The industry's clubby atmosphere evaporated. Touche Ross aggressively chased and won new business, exasperating slower-moving firms such as Arthur Young, which complained in a report: No longer do accountants compete solely ...
The Number offers a unified vision of how today’s accounting scandals reflect a broader system failure. As long as investors remain too focused on the number, companies will find ways to manipulate it.
Believing that the Number is as much about self-worth as it is net worth, Eisenberg strives to help readers better understand and more efficiently manage all aspects of their life, money, and pursuit of happiness.
Most of all, the book is an account of memory and identity, of Wentzel's project to make some sense of his bewildering past and something worthy of his future.
This book is also written for graduate students who are interested in becoming familiar with the modern communication system concept at millimeter wave range.