explain pulp and paper industry in details with an example and diagram.(50marks)
Need own answer and no internet answers r else i il downvote nd report to chegg.Even a single is wrong i il downvote.its 50marks question so no short answer minimum 10page answer required and own answer r else i il downvote.
Note:Minimum 10page answer and no plagarism r else i il downvote and report to chegg.Minimum 10 to 15page answer required r else dnt attempt.strictly no internet answer n no plagarism.
its 50marks question so i il stricly review nd report
In: Computer Science
Sequoia Paper Products, Inc., manufactures boxed stationery for sale to specialty shops. Currently, the company is operating at 85 percent of capacity. A chain of drugstores has offered to buy 31,000 boxes of Sequoia’s blue-bordered thank-you notes as long as the box can be customized with the drugstore chain’s logo. While the normal selling price is $6.90 per box, the chain has offered just $2.90 per box. Sequoia can accommodate the special order without affecting current sales. Unit cost information for a box of thank-you notes follows:
| Direct materials | $1.90 |
| Direct labor | 0.37 |
| Variable overhead | 0.09 |
| Fixed overhead | 1.90 |
| Total cost per box | $4.26 |
Fixed overhead is $405,000 per year and will not be affected by the special order. Normally, there is a commission of 9 percent of price; this will not be paid on the special order since the drugstore chain is dealing directly with the company. The special order will require additional fixed costs of $15,700 for the design and setup of the machinery to stamp the drugstore chain’s logo on each box.
Required:
1. Which alternative is more cost effective and
by how much?
The operating income would increase by $fill in the blank 2.
2. What if Sequoia Paper Products was operating at capacity and accepting the special order would require rejecting an equivalent number of boxes sold to existing customers? Which alternative would be better?
In: Accounting
You’re flying your 10,000-kg Scooty Puff Pro spaceship at a constant speed of 20 km/s in the positive x-direction. All of the sudden it malfunctions and many of the thrusters are stuck on. The main thruster is stuck on producing a 800 kN force in the positive x-direction. Two of the small maneuvering thrusters are also stuck on, one producing a 100 kN force in a direction 30° from the positive y-direction towards the negative x-direction, and the other is producing a 150 kN force in a direction 10° from the negative y-direction towards the negative x-direction. After 2 minutes of this the two maneuvering thrusters shut off and the main thruster decreases in magnitude to 200 kN, while still applying the force in the positive x-direction. It takes an additional 6 minutes to fix the problem and turn all of them off. How far and in what direction would you have to travel to get to where you would have been if the malfunction had not occurred.
In: Physics
20. Eva is a beer truck driver for the a local brewery. Her beer run takes her from Philadelphia to Glassboro every day. The brewer has given Eva a very precise route. On a Friday morning, Eva’s boyfriend calls and asks her to take the beer truck and meet him in Atlantic City for a day of gambling. Eva says she can only spend six hours in Atlantic City. During that time, she will gamble, get a manicure and pedicure, and have a steak dinner. She plans to finish her deliveries afterwards. She drives the beer truck to Atlantic City, and while searching for a parking space in a casino parking lot, Eva accidentally rear ends a convertible driven by a Thai heiress, who has been travelled in the United States with her pet tiger. The heiress wants to sue Eva and the beer company for negligence. Will the heiress be successful in suing Eva and the beer company?
a. She will prevail against neither.
b. She will prevail against both.
c. She will prevail against Eva but not against the brewery.
d. She will prevail against the brewery, but she won’t prevail against the brewery.
21. The Thai heiress has a sign on her convertible warning people not to approach because of the dangerous tiger lurking unseen behind her tinted windows. Eva has a license to own the tiger. The tiger has graduated tiger obedience school and has all his shots and circus certifications. The tiger is muzzled and held in her car by steel chains. He is an extremely friendly tiger. When Eva approaches the heiress to apologize, the tiger, having been startled by the accident, breaks its muzzle and chain and bite’s Eva’s arm off. Eva wants to sue the heiress under tort law. Will Eva win?
a. Yes, the heiress was negligent.
b. No, the heiress met her duty of care and could not foresee that the tiger would break its muzzle and chain.
c. Yes, Eva will win under strict liability
d. Yes, the heiress committed an intentional tort of battery.
23. In November, a billionaire Norwegian prince proposes to Shelly and buys her a cottage in Oslo as well as a Ferrari and a stable of fine horses and cows. She contacts Barbara and tells her that she cannot perform the remainder of the contract, but offers to write five songs for Barbara if Barbara will agree to relieve Shelly of her obligations under the original contract. Barbara accepts. What is this subsequent agreement called? __________________________________
26. Which of the following are reasons why an employer would prefer to hire Maxie as an independent contractor rather than as an employee?
a. to save employer’s contribution to Maxie’s Social Security taxes
b. to prevent the employer from being held liable for Maxie’s negligence
c. to prevent paying for worker’s compensation insurance for Maxie
d. all of the above
In: Operations Management
Cherokee Inc. is a merchandiser that provided the following information:
| Amount | ||
| Number of units sold | 13,000 | |
| Selling price per unit | $ | 16 |
| Variable selling expense per unit | $ | 1 |
| Variable administrative expense per unit | $ | 1 |
| Total fixed selling expense | $ | 19,000 |
| Total fixed administrative expense | $ | 13,000 |
| Beginning merchandise inventory | $ | 12,000 |
| Ending merchandise inventory | $ | 25,000 |
| Merchandise purchases | $ | 89,000 |
Required:
1. Prepare a traditional income statement.
2. Prepare a contribution format income statement.
In: Accounting
Balanced scorecards are widely used by companies to “balance” their financial with nonfinancial objectives. Do a Google search using the phrase “Coca-Cola balanced scorecard” or “balanced score-card images” or “balanced scorecard examples” to see examples.
Prepare a new and improved balanced scorecard for Coca-Cola.
Explain why your recommended balanced scorecard is best for
Coca-Cola.
In: Operations Management
During Heaton Company’s first two years of operations, it reported absorption costing net operating income as follows:
| Year 1 | Year 2 | ||||
| Sales (@ $61 per unit) | $ | 1,037,000 | $ | 1,647,000 | |
| Cost of goods sold (@ $40 per unit) | 680,000 | 1,080,000 | |||
| Gross margin | 357,000 | 567,000 | |||
| Selling and administrative expenses* | 298,000 | 328,000 | |||
| Net operating income | $ | \59,000\ | $ | 239,000 | |
* $3 per unit variable; $247,000 fixed each year.
The company’s $40 unit product cost is computed as follows:
| Direct materials | $ | 10 |
| Direct labor | 11 | |
| Variable manufacturing overhead | 2 | |
| Fixed manufacturing overhead ($374,000 ÷ 22,000 units) | 17 | |
| Absorption costing unit product cost | $ | 40 |
Forty percent of fixed manufacturing overhead consists of wages and salaries; the remainder consists of depreciation charges on production equipment and buildings.
Production and cost data for the first two years of operatons are:
| Year 1 | Year 2 | |
| Units produced | 22,000 | 22,000 |
| Units sold | 17,000 | 27,000 |
Required:
1. Using variable costing, what is the unit product cost for both years?
2. What is the variable costing net operating income in Year 1 and in Year 2?
3. Reconcile the absorption costing and the variable costing net operating income figures for each year.
In: Accounting
In what ways does U.S. culture encourage the development of intimacy during young adulthood? Are there ways in which U.S. culture frustrates this developmental priority?
In: Psychology
Develop a list of your personal ethical towards genetic cloning and moral feelings toward the issue Research and list the professional ethics and morals of this issue Explain how your personal ethics and morals might affect the professional ethics in the medical profession Explain how you can respond to this dilemma in a professional manner Describe your plan to reconcile your personal ethical and moral feelings/attitudes with your obligation to act as a medical professional
In: Nursing
Highland Company produces a lightweight backpack that is popular with college students. Standard variable costs relating to a single backpack are given below:
| Standard
Quantity or Hours |
Standard Price or Rate |
Standard Cost |
|||||
| Direct materials | ? | $ | 3.00 | per yard | $ | ? | |
| Direct labor | ? | ? | ? | ||||
| Variable manufacturing overhead | ? | $ | 2 | per direct labor-hour | ? | ||
| Total standard cost per unit | $ | ? | |||||
Overhead is applied to production on the basis of direct labor-hours. During March, 570 backpacks were manufactured and sold. Selected information relating to the month’s production is given below:
| Materials Used |
Direct Labor | Variable Manufacturing Overhead |
|||||||
| Total standard cost allowed* | $ | 8,550 | $ | 6,384 | $ | 1,596 | |||
| Actual costs incurred | $ | 6,080 | ? | $ | 2,812 | ||||
| Materials price variance | ? | ||||||||
| Materials quantity variance | $ | 570 | U | ||||||
| Labor rate variance | ? | ||||||||
| Labor efficiency variance | ? | ||||||||
| Variable overhead rate variance | ? | ||||||||
| Variable overhead efficiency variance | ? | ||||||||
*For the month's production.
The following additional information is available for March’s production:
| Actual direct labor-hours | 855 | |||
| Difference between standard and actual cost per backpack produced during March | $ | 0.20 | F | |
Required:
Hint: It may be helpful to complete a general model diagram for direct materials, direct labor, and variable manufacturing overhead before attempting to answer any of the requirements.
5. What is the standard direct labor rate per hour?
6. What was the labor rate variance for March? The labor efficiency variance?
7. What was the variable overhead rate variance for March? The variable overhead efficiency variance?
8. Prepare a standard cost card for one backpack.
In: Accounting
Make a statement relating the Refraction of Light, the Index of Refraction, Rays of Light, the Velocity of Light in a Medium, and a Simple Lens. Please be somewhat detailed. Thank you.
In: Physics
For one binomial experiment,
n1 = 75
binomial trials produced
r1 = 30
successes. For a second independent binomial experiment,
n2 = 100
binomial trials produced
r2 = 50
successes. At the 5% level of significance, test the claim that
the probabilities of success for the two binomial experiments
differ. (a) Compute the pooled probability of success for the two
experiments. (Round your answer to three decimal places.)
(b) Check Requirements: What distribution does the sample test
statistic follow? Explain.
The Student's t. The number of trials is sufficiently large. The standard normal. We assume the population distributions are approximately normal. The Student's t. We assume the population distributions are approximately normal. The standard normal. The number of trials is sufficiently large.
(c) State the hypotheses.
H0: p1 = p2; H1: p1 < p2H0: p1 = p2; H1: p1 ≠ p2 H0: p1 < p2; H1: p1 = p2H0: p1 = p2; H1: p1 > p2
(d) Compute p̂1 -
p̂2.
p̂1 - p̂2 =
Compute the corresponding sample distribution value. (Test the
difference p1 − p2. Do not
use rounded values. Round your final answer to two decimal
places.)
(e) Find the P-value of the sample test statistic. (Round
your answer to four decimal places.)
(f) Conclude the test.
At the α = 0.05 level, we fail to reject the null hypothesis and conclude the data are statistically significant. At the α = 0.05 level, we fail to reject the null hypothesis and conclude the data are not statistically significant. At the α = 0.05 level, we reject the null hypothesis and conclude the data are not statistically significant. At the α = 0.05 level, we reject the null hypothesis and conclude the data are statistically significant.
(g) Interpret the results.
Reject the null hypothesis, there is sufficient evidence that the proportion of the probabilities of success for the two binomial experiments differ. Reject the null hypothesis, there is insufficient evidence that the proportion of the probabilities of success for the two binomial experiments differ. Fail to reject the null hypothesis, there is insufficient evidence that the probabilities of success for the two binomial experiments differ. Fail to reject the null hypothesis, there is sufficient evidence that the proportion of the probabilities of success for the two binomial experiments differ.
In: Math
Give a step by step process of veryfying that a
component under a set of loads will not fail.
Soild Mechanics course question
In: Mechanical Engineering
Explain the three branches of the Georgia State Government..
-Explain the qualifications of a Georgia State Senator.
-Explain the qualifications for members of the Georgia State General Assembly.
-Explain the qualifications for the Georgia Governor.
Explain the qualifications for the Georgia Lt. Governor.
Explain the Georgia State Judicial Branch.
-Outline the history of the Georgia State Flag.
In: Psychology
Why is diversity good for an international business what actions can a company take to foster greater diversity?
In: Operations Management