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Henry Rand Hatfield
This book is a biographical study of the first full-time accounting professor in a US university. Henry Rand Hatfield (1866-1945) was the first dean of the Chicago business school and the second dean of the Berkeley business school, and he was long regarded as the "dean of accounting teachers everywhere". His two textbooks, "Modern Accounting" (1909) and "Accounting" (1927), were among the most respected reference works in the first half century, and they and his articles continue to be cited today. His textbooks and carefully crafted articles were veritable annotations on the accounting literature and drew extensively on accounting and legal authorities in the US and overseas. He exemplified a principled approach to accounting debate and discussion, and he skewered sloppy and imprecise terminology and shoddy thinking. He did not propound any grand theories but was instead an astute critic of the literature, a delectable writer, and, above all, a consummate scholar. Hatfield was an authority on early bookkeeping history, and his essay, "An Historical Defense of Bookkeeping", has long been one of the most celebrated articles in the US literature. Professor Basil Yamey has written a commentary expressly for the book on Hatfield as a historian of accounting and bookkeeping. Stephen Zeff began his research in the 1960s, when he was granted access to Hatfield's extensive files of correspondence, notes and papers, and he proceeded to interview, or correspond with, many of Hatfield's former colleagues and students. The author also drew on the archives at the Northwestern University, the University of Chicago and the University of California, as well as the records of the American Accounting Association, of which Hatfield was a founder and President. The book is rich in references to primary sources. Many of Hatfield's unpublished and previously published papers are reproduced in the book, which also contains a complete list of Hatfield's publications, including his more than 50 penetrating book reviews.
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Born On The Kitchen Floor - Softcover
In this rare look into the diplomatic life as it is actually led, Barbara Sullivan shares her journey from shy, inhibited girl from the Bronx to senior ranking U. S. Foreign Service officer. Coming from the 1950s, when the goal of most women was to marry, have children and live in the suburbs, Sullivan's magic carpet ride from a simple, working class upbringing in New York to a string of captivating locales, such as Indonesia, West Africa and Saudi Arabia is breathtaking. But the real genious of this book is how Sullivan generously and self-deprecatingly shares the joys and sorrows of raising a family of five children while maintaining a lifelong love affair with her husband. All this is accomplished while serving in the trenches as a career diplomat in the embassies of the world's less glamorous, but much more exciting and dangerous places. This book shares a unique perspective of a life well lived.
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