Archive for the 'College' Category

Till Gabriel Blows His Horn

The eyes of Texas are upon you

All the live long days

The eyes of Texas are upon you

And you cannot get away

Do not think you can escape them

From night till early in the morn

The eyes of Texas are upon you

Till Gabriel blows his horn

Those are the lyrics to the alma mater for The University of Texas at Austin. As you may have figured out by now, I received degrees from there many years ago. For many this is just a song set to the tune of I’ve Been Working on the Railroad, but for Texas Exes it serves as a reminder that what we do with our lives is seen and felt by many people – perhaps not the entire State of Texas or the world, but more people than one would imagine.

A friend and former business associate recently died as the result of a seemingly random traffic accident. He too was a proud graduate of The University of Teas at Austin. While we did not talk as often as we did when we worked at the same company, we exchanged texts throughout the year about the ups and downs of the various Longhorn athletic teams and how things were going in our professional careers.

When I attended his funeral in the small Texas town of Ballinger, it struck me just how many lives one person could touch in their lives. The church was overflowing with people wanting to take a part in honoring his life. As I listened to the eulogies, it also struck me that he was a person that truly lived his life knowing that the eyes of Texas were upon him. As the stories were told of his childhood and on through to his last day, it left no doubt that he had an eye for business from an early age, that community was important to him, and that love of family and God were at the center of every part of his life.

As many of us do, I find myself caught up all too often in the daily work grind. That grind seems to have the ability to consume all our energy, leaving very little for the other much more important things in our lives. The grind gets in the way our relationships with friends and family; it becomes the excuse to not be involved in activities to help those in our community; it even begins to interfere with our faith. In short we let work define our lives. We reach a point where we live to work. What we need to do is work to live.

My friend had it right; he strived for success in his career in order to be a better husband, father, and member of his community. He wanted to make a difference in people’s lives – and I think the evidence is there that he did. I can learn a lot from his short 35 years of life, and the last lesson is to remember what matters most, never lose sight of it and live every day like it is your last chance to impact a life.

Till Gabriel blows his horn…………

Happy 100th, UT Department of Accounting

Debits on the left,

Credits on the right,

Stand up, sit down,

Fight, fight, fight!

If you don’t know that one, then you are probably not an accountant.

This year marks the 100th anniversary of the creation of the University of Texas McCombs School of Business Department of Accounting.  I am proud to say that I was a part of that history for five of those one hundred years and that I received 2 of the  25,605 accounting degrees conferred since 1912.  In fact I even went down to the campus recently to take a picture of The Tower lit up in honor of the occasion.

While I left the accounting profession fairly early on in my career, I attribute much of my professional success to the educational foundation I received while attending the McCombs School of Business in pursuit of an accounting degree.  I call my accounting degrees from UT “my dirty little secrets” since technology professionals tend to have less than high regard for accountants.  But not very closely held secrets – since my diplomas are proudly displayed on the wall behind my desk.

Many people think that majoring in accounting means just learning the mechanics of debits and credits, memorizing all those mind numbing Generally Accepted Accounting Principles, and just adding and subtracting numbers.  At some schools that may be the case, but at UT the professors actually taught us about business –  not just how to keep score. They also brought in real world business leaders that brought the theoretical to life.

You may think that I am just a homer that thinks that his university has better academics than the rest of the schools in the country.  But in this case, I think it is more than just my opinion.  Just check out these facts and figures about the McCombs Accounting Department:

So Happy 100th to the best accounting program in the country, and thanks for shaping my business mind and the minds of so many others.  Hook’em!