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University of North Carolina, Wilmington - ACG - 301
CHAPTER 9Inventories: Additional Valuation IssuesCHAPTER REVIEW*Note: All asterisked (*) items relate to material contained in the Appendix to the chapter. 1. Chapter 9 concludes the discussion of inventories by addressing certain unique valuation prob
University of North Carolina, Wilmington - ACG - 301
CHAPTER 12Intangible AssetsCHAPTER REVIEW*Note: All asterisked (*) items relate to material contained in the Appendix to the chapter. 1. Chapter 12 discusses the basic conceptual and reporting issues related to intangible assets. Valuing and Amortizing
University of North Carolina, Wilmington - ACG - 302
Accounting 302-001, Cameron Hall 101 . 2:00 3:15 Accounting 302-002, Cameron Hall 101 . 3:30 4:45External Financial Reporting II Spring 2012Instructor: Office: Office Phone: Home Phone: Fax: E-mail address: Class Schedule: May 8) Daniel Ivancevich 230-B
University of North Carolina, Wilmington - ACG - 302
Name _ ACG 302 Quiz Chapter 16 Spring 2012 A) B) C) D) 1. The conversion of bonds is most commonly recorded by the incremental method. proportional method. market value method. book value method. 2. On July 1, 2012, an interest payment date, $80,000 of Pa
University of North Carolina, Wilmington - ACG - 302
Name _ ACG 302 Quiz Chapter 13 Spring 2012A) B) C) D) A) B) C) D) A) B) C) D) 1. Of the following items, the only one which should not be classified as a current liability is current maturities of long-term debt. sales taxes payable. short-term obligatio
University of North Carolina, Wilmington - ACG - 302
Name: _ ACG 302 Quiz Chapter 14 Spring 2012 1. If bonds are issued initially at a premium and the effective-interest method of amortization is used, interest expense in the earlier years will be greater than if the straight-line method were used. greater
University of North Carolina, Wilmington - ACG - 302
Name _ ACG 302 Chapter 15 Quiz Spring 2012 A) B) C) D) 1. A primary source of stockholders' equity is income retained by the corporation. appropriated retained earnings. contributions by stockholders. both income retained by the corporation and contributi
University of North Carolina, Wilmington - ACG - 302
Intermediate Accounting13-1Prepared by Coby Harmon University of California, Santa Barbara13Current Liabilities and ContingenciesIntermediate Accounting 14th Edition13-2Kieso, Weygandt, and WarfieldLearning Objectives Learning Objectives1. 2. Des
University of North Carolina, Wilmington - ACG - 302
CHAPTER 13Current Liabilities and ContingenciesCHAPTER REVIEW1. Chapter 13 presents a discussion of the nature and measurement of items classified on the balance sheet as current liabilities. Attention is focused on the mechanics involved in recording
University of North Carolina, Wilmington - ACG - 302
CHAPTER 14Long-Term LiabilitiesCHAPTER REVIEW*Note:All asterisked (*) items relate to material contained in the Appendix to the chapter. 1. Chapter 14 presents a discussion of the issues related to long-term liabilities. Long-term debt consists of prob
University of North Carolina, Wilmington - ACG - 302
CHAPTER 15Stockholders' EquityCHAPTER REVIEW1. Chapter 15 focuses on the stockholders' equity section of the corporate form of business organization. Stockholders' equity represents the amount that was contributed by the shareholders and the portion th
University of North Carolina, Wilmington - ACG - 302
CHAPTER 17InvestmentsCHAPTER REVIEW1. The problems of accounting for investments involve measurement, recognition, and disclosure. Investments are generally classified as either debt securities or equity securities. Chapter 17 covers both temporary and
University of North Carolina, Wilmington - ACG - 302
CHAPTER 18Revenue RecognitionCHAPTER REVIEW1. One of the most difficult issues facing accountants concerns the recognition of revenue by a business organization. Although general rules and guidelines exist, the significant variety of marketing methods
University of North Carolina, Wilmington - ACG - 302
CHAPTER 19Accounting for Income TaxesCHAPTER REVIEWIntroduction 1. Chapter 19 addresses the issues related to accounting for income taxes. Taxable income is computed in accordance with prescribed tax regulations and rules, whereas accounting income is
University of North Carolina, Wilmington - ACG - 302
CHAPTER 21Accounting for LeasesCHAPTER REVIEW1. Many businesses lease substantial portions of the property and equipment they use in their business organization as an alternative to ownership. Because leasing provides some financial, operating, and ris
University of North Carolina, Wilmington - ACG - 302
CHAPTER 22Accounting Changes and Error AnalysisCHAPTER REVIEW1. Chapter 22 discusses the different procedures used to report accounting changes and error corrections. The use of estimates in accounting as well as the uncertainty that surrounds many of
Washington State - CSE - 542
Washington State - CSE - 542
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Washington State - CSE - 542
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Washington State - CSE - 542
Washington State - CSE - 542
Washington State - CSE - 542
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Washington State - CSE - 542
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Washington State - CSE - 542
CSE 542 Advanced Data Structures and AlgorithmsLab 1Jon Turner Due 2/1/2012General notes for labs. The labs are intended to help you get a deeper understanding of the material covered in class. There is typically not a lot of new code required, but you
Washington State - CSE - 542
CSE 542 Advanced Data Structures and AlgorithmsLab 1 SolutionJon TurnerPart 1. The source code for this part appears below. Dheap.h (with unchanged parts omitted) . class Dheap cfw_ public: . / stats methods void clearStats(); string& stats2string(stri
Washington State - CSE - 542
CSE 542 Advanced Data Structures and AlgorithmsLab 2Jon Turner Due 2/15/2012Recall and follow the General notes from lab 1. This lab has two parts. In the first part you will be evaluating the performance of the augmenting path method for the max flow
Washington State - CSE - 542
CSE 542 Advanced Data Structures and AlgorithmsLab 2 SolutionJon TurnerPart 1. The source for the modified shortPath class appears below.. class shortPath : public augPath cfw_ public: shortPath(Flograph&,int&); private: bool findPath(); int int ; -#i
Washington State - CSE - 542
CSE 542 Advanced Data Structures and AlgorithmsLab 3Jon Turner Due 3/7/2012Recall and follow the General notes from lab 1. In this lab, you will be studying the performance of Kruskal's algorithm for the minimum spanning tree and the performance of the
Washington State - CSE - 542
Washington State - CSE - 542
Washington State - CSE - 542
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Washington State - CSE - 542
Washington State - CSE - 542
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Washington State - CSE - 542
Washington State - CSE - 542
Washington State - CSE - 542
Washington State - CSE - 542
Washington State - CSE - 542
Washington State - CSE - 542
Washington State - CSE - 542
Washington State - CSE - 542
Maintaining a PartitionJonathan Turner March 23, 2010This note is largely based on the analysis in Chapter 2 of Data Structures and Network Algorithms by Robert Tarjan, SIAM Press, 1985. The presentation has been expanded and adapted to provide a more s
Washington State - CSE - 542
Washington State - CSE - 542
Engineering Review SessionJon TurnerComputer Science & Engineering Washington University www.arl.wustl.edu/~jstEngineering Big Picture Minimum Fibonacci Shortestspanning trees heaps general greedy method, Prim's algorithm, d-heaps how operations a
Washington State - CSE - 542
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Washington State - CSE - 542
Washington State - CSE - 542
Washington - H A&S - 222b
Energy and Environment H A&S 220d Spring 2009 Peter Rhines Marcela Ewertwith Eric Lindahl, Bob Koon of the UW Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratorythe suns ultraviolet (left) and infrared radiationimagers.gsfc.nasa.gov/ems/uv.html www.odysseymagazine.
Washington - H A&S - 222b
Lectures 2-3 week 1-2 2009: HAS222d Solar radiation, the greenhouse, global heat enginehttp:/en.wikipedia.org/The 4 streams of this course (see syllabus) 1.Energyforms of energy concetrated, diluted conservation transmission/movement transformation eff
Washington - H A&S - 222b
formed by subatomic particles: neutrons (neutral), protons (+), electrons () electrons move through the atomic volume, and are held there by the (VERY dense) nucleus The Atom= 1015 mHe= 1010 m the number of subatomic particles determines the propert
Washington - H A&S - 222b
Lectures 7-8 Thurs 23.iv.09 HAS 222d Introduction to energy & environment Atmosphere-ocean: circulationThe atmosphere/ocean system is a `heat engine' largely driven by the sun.that is, a contraption in which heated fluid (air or water) expands and, under
Washington - H A&S - 222b
Lecture 9-10 HAS222d-09 Introduction to energy & environment Air pollutionapplying flux and concentration ideas to pollution and to basic atmosphere/ocean dynamics The chapter in Spherical Cow on `steady state box models' assumes simple, well-mixed rese
Washington - H A&S - 222b
Arctic sea ice animation (Tom Agnew, Environment Canada)Lecture 12 HAS222d Intro to energy and environment 2009 slides on water in the atmosphere P.B. RhinesSatellite image of water vapor (not cloud.it's gaseous water which is normally invisible). This
Washington - H A&S - 222b
HAS222d 2009 Intro to Energy and Environment: Lecture 13: Global energy: national profiles, local solutionsWe want to look into the global use of energy by humans, estimated at 4 x 1020 J/year. This is the number which, divided by the global population a
Washington - H A&S - 222b
HA&S 222d Spr 2009 Lecture 14 slides Arctic history and climateDeep timeshowing the cooling of the Earth since the end of the Creaceous period (the dinosaur era). There was little or no snow or ice on Earth then. Abruptly, about 2.5 million years ago, t
Washington - H A&S - 222b
Lecture 15 The Necklace around the Arctic Arctic indigenous peoples and ANWR in AlaskaThere are many sources of Arctic literature; one readable book on the changing Arctic (with emphasis on climate change) is the Arctic Climate Impact Assessment, availab
Washington - H A&S - 222b
HAS 222d-2009 Lecture 16 week 9 Exponential growth P.RhinesDigression on exponential growth and global population: exponential growth occurs when the growth is proportional to the population.for example, if each person has the same number of children dur
Washington - H A&S - 222b
HAS222d Intro to Energy and Environement: Lecture 17 week 9 Solutions40% off energy use in US goes into generating electricity generation efficiency: 33% electric power loss: plant to consumer 7.2% in US.costs more than shipping the fossil fuel US averag
Washington - H A&S - 222b
1H A&S 222d Introduction to Energy and Environment P.B.Rhines Spring 2009 Lectures 2 and 3 some changes appear in RED Notes on SOLAR RADIATION and the EARTHS GREENHOUSESuns radiation and its spectrum. We introduced the suns energy, and the spectrum of w
Washington - H A&S - 222b
1 H A&S 222d Introduction to Energy and Environment P. B.Rhines spring 2009 Lecture 4I. INTRODUCTION TO HUMAN ENERGETICS We will encounter several very different views of the environment: McNeill's history (which has considerable sociology and philosophy
Washington - H A&S - 222b
1 H A&S 222d Introduction to Energy and Environment: Life Under the Pale Sun P.B.Rhines, M Ewert Spring 2009 Lecture 5 THERMAL ENERGYSCIENCE CORE: PHYSICS OF ENERGY, continued We are beginning to fill in the list of `forms of energy' and to give examples
Washington - H A&S - 222b
Peak Oil and Climate ChangeAS222d 20 May 2009 284 Mary Gates James W. Murray School of Oceanography University of Washington1999 - ~$10/b2008 - ~$147/bIEA World Energy Outlook - Nov 2008 (NEW) "The world's energy system is at a crossroads. Current glo