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Take a tour of the creatively (and sometimes strangely) named conference rooms in SoftLayer's Alpha headquarters.
Recognizing the need for cooperation and communication among Boards of Accountancy, NASBA sponsors an Annual Meeting in the fall of each year that provides a unique opportunity for State Board members, executive directors and others interested in the profession to discuss freely and candidly the major issues facing state regulation of public accountancy.
The site of NASBA’s 108th Annual Meeting, Dana Point, CA, has been the site of several outstanding NASBA meetings. In this inspiring setting, we will exchange new ideas and consider how to help the Boards protect the public by utilizing the best thinking of regulators, professionals, academics and other interested parties.
Throughout the year, NASBA committees and staff have been engaged in communication with the member Boards to keep information flowing. The Annual Meeting is the capstone of those efforts. Speakers from the Financial Accounting Foundation, American Accounting Association, American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business and others will join NASBA’s leaders in addressing the major regulatory issues involved in ensuring the Boards’ licensees meet the public’s expectations. Through plenary presentations, regional meetings and informal gatherings, participants will be encouraged to share their views with colleagues from other jurisdictions, and consider the ways in which Accountancy Boards can be responsive to the public’s needs.
Recognizing the need for cooperation and communication among Boards of Accountancy, NASBA sponsors an Annual Meeting in the fall of each year that provides a unique opportunity for State Board members, executive directors and others interested in the profession to discuss freely and candidly the major issues facing state regulation of public accountancy.
The site of NASBA’s 108th Annual Meeting, Dana Point, CA, has been the site of several outstanding NASBA meetings. In this inspiring setting, we will exchange new ideas and consider how to help the Boards protect the public by utilizing the best thinking of regulators, professionals, academics and other interested parties.
Throughout the year, NASBA committees and staff have been engaged in communication with the member Boards to keep information flowing. The Annual Meeting is the capstone of those efforts. Speakers from the Financial Accounting Foundation, American Accounting Association, American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business and others will join NASBA’s leaders in addressing the major regulatory issues involved in ensuring the Boards’ licensees meet the public’s expectations. Through plenary presentations, regional meetings and informal gatherings, participants will be encouraged to share their views with colleagues from other jurisdictions, and consider the ways in which Accountancy Boards can be responsive to the public’s needs.
The entrance to the Lower Level meeting room is via level one of the parking garage. The Lower Level meeting room lobby is where you will find a drinking fountain, restrooms and the full kitchen.
Independence Palace (Dinh Độc Lập), also known as Reunification Palace (Vietnamese: Dinh Thống Nhất), built on the site of the former Norodom Palace, is a landmark in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. It was designed by architect Ngô Viết Thụ and was the home and workplace of the President of South Vietnam during the Vietnam War. It was the site of the end of the Vietnam War during the Fall of Saigon on April 30, 1975, when a North Vietnamese Army tank crashed through its gates.
A "shoot this for our program brochure" assignment for work; I could *not* get the entire group to sit still and still look natural, so I wound up having to composite one of them in from another frame. Any guesses which one?
Recognizing the need for cooperation and communication among Boards of Accountancy, NASBA sponsors an Annual Meeting in the fall of each year that provides a unique opportunity for State Board members, executive directors and others interested in the profession to discuss freely and candidly the major issues facing state regulation of public accountancy.
The site of NASBA’s 108th Annual Meeting, Dana Point, CA, has been the site of several outstanding NASBA meetings. In this inspiring setting, we will exchange new ideas and consider how to help the Boards protect the public by utilizing the best thinking of regulators, professionals, academics and other interested parties.
Throughout the year, NASBA committees and staff have been engaged in communication with the member Boards to keep information flowing. The Annual Meeting is the capstone of those efforts. Speakers from the Financial Accounting Foundation, American Accounting Association, American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business and others will join NASBA’s leaders in addressing the major regulatory issues involved in ensuring the Boards’ licensees meet the public’s expectations. Through plenary presentations, regional meetings and informal gatherings, participants will be encouraged to share their views with colleagues from other jurisdictions, and consider the ways in which Accountancy Boards can be responsive to the public’s needs.
Grancreer Setagaya Nakamachi, Tokyo
Which One? Once Again (2017) oil on canvas, charcoal, pencil 450x450x45mm x2
グランクレール世田谷中町
せいくらべ を もういちど (2017) キャンバスに油彩、木炭、鉛筆 450x450x45mm x2
www.grancreer.com/blog/nakamachi/
(写真:WATERMARK arts & crafts 清水良匡)
協力:WATERMARK arts & crafts
Recognizing the need for cooperation and communication among Boards of Accountancy, NASBA sponsors an Annual Meeting in the fall of each year that provides a unique opportunity for State Board members, executive directors and others interested in the profession to discuss freely and candidly the major issues facing state regulation of public accountancy.
The site of NASBA’s 108th Annual Meeting, Dana Point, CA, has been the site of several outstanding NASBA meetings. In this inspiring setting, we will exchange new ideas and consider how to help the Boards protect the public by utilizing the best thinking of regulators, professionals, academics and other interested parties.
Throughout the year, NASBA committees and staff have been engaged in communication with the member Boards to keep information flowing. The Annual Meeting is the capstone of those efforts. Speakers from the Financial Accounting Foundation, American Accounting Association, American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business and others will join NASBA’s leaders in addressing the major regulatory issues involved in ensuring the Boards’ licensees meet the public’s expectations. Through plenary presentations, regional meetings and informal gatherings, participants will be encouraged to share their views with colleagues from other jurisdictions, and consider the ways in which Accountancy Boards can be responsive to the public’s needs.
Agnes Kalibata, Minister of Agriculture in Rwanda, speaking at the "High-level session: Developing the future of the landscapes approach, 2015 and beyond." at the Global Landscapes Forum, Warsaw, Poland.
Photo by Neil Palmer (IWMI)
More information on the Global Landscapes Forum, please visit landscapes.org
If you use one of our photos, please credit it accordingly and let us know. You can reach us through our Flickr account or at: cifor-mediainfo@cgiar.org and m.edliadi@cgiar.org
The hotel houses 74 rooms for smokers and non-smokers.
IN EACH ROOM YOU WILL FIND:
• Shower and WC;
• Color TV set with remote control;
• Telephone.
ADDITIONAL SERVICES AVAILABLE ON REQUEST:
• Extra bed;
• Baby cot;
• Extra toiletries;
• Hair dryer.
OTHER FACILITIES:
• Individual safe deposit boxes at the reception;
• Wake-up calls;
• Fax, copying services;
• Postal services;
• Free taxi call;
• Guests with laptops can use wireless internet for free.
Take a tour of the creatively (and sometimes strangely) named conference rooms in SoftLayer's Alpha headquarters.
While most people can control the equipment with the small touch panel in the meeting room, I will use the iPad running Crestron's app. For now, the only real difference is that the iPad has independent control of each microphone (the small touch panel has just one volume control that affects all mics, for simplicity), better button layout, and longer battery life. The small touch panel in the committee room will always remain simple in capability, the iPad app could be updated in the future to offer greater control of added equipment.