades by writing options to collect the premiums against underlying futures positions.  In addition, it will show you how they use options to hedge against adverse risk by using time to their advantage.  Strategy examples will be giving using CBOT®'s new 100% electronic mini-sized DowSM options.

Let me share with you some insights in the hedge fund world. In 2002, it was estimated that approximately $600 billion was invested in hedge funds, mostly because of strong performance and the sophisticated trading tactics used to trade money. Hedge fund managers can use any style and asset class. That gives them a lot of flexibility.

Historically, hedge funds do well in bear markets. In 1987, the year of a stock market crash, hedge funds returned 14.49 percent compared to an S&P 500 return of 5.24 percent. Part of that performance is attributed to the ability to short, or bet against, stocks.

Billionaire Warren Buffett, who some say is one of the world's smartest investor, is reported to have some of his personal fortune invested in the Bermuda-based hedge fund, West End Capital Management.

Unfortunately, there is a whole set of SEC rules and regulations written to keep smaller investors from participating in a hedge fund. According to the SEC rules, to invest in a hedge fund, investors must have an annual income of $200,000 if you're single and $300,000 if you're married.

Hedge fund managers are not restricted to a set style or disclosure of which derivative markets they use. In fact, they can short the market and often times use a basket of stocks known as exhange traded funds or ETF's and stock index futures. This style is in contract to that of mutual funds, which mainly are fully invested in stocks, bonds or in cash, and usually hold to the business model of being long the market.

Hedge fund pros know how to use equity options positions to generate extra income without selling. Some strategies include writing covered puts and calls, calendar spreads, collars, cross-market spreads, curve trades and synthetic futures option strategies.

These strategies can be a combination of just option positions or a combination of futures and options together. Remember that options are complicated to those who do not educate themselves on the subject. It takes time and practice. In fact, trading is complicated, life is complicated. The great thing about our society is that we have power. Each and every one of us has power. That is, the power to make choices and decisions.  We have the power to want to explore and expand our knowledge in any subject. If you are a trader you have the power to learn more about investing.

In the beginning of this article I stated that commercials are hedgers and they typically use the derivative markets, in this case the futures and or options markets, to reduce or eliminate risk.

Speculators, on the other hand, accept risk in return for potential gains. Most investors do not have a risk plan other than a stop. That can be a real order or a mental idea of where to exit a trade. The later is the worst as most speculators change their minds and thus can fall into the trap of letting losers ride.

I want to introduce you to the concept of implementing option strategies as a hedging vehicle, or an insurance policy, which can put you on the same level as a commercial or professional trader. After all, if a bank uses futures to spread off risk, why can't a futures trader use options to spread off risk and act like a hedger?

Hopefully this article will dynamically alter your perception and understanding of options. On the one hand, options trading can be a complex dimension and new universe due to the fact that options have many variables and there are so many choices to make. On the other hand, that is why they offer flexibility.

Options are multi- dimensional.   There is more to calculating the options value besides determining an opinion of the direction of price on the underlying market. As we know, markets only have three choices to move: up, down or sideways.

With options there are other elements to consider besides picking the right price direction. There is time and volatility to consider. Volatility is not just categorized as the change in price value, but also as the measurement of the percentage change in price.  There is implied volatility and historical implied volatility.

There are ways to hypothetically measure an options value by mathematical models as developed by University of Chicago 's Fisher Black (mathematician) and Myron Scholes (economist). They developed the formula that is standard in the pricing of options value.

Then there are other elements to help calculate various value changes, known as the "Greeks". For example, delta gives the percentage value the option will move in relation to the move in the underlying market. Theta gives the value change against time decay.  Vega measures the options price value on the change in volatility. Then there is gamma, which measures how fast the delta will change.

Directional trend strategies in options if one is bullish can include outright purchases of call options. This carries the characteristic of limited risk with unlimited rewards. There are many other combinations one can implement such as bull call spreads, ratio back spreads, vertical or horizontal calendar spreads. As you can see there are many names and variations one can mix and match to custom tailor a trading plan. The bearish strategies would use the opposite of these nomenclatures such as outright put purchases, bear put spreads and so on.

One specific strategy I wish to discuss is what is known as a "Collar". A collar is designed to reduce risk without putting your money up for protection. This is done by writing and buying an option against a futures position. The downside of this strategy is that it reduces your profit potential. It is a hedge strategy within a specific price target range.

Continued in the article

Bob Jensen's threads on accounting for derivative financial instruments and hedging activities are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm 


"What Did You Get From ERP And What Can You Get?" by Gregory J. Millman, Financial Executive, May 2004, pp. 38-42.  This will soon be online at http://www.fei.org/mag/ 

The evidence leaves little doubt that for most companies, ERP (enterprise resource planning) has failed to meet expectations or deliver on its value promise.  It's hard to find an expert who things otherwise.  "Based on our data, only a select few companies have gotten value out of their ERP implementations, and those are the world-class companies.  The value for the average company is still many years away," says David Hebert, who leads The Hackett Group's business advisory services program in application ROI.

The latest annual survey of financial executives by FEI and Computer Sciences Corp. found that "only a small minority, 10 percent, believe they are achieving a high return on technology investments."  Scott Phares, vice president of business services for the application software firm Business Engine says, "I hate to beat up on ERP, but it has the most visibility as the most expensive but least-value-derived kind of implementation.  There are tons of partly implemented or partly used products out there."

To be sure, the rap on ERP isn't entirely one-sided.  Peter Greffe, senior vice president for finance at the Bank of Montreal (BMO), says, "When you implement something new like this, it will relocate profitability to a certain extent.  Anybody that gets a positive impact will love the system, and anybody that gets a negative will not."

Jensen Comment:  ERP systems may have greater returns now that firms have to worry about Sarbanes-Oxley compliance.  Also, firms like Union Carbide claim that ERP has been a great help in FAS 133 compliance --- http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/000overview/mp3/133summ.htm 

Bob Jensen's threads on ERP are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245glosap.htm 


Humanities Magazine --- http://www.neh.gov/news/humanities.html 

See the profiles of the ten recipients of the National Humanities Medal


Maxim Publisher Hits Poetry Circuit (Front Page of The Wall Street Journal)
Felix Dennis is a poet who also happens to be the multimillionaire publisher of the irreverent Maxim magazine, and he's on a crusade to challenge the obscurity of modern verse.

He Likes Meter and Rhyme,
Calls Free Verse a Crime
And Dog Poems Sublime

"Felix Dennis, No Pro, Has Spotted His Foe: Poetry's Status Quo," by Matthew Rose, The Wall Street Journal, May 3, 2004, Page A1 --- http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108327280097297732,00.html?mod=home%5Fpage%5Fone%5Fus 

When he began reading his poetry in public, Felix Dennis, the publishing mogul behind Maxim magazine, usually arrived by helicopter. He dubbed a late 2002 12-city trip around England the "Did I Mention the Free Wine?" tour, on the advice, he says, of Mick Jagger, his neighbor on the island of Mustique. During the reading, young women in tour T-shirts handed out free glasses of wine from his own cellar.

As he read, his words were flashed on a screen and electronic music, especially written for him, provided a background.

"Never go back," Mr. Dennis growled into a microphone, starting the poem that kicks off and ends his readings:

Never go back.
Never return to the haunts of your youth.
Keep to the track, to the beaten track,
Memory holds all you need of the truth.

In a picaresque career, Mr. Dennis has played drums for Eric Clapton, gone to jail for publishing Oz, a crudely satirical magazine, and written a biography of Bruce Lee. In his newest chapter, the British multimillionaire is on a crusade to challenge the obscurity of modern poetry, by reclaiming old-fashioned values of rhyme and meter.

His flair for marketing, and his bankroll, are giving him unusual success. His first volume of poetry, "A Glass Half Full" got barely any attention from serious reviewers but sold all 10,000 copies printed in Britain.

For the American edition, due in September, Mr. Dennis, 56 years old, is upgrading his traveling show. He has hired a jet for about $300,000 to shuttle him to towns around the country where he plans to hand out a DVD of previous performances. Hoping to make a profit from Mr. Dennis's new passion, publisher Miramax Books, a unit of Walt Disney Co., has plans to print 25,000 copies. Most serious poets are lucky to sell 3,000.

"It would be nice if Mr. Letterman or Oprah gave me two minutes," Mr. Dennis says. "I'd blow their bloody socks off."

Mr. Dennis has let his hair grow long and shaggy since he started writing seriously in late 2000. He has completed 650 poems, at last count, in the four hours a day he devotes to them. Every few weeks, he sends what he calls a "wodge" of poems to his editor and to a lawyer friend, who stands in for the kind of ordinary reader Mr. Dennis seeks. Mr. Dennis then joins the other two in grading his poems. Those that get three As make the cut. Cs are discarded. Anything in between goes up for discussion or revision.

Mr. Dennis says in the next few years he's considering selling Dennis Publishing, owner of the highly successful Maxim, an irreverent men's magazine. He would like to concentrate on poetry and other interests, he says, such as accumulating enough land to plant a 50,000-acre forest in England, named the Forest of Dennis. He also has an idea to build retirement villages for baby boomers.

His poetry is intended for "people who appear to devour it as if they've been starved for 40 or 50 years, which, by the way, they have," he says. Easing into a leather armchair in his Manhattan apartment, Mr. Dennis accidentally sat on a slim volume of poetry by Ezra Pound, a poet known for being impenetrable in his later years. "That's what he deserves," Mr. Dennis snorted. "He used to write good poems."

Continued in the article

May 5, 2005 reply from Roberta Lipsig, SUNY Oswego [rlipsig@OSWEGO.EDU

Here's a webzine for those who want "real poetry" - of all sorts except blank verse:

http://www.poetryrenewal.com/ 

Their Mission Statement: Poetry Renewal will refresh and renew the standards and disciplines that have been lacking in much of poetry in the last fifty to 150 years. We will give an outlet for more disciplined verse that has been disrespected by late twentieth century academics. We will not be iconoclasts. We will uphold the poetic traditions and disciplines that sustained our civilization for thousands of years. We will be praising and featuring those who make a study of and apply the art and craft of poetry.

Roberta Lipsig 
Professor Emerita 
Formerly at SUNY Oswego now in Gainesville FL 
(Hey Bob, I went in the opposite direction from you.)

 


The Writings of Henry D. Thoreau (American Literature) ---  http://www.thoreau.niu.edu/ 

The Museum of Bad Art --- http://www.museumofbadart.org/ 

Bob Jensen's history and literature bookmarks are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob2.htm#History 




How can a nasty neighbor help you save on income tax?

The answer is at http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/may2004/ftta.htm 


Forwarded by The Cha Cha Lady

1. Brain cells come, and brain cells go, but fat cells live forever.  

2. Transvestite: A guy who likes to eat, drink and be Mary. 

3. The difference between the Pope and your boss.... The Pope only expects you to kiss his ring. 

4. My mind works like lightning. One brilliant flash and it is gone. 

5. The only time the world beats a path to your door is if you're in the bathroom. 

6. I hate sex in the movies. Tried it once. The seat folded up, the drink spilled and that ice, well, it really chilled the mood. 

7. It used to be only death and taxes were inevitable. Now, of course, there's shipping and handling, too. 

8. A husband is someone who, after taking the trash out, gives the impression that he just cleaned the whole house. 

9. My next house will have no kitchen - just vending machines and a large trash can. 

10. A blonde said, "I was worried that my mechanic might try to rip me off. I was relieved when he told me all I needed was turn signal fluid." 

11. I'm so depressed. My doctor refused to write me a prescription for Viagra. He said it would be like putting a new flagpole on a condemned building. 

12. My neighbor was bitten by a stray rabid dog. I went to see how he was and found him writing frantically on a piece of paper. I told him rabies could be cured and he didn't have to worry about a Will. He said, "Will? What Will? I'm making a list of the people I want to bite!" 

13. Definition of a teenager? God's punishment for enjoying sex. 

14. As we slide down the banister of life, may the splinters never point the wrong way. 

15. When I was young we used to go "skinny dipping," now I just "chunky dunk." 

16. The early bird has to eat worms. 

17. The worst thing about accidents ! in the kitchen is eating them. 

18. Don't argue with an idiot; people watching may not be able to tell the difference. 

19. Wouldn't it be nice if whenever we messed up our life we could simply press 'Ctrl Alt Delete' and start all over? 

20. Stress is when you wake up screaming and then you realize you haven't fallen asleep yet. 

21. Just remember...if the world didn't suck, we'd all fall off.


The Cha Cha Lady informed me that the camel spider photographs are phony.

Bob, See: http://www.snopes.com/photos/bugs/camelspider.asp 

Paula


Forwarded by Auntie Bev

The following questions and answers were collated from the SAT tests given to 16 years-old students! Don't laugh too hard -- one of them could become president one day! You have to admit some are very creative, though.

Q: Name the four seasons. A: Salt, pepper, mustard and vinegar

Q: Explain one of the processes by which water can be made safe to drink.

A: Flirtation makes water safe to drink because it removes large pollutants like grit, sand, dead sheep and canoeists.

Q: How is dew formed? A: The sun shines down on the leaves and makes them perspire.

Q: What is a planet? A: A body of earth surrounded by sky.

Q: What causes the tides in the ocean?

A: The tides are a fight between the Earth and the Moon. All water tends to flow toward the moon because there is no water on the moon and nature abhors a vacuum. I forget where the sun joins in this fight.

Q: In a democratic society, how important are elections? A: Very important. Sex can only happen when a male gets an election.

Q: What are steroids? A: Things for keeping carpets on the stairs.

Q: What happens to your body as you age? A: When you get old, so do your bowels and you get intercontinental.

Q: What happens to a boy when he reaches puberty? A: He says good-bye to his boyhood and looks forward to adultery.

Q: Name a major disease associated with cigarettes. A: Premature death.

Q: How can you delay milk turning sour? A: Keep it in the cow.

Q: How are the main parts of the body categorized? (e.g., abdomen).

A: The body is consisted into three parts - the brainium, the borax and the abdominal cavity. The brainium contains the brain, the borax contains the heart and lungs and the abdominal cavity contains the five bowels, A, E, I, O and U.

Q: What is the Fibula? A: A small lie.

Q: What does "varicose" mean? A: Nearby.

Q: What is the most common form of birth control? A: Most people prevent contraption by wearing a condominium.

Q. Give the meaning of the term "Caesarian Section" A. The caesarian section is a district in Rome.

Q: What is a seizure? A: A Roman Emperor.

Q: What is a terminal illness? A: When you are sick at the airport.

Q: Give an example of a fungus. What is a characteristic feature? A: Mushrooms. They always grow in damp places and so they look like umbrellas.

Q: What does the word "benign" mean? A: Benign is what you will be after you be eight.

Q: What is a turbine? A: Something an Arab wears on his head.

And just think, one day our social security payments will depend on these kids!! !


Forwarded by Don VanEynde

1. Two vultures boarded a plane, each carrying two dead raccoons. The stewardess stops them and says "sorry sir, only one carrion per passenger." 

2. NASA recently sent a number of Holsteins into orbit for experimental purposes. They called it the herd shot round the world. 

3. Two boll weevils grew up in S Carolina. One took off to Hollywood and became a rich star. The other stayed in Carolina and never amounted to much--and naturally became known as the lesser of two weevils. 

4. 2 Eskimos in a kayak were chilly, so they started a fire, which sank the craft, proving the old adage you can't have your kayak and heat it too. 

5. A 3-legged dog walks into an old west saloon, slides up to the bar and announces "I'm looking for the man who shot my paw." 

6. Did you hear about the Buddhist who went to the dentist, and refused to take Novocain? He wanted to transcend dental medication. 

7. A group of chess enthusiasts checked into a hotel, and met in the lobby where they were discussing their recent victories in chess tournaments. The hotel manager came out of the office after an hour, and asked them to disperse. He couldn't stand chess nuts boasting in an open foyer. 

8. A women has twins, gives them up for adoption. One goes to an Egyptian family and is named "Ahmal" The other is sent to a Spanish family and is named "Juan". Years later, Juan sends his birth mother a picture of himself. Upon receiving the picture, she tells her husband she wishes she also had a picture of Ahmal. He replies, "They're twins for Pete sake!! If you've seen Juan, you've see Ahmal!!" 

9. A group of friars opened a florist shop to help with their belfry payments. Everyone liked to buy flowers from the Men of God, so their business flourished. A rival florist became upset that his business was suffering because people felt compelled to buy from the Friars, so he asked the Friars to cut back hours or close down. The Friars refused. The florist went to them and begged that they shut down. Again they refused.. So the florist then hired Hugh McTaggert, the biggest meanest thug in town.. He went to the Friars' shop, beat them up, destroyed their flowers, trashed their shop, and said that if they didn't close, he'd be back. Well, totally terrified, the Friars closed up shop and hid in their rooms. This proved that Hugh, and only Hugh, can prevent florist friars.  

10. And finally, there was a man who sent 10 puns to some friends in hopes at least one of the puns would make them laugh. Unfortunately no pun in ten did!!! 


Forwarded by Earl

A group of 3rd, 4th and 5th graders, accompanied by two female teachers, went on a field trip to the local racetrack (Churchill Downs) to learn about thoroughbred horses and the supporting industry (Bourbon), but mostly to see the horses.
     
When it was time to take the children to the bathroom it was decided that the girls would go with one teacher and the boys would go with the other.
     
The teacher assigned to the boys was waiting outside the men's room when one of the boys came out and told her that none of them could reach the urinal.  Having no choice, she went inside, helped the boys with their pants, and began hoisting the little boys up one by one holding onto their "wee wees" to direct the flow away from their clothes.
     
As she lifted one, she couldn't help but notice that he was unusually well endowed.  Trying not to show that she was staring the teacher said, "You must be in the 5th grade."

No, ma'am, " he replied. "I'm the jockey riding Silver Arrow in the seventh!"


Forwarded by Dick Haar

Color yourself into therapy..................

http://www.chinapaint.com/eng/flash/colorandme_en.swf 


Forwarded by The Cha Cha Lady

A mother enters her daughter's bedroom and sees a letter on the bed. With the worst premonition, she reads it, with trembling hands:

It is with great regret and sorrow that I'm telling you that I eloped with my new boyfriend. I found real passion and he is so nice, with all his piercings and tattoos and his big motorcycle.

But it is not only that mom, I'm pregnant and Ahmed said that we will be very happy in his trailer in the woods, He wants to have many more children with me and that's one of my dreams. I've learned that marijuana doesn't hurt anyone and we'll be growing it for us and his friends, who are providing us with all the cocaine and ecstasy we may want.

In the meantime, we'll pray for science to find the AIDS cure, for Ahmed to get better, he deserves it. Don't worry Mom, I'm 15 years old now and I know how to take care of myself. Some day I'll visit so you will get to know your grandchildren.

Your daughter,

Shirley

PS: Mom, it's not true. I'm at the neighbor's house. I just wanted to show you that there are worst things in life than the school's report card that's in my desk's drawer...I love you!

Bob Jensen's Comment
The letter above reminds me of a note that my neighbor (Mrs. Alma Short) in Tallahassee once received from her twelve year old son.  It read, "My report card in is the mail box.  I've run away from home."


According to the Cha Cha Lady, we elected these geniuses.

The following are actual stories provided by a retiring Washington, D.C.government Travel Agent of 30+ years:

I had a New Hampshire Congresswoman ask for an aisle seat so that her hair wouldn't get messed up by being near the window.

I got a call from a Candidate's Staffer, who wanted to go to Capetown. I started to explain the length of the flight and the passport information then she interrupted me with, "I'm not trying to make you look stupid, but Capetown is in Massachusetts." Without trying to make her look like the stupid one, I calmly explained, "Cape Cod is in Massachusetts, Capetown is in Africa." Her response ... (click).

A Senior Vermont Congressman called, furious about a Florida package we did. I asked what was wrong with the vacation in Orlando. He said he was expecting an ocean-view room. I tried to explain that is not possible, since Orlando is in the middle of the state. He replied, "Don't lie to me. I looked on the map, and Florida is a very thin state!!!"

I got a call from a Lawmakers Wife who asked, "Is it possible to see England from Canada?" I said, "No." She said, "But they look so close on the map."

An Aide for a Bush cabinet member once called and asked if they could rent a car in Dallas. When I pulled up the reservation, I noticed they had only a 1-hour lay-over in Dallas. When I asked him why he wanted to rent a car, he said, "I heard Dallas was a big airport, and we will need a car to drive between the gates to save time."

An Illinois Congresswoman called last week. She needed to know how it was possible that her flight from Detroit left at 8:20am and got into Chicago at 8:33am. I tried to explain that Michigan was an hour ahead of Illinois, but he could not understand the concept of time zones. Finally, I told her the plane went very fast, and she bought that!

A New York lawmaker called and asked, "Do airlines put your physical description on your bag so they know who's luggage belongs to who?" I said, "No, why do you ask?" She replied, "Well, when I checked in with the airline, they put a tag on my luggage that said (FAT), and I'm overweight, I think that is very rude?" After putting her on hold for a minute while I "looked into it" (I was actually laughing) I came back and explained the city code for Fresno, CA is (FAT), and that the airline was just putting a destination tag on her luggage.

A Senator's Aide called in inquiring about a trip package to Hawaii. After going over all the cost info, she asked, "Would it be cheaper to fly to California and then take the train to Hawaii?"

I just got off the phone with a freshman Congressman who asked, "How do I know which plane to get on?" I asked him what exactly he meant, to which he replied, "I was told my flight number is 823, but none of these darn planes have numbers on them."

A Lady Senator called and said, "I need to fly to Pepsi-Cola, FL. Do I have to get on one of those little computer planes?" I asked if she meant fly to Pensacola, FL on a commuter plane. She said, "Yeah, whatever!!"

A Senior Senator called and had a question about the documents he needed in order to fly to China. After a lengthy discussion about passports, I reminded him he needed a visa. "Oh no I don't, I've been to China many times and never had to have one of those." I double checked and sureenough, his stay required a visa. When I told him this he said, "Look,I've been to China four times and every time they have accepted my American Express!"

A New Mexico Congresswoman called to make reservations, "I want to go from Chicago to Rhino, New York" The agent was at a loss for words. Finally, the agent: "Are you sure that's the name of the town?" "Yes, what flights do you have?" replied the lady. After some searching, the agent came back with, "I'm sorry, ma'am, I've looked up every airport code in the country and can't find a Rhino anywhere." The lady retorted, "Oh don't be silly! Everyone knows where it is. Check your map!" The agent scoured a map of the state of New York and finally offered, "You don't mean Buffalo, do you?" "That's it! I knew it was a big animal", she admitted!!!

Now you know why government is in the shape that it's in!


Forwarded by Debbie

"Nobody in football should be called a genius. A genius is a guy like Norman Einstein. "
Joe Theismann, football commentator

I think Theismann is qualified to run for the U.S. Senate.


Forwarded by the Cha Cha Lady

Four All Who Reed and Right
===========================

We'll begin with a box, and the plural is boxes;
but the plural of ox became oxen not oxes.

One fowl is a goose, but two are called geese,
yet the plural of moose should never be meese.

You may find a lone mouse or a nest full of mice;
yet the plural of house is houses, not hice.

If the plural of man is always called men,
why shouldn't the plural of pan be called pen?

If I spoke of my foot and show you my feet,
and I give you a boot, would a pair be called beet?

If one is a tooth and a whole set are teeth,
why shouldn't the plural of booth be called beeth?

Then one may be that, and three would be those,
yet hat in the plural would never be hose, and the plural of cat
is cats, not cose.

We speak of a brother and also of brethren,
but though we say mother, we never say methren.

Then the masculine pronouns are he, his and him,
but imagine the feminine, she, shis and shim.

Let's face it,
English is a crazy language.

There is no egg in eggplant,
nor ham in hamburger;
neither apple nor pine in pineapple.
English muffins weren't invented in England . 
French fries weren't created in France. 

We take English for granted.
But if we explore its paradoxes,
we find that quicksand can work slowly, boxing rings are square
and a guinea pig is neither from Guinea , nor is it a pig.

And why is it that writers write but fingers don't fing,
grocers don't groce and hammers don't ham?

Doesn't it seem crazy that you can make amends,
but not one amend?

If you have a bunch of odds and ends
and get rid of all but one of them,
what do you call it?

If teachers taught,
why didn't preachers praught?

If a vegetarian eats vegetables,
what does a humanitarian eat?

Warning for Women from the Cha Cha Lady 

Most of you have read the scare-mail about the person whose kidneys were stolen while he was passed out. While that was an "urban legend," this one is NOT. It's happening every day. I'm sending this "warning" only to a few of my closest friends. You too may have been a victim ... read on. My thighs were stolen from me during the night of August 3rd a few years ago. It was just that quick. I went to sleep in my body and woke up with someone else's thighs. The new ones had the texture of cooked oatmeal. Who would have done such a cruel thing to legs that had been wholly, if imperfectly, mine for years? 

Whose thighs were these? What happened to mine? I spent the entire summer looking for them. I searched, in vain, at pools and beaches, anywhere I might find female limbs exposed. I became obsessed. I had nightmares filled with cellulite and flesh that turns to bumps in the night. Finally, hurt and angry, I resigned myself to living out my life in jeans and Sheer Energy pantyhose. Then, just when my guard was down, the thieves struck again. 

My rear end was next. I knew it was the same gang, because they took pains to match my new rear end (although badly attached at least three inches lower than the original) to the thighs they had stuck me with earlier. Now my rear complemented my legs, lump for lump. Frantic, I prayed that long skirts would stay in fashion. Two years ago I realized my arms had been switched. One morning while fixing my hair, I watched, horrified but fascinated, as the flesh of my upper arms swung to and fro with the motion of the hairbrush. This was really getting scary. 

My body was being replaced, cleverly and fiendishly, one section at a time. In the end, in deepening despair, I gave up my T-shirts. What could they do to me next? Age? Age had nothing to do with it. Age was supposed to creep up, unnoticed and intangible, something like maturity. NO, I was being attacked, repeatedly and without warning. That's why I've decided to share my story. I can't take on the medical profession by myself. 

Women of America, wake up and smell the coffee! That isn't really "plastic" those surgeons are using. You know where they're getting those replacement parts, don't you? The next time you suspect someone has had a face "lifted," look again! Was it lifted from you? Check out those tummy tucks and buttocks raisings. Look familiar? Are those your eyelids on that movie star? I think I finally may have found my thighs...and I hope that Cindy Crawford paid a really good price for them! This is NOT a hoax! This is happening to women in every town every night........

Warn your friends!!!!!!!


Forwarded by Bob Overn

A young blonde was on vacation in the depths of Louisiana. She wanted to take home a pair of genuine alligator shoes in the worst way but was very reluctant to pay the high prices the local vendors were asking for the highly prized shoes.

After becoming very frustrated with the "no haggle on prices" attitude of one of the shopkeepers, the blonde shouted, "Well then, maybe I'll just go out and catch my own alligator, so I can get a pair of shoes at a decent price!"

The shopkeeper said with a sly, knowing smile, "Little lady, y'all just go and give it a try, why don'cha!"

The blonde turned on her heel and headed out toward the swamps, determined to catch herself an alligator .

Later in the day, as the shopkeeper is driving home, he pulls over to the side of the levee where he spots that same young woman standing waist deep in the murky bayou water, shotgun in hand. Just then, he spots a huge 9-foot gator swimming rapidly toward her. With lightning speed, she takes aim, kills the creature . . .and, with a great deal of effort, hauls it onto the slimy swamp bank. Lying nearby were several more of the dead creatures.

The shopkeeper stands on the bank and watches this scenario in amazed silence.

Just then, the blonde struggles and flips the gator on its back. Then, rolling her eyes heaven-ward and screaming in great frustration, she shouts out, "Damn, this one is barefoot, too!"




And that's the way it was on May 15, 2004 with a little help from my friends.

Jesse's Wonderful Music for Romantics (You have to scroll down to the titles) --- http://www.jessiesweb.com/

I highly recommend TheFinanceProfessor (an absolutely fabulous and totally free newsletter from a very smart finance professor) --- www.FinanceProfessor.com 

 

Bob Jensen's bookmarks for accounting newsletters are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#News 

News Headlines for Accounting from TheCycles.com --- http://www.thecycles.com/business/accounting 
An unbelievable number of other news headlines categories in TheCycles.com are at http://www.thecycles.com/ 

 

Jack Anderson's Accounting Information Finder --- http://www.umsl.edu/~anderson/accsites.htm

 

Gerald Trite's great set of links --- http://www.zorba.ca/bookmark.htm 

 

Paul Pacter maintains the best international accounting standards and news Website at http://www.iasplus.com/

The Finance Professor --- http://www.financeprofessor.com/about/aboutFP.html 

 

Walt Mossberg's many answers to questions in technology --- http://ptech.wsj.com/

 

How stuff works --- http://www.howstuffworks.com/ 

 

Household and Other Heloise-Style Hints --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob3.htm#Hints 

 

Bob Jensen's video helpers for MS Excel, MS Access, and other helper videos are at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/ 
Accompanying documentation can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/default1.htm and http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm 

 

Click on www.syllabus.com/radio/index.asp for a complete list of interviews with established leaders, creative thinkers and education technology experts in higher education from around the country.

 

Professor Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-999-7347 Fax: 210-999-8134  Email:  rjensen@trinity.edu  

 

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May 1, 2004

Bob Jensen's New Bookmarks on May 1, 2000
Bob Jensen at Trinity University
 

For earlier editions of New Bookmarks, go to http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookurl.htm 

Now we're Over the Hill Swingers --- http://webs.lanset.com/lindenschmitt/epix/OverTheHillSwing.htm 

Household and Other Heloise-Style Hints --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob3.htm#Hints  

Message from one of my distant relatives about another distant relative:

I think you might enjoy going to Erica's website and listening. Her website is www.ericarandolph.com 

Hello family, This is part of an email I received from Dorothy Overn Randolph. I thought you would all like to hear and see our beautiful and talented relative, Erica Randolph, on her website. Thanks Dorothy for sharing with us all.

Barb


Quotes of the Week

The victor belongs to the spoils.
Francis Scott Fitzgerald

A Republican-sponsored anti-Kerry ad shows up on a website featuring a video game starring a gun-toting cartoon President Bush killing terrorists. The campaign, which has spent at least $50 million on commercials so far, is going after Kerry with increasingly negative ads.
"Shoot 'em Up, Vote for Bush," Wired News, April 16, 2004 http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,63090,00.html?tw=newsletter_topstories_html 
Although I'm politically conservative, I find adds of this nature stupid as well as being in very poor taste.  I advise John Kerry to follow up with a cartoon add showing Bush shooting himself in the foot.

One of the Reasons for the High Cost of Automobile Insurance --- They're Like Modern Toasters
Costly air bags, expensive electronics, and lightweight body materials are driving up the cost of fixing new cars. Not only do many more parts have to be replaced rather than repaired, but fewer and fewer body shops can afford the special equipment and training required to do the work."  We're moving closer and closer to the disposable car," says Dan Bailey, an executive vice president at Carstar, the largest auto-body repair franchise in the United States.

Eric C. Evarts, "New cars are getting too expensive to fix," The Christian Science Monitor, April 19, 2004 --- http://www.csmonitor.com/2004/0419/p13s02-wmgn.html 

Richard, 62, is one of seven activists being honored Monday in San Francisco with the Goldman Environmental Prize -- the best-known award for environmentalists. Awards are given to activists in six regions -- Africa, Asia, Europe, Island Nations, North America and South/Central America -- and each recipient receives $125,000.
"Net Helps Activists Expose Plight," Wired News, April 19, 2004 --- http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,63128,00.html?tw=newsletter_topstories_html 

True wireless broadband is coming to the U.S. this year and next. By the end of 2005, courtesy of Verizon Wireless, you should be able to wirelessly connect a laptop, PDA or cellphone to the Internet at real broadband speeds from almost any location in every major U.S. metropolitan area.
Walter Mossberg, "Verizon Is Crossing The U.S. With Speedy, True Wireless Access," The Wall Street Journal, April 8, 2004 --- http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,personal_technology,00.html 

If you are a parent of young children, a heavy user of e-mail attachments, or somebody who just can't break away from familiar software, it may be worth $9.95 a month for MSN Premium, or even $14.95 for AOL for Broadband. But if you don't fit one of those categories, save your money.
Walter Mossbert, "MSN and AOL Offer Extras for Broadband, But Are They Worth It?" The Wall Street Journal, April 15, 2004 --- http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,personal_technology,00.html 

A Massachusetts company is working on a new generation of robots that would help American soldiers in battle. The machines won't look anything like the Terminator, though.
Mark Baard, Wired News, Wired News, April 13, 2004 --- http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,63036,00.html?tw=newsletter_topstories_html 

"That's fine," his father replied, "but go to college so people will think you're an eccentric, not just a beach bum."
Stephen Kinzer, A Passion for Poetry (and Profits), The New York Times, April 19, 2004 --- http://www.nytimes.com/2004/04/19/books/19POET.html 
This is what how his father responded when John Barr revealed that he wanted to become a poet.  John Barr studied English literature and business.  After making a fortune in investment banking, he is now the "President of the Poetry Foundation, with a challenge perhaps unique in the history of literature: deciding how to make use Ruth Lilly's gift worth more than $100 million."

Men have become the tools of their tools.
Henry David Thoreau

The second mouse gets the cheese.
As quoted in a recent email message from David Fordham

An intellectual is the type of person who has bound those books he has not read.
Leo Longanesi

Examinations are formidable even to the best prepared, for the greatest fool may ask more than the wisest man can answer.
Charles Caleb Colton as quoted by Mark Shapiro --- http://irascibleprofessor.com/comments-04-19-04.htm 

The trouble with long-range planning is that it almost never works.
"Plus Ca Change," The Chronicle of Higher Education, April 2, 2004, Page C1

It is better to offer no excuse than a bad one.
George Washington.
As quoted by Mark Shapiro --- http://irascibleprofessor.com/comments-04-09-04.htm 

The government estimates it takes taxpayers 28 hours and 30 minutes to complete an average tax return with itemized deductions and income reported from interest, dividends and capital gains. That's 42 minutes longer than last year.
SmartPros, April 16, 2004 --- http://www.smartpros.com/x43284.xml 
Bob Jensen's threads for time-saving software are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#010304Taxation 

"Given the poor state of the FBI's information systems, field agents usually did not know what investigations in their own office, let alone in other field offices, were working on," said a report from the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States (also known as the 9-11 Commission), which was formed to investigate the circumstances surrounding the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. The FBI has been unable to fully deploy its new, $458 million Trilogy network and applications that supposedly lay a foundation for improved information sharing.
Dan Farber, "Business blind spots can have devastating consequences," ZD Net, April 16, 2004 --- http://techupdate.zdnet.com/techupdate/stories/main/Business_blind_spots.html 

Valen E. Johnson, a biostatistics professor at the University of Michigan and author of "Grade Inflation: A Crisis in College Education" (Springer Verlag), said the use of student ratings to evaluate teachers also inflates grades: "As long as our evaluations depend on their opinion of us, their grades are going to be high."
Karen Arenson (See below)

Reed College, a selective liberal arts college in Oregon, where the average grade-point average has remained a sobering 2.9 (on a 4.0 scale) for 19 years. 
Karen Arenson (See below)

America's workers face a real threat: The potential for their wages to sink to overseas levels. Plus: Bush's dilemma, A coming worker shortage? 
Business Week Special Report, March 22, 2004 --- http://www.businessweek.com/bwdaily/db_special/db_04jobs.htm 

Two years ago Karen Hughes resigned as counselor to President Bush to go back to Texas and spend time with her family. In response, New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd ridiculed Karen Hughes' exercise of free choice: "Women will never get anywhere in this boys' administration, or this boys' town, or this boys' world, if they're going to sacrifice prime West Wing real estate every time their husbands and kids kvetch."
Carey Roberts, Feminist.com, April 14, 2004 --- http://www.ifeminists.net/introduction/editorials/2004/0414roberts.html 

Apple's Steve Jobs will take Real Networks' olive branch, snap it across his knee and whack Rob Glaser over the head with it.
"Apple on a Roll," Wired News, April 15, 2004 --- http://blog.wired.com/cultofmac/ 
Also see The New York Times, April 15, 2004 --- http://www.nytimes.com/2004/04/15/business/media/15real.html 

Signs on a wall:  
No Whining 
No Lame Excuses.
No Topless Drinks

Commentary of the Day - April 9, 2004: The Excuse Machine. Guest commentary by Beverly Carol Lucey --- http://irascibleprofessor.com/comments-04-09-04.htm 

I love my students. Most are sincere, motivated, and assets to any classroom. I n fact two of them this semester have not registered on the Excuse-0-Meter once. That's significant because one was very pregnant, has given birth, not asked for any extensions and kept up with all the work so far. The other student is in a wheelchair, and prone to leg and kidney infections. If he misses something, he merely apologizes and we move on.

Excuses remind me of The Trouble with Tribbles from the early Star Trek series: a space trader, Cyrano Jones, gives Uhura a purring ball of fluff known as a tribble. Charmed by the creature, Uhura takes it back to the Enterprise. However, as McCoy soon learns, tribbles are born pregnant and the more they eat ... and they eat constantly ... the more they multiply. Soon the starship is overrun by the furry creatures.

Dignity and personal responsibility should not be in such short supply. Right now, it's hard to breathe with all these tribbles piling up around the joint.

Do we have to wear ear muffs?
Ben & Jerry's is boosting its image and environmental standing by creating a freezer that uses sound waves to maintain cold.
Ken Brown," Chilling at Ben & Jerry's: Cleaner, Greener," The Wall Street Journal, April 15, 2004 --- http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108199068139983335,00.html?mod=gadgets%5Fprimary%5Fhs%5Flt 

According to a joint survey by PricewaterhouseCoopers and the Economist Intelligence Unit, financial institutions have equated good corporate governance with meeting the demands of regulators rather than improving the quality of management. PwC suggests how to comply and improve in order to reap the potential strategic advantages of improved governance.
SmartPros, April 7, 2004 --- http://www.smartpros.com/x43179.xml 

A U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) administrative law judge recently issued what is believed to be the first ruling on whistleblower protections under The Sarbanes-Oxley Act. The DOL ruled that a bank's former CFO was unlawfully terminated after protesting suspected insider trading.
FERF Newsletter on April 6, 2004 
Bob Jensen's threads on whistle blowing are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraudconclusion.htm#WhistleBlowing

Foul Weather Friends
Hotels are looking to take back some of the market share that online travel sites grabbed in the lean years.
Tom Kontzer, Information Week, April 12, 2004 --- http://www.informationweek.com/story/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=18900967 
Online Travel Wars: The Hotels Strike Back http://update.internetweek.com/cgi-bin4/DM/y/egXI0GMPWZ0G4X0CTZA0AD
Hotels are looking to take back some of the market share that online travel sites grabbed in the lean years.

Internet performance tracker Keynote Systems on Thursday released its online rankings for airlines, hotels and travel agencies, with the worst sites taking nearly three-quarters of a minute to load and failing to complete 1 out every 4 transactions.
TechWeb News, April 1, 2004 --- http://www.techweb.com/wire/story/TWB20040401S0011 

Selected Quotations from Mike Kearl's Home Page (one of the most popular sites for sociologists around the world) --- http://www.trinity.edu/mkearl/ 

Nearly one quarter century ago columnist Lewis Lapham made the following observation:
There no longer exists a theater of ideas in which artists or philosophers can perform the acts of the intellectual or moral imagination. In nineteenth-century England Charles Darwin could expect On The Origin of Species to be read by Charles Dickens as well as by Disraeli and the vicar in the shires who collected flies and water beetles. Dickens and Disraeli and the vicar could assume that Mr. Darwin might chance to read their own observations. But in the United States in 1979 what novelist can expect his work to be read by a biochemist, a Presidential candidate, or a director of corporations; what physicist can expect his work to be noticed, much less understood, in the New York literary salons? ("A Juggernaut of Words," Harper's Magazine, June 1979: pp. 12-13).
Conditions have hardly improved in 2004. Now in the supposed "Information Age" six out of ten American households do not purchase a single book and one-half of American adults do not read one. In 1965 when the Gallup Organization asked young people if they read a daily newspaper, 67 percent said yes; thirty-five years later, roughly 20 percent answer affirmatively. And yet "they" say we are saturated with informational overload!

I am most interested in the potential of this cyberspace medium to inform and to generate discourse, to enhance information literacy, and to truly be a "theater of ideas." This site features commentary, data analyses (hey, we've become a "factoid" culture), occasional essays, as well as the requisite links, put together for courses taught by myself and my colleagues.  Additions and updates are made daily.  If you do give feedback on one of the message pads scattered across these pages and wish a reply, please include your e-mail address.

And now for some sites to stimulate the sociological imagination  
(or, at a minimum, prepare one for Sociology Jeopardy).

Continued at http://www.trinity.edu/mkearl/ 

Before we go any further here, has it ever occurred to any of you that all this is simply one grand misunderstanding? Since you're not here to learn anything, but to be taught so you can pass these tests, knowledge has to be organized so it can be taught, and it has to be reduced to information so it can be organized do you follow that? In other words this leads you to assume that organization is an inherent property of the knowledge itself, and that disorder and chaos are simply irrelevant forces that threaten it from outside. In fact it's exactly the opposite. Order is simply a thin, perilous condition we try to impose on the basic reality of chaos...
William Gaddis, JR, p. 25 as quoted by Mike Kearl in Sociology of Knowledge ---  http://www.trinity.edu/mkearl/knowledg.html 
All scholars and would-be scholars should absorb what is communicated at the above site.

In a recent quotation forwarded by Jagdish Gangolly [JGangolly@UAMAIL.ALBANY.EDU

It is a mere method of discipline which refuses to take into account the individual. It is a manufactory specially designed for grinding out uniform results. It follows an imaginary straight line of the average in digging its channel of education. But life's line is not the straight line, for it is fond of playing the see-saw with the line of average, bringing upon its head the rebuke of the school. For according to the school life is perfect when it allows itself to be treated as dead, to be cut into symmetrical conveniences. And this was the cause of my suffering when I was sent to school.... my mind had to accept the tight-fitting encasement of the school which, being like the shoes of a mandarin woman, pinched and bruised my nature on all sides and at every movement. I was fortunate enough in extricating myself before insensibility set in.
Tagore, Indian poet on education and schooling

 




Bob Jensen's April-June 2004 Updates on Frauds and the Accounting Scandals --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud063004.htm 

Updates on the leading books on the business and accounting scandals --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud.htm#Quotations 

I love Infectious Greed by Frank Partnoy ---  http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud.htm#Quotations 

Updated Warnings on Identity Theft --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm#IdentityTheft 

Fraud Detection and Reporting --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm

Charity Frauds --- Fraud Detection and Reporting --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm 


The bottom line is that, in my view, the federal government’s current financial statements and annual reports do not give policy makers and the American people an adequate picture of our government’s overall performance and true financial condition. This is a serious issue. As Thomas Jefferson noted, an informed electorate is the basis for a sound democracy. But how can the American people and their elected officials make sound decisions if they aren’t given timely, accurate and useful information?
The Honorable David M. Walker (U.S. Comptroller General), "Truth and Transparency:  The Federal Government's Financial Condition and Fiscal Outlook, Journal of Accountancy, April 2004, pp. 26-31 --- http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/apr2004/walker.htm 

Let me review the federal government’s current financial condition; its fiscal 2002 annual financial report says a lot but not enough. The good news is that as of September 30, 2002, we had about $1 trillion in reported assets. The bad news is that we had almost $8 trillion in reported liabilities. That left us with about a $7 trillion accumulated deficit, or a little more than $24,000 for every man, woman and child in the United States. In fiscal year 2002, the federal government reported a net operating deficit of $365 billion. Many of you may be more familiar with the unified budget deficit number, which in fiscal year 2002 was $158 billion. Irrespective of whether you focus on the accrual-based accounting numbers or the cash-based budget numbers, the picture isn’t good and it’s getting worse. For example, the Congressional Budget Office [CBO] projects that the unified budget deficits in fiscal years 2003 and 2004 will be $401 billion and $480 billion, respectively. These numbers are up significantly from fiscal year 2002. Interestingly, CBO estimates that we will incur about $157 billion in interest on publicly held federal debt in fiscal year 2003 even though current interest rates are low on a relative basis. CBO also estimates that, excluding Social Security surpluses, the total deficit for fiscal years 2003 and 2004 will be $562 billion and $644 billion, respectively. If all these numbers are making your head spin, just remember that they are all big, and they are all bad.

More important, although we know that we are in a financial hole, we don’t really have a very good picture of how deep it is. Several very significant items are not currently included as liabilities in the federal government’s financial statements. These items include several trillion dollars in nonmarketable government securities in the so-called “trust funds.” In the case of the Social Security and Medicare trust funds, the federal government took in taxpayer money, spent it on other items and replaced it with an IOU. Given this fact, the amounts attributed to such activities aren’t shown as a liability of the U.S. government. Does this make sense, especially when the government continues to tell Social Security and Medicare beneficiaries that they can count on the bonds in these “trust funds?” Is the federal government trying to have its cake and eat it too?

The current liability figures for the U.S. government also do not adequately consider veterans’ health care benefit costs provided through the Department of Veterans Affairs, nor do they include the difference between future promised and funded benefits from the Social Security and Medicare programs. These additional amounts total tens of trillions of dollars in discounted present value terms. Simply put they are likely to exceed $100,000 in additional burden for every man, woman and child in America today, and these amounts are growing every day. These items may or may not ultimately be considered to be liabilities from an accounting perspective, but they do represent significant commitments that will have to be addressed. The burden of paying for these is not a very nice present for a child born today. Personally, I’d prefer a savings bond rather than a bill.

In fairness the federal government’s financial statements also exclude some assets and rights held by the government. For example, the financial statements do not acknowledge the federal government’s power to tax. The U.S. government owns and controls one out of every four acres of the U.S. landmass. Yet the financial statements do not include any asset value for so-called stewardship or heritage assets, such as public lands and monuments, or national defense assets, such as missiles, tanks, ships and planes. These items were acquired at a cost and have some value, but do we really ever expect to sell them? For the most part, the answer is no.

Beyond financial information the federal government as a whole and each federal department and agency need to be able to show the results they have achieved with the resources and authorities they have been given. I’m not talking about performance measurement in a narrow sense but about whether agencies can show they are making a difference towards meeting the needs of society. This type of performance information and related cost/benefit analyses needs to become a standard part of federal reporting and operations. Unfortunately, for the most part, this is not being done adequately.

The bottom line is that, in my view, the federal government’s current financial statements and annual reports do not give policy makers and the American people an adequate picture of our government’s overall performance and true financial condition. This is a serious issue. As Thomas Jefferson noted, an informed electorate is the basis for a sound democracy. But how can the American people and their elected officials make sound decisions if they aren’t given timely, accurate and useful information?

The recent accountability failures in the private sector underscore the importance of proper accounting and reporting practices. It is critically important that such failures not be allowed to occur in the public sector. We at the GAO are dedicated to ensuring they don’t occur and to furthering progress on these and other important transparency and accountability issues. Earlier this year the GAO was unable for a sixth consecutive year to express an opinion as to whether the U.S. government’s consolidated financial statements were fairly stated. We were unable to express an opinion primarily because of serious financial management problems at the Defense Department, the government’s inability to adequately account for intragovernmental transactions and the government’s inability to properly prepare consolidated financial statements. Despite this track record I believe that, as 21 of 24 major federal agencies do, the federal government can and ultimately will receive an unqualified opinion on its financial statements, it’s hoped well before my term ends in 2013. At the same time I can assure you the U.S. government will not receive an opinion on its financial statements from the GAO until it earns one.

Continued in the article

Bob Jensen's threads on governmental accounting and accountability --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud.htm#USgovernmentAccountability 


Paychecks are now more politically correct, but CEO wallets won't shrink overnight. See which executives nabbed the juiciest pay bonanzas last year.
"Here Comes Politically Correct Pay," The Wall Street Journal, April 12, 2004 --- http://online.wsj.com/page/0,,2_1081,00.html?mod=home_in_depth_reports 

Welcome to the new world of politically correct pay, where directors increasingly scrutinize their leader's compensation through the eyes of irate shareholders, workers and regulators. That already means some big changes are in the works. But nobody should weep for the CEO just yet: Even the most sweeping moves won't shrink chief executives' bulging wallets overnight.

Bob Jensen's threads on corporate governance frauds are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud.htm#Governance 




Academe has just posted its latest salary data --- The new salary data has just been posted by Academe --- http://www.aaup.org/surveys/04z/z04tab.htm  
Because of the careful way in which this data is collected, comparisons are generally possible.

The entire survey report is at http://www.aaup.org/surveys/04z/04z.pdf 

The March/April magazine is at http://www.aaup.org/publications/Academe/ 


"Identity Theft, Fraud So Easy 'It's Absurd'," SmartPros, April 16, 2004 --- http://www.smartpros.com/x43281.xml 

April 16, 2004 (Kennebec Journal) — KeyBank Maine President Kathyrn Underwood warned that the guest speaker's talk would leave the audience "scared to death," and she was right.

Over the next two hours, white-collar crime expert and former scammer Frank W. Abagnale told the 250 people at the Sable Oaks Marriott on Tuesday exactly how easy it is these days for criminals to steal their identities, forge their checks or otherwise defraud them. It's even easier today than when he was a globe-trotting flimflam man 40 years ago, Abagnale said.

"The fact is that what I did 40 years ago is 2,000 times easier to do today," he said.

Abagnale is the best-selling author of "Catch Me If You Can," and was portrayed by actor Leonardo DiCaprio in the recent hit movie by the same name. It's the story of how Abagnale cashed more than $2.5 million in bad checks in every state and 25 foreign countries between the ages of 16 and 21, impersonating an airline pilot, an attorney, a college professor and a pediatrician.

Police caught him when he was 21, and Abagnale served five years in prison. He was released on the condition that he would help the government by providing advice to law-enforcement agencies. Today, more than 14,000 businesses and law-enforcement agencies use Abagnale's services to prevent fraud.

He doesn't look much like DiCaprio, but his speaking voice has the cadence of a master salesman, giving a hint of the skills he used to fool bank tellers and police alike.

Abagnale described various types of white-collar crime, but spent a majority of the KeyBank talk focused on identity theft and check fraud. When Abagnale forged checks 40 years ago, he said, he needed a $1 million printing press. Today, $6,000 will buy highly portable, top-of-the-line computer equipment that can perfectly duplicate checks and other documents that don't have special defenses built into them, he said.

"Technology is only going to make crime easier -- always has, always will," said Abagnale.

In 2002, he said, there were 9.9 million victims of identity theft in the United States. Identity theft is when a criminal uses someone else's vital data (birth date, Social Security number and other information) to apply for such things as credit cards, home mortgages and car loans. Identity theft cost defrauded businesses $47.6 billion that year.

The total loss to individual victims was $5 billion, and they spent 297 million hours trying to resolve the tangled financial mess left by the thief.

Getting the information needed to steal an identity is "so simple it's absurd," said Abagnale. There are at least 22 different types of personal information that can be obtained off the Internet, Abagnale said.

There are Web sites that legally sell Social Security numbers. The Mormon Church keeps an online database of death statistics, and information such as birth date, date of death, Social Security number and last five addresses are included 10 days after someone dies, he said.

A scam artist can see in the newspaper that a wealthy stockbroker died, wait 10 days and get the information off the church Web site. He can use the information to apply for a credit card on a predated form, spend the money and leave the bill for the stockbroker's widow, said Abagnale.

"Everywhere we look, we're giving away information, every day, all the time," he said.

To protect against identity fraud, Abagnale suggested a service that he uses, www.privacyguard.com . Anytime your credit is checked, said Abagnale, this company alerts you within 30 minutes.

"The only way to protect yourself against identity theft is to know when someone is doing it," he said.

Bob Jensen's helpers on identity theft prevention are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm#IdentityTheft 




Some of us are just too young to remember (Ha Ha)!

April 7, 2004 message from Aaron Konstam [akonstam@trinity.edu

For those of us in the computer business we note the 40th anniversary of an event that is as important in its way as the distribution of microcomputer systems.

Forty years ago this week IBM announced a revolution in computer equipment, that is, the IBM 360 family of computers.

Aaron Konstam 
Computer Science 
Trinity University 
One Trinity Place. San Antonio, TX 78212-7200


"A Glimmer of Hope for Fading Minds," by Gina Kolata, The New York Times, April 13, 2004 --- http://www.nytimes.com/2004/04/13/health/13PREV.html 

Alzheimer's disease can seem unrelentingly grim. There is no cure, no known way to prevent the illness, and the benefits of current treatments are modest at best.

But in laboratories around the country, scientists are uncovering clues that may eventually — perhaps even in the next two decades — allow them to prevent, slow or even reverse the ruthless progression of the illness.

"Things are more hopeful than perhaps people think," Dr. Karen Duff of the Nathan Kline Institute of New York University said. "We are on the cusp of having something really useful."

That hope comes on the heels of disappointment. Aricept and other drugs to slow the disease's progress have not lived up to the public's high expectations.

But researchers are now turning in a new direction, testing whether other medications, some already on the market for other disorders, might head off Alzheimer's or keep it from becoming worse by acting on possible risk factors for the illness.

For example, several studies have suggested a link between Alzheimer's and cholesterol, which is produced by the brain, as well as by the liver, raising the possibility that statins, the drugs that lower cholesterol, might hold Alzheimer's at bay. Other researchers have hypothesized that medications that reduce inflammation, a hallmark of Alzheimer's in areas of the brain where cells are dying, might prove useful.

Still another idea is that Alzheimer's may be set off when someone who is predisposed to it receives another "hit" to the brain, for example from high blood pressure, reduced blood flow, a stroke or high cholesterol levels. If that is the case, a generation of middle-aged people who have had access to effective drugs for treating blood pressure and high cholesterol may already be receiving some protection.

Dr. Norman Relkin, director of the Memory Disorders Program at Weill Medical College of Cornell, said studies testing ways to prevent or delay the disease would be completed in this decade.

"There is a high likelihood that one or more of them will be positive," Dr. Relkin said. "Do I believe we will have a disease modifying intervention before 2025? Absolutely."

If researchers had a dream about preventing Alzheimer's, it might go like this: A very safe drug is developed to treat a very common disease. Soon, millions are taking it, starting in middle age or even younger, when the terrible brain-cell death of Alzheimer's begins.

Amazingly, it turns out that this safe and popular drug has an unexpected benefit. It provides protection from Alzheimer's disease, preventing it altogether in some people, staving it off for years in others. The predictions that Alzheimer's cases will skyrocket as baby boomers reach old age never come true.

It is, of course, only a dream. But it is also not as far-fetched as it sounds, experts say. In the past few years, researchers have found evidence suggesting that statins, drugs taken by millions of Americans to lower cholesterol levels, may also protect against Alzheimer's.

Continued in the article

Robo Rehab (From MIT's Technology Review Newsletter on April 14, 2004)
Each year 700,000 people in the United States have a stroke, and more than half suffer from impaired movement. Their route to recovery is long and tough, as they painfully relearn how to use an arm or a leg by going through the motions over and over again with a physical or occupational therapist. Unfortunately, all that therapist time gets very expensive, and many stroke victims never recover as well as they might. Enter rehabilitation robots, which can ease the therapist’s load by delivering certain treatments very efficiently—in some cases achieving dramatically better results than conventional therapy alone.
http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/wo_bender041404.asp?trk=nl


Bullen responded, "Simplicity is as simplicity does." In other words, if the financial instrument is not simple, how can its accounting be simple?

FERF Newsletter, April 20, 2004

Update on SFAS 150

Halsey Bullen, Senior Project Manager at the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB), gave an update on SFAS 150.

Private Net last discussed SFAS 150 and FASB Staff Position (FSP) 150-3 in the February issue: http://www.fei.org/newsletters/privatenet/pnet204.cfm 

Bullen said that SFAS 150 was originally designed to account for "ambiguous" instruments, such as convertible bonds, puttable stock, Co-Co No-Nos (conditionally convertible, no coupon, no interest instruments), and variable share forward sales contracts. Mandatorily redeemable shares of ownership issued by private companies were then included in the accounting for this class of instruments.

Bullen said that FSP 150-3 allowed private companies to defer implementation of SFAS 150 until 2005 with respect to shares that were redeemable on fixed dates for fixed or externally indexed amounts, and indefinitely for other mandatorily redeemable shares. (We will assume indefinite deferral for mandatorily redeemable ownership shares issued by private companies.)

As an update, Bullen said that in Phase 2, the FASB was considering several alternatives for "bifurcating" the ambiguous instruments into equity and liability components: * Fundamental components approach, * Narrow view of equity as common stock, * IASB 32 approach: bifurcate convertibles and treat any other obligation that might require transfer of assets as a liability for the full amount, * Minimum obligation approach, and * Reassessed expected outcomes approach.

Bullen said that the FASB has encountered a number of challenges in trying to account for these ambiguous instruments, not the least of which are just basic conceptual definitions of shareholder equity and liability. For example, should equity be defined as assets minus liabilities, or should liabilities be first defined as assets minus shareholder equity?

One FEI member asked Bullen, "Where is the concept of simplicity?" Bullen responded, "Simplicity is as simplicity does." In other words, if the financial instrument is not simple, how can its accounting be simple?

Bullen told the participants to expect an exposure draft in late 2004 or early 2005.

Bob Jensen's threads on accounting theory are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory.htm 


April 17, 2004 inquiry from John Gerace

Can anyone recommend a source of information that students in economics, finance and accounting may use as a guide for expository and essay writing I am familiar with Mark Blaug's book on "The Methodology of Economics or How Economists Explain" but I am searching for something more in the way of a "handbook or guide". Does something exist at your institutions and if so can it be shared?

Thanks, John Gerace

John J. Gerace, Ph.D., PE 
Assistant Professor and Chair of the Department of Business 
Chestnut Hill College 
9601 Germantown Avenue 
Philadelphia, PA 19118 
E-mail:
geracej@chc.edu 

April 17, 2004 reply from Karen Taranto [taranto@GWU.EDU

"Economical Writing" by Deirdre N. McCloskey is short and witty. She also has a text, "The Rhetoric of Economics." Chapter 2 is titled, "The Literary Character of Economic Science."

April 19, 2004 reply from 

John, it isn’t only expository and essay writing, but we have used “Effective Writing: A Handbook for Accountants”, fifth edition, by May and May, from Prentice Hall.

I have snurled the URL from Prentice Hall below. It takes a couple of seconds to load, but when you get there, scroll down and check out the table of contents, … it might be something useful for your purposes.

http://snipurl.com/5sus 

Good luck…

David R. Fordham
PBGH Faculty Fellow
James Madison University

April 19, 2004 reply from KATHRYN HANSEN [kathryn.hansen@VERIZON.NET

John, There also is a book by Melanie McKay and Elizabeth Rosa which includes both writing and presentation skills. The title: "The Accountant's Guide to Professional Communication: Writing and Speaking the Language of Business", published by Dryden. I prefer it to May and May because it has a little grammar guide in the back which if you have English as a Second Language students you can reference so they can improve their grammar.

Kathy Hansen 
California State University - Los Angeles


From Syllabus News on April 20, 2004

McGraw-Hill/Irwin Announces Pilot Study-Tool on Cellphones

Higher Ed Publisher McGraw-Hill/Irwin released a pilot version of a student self-assessment application designed for cell phones with Internet access. The assessment tool, called Study-to-Go, is currently available for Palm and Pocket PC devices. The pilot version is available to students free of charge for access to textbook correlated quizzes, key terms, and flashcards via their cell phone Internet browser. The company is making the service available in beta to gather research on the future development of the service.

"This is another option for students that delivers a simple, yet powerful way for them to use their cellphone to study when they have down time in their busy schedules,” JP Lenney, president of McGraw-Hill/Irwin, a unit of McGraw-Hill Higher Education.

Students can provide comments at: http://info.101com.com/default.asp?id=6611 


The Miracle of DVR Instant Recording --- This Has Many Education Possibilities

"With a DVR, the Puck Stops Here," by Katie Dean, Wired News, April 20, 2004 --- http://www.wired.com/news/gizmos/0,1452,63105,00.html?tw=newsletter_topstories_html 

When Scott Mellanby of the St. Louis Blues apparently scored the tying goal late in a recent National Hockey League playoff game with the San Jose Sharks, Sharks assistant coach Tim Hunter wasn't worried.

He quickly replayed the whole scene on his tablet PC equipped with TiVo-like functionality and verified that there was no goal. In contrast, it took officials 2.5 minutes to call up to the booth and then rule on the play.

"We knew instantly that it wasn't a goal," Hunter said. "We were able to calm our team down, and our team was recomposed and ready for the next face-off."

The tech-savvy Sharks, who are now in the conference semifinals in the race for the Stanley Cup, are using a "bench monitor" to mark, review and zoom in on plays, and make adjustments to their strategy on the fly. The device also helps illustrate "coachable moments."

A digital video recorder hooked up to a server records the game and then wirelessly transmits the data to a tablet PC. Hunter can then use a stylus or a remote to mark key moments in the game -- like a goal for, goal against, power play or penalty kill -- so that he can return to them with a quick click. He can diagram over the video as well.

"We're able to make edit marks on the streaming video and then go back and replay those," Hunter said. "You can review why you got the goal or why the team broke down.

"We can show a player, 'Here's a situation where you might have been able to exploit the passing lane of the opponent.' Later in the period this might prove to be beneficial," he said.

Additionally, coaches can take prerecorded video from the DVR and call it up on the bench monitor during the game to illustrate how an opponent acts in a particular situation.

Hunter said a lot of teams in the National Hockey League have a video coach who watches the game in the back office and communicates with coaches using a headset. The Sharks are the only team to use the bench monitor, however.

"This just allows us as coaches to do it ourselves and see it with our own eyes," Hunter said.

Randy Eccker, vice president of XOS Technologies, which provides the software for the bench monitor, said San Jose's coaches know how to use it as an effective teaching tool.

"When you're a player, your vision of what happened is somewhat limited by your own perspective and vision and experience," Eccker said. "The bench monitor gives them an added dimension and therefore more information as to what really happened, and gives them that feedback immediately during the game."

Of course, that also means players may get an earful after a boneheaded play.

Still, "the players are very receptive," Hunter said. "These are all young kids. They have Xboxes and iPods, and they are techno wizards themselves. They're all used to the technology, and they think it's pretty cool."

The team burns DVDs of players' shifts on the ice and hands them out to individuals. The Sharks regularly watch the DVDs on their laptops while traveling from game to game.

Hunter and head coach Ron Wilson used the technology when leading the Washington Capitals during the 2000-2002 seasons. They got the Sharks' bench monitor up and running for the last two games of the regular season and for every playoff game this year.

So far, hockey is the only sport to use the bench monitor, Eccker said. NHL officials were not available for comment on this story.

XOS Technologies did a test run with several teams in the National Basketball Association, but the device has not yet been approved.

"People feel like the team (using it) would have an advantage, and therefore (everyone else) would have to buy it," Eccker said. "A lot of owners and managers don't want to feel like they have to make that purchase."

The National Football League has eliminated all electronic tools from inside the game, so a device like the bench monitor is not permitted.

"It's another cool toy for us coaches," Hunter said. "Every little advantage you can get makes a difference."

April 20, 2004 reply from Richard Campbell

Bob:

In contrast, the NFL does not allow teams to take advantage of TV technology. The current practice is for a cameraman to photograph multiple pre-snap images, and ferry them down to the field level on a wire. Football fans may see quarterbacks looking at those photos in between possessions in order to anticipate defensive strategies.

One of my accounting graduates obtained a field pass for me for a Buffalo Bills game, and I was able to overhear the strategy between Marv Levy and Jim Kelly. I was able to hear the roar of the approving crowd as I walked down the runway from the locker room to the field. It was a little louder than the students as I walked into class for a thrilling (to them) lecture on financial statement ratios.

Richard

Richard J. Campbell 
School of Business University of Rio Grande 
Rio Grande, OH 45674

Bob Jensen's threads on DVR are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/thetools.htm#DVR 


Using a PC to Record and Save Television Shows

"Cheaper Than TiVo: Souping Up Your Computer," by Walter Mossberg, The Wall Street Journal, April 14, 2004, Page D4  --- http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108190122404782063,00.html?mod=gadgets%5Flead%5Fstory%5Fcol 

Beyond TV 3 Turns PCs Into Digital Video Recorders; The Installation Nightmare 

 The coolest, trendiest way to watch television today is by using a digital video recorder, or DVR. With a DVR system, you can pause or rewind live TV. And, more important, you can record any program for viewing later without enduring the twin hassles of videotape recording: complicated programming and the need to keep blank tapes handy. That's because DVRs record TV shows to a large hard disk, and you pick the shows to record by just clicking their names in an onscreen program guide.

But buying a DVR can be costly. The most popular options are high-end set-top boxes containing technology from TiVo, or its rival, Replay TV, which require a fee-based service; or, high-end Media Center PCs, that use a PC's internal hard disk as a DVR.

If your budget is limited, and you have a plain old Windows PC, however, you can turn it into a DVR by using a new product from SnapStream Media, a small company from Houston. SnapStream's Beyond TV 3 includes DVR software for Windows, and is bundled with the necessary hardware -- an external TV tuner from Hauppauge Computer Works that plugs into the computer with a simple USB cable. This bundle is sold on the SnapStream.com Web site for $229.99. No service fee is charged.

. . .

Actually using Beyond TV 3 was a so-so experience, but nothing to write home about. I recorded an episode of "Charmed" and used the ShowSqueeze feature, which compresses recorded shows into Windows Media format. The DVD burning software included with the hardware didn't work with my test PC. I also paused and skipped back through live programming. The picture was only fair, not nearly as good as the image on the $150 TV set sitting a few feet away.

I found navigating through BTV 3's screens to be clumsy. Settings screens lacked a button like "Done" or "Apply" to let you apply new settings -- the only recourse was to arrow back to the prior screen. When you shut down Beyond TV, a geeky log, which shows you exactly what is shutting down, appears on screen. This could easily suggest to a casual user that her PC was melting down.

The company acknowledges these rough edges, but says it will be taking steps to remove them in future versions. The multiple installations will be combined into one, it says, and the odd messages will be made more friendly. The log display at shutdown will be removed.

Maybe that will turn Beyond TV into an acceptable product. But I'm not sure. My suggestion for those wanting a DVR in their PC is to save up for a Media Center PC, which comes equipped with a built-in TV tuner card and has a smarter interface.

Bob Jensen's threads on DVR are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/thetools.htm#DVR 


April 19, 2004 message from Richard Campbell

Here is a link to the above. Vanna White is not available to turn the letters though,

http://www.virtualpublishing.net/hangman/index.html

Richard J. Campbell
mailto:campbell@rio.edu

Summaries of some useful technology resources (including edutainment and games) for educators are given at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/thetools.htm 


After May 18, 2004 I will be a "rural folk."  I will be on sabbatical leave and will not return to teach at Trinity University until January 2005.  In the eight months that I am away from campus, I will be living in the mountains in a rural location and really wish I could go wireless as described below.  However, I will probably have to rely upon a cable modem until wireless reaches the White Mountains of New Hampshire.

"Rural Folk May Yet Get Broadband," by Elisa Batista, Wired News, April 17, 2004 --- http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,63100,00.html?tw=newsletter_topstories_html 

In another attempt to bring broadband Internet coverage to rural areas, the Federal Communications Commission is proposing letting wireless providers offer service on airwaves currently used by satellite companies.

By collecting comments from the public, the FCC hopes to explore ways that wireless broadband companies and satellite service providers could share the 3.65- to 3.7-GHz band of spectrum without interfering with one another. The FCC's proposal (PDF) for a change in the rules is the latest in a series of ideas, including offering broadband over power lines, aimed at bringing high-speed Internet access to rural areas.

Unlike current wireless services powered by unlicensed bands of spectrum -- such as Wi-Fi -- the FCC is proposing letting fixed wireless devices such as antennas and desktop computers operate at up to 25 watts of power -- or 25 times the power emitted by Wi-Fi devices. The additional power would let wireless customers receive stronger signals, at faster speeds and for longer distances than possible with current wireless Internet services. The strength of the service would depend on the position of equipment such as antennas, analysts say.

"The rural areas need additional power because things are spread apart," said Ed Rerisi, analyst at ABI Research.

Mobile devices, such as laptop computers, would continue to operate at the 1-watt power limit set by the FCC, said Jim Schlichting, deputy chief of the agency's office of engineering and technology.

"The rules would be that you couldn't cause interference with earth stations," Schlichting said. "But if you're looking to transmit something at a higher power, like putting an antenna on a barn and radiating it over several miles, that could cause interference on satellite dishes."

Indeed, it may take a while before residents of rural areas see a single service from the FCC's latest proposal. Both wireless and satellite industry observers expect a long, drawn-out process as satellite companies duke it out to protect their airwaves from wireless startups.

Satellite companies, naturally, are concerned that devices emitting that much power will interfere with their operations, which include commercial satellite dishes and three federal radar systems.

"There is a homeland security (concern) as well," said David Cavossa, director of the Satellite Industry Association.

Cavossa said some commercial satellite companies also sell services to government agencies that use the spectrum for radar and other communications systems. If wireless broadband interferes with these systems, it could present a breach in security.

But the satellite industry's attempts to quash interest in the spectrum may be in vain. Analysts predict the FCC will eventually approve the proposal because a wireless system is the cheapest and easiest way to get broadband Internet to rural customers. Internet over power lines is still an unproven technology. Laying down copper and cables to offer Internet access via DSL or cable modem is expensive. Satellite Internet is also costly.

Continued in the article


Question
How can annoying pop-up windows be avoided when surfing the Web?

Answer

Just a little FYI on popups and spyware...

Spyware is software that can get onto your computer very easily and will not be stopped by anti-virus software. Spyware is designed to help marketers prospect to you better but can be very intrusive. Another VERY annoying form of spyware is called a "hijacker". This is spyware that deflects your browser to another search engine every time you look for something. Hijackers can take several different forms and can be VERY difficult to get rid of as they nuzzle right into your registry.

There are some excellent free programs that can help ID spyware and eliminate it as well as prevent it from coming back onto your computer.

1. I use the google pop-up blocker and I like it a lot - It has stopped 99% of pop-up windows. 2. Ad Aware will find and eliminate spyware that already exists on your computer. 3. SpyBot Search and Destroy will do the same. 4. Spyware Guard will prevent new spyware from making its way onto your computer. 5. HijackThis! will help ID where a hijacker has dug in it's claws into your computer - a specialist can then take that info and tell you how to eliminate the hijacker. In most cases you can find a specialist in forums.

I'm sure you can find these downloads and a lot of information about them by doing a search in Google.

Hope this is helpful.

Regards,

Dave Will 
PC Skills Training
http://www.bostonlearninginc.com/ 

"Pop-Up Company Fights Utah's Spyware Law Utah's Spyware Control Act Assailed," KDCO, April 14, 2004 --- http://www.channeloklahoma.com/technology/3004934/detail.html 

A New York company whose software creates pop-up ads is going to court to fight a Utah law that bans such ads.

WhenU.com claims the new law violates its constitutionally protected right to advertise. It also says the law does little to protect the privacy of computer users.

WhenU provides users with free software like games and screen savers. But when the free software is loaded on a computer, it also adds a separate program that tracks Web traffic and matches a user's surfing habits with certain advertisers.

Utah's Spyware Control Act makes it illegal to create or install computer software that monitors Internet activity and sends the information elsewhere, usually without the user being aware of it or consenting to it.

The law also calls for penalties for pop-up ads.

A spokesman for the Utah Attorney General's Office declined to comment on the suit, saying the office hasn't seen it yet.

Some spyware causes multiple pop-up ads while online, and some installs without consent when users visit certain Web sites.

The U.S. Congress has looked at banning software that tracks user behavior without consent. But software manufacturers say there are legitimate uses for the applications. An industry group said laws should punish those who use the collected information improperly.

Previous Story:

Tim Berners-Lee Honored With $1.2M Prize http://update.internetweek.com/cgi-bin4/DM/y/egXI0GMPWZ0G4X0CTzR0A1
The inventor of the web has been awarded the first Millennium Technology Prize for creating the ubiquitous World Wide Web.

You can read more about Berners-Lee at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245glosf.htm#World2 


From AIA News on April 16, 2004

Paul Volcker, Chairman of the International Accounting Standards Committee Foundation has welcomed the announcement by the Australian Financial Reporting Council to adopt International Financial Reporting Standards for reporting entities from 2005.

http://www.aia.org.uk/news/fullstory_index.cfm?fuseaction=detail&storyid=1935


New Journal of Emerging Technologies in Accounting (JETA) --- http://aaahq.org/ic/browse.htm 
Abstracts are free.  Full articles are not free.

Articles

Discussion Forum

An ongoing discussion forum of articles published in JETA is maintained online by the Discussion Forum Editor, Andy Lymer at: http://aaahq.org/pubs/JETA/comments.

Please visit this site if you wish to share your comments or review others’ views on any of the articles in JETA.


April 15, 2004 message from noreply@alliedacademies.com 

We have posted a new listing of articles which are forthcoming in one or another of the Allied Academies journals. We have been working with many of you to ensure that our queue is correct and that titles, authors, and affiliations are correct. Please note that this list was updated on 3-14-04 and does not reflect any of the more recently accepted articles or the award winners from the New Orleans conference. We hope to institute a new system which will maintain a constant list of approved and forthcoming articles on the web page.

If you have a forthcoming article, please check our listing (see link below) and be sure that your article is listed, and that the titles, authors, and affiliations are correct. If there are any errors, please email jimandjoann@thedrscarland.com  with corrections as soon as possible. http://www.whitneypress.com/journal-schedule-04.html 

To those of you who participated in the New Orleans conference, we would like to thank all 225 of you for making it our best conference yet. We hope to have the Newsletter up in the next few weeks and will e-mail it to you then. We hope to have the online system geared up to take Internet Conference submissions and Maui submissions very soon as well. We look forward to your participation. 

Thank you, 

Trey Carland


April 16, 2004 message from Wanda Wallace [wanda.wallace@business.wm.edu

Dear Bob,

I have completed a multiple-year research project on Bankruptcy Prediction which has resulted in a monograph published on-line by The Institute of Internal Auditors. The product includes EXCEL spreadsheets that I believe you will find of interest for use in the instructional and research process.

Since The IIA Research Foundation sponsored the project and is committed to widespread dissemination of its research, the downloadable product is accessible at the following site to provide access, including for educational use

(with merely a related request by the Foundation for donations by those who choose to do so).

Anyway, the site to access follows:

<http://www.theiia.org/iia/index.cfm?doc_id=4619>

It's always nice to see a project at this stage! Hope you find it of interest.

FYI--full cite below

MONOGRAPH PUBLISHED ON-LINE

Wanda A. Wallace, Risk Assessment By Internal Auditors Using Past Research on Bankruptcy: Applying Bankruptcy Models (Altamonte Springs, Florida: The Institute of Internal Auditors Research Foundation, 2004) The monograph, including both a PDF file and linked EXCEL worksheets, is accessible at <http://www.theiia.org/iia/index.cfm?doc_id=4619>.

Regards,
Wanda 4/16/04


Grade Inflation

Valen E. Johnson, a biostatistics professor at the University of Michigan and author of "Grade Inflation: A Crisis in College Education" (Springer Verlag), said the use of student ratings to evaluate teachers also inflates grades: "As long as our evaluations depend on their opinion of us, their grades are going to be high."
See below

Reed College, a selective liberal arts college in Oregon, where the average grade-point average has remained a sobering 2.9 (on a 4.0 scale) for 19 years.
See below

Administrators and some faculty at some of the country's top universities have proposed correcting for so-called grade inflation by limiting A's

"Is It Grade Inflation, or Are Students Just Smarter?" by Karen W. Arenson, The New York Times, April 18, 2004 ---  http://www.nytimes.com/2004/04/18/weekinreview/18aren.html 

MILLION dollars isn't what it used to be, and neither is an A in college.

A's - including A-pluses and A-minuses - make up about half the grades at many elite schools, according to a recent survey by Princeton of the Ivy League and several other leading universities.

At Princeton, where A's accounted for 47 percent of grades last year, up from 31 percent in the 1970's, administrators and some faculty have proposed correcting for so-called grade inflation by limiting A's to 35 percent of course grades.

Not everyone is convinced there is a problem. A recent study by Clifford Adelman of the United States Department of Education concluded that there were only minor changes in grade distributions between the 1970's and the 1990's, even at highly selective institutions. (A bigger change, he said, was the rise in the number of students withdrawing from courses and repeating courses for higher grades.)

Alfie Kohn, author of the coming book "More Essays on Standards, Grading and Other Follies" (Beacon Press), says rising grades "don't in itself prove that grade inflation exists.''

"It's necessary to show - and, to the best of my knowledge, it has never been shown - that those higher grades are undeserved,'' he said.

Is it possible that the A students deserve their A's?

Getting into colleges like Princeton is far more difficult than it used to be. And increasing numbers of students are being bred like racehorses to breeze through standardized tests and to write essays combining Albert Einstein's brilliance with Mother Teresa's compassion.

Partly to impress admissions officers, students are loading up on Advanced Placement courses. The College Board said the number taking 10 or more such courses in high school is more than 10 times what it was a decade ago. And classes aimed at helping them do better on the SAT exams are booming.

"Back in 1977, when I graduated from high school, it had to be less than 25,000 students nationally who spent more than $100 on preparing for the SAT," said John Katzman, founder and chief executive of The Princeton Review, which tutors about 60,000 students a year for the SAT's. "It was the C students who prepped, not the A students," he added. "Now it's got to be circa 200,000 or 250,000 students who are going to spend more than $400 to prepare for the SAT."

But Wayne Camara, vice president of research at the College Board, said that while students are increasingly well prepared, "that in no way accounts for the shift in grades we are seeing.''

"Grades are not like temperatures or weights,'' he said. "What constitutes an A or a B has changed, both in high school and in college."

He said teachers are aware of how competitive the academic world has become and try to help students by giving better grades. "If you graduated from college in the 1950's and you wanted to go to law school or a graduate program, you could," Dr. Camara said. "Today it is very difficult. You are not going to be able to graduate from Harvard or Princeton with a 2.8 grade point average and get into Georgetown Law."

In addition, one recent Princeton graduate who works in investment banking and has participated in recruiting meetings cautioned in a letter to The Daily Princetonian that hiring practices can be superficial, and that grade-point averages are one of the first items scrutinized on a résumé.

Stuart Rojstaczer, a geology professor at Duke who runs the Web site www.Gradeinflation.com, says that higher grades are the result of a culture where the student-consumer is king. "We don't want to offend students or parents," he said. "They are customers and the customer is always right."

Valen E. Johnson, a biostatistics professor at the University of Michigan and author of "Grade Inflation: A Crisis in College Education" (Springer Verlag), said the use of student ratings to evaluate teachers also inflates grades: "As long as our evaluations depend on their opinion of us, their grades are going to be high."

Even if the Princeton plan is approved, Professor Johnson, who unsuccessfully tried to lower grades at Duke University a few years ago, cautioned that reform is difficult. "It is not in the interest of the majority to reform the system," he said. "Assigning grades, particularly low grades, is tough, and it requires more work, since low grades have to be backed up with evidence of poor performance."

But Princeton and others may take some comfort from Reed College, a selective liberal arts college in Oregon, where the average grade-point average has remained a sobering 2.9 (on a 4.0 scale) for 19 years.

The college says it ranks third among all colleges and universities in the proportion of students who go on for Ph.D.s, and has produced more than 50 Fulbright Scholars and 31 Rhodes scholars.

Still, Colin S. Diver, Reed's president, says graduate schools worried about their rankings are becoming less willing to take students with lower grades because they make the graduate schools appear less selective.

"If they admit someone with a 3.0 from Reed who is in the upper half of the class, that counts against them, even if it is a terrific student," Mr. Diver said. "I keep saying to my colleagues here that we can hold ourselves out of the market for only so long."

Bob Jensen's threads on assessment are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/assess.htm 


"Websites 'failing' disabled users," by Geoff Adams-Spink, BBC News Online, April 14, 2004 --- http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/3623407.stm 

An investigation by the Disability Rights Commission shows that most websites are unusable by disabled people.

This means that many everyday activities carried out on the internet - booking a holiday, managing a bank account, buying theatre tickets or finding a cheaper credit card - are difficult or impossible for many disabled people.

Bert Massie, DRC Chairman described the situation as "unacceptable", and said the organisation was determined not to allow disabled people to be left behind by technology

A thousand websites were tested for the survey using automated software, and detailed user testing was carried out on 100 sites, including government, business, e-commerce, leisure and web services such as search engines.

The results showed that the worst affected group were those with visual impairments.

Blind people involved in testing websites were unable to perform nearly all of the tasks required of them despite using devices such as screen readers.

"The web has been around for 10 years, yet within this short space of time it has managed to throw up the same hurdles to access and participation by disabled people as the physical world," said Mr Massie.

"It is an environment that could be made more accommodating to disabled people at a relatively modest expense."

Mr Massie warned website owners to improve accessibility or be prepared to face legal action.

The 1995 Disability Discrimination Act requires information providers to make their services accessible.

The problems most commonly encountered by the disabled website testers were cluttered pages, confusing navigation, failure to describe images and poor colour contrast between background and text.

Researchers at London's City University, who carried out the study for the DRC, also found that many web developers were unaware of what needed to be done to make sites accessible.

Continued in the article

Good Website Design Checklist

Related Documents

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BBC Ouch
DRC
RNIB
New Statesman
Texthelp Systems

Bob Jensen's threads on the disability laws in the U.S. and technology alternatives for Web design and distance education are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/theworry.htm#DisabledUsers 

April 16, 2004 reply from David R. Fordham [fordhadr@JMU.EDU

Original Message:

The problems most commonly encountered by the disabled website testers were cluttered pages, confusing navigation, failure to describe images and poor colour contrast between background and text.

Reply:

Bob et al:

Hmmmm. This is a problem for the disabled, but not for the ENnabled? I myself have trouble with cluttered pages, confusing navigation, failure to describe images, and poor color usage! Obviously I’m just getting too old…

And for those of you who remember the TV series “Connections”: I find it amusing to watch the slow evolution of the word “Disabled” as more and more people abuse it … alas.

David R. Fordham
PBGH Faculty Fellow
James Madison University


From MIT's Technology Review Newsletter on April 14, 2004

From the TR Blog

Nanotechnology: What’s in a Name?
Has the term "nanotechnology" been so overused as to become meaningless? A legal complaint against Merrill Lynch, of all companies, may help restore the word to its original meaning--technologies that work on the scale of a nanometer or less.
http://www.technologyreview.com/blog/blog.asp?blogID=1361&trk=nl

A Blacklist for Renters
The latest problem for renters is the proliferation of computerized databases of people who have been taken to court by their landlords and have successfully defended themselves. These databases effectively punish renters for exercising their constitutional rights.
http://www.technologyreview.com/blog/blog.asp?blogID=1362&trk=nl

Trinity University Sues Trinity University

A few months ago, I discovered a fraudulent diploma mill near New Orleans that allows sells diplomas under alternative names of Trinity College or Trinity University.  My message is archived at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm#DiplomaMill 

The genuine university that owns the name "Trinity University" is at http://www.trinity.edu/ 

The diploma mill that is illegally issuing diplomas as "Trinity University" is at http://trinity-college.edu/index.html 

"Trinity University Sues to Protect Name," by Guillermo Contreras, San Antonio Express News, April 16, 2004

For $695, Trinity College & University will send you a bachelor's degree, or you can get an associate degree for $375 or a certificate of achievement for $175.

There are no courses to take, no classrooms to sit in and no tangible student body.

After the organization began targeting soldiers in Iraq, the Army recently joined the state of Oregon in warning that it may be nothing more than a "diploma mill" — an entity that operates only to make money, often offering college credit for life experiences rather than formal education.

And now, the prestigious Trinity University in San Antonio is asking a federal judge to forbid Trinity College & University from using "Trinity" in its name.

In a lawsuit filed in federal court this week, Trinity University said Trinity College & University — registered in the British Virgin Islands but purportedly based in Metairie, La., near New Orleans — is infringing on the San Antonio school's trademark and causing confusion.

"Trinity University has filed this suit in an effort to preserve and protect the university's good name," spokeswoman Sharon Jones Schweitzer said Thursday.

"We consider what this entity is doing to be an infringement on our trademark, on the name of Trinity University. The name is very important to the university's reputation.

"This entity is creating confusion in the higher education community, and we're tired of it," she said. "The confusion diminishes the value of a Trinity University degree."

The university has received numerous calls and e-mails asking if the two are the same school or if they work together, Schweitzer said.

That confusion came to a head in January, when the Philadelphia Daily News mistakenly lumped Trinity University with Trinity College & University and referred to both as diploma mills.

The newspaper ran a correction the following day after Trinity University officials contacted the reporter.

A woman who answered the toll-free number for Trinity College & University on Thursday declined to provide the name of company officials or further information about the business. Instead, she said requests for comment should be submitted via e-mail.

The organization did not respond to an e-mail message sent by the San Antonio Express-News.

"You're talking about a school that has a very good reputation scholastically," John Cave, who practices trademark law in San Antonio, said about Trinity University.

"Any type of confusion with (an entity) that doesn't have the same scholastic standards as Trinity (University) would not be a good thing for them."

In addition to asking that the Web-based organization drop the name "Trinity," the university wants the company to deliver all items that have the word Trinity on it to be destroyed and is seeking unspecified compensatory damages.

No hearing on the request has been set.

California-based author John Bear, who for 12 years was the FBI's principal consultant and expert witness on diploma mills and fake degrees, said Trinity University is wise to bring suit.

He said some questionable outfits are nothing more than fancy Web sites with a mail drop registered to offshore companies that move headquarters to whatever state offers the least resistance. They may cite accreditation of their programs from numerous organizations that often are phony themselves.

"It's a very common thing for fake entities to use the names of very well-known schools in their own names," Bear said Thursday.

That, he said, can frustrate officials of legitimate learning institutions, and also confuse employers.

"The confusion is probably at the gatekeeper level, the HR (human resources) office, where somebody comes to their business and says, like in this case, I have my degree from Trinity," Bear said.

"If somebody said Trinity, they (HR person) would think, 'Oh yeah, Trinity, sure San Antonio, great school.' They probably wouldn't check any further."

Bob Jensen's threads on diploma mill frauds are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm#DiplomaMill 


And I thought we would not need real offices in a future of virtual reality.

"Sneak Peeks at Tomorrow's Office," Business Week, April 13, 2004 --- http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/apr2004/tc20040413_0505_tc146.htm 

PRODUCTIVITY BOOSTERS.  
Welch is just one of many scientists at universities and government labs -- and at companies such as IBM (IBM), Microsoft (MSFT ), and even office-furniture maker Steelcase (SCS ) -- whose work is changing the office environment. They're developing desk chairs that will sense when you're stressed and, perhaps, tell your boss to offload some of your work; PCs that can figure out during your senior moments where you've seen a particular name; and desktops that, with a push of a button, transform themselves into computer monitors to help facilitate discussion during a roundtable meeting.

All of these ideas have one goal in common: To raise white-collar productivity -- or at least preserve the huge gains of recent years while avoiding employee burnout.

The idea is to build upon the innovations that have transformed offices over the past 15 years. As recently as 1990, voice mail was still being introduced in Corporate America, e-mail was largely self-contained within companies, and attending a meeting in another city meant going there.

Continued in the article.


Nearly the entire April 2004 issue of Syllabus Magazine is devoted to computer and network security.  This is a useful reference with lots of links --- http://www.syllabus.com/mag.asp 

Bob Jensen's threads on computer and networking security are at the following links:

http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245gloss.htm 

http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/000start.htm#SpecialSection 


Some Ohio public school districts — locked in a heated tug-of-war for students with charter schools, home school, and work options — are hoping to yank students back with an online rope --- http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20040411/NEWS04/404110367/-1/NEWS 


Free Training Course on the Mortgage Industry --- http://mortgage-education.com/ 

From T.H.E. Newsletter on April 14, 2004

Mortgage-Education.com is a Web site dedicated to providing postsecondary education about mortgage loans. The goal of the site is to take novices in the finance industry and turn them into well-trained loan officers within 60 days. The site features the Complete Mortgage Industry Certification (CMIC) program that trains students about conventional, nonconventional and FHA loans. The CMIC enables students to properly process a loan in a timely manner. All of the lessons on the site are taught online in video, audio and text, and are now approved by the American Council of Education for nine semester hours of college credit toward an associate's or bachelor's degree. Furthermore, upon completion of the CMIC, the student's name will be entered into a database allowing all 50 major lending corporations to view the individual's résumé for a potential job offer.

Bob Jensen's threads on online training and education alternatives are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/crossborder.htm 


Educators Road Map to the Web from T.H.E. Journal
Copies of the Road Map can be ordered online at http://www.thejournal.com/roadmap/order 
Remember that anything in print is probably out of date in the era of advancing technologies.


Library Journal --- http://www.libraryjournal.com/ 

Bob Jensen's library search helpers are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/searchh.htm 


Rembrandt's Journey: Painter, Draftsman, Etcher http://www.artic.edu/aic/exhibitions/rembrandt.html 

Bob Jensen's bookmarks for art history are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob2.htm#History 


Modern Extensions of the Peter Meter

The first invention came in the 1950s. Soldiers could get out of the Czech army by claiming they were gay, and researcher Kurt Freund needed to find a way to confirm their orientation. He invented a kind of barometer that measures changes in air pressure around the penis when a man has an erection. A more modern device -- nicknamed a "peter meter" -- uses mercury and an electrical current to measure changes in the size of a band placed around the penis. In women, scientists use a tampon-like gizmo that shines light into the vagina and tracks blood flow by measuring the diffusion of light in the surrounding tissues.
"Brain Scans Arouse Researchers," by Randy Dotinga, Wired News, April 19, 2004 --- http://www.wired.com/news/medtech/0,1286,63115,00.html?tw=newsletter_topstories_html 

The study of sexual arousal, long limited to imprecise measurements of activity below the waist, is moving into new territory. In laboratories from New Jersey to California, researchers are putting men and women into MRI machines and watching how their brains react when they become sexually stimulated.

While they face a variety of challenges, researchers told an audience here at last weekend's meeting of the western region of the Society for the Scientific Study of Sexuality, an organization of sex researchers and therapists, that they're beginning to gain greater insight into how people get turned on. "It's much more than pushing a button and having a reflex," said Rutgers University professor emerita Beverly Whipple.

Ultimately, the brain research could lead to new treatments for sexual dysfunction and perhaps bring pharmaceutical companies closer to the ever-elusive Viagra-type pill for women. The findings also offer new hope for a diverse group of people, including the disabled and wrongly accused sex offenders.

Since the dawn of psychology, academics have tried to understand arousal by studying people willing to share details of their sex lives. But only over the past five decades have researchers developed effective ways of measuring physical signs of stimulation.

The first invention came in the 1950s. Soldiers could get out of the Czech army by claiming they were gay, and researcher Kurt Freund needed to find a way to confirm their orientation. He invented a kind of barometer that measures changes in air pressure around the penis when a man has an erection. A more modern device -- nicknamed a "peter meter" -- uses mercury and an electrical current to measure changes in the size of a band placed around the penis. In women, scientists use a tampon-like gizmo that shines light into the vagina and tracks blood flow by measuring the diffusion of light in the surrounding tissues.

The devices have provided psychologists with plenty to think about. Last year, Northwestern University researchers reported that women, regardless of their sexual orientation, tend to get turned on by all types of pornography -- gay, lesbian and straight. Heterosexual men, by contrast, prefer erotica with at least one female participant. The opposite is true of gay men.

The arousal devices aren't perfect, however. "The female instrument is more complicated than the male instrument," said Michael Bailey, chairman of the psychology department at Northwestern University. "We understand it less, and people are less satisfied with it." To make matters more complicated, many men don't have full erections, especially when they're older, and it's difficult to compare stimulation in men and women.

About five years ago, sex researchers began turning to brain imaging. "We can access the mind more directly by imaging the brain than by measuring the penis or the vagina," said Bailey in a phone interview. "I'm a psychologist, and I'm interested in what's happening in the mind."

Functional magnetic resonance imaging, or fMRI, which measures metabolic changes in the brain, appears to be the most popular scanning technology among sex researchers. By using fMRI, they can detect which parts of the brain become more -- or less -- active during arousal and orgasm.

Continued in the article


I used to think of Fulbright awards as opportunities to teach or study abroad for entire semesters. Now the Fulbright Scholars Program has wider flexibility for shorter and longer periods of time. For example, Dick Burr's wife (Pat) has had several such Fulbright awards, the last one being a trip to Viet Nam for two weeks.  Her host was Ton Duc Thang University of Technology in Ho Chi Minh City (old Saigon).

-----Original Message----- 
From: Burr, Richard M 
Sent: Wednesday, April 14, 2004 1:48 PM 
Subject: Fulbright Scholar Program

From the Fulbright Scholar Program:

"This past year 800 U.S. faculty and professionals taught or conducted research in over 140 countries as Fulbright Scholars. Their Fulbright grants enabled recipients to expand their professional interests, enrich their teaching, and advance their scholarship.

Fulbright grantees come from all disciplines of the humanities, the social sciences, and the natural and physical sciences, as well as business, journalism, and law. Grants are awarded to faculty of all academic ranks, including adjunct and emeritus.

A flyer listing the grants in business can be downloaded from our web site's Campus Representative section at www.cies.org ."

Richard M. Burr, Ph.D. 
Professor & Chair Business Administration 
One Trinity Place 
San Antonio, Texas 78212-7200


A Comprehensive Guide to Universities, Colleges, and Schools Worldwide --- http://www.internationaleducationmedia.com

From T.H.E. Newsletter on April 14, 2004


The International Education Media site allows visitors to search for and learn more about educational opportunities abroad. The site contains an A-Z list of foreign countries that accept international students. For each country, the site has a listing of all the universities, colleges and schools that recruit international students, with many of these institutions providing contributed articles that give a more in-depth look at their school. Visitors to the site can also search for schools by educational topic and search through links for information about student visas.


Bob Jensen's other helpers for finding colleges and universities and sources of funding --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob2.htm#Scholarships 

The easiest way to find a college's home page is to use Google at http://www.google.com/advanced_search?hl=en 

You can search for key words on a college's server using http://www.google.com/options/universities.html 

Bob Jensen's links to distance education training and education pages are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/crossborder.htm 

A Comprehensive Guide to Universities Colleges and Schools Worldwide --- http://www.internationaleducationmedia.com

From T.H.E. Newsletter on April 14, 2004


The International Education Media site allows visitors to search for and learn more about educational opportunities abroad. The site contains an A-Z list of foreign countries that accept international students. For each country, the site has a listing of all the universities, colleges and schools that recruit international students, with many of these institutions providing contributed articles that give a more in-depth look at their school. Visitors to the site can also search for schools by educational topic and search through links for information about student visas.

The Taxonomy Warehouse is a fantastic search engine in terms of helpful categories --- http://www.taxonomywarehouse.com/ 

Bob Jensen's search helpers are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/searchh.htm 

Finding Colleges, College Rankings, Financial Aid, and Online Programs --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob2.htm#Scholarships  

 


Hi XXXXX,

I do appreciate that you read my messages. I did a little checking and found out that the accusation is not only a false rumor, it is a vicious attack on Target Stores --- http://www.truthorfiction.com/rumors/t/target-viet.htm 

Thanks,

Bob Jensen


Please Insert a Quarter Into the Topic Machine

I had to chuckle somewhat at this message from a student at a leading university in the U.S.  I imagine many of you get this same type of inquiry from topic hunters.  At least we can say that the assigned project leaves room for creative searching by a student who does not know "what she is looking for."

Dr. Jensen,

I'm supposed to be doing a website discussing a current Accounting Technology issue, and in searching the internet looking for a topic that falls into that category, I found your website. However, I'm still not sure what exactly I'm looking for, and I was wondering if you maybe had any suggestions of topics for this project.

Thanks! 
Amanda


From T.H.E. Journal, April 2004 --- http://www.thejournal.com/magazine/vault/M2664.cfm 

Exclusive Series: SBR

"High (School)-Tech: The Effect of Technology on Student Achievement in Grades 7-12," by Neal Starkman, T.H.E.'s The Focus Newsletter, April 15, 2004 --- http://www.thejournal.com/thefocus/37.cfm 

In Lincolnshire, Ill., teachers at Adlai E. Stevenson High School are mandated to be proficient in the “operation and conceptualization of hardware and networks, applications, information tools, and presentation tools.”

In Scott County, Ky., students throughout the school district participate in a Digital Storytelling Project. The project lets students select an appropriate story, restructure the story in response to a “seven elements” model, create storyboards, gather content, produce videos, and share them at a Digital Storytelling Festival.

In Granger, Ind., eighth-grade students at Discovery Middle School produce a seven-minute news broadcast every morning. They make the assignments; organize the crew; set up camera equipment; block the shots; instruct others, including adults, in their roles in the production; and read the news.

And in Redmond, Wash., Tom Charouhas, a science teacher at Rose Hill Junior High School, uses “probeware” to show students how to determine the force needed to maintain mechanical efficiency in pulley systems. By using probeware, students can actually see the results of their actions on numerous pulleys.

What's going on here?

It's technology in the classroom: word processing programs, e-mail, databases and spreadsheets, modeling software, closed-circuit television, computer networks, CD-ROM encyclopedias, network search tools, desktop publishing, videotape recording and editing equipment, and the list goes on and on. What the chalkboard was to the 20th-century classroom, the computer is to the 21st-century classroom. The one important difference is that the concept of the chalkboard didn't change much over the decades; however, we're just at the beginning of the evolution of the computer as a teaching and learning tool.

Lake Washington School District, which includes Tom Charouhas' school and 41 others, is a good example of how far technology has traveled in schools. The North Central Regional Educational Laboratory (NCREL), online at http://www.ncrel.org, reports that the district started wiring its schools back in 1989. Today, there is a computer for every four students, and the district even has its own channel on cable TV. The district is also committed to renewing its hardware every five years for desktops and every four years for laptops, in addition to training all of its 1,300 teachers (no teacher proficiency, no computer upgrade). Charouhas has seen a “slow and steady climb” in not only the expertise of teachers in technology but also, and much more importantly, the expertise of students. “You can talk about concepts until you're blue in the face,” he says, but he believes that students really learn the science when they actually do the science.

But, is it as easy as that? Is it just a matter of “wiring”? The Center for Applied Research in Educational Technology (CARET), online at http://caret.iste.org, has compiled evidence on just what impact technology has had on student performance. It's concluded that technology improves student performance when the application has the following characteristics:

Curriculum. It directly supports the curriculum objectives being assessed.

Collaboration. It provides opportunities for student collaboration.

Feedback. It adjusts for student ability and prior experience, and provides feedback to the student and teacher about student performance or progress with the application.

Integration. It is integrated into the typical instructional day.

Assessment. It provides opportunities for students to design and implement projects that extend the curriculum content being assessed by a particular standardized test.

Support. It is used in environments where teachers, the school community, and school and district administrators support the use of technology.

None of this, of course, should be surprising. As Charouhas says, “The use of the technology cannot supersede the content… [and] the most important [component] of any classroom is the teacher.”

Elliot Wolfe can attest to that. Wolfe, a senior at Seattle's Garfield High School, takes classes at Seattle Central Community College as part of a program called Running Start. On March 11, he made a presentation on native Catholic boarding schools using PowerPoint and an LCD projector. His 18 slides included photographs and facts about the nature of the classes in boarding schools, where the schools were located, and how many students attended each over a period of time. He used the slides to illustrate the main points and then orally elaborated on them over the course of about 10 minutes.

Was it effective? Sure. All of us, including students, learn in various ways (e.g., auditorily, visually, kinesthetically), and the more of those ways a teacher can employ, the greater the chance of learning. But is it a panacea?

Continued in the article

Bob Jensen's threads on assessment are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/assess.htm 


"At Iowa, "The GMAT Is Important" Tippie School's Admissions Director Mary Spreen explains that comment and what else it takes to get in," Business Week Online, April 15, 2004 --- http://snipurl.com/Tippie 

Mary Spreen is director of MBA admissions and financial aid at the Tippie School of Management at the University of Iowa. She joined the school in November, 1996, though she has been active in admissions and student services through much of her career. She started as an assistant to the dean for student services at the College of Business at the University of Hawaii as an MBA student.

After working for Xerox in Hawaii, she returned to the University of Hawaii as assistant dean of academic services for its School of Travel Industry Management. She holds a BA in psychology from Wayne State University. She recently spoke by phone and e-mail with BusinessWeek Online reporter Mica Schneider. Here's an edited transcript of their discussion:

Q: In 2003, your office received 338 applicants to fill 80 seats, vs. 500 applications the year before. Where have all the applicants gone?
A:
The number of international applicants seems to be down for all graduate majors at the university. Candidates are concerned about U.S. visa policies. MBA candidates, in particular, also have more options [to study] in Europe and [elsewhere] than in the past.

The number of U.S. candidates is very similar to last year. However, at the moment there seem to be quite a few who are applying later than usual.

Q: How competitive will MBA admissions be this year? Last year, you accepted 45% of applicants.
A:
I expect the level of competitiveness to be about the same. We determined several years ago that it's more important for us to have high quality than to reach a specific number of students in the class.

Continued in the article


Question
What is Linspire?

Answer

Lindspire (Lindows)= LinspireTM is a full-featured operating system like Microsoft Windows XP or Apple Mac OSX. Linspire offers you the power, stability and cost-savings of Linux with the ease of a windows environment. In addition, Linspire features exclusive CNR technology that makes installing software on Linspire fast and easy -- simply find the software you want in the CNR Warehouse, then click and run it!   Watch a 5-minute Flash Demo to quickly learn more about Linspire and CNR --- http://www.linspire.com/lindows_sales_intro.php

Lindows Inc. on April 14, 2004  changed the name of its Lindows operating system to Linspire, responding to a federal judge's refusal to halt Microsoft Inc.'s trademark infringement lawsuits outside the U.S.  See "Lindows Changes Name Of System to Linspire," The Wall Street Journal, April 15, 2004 --- http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108198846930983270,00.html?mod=technology%5Fmain%5Fwhats%5Fnews 

Microsoft sued San Diego-based Lindows in 2001 in U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington, alleging the name infringed on its trademark for the ubiquitous Windows operating system.

The Redmond, Wash., software giant later filed similar complaints in Europe, Canada and Mexico and won preliminary injunctions in the Netherlands, Sweden and Finland. The Dutch ruling, on Jan. 29, was the most sweeping, prohibiting the sale of Lindows products in Belgium, Luxembourg and the Netherlands and making the Lindows Web site inaccessible in those countries.

"The Penguin Is Popping Up All Over Linux is fast breaking out of its original stomping ground in servers and into cell phones, cars, telecom gear, consumer electronics...," Business Week Online, March 30, 2004 --- http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/mar2004/tc20040330_8251_tc167.htm 

UNCOUNTED MILLIONS.  
Sound familiar? It should. To a degree, the same dynamics are propelling Linux' swift rise in the server OS market. Linux had a 7% share of that market in the fourth quarter of 2003 according to Framingham (Mass.) tech tracker IDC. But this number may not reflect the tens of millions of free versions of Linux that system administrators have downloaded and installed themselves. And year-over-year, Linux posted a 63% increase in market share, by far the biggest increase for any server OS.

This rapid growth in part reflects Linux' rapid move into the embedded operating system market. Until recently, makers of proprietary operating systems mainly worked that sector. The largest among them, Wind River (WIND ), attained close to 50% market share but remained far from dominant, as no one company could create products to span the thousands of types of processors that run embedded software. In fact, many device companies -- in aerospace and defense in particular -- have kept their development and code in-house.

As Linux has begun to mature, however, electronics makers have started to focus on its advantages. By incorporating it, they can minimize the number of operating systems they use in products to boost efficiency -- and thus free their programmers to concentrate on work that adds value to their products.

Continued in the article

Bob Jensen's short summary of operating systems is at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245glosf.htm#Operating1 


If any of you have had experience with GoToMyPC, please let me know.  I tried it and it is working great!

Because Walt Mossberg (WSJ, September 6, 2001) gave this device and service a positive review, I am going to order it so that I may operate my desktop computer at Trinity University from my home in the White Mountains of New Hampshire.

GoToMyPC Corporate Can Reduce Remote Access Costs 
This white paper discusses how companies can reduce the cost of providing secure remote access by using GoToMyPC Corporate and explores the many factors that influence the total cost of providing remote access. This comprehensive white paper covers the following:

Evolution of Corporate Network Remote Access
Remote Access User Communities
Secure Remote Access Cost Factors/Alternatives
Detailed Remote Access Cost Examples
Cost Analysis Methodology and Assumptions

After you read the white paper, we welcome you to contact us for a complimentary cost analysis using the same methodology employed in this white paper --- http://snipurl.com/GTMPC 

After I install it, I will give you an updated report on how it works.

Walt Mossberg's positive review is given at http://interactive.wsj.com/archive/retrieve.cgi?id=SB999723847321875907.djm&template=pasted-2001-09-06.tmpl

I shortened this Mossberg Review URL to http://snipurl.com/MossbergGoToMyPC

HERE'S HOW 
GoToMyPC works. First, you go to the company's Web site, register and download a small program on the PC or PCs you wish to be potential targets for remote control. The program, which works quietly in the background, must be running for the process to work. You don't need to fiddle with any Internet settings at all.

Then, when you want to remotely control the target PCs, you just log onto the GoToMyPC Web site, specify the PC you want to control from a list of those you've enabled, and magic occurs. The screen of the target PC appears in a window on the remote PC's screen, exactly as it would look if you were sitting there. The mouse and keyboard of the remote PC operate all the programs on your target machine.

The company says the process is highly secure. Two passwords are required -- one to log onto the service and another to gain access to each target PC. And all of the data exchanged in each remote-control session is encrypted. The company even claims the service will work through many corporate firewalls.

There is one major limitation: The service works best with an always-on, high-speed Internet connection on both ends. It will function via a slower dial-up connection, but the target computer must remain dialed into the Internet constantly, and the typing and viewing lag is more noticeable.

Another problem arises if there's a difference in screen size or resolution between the remote and target machines. If the remote machine has a smaller or lower-resolution screen, you'll either have to squint to read the target machine's screen or do a lot of scrolling to see everything.

April 13, 2004 reply from Richard J. Campbell [campbell@RIO.EDU

Bob:

I used gotomypc at last year’s AIS Educators Conference. I was able to open all files and programs on my home (development) computer with no problems.

On the remote computer, you just download gotomypc client software and logon and it is difficult to realize that you are working remotely. At one point I tried to print out a file at the hotel and was puzzled why the hotel’s printer was not printing my file. When I got home my printer had 30 pages of printed documents in the tray.

The client software does not require admin rights on the remote computer.

Richard J. Campbell 
School of Business University of Rio Grande 
Rio Grande, OH 45674

April 13, 2004 reply from Gadal, Damian [DGADAL@CI.SANTA-BARBARA.CA.US

I've used it and have been very pleased with the product!

April 13, 2004 messages from Bob Jensen and Jagdish Pathak


This is when it is nice to have a secretary back at home base who can put your office machine back on line if it disconnects.

On the positive side of things, the Trinity University security is much stronger than the security of my laptop online at my home in the mountains. Therefore, when email is opened and saved and files are downloaded, I have much more protection if I am doing this on my campus computer.

Thanks,

Bob

 -----Original Message----- 
From: Dr. Jagdish Pathak/Odette School of Business/University of Windsor 
Sent: Tuesday, April 13, 2004 12:58 PM 
Subject: Re: Operate Your Office Computer Remotely

It's great piece of software with equally great limitations. It requires that your , for example University PC on network MUST always be on-line, if you want it to be operated from your new home in NH. I found it a bit tricky as sometimes our ISP keeps on engaging in server shifting and other stuff for maintenance and virus removal jobs. This in turn does often put my PC off from the net. If the same thing happens with your server or your power supply goes off forcing you to restart your PC manually, then GOTOMYPC will not work. 

Another most vital part is the security and access control. It is most probable that your id and password is known to you and your software provider. I have read a horror story (I do not recollect it, where?) where a guy saw from his own eyes on his laptop screen that some unknown entity was moving cursor and opening certain files and mailing to some unknown address (at this point, he (the storyteller, perhaps took the control of his mouse and logged off the system.). I am not sure how far it is true but it is a technical possibility in such kind of P2P software.

My two cents worth!

Jagdish Pathak, PhD 
Assistant Professor of Accounting Systems Accounting & Audit Area 
Odette School of Business 
University of Windsor 401 Sunset Windsor, N9B 3P4, ON Canada

April 14, 2004 reply from Tom Hicks

Two thoughts -

A) You can do this free with (1) Remote Desktop if you are using XP or (2) VNC using windows 98/XP/2000/MaxOS/Linux. Are you sure you want to pay for it.

B) You will need to make sure that computer services is willing to create a port-hole through the firewall. Check before you buy!

Tom

April 14 reply from GoToMyPC prosupport@citrixonline.com 

Dear Bob,

Thank you for using GoToMyPC.

Certain firewalls and proxy servers may block your ability to successfully use our service. GoToMyPC can use port 80, 443, or 8200. The following are our system IP ranges:

12.129.129.128-255

63.251.224.0-255

64.15.196.160-191

64.94.164.96-111

64.94.164.192-255

64.95.112.32-63

65.224.21.128-255

66.151.158.0-255

66.151.150.160-191

If you are connecting to or from a corporate network, please check with your Systems Administrator or IT Manager. Try your connection again after updating your software and verifying access to the ports listed above.

For specific information regarding GoToMyPC security features, please visit the following URL:

https://www.gotomypc.com/help2.tmpl#securityaccess

Thank you again for your interest in GoToMyPC, the fast, easy and secure way to access your PC from any Web browser.

Barry McGuire
Help Desk Coordinator
Citrix Online Division
Citrix Systems, Inc.
5385 Hollister Avenue
Santa Barbara, CA 93111 USA

www.citrix.com

Customer Care & GoToMyPC Personal Sales
888-259-3826 (toll free for North America)
805-690-5750 (direct dial)
001-800-574-4234 (toll free for Mexico)
00-800-5744-2340 (toll free for Europe)


SoftPedia Freeware --- http://www.softpedia.com/user/help.shtml 

SoftPedia.com is a library of over 20,000 free and free-to-try software programs for Windows and Unix/Linux,games and drivers. We review and categorize these products in order to allow the visitor/user to find the exact product they and their system needs. We strive to deliver only the best products to the visitor/user together with self-made evaluation and review notes. We add more than 50 products on our site every day. All our services are FREE of charge for the visitors/users. There is a membership system, but it does not require a payed subscription, although it offers a series of advantages for the registered user.

SoftPedia.com is composed of three sections, each one with a specific purpose.

The first is www.SoftPedia.com which lists a wide range of freeware, shareware, trial, demo and adware software products.

In second comes Games.SoftPedia.com on which gamers can find the latest demos, patches and trailers of commercial games, along other freeware and shareware games, as well as other useful information as upcoming games release dates, download rankings, and so on.

Third is Drivers.SoftPedia.com which helps visitors/users find the latest drivers for their hardware, regardless of their version of Windows Operating System.

In addition to the mentioned specific products, all three sections display a selection of recent news from the IT World, in both English and Romanian languages. There is also a news archive which visitors/users can browse and search as they like. They can even send the news they consider interesting to their friends, or externally link to the news pages on our sites.

Bob Jensen's links to freeware and shareware are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob4.htm#Freeware 


"Your Right to X-Rated Sites"
The ACLU and the government butt heads over privacy, free speech, and protecting kids online--again
By Anush Yegyazarian, PC World, April 7, 2004 --- http://www.pcworld.com/news/article/0,aid,115531,00.asp 

In early March, the Supreme Court again heard arguments concerning the 1998 Child Online Protection Act. That act was intended to protect children from viewing online what the law calls "material that is harmful to minors."

There are qualifications about how such material must also lack any redeeming scientific, artistic, political or literary value for minors. In other words, this shouldn't affect a teen's ability to see full-frontal pictures of Michelangelo's David or the armless and topless Venus de Milo, or even to read explicit excerpts from anatomy texts.

What COPA intends to target is pornography. We all know that the Web is full of it, and that it's fairly easy to access.

Aside from what's truly obscene--which the law and the courts have sort of, kind of, defined--what's classified as porn or material harmful to minors tends to differ depending on whom you ask and the age of the minor in question. But no matter how you define it, according to the First Amendment, adults have the right to create and to view sexually explicit material--even if that material may be deemed pornographic or harmful to minors.

So the question before the Supreme Court, lawmakers, and every parent is: How do we keep sexually explicit material available to adults but away from children?

Burden on Creators or Consumers?

Let me get a couple of disclaimers out of the way first: I'm not a parent; I'm also not a consumer of so-called adult entertainment.

But I like the HBO show Sex in the City, and discussing it is a lot of fun. There are chat rooms and sites devoted to the show, some of which may at various times include commentary that's naughty at best and harmful to minors at worst, offering little or no redeeming value for those minors. Do such sites have to require proof of age for access? You can argue that they do, according to COPA.

In large part, it's the proof-of-age requirement that has prompted the American Civil Liberties Union and other like-minded organizations to oppose COPA before the Supreme Court. Under the act, sites that have "prurient" (legalese for sexually explicit material that lacks redeeming value) material harmful to minors must require some form of ID--such as a credit card, an adult ID, a digital certificate, and so on--to prove that the person who wants access to the content is over 17 years old.

So what's the problem? Well, there are a couple issues.

First, requiring an ID removes anonymity, which would deter at least some people from going to a site. They may be concerned about the potential stigma because they don't trust the site to protect their privacy, or they may want to limit the number of sites that have personal information about them. COPA does include some privacy provisions, but whether they're sufficient is debatable.

Second, the people running such a site may decide to self-censor, avoiding a subject--even something they're legally allowed to discuss--because they don't want to risk running afoul of COPA or don't want to shoulder the additional cost of implementing an age-verification method.

The ACLU and other groups have persuaded lower federal courts (most recently the Third Circuit Court of Appeals) that reasons such as these are enough to shelve COPA or send it back to the congressional drawing board. And let's not forget that a too-broad definition of indecency helped in striking down the 1996 Computer Decency Act.

But most importantly, adult IDs are not the only way to protect children online. Other methods could be just as effective without triggering self-censorship or creating problems with free speech or privacy rights.

Other Methods of Protection

COPA required the creation of a commission to investigate and evaluate various child-protection methods, and to assess any adverse impact on adults who want to access adult materials. That commission made its report in October 2000.

Guess what? According to the report, no single protection method is best. And requiring IDs has a negative impact on adult access, our First Amendment rights, and privacy, among other things. However, user- and ISP-based filtering and "greenspaces" (domains or sites that are specifically kid-friendly, such as the recently approved .kid domains) scored better as protection mechanisms, while avoiding many of the negatives of requiring adult IDs.

Continued in the article

Bob Jensen's threads on the controversial DMCA are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/theworry.htm#Copyright 


Automobile Financing and Cheating

I have a Web document on automobile financial fraud and dirty tricks at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudDealers.htm 

When teaching Excel's financial functions (Insert, Function, Financial) to my students, I often illustrate Excel functions using actual dealer terms.  One of my spreadsheets for this is called Big Earl in the Excel Workbook FraudEarlBob.xls at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/Excel/ 

I ran across a rather interesting Fitzgerald Auto Mall payment calculator at http://www.fitzmall.com/finance.asp 
It checks out and returns the same answers as my Excel file illustrations.  For example, read in a price of $16,995 and a financing of $15,996 after a $1,000 down payment on a 60 month loan at 2.80% APR, and the payments really are $286 per month after you hit the site's "Recalculate" button.  

Fitzgerald Auto Mall calculator is a nice calculator, but it is very limited in terms of typical deals offered today such as no payments for six months.  My Excel workbook using the Big Earl spreadsheet tries to illustrate more complex deals.  For example, the Fitzgerald Auto Mall calculator will not work for the 0-0-0 (Zero down, Zero interest, Zero payments for 12 months)  terms illustrated at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudDealers.htm 

Other online calculators are linked at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob3.htm#080512Calculators

Question
How can you verify if the financing terms offered to you are honest?

Answer
Probably the best approach is to pretend that you are going to make a purchase for cash without a financing deal.  Then try to negotiate the lowest price you can get for cash for the car, the extended warranty, etc.  Next use that as "the" price when you use some type of calculator such as my spreadsheet or the payment calculator at http://www.fitzmall.com/finance.asp 

If a car seller cheats you on the financing deal, it will typically entail using a financing price that is higher than the rock bottom cash price that you can get in a cash deal.  If the financing price is not equal to the rock bottom cash price, then the disclosed APR is not the true APR interest rate that you will be paying.

Other dirty tricks played by car sellers and sometimes banks are listed at  http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudDealers.htm 

Bob Jensen's threads on how to detect and report frauds --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm 

April 15, 2004 reply from Don Mathis

Dear Dr. Jensen, One of my brothers has an automotive repair shop in Austin, one works with debt collection at Frost Bank here in San Antonio. I had forwarded your message about autos to both. You may appreciate Ted's feedback. 

Don Mathis, 
Library

-----Original Message----- 
From: ted.mathis@frostbank.com [mailto:ted.mathis@frostbank.com]  
Sent: Thursday, April 15, 2004 11:26 AM 
To: Mathis, Donald E. Subject: Fw: Automobile Financing and Cheating

Dr. Jensen is fascinating. I really liked this site about Automobile Financing and Cheating, since it pertains to my business. The zero zero zero deals that Mitsubishi offered were not only disastrous to the buyers, but Mitsubishi suffered also. Last year Mitsubishi repo'd so many cars after the buyers defaulted on the 1st payment (a year after purchase) that there cars were a glut on the market. The San Antonio Auto Auction, which has thousands of fenced, secured acres, ran out of room. They had to park Mitsubishi's in unsecured areas and hire extra security to patrol. One auction in Florida had to temporarily close its lanes to Mitsubishi's, as there were so many of them. The only winners in the zero zero zero scam were the wholesale buyers who could buy a Mitsubishi for 5-6 thousand dollars below a comparable Honda or Toyota.

I so liked the info at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudDealers.htm  that I follow links to his other sites and spent several hours informing myself of all the useful sites he has. I even bookmarked http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob3.htm#080512Calculators  and will refer back to it later.

 


April 13, 2004 message about the $9.95 WinPLOSION from Aaron Delwiche

Hi Bob,

If you haven't seen this yet, you might get a kick out of it:

http://www.winplosion.com 

Does a decent job of mimicking Panther's Expose functionality on a windows platform.

Aaron


Message from Wired News on April 9, 2004

I'd like to make you aware of a new feature we're launching today on Wired News. It's the Cult of Mac blog, a daily update of curious, quirky Mac-related links found by reporter Leander Kahney, who covers the Apple/Mac beat for us. You can bookmark it here: http://r.wired.com/r/cultofmac/http://blog.wired.com/cultofmac/ 

The blog will be an adjunct to Wired News' Mac coverage. We hope it will prove to be a good format for covering all the brief, interesting items that otherwise wouldn't make it into a full Wired News story.

The blog is created with Tripod's Blog Builder (http://blog.tripod.lycos.com/), which has garnered favorable reviews and is proving reliable and easy to use. Tripod and Wired News share a corporate parent, TerraLycos.

Incidentally, Leander is the author of a book about Mac culture, Cult of Mac, to be published by No Starch Press (http://www.nostarch.com/) in August.

Sincerely,

David Miller, managing editor


There are two popular versions of software for making narrated videos of computer screen action.  One is feeware and the other is freeware.

The fee version of Camtasia Studio from TechSmith is described (with my video tutorial) at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm

The Camtasia Studio link is http://www.techsmith.com/products/studio/default.asp

Camtasia produces avi files of computer screen action with audio included from your microphone dialog.  There is also software to compress these avi files into wmv, rm, and

No Multimedia Expertise Needed

Not every user has every media player. That’s why Camtasia Studio supports all popular multimedia formats:

·       Macromedia Flash (.flv and .swf)

·       Windows Media (.wmv)

·       Apple QuickTime (.mov)

·       RealNetworks RealMedia (.rm)

·       And More!

There is also something similar in freeware.

 

April 8, 2004 message from Bud Labitan

************************
-----Original Message----- 
From: Budlabitan@aol.com [mailto:Budlabitan@aol.com]  
Sent:
Thursday, April 08, 2004 9:12 PM  
To: Jensen, Robert 
Subject: question 

Bob,

Your excelgoalseek.wmv is excellent --- http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/acct5342/  
Can you tell me what frame rate and audio setting you used?   I am attempting to get as good a level of resolution on a file I am playing with.  

I found freeware called camstudio which creates avi files, and I also found an avi to wmv converter.

 http://download.softpedia.com:8080/MULTIMEDIA/VIDEO/camstudio.exe  http://wcarchive.cdrom.com/pub/bws/bws_47/StoikVideoConverter10.zipor  

I got better results after downloading the newest windowsmedia codecs from Microsoft.  

Thanks,  

Bud
*********************************

Bob Jensen's threads on Camtasia are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm 


People continue to mistake The Onion's stories for real news -- partly because the stories are so deadpan, partly because people are desperate to validate their twisted beliefs. Whatever the reason, the folks at The Onion just keep on laughing.

"Onion Taken Seriously, Film at 11," by Daniel Terdiman, Wired News, April 14, 2004 --- http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,63048,00.html?tw=newsletter_topstories_html 

The article in the Beijing Evening News told a shocking story of American hubris: Congress was behaving like a petulant baseball team and threatening to bolt Washington, D.C., unless it got a new, modern Capitol building, complete with retractable roof.

There was a problem with the story. Rather than do his own original reporting, Evening News writer Huang Ke had cribbed, nearly word for word, his text from an American publication. And as if that wasn't bad enough, Ke hadn't bothered to vet the source he had plagiarized: The Onion.

At first, the Evening News stood by its story, demanding proof it wasn't true. It finally did apologize, but stubbornly tried to deflect blame for having been duped.

It wrote: "Some small American newspapers frequently fabricate offbeat news to trick people into noticing them with the aim of making money."

Carol Kolb, the editor of The Onion, the satirical publication that bills itself as "America's Finest News Source," jokes that the Evening News might not have been too far off-base with its defense.

"That's what we do at The Onion," she laughs. "We do print lies to make money."

Continued in the article


Man Nods His Way To The Top BOSTON—Using his unparalleled ability to nod after his superiors speak, Thomas J. Mieritz, 39, rose to the level of vice-president at Fidelity Investments Monday. "I knew Mieritz was the man for the job the instant I started talking. He was ready to get on board with every one of my proposed mutual-fund investment initiatives," Fidelity chairman Edward C. Johnson III said. "I thought, 'Now, there's a man who makes smart decisions without a lot of hullabaloo.'" Johnson added that, if Mieritz can master boot-licking, buck-passing, and myopic self-satisfaction, he'll probably run the company one day.
The Onion, April 14, 2004 --- http://www.theonion.com/index.php?pre=1 

Zambia Tired Of Being Mentioned In 'News Of The Weird' Section LUSAKA, ZAMBIA—Zambian president H.E. Levy P. Mwanawasa publicly chastised Reuters and 10 other news organizations Monday for featuring Zambia in their "news of the weird" sections. "Zambia has a rich cultural history well beyond the man who can swallow razor blades," Mwanawasa said. "Either feature something about Zambia besides dodecatuplets, or don't feature Zambia at all." Interestingly, in addition to being the Zambian leader, Mwanawasa is also the proud owner of the world's longest soda-can pull-tab chain.
The Onion, April 14, 2004 --- http://www.theonion.com/index.php?pre=1 


Horny roosters are logging in from all over the world.  Give Burger King credit. Its attempt to advertise chicken sandwiches on the Web by setting up an ersatz webcam porn studio could have been a cheesy flop. Instead, its Subservient Chicken website is a hit --- http://www.subservientchicken.com/ 

Seriously, techies might look at this site to observe how to simulate what looks like live feeds (no pun intended).  
Type in "laid out" in the text box and click on "Submit."

 

"Porno Hen Hawks for Burger King," by Chris Ulbrich, Wired News, April 14, 2004 --- http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,63053,00.html?tw=newsletter_topstories_html 

Camgirls, make way for the camchicken.

For years, pornographers have used the Web to stage interactive peepshows that let visitors type requests to models in front of the camera. More recently, amateur "camgirls" have used cheap webcams and broadband connections to broadcast performances from their own bedrooms.

Now comes subservientchicken.com, a website that mimics the look of an Internet sexcam show to promote a new chicken sandwich from Burger King.

Instead of starring a busty young woman or a porn stud with rock-hard abs, the Flash-powered site features an actor in a chicken suit, dressed in lingerie. And unlike previous big-business attempts to cash in on an Internet trend, the Subservient Chicken site quickly became an Internet hit.

Launched last Wednesday, the Subservient Chicken site racked up a million hits in the first 24 hours, and between 15 million and 20 million hits so far, according to Crispin Porter & Bogusky, the advertising agency responsible for the site.

Already, websites have sprung up to track the commands the chicken will and will not perform.

Word got out even before the site was out of beta testing, said Crispin Porter & Bogusky creative director Andrew Keller. The site was built as a tie-in to a television campaign that began running on MTV, Comedy Central, Spike and BET last week.

"We sent out a couple e-mails to test the site within the agency and with friends, and it went bananas," he said.

The site's design is appropriately tatty. A fake camera window displays a pixelated image of a dimly lighted living room. The decor is Web Porn College Modern: beige carpet, magenta couch, silver floor sconce. The chicken tentatively steps out of the kitchenette, wearing a garter belt, a metal anklet and nothing else. A text box invites the viewer to "Get chicken the way you like it." The chicken gazes at the camera expectantly.

Though the site looks like a live feed, it appears to be a collection of short movie clips triggered by keywords in the user's requests.

Continued in the article


To Subscribers on the AECM --- http://pacioli.loyola.edu/aecm/ 

I am probably the worst offender in terms of sending out messages of dubious links to accounting technologies or even accounting. I was a bit surprised that nobody outside Trinity University complained to me privately or on the AECM about my porno chicken link to the Burger King promotional site yesterday. After I sent the message out, I had second thoughts (even before I received one complaint from a Trinity colleague) and sent myself a message telling me that this was inappropriate for the AECM. The content of that site is offensive, although I was more enamored with the technology of being able to control the animation by typing in commands to what appear to be live feeds. Thus my curiosity about the technology of the site obscured my judgment about the stupid content of the site. I can see education technology possibilities in this case if you can stomach the content of this particular site without throwing up. Seriously, techies might look at this site to observe how to simulate what looks like live feeds (no pun intended). Type in "laid out" in the text box and click on "Submit." --- http://www.subservientchicken.com/ 

The highly controversial porno chicken Burger King site is reviewed by Wired News at http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,63053,00.html?tw=newsletter_topstories_html  
I probably should apologize to those of you who threw up after viewing Burger King's chicken.

The AECM is rather unique in the sense that it is the only significant survivor. There were earlier AAA and various international attempts to form listserv and networked discussion groups among accounting educators, but most of these faded away as the AECM evolved into a near-monopoly in terms of worldwide online communications between accounting educators and researchers. In the early years of the AECM, Barry Rice held rather tight bounds on what was appropriate message content for the AECM. His subsequent silence on this topic (read that his not reaming out Bob Jensen for some recent messages) appears to signal greater tolerance of allowing us to use our judgment on what might be of interest to a relatively large number of AECM subscribers.

In particular, this opened the door to more general and philosophical discussions in accounting and education beyond the constraints of a more limiting technology focus. I applaud this, and if the AECM reverted to its earlier constraints it would be necessary for Jagdish, Paul, Bob, and others to form some type of wider online discussion forum or listserv for accounting educators and researchers. The fact that the AECM is now open to a wider array of topics makes it unnecessary, in my judgment, to form another outlet for accounting educators and researchers.

Humor and entertainment messages are the most difficult to assess. Entertaining relief messages now and then are always welcomed by me. If they become too frequent and tiresome, then it is appropriate to register a polite complaint to remind Jensen and others to slow down and exercise more restraint. Sometimes it is more polite to register those complaints in private messages rather than AECM messages. Somebody really should have complained about the porno chicken message.

Until Barry cancels my AECM subscription, I will probably continue to define the bounds of the AECM quite loosely. I wish that many of our talented lurkers and activists would do the same in the spirit that true academics are tolerant of criticism. Don't be afraid to ream me out. I'm already covered in scar tissue. What keeps me going is that I've filed over 1000 messages that express appreciation for every one of the messages that express a wish I would go away. Those odds are good enough for me until Barry pulls my plug.

My only hope is that lurkers on the AECM will become more active and share their insights and helpers with the rest of us. And I would like to say a positive word about Scott Bonacker and other practitioners who send us highly insightful messages. God bless the practitioners who participate in the AECM. We wish there were more of you who are willing educate us.

Bob Jensen

April 15, 2004 reply from Kate Mooney [kkmooney@STCLOUDSTATE.EDU

Wow, Bob, do you realize the effect a huge mea culpa like yours has? I’ve been busy and hadn’t bothered with links in posts lately, but how could I resist after you eloquent post? So, I finally went to the porno chicken site, right after reading your post and it is SO busy that I didn’t get much of a thrill from it. However, I giggled over the algebra post earlier this morning.

I really value the wide ranging discussions that appear on this list. The passionate opinions force me to be involved and deliberate in my teaching. The wacky posts entertain. The quotes in posters’ signatures inspire. And, if I’m swamped, there is always the delete “X” on my toolbar.

Kate Mooney, PhD, CPA
Professor, Dept. of Accounting
St. Cloud State University
St. Cloud MN 56301 USA

kate@stcloudstate.edu
http://cobfaculty.stcloudstate.edu/kmooney 

April 15, 2004 reply from George Wright [geo@LOYOLA.EDU

I'm not even an accountant. I'm just on the list because my office was next to Barry Rice's when he developed and tested it---making me one of the longest tenured subscribers :-)! I've learned a lot about a lot of things. I'd hate to see subscribers feel that some net-cop was lurking, ready to whine about off-topic posts.

Geo

April 15, 2004 message from Dennis Beresford [dberesfo@TERRY.UGA.EDU

Bob, I was fascinated by the chicken. Please don't apologize and please keep alerting us to these kinds of things.

It is wonderful that you and all of the other regular contributors take the time to share such diverse materials, even if an occasional recipient doesn't appreciate it. As you say, I'm not aware of any similar service. While most of the "pure techie" stuff is over my head, I do get some good ideas. And the other matters that are distributed are often extremely valuable to me.

I think I have earned the right to read the things that interest me and delete those that don't. One of the great things about email, the Internet, and other aspects of our electronic life is that we are offered so many choices of reading material. The total time it takes to delete emails that don't interest me is much less than I waste on day dreaming or many other nonproductive activities. AECM is a wonderful resource and I look forward to all of our future interesting exchanges.

Denny Beresford

April 16, 2004 reply from Ron Perrin [rperrin@UOW.EDU.AU

Hey, we accountants, academics and practitioners alike, are known for our predilection to comedy and humour. I also checked out Bob Jensen's 'chicken'. Hey, Bob, I got the chicken to 'sit' (repeat - 'sit') on one of the lounge chairs - maybe it's because I said 'please' - I just couldn't bear to bully the chicken like most of the chicken's other clients would.

But seriously though I really enjoy reading the content and comment in AECM. It is my first stop in my morning trawl through the dross and spam that manages to invade and infiltrate our university's servers each day. AECM is 'choc-a-bloc' full of interesting, informative and educational content and comments. And thanks to all the regular contributors who give so generously of their time, resources and intellect to keep us all informed and enthralled.

I reckon that world's not as bad a place as our mass media would have us believe, but I also reckon we can still stand a little more humour.

Cheers Ron Perrin 
Sub Dean Faculty of Commerce 
University of Wollongong 
New South Wales Australia

April 16, 2004 reply from Jagdish Pathak [jagdish@UWINDSOR.CA

I do not know where from somebody got porno stuff out of that jumping chicken! I even tried some lewd and four letter kind of stuff to see if the chicken responds in any bizarre manner but to my surprise it rebuked me figuratively.

I liked the idea from technology point of view too as a large set of streaming pictures can be grouped with certain specific commands so as to give an illusion of a comic but an intelligent set of predefined acts.

Though the algorithm used is not very complex but the message is clear that some of us can put it to great use in teaching of any course of our choice.

GREAT, Bob. You don't have to be apologetic for any (wrong ?) which is yet to be established "WRONG" by more than a single person (it may be a personal opinion of somebody who questioned the validity of chicken post on this listserve).

Jagdish Pathak, PhD 
Assistant Professor of Accounting Systems 
Accounting & Audit Area 
Odette School of Business 
University of Windsor 
401 Sunset Windsor, N9B 3P4, ON Canada

April 16, 2004 reply from David R. Fordham [fordhadr@JMU.EDU

Bob, I REALLY, truly, am too old. I couldn’t find anything offensive on the chicken site (but then again, I’m overly prudish in that I wouldn’t have thought to type in any lewd suggestive behavior in the directions box anyway, -- and I’ve never visited a live porn feed site so I don’t know what is expected… and as my wife will readily tell you, I am seriously lacking in imagination once you get outside the field of accounting technology!) ;-)

Keep up the great work in keeping us all informed, enlightened, inspired, and even entertained!

David R. Fordham
PBGH Faculty Fellow
James Madison University


How to Remove Hidden Personal Information From a MS Word Document

April 12, 2004 message from Jim McKinney [jim@MCKINNEYCPA.COM

I have heard of a few different ways to remove identifying information from Word documents, necessary for blind reviews. I just read about one method in the May 4,2004 issue of PC Magazine (pg. 95). It said that you should open the Word document in WordPad (which comes free with Windows) and save it as a Rich Text Format file (rtf). This is supposed to remove all identifying info. It seemed to work on a trial document, though once you resave it as a Word Document, new identifying info is saved again. This method was supposed to be more effective at removing identifying info than using Word to save the document as a RTF document. A few

1) By saving it as a RTF document, is any original formatting lost? 2) I know that pdf files will sometimes save the creator's name in the properties section of the document - is it saved elsewhere? 3) Does WordPerfect have a similar problem like Word with storing identifying info?

Jim McKinney, Ph.D, C.P.A. 
Howard University School of Business 
2600 Sixth Street, NW Washington, DC 20059

April 13, 2004 reply from David R. Fordham [fordhadr@JMU.EDU

Jim, RTF (rich text format) saves about 25% of the formatting capabilities of Word. Fortunately, it is the 25% which accounts for about 95% of what most everyday users of Word actually use: italics, bold, underlining, font selection and font sizing, margins, and other stuff you normally find on your “standard” and “formatting” toolbars. If you do any formatting beyond the toolbar, however, you may lose it by converting to RTF.

Because I use so many non-toolbar features in Word (including any drawings, diagrams, tables, etc.) in my manuscripts, I generally prefer to manually remove the easily-findable identification from my manuscript file. There are TWO (2) places you need to worry about:

1. On the menu bar, select FILE, then select PROPERTIES, then select the SUMMARY tab.  

2.  On the menu bar, select TOOLS, then select OPTIONS, then select the USER INFORMATION tab.
(The above are for WordXP… other versions of Word may use slightly different wording on the menu selections.)

There are other ways of identifying the origins of Word files, but these two are the most easily accessible by non-“power” users. I would suspect that very few reviewers would be capable of accessing the other locations, and they are harder to change anyway. By clearing these two locations, you should be safe enough to have confidence in the blindness of the reviews. Ditto with changing the properties of the PDF documents.

I am not familiar with the current versions of WordPerfect, but I would assume that they have similar “properties” at the file level, and “tools options” at the session / application level, too.

David R. Fordham
PBGH Faculty Fellow
James Madison University

April 13, 2004 reply from Jim McKinney [jim@MCKINNEYCPA.COM

Just by opening the document in a text editor will allow you to see most author info buried in the document. I tried the two steps suggested by David below which removed most instances of my name, but yet still left at least one instance my name behind. I was not tracking any changes (see article below). The text showed up as: JXiXmX XMXcXKXIXNXNXEXY where X is an unrecognizable character. Maybe I am doing something wrong. Jim See http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/04_16/b3879047.htm Business Week April 19, 2004 pg. 26 Don't Let Word Give Away Your Secrets Hidden data can reveal too much about a document's murky past

When SCO Group (SCOX ), a litigious Lindon (Utah) software company, filed a breach-of-contract suit in Michigan against DaimlerChrysler (DCX ) in March, it revealed a lot more than it intended. A CNET News reporter, poking through the Microsoft Word (MSFT ) filing, discovered that the case had originally been drawn up as a suit against Bank of America (BA ) in a California court.

There's a lot more than meets the eye in many Word documents, a fact often overlooked when people e-mail Word files or post them to Web sites. The information that may be hidden in a Word, Excel, or PowerPoint file may include the names of the author and anyone who edited the document, reviewers' comments, the types and identification of computers on which the file was opened, and deleted text.

Most problems involve Word documents. One useful, but potentially dangerous, feature of Word is "track changes." When turned on, it keeps a record of who made what alterations and when. Unless you carefully clean up the document, which can sometimes be done with a single mouse click, anyone receiving it can see the record of changes by using the "show markup" mode. This is what trapped SCO. Another feature lets you keep an audit trail by saving versions of a Word document as it goes through revisions. Unless all but the last version is deleted before the file is circulated, a recipient will be able to see them.

OTHER INFO CONCEALED INSIDE A WORD FILE requires more skill and effort to retrieve. The most straightforward way to see the information is to open a Word document in a text editor such as Windows Notepad. Most of what appears on the screen will be gibberish, but there can be a lot of interesting information buried in the nonsense, such as the names of everyone who worked on the document. For example, a Wired News analysis of a Word document circulated by California Attorney General Bill Lockyer urging other attorneys general to crack down on file-sharing showed that the text had been edited or reviewed by an official of the Motion Picture Association of America.

Nearly every business exchanges electronic documents with partners, competitors, and customers. If those documents are written in Word, they are likely to contain information you would rather not share outside your own organization. How do you prevent it? One way is to select "Track Changes" from the tools menu and view the document as "Final Showing Markup." Make sure that all your changes have been either accepted or rejected by the program -- a step that removes the tracking information. And make sure all versions but the last have been deleted. But, as the electronic newsletter Woody's Office Watch notes, "it's very, very difficult to delete potentially embarrassing information all of the time."

One tool that helps get the job done is Microsoft's Remove Hidden Data, a free add-in to Office XP and 2003. But it's a better idea to avoid distributing Microsoft Office files unless absolutely necessary. People need to share information, but they don't need to give the recipients access to the original documents. One way to do that is to use Adobe Systems' (ADBE ) portable document format (PDF), which can be displayed in the free and ubiquitous Acrobat Reader. It retains the formatting of the original document -- but strips all hidden data. Adobe's program for creating PDFs, Acrobat 6.0 ($149), has extensive document-management features but is overkill for many uses. However, many other products can convert Office files to it, including Macromedia's (MACR ) RoboPDF ($79) and ScanSoft's (SSFT ) PDF Converter for Word ($50). Apple Computer's (AAPL ) Mac OS X has PDF conversion built in.

Computers, alas, are filled with traps to snare the unwary. Hidden data in Office files are just one more thing to worry about. Fortunately, precautions will keep danger at bay.

April 13, 2004 reply from Scott Bonacker

Instead of trying to modify or delete the information that is hidden in the files, address it at the source. Where does that identification come from?

I don't know all of the answers, but when you light up a new computer out of the box it wants to connect to a registration site and it asks for your name. When you install new software it asks for your name and wants to connect to a registration site. And those are just the obvious instances. In many cases the ID can be changed in the preferences or options menus so you don't have to live with the wrong name.

The next time you have to re-format your hard drive and re-install everything refer to yourself as 'Valued Customer' or 'Alfred E. Neuman' or whatever comes to mind. The software can't disclose what it doesn't know. Unless of course words like 'I certify...' or 'Under penalty of perjury ...' are somewhere close by.

There are also tools for editing registry information and changing user names, but I'm not too familiar with those.

Scott E Bonacker, CPA 
820 E. Primrose 
Springfield, MO 65807 

April 14, 2004 discouraging reply from Jagdish Gangolly [JGangolly@UAMAIL.ALBANY.EDU

Scott,

I am sorry, but it may be very difficult to do. For all practical purposes, it is not possible to achieve because word puts your footprints in the file in binary/hexadecimal format that you cannot see using any GUI based editors. I suggest you look at one of your documents using a hex-editor (for example, winhex) and see your own footprints. Of course, you can edit the footprints, or you can use an alias, but putting passwords and so on do not really work well.

Even finding hidden data is not easy to detect, since one can append NT streams to files in windows. The only way to detect such hidden data is to look at $MFT file and then discovering it by viewing the hard disk using one of the binhex editors such as winhex or hexworkshop.

Jagdish

April 14, 2004 reply from Scott Bonacker [lister@BONACKERS.COM

Jagdish,

That is true, it would be difficult to remove all uniquely identifying information. I may have misunderstood the original question then - my suggestion is the equivalent of removing your name badge when you walk out of the meeting. As individuals we are all identifiable in varying degrees of difficulty.

Some people prefer to remain anonymous among strangers (as much as possible) and may omit signing their email and use an obscure email account. Someone else will include a signature block that identifies them, or make their email address the equivalent of their name.

There may come a time in the future that we carry imbedded RFID tags, but for now identification is mostly in the form of documents we carry in our wallets and we choose when and where and to whom to display them. My thinking is that we should have some degree of control over this.

By publishing something to this list, for example, I already know that I don't know who will be reading the message or when or where. And I also know that it may end up in one of Bob Jensen's footnotes and preserved for - well, a long time anyway [Yes, there are some things I would like to edit, like 'principle']. I could use a non-obvious pseudonym and an obscure email address to post these messages, or I can choose to identify myself.

The idea isn't to hide your identity - I agree with you that is nearly impossible for even the moderately technical. There is very little 'Wild Wild West' left where someone can go to escape their past and re-make themselves, and in current Western culture I don't think that is even seen as an 'honorable' thing to do. Let alone being downright suspicious in certain circumstances. This is the wrong list for that discussion.

The idea is to have a choice, and by choosing, to add or detract from the action. An auditor signs the final certification report and not the drafts, for example.

The other part of what you are saying is also correct - if you would be embarrassed by it publicly then you probably oughtn't to think you can do it privately.

Scott


Hi Roy and others,

I've always had mixed feelings about becoming obsessed with learning styles, because teaching a student in a style that is best for a given student may not always be "best" in the long run since it does not motivate the student to adjust to other learning environments. For example, good accounting students are often great memorizers. Giving them a mass of reading material and other learning material that overwhelms memorizers may be better for them in the long run since it requires that they learn how to deal with information overload. Information overload, however, often makes students very frustrated and even angry. I guess I've been preparing students for paths through a jungle in which I am often very lost myself.

I have some threads on learning styles at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/assess.htm#LearningStyles 

I also have a paper on the importance of self-learning at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/265wp.htm  
Self learning often requires that students hack out a new path through the jungle. This is most important even if it does not suit a preferred learning style.

Bob Jensen

----Original Message----- 
From:  David R. Fordham 
Sent: Wednesday, April 07, 2004 
Subject: Re: Teaching & learning responsibility?

Roy, what a coincidence that less than 24 hours ago, I saw a stone plaque in Raleigh North Carolina which almost perfectly states my response to the question you posed to Jagdish. The quote, which was not attributed, said:

"Prepare the Child for the Path… NOT the Path for the Child."

Adapting teaching styles should be done NOT to make it "easier" for the student to learn, but to make it more "effective" for the students to learn HOW to learn once they are in the real world. In Higher Education, our teaching should NOT be determined how we like to teach, NOR how the students learn. It should be determined by how to enable the student to learn MORE once they leave our tutelage. Prepare the child for the path, not the path for the child.

David R. Fordham PBGH Faculty Fellow James Madison University

-----Original Message----- 
From: Roy (Dr) Sent: Saturday, April 10, 2004 3:34 PM 
Subject: Teaching & learning responsibility?

Jagdish,

How would you respond to this statement: "All students do not learn the same way, and they are not dumb, they just learn differently, and it is our duty to teach according to how the students' learn, not how we learned or how we want to teach"?

Roy Regel Professor of Accounting The University of Montana

"The art of government is to make two-thirds of a nation pay all it possibly can pay for the benefit of the other third" - Voltaire

April 9, 2004 messages from Jagdish Gangolly and Patricia Doherty

Patricia,

I agree that sometimes we instructors are unreasonable. However, the cost of reproducing those materials are negligible (Cds and internet are cheap). So I posed the question to our McGraw-Hill rep. His response was that many instructors (specially the adjuncts) insist on paper copies of materials and transparencies for the powerpoint slides -- and that is expensive.

A few years ago, for our basic accouinting systems course (which has been java based for about 7 years now) I decided not to use a textbook, but the java tutorial which is available for free in hypertext format on the internet. I was horrified to discover a few weeks into the semester that many of the students had bought the same book in print, at great cost.

I think the problems have to do with our state of familiarity with IT, and the students' refusal to adapt the cognitive style necessary to absorb knowledge that is not presented linearly. The latter could be due to laziness, reluctance to change, or both. My attitude is, if they want the previlege to be lazy or inflexible, let them pay for it. However, I also consider it my obligation to tell the students that they have a choice. I wish more students exercise it.

I don't see the future bright, specially for those who are lazy or inflexible. However, those who are not may be able to keep in their pockets tidy change (I am told it costs around $900 per semester).

Jagdish

-----Original Message----- 
From: Patricia Doherty 
Sent: 4/9/2004 9:22 AM 
Subject: Re: High cost of textbooks

The problem is that if the publisher included your E & Y tax guide, and the IRS book, then the adopters would also ask if there were teaching notes (since adjuncts teach these courses), and solutions to the exercises, too. Perhaps transparencies for class prep, or PowerPoint better yet. They need to have complimentary desk copies for each faculty member (two for those who want to keep a copy at home, too, to avoid toting back and forth) too. And then, of course, it has to be up to date, and the exercises have to be refreshed every couple of years, or else the students are passing around solutions. It all adds up, doesn't it? Then, there is the bookstore. At the beginning of the term, when hundreds or even thousands of students all buy their books in the same period of less than a week, they don't want to wait in line too long. Our bookstore can get you out of there on those days in about 10 minutes - I know, I have done it and been amazed when the line I was in, clear back to the escalator, moved that fast. That requires a BIG squad of temporary help, and overtime for full timers. Adds up. We are business faculty, and we are teaching our students how to increase shareholder value and add to profits. Publishers are for-profit organizations, and so are bookstores. Yes, the book bill at the beginning of the semester is huge. These students now pay more for one book, often, that I paid for ALL of my books in a semester when I was at school. But that was a long time ago, when the tuition at my private university was under $2,000 a year. Thank goodness for scholarships, because my father could not have afforded even that. He did have to foot the book bill. I don't expect books to be the same price now, though, because what is?

p

If flying is so safe, why do they call the airport the terminal? Author unknown.

Patricia A. Doherty 
Instructor in Accounting 
Coordinator, Managerial Accounting 
Boston University School of Management 
595 Commonwealth Avenue Boston, MA 02215

April 9, 2004 reply from Regel, Roy (Dr) [Roy.Regel@BUSINESS.UMT.EDU

Jagdish,

Your response to a textbook cost question moved into what I consider a more serious problem, learning styles and whose responsibility it is to change.

I agree with much of what you said about familiarity with IT, students' refusal to adapt the cognitive style necessary to absorb knowledge that is not presented linearly, and privilege to be lazy or inflexible, but some of my colleagues do not agree, and get quite upset over these issues.

This is becoming an increasing important issue here where access to higher education, student retention, and university funding are strongly intertwined. As larger percentages of high school graduates attend college, and grade inflation increases, it seems inevitable that more students will be at the lower margin of cognitive adaptability.

How would you respond to this statement: "All students do not learn the same way, and they are not dumb, they just learn differently, and it is our duty to teach according to how the students' learn, not how we learned or how we want to teach"?

Roy Regel
Professor of Accounting
The University of Montana

April 8, 2004 message from Richard J. Campbell [campbell@RIO.EDU

Here is a link to a CNN story.

http://www.cnn.com/2004/EDUCATION/04/08/textbook.gouging.ap/index.html 

Could the practice of bundling a study guide, a CD along with the textbook be illegal tying? Isn't this the same thing Microsoft has been accused of so that they can maintain their monopoly?

Richard J. Campbell 
School of Business 
University of Rio Grande 
Rio Grande, OH 45674

Bob Jensen's links on publisher frauds and monopoly abuses are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm#ScholarlyJournalRipoffs 


"College textbook costs skyrocketing Study finds extras, new editions drive prices up," CNN.com,  April 12, 2004 --- http://www.cnn.com/2004/EDUCATION/04/08/textbook.gouging.ap/index.html

Instead, she judges the newest Calculus 101 text by what's inside: a CD-ROM, flashy color photographs and a bubble-wrapped study manual. All those extras bring the price tag to $126, she says.

"The textbook companies are adding bells and whistles that students don't need -- it's making the cost of education unaffordable," said Connolly, a student at Portland State University.

A study spearheaded by students in Oregon and California found that the cost of textbooks has skyrocketed because of the bundling of ancillary products like CD-ROMs. It also claims that publishers roll out new editions year after year, forcing students to buy new books although the content scarcely changes.

Pat Schroeder, president of the Association of American Publishers and a former congresswoman, said the report was one-sided and flawed.

Fifteen members of Congress have asked for an investigation into the pricing policies of U.S textbook publishers. The General Accounting Office, which is the investigative arm of Congress, has given the request high priority, said Cornelia Ashby, the director of the office's education branch.

The study was conducted by the California Student Public Interest Research Group, Oregon Student Public Interest Research Group and the OSPIRG Foundation. The groups conducted a survey of the most widely assigned books in the fall of 2003 at 10 public colleges in Oregon and California.

According to the study, college students today spend about $900 on textbooks every year. On average, textbook publishers keep books on the shelf for 31/2 years before issuing a new one. Over half of faculty members surveyed said the new editions are "rarely" to "never" justified.

"Calculus hasn't changed much since Isaac Newton. The question needs to be asked -- do we really need a new edition every few years?" said U.S. Rep. David Wu, an Oregon Democrat who was the first lawmaker to ask for the investigation last fall.

Information age

Textbook publishers say the students' recommendations, which include a five-year minimum before the release of a new edition, fail to take the need for updates into account.

"Imagine a government textbook that had Bill Clinton as president. Or an accounting textbook that didn't include Enron. Or a biology textbook that didn't have cloning or stem cell research. The world changes so fast," said Jessica Dee Rohm, spokeswoman for Thomson Learning, the Stamford, Connecticut-based textbook giant.

Publishers say that even if the subject is calculus or art history, and by nature doesn't change as radically as genetics, the revised editions are always different.

"We have a revision diary that's hundreds of pages long for that book -- we invested $300,000 of research to change it," said Rohm, referring to the Calculus 101 book that Connolly held up at a news conference in Portland on Wednesday.

Rohm said that the information age has changed everything, and the CD-ROM is only the tip of the iceberg in staying on top of that trend.

The spiraling price of textbooks has led to all sorts of strategies to reduce the financial hit, said Merriah Fairchild of the California Student Public Interest Research Group.

"I know stories of students pooling together to buy a single book -- students just can't afford it anymore," Fairchild said.

Bob Jensen's links on publisher frauds and monopoly abuses are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm#ScholarlyJournalRipoffs 


More on (moron?) Learning Styles

Question
What is the best way to impress people at a dinner or cocktail party?

Answer
Memorize from Study Stack.  Actually this is a serious study aid for students and faculty.

From the Scout Report on May 16, 2004

Study Stack --- http://www.studystack.com/ 

Developed by John Weidner, the Study Stack concept basically assists individuals to memorize information about various subjects, including geography, history, math, languages, and science. Users of the site can select one of the existing stacks, which consists of virtual study cards allowing individuals to learn at their own pace until they are satisfied with their progress. What is also particularly novel about this learning tool is that data entered for customized study stacks can be automatically displayed as a matching game, a word search puzzle, or a hangman game. So far, the site contains dozens of study stacks for each subject, with the areas dedicated to math and science containing quite a number of rather helpful stacks. With its wide range of applications, this site will be very helpful to students at different age levels and teachers who may be seeking to develop a new study tool for any number of topics or themes within a subject area.

Bob Jensen's threads on learning games are in various places. One place to start is at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/updateee.htm 

Also see http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/thetools.htm 


April 8, 2004 message from Ed Scribner [escribne@nmsu.edu

Bob,

Possible addition, relevant to students in our region, to http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbus.htm  

ConocoPhillips Energy Business Glossary ( http://www.conocophillips.com/utilities/glossary/glossary.asp  )

Ed Scribner

Bob Jensen's accounting, finance and business glossary links are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbus.htm 

Bob Jensen's technology glossary and related links are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245gloss.htm 


April 14, 2004 message from Ernst.Young@ey.com 

Ernst & Young is engaged in an ongoing dialogue with a group of audit committee chairs known as the Audit Committee Leadership Network. From this dialogue, E&Y distills critical insights and shares them through a publication called BoardMatters Quarterly. We are pleased to share this publication with our EY Faculty Connection subscribers. 

This issue provides information on several hot boardroom topics, including risk management, evaluating audit committee charters, assessing the "tone at the top," and key trigger points around FIN 46. To launch the newsletter, please copy and paste the following address into your Internet browser (Adobe Acrobat required): --- http://snipurl.com/EYauditCommittees 


"E-mail attack could kill servers," NewScientist.com, April 4, 2004 --- http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns99994858 


Women's Rights and Democracy in the Arab World --- http://www.ceip.org/files/pdf/CarnegiePaper42.pdf 


DiversityWeb --- http://www.diversityweb.org/ 


What's the meta, data? 

"Taxonomy Today, ROI Tomorrow," by David Berlind, ZD Net, April 11, 2004 --- http://techupdate.zdnet.com/techupdate/stories/main/Taxonomy_today,_ROI_tomorrow.html 

Among the top ten strategic technologies for 2005 that Gartner analysts are advising enterprises to act on as soon as possible are those that address the thorny problem of enterprise taxonomies.

According to Gartner analyst Rita Knox, wrapping data and knowledge in metadata-based frameworks reduces the time needed to retrieve that information, thereby freeing up enterprises' most precious resource -- time -- for allocation to tasks that deliver real value, such as creating, servicing, and selling.

Mining legacy data presents three challenges: determining where those bits are stored, what stored them there (for example, e-mail clients and servers and their largely proprietary repositories), and how (format, security, etc) they're stored. The amount of corporate data and knowledge that is resting on PC's hard drives (where it's virtually undiscoverable and inaccessible) and that could be beneficial to other users, accounts for the vast majority of an organization's information assets. The remaining information, which is found on servers, may be more accessible, but is still just as difficult to relate and mine.

So difficult is relating, mining, and even replicating existing information to other repositories that Microsoft is creating a new file system (WinFS) for Windows that promises not only to divorce data from the applications that create it, but also provides a metadata framework for speeding the information's discovery, retrieval, and marriage to other related information. WinFS, which is based on Microsoft's next version of SQL Server (code-named Yukon), is expected to make its appearance in the next version of Windows (code-named Longhorn), which isn't do until 2006 at the earliest. So far, metadata functionality is not a part of the public roadmap for any competing operating systems -- including Linux.

Continued in the article

What's the meta, data? 

Metadata is widely known as data about data. For example, the title of a document, who created it, when it was created, and the language it is written in are all forms of metadata. Even corporate data, such as the data generated in the course of a transaction, may have some metadata attached to it. A call center, for example, may generate a lot of transactional data relating to incoming calls, but attaching an operator's name (or code) to each of the transactions qualifies as metadata much as an author's name that is attached to a document.

Another form of metadata that could be assigned to document or a transaction is its category or classification. This is where taxonomy comes into play. Taxonomies are generally hierarchical and come in handy for assigning knowledge and data to categories. They involve the selection of the standard vocabulary that represents categories, sub-categories, sub-sub categories, and so on. Taxonomies also are thesauri because they also map synonyms to that terminology. As more data, documents, and knowledge are categorized according to any given organization's taxonomy, rich connections can be made between dissimilar data types that were previously related, but impossible to connect technologically because there wasn't a taxonomical superstructure sitting across or between the various stove-pipes for making those connections.

Bob Jensen's helpers for XBRL are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/XBRLandOLAP.htm#XBRLextended 

April 13, 2004 reply from Neal Hannon [nhannon@COX.NET

Bob and all,

In a recent Strategic Finance magazine article, I presented evidence that the year 2005 will truly be a breakout year for XBRL implementations.  What started as a trickle, is now a stream.  See below:

"Consider the momentum XBRL will gain from a brief sampling of announcements from the 8th XBRL International conference in Seattle, Washington last November:



•       EDGAR Online and Microsoft jointly announced a service to provide SEC Filing information via Web Services; Microsoft distributed copies of a pre-release version of a Microsoft Office 2003 Solution Accelerator for XBRL, and PRNewswire previewed XBRL for Earnings Releases.

 
•       The FASB and IASB announced that they had created XBRL Fellows positions in recognition of the significant impact that XBRL will have on the adoption of accounting standards.  The 8th XBRL International conference attracted 284 attendees from 19 countries including 50 participants from Asian countries.  Over 120 people attended the tutorial sessions, and the 10 conference sponsors were DecisionSoft, Deloitte, Ernst & Young, Fujitsu, Hitachi, Hyperion, KPMG, PricewaterhouseCoopers, Software AG, and UBmatrix. 


•       The Dutch Water Boards are the first to go live with XBRL for financial reporting under new EMU guidelines, with a mandate for electronic reporting now in place in Holland.


•       Exchanges are leading the way in developing taxonomies and stimulating public companies to produce XBRL; whetting the appetite of investors worldwide for financial information in XBRL.  This movement was reinforced by the launch of the KOSDAQ investor information service in XBRL and presentations from the Shenzhen and New Zealand exchanges.


•       Strong technical advancements in the XBRL specification were announced with XBRL International members collaborating on a new XBRL Primer from XBRL Japan, along with public working drafts of the XBRL GL Version 1.1 Taxonomy, the Financial Reporting Taxonomies Architecture 1.0, and XBRL Specification 2.1 Candidate Recommendation 2.  



Major government sector projects are already underway including the $39 million Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council (FFIEC) effort for modernization of quarterly bank financial reports. On the international taxation front, consider Inland Revenue of Great Britain’s project for filing of corporation tax, Japan’s National Tax Agency, the Australian Tax Office (ATO), and the Netherlands Belastingdienst (tax authority) who have all committed to use XBRL.

Worldwide, XBRL jurisdictions are established in Australia, Canada, Germany, the International Accounting Standards Committee Foundation, Japan, Netherlands, New Zealand, United Kingdom and the United States.  Provisional jurisdictions include Ireland, Korea, and Spain; the Shenzhen exchange in China has begun developing an XBRL based filing system.  Preliminary activity has been noted in India, Singapore, South Africa, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Finland, Columbia, Argentina, and Brazil.

Over 16 companies are listed as either XBRL software developers or XBRL solution providers in the latest listing of XBRL vendors, and recent counts of XBRL products are approaching 50.  This support will certainly help fuel the upcoming growth.  [Note:  XBRL is currently playing a prominent role in the conversion of accounting into International Accounting Standards, especially in the European Union, which will move to IAS in 2005.]

Bottom line is this.  Although XBRL may seem like something that has taken longer than you may think it should to develop and mature, the promise of XBRL will soon be fulfilled.  The year 2004 will see many exciting developments in the world of XBRL, but just wait until you see what happens in 2005."   


Resources:
SmartPros XBRL Resource Center:  http://finance.pro2net.com/x41232.xml
XBRL.org Press Releases:  http://www.xbrl.org/newsandevents/index.asp?sid=4
XBRL Frequently Asked Questions:  http://www.xbrl.org/whatisxbrl/index.asp?sid=14
XBRL Survey with Major Accounting Software Vendors:  www.xbrl.org/whitepapers.asp?sid=21

Neal

Neal J. Hannon, CMA 
XBRL Editor, Strategic Finance Magazine
University of Hartford   (860) 768-5810
(401) 769-3802 (Home Office)

Bob Jensen's helpers for XBRL are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/XBRLandOLAP.htm#XBRLextended 


Things are happening so quickly with XBRL, any book on it is apt to be somewhat out of date before it is even printed.  However, the following book is now available from the FEI.

XBRL AND THE SEC 
On Mar. 23, members of the Committee on Finance and Information Technology (CFIT) met with Corey Booth, the CIO of the SEC, to discuss the merits of XBRL. Chairman Garry Lowenthal and Vice Chairman Taylor Hawes presented Mr. Booth with a letter from the Committee on how XBRL could be implemented at the SEC to achieve greater transparency of financial information. They also walked Mr. Booth through a demonstration of an XBRL tagged financial statement. CFIT promised to work with the SEC to help develop XBRL taxonomies and assist with any questions they might have.

Everything You Wanted To Know About XBRL, but Were Afraid To Ask: A CFO's Guide $49
By Financial Executives Research Foundation, Inc.
 http://www.fei.org/rfbookstore/PubDetail.cfm?Pub=152  


Muller: Alaska is Melting. Can Kyoto Save It?
To residents of Alaska, the prospect of even a small rise in the average temperature is a looming catastrophe. In fact, Alaska may well be a particularly sensitive alarm—like a canary in a mine shaft. The solution to global climate change, writes TechnologyReview.com columnist Richard Muller, lies not so much in the emissions-limiting Kyoto Treaty (which would not restrain mega-polluters China and India) but rather in supercharged R&D on efficiency technologies.
http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/wo_muller041604.asp?trk=nl


From PBS
American Experience: The Pill --- http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/pill/index.html 


From the FERF Newsletter on April 6, 2004

SEVENTH ANNUAL GLOBAL CEO SURVEY: ENTERPRISE RISK MANAGEMENT Chief executives worldwide are well aware of today's risks, from global terrorism to currency instabilities to excessive regulation. Still, nearly half of the CEOs responding to PricewaterhouseCoopers' Seventh Annual Global CEO Survey say that they are more aggressive risk-takers than in the past. And what are their biggest fears? Over-regulation, increased competition and currency fluctuations.

These are just some of the key findings from PwC's survey, which included interviews with nearly 1,400 CEOs in 40 countries.

This year's survey examines risk and enterprise risk management (ERM). The Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission

(COSO) commissioned PwC to draft a framework of risk management concepts and guidelines, and an exposure draft has been circulated for comment. According to that draft, ERM provides a framework for corporate management to effectively deal with uncertainty and associated risk and opportunity, and thereby enhance its capacity to build value.

Entry-level ERM involves six basic processes:

* Formal enterprise-wide risk identification,

* Formal enterprise-wide assessment processes for risk,

* Formal enterprise-wide risk response,

* Formal enterprise-wide control activities for risks,

* Formal enterprise-wide monitoring of risk, and

* Processes for internal and external regulatory reporting compliance.

In PwC's survey, between 60% and 73% of the CEOs report that these elements are well embedded in their organizations.

According to PwC, full implementation of ERM is far more advanced, and is in place when:

* The CEO has the information needed to manage risk at the enterprise level,

* A common terminology or set of standards exists for managing risk,

* ERM is fully integrated within the strategic planning process,

* Risk management data are quantified to the greatest possible extent,

* Risk management is fully integrated across all functions and business units,

* All employees and executives in the organization understand their level of personal accountability within the ERM framework,

* The costs of regulatory compliance are closely tracked, and

* Compliance with regulatory requirements is closely managed and monitored to eliminate the risk of noncompliance.

In PwC's survey, only 13% to 33% of the CEOs strongly agree that their companies have one or more of these elements in place.

To download the entire PwC report, with detailed survey findings and more information on the survey participants and methods, click on http://www.pwcglobal.com/Extweb/insights.nsf/docid/D4700640C39F9D6780256E1A00417F29 


Question
Why do you think the number of applications you've received this year is slightly lower than in 2003, when 1,080 people applied to the B-school? 

Answer from Mireia Rius, Director of Admissions, University of Navarra's IESE Business School in Barcelona.  This university ranks No. 8 on BusinessWeek's 2002 list of full-time, non-U.S. MBA programs. http://www.businessweek.com/bschools/content/apr2004/bs2004045_9908_bs037.htm?c=bwmbaapr7&n=link2&t=email 
 

IESE had a lot of international exposure the past few years. This led to a surge in applications, which grew by almost 10% each year. This year's slight decrease in applications is natural after the significant upshot and is a reflection of the general decline in the [MBA] market due to the difficult job market


Inside Public Accounting Newsletter (Not Free) --- http://www.hudsonsawyer.com/ 
For a review of its history, see http://www.smartpros.com/x43213.xml 

Bob Jensen's bookmarks for accounting newsletters are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#News 


Medical Mood Ring Want to have doctors wrapped around your finger? MIT engineers have developed a “ring sensor” that monitors the wearer’s temperature, heart rate, and blood oxygen level. http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/prototype60404.asp?trk=nl 


Lights Out Again? Months after the stifling blackout last August that crippled eight states and parts of Canada, North America’s aging power grid is still, well, aged—and not much has been done to fix it, according to a new study. http://www.technologyreview.com/blog/blog.asp?blogID=1351&trk=nl 


Serious Matters on Tax

My updates are on the dwindling of corporate income tax revenues are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#TaxAvoidance 

 

Not-So-Serious-Matters on Tax

Have you heard the one about the magic accounting wand? The puppies? The "ought to be" deductions? Believe it or not, the following tales are real-life tax stories told by Texas certified public accountants. No names are being used to protect the innocent. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/99010 

With a wave of the magic accounting wand

A married couple entered their CPA's office with a large box of unsorted receipts from their business. They upended the box on the CPA's small conference table and proceeded to go through the receipts with the CPA. They picked up each receipt and announced to the CPA what it was for -- gas, copy paper, tires, etc. After they had gone through the pile, they asked the CPA to tell them on the spot what they owed, apparently expecting the CPA to wave his magic accounting wand over the pile of receipts and divine the couple's tax liability.

No puppies, no puppies!

A couple arrived at a CPA's office to prepare their tax return. They saw a picture of the CPA's dog and asked if they had told the CPA that their dog had puppies earlier in the year. The CPA said no, and the couple went on to tell the CPA that they sold all six of the puppies for $400 each. The CPA did the math and informed the couple that they had to count the $2,400 as income. The couple then quickly restated their position, and said, "Oh, I'm sorry, we meant we did have six puppies, but they all died, and we're still in mourning."

Didn't you know that deductions and credits are physical objects?

A CPA completed a tax return for a partnership that owned several hospitals and sent a cover letter that said, among other things, "each partner should pick up his or her share of deductions and credits on the applicable line of their personal tax returns." The CPA received a call from one of the partners asking if the CPA could tell him where he needed to pick up his deductions and credits. The CPA tried to refer him back to the letter, but the partner said, "No, you don't understand. I want to know where to come to pick up my deductions and credits."

Taking care of the animals

A client who passed away stipulated in her will that the beneficiary was required to provide food, shelter, and medical care to her animals during their lifetimes or be stripped of his inheritance. The executor of the will became quite upset when he learned that those expenses were not tax deductions on the estate's income tax return.

The cost of looking good

A business owner asked his CPA if he could deduct the cost of his haircut. The CPA said no. The owner's argument: getting regular haircuts is a legitimate business expense because having short hair is essential to attracting customers to his construction business.

Oh, the Bahamas!

A business owner and his family took a spring break vacation to the Bahamas. Several other couples, who happened to be customers of the business, joined the family on the trip. The business owner asked his CPA if he could deduct the cost of his family's trip because having the customers along made it a "business trip." The CPA said no.

Towing equipment by any other name...

In reviewing the prior corporation tax returns of a potential physician client, a CPA noticed depreciation schedules for "towing equipment." When the CPA asked the client for an explanation, the doctor replied, "ski boat."

Those "ought to be" deductions

Every year, one client brings his CPA all of his receipts and three stacks of cancelled checks. They're labeled: ought to be, should be, and may be, for the expenses he's paid throughout the year that he thinks might be tax deductions. An example of the ought to be deductions: the expenses for his daughter's coming-out party.

Taxes in wartime

One CPA had a Navy officer in charge of logistics for nine states come in with his tax return already prepared for the CPA to look over. He said, "I don't have time to mess with these taxes. I have a war to run."


"Top 10 Most Unusual Sales Tax Laws," SmartPros, April 9, 2004 --- http://www.smartpros.com/x43199.xml 

Taxware released its second annual Top 10 Most Unusual Sales Tax Laws For 2004, compiled by Taxware's team of tax specialists.

10. In Ohio, a gift basket of fruit or candy is not subject to sales tax, as the "true object sought is the food items contained within," not the basket. However, a candy-filled lead crystal candy dish -- which is considered a decorative container -- would be fully taxable.

9. In Connecticut, the sale of a pumpkin in its "natural grown state" is exempt from sales tax because it is considered a food product. However, if the pumpkin is sold after being painted, its "primary purpose" becomes decoration and is subject to sales tax.

8. In Washington, crushed, shaved or cubed ice is not taxable, but blocks of ice are.

7. Up until 2003 in Texas, donuts and other individual sized bakery items sold in quantities of five or less were taxable -- they are now exempt.

6. Antacids are exempt in Connecticut, but are taxable once one crosses the border into Massachusetts.

5. In Minnesota, cough drops are taxable as "candy."

4. In California, fresh fruit is exempt, but an apple purchased through a vending machine is taxable on 33 percent of the price.

3. In Minnesota, massage therapy provided by a licensed masseuse is subject to the state sales tax unless the massage is for the treatment of an "illness, injury or disease," in which case it is tax exempt.

2. In Texas, "intravenous systems, supplies and replacement parts" are tax-exempt when used in the treatment of humans, but taxable when used in the treatment of animals.

1. In Wisconsin, cloth diapers are exempt, but disposable baby diapers are taxable.


This chief of New York Times Digital once famously planned to spin off the online division and take it public. Didn't happen. Now that his operation is turning a tidy profit, Martin Nisenholtz is back to making declarations.

"Putting Blogs in Their Place," byMartin Nisenholtz, Wired Magazine, April 2004 --- http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/12.04/view.html?pg=3 


April 13, 2004 message from alfred.rodriguez@trinity.edu 

I'm pleased to announce that Trinity University's new "Parent's Guide to Student Information" is now available online. This guide, along with it's accompanying Student Consent to Release Educational Records form can be accessed from the following links:

Parent's Guide to Student Information:

http://www.trinity.edu/departments/registrar/Parental_Access.pdf

Student Consent form:

http://www.trinity.edu/departments/registrar/FORMS/Student_Consent.pdf

This information will be shared with all incoming new students and their parents beginning this summer. Please feel free to contact me should you have any questions or if you have difficulty opening these documents.

My thanks to all those who were instrumental in developing our new policy.

Fred

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Alfred Rodriguez, Jr.
University Registrar
Trinity University
One Trinity Place
San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
ph (210)999-7201 fax (210)999-7202

alfred.rodriguez@trinity.edu 

www.trinity.edu/departments/registrar/


From the Cornell University Library

Pastimes and Paradigms: Games We Play ---  http://rmc.library.cornell.edu/games/index.html 

The Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections investigates the evolution of games since 1800 through PASTIMES AND PRADIGMS : GAMES WE PLAY. The exhibition includes a wide variety of antique and contemporary games, as well as rare books on rules, strategies, and recreation. Featured items include early nineteenth-century geographical board games; a Civil War game; suffrage games that garnered support in the battle for women's votes; a vintage Monopoly game (the subject of Cornell President Jeffrey Lehman's first book); gambling punchboards; and a selection of games inspired by television programming. 

Although they differ in design and presentation, they share a single message: the game is the medium.

Bob Jensen's history bookmarks are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob2.htm#History 


Social Science Research Council ---  http://www.ssrc.org 


Forwarded by The Cha Cha Lady (who I think leans toward the Republican Party).

While suturing a laceration on the hand of a 70-year-old Massachusetts business Tycoon (whose hand had been caught in a fence while working at his country home), a doctor and the old man were talking about G. Bush possibly being in the White House one more term.

The old Tycoon said, "Well, ya know, Bush is a 'post turtle.'"

Not knowing what the old man meant, the doctor asked him what a post turtle was.

The old man said, "When you're driving down a country road and you come across a fence post with a turtle balanced on top, that's a post turtle."

The old man saw a puzzled look on the doctor's face, so he continued to explain, "You know he didn't get there by himself, he doesn't belong there, he can't get anything done while he's up there, and you just want to help the poor stupid bastard get down."


From PBS Television

The New Americans --- http://www.pbs.org/independentlens/newamericans/ 


Message sent to my students on April 15, 2004  (My threads on accounting for derivatives and hedging activities are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm )

I placed a paper in your student mail boxes.  It is by a member of the DIG and a former head of the CBOT office in New York    His name is Ira Kawaller and I occasionally do derivatives workshops with Ira --- http://www.kawaller.com/

The paper is entitled “What Analysts Need to Know about Accounting for Derivatives”  and appears in the March/April issue of Financial Analysts Journal --- http://www.aimr.com/publications/faj/
It is not free online.

In particular, note the section on Assessing Hedge Performance beginning on Page 25 and the Microsoft Corporation disclosure illustration.  I think this may be very similar to hedge performance in Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae.  Also note the J.P. Morgan illustration beginning near the bottom of Page 27.

Also note the cash flow versus fair value hedge discussion on Page 27.  For the final exam, note the discussion on why ineffectiveness as typically tested my not be a good measure of how well the hedge performed.

Pay particular attention to the conclusions on Page 29.

CONCLUSIONS

Despite the added transparency afforded by FAS No. 133's requirement that derivatives be recorded on the balance sheet as assets or liabilities, the job of interpreting financial statements continues to provide challenges when derivatives play a material role in the way a company is managed.  Special hedge accounting causes the effects of the hedge and the effects of the hedged item to be realized in a common accounting period, which is generally considered to be an appropriate way to assess hedge performance.  But the presentation may be muddied because hedge accounting may not be used across the board for all hedges and because the extent of the exposure that remains unhedged may not be immediately apparent.  For equity valuation purposes, knowing how much of an exposure remains unprotected may be more relevant than knowing how much a derivative might gain or lose--particularly because the derivative effect will typically be offset by a compensating value change associated with the hedged item.  Put another way, FAS No. 133's dedication to pairing the derivative's gain or loss strictly to the gain or loss of the designated hedged item--rather than to the overall associated market exposure--may provide useful information to the risk manager, but this information may be insufficient for the analyst.  This problem particularly afflicts fair value hedges.

For an analyst to evaluate any company--whether it uses derivatives or not--the analyst needs to know what price exposure exists, how much of this exposure is covered, and how hedges are managed.  Company managers may be hesitant to be fully transparent about some portion of this information for fear that it could be used by the company's competitors, but at a minimum, analysts should doggedly try to discern the magnitudes of the more critical exposures and how these risks are managed.  Uncovering this process might be as important as--or even more important than--results.

Analysts' assessments should also be influenced by their views as to the future course of prices associated with the exposures.  Clearly, these forecasts may be highly subjective, so they justify different valuations made by different analysts.  Still, the company that is perceived to be able to anticipate changes in critical prices (or interest rates or exchange rates ) and adjust hedge coverage accordingly should be valued more highly than the company that does not have this capability.  Unfortunately, making a reliable assessment of the company's skill by assessing a static picture of a derivatives position (i.e., a balance sheet value) and/or hedge results over a limited number of accounting periods is next to impossible.  Therefore, the analyst's knowledge of the talents and capabilities of a company's risk management team is critical information.




Household and Other Heloise-Style Hints --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob3.htm#Hints 


Forwarded by Don Mathis

What You Can Do With Vodka

01. To remove a bandage painlessly, saturate the bandage with vodka. The solvent dissolves the adhesive.

02. To clean the caulking around bathtubs and showers, fill a trigger-spray bottle with vodka, spray the caulking, let set five minutes and wash clean. The alcohol in the vodka kills mold and mildew.

03. To clean your eyeglasses, simply wipe the lenses with a soft, clean cloth dampened with vodka. The alcohol in the vodka cleans the glass and kills germs.

04. Prolong the life of razors by filling a cup with vodka and letting your safety razor blade soak in the alcohol after shaving. The vodka disinfects the blade and prevents rusting.

05. Spray vodka on vomit stains, scrub with a brush, then blot dry.

06. Using a cotton ball, apply vodka to your face as an astringent to cleanse the skin and tighten pores.

07. Add a jigger of vodka to a 12-ounce bottle of shampoo. The alcohol cleanses the scalp, removes toxins from hair, and stimulates the growth of healthy hair.

08. Fill a sixteen-ounce trigger-spray bottle with vodka and spray bees or wasps to kill them.

09. Pour one-half cup vodka and one-half cup water in a Ziploc freezer bag, and freeze for a slushy, refreezable ice pack for aches, pain, or black eyes..

10. Fill a clean, used mayonnaise jar with freshly packed lavender flowers, fill the jar with vodka, seal the lid tightly and set in the sun for three days. Strain liquid through a coffee filter, then apply the tincture to aches and pains.

11. Make your own mouthwash by mixing nine tablespoons powered cinnamon with one cup vodka. Seal in an airtight container for two weeks. Strain through a coffee filter. Mix with warm water and rinse your mouth. Don't swallow.

12. Using a q-tip, apply vodka to a cold sore to help it dry out.

13. If a blister opens, pour vodka over the raw skin as a local anesthetic that also disinfects the exposed dermis.

14. To treat dandruff, mix one cup vodka with two teaspoons crushed rosemary, let sit for two days, strain through a coffee filter and massage into your scalp and let dry.

15. To treat an earache put a few drops of vodka in your ear. Let set for a few minutes. Then drain. The vodka will kill the bacteria that is causing pain in your ear.

16. To relieve a fever, use a washcloth to rub vodka on your chest and back as a liniment.

17. To cure foot odor, wash your feet with vodka.

18. Vodka will disinfect and alleviate a jellyfish sting.

19. To remove cigarette smoke in your home or office mix one part vodka and three parts water and spray the clothing, then launder and let dry.

20. Pour vodka over an area affected with poison ivy to remove the urushiol oil from your skin.

21. Swish a shot of vodka over an aching tooth. Allow your gums to absorb some of the alcohol to numb the pain.

After reading this, can you believe that some people drink the stuff?


Forwarded by The Cha Cha Lady

Answering Machine at a Mental Hospital:

Hello, and welcome to Dane County mental health hospital.

If you are obsessive-compulsive, press 1 repeatedly.

If you are co-dependent, please ask someone to press 2 for you.

If you have multiple personalities, press 3,4,5 and 6.

If you are paranoid, we know who you are and what you want. Stay on the line so we can trace your call.

If you are delusional, press 7 and your call will be forwarded to the mother ship .

If you are schizophrenic, listen carefully and a small voice will tell you which number to press.

If you are manic-depressive, it doesn't matter which number you press, no one will answer.

If you are dyslexic, press 9696969696969696.

If you have a nervous disorder, please fidget with the pound key until a representative comes on the line.

If you have post-traumatic stress disorder, s-l-o-w-l-y & c-a-r-e-f-u-l-l-y press 0-0-0.

If you are bi-polar, please leave a message after the beep or before the beep or after the beep. Please wait for the beep.

If you have short-term memory loss, press 9. If you have short-term memory loss, press 9. If you have short-term memory loss, press 9.

If you have low self-esteem, please hang up. Our operators are too busy to talk with you.

If you are menopausal, hang up, turn on the fan, lie down and cry. You won't be crazy forever.

If you are blonde, don't press any buttons, you'll just mess it up.


Forwarded by The Cha Cha Lady

How did the Easter bunny become part of a religious holiday? --- http://ask.yahoo.com/ask/20021108.html 

Dick Haar laid an egg --- http://media.euniverse.com/funpages/cms_content/2461/flyin_egg_fight.swf


Forwarded by Vidya

ARE YOU LONESOME TONIGHT? (Senior Citizen Version)
For the accompanying music go to http://mywebpages.comcast.net/jwwaller/elvis/ 

Are you lonesome tonight? Does your tummy feel tight? Did you bring your mylanta and tums?

Does your memory stray, To that bright sunny day, When you had all your teeth and your gums?

Is your hairline receding? Your eyes growing dim? Hysterectomy for her, And its prostate for him.

Does your back give you pain? Do your knees predict rain? Tell me dear, are you lonesome tonight?

Is your blood pressure up? Good cholesterol down? Are you eating your low fat cuisine?

All that oat bran and fruit, Metamucil to boot. Helps you run like A well oiled machine.

If it's football or baseball, He sure knows the score. Yes, he knows where it's at But forgets what it's for.

So your gallbladder's gone, But your gout lingers on, Tell me dear, are you lonesome tonight?

When you're hungry, he's not, When you're cold, he is hot, Then you start that old thermostat war.

When you turn out the light, He goes left and you go right, Then you get his great symphonic snore.

He was once so romantic, So witty and smart; How did he turn out to be such A cranky old fart?

So don't take any bets,

It's as good as it gets,

Tell me dear, are you lonesome tonight?

Ladies and gentlemen, Elvis has left the building.


Forwarded by David Fordham

With all the scandals going on relating to inflated earnings, I remember a joke told by the former Governor of Florida Reubin Askew:

Corporate Profits are like Sex.

1. Everyone believes there is a lot more of it in the world than there really is.

2. Everyone is convinced that someone ELSE is getting more than their fair share.

3. When asked to report publicly, everyone wants others to think they have a lot more of it than they really do.

4. Lying in the reporting process is one of the things that makes it all so much fun.


Forwarded by the Cha Cha Lady

"16 THINGS THAT IT TOOK ME OVER 50 YEARS TO LEARN" by Dave Barry

1. Never, under any circumstances, take a sleeping pill and a laxative on the same night.

2. If you had to identify, in one word, the reason why the human race has not achieved, and never will achieve, its full potential, that word would be "meetings."

3. There is a very fine line between "hobby" and "mental illness."

4. People who want to share their religious views with you almost never want you to share yours with them.

5. You should not confuse your career with your life.

6. Nobody cares if you can't dance well. Just get up and dance.

7. Never lick a steak knife.

8. The most destructive force in the universe is gossip.

9. You will never find anybody who can give you a clear and compelling reason why we observe daylight savings time.

10. You should never say anything to a woman that even remotely suggests that you think she's from her at that moment.

11. There comes a time when you should stop expecting other people to make a big deal about your birthday. That time is age eleven.

12. The one thing that unites all human beings, regardless of age, gender, religion, economic status or ethnic background, is that, deep down inside, we ALL believe that we are above average drivers.

13. A person, who is nice to you, but rude to the waiter, is not a nice person. (This is very important. Pay attention. It never fails.)

14. Your friends love you anyway.

15. Never be afraid to try something new. Remember that a lone amateur built the Ark. A large group of professionals built the Titanic.

16. FINAL Thought for the day: Men are like a fine wine. They start out as grapes, and it's up to the women to stomp the crap out of them until they turn into something acceptable to have dinner with.


Grandma's only complaint about life in a nursing home (you guess) --- http://www.justsaywow.com/funpages/view.cfm/2266 




And that's the way it was on May 1, 2004 with a little help from my friends.

Jesse's Wonderful Music for Romantics (You have to scroll down to the titles) --- http://www.jessiesweb.com/

I highly recommend TheFinanceProfessor (an absolutely fabulous and totally free newsletter from a very smart finance professor) --- www.FinanceProfessor.com 

 

Bob Jensen's bookmarks for accounting newsletters are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#News 

News Headlines for Accounting from TheCycles.com --- http://www.thecycles.com/business/accounting 
An unbelievable number of other news headlines categories in TheCycles.com are at http://www.thecycles.com/ 

 

Jack Anderson's Accounting Information Finder --- http://www.umsl.edu/~anderson/accsites.htm

 

Gerald Trite's great set of links --- http://www.zorba.ca/bookmark.htm 

 

Paul Pacter maintains the best international accounting standards and news Website at http://www.iasplus.com/

 

The Finance Professor --- http://www.financeprofessor.com/about/aboutFP.html 

 

Walt Mossberg's many answers to questions in technology --- http://ptech.wsj.com/

 

How stuff works --- http://www.howstuffworks.com/ 

 

Household and Other Heloise-Style Hints --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob3.htm#Hints 

 

Bob Jensen's video helpers for MS Excel, MS Access, and other helper videos are at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/ 
Accompanying documentation can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/default1.htm and http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm 

 

Click on www.syllabus.com/radio/index.asp for a complete list of interviews with established leaders, creative thinkers and education technology experts in higher education from around the country.

 

Professor Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-999-7347 Fax: 210-999-8134  Email:  rjensen@trinity.edu  

 

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April 8, 2004

Bob Jensen's New Bookmarks on April 8, 200
Bob Jensen at Trinity University
 

For earlier editions of New Bookmarks, go to http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookurl.htm 


Quotes of the Week

Have you ever heard of kids playing ‘accountant’? … even if they wanted to BE one?
Rita Rudner --- http://www.ritafunny.com/  (as quoted in an email message from David Fordham)

The market's obsession with this one monthly number is obscuring the larger economic outlook, which remains robust -- even for jobs
Amey Stone, "Beyond the Jobs Figure Fixation," Business Week, April 2, 2004 --- http://www.businessweek.com/bwdaily/dnflash/apr2004/nf2004042_6507_db042.htm 

A little lemon and seltzer will remove those pesky ink stains after you've been fingerprinted.
Martha Stewart

Playing Favorites: Why Alan Greenspan's Fed lets banks off easy on corporate fraud.
Ronald Fink --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud063004.htm#SPE 

How to earn billions and pay no taxes!
MORE THAN 60% OF U.S. FIRMS didn't pay federal taxes for 1996 through 2000, federal budget officials said. Their report shows how deeply rooted corporate tax avoidance, legal and otherwise, has become.

John D. McKinnon --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm 
The sad part is some of our leading international accounting firms pushed even beyond the legal limits in selling sham tax shelters to large and supposedly prestigious corporations.

... it offends all three big religions — the Muslims, the Jews and the Christians. Plus the vegetarians. It's a four-shot.
George Carlin's promotion of his forthcoming book entitled WHEN WILL JESUS BRING THE PORK CHOPS?
George is trying to cash in the the latest craze for new "religious" books.  Better order your copy in advance so you won't miss out on this "four shot" book.
I picked this up from the last lines of his interview in Time Magazine, March 29, 2004 --- http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1101040329-603219,00.html 

An ambitious $92 billion reshaping of the Army appears to be in serious trouble, according to the General Accounting Office. Even worse, the Army might have known it from the start.
Noah Shachtman, "GAO Says Army on Road to Ruin," Wired News, April 5, 2004 --- http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,62931,00.html?tw=newsletter_topstories_html 

Guess what the real reason is behind the slump in music sales?  The music is lousy.
The recording industry insists that CD sales are off because everyone's online stealing the music. Now a study comes along saying that piracy has little, if anything, to do with stagnant sales.
Wired News,
March 30, 2004 --- http://www.wired.com/news/digiwood/0,1412,62871,00.html?tw=newsletter_topstories_html 

"The conviction rate in these cases is 85 percent in federal court," said Ira Lee Sorkin, a New York defense lawyer and former prosecutor. "It's not hard to win these cases."  Last week, Jamie Olis, a former midlevel executive at Dynegy, a Houston energy company, was sentenced to more than 24 years in prison for his role in accounting fraud at the company. The sentence was one of the most severe imposed in a white-collar fraud case, prosecutors and defense lawyers said.
Alex Berenson, "Despite 2 Mistrials, Prosecutors Rack Up White-Collar Victories," The New York Times, April 4, 2004 --- http://www.nytimes.com/2004/04/04/business/04TYCO.html 

"The pressures are just unbelievable to control costs and improve productivity," said George Milkovich, a longtime Cornell University professor of industrial relations and co-author of the leading textbook on compensation. "All this manipulation of payroll (illegal time card changes by mangement) may be the unintended consequence of increasing the emphasis on bonuses."
Steven Greenhouse, "Altering of Worker Time Cards Spurs Growing Number of Suits," The New York Times, April 4, 2004 --- http://www.nytimes.com/2004/04/04/national/04WAGE.html 

American expectations for health care over the last thirty years have been developed during the most massive transfer of wealth into one sector (health care) that history has ever seen. Health care is a fiscal black hole into which we can pour all of our children’s future. Yet we are no healthier than many nations that spend far less, and we leave 43 million Americans uncovered by health insurance. Americans now spend on average approximately $5,500 per person on health care.
Former Governor Richard Lamm, The Brave New World of Health Care

The beauty of war is that each leader of a band of assassins has his flag blessed and invokes God before setting off to exterminate his neighbors.
Voltaire

The charge that sticks is that Clarke has been hypocritical. Back in August 2002, when he still worked for Bush, Clarke said on the record in a TIME story that the Bush Administration's al-Qaeda policy review had moved "as fast as could be expected." He then gave the much publicized briefing to reporters on background, insisting the White House had "vigorously" pursued the Clinton Administration's policy on al-Qaeda. He said no new "plan" or "strategy" to take action against al-Qaeda had been developed under Clinton. In his book, Clarke says the opposite. He describes this plan in detail and castigates the Bush Administration for letting it languish. "My view was that this Administration, while it listened to me, didn't either believe me that there was an urgent problem, or was unprepared to act as though there were an urgent problem," he told the commission. Before Sept. 11, the Bush White House made terrorism "an important issue but not an urgent issue."
Amanda Ripley, "
The Chief Accuser:  How credible is Richard Clarke?," Time, March 28, 2004 --- http://www.time.com/time/covers/1101040405/nclarke.html 
Also Clarke's timing is indeed convenient. Against All Enemies came out the week he testified before the commission. If he receives a typical royalty rate, he would make at least $1.8 million from sales.

Bring me the Viagra Hal!
An aging populace will look increasingly to technology to enhance its quality of life, writes columnist Rodney Brooks. Computers and telecommunications will help ease social isolation, and ultimately, robots could help care for the infirm. 
"Technology's Elder Boom An aging populace will look increasingly to technology to enhance its quality of life," by Rodne Brooks, MIT's Emerging Technologies, April 5, 2004 --- http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/brooks0404.asp?trk=nl 

Jenkins: Look, Listen, Walk You've seen them. Maybe you're one of them. They're the zombies of the New Media Era: the unthinking, the unseeing, the undead. They are all around us. The guy who sits on the subway, his headphones obscuring his hearing, so closed off from the people next to him that he starts singing out loud. The woman talking on her cell phone walking down the street, her eyes half shut, her thoughts miles away, until she sinks up to her ankles in a puddle of melting snow. These people are using mobile technology to cut themselves off from the world. What if we could use these same technologies to engage with the world more fully? That, writes columnist Henry Jenkins, is the goal of "augmented reality"--the concept of heightening our awareness of the real world by annotating it with information conveyed by mobile technologies. http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/wo_jenkins040204.asp?trk=nl 

The only way to preserve your culture is to put it in jeopardy.
Paul Andreu

Google Mail Google's new e-mail service seems too good to be true--1,000 megabytes of free storage, no pop-ups, and no banner ads. Well, they did announce it on April 1. 
http://www.technologyreview.com/blog/blog.asp?blogID=1346&trk=nl  http://www.technologyreview.com/blog/blog.asp?blogID=1347&trk=nl 

Sure it costs nothing and offers 1 GB of storage, but Google's newly announced Gmail service gives some privacy advocates the creeps. A program would scan missives for keywords and serve ads based on the content.
Kim Zetter, "Free E-Mail at Steep Price," Wired News, April 1, 2002 --- http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,62917,00.html?tw=newsletter_topstories_html 

In his most recent Irascible Professor post, Poor Elijah suggests that a war rages on between the camps of those who teach through allowing students to "discover" and those who teach through "direct" instruction. His comments, erudite and acerbic, address math and its close cousins, the hard sciences. Striking me as peculiarly absent from his discussion is the softer, though no less contentious, subject of English. Educators in this field have begun to stray from rigorous and demanding expectations from themselves and students for the past few years, detrimentally affecting an entire generation, no less the immediate present.
Mark Shapiro, April 2, 2004 --- http://irascibleprofessor.com/comments-04-02-04.htm 

The Federal Court of Canada ruled on March 26 that Internet Service Providers can't be forced to turn over identities of suspected music swappers, throwing a roadblock in the path of the recording industry's efforts to crack down on the practice.
Terry Weber and Jack Kapicia, Globe and Mail, March 31, 2004 --- http://www.globetechnology.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20040331.wdownload0331/BNStory/Business/ 

Economic Benefits of Divorce
Married people go from having one larger family home to, when they divorce, two smaller homes for one or two people. That means the housing market is being driven by an influx of newly single people looking to buy smaller properties for their new smaller households.  Scotland has one of the highest divorce rates in Europe, with more than 10,000 marriage break-ups each year. With the average cost of divorce estimated at around £13,000, new divorcees are contributing millions to the economy on a yearly basis. Obvious bills such as lawyers’ and estate agents’ fees make up part of this expense, but hidden costs such as buying an extra sets of toys and clothes for the children and another set of household appliances, all add up. Statistics also show that many divorcees tend to splash out on treats and luxuries such as holidays.
"Divorced, lonely and angry ... and reaching for their wallets," Sunday Harold, April 4, 2004 --- http://www.sundayherald.com/40974 





Bob Jensen's January-March 2004 Updates on Frauds and the Accounting Scandals --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud033104.htm 

Bob Jensen's April-June 2004 Updates on Frauds and the Accounting Scandals --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud063004.htm 

News Headlines for Accounting from TheCycles.com --- http://www.thecycles.com/business/accounting 
An unbelievable number of other news headlines categories in TheCycles.com are at http://www.thecycles.com/ 


Don't Fall for This One --- You Could Spend Spend $1,000 and Then be Sentenced to Time in Club Fed
"IRS Warns of 'Corporation Sole' Tax Scam," AccountingWeb, March 31, 2004 --- http://www.accountingweb.com/cgi-bin/item.cgi?id=98963 

Scheme promoters typically exploit legitimate laws to establish sham one-person, nonprofit religious corporations. Participants in the scam apply for incorporation under the pretext of being a "bishop" or "overseer" of the phony religious organization or society. The idea promoted is that the arrangement entitles the individual to exemption from federal income taxes as an organization described in Section 501(c)(3) laws.

The scheme is currently being marketed through seminars with fees of up to $1,000 or more per person. Would-be participants purportedly are told that Corporation Sole laws provide a "legal" way to escape paying federal income taxes, child support and other personal debts by hiding assets in a tax exempt entity.

Read more at http://www.accountingweb.com/cgi-bin/item.cgi?id=98963 


You're Fired --- http://www.dfw.com/mld/dfw/living/8328484.htm?1c 

From The Wall Street Journal's Accounting Educators' Review on April 2, 2004

TITLE: Trump's Casinos Risk Bankruptcy, Auditors Warn
REPORTER: Christina Binkley
DATE: Mar 31, 2004
PAGE: A3
LINK: http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108068826233069530,00.html 
TOPICS: Audit Report, Auditing

SUMMARY: Auditors have issued a going concern audit opinion on Trump Hotels and
Casino Resorts, Inc. for the third year in a row.

QUESTIONS: 

1.) What is a "going concern"? What is a "qualified audit opinion"? In general, how and why is an audit opinion qualified because of a going concern issue?

2.) What are the particular circumstances under which Trump Hotels & Casino Resorts, Inc. has received a going concern audit opinion? Does it seem likely that this operation will go out of business?

3.) How does Mr. Trump describe the chain of events leading to the current state of Trump Hotels & Casino Resorts financial condition? If you were a shareholder in this business, would you be concerned about Mr. Trump's description of his handling of this company? What financial controls are designed to limit an entity's ability to take on too much debt? 

4.) Is it common for a company to receive a going concern opinion for three years in a row? What would you characterize as a typical chain of events following a company receiving such an opinion on its financial statements? 

5.) Does the status of this company's finances surprise you in light of Mr. Trump's recent TV notoriety?


Hi Amy, 

I have a tutorial on Excel's conditional formatting at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm

My Camtasia video on this topic is at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm

Bob Jensen

-----Original Message-----
From: Accounting Education using Computers and Multimedia [mailto:AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU] On Behalf Of Amy Dunbar
Sent: Monday, April 05, 2004 12:53 PM
Subject: Re: Software to develop "Drag and Drop" quizzes

 

Paul, you just made grading my Excel projects a lot easier.  I have never used conditional formatting so I checked Excel help.  I am making the cell color change if the entry is correct.  Students can immediately see if they are making an error.  In the past, I have always gone back and forth with my students until the spreadsheets are correct.  I bet this will cut down on the number of file transfers.  Thanks!!!!!!

Amy Dunbar
Department of Accounting
School of Business
University of Connecticut
2100 Hillside Road, Unit 1041
Storrs, CT 06269-1041

 -----Original Message-----
From: Fisher, Paul [mailto:PFisher@ROGUECC.EDU]
Sent: Monday, April 05, 2004 12:38 PM
Subject: Re: Software to develop "Drag and Drop" quizzes

 Another alternative is to do "conditional formatting" in EXCEL.  It is not as active, but with different colors you can get the same idea across.

Paul


Forwarded by Debbie Bowling

Breweries, Barbies, and Bankruptcies: Take the FORTUNE 500 Companies Quiz --- http://www.fortune.com/fortune/lists/2004/fortune500/quizzes/companies_quiz.html 


"Do female execs have cleaner hands?" by Stacy Teicher (Stanford University), Christian Science Monitor, March 15, 2004 --- http://www.csmonitor.com/2004/0315/p14s03-wmgn.htm 
Evidence suggests a link between women and ethical behavior. But they embezzle more often. In a post-Martha Stewart world, corporate America sifts conflicting claims. By Stacy A. Teicher | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor

Not long ago, it was the year of the whistle-blowing women - with Sherron Watkins of Enron, Cynthia Cooper of WorldCom, and Coleen Rowley of the FBI being celebrated on the cover of Time magazine. It was tempting to speculate that if more women were in charge, they'd be an ethical force capable of transforming top management.

But more recent criminal cases, against Martha Stewart and Enron's Lea Fastow, have tempered those hopes. Clearly businesswomen can cross ethical and legal lines right alongside the men.

So where should corporate America turn in a post-Martha world? As more women move into boardrooms and corner offices, can they have a cleansing effect?

Welcome to a contentious debate with plenty of ifs and buts - and few hard facts.

There is some evidence suggesting a tantalizing link between women and ethical business behavior. But not everyone buys it - and even those who do often disagree as to why.

"There's a camp that argues women are going to bring a different perspective based on their historically and culturally accepted caretaking roles," says Debra Meyerson, professor of education and organizational behavior at Stanford University. "And there's another perspective that doesn't buy into this [argument] that women and men are different in some fundamental way."

Many tread carefully somewhere in between. Advocates for appointing more women to corporate boards of directors say it would lead to better business practices - but not because women are inherently more ethical. "Because [women] have been outside [most corporate boards] for so long, as individuals they're bringing a new perspective. They're not necessarily just going to be one of the Greek chorus saying 'yes' to the CEO," says Toni Wolfman, chair of the corporate-board resource committee at The Boston Club, a professional women's group.

A 2002 Canadian study offers a rare glimpse beyond the anecdotes that are a staple of this debate. It found that 94 percent of corporate boards with three or more women ensured that their companies had conflict-of-interest guidelines, compared with 68 percent of all-male boards. When it came to verifying audit information, the figures were 91 percent vs. 74 percent, according to the Conference Board of Canada, an independent research group. The study doesn't claim a causal link, however, since it's possible that companies already engaging in such practices attract more women to their boards.

About 16 percent of board members in Canada are women. In Fortune 500 companies in the United States, it's about 14 percent. What's noteworthy about the Canadian study, Professor Meyerson says, is that it looked at boards with more than two women. Research has shown that unless a minority group reaches a tipping point of about 15 percent representation, its members are under extreme pressure to conform to the majority. Women who have served on boards confirm that finding, saying men show greater respect for their views as individuals when there is more than just a token woman present.

"We're not asking you to put them on [boards] because they're women, [but] if you're looking for the best directors, you can't afford to ignore half the universe," Ms. Wolfman says.

Embezzlement factor As more women reach positions of power in the business world, some observers say, there will simply be equal opportunity for corruption.

Embezzlement statistics bolster this argument. In 2002, women committed slightly more embezzlement crimes than men. A recent New York Times analysis of federal data showed that between 1993 and 2002, embezzlement by women increased 80.5 percent to 5,917 (compared with 5,898 by men).

In the broader category of occupational fraud and abuse, men do commit 75 percent of the crimes, and they steal larger amounts of money - a median of $185,000 compared with $48,000 for women, according to a 2002 report by the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners. That's because more men hold high-level positions where they can manipulate financial statements, argues Kyle Anne Midkiff, a certified fraud examiner and principal at Nihill & Riedley, P.C. in Philadelphia.

Continued in the article

Are women more ethical and moral? --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm#Women 


Just how good are your registrar's internal controls?

Forwarded by Debbie Bowling (who once turned down a $500 offer to change a grade)

"Southern mired in grades-for-money scandal," CNN News, April 3, 2004 --- http://www.cnn.com/2004/EDUCATION/04/02/money.grades.ap/index.html  

A worker in Southern University's registrar's office took money to change grades for 541 current and former students, the school's chancellor said Thursday. The scandal probably will cost at least some students their degrees and could lead to criminal charges.

Both undergraduate and graduate students at the nation's largest historically black university were implicated, and some paid to have as many as 20 grades changed, Chancellor Edward Jackson said. In the case that revealed the scandal, computer records showed a student receiving a degree she hadn't earned, he said.

"I strongly suspect when we start revoking grades, we'll start revoking degrees," Jackson said.

The school's report has been turned over to East Baton Rouge Parish District Attorney Doug Moreau, who said he intends to vigorously prosecute participants in the scandal.

Moreau said possible charges include filing false public records, forgery and bribery. He declined to provide details about the evidence, but said the university's investigation involved more than 2,000 possible grade changes.

Jackson said the scandal dates to 1995, and that the altered records were traced to a single assistant registrar who received money from students in exchange. He declined to name the worker.

A number of students interviewed on campus Thursday said they were upset that fellow students had bought grades.

"To me, it shouldn't be going on. You've got to earn your grade," said Leonard Pete, a senior.

Some students, however, said the practice was widely known, though none said they had ever paid for a grade.

"Sophomore year, it (cost) like $75 a grade," said Eddie Green, a senior.

Jackson said the yearlong investigation into the scandal began in March 2003, when a student enrolled in a Southern graduate program presented credentials showing she had earned a bachelor's degree from that department.

The department had no record that the woman had ever graduated and alerted university auditors, who discovered that unauthorized entries had been made in a number of academic records.

To prevent similar abuses in the future, the 17,000-student university has new internal controls in place and has assigned an internal auditor to monitor the registrar's office, Jackson said.

Continued in the article




Forwarded by Paula Ward

I have a new story on line. It’s on my web page at

http://www.geocities.com/jaward04@sbcglobal.net/dancfool.htm 

Just click on the link and scroll down to the bottom of the page to

     · Strike Zone 
     · Toasted Cheese 
     · Volume 4, Issue 1, March 2004 

The first line links directly to the story. The second links to the ezine. The third links to the table of contents. If you see a syntax error message, just click the no button and it will go away. If you don't see the error message, you will probably be assaulted with a pop up add. Sorry about that. The free web hosting SBC promises is a GeoCities site that spams the unsuspecting user. Now for my disclaimer. I do not endorse any of the products advertised by GeoCities.

Send future emails to me at jaward04@sbcglobal.net

John A. Ward
(aka Booger Jack)


And the winner is ________
Hint:  It's not Wal-Mart's Online Music Store

"New Web Music Stores Offer Unique Features, And One Is a Winner," Walter Mossberg, The Wall Street Journal,  April 1, 2004; Page B1 --- http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,personal_technology,00.html 


This is great!
Video History of Times Square from MSNBC --- http://www.marcprensky.com/writing/IITSEC%20Paper%202002%20(536%20V2-Final).pdf 


CourseBuilder extensions to DreamWeaver --- http://www.macromedia.com/resources/elearning/extensions/dw_ud/coursebuilder/

I shortened it to http://snipurl.com/14yu 

The CourseBuilder for Dreamweaver Extension is the most popular Macromedia learning extension. It accelerates the instructional development process with more than 40 pre-scripted learning interactions, quiz and assessment templates, and the ability to track results to a learning management system or database such as Lotus LearningSpace, using an AICC communication (instead of ADL SCORM).  

Bob Jensen's threads on the history of course authoring and course management software can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/290wp/290wp.htm 


"A Digital Slide Show For Your Coffee Table," by Walter Mossberg, The Wall Street Journal, March 31, 2004 --- http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108069211696669672,00.html?mod=gadgets%5Flead%5Fstory%5Fcol 

One of the downsides to the digital images that live in your PC or your camera's memory is that they aren't as tangible as printed photos. You can't slap a magnet on one and stick it to the refrigerator. You can't paste it into a scrapbook alongside your ticket stubs and caught-at-a-concert guitar pick. And worst of all, you can't frame and display digital images on your coffee table, without going through the effort of printing them out.

Unless you have the ultimate yuppie photo toy -- a digital picture frame. This gadget is just what it sounds like: a small, color liquid crystal display screen that looks like a regular picture frame but has built-in technology that allows it to display multiple digital images in slide-show format.

My assistant Katie Boehret and I have been testing digital picture frames from two companies -- Vialta and Pacific Digital. Vialta, which makes video phones we have recommended, offers the $299.99 VistaFrame digital picture frame. Pacific Digital's MemoryFrames come in two models: a $349 version that measures 5"x7" and an 8"x10" frame that goes for $449. We tested the 8"x10" model.

Both of these devices are attractive, but the MemoryFrame comes with a stylish wooden frame that you can attach to the outside of the screen to give it more of a classic feel. Vialta's VistaFrame, which is roughly 7½-inch-square, has a more futuristic appearance and comes in silver or gray. We tested the gray, which looks like brushed metal.

One big difference between the VistaFrame and MemoryFrame is the method for uploading photos. The VistaFrame has built-in slots on its side for five memory cards: CompactFlash, Memory Stick, SecureDigital, MultiMediaCard and SmartMedia. This makes it easy for digital-camera users to pop a memory card out of a camera and directly into the VistaFrame. You can copy up to eight images from the memory cards to the VistaFrame's internal memory, using a feature called "My Album."

Instead of memory-card slots, the Pacific Digital MemoryFrame has USB ports on its back side. These ports let you connect a computer, digital camera or portable "thumb" drive to the frame with the included USB cable. We connected our MemoryFrame to a thumb drive and a digital camera during our tests. The MemoryFrame can hold 80 images regardless of the size; all images are automatically copied over in the same size as the screen.

The MemoryFrame also comes with software called Digital PixMaster, which lets you mix your digital images with PowerPoint slides, graphics and audio. It has built-in speakers that will play the audio that you program to play with the images.

Continued in the article


Blackboard Announces General Availability of the Blackboard Content System, March 9, 2004  --- http://www.blackboard.com/about/press/prview.htm?id=269 

Blackboard Inc., a leading enterprise software company for e-Education, today announced the general availability of the Blackboard Content System™. Currently being implemented by 19 academic institutions, the Blackboard Content System benefits students, faculty and campus IT administrators by lowering the costs and increasing the simplicity of managing learning content, digital assets and e-Portfolios in an enterprise learning environment. The announcement was made in a keynote presentation to an audience of approximately 1,300 attendees at the 2004 Blackboard Users Conference in Phoenix, AZ.

The Blackboard Content System is one system in the Blackboard Academic Suite™, a comprehensive family of integrated applications that provides a unified enterprise environment for teaching, learning, research, knowledge-sharing, communication, and student life. With Blackboard’s common platform, students, instructors and other community members quickly acclimate to a look and feel that makes the online environment as familiar as the offline campus.

The three best-of-breed solutions that make up the Blackboard Academic Suite, the Blackboard Learning System™, Blackboard Content System and Blackboard Portal System™, are made more powerful together through a shared architecture, consistent interfaces, seamless file sharing, and robust administration features. Scalable from a single department to an entire university system, the Blackboard Academic Suite provides an integrated educational experience for students, faculty and staff, and an integrated management view for IT departments.

“Blackboard has rapidly become an integral part of education at Princeton, and enhanced nearly every aspect of that education, both by facilitating existing practices, but also by making possible entirely new practices that will help maintain and enhance Princeton's leadership in higher education,” stated Serge Goldstein, Director of Academic Services, Princeton University. “The Blackboard Content System will enable our faculty to more effectively manage and reuse course content.”

The Blackboard Content System incorporates application capabilities in four key areas: 

“The Blackboard Content System provides students and faculty with better ways to track and navigate learning resources and to showcase the work products and milestones of their educational careers through e-Portfolios,” said Matthew Pittinsky, Chairman of Blackboard. “Already we have seen a great response from our early adopters, and we are pleased to be showcasing the Blackboard Content System this week at our 6th Annual Users Conference.”

Bob Jensen's "old" threads on Blackboard are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/blackboard.htm 


Newspapers, attorneys and police use software that detects writers who steal content, as "text piracy" threatens to become the next digital windfall for attorneys.
"Electronic Snoops Tackle Copiers," by Randing Dotinga, Wired News, April 2, 2004 --- http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,62906,00.html?tw=newsletter_topstories_html 

New markets are finally opening up for plagiarism-detection software, a mainstay of academia that has struggled to expand its reach beyond term papers.

The scandal-plagued newspaper industry is considering whether to adopt the technology to crack down on copycats, while the New York Police Department is testing it as an investigative tool.But experts say the biggest potential market might be the publishing industry, which one day may find itself coping with the same kind of piracy that bedevils movie makers and music producers.

Some law firms are already using one type of technology "to essentially troll the Internet for the next Stephen Ambrose," said plagiarism-detection software developer John Barrie, referring to the late historian accused of peppering his bestsellers with snippets stolen from other people's work.

Barrie, whose privately held iParadigms company reports annual revenue of $10 million, is trying hard to woo new clients beyond its 3,500 current customers. Every college and university in the United Kingdom has already signed on for the service.

At campuses from the University of California to the University of Florida, students must submit term papers to iParadigms' Turnitin, a service that checks their content against huge databases of books, websites and other students' term papers.

Turnitin, by far the most popular brand of plagiarism-detection software, charges universities $1,000 for a license and an annual fee of 60 cents per student.

The software has had its share of critics, including students who worry about submitting their work to a giant database without compensation or recognition of their copyrights.

Some prestigious universities, including Harvard, Yale and Stanford, refuse to adopt the software. Meanwhile, students at universities with honor codes point out that there's no sense in pledging to be honest if administrators and professors figure some of them are lying.

"It raises all kinds of funny issues in that sense," said Rutgers University professor of management Donald McCabe, who studies college cheating and thinks schools should emphasize plagiarism prevention instead of trying to bust plagiarists.

Barrie, however, claimed the copyright concerns are overblown, and earlier this year told Court TV that students could still "take their Macbeth essay to the market and make millions."

News coverage of Turnitin has fallen over the last few years after its debut in the late 1990s, but the latest batch of journalism scandals has resurrected the media's interest.

First, The Hartford Courant newspaper in Connecticut announced it would consider using the technology after Turnitin software discovered that the president of a state university campus had plagiarized some of an op-ed commentary from three sources, including The New York Times, which suffered its own plagiarism scandal last year during the notorious Jayson Blair affair. (The university president later resigned.)

Bob Jensen's threads on plagiarism are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/plagiarism.htm 


I want to warn you that the site below links to commercial "universities" of varying quality and does not link to most major colleges and universities that are now offering various online education and training alternatives that are more extensive.  'There are also some alternatives that you will find at the commercial "universities" that you will not yet find at most major colleges and universities such as doctorates online, including DBA doctoral degrees in business administration.  I really cannot speak to the quality of some of these programs and was surprised to learn that the largest and most noteworthy University of Phoenix now offers a DBA online --- http://www.universities.com/Distance_Learning/University_of_Phoenix_Doctor_of_Business_Administration.html 

April 2, 2004 message from Support At Universities [support@universities.com

Our new website lists colleges and universities around the world, as well as the degrees they offer.

Here is our link:

http://www.universities.com/Distance_Learning 

We would like to have more people visit us, so we would appreciate your adding our link to your site.

Sincerely,

Stephanie Universities.com

Bob Jensen's links to these and to the online training and education alternatives at more main stream and traditional colleges and universities online are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/crossborder.htm 


"Wichita, Kan., College Students Try Out Classroom Interaction Technology," by Katherine Leal Unmuth, The Wichita Eagle, Kan. Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News --- http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/business/national/8309675.htm 

The blue remotes grasped by Wichita State University students taking a Wednesday evening "Economics of E-Business" class may resemble television remotes, but they're not.

Called the Classroom Performance System, or CPS, they're the latest classroom technology the W. Frank Barton School of Business is trying out.

Standing at the front of the classroom, Wichita State professor and associate dean Jim Clark wanted to know: What would be the minimum profitable price to sell Visual Studio .Net software in Vietnam? He supplied some numbers and gave the options: A. $399; B. anything more than $25; C. over $15; D. over $10; or E. over $0.

The students paused, then quietly lifted their clickers and pointed them toward a receiving unit. A moment later a screen showed how many voted for each response. The correct answer was C, and 11 of the 18 students got it right.

"It's a way to get students a little more involved," Clark said. "They're not just sitting there passively. It's way to check whether or not they're understanding what you tell them."

WSU's Center for Management Development also uses the system. And the Wichita school district is using it in a trial setting at East High School.

CPS allows instructors to administer and grade quizzes, informally poll students and take attendance electronically.

It's marketed by eInstruction, a company in Denton, Texas, founded by a former teacher. Among the clients listed on its Web site: Cessna Aircraft Co. and the Boeing Wichita Credit Union. According to the site, more than 450 universities are using it in some way.

Business dean John Beehler said it helps increase classroom participation.

"If you see this glazed look -- I call it the cocker spaniel look -- you know they're not getting it," he said. "This tool lets the faculty see if they're really getting it."

The business school has wired all classrooms for the system. It has 64 clickers and is considering buying more. Current students did not pay for the CPS remotes, but in the future each student could pay $15 to $20, Clark said. So far, implementing CPS in the business school has cost about $6,000, he said.

Continued in the article

Hypergraphics Corporation was one of the first vendors of remote control systems --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/290wp/290wp.htm 
That company evolved through a number of corporate name changes and is now IV Systems --- http://www.ktc.net/IVsystems/new.htm 

The Texas Instrument alternative is summarized at http://education.ti.com/us/about/press/release/news48.html 

Of course many electronic classrooms, including my own, have built in capability for two way computer and audio interacts when the students wear their ear phones.  Also see  http://oldpueblomoo.arizona.edu:7000/3580/ 


Teens praise online algebra lessons --- http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/2004/Mar/30/ln/ln17a.html 

The school has enough textbooks, but the students don't need them in Yvette McDonald's algebra class at Kahuku High and Intermediate School.

Kahuku students, from left, Brendan Melemai, Daesha Johnson and James Bautista use computers instead of books in algebra class. The interactive computer program was developed last year by Honolulu Community College. Jeff Widener • The Honolulu Advertiser

And that's a good thing.

It's because her students in grades 9 through 12 learn math not with books but through an interactive computer program developed last year by Honolulu Community College and being piloted in four Hawai'i high schools, a middle school and a community college.

With this new approach, the hope is to boost high school math scores and cut down on expensive and time-consuming remedial math in college.

"It's pretty good," said 17-year-old James Bautista Jr., peering intently at the algebra equation on the screen before choosing the correct answer from several suggestions.

"Sometimes teachers make it harder than it really is. If I see it first and try to understand it myself without the teacher dictating, it's kind of better. When I'm pressured into it, I'm not good. I'm better at this where I can take my time."

While it's too soon to know if this online algebra class will improve high school math scores, end-of-semester assessment testing at HCC in mid-May will show how it's working among college students. Assessment testing will be done in high schools next year.

"They should have this at Waialua," Bautista said. "I failed math at Waialua twice — algebra and geometry. The teacher's a cool guy, but he's so quick I had a hard time keeping up with him."

"It's so much easier," agrees 17-year-old Francisco "Pancho" Peterson. "If you click on the magnifying glass, it shows you the procedure of what you should know, and that helps a lot. It shows you what to do. In a way, it's like a big cheat sheet to figure out what you did."

Continued in the article

Bob Jensen's threads on assessment are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/assess.htm 


Commercial journal publishers will resort to almost anything to keep ripping off libraries and scholars.

April 1, 2004 message from Carolyn Kotlas [kotlas@email.unc.edu

OPEN ACCESS PUBLISHING

"Commercial publishers used to object to OA [open access] journals on the ground that they bypassed peer review. But that was clearly false. The latest refinement of the objection is that peer review at OA journals cannot be trusted. It must be compromised or corrupted by the business model, which covers expenses by charging an upfront fee on accepted articles. Such journals will have an incentive, the argument goes, to accept any paper from a paying author."

In the March 2004 issue of the SPARC OPEN ACCESS NEWSLETTER, Peter Suber examines the topic of open-access journals and dismisses many of the publishers' arguments against them. The issue also includes numerous links to other open access resources. The newsletter is available online, at no cost, at http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/newsletter/03-02-04.htm.

SPARC Open Access Newsletter [ISSN 1546-7821] is written by Peter Suber and published by SPARC. Suber, who writes and consults in the area of open access to scientific and scholarly research literature, is a research professor at Earlham College.

The Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition [SPARC] is "an alliance of academic and research libraries and organizations working to correct market dysfunctions in the scholarly publishing system." For more information, contact: SPARC, 21 Dupont Circle, NW, Suite 800, Washington, DC 20036 USA; tel: 202-296-2296; fax 202-872-0884; email: sparc@arl.org; Web: http://www.arl.org/sparc/.

Bob Jensen's threads on rip offs by scholarly journals and the grass roots movements by libraries and scholars to open new channels of research reporting can be found at  http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm#ScholarlyJournalRipoffs 


April 1, 2004 message from Carolyn Kotlas [kotlas@email.unc.edu

SURVEYING THE DIGITAL FUTURE

On June 8, 1999, the University of California - Los Angeles Center for Communication Policy began the first comprehensive, long-term study of "how life is being transformed by computers and the Internet." The UCLA World Internet Project surveys include households in the U.S., Europe, Latin America, the People's Republic of China, and Singapore. "Surveying the Digital Future," the survey's Year Three report, released in January, found the following:

"Television viewing is lower among Internet users than non-users in all of the surveyed countries."

"Information on the Internet is viewed as generally reliable and accurate by a large percentage of users in most countries."

There are "surprisingly high levels of online use among the poorest citizens in all of the survey countries."

"Even though respondents consistently say that online access is a powerful tool for information gathering, the Internet is not perceived by most users as having an effect on school grades."

For more information about the survey and to view all reports, go to http://ccp.ucla.edu/pages/internet-report.asp.

The UCLA Center for Communication Policy, created in September 1993, is "a forum for the discussion and development of policy alternatives addressing the leading issues in media and communication." For more information, contact: The Center for Communication Policy, UCLA, Box 951586, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1586 USA; tel: 310-825-3711; email: internet@ucla.edu; Web: http://ccp.ucla.edu/index.asp.

 


One of the selling points of cyberschools is the apparent savings they offer. It's not so clear that money is actually being saved, and states are seeking more accountability. By John Gartner.

"Virtual-School Costs Under Siege," by John Gartner, Wired News, April 1, 2004 --- http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,62890,00.html?tw=newsletter_topstories_html 

In addition to offering the latest technology and allowing parents to be more actively involved in their children's education, virtual schools were also thought to lower the cost of teaching.

Although her schools have no classrooms, desks, cafeterias or gymnasiums, they aren't much cheaper to operate than a traditional school, says Mickey Revenaugh, vice president for partnerships and outreach for Connections Academy. Revenaugh says that the cost of computers, printers and cutting-edge curricula offsets most of the virtual schools' cost savings from paying fewer teachers and minimizing building-maintenance fees.

Revenaugh says many parents are drawn to the school because of the quality of the curriculum, which includes textbooks, novels, art supplies and workbooks. "We send about 100 pounds of books and materials for each child, and the shipping costs are quite high because everything has to be returned to us," says Revenaugh.

But several states question the amounts that for-profit companies such as Connections Academy charge to operate schools on their behalf. Legislators and education departments in Pennsylvania, Idaho, Ohio and Florida want more oversight authority over how virtual schools spend their funding.

Publicly funded virtual schools are run by boards of directors who answer to either the state or the school district that granted the school charter. The boards contract with private companies to provide services -- which can include management services, technology and support services, curriculum, teaching staff and administrators -- to the schools. Other virtual schools follow the brick-and-mortar tradition of hiring staff as employees of the state or district.

Continued in the article

Bob Jensen's threads on cost of online training and education programs can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/distcost.htm 


 

There are some new online degree and certificate programs in forensic accounting. For example, you can choose and online or onsite program at Florida Atlantic University --- http://www.masters-in-forensic-accounting.com/ 

Hi Tommie,

It is interesting how you have combined this new program with internships at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. 

Bob Jensen

-----Original Message-----
From: Tommie W Singleton [mailto:tsinglet@uab.edu]
Sent:
Saturday, April 03, 2004 3:51 PM
To:
Jensen, Robert
Subject: FW: Re: Web-Based Class in Forensic Acct

Bob,

We at UAB have a 4-course series in Fraud and Forensics. We just started offering the courses this semester. There is a lot of information on a temporary web site for our program at:

http://www.business.uab.edu/FACULTY/TSingleton/fraud/Index.html 

The Mid-Atlantic AAA has a panel scheduled on Friday (April 16) on the topic of accounting and forensic education, for which I am a panelist. Academics interested in this topic should try to get there or get debriefed by at attendee. Our program was also mentioned in the ACFE newsletter last month, and the state society of CPAs this month. We have 27 students taking the first course, all taking it as an elective! Have raised almost $20K since January for scholarships. The program is really off to a good start. The University approved our concentration and we are now filing for state approval for an official concentration in forensic accounting, accounting degree. We plan to offer 3 of the 4 courses to professionals (the 4th is a practicum) in some format; my preference is online - but we have not yet firmed up those plans. Expressed interest, sent to UAB, would help me to push for the idea. Currently, the program is both undergraduate and graduate credit.

Feel free to offer this info to the mailing list ( I was once a subscriber but not now).

Please forgive my rambling but I know full well that you are the "CPU" for IT in accounting.

Respectfully,
Tommie Singleton
tsingleton@uab.edu
(205) 934-8862


April 4, 2004 message from Jagdish Gangolly [JGangolly@UAMAIL.ALBANY.EDU

Bob,

Under funding from the US Department of Education, Department of Justice, and the NSF, we (SUNY-Albany) have put together two graduate course modules of relevance in forensics: risk assessment and incident handling.

While this semester they are open only to senior officials at the New York State Police and the New York State Office of Cyber Security and Critical Infrastructure Coordination, starting in the fall we probably will open it to the University community.

Later today I am putting up the website (www.albany.edu/acc/courses/ia/inf766) for the Incident Handling module. The module description reads:

"The objectives of the course are to learn what are incidents, why they occur, who/what causes them, how to detect them, what are the preventive/protective measures that organizations can take, what to do when they do occur, when do they need to be reported and to whom.

We will learn the various types of incidents, what to do in case of each to protect the evidence, prevent gaps in the chain of their custody. In particular, we will learn how and what kinds of evidence to obtain, how to prevent evidence from getting lost or destroyed, how to ensure that the evidence is admissible. We also will learn what is evidence, what are different types of evidence, basic rules on collecting, handling, and documenting evidence."

While the module is not specific to accounting, and has a distinct computing and criminological flavour, I thought some AECMers might be interested.

For those interested in some of the work we are doing at Albany, the website is: http://www.albany.edu/cifa/

Jagdish


Hi Malcolm,

I really appreciated your message since it confirms what I along with others much more prophetic than me were asserting in the very early years of online training and education.

What I am referring to is the shift in emphasis of colleges and universities away from degree programs into a multitude of certificate programs (not that I am suggesting that this one venture at Indiana University is an earth shaking shift in emphasis at this early stage.)

One of the early prophets of this trend was Chancellor Langenberg whom I quoted years ago at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/255wp.htm 

"Diplomas and Degrees are Obsolete," D.N. Langenberg, The Chancellor of the University System of Maryland, The Chronicle of Higher Education, September 12, 1997, Page A64.

Bob Jensen

April 1, 2004 message from Malcolm McLelland [mclellan@UIC.EDU

Indiana University is offering an an online, 8 course, 12 credit hour, "Certificate Program in Business Valuation and Forensic Accounting" through its Kelley Direct Online Programs beginning Fall 2004. The information is not yet on the website ( http://kdirect.iu.edu/ ) but probably will be soon.

MMc


Hi Again Malcomb,

One of the famous quotes that I strongly disagree with is the following:

"You guys (traditional colleges) are in trouble and we (corporate programs) are going to eat your lunch." 
Michael Milken, on the future of higher education

I think what you've pointed out is that certificate programs are on the rise in traditional universities like the University of Illinois st Chicago. One of my favorite examples is the MBA certificate program at the Simon Graduate School of Business at the University of Rochester. This is not a full MBA degree. It is a MBA certificate that can be earned on a part-time basis in considerably less time than the two years required for a traditional MBA at Rochester. If you ask why this program was organized, I think it is an early recognition of shifting market conditions in education --- http://www.simon.rochester.edu/programs/program_pt.aspx 

An interesting added feature is that enrollment in the certificate program enables students who do well to avoid having to take the GMAT when and if they apply for the full MBA program at Rochester.

I don't think the above program has any online courses, but it could well move online. One thing I want to stress is that distance education is not synonymous with "low contact" with instructors and other students. One of the main selling points is that online technology makes it possible to have much higher contact on nights, week ends, and most any time of day if the online course is designed for such interaction. Once again, my best example of this is the instant messaging (IM)pedagogy of Amy Dunbar at the University of Connecticut --- http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/002cpe/02start.htm#2002  
(You have to scroll down a bit to find Amy)

The problem with programs such as a traditional MBA degree program is that a "one size fits all" degree generally makes veteran employees laugh when a newly-minted and naïve MBA graduate is hired. A typical MBA graduate is not "certified" in any area of business expertise.

The college graduate of the future will not have a one-size-fits-all diploma. Instead, each student's transcript will be a portfolio of certificates in writing skills, language skills, computing skills, athletic skills, classical studies education, finance education, management education, accounting education, etc. There will be no "graduates" per se. Education and training will simply add to one's portfolio of certificates and experience record.

Education certificate programs will have prerequisites. For example, a student might not be able to enroll in a finance curriculum without having the required economics certificates.

"Diplomas and Degrees are Obsolete," 
D.N. Langenberg, The Chancellor of the University System of Maryland, 
The Chronicle of Higher Education, September 12, 1997, Page A64.

Bob Jensen

-----Original Message
Sent: Friday, April 02, 2004 5:50 PM
Subject: Certificate programs: Focused, short-duration training

Bob,

Interesting. I've not read much about business education in general, or online accounting education in particular, but I guess there's more I can add that some may be interested in:

The University of Illinois at Chicago has a few certificate programs that have become successful in Chicago, though they're not online to my knowledge. I was fairly blase about the idea of certificate programs until I ran into an executive in downtown Chicago who, though a Northwestern grad, had taken a short Entrepreneurship certificate program at UIC. He was very pleased with the course and didn't mind the tuition of about $2,000 for what was a low-total-contact-time course. Presumably he's not an outlier given the overall sucess of the certificate programs.

Though low-contact courses (whether online or not) seem like a Bad Thing pedagogically, the demand for them might suggest otherwise. Based on my discussion with the executive, and on a long discussion I had with Denny Riegle (ex-HR Director of Andersen North America), there are perhaps some good explanations for the demand: The executive liked the idea he could complete a course *in a short time period focusing directly on subject matter of interest to him*; and he didn't mind paying a lot for it. Denny Riegle mentioned that--no offense to me and my colleagues--Arthur Andersen could do a far better job than academics at teaching their professionals substantive technical matter. The reason he gave was this: Andersen would always find the best experts in the firm--and they had good ones--in a narrow technical area to teach their internal courses, provided in the form of intense short-duration (i.e., immersion) training.

As I think about it the discussion here might suggest why online programs and certificate programs might be a Good Thing pedagogically (though I personally much prefer the classroom environment, both as a student and as a teacher). Further, it does seem to suggest "Diplomas and Degrees [could become] Obsolete" in the sense of imparting narrow technical knowledge rather than broad general education.

Best regards,

Malcolm

April 3, 2004 reply from Malcolm McLelland [mclellan@UIC.EDU

Bob,

Interesting again: I suppose the trend toward certificate programs is similar to the unbundling of services and pricing in banking which began in the 1980s. Banks used to try and sell "relationships" (i.e., bundled services) but had to start unbundling services to compete in an environment of financial disintermediation. Interestingly, Milken himself was a leader in promoting financial disintermediation. Perhaps he saw "traditional universities" as being analogous to "traditional relationship bankers" (which had real trouble adjusting to a deregulated environment with non-bank competition and disintermediation). So, it's interesting to think about how the analogy either holds up or breaks down.

Perhaps what Milken missed was that financial disintermediation and the competitive difficulties of banks were driven largely by deregulation; they weren't driven so much by IT. So he might have made the mistaken inference that IT wouldn't matter in education, or that "traditional universities" wouldn't use it to adapt. Since university faculty are quite IT-proficient relative to the general public, it seems reasonable they could use IT to effectively compete with non-traditional sources of training. So unbundling academic training and facilitating unbundling using IT seems a good way to avoid Milken's prediction, I suppose.

More interestingly, the prediction

" ... each student's transcript will be a portfolio of certificates in writing skills, language skills, computing skills, athletic skills, classical studies education, finance education, management education, accounting education, etc. There will be no "graduates" per se. Education and training will simply add to one's portfolio of certificates and experience record."

suggests unbundling education in a way similar to the unbundling of financial services resulting from disintermediation driven by Milken and others. I don't know when Milken made the comment, but in the end I think his prediction will be off the mark.

There seems to be a paper roaming around somewhere in all this about the relationship between accounting labor markets and the demand for accounting education . . .

MMc


That's a Morae --- http://www.techsmith.com/products/morae/default.asp 
New from Techsmith (the Same Company that Developed Camtasia and SnagIT) 

Morae is the only fully integrated, all-digital solution for analyzing human-computer interaction. Powered by TechSmith's unique Rich Recording Technology, Morae combines both user and system activity into one synchronized recording that is indexed and searchable. Review and analyze recording sessions quickly and accurately - then edit and share your insight with anyone, anywhere.

Recorder Features:

Rich, synchronized recording. Record screen video, camera video and audio of the user, Web page changes, mouse clicks, keyboard entry, onscreen text and Markers entered through Remote Viewer. All recorded information is automatically synchronized by Rich Recording Technology.

One-click or customized recording. Click the Start button to record with the default settings. Or create and save a configuration file with custom settings, such as:

Test recording option. Use this option to test your recording settings prior to beginning an actual recording.

Audio and video preview. Recorder automatically scans the computer system for camera and microphone devices. Use the live preview of camera video and audio to easily make adjustments.

Remote Viewer Features:

Network connection. Connect Remote Viewer to Recorder via a LAN/WAN (including wireless) or a Virtual Private Network (VPN).

Remote observation. View desktop activity sent real-time from the Recorder source computer.

Customized logging system. Add markers that are communicated to Recorder, saved and synchronized with the recording.

Manager Analysis Features:

Synchronized viewing. Review synchronized screen and camera video. Select any event and the camera and screen recordings instantly move to when the event occurred.

Flexible searching. Search only for events of interest or for text that appeared onscreen during recording.

Instant calculation. Quickly calculate metrics such as time on task with automatic time-stamping of events and a dynamic built-in calculator.

Navigable results. Visualize search results in a time-stamped list view or interactive graph format, synchronized with the video. Export the results to a comma-delimited file for import into other applications.

Text and audio annotation. Add text or audio notes to Markers or isolated sections of the recording.

Manager Presentation Features:

Create and edit. Create highlight videos with an easy-to-use interface. Add audio notes.

Organize. Drag and drop video and title clips to the Storyboard. Add and edit clips there, too.

Customize Camera PIP. Include camera video PIP over the screen video, and adjust its position and size on a clip-by-clip basis or for the entire video.

Produce and share. Produce your highlight video as an industry-standard AVI file for easy sharing. Pack and Show option ensures that the video will play on any system.

 


Denny Beresford noted the article below.
"Revenge Of The Bean Counters No longer frail in the face of fraud, accounting firms are thriving on new laws that give them real clout," by Daren Fonda, Time Magazine, March 22, 2004 --- http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1101040329-603239,00.html 

There's a joke in the accounting trade that the difference between a wobbly grocery cart and a corporate auditor is that the cart has a mind of its own. Very funny, unless you had invested in MCI (formerly WorldCom), which recently announced that the pretax income it reported for 2000 and 2001 was just a tad off--$74.4 billion less than it had said, after writedowns and adjustments. Outside auditors have signed off on bogus earnings reports and balance sheets at companies from Rite Aid to Xerox. In some cases, auditors dealt with corporate brass intent on concealing thievery; WorldCom's ex-CFO, Scott Sullivan, recently pleaded guilty to fraud and conspiracy charges, for instance. In other cases, auditors simply lacked spine: again and again, they failed to police the books aggressively for fear of losing the client, along with consulting gigs that brought in higher profits than standard audit work.

The tables have turned. Strengthened and emboldened by the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, which overhauled accounting responsibilities, the bean counters have taken off their kid gloves and snapped on rubber ones. With their federally issued mandate to look for trouble, accountants no longer have to take a company's word that its audit policies are legit. The accountants have the power to challenge corporate ledgers with impunity — and they're raking in money doing so. "Auditors and audit committees are now in the catbird seat," says Harvard Business School professor Jay Lorsch. Companies no longer feel free to dump their auditors, for fear of sparking a public spat; no one wants to spook jittery investors, provoke shareholder lawsuits or another regulatory crackdown. "There's more respect for the auditor," says Julie Lindy, editor of Bowman's Accounting Report. "Companies no longer think the audit process is about creating the illusion that they're jumping through hoops."

The tables have turned. Strengthened and emboldened by the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, which overhauled accounting responsibilities, the bean counters have taken off their kid gloves and snapped on rubber ones. With their federally issued mandate to look for trouble, accountants no longer have to take a company's word that its audit policies are legit. The accountants have the power to challenge corporate ledgers with impunity — and they're raking in money doing so. "Auditors and audit committees are now in the catbird seat," says Harvard Business School professor Jay Lorsch. Companies no longer feel free to dump their auditors, for fear of sparking a public spat; no one wants to spook jittery investors, provoke shareholder lawsuits or another regulatory crackdown. "There's more respect for the auditor," says Julie Lindy, editor of Bowman's Accounting Report. "Companies no longer think the audit process is about creating the illusion that they're jumping through hoops."

The change in the relationship is largely because of Sarbanes-Oxley, known in the trade as Sox or Sarbox. The 2002 law stiffens accountants' spines in part because it places them under a new federal watchdog agency that will soon start spot-checking their work. That agency, the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, also has an industry moniker — Peek-a-Boo — and recently issued a stricter set of rules detailing how auditors should evaluate internal controls. Companies must test these controls regularly, and such tests must be conducted by a firm different from the company's outside auditor, to avoid conflicts of interest. The agency's chairman, former New York Federal Reserve Bank chief William McDonough, is close to finalizing joint supervision rules with the European Union — welcome news to U.S. investors after the collapse of Parmalat, the Italian firm that had concealed $18 billion in debt.

Bottom line: Be nice to your accountants — or else. Outside auditors answer to an audit committee made up of at least two independent board members; previously they might have dealt only with a chief financial officer, and "it would not have been unusual for CFOs ... to try to limit the scope of an audit," says Scott Green, head of compliance for the law firm Weil, Gotshal & Manges. Since the law bars accounting firms from selling certain consulting services to audit clients, including such lucrative ones as information-systems design, auditors face less pressure from their partners to pass cooked books.

The new measures have "put the fear of God" in corporate bosses and their employees "to make sure that auditors get accurate information," says Edward Nusbaum, CEO of Grant Thornton, the nation's sixth largest accounting firm. Gary Shamis, a managing partner at SS&G Financial Services in Cleveland, Ohio, says he recently met with the audit committee of a client "for the first time in 20 years." Because auditors are under greater scrutiny and because the law demands it, they must also document the process more meticulously.

Continued in the article

A few quips consistent with Fonda's article.

A Quote from FAS 123 History (1993)
Dennis R. Beresford and James J. Leisenring came to the Red Lion Inn on a hot August morning with a simple goal: to explain a change in an accounting rule. Before it was over they were lucky to have escaped the first lynching in San Jose in a half-century. Measuring out the rope were 300 seriously pissed off Silicon Valley CEOs and other senior execs who could see the ruin of their lives' work because some glorified bean counters in Washington had decided to count sacrifice flies as home runs.
Michael S. Malone, Upside Today, November 1, 1993 --- http://www.upside.com/texis/mvm/story?id=34712c0a45 

We are neither hunters nor gatherers.  We are accountants.
New Yorker
Cartoon

It's up to you now Miller.  The only thing that can save us is an accounting breakthrough.
New Yorker
Cartoon


Assessing The ROI Of Marketing Promotions

An emerging class of software helps execs track the success of product promotions and comply with government regulations. http://update.informationweek.com/cgi-bin4/DM/y/egIL0GMPWZ0G6p0CSak0AF

Bob Jensen's marketing bookmarks are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#Marketing 


Following on the heels of a similar IASB international requirement  
Lobbying bribes will pour into Congress!

Share-Based Payment—an amendment of Statements No. 123 and 95 
(Proposed Statement of Financial Accounting Standards) --- http://www.fasb.org/draft/ed_intropg_share-based_payment.shtml 

On March 31, 2004, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) issued a proposed Statement, Share-Based Payment, that addresses the accounting for share-based payment transactions in which an enterprise receives employee services in exchange for (a) equity instruments of the enterprise or (b) liabilities that are based on the fair value of the enterprise’s equity instruments or that may be settled by the issuance of such equity instruments. The proposed Statement would eliminate the ability to account for share-based compensation transactions using APB Opinion No. 25, Accounting for Stock Issued to Employees, and generally would require instead that such transactions be accounted for using a fair-value-based method.

The Board invites comments on all matters in the proposed Statement, particularly on the specific issues discussed in the Notice for Recipients section. Respondents need not comment on all of the issues presented and are encouraged to comment on additional issues as well.

Continued at http://www.fasb.org/draft/ed_intropg_share-based_payment.shtml 

Now watch for U.S. legislation to override the proposed amendments.  The steps on Silicon Valley's preferred approach to employee compensation --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory/sfas123/jensen01.htm 


"Expensing Options: An Overblown Storm," by David Henry, Business Week, April 1, 2004 --- http://www.businessweek.com/bwdaily/dnflash/apr2004/nf2004041_0928_db035.htm  
FASB, the accounting rulemaking body, has heard plenty from opponents of its new proposal. Their chances of prevailing are slim, however.

NO REPEATS. 
Representative Richard H. Baker (R-La.) announced just hours after FASB posted its draft on Mar. 31 that he will hold hearings on its impact before his capital-markets subcommittee of the House Committee on Financial Services. He says the rule could stifle new companies and job creation. "I fear FASB is beginning to stand for Flatten All Startup Businesses," he said.

Still, this time around observers doubt FASB will buckle again -- or have to. Current board members generally view the 1994 episode as a debacle that must not repeat itself. It damaged FASB's credibility as a principled rulemaker and weakened the board's resolve to back rules that corporate executives might not like, even if they would help investors.

In the interim, many experts agree, executives have become even more aggressive in their ploys to use accounting rules to pump up earnings to drive up stock prices -- and their options payoffs. FASB Chairman Robert Herz has been stoically saying for months that part of his job this spring will be going to Washington to be publicly harangued.

LITTLE IMPACT. Besides will power, FASB has momentum on its side. Not only have nearly 500 companies volunteered to begin expensing options but they've generally seen no bad consequences from doing so. A study of 335 of those companies by Towers Perrin, a compensation consultant, found no impact on their stock prices.

The proposed rule would likely reduce reported earnings of S&P 500 companies by less than 3%, according to analysts at Bear, Stearns & Co. That's down sharply from the 18% hit they would have been felt had the rule been in effect in 2002. The reason for the decline: Other earnings have increased, and companies have been issuing fewer options and apparently shifting to other forms of pay.

At the same time, despite the efforts of U.S.-based tech-industry lobbyists, the International Accounting Standards Board recently adopted a similar expensing rule that will apply next year to more than 7,000 companies listed in Europe.

Continued in the article

Bob Jensen's threads on employee stock options are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory/sfas123/jensen01.htm


When recruiting teens for college and/or particular careers such as accounting, here's one of the competitive tools that we have not successfully exploited.  This type of thing is also being successfully employed in recruiting and training, but does not seem to have widespread success in educational institutions.

Questions
What has become the most successful and most controversial recruiting tool of the U.S. Army?  And how is gaming linked to the forthcoming enormous impact of Grid Computing?

Answers
For the answer to the second question on Grid Computing, go to http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/updateee.htm#Future 

I viewed the answer to the first question of television.
I watched this while eating breakfast on March 31.
CBS News on March 30, 2004 proclaimed that an Internet game has become a major recruitment tool.  The game that is especially successful is called America's Army.  The official version of this game is at http://www.americasarmy.com/ 

"Army Recruits Video Gamers," CBS News, March 30, 2004 --- http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2004/03/30/eveningnews/main609489.shtml 

The soldiers are real. But they're also actors, staging scenes for the Army's latest war game.

It's a video game created by the U.S. Army to win over the hearts and minds of American teenagers.

And, as CBS News Correspondent Jim Acosta reports, judging by these faces, mission accomplished.

Game player Rob Calcagni believes the game is going to work on a lot of guys his age.

"Definitely, because it's a fun game," says Calcagni.

The game, "America's Army" has become such an overnight hit, the Army staged a tournament in New York. Recruiters were waiting at the door.

"This is a fantastic recruiting opportunity," says Lt. Col. John Gillette. "We would like to sign up as many as possible. We are looking for five to ten."

One of these teens enlisted after playing the game, the other two are thinking about it, which is exactly what the creator of "America's Army" had in mind.

"We look at all the things that the Army is doing that is under the control of the Army that captures people's attention and the game is number one," says the game's creator Col. Casey Wardynksi.

America's Army has surpassed even the Pentagon's expectations. It's now the number one online action game in the country. The Army hasn't seen a recruiting tool this effective since "Be all that you can be."

But psychology professor Brad Bushman of the University of Michigan, a critic of violent video games, complains "America's Army" isn't real enough.

"War is not a game," he says.

"The video game does provide a sanitized view of violence," says Bushman. "For example, when you shoot someone or when you are shot you see a puff of blood; you don't see anyone suffering or writhing in pain."

"Kids aren't stupid," says Wardynski. "They know if they come into the army there is a reason that we have rifles and tanks and all that stuff."

The players insist they understand the meaning of "game over."

"If you are going to join the Army, you know the risk," says one gamer, Bart Koscinski. "In this game you might die like eight times in like 15 minutes. In real life people know what they are getting themselves into."

New editions of "America's Army" are now being developed for home video game systems -- a move that will deploy even more young cyber-soldiers to the military's virtual battlefield.

CombatSim.com --- http://www.combatsim.com/ 

Welcome to the web's largest resource of professionally-written articles and news about military combat simulations and strategy games. Our archives of news and articles span the golden age of this category of games from January of 1996 to February of 2003.

DEFENSE COMBAT SIM OLYMPICS –METHODOLOGIES INCORPORATING THE “CYBER GAMING CULTURE” bu Flack Maguire, Michael van Lent, Marc Prensky, and Ron W. Tarr --- http://www.marcprensky.com/writing/IITSEC%20Paper%202002%20(536%20V2-Final).pdf 

There have been many changes in the past twenty years in the implementation of simulation and computer games, including game development, usage in fixed locations, and event-based experiences both in the civilian and commercial spaces. This paper examines each of these three areas individually in order to predict their likely future developments. It then evaluates the dynamic potential for the military that lies at the crossroads where these trends are merging, and relates their interaction to the growing popularity of the online computer gaming experience.

Although far from a complete study, this paper aims to add to the discussion of these industry trends.

The paper proposes that there is a strong benefit to the military for recruiting, pre-training, and training of active duty members through the combination of :

· Choosing, building, or modifying effective combat simulation games for military use.

· Operating computer game competitions with significant military presence – similar to the air shows of

today – for event-based and location-based computer gaming competitions

· Using the combined venues of (a) online gaming competitions, (b) location-based game centers, and (c)

large scale gaming competitions

· Operating under the sports model of Leagues (by appropriate military warfare specialty for each League)

and further dividing the Leagues into competing Divisions.

By reaching out in this way to a wider spectrum of possibilities for including the cyber entertainment culture, the military will, we predict, experience benefits in recruiting, pre-training, and training, making further use of the compelling attraction of computer games that has been demonstrated by games’ recent rise to a predominant role for military age people in our society.

"Computer Games Liven Up Military Recruiting, Training," by Harold Kennedy, National Defense Magazine, November 2002 --- http://www.nationaldefensemagazine.org/article.cfm?Id=967 

Computer games—which entertain millions of U.S. teenagers—are beginning to breathe fresh life into military recruiting and training.

Earlier this year, for example, the U.S. Army launched a new computer game—called “America’s Army”—over the Internet.

Aimed at encouraging teens to join up, it enables players to experience both basic and advanced training, join a combat unit and fight in a variety of environments, including arctic Alaska, upstate New York and a third-world city.

Players can fire on a rifle range, run an obstacle course, attend sniper school, train in urban combat and parachute from a C-17 transport.

The game accurately depicts military equipment, training and the real-life movements of soldiers, said Lt. Col. George Juntiff, Army liaison officer to the Modeling, Virtual Environment and Simulation (MOVES) Institute, at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, Calif., which developed the game.

“America’s Army” features sound effects by moviemaker George Lucas’ company, SkyWalker, and Dolby Digital Sound. In addition, sound effects from the movie “Terminator II” were provided at no charge.

The game is getting considerable attention. During its first two weeks, more than a million Americans downloaded the game for free, Juntiff said.

“That’s an enormous number,” he said. “It’s the largest release in computer game history.”

Even more people are likely to acquire the game starting in October, Juntiff said, when the Army was scheduled to begin distributing it as a free CD set to a target audience over the age of 13. The developers plan to upgrade the game every month to attract new players, he said.

Actually, “America’s Army” consists of two separate games—”Soldiers,” a role-player based on Army values, and “Operations,” a shooter game that takes players on combat missions. It was developed and distributed at a cost of $7.5 million by MOVES and the U.S. Military Academy’s Office of Economic and Manpower Analysis at West Point, N.Y.

The computer game is a “very cost-effective” way to reach potential recruits, especially compared to television advertising, said Maj. Chris Chambers, OEMA deputy director. “It is also a more detailed means of showing the American people what we do.”

The game also puts the Army in a positive light, said Juntiff. “It lets people know the Army is high-tech. It’s not what they see in the movies.”

The game, in addition, raises ethical issues, Juntiff said. “The game sets rules of engagement, and if you violate those rules, you pay the price.”

Once they enlist, recruits, these days, can expect to encounter computer games throughout their military training, said Michael R. Macedonia, senior scientist for the U.S. Army Simulation, Training and Instrumentation Command (STRICOM), headquartered in Orlando, Fla. Even well-known commercial games have been adapted for military use, he told National Defense.

That process began, he said, in the 1980s, when the Army modified the Atari tank battle game, “Battlezone,” to let it have gunner controls similar to those of a Bradley Infantry Fighting Vehicle. The idea, he explained, was to enhance the eye-hand coordination of armor crews.

Then, in the mid-1990s, the Marines edited the commercial version of the three-dimensional game “Doom” to create “Marine Doom,” to help train four-man fire teams in urban combat.

More recently, the Army’s Soldier Systems Center, in Natick, Mass., has commissioned the games developer, Novalogic, of Calabasas, Calif., to modify the popular Delta Force 2 game to help familiarize soldiers with the service’s experimental Land Warrior system.

The Land Warrior system includes a self-

contained computer and radio unit, a global-positioning receiver, a helmet-mounted liquid-

character display and a modular weapons array that adds thermal and video sights and laser ranging to the standard M-4 carbine and M-16A2 rifle.

A customized version of another computer game, Microsoft Flight Simulator, is issued to all Navy student pilots and undergraduates enrolled in Naval Reserve Officer Training Courses at 65 colleges around the nation. The office of the Chief of Naval Education and Training has installed the software at the Naval Air Station in Corpus Christi, Texas, and plans to install it at two other bases in Florida.

LB&B Associates, of Columbia, Md., has modified the game engine from author Tom Clancy’s best-selling computer game, “Rainbow Six Rogue Spear,” to train U.S. combat troops in urban warfare. The game—marketed by Ubi Soft Entertainment, of San Francisco—is based one of Clancy’s military novels.

The new version—which is still being developed—will not be used to improve marksmanship, but to sharpen decision-making skills at the small-unit level, said Michael S. Bradshaw, LB&B’s Systems Division manager. LB&B has completed a proof-of-concept version, which “worked brilliantly,” Bradshaw said. The project, he explained, has been turned over to the Institute for Creative Technology for final development.

Continued in the article

March 31, 2004 reply from David Fordham

Have you ever heard of kids playing ‘accountant’? … even if they wanted to BE one?
Rita Rudner --- http://www.ritafunny.com/  (as quoted in an email message from David Fordham)


"The military industrial porn complex," by John Feffer, Salon.com, March 30, 2004 --- http://www.salon.com/tech/feature/2004/03/30/military_mags/index_np.html 

Popular science magazines used to be aimed at the geeky wannabe inventor. Today, it's all about the glamour of war.

Photo spreads of supersized weapons, sidebars of eye-popping stats, and prose of pumped-up power: What is happening to popular science magazines? It's not quite hardcore, like the descriptions of raw, sweaty military ops in Soldier of Fortune or the Marines' in-house organ, Leatherneck. The science magazines have more of a soft-core vibe. Over the last several years, several have turned themselves into military versions of a Victoria's Secrets catalog.

Take the September 2003 issue of Popular Mechanics. The cover proclaims "American Megapower: Inside the Most Awesome Fighting Force On Earth." A bat-winged stealth bomber presides over a group shot of tanks, an aircraft carrier and a visored soldier. The text inside amounts to an unabashed love letter to the Pentagon. No mention is made of how this megapower appears to be bogged down in Iraq or that there are any limits to military force, scientific or otherwise.

Continued in the full article (not free)


Hi Neil,

You might contact Greenleaf Publishing at http://www.greenleaf-publishing.com/ 

Other authors have had similar difficulties with large publishing houses who may at times be worried about offending certain constituencies, but generally the problem is more one of perceived low profitability. There are some publishers like Doubleday or Random House who will publish controversial material if the controversy itself might lead to huge sales. They often prefer authors where were insiders turned whistleblowers.

What I would do is contact Robert Bryce who published Pipe Dreams: Greed, Ego, and the Death of Enron on his own through Public Affairs, 250 West 57th Street, Suite 1321, New York, NY 10107. Bryce had quite a lot of success with this excellent book that was not published by one of the leading publishing firms..

You might also contact Tony Tinker at Baruch College in NYC. Tony has close ties with publishers who are willing, like him, to buck the establishment. Tony's email address is TTinker@baruch.cuny.edu  .

Bob Jensen

April 1, 2004 message from neil glass [neil.glass@get2net.dk

I contacted you about 3 weeks ago about my book "Rip-Off: The scandalous inside story of the Management Consulting Money Machine".

I am looking for a publisher for this book in the US.

Although several publishing houses have raved about the book, they have said (as Prentice Hall did yesterday) they will not buy it as they do not wish to upset the major management consultancies, with whom they have close links.

Given your interest in ethical (and thus non-ethical) business practices, I assume you might know some publishers with b-lls and these publishers might not be afraid to publish something as controversial as my book.

I would be happy to pay you (or any charity of your choice) $10,000 as an introduction fee, if you can introduce the book to any publishing editor from a known publishing house, who subsequently decides to publish it. As for my interests, any money I should make from the book will be going to build a new orphanage for the 40-50 orphans in the Nava Kiran children's home in Katmandu, Nepal.

You can find details of my book on my website www.only-on-the-net.com . Though please note that the version on the site is for the European market. If you know a publisher, who might be interested in taking the book, I can e-mail them a US version with more American, rather than European, examples og management consultancy malpractice.

Neil


March 31, 2004 message from Scott Bonacker [cpa@BONACKERS.COM

I'll wager there are some motorcycle riders on the list that would like to see these pictures if only to better appreciate the car and truck traffic.

There are many pages and lots of photographs, so don't view this on a dial-up connection unless you have some time.

http://www.angelfire.com/extreme4/kiddofspeed/.

Text from the first page:

GHOST TOWN

my rides through Chernobyl area now including a photos of new rides (spring 2004) beginning of a story about town where one can ride with no stoplights, no police, no danger to hit some cage or some dog..


Point of Impact: Where's My Job?
As companies move programming and engineering jobs to low-wage countries like India and China, U.S. leadership in technology could be imperiled. Deborah Wince-Smith, head of the Council on Competitiveness, helped the nonpartisan organization launch a National Innovation Initiative to devise ways the United States can stay ahead of emerging global competitors. In this exclusive Technology Review interview, Wince-Smith explains the roots of the problem and offers ideas on how to make sure the U.S. maintains its innovation edge.
http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/impact0404.asp?trl=nl


March 31, 2004 message from Dr James Fowler III [drjamesfowler@pcsservers.net

As part of a search I used the academic job site Academic Careers Online and really liked it.

You can search or announce faculty, post doc, researcher, library, endowed chair, and administrative jobs at colleges, universities and research institutes anywhere.

Applicant can use all their services without being charged and employers can post a job listing for up to three full months for US$ 175 (CAD 234). This even includes a unique email alert system that notifies applicants when a job matching their search criteria is posted.

To see the site go to www.AcademicCareers.com 

Regards,

Jim

Dr. James Fowler III 
Jim@Drjamesfowler.com 

I added Jim's message to http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#careers 


Forwarded by Don Mathis

"Is There Really a Fatherhood Crisis?" by Stephen Baskerville, The Independent Review, Spring 2004 --- http://www.independent.org/tii/content/pubs/review/tir84_baskerville.html  


ToolBook Update

I was once a strong advocate of ToolBook, but I lost interest in ToolBook when it changed to more of a template-oriented course authoring and course management system in a succession of product and corporate name changes.  Richard Campbell is probably our most loyal remaining Toolbook users in accounting education --- http://www.virtualpublishing.net 
It is almost certain that he will be experimenting with the new SumTotal Systems package.  

Now there are some more ToolBook changes, including a corporate name change, described in the message below.

April 1, 2004 message from Janet Chappell [jchappell@sumtotalsystems.com

Click2learn Changes Name

 Click2learn and Docent merged March 19 to form SumTotal Systems.  

A Powerful Simulation Capability Added to ToolBook
Now you can create simulations that may be used in 3 modes: show me, try me and test me. Details are included in the Instructor 2004 datasheet:

 http://www.sumtotalsystems.com/toolbook/datasheets/toolbook_instructor_200

 New Examples of ToolBook Content

 http://www.sumtotalsystems.com/toolbook/showcase/index.html

 Up Coming Web-based Demonstrations

 TB Instructor Simulations: April 20, 11 am PT, noon MT, 1 pm CT or 2 pm ET

 Overview of ToolBook: April 22, 11 am PT, noon MT, 1 pm CT or 2 pm ET

 All you will need is a phone for the conference call and a PC with  Internet access for the visuals. Send me an email requesting the logon information if interested.

Link to Trial Download

 http://www.sumtotalsystems.com/toolbook/downloads/index.html

 Please contact me if you would like more information about ToolBook.

 There are academic and government discounts available.

 Best regards,

 JANET CHAPPELL,
Acct Mgr, Sales OFFICE +1 800 471 5184 x1541
SumTotal Systems, Inc. (Nasdaq; SUMT) FAX +1 425 637 1504
110 110th Avenue NE
Bellevue WA 98271 EMAIL jchappell@sumtotalsystems.com 

 


March 31, 2004 message from David R. Fordham [fordhadr@JMU.EDU

Funny how words "evolve" in meaning. Google used to mean a huge number (1 followed by 100 zeroes, if memory serves correct). My students today had never heard the term used in that context!

Several semesters ago, I wrote a little rant for my students to get them thinking, and asked the question, why don't we have a uniform classification scheme (like Dewey Decimal or Library of Congress) to help us find Internet resources. At the time, AskJeeves was one of the best. Today Google seems to be everyone's favorite.

Rather than clog this list with food for speculation, anyone interested can check out: http://cob.jmu.edu/fordham/essay06.htm 

I'm curious if the denizens of this listserv have any comments relative to where the librarians are in all this? (My comments relative to accountants are particularly inciting and inflammatory, as usual!)

David R. Fordham 
PBGH Faculty Fellow 
James Madison University

April 4, 2004 message from David R. Fordham [fordhadr@JMU.EDU

I received the following response from a librarian in Canada. I thought I would forward it on to the group, just on the off chance that someone read my earlier post on Internet cataloging and had the courage to read my essay…

Ms. Frick is speaking only for her individual library, but I guess it is a start. I would, however, like to see something at the national (or better, International) level. Even a voluntary standard is better than no standard at all, -- but standardization is essential.

(Ms. Frick gave me permission to post her reply to the listserv…)

David R. Fordham
PBGH Faculty Fellow
James Madison University

April 2, 2004 reply from Pamela Frick [mailto:pamela.frick@mississauga.ca

The librarians are here, at least here at Mississauga Library System, doing exactly what you suggest if only in a small way. I have been afraid for several years that the library profession will be passed by unless we get with the web.

Last year I led a small but vital staff in a project to catalogue web sites useful to our customers. Our contribution may be small, but at least it is a start.

I would like to suggest that you go to http://www5.mississauga.ca/library/atlis/javascreen.htm  and check out a few keywords such as Kyoto accord or anorexia nervosa.

Thanks for your essay. I hope more librarians read it and feel motivated to do what we have started to do here.

Pamela Frick, Manager, 
Central Library Sciences Department 
Mississauga Library System 
301 Burnhamthorpe Rd. 
West Mississauga ON L5B 3Y3  

e-mail: pamela.frick@mississauga.ca 

March 31, 2004 reply from Bob Jensen

Hi David,

Actually something far more sophisticated than the Library of Congress system is in the works under the leadership of Tim Berners-Lee. However, I think it is bogged down for lack of money.

The system is called Resource Description Framework (RDF) --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/XBRLandOLAP.htm#RDF_Extended 

Bob

March 31, 2004 message from Jagdish Gangolly [ JGangolly@UAMAIL.ALBANY.EDU ] 

Actually a bunch of new technologies have been under development: RDF, OWL (Web Ontology Language), KIF (Knowledge Interchange Format) ... Their collective objective is to make "knowledge", whatever it means, processible by computers so that we can all be a bit more lazy, I guess.

I don't think the problem is a lack of funding (even though a lot of initial funding came from the defense sources, and those sources, especially for this kind of research, may be more arid today than they were a few years ago. Those who are interested in this general area may like to refer to two outstanding books that I have used as texts in my courses

1. Knowledge Representation, by John Sowa

2. Finding Out About, by Richard Belew

Of course, one can also google (one of the latest verbs in the English language) the keywords above.

Jagdish

You can read more about RDF and OWL at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/XBRLandOLAP.htm#RDF_Extended 


The Sidestep

Some of you I’m certain are not interested in how firms account for risk.  However, since great leaders like Alan Greenspan and Warren Buffet claim that the Freddie Mac Corporation is a serious threat that could bring down the entire U.S. economy, it may peak your interest in Freddie Mac just a bit.

Editorial on Freddie Mac's Sidestep
A Lesson From Derivatives 101

In the “Best Little Whorehouse in Texas ” Broadway show and movie, when asked what he was going to do about the “Chicken Ranch Whorehouse,” the Governor of Texas broke into a song and dance entitled “Sidestep.”

I hummed the Sidestep tune while listening to the Freddie Mac 2004 Shareholders Meeting.  You can listen to replays of the Freddie Mac Shareholders Meeting until midnight April 14 at http://www.freddiemac.com/news/archives/investors/2004/annualstockwebcast_032504.html 

I do think that Freddie Mac, with the help of PwC auditors, is making a genuine and sincere attempt to overcome the really bad shape of the accounting system that got most of its top executives fired.  The sins of the past were clearly acknowledged in the 2004 Shareholders Meeting.  

However, when it came to answer questions about interest rate risk and leveraged debt risk, especially those excellent questions from Mr. Jain in the audience, Freddie Mac launched into the Sidestep.

When asked about the concerns of Alan Greenspan and Warren Buffet (who sold all his holdings in Freddie Mac) concerning interest rate risk, Freddie Mac broke into a "Sidestep" by correctly stating that Freddie Mac hedges interest rate risk with interest rate risk derivatives to the tune of over $1 trillion in derivative hedges.

Let me give you a lesson from Derivatives 101

When any kind of price or interest rate risk is hedged, there are really two types of hedges.

These two types of hedges apply to hedges of assets or liabilities.  Freddie Mac hedges its mortgage investments.  It also hedges its debt which is very high since Freddie Mac has about 67% debt in a very high leveraging operation on a thin equity.

The sad thing about price and interest rate risk is that it is impossible to hedge both at the same time.  Hedging cash flow risk causes and current value risk.  Hedging value causes cash flow risk.

Freddie Mac actually hedges "interest rate risk" with both cash flow and fair value hedges.  But doing so does not eliminate interest rate risk as implied throughout the Freddie Mac 2004 Shareholders Meeting.  Doing so merely changes the type of risk exposure.

When Freddie Mac hedges cash flow risk, the combined sum of the hedged item plus the hedging derivative values thereby become exposed to current value risk.  Cash-hedged mortgage investments protect revenues from interest rate fluctuations, but the value of the assets will plunge if interest rates soar and soar if interest rates plunge.

When Freddie Mac hedges value risk, the combined monthly cash flows from hedged item interest and hedging derivative cash flows will plunge if interest rates decline and soar if interest rates explode.  

Since many of Freddie Mac's fixed-rate mortgage investments are at relatively low interest rates, they have protected asset value with fair value hedges.  However, doing so created cash flow risk.

The point from Derivatives 101, it is a sidestep whenever a claim is made that "interest rate or any other price risk is hedged."  The correct response is that "we hedged cash flows" or "we hedged current value" but not that "we hedged both."  

When a corporation like Freddie Mac hedges both cash flow risk of some investments and current value risk of other assets, it is very difficult to evaluate the net risk exposure.

I do think that Freddie Mac, with the help of PwC auditors, is making a genuine and sincere attempt to overcome the really bad shape of the accounting system that got most of its top executives fired.  The sins of the past were clearly acknowledged in the 1004 Shareholders Meeting.  

However, when it came to answer questions about interest rate risk and leveraged debt risk, especially those excellent questions from Mr. Jain in the audience, Freddie Mac launched into the Sidestep.

In the final analysis with interest rates poised to soar, we really don’t know if Freddie Mac’s net hedged position will clobber its asset and debt values or its cash flows.  

Something must get clobbered!


March 31, 2004 reply from Robert B Walker [walkerrb@ACTRIX.CO.NZ

A good summary of why IAS 39 is meeting such resistance. Economically you are hedged - you just can't reflect it in your financial report. Might that not suggest that there is something wrong with FAS 133 and its progeny?

I have a client that has exactly this problem. It carries its mortgage book at amortised cost even though it may be able to sell it (after all it did buy a large chunk of it). However, the valuation problems are monumental. For this reason it does not revalue the related interest rate swaps it must hold to be prudent.

It can get away with this for the time being as IAS 39 is merely one of a number of sources of authority under NZ GAAP (one of the other sources being predominant industry practice - a bit of a self-fulfilling prophecy really). However soon it will not be able to avoid it as IAS 39 will be a mandatory component of NZ GAAP.

The problem is exacerbated in NZ as we, effectively, do not have the notion of comprehensive income. All movements in derivatives would be booked to profit. There would be no commensurate gain or loss from the related mortgage portfolio because the stringent conditions for hedge quality cannot be met nor practically can the portfolio be valued. This is an economic nonsense of course.

Personally I don't think mixed measurement accounting systems are conceptually coherent. It should be fair value for one class of financial element, fair value for them all. But then how can you practically measure the value of a mortgage portfolio ...

April 1, 2004 reply from Bob Jensen

Hi Robert,

You are correct when it comes to difficulties of valuing swaps.

However, there are some approaches that I discuss at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speakers/133swapvalue.htm 

Thanks,

Bob Jensen


And just how might Freddie Mac get clobbered by derivatives and derivatives accounting?
Bob Jensen’s threads on derivatives accounting are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm

Part 1:  Optimism

It is very easy to become overly pessimistic about derivatives when reading quotations from Greenspan and Buffet.  In some ways pessimism over financial instrument derivatives in the economy is analogous to pessimism over the use of antibiotics  since super-resistant microbes will evolve that might one day bring humanity to its knees.  But to cave into such fears and immediately ban all antibiotics would cause more immediate plagues and death in humanity.  Similarly to ban the use of derivatives for managing financial risk would bring modern economies to their knees overnight.

There are expensive derivatives strategy and accounting remedies such as those purportedly adopted by Fannie Mae.  Fannie Mae claims to have modified its derivative hedging strategy as a result of FAS 133 (so much for FASB standards neutrality) and has had a much better accounting system in place in spite of a brief snafu where it failed to report $1 billion in derivatives.  The snafu was rather quickly detected by Fannie's internal control system.  See an summary of this strategy at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm#FannieMae 
Note how Fannie Mae makes every effort to avoid macro hedging that will not be allowed to get hedge accounting.  The result is that changes in derivative values do not create the wild earnings fluctuations that worries Buffet, because Fannie Mae gets hedge accounting much of the time.  

But such a strategy is a tremendously expensive and cumbersome in a company that owns mortgages of over 32 million households.  Note the use of Non-GAAP financial measures reported at http://www.fanniemae.com/ceoanswers/discussion.jhtml 

Fannie got smart when she watched her little brother Freddie fall to his knees because of bad compliance with FAS 133.   Now Freddie is trying to learn about accounting from his big sister.  Fanny Mae's  CEO claims the following in answer to the question "Why do you have confidence that you have done your derivative accounting properly?" --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm#FannieMae 

Let me walk through how we account for our derivatives:

The positive derivatives strategy of Fannie Mae now being copied by Freddie Mac begs the question regarding whether any derivatives strategy can overcome the macro worries of Alan Greenspan and Warren Buffet regarding the use of derivatives to hedge enormous (trillion dollar magnitude) of risk.  We have seen so many "fiascos" in derivatives use at the hundred million dollar level (e.g, Proctor and Gamble), billion dollar level (e.g., Orange County), and multi-billion dollar level (e.g., Long-Term Capital).  For a summary of derivatives scandals, see http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#DerivativesFrauds 


Hi Calvin,

I don’t know of any that are worth mentioning.

There were a lot of bad disclosure illustrations in 2001 and 2001, most notably Enron.  Since then disclosures have gotten a lot better.  One example I like to use is Calpine --- http://www.calpine.com/

I guess the answer to your question is no.  Accounting professors have been pretty slow picking up on FAS 133 and textbooks and journals are still lacking in this area.

Other than what you find in my tutorials, I do not have anything particularly helpful to add --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm 

I just added the following interesting link to the above document.  

http://www.rense.com/general50/cooking2.htm,

Note the $25 billion loss of Fannie Mae in derivatives 
(the company that is supposed to have the supreme hedging system.)

"Cooking The Books Part II - US $71 Trillion Casino Banks," by Michael Edward, Rense.com, March 27. 2004 --- http://www.rense.com/general50/cooking2.htm

Derivative holdings by U.S. banks increased nearly $4 TRILLION in just 3 months to now total over $71.1 TRILLION. JPMORGAN CHASE accounts for $3.1 TRILLION of this increase.

That's $ 71,100,000,000,000.

The first 7 banks listed below account for 96% of all commercial bank derivative holdings, with 90% of these derivatives in extremely risky OTC (Over the Counter) contracts.

As I said in Cooking the Books Part I, U.S. banks are giant gambling casinos, and now they have become even larger gambling addicts at the expense of all Americans.

DERIVATIVES CONTRACTS AS OF DECEMBER 31, 2003 (based on just released 03Q4 OCC Bank Derivatives report)

1. JPMORGAN CHASE BANK - $36,805,757,000,000 (Assets $628,662,000,000) Risk Ratio 58.5:1 ($58.54 of derivatives per $1 of assets). Credit exposure to Risk-Based Capital Ratio 844.6% OTC Derivatives 92.6%

2. BANK OF AMERICA - $14,869,220,000,000 (Assets $617,962,000,000) Risk Ratio 24:1 ($24.06 of derivatives per $1 of assets). Credit exposure to Risk-Based Capital Ratio 221.7% OTC Derivatives 83.4%

3. CITIBANK - $11,167,882,000,000 (Assets $582,123,000,000) Risk Ratio 19:1 ($19.18 of derivatives per $1 of assets). Credit exposure to Risk-Based Capital Ratio 267.1% OTC Derivatives 96.4%

4. WACHOVIA BANK - $2,326,465,000,000 (Assets $353,541,000,000) Risk Ratio 6.6:1 ($6.58 of derivatives per $1 of assets). Credit exposure to Risk-Based Capital Ratio 80.6% OTC Derivatives 70.2%

5. HSBC BANK USA - $1,353,741,000,000 (Assets $92,958,000,000) Risk Ratio 14.5:1 ($14.45 of derivatives per $1 of assets). Credit exposure to Risk-Based Capital Ratio 288.5% OTC Derivatives 88.7%

6. BANK ONE - $1,232,095,000,000 (Assets $256,787,000,000) Risk Ratio 4.8:1 ($4.79 of derivatives per $1 of assets). Credit exposure to Risk-Based Capital Ratio 58.7% OTC Derivatives 96.1%

7. BANK OF NEW YORK - $561,694,000,000 (Assets $89,258,000,000) Risk Ratio 6.3:1 ($6.29 of derivatives per $1 of assets). Credit exposure to Risk-Based Capital Ratio 77.7% OTC Derivatives 78.1%

8. WELLS FARGO BANK - $557,161,000,000 (Assets $250,474,000,000)

Risk Ratio 2.2:1 ($2.22 of derivatives per $1 of assets). Credit exposure to Risk-Based Capital Ratio 26.7% OTC Derivatives 66.3%

9. FLEET NATIONAL BANK - $443,708,000,000 (Assets $192,265,000,000) Risk Ratio 2.3:1 ($2.30 of derivatives per $1 of assets). Credit exposure to Risk-Based Capital Ratio 20.2% OTC Derivatives 64.1%

10. STATE STREET BANK - $369,843,000,000 (Assets $80,435,000,000) Risk Ratio 4.6:1 ($4.59 of derivatives per $1 of assets). Credit exposure to Risk-Based Capital Ratio 161.0% OTC Derivatives 89.2%

JPMORGAN CHASE is far past the point of no return. To put it in simple terms, JPMORGAN CHASE, BANK OF AMERICA, CITIBANK, and HSBC are already insolvent many times over. They have no liquidity, yet they are still operating as if they do.

This has now gone way beyond the imminent bursting of the US financial debt bubble... it has become an explosive financial weapon of mass destruction.

To understand the gambling risk U.S. banks have created, please read the following articles:

THE 3-D BOMB: DERIVATIVE DOMINO DESTRUCTION http://worldvisionportal.org/WVPforum/viewtopic.php?t=177

U.S. BANKS HAVE BECOME A PONZI SCHEME Most Bank Derivatives Have UNLIMITED Risk DERIVATIVES ARE THE KISS OF DEATH (scroll down to view these articles) http://worldvisionportal.org/WVPforum/viewtopic.php?t=160 

U.S. Bank Fraud Created Europe's Largest Bankruptcy http://worldvisionportal.org/WVPforum/viewtopic.php?t=176

$25 BILLION of Fannie Mae Derivative Losses http://worldvisionportal.org/WVPforum/viewtopic.php?t=192

Non-commercial reproduction allowed, otherwise copyright 2004 by WorldVisionPortal.Org

http://worldvisionportal.org/WVPforum/viewtopic.php?t=198

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Lin, Calvin (IT) [mailto:Calvin.Lin@morganstanley.com]
Sent: Friday, April 02, 2004 12:54 PM
To: Jensen, Robert
Subject: Any help is appreciated.

  Hi Bob,

  I came across your website while doing some research on the subject of FAS 133.  Basically I am trying to find a company to do a paper on how it used / mis-used FAS133 to account for its derivatives.  So far I have read some articles on your website for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and I may use those companies as my case studies.

Do you happen to know if there are any other documented cases where the use of FAS 133 were examined in detail?  If so where can I get more information about them?

Regards,

Calvin Lin
Institutional Securities Division
Morgan Stanley & Co.
New York, NY


Although most of those scandals entailed fraudulent scandals, some like Long-term Capital entailed having the top economists of the world (i.e., Nobel Prize winning economists Merton and Scholes) failing to understand the inevitable quicksand in managing derivatives hedging on a complex scale.  

In the end, derivatives are like antibiotics.  It's dangerous to live with them, but the world is better off because of them.  The same can be said about FAS 133 and its many implementation guides and amendments.  Booking derivatives at fair value is dangerous, but the economy would be worse off without it.  What we have to do is to strive night and day to improve upon reporting of value and risk in a world that relies more and more on derivative financial instruments to manage risks.


Part 2:  Pessimism  (Note that the negative articles about Freddie Mac apply to the old management that was fired.  Freddie Mac is now trying claw its way back up from the hole.)

Warren Buffet has a knee-jerk avoidance of investing in corporations that are heavy into derivative strategies for speculation or hedging purposes.  Warren Buffet claims:  "Derivatives are financial weapons of mass destruction.  The dangers are now latent--but they could be lethal."  See "Avoiding a 'Mega-Catastrophe' Derivatives ," by Warren Buffet, Fortune --- http://www.fortune.com/fortune/investing/articles/0,15114,427751,00.html 
In his 2002 Berkshire Hathaway Annual Report he provides more detail regarding his concerns.

Warren Buffet on Derivatives

Following are edited excerpts from the Berkshire Hathaway annual report for 2002 --- http://www.fintools.com/docs/Warren%20Buffet%20on%20Derivatives.pdf 

I view derivatives as time bombs, both for the parties that deal in them and the economic system.  Basically these instruments call for money to change hands at some future date, with the amount to be determined by one or more reference items, such as interest rates, stock prices, or currency values. For example, if you are either long or short an S&P 500 futures contract, you are a party to a very simple derivatives transaction, with your gain or loss derived from movements in the index. Derivatives contracts are of varying duration, running sometimes to 20 or more years, and their value is often tied to several variables.

Unless derivatives contracts are collateralized or guaranteed, their ultimate value also depends on the creditworthiness of the counter-parties to them. But before a contract is settled, the counter-parties record profits and losses – often huge in amount – in their current earnings statements without so much as a penny changing hands. Reported earnings on derivatives are often wildly overstated. That’s because today’s earnings are in a significant way based on estimates whose inaccuracy may not be exposed for many years.

The errors usually reflect the human tendency to take an optimistic view of one’s commitments. But the parties to derivatives also have enormous incentives to cheat in accounting for them. Those who trade derivatives are usually paid, in whole or part, on "earnings" calculated by mark-to-market accounting. But often there is no real market, and "mark-to-model" is utilized. This substitution can bring on large-scale mischief. As a general rule, contracts involving multiple reference items and distant settlement dates increase the opportunities for counter-parties to use fanciful assumptions. The two parties to the contract might well use differing models allowing both to show substantial profits for many years. In extreme cases, mark-to-model degenerates into what I would call mark-to-myth.

I can assure you that the marking errors in the derivatives business have not been symmetrical. Almost invariably, they have favored either the trader who was eyeing a multi-million dollar bonus or the CEO who wanted to report impressive "earnings" (or both). The bonuses were paid, and the CEO profited from his options. Only much later did shareholders learn that the reported earnings were a sham.

Another problem about derivatives is that they can exacerbate trouble that a corporation has run into for completely unrelated reasons. This pile-on effect occurs because many derivatives contracts require that a company suffering a credit downgrade immediately supply collateral to counter-parties. Imagine then that a company is downgraded because of general adversity and that its derivatives instantly kick in with their requirement, imposing an unexpected and enormous demand for cash collateral on the company. The need to meet this demand can then throw the company into a liquidity crisis that may, in some cases, trigger still more downgrades. It all becomes a spiral that can lead to a corporate meltdown.

Derivatives also create a daisy-chain risk that is akin to the risk run by insurers or reinsurers that lay off much of their business with others. In both cases, huge receivables from many counter-parties tend to build up over time. A participant may see himself as prudent, believing his large credit exposures to be diversified and therefore not dangerous. However under certain circumstances, an exogenous event that causes the receivable from Company A to go bad will also affect those from Companies B through Z.

In banking, the recognition of a "linkage" problem was one of the reasons for the formation of the Federal Reserve System. Before the Fed was established, the failure of weak banks would sometimes put sudden and unanticipated liquidity demands on previously-strong banks, causing them to fail in turn. The Fed now insulates the strong from the troubles of the weak. But there is no central bank assigned to the job of preventing the dominoes toppling in insurance or derivatives. In these industries, firms that are fundamentally solid can become troubled simply because of the travails of other firms further down the chain.

Continued in the article


"Greenspan Says Congress Should Limit Fannie, Freddie," by Dawn Kopecki and Josepth Rebello, The Wall Street Journal, February 24, 2004 --- http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB107763512493737729,00.html?mod=home_whats_news_us 

Mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac could pose a threat to the financial system, according to Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan.

Mr. Greenspan called on Congress Tuesday to impose stringent restrictions on the ability of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to issue debt and purchase assets, saying the growth of the institutions poses a risk to the safety of the U.S. financial system.

"The Federal Reserve is concerned about the growth and the scale of the [government-sponsored enterprises'] mortgage portfolios, which concentrate interest and prepayment risks at these two institutions," Mr. Greenspan said in written testimony to the Senate Banking Committee. Although he said he didn't think a crisis was imminent, "preventative actions are required sooner rather than later."

"GSEs need to be limited in the issuance of GSE debt and in the purchase of assets, both mortgages and non-mortgages, that they hold," he added in the written testimony.


In many ways, Freddie Mac provides a wonderful example of the difficulties of managing risk in complex companies and complex economies.  Note the following quotation in 2001 prior to the highly-publicized Year 2004 revisions of Freddie Mac's Year 2001 financial statements:

Mitchell Delk Senior Vice President Freddie Mac 
Written Statement Before the Subcommittee on Capital Markets, Insurance and Government Sponsored Enterprises of the Committee on Financial Services, U.S. House of Representatives 
July 11, 2001 (Note the Date) --- http://www.freddiemac.com/speeches/md071101.htm 

A pioneer in the use of risk-based stress tests, Freddie Mac believes that a well-implemented capital standard must produce specific and accurate determinations of required capital. Assigning too little capital or too much both have negative consequences. Too little capital could jeopardize our ability to withstand an extreme downturn in the economy. On the other hand, requiring too much capital would impose unnecessary costs on the nation’s families. Mortgage rates would rise, and mortgage products attractive to lower-income borrowers would become more expensive or unavailable.

Furthermore, it is critical that the test be operationally workable. For Freddie Mac to purchase mortgages on a daily basis, we must be able to calculate the amount of capital that will be required and incorporate it into our business planning and processes.

Finally, the stress test should recognize prudent risk management. For example, the test should not penalize the use of swaps and other securities contracts, the function of which is to manage interest-rate risk. This is an essential risk management strategy that we and other large, well-capitalized financial institutions use every day. A standard that ties capital to risk would appropriately recognize this strategy with a lower capital requirement. According to Chairman Greenspan, regulators must “develop ways to improve their tools while reinforcing incentives for sound risk management.”

Tripped Up by FAS 133
"Freddie Mac Overstated Results By as Much as $1 Billion in 2001," by Patrick Barta and John D. McKinnon, The Wall Street Journal, November 20, 2003 

Freddie Mac is expected to report that it overstated earnings by as much as $1 billion in 2001 when it releases a much-anticipated restatement of past earnings in the next several days, people familiar with the situation said.

The mortgage-finance company, which has been embroiled in an accounting scandal since June, is still expected to conclude that it undercounted earnings by $4.5 billion or more during the entire three-year period of its restatement, which covers 2000, 2001 and 2002. But an overstatement during one of those years would be significant because it would further highlight the volatility of Freddie Mac's financial results, something the company had tried to hide. Freddie Mac initially reported that it earned $4.1 billion in 2001.

Some details of Freddie Mac's restatement remained in flux in advance of its release, and some people with knowledge of the situation cautioned that the numbers could change, although likely not enough to erase the troublesome overstatement. Some also believe that the overstatement could be limited to one quarter.

David Palombi, a spokesman for Freddie Mac, said he couldn't provide details on the restatement, though he noted that company officials have long stressed that it would reveal more volatile results. He said that the restatement is expected to significantly boost shareholder equity at the company.

Still, the possibility that Freddie Mac may have overstated its results in one of the years under review could make life harder for the company on Wall Street and in Washington, where legislators have been working to place Freddie Mac under stricter regulation. Companies that understate earnings are often treated more gingerly on Wall Street and elsewhere, analysts said, since correcting the errors results in more income for shareholders.

"They set up this belief that what they did was they understated earnings, and apparently they did on a cumulative basis, but it's not going to go over well that in one of the years they overstated earnings," said Mike McMahon, a financial-services industry analyst at Sandler O'Neill & Partners in San Francisco.

Freddie Mac is under investigation by several government agencies after it revealed that it used improper accounting tactics to smooth earnings to better please Wall Street. In some cases, the company pushed unwanted earnings into the future, or hid gains it thought would make the company appear to be too volatile. But an internal investigation revealed the company also used accounting gimmicks to mask some losses that resulted from accounting rules it thought were unfair.

The government-sponsored, publicly traded company exists to buy mortgages from lenders, providing needed capital to keep the U.S. mortgage market operating smoothly.

Freddie Mac's financial statements can be downloaded from http://www.freddiemac.com/investors/ 


"At Freddie Mac, It's Hard To Lay Claim to Innocence," by Jerry Knight, The Washington Post
July 28, 2003 (Note the Date)
--- http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A51391-2003Jul26?language=printer 
"The intent was to deceive investors, and for that, everyone involved ought to take a fall."

When the accounting and management failures at Freddie Mac first surfaced last month, the board of directors proclaimed that it was throwing out all the executives tainted by the scandal and installing a new CEO.

Chief executive Leland C. Brendsel and Chief Financial Officer Vaughn A. Clark were allowed to resign. President David W. Glenn was fired.

Gregory J. Parseghian, 42, Freddie's chief investment officer, was promoted to president and chief executive. It was inferred that Parseghian had nothing to do with cooking the books and would restore the company's credibility.

As we now know, the idea that Parseghian is squeaky clean is tough to swallow after reading last week's report on the internal investigation of Freddie's phony financial reports.

The new chief executive's name turns up repeatedly in the investigative report detailing the dubious deals that Freddie Mac used to hide as much as $4.5 billion in profits.

According to the report of the internal investigation initiated by Freddie's board:

• Parseghian was directly involved with finding ways for Freddie Mac to circumvent new accounting industry rules that were written to help investors understand the impact on corporate finances of exotic transactions known as derivatives. James R. Doty, the lawyer who prepared the report, came to the conclusion that Parseghian was told by Freddie's auditors that the transactions the working groups recommended passed accounting muster, and were therefore completely above board.

• Parseghian was among several senior executives who approved a memo implementing a $700 million transaction known as the Coupon Trade-Up Giant, or CTUG, that was specifically designed to offset the impact of the new derivatives accounting rules.

• Parseghian, who was responsible for briefing the investment committee of Freddie's board of directors about major transactions, helped come up with a way to divide the CTUG into pieces small enough that the board wasn't required to be informed of them individually, even though all together they were part of one grand plan. "This division had the effect of avoiding the need for Board authorization," the report said. As a result, "the company failed to adhere to its own governance requirements."

• Parseghian participated in one meeting at which top Freddie Mac executives discussed five other ways in which they could get around the new derivatives accounting rules. He also supervised several junior executives who participated in two "working groups" that coordinated efforts to minimize the impact of the derivative accounting rules on the bottom line.

Freddie Mac won't say whether Parseghian was officially a member of those groups. Parseghian has declined to comment on the report.

Be that as it may, the report makes clear he was a central character in events that could lead to as much as $4.5 billion in restatements. It is hard to believe he can restore Freddie's credibility. The report portrays Freddie Mac as an organization that single-mindedly set out to circumvent new rules drafted by the accounting industry to demystify derivatives, the generic name for a menagerie of financial creations.

Dreamed up a couple of decades ago by mathematicians and PhD economists, derivatives offer clever ways for corporations to protect themselves against changes in interest rates and other unpredictable economic events.

They can also be used to cheat on income taxes, government prosecutors contend in a high-profile tax shelter trial now underway. They can and were used by Enron Corp. to create phantom profits. And at Freddie Mac they were used to hide profits, creating a convenient rainy-day fund that the company could tap whenever its operations failed to produce enough profit to satisfy Wall Street. Ever since derivatives were invented, people have struggled to figure out how they ought to be accounted for on a corporation's books. For years most companies simply pretended their dealings in derivatives didn't exist, making little or no mention of them in financial reports.

Finally the Financial Accounting Standards Board, which writes the official guidelines for keeping the books of U.S. corporations, came up with a rule that for lack of a simpler moniker will have to go by its official name: Statement of Financial Accounting Standard No. 133, known in colloquial accountants-speak as SFAS 133.

The basic rule is simple: Starting Jan. 1, 2001, companies must disclose the fair market value of their derivatives.

Freddie Mac fought that rule when it was being written, and when it was implemented the organization "devoted considerable resources to exploring strategies that would mitigate the effects of the rule change," the internal investigation found. Elsewhere, the report states simply, "Management believed that SFAS 133 should be 'transacted around.' " It's impossible to read the internal investigation report without being struck by Freddie Mac's arrogance. Nowhere in it is any evidence that anybody at Freddie Mac ever suggested the company ought to play by the same accounting rules as everybody else. The pervasive corporate value was that our business is different, these rules should not apply to us. So while other companies complied with the new rules and fairly disclosed the market value of their derivatives, Freddie devoted vast resources to a "transition" strategy designed to ensure that SFAS 133 would have as little impact as possible on the financial statements issued to investors.

That was no easy task, because in 2001, Freddie Mac was sitting on billions of dollars of gains in the market value of its derivative portfolio, a condition that would have ballooned its profit.

Freddie didn't want to report that windfall all at once, as accounting rules required, but wanted to move the "profit" into future quarters when it wouldn't just be seen as a fluke of accounting but real, sustained growth in the bottom line.

Investors wouldn't understand the one-time gain, Freddie feared. Somebody might see those billions and buy the stock, pushing up the price.

If the stock went up because of this windfall, it would fall when the derivatives profits evaporated, as they inevitably would under SFAS 133 accounting.

In dozens of pages, the report spells out how far Freddie went to avoid reporting a windfall when the new accounting rules kicked in. Elaborate deals were cooked up using "results-oriented, reverse engineering." In other words: Here's how much profit we want to report to shareholders, let's figure out how we can do it.

Some of the things that were done clearly violated accounting rules, and for that heads rolled -- Brendsel, Vaughn and Glenn. Other transactions were more creative, bending the rules without breaking them. But Parseghian was promoted.

The report states that Parseghian was assured by Arthur Andersen, then Freddie's auditor, that the transactions were allowed, that they followed the letter of accounting standards. Within the rules or not, it doesn't make much difference. The intent was to deceive investors, and for that, everyone involved ought to take a fall.

Restoring Freddie's credibility ought to mean getting rid of everybody involved -- up to and including the board of directors. That's what WorldCom Inc. did, and it was a crucial step in that company clawing its way out of its own accounting scandals.

As Washington Post reporters Kathleen Day and David S. Hilzenrath have pointed out, the boards of Freddie Mac and its corporate cousin Fannie Mae each have five seats reserved for political appointments. Because the two giant mortgage companies were created by the government, the president himself gets to pick a batch of board members.

Over the years, some of the presidential appointees have been distinguished citizens, others have been distinguished by their political credentials.

For example, then-President Bill Clinton gave a seat on the Fannie board to Garry Mauro, who ran for governor of Texas and lost. President Bush gave one to Molly H. Bordonaro, who ran for Congress from Oregon and lost.

Lobbyists, loyalists, politicians and politicians' spouses have all been entrusted with overseeing the two biggest financial institutions in the United States. The non-political board members cover a similar range of résumés.

It would be fun to call up each of the Freddie Mac board members this morning and give them a pop quiz on the internal investigation that was completed last week.

1) Define CTUG, swaptions portfolio valuation and J-Deals.

2) Explain the key provisions of SFAS 133.

3) Compare and contrast the implied volatility of swaptions based on the Black Rock valuation model with the historical volatility model created by the company.

All Washington investors need to know is that No. 1 are transactions Freddie Mac officials used to get around No. 2.

All they need to know about No. 3 is that by switching from one valuation model to another, and then switching back 39 days later, Freddie conveniently managed to hide millions of dollar worth of profits.

Board members, on the other hand, ought to be able to expound on these topics in great detail. Doty told The Washington Post last week that the directors were not given enough information about the these matters to prompt questions at the time. A major transaction that was later found to be highly questionable "simply passed under the radar screen" of the board, Doty said.

Rather than a pop quiz , the board members ought to be called before Congress and examined in depth on their knowledge of how Freddie Mac does business, why this accounting scandal happened, what they knew and when they knew.

Bob Jensen's threads on other derivative financial instruments frauds --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm

Bob Jensen’s threads on derivatives accounting are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm


This is old news, but it does provide some questions for students to ponder.  The main problem of fair value adjustment is that many ((most?) of the adjustments cause enormous fluctuations in earnings, assets, and liabilities that are washed out over time and never realized.  The main advantage is that interim impacts that “might be” realized are booked.  It’s a war between “might be” versus “might never.”  The war has been waging for over a century with respect to booked assets and two decades with respect to unbooked derivative instruments, contingencies, and intangibles.

As you can see below, the war is not over yet.  In fact it has intensified between corporations (especially banks) versus standard setters versus members of the academy.

From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Educators' Review on April 2, 2004

TITLE: As IASB Unveils New Rules, Dispute With EU Continues 
REPORTER: David Reilly 
DATE: Mar 31, 2004 
PAGE: A2 LINK: http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108067939682469331,00.html  
TOPICS: Generally accepted accounting principles, Fair Value Accounting, Insider trading, International Accounting, International Accounting Standards Board

SUMMARY: Despite controversy with the European Union (EU), the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) is expected to release a final set of international accounting standards. Questions focus on the role of the IASB, controversy with the EU, and harmonization of the accounting standards.

QUESTIONS: 
1.) What is the role of the IASB? What authority does the IASB have to enforce standards?

2.) List three reasons that a country would choose to follow IASB accounting standards. Why has the U.S. not adopted IASB accounting standards?

3.) Discuss the advantages and disadvantages of harmonization of accounting standards throughout the world. Why is it important the IASB reach a resolution with the EU over the disputed accounting standards?

4.) What is fair value accounting? Why would fair value accounting make financial statements more volatile? Is increased volatility a valid argument for not adopting fair value accounting? Does GAAP in the United States require fair value accounting? Support your answers.

Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island 
Reviewed By: Benson Wier, Virginia Commonwealth University 
Reviewed By: Kimberly Dunn, Florida Atlantic University

Bob Jensen's threads on these controversial standards are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm 

Also note http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speakers/133glosf.htm#IASC 

Bob Jensen's threads on accounting theory are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory.htm 

Those threads dealing with fair value are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen//theory/00overview/theory01.htm 


IASB Finalizes Macro Hedging Amendments to IAS 39 March 31, 2004 --- http://www.iasb.org/news/index.asp?showPageContent=no&xml=10_120_25_31032004_31032005.htm 

The International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) issued an Amendment to IAS 39 Financial Instruments: Recognition and Measurement on Fair Value Hedge Accounting for a Portfolio Hedge of Interest Rate Risk. The amendments simplify the implementation of IAS 39 by enabling fair value hedge accounting to be used more readily for a portfolio hedge of interest rate risk (sometimes referred to as a macro hedge) than under previous versions of IAS 39.

The publication of this amendment is a direct response to concerns expressed by the banking community about the potential difficulty of implementing the requirements of IAS 39. Many constituents had sought fair value hedge accounting treatment for portfolio hedging strategies, which was not previously permitted under IAS 39. In the light of these concerns, the IASB launched intensive discussions with representatives of the banking industry to determine whether a way could be found within the existing principles of IAS 39 to allow fair value hedge accounting treatment to be applied to a macro hedge.

The publication of this amendment means that macro hedging will be part of the IASB’s set of standards to be adopted in 2005. The IASB notes that discussions will continue on another aspect of IAS 39, namely an additional hedging methodology and the balance sheet presentation of certain hedges—issues of particular concern to some banking institutions. Furthermore, in April, the IASB will publish a proposed limited amendment to restrict the existing fair value option in response to concerns raised by banking supervisory authorities.

With today’s publication of the macro-hedging amendment, the IASB announced its intention to set up an international working party to examine the fundamentals of IAS 39 with a view to replacing the standard in due course. (A similar working party will be established on the IASB’s long-term insurance project.) The financial instruments working party will assist in improving, simplifying and ultimately replacing IAS 39 and examine broader questions regarding the application and extent of fair-value accounting—a topic on which the IASB has not reached any conclusion. Although any major revision of IAS 39 may take several years to complete, the IASB is willing to revise IAS 39 and IFRS 4 Insurance Contracts in the short term in the light of any immediate solutions arising from the working parties’ discussions. The IASB plans to announce details of these two working parties in the coming weeks.

Introducing the amendment to IAS 39, Sir David Tweedie, IASB Chairman, commented:

This amendment is a further step in our project to ease the implementation of IAS 39 for the thousands of companies required to implement international standards in 2005 and those companies already using IFRSs. The IASB has made it clear that any amendments must be within the basic principles of hedge accounting contained in IAS 39, but that we will work within those principles to simplify the application of the standard. This amendment does not mark the end of the Board’s work on the subject of financial instruments. The Board remains open to all suggestions for improvement of the standard and is taking active steps in both the immediate future and in the medium term to that end.
The primary means of publishing International Financial Reporting Standards is by electronic format through the IASB’s subscriber Website. Subscribers are able to access the amendment published today through “online services”. Those wishing to subscribe should contact:


Printed copies of Amendment to IAS 39 Financial Instruments: Recognition and Measurement: Fair Value Hedge Accounting for a Portfolio Hedge of Interest Rate Risk (ISBN 1-904230-58-X) will be available shortly, at £15 each including postage, from IASCF Publications Department.

Bob Jensen's threads on macro hedging are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speakers/133glosf.htm#M-Terms 


I have previously reported everything in Mike's message below, but he puts it into plain English.

March 31, 2004 message from Mike Gasior --- afsnewsletter@binhost.com 

ANOTHER PROBLEM FOR EUROPE REGARDING ACCOUNTING

This is a topic where I want to be quite brief and completely efficient. About three years ago a new accounting rule took effect in the United States you will hear referred to as "FAS 133". This accounting standard dramatically changed the way companies reported their derivative holdings, and the idea was to make financial statements more transparent and more realistic. While I was not completely in favor of the ruling by FASB and believed the new rule had many flaws, it was at least progress in the right direction. For this reason I tried to stay open minded about it.

As many of my readers know, the derivatives marketplace has grown to an enormous size and knows no borders. Companies and financial institutions the world over enter into a vast array of derivative contracts each and every business day. One concern for all these participants has been understanding the financial status and condition of the party you are entering into these contracts with. Given that the rest of the world does not follow U.S. GAAP accounting, the hope has been that some of the other major economies would adopt standards similar to the U.S. FAS 133 to allow a more "apples to apples" type of comparison between parties. We were about to get that continuity in Europe with the adoption of IAS 32 and IAS 39, which would have brought much global reporting into line with FAS 133 and make the markets more transparent. By the way, the FAS stands for "Financial Accounting Standard" and the IAS for "International Accounting Standard".

But here comes our friends at the EU, bowing to pressure from a variety of European banks (particularly the French) that are mortified at the idea of having to mark their derivative holdings to market and reflecting the changed value on their balance sheets the way U.S. companies are now forced to do. The plan was for IAS 32 and IAS 39 to take effect in 2005, but now it appears the implementation will be at least delayed. If not cancelled altogether.

I'm not going to insult your intelligence by re-telling you my opinion of the Microsoft ruling by the EU, but you tell me how this accounting situation is much different. If behavior like this continues, where political pressures cause the playing field to always be shifted away from U.S. companies, I can guarantee you the U.S. will lash out with legislation of their own and it will not be a pretty sight.

Please don't read any sort of political inferences into what I am saying. I always try to take an economic approach to matters such as these, but that doesn't make me a fool. It will be an economic disaster as protectionist walls begin to go up around the world for everyone involved. But U.S. companies and U.S. politicians are not going to sit still either while other countries whittle away the ability of the U.S. to compete abroad. My suggestion to these countries is improve your markets and products to better compete with your American competitors. If your so afraid to compete on a level playing field you will give the U.S. no choice but tilt their own field to your disadvantage.

Bob Jensen's threads on FAS 133 and IAS 39 are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm 


Online Continuing Education from the Institute of Internal Auditors --- http://www.theiia.org/ 

 http://education.smartpros.com/main/welcome.asp?qs=iia   Issues and Answers - From Experts

  Accounting/Auditing - DEMO   

   Skills Training

   Accounting/Auditing

   Ethics

   Financial Planning

   Information Systems and Computer Applications

   Management

   Taxation

    Issues & Answers - From Experts
    See Most Recent Updates

   Auditing

   E-commerce

   Economics

   Finance

   Financial Reporting

   Information Systems

   Management

   Managerial Accounting

   Security & Control

   Tax

Bob Jensen's threads on online training alternatives are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/crossborder.htm#Training 


A New Computer Choice on Wal-Mart Shelves

"Sun Desktop Shines on Wal-Mart with Discount Boxes," by Peter Galli, eWeek,  March 30, 2004 --- http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1759,1558059,00.asp?kc=EWNWS033104DTX1K0000599 

"Sun is a technology provider and our Java Desktop System is now preloaded on Microtel hardware and available for sale at Wal-Mart for under $300 a system. The Microtel SYSWM8001 PC, with an AMD [Advanced Micro Devices Inc.] Duron 1.6GHz chip and no floppy drive can be bought for $298 from Wal-Mart now," he said.

eWEEK last December first reported that Sun was negotiating with major retailers Wal-Mart and Office Depot to include its Java Desktop System on consumer PCs and laptops.

Schwartz said on Tuesday that "we are seriously considering Wal-Mart now to be the PC supplier for Sun Microsystems. We also have some 500 pilots of our Java Desktop System and the Java Enterprise System now running across the world and North America is the most cynical market when it comes to looking at Microsoft alternatives.

"We are making a lot more gains overseas, in places like Asia and South America," he said.

Sun currently had some 160,000 Java Enterprise System users, employees and companies cumulatively, at $100 per user under a three-year contract with unlimited rights to use it, he said.

. . . 

There were now four notable trends in Sun's market, he observed. "Firstly, everyone is moving forward with Web services and Java Web services. The evolution of our platform for this is stronger than it has ever been and our J2EE application server is an example of that. We are seeing some 55,000 copies of this being downloaded a week (up from 5,000 a week in November) and it is now free for them to deploy," Schwartz said.

Secondly, security and identity was a big deal. "Sarbanes Oxley will be as huge driver, as viruses and Sarbanes Oxley are essentially about the same thing: knowing where the content is coming from and who the source is," he said.

Thirdly, messaging consolidation was a big trend area, with many people looking at replacing their Microsoft exchange environments. The fourth trend area was content delivery, Schwartz said.

According to the executive, the business value for Sun lay in volume, which drove everything in IT. "It's what Sun did to IBM, it's what Intel and Linux are potentially doing to Sun and it is what we will do to Microsoft. But volume without monetization doesn't create wealth for our shareholders, he said.

April 1, 2004 reply from Neil Pape

I find it amusing that on the Wal Mart web page for this machine it describes the machine as a "Microsoft Windows alternative", but the suggested accessory for this item is a Microsoft brand trackball.


"CalCPA Announces Financial Literacy Program," SmartPros, April 1, 2004 --- http://www.smartpros.com/x43079.xml 

The California Society of Certified Public Accountants announced a resolution that declares April "Financial Literacy Month" in California and launched a new program geared to help Californians better manage their money.

"The CPA profession is at the heart of sound financial decision-making -- and CalCPA members take this responsibility very seriously," said CalCPA Chair Steve Wimmers, CPA. "We're here to protect the public, and working with youth -- and all Californians -- to help them make responsible financial decisions is just one more way we can achieve this goal."

In accordance with the resolution, the state society launched Dollars & Sense, an outreach program designed to educate Californians, young and old, about basic financial matters, Wimmers said. CalCPA members volunteer their time to lead free seminars, which are typically hosted by state legislators or other community leaders. The seminars are "designed to improve Californians' knowledge of basic financial planning and tax issues."

According to Wimmers, a recent statewide survey commissioned by CalCPA showed that nearly half of those who use credit cards carry forward a portion of their balance each month and only about one-third put a fixed amount of their earnings into a savings account.

"By making smart financial decisions, Californians can get their debt under control and start achieving their financial goals," said Wimmers. "We're here to help."

CalCPA is one of the nation's largest accounting organizations and the largest CPA association in California, serving 27,000 members in public practice, private industry, education and government.

The main site for this is http://www.calcpa.org/FLC/index.html 

Bob Jensen's helpers along similar lines are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fees.htm 

Online training alternatives are linked at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/crossborder.htm 


"Linux vs. Windows: Which Is More Secure?" by Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols, eWeek,  March 30, 2004 --- http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1759,1557459,00.asp?kc=EWNWS033104DTX1K0000599 

In a new report, Is Linux More Secure Than Windows? from Forrester Research Inc., based in Cambridge, Mass., Computing Infrastructures Senior Analyst Laura Koetzle finds that both Windows and Linux can be deployed securely. Microsoft Corp., however, fixes security problems the quickest—which is a good thing, since it also has the most major security holes.

Forrester found that many IT professionals believe that Linux is more secure than Windows, but Koetzle found that the real-world answer is more complicated than that simplistic analysis.

Koetzle believes, based on a survey of past security vulnerabilities, that security vulnerabilities follow a timeline—in other words, that they have a lifespan.

In this lifetime, real vulnerabilities to attack are usually born with a public disclosure of the problem in a form like the Bugtraq security mailing list. Next, the ISVs or open-source developers prioritize the vulnerability and build a stable fix for it.

Lagging behind these developers, unscrupulous hackers then start exploiting the vulnerability. However, it's only after one of them builds an automated script tool for unskilled vandals (aka script kiddies) that the number of attacks really takes off.

The real period of enterprise vulnerability is after these script-kiddy tools appear and before customers apply the patch. In other words, most real-world security breaches on either operating system could be fixed with timely patch management.

But the fault doesn't lie entirely with sloppy system administration, according to Koetzle. "It's up to the customer to apply it (the patch)," she writes. "But doing so isn't a simple task: Because few firms stick to consistent platform configurations and most lack robust testing and deployment procedures, patch application can take months—or longer. For example, for the nine highest-profile Windows malicious code incidents as of March 2003, Microsoft's patches predated major outbreaks by an average of 305 days, yet most firms hadn't applied the patches."

Forrester believes, though, that the judging of how well operating system vendors deal with security problem is bigger than just quick patch release and how well the vendor enables administrators to apply those patches. To Forrester, the key questions in judging operating systems are: how quickly does an operating system vendor fix public security vulnerabilities; how severe are those problems, compared with other vendors; and how close the vendor gets to fixing 100 percent of its security flaws.

Continued in the article


I thought DOS was already dead!

DOS on Its Death Bed? --- http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1759,1558362,00.asp?kc=EWNWS033104DTX1K0000599 

 




Forwarded by Walt Bernards

From a Military Doctor

I am a doctor specializing in Emergency Medicine in the Emergency Departments of the only two military Level One-trauma centers. They are both in San Antonio, TX and they care for civilian Emergencies as well as military personnel. San Antonio has the largest military retiree population in the world living here, because of the location of these two large military medical centers. As a military doctor in training in my specialty, I work long hours and the pay is less than glamorous.

One tends to become jaded by the long hours, lack of sleep, food, family contact and the endless parade of human suffering passing before you. The arrival of another ambulance does not mean more pay, only more work.

Most often, it is a victim from a motor vehicle crash. Often it is a person of dubious character who has been shot or stabbed. With our large military retiree population, it is often a nursing home patient.

Even with my enlisted service and minimal combat experience in Panama, prior to medical school, I have caught myself groaning when the ambulance brought in yet another sick, elderly person from one of the local retirement centers that cater to military retirees. I had not stopped to think of what citizens of this age group represented.

I saw "Saving Private Ryan." I was touched deeply. Not so much by the carnage in the first 30 minutes, but by the sacrifices of so many. I was touched most by the scene of the elderly survivor at the graveside, asking his wife if he'd been a good man. I realized that I had seen these same men and women coming through my Emergency Dept. and had not realized what magnificent sacrifices they had made. The things they did for me and everyone else that has lived on this planet since the end of that conflict are priceless.

Situation permitting, I now try to ask my patients about their experiences. They would never bring up the subject without the inquiry. I have been privileged to an amazing array of experiences, recounted in the brief minutes allowed in an Emergency Dept. encounter. These experiences have revealed the incredible individuals I have had the honor of serving in a medical capacity, many on their last admission to the hospital.

There was a frail, elderly woman who reassured my young enlisted medic, trying to start an IV line in her arm. She remained calm and poised, despite her illness and the multiple needle-sticks into her fragile veins. She was what we call a "hard stick." As the medic made another attempt, I noticed a number tattooed across her forearm. I touched it with one finger and looked into her eyes. She simply said "Auschwitz." Many of later generations would have loudly and openly berated the young medic in his many attempts. How different was the response from this person who'd seen unspeakable suffering.

Also, there was this long retired Colonel, who as a young officer had parachuted from his burning plane over a Pacific Island held by the Japanese. Now an octogenarian, his head cut in a fall at home where he lived alone. His CT scan and suturing had been delayed until after midnight by the usual parade of high priority ambulance patients. Still spry for his age, he asked to use the phone to call a taxi, to take him home, then he realized his ambulance had brought him without his wallet.

He asked if he could use the phone to make a long distance call to his daughter who lived 7 miles away. With great pride we told him that he could not, as he'd done enough for his country and the least we could do was get him a taxi home, even if we had to pay for it ourselves. My only regret was that my shift wouldn't end for several hours, and I couldn't drive him myself.

I was there the night! MSgt. Roy Benavidez came through the Emergency Dept. for the last time. He was very sick. I was not the doctor taking care of him, but I walked to his bedside and took his hand. I said nothing. He was so sick, he didn't know I was there. I'd read his Congressional Medal of Honor citation and wanted to shake his hand. He died a few days later.

The gentleman who served with Merrill's Marauders, the survivor of the Bataan Death March, the survivor of Omaha Beach, the 101 year old World War I veteran, the former POW held in frozen North Korea, the former Special Forces medic - now with non-operable liver cancer, the former Viet Nam Corps Commander. I remember these citizens.

I may still groan when yet another ambulance comes in, but now I am much more aware of what an honor it is to serve these particular men and women.

I have seen a Congress who would turn their back on these individuals who've sacrificed so much to protect our liberty. I see later generations that seem to be totally engrossed in abusing these same liberties, won with such sacrifice.

It has become my personal endeavor, to make the nurses and young enlisted medics aware of these amazing individuals when I encounter them in our Emergency Dept. Their response to these particular citizens has made me think that perhaps all is not lost in the next generation.

My experiences have solidified my belief that we are losing an incredible generation, and this nation knows not what it is losing. Our uncaring government and ungrateful civilian populace should all take note. We should all remember that we must "Earn this."

Written By CPT. Stephen R. Ellison, M.D. 


Forwarded by The Cha Cha Lady

ANDY ROONEY'S VIEW OF WOMEN OVER 40

Andy Rooney says.... "As I grow in age, I value women who are over 40 most of all. Here are just a few reasons why:

An over 40 woman will never wake you in the middle of the night to ask, "What are you thinking?" She doesn't care what you think.

If an over 40 woman doesn't want to watch the game, she doesn't sit around whining about it. She does something she wants to do. And it's usually something more interesting.

An over 40 woman knows herself well enough to be assured in who she is, what she is, what she wants, and from whom. 

Few women past the age of 40 give a darn what you might think about her or what she's doing.

An over 40 woman usually has had her fill of "meaningful relationships" and commitment." The last thing she wants in her life is another dopey, clingy, whiny, dependent lover.

Over 40 women are dignified. They seldom have a screaming match with you at the opera or in the middle of an expensive restaurant. Of course, if you deserve it, they won't hesitate to shoot you if they think they can get away with it.

Over 40 women are generous with praise, often undeserved. They know what it's like to be unappreciated.

An over 40 woman has the self-assurance to introduce you to her women friends. A younger woman with a man will often ignore even her best friend because she doesn't trust the guy with other women. A woman over 40 couldn't care less if you're attracted to her friends because she knows her friends won't betray her.

Women get psychic as they age. You never have to confess your sins to an over 40 woman. They always know.

An over 40 woman looks good wearing bright red lipstick. This is not true of younger women.

Over 40 women are forthright and honest. They'll tell you right off you are a jerk if you are acting like one. You don't ever have to wonder where you stand with her.

Yes, we praise over 40 women for a multitude of reasons. Unfortunately, it's not reciprocal. For every stunning, smart, well-coiffed hot woman of 40+, there is a bald, paunchy relic in yellow pants making a fool of himself with some 22-year-old waitress.

Ladies, I apologize.

Andy Rooney

 


Forwarded by The Cha Cha Lady (she may have been having a headache).

God said, "Adam, I want you to do something for me."

Adam said, "Gladly, Lord, what do You want me to do?"

God said, "Go down into that valley."

Adam said, "What's a valley?" God explained it to him.

Then God said, "Cross the river." Adam said, "What's a river?"

God explained that to him, and then said, "Go over to the hill......."

Adam said, "What is a hill?"

So, God explained to Adam what a hill was.

He told Adam, "On the other side of the hill you will find a cave."

Adam said, "What's a cave?"

After God explained, he said, "In the cave you will find a Woman."

Adam said, "What's a woman?" So God explained that to him, too. Then, God said, "I want you to reproduce."

Adam said, "How do I do that?"

God first said (under his breath), "Geez....."

And then, just like everything else, God explained that to Adam, as well.

So, Adam goes down into the valley, across the river,

and over the hill, into the cave, and finds the woman.

Then, in about five minutes, he was back.

God, his patience wearing thin, said angrily,

"What is it now?"

And Adam said, "What's a headache?"


Forwarded by Bob Overn

Three men were discussing aging at the nursing home. Sixty is the worst age to be," said the 60-year-old. You always feel like you have to pee.

And most of the time, you stand at the toilet and nothing comes out!"

"Ah, that's nothin'," said the 70-year-old. When you're seventy, you don't have a bowel movement anymore. You take laxatives, eat bran, you sit on the toilet all day and nothin' comes out!"

"Actually," said the 80-year-old, "Eighty is the worst age of all."

"Do you have trouble peeing too?" asked the 60-year-old.

"No, not really. I pee every morning at 6:00. I pee like a racehorse on a flat rock; no problem at all."

"Do you have trouble having a bowel movement?"

"No, I have one every morning at 6:30."

With great exasperation, the 60-year-old said, "Let me get this straight. You pee every morning at 6:00 and poop every morning at 6:30. So what's so tough about being 80?"

I don't wake up until 7:00."


Forwarded by Dick Haar

HUMMINGBIRD - this is amazing...

Give it time to load...each set of pictures, that is.

A lady found a humming bird nest and got pictures all the way from the egg to leaving the nest. Took 24 days from birth to flight! Very neat and good pictures. BE SURE AND SHARE WITH THE GRANDCHILDREN AND KIDS (if you have any).

http://community-2.webtv.net/hotmail.com/verle33/HummingBirdNest/ 


Forwarded by Team Carper

You know you're living in 2004 when...

01. You accidentally enter your password on the microwave. 
02. You haven't played solitaire with real cards in years. 
03. You have a list of 15 phone numbers to reach your family of 3. 
04. You e-mail the person who works at the desk next to you. 
05. Your reason for not staying in touch with friends is that they don't have e-mail addresses. 
06. When you go home after a long day at work you still answer the phone in a business manner. 
07. When you make phone calls from home, you accidentally dial 9 to get an outside line. 
08. You've sat at the same desk for four years and worked for three different companies. 
10. You learn about your redundancy on the 11 o'clock news. 
11. Your boss doesn't have the ability to do your job. 
12. Contractors outnumber permanent staff and are more likely to get long-service awards.

AND THE REAL CLINCHERS ARE...

13. You read this entire list, and kept nodding and smiling. 
14. As you read This list, you think about forwarding it to your "friends." 
15. You got this email from a friend that never talks to you anymore, except to send you jokes from the net. 
16. You are too busy to notice there was no #9 
17. You actually scrolled back up to check that there wasn't a #9 
18. AND NOW U R LAUGHING at your self and wish you knew what the dirty #9 was that Jensen deleted.


Forwarded by Team Carper

What Is Easter?

THREE BLONDES (NATURAL) DIED AND FOUND THEMSELVES STANDING BEFORE ST. PETER. HE TOLD THEM THAT BEFORE THEY COULD ENTER THE KINGDOM, THEY HAD TO TELL HIM WHAT EASTER WAS.

THE FIRST BLONDE SAID, "EASTER IS A HOLIDAY WHERE THEY HAVE A BIG FEAST AND WE GIVE THANKS AND EAT TURKEY."

ST. PETER SAID, "NOOOOOO," AND HE BANISHED HER TO HELL.

THE SECOND BLONDE SAID, "EASTER IS WHEN WE CELEBRATE JESUS' BIRTH AND EXCHANGE GIFTS."

ST. PETER SAID, "NOOOOOO," AND HE BANISHED HER TO HELL.

THE THIRD BLONDE SAID, SHE KNEW WHAT EASTER IS, AND ST. PETER SAID, "SO, TELL ME."

SHE SAID, "EASTER IS A CHRISTIAN HOLIDAY THAT COINCIDES WITH THE JEWISH FESTIVAL OF PASSOVER. JESUS WAS HAVING PASSOVER FEAST WITH HIS DISCIPLES WHEN HE WAS BETRAYED BY JUDAS, AND THE ROMANS ARRESTED HIM. THE ROMANS HUNG HIM ON THE CROSS AND EVENTUALLY HE DIED. THEN THEY BURIED HIM IN A TOMB BEHIND A VERY LARGE BOULDER ..

ST. PETER SAID, "VERRRRRRY GOOD."

THEN THE BLONDE CONTINUED, "NOW EVERY YEAR THE JEWS ROLL AWAY THE BOULDER AND JESUS COMES OUT. IF HE SEES HIS SHADOW, WE HAVE SIX MORE WEEKS OF BASKETBALL."

ST. PETER FAINTED.


Forwarded by The Cha Cha Lady

Long Live the Republic of Texas

Texas has given all those complainers plenty of time to get used to the results. After seeing the whiners along the inauguration route, the folks from Texas have decided that we might just take matters into our own hands.

Here is our solution:

#1: Let Kerry become President of the United States (all 49 states).

#2: George W. Bush becomes the President of the Republic of Texas So what does Texas have to do to survive as a Republic? 

NASA in Houston, Texas will control the space industry.  

We refine over 85% of the gasoline in the United States. Defense Industry (we have over 65% of it). The term "Don't mess with Texas," will take on a whole new meaning

Oil - we can supply all the oil that the Republic of Texas will need for the next 300 years. Yankee states? Sorry about that.

Natural Gas - Again we have all we need and it's too bad about those northern states. Mr. Kerry will figure a way to keep them warm.

Computer Industry - we currently lead the nation in producing computer chips and communications: Small places like HP, Texas Instruments, Dell Computer, EDS, Raytheon, National Semiconductor, Motorola, Intel, AMD, Atmel, Applied Materials, Ball Semiconductor, Dallas Semiconductor, Delphi, Nortel, Alcatel, Etc,Etc. The list goes on and on.

Health Centers - We have the largest research centers for Cancer research, the best burn centers and the top trauma units in the world and other large health planning centers.

We have enough colleges to keep us going: U.T., Texas A&M, TexasTech, Rice, SMU, University of Houston, Baylor, UNT, Trinity University, Texas Women's University, etc. Ivy grows better in the south anyway.

We have a ready supply of workers (just open the border when we need some more ) .

We have control of the paper industry, plastics, insurance, etc.

In case of a foreign invasion, we have the Texas National Guard and the Texas Air National Guard. We don't have an army but since everybody down here has at least six rifles and a pile of ammo, we can raise an army in 24 hours if we need it. If the situation really gets bad, we can always call Department of Public Safety and ask them to send over a couple of Texas Rangers. We are totally self sufficient in beef, poultry, hogs and vegetable produce and everybody down here knows how to cook them so that they taste good. Don't need any food. This just names a few of the items that will keep the Republic of Texas in good shape There isn't a thing out there that we need and don't have.

Now to the rest of the United States under President Kerry : Since you won't have the refineries to get gas for your cars, only President Kerry will be able to drive around in his 9 mile per gallon SUV. The rest of the United States will have to walk or ride bikes.

You won't have any TV as the space center in Houston will cut off your communications. You won't have any natural gas to heat your homes but since Mr. Kerry has predicted global warming, you will not need the gas.

Signed, The People in Texas

Addendum by Bob Jensen
And the Republic of Texas may actually absorb all of Mexico since this would simply be completing the loop in history.  The problem is that we will then have to build an iron curtain to discourage citizens of California, Nevada, Arizona, and New Mexico from trying to constantly sneak into our Republic.


Follow up by The Cha Cha Lady

A man from Texas, driving a Volkswagen Beetle, pulls up next to a guy in a Rolls Royce at a stop sign

Their windows are open and he yells at the guy in the Rolls, "Hey, you got a telephone in that Rolls?"

The guy in the Rolls says, "Yes, of course I do."

"I got one too... see?" the Texan says.

"Uh, huh, yes, that's very nice."

"You got a fax machine?" asks the Texan.

"Why, actually, yes, I do."

"I do too! See? It's right here!" brags the Texan.

The light is just about to turn green and the guy in the Volkswagen says, "So, do you have a double bed in back there?"

The guy in the Rolls replies, "NO! Do you?"

"Yep, got my double bed right in back here," the Texan replies.

The light turns and the man in the Volkswagen takes off. Well, the guy in the Rolls is not about to be one-upped, so he immediately goes to a customizing shop and orders them to put a double bed in back of his car.

About two weeks later, the job is finally done. He picks up his car and drives all over town looking for the Volkswagen beetle with the Texas plates.

Finally, he finds it parked alongside the road, so he pulls his Rolls up next to it.

The windows on the Volkswagen are all fogged up and he feels somewhat awkward about it, but he gets out of his newly modified Rolls and taps on the foggy window of the Volkswagen.

(It's ok, the joke is CLEAN)

The man in the Volkswagen finally opens the window a crack and peeks out. The guy with the Rolls says, "Hey, remember me?"

"Yeah, yeah, I remember you," replies the Texan, "What's up?"

"Check this out... I got a double bed installed in my Rolls."

The Texan exclaims,

"YOU GOT ME OUT OF THE SHOWER TO TELL ME THAT?!"


Forwarded by Team Carper

GIVE ME A SENSE OF HUMOR, LORD There is the story of a pastor who got up one Sunday and announced to his congregation: "I have good news and bad news. The good news is, we have enough money to pay for our new building program. The bad news is, it's still out there in your pockets."

While driving in Pennsylvania, a family caught up to an Amish carriage. The owner of the carriage obviously had a sense of humor, because attached to the back of the carriage was a hand printed sign ... "Energy efficient vehicle: Runs on oats and grass. Caution: Do not step in exhaust."

People want the front of the bus, the back of the church, and the center of attention.

"Somebody has well said there are only two kinds of people in the world. There are those who wake up in the morning and say, "Good morning, Lord," and there are those who wake up in the morning and say, "Good Lord, it's morning."

A father was approached by his small son who told him proudly, "I know what the Bible means!" His father smiled and replied, "What do you mean, you 'know' what the Bible means?" The son replied, "I do know!" "Okay, said his father. "So, son, what does the Bible mean?" "That's easy, Daddy. It stands for 'Basic Information Before Leaving Earth.'"

There was a very gracious lady who was mailing an old family Bible to her brother in another part of the country. "Is there anything breakable in here?" asked the postal clerk. "Only the Ten Commandments." answered the lady.

The minister was preoccupied with thoughts of how he was going to, after the worship service, ask the congregation to come up with more money than they were expecting for repairs to the church building. Therefore, he was annoyed to find that the regular organist was sick and a substitute had been brought in at the last minute. The substitute wanted to know what to play. "Here's a copy of the service," he said impatiently. "But you'll have to think of something to play after I make the announcement about the finances." During the service, the minister paused and said, "Brothers and Sisters, we are in great difficulty; the roof repairs cost twice as much as we expected, and we need $4,000 more. Any of you who can pledge $100 or more, please stand up.." At that moment, the substitute organist played "The Star Spangled Banner." And that is how the substitute became the regular organist!

Give me a sense of humor, Lord, Give me the grace to see a joke, To get some humor out of life, And pass it on to other folk


Forwarded by David Coy

Don't forget to file your dog's tax return --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/junk/dogtax.htm 


Forwarded by Maria

RealAge Tip of the Day --------------------------------------------------------
Somewhere in the Middle:  The right amount of vitamin D may help promote prostate health.  Getting too much or too little vitamin D appears to put prostate health at risk. In a study, men who got the least amount of vitamin D had a higher risk of prostate cancer compared to men who consumed average amounts. Men who got excessive vitamin D had a higher risk, too. Strike a happy medium with about 400 IU per day.  RealAge Benefit: Getting 400 IU of vitamin D and 1,200 milligrams of calcium per day can make your RealAge as much as 1.3 years younger.  More: Vitamin D is important for . . .
For more, go to: http://mailer.realage.com/click?q=7d-FFBqIDLUdjDs-qFUVM3_-Rg9UdRR


Look for answers to your pest control questions at http://www.pestcontrolcanada.com/Questions/recent_pest_control_questions%20page2.htm


Pop Quiz

Question
How many of the following tips are really good ideas?

 Forwarded by Team Carper

01. Flies or bees bothering you? Spray them with hair spray and they will take a quick dive.  

02. Sealed envelope - Put in the freezer for a few hours, then slide a knife under the flap. The envelope can then be resealed  

03. Use Empty toilet paper roll to store appliance cords in. It keeps them neat and you can write on the roll what appliance it belongs to.   (Vernon Jensen, my father, always stored extension cords using toilet paper and paper towel cores.)

04. For icy door steps in freezing temperatures: get warm water and put Dawn dish washing liquid in it. Pour it all over the steps.  They won't refreeze.  (Works in New Hampshire until the rain hits.)

05 Permanent marker on appliances/counter tops (like store receipt  BLUE!) Try rubbing alcohol on paper towel.  

06. Spray a bit of perfume on the light bulb in any room to create a lovely light scent in each room when the light is turned on.  

07. Place fabric softener sheets in dresser drawers and your clothes will smell freshly washed for weeks to come. You can also do  this with towels and linen.  

08. Candles will last a lot longer if placed in the freezer for at least 3 hours prior to burning.  

09. To clean artificial flowers, pour some salt into a paper bag and add the flowers. Shake vigorously as the salt will absorb all the  dust and dirt and leave your artificial flowers looking like new!  Works like a charm!  

10. To get rid of itch from mosquito bites, try applying soap on the area and you will experience instant relief.  

11. Ants, ants, ants everywhere ... Well, they are said to never cross a chalk line. So get your chalk out and draw a line on the floor or wherever ants tend to march. See for yourself.  

12. Use air-freshener to clean mirrors. It does a good job and better still, leaves a lovely smell to the shine.  

13. When you get a splinter, reach for the scotch tape before resorting to tweezers or a needle. Simply put the scotch tape over the splinter, then pull it off. Scotch tape removes some splinters  painlessly and easily.


Answer
All the above are worth a try, but I have my doubts that Number 11 when it comes to microscopic farrow ants in Texas.

You can look for answers to your pest control questions at http://www.pestcontrolcanada.com/Questions/recent_pest_control_questions%20page2.htm  

Question from One of My Loyal Fans
What is the best way to peel boiled eggs?

Answer
Don't crack and peel boiled eggs by hitting them on the side of a pan. Use a spoon to crack a ring around the egg, and then peel the rest off easily.

OK, here's how to prepare the eggs --- http://users.ev1.net/~keker/eggs.htm  

Place eggs and cold water in a pot (be sure to cover eggs with at least 1/2" of water). Bring to boil, then turn heat down to simmer (this will happen immediately if you have a gas stove (if you have an electric stove, sell it and buy a gas stove - or give up). For large eggs, simmer for 6 minutes, then using a knife handle, break all the shells in several places. Finish simmering for an additional 9 minutes. When finished cooking, run COLD water into the pot and let eggs cool (You might even add ice to speed up the cooling.).




And that's the way it was on April 8, 2004 with a little help from my friends.

Jesse's Wonderful Music for Romantics (You have to scroll down to the titles) --- http://www.jessiesweb.com/

I highly recommend TheFinanceProfessor (an absolutely fabulous and totally free newsletter from a very smart finance professor) --- www.FinanceProfessor.com 

 

In March 2000, Forbes named AccountantsWorld.com as the Best Website on the Web --- http://accountantsworld.com/.
Some top accountancy links --- http://accountantsworld.com/category.asp?id=Accounting

 

For accounting news, I prefer AccountingWeb at http://www.accountingweb.com/ 
I also like SmartPros at http://www.smartpros.com/ 

 

Another leading accounting site is AccountingEducation.com at http://www.accountingeducation.com/ 

 

Jack Anderson's Accounting Information Finder --- http://www.umsl.edu/~anderson/accsites.htm

 

Gerald Trite's great set of links --- http://www.zorba.ca/bookmark.htm 

 

Paul Pacter maintains the best international accounting standards and news Website at http://www.iasplus.com/

The Finance Professor --- http://www.financeprofessor.com/about/aboutFP.html 

 

Walt Mossberg's many answers to questions in technology --- http://ptech.wsj.com/

 

How stuff works --- http://www.howstuffworks.com/ 

 

Bob Jensen's video helpers for MS Excel, MS Access, and other helper videos are at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/ 
Accompanying documentation can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/default1.htm and http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm 

 

Click on www.syllabus.com/radio/index.asp for a complete list of interviews with established leaders, creative thinkers and education technology experts in higher education from around the country.

 

Professor Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-999-7347 Fax: 210-999-8134  Email:  rjensen@trinity.edu  

 

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April 1, 2004

Bob Jensen's New Bookmarks on April 1, 2004
Bob Jensen at Trinity University
 


Quotes of the Week

Quoting one is plagiarism; quoting many is research.
Author unknown

The distance between one molecule and another is the distance between the stars.
Carlo Dossi

It is impossible to enjoy idling thoroughly unless one has plenty of work to do.
Jerome K. Jerome

Following the Bush administration's lead, Republicans in the House say they will push to overhaul a financial aid system that often sends a disproportionate share of federal education money to wealthy universities with relatively few low-income students.
Greg Winter, "Push Is On to Limit Aid to Rich Universities," The New York Times, March 28, 2004 --- http://www.nytimes.com/2004/03/26/education/26COLL.html 

Sixteen of the teams that made the tournament's initial field of 65 had graduation rates of 25 percent or less. Four of those teams did not graduate a player within the six years allotted, according to the latest National Collegiate Athletic Association graduation data.
Joe Drape, "Graduation Is Secondary for Many in Final 16," The New York Times, March 28, 2004 --- http://www.nytimes.com/2004/03/24/sports/ncaabasketball/24GRAD.html 

Self-appointed sheriffs scan eBay and Yahoo auctions looking for fraud. When they find it - or at least when they think they've found it - they warn buyers or make outrageously high bids themselves in order to end the auction and prevent potential victims from falling into the trap. Elsewhere, private crusaders cruise Internet chat rooms for pedophiles and report their findings to law enforcement - or even expose them online. And hackers release programs into cyberspace that repair the damage done by malicious computer viruses.
John Schwartz, "On the Web, Vengeance Is Mine (and Mine)" The New York Times, March 28, 2004 --- http://www.nytimes.com/2004/03/28/weekinreview/28schw.html 

Audio Speeches from Past Leaders and Famous People (the entire set of recordings is too large to make available online)
The voices include every U.S. president since Herbert Hoover, foreign leaders from Charles de Gaulle to Corazon Aquino, scientists like Jacques Cousteau and Carl Sagan, entertainers like Joan Baez and Cecil B. DeMille. They are all part of a collection of speeches spanning nearly 100 years recently acquired from the Commonwealth Club by the Hoover Institution
"Commonwealth Club archives feature key 20th-century voices," Stanford Magazine --- http://www.stanfordalumni.org/news/magazine/2004/marapr/show/archives.html 
Some audio clips are available at http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2003/06/17/MN157028.DTL 
Other links about these recordings are available at http://www-hoover.stanford.edu/hila/cwclub.htm 

I found an excellent search engine for audio and video clips called singingfish - http://www.singingfish.com  I did a search for "Worldcom accounting" and found an interview by an NPR commentator and Denny Beresford. It would be easy to supplement an accounting lecture with appropriate sound bites from a variety of sources.
Richard Campbell, e-Mail Message on March 25, 2004
Bob Jensen's audio and video search helpers for clips, lectures, interviews, speeches, and books can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/searchh.htm#Audio 

Audio and Video Lectures on Demand --- http://eserver.org/lectures/  
Bob Jensen's audio and video search helpers for clips, lectures, interviews, speeches, and books can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/searchh.htm#Audio 

Three quarters of the American population now have Internet access, with women slightly more likely than men to spend time surfing, a new survey says.
Wired News, March 18, 2004 --- http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,62712,00.html?tw=newsletter_topstories_html 

Three quarters of the American population now have Internet access, with women slightly more likely than men to spend time surfing, a new survey says.
Wired News, March 18, 2004 --- http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,62712,00.html?tw=newsletter_topstories_html 

People are more willing to sympathize with unhappiness than happiness.
Simone de Beauvoir

My bottom line is this advice to investors: Look at the firm's 10-K and examine the extent to which it employs derivatives. If the corporation engages derivatives to a large extent, sell your stocks and start looking for another company in which to invest. If you find a firm that does not use them or uses them only modestly, you can consider investing in the company. If you do, save the 10-K. If later you learn that the company has lost a lot of money in derivatives activities that they did not disclose, then find a good litigation attorney. It will be your only recourse.
J. Edward Ketz, "The Accounting Cycle The Amazing World of Derivatives," SmartPros, March 2004 --- http://www.smartpros.com/x42941.xml 
I hope Ed is jesting in the above quotation.  Derivatives are the way firms manage risks, and to do away with derivatives would be like giving up the crutches that hold you up on a broken leg. 
Bob Jensen’s documents on derivatives are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm

Of particular relevance to our economy overall is the application of property-right protection to information technology," Greenspan said, adding, "How appropriate is our current system-- developed for a world in which physical assets predominated-- for an economy in which value increasingly is embodied in ideas rather than tangible capital? The importance of such questions is perhaps most readily appreciated here in Silicon Valley.
Alan Greenspan, Speech at Stanford University, February 27, 2004 --- http://news-service.stanford.edu/news/2004/march3/greenspan-33.html

Kenneth R. Timmerman is a senior writer for Insight magazine. His book The French Betrayal of America is just out.  The following is a quote from Kenneth R. Timmerman, "The French War for Oil," The Washington Post, March 16, 2004.

The French claimed their opposition to the U.S.-led war to oust Saddam Hussein was all about policy. The editor of the Paris daily Le Monde, Jean-Marie Colombani, just resuscitated those arguments in an editorial that singled out George W. Bush as "a threat to the very foundation of the historical alliance between the U.S. and Europe," and called fervently for the election of John F. Kerry. (I guess that F now stands for France.)

But Colombani, whose paper's coverage of the war in Iraq was noteworthy for its wanton disregard for the truth, had not a word to say about his country's war for oil. Indeed, the secret deals the French state-owned oil companies negotiated in the 1990s with Saddam Hussein went widely unreported in France.

Almost as soon as the guns went silent after the first Gulf war in 1991, French oil giants Total SA and Elf Aquitaine - who have now merged and expanded to become TotalFinaElf - sought a competitive advantage over their rivals in Iraq by negotiating exclusive production-sharing contracts with Saddam's regime that were intended to give them a stranglehold on Iraq's future oil production for decades to come.

Catherine Hakim, a sociology professor at the London School of Economics, recently completed a large survey in Spain and the UK of people's labor force preferences -- in short, how men and women each value work in their lives. Her results are notable since they get at how people feel about these topics in their personal lives, rather than how they feel about public policy. The results may surprise you; they certainly did the European Commission.
FastCompany --- http://www.fastcompany.com/articles/2004/01/hakim.html 

Democratic Presidential Candidate John Kerry refers to the Mutual Fund Industry as "Organized Crime."
"John Kerry’s 19 Year Record On Investor Issues," American Shareholders' Association ---  http://www.americanshareholders.com/news/asakerryreport03-22-04.pdf  

Two senators introduce legislation that would impose jail time for sharing as little as one file, while the House may consider another that would lower the bar to take people to court. Looks like entertainment lobbyists are winning their war against peer-to-peer networks.
Xeni Jardin, Wired News, March 26, 2004 --- http://www.wired.com/news/digiwood/0,1412,62830,00.html?tw=newsletter_topstories_html 
Bob Jensen's threads on P2P technologies and controversies are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/napster.htm 

Canadian Web sleuths save U.S. girl in porn case.
Christie Blatchford, The Globe and Mail, March 26, 2004 --- http://www.globetechnology.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20040326.gtblatch26/BNStory/Technology/ 

Some Quotations About the Amazing Amazon that is Flooded With Cash from "Amazon That Finally Clicks," by Russ Banham, CFO Magazine,  Sprint 2004 Special Issue --- http://www.cfo.com/article/1,5309,12598|0|M|846|,00.html 

Little wonder why Erik Brynjolfsson, a professor at MIT's Sloan School of Management and director of its Center for eBusiness, calls Amazon "the world's largest consumer laboratory."

While still sometimes referred to as an online bookstore, Amazon now boasts a product line that staggers the imagination, from apparel, sporting goods, and jewelry to new services including a feature that lets customers make "1-Click" Presidential campaign contributions.

Behind Amazon's breadth of products and services are myriad business arrangements: some products the company owns, inventories, sells, and ships; others it sells on behalf of third-party retailers. Some of these third-party products Amazon ships and fulfills; others are shipped and fulfilled by the third parties themselves. Among those third parties are thousands of mom-and-pop E-tailers that collectively make Amazon's Marketplace division a perpetual online garage sale surpassed only by E-bay.

With 39 million active customer accounts (based on the number of E-mail addresses from which orders originated in 2003), Amazon seems to be making good on its promise to offer the "Earth's biggest selection of products," or as Szkutak puts it, "to build a place where people can find, discover, and buy anything they want online." To do that, he says, the company has learned—sometimes the hard way—to "start with the customer and work backward."

Working backward has changed Amazon from an online retailer to an E-commerce platform. Today, it is not a store so much as a channel, a place where brand-name third-party retailers, smaller businesses, and just plain folks can hawk their goods to a worldwide clientele. This past holiday season, shoppers traipsed through Amazon to buy products from Gap, Toys "R" Us, True Value Hardware, and Kitchen Etc.—and maybe some kid in Idaho who was trying to unload his slightly dog-eared Harry Potter library. Assembling such a vast collection of partners and building the systems that allow customers to buy from an individual as easily as they buy from a retail giant has not been easy, and analysts praise Amazon's achievements. "Amazon has knocked 10 steps down to 1," says Adam Sarner, a research analyst at Stamford, Connecticut-based technology research firm Gartner Inc. "This is what they mean by 'customer convenience.'"

See below for more quotations from this article

March 30, 2004 email message from Bob Jensen

When you figure that Freddie Mac has over $1,000,000,000,000 in derivatives and it takes roughly 10,000 dollar bills lined up end to end to stretch for one mile, there are enough derivative notional dollars in Freddie Mac to lay out end to end for about 100,000,000 miles.  This is enough to go around the earth’s center about 4,000 times or enough for about 200 round trips to the moon.

There are not enough to reach Mars (250 million miles), so let’s give Freddie Mac another decade to reach Mars if he (it) does not bring the U.S. economy to its knees in the meantime (as is being warned by Alan Greenspan).  What’s scary is that Freddie is actually smaller than his mortgage-buying big sister Fannie Mae.

To listen (or watch) the emotionally-charged 2004 Freddie Mac Annual Meeting, you can tune in beginning at 8:00 a.m. Central Standard Time beginning March 31 and/or tune into the replays until midnight of April 14 --- http://www.freddiemac.com/news/archives/investors/2004/annualstockwebcast_032504.html

Bob Jensen’s threads on Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm

 (See Below)

 




 

Bob Jensen's January-March 2004 Updates on Frauds and the Accounting Scandals --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud033104.htm 

News Headlines for Accounting from TheCycles.com --- http://www.thecycles.com/business/accounting 
An unbelievable number of other news headlines categories in TheCycles.com are at http://www.thecycles.com/ 

March 20, 2004 message from Scott Bonacker [lister@BONACKERS.COM

It's nice to know that Americans aren't the only ones that want to believe - and that sometimes the perpetrators get caught. Also of interest is the ratio of crore to $US.

Scott

-----Original Message-----
From: cluestick.org
Sent: Friday, March 19, 2004 7:29 PM

Subject: MEDIA: Two 419ers scam an Indian man, and get arrested

http://web.mid-day.com/news/city/2004/march/79007.htm 

note: 1 lakh = 100,000, 1 crore = 100 lakhs (10,000,000 / ten million

 

Robert Walker in Wellington, New Zealand sent me a Word document that, with his permission, I saved as a HTML document at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/WalkerVAllen.htm 
This reports on a court case that you may find it interesting reading on the theory of contingent liabilities as applied to a recent court case.




Standards Versus Popularity

"Coach Fitz's Management Theory, by Michael Lewis, New York Times Magazine, March 28, 2004 --- http://www.nytimes.com/2004/03/28/magazine/28COACH.html?pagewanted=1 

Quote 1:  Michael Lewis
The past was no longer on speaking terms with the present. As the cash poured in from former players and parents of former players who wanted to name the gym for the 56-year-old Fitz, his current players and their parents were doing their best to persuade the headmaster to get rid of him. I called a couple of the players involved, now college freshmen. Their fathers had been among the complainers, but they spoke of the episode as a kind of natural disaster beyond their control. One of the players, who asked not to be named, called his teammates ''a bunch of whiners'' and explained that the reason Fitz was in such trouble was that ''a lot of the parents are big-money donors.''

Quote 2:  Coach Fitz:  
"I know about parents. I know how much they love to say, 'I pay $14,000 in tuition, and so my little boy deserves to play.' No way. You earn the right to play. I had a mom and dad, too, you know. I loved my mom and dad. My dad didn't understand much about athletics, and so he didn't always get it. You have to make that distinction at some point. At some point you have to stand up and be a man and say: 'This is how I'm going to do it. This is how I'm going to approach it.' When is the last time any of you guys did that? No. For you, it's all 'fun.' Well, it's not all fun. Some days it's work.''

Quote 3:  Michael Lewis
Then he wrapped it up, with a quote he attributed to Mark Twain, about how the difference between animals and people, the ability to think, is diminished by people's refusal to think. Aesop to Mark Twain, with a baseball digression and a lesson on self-weaning: the whole thing took five minutes.

And then his mood shifted completely. The kids climbed to their feet and followed their coach back to practice. He faced the most deeply entrenched attitude problem in his players in 31 years. His wife, Peggy, had hinted to me that for the first time, Fitz was thinking about giving up coaching altogether. He faced a climate of sensitivity that made it nearly impossible for him to change those attitudes. He faced, in short, a world trying to stop him from making his miracles. And on top of it all, he had the flu. It counted as the lowest moment, easily, in his career as a baseball coach. Unfairly, I took the moment to ask him, ''Do you really think there's any hope for this team?'' The question startled him into a new freshness. He was alive, awake, almost well again. ''Always,'' he said. ''You never give up on a team. Just like you never give up on a kid.'' Then he paused. ''But it's going to take some work.''

And that's how I left him. Largely unchanged. No longer, sadly, my baseball coach. Instead, the kind of person who might one day coach my children. And when I think of that, I become aware of a new fear: that my children might never meet up with their Fitz. Or that they will, and their father will fail to understand what he's up to.


Politically Correct Recruitment and Maintenance of Faculty

"With Liberty and Comfort for All." by  Mike S. Adams, Townhall.com, March 29, 2004 ---  (archive)http://www.townhall.com/columnists/mikeadams/ma20040329.shtml 

Well, I suppose it had to happen. After eleven years of teaching at a public university, I finally got a call from one of my superiors informing me that I had made one of my co-workers feel “uncomfortable” in the workplace.  For those who may not know, the right to feel “comfortable” at all times trumps the First Amendment at most public universities.

Naturally, when I found out that I made a co-worker feel “uncomfortable,” I wanted to know what I had said or done to produce such an unthinkable result. That was when I learned that the “discomfort” occurred because I had been discussing some of my weekly columns here in the workplace (i.e., at the public university).  The penalty for that transgression was simple: a ban on discussing my columns in the office in front of those who might be offended by my opinions. This was accompanied by the shocking revelation that “not everyone sees things the way you do, Mike.”

When it first hit me that while in the office I could no longer talk about gay rights, feminism, religion, Darwinism, affirmative action, or any issue I discuss in my column, I was outraged. In fact, I got so mad that I raised my voice before storming out of my superior’s office. I never thought that the right of each university employee to feel comfortable at all times would ever actually be enforced against me here in the workplace (a.k.a., the public university).

But after I thought about it for a while, my anger turned to elation. Surely, the power to trump the First Amendment rights of others in response to “discomfort” is available to all employees, not just a select few. Since that must be the case (because our public university is committed to equality), I decided to make a list of every situation I had encountered at UNC-Wilmington where I felt “uncomfortable.”

Armed with such a list, university administrators can now identify and silence the responsible parties, and I can enjoy the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of unmitigated comfort. The following list isn’t yet complete, but I thought that I would share some highlights since I’m not allowed to talk to anyone in the office (here at the public university) about these issues:

*My first year at UNCW, a faculty member in our department objected to a job candidate because he was “a little too white male.” Such comments make me feel really uncomfortable, being a white guy and all that.

*My second year at UNCW we removed a white woman from our interview pool in order to make room for a black woman. When the university forced me to discriminate on the basis of race, I felt really uncomfortable.

*My third year at UNCW someone suggested that we should reject a job candidate because he was “too religious.” It sure makes me feel uncomfortable when people say things like that.

*My fourth year at UNCW someone objected to a job candidate because she felt that the husband played too dominant a role in the candidate’s marriage. It also makes me feel uncomfortable when people say things like that.

*Then there are all the times that the name Jesus Christ has been used as a form of profanity in the office. That makes me feel uncomfortable. By the way, I am especially offended by the phrase “Jesus F***ing Christ!” I mean, no one ever says “Mo-F***ing-Hammed!” or “F***ing Buddha!,” do they?

*Then there was the time that a gay activist in our department suggested that I switch to bi-sexuality in order to double my chances of finding a suitable “partner.” That made me feel uncomfortable and she knew it. After I started to blush, she asked, “What’s the matter, are you a little homophobic?” So what if I don’t think you can change your sexual orientation as easily as your underwear? Is that so wrong? Do I really have a phobia?

*And how about the time that a faculty member called another faculty member a “mother f***er” in one of our meetings? That was before he said that he should have climbed over the desk and “slapped the s*** out of him.” These sociologists need to start getting along with one another if they plan to build a Utopian society. Plus, it makes me feel really uncomfortable to hear about these threats of violence in the workplace.

*Then there’s the professor in our department who thinks that I am trying to poison her with tear gas. A few years ago the police questioned me about breaking into her office and spraying chemicals. That was a pretty uncomfortable situation. I think it even qualifies as a Maalox moment. By the way, how long do I have to work with this woman? She makes me feel very uncomfortable.

*And then there was the time that the university attorney read two of my personal e-mails against my objections. Do you have any idea how uncomfortable that made me feel? That’s a long story that you can read about in my new book, which I am not trying shamelessly to promote. I know that capitalism makes a lot of my colleagues feel uncomfortable.

*A member of the UNCW Board of Trustees has been heard calling people “white trash” and making other racist statements in public. She has to vote on my next promotion as well as the promotion of every other professor at the university. That makes me feel a little uncomfortable, still being a white guy and all that. Maybe my race makes her feel uncomfortable, but some of us can’t afford to change the color of our skin. We can’t all be like Michael Jackson. I know that makes a lot of parents feel comfortable.

Well, that covers the first ten items on my list. I have over two hundred more to go but I’m getting a crick in my neck from writing all of this down. It’s only 10:51 a.m. (EST) but I think I’ll call it a day. I can’t work unless I feel perfectly comfortable, both physically and emotionally at all times.

I’ll be back in the morning. In the meantime, the university needs to start rounding up all of the people who are interfering with my life, liberty, and pursuit of absolute comfort. I hope that no one will feel uncomfortable when they are reprimanded for making me feel uncomfortable.

I know that if everyone follows my lead, free speech will die here at our local university. But at least everyone will feel comfortable at all times. I guess that’s all that really matters.

Mike S. Adams (adams_mike@hotmail.com) is the author of “Welcome to the Ivory Tower of Babel.”  Note: all UNC-Wilmington faculty, staff, students, and administrators who were offended by this column must keep their remarks to themselves while in the workplace. Discussion of my columns is strictly forbidden. If anyone cares to discuss the incidents mentioned in this article, just meet me for a latte at Barnes and Noble. I’ll buy the first round, unless that makes someone feel uncomfortable.


March 30, 2004 message from Derek Lee [derekl@SFU.CA

On Wednesday, March 31, 2004 at 11:00-12:00pm PST (GMT –8:00) there will be a Webcast featuring the instructors of the Certificate in Web-Based Instruction (CWI) offered by Simon Fraser University Canada. This online program teaches participants how to design, produce, and teach online courses. Participants of the Webcast can interact with the instructors and ask questions about this 24-week program offered entirely online. Please register to participate in the live Webcast by visiting www.sfu.ca/lidc/telestraining.

 

Our next Webcasts are scheduled for:

Thursday, April 8, 2004 at 11:00-12:00pm PST (GMT –8:00)

Wednesday, April 14, 2004 at 11:00-12:00pm PST (GMT –8:00)

 

 

Thanks,

Derek Lee

Communication Officer

Certificate In Web-based Instruction

March 30, 2004 reply from Bob Jensen

Simon Fraser is an outstanding university in Canada, so I expect that this will be an outstanding course.

It should be noted that the course does cost $1,900 in Canadian dollars.


Say it isn't so for the White Mountains

Supreme Telecom Smackdown
The Supreme Court hands down a decision that could be bad news for folks in rural areas still frustrated by lack of broadband services.
http://www.technologyreview.com/blog/blog.asp?blogID=1338&trl=nl


Question
What is a Web portal?

Answer from http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245glosf.htm#PORTAL 

PORTAL =

A "one-stop" place of information and services for some topical area or grouping of related topical areas.  Following on the heels of my featured knowledge portal in my August 22, 2000  New Bookmarks comes a featured review of "Portals in Higher Education," by Michael Looney and Peter Lyman, Educause Review, July/August 2000 --- http://www.educause.edu/pub/er/erm00/erm004.html 

A few selected quotations from the Looney and Lyman article are given below:

WHAT ARE PORTALS? 
Let’s start with a simple definition, and then explore some of the variations of portals. At the most basic level, portals gather a variety of useful information resources into a single, “one-stop” Web page, helping the user to avoid being overwhelmed by “infoglut” or feeling lost on the Web. But since no two people have the same interests, portals allow users to customize their information sources by selecting and viewing only the information they find personally useful. Some portals also let you personalize your portal by including private information (such as your stock portfolio or checking account balance). Put simply, an institution’s portal is designed to make an individual’s Web experience more efficient and thereby make the institution as a whole more productive and responsive.

. . .

The two most popular consumer portals are AOL and Yahoo! AOL ( http://www.aol.com ) has over twentyfive million users averaging 12 minutes per session.2 Yahoo! ( http://www.yahoo.com ) has over twentytwo million users averaging nearly 25 minutes per session and is the classic directory portal that most other portals have imitated. Portals often seem similar from one site to another because publishers of generic consumer information, such as InfoSpace ( http://www.infospace.com ) and MyWay ( http://www.myway.com  ), license the same information services to many dot.coms. College.com companies may license these information to companies as B2B (business-to-business) enterprise or use them on student-oriented web pages as a B2C (business-to-consumer) enterprise.

. . . 

According to the Delphi Group’s published survey results, 55 percent of Fortune 500 companies are already using an enterprise portal or have plans to develop one in the near future. Enterprise portals are intended to assist employees to be more efficient and productive by centralizing access to needed data services—for example, competitive information, manufacturing and accounting data, 401K information, and other human relations data. Enterprise portals often include news, weather, and sports feeds as a benefit for the employee, giving these portals the appearance of a community portal.

Examples of campus portals:

Some campuses have already started developing educational portals to accomplish these goals. The University of Washington has developed MyUW ( http://myuw.washington.edu ). This portal site uses information in innovative ways that enhance the educational mission, personalizing student data (student debit-card totals, student course information) and providing faculty with ideas and resources for new uses of technology for teaching.  The UW portal seems to have the mission of creating an online community encompassing a diverse and complex on-and off-campus environment. And the MyUCLA site ( http://www.my.ucla.edu  ), one of the oldest in higher education, provides a classic directory-style portal, ranging from new modes of accessing campus administrative data to relevant feeds from the UCLA Daily Bruin. 

My main objection to a portal is that is requires user log-in.  This makes it difficult to locate documents within using search engines like Google.  I might never have been "discovered" if my Web site was instead a portal requiring a log-in at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ 

"Why Are Portalized University Home Pages Rare? by Joe St Sauver, Syllabus, March 2004, pp. 21-24 --- http://www.syllabus.com/article.asp?id=9022 

What's a Portal Anyway?

A good defining answer to "What's a portal?" has always been elusive, but operationally it is a Web site that:

Straight forwward, secure Web sites that many have deployed --- sites that allow users to perform administrative tasks online such as registering for classes or looking up grades --- are generally not considered to be portals, because users will not routinely log in to sites of that sort unless they have a specific administrative task to accomplish, and it is extremely unlikely that anyone would make one of these secure administrative Web sites their default home page.

"Facing the Portal:  A conversation with Annie Stunden (University of Winconsin-Madison's CIO)," Syllabus, March 2004, pp. 8-14 --- http://www.syllabus.com/article.asp?id=9021 

Syllabus: What would you say are the most important lessons learned from your experience with your portal?


Annie Studnen: We learned that on a campus as big as ours, fostering the collaboration of the campus community is one of the most important things, and one of the hardest. We’re a very distributed environment so people can sort of do what they want to do. There’s very little top-down direction that dictates what you have to do. Our chancellor was certainly interested in having a portal, or at least something that looked like a portal, on campus. But we needed to champion this actively, to get people willing to put the information that they felt ultimately responsible for into the portal. That was the hardest part. We know how to do the technology. The people work is harder. Folks on campus felt that if they put the information that they were responsible for—think about student records information, for example—in the portal, that they were, in some way, losing control.

An issue still floats out there about how the portal is governed. Student Affairs manages the student information system, Finance manages the financial system, and the Graduate School manages the grants management system. But who manages the portal? Is it that awful technology organization you never trust? —Read: “Why should they be calling the shots on this?”

Well, if the central technology organization is not calling the shots, in concert with some kind of campuswide advisory or governance body, where else can you put the responsibility so that the portal does not become one-department centric? And the whole point is to keep the portal a campus portal, not a teaching and learning portal, not a student information system portal, not a payroll portal, but a campus portal. This remains a challenge, because distributed governance is hard. Regardless, our campus portal is becoming more and more accepted—we’re getting something like 70,000 hits a day.

The best and most imaginative campus portal did not survive.  I contend that the Fathom knowledge portal at Columbia University extended well beyond the objectives and strategies of other campus portals do date.  The Fathom portal was leading partners such as the Smithsonian and the New York Public Library for heavy input of knowledge into the portal.  It was called Fathom --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book00q3.htm#Fathom 

An Internet/Web portal with 14 channels on marketing and e-Commerce --- http://www.internet.com/home-d.html 

Other examples of portals and vortals can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/portals.htm 


"The Library of Congress Online for Educators," by Leni Donlan, Technology & Learning, March 2004, Page 20 --- http://www.techlearning.com/story/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=17701379 

The Library of Congress is the nation's oldest federal cultural institution. Established in 1800 as a legislative library, it grew into a national institution during the nineteenth century and, since World War II, has become an international resource. It is the largest library in the world, with more than 126 million items on approximately 530 miles of bookshelves. The collections include nearly 19 million books, 2.6 million recordings, 12 million photographs, 4.8 million maps, and 56 million manuscripts.

The Library is an institution of tremendous diversity. Among its many roles it is: the major research arm of the U.S. Congress; the copyright agency of the United States; a government library heavily used by the executive branch and the judiciary; and the world's largest repository of maps, atlases, printed and recorded music, motion pictures and television programs.

For those able to visit in person, there are twenty-two public reading rooms. And for those who cannot be there in person there are the following Library of Congress Web sites, a veritable treasure trove for learners of all ages. Let's explore

The Learning Page especially for teachers --- http://memory.loc.gov/learn/ 
This site serves as a wonderful "front door" to the Library's diverse materials. It's a simple-but-elegant homepage with clickable links to the six major sections which we will examine in more detail below plus links for a chat section and a "News!" page sharing announcements about conferences, events, new content, and resources of special interest to educators. Plus there's a link to a page highlighting other Library content of special interest to educators. Follow the links to:

Getting Started --- http://memory.loc.gov/learn/start/index.html 
This page provides orientation for users of The Learning Page and the American Memory collections. It offers illustrative examples of types of primary sources and how they might be used in the classroom. This section includes information about how to search, link & bookmark, view & listen, print & save, cite sources, understand copyright and fair use. Teachers will also find the links for History Day Resources, Internet Resources, and Read More About It (bibliographies) helpful.

Lesson Plans --- http://memory.loc.gov/learn/lessons/index.html 
Almost seventy lesson plans are currently available, and this page offers educators five ways to search: by Discipline, by Era, by Theme, by Title, or by Topic. All lessons were created by educators and tested in their classrooms. They are presented with required handouts and references and are ready for use "as is" or can be adapted as needed. The lessons look at American History through various perspectives and disciplines. There are also links for using primary materials with students, and more.

Features & Activities --- http://memory.loc.gov/learn/features/index.html 
An entire page of links to various activities, each with a short description and suggested grade levels. There are two "Collaborative Activities" (students can interact with the Library and with peers): The "Branding of America" and "The Great American Potluck" allows students to examine, respectively, the influence of name brands and the foods of various groups of Americans. And then there are links to Activities such as: "Women's Words of Wisdom," "From Slavery to Civil Rights," "From Fantasy to Flight," "Zoom into Maps," and many more, all making use of the Library's resources. Finally there are Feature Presentations entitled "American Memory Timeline," "Elections," "Inaugurations," "Immigration," and more.

Collection Connections --- http://memory.loc.gov/learn/collections/index.html 
Any teacher cannot help but be awed by the Library's incredibly vast array of collections for use with students. Like the Smithsonian, it is a repository of wonderful content for lessons in many subject areas. Clicking on Collection Connections Index brings up an alphabetical list of links for dozens of pages of resources and suggestions for teaching. History buffs will especially enjoy links to topics like: "America Singing: 19th Century Song Sheets," "Civil War Maps," or "Stars and Stripes: the American Soldiers Newspaper of World War I." Like browsing in a dusty old bookstore, one could spend hours here reading, learning, and preparing materials for one's students.

Community Center --- http://memory.loc.gov/learn/community/index.html 
This, the newest, section of the Learning Page celebrated its first birthday in October 2003. An attempt to create a community of like-minded educators, it's the place to meet Library staff and educators in monthly, themed conversation through live chats. There are also links to transcripts of archived chats from the past on topics such as baseball, civil rights, and women's history. Click on a link to contribute to The Source, an online newsletter or subscribe to Learning Page E-Mail Updates to hear about new content.

Professional Development --- http://memory.loc.gov/learn/educators/index.html 
The section is intended to help teachers make use of the Library's resources. It provides access to workshops and institutes (in the Library's Learning Center in Washington, or by video-conference) and an array of downloadable presentations and "handouts" for distribution. In addition, a collection of "Self-Serve Workshops" is available on historical topics, searching techniques, lesson design, an introduction to the collections, and even technical aspects of using the Web for learning and presentation.

Nowto The Library of Congress' main Web site: --- http://www.loc.gov/ 
This is the portal, to all the resources and sites described both above and below. And to be in the know about the Library's activities at home and outside of Washington visit More Complete News and Events (bottom right on the homepage). Also, to get answers to questions about the Library of Congress click on About the Library. Here are the major links on the Library's Home page.

American Memory --- http://memory.loc.gov 
With more than 7 million digital items from more than 100 historical collections, American Memory is a gateway to rich primary source materials relating to the history and culture of the United States. Click on "Collection Finder," and then click on "List All Collections." If you are new to the site, click on Show Descriptions, then scroll down the page and read about the individual collections. The "Today in History" link provides fascinating possibilities for creative lessons. For example, select December 7 from the Archive and find a content-rich page dealing with the attack on Pearl Harbor and Americans' reaction to that attack, and then have your students compare/contrast it with the events of September 11. One caveat: the primary sources in American Memory come 'as is'without context or a textbook/encyclopedic explanation. While intriguing, they often raise more questions than they answer, making them a wonderful resource for building critical thinking and triggering engaged research. But it's a good idea to structure their use by limiting access to one or two collections or by providing a teacher prepared set of links that will ensure the successful and expedient use of the site.

Global Gateway --- http://international.loc.gov/intldl/intldlhome.html 
Teachers of World History and World Affairs (and in today's world, most teachers have become that) will appreciate the links to "Individual Digital Collections" that focus on international cultures and histories and the bilingual multimedia "Collaborative Digital Libraries," built with international partners. For example, "Parallel Histories: Spain, United States, & the American Frontier" is a wonderful opportunity for advanced Spanish students to read and compare Spanish and English versions. The page also offers many content-rich links at which one can discover unexpected treasures! For example, "Portals to the World" has an alphabetically arranged set of links for every country in the world, a wonderful place for students to explore.

America's Story from America's Library --- http://www.americaslibrary.gov/ 
The target audience for this bright and engaging Web site is the sixth grade student. However, children as young as second grade would enjoy using the site with parent/teacher help and older students appreciate the lighthearted introduction to American History and can use the site to kick off further research. There are five sections, each providing images, stories, and interactive activities.

THOMAS - Legislative Information on the Internet --- http://thomas.loc.gov/ 
Whether for serious scholarship, for research by middle school and high school students, or just to see what our elected representatives have been doing, Thomas is an incredible resource. It allows the user to learn the status of legislation in both the House and the Senate for the current legislative session or from past legislative sessions. One can search by bill number or by a key word or phrase. In addition there are links that allow the user to find actual legislation from as far back as the 93d Congress (1973-4); roll-call votes dating back to the 101st Congress (1989-90); and even Committee Reports dating back to the 104th Congress (1995-6). For the government or civics teacher or learner, this site is a gold mine! Dig in and explore or use the Learning Page activity, "Introducing THOMAS!" to guide your use.

Exhibitions --- http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/ 
A visit to the Library of Congress to view the exhibitions housed in the beautiful Jefferson Building should be on every tourist's to-do-list. Exhibitions are (which is well worth a visit, in and of itself!). The physical exhibitions are open to all ages, making their viewing a wonderful family or class outing. But for those who cannot be there in person the Library shares them online in online galleries. The galleries are archived for perpetual use on the Web. Try to not get teary-eyed when you bring up, from "American Treasures of the Library of Congress" the original drafts of The Declaration of Independence or the Emancipation Proclamation or the Gettysburg Address! Also, don't miss the beautiful and informative "Rivers Edens and EmpiresLewis and Clark" and the "Revealing of America" exhibit, or the "Bob Hope and American Variety" exhibit. Then, scroll slowly down the home page and visit those exhibits that call to you!

The Wise Guide --- http://www.loc.gov/wiseguide/index-flash.html 
Offering bright and breezy content for newcomers, this site is a wonderful place for adults to get started with the Library of Congress Web sites. Offered monthly, in a "magazine" styled format, the site pulls together content from throughout the Library to launch a user's further exploration. For example, clicking on "One Day Her Prince Did Come" brings up an introduction to the Library's Art Wood Collection of Caricature and Cartoon, a collection of 36,000 works by more than 2,800 artists. It's a comprehensive array ranging from political cartoons to comic strips, to animation "cels," (drawings on celluloid) including cels for Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, the first American feature-length Technicolor animated cartoon. Each month's "edition" is archived when the new edition is published, so all editions can be accessed at any time.

All of the above provides just the briefest overview of the wonderful treasures for educators at the Library of Congress Websites. Do come and explore for yourself and for your students all that "the nation's library" has to offer!

Bob Jensen's helpers for finding and using libraries:

http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob2.htm 

http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/searchh.htm 


"Amazon Finally Clicks:  Ten years old and profitable at last, it offers a textbook lesson on how to be both focused and flexible," by Russ Banham, CFO Magazine, Spring 2004 Special Issue, pp. 20-22 --- http://www.cfo.com/article/1,5309,12598||M|846,00.html 

The foosball tables are still there, as are the desks made from sawhorses, plywood, and old doors. And no one wears a tie, not even CFO Thomas J. Szkutak. But if some E-commerce trappings are alive and well at Amazon.com headquarters, others are not. Red ink, for example, has disappeared—at least for now. The company posted its first indisputably (that is, GAAP-based) profitable year in 2003, propelled by strong holiday sales and a weakened dollar, which boosted overseas results.

That has prompted plenty of backslapping in the halls of Amazon's headquarters, a former hospital with an improbable Art Deco design and a postcard view of downtown Seattle and Puget Sound. As it prepares to celebrate its 10th anniversary, Amazon.com is a very different company from the so-called E-tailer that, at the time of its initial public offering in 1997, had to caution would-be investors not to confuse it with Amazon Natural Treasures, a retailer and E-tailer of rain-forest products.

Few would make that mistake today. While still sometimes referred to as an online bookstore, Amazon now boasts a product line that staggers the imagination, from apparel, sporting goods, and jewelry to new services including a feature that lets customers make "1-Click" Presidential campaign contributions.

Behind Amazon's breadth of products and services are myriad business arrangements: some products the company owns, inventories, sells, and ships; others it sells on behalf of third-party retailers. Some of these third-party products Amazon ships and fulfills; others are shipped and fulfilled by the third parties themselves. Among those third parties are thousands of mom-and-pop E-tailers that collectively make Amazon's Marketplace division a perpetual online garage sale surpassed only by E-bay.

With 39 million active customer accounts (based on the number of E-mail addresses from which orders originated in 2003), Amazon seems to be making good on its promise to offer the "Earth's biggest selection of products," or as Szkutak puts it, "to build a place where people can find, discover, and buy anything they want online." To do that, he says, the company has learned—sometimes the hard way—to "start with the customer and work backward."

Working backward has changed Amazon from an online retailer to an E-commerce platform. Today, it is not a store so much as a channel, a place where brand-name third-party retailers, smaller businesses, and just plain folks can hawk their goods to a worldwide clientele. This past holiday season, shoppers traipsed through Amazon to buy products from Gap, Toys "R" Us, True Value Hardware, and Kitchen Etc.—and maybe some kid in Idaho who was trying to unload his slightly dog-eared Harry Potter library. Assembling such a vast collection of partners and building the systems that allow customers to buy from an individual as easily as they buy from a retail giant has not been easy, and analysts praise Amazon's achievements. "Amazon has knocked 10 steps down to 1," says Adam Sarner, a research analyst at Stamford, Connecticut-based technology research firm Gartner Inc. "This is what they mean by 'customer convenience.'"

Jonathan Gaw, a research manager at technology research firm IDC, says, "No one else has this kind of expertise, because no one else has invested the capital to build this kind of infrastructure."

Amazon.com was once viewed as a leading member of the E-commerce vanguard, but most of the followers have fallen by the wayside. True, the survivors—E-bay, MSN, AOL, Yahoo, and Google—have become household names, but success remains precarious and depends on, among other things, the ability to be nimble. Amazon built its brand initially on low-priced books and waited for customers to come bargain-hunting. Today it pulls out all the stops to get people to visit, from "never-before-seen" Bruce Springsteen concert footage to a "secret message" from Madonna. If that sounds like the sort of pop-culture gimmickry one might expect from, say, AOL, there's good reason: the E-commerce giants are out to eat one another's lunch. When Google, for example, announced Froogle, a new service that allows users to search for a product name and be directed only to sites that sell that product, Amazon launched a new subsidiary, A9, devoted to Web searching, and even located its offices close to Google in Silicon Valley. Similarly, the boundaries between the business models of E-bay, Yahoo, and even Microsoft can be hard to discern, as all of these companies seek to protect themselves and to copy whatever seems to work.

Continued in the article

Bob Jensen's threads on e-Commerce and e-Business are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce.htm 


"Seeing-Eye Computer Guides Blind," by Louise Knapp, Wired News, March 30, 2004 --- http://www.wired.com/news/gizmos/0,1452,62810,00.html?tw=newsletter_topstories_html 

Helen Keller once said that what a blind person needs is not a teacher but another self. Researchers are developing a system that aims to provide something close -- a computerized "seeing" assistant that will help blind people read books, access Web pages, recognize faces and navigate unfamiliar rooms.

The portable system, called iCare, consists of a tiny camera mounted on a pair of glasses, a laptop carried in a backpack, a headset and a microphone. Designed by researchers at Arizona State and Wright State universities, ICare converts the images recorded by the camera to verbal messages conveyed to the user.

"Computer algorithms process the images and extract information from them to give the user information about what they are looking at," said Nikolaos Bourbakis, professor at Wright State University's College of Engineering and Computer Science in Dayton, Ohio.

Users can program iCare to feed them information continuously or only when prompted by a question, such as "What is directly in front of me?" or "Who just walked into the room?"

So far, iCare's greatest talent is its ability to translate type into spoken words. The iCare-Reader translates text into a synthesized voice using optical character recognition software and other software that compensates for different lighting conditions and orientations.

David Paul, one of two blind computer science students at Arizona State University, or ASU, who tested the system, said speed is one of the system's greatest assets. "It's as fast as a sighted person could read a book -- this is one of the phenomenal things about it."

The iCare-Reader not only enables blind people to choose any book from the library shelf, but also allows them to check out a restaurant menu, the size marked on a shirt tag or the label on a soup can.

The reader doesn't translate handwritten text well yet, but the team is still working on it.

ICare also lets the blind or visually impaired persons navigate websites previously only accessible with a mouse.

Screen-reader software, such as Jaws, can translate information on a computer screen to spoken word. But this is only useful if users are able to get to the pages they are interested in.

"The way a blind person navigates around the screen is with the keyboard, but there are some sites that don't work so well with keyboard alone and have some mouse-driven applications," said Terri Hedgpeth, disability research specialist at ASU. "But a blind person can't tell where the mouse cursor is, so (he or she) can't access these sites."

To overcome this problem, the ASU team developed another facet of the system, called the iCare-Assistant, that works with Blackboard, software designed to manage university course material.

"We have developed a software interface that bridges the screen-reader software and Blackboard through keyboard shortcuts that get you into these areas," Hedgpeth said.

Continued in the article

Bob Jensen's threads on technology for handicapped persons are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/thetools.htm#Handicapped 


Now, Germany is determined to regain its preeminent role in higher education by offering an international degree program taught in English. Students are encouraged to learn German as a second language.

Forwarded by Debbie Bowling

"Germany woos American students:  Free degree programs in English may answer some prayers," by Jennifer Carlile, MSNBC News, March 26, 2004 --- http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/4601000/ 

Free higher education in the home of Western civilization's most provocative thinkers, a chance to learn a second language -- and a legal drinking age of 16? It's a formula that might appeal to both stressed parents and students alike!

Germany is willing to accommodate what could be a dream for many American families, worried about the skyrocketing cost of higher education.

“Our idea is to get the best people to the universities,” said Nina Lemmens, the London-based director of the German Academic Exchange Service, the DAAD.

This week, Lemmens has been promoting the free international degree program in English to British students, who also are worried about higher college fees. But she explained the German universities also are keen on recruiting American and other international students for their tuition-free programs.

Continued in the article.

Bob Jensen's higher education bookmarks are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob2.htm 


Question
How bad will the shortage of doctoral faculty in collegiate business education become?

Answers
In September 2003, the AACSB issued the results of a survey that paint a pretty bleak picture of supply of doctoral faculty relative to increasing demand --- www.aacsb.edu/dfc 

Sustaining Scholarship in Business Schools
Executive Summary/September 2003

FINDINGS

Unless decisive action is taken to reverse declines in business doctoral education, academic business schools, universities, and society will be faced with an inevitable erosion in the quality of business education and research.

In recent years, the production of new business doctorates has decreased.  In the US, for example, business doctorates declined from 1,327 in 1994-95 to 1,071 in 1999-2000, or more than 19 percent.  The percentage of doctorates produced by AACSB-accredited institutions also has decreased, to 84 percent in 1999-2000 from 92 percent a decade earlier.  Today, the number of doctorates produced by accredited schools is at its lowest level since 1987.  Although there are some examples of new programs and marginal increases in enrollment in various parts of the world, local demand has outstripped supply in virtually all countries.

Within five years, the US shortage of business Ph.D.'s is expected to be 1,142; and in 10 years, the shortage will reach 2,419.  Although considerable uncertainty about these projections must be acknowledged, the findings take into account an in-depth review of current Ph.D. enrollments, projected demand for business education, faculty retirements, and the typical hiring patterns of Ph.D.'s by accredited and non-accredited schools.

The DFC concluded that doctorally trained individuals are the most essential element in assuring the continued rigor of business education and research conducted in academic, business, and public policy institutions.  Ensuring adequate supply must, therefore, be a primary concern from an industry-level perspective.  From a school perspective, many deans, department chairs, and program directors face unfilled positions after each hiring season.  They confront salary escalation that far exceeds market changes or salary trends in other academic fields and must deal with internal management challenges posed by salary inversion.

Demand for doctoral faculty will continue to increase as the number of MBA providers and students expands globally, business schools strive to meet global standards for quality, and demographic trends drive up undergraduate business enrollment and the proportion of faculty likely to retire.

Substantial increases in production are not expected because of funding and incentive issues.  A DFC survey of US program directors and deans suggests that about 80 percent of funding for doctoral programs derives from business schools' own resources.  Endowments and university sources, such as fellowships and assistantships, constitute the remainder.  Federal and corporate funding supports only a small fraction of the costs.  In some instances, costs are somewhat offset by assigning teaching responsibilities to Ph.D. students.  Funding models are more variable outside the US, but generally doctoral students are more likely to be self-funded or employed in junior faculty positions.

Unlike other business school programs, such as the MBA, there are few financial or reputational incentives to invest in Ph.D. programs.  The advantages to enlarging a Ph.D. program are intangible--increased faculty satisfaction, for example.


Freddie Mac Annual Stockholders' Meeting to Be Webcast 
(or a listen-in conference call via telephone) 

Freddie Mac held its 2004 annual stockholders' meeting on Wednesday, March 31, 2004. The annual meeting will convene at 9 a.m. E.T. at the Hilton McLean Tysons Corner, 7920 Jones Branch Drive, McLean, VA.

Note that this Webcast is like to be contentious and deals with risk that could bring down the entire U.S. economy.  For accounting students and faculty, it should be especially interesting from the standpoint of the importance of accounting rules in valuation and risk analysis of a corporation.

Recordings of the meeting were broadcast afterwards for those who could not listen in on the original Webcast --- http://www.freddiemac.com/news/archives/investors/2004/annualstockwebcast_032504.html 

McLean, VA – Freddie Mac (NYSE:FRE) will hold its next annual stockholders' meeting on March 31, 2004. The annual meeting will convene at 9 a.m. E.T. at the Hilton McLean Tysons Corner, 7920 Jones Branch Drive, McLean, VA.

The annual meeting can be heard in listen-only mode live via Freddie Mac's Investor Relations website 
( http://www.freddiemac.com/investors/webcasts ).The meeting also can be heard in listen-only mode via conference call. The dial-in numbers for the call are:

A recording of the annual meeting will be available continuously beginning at approximately 4 p.m. E.T. Wednesday, March 31 until midnight Wednesday, April 14. To access the recording, call (800) 475-6701 in the United States, or (320) 365-3844 from international locations. The access code for the recording is: 723715.

Freddie Mac is a stockholder-owned company established by Congress in 1970 to support homeownership and rental housing. Freddie Mac fulfills its mission by purchasing residential mortgages and mortgage-related securities, which it finances primarily by issuing mortgage-related securities and debt instruments in the capital markets. Over the years, Freddie Mac has opened doors for one in six homebuyers in America.

Freddie Mac's earnings releases and other financial disclosures are available on the Investors' page of the company's website at www.freddiemac.com.

 

Alan Greenspan claims that the financial risk of Freddie Mac could bring down the entire economy.  The Year 2002 financial statements of Freddie Mac were delayed by nearly one year due to errors in the Year 2000 and 2001 annual reports that resulted in revised reports that took almost a year to restate by PwC after being certified in error by Andersen.  The top executives of Freddie Mac were fired due to suspected book cooking in the accounting statements.

The errors largely center around failure to follow FAS 133 rules for accounting for derivative financial statements and hedging activities, with particular problems centered around inappropriate use of hedge accounting for macro hedges.  You can read more about the saga at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm#FreddieMac 

The original and revised sets of financial statements can be downloaded and compared from links at http://www.freddiemac.com/investors/


Question
How and where can you download audio electronic books?

Answer
The Guardian has a nice March 18, 2004 summary --- http://www.guardian.co.uk/online/story/0,3605,1171197,00.html 

 

Links

Audible
www.audible.com
PayPerListen
www.payperlisten.com
Time Warner Digital Audio Books
www.mytimewarneraudio.com
Audio books free
www.audiobooksforfree.com
Richmond-Upon-Thames libraries: eBooks
http://www.richmond.gov.uk/depts/opps/eal/leisure/libraries/pn/ebooks/eaudio/default.htm  

Bob Jensen's threads on electronic books can be found in the following documents:

http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ebooks.htm 

http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/searchh.htm 


Question
How big is a petabyte?
A gigabyte is roughly a thousand megabytes. A terabyte is roughly a thousand gigabytes

Answer on March 22 from InformationWeek.com [InformationWeek.com@update.informationweek.com

Where Does A 50-Petabyte Database Sit?

At the top of the list. Here's a look at the world's largest data systems, plus a government database expected to hold 5 petabytes (5,000 terabytes) this decade and 50 petabytes in two decades.

* AT&T's 26-Terabyte Data Warehouse http://update.informationweek.com/cgi-bin4/DM/y/efyU0BcUEY0Glu0CQvi0AU

* The Database With A 142-Year Pedigree http://update.informationweek.com/cgi-bin4/DM/y/efyU0BcUEY0Glu0CQvj0AV

* Handling 887 Queries At Once http://update.informationweek.com/cgi-bin4/DM/y/efyU0BcUEY0Glu0CQvk0AW

* 4 Terabytes Of Boeing Part Specs http://update.informationweek.com/cgi-bin4/DM/y/efyU0BcUEY0Glu0CQvl0AX

* Storing Records Of 9 Million Military Personnel http://update.informationweek.com/cgi-bin4/DM/y/efyU0BcUEY0Glu0CQvm0AY


New from Macromedia --- http://www.macromedia.com/ 

Dreamweaver MX 2004 is improved and faster than ever. 

• Up to 50% faster on Windows 
• Timelines feature restored 
• FTP optimized for speed and server compatibility


Forwarded by Debbie Bowling

"Google goes local Search giant to tap into huge local advertising market," by Stephanie Olsen, MSNBC News, March 17, 2004 --- http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/4547867/ 

Internet darling Google is taking search to the streets, helping Web surfers find cafes, parks or even Wi-Fi hot spots in their area.

On Wednesday, the Web search company unveiled Google Local, which has been tested in the company's research and development lab for the last 8 months. Type a keyword along with an address or city name into the search box at Google.com or at its newly designated site, Local.google.com, to find maps, locally relevant Web sites and listings from businesses in the area.

"A lot of times when people are looking for something, they want to do it on a local level...This is a core search promise," said Marissa Mayer, Google's director of consumer Web products, who helped build the service with a team of engineers from Google's New York office.

Prime real estate Mountain View, Calif.-based Google is giving prominence to local search at a time when it's one of the most hyped areas of development in the industry. Financial analysts and industry executives say geographically targeted search listings are prime real estate for local advertising, an estimated $12 billion annual business in the United States. In 2004, less than $50 million of that market will go toward ads related to local Net searches, but over time, the dollars will find their way to the virtual world, analysts say.

It will be "worth a lot more online. That is, merchants will pay more," said Safa Rashtchy, Piper Jaffray's Internet analyst. "Integration of that with search will make it very convenient for searchers and extremely useful for local merchants."

For now, search engines including Google, Yahoo, Ask Jeeves, MSN and CitySearch are working to perfect local search for consumers.

Google's chief rival, Yahoo, recently improved visitors' chances of finding local restaurants, ATMs, shops and bus routes through its map service. With its new SmartView feature, Yahoo now incorporates points of interests like restaurants into local maps, allowing Web surfers to refine what they're looking for (for example, Italian or Indian food) and see where a particular spot is located in the neighborhood.

Google, which fields about 200 million queries a day, said its local service improves people's access to relevant information, its long-time mission. Using the local service, people will find business addresses, phone numbers and "one-click" driving directions to places of interest.

To deliver the results, Google draws on business listings provided by third-party companies. It also uses technology to collect and analyze data on the physical location of a Web page and then matches that data to specified queries and their designated addresses.

For now, Google will not display local advertisements on the service, but it plans to do so in the future. However, the company currently sells advertisers the ability to target people by region on the main Web site. Google makes money by letting advertisers bid for placement on results pages for related search terms. Ads appear adjacent to or atop search results.

Bob Jensen's search helpers are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/searchh.htm 

Bob Jensen's travel helpers are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob3.htm#Travel 


Aaron Konstam informed me that you can now tap Google via email --- http://capescience.capeclear.com/google/index.shtml 
CapeMail - Asynchronous Google Access or Google by Email

Google recently published its Web Services interface at http://www.google.com/apis (tech explanation). We've built an email interface to Google. Actually, the folks in Marketing built it, which says a lot about the simplicity of Web services. Just email google@capeclear.com  and put the text of your query in the "Subject" line. You'll receive your search results via email.

It's not going to take the world by storm, but maybe it'll kick start some thought processes on the power of Web Services. It might be useful for PDAs, mobile phones, offline laptop users, and generally people who have infrequent, low quality access to the Internet. Some people may find it easier to use email rather than launch a browser, or maybe you could just use it to remind yourself to do something on the Internet...

There are some interesting queries that you can do on google, that transfer nicely to CapeMail. One trick is to do the query " site:www.capeclear.com ceo " to find out Cape Clear's CEO. Send this query to CapeMail - and find out who our CEO is...

International: Are your French, Dutch, Russian or outside the general '.com' arena? To see sites in just your region, append the text "site:.XX" to the end of your subject query, where XX is your domain of interest. For example to see all occurences of CapeClear in Denmark do the following query: CapeClear site:.dk, for a similar query on French Websites try this

Shortcut: More useful is the following idea: Store this link on your desktop. (How?: hover over this link, right mouse click->'Copy Shortcut', then on your Windows desktop, right mouse click->'Paste Shortcut'). A handy shortcut for CapeMail access.

Discuss CapeMail in the CapeScience forum or email ed@capeclear.com  and check out our sister offering CapeSpeller

March 29, 2004 reply from Charlie Betts [cbetts@COLLEGE.DTCC.EDU

Bob,

I've used Capemail's google service once and I'll probably never have the need or the inclination to use it again, but my one-time use produced some amazing results.

I recently did a presentation on search engines in general and google in particular for faculty. As a "gee whiz" factor, I included google by email. I sent a query just before lunch and when I returned to my office a half hour or so later I checked the results. Since I thought the time this service would take might be of interest I made note of the time my message was sent and the time the reply was received. According to our email system, I sent the message at 11:55:03 A.M. EST. The time received on the reply was 4:52.16 P.M. GMT. Which means that allowing for the five hour time difference, I received a reply 2 minutes and 47 seconds before I sent the query.

Talk about fast... 

Without education, we would all be in great danger of taking educated people seriously.

Charlie Betts 
DTCC, Terry Campus 
100 Campus Drive Dover DE 19904
cbetts@college.dtcc.edu 

Other Google features, including equation solving, can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/searchh.htm 


Google has become so huge, that learning about what you can do and/or remembering to use what you once learned how to do something is as complex as running a Microsoft Office product. How many of us know and or use all of the features in MS Word? How many of us know and use all of the features in Excel such as Goal Seek, Solver, Pivoting, and 3D graphing? How many of us know how to use the new exotic features of PowerPoint?

There are books, videos, and online tutorials that will illustrate how to use MS Office features.

Although I have not yet found online video tutorials on Google features, there are now books that you can buy such as How to Do Everything With Google by Fritz Schneider Nancy Blachman Eric Fredricksen (McGraw-Hill, 2004) --- http://books.mcgraw-hill.com/cgi-bin/pbg/0072231742.html 

There are also quite a few tutorials.  Insert the phrase "Google Tutorial" in the search box at http://www.google.com/advanced_search?hl=en 

A drawback of books and tutorials for Google vis-a-vis MS Office products is that Google seems to add new features monthly whereas Microsoft adds new features at a slower pace.

Google features, including equation solving, can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/searchh.htm 


Question
What is the deep Web?

Answer

"In search of the deep Web," by Alex Wright, Salon, March 9, 2004 --- http://www.salon.com/tech/feature/2004/03/09/deep_web/index_np.html 

The next generation of Web search engines will do more than give you a longer list of search results. They will disrupt the information economy.

When Yahoo announced its Content Acquisition Program on March 2, press coverage zeroed in on its controversial paid inclusion program, whereby customers can pony up in exchange for enhanced search coverage and a vaunted "trusted feed" status. But lost amid the inevitable search-wars storyline was another, more intriguing development: the unlocking of the deep Web.

Those of us who place our faith in the Googlebot may be surprised to learn that the big search engines crawl less than 1 percent of the known Web. Beneath the surface layer of company sites, blogs and porn lies another, hidden Web. The "deep Web" is the great lode of databases, flight schedules, library catalogs, classified ads, patent filings, genetic research data and another 90-odd terabytes of data that never find their way onto a typical search results page.

Today, the deep Web remains invisible except when we engage in a focused transaction: searching a catalog, booking a flight, looking for a job. That's about to change. In addition to Yahoo, outfits like Google and IBM, along with a raft of startups, are developing new approaches for trawling the deep Web. And while their solutions differ, they are all pursuing the same goal: to expand the reach of search engines into our cultural, economic and civic lives.

Bob Jensen's search helpers are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/searchh.htm 


After you read the continued support from the faculty Senate, you begin to sympathize with this 40-year academic professor and president of a college until you read the final paragraph  below (that paragraph is weird!).

"College President Is Retiring After Claim He Plagiarized," The New York Times, March 19, 2004 --- http://www.nytimes.com/2004/03/20/education/20retire.html?ex=1080622800&en=d10eeb1abea4af59&ei=5070 

A Connecticut college president facing claims that he plagiarized material for an op-ed column published in The Hartford Courant announced his retirement on Friday.

Richard L. Judd, 66, has been president of Central Connecticut State University in New Britain since 1996 and has worked at the school for 40 years.

His retirement was announced four days after William Cibes, the chancellor of the state university system, issued a report concluding that Mr. Judd had plagiarized from three sources in an opinion column he wrote for The Hartford Courant that was published on Feb 26. In the report, obtained by The Associated Press, Mr. Cibes called the actions a "clear, unacceptable case of plagiarism."

Mr. Judd apologized this week to the university's faculty Senate, which recommended that he keep his job. In a letter Friday to Lawrence D. McHugh, chairman of the university's trustees, Mr. Judd cited health concerns as the reason for his retirement, which is effective on July 1.

"I am doing so after careful consideration of my personal responsibilities and of my family and in regard to my health," he wrote. "It has been my honor and privilege to serve Central Connecticut State University over the past 40 years."

Mr. Judd was hospitalized on Wednesday after collapsing in his office. He had been scheduled to meet with the trustees on Friday to discuss the plagiarism allegation, but that meeting was postponed because of Mr. Judd's health.

Mr. Cibes's investigation found that the op-ed article, about the prospects for peace in Cyprus, included unattributed verbatim phrases from an editorial in The New York Times, a Web site of the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus and an article published in a London newspaper, The Independent on Sunday.

Using the material without attribution violated the university's policy on plagiarism, Mr. Cibes said.

Mr. Judd had an earlier run-in with university officials in March 2002, when he was reprimanded by the board after his arrest on charges of impersonating a police officer two months earlier. The board voted to express its "displeasure" with Mr. Judd, who admitted he used the oscillating headlights on his state car to pull over a motorist he believed was speeding.

Bob Jensen's threads on plagiarism are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/plagiarism.htm 


Audio Speeches from Past Leaders and Famous People (the entire set of recordings is too large to make available online)
The voices include every U.S. president since Herbert Hoover, foreign leaders from Charles de Gaulle to Corazon Aquino, scientists like Jacques Cousteau and Carl Sagan, entertainers like Joan Baez and Cecil B. DeMille. They are all part of a collection of speeches spanning nearly 100 years recently acquired from the Commonwealth Club by the Hoover Institution
"Commonwealth Club archives feature key 20th-century voices," Stanford Magazine --- http://www.stanfordalumni.org/news/magazine/2004/marapr/show/archives.html 
Some audio clips are available at http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2003/06/17/MN157028.DTL 
Other links about these recordings are available at http://www-hoover.stanford.edu/hila/cwclub.htm 


The Relevance (or lack thereof) of Our Research

In my personal opinion, the counting of publications in academic performance evaluation has become dysfunctional just as student teaching evaluations are dysfunctional whenever the counting up impacts behavior to maximize the numerical scores rather than truly maximize the substance of the contribution and the professional responsibility to research, scholarship, and our learning. 

Note in particular the message from Denny Beresford (University of Georgia) and the link to cancer research in the March 9, 2004 edition of Fortune Magazine (‘THE WAR ON CANCER  'We Have a Shortage of Good Ideas',” by Clifton Leaf   --- http://www.fortune.com/fortune/articles/0,15114,598431,00.html

Unfortunately, Leaf says, 'the accumulation of data gives people the illusion they've done something meaningful.'"

 Bob Jensen

March 20, 2004 message from Denny Beresford (University of Georgia)

-----Original Message-----
From: Dennis Beresford [mailto:dberesfo@terry.uga.edu]
Sent: Saturday, March 20, 2004 10:07 AM
Subject: The relevance of research

The current issue of Fortune magazine has a very interesting cover story, "Why we're losing the war on cancer (and how to win it)."  Much of the blame for the lack of progress is placed on the relative ineffectiveness of research.  I thought that the following two paragraphs were particularly interesting - could we say the same about much (most) of the current research in accounting?

"Yet virtually all these experts offered testimony that, when taken together, describes a dysfunctional 'cancer culture' - a groupthink that pushes tens of thousands of physicians and scientists toward the goal of finding the tiniest improvements in treatment rather than genuine breakthroughs; that fosters isolated (and redundant) problem solving instead of cooperation; and rewards academic achievement and publications over all else."

"Metastasis, on the other hand, is a big idea - an organism-wide phenomenon that may involve dozens of processes.  It's hard to do replicable experiments when there are that many variables.  But that's the kind of research we need.  Instead, say Weinberg, researchers opt for more straightforward experiments that generate plenty of reproducible results.  Unfortunately, he says, 'the accumulation of data gives people the illusion they've done something meaningful.'"

Something to think about.

Denny Beresford 

March 21, 2004 reply from Linda Kidwell, on leave at Charles Stuart University, Australia [lkidwell@CSU.EDU.AU

This thread brings me back to the doctoral consortium at Lake Tahoe in 1990. As one might expect, the seminars were dominated by capital markets research, an area that I found rather dull in comparison to behavioral research. In my naivete, I had the gall to ask a rather prominent fellow this question after his presentation: "The early research in this area was very informative, but now it seems like we are looking at minutiae like how many SECONDS does it take for the market to absorb such and such. Is the continued research in this area actually adding anything new, or is it just for our own entertainment?" Well this fellow was quite put off, and there was an audible gasp in the room. However, another fellow, one of the two co-authors of that famous seminal paper in the area, said, "She has an excellent point!"

Needless to say, I did not win any influential friends among the power set. On the other hand, my roommate there has become one of my dearest friends, so not all was lost!

Linda

March 20 reply from Jagdish Gangolly (SUNY-Albany)

-----Original Message-----
From: Jagdish Gangolly
Sent: Saturday, March 20, 2004 2:26 PM
To: 'dberesford@terry.uga.edu'
Subject: RE: The relevance of research

I think we could say the same thing about much of academic research in accounting.

In a sense, I would say, much of the blame can be placed on the academic researchers not listening to things that the practitioners face and think are important. It should make an interesting study to see to what extent all the empirical research in financial accounting the past thirty something years has transformed the way accounting is done in the real world (besides driving the practitioners out of AAA).

 

That not much of our research is taxpayer funded is no excuse. Just as the cancer scientists have been more interested in doing "proper" science rather than solving the problem, viz., studying metastasis in order to arrest it, most empirical researchers in, primarily financial accounting, have been more concerned with "proper" research rather than study and solution of problems faced in the real world. In my opinion, the statistical tools fancied by our researchers might be the accounting equivalents of the nude mice.

Just as nude mice accept xenografts, statistical programs we use accept any data (our version of xenografts).

  Jagdish

 

Earlier related messaging on Pangloss and Popper and the relevance of research

March 11, 2004 message from Paul Williams ( North Carolina State University )

Near the end of his career he (Popper) opted for a Darwinian model (metaphor, i.e., the effective use of tropes to persuade people your are right) of the knowledge process in science that goes by the name of evolutionary epistemology. An acknowledgement of his critics and the sociology of knowledge; science is a discursive practice, too. Science is rife with examples of "fraud." Mendel, we now know because of our deeper understanding of the micro-mechanisms of inheritance, fudged his data about his famous sweet peas. He was confident his theory was sound, so he recorded data that "confirmed" it (a good thing, too). Milliken's notebooks of his oil drop experiments show his selective reporting of trials -- only the ones that neatly fit his theory were reported.

The irony of Popper's legacy, at least in accounting and economics (other business disciplines as well, I suppose) is that "rigor" is preferred for rigor's sake -- "rigor" is simply an effective rhetorical strategy for closing a society (the gist of Feyerabend's Against Method is the stultifying effect of Popperian dogma about method). This has certainly been used to great effect in accounting. Indeed, there is no other point to so-called mainstream accounting research than to demonstrate rigorously that your prejudices are true. The review process at the major journals takes so long because everything that comes out of it as acceptable must be completely sanitized for political and methodological correctness. David's previous commentary about the disappearance of social accounting as possibly a failure of accounting is spot on. Bob Jensen's  Phantasmagoric Accounting, a serious effort to attune the academy to the possibilities for accounting in implementing social controls over entities that society permits to exist through charter (what Paton and Littleton allege is the function of accounting) failed to stimulate much research not because it was "Cold Fusion" but because it would necessitate scholarship that did not meet the standards of "rigor" imposed by the radical property rights of corporations crowd that control the agenda in the U.S. Principal/agent theory and efficient capital market theory are woefully inadequate theories at best and, more likely, simply nonsense (the debacle that is stock option compensation is an unintended consequence of the faddishness of Jensen and Meckling's theory of linking executive compensation to firm performance; believing in imaginary worlds can have serious consequences when you act on those beliefs). As someone with long experience attempting to bring some real Popperian rigor to the academy, one is invariably greeted with accusations of being a Marxist or some other undesirable (note how Roger evoked Marxism in his response to me; I am simply an American). That is the sad state of the accounting academy in the U.S.: if you are not four-square behind the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and Big 4 view of the world, then you are a subversive and no matter what your scholarship, by definition, it is not rigorous. Thus the reference to Dr. Pangloss. This dogmatic view characteristic of so many economists prompted Harvard biologist Edward O. Wilson to remark in his book Consilience that the greatest obstacle to environmental realism was the myopia of professional economists. There is no reason why accountants need to suffer from that same myopia.

On March 10, 2004, David R. Fordham wrote:

 In my opinion, it is a crying shame that e.e.Cummings is required reading in high school, but Pangloss and Popper are not. I would think it should be the other way around. How square can I get?

David R. Fordham
PBGH Faculty Fellow
James Madison University

On March 10, 2004 Jagdish Gangolloy wrote

 I am no professional philosopher, but will wear my amateur hat anyway.

Rudolf Carnap explained the enterprise of logical positivism as "the elimination of metaphysics through the logical analysis of language". It was a basic tenet of Logical positivism, some have called it "British empiricism in continental dress", (most empirical research in accounting is positivistic in some way) that universal statements in language (ie., universally quantified statements, for example "All swans are white" or "All ravens are black") can be derived from individual existential statements ("This raven is black", "That raven is black" and so on) through verification of the truth of such individual statements and the application of the principle of induction.

(The luminaries in the Logical positivist movement include the Vienna circle (Carnap, Tarski, von Neumann), A.J. Ayer, Russell, and Quine. While Popper "hung out" with the Vienna circle crowd, he disavowed any association with them.) However, logicians have usually not considered induction valid inference. In fact philosophers call this the induction problem. 

Popper challenged this, and said that universals can be falsified but not verified, ie., falsificationism is a solution to the induction problem. Falsificationism used modus tollens inference, a valid inference rule in logic.

By Popperian rigour, one usually means the vigour with which "experiments" are conducted to falsify the universal statement. For example, the following is the discussion of Popperian rigour in the conduct of the "cold fusion" experiments of Utah fame, the reference is to the work of scientists who debunked the Utah experimental results:

"They pursued every lead with relentless tenacity and Popperian rigor, repeating every experiment, calculating every effect, looking not merely for positive or negative results, but also for explanations of the false positive results that others were reporting -- in other words, finding the mistakes of other scientists. These they found in abundance. Far from publicizing their work, they were so secretive that rumors started to circulate, and even appeared in the press, that they were protecting positive results. Finally, they were able, 5 weeks after the Utah press conference, to stand before their colleagues in Baltimore and, piece by piece, in vivid detail, demolish the case for Cold Fusion. Cold Fusion had been given its chance, a suspension of disbelief no matter how unlikely it seemed, and it had failed to prove itself. Cold Fusion was dead in the eyes of respectable science." (Source:  http://www.its.caltech.edu/~dg/fusion_art.html)

What I meant is that many researchers consider support for their pet hypothesis in data as verification as well as non-falsifiability of the underlying pet theory. That is like accepting the truth of the statement "All ravens are black" by observing a bunch of black ravens. 

 In fact it is safe to say that the bedrock on which much of empirical research in accounting rests is verificationism and the principle of induction. Many I know and regard pay lip service to Popper (may be because of the political ramification of his views), and yet fall into the positivist trap that Popper fought against.

Logical positivism fell out of favour with the rest of the world (except for many economists and accountants) soon after the first war.

  Jagdish


Why don't leading accounting research journals publish comments received after publication?

March 10 message from Roger Collins

-----Original Message-----
From: Accounting Education using Computers and Multimedia [mailto:AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU] On Behalf Of Roger Collins
Sent: Wednesday, March 10, 2004 10:37 PM
Subject: Re: Hot and Cold...Pangloss, Popper et al

Jagdish, thanks for a great summing up. But you leave out one thing. Your reference -

http://www.its.caltech.edu/~dg/fusion_art.html

- as well as providing an illustration of the phrase "Popperian rigour" in action, is also a model of a clear, concise explanation in plain English of a scientific issue and the underlying theory. Its also a great story, pointing out the political realities of research finance and the pressures and dangers of uncritical appraisal, mass media coverage and financial conflicts of interest. Had Dr. Goodstein been a teacher of mine I would certainly, on this evidence, have stuck with "A" level Physics. Well worth a read, everyone!

And after reading Dr. Goodstein's piece, two questions...

1). How come we don't seem to find space in AAA journals (or, for that matter, in most other academic accounting journals) for "comments" on published papers?

2).Those "positive theory of accounting" people; who were those guys?    ;-)

Regards,

Roger

Roger Collins
UCC School of Business
 

Jagdish Gangolly wrote:

I am no professional philosopher, but will wear my amateur hat anyway.

Hi Roger,

I have long argued that in this age of technology, papers should be living things much like Web documents which are constantly updated by both the original authors and by comments received from assigned referees and from the world in general.

The Accounting Review (TAR) in days of old published comments on articles.  Objections that helped lead to a policy of doing away with comments included the following:

  1. Comments can be a way of getting something “published” in TAR that can misleadingly be counted as a publication even though it took less that an hour to write as opposed to a full article that might take months to write.   Authors who do not have the ability to publish a mainline article in TAR thereby get a cheap “hit.”

    Counter argument:  If the performance evaluators do not distinguish comments from full articles, the problem is with the evaluators rather than the policy of publishing comments. 


  2. It is difficult to get referees for mainline articles, and the policy of publishing comments creates too much burden on the refereeing system if the comments are refereed or too much burden the Editor if the comments are not refereed by anybody other than the Editor (who may not be an expert in the particular topic of a comment).

    Counter argument:  Flaws in both the original published paper and in the refereeing process should not be perpetuated because the original referees cannot be bothered.  Once a paper is made public, the entire world becomes a system of “referees.”



  3. Negative comments in most cases force responses from the original authors who do not want to be bothered with time consuming defenses of their published articles since they’ve now moved on to the next article in process.

    Counter argument:  Why should flaws and ignorance by hidden because the original authors do not want to be bothered or embarrassed?


  4. Given the limited space of in expensive hard copy, more space in some former editions of TAR were devoted to comments than to new articles.

    Counter argument:  Cost of space is negligible in electronic versions of journals.  A changed policy in this era of electronic publishing might be to publish comments only in the electronic versions that are not mailed out in the hard copy versions except for links to the comments published on the Web.

 

I have long argued that in this age of technology, papers should be living things much like Web documents where they are constantly updated by both the original authors and by comments received from assigned referees and from the world in general.

Bob Jensen

PS  The "positive theory of accounting" people who brought positivism into accounting research literature are the early accounting researchers advocating capital markets research.  They are rooted largely in the Universities of Chicago and Rochester doctoral students of the 1970s who branched out into other universities with their capital markets empiricism.  The best-known book arguing for positivism in accounting is the following:

Watts, R. & Zimmerman, J. (1986), Positive Accounting Theory, Prentice-Hall,
Englewood Cliffs. (which followed up on a Watts and Zimmerman 1978 paper in The Accounting Review, pp. 112-134.  

Like so many accounting theory papers that are built upon earlier research in economics and finance, the Watts and Zimmerman paper followed on the heels of the M. Jensen and W.H. Meckling paper "Theory of the Firm:  Managerial Behavior, Agency Costs and Ownership Structures, Journal of Financial Economics, October 1976 ).

The Watts and Zimmerman article and book encountered a fire storm of criticism which the authors largely ignored until Ross Watts and Jerry Zimmerman published their long-awaited and controversial rebuttal claiming that it was more or less a waste of time in academe to pursue the attack on positivist theory.  See "Positive Accounting Theory:  A Ten-Year Perspective," The Accounting Review, 1990, pp. 131-156.

Positive Accounting Theory News can be found at http://positive-accounting-theory.thecycles.com/ 

Bob Jensen

March 22, 2004 reply from Paul Williams [williamsp@COMFS1.COM.NCSU.EDU

To me, the model for a modern journal is BMJ, the British Medical Journal. Articles are published online, citations often are hotlinked to the actual articles, comments and rebuttals follow the article---it's a hotbed for disseminating timely information, and gauging colleagues responses. Take a look at http://bmj.bmjjournals.com/ 

Eric Press, Ph.D., C.P.A. 
Associate Professor of Accounting
Fox School of Business 
301 Speakman Hall 
Temple University Philadelphia, PA 19122 
eric.press@temple.edu  
http://courses.temple.edu/epress 

March 21, 2004 reply from Paul Williams [williamsp@COMFS1.COM.NCSU.EDU

Academic research in accounting has been a singular failure if the standard of evaluation is the same as one we might apply to research in the physical/biological sciences. Even if cancer research has its critics (scientific research is a social enterprise, too) for being "risk" averse, many cancer victims have much better prospects today than they did just 10 years ago. 

Mainstream academic research in accounting hasn't even that accomplishment to point to. But in another sense, academic research in accounting has been enormously successful as an ideology and a rhetoric. As Bob's excellent assessment of the issue of comments on papers indicates, commentary on accounting research has been expunged from the leading journals (The Accounting Review as well, "our" association journal). As Sara Reiter and I show in our paper in AOS, the JAR conferences started out with participants from disciplines other than business and economics, but their critiques were problematic because they were about foundation assumptions (critical value judgements that even the "hard" sciences have to make). The JAR solution was simply to quit inviting people who provided commentary that questioned the foundation value judgments. That kind of commentary is no longer possible in accounting. 

The ideologues from the U. of Chicago have established the boundaries within which all accounting research and debate must occur. Thus we seem unable to appreciate the irony of our spending so much of our intellectual talent "researching" the issue of management compensation strictly within the confines of principal/agent theory, when the issue has its origins in the early work of Jensen and Meckling who persuaded enough of us that options were the way to compensate managers to prevent them from becoming mere bureaucrats. We believed in this imaginary world, made policy on the basis of belief in this imaginary world, the consequence of that belief is now apparent to all, and the only way we seem to be able to analyze this issue is through the continued use of the lens of the reality of this imaginary world. 

The definition of irrationality is to continue to behave in certain ways expecting the outcomes to be different even when there is ample evidence they won't be. And the powers that be still seem to marvel at why we have been so unsuccessful! We should all retire to bedlam. Given recent events can anyone still believe the notion of market efficiency we have taken as an article of faith is coherent (perhaps we should all reread DR Scott?)? The fact that we still debate it after 40 years with libraries filled with "empirical evidence" should tell us that it is not a scientific proposition; it is a political proposition. 

Bob has an excellent idea. More and more groups of natural scientists are moving toward on line publishing as part of a continuous conversation (that is why Al Gore invented the internet in the first place). The AAA could go a long way toward improving the quality of our scholarship by adopting a model like the one Bob suggests. If academic reputations in accounting are indeed predicated on generating the most persuasive evidence and arguments, that will happen with Bob's approach and is nothing to be feared. Why it is feared so much may tell us a great deal about what the real purpose of accounting research is (politically correct academic reputations, perhaps?)

Paul Williams

March 22, 2004 reply from Bob Jensen

Come on Paul, there must be some seminal idea that originated in the academy to help accounting practitioners.

Help! Try to convince Paul and me that some important idea somewhere was dreamed up by an accounting professor to the great relief of our practitioner brethren. 

In Times Square in NYC some years back I invited Joel Demski to give a plenary speech at an AAA annual meeting.

In that speech Joel declared that there was one professional application of academic accounting research --- Dollar Value LIFO.

Unfortunately, some years later when I asked AECMers to show me where Dollar Value LIFO was a product of the academy, Dale Flesher declared that even Dollar Value LIFO was invented by a practitioner cost accountant and not a professor.

One other possibility was ABC costing, but that was shown early on to have been invented by a cost accountant at John Deere Corporation.

March 22, 2004 reply from Leslie Kren

-----Original Message----- 
From:  Leslie Kren 
Sent: Monday, March 22, 2004 10:59 AM 
Subject: Re: FW: The relevance of research

Is the validity-test of business research the immediacy of its 'real world' usefulness? Should academics compare their work to the Conference Board and to authors of mass-market business books?

Since our main role is not research for hire, we set our own research agenda. This leads to the uncomfortable reality that some of our research does not add value. Many blind alleys are investigated and the poorly skilled among us are doomed to failure at the outset. However, I do not accept the premise that we have accomplished nothing. It seems to me that we now have a better understanding of the role of information in the organization. That grand theories have not emerge may merely reflect the diversity of practice.

In the cost management area, for example, a rich diversity in accounting research has provided numerous insights into the antecedents and consequences of control system design. There are many such articles that my graduate students (with job experience) read, apply to business cases, and find enlightening and useful.

A more troubling issue, in my mind, is our failure to disseminate our research. In the cost management area, our textbooks have changed only marginally over the past decades. Thus, relevant academic research is never exposed to the 'real world'. To some extent, the nay-saying attitude that accounting research has no value gives our textbook authors the excuse to ignore it all.

**************************************** 
Leslie Kren, CPA 
Associate Professor 
School of Business University of WI - Milwaukee 
3202 N. Maryland Milwaukee, WI 53201
  
lkren@uwm.edu
  
http://www.uwm.edu/~lkren/ 

March 22 reply from Bob Jensen

Hi Leslie,

I would never argue that academic research has not piled on some improvements to practice, and it certainly has had great impact on awareness that there are better ways to account both to management and investors/creditors. Decades ago, the cost accounting literature never made mention of TQM or the fact that poor quality can be a huge cost driver. We made strides in many areas such as showing that forward rates should be discounted when marking derivative instruments to fair value.

But Japanese auto manufacturers discovered that TQM pays long before the first article on this topic ever appeared in the accounting literature. The finance practitioners were discounting forward prices long before this appeared in our academic research papers.

My challenge is for you to find that seminal idea that conceived something for which the practicing profession is both aware of and eternally grateful. For example, we can all appreciate the fact that modern chemists and physicians are eternally grateful that Pauling, Watson, and Crick conceived of the helix/double helix DNA structure. And we can appreciate this simply because we listen to the praises of practitioners even though we ourselves do not and will never understand the underlying chemistry.

The challenge is to cite practitioners who have ever truly praised a seminal discovery reported in the academic research literature. If and when we find such praise, chances are that the seminal idea, like double entry bookkeeping itself, is rooted in practice rather than academe.

Awards such as the AAA Seminal Contributions Awards go to seminal works in academic accounting research that are deemed seminal to professors. I challenge you to randomly survey practitioners and find any practitioner who is aware of any one of the rarely-bestowed AAA award-winning seminal research honors --- http://accounting.rutgers.edu/raw/aaa/awards/awrd2win.htm 

American Accounting Association Seminal Contributions to Accounting Literature
1994 - "Economic Incentives in budgetary Control Systems" by Joel S. Demski and Gerald A. Feltham
The Accounting Review (April) 1978
1989 - "Information Content of Annual Earnings Announcements" by William H. Beaver
Journal of Accounting Research 1968
1986 - "An Empirical Evaluation of Accounting Income Numbers" by Ray Ball and Philip Brown
Journal of Accounting Research, 1968

 

March 23, 2004 reply from Paul Williams [williamsp@COMFS1.COM.NCSU.EDU

Bob, et al, 

Since we are on this subject of relevance of research, let me propose the following hypothesis for your consideration. We are always assuming that the purpose of accounting research is to improve "practice," and we further presume that "practice" is synonymous with the organized "profession." Have we ever entertained the possibility that the reason our research is so irrelevant is that is exactly what the profession wants from the academy and that the greatest obstacle to improving the potential of accounting as a social function (the traditional definition of anything that qualifies as a profession) is the organized profession itself? Given its conduct lately (at least that of the BIG practices) its "ends in view" (one of Carl Devine's expressions emblazoned in my head) are certainly, in my view, not something the academy should be particularly enthusiastic about abetting.

Paul Williams
University of North Carolina

March 22, 2004 reply from Kay Zekany

Perhaps the relevance of our research should not only be measured based only on its impact on industry, but instead, also on its impact on us as scholars and learners and teachers, and in turn on our students.

Kay Zekany
Assistant Professor of Accounting
College of Business Administration
Ohio Northern University

 

March 23, 2004 reply from David R. Fordham [fordhadr@JMU.EDU

I've been thoroughly enthralled by the discussion. Is it time yet to muddy the water by asking whether the discussants are concentrating solely on "Basic Research", or whether the ideas apply also to "Application Research", or even worse: to the repackaging and distribution of knowledge rather than its creation.

Being from a so-called "teaching" school, as opposed to a "Research I" school, we define the term "research" a little differently. Not just "scholarly activity", mind you, but RE-search.

Stated another way, is "exploring unexplored realms" the only definition of research? If so, then why is the term not just "search"?

If the economists' measure of production includes value-added activities such as repackaging, distribution, transportation, and the like, why would not the measure (value) of research include the repackaging, distribution, and transportation of knowledge?

Stirring up a little silt, as always, to change the color of the water...

David R. Fordham 
PBGH Faculty Fellow

 


Joe Drape, "Graduation Is Secondary for Many in Final 16," The New York Times, March 28, 2004 --- http://www.nytimes.com/2004/03/24/sports/ncaabasketball/24GRAD.html 

The N.C.A.A. men's basketball tournament is once more whittled to a field of 16, and among the teams are a few surprises. Graduation rates among players on the remaining teams have once more been analyzed in studies, and in that regard there have been no surprises: only four — Duke, Kansas, Vanderbilt and Xavier — posted graduation rates of 50 percent or better.

Sixteen of the teams that made the tournament's initial field of 65 had graduation rates of 25 percent or less. Four of those teams did not graduate a player within the six years allotted, according to the latest National Collegiate Athletic Association graduation data.

"It's reprehensible and disappointing," the N.C.A.A. president, Myles Brand, said of the overall findings. "I think the current system permits student-athletes in basketball to move through school without getting a degree."

Brand says he believes, however, that an academic reform package the N.C.A.A. is expected to adopt next month — the so-called incentive/disincentive plan — will soon allow university officials and fans to take pride in their basketball team's on-court performance without having to be embarrassed about failures in the classroom.

Teams that do not perform well academically could lose scholarships and be barred from postseason play, potentially losing millions of dollars in revenue for their respective colleges. Teams that perform well in the classroom, on the other hand, would be entitled to additional revenue through the N.C.A.A.'s distribution formula and would pick up more scholarships and receive other benefits like additional graduate assistant coaches.

Richard Lapchick, director of the Institute for Diversity and Ethics in Sport at the University of Central Florida, said that the new plan was overdue and that it could improve poor academic performance, especially in high-profile sports like basketball and football.

In his own studies over the previous 10 years, Lapchick has found, among other things, that more than 50 Division I basketball programs had failed to graduate even one black player.

"This would be the first time ever the N.C.A.A. would hand out sanctions for schools that fail to deliver on the promise of an education when they open their doors to athletes," Lapchick said.

Yesterday, he released his survey, "Keeping Score When It Counts: Graduation Rates and Diversity in Campus Leadership for 2004 Men's Sweet 16 Teams."

"There also are rewards for teams that do it right, which are not many if you look at the 16 teams," he said of the pending N.C.A.A. incentive/disincentive plan.

Of the teams still left in the N.C.A.A. tournament, Kansas had the top graduation rate among players, at 73 percent, followed by Duke and Xavier at 67 percent and Vanderbilt at 62 percent.

The other 12 teams had graduation rates below 50 percent, and 7 of them graduated 33 percent or less of their men's basketball players. Those colleges, according to a separate study released by the Knight Foundation Commission on Intercollegiate Athletics, were Alabama; Alabama at Birmingham; Connecticut; Georgia Tech; Nevada; Oklahoma State; and Pittsburgh.

The N.C.A.A. did not release campus-specific graduation rates for 16 teams in the 65-field tournament. Those 16 colleges fell under the federal Department of Education's ruling last year that graduation rate information could not be published for a class in which there were fewer than three athletes on scholarships or fewer than three who graduated.

"We feel uncomfortable, too, when we see these rates published, and agree with the new structure," said Jim Haney, executive director of the National Association of Basketball Coaches. "We've all raised the bar academically, and when kids know how high the bar is set they'll go meet it."

The Knight Commission chairman, William C. Friday, president emeritus of the University of North Carolina, said he was not so sure.

"When you see poor graduation rates, recruiting violations and instances of academic fraud, any thoughtful sports fan can see that we've created an entertainment industry and, in the process, it has eroded the integrity of the university," Friday said.

"It is a good first step, but it is going to take a lot more than that," he said of the proposed N.C.A.A. plan. "We need to step back and take the pressure off college sports. That means getting some discipline back in our dealings with television networks and keeping coaches' salaries down. We are not honoring our moral duty to these student athletes."

Indeed, the graduation rates of athletes in revenue-generating sports like basketball are at variance with the performance of students in other sports.

Sixty-two percent of all scholarship athletes who entered Division I colleges for the 1996-97 academic year graduated in the six-year window allowed for such statistics. Only 42 percent of the players in men's basketball programs in Division I graduated, however.

"There are some loopholes that haven't serve us well in sports like men's basketball," Brand said. "We intend to change that."

March 28, 2004 reply from Chuck Pier [texcap@HOTMAIL.COM

There was a similar article in the Chronicle of Higher Education recently. That article caused an interesting discussion between myself and a colleague. He asked, "Why can't kids major in football or basketball?" He wasn't talking about phys ed. which many athletes will major in, but he was talking football itself. My first response was, "What will they do with that degree?" and he shot back, "The same as they do with a degree in 'voice' or 'dance' or 'bassoon" or 'tuba!.'" (He mentioned the last two because my daughter will graduate (we hope) in May with a degree in Bassoon performance from SMU in Dallas, and is getting married to a young man who has a degree in Tuba performance.)

He said the degree in football or basketball would require them to study the mechanics, history, politics, etc of their chosen sport. When they are through they may actually have some idea of who Ty Cobb, Bob Cousey, or Bronco Nagurski was. I think it would help them understand their sport and be better players. If they can't find a job in their chosen degree field, they could go back to grad school, get a second degree, or teach, again just as music or dance majors do. I remember my daughter's bassoon professor telling her that there are 4 times as many pro basketball players than there are professional bassoonists. Yet, to my knowledge there are no schools offering a degree in basketball and hundreds offering degrees in bassoon.

Just a thought.

Charles A. Pier 
Assistant Professor 
Department of Accounting 
Walker College of Business 
Appalachian State University Boone, NC 28608 

email: pierca@appstate.edu 

March 29, 2004 reply from Bob Jensen

Hi Chuck,

Athletic majors who graduate usually end up in some type of career in coaching, teaching, or training.  The ones who actually graduated actually attended class and studied just like your daughter did for her music degree at SMU.

The problem with too many of the top NCAA Division 1 basketball players is that they can't be bothered to study or even attend class.  Too many of them aspire to get into the NBA when in fact only a very small percentage will ever make a living in the NBA --- http://www.nytimes.com/2004/03/24/sports/ncaabasketball/24GRAD.html

Where do they go if they did not attend class and did not make it into the NBA?  Some years ago, five UCCL basketball players sued UCLA for allowing them to enroll in UCLA, play four years of basketball, and never learn how to even read.

And the Division 1 coaches and alumni cry foul every time the NCAA tries to raise the admission standards and/or retention standards for Division 1 athletes.

Bob

March 29, 2004 reply from Paul Williams [williamsp@COMFS1.COM.NCSU.EDU

Bob, 

The graduation rate statistics published by the NCAA are not reliable, especially for basketball. Basketball has far fewer scholarships than football. The statistic is calculated on freshman cohorts and is completely inflexible. For example, if Duke recruited 3 freshman on scholarship and one of those students transferred to another school and successfully completed their degree there, that student still shows up as failing to graduate from Duke within six years. 

The same is true for players who "go pro" and return later to complete their degrees (e.g., Michael Jordon); they count as failures as well. Our faculty representative on the ACC athletics counsel did a calculation for ACC basketball teams taking into account these anomalies, i.e., how many freshman recruits completed a degree somewhere?

The actual experience of these athletes with obtaining an education and ultimately a degree is better than NCAA stats tell. The NCAA labors under the delusion of the scholar/athlete, when the pressures (heaped upon the institution by the alumni to a large extent -- the "boosters") are now so intense that it is nearly impossible to be both. I have had numerous experiences with athletes that struggled in class during their season, but who did pretty well when the time to study was available (one vivid experience was having an FSU baseball player in a cost accounting class during spring term who played 32 games during the month of April. Needless to say, he failed the class, but made a good grade when taking it again during summer school).

Many of the athletes recruited certainly aren't college material and are recruited only for their athletic prowess, but the system makes it hard for all athletes to be successful scholars. I don't know why the NCAA doesn't allow athletes to be athletes sometimes and scholars at another, rather than insist they be both. If seasons were established to correspond to school terms, which they nearly do now (the big change would be to start basketball season 3 weeks later), then athletes would only play during the season and go to school during the "off season." It may also be time for the professional leagues, particularly the NFL, to stop expecting the states to subsidize the develop of professional athletes. Professional baseball has a farm system and hockey has junior leagues. Young men ,like Labron Harris, who aren't as ready as he was for the big leagues could take the risk and enter a farm system, paid for by the league, and devote themselves full time (i.e., major in their sport) to pursuing the dream.

March 29, 2004 reply from Regel, Roy (Dr) [Roy.Regel@BUSINESS.UMT.EDU

Bob Jensen said "This would put an end to allowing athletes to attend college for years without taking anything other than phony athletic courses that can be passed without knowing how to read or write." Would proper application of managerial accounting concepts help solve the problems described by Bob?

The value chain, activity-based cost/management, production life cycles, cost of quality, reducing production line variation, and non-value added costs are important concepts in modern organizations, including education.

Shouldn't "knowing how to read and write" be inspected at the front end of the college education process? If the inspection is done well, wouldn't student variation be less in subsequent courses, thus allowing greater incremental learning efficiency? Does increased "raw material" quality variation cause a dramatic increase in subsequent processing cost of a student/graduate? Does failure to inspect at the front end increase life cycle time and cost? Is "rework" a non-value added cost that should be minimized or eliminated?

Why do truly 'phony courses' exist? Isn't this an example of non-value added cost?

If the NCAA required "that athlete class attendance be monitored and that completion of the common curriculum core with a C average or better is completed in no less than three years," would violators search for core sections with easy grading standards, liberal enforcement of attendance, and other ways to get around the intent of the rules? Also, does rampant grade inflation allow C grades for students who cannot read or write? (Is this result possible because the grade was based heavily on attendance?)

Cynics Corner:

Many of these education problems are not unique to athletes.

Are there any analogies to corporate governance and accountants' behavior and financial accounting & auditing standards? Will more precise rules lead to a solution? (when present principles and rules are frequently not enforced).

Will this discussion lead us toward a "root cause" of the problem?

If a root cause is identified, will any change occur?

My hope is that basic application of fundamental principles will help us make progress toward the values we espouse.

Roy W. Regel
Professor of Accounting
The University of Montana - Missoula

March 29, 2004 reply from Bob Jensen

Actually, phony courses add a lot to value.

The student who is aiming only for an NBA career can focus full time on basketball without incurring the cost or risk of flunking out. This adds value since he becomes a better player and has a better shot at making it to the NBA.

The phony courses add a lot to value to the university. Huge alumni gifts are often pegged to winning teams, and phony courses allow the university to recruit and retain better players. For example, I recall that alumni wanted to give money to Notre Dame for a new/improved football stadium. Notre Dame's President announced that would be great, but the alumni had to first give raise money for a new library. The President at the time was Theodore M. Hesburgh,(1952-1987). I'm certain that the winning teams at Notre Dame during this period made it easier to ask for more money.

Bob Jensen

March 30, 2004 reply from Paul Williams [williamsp@COMFS1.COM.NCSU.EDU

Bob,

My institution (NC State), as a consequence of our problems with the basketball program a few years ago, has instituted policies that essentially do what you suggest. The athletic department monitors each athlete by contacting each course instructor for periodic updates on attendance and performance. Of course, if faculty don't take the time to fill in the reports, then the program doesn't work as well. Athletes at NC State have tutors and study halls where attendance is mandatory (Duke and UNC also do a very good job of directing their athletes to a degree). One of the real scandals is the graduation rate for non-athletes. Athletes get lots of counseling and help, but the non-athlete student doesn't get nearly the attention. During my stint on faculty senate there was much talk and some movement toward designing a program for all NC State students that would provide the support that is provided to athletes (our first year college provides this to a limited number of students, but it is a model yet to be expanded to all students.) The budget woes of the last few years have dashed much hope we will be able to do that on any large scale.

Another issue I mull about is how much the opportunities for women and non-revenue sport participation in general has substantially increased. The participation of women in intercollegiate athletics seems to indicate that there was likely a great deal of interest in the past, but no opportunity. The reality is that such opportunities are possible only through the big time revenue sports (state legislatures are not likely to fund intercollegiate men or womens' ice hockey, at least here in NC). Do we tolerate corruption in the revenue sports as the price for increasing the opportunities for participation in intercollegiate sports (of all kinds and for all persons)? Tough question; if some college presidents answer "Yes", I'm not sure I would judge them harshly. 

Paul

 

March 30, 2004 reply from Steven White [steven.white@WKU.EDU

I was the Faculty Athletics Representative at WKU for several years and watched the graduation rates quite closely. The amazing thing is that "good" programs generally have very high graduation rates....Duke, UNC, Stanford, UCLA.........many "successful" programs have graduation rates in basketball of zero or very close to it.......Cincinnatti didn't graduate a player for several years! As with most things, a few rogues paint an ugly picture for the more common program that actually accomplish what college athletics should accomplish (not just making money)! By the way, the University of Michigan reports that their athletics program loses money. How does that happen?


You can find out whether your "politically-minded" acquaintances are blow-hard cheapskates.

Question
Is this a privacy invasion?

Answer
Go to www.fundrace.org  put in your address and it shows who in your neighborhood has contributed how much to a presidential candidate and to which candidate.

You can also enter a zip code to widely define your "neighborhood."  For example, one of the more affluent neighborhoods in San Antonio has a 78209 zip code.  Fill it in to see what "oh-niners" gave to each candidate.

More controversial is the fact that you can enter a name to find what that person gave to each candidate.  For example, I entered the name of my friend Dick Haar and found out that he gave $500 to George Bush.  I also got a listing of his full name, occupation, and current home address.

What is even more controversial is finding out how little a person gave, including zero.  For example, I typed in "Robert Jensen" and discovered that I didn't give a penny to any candidate.  What a cheapskate!

Hey!  This might be a great way to find out if your spouse secretly gave your hard earned dough to a candidate that you don’t want elected.

This site also lists airline and hotel spending by candidates which some of you might find interesting --- http://www.fundrace.org/neighbors.php 

There is also a money map at http://www.fundrace.org/citymap.php

 March 27, 2004 reply from David R. Fordham [fordhadr@JMU.EDU

Bob, I’m quite curious about your question.

Why would this be a privacy invasion?

David R. Fordham
PBGH Faculty Fellow
James Madison University

March 27, 2004 reply from Bob Jensen

Well for openers, I can find out if Richard Haar contributes more to Republicans than Democrats (he’s a flag-waving Republican). I can even find out how much more ($500 to date).

I can find out that Richard Haar not only lives in South Texas, but I can find his exact address in Fair Oaks Ranch near Boerne.

If I am seeking funds for local or regional conservative causes in South Texas, I can use this database to find a listing of those persons in Dick Haar’s region to pester for money. Dick does not like being pestered for money.

If Dick Haar’s entire family contributes an enormous amount of money, I can begin to investigate what favors they might be seeking in return for political contributions.

If I was an administrator at the University of South Alabama and influenced by how much faculty sacrifice in their earnings for political causes, I can find out the following:

Candace McCombs ($750 wasted on Howard Dean)
Professor University of South Alabama

Bob

(PS: I did not know there even was a Candace McCombs until I searched for “McCombs” (actually I was looking for Red McCombs from San Antonio) who owns the Minnesota Vikings and donated over $50 million to the McCombs School of Business at the University of Texas while my former doctoral student, Bob May, was the Dean. Actually rich guys like Red probably make donations to both political parties without using their real names since they have corporations to hide behind. )

March 29, 2004 reply from Paul Polinski [pwp3@CASE.EDU

Some of this might prove useful for checking out other political candidates. For instance, Eric Fingerhut (a current Ohio State Senator) is running as a Democrat against George Voinovich for a Congressional Senate seat; and for Eric,

Eric Fingerhut Joe Lieberman $450


For a number of years, Jim has been publishing Technology Source (TS) from the University of North Carolina .  It became more difficult as his corporate grants expired (the original grants came when Bill Graves was in charge of the now defunct Institute for Advanced Technology (IAT) at UNC --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245gloss.htm .

He asked that I forward this on to faculty interested in education technology.

I generally posted abstracts of TS publications in New Bookmarks.  Jim frequently conducted excellent interviews with pathfinders in education technology.  The IAT and its TS publication commenced as small springs that fed into tributaries.  Early controversies have subsided, and education technology is now main stream across all realms of education literature.

Bob Jensen

-----Original Message-----
From: James L. Morrison [mailto:morrison@unc.edu]
Sent: Sunday, March 21, 2004 10:44 AM
To: Jensen, Robert
Subject: Technology Source Update/ Innovate Call for Manuscripts

Last September, the MVU VP for Academic Affairs notified me that MVU would not publish The Technology Source past the November/December 2003 issue due to budget constraints. During our conversation, he authorized me to locate an institution that could continue publishing TS, with the understanding that MVU would transfer TS to that institution for the cost of moving the database. The MVU president later reversed this decision, and now seeks to transfer the journal to a Michigan institution. If he is unsuccessful, the current version of TS will probably continue to be archived at http://ts.mivu.org . If he is successful, TS will have a new editor and editorial board.

We are now working with officials of the Nova Southeastern University (http://www.nova.edu) to begin a new online peer-reviewed journal, Innovate, which will focus on the creative use of information tools to enhance active learning methods irrespective of sector (K-12, colleges and universities, corporate universities).  Innovate will model the use of these tools to enhance professional communication (i.e., a discussion forum for each article; a "read related" feature that links readers to articles on similar topics for instant access; an "email this article" feature; an "easy print" feature; and links to text, audio, and video files within each article as appropriate). In addition, the journal will be available in multiple languages and will include a multimedia classifieds section where employers can market their openings and job seekers can present their credentials. Finally, our partner, ULiveandLearn ( http://www.uliveandlearn.com/ ), will host Innovate-Live, a series of interactive webcasts addressing the topic of each article with authors and readers.

The first issue of Innovate will be published 1 July 2004. We are funding the journal with partial assistance from our readers. We will have a nominal subscription fee for individuals and a reasonable fee for institutions that will allow all members of those institutions to access the journal from on or off campus.

If you would like to submit a manuscript for publication consideration that is congruent with our focus, or if you know of an institution that would like to partner with us to produce the journal in a language other than English, please send me a note at morrison@unc.edu. If you would like to receive periodic announcements of our progress, please register at http://horizon.unc.edu/innovate  

Please forward this announcement to colleagues who are interested in enhancing their teaching effectiveness using information technology tools.

Best.

James L. Morrison

Editor-in-Chief of Innovate
Professor Emeritus of Educational Leadership
UNC-Chapel Hill
http://horizon.unc.edu

 


Forwarded on March 23, 2004 by Elliot Kamlet SUNY Account [ekamlet@BINGHAMTON.EDU

A man in Southern California is irate over the results of “Googling” his name. Mark Maughan, certified public accountant of the Brown & Maughan firm, believes the search results for “Mark Maughan” contained “alarming, false, misleading and injurious results.”

Maughan discovered that Google’s results about him and his company made false claims that, according to NBC4News, “the search results falsely represent that plaintiffs Maughan and/or Brown & Maughan have been disciplined for gross negligence, for failing to timely submit a client's claim for refund of overpayment of taxes, and for practicing as a CPA without a permit.”

Plaintiff attorney John A. Girardi believes that Google’s PageRank system is what caused this misinformation. In the suit, Giradi states that Google PageRank “reformats information obtained from accurate sources, resulting in changing of the context in which information is presented.”

While it’s true that Google results pages alter the context of information, PageRank does not actually determine search result descriptions.

The attorney stated that a literal reprint would be suitable, but that the reformat gives misinformation. He is asking that Google discontinue using PageRank. Girardi is asking for unspecified monetary damages, as well.

Also named in the lawsuit are Yahoo, AOL, and Time Warner.

For more details, go to http://www.nbc4.tv/news/2937016/detail.html 

Bob Jensen's search helpers are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/searchh.htm 


Question
College professors and most of their students have enormous disdain for fake diplomas.  Did you ever wonder who buys a lot of these fakes?

Answer
Primary and secondary teachers are buying them up just to tap into automatic raises that accompany new credentials.

While I was up in Canada last week, the hotel left a copy of The Globe and Mail in front of my door each day.

"Teachers Under Fire for Fake On-Line Degrees," The Globe and Mail, March 26, 2004 --- http://snipurl.com/FakeDegrees 

A county school board in Lawrenceville , Ga. , may demand that six teachers repay nearly $30,000 ( U.S. ) in pay raises they received after obtaining fake degrees from an on-line school in Liberia .

St. Regis University , the on-line school, grants master's degrees and doctorates based on "life experience." A master's degree costs $995 and a doctorate costs $1,500.

Several school board members have accused the teachers of fleecing the system, and some suggested the teachers should lose their jobs.

Bob Jensen's threads on fake diplomas are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm#DiplomaMill


March 23, 2004 message from Heather MacMaster [southwestern.email@thomsonlearning.com

The second edition of Derivatives: An Introduction by Robert Strong will be available in July for your fall classes.

One of the briefest texts on the market, Robert Strong's ability to explain the intuition behind the math and show students how derivatives are actually used has made this course much more tangible and easier to understand.

The second edition has expanded its coverage of Real Options, with more discussion of option strategies than the typical survey course text. Also integrated throughout the text are rich examples to show how it may be appropriate to use several types of Derivative Options at once, or both futures and options at the same time.

This text illustrates real-world uses of derivatives. Distinctive features of this applied approach include:

"Derivatives Today" Boxes: Real-life, derivative situations provide students with an opportunity to consider issues they may encounter in the marketplace. "Trading Strategy" Boxes: These stimulating trading scenarios illustrate various methods in which speculators or investors use options in ways that most existing texts do not cover. Finally, in clear and concise prose, Strong focuses on the practical. Since the text includes more institutional detail than competing texts, users can connect theory to practice! Also to maintain student interest and applicablity, Strong sparks interest by using many institutional anecdotes, including trading mechanics, market folklore, and contemporary examples of derivatives use and misuse.

Be sure to click below to reserve your complimentary copy when the book publishes in July…

[Link Deleted]

Sincerely,

Heather MacMaster 
Marketing Manager 
Thomson South-Western

Bob Jensen's threads on derivatives are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm 


Hi Glen,

I think a lot of Andersen's training materials are still at the training facility in St Charles (which is still being operated by Andersen). The last time I did a gig with Art Wyatt, he said that some executive partners like John Stuart were working in St Charles.

I am having a difficult time locating a home page, but reference is made to this center on various links such as  http://www.umcs.maine.edu/~ftp/wisr/Andersen.html 

An interesting site about DayDreams by Design at St Charles can be found at http://www.prweb.com/releases/2003/7/prweb71394.htm 

Bob Jensen

-----Original Message----- 
From: Glen L Gray Sent: Wednesday, March 17, 2004 7:19 PM 
Subject: Where did they go?

Arthur Andersen had world-class training for their staff. The question is what happen to all their training materials? There must be videos, CDs and printed materials floating around somewhere. A colleague contacted someone at A.A. and that person did not know what happen to all the materials they had at their training facility.

Does anybody on this list know? 

Glen L. Gray, PhD, CPA Accounting & Information Systems, COBAE California State University, Northridge Northridge, CA 91330-8372 818.677.3948 818.677.2461 (messages) http://www.csun.edu/~vcact00f 

 


Although you might not agree with some of Irv's opinions below, the announcement is important to note.

Irv probably knows more about accounting and flying (i.e., pilot) certification examinations than any other human being in the U.S.

Bob Jensen

-----Original Message-----
From: Irvin Gleim [mailto:irvin.gleim@gleim.com]
Sent: Tuesday, March 23, 2004 5:42 PM
To: Jensen, Robert
Subject: Major CMA Exam Changes Affecting Your Students

 

The IMA is making substantive changes to the CMA exam beginning July 1, 2004. The IMA will release a new exam this summer and will remain in 4 parts, although it will be significantly different than the prior exam. However, there is good news; the current exam (unchanged) will be available to your students until December 31, 2007, PROVIDED YOUR STUDENTS REGISTER FOR THE CURRENT CMA EXAM PRIOR TO JUNE 30, 2004.

The current CMA exam is an easier exam to prepare for and pass. Your students should consider pursuing the CMA either in place of the CPA or in addition to the CPA. The total cost to take the CMA as a student is $265; undergraduate students can take the exam, and there is not a 150-hour requirement.

An explanation of the reorganized CMA exam is available at http://www.gleim.com/accounting/cma/examnews/cmaexam.php

A comparison of the current (unchanged) CMA exam with the reorganized exam is available at http://www.gleim.com/accounting/cma/examnews/comparison.php

PLEASE RECOMMEND THE FOLLOWING TO YOUR STUDENTS:

A. Join the IMA for $35 (required to take the CMA exam) at https://www.imanet.org/forms/MembershipAppform1.asp

B. Decide which part to take first: See http://www.gleim.com/accounting/cma/examnews/passfirst.php

C. Register for the exam and pay $57.50 (which is 50% of the regular fee) per exam part. The $75 credentialing fee is waived for students. https://www.imanet.org/forms/examregform.asp

D. Purchase Gleim/Flesher CMA Review. Substantial discounts are available through Gleim's complimentary Academic Site License program. Call 800-874-5346, ext. 104 for details.

E. Study CMA Review books, software, and audios (approximately 40 hours) per part.

F. Take and pass each part.

G. Continue with any remaining parts and become a CMA and/or CFM.

Irv

Dr. Irvin N. Gleim
Gleim Publications, Inc.
P.O. Box 12848
Gainesville, FL 32604
352-375-0772, x.110
800-87-GLEIM, x.110
352-224-1310, direct
352-870-2742, cell
Fax 888-375-6940

http://www.gleim.com


March 22, 2004 message from Richard Campbell

I just created a tutorial on the above method which uses simultaneous linear equations. I use Microsoft Excel to solve the problem. The data is in an Adobe Acrobat file, and the tutorial is a Flash animation.

Both files are a little rough and need editing, but I wanted to finish it for my Tuesday Advanced Cost class.

See the following link.

http://www.VirtualPublishing.NET/ma03a.htm 

Richard J. Campbell

March 22, 2004 reply from Dave Will

Richard,

I am very involved with SYNCHRONOUS (LIVE) online training using web conferencing (not video conferencing). Have you ever used this technology? Students can attend a class or you can tutor them one-to-one using web conferencing.. They see what's on your PC while you all talk in a telephone conference call. It is very interactive, reliable and easy to use. Some universities are using it for classes, review sessions and office hours.

Dave Will dwill@bostonlearninginc.com 

March 22, 2004 reply from Mike Sweeney

Richard,

I like your tutorial and the overall interface.

I teach online classes and have been experimenting with Camtasia. Here is an example dealing with NPV in flash (also pretty rough).

http://polaris.umuc.edu/%7Emsweeney/Camtasia03/pvirr/pvirrf.html 

I plan to spend time this summer learning RoboDemo and creating a variety of online demo's for my finance and accounting classes. Always the capitalist, I'm looking to make a buck from my work. Any suggestions on whom I might contact?

Thanks,

Mike Sweeney 
Hillsdale College michael.sweeney@hillsdale.edu  
University of Maryland University College 
msweeney70@yahoo.com 

Bob Jensen's threads on video and related education technologies are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm 


This Will Scare Your Pants Off

Conservative Estimate of What You Should Be Saving for Retirement
Calculator from American Savings Education --- http://www.asec.org/ballpark/ 

A Savings Calculator With More Options (Plus many more business calculators)
Dinkytown from KJE Computer Solutions --- http://www.dinkytown.net/ 

TIAA/CREF Retirement and Planning Calculators --- http://www.tiaa-cref.org/calcs/index.html

Morningstar --- http://members.morningstar.com/product/retirementplan.html?ss=ov&kw=rl+retirement+calculator 

U.S. Social Security Administration (Many helpers from an organization destined to go broke) --- http://www.ssa.gov/ 

March 29, 2004 reply from Patricia Doherty [pdoherty@BU.EDU

Yeah, it is scary, especially when I realize that if I saved what I should, I would have to either stop eating or move into an old refrigerator box alongside the railroad tracks (if I could find a spot among all the other homeless there).

Patricia A. Doherty
Instructor in Accounting
Coordinator, Managerial Accounting
Boston University School of Management
595 Commonwealth Avenue
Boston, MA 02215

Bob Jensen's threads on financial and other online calculators are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob3.htm#080512Calculators 


E&Y Faculty Connection --- http://www.ey.com/GLOBAL/content.nsf/US/EY_Faculty_Connection_(Issue_5

Ernst & Young Launches Audit Committee Outreach Efforts
Ernst & Young continues to undertake initiatives aimed at helping to restore investor confidence in the capital markets. In addition to implementing a number of professional development initiatives and quality and compliance safeguards within our own organization, we are also engaging in an ongoing dialogue with audit committees.

In 2003, Ernst & Young and Tapestry Networks founded the Audit Committee Leadership Network, a group of audit committee chairs who share insights and best practices on issues in the new audit environment. The ACLN includes directors from Aetna, American Express Company, Caterpillar Inc., The Coca-Cola Company, FedEx Corporation, The Home Depot, Inc., Newell Rubbermaid Inc., Pfizer Inc, Texas Instruments, and Viacom Inc. The Network, which first met in September, meets quarterly.

Some of the topics the ALCN has discussed so far include enterprise risk management, the role of the audit committee before and after a transaction, audit committee charters, audit committee priorities and performance, and the emerging roles and responsibilities of audit committees in light of changing regulations, expectations and relationships.

E&Y has also launched an information series on issues for audit committees and others concerned about financial reporting. The initiative includes BoardMatters Quarterly, an electronic newsletter, and a series of web-based forums for live discussions on emerging issues.

The first issue of BoardMatters Quarterly was released in late December and is available to EY Faculty Connection readers. This edition covers Section 404 of Sarbanes-Oxley and its implications, managing whistleblower processes, the composition of audit committees, and executive compensation. Upcoming issues will cover enterprise risk management, the changing role of internal audit, and other topics.

As an EY Faculty Connection reader, you will receive invitations to the web-based forums Ernst & Young will host on emerging issues for audit committees. The first of this series of "webcasts" will be held on the implications of Sarbanes-Oxley implementation for audit committee members. We will send notice of the webcast when the date has been finalized. Other webcasts that have been archived or are soon to be aired are listed in this newsletter, under Thought Center Webcasts.

At Ernst & Young, we are committed to restoring investor confidence. We welcome our faculty colleagues to join in the dialogue with audit committees on our webcasts as we collectively seek to address this critical issue.

E&Y Publishes Emerging Trends in Internal Controls
One of the most involved processes companies face today is implementing Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. Ernst & Young is engaged in an ongoing process of surveying major businesses representing virtually all industries in today's marketplace about their Section 404 preparations and processes. We are pleased to share our findings with EY Faculty Connection readers.

Emerging Trends in Internal Controls identifies what appear to be trends and practices among companies as they try to build effectiveness and efficiencies in their processes and embed control consciousness throughout their companies. We invited Dr. Larry Rittenberg, Professor of Accounting at the University of Wisconsin – Madison, to provide his insights on the educational and research implications of these emerging trends. Please see Dr. Rittenberg's comments in the From the Academy section


From the March 10, 2004 FEI Newsletter from Colleen Sayther [mailmanager@feiexpress.fei.org

Restatements Dip Slightly in 2003
After climbing steadily for four years, the number of public-company restatements fell very slightly in 2003, to 323 from 330 in 2002, according to the Huron Consulting Group. By comparison, the total for 1999, the first year for which Huron began issuing a report, was 212. The firm analyzed data from amended quarterly and annual financial statements filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission; restatements are recorded as of the year filed, not by the date of the announcement.

Errors in accounting for reserves and contingencies represented the leading cause of restatements in 2003, Huron concluded. This category includes accounting errors related to accounts receivable and inventory reserves, restructuring reserves, accruals and other loss contingencies. Restatements in this category rose more than any other last year, the firm concluded.

"Reserves and contingencies may be the most judgmental accounts in a company's financial statements because in many cases, they are subject to an estimation process," the firm noted in a report. "These restatements, however, do not simply reflect changes in estimates, but rather reflect flawed judgments due to oversight or misuse of facts, fraud or a misapplication of GAAP."

Revenue recognition, which was the leading cause of restatements over the past five years, was the second-leading cause in 2003. However, the total involved in the 63 such restatements last year fell 26 percent from the year before, when revenue recognition restatements hit an all-time high.

Huron tracks restatements in five categories: reserves and contingencies; revenue recognition; equity (errors in stock option or warrant accounting, for instance); capitalization and expensing of assets; and inventory issues such as valuation, quantity and cost of sales adjustments.

Last year also marked a new high in the survey for the number of annual filings that were restated - 206, or 64 percent of the total, more than double the 98 in 2000.

Looking at the 2003 results by size, the number of restatements by companies with less than $100 million in annual revues rose to 158, or 49 percent. Conversely, restatements by companies with more than $1 billion in annual sales fell slightly, from 22 percent in 2002 to 20 percent last year.

The Huron Consulting Group is available to the public at http://snipurl.com/FSrevisions 


"Rash of Restatements Rattles," by K.C. Swanson, TheStreet.com, March 17, 2004 http://www.thestreet.com/tech/kcswanson/10149112.html 

Confession season is upon us, but the problem so far isn't companies owing up to earnings shortfalls. Instead, they're admitting past financial results were simply wrong.

Unnerved by a sterner accounting culture, companies have been increasingly reaching back years to ratchet down reported profits by tens or even hundreds of millions of dollars. Eyeing the March 15 filing deadline for calendar 2003 annual reports, Bristol-Myers Squibb (BMY:NYSE) , P.F. Chang's (PFCB:Nasdaq) , Veritas (VRTS:Nasdaq) and Nortel (NT :Nasdaq) this week joined a fast-growing string of public companies to say prior financial reports inflated real business trends.

The number of restated audited annual financial statements hit a record high of 206 last year, according to Chicago-based Huron Consulting Group. Observers say 2004 is already shaping up as a banner year for revisions.

"There are certainly more high-profile restatements and you're hearing about them more" compared to past years, said Jeff Brotman, an accounting professor at the University of Pennsylvania.

For Bristol-Myers Squibb, Nortel and Network Associates (NET:NYSE) , recent restatements came on top of prior restatements, much to the irritation of investors. In at least two cases, the embarrassing double restatements prompted internal shifts; Nortel put two of its financial executives on leave as part of a bookkeeping probe. Network Associates fired PricewaterhouseCoopers, according to various news reports, after the auditor cited "material weakness" in its internal controls in the company's annual report.

Probably the biggest reason for the wave of honesty is a host of new corporate governance and accounting rules in the wake of the corporate reform legislation known as Sarbanes-Oxley, which went into effect a year and a half ago. Also, accounting firms have grown far more cautious, cowed by the collapse of auditor Arthur Andersen in 2002 after massive fraud at its client Enron.

The upshot is that both managers and auditors are now more likely to err on the side of conservative accounting.

"A lot of things in accounting are judgment calls, gray areas," said Peter Ehrenberg, chair of the corporate finance practice group at Lowenstein & Sandler, a Roseland, N.J.-based law firm. "If there are issues in any given company and we were in 2000, a person acting in good faith might easily say, 'We can pass on that.' But that same person looking at the same facts today might say, 'There's too much risk.'

"Certainly regulators in general are more credible because they're much less likely to give the benefit of the doubt in this environment," he added. "The auditors know that and they're [therefore] less likely to stick their necks out."

Case in point: Last week Gateway (GTW:NYSE) said longtime auditor PricewaterhouseCoopers won't work for it anymore. PwC did the books back in 2000 and 2001 -- an era of aggressive accounting that still haunts Gateway, though it's now under different management.

From Executive Suite to Cell Block

Tougher law enforcement against corporate offenders is also fueling more prudent behavior. The long-underfunded Securities and Exchange Commission, which is now required to review the financial statements of public companies every three years, has finally been given more dollars to hire staff. In 2003, the SEC's workforce was 11% higher than in 2001. This year, the agency's budget allocation should allow it to expand its payroll an additional 9%, to nearly 3,600 employees.

On the corporate side, CEOs and CFOs have had to certify their financial reports since August 2002, also as a result of Sarbanes-Oxley. "I think Sarbanes-Oxley makes executives ask the hard questions they should have always asked," said Jeffrey Herrmann, a securities litigator and partner in the Saddle Brook, N.J.-based law firm of Cohn Lifland Pearlman Herrmann & Knopf. "Maybe today an executive says to his accounting firm: 'I'm not going to regret anything here about how we handled goodwill or reserves, am I? It isn't coming back to haunt us, is it?' "

Recent government prosecutions against high-level executives such as Tyco's Dennis Kozlowski, Worldcom's Bernie Ebbers, and Enron's Andrew Fastow and Jeffrey Skilling starkly underscore the penalties managers may face for playing fast-and-loose with accounting.

Meanwhile, auditing firms are starting to rotate staff, bringing in newcomers to take a fresh look at clients' accounting. Also, new rules handed down by the Financial Accounting Standards Board have prompted reassessments of past accounting methods, which can lead to earnings revisions reaching back five years (the period for which financial data is included in annual reports).

Another level of checks and balances on accounting shenanigans arrived last April when the SEC ruled that corporate audit committees must be composed entirely of members independent from the company itself. "Audit committees are getting more active and making sure that when they learn of problems, they're going to be dealt with," said Curtis Verschoor, an accounting professor at DePaul University.

In this environment of heightened scrutiny, however, the notion that a restatement was tantamount to a financial kiss of death has faded, too.

"We have now seen companies that issued restatements that have lived to do business another day," said Brotman. "The stock hasn't crashed; nobody's been fired or gone to jail; they haven't lost access to the capital markets; there haven't been any more shareholder lawsuits than there would have already been. If a company does a restatement early, fully and explains exactly what it is and why, it's not a lethal injection."

Meanwhile, corporate reform rules are being put in place that could lead to yet more accounting cleanups down the road. One provision will make companies find a way for whistleblowers to confidentially report possible wrongdoings, noted Verschoor.

Still, "the pendulum swings both ways," said Herrmann. "If the government continues to prosecute people in high-level positions, maybe that will last for a while. It probably will send a message and the fear of God will spread. But my guess is that politics being what it is, somewhere down the line the spotlight will be off and there will be fewer prosecutions."

 

A Round-Up of Recent Earnings Restatements
Some firms are no stranger to the restatement dance
Company Financial Scoop Number of restatements in past year
Bristol-Myers Squibb (BMY:NYSE) Restating fourth-quarter and full-year results for 2003 due to accounting errors. Follows an earlier restatement of earnings between 1999 and 2002, as of early 2003 Twice
P.F. Chang's China Bistro (PFCB:Nasdaq) Will delay filing its 10K; plans to restate earnings for prior years, including for calendar year 2003 Once
Veritas (VRTS:Nasdaq) Will restate earnings for 2001 through 2003 Once
Nortel (NT:NYSE) Will restate earnings for 2003 and earlier periods; Nortel already restated earnings for the past three years in October 2003 Twice
Metris (MXT:NYSE) Restated its financial results for 1998 through 2002 and for the first three quarters of 2003 following an SEC inquiry Once
Quovadx (QVDX:Nasdaq) Restating results for 2003 Once
WorldCom Restated pretax profits from 2000 and 2001; this month former CEO Bernie Ebbers indicted on fraud charges in accounting scandal that led to 2002 corporate bankruptcy Once
Service Corp. International (SRV:NYSE) Restating results for 2000 through 2003 Once
Flowserve (FLS:NYSE) Restating results for 1999 through 2003 Once
OM Group (OMG:NYSE) Restating results for 1999 through 2003 Once
IDX Systems (IDXC:Nasdaq) Restated results for 2003 Once
Network Associates (NET:NYSE) Restated results for 2003 this month; restated earnings for periods from 1998 to 2003 after investigations by the SEC and Justice Department Twice
Take-Two (TTWO:Nasdaq) In February, restated results from 1999 to 2003 following investigation by the SEC Once
Sipex (SIPX:Nasdaq) In February, restated results from 2003, marking the second revision of third-quarter '03 results Twice
Source: SEC filings, media reports.

In an informal survey last spring, the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business, which accredits business school programs, found that 35 percent of its member schools required students to take an ethics course. That was virtually unchanged from the results of a more formal study in 1988, in which a third of the association's members required ethics courses.

"A Question of Ethics: How to Teach Them?" by Christopher S. Stewart, The New York Times, March 21, 2004 --- http://www.nytimes.com/2004/03/21/business/yourmoney/21exli.html 

S scandals ripple through the corporate world, some business schools have introduced ethics courses, tweaked existing ones and conducted classroom conversations about the implosions of major companies like Enron and WorldCom.

Yet many business school professors, deans and students say that change is happening gradually.

"It's been slow going," said Fred J. Evans, dean of the College of Business and Economics at California State University at Northridge. In his opinion, he said, many business school professors are not yet well prepared to teach the subject.

"Schools bear some of the responsibility for the behavior of executives," he said. "If they're making systematic errors in the world, you have to go back to the schools and ask, 'What are you teaching?' "

In an informal survey last spring, the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business, which accredits business school programs, found that 35 percent of its member schools required students to take an ethics course. That was virtually unchanged from the results of a more formal study in 1988, in which a third of the association's members required ethics courses.

Some elite schools, like Harvard, have started requiring ethics courses this year. "We've been looking into this for a few years, but it took some time to build," said Lynn S. Paine, a professor of business administration and a leader in designing the new course.

But other business schools have made no changes to their ethics curriculums. Many said their coverage of ethics was more than enough before the scandals broke. "We don't have an ethics requirement," said Sharon P. Smith, the dean of Fordham University's Graduate School of Business. "But we always talked about the subject in classes. It's a no-brainer for us. We don't shy away from questions of right and wrong."

Even when an ethics course is required, many students say the material is general or detached from the rest of the graduate curriculum.

"You have five profit-oriented classes during the semester where you're learning about free markets and shareholder maximization, and then there's one mandatory ethics course," said Chris Andrews, 30, who is in his second year at the McDonough School of Business at Georgetown University. "It's an abrupt transition, a tough way to learn about ethics. And you wonder if it can really prepare you for the real world."

In a recent survey conducted by the Aspen Institute, a nonprofit research center, roughly half of the 1,700 graduate business students who were interviewed said they thought they would have to make a decision in the future that would test their values. Only 22 percent said their schools were doing "a lot" to prepare them to manage value conflicts. One in five respondents said they were not being prepared at all.

"Everyone comes out thinking they're an ethical person," said one recent graduate of the University of Chicago Graduate School of Business. "And then all of a sudden you're working and there's money at stake."

The former student, who graduated in 2003, said that when he started work at an investment firm the summer after he graduated, he learned that the generic ethics cases used in school and the ethical situations encountered in the real world could be quite different. The contrast became particularly vivid, he said, when he spent several months researching a company in preparation for a big buyout and stumbled upon a number of potential problems that made him question the merit of the deal.

Everything "is tied to making the deal happen at this point," he said. "You have to ask yourself, 'Should I tell everyone there are some red flags and chance freaking everyone out and losing the account, or do I overlook it?' " he added. "This isn't something I learned about in any of those case studies." He disclosed the problems to his firm, a decision he said was based more on his own moral code than anything else. His firm is still evaluating the company.

Dr. Amitai Etzioni, a sociology professor at George Washington University who taught ethics at Harvard Business School in the 1980's, said that while many business schools had begun offering ethics courses, "they ghettoize the class."

"And most of the time the message to students is, 'Find a good lawyer so you can justify what you're doing,' " he added. "It doesn't tell you there are some basic values, that certain things are wrong."

ARCHIE CARROLL, a management professor who teaches ethics at the Terry College of Business at the University of Georgia, says that adding ethics training does not appear to be a priority at many schools. "I don't see governing boards at schools or advisory boards putting pressure on deans to teach more business ethics," he said.

Not long after corporate scandals began unfolding in late 2001 and early 2002, a group of professors and business executives began lobbying the business school accrediting association to require M.B.A. students to take a course in ethics. Late last year, however, the association said it would instead make the topic more prominent in its catalog of standards.

The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, which has required M.B.A. students to take an ethics course since 1975, will begin offering a Ph.D. program in business ethics next fall.

The Haas School of Business at the University of California at Berkeley recently started the Center for Responsible Business, which includes seven new ethics courses. The program will require first-year students to visit executives in jail.

The Joseph M. Katz Graduate School of Business at the University of Pittsburgh dropped its ethics requirement last year in favor of steeping every class with ethics. Professors are now required to take a course in ethics training.

"We decided that having a separate ethics class was a lot like telling students that they could be bad during the week, but just had to go to church on Sunday," said Frederick W. Winter, dean of the school. "By taking out the one course, I think we'll be making every other course richer in the subject."


Forwarded by Barb Hessel

One of our distant cousins raises Boer Goats --- http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=11147976&BRD=2041&PAG=461&dept_id= 




Right now you probably see that prosperity as being threatened, particularly by high prices at our nation's gasoline pumps. And maybe you don't think I care. But I do care. I want you to know that this development is very sad, very distressing, for myself, and my vice president's self. Just yesterday, Dick Cheney came to the Oval Office, and from the look on his face, I could tell something was bothering him. I figured it was gas-related, so I told him that whatever it was, he should just let it out. He did.
Satire from Yale featuring George W. Bush --- http://www.satirewire.com/news/0105/bushspeech.shtml 

Forwarded by Vidya

If Abbott & Costello did their " Who's on First " routine in today's technology era..

ABBOTT: Ultimate Super Duper Computer Store. Can I help you?

COSTELLO: Thanks. I'm setting up a home office in the den, and I'm thinking of buying a computer.

ABBOTT: Mac?

COSTELLO: No, the name is Lou.

ABBOTT: Your computer?

COSTELLO: I don't own a computer. I want to buy one.

ABBOTT: Mac?

COSTELLO: I told you, my name is Lou.

ABBOTT: What about Windows?

COSTELLO: Why? Does it get stuffy?

ABBOTT: Do you want a computer with Windows?

COSTELLO: I don't know. What do I see when I look out the windows?

ABBOTT: Wallpaper.

COSTELLO: Never mind the windows. I need a computer and software.

ABBOTT: Software that runs on Windows?

COSTELLO: No, on the computer! I need something I can use to write proposals, track expenses. You know, run a business. What have you got?

ABBOTT: Office.

COSTELLO: Yeah, for my office. Can you recommend anything?

ABBOTT: I just did.

COSTELLO: You just did what?

ABBOTT: Recommended something.

COSTELLO: You recommended something?

ABBOTT: Yes.

COSTELLO: For my office?

ABBOTT: Yes.

COSTELLO: Okay, what did you recommend for my office?

ABBOTT: Office.

COSTELLO: Yes, for my office.

ABBOTT: Office for Windows.

COSTELLO: I already have an office and it already has windows! Let's say I'm sitting at my computer, and I want to

type a proposal. What do I need?

ABBOTT: Word.

COSTELLO: If I'm writing a proposal, I'm going to need lots

of words. But what program do I load?

ABBOTT: Word.

COSTELLO: What word?

ABBOTT: The Word in Office.

COSTELLO: The only word in office is office.

ABBOTT: The Word in Office for Windows.

COSTELLO: Which word in "office for windows?"!

ABBOTT: The Word you get when you click the blue W.

COSTELLO: I'm going to click your big W if you don't give me a straight answer. Let's forget about words for a minute.  What do I need if I want to watch a movie over the Internet?

ABBOTT: RealOne.

COSTELLO: Maybe a real movie, maybe a cartoon. What I watch

is none of your business. But what do I need to watch it?

ABBOTT: RealOne.

COSTELLO: If it's a long movie I'll also want to watch reels two, three and four. Can I watch reel four?

ABBOTT: Of course.

COSTELLO: Great! With what?

ABBOTT: RealOne.

COSTELLO: Okay, so I'm sitting at my computer and I want to

watch a movie. What do I do?

ABBOTT: You click the blue 1.

COSTELLO: I click the blue one what?

ABBOTT: The blue 1.

COSTELLO: Is that different from the blue W?

ABBOTT: Of course it is. The blue 1 is RealOne. The blue W is Word.

COSTELLO: What word?

ABBOTT: The Word in Office for Windows.

COSTELLO: But there's three words in "office for windows!"

ABBOTT: No, just one. But it's the most popular Word in the world.

COSTELLO: It is?

ABBOTT: Yes, although to be fair there aren't many other Words left. It pretty much wiped out all the other Words.

COSTELLO: And that word is the real one?

ABBOTT: No. RealOne has nothing to do with Word. RealOne isn't even part of Office.

COSTELLO: Never mind; I don't want to get started with that again. But I also need something for bank accounts, loans, and so on. What do you have to help me track my money?

ABBOTT: Money.

COSTELLO: That's right. What do you have?

ABBOTT: Money.

COSTELLO: I need money to track my money?

ABBOTT: No, not really. It comes bundled with your computer.

COSTELLO: What comes bundled with my computer?

ABBOTT: Money.

COSTELLO: Money comes bundled with my computer?

ABBOTT: Exactly. No extra charge.

COSTELLO: I get a bundle of money with my computer at no extra charge? How much money do I get?

ABBOTT: Just one copy.

COSTELLO: I get a copy of money. Isn't that illegal?

ABBOTT: No. We have a license from Microsoft to make copies of Money.

COSTELLO: Microsoft can license you to make money?

ABBOTT: Why not? They own it.

COSTELLO: Well, it's great that I'm going to get free money, but I'll still need to track it. Do you have anything for managing your money?

ABBOTT: Managing Your Money? That program disappeared years ago.

COSTELLO: Well, what do you sell in its place?

ABBOTT: Money.

COSTELLO: You sell money?

ABBOTT: Of course. But if you buy a computer from us, you get it for free.

COSTELLO: That's all very wonderful, but I'll be running a

business. Do you have any software for, you know, accounting?

ABBOTT: Simply Accounting.

COSTELLO: Probably, but it might get a little complicated.

ABBOTT: If you don't want Simply Accounting, you might try M.Y.O.B.

COSTELLO: M.Y.O.B.? What does that stand for?

ABBOTT: Mind Your Own Business.

COSTELLO: I beg your pardon?

ABBOTT: No, that would be I.B.Y.P. I said M.Y.O.B.

COSTELLO: Look, I just need to do some accounting for my home business. You know--accounting? You do it with money.

ABBOTT: Of course you can do accounting with Money. But you may need more.

COSTELLO: More money?

ABBOTT: More than Money. Money can't do everything.

COSTELLO: I don't need a sermon! Okay, let's forget about money for the moment. I'm worried that my computer might...what's the word? Crash. And if my computer crashes, what can I use to restore my data?

ABBOTT: GoBack.

COSTELLO: Okay. I'm worried about my computer smashing and I need something to restore my data. What do you recommend?

ABBOTT: GoBack.

COSTELLO: How many times do I have to repeat! myself?

ABBOTT: I've never asked you to repeat yourself. All I said was GoBack.

COSTELLO: How can I go back if I haven't even been anywhere?  Okay, I'll go back. What do I need to write a proposal?

ABBOTT: Word.

COSTELLO: But I'll need lots of words to write a proposal.

ABBOTT: No, you only need one Word-the Word in Office for Windows.

COSTELLO: But there's three words in...Oh, never mind.

ABBOTT: Hello? Hello? Customers! Why do they always hang up on me? Oh, well.

 


Forwarded by Pat Doherty

I signed up for an exercise class and was told to wear loose-fitting clothing. If I HAD any loose-fitting clothing, I wouldn't have signed up in the first place! 
Author unknown.


Things you should know before visiting Florida (forwarded by Auntie Bev)

l. First you must learn to spell the city names. Is it Fort Myers, Fort Meyers, or Ft. Myers. Or try Port Chalotte, Pt. Charlotte or Charlotte. One good thing -- North Port is always North Port. All are acceptable as maps, mail, and articles each spell it "their way".

2. If your road map is more than a few weeks old, throw it out and buy a new one. If you live in Estero or Naples your map is already a day old and obsolete.

3. Forget the traffic rules you learned elsewhere. This part of Florida has its own version of traffic rules. "Hold on and Pray".

4. There is no such thing as a dangerous high speed chase in SW Florida. We all drive like that.

5. All directions start with Rt 41 and I-75, which has no beginning and no end.

6. The morning rush hour is from 6:00 to 10:00. The evening rush hour is from 3:00 to 7:00. Friday's rush hour starts on Thursday.

7. If you actually stop at a yellow light, you will be rear ended and/or cussed out. When you are the first one in the starting line, count to five when the light turns green before going to avoid crashing with all the drivers that are running the red light in cross traffic.

8. Construction is a way of life with a permanent form of entertainment. We are having so much fun as they widen roads that were finished just a couple years ago. And of course they are making new roads by the minute.

And don't forget all the new developments with gravel trucks going in and out the entrances. They don't have any brakes so watch out.

9. All unexplained sights are explained by the phrase "we are in Florida".

10. If someone actually turned on their turn signal it would be because of a factory defect. That includes the police cars too.

11. Car horns are actually "Road Rage" indicators.

12. All old ladies and men with blue hair and driving anything that costs over $50,000.00 have the right of way. Period...

13. Notice that all streets off main roads mysteriously change names as you cross the intersections. Some even change complete names over night.

14. To travel 3 miles could take up to 3 hours. Much longer if you travel the interstate.

15. The speed limit on all roads is at least 30 miles over the posted speed limit, and you are "running" with the traffic.

16. I-75 and Rt. 41 are our daily version of NASCAR. Some people call them "Death Road".

17. Ever notice why fire trucks and ambulances are sitting in strategic places. They don't want to have to travel far in case of an emergency and be victims themselves.

18. If it is summer everyone watches the weather report to see if a hurricane is brewing in the Atlantic. If it is winter everyone nibbles ontheir hurricane supplies on the way to work.

19. If it is 90 degrees everyone is at the beach. If it is 75 degrees everyone is shopping. If it is raining everyone is eating out.

20. If it has rained 3 inches in the past hour everyone is flooded.

There is no place like living in paradise year around. We live for the quiet of the summer months when the snow birds have gone home and the full timer's have gone north to clog the roads up there. We have 3 months to ourselves


Forwarded by Team Carper

A frog goes into a bank and approaches the teller. He can see from her nameplate that her name is Patricia Whack.

"Miss Whack, I'd like to get a $30,000 loan to take a holiday."

Patty looks at the frog in disbelief and asks his name.

The frog says his name is Kermit Jagger, his dad is Mick Jagger, and that it's okay, he knows the bank manager.

Patty explains that he will need to secure the loan with some collateral.

The frog says, "Sure. I have this," and produces a tiny porcelain elephant, about an inch tall, bright pink and perfectly formed.

Very confused, Patty explains that she'll have to consult with the bank manager and disappears into a back office.

She finds the manager and says, "There's a frog called Kermit Jagger out there who claims to know you and wants to borrow $30,000, and he wants to use this as collateral."

She holds up the tiny pink elephant. "I mean, what in the world is this?"

(you're gonna love this)

(its a real treat)

( a masterpiece)

(wait for it)

The bank manager looks back at her and says...

"It's a knickknack, Patty Whack. Give the frog a loan. His old man's a Rolling Stone."

(You're singing it, aren't you?)


Forwarded by Maria

A Father's Rules for Dating His Daughter

Rule One: If you pull into my driveway and honk you'd better be delivering a package, because you're sure not picking anything up.

Rule Two: You do not touch my daughter in front of me. You may glance at her, so long as you do not peer at anything below her neck. If you cannot keep your eyes or hands off my daughter's body, I will remove them.

Rule Three: I am aware that it is considered fashionable for boys your age to wear their trousers so loosely that they appear to be falling off their hips. Please don't take this as an insult, but you and all of your friends are complete idiots. Still, I want to be fair and open minded about this issue, so I propose this compromise: You may come to the door with your underwear showing and your pants ten sizes too big, and I will object.  However, in order to ensure that your clothes do not, in fact, come off during the course of your date with my daughter, I will take my electric nail gun and fasten your trousers securely in place to your waist.

Rule Four: I'm sure you've been told that in today's world, sex without utilizing a "barrier method" of some kind will kill you. Let me elaborate: when it comes to sex, I am the barrier, and I will kill you.

Rule Five: In order for us to get to know each other, we should talk about sports, politics, and other issues of the day. Please do not do this. The only information I require from you is an indication of when you expect to have my daughter safely back at my house, and the only word I need from you on this subject is "early."

Rule Six: I have no doubt you are a popular fellow, with many opportunities to date other girls. This is fine with me as long as it is okay with my daughter. Otherwise, once you have gone out with my little girl, you will continue to date her until she is finished with you. If you make her cry, I will make you cry.

Rule Seven: As you stand in my front hallway, waiting for my daughter to appear, and more than an hour goes by, do not sigh and fidget. If you want to be on time for the movie, you should not be dating. My daughter is putting on her makeup, a process that can take longer than painting the Golden Gate Bridge. Instead of just standing there, why don't you do something useful, like changing the oil in my car?

Rule Eight: The following places are not appropriate for a date with my daughter: Places where there are beds, sofas, or anything softer than a wooden stool. Places where there are no parents, policemen, or nuns within eyesight. Places where there is darkness. Places where there is dancing, holding hands, or happiness. Places where the ambient temperature is warm enough to induce my daughter to wear shorts, tank tops, midriff T-shirts, or anything other than overalls, a sweater, and a goose down parka zipped up to her throat. Movies with a strong romance or sexual theme are to be avoided; movies which feature chain saws are okay. Hockey games are okay.  Old folks homes are better.


Signs forwarded by Team Carper


1) In a Bangkok temple:
"IT IS FORBIDDEN TO ENTER A WOMAN, EVEN A FOREIGNER IF DRESSED AS A MAN."
 
2) Cocktail lounge, Norway:
"LADIES ARE REQUESTED NOT TO HAVE CHILDREN IN THE BAR."
 
3) At a Budapest zoo:
"PLEASE DO NOT FEED THE ANIMALS. IF YOU HAVE ANY SUITABLE FOOD, GIVE IT TO
THE GUARD ON DUTY."
 
4) Doctors office, Rome:
"SPECIALIST IN WOMEN AND OTHER DISEASES.
 
5) Hotel, Acapulco:
"THE MANAGER HAS PERSONALLY PASSED ALL THE WATER SERVED HERE."
 
6) Information booklet about using a hotel air conditioner, Japan:
"COOLES AND HEATES: IF YOU WANT JUST CONDITION OF WARM AIR IN YOUR ROOM,PLEASE CONTROL YOURSELF."
 
7) Car rental brochure, Tokyo:
"WHEN PASSENGER OF FOOT HEAVE IN SIGHT, TOOTLE THE HORN. TRUMPET HIM
MELODIOUSLY AT FIRST, BUT IF HE STILL OBSTACLES YOUR PASSAGE THEN TOOTLE HIM WITH VIGOR."
 
8) Dry cleaners, Bangkok:
"DROP YOUR TROUSERS HERE FOR THE BEST RESULTS."
 
9) In a Nairobi restaurant:
"CUSTOMERS WHO FIND OUR WAITRESSES RUDE OUGHT TO SEE THE MANAGER."
 
10) On the grounds of a private school:
"NO TRESPASSING WITHOUT PERMISSION."
 
>11) On an Athi River highway:
"TAKE NOTICE: WHEN THIS SIGN IS UNDER WATER, THIS ROAD IS IMPASSABLE."
 
>12) On a poster at Kencom:
 
"ARE YOU AN ADULT THAT CANNOT READ? IF SO, WE CAN HELP."
 
13) In a City restaurant:
"OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK AND WEEKENDS."
 
14) One of the Mathare buildings:
"MENTAL HEALTH PREVENTION CENTRE."
 
15) A sign seen on an automatic restroom hand dryer:
"DO NOT ACTIVATE WITH WET HANDS."
 
16) In a Pumwani maternity ward:
"NO CHILDREN ALLOWED."
 
17) In a cemetery:
"PERSONS ARE PROHIBITED FROM PICKING FLOWERS FROM ANY BUT THEIR OWN
GRAVES."
 
18) Tokyo hotel's rules and regulations:
"GUESTS ARE REQUESTED NOT TO SMOKE OR DO OTHER DISGUSTING BEHAVIOURS IN BED."
 
19) Hotel notice, Tokyo:
"IS FORBIDDEN TO STEAL HOTEL TOWELS PLEASE. IF YOU ARE NOT A PERSON TO DO
SUCH A THING IS PLEASE NOT TO HAD NOT IS."
 
20) On the menu of a Swiss restaurant:
"OUR WINES LEAVE YOU NOTHING TO HOPE FOR."
 
21) In a Tokyo bar:
"SPECIAL COCKTAILS FOR THE LADIES WITH NUTS."
 
22) Hotel brochure, Italy:
"THIS HOTEL IS RENOWNED FOR ITS PEACE AND SOLITUDE. IN FACT, CROWDS FROM ALL OVER THE WORLD FLOCK HERE TO ENJOY ITS SOLITUDE."
 
23) Hotel lobby, Bucharest:
"THE LIFT IS BEING FIXED FOR THE NEXT DAY. DURING THAT TIME WE REGRET THAT YOU WILL BE UNBEARABLE."
 
24) Hotel elevator, Paris:
"PLEASE LEAVE YOUR VALUES AT THE FRONT DESK."
 
25) Hotel, Yugoslavia:
"THE FLATTENING OF UNDERWEAR WITH PLEASURE IS THE JOB OF THE CHAMBERMAID."
 
26) Hotel, Japan:
"YOU ARE INVITED TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE CHAMBERMAID."
 
27) In the lobby of a Moscow hotel across from a Russian Orthodox
monastery:
"YOU ARE WELCOME TO VISIT THE CEMETERY WHERE FAMOUS RUSSIAN AND SOVIET
COMPOSERS, ARTISTS, AND WRITERS ARE BURIED DAILY EXCEPT THURSDAY."
 
28) Hotel catering to skiers, Austria:
"NOT TO PERAMBULATE THE CORRIDORS IN THE HOURS OF REPOSE IN THE BOOTS OFASCENSION."
 
29) Taken from a menu, Poland:
"SALAD A FIRM'S OWN MAKE; LIMPID RED BEET SOUP WITH CHEESY DUMPLINGS IN THE FORM OF A FINGER; ROASTED DUCK LET LOOSE; BEEF RASHERS BEATEN IN THE
COUNTRY PEOPLE'S FASHION."
 
30) Supermarket, Hong Kong:
"FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE, WE RECOMMEND COURTEOUS, EFFICIENT SELF-SERVICE."
 
31) >From the "Soviet Weekly":
"THERE WILL BE A MOSCOW EXHIBITION OF ARTS BY 15,000 SOVIET REPUBLIC
PAINTERS AND SCULPTORS. THESE WERE EXECUTED OVER THE PAST TWO YEARS."
32) In an East African newspaper:
"A NEW SWIMMING POOL IS RAPIDLY TAKING SHAPE SINCE THE CONTRACTORS HAVE THROWN IN THE BULK OF THEIR WORKERS."
 
33) Hotel, Vienna:
"IN CASE OF FIRE, DO YOUR UTMOST TO ALARM THE HOTEL PORTER."
 
34) A sign posted in Germany's Black Forest:
"IT IS STRICTLY FORBIDDEN ON OUR BLACK FOREST CAMPING SITE THAT PEOPLE OF
DIFFERENT SEX, FOR INSTANCE, MEN AND WOMEN, LIVE TOGETHER IN ONE TENT
UNLESS THEY ARE MARRIED WITH EACH OTHER FOR THIS PURPOSE."
 
35) Hotel, Zurich:
BECAUSE OF THE IMPROPRIETY OF ENTERTAINING GUESTS OF THE OPPOSITE SEX IN
THE BEDROOM, IT IS SUGGESTED THAT THE LOBBY BE USED FOR THIS PURPOSE."
 
36) An advertisement by a Hong Kong dentist:
"TEETH EXTRACTED BY THE LATEST METHODISTS."
 
37) Tourist agency, Czechoslovakia:
"TAKE ONE OF OUR HORSE-DRIVEN CITY TOURS. WE GUARANTEE NO MISCARRIAGES."
 
38) In the window on a Swedish furrier:
"FUR COATS MADE FOR LADIES FROM THEIR OWN SKIN."
 
39) The box of a clockwork toy made in Hong Kong:
"GUARANTEED TO WORK THROUGHOUT ITS USEFUL LIFE."
 
40) In a Swiss mountain inn:
"SPECIAL TODAY - NO ICE-CREAM."
41) Airline ticket office, Copenhagen:
"WE TAKE YOUR BAGS AND SEND THEM IN ALL DIRECTIONS."
 
42) On the door of a Moscow hotel room:
"IF THIS IS YOUR FIRST VISIT TO THE USSR, YOU ARE WELCOME TO IT."
 
43) A laundry in Rome:
"LADIES, LEAVE YOUR CLOTHES HERE AND SPEND THE AFTERNOON HAVING A GOOD
TIME

 


Forwarded by Dick Haar

The mothers of two terrorists are chatting. One pulls her purse out and starts flipping through pictures.

"This is my oldest son. He's a martyr."

"And here's my second son; he's a martyr too."

After a pause and a deep sigh, the second mother wistfully says,

"They blow up so fast, don't they?"


Forwarded by Dick Haar

Subject: How do you tell the difference between liberals, conservatives, and a Texan?

Imagine the following situation. You're walking down a deserted street with your wife and two small children. Suddenly, a dangerous looking man with a huge knife comes around the corner, locks eyes with you, screams obscenities, raises the knife, and charges. You are carrying a Glock .40, and you are an expert shot. You have mere seconds before he reaches you and your family. What do you do?

Liberal Answer: "Well, that's not enough information to answer the question!

Does the man look poor or oppressed?

Have I ever done anything to him that would inspire him to attack?

Could we run away?

What does my wife think? What about the kids?

Could I possibly swing the gun like a club and knock the knife out of his hand?

What does the law say about this situation?

Does the Glock have appropriate safety built into it?

Why am I carrying a loaded gun anyway, and what kind of message does this send to society and to my children?

Is it possible he'd be happy with just killing me? Does he definitely want to kill me, or would he be content just to wound me?

If I were to grab his knees and hold on, could my family get away while he was stabbing me?

Should I call 9-1-1?

Why is this street so deserted? We need to raise taxes, have a paint and weed day and make this a happier, healthier street that would discourage such behavior.

This is all so confusing! I need to debate this with some friends for a few days and try to come to a consensus.

Conservative Answer: BANG!

Texan Answer: BANG! BANG! BANG! BANG! BANG! BANG! BANG! BANG! BANG! click.... (sounds of reloading). BANG! BANG! BANG! BANG! BANG! BANG! BANG! BANG! BANG! click.

Daughter: "Nice grouping, Daddy! Were those the Winchester Silver Tips?"


Forwarded by Dick Haar

What is an Oxymoron?

Oxymoron Definition: A rhetorical figure in which incongruous or contradictory terms are combined.

EXAMPLE: "Oxymoron" = Removing the Ten Commandments from the courthouse while making people in court swear to tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth, so help you God ... while your hand is on the Bible!


Forwarded by Auntie Bev

I especially liked Number 32 below.  Poor Wilbur!

Bob

(1) My husband and I divorced over religious differences. He thought he was God and I didn't!  He thought I wanted to be the Virgin Mary.  He was right on this one.

(2) I don't suffer from insanity; I enjoy every minute of it.

(3) I Work Hard Because Millions On Welfare Depend on Me!

(4) Some people are alive only because it's illegal to kill them.

(5) I used to have a handle on life, but it broke.

(6) Don't take life too seriously; no one gets out alive.

(7) You're just jealous because the voices only talk to me.

(8) Beauty is in the eye of the beer holder.

(9) Earth is the insane asylum for the universe.

(10) Quoting one is plagiarism; quoting many is research.

(11) I'm not a complete idiot -- some parts are missing.

(12) Out of my mind. Back in five minutes.

(13) Nyquil, the stuffy, sneezy, why-the-heck-is-the-room-spinning medicine.

(14) God must love stupid people; he made so many.

(15) The gene pool could use a little chlorine.

(16) It IS as BAD as you think, and they ARE out to get you.

(17) Consciousness: that annoying time between naps.

(18) Ever stop to think, and forget to start again?

(19) MOP AND GLOW - Floor wax used by Three Mile Island cleanup team.

(20) Being "over the hill" is much better than being under it!

(21) Wrinkled Was Not One of the Things I Wanted to Be When I Grew up.

(22) Procrastinate Now!

(23) My Dog Can Lick Anyone.

(24) I Have a Degree in Liberal Arts; Do You Want Fries With That?

(25) FAILURE IS NOT AN OPTION. It comes bundled with the software.

(26) A hangover is the wrath of grapes.

(27) A journey of a thousand miles begins with a cash advance.

(28) STUPIDITY IS NOT A HANDICAP. Park elsewhere!

(29) They call it PMS because Mad Cow Disease was already taken.

(30) He who dies with the most toys is nonetheless dead.

(31) A PICTURE IS WORTH A THOUSAND WORDS, but it uses up three thousand times the memory.

(32) HAM AND EGGS - A day's work for a chicken, a lifetime commitment for a pig.

(33) The trouble with life is there's no background music.

(34) The original point and click interface was a Smith and Wesson.




And that's the way it was on April 1, 2004 with a little help from my friends.

Jesse's Wonderful Music for Romantics (You have to scroll down to the titles) --- http://www.jessiesweb.com/

 

I highly recommend TheFinanceProfessor (an absolutely fabulous and totally free newsletter from a very smart finance professor) --- www.FinanceProfessor.com 

 

In March 2000, Forbes named AccountantsWorld.com as the Best Website on the Web --- http://accountantsworld.com/.
Some top accountancy links --- http://accountantsworld.com/category.asp?id=Accounting

 

For accounting news, I prefer AccountingWeb at http://www.accountingweb.com/ 
I also like SmartPros at http://www.smartpros.com/ 

 

Another leading accounting site is AccountingEducation.com at http://www.accountingeducation.com/ 

 

Jack Anderson's Accounting Information Finder --- http://www.umsl.edu/~anderson/accsites.htm

 

Gerald Trite's great set of links --- http://www.zorba.ca/bookmark.htm 

 

Paul Pacter maintains the best international accounting standards and news Website at http://www.iasplus.com/

The Finance Professor --- http://www.financeprofessor.com/about/aboutFP.html 

 

Walt Mossberg's many answers to questions in technology --- http://ptech.wsj.com/

 

How stuff works --- http://www.howstuffworks.com/ 

 

Bob Jensen's video helpers for MS Excel, MS Access, and other helper videos are at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/ 
Accompanying documentation can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/default1.htm and http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm 

 

Click on www.syllabus.com/radio/index.asp for a complete list of interviews with established leaders, creative thinkers and education technology experts in higher education from around the country.

 

Professor Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-999-7347 Fax: 210-999-8134  Email:  rjensen@trinity.edu  

 

The Training Top 100 is a ranking of organizations that excel at human capital development, as determined each year by Training Magazine --- http://www.trainingmag.com/training/reports_analysis/top100/2004/rankings.jsp 

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