On November 1, 2017, the following were the account balances of Soho Equipment Repair. Debit Credit Cash $ 2,790 Accumulated Depreciation—Equipment $ 500 Accounts Receivable 2,910 Accounts Payable 2,300 Supplies 1,120 Unearned Service Revenue 400 Equipment 10,000 Salaries and Wages Payable 620 Common Stock 10,000 Retained Earnings 3,000 $16,820 $16,820
During November, the following summary transactions were completed.
Nov. 8 Paid $1,220 for salaries due employees, of which $600 is for November and $620 is for October salaries payable.
10 Received $1,800 cash from customers in payment of account.
12 Received $3,700 cash for services performed in November.
15 Purchased store equipment on account $3,600.
17 Purchased supplies on account $1,300. 20 Paid creditors $2,500 of accounts payable due.
22 Paid November rent $480.
25 Paid salaries $1,000.
27 Performed services on account worth $900 and billed customers.
29 Received $750 from customers for services to be performed in the future.
part 1
Enter the November 1 balances in the ledger accounts.
In: Accounting
Problem 3-5A On November 1, 2019, the account balances of Schilling Equipment Repair were as follows. No. Debits No. Credits 101 Cash $ 2,400 154 Accumulated Depreciation—Equipment $ 2,000 112 Accounts Receivable 4,250 201 Accounts Payable 2,600 126 Supplies 1,800 209 Unearned Service Revenue 1,200 153 Equipment 12,000 212 Salaries and Wages Payable 700 311 Common Stock 10,000 320 Retained Earnings 3,950 $20,450 $20,450 During November, the following summary transactions were completed. Nov. 8 Paid $1,700 for salaries due employees, of which $700 is for October salaries. 10 Received $3,420 cash from customers on account. 12 Received $3,100 cash for services performed in November. 15 Purchased equipment on account $2,000. 17 Purchased supplies on account $700. 20 Paid creditors on account $2,700. 22 Paid November rent $400. 25 Paid salaries $1,700. 27 Performed services on account and billed customers $1,900 for these services. 29 Received $600 from customers for future service.
In: Accounting
Problem 4-7A (Part Level Submission) On November 1, 2017, the following were the account balances of Soho Equipment Repair. Debit Credit Cash $ 3,120 Accumulated Depreciation—Equipment $ 500 Accounts Receivable 3,010 Accounts Payable 2,630 Supplies 1,450 Unearned Service Revenue 400 Equipment 10,330 Salaries and Wages Payable 720 Common Stock 10,330 Retained Earnings 3,330 $17,910 $17,910 During November, the following summary transactions were completed. Nov. 8 Paid $1,220 for salaries due employees, of which $500 is for November and $720 is for October salaries payable. 10 Received $1,860 cash from customers in payment of account. 12 Received $3,750 cash for services performed in November. 15 Purchased store equipment on account $3,660. 17 Purchased supplies on account $1,410. 20 Paid creditors $2,510 of accounts payable due. 22 Paid November rent $500. 25 Paid salaries $1,010. 27 Performed services on account worth $950 and billed customers. 29 Received $800 from customers for services to be performed in the future. (d) Prepare a trial balance at November 30.
In: Accounting
Many investors and financial analysts believe the Dow Jones
Industrial Average (DJIA) gives a good barometer of the overall
stock market. On January 31, 2006, 9 of the 30 stocks making up the
DJIA increased in price (The Wall Street Journal, February 1,
2006). On the basis of this fact, a financial analyst claims we can
assume that 30% of the stocks traded on the New York Stock Exchange
(NYSE) went up the same day.
A sample of 62 stocks traded on the NYSE that day showed that 27
went up.
You are conducting a study to see if the proportion of stocks that
went up is is significantly more than 0.3. You use a significance
level of α=0.10α=0.10.
What is the test statistic for this sample? (Report answer accurate
to three decimal places.)
test statistic =
What is the p-value for this sample? (Report answer accurate to
four decimal places.)
p-value =
The p-value is...
This test statistic leads to a decision to...
As such, the final conclusion is that...
In: Math
Question 4 [20 marks] Analyze if the statements that are presented below are True or False. You MUST justify your answer to get credit. Answers without justification (even if they are correct) will be given zero marks.
(a) In any Pareto-optimal allocation of a two-good economy, each consumer has to consume a positive amount of both goods.
(b) A monopolist never produces on the elastic segment of its average revenue curve.
(c) If a firm’s production exhibits increasing returns to scale, then the firm’s marginal costs are decreasing and below its average costs.
(d) Maroon Theater practices third-degree price discrimination and sells tickets to three groups of customers: students, regular customers and senior citizens. The inverse demand of the three groups is linear. Furthermore, the students’ and senior citizens’ elasticities of demand for tickets are −4 and −3, respectively. Because the price charged to regular customers is greater than the price charged to senior citizens, we know with certainty that the ticket price for students will be lower than the ticket price for regular customers.
In: Economics
Discuss and identify instances of the three levels of service and how they contribute to a “positive ripple effect of collaborative school consultation.”
In: Psychology
Data show that men between the ages of 20 and 29 in a general population have a mean height of 69.3 inches, with a standard deviation of 2.9 inches. A baseball analyst wonders whether the standard deviation of heights of major-league baseball players is less than 2.9 inches. The heights (in inches) of 20 randomly selected players are shown in the table.
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In: Statistics and Probability
I really would appreciate it if someone could provide me with the Excel formulas to calculate the last five (5) columns of the spreadsheet listed below.
| # of Trading Days Before/After Event Date | DATE |
Closing Prices Procter&Gamble |
MKT-Rf | Rf | Returns Honeywell | Expected Returns Procter&Gamble (ER) | Abnormal Returns Procter&Gamble (AR) | AR t-test | AR Significant (Y/N) ? | Cumulative Abnormal Returns Procter&Gamble (CAR) |
| -270 | 1/2/2004 | 49.4950 | -0.17 | 0.003 | ||||||
| -269 | 1/5/2004 | 49.7400 | 1.2 | 0.003 | 0.4950056 | |||||
| -268 | 1/6/2004 | 49.4900 | 0.2 | 0.003 | -0.5026136 | |||||
| -267 | 1/7/2004 | 49.0500 | 0.34 | 0.003 | -0.8890745 | |||||
| -266 | 1/8/2004 | 49.5650 | 0.45 | 0.003 | 1.0499491 | |||||
| -265 | 1/9/2004 | 49.8200 | -0.72 | 0.003 | 0.514478 | |||||
| -264 | 1/12/2004 | 50.1250 | 0.57 | 0.003 | 0.6122039 | |||||
| -263 | 1/13/2004 | 49.8500 | -0.51 | 0.003 | -0.5486324 | |||||
| -262 | 1/14/2004 | 50.0150 | 0.8 | 0.003 | 0.330995 | |||||
| -261 | 1/15/2004 | 49.7550 | 0.15 | 0.003 | -0.5198401 |
In: Finance
In: Nursing
Develop a C++ program that looks for a given value in a text file full of integer values
Prompt the user for a value to search for in the file
Open the accompanying text file named numbers.txt
Search the contents of the text file
Maintain how many many times the value is found in the file
Close the text file when processing is complete
Display the number of times the value is found in the file
Number.txt
61 62 71 40 32 6 27 8 74 3 95 10 74 69 66 37 94 10 17 55 38 5 43 69 19 89 65 74 71 33 85 74 26 5 6 40 36 100 4 57 56 73 78 24 36 48 84 3 89 80 93 49 46 8 39 89 50 44 47 78 37 12 41 4 40 57 21 13 43 73 64 4 67 8 37 10 9 51 38 67 68 30 66 1 42 43 53 7 93 32 33 94 22 74 84 77 48 27 37 51 28 100 86 91 8 30 13 1 23 17 81 39 86 70 6 74 4 70 58 31 7 45 26 69 73 38 40 82 82 99 49 23 31 47 43 82 55 55 52 18 5 71 16 15 25 75 66 6 20 34 95 14 62 89 49 99 38 91 20 9 40 24 10 23 18 42 12 61 50 19 86 44 8 83 15 42 37 30 1 42 61 5 52 29 22 18 60 13 24 54 82 2 43 66 82 91 23 67 48 71 80 95 47 55 94 59 82 67 1 40 25 17 71 27 8 30 66 97 43 100 30 78 26 18 5 34 90 63 44 85 47 55 97 55 56 42 100 38 56 99 17 70 98 86 90 41 24 61 20 67 56 51 93 10 15 74 42 58 59 38 38 27 71 95 82 42 93 53 18 23 98 92 80 42 31 94 67 99 70 89 40 20 91 35 48 17 22 30 35 27 23 3 92 45 14 24 20 72 95 18 60 54 30 54 3 37 55 50 95 67 13 70 63 75 66 91 47 45 66 74 81 5 14 63 33 99 74 90 37 39 65 70 79 60 98 57 41 59 64 70 21 39 3 84 50 84 100 20 88 84 65 45 24 56 35 45 92 41 44 47 62 24 17 24 21 16 2 87 56 25 95 51 50 31 94 92 86 97 91 74 47 35 44 93 73 73 84 23 74 1 94 81 21 67 29 52 65 85 31 97 61 77 53 55 84 48 8 1 99 50 40 36 42 66 84 27 43 100 28 58 62 14 42 25 51 3 71 97 68 57 7 92 12 47 72 18 91 58 33 14 90 51 42 14 97 77 86 87 74 12 25 75 18 29 12 18 17 36 42 85 24 1 18 82 64 33 95 94 70 16 44 72 18 64 66 53 59 70 18 40 35 83 8 88 85 32 6 20 56 37 41 19 4 85 77 45 93 1 5 63 7 37 4 37 67 38 62 56 39 26 77 11 33 75 81 75 23 77 43 78 36 56 16 66 81 98 37 38 1 19 59 82 20 8 90 64 49 55 16 16 93 64 54 24 10 90 14 68 67 59 99 25 69 41 90 40 30 7 41 95 46 44 46 90 40 13 47 69 28 21 37 73 35 85 48 25 100 45 56 93 81 53 86 10 23 52 67 83 63 4 74 73 34 56 34 50 8 72 69 77 80 41 6 49 100 77 17 47 18 62 14 88 30 88 94 93 58 54 49 95 76 9 66 89 36 72 16 13 20 33 54 5 57 20 57 72 27 2 46 66 13 3 4 44 41 36 85 13 26 97 63 50 8 49 87 19 23 47 60 68 52 17 13 42 57 67 13 43 70 31 60 83 17 6 58 60 97 6 65 75 58 98 59 36 69 15 79 62 99 31 14 11 95 67 58 65 96 19 43 73 76 15 72 54 94 73 43 84 72 70 52 28 10 32 35 50 91 77 24 40 38 38 31 91 100 55 34 71 32 90 20 29 46 29 45 20 30 61 1 5 19 48 70 97 41 33 5 21 39 19 94 49 43 83 1 60 38 76 40 49 14 96 34 18 43 90 85 42 48 52 45 79 7 94 18 24 23 68 90 58 64 81 1 74 32 100 27 81 94 83 42 55 28 13 66 43 15 84 95 1 74 53 33 86 41 38 17 6 18 76 2 45 75 15 38 97 67 95 72 69 85 49 2 22 10 65 10 98 53 60 27 77 2 48 30 52 85 27 65 29 44 2 43 64 5 55 31 89 35 29 96 42 73 91 55 12 59 96 44 9 51 92 11 87 93 29 12 33 67 11 65 2 5 90 66 16 94 5 52 56 57 29 56 65 97 19 57 57 75 40 69 11 90 78 32 52 83 14 22 94 87 28 43 99 20 66 63 30 34 47 95 43 35 8 79 30 33 43 61 23 77 23 27 30 88 30 67 1 13 57 57 21 24 37 64 83 1 96 63 16 38 7 80 28 59 20 87 72 8 77 88 84 70 41 95 20 66 31 24 37 67 70 91 6 8 92 58 68 69 99 19 93 44 84 83 34 64 2 94 50 96 58 55 66 69 83 9 72 45 88 100 24 11 53 75 8 18 21 25 55
In: Computer Science