Honors Project Seminar

This seminar is a Culminating Experience course and offers an opportunity for students to apply what they have learned throughout the accounting curriculum and express an authoritative, well-researched position on an accounting issue currently in front of the FASB, EITF or SEC. The student will develop an appreciation for the legislative and administrative rule-making processes and actively participate in that process by producing a comment letter suitable for publication as part of the public record of discussion surrounding the proposed rule change.

Programming w/Data Structures

Advanced programming techniques in the Java language. Elementary techniques of software engineering: documentation, coding style, basic testing principles, and informal reasoning about correctness. The notion of an abstract data structure and various important data structures: stacks, queues, linked lists, tree-based structures, and hash tables. Use of object-oriented language constructs for encapsulation of data objects. Lecture, programming projects.

Neoliberal Legal Theory

(Research Seminar) The theory of governance known today as "neoliberalism" is most often understood as a mainly economic policy.  Both its opponents and its proponents seem to agree that neoliberalism is best debated as an ensemble of practices (such as free trade, privatization, deregulation, competitiveness, social-spending cutbacks and deficit reduction) that emphasize the primacy of the free market in and for the arrangement of social and political orders.  But, particularly in its initial theorizations, neoliberalism was also, perhaps even primarily, a philosophic d

S-Orchestra

This ensemble provides all University members an opportunity to perform in a non-competitive atmosphere and achieve success according to one's individual goals. Students will be required to practice before each rehearsal. One performance will be given each semester. Attendance is mandatory. An audition is required.
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