Questions
Cereal Name Mfr Cal Prot Fat Sod Fiber Carb Sugar Pot Vit Shelf Rating 100% Bran...

Cereal Name Mfr Cal Prot Fat Sod Fiber Carb Sugar Pot Vit Shelf Rating
100% Bran N 70 4 1 130 10 5 6 280 25 3 68.4
100% Natural Bran Q 120 3 5 15 2 8 8 135 0 3 33.98
All-Bran K 70 4 1 260 9 7 5 320 25 3 59.43
All-Bran with Extra Fiber K 50 4 0 140 14 8 0 330 25 3 93.7
Almond Delight R 110 2 2 200 1 14 8 * 25 3 34.38
Apple Cinnamon Cheerios G 110 2 2 180 1.5 10.5 10 70 25 1 29.51
Apple Jacks K 110 2 0 125 1 11 14 30 25 2 33.17
Basic 4 G 130 3 2 210 2 18 8 100 25 3 37.04
Bran Chex R 90 2 1 200 4 15 6 125 25 1 49.12
Bran Flakes P 90 3 0 210 5 13 5 190 25 3 53.31
Cap'n'Crunch Q 120 1 2 220 0 12 12 35 25 2 18.04
Cheerios G 110 6 2 290 2 17 1 105 25 1 50.77
Cinnamon Toast Crunch G 120 1 3 210 0 13 9 45 25 2 19.82
Clusters G 110 3 2 140 2 13 7 105 25 3 40.4
Cocoa Puffs G 110 1 1 180 0 12 13 55 25 2 22.74
Corn Chex R 110 2 0 280 0 22 3 25 25 1 41.45
Corn Flakes K 100 2 0 290 1 21 2 35 25 1 45.86
Corn Pops K 110 1 0 90 1 13 12 20 25 2 35.78
Count Chocula G 110 1 1 180 0 12 13 65 25 2 22.4
Cracklin' Oat Bran K 110 3 3 140 4 10 7 160 25 3 40.45
Cream of Wheat (Quick) N 100 3 0 80 1 21 0 * 0 2 64.53
Crispix K 110 2 0 220 1 21 3 30 25 3 46.9
Crispy Wheat & Raisins G 100 2 1 140 2 11 10 120 25 3 36.18
Double Chex R 100 2 0 190 1 18 5 80 25 3 44.33
Froot Loops K 110 2 1 125 1 11 13 30 25 2 32.21
Frosted Flakes K 110 1 0 200 1 14 11 25 25 1 31.44
Frosted Mini-Wheats K 100 3 0 0 3 14 7 100 25 2 58.35
Fruit & Fibre Dates, Walnuts, and Oats P 120 3 2 160 5 12 10 200 25 3 40.92
Fruitful Bran K 120 3 0 240 5 14 12 190 25 3 41.02
Fruity Pebbles P 110 1 1 135 0 13 12 25 25 2 28.03
Golden Crisp P 100 2 0 45 0 11 15 40 25 1 35.25
Golden Grahams G 110 1 1 280 0 15 9 45 25 2 23.8
Grape Nuts Flakes P 100 3 1 140 3 15 5 85 25 3 52.08
Grape-Nuts P 110 3 0 170 3 17 3 90 25 3 53.37
Great Grains Pecan P 120 3 3 75 3 13 4 100 25 3 45.81
Honey Graham Ohs Q 120 1 2 220 1 12 11 45 25 2 21.87
Honey Nut Cheerios G 110 3 1 250 1.5 11.5 10 90 25 1 31.07
Honey-comb P 110 1 0 180 0 14 11 35 25 1 28.74
Just Right Crunchy Nuggets K 110 2 1 170 1 17 6 60 100 3 36.52
Just Right Fruit & Nut K 140 3 1 170 2 20 9 95 100 3 36.47
Kix G 110 2 1 260 0 21 3 40 25 2 39.2411
Life Q 100 4 2 150 2 12 6 95 25 2 45.3281
Lucky Charms G 110 2 1 180 0 12 12 55 25 2 26.7345
Maypo A 100 4 1 0 0 16 3 95 25 2 54.8509
Muesli Raisins, Dates, & Almonds R 150 4 3 95 3 16 11 170 25 3 37.1369
Muesli Raisins, Peaches, & Pecans R 150 4 3 150 3 16 11 170 25 3 34.1398
Mueslix Crispy Blend K 160 3 2 150 3 17 13 160 25 3 30.3134
Multi-Grain Cheerios G 100 2 1 220 2 15 6 90 25 1 40.106
Nut&Honey Crunch K 120 2 1 190 0 15 9 40 25 2 29.9243
Nutri-Grain Almond-Raisin K 140 3 2 220 3 21 7 130 25 3 40.6923
Nutri-grain Wheat K 90 3 0 170 3 18 2 90 25 3 59.6428
Oatmeal Raisin Crisp G 130 3 2 170 1.5 13.5 10 120 25 3 30.4508
Post Nat. Raisin Bran P 120 3 1 200 6 11 14 260 25 3 37.8406
Product 19 K 100 3 0 320 1 20 3 45 100 3 41.5035
Puffed Rice Q 50 1 0 0 0 13 0 15 0 3 60.7561
Puffed Wheat Q 50 2 0 0 1 10 0 50 0 3 63.0056
Quaker Oat Squares Q 100 4 1 135 2 14 6 110 25 3 49.5119
Quaker Oatmeal Q 100 5 2 0 2.7 * * 110 0 1 50.8284
Raisin Bran K 120 3 1 210 5 14 12 240 25 2 39.2592
Raisin Nut Bran G 100 3 2 140 2.5 10.5 8 140 25 3 39.7034
Raisin Squares K 90 2 0 0 2 15 6 110 25 3 55.3331
Rice Chex R 110 1 0 240 0 23 2 30 25 1 41.9989
Rice Krispies K 110 2 0 290 0 22 3 35 25 1 40.5602
Shredded Wheat N 80 2 0 0 3 16 0 95 0 1 68.2359
Shredded Wheat 'n'Bran N 90 3 0 0 4 19 0 140 0 1 74.4729
Shredded Wheat spoon size N 90 3 0 0 3 20 0 120 0 1 72.8018
Smacks K 110 2 1 70 1 9 15 40 25 2 31.2301
Special K K 110 6 0 230 1 16 3 55 25 1 53.1313
Strawberry Fruit Wheats N 90 2 0 15 3 15 5 90 25 2 59.364
Total Corn Flakes G 110 2 1 200 0 21 3 35 100 3 38.8397
Total Raisin Bran G 140 3 1 190 4 15 14 230 100 3 28.5928
Total Whole Grain G 100 3 1 200 3 16 3 110 100 3 46.6588
Triples G 110 2 1 250 0 21 3 60 25 3 39.1062
Trix G 110 1 1 140 0 13 12 25 25 2 27.7533
Wheat Chex R 100 3 1 230 3 17 3 115 25 1 49.7874
Wheaties G 100 3 1 200 3 17 3 110 25 1 51.5922
Wheaties Honey Gold G 110 2 1 200 1 16 8 60 25 1 36.1876

SELECT a simple random sample size 37 from the cereal data. Outline in detail the process you used and identify the fist 4 members of your example.

- Use the variable Mfr for this sample of 37 to answer each of the following.

(a). identify the variable of interest along with the level of measure.

(b) CONSTRUCT a frequency table for the data.

(c) Display the data in a graph. Be sure to include all the proper labels in the graph.

(d) describe the shape of the data if it is appropiate to do so. If it is not appropiate to describe the shape then explain why.

In: Math

1. ( (6 pts) What are the null and alternative hypotheses? (There will be three of...

1. (

  1. (6 pts) What are the null and alternative hypotheses? (There will be three of each.)
  2. (8 pts) Copy out the entire ANOVA table from JASP, SPSS, or the online calculator. Say what the results mean in terms of rejecting or retaining each null hypothesis (alpha = .05). For each F test, report Fcrit as well.
  3. (6 pts) Graph the results. Include one point on the graph for each cell mean (4 data points total). Also report each cell mean numerically in a Table. Follow the book’s graphing conventions (see Question 3, above).
  4. (4 pts) Explain in a few sentences and annotation of the graph how the numerical analysis and graph each show evidence for any main effects of the two independent variables and/or for an interaction between the two independent variables (whichever are reliable in this analysis). In other words, for which group or groups does the drug appear to be effective?
    time prevuse concentration
    51 1 1
    48 1 1
    62 1 1
    71 1 1
    53 1 1
    61 1 1
    55 1 1
    64 1 1
    27 1 2
    30 1 2
    37 1 2
    47 1 2
    40 1 2
    29 1 2
    31 1 2
    35 1 2
    48 2 1
    55 2 1
    55 2 1
    61 2 1
    69 2 1
    64 2 1
    59 2 1
    59 2 1
    52 2 2
    60 2 2
    58 2 2
    64 2 2
    49 2 2
    60 2 2
    53 2 2
    55 2 2

In: Statistics and Probability

1. PRICE SHARES Company A B C A B C Day 1 $14 $21 $55 500...

1.

PRICE SHARES
Company A B C A B C
Day 1 $14 $21 $55 500 390 270
Day 2   11   22   60 500 390 270
Day 3   15   42   58 500 195a 270
Day 4   10   44   27 500 195 540b
Day 5   12   43   29 500 195 540
aSplit at close of day 2.
bSplit at close of day 3.

Calculate a Standard& Poor's Index for days 1 through 5 using a beginning index value of 10. Do not round intermediate calculations. Round your answers to three decimal places.

Day 1:

Day 2:

Day 3:

Day 4:

Day 5:

2.

PRICE SHARES
Company A B C A B C
Day 1 $13 $25 $53 450 400 210
Day 2   11   20   58 450 400 210
Day 3   14   50   60 450 200a 210
Day 4   15   52   28 450 200 420b
Day 5   11   50   30 450 200 420
aSplit at close of day 2.
bSplit at close of day 3.

Calculate a Dow Jones Industrial Average for days 1 through 5. Do not round intermediate calculations. Round your answers to three decimal places.

Day 1:  

Day 2:  

Day 3:  

Day 4:  

Day 5:  

In: Finance

Suppose Stocks A, B and C are the only three component stocks in a benchmark index....

Suppose Stocks A, B and C are the only three component stocks in a benchmark index. The number of shares outstanding of Stocks A, B and C are 371,000 shares, 312,000 shares, and 234,000 shares, respectively. The prices of Stocks A, B and C for Days 1, 2, 3 and 4 are given in the table below:

Stock A

Stock B

Stock C

Day 1

30.37

41.70

81.85

Day 2

31.03

40.61

78.65

Day 3

32.05

42.03

79.28

Day 4

33.49

44.65

79.92

If the benchmark value-weighted index was 1508.13 on Day 1, the benchmark value-weighted index on Day 4 was ( )? (Note: Answer must be correct to 2 decimal places, but you may leave your answer with more than 2 decimal places.)

In: Finance

Given two arrays: A[0..m-1] and B[0..n-1]. Find whether B[] is a subset of A[] or not....

Given two arrays: A[0..m-1] and B[0..n-1]. Find whether B[] is a subset of A[] or not. Both the arrays are not in sorted order. It may be assumed that elements in both array are distinct. Design an O(n) time algorithm that solves this problem. Provide pseudocode

Ex:
Input: A[] = {11, 1, 13, 21, 3, 7}, B[] = {11, 3, 7, 1}
Output: B[] is a subset of A[]

Input: A[] = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6}, B[] = {1, 2, 4}
Output: B[] is a subset of A[]

Input: A[] = {10, 5, 2, 23, 19}, B[] = {19, 5, 3}
Output: B[] is not a subset of A[]

In: Computer Science

def read_list(): """ This function should ask the user for a series of integer values (until...

def read_list():

"""

This function should ask the user for a series of integer values (until the user enters 0 to stop) and store all those values in a list. That list should then be returned by this function.

"""

def remove_duplicates(num_list):

"""

This function is passed a list of integers and returns a new list with all duplicate values from the original list remove.

>>> remove_duplicates([1, 2, 3, 2, 3, 4])

[1, 2, 3, 4]

>>> remove_duplicates([1, 1, 1])

[1]

>>> remove_duplicates([])

[]

"""

def main():

num_list = read_list()

print("Original list entered by user: ")

print(num_list)

no_duplicates = remove_duplicates(num_list)

print("List with duplicates removed: ")

print(no_duplicates)

In: Computer Science

As a long-term investment, Painters' Equipment Company purchased20% of AMC Supplies Inc.'s 470,000 shares for...

As a long-term investment, Painters' Equipment Company purchased 20% of AMC Supplies Inc.'s 470,000 shares for $550,000 at the beginning of the fiscal year of both companies. On the purchase date, the fair value and book value of AMC’s net assets were equal. During the year, AMC earned net income of $320,000 and distributed cash dividends of 20 cents per share. At year-end, the fair value of the shares is $582,000.

Required:
1. Assume no significant influence was acquired. Prepare the appropriate journal entries from the purchase through the end of the year.
2. Assume significant influence was acquired. Prepare the appropriate journal entries from the purchase through the end of the year.


For Requirement 1:

NoEventGeneral JournalDebitCredit

1Investment in AMC shares$550,000


Cash
$550,000





22No journal entry required






33Cash?


?
?





44Fair value adjustment$32,000


Unrealized holding gain - NI
$32,000

For Requirement 2:

NoEventGeneral JournalDebitCredit
11Investment in AMC shares$550,000


Cash
$550,000





22Investment in AMC shares$64,000


Investment revenue
$64,000





33Cash?


?
?





44No journal entry required


In: Accounting

Garcia has the following desires for music downloads: 0 if the price is higher than $2;...

Garcia has the following desires for music downloads: 0 if the price is higher than $2; 1, if the price is $2; 2, if the price is $1.50; 3, if the price is $1; 4, if the price is $0.50.

            Maria has a download desire of 0 if the price is higher than $2.50; 1, if the price is $2.50; 2, if the price is $2.00; 3, if the price is $1.50; 4, if the price is $1.00; 5, if the price is $0.50.

            Spotiplay has a desire to supply 7 if the price is higher than $2.50; 5, if the price is $2.50; 4, if the price is $2.00; 3, if the price is $1.50; 2, if the price is $1.00; 1, if the price is $0.50.

            NewPlay has a desire to supply 6 if the price is higher than $2.50; 5, if the price is $2.50; 4, if the price is $2.00; 2, if the price is $1.50; 1, if the price is $1.00; 0, if the price is $0.50.

a) Plot the supply and demand interaction. What is the equilibrium price and quantity?

b) If downloads are a normal good, what is the general amount of Garcia’s downloads; more or less at each given price?

c) If the access cost of internet bandwidth decreases, what is the general amount of downloads NewPlay will make available; more or less at each given price?

d) If the government comes in and mandates a maximum price of $1.00 per download, will there be a shortage or a surplus?

In: Economics

C4-2 From Recording Transactions (Including Adjusting Journal Entries) to Preparing Financial Statements and Closing Journal Entries...

C4-2 From Recording Transactions (Including Adjusting Journal Entries) to Preparing Financial Statements and Closing Journal Entries (Chapters 2, 3, and 4) [LO 2-3, LO 3-3, LO 4-1, LO 4-2, LO 4-3, LO 4-4, LO 4-5, LO 4-6]

[The following information applies to the questions displayed below.]

Brothers Harry and Herman Hausyerday began operations of their machine shop (H & H Tool, Inc.) on January 1, 2013. The annual reporting period ends December 31. The trial balance on January 1, 2015, follows (the amounts are rounded to thousands of dollars to simplify):
  Account Titles Debit Credit
  Cash $ 2
  Accounts Receivable 6
  Supplies 13
  Land 0
  Equipment 51
  Accumulated Depreciation $ 5
  Software 24
  Accumulated Amortization 4
  Accounts Payable 4
  Notes Payable (short-term) 0
  Salaries and Wages Payable 0
  Interest Payable 0
  Income Tax Payable 0
  Common Stock 74
  Retained Earnings 9
  Service Revenue 0
  Salaries and Wages Expense 0
  Depreciation Expense 0
  Amortization Expense 0
  Income Tax Expense 0
  Interest Expense 0
  Supplies Expense 0
     Totals $ 96 $ 96
Transactions during 2015 (summarized in thousands of dollars) follow:
1. Borrowed $11 cash on a six-month note payable dated March 1, 2015.
2. Purchased land for future building site; paid cash, $8.
3. Earned revenues for 2015, $142, including $31 on credit and $111 collected in cash.
4. Issued additional shares of stock for $4.
5. Recognized salaries and wages expense for 2015, $76 paid in cash.
6. Collected accounts receivable, $15.
7. Purchased software, $11 cash.
8. Paid accounts payable, $12.
9. Purchased supplies on account for future use, $19.
10. Signed a $20 service contract to start February 1, 2016.
Data for adjusting journal entries:
11. Unrecorded amortization for the year on software, $4.
12. Supplies counted on December 31, 2015, $12.
13. Depreciation for the year on the equipment, $5.
14. Accrued interest of $1 on notes payable.
15. Salaries and wages earned but not yet paid or recorded, $11.

16.

Income tax for the year was $7. It will be paid in 2016.
INCLUDE journal entires, adjusting journal entires, T-accounts,unadjusted trial balance, adjusted trial balance,income statement, statement of retained earnings, closing journal entry, post-closing trial balance

In: Accounting

Consider the following time series data. Quarter Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 1 5 8...

Consider the following time series data.

Quarter Year 1 Year 2 Year 3
1 5 8 10
2 2 4 8
3 1 4 6
4 3 6 8
A.) Use a multiple regression model with dummy variables as follows to develop an equation to account for seasonal effects in the data. Qtr1 = 1 if Quarter 1, 0 otherwise; Qtr2 = 1 if Quarter 2, 0 otherwise; Qtr3 = 1 if Quarter 3, 0 otherwise. If required, round your answers to three decimal places. For subtractive or negative numbers use a minus sign even if there is a + sign before the blank. (Example: -300) If the constant is "1" it must be entered in the box. Do not round intermediate calculation.
ŷ =   +   Qtr1 +   Qtr2 +   Qtr3
B.)Use a multiple regression model to develop an equation to account for trend and seasonal effects in the data. Use the dummy variables you developed in part (a) to capture seasonal effects and create a variable t such that t = 1 for Quarter 1 in Year 1, t = 2 for Quarter 2 in Year 1,… t = 12 for Quarter 4 in Year 3.
If required, round your answers to three decimal places. For subtractive or negative numbers use a minus sign even if there is a + sign before the blank. (Example: -300)
ŷ =   +  Qtr1 +  Qtr2 +  Qtr3 +   t
C.) Is the model you developed in part (a) or the model you developed in part (b) more effective? If required, round your intermediate calculations and final answer to three decimal places.
Model developed in part (a) Model developed in part (b)
MSE

D.) Justify your answer

In: Statistics and Probability