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HOW THE UNIVERSITIES CAN AID THE ACCOUNTING PROFESSION.

The Accounting Review 1927 2(1), 37-42
Abstract In spite of the multiplication of schools of accountancy during the last twenty-five years, a relatively small percentage of the men who enter the profession have graduated from the recognized schools. This is no doubt due in large part to a lack of cooperation between the school and the profession for a purpose which would be mutually advantageous. Some progress is this respect has been made in the last few years by the establishment of a Bureau of Placements by the American Institute of Accountants, but the conditions of employment laid down there in leave much to be desired, and seem designed rather to give the student control of his position instead of permitting the employer to control the student. To illustrate how important is the correlation of theory with practice, it is only necessary to point out that in any given piece of work it would be practically an endless task to carry out in full every operation and every test which the theory would make possible. An audit carried out along these lines would be prohibitive in cost, and its result would be no more certain.

THE AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF UNIVERSITY INSTRUCTORS IN ACCOUNTING.

The Accounting Review 1927 2(1), 74-81
Abstract This article presents proceeding of the eleventh annual convocation of the organization American Association of University Instructors in Accounting, which held during December 28-29, 1927 at St. Louis, Missouri. Program meetings were held in morning and evening sessions. A brief verbal report was presented for the Committee on Membership in which members were asked to furnish a list of accounting teachers in their institutions and also endorsed the secretary's recommendation for a large membership committee. A report from the Committee on Cooperation with the American Institute of Accountants was read by professor J. H. Jackson and is appended to these minutes. No report was furnished by the Committee on Cooperation with the National Association of Cost Accountants. The president furnished a brief verbal report for the Committee on Cooperation with the American Society of Certified Public Accountants, reporting progress and expecting continuation of the work. A similar report was also furnished for the Committee on Research.

PLANT APPRAISALS--THEIR TREATMENT IN THE ACCOUNTS.

The Accounting Review 1927 2(4), 303-326
Abstract During the past few years there has been a considerable amount of writing and discussion in the accounting and engineering field on the subject of the valuation of assets, and especially has the valuation of fixed plant assets come in for much analysis and study. The increasing interest in this problem has been doubtless due, in no small measure, to the attention directed toward it by the income tax regulations and by the marked upward swing of prices from the prewar to the postwar level-a fact which has been of considerable importance and annoyance in numerous public utility valuations incident to the regulation of their rates. However, it may be said without fear of serious contradiction that, as a practical matter, the accountant in the past has not given sufficient consideration to this important problem. This article sets forth the various methods by which the facts of such a policy may be expressed in the accounts and operating statements, assuming that the policy has been decided upon.