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  1. Part of the USC Marshall School, the USC Leventhal School of Accounting offers three 1-year graduate programs and one part-time program for working professionals that will take their skills to the next level. Choose accounting, business taxation, or accounting with an emphasis in data analytics.

  2. USC Marshall School of Business is one of the world’s leading global undergraduate business programs. Our courses of study in Business Administration or Accounting allow students to combine in-depth knowledge of the theory and practice of business with a solid foundation in the liberal arts.

  3. The VanEck Digital Assets Initiative at USC’s Marshall School of Business is a hub for education, research, industry partnerships, academia-meets-industry events, and promoting the ecosystem of digital assets, blockchain, cryptocurrencies, non-fungible tokens, and the metaverse.

  4. Website. www .marshall .usc .edu. The USC Marshall School of Business is the business school of the University of Southern California. It is accredited by the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business. [5] In 1997 the school was renamed following a $35 million donation from alumnus Gordon S. Marshall.

  5. The Office of Executive Education is located at the USC Center in Downtown Los Angeles. Phone (213) 740-8990. Fax (213) 740-6406. Email execed@marshall.usc.edu. Click here to visit our Website. Arvind Bhambri, PhD, Academic Director, Executive Education. Tim Blakesly, BS, Assistant Dean and Director, Executive Education.

  6. 23 hours ago · USC Marshall School of Business. Jill and Frank Fertitta Hall is a 104,000-square-foot, state-of-the-art facility dedicated to USC Marshall’s undergraduate students and programs, as well as the new home of the Lloyd Greif Center for Entrepreneurial Studies. Marshall’s newest—and largest—building, it opened in a grand ceremony in the ...

  7. 2 days ago · USC Marshall School of Business. Bridge Hall was built in 1928 from a bequest of Dr. Norman and Mrs. Mae Manford Bridge. It was designed by notable Los Angeles architects John and Donald Parkinson, and was the first campus facility of the business school - then known as the College of Commerce and Business Administration. Photo by William Vasta.

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