|
| PAWS & REFLECT Fall 2022, Volume 4
News from Clemson University's School of Accountancy
| |
|
The School of Accountancy is thriving. Although we still face the uncertainty that COVID-19 will have on our operations this fall, our students, faculty and staff are well-prepared to face and overcome those related challenges effectively. Our four- and six-year graduation rates remain strong, while our CPA pass rate is well above the national average. We have integrated business analytics and emerging technologies throughout our undergraduate and graduate curriculums, and our students are graduating ready to face the rapidly changing technological environment they will enter. Our MPAcc graduates continue to be highly sought after in the labor market. This past year we conducted a major initiative to benchmark our curriculum against the new CPA Evolution objectives. While we were delighted to find that we had proactively addressed many of the changing objectives, this exercise motivated us to examine how we could further improve our curriculum and ensure it remains relevant. Finally, after the last two years of financial constraints, I am pleased to announce that this fall, the School will welcome seven new faculty and staff members.
After serving 4.5+ years as director of the School and 9+ years at Clemson University, I have decided that it is time for me to take early retirement. I plan to keep one (small) foot in academia continuing as a visiting professor at Nyenrode University in the Netherlands and finishing several research projects as an emeritus professor at Clemson. However, I mainly plan to spend most of my time with family and friends, traveling, hiking and figuring out what is next. While I am excited about the future, I will miss the students, faculty, staff and other friends of the School of Accountancy that have greatly enriched my life at Clemson. I depart knowing that the School of Accountancy is on firm footing with a clear path forward. I am assured that it will continue to thrive under the leadership of Associate Professor Robin Radtke, who became the interim director effective Aug. 15.
GO TIGERS!
Sally K. Widener, Ph.D.
Emeritus Professor
| |
|
I’m excited about the opportunity to serve as interim director of the School of Accountancy. I look forward to actively seeking ways to continuously improve all aspects of our scholarly work, as well as facing any future hurdles that life may throw our way. The School of Accountancy is a great place to learn and work, and I’m committed to keeping it that way!
GO TIGERS!
Robin R. Radtke, Ph.D.
Associate Professor and
Interim Director of the School of Accountancy
| |
| - Department Changes
- Student Highlights & Awards
- Student Organizations
- Alumni Spotlight
- Faculty Awards & Research
- MPAcc Program News
- Advisory Board Members
| |
The School of Accountancy thanks Sally Widener, Mike Mendonca and Kathy Glenn for their many years of service.
After serving over nine years at Clemson University, 4.5+ years of which were spent as the director of the School of Accountancy, Sally Widener has decided to retire early. She is looking forward to traveling, hiking and spending time with family and friends as well as continuing as a visiting professor at Nyenrode University in the Netherlands and completing several ongoing research projects as an emeritus professor at Clemson.
After 11 years of dedicated service to Clemson, as both the commander of the Air Force ROTC Detachment and academic advisor/instructor in the School of Accountancy, Mike Mendonca has announced his retirement. His plans include getting back into flying single-engine prop airplanes and helping out at Clemson Outdoor Lab’s high ropes course.
After 20 years of dedicated service to Clemson as an administrative assistant and coordinator in and outside the School of Accountancy, Kathy Glenn has decided to retire. Her immediate plans include spending time with her 13-week-old granddaughter, Emma.
| |
Please join us in congratulating Phil Maiberger and Scott Toussaint, who have been promoted to senior lecturers, and Jace Garrett and Jeremy Vinson, who have been promoted to associate professors.
| |
| Anna McElreath Amy Littleton
|
|
Staff
Please join us in welcoming to the School of Accountancy our new administrative coordinator, Anna McElreath, and our new undergraduate registration coordinator and undergraduate academic advisor, Amy Littleton.
| |
|
Lecturers
Paul Bonney is teaching the legal environment of business class. Before joining the Clemson faculty, Bonney worked for 29 years at Exelon Corporation, one of the nation's largest electric and gas utility companies, where he was a senior executive and managed legal and regulatory affairs for the corporation and a number of its subsidiaries. He is currently an energy-industry consultant, focusing on renewable energy and transportation electrification, and serves on the advisory board of the Kleinman Energy Policy Center at the University of Pennsylvania and on the board of directors of the York Water Company. He previously practiced law at the Morgan Lewis law firm and conducted economic research at National Economics Research Associates.
| |
|
Andy Weaver joins the Clemson faculty this fall as a lecturer in the School of Accountancy, teaching financial accounting concepts and managerial accounting concepts. Before Clemson, he taught in the James Benjamin Department of Accounting at Texas A&M University, teaching financial accounting principles, managerial accounting principles and intermediate accounting. Andy holds a BBA and M.S. in finance from Texas A&M and spent over 30 years in various finance and accounting roles in public and private-equity companies. He is also a certified public accountant in Texas.
| |
|
Assistant Clinical Professors
Holly Hawk is teaching both accounting information systems courses and analytics courses. She received her Ph.D. from the University of Georgia, a Master of Accounting from the University of Georgia and a Bachelor of Business Administration from Mercer University. She worked at Pricewaterhouse Coopers and TD Bank and was also a lecturer at the University of Georgia, where she taught undergraduate accounting systems and graduate accounting systems courses. Before UGA, she taught various courses at Clemson University. She was named in the 2021 CPA Practice Advisor 40 under 40. Hawk was a part of the CPA Evolution Information Systems and Controls task force that focused on developing a high-level model curriculum with topics and learning objectives for the Information and Systems Controls discipline of the 2024 CPA Exam.
| |
|
John Ledbetter joins the Clemson School of Accountancy from Ball State University. He joined Ball State in 1999 and served most recently as the accounting department chair and associate professor. Ledbetter earned his Ph.D. in accounting from the University of Houston after working about fifteen years in public accounting. He treasures memories and friendships from working on State Department grants with faculty from Tikrit University in Iraq and Kabul University in Afghanistan. His previous teaching and research both emphasize taxation, but he has taught a variety of courses across the accounting curriculum. This fall, Ledbetter will teach intermediate accounting I. He and his wife Toni enjoy water sports, hiking, bicycling and time with family.
| |
|
Assistant Professor
Courtney Yazzie joined the Clemson School of Accountancy in July 2022 after earning her Ph.D. at the University of Kansas. Before joining academia, Yazzie worked for Deloitte and RSM in Des Moines, IA. She is a licensed CPA in the state of Iowa. She researches issues primarily related to taxation, corporate governance, capital markets and executive compensation. This year, she will be teaching individual taxation to undergraduate students.
| |
STUDENT HIGHLIGHTS & AWARDS
| |
|
Micah Aebischer was born in Charleston, S.C., and grew up in West Columbia, S.C. Although initially interested in studying biology, a bad laboratory experience steered him to the Wilbur O. and Ann Powers College of Business and accounting. He decided to major in accounting after taking a principles of accounting class because the “numbers all made sense” and accounting seemed to be a “genuine way to help people.” Read Aebischer's spotlight.
| |
|
Jordan Black, an accounting and finance double major who graduated in May 2022, placed 1st in the Fall 2021 ETF Portfolio Challenge with a portfolio returning 47.23 percent in 12 weeks. The ETF Portfolio Challenge is a simulated investment challenge designed to help educate college students about investing in Exchange-Traded-Products. Through ETF Global, students are to construct a portfolio with 4-10 ETFs using a virtual endorsement of $100,000. Winners are invited to the prestigious ETP Forum in New York City to be recognized and network with 400+ financial professionals. Read Black's spotlight.
| |
|
Lydia Terlizzi joined Clemson University in the fall of 2022. Her path to Clemson was an unconventional one, but it is clear she has found a family at Clemson. Terlizzi, from Aiken, S.C., originally attended the University of South Carolina as an international business and economics major. However, she fell in love with accounting after taking her first accounting course. She decided to make a change after two years in Columbia and found her way to Clemson — in part due to the strong accounting program. Read Terlizzi's spotlight.
| |
Accounting Networking Night Back In-Person
| |
|
In February 2022, Accounting Networking Night returned to an “in-person” format after being held virtually in the fall of 2020 and spring and fall of 2021. Accounting Networking Night is an opportunity for students and potential employers to meet informally to explore employment opportunities and get to know one another. Read more about Networking Night.
| |
|
Oxford
This summer, 17 MPAcc students and 35 undergraduate accounting students participated in study abroad programs at Oxford University. Students lived and learned at Magdalen College, one of the 38 colleges that comprise Oxford University, while taking courses from Clemson University faculty (participating School of Accountancy faculty included emeritus professor Ralph Welton, associate professor Jeremy Vinson and senior lecturer Judson Jahn). Students attended multiple receptions and ‘High table’ dinners (pictured above), allowing them to interact with the guest speakers and faculty. Read more about Oxford.
Rome
After two years of virtual programs, 31 business students, including six accounting majors, headed to Rome in June 2022 to study at the American University of Rome. Assistant clinical professor Phebe Davis-Culler and senior lecturer Scott Toussaint also participated in the program. Phebe Davis-Culler taught a class in managerial accounting, and Scott Toussaint taught a law class. In addition to coursework, students enjoyed two excursions — one to Tuscany and another to Pompeii.
| |
Congratulations School of Accountancy Scholarship Winners
| |
|
Each year, the Scholarships and Awards committee of the School of Accountancy selects 15 students to receive awards. Students are selected based on evidence of academic performance, leadership, service and character. The awards are conferred during the Wilbur O. and Ann Powers College of Business Honors and Awards Ceremony. The awards range from $232.50 to $1,000 per student. The School of Accountancy is thankful to all of our generous donors who make these annual awards possible.
Ashtynne Alberts
Isabelle Boomhower
Emma Chacknes
Eva Dailey
Morgan Friday
Momoko Fukae
Jake George
Katie Goodman
Christian Kasai
Meghan Kennedy
Sophia Lombardi
Kaela Matthews
Matthew Salter
Lydia Terlizzi
Danielle Virgintino
| |
Congratulations SCACPA Scholarship Winners
| |
|
Each year, the South Carolina Association of CPAs (SCACPA) awards accounting students from colleges and universities within South Carolina with scholarships ranging from $500 to $2,500. For the 2021-2022 academic year, scholarships totaling $90,500 were awarded to 60 students from across the state. Congratulations to all the Clemson award winners listed below!
Ashtynne Alberts
Justin Brasher
Kathryn Dunwoody
Jackson Dye
Camryn Emory
Dawson Hays
Jaimin Joshi
Colt Martin
Ashley McCord
Victor Mohaugen
Maggie Moree
Benjamin Oliver
Katlyn Phelan
Sarah Stafford
James Swicegood
Brenna Tierney
Addelin Wellborn
Omar Williams
| |
|
Members make welcome back boxes for faculty.
|
|
Beta Alpha Psi
Beta Alpha Psi, an honorary accounting and finance organization led by assistant clinical professor Phebe Davis-Culler and senior lecturer Annieka Philo, has worked hard this past year, making a significant impact on its members and their community. They held 16 professional meetings with firms and organizations where members received information on various topics to help them prepare for their careers. Several members also attended the virtual annual meeting in August 2021, as well as the virtual mid-year meeting last spring. BAP also welcomed 22 new members during the 2021-2022 academic year. Through their hard work and dedication, BAP could maintain its Superior National Status this past year. Read more about Beta Alpha Psi.
| |
|
IMA Student Chapter
This past year, under the direction of assistant clinical professor Brian Carver and associate professor Robin Radtke, Clemson's IMA student chapter held in-person meetings and hosted a variety of speakers to discuss topics that help members prepare for future careers in corporate accounting. Speakers included Lori Hudson from National Gypsum Company, Brandon Hall from Clemson Athletics, Josh Burgess from ScanSource, Lynn Martin from MST Concrete Products, Inc. and Melba Daniels from Duke Energy in a joint meeting with Beta Alpha Psi. Thank you to all of the speakers who made these meetings possible!
| |
Templeton Business Ethics Case Competition
| |
|
In February 2022, Ashley McCord and Hannah Fugate, two senior accounting majors, competed in the Templeton Business Ethics Case competition. School of Accountancy associate professor Robin Radtke advised the duo. Clemson’s team was pitted against 15 other colleges and universities in the competition, sponsored by the Business Ethics and Corporate Social Responsibility Initiative at Stetson University in central Florida. Read more about the competition.
| |
Deloitte Audit Innovation Campus Challenge
| |
|
During the Fall 2021 semester, a team of six accounting majors participated in the Deloitte Audit Innovation Campus Challenge. The Challenge involved 70 of the top colleges and universities in the U.S. Prior Clemson teams twice proceeded through the competition to the “finals” at Deloitte University near Dallas. Clemson’s 2021 six-person team included Elizabeth Braunstein, Jennifer Cagno, Hannah Fugate, Nathan Higgins, Margaret McGlone and Katelyn Tindal, with lecturer Terry Knause serving as the faculty advisor. Read more about the Challenge.
| |
|
Mike McGuigan grew up in Abbeville, S.C., and spent his life working and serving the Upstate. He graduated from Clemson University in 1977 and earned his MBA from the University of South Carolina in 1978. McGuigan worked as a CPA with Elliott Davis for over 40 years, retiring as a Tax Shareholder in 2019.
McGuigan provided tax, accounting and practice management services to his clients during his distinguished career at Elliott Davis, specializing in professional practices. Based in the Greenville office, he also served in several leadership roles, including serving as a member of the firm’s Executive Committee and Compensation Committee, Greenville Office Leader, Interim COO and Shareholder over Innovation. Beyond formal leadership roles, McGuigan was a dedicated mentor within the firm, always offering advice and encouragement and helping professionals develop throughout their careers. He has performed numerous civic duties, including serving as the past president of the Greenville Literacy Association and being an active board member for the Greenville Family Partnership, the United Way Campaign Cabinet, the YWCA Empowerment Committee and the Metropolitan Arts Council.
McGuigan has served and stayed connected with his Clemson Family throughout the years, most recently by teaching introductory accounting classes in the School of Accountancy. McGuigan’s wealth of practical experience, combined with his warm teaching style, made him an instant student favorite. He taught for three years before officially retiring (again!) to focus on spending more time with his wife, children and grandchildren. McGuigan also served Clemson as an Advisory Board member for the School of Accountancy and rarely missed an opportunity to come back on campus to network with students and faculty. He enjoys using his spare time with projects around his home, continued learning, listening to various podcasts, cooking for his friends and family and keeping up to date on technology.
We are incredibly grateful for everything McGuigan has done for the School of Accountancy throughout the years and wish him all the best in retirement. GO TIGERS!
| |
FACULTY AWARDS & RESEARCH
| |
Faculty Awards and Honors
| |
|
Kathryn Kisska-Schulze, JD, LL.M.
|
|
Holmes-Cardozo Distinguished Submitted Conference Paper
Associate professor Kathryn Kisska-Schulze's article (with John T. Holden, Oklahoma State University and Corey Ciocchetti, Denver University), "Brute Force Federalism," won the 2022 Holmes-Cardozo Distinguished Submitted Paper award offered by the Academy of Legal Studies in Business (ALSB). The Holmes-Cardozo Award was established to recognize significant, unpublished original legal research and is the premier paper award granted at the annual ALSB conference. This is the second year in a row that one of associate professor Kisska-Schulze's articles has been recognized for this award.
| |
|
Phebe Davis-Culler, Ph.D.
|
|
Surgent Faculty Fellow
Assistant clincal professor Phebe Davis-Culler was selected as a Surgent Faculty Fellow for the 2022-2023 academic year. In this role, Davis-Culler will receive access to student resources and will be provided tutorials and best practices on how to integrate these resources into the classroom. She is part of a cohort of professors from 10 states and the District of Columbia.
John B. Thurston Award (Institute of Internal Auditors)
Assistant clinical professor Phebe Davis-Culler’s article (with Denise Dickins, Joseph Reid, and Julia Higgs), “Illuminating the Black Experience in Internal Auditing,” was published in April 2021 by the Internal Auditor Magazine and awarded the John B. Thurston award this year by the Institute of Internal Auditors (IIA). The Thurston Award was established in 1951 as a tribute to John B. Thurston, the IIA’s first international president and an eminent authority in the field of internal auditing. It is the highest literary honor given by the Institute for work published in the Internal Auditor magazine during the year.
| |
|
Charles D. and Katrina M. Way Faculty Fellowship
Assistant professor Babak Mammadov received the 2022-2023 Charles D. and Katrina M. Way Faculty Fellowship. This prestigious award provides financial support for research that has implications for practitioners and students. Assistant professor Mammadov plans to use the award funding for a research project investigating the implications of auditor-client firm corporate culture similarity on financial reporting quality. The research paper contributes to the stream of literature that adopts machine learning and artificial intelligence to measure corporate culture. Read more about the award.
2021-2022 Dean's Award for Interdisciplinary Research Collaboration
Assistant professor Babak Mammadov received the 2021-2022 Dean’s Award for Interdisciplinary Research Collaboration. The award is based on the project titled “The Importance of Financial Misconduct of Institutional Investors on Corporate Social Responsibility.” This is a collaborative effort between assistant professor Mammadov and Finance associate professor Blerina Bela Zykaj, and the manuscript was nominated for the best paper award at the 2021 Financial Management Association (FMA) conference. The study analyzes the effect of institutional investors with disciplinary history (IDH) on the corporate social responsibility (CSR) activities of investee firms. Findings suggest that IDH discourages firms’ engagement in CSR activities and attributes this regularity to institutions’ disregard for social norms. This study is relevant for academics and practitioners because it shows that ethical behavior is contagious and has far-reaching consequences for society.
| |
Elliot Davis Sponsors Faculty and Staff Excellence
| |
|
Elliott Davis has generously offered to sponsor cash awards and a plaque for five annual School of Accountancy Faculty and Staff Excellence Awards. These awards are designed to recognize and reward excellence amongst the faculty and staff in the School of Accountancy. Associate professor Jeremy Vinson won the Teaching Excellence Award. Assistant professor Marc Cussatt won the Research Excellence Award. Associate professor Kathryn Kisska-Schulze won the Overall Faculty Excellence Award. Senior lecturer Suzy Pearse won the Service Excellence Award. Sebrina Clayton won the Staff Excellence Award.
| |
|
Scholarship Established in Honor of Faculty Member
In honor of lecturer Terry Knause, Hattie Pitcairn, his former student and 2020 MPAcc graduate, established the Terry Knause ‘95 Accountancy Annual Scholarship with the help of gifts from family and friends. This is a scholarship awarded to students enrolled in the School of Accountancy.
| |
Faculty Research Spotlights
| |
|
The usefulness of corporate income tax accounting: Evidence from pension returns.
Authors: Marc Cussatt, Ph.D., and Paul Demere, Ph.D.
The Accounting Review
The study utilizes income tax accounting information (ITA) from Form 5500 Schedule SB, a tax form related to companies’ defined-benefit pension plans, and finds that pension expense and funding measures are more strongly associated with market value, future cash contributions, the cost of equity capital, and credit ratings than comparable GAAP measures. This association is particularly pronounced when ITA better maps to economic fundamentals and when GAAP offers greater managerial discretion. Using intra-day returns and disclosure times obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request, we also find that markets react to the release of ITA measures in Form 5500 within 5 minutes of public disclosure. Our study provides novel empirical tests of theory about the benefits of ITA using actual, not imputed, ITA measures and provides evidence that investors can and do use the unique information in a publicly disclosed tax form.
The importance of clarification of auditors’ responsibilities under the new audit reporting standards.
Authors: Ann Backof, Ph.D., Kendall Bowlin, Ph.D., and Brian Goodson, Ph.D.
Contemporary Accounting Research
This study examines how a subtle difference among PCAOB, ASB and IAASB auditor reporting standards affects audit litigation outcomes. Their research finds that jurors evaluate auditors more harshly when the audit report identifies a critical audit matter (CAM) related to a financial statement item subsequently found to be misstated. However, they also find auditors can drastically reduce the heightened litigation risk associated with CAM reporting by simply clarifying that auditors are responsible for providing reasonable “but not absolute” assurance that the financial statements are not materially misstated. These findings are especially important because the ASB and IAASB’s recently revised reporting standards mandate inclusion of such clarifying language within the audit report, while the PCAOB, despite widespread support from stakeholders, ultimately chose to omit a similar mandate from its reporting requirements.
The effects of openness of internal reporting and shared interest with an employee on managerial collusion and subsequent cooperation.
Author: Dan Way, Ph.D.
Contemporary Accounting Research
In two experiments, the study finds that collusion against the firm between peer managers is greatest when the transparency of their internal reporting is greater and when their collusion also benefits one of their subordinates, perhaps because this makes collusion easiest to rationalize. The study also finds that more transparent internal reporting is perceived by managers as limiting to their autonomy, which has detrimental effects on future behavior. However, collusion between peer managers improves perceptions of autonomy and group identification, which improves future firm-friendly behavior and may reduce some of the costs of collusion to the firm. In total, the results highlight the relative costs and benefits of control choices — more transparent internal reporting and shared outcomes between managers and employees — that have grown in popularity in practice.
| |
|
Faculty Publications
Backof, A., K. O. Bowlin, and B. M. Goodson. 2022. “The importance of clarification of auditors’ responsibilities under the new audit reporting standards.” Contemporary Accounting Research, forthcoming.
Barradale, N. J., B. M. Goodson, and M. T. Sooy. 2022. “Does accounting measurement influence market efficiency? A laboratory market perspective.” Behavioral Research in Accounting, forthcoming.
Bedford, D., R. F. Speklé, and S. K. Widener. 2022. “Budgeting and employee stress in times of crisis: Evidence from the Covid-19 Pandemic.” Accounting, Organizations and Society, 101.
Bordeman, A., M. Cussatt, and K. Westermann. 2022. “Risk and control considerations in attestation engagements: The auditor’s role in the Academy Awards.” Issues in Accounting Education, forthcoming.
Brown, J. L., P. R. Martin, G. B. Sprinkle, and D. Way. 2022. “How return on investment and residual income performance measures and risk preferences affect risk-taking.” Management Science, forthcoming.
Cussatt M., and P. Demere. 2022. “The usefulness of corporate income tax accounting: Evidence from pension returns.” The Accounting Review, forthcoming.
Houser, K., and K. Kisska-Schulze. 2022. “Disrupting venture capital: Carrots, sticks, and artificial intelligence.” UC Irvine Law Review, forthcoming.
Dalton, D., J. Garrett, N. Harp, and G. McPhee. 2022. “An analysis of organizational support for telecommuting in public accounting firms.” Behavioral Research in Accounting, forthcoming.
Davis, P., A. M. Donnelly, and R. R. Radtke. 2022. “The impact of dark triad personality traits and gender on whistleblowing decisions.” Research on Professional Responsibility and Ethics in Accounting, forthcoming.
Goodson, B. M., J. Grenier, and E. Maksymov. 2022. “When law students think like audit litigation attorneys: Implications for experimental research.” Accounting, Organizations and Society, forthcoming.
Mammadov, B., and A. Bhandari. 2022. “Stressed about money: The effect of employee financial pressure on financial reporting outcomes.” Auditing: A Journal of Practice & Theory, forthcoming.
Mock, R., D. Chamberlain, and K. Kisska-Schulze. 2022. “The zero-value tax fantasy.” Virginia Tax Review, forthcoming.
Speklé, R. F., F. H. M. Verbeeten, and S. K. Widener. 2022. “Nondyadic control systems and effort direction effectiveness: Evidence from the public sector.” Management Accounting Research 54.
Vinson, J. M., J. J. McMillan, and L. F. Schleifer. 2022. “An investigation of the association of grit with performance in accounting courses.” Journal of Accounting Education 59.
Way, D. 2022. “The effects of openness of internal reporting and shared interest with an employee on managerial collusion and subsequent cooperation.” Contemporary Accounting Research, forthcoming.
| |
|
Curriculum Update
The Master of Professional Accountancy (MPAcc) program added a new elective course, “Internal Controls over Financial Reporting,” to its curriculum during the 2021-2022 academic year. Senior lecturer Suzy Pearse, MPAcc Program Coordinator, developed this course, teaching it during Spring 2022. This advanced study of internal control is an elective course students can take to learn how to understand significant financial reporting business processes from inception to completion. The course includes risk identification, internal control mapping and testing of controls.
| |
Clemson’s Accounting Advisory Board plays an essential role in the School of Accountancy, helping us better prepare our accounting majors for the profession they will enter upon graduation. Our members provide practical insights on various issues, including how to incorporate curriculum changes best to ensure students acquire the skills needed in a constantly evolving global business environment. We are grateful to our continuing and new members. Thank you so much for all you do to support our students and the School of Accountancy!
Continuing Board Members
Mike Boliek (Elliott Davis)
Roselle Bonnoit (FORVIS)
Jessica Donan (EY)
Aubrey Harrell (KPMG
Lori Hudson (National Gypsum Company)
Jon Ridgway (KPMG)
Brandon Robinson (Bradshaw, Gordon & Clinkscales)
Jeff Schwartz (Deloitte)
Earl Stone (Deloitte)
Jimmy ten Pas (FORVIS)
TJ Way (Morgan Stanley)
New Board Member
Angie Pulley (Coca-Cola Ltd.)
| |
|
|
Wilbur O. and Ann Powers College of Business School of Accountancy
Clemson, South Carolina 29634 | (864) 656-3265| clemson.edu/business/accounting
Accountancy | Aerospace Studies | Economics | Financial Management
Graphic Communications | Management | Marketing | Military Leadership | Master of Business Administration
| |
|
|
|
|