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Graham Holdings Company 2014 Annual Report
GRAHAM HOLDINGS 2014 ANNUAL REPORT REVENUE BY PRINCIPAL OPERATIONS n EDUCATION 61% n CABLE 23% n TELEVISION BROADCASTING 10% n OTHER BUSINESSES 6% FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS (in thousands, except per share amounts) 2014 2013 Change Operating revenues $ 3,535,166 $ 3,407,911 4% Income from operations $ 407,932 $ 319,169 28% Net income attributable to common shares $ 1,292,996 $ 236,010 — Diluted earnings per common share from continuing operations $ 138.88 $ 23.36 — Diluted earnings per common share $ 195.03 $ 32.05 — Dividends per common share $ 10.20 $ — — Common stockholders’ equity per share $ 541.54 $ 446.73 21% Diluted average number of common shares outstanding 6,559 7,333 –11% INCOME FROM NET INCOME ATTRIBUTABLE OPERATING REVENUES OPERATIONS TO COMMON SHARES ($ in millions) ($ in millions) ($ in millions) 3,861 582 1,293 3,453 3,535 3,373 3,408 408 314 319 149 277 236 116 131 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 RETURN ON DILUTED EARNINGS PER AVERAGE COMMON COMMON SHARE FROM DILUTED EARNINGS STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY* CONTINUING OPERATIONS PER COMMON SHARE ($) ($) 46.6% 138.88 195.03 38.16 9.8% 9.0% 23.36 31.04 32.05 5.2% 17.32 4.4% 14.70 17.39 6.40 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 * Computed on a comparable basis, excluding the impact of the adjustment for pensions and other postretirement plans on average common stockholders’ equity. 2014 ANNUAL REPORT 1 To OUR SHAREHOLDERS Quite a lot happened in 2014. -
Martha L. Minow
Martha L. Minow 1525 Massachusetts Avenue Griswold 407, Harvard Law School Cambridge, MA 02138 (617) 495-4276 [email protected] Current Academic Appointments: 300th Anniversary University Professor, Harvard University Harvard University Distinguished Service Professor Faculty, Harvard Graduate School of Education Faculty Associate, Carr Center for Human Rights, Harvard Kennedy School of Government Current Activities: Advantage Testing Foundation, Vice-Chair and Trustee American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Access to Justice Project American Bar Association Center for Innovation, Advisory Council American Law Institute, Member Berkman Klein Center for Internet and Society, Harvard University, Director Campaign Legal Center, Board of Trustees Carnegie Corporation, Board of Trustees Committee to Visit the Harvard Business School, Harvard University Board of Overseers Facing History and Ourselves, Board of Scholars Harvard Data Science Review, Associate Editor Initiative on Harvard and the Legacy of Slavery Law, Violence, and Meaning Series, Univ. of Michigan Press, Co-Editor MacArthur Foundation, Director MIT Media Lab, Advisory Council MIT Schwarzman College of Computing, Co-Chair, External Advisory Council National Academy of Sciences' Committee on Science, Technology, and Law Profiles in Courage Award Selection Committee, JFK Library, Chair Russell Sage Foundation, Trustee Skadden Fellowship Foundation, Selection Trustee Susan Crown Exchange Foundation, Trustee WGBH Board of Trustees, Trustee Education: Yale Law School, J.D. 1979 Articles and Book Review Editor, Yale Law Journal, 1978-1979 Editor, Yale Law Journal, 1977-1978 Harvard Graduate School of Education, Ed.M. 1976 University of Michigan, A.B. 1975 Phi Beta Kappa, Magna Cum Laude James B. Angell Scholar, Branstrom Prize New Trier East High School, Winnetka, Illinois, 1968-1972 Honors and Fellowships: Leo Baeck Medal, Nov. -
Academic Guidelines Distribution Project
University of Pennsylvania ScholarlyCommons Organizational Dynamics Working Papers Organizational Dynamics Programs June 2007 Academic Guidelines Distribution Project Kimberly A. Perry University of Pennsylvania, [email protected] Larry Starr University of Pennsylvania, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.upenn.edu/od_working_papers Perry, Kimberly A. and Starr, Larry, "Academic Guidelines Distribution Project" (2007). Organizational Dynamics Working Papers. 3. https://repository.upenn.edu/od_working_papers/3 Organizational Dynamics Working Paper #06-18. This paper is posted at ScholarlyCommons. https://repository.upenn.edu/od_working_papers/3 For more information, please contact [email protected]. Academic Guidelines Distribution Project Abstract The number and scope of programs of organizational and executive coaching has dramatically increased over the past 15 years. An unknown number of private and professional consulting companies offer proprietary or standardized workshops, classes, and coaching services. A growing number of academic institutions in the United States and Canada offer or have plans to offer "coaching programs" packaged or delivered as educational workshops; graduate courses; post-baccalaureate and/or graduate certificates; degree programs or graduate concentrations within degree programs; and as direct coaching service to enhance personal and professional development for students, faculty, and members of the academic administration. Academic coaching programs are located in many areas within a university including within schools or departments of psychology, business, education, public policy, and human resources. A single institution may have multiple yet autonomous coaching programs or offerings. This results in separate and often inconsistent policies and standards by those who establish and deliver the programs, confusion or miscommunication by those who buy the programs, and little interaction between program managers within a single institution, as well as between institutions. -
Cs Title Court Id Maurice Elias V. Mabek Co, Et Al Cacdce Japhet Lopez, Et Al V
cs_title court_id Maurice Elias v. Mabek Co, et al cacdce Japhet Lopez, et al v. Denny's Inc, et al cacdce Jarek Molski et al v. Arby's Huntington Beach et al cacdce Les Jankey et al v. Mister Ds Liquor Market et al cacdce Les Jankey et al v. Moons Market et al cacdce Mimi Greenberg v. Lindfield Inc et al cacdce Frank J Pairis Sr v. Citrus Valley Health Foundation et al cacdce Byron Chapman v. Ahmed S Siddiqui et al cacdce Joe Babakanian v. Thomas Chow et al cacdce Joe Babakanian v. K Mart Corporation et al cacdce Babakanian v. El Toro Shopping Center et al cacdce Babakanian et al v. Buchheim Properties III cacdce Joe Babakanian v. Bank Of America Corporation et al cacdce Joe Babakanian v. Popeyes et al cacdce Joe Babakanian v. International House of Pancakes Inc et al cacdce Dung Le et al v. Anaheim City School District et al cacdce Disabled Rights Union on Behalf of Michael Rifkin and its Members v. Rome Tailor et al cacdce Juan Moreno v. Cal West Distributors Inc et al cacdce Mary Winic et al v. Mr Cecils California Ribs #1 LLC et al cacdce Disabled Rights Union v. Sizzler Family Steakhouse #453 et al cacdce K Moore v. Los Angeles Unified School District et al cacdce Charles Tyler v. Prakash Patel et al cacdce Rosemarie Roggenkamp v. Kentucky Fried Chicken et al cacdce Rosemarie Roggenkamp v. IHOP Corp et al cacdce Rosemarie Roggenkamp v. Kentucky Fried Chicken et al cacdce Rosemarie Roggenkamp v. Keeno's et al cacdce Darryl Eversole v. -
2020-2021 GGU Catalog
GOLDEN GATE UNIVERSITY CATALOG 2020–2021 Golden Gate University Catalog 2020-2021 Contents Contents .............................................................................................. 1 Content Disclaimer About GGU ........................................................................................ 2 The content in this document was published on June 05, 2020. For School of Undergraduate Studies ....................................................... 4 the most current catalog information, see catalog.ggu.edu School of Accounting ....................................................................... 53 Edward S. Ageno School of Business ............................................... 64 Bruce F. Braden School of Taxation .............................................. 132 School of Law ................................................................................ 138 Libraries ......................................................................................... 140 Admission ....................................................................................... 141 Financial Planning .......................................................................... 151 Enrollment ...................................................................................... 167 Academic Requirements ................................................................. 181 Student Services ............................................................................. 185 Graduation and Commencement ................................................... -
Commencement Program, 1957
Golden Gate University School of Law GGU Law Digital Commons Commencement About GGU School of Law 6-1957 Commencement Program, 1957 Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.law.ggu.edu/commencement Part of the Legal Education Commons Recommended Citation "Commencement Program, 1957" (1957). Commencement. Paper 25. http://digitalcommons.law.ggu.edu/commencement/25 This Presentation is brought to you for free and open access by the About GGU School of Law at GGU Law Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Commencement by an authorized administrator of GGU Law Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. 6/ifty- fi4xt6 @/tnnua/ @ommeneement GOLDEN GATE COLLEGE WAR MEMORIAL VETERANS BUILDING FRIDAY, JUNE 14, 1957 EIGHT O'CLOCK P. M. BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF GOLDEN GATE COLLEGE BOARD OF TRUSTEES CARL H. .ALLEN JOHN H. CoUPIN FRED DRExLER ROY S. FROTHINGHAM JAMBS E. HAMMOND ALEXANDER R. HERON MILTON C. KENNEDY HARRYLANGB RUDOLPH E. LINDQUIST LLOYD D. LUCKMANN NAGEL T. MINER WARREN H. PILLSBURY VAUGHN D. SEIDEL A. B. TICHENOR EMIL G. WUNNER PROGRAM MUSICAL PRELUDE DR. WENDELL 0TEY Professor of Music, San Francisco State College Two Fugues on the "Magnificat" . Pachelbel Francaise Poulenc Allegro in G . Franck * PROCESSIONAL March inC ... • . Beethoven * WELCOME NAGEL T. MINER President, Golden Gate College * INVOCATION THE REv. PAUL H. BUCHHOLZ, D.D. * COMMENCEMENT GREETINGS MR. JAMEs E. HAMMOND President, Board of Directors of the YMCA of San Francisco The Consonata Organ has been furnished through the courtesy of Leathurby Company, 183 Golden Gate Avenue, San Francisco, Calif. PROGRAM COMMENCEMENT ADDRESS Introduction NAGEL T. -
Golden Gate College School of Law Bulletin - 1966-1967
Golden Gate University School of Law GGU Law Digital Commons Law School Bulletins & Prospectus About GGU School of Law 1966 Golden Gate College School of Law Bulletin - 1966-1967 Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.law.ggu.edu/bulletins Part of the Curriculum and Instruction Commons Recommended Citation "Golden Gate College School of Law Bulletin - 1966-1967" (1966). Law School Bulletins & Prospectus. Paper 25. http://digitalcommons.law.ggu.edu/bulletins/25 This Newsletter or Magazine is brought to you for free and open access by the About GGU School of Law at GGU Law Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Law School Bulletins & Prospectus by an authorized administrator of GGU Law Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. GOLDEN GATE COLLEGE BULLETIN VOL. IV MARCH 1966 NO.7 SCHOOL OF LAW 1966-1967 GOLDEN GATE COLLEGE AND ACCREDITED BY THE COMMITTEE OF BAR EXAMINERS, STATE BAR OF CALIFORNIA GOLDEN GATE COLLEGE This Bulletin is one of a series which describes the undergraduate programs in Accounting, Business Administration, Economics, Insur ance, Political Science, Traffic and Transportation, and General Edu cation; the graduate programs in Business and Public Administration; and the program of the School of Law. These yearly bulletins are available free of charge to persons desiring information about Golden Gate College. Copies of the bulletin for the School of Law may be obtained from the Dean of the School. All correspondence, inquiries, requests for information (including class schedules), application for admission and transcripts or other documents concerning the School of Law .should be addressed as follows: Dean, School of Law Golden Gate College 536 Mission Street San Francisco, California 94105 Requests for copies of other bulletins should be addressed as follows: Director of Admissions Golden Gate College 220 Golden Gate Avenue San Francisco, California 94102 All telephone inquiries should be made to 775-5774 (Area Code 415). -
2004 Annual Report Contents
NEWSPAPER/ONLINE PUBLISHING TELEVISION BROADCASTING MAGAZINE PUBLISHING CABLE TELEVISION 04EDUCATION The Washington Post Company 2004 Annual Report Contents Financial Highlights, 1 Letter to Shareholders, 2 Corporate Directory, 12 Form 10-K Financial Highlights (in thousands, except per share amounts) 2004 2003 % Change Operating revenue $ 3,300,104 $ 2,838,911 + 16% Income from operations $ 563,006 $ 363,820 + 55% Net income $ 332,732 $ 241,088 + 38% Diluted earnings per common share $ 34.59 $ 25.12 + 38% Dividends per common share $ 7.00 $ 5.80 + 21% Common shareholders’ equity per share $ 251.93 $ 217.46 + 16% Diluted average number of common shares outstanding 9,592 9,555 – Operating Revenue Income from Operations Net Income ($ in millions) ($ in millions) ($ in millions) 04 3,300 04 563 04 333 03 2,839 03 364 03 241 02 2,584 02 378 02 204 01 2,411 01 220 01 230 00 2,410 00 340 00 136 Diluted Earnings Return on Average Common per Common Share Shareholders’ Equity ($) 04 34.59 04 14.8% 03 25.12 03 12.3% 02 21.34 02 11.5% 01 24.06 01 14.4% 00 14.32 00 9.5% 1 2004 ANNUAL REPORT A LETTER FROM DONALD E. GRAHAM To Our Shareholders For Red Sox fans and The Washington Post Company, 2004 was annus mirabilis, an amazing year. Many, many things went well for our company. Some were long planned and the result of careful work; others were strokes of luck. One statistic sums it up. Operating income of $563 million was $175 million higher than the best year we ever had, $388 million in 1999. -
TA 322B.WC1 Federal Income Taxation of Corporations and Shareholders II Cross-Listed with and Equivalent to LLM 322B.WC1
TA 322B.WC1 Federal Income Taxation of Corporations and Shareholders II Cross-listed with and equivalent to LLM 322B.WC1 Students enrolled in a web-conference section (WC) will attend and participate in the class live via Zoom. Students should access the Zoom classroom on their device (computer, laptop, phone, etc.) and have a working camera and microphone. George C. Koutouras Adjunct Professor Bruce F. Braden School of Taxation and School of Accounting Golden Gate University Contact Information Email: [email protected] Telephone: 310.988.9658 Office Hours: By Appointment First Day of class: May 10, 2020, 6 pm – 8:40 pm Last Day of class: August 22, 2020 Course Description Covers specific issues related to corporate transactions including taxable and non-taxable transactions including reorganizations and divisions; carryovers of tax attributes; limitations on carryovers. Prerequisite: TA 322A. Learning Outcomes After successfully completing this course, students can expect to be able to do the following: Anticipate tax outcomes of transactions based on an understanding of the elements of consideration exchanged and the objectives of the statutory provisions that govern transactions between corporations and their shareholders. Understand corporate transaction forms both taxable and nontaxable, acquisitive and divisive. Page | 1 Understand related consequences of transactions, including effects on tax basis, tax attributes and holding periods. The outcomes for this course support the overall outcomes for the Master of Science in Taxation. Graduates of the Master of Science in Taxation program will: The Master of Science in Taxation stresses real-world skills that empower students to be exceptional tax professionals. Many of the "Big Four" firms hire GGU graduates and send their employees to GGU to update their tax education. -
Alumni Magazine C2-C4camjf07 12/21/06 2:50 PM Page C2 001-001Camjf07toc 12/21/06 1:39 PM Page 1
c1-c1CAMJF07 12/22/06 1:58 PM Page c1 January/February 2007 $6.00 alumni magazine c2-c4CAMJF07 12/21/06 2:50 PM Page c2 001-001CAMJF07toc 12/21/06 1:39 PM Page 1 Contents JANUARY / FEBRUARY 2007 VOLUME 109 NUMBER 4 alumni magazine Features 52 2 From David Skorton Residence life 4 Correspondence Under the hood 8 From the Hill Remembering “Superman.” Plus: Peres lectures, seven figures for Lehman, a time capsule discovered, and a piece of Poe’s coffin. 12 Sports Small players, big win 16 Authors 40 Pynchon goes Against the Day 40 Going the Distance 35 Camps DAVID DUDLEY For three years, Cornell astronomers have been overseeing Spirit 38 Wines of the Finger Lakes and Opportunity,the plucky pair of Mars rovers that have far out- 2005 Atwater Estate Vineyards lived their expected lifespans.As the mission goes on (and on), Vidal Blanc Associate Professor Jim Bell has published Postcards from Mars,a striking collection of snapshots from the Red Planet. 58 Classifieds & Cornellians in Business 112 46 Happy Birthday, Ezra 61 Alma Matters BETH SAULNIER As the University celebrates the 200th birthday of its founder on 64 Class Notes January 11, we ask: who was Ezra Cornell? A look at the humble Quaker farm boy who suffered countless financial reversals before 104 Alumni Deaths he made his fortune in the telegraph industry—and promptly gave it away. 112 Cornelliana What’s your Ezra I.Q.? 52 Ultra Man BRAD HERZOG ’90 18 Currents Every morning at 3:30, Mike Trevino ’95 ANATOMY OF A CAMPAIGN | Aiming for $4 billion cycles a fifty-mile loop—just for practice. -
2005 Annual Report 1 to Our Shareholders
THE WASHINGTON POST COMPANY NEWSPAPER/ONLINE PUBLISHING TELEVISION BROADCASTING MAGAZINE PUBLISHING CABLE TELEVISION EDUCATION 2005 Annual Report CONTENTS Financial Highlights, 1 Letter to Shareholders, 2 Corporate Directory, 12 Form 10-K FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS (in thousands, except per share amounts) 2005 2004 % Change Operating revenue $ 3,553,887 $ 3,300,104 + 8% Income from operations $ 514,914 $ 563,006 – 9% Net income $ 314,344 $ 332,732 – 6% Diluted earnings per common share $ 32.59 $ 34.59 – 6% Dividends per common share $ 7.40 $ 7.00 + 6% Common shareholders’ equity per share $ 274.79 $ 251.11 + 9% Diluted average number of common shares outstanding 9,616 9,592 – OPERATING REVENUE INCOME FROM OPERATIONS NET INCOME ($ in millions) ($ in millions) ($ in millions) 05 3,554 05 515 05 314 04 3,300 04 563 04 333 03 2,839 03 364 03 241 02 2,584 02 378 02 204 01 2,411 01 220 01 230 DILUTED EARNINGS RETURN ON AVERAGE COMMON PER COMMON SHARE SHAREHOLDERS’ EQUITY ($) 05 32.59 05 12.4% 04 34.59 04 14.9% 03 25.12 03 12.3% 02 21.34 02 11.6% 01 24.06 01 14.4% 2005 ANNUAL REPORT 1 TO OUR SHAREHOLDERS 2005 was a somewhat disappointing year. Our newspaper, TV and magazine businesses turned in poor- er results than their managers expected when the year began. Cable ONE was having a spectacular year until Hurricane Katrina devastated our Mississippi Gulf Coast systems. Kaplan’s brick-and-mortar college business missed its goals badly, disappointing Jonathan Grayer and me. These are the facts, and I’ll set them out for you in detail. -
List of All Postsecondary Institutions in the Seven-County Bay Area
List of All Postsecondary Institutions in the Seven-County Bay Area In 2012, by our best estimate, the Bay Area was home to over 300 postsecondary institutions. Data for the study were collected from the following public, nonprofit, and for-profit institutions. A-1 TRUCK DRIVING SCHOOL AB TRUCK DRIVING SCHOOL ACADEMY FOR SALON PROFESSIONALS ACADEMY OF ART UNIVERSITY ACADEMY OF CHINESE CULTURE AND HEALTH SCIENCES ACADEMY OF INTUITION MEDICINE & ENERGY MEDICINE UNIVERSITY ACADEMY OF TRUCK DRIVING ACADEMYX ACUPRESSURE INSTITUTE ACUPUNCTURE AND INTEGRATIVE MEDICINE COLLEGE-BERKELEY ADVANCE ENGLISH ACADEMY ADVANCED PRO NURSING INSTITUTE ADVANCED VOCATIONAL INSTITUTE ALLIANT INTERNATIONAL UNIVERSITY, SAN FRANCISCO AMERICAN ACADEMY OF ENGLISH AMERICAN BAPTIST SEMINARY OF THE WEST AMERICAN CAREQUEST AMERICAN CENTURY COLLEGE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF NURSING AMERICAN COLLEGE OF TRADITIONAL CHINESE MEDICINE AMERICAN CONSERVATORY THEATER AMERICAN HEALTH EDUCATION AMERICAN TRUCK SCHOOL AMFASOFT CORPORATION ANDREW UNIVERSITY ANIMATION MENTOR AREA TRUCK DRIVING SCHOOL ARGOSY UNIVERSITY, SAN FRANCISCO BAY AREA ARRIBA JUNTOS ASHER COLLEGE AU LAC INSTITUTE AVALON SCHOOL OF COSMETOLOGY-ALAMEDA AVIATION INSTITUTE OF MAINTENANCE AYUVIDYA COLLEGE OF AMERICA BABSON COLLEGE BAUMAN COLLEGE BAY AREA CENTER FOR WALDORF TEACHER TRAINING BAY AREA COLLEGE OF NURSING BAY AREA HAIR INSTITUTE BAY AREA MEDICAL ACADEMY BAY AREA VIDEO COALITION BAY CITIES BIBLE COLLEGE BAY COLLEGE OF CALIFORNIA BELLAKEN CAREER CENTER BENTHAM COLLEGE BERKELEY CITY COLLEGE BERLITZ LANGUAGE CENTER