1.
value:
3.34 points
Following are selected transactions Deshawn Company for 2010 and 2011.
2010
Dec.
13
Accepted a $28,000, 45-day, 7% note dated December 13 in granting Latisha Clark a time extension on her past-due account receivable.
31
Prepared an adjusting entry to record the accrued interest on the Clark note.
2011
Jan.
27
Received Clark’s payment for principal and interest on the note dated December 13.
Mar.
3
Accepted a $22,000, 10%, 90-day note dated March 3 in granting a time extension on the pastdue account receivable of Shandi Company.
17
Accepted a $20,000, 30-day, 8% note dated March 17 in granting Juan Torres a time extension on his past-due account receivable.
Apr.
16
Torres dishonors his note when presented for payment.
May
1
Wrote off the Torres account against the Allowance for Doubtful Accounts.
June
1
Received the Shandi payment for principal and interest on the note dated March 3.
Prepare journal entries for the above transactions for 2011. (Use 360 days a year. Do not round intermediate calculations and round your final answers to nearest dollar amount. Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
2011
Jan.
27
Mar.
3
17
Apr.
16
May
1
June
1
2.
value:
3.33 points
Hawk Company establishes a $360 petty cash fund on September 9. On September 30, the fund shows $89 in cash along with receipts for the following expenditures: transportation-in, $53; postage expenses, $54; and miscellaneous expenses, $153. The petty cashier could not account for a $11 shortage in the fund. Hawk uses the perpetual system in accounting for merchandise inventory.
(1)
Prepare the September 9 entry to establish the fund. (Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
Sept. 9
(2)
Prepare the September 30 entry to reimburse the fund. (Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
Sept. 30
(3)
Prepare an October 1 entry to decrease the fund to $315. (Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
Oct. 1
3.
value:
3.33 points
Frederick Clinic deposits all cash receipts on the day when they are received and it makes all cash payments by check. At the close of business on June 30, 2011, its Cash account shows a $14,853 debit balance. Frederick Clinic's June 30 bank statement shows $14,746 on deposit in the bank.
a.
Outstanding checks as of June 30 total $2,295.
b.
The June 30 bank statement included a $65 debit memorandum for bank services.
c.
Check No. 919, listed with the canceled checks, was correctly drawn for $389 in payment of a utility bill on June 15. Frederick Clinic mistakenly recorded it with a debit to Utilities Expense and a credit to Cash in the amount of $398.
d.
The June 30 cash receipts of $2,346 were placed in the bank's night deposito.
The following information applies to the questions displayed below.].docxbarbaran11
The following information applies to the questions displayed below.]
The following information is available to reconcile Clark Company
’
s book balance of cash with its bank statement cash balance as of July 31, 2011.
a.
On July 31, the company
’
s Cash account has a $24,754 debit balance, but its July bank statement shows a $27,407 cash balance.
b.
Check No. 3031 for $1,650 and Check No. 3040 for $817 were outstanding on the June 30 bank reconciliation. Check No. 3040 is listed with the July canceled checks, but Check No. 3031 is not. Also, Check No. 3065 for $601 and Check No. 3069 for $2,418, both written in July, are not among the canceled checks on the July 31 statement.
c.
In comparing the canceled checks on the bank statement with the entries in the accounting records, it is found that Check No. 3056 for July rent was correctly written and drawn for $1,220 but was erroneously entered in the accounting records as $1,210.
d.
A credit memorandum enclosed with the July bank statement indicates the bank collected $7,500 cash on a non-interest-bearing note for Clark, deducted a $38 collection fee, and credited the remainder to its account. Clark had not recorded this event before receiving the statement.
e.
A debit memorandum for $805 lists a $795 NSF check plus a $10 NSF charge. The check had been received from a customer, Jim Shaw. Clark has not yet recorded this check as NSF.
f.
Enclosed with the July statement is a $11 debit memorandum for bank services. It has not yet been recorded because no previous notification had been received.
g.
Clark
’
s July 31 daily cash receipts of $8,652 were placed in the bank
’
s night depository on that date, but do not appear on the July 31 bank statement.
1.
value:
5.00 points
Required:
1.
Prepare the bank reconciliation for this company as of July 31, 2011.
(Input all amounts as positive values. Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
CLARK COMPANY
Bank Reconciliation
July 31, 2011
Bank statement balance
$
Book balance
$
Add:
Add:
Deduct:
Deduct:
$
$
Adjusted bank balance
$
Adjusted book balance
$
references
ebook & resources
2.
value:
10.00 points
2.
Prepare the journal entries necessary to bring the company
’
s book balance of cash into conformity with the reconciled cash balance as of July 31, 2011.
(Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
July 31
[The following information applies to the questions displayed below.]
At December 31, 2011, Ethan Company reports the following results for its calendar-year.
Cash sales
$
1,958,730
Credit sales
3,378,000
In addition, its unadjusted trial balance includes the following items.
Accounts receivable
$
1,023,534
debit
Allowance for doubtful accounts
15,990
debit
3.
value:
5.00 points
Required:
1.
Prepare the adjusting entry for this compa.
1) At July 31, Ramirez Company has the following bank information.docxSONU61709
1) At July 31, Ramirez Company has the following bank information: cash balance per bank $7,882, outstanding checks $701, deposits in transit $1,916, and a bank service charge $23.
Determine the adjusted cash balance per bank at July 31.
The adjusted cash balance per bank
$
2) Setterstrom Company established a petty cash fund on May 1, cashing a check for $125.00. The company reimbursed the fund on June 1 and July 1 with the following results.
June 1: Cash in fund $2.75.
Receipts: delivery expense $28.25; postage expense $37.25; and miscellaneous expense $54.05.
July 1: Cash in fund $4.75.
Receipts: delivery expense $23.75; entertainment expense $49.50; and miscellaneous expense $47.00.
On July 10, Setterstrom increased the fund from $125.00 to $155.00.
Prepare journal entries for Setterstrom Company. (Credit account titles are automatically indented when amount is entered. Do not indent manually.)
Date
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
May 1
June 1
July 1
July 10
3) At the end of 2014, Carpenter Co. has accounts receivable of $729,030 and an allowance for doubtful accounts of $54,500. On January 24, 2015, the company learns that its receivable from Megan Gray is not collectible, and management authorizes a write-off of $7,140. On March 4, 2015, Carpenter Co. receives payment of $7,140 in full from Megan Gray.
Prepare the journal entries to record this transaction. (Credit account titles are automatically indented when amount is entered. Do not indent manually.)
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
(To reverse write-off)
(To record collection from Gray)
4) Presented below are data on three promissory notes.
Determine the missing amounts. (Use 360 days for calculation.)
Date of
Note
Terms
Maturity
Date
Principal
Annual
Interest Rate
Total
Interest
(a)
April 1
60 days
$589,200
5
%
$
(b)
July 2
30 days
64,080
%
$534
(c)
March 7
6 months
134,400
9
%
$
5) Colaw Stores accepts both its own and national credit cards. During the year, the following selected summary transactions occurred.
Jan. 15
Made Colaw credit card sales totaling $25,600. (There were no balances prior to January 15.)
20
Made Visa credit card sales (service charge fee 4%) totaling $6,100.
Feb. 10
Collected $12,700 on Colaw credit card sales.
15
Added finance charges of 3% to Colaw credit card account balances.
(a)
Journalize the transactions for Colaw Stores. (Credit account titles are automatically indented when amount is entered. Do not indent manually.)
Date
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
Jan. 15
Jan. 20
Feb. 10
Feb. 15
Elburn Supply Co. has the following transactions related to notes receivable during the last 2 months of 2014. The company does not make entries to accrue interest except at December 31.
Nov. 1
Loaned $10,000 cash to Manny Lopez on a 12-month, 12% note.
Dec. 11
Sold goods to R ...
1)At July 31, Ramirez Company has the following bank information.docxlindorffgarrik
1)
At July 31, Ramirez Company has the following bank information: cash balance per bank $7,882, outstanding checks $701, deposits in transit $1,916, and a bank service charge $23.
Determine the adjusted cash balance per bank at July 31.
The adjusted cash balance per bank
$
2)
Setterstrom Company established a petty cash fund on May 1, cashing a check for $125.00. The company reimbursed the fund on June 1 and July 1 with the following results.
June 1: Cash in fund $2.75.
Receipts: delivery expense $28.25; postage expense $37.25; and miscellaneous expense $54.05.
July 1: Cash in fund $4.75.
Receipts: delivery expense $23.75; entertainment expense $49.50; and miscellaneous expense $47.00.
On July 10, Setterstrom increased the fund from $125.00 to $155.00.
Prepare journal entries for Setterstrom Company.
(Credit account titles are automatically indented when amount is entered. Do not indent manually.)
Date
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
May 1
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
June 1
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
July 1
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
July 10
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
3)
At the end of 2014, Carpenter Co. has accounts receivable of $729,030 and an allowance for doubtful accounts of $54,500. On January 24, 2015, the company learns that its receivable from Megan Gray is not collectible, and management authorizes a write-off of $7,140. On March 4, 2015, Carpenter Co. receives payment of $7,140 in full from Megan Gray.
Prepare the journal entries to record this transaction.
(Credit account titles are automatically indented when amount is entered. Do not indent manually.)
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
(To reverse write-off)
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
(To record collection from Gray)
4)
Presented below are data on three promissory notes.
Determine the missing amounts.
(Use 360 days for calculation.)
Date of
Note
Terms
Maturity
Date
Principal
Annual
Interest Rate
Total
Interest
(a)
April 1
60 days
$589,200
5
%
$
[removed]
(b)
July 2
30 days
64,080
[removed]
%
$534
(c)
March 7
6 months
134,400
9
%
$
5)
Colaw Stores accepts both its own and national credit cards. During the year, the following selected summary transactions occurred.
Jan. 15
Made Colaw credit card sales totaling $25,600. (There were no balances prior to January 15.)
20
Made Visa credit card sales (service charge fee 4%) totaling $6,100.
Feb. 10
Collected $12,700 on Colaw credit card sales.
15
Added finance charges of 3% to Colaw credit card account balances.
(a)
Journalize the transactions for.
AWeek Five Exercise AssignmentFinancial Ratios1. Liquidity r.docxikirkton
AWeek Five Exercise Assignment
Financial Ratios
1. Liquidity ratios. Edison, Stagg, and Thornton have the following financial information at the close of business on July 10:
Edison
Stagg
Thornton
Cash
$4,000
$2,500
$1,000
Short-term investments
3,000
2,500
2,000
Accounts receivable
2,000
2,500
3,000
Inventory
1,000
2,500
4,000
Prepaid expenses
800
800
800
Accounts payable
200
200
200
Notes payable: short-term
3,100
3,100
3,100
Accrued payables
300
300
300
Long-term liabilities
3,800
3,800
3,800
a. Compute the current and quick ratios for each of the three companies. (Round calculations to two decimal places.) Which firm is the most liquid? Why?
2. Computation and evaluation of activity ratios. The following data relate to Alaska Products, Inc:
20X5
20X4
Net credit sales
$832,000
$760,000
Cost of goods sold
440,000
350,000
Cash, Dec. 31
125,000
110,000
Average Accounts receivable
180,000
140,000
Average Inventory
70,000
50,000
Accounts payable, Dec. 31
115,000
108,000
a. Compute the accounts receivable and inventory turnover ratios for 20X5. Alaska rounds all calculations to two decimal places.
3. Profitability ratios, trading on the equity. Digital Relay has both preferred and common stock outstanding. The company reported the following information for 20X7:
Net sales
$1,500,000
Interest expense
$120,000
Income tax expense
$80,000
Preferred dividends
$25,000
Net income
$130,000
Average assets
$1,100,000
Average common stockholders' equity
$400,000
a. Compute the profit margin ratio, the return on equity and the return on assets, rounding calculations to two decimal places.
b. Does the firm have positive or negative financial leverage? Briefly explain.
4. Horizontal analysis. Mary Lynn Corporation has been operating for several years. Selected data from the 20X1 and 20X2 financial statements follow.
20X2
20X1
Current Assets
$76,000
$80,000
Property, Plant, and Equipment (net)
99,000
90,000
Intangibles
25,000
50,000
Current Liabilities
40,800
48,000
Long-Term Liabilities
143,000
160,000
Stockholders’ Equity
16,200
12,000
Net Sales
500,000
500,000
Cost of Goods Sold
332,500
350,000
Operating Expenses
93,500
85,000
Prepare a horizontal analysis for 20X1 and 20X2. Briefly comment on the results of your work.
5. Vertical analysis. Mary Lynn Corporation has been operating for several years. Selected data from the 20X1 and 20X2 financial statements follow.
20X2
20X1
Current Assets
$ 76,000
$ 80,000
Property, Plant, and Equipment (net)
99,000
90,000
Intangibles
25,000
50,000
Current Liabilities
40,800
48,000
Long-Term Liabilities
143,000
160,000
Stockholders’ Equity
16,200
12,000
Net Sales
500,000
500,000
Cost of Goods Sold
332,500
350,000
Operating Expenses
93,500
85,000
Prepare a vertical analysis for 20X1 and 20X2. Briefly comment on the results of your work.
6. Ratio computation. The financial statements of the Lone Pine Company follow.
LONE PINE COMPANY
Comparat ...
Exercise 8-6 Petty cash fund accounting L.O. P2[The following info.docxrhetttrevannion
Exercise 8-6 Petty cash fund accounting L.O. P2
[The following information applies to the questions displayed below.]
NetPerks Co. establishes a $200 petty cash fund on January 1. On January 8, the fund shows $28 in cash along with receipts for the following expenditures: postage, $64; transportation-in, $19; delivery expenses, $36; and miscellaneous expenses, $53. NetPerks uses the perpetual system in accounting for merchandise inventory.
references
1.
value:
2.00 points
Exercise 8-6 Part 1
(1)
Prepare journal entry to establish the fund on January 1.
(Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
Jan. 1
[removed]
[removed]
check my work
eBook Link
View Hint #1
references
2.
value:
2.00 points
Exercise 8-6 Part 2
(2)
Prepare journal entry to reimburse it on January 8.
(Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
Jan. 8
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
check my work
eBook Link
View Hint #1
references
3.
value:
2.00 points
Exercise 8-6 Part 3
(3)
Prepare journal entries to both reimburse the fund and increase it to $500 on January 8, assuming no entry in part 2.
(Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
Jan. 8
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
4.
value:
6.00 points
Exercise 8-7 Bank reconciliation and adjusting entries L.O. P3
A table for a monthly bank reconciliation dated September 30 is given below. For each item 1 through 12, indicate whether the item should be added to or deducted from the book or bank balance, or whether it should not appear on the reconciliation.
(Select the answers in the appropriate cells and Leave no cells blank be certain to select "NA" in fields which are not applicable.)
Bank Balance
Book Balance
Shown/Not Shown
1.
Bank service charge for September.
2.
Checks written and mailed to payees on October 2.
3.
Checks written by another depositor but charged against this company’s account.
4.
Principal and interest on a note receivable to this company is collected by the bank but not yet recorded by the company.
5.
Special bank charge for collection of note in part 4 on this company's behalf.
6.
Check written against the company's account and cleared by the bank; erroneously not recorded by the company's recordkeeper.
7.
Interest earned on the September cash balance in the bank.
8.
Night deposit made on September 30 after the bank closed.
9.
Checks outstanding on August 31 that cleared the bank in September.
10.
NSF check from customer is returned on September 25 but not yet recorded by this company.
11.
Checks written by the company and mailed to payees on September 30.
12.
Deposit made on September 5 and processed by the bank on September 6.
5.
value:
6.00 points
Problem 8-2A Establish, reimburse, and adjust petty cash L.O. P2
Shawnee Co. .
ProblemIssuance of stock organization costs. Snowbound Corporat.docxbriancrawford30935
Problem
Issuance of stock: organization costs. Snowbound Corporation was incorporated in July. The firm's charter authorized the sale of 200,000 shares of $10 par-value common stock. The following transactions occurred during the year:
7/1:
Sold 45,000 shares of common stock to investors for $18 per share. Cash was collected and the shares were issued.
7/7:
Issued 600 shares to Sharon Dale, attorney-at-law, for services rendered during the corporation's organizational phase. Dale charged $12,600 for her work.
8/11:
Sold 20,000 shares to investors for $22 per share. Cash was collected and the shares were issued.
12/14:
Issued 30,000 shares to the MJB Company for land valued at $900,000.
Instructions
Prepare journal entries to record each transaction.
Student Guidance ReportAshford University ACC205Guidance ReportWeek FourLISTEN TO AUDIO/VIDEO EXPLAINING THE GUIDANCE REPORTYELLOW INDICATES ACCOUNT AMOUNTS CHANGEDChange Account to:Based Upon Course Start DateAccount to
be changedOriginal
AmountJan - FebMar-AprMay-JunJul-AugSept-OctNov-DecCh 7 Ex 2Loan$ 225,000$ 250,000$ 260,000$ 270,000$ 280,000$ 290,000$ 450,000QuestionsYOUR ANSWERS BASED UPON COURSE START DATEa. Compute Hall’s accrued interest as of December 31, 20X1.b. Present the appropriate balance sheet disclosure for the accrued interest and the current and long-term portion of the outstanding debt as of December 31, 20X1.c. Repeat parts (a) and (b) using a date of December 31, 20X2, rather than December 31, 20X1. Assume that Hall is in compliance with the terms of the loan agreement.Accrued interest 12/31/X2DisclosureAccount to
be changedOriginal
AmountJan - FebMar-AprMay-JunJul-AugSept-OctNov-DecCh 7 Ex 4Salary expense5000051,00052,00053,00054,00055,00056,000QuestionsYOUR ANSWERS BASED UPON COURSE START DATESalary expenseSocial Security PayableMedicare PayableFed Taxes PayableState Taxes PayableInsurance PayableCashPayroll Tax ExpenseSocial Security PayableMedicare PayableState unemploymentFed unemploymentAccount to
be changedOriginal
AmountJan - FebMar-AprMay-JunJul-AugSept-OctNov-DecCh 7 Pb 212/1 Note payable2000025,00026,00028,00030,00031,00033,00012/1 Interest rate015%15%15%15%15%15%Warranty2027202820292030203120322033Purchase on account1600017,00018,00019,00020,00021,00022,000Note payable50006,0007,0008,0009,00010,00011,000Warranty repair162172182192202222232Salary accural14001,5001,6001,7001,8001,9002,000Vacation6%360006%37,0006%38,0006%39,0006%40,0006%41,0006%42,00012/26 interest120$ 120$ 120$ 120$ 120$ 120$ 120a. Prepare journal entries to record the preceding transactions and events.CashNotes PayableWarranty expenseWarranty LiabilityMerchandiseAccounts PayableCashNote PayableWarranty LiabilityCashSalary ExpenseSalary PayablePayroll ExpenseAccrued Vacation Payableb. Determine accrued interest as of December 31, 20XX, and prepare the necessary adjusting entry or entries.12/1 one month accrual12/26 60 day note-accrue 5 daysTotal Interest Acc.
The following information applies to the questions displayed below.].docxbarbaran11
The following information applies to the questions displayed below.]
The following information is available to reconcile Clark Company
’
s book balance of cash with its bank statement cash balance as of July 31, 2011.
a.
On July 31, the company
’
s Cash account has a $24,754 debit balance, but its July bank statement shows a $27,407 cash balance.
b.
Check No. 3031 for $1,650 and Check No. 3040 for $817 were outstanding on the June 30 bank reconciliation. Check No. 3040 is listed with the July canceled checks, but Check No. 3031 is not. Also, Check No. 3065 for $601 and Check No. 3069 for $2,418, both written in July, are not among the canceled checks on the July 31 statement.
c.
In comparing the canceled checks on the bank statement with the entries in the accounting records, it is found that Check No. 3056 for July rent was correctly written and drawn for $1,220 but was erroneously entered in the accounting records as $1,210.
d.
A credit memorandum enclosed with the July bank statement indicates the bank collected $7,500 cash on a non-interest-bearing note for Clark, deducted a $38 collection fee, and credited the remainder to its account. Clark had not recorded this event before receiving the statement.
e.
A debit memorandum for $805 lists a $795 NSF check plus a $10 NSF charge. The check had been received from a customer, Jim Shaw. Clark has not yet recorded this check as NSF.
f.
Enclosed with the July statement is a $11 debit memorandum for bank services. It has not yet been recorded because no previous notification had been received.
g.
Clark
’
s July 31 daily cash receipts of $8,652 were placed in the bank
’
s night depository on that date, but do not appear on the July 31 bank statement.
1.
value:
5.00 points
Required:
1.
Prepare the bank reconciliation for this company as of July 31, 2011.
(Input all amounts as positive values. Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
CLARK COMPANY
Bank Reconciliation
July 31, 2011
Bank statement balance
$
Book balance
$
Add:
Add:
Deduct:
Deduct:
$
$
Adjusted bank balance
$
Adjusted book balance
$
references
ebook & resources
2.
value:
10.00 points
2.
Prepare the journal entries necessary to bring the company
’
s book balance of cash into conformity with the reconciled cash balance as of July 31, 2011.
(Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
July 31
[The following information applies to the questions displayed below.]
At December 31, 2011, Ethan Company reports the following results for its calendar-year.
Cash sales
$
1,958,730
Credit sales
3,378,000
In addition, its unadjusted trial balance includes the following items.
Accounts receivable
$
1,023,534
debit
Allowance for doubtful accounts
15,990
debit
3.
value:
5.00 points
Required:
1.
Prepare the adjusting entry for this compa.
1) At July 31, Ramirez Company has the following bank information.docxSONU61709
1) At July 31, Ramirez Company has the following bank information: cash balance per bank $7,882, outstanding checks $701, deposits in transit $1,916, and a bank service charge $23.
Determine the adjusted cash balance per bank at July 31.
The adjusted cash balance per bank
$
2) Setterstrom Company established a petty cash fund on May 1, cashing a check for $125.00. The company reimbursed the fund on June 1 and July 1 with the following results.
June 1: Cash in fund $2.75.
Receipts: delivery expense $28.25; postage expense $37.25; and miscellaneous expense $54.05.
July 1: Cash in fund $4.75.
Receipts: delivery expense $23.75; entertainment expense $49.50; and miscellaneous expense $47.00.
On July 10, Setterstrom increased the fund from $125.00 to $155.00.
Prepare journal entries for Setterstrom Company. (Credit account titles are automatically indented when amount is entered. Do not indent manually.)
Date
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
May 1
June 1
July 1
July 10
3) At the end of 2014, Carpenter Co. has accounts receivable of $729,030 and an allowance for doubtful accounts of $54,500. On January 24, 2015, the company learns that its receivable from Megan Gray is not collectible, and management authorizes a write-off of $7,140. On March 4, 2015, Carpenter Co. receives payment of $7,140 in full from Megan Gray.
Prepare the journal entries to record this transaction. (Credit account titles are automatically indented when amount is entered. Do not indent manually.)
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
(To reverse write-off)
(To record collection from Gray)
4) Presented below are data on three promissory notes.
Determine the missing amounts. (Use 360 days for calculation.)
Date of
Note
Terms
Maturity
Date
Principal
Annual
Interest Rate
Total
Interest
(a)
April 1
60 days
$589,200
5
%
$
(b)
July 2
30 days
64,080
%
$534
(c)
March 7
6 months
134,400
9
%
$
5) Colaw Stores accepts both its own and national credit cards. During the year, the following selected summary transactions occurred.
Jan. 15
Made Colaw credit card sales totaling $25,600. (There were no balances prior to January 15.)
20
Made Visa credit card sales (service charge fee 4%) totaling $6,100.
Feb. 10
Collected $12,700 on Colaw credit card sales.
15
Added finance charges of 3% to Colaw credit card account balances.
(a)
Journalize the transactions for Colaw Stores. (Credit account titles are automatically indented when amount is entered. Do not indent manually.)
Date
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
Jan. 15
Jan. 20
Feb. 10
Feb. 15
Elburn Supply Co. has the following transactions related to notes receivable during the last 2 months of 2014. The company does not make entries to accrue interest except at December 31.
Nov. 1
Loaned $10,000 cash to Manny Lopez on a 12-month, 12% note.
Dec. 11
Sold goods to R ...
1)At July 31, Ramirez Company has the following bank information.docxlindorffgarrik
1)
At July 31, Ramirez Company has the following bank information: cash balance per bank $7,882, outstanding checks $701, deposits in transit $1,916, and a bank service charge $23.
Determine the adjusted cash balance per bank at July 31.
The adjusted cash balance per bank
$
2)
Setterstrom Company established a petty cash fund on May 1, cashing a check for $125.00. The company reimbursed the fund on June 1 and July 1 with the following results.
June 1: Cash in fund $2.75.
Receipts: delivery expense $28.25; postage expense $37.25; and miscellaneous expense $54.05.
July 1: Cash in fund $4.75.
Receipts: delivery expense $23.75; entertainment expense $49.50; and miscellaneous expense $47.00.
On July 10, Setterstrom increased the fund from $125.00 to $155.00.
Prepare journal entries for Setterstrom Company.
(Credit account titles are automatically indented when amount is entered. Do not indent manually.)
Date
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
May 1
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
June 1
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
July 1
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
July 10
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
3)
At the end of 2014, Carpenter Co. has accounts receivable of $729,030 and an allowance for doubtful accounts of $54,500. On January 24, 2015, the company learns that its receivable from Megan Gray is not collectible, and management authorizes a write-off of $7,140. On March 4, 2015, Carpenter Co. receives payment of $7,140 in full from Megan Gray.
Prepare the journal entries to record this transaction.
(Credit account titles are automatically indented when amount is entered. Do not indent manually.)
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
(To reverse write-off)
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
(To record collection from Gray)
4)
Presented below are data on three promissory notes.
Determine the missing amounts.
(Use 360 days for calculation.)
Date of
Note
Terms
Maturity
Date
Principal
Annual
Interest Rate
Total
Interest
(a)
April 1
60 days
$589,200
5
%
$
[removed]
(b)
July 2
30 days
64,080
[removed]
%
$534
(c)
March 7
6 months
134,400
9
%
$
5)
Colaw Stores accepts both its own and national credit cards. During the year, the following selected summary transactions occurred.
Jan. 15
Made Colaw credit card sales totaling $25,600. (There were no balances prior to January 15.)
20
Made Visa credit card sales (service charge fee 4%) totaling $6,100.
Feb. 10
Collected $12,700 on Colaw credit card sales.
15
Added finance charges of 3% to Colaw credit card account balances.
(a)
Journalize the transactions for.
AWeek Five Exercise AssignmentFinancial Ratios1. Liquidity r.docxikirkton
AWeek Five Exercise Assignment
Financial Ratios
1. Liquidity ratios. Edison, Stagg, and Thornton have the following financial information at the close of business on July 10:
Edison
Stagg
Thornton
Cash
$4,000
$2,500
$1,000
Short-term investments
3,000
2,500
2,000
Accounts receivable
2,000
2,500
3,000
Inventory
1,000
2,500
4,000
Prepaid expenses
800
800
800
Accounts payable
200
200
200
Notes payable: short-term
3,100
3,100
3,100
Accrued payables
300
300
300
Long-term liabilities
3,800
3,800
3,800
a. Compute the current and quick ratios for each of the three companies. (Round calculations to two decimal places.) Which firm is the most liquid? Why?
2. Computation and evaluation of activity ratios. The following data relate to Alaska Products, Inc:
20X5
20X4
Net credit sales
$832,000
$760,000
Cost of goods sold
440,000
350,000
Cash, Dec. 31
125,000
110,000
Average Accounts receivable
180,000
140,000
Average Inventory
70,000
50,000
Accounts payable, Dec. 31
115,000
108,000
a. Compute the accounts receivable and inventory turnover ratios for 20X5. Alaska rounds all calculations to two decimal places.
3. Profitability ratios, trading on the equity. Digital Relay has both preferred and common stock outstanding. The company reported the following information for 20X7:
Net sales
$1,500,000
Interest expense
$120,000
Income tax expense
$80,000
Preferred dividends
$25,000
Net income
$130,000
Average assets
$1,100,000
Average common stockholders' equity
$400,000
a. Compute the profit margin ratio, the return on equity and the return on assets, rounding calculations to two decimal places.
b. Does the firm have positive or negative financial leverage? Briefly explain.
4. Horizontal analysis. Mary Lynn Corporation has been operating for several years. Selected data from the 20X1 and 20X2 financial statements follow.
20X2
20X1
Current Assets
$76,000
$80,000
Property, Plant, and Equipment (net)
99,000
90,000
Intangibles
25,000
50,000
Current Liabilities
40,800
48,000
Long-Term Liabilities
143,000
160,000
Stockholders’ Equity
16,200
12,000
Net Sales
500,000
500,000
Cost of Goods Sold
332,500
350,000
Operating Expenses
93,500
85,000
Prepare a horizontal analysis for 20X1 and 20X2. Briefly comment on the results of your work.
5. Vertical analysis. Mary Lynn Corporation has been operating for several years. Selected data from the 20X1 and 20X2 financial statements follow.
20X2
20X1
Current Assets
$ 76,000
$ 80,000
Property, Plant, and Equipment (net)
99,000
90,000
Intangibles
25,000
50,000
Current Liabilities
40,800
48,000
Long-Term Liabilities
143,000
160,000
Stockholders’ Equity
16,200
12,000
Net Sales
500,000
500,000
Cost of Goods Sold
332,500
350,000
Operating Expenses
93,500
85,000
Prepare a vertical analysis for 20X1 and 20X2. Briefly comment on the results of your work.
6. Ratio computation. The financial statements of the Lone Pine Company follow.
LONE PINE COMPANY
Comparat ...
Exercise 8-6 Petty cash fund accounting L.O. P2[The following info.docxrhetttrevannion
Exercise 8-6 Petty cash fund accounting L.O. P2
[The following information applies to the questions displayed below.]
NetPerks Co. establishes a $200 petty cash fund on January 1. On January 8, the fund shows $28 in cash along with receipts for the following expenditures: postage, $64; transportation-in, $19; delivery expenses, $36; and miscellaneous expenses, $53. NetPerks uses the perpetual system in accounting for merchandise inventory.
references
1.
value:
2.00 points
Exercise 8-6 Part 1
(1)
Prepare journal entry to establish the fund on January 1.
(Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
Jan. 1
[removed]
[removed]
check my work
eBook Link
View Hint #1
references
2.
value:
2.00 points
Exercise 8-6 Part 2
(2)
Prepare journal entry to reimburse it on January 8.
(Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
Jan. 8
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
check my work
eBook Link
View Hint #1
references
3.
value:
2.00 points
Exercise 8-6 Part 3
(3)
Prepare journal entries to both reimburse the fund and increase it to $500 on January 8, assuming no entry in part 2.
(Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
Jan. 8
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
4.
value:
6.00 points
Exercise 8-7 Bank reconciliation and adjusting entries L.O. P3
A table for a monthly bank reconciliation dated September 30 is given below. For each item 1 through 12, indicate whether the item should be added to or deducted from the book or bank balance, or whether it should not appear on the reconciliation.
(Select the answers in the appropriate cells and Leave no cells blank be certain to select "NA" in fields which are not applicable.)
Bank Balance
Book Balance
Shown/Not Shown
1.
Bank service charge for September.
2.
Checks written and mailed to payees on October 2.
3.
Checks written by another depositor but charged against this company’s account.
4.
Principal and interest on a note receivable to this company is collected by the bank but not yet recorded by the company.
5.
Special bank charge for collection of note in part 4 on this company's behalf.
6.
Check written against the company's account and cleared by the bank; erroneously not recorded by the company's recordkeeper.
7.
Interest earned on the September cash balance in the bank.
8.
Night deposit made on September 30 after the bank closed.
9.
Checks outstanding on August 31 that cleared the bank in September.
10.
NSF check from customer is returned on September 25 but not yet recorded by this company.
11.
Checks written by the company and mailed to payees on September 30.
12.
Deposit made on September 5 and processed by the bank on September 6.
5.
value:
6.00 points
Problem 8-2A Establish, reimburse, and adjust petty cash L.O. P2
Shawnee Co. .
ProblemIssuance of stock organization costs. Snowbound Corporat.docxbriancrawford30935
Problem
Issuance of stock: organization costs. Snowbound Corporation was incorporated in July. The firm's charter authorized the sale of 200,000 shares of $10 par-value common stock. The following transactions occurred during the year:
7/1:
Sold 45,000 shares of common stock to investors for $18 per share. Cash was collected and the shares were issued.
7/7:
Issued 600 shares to Sharon Dale, attorney-at-law, for services rendered during the corporation's organizational phase. Dale charged $12,600 for her work.
8/11:
Sold 20,000 shares to investors for $22 per share. Cash was collected and the shares were issued.
12/14:
Issued 30,000 shares to the MJB Company for land valued at $900,000.
Instructions
Prepare journal entries to record each transaction.
Student Guidance ReportAshford University ACC205Guidance ReportWeek FourLISTEN TO AUDIO/VIDEO EXPLAINING THE GUIDANCE REPORTYELLOW INDICATES ACCOUNT AMOUNTS CHANGEDChange Account to:Based Upon Course Start DateAccount to
be changedOriginal
AmountJan - FebMar-AprMay-JunJul-AugSept-OctNov-DecCh 7 Ex 2Loan$ 225,000$ 250,000$ 260,000$ 270,000$ 280,000$ 290,000$ 450,000QuestionsYOUR ANSWERS BASED UPON COURSE START DATEa. Compute Hall’s accrued interest as of December 31, 20X1.b. Present the appropriate balance sheet disclosure for the accrued interest and the current and long-term portion of the outstanding debt as of December 31, 20X1.c. Repeat parts (a) and (b) using a date of December 31, 20X2, rather than December 31, 20X1. Assume that Hall is in compliance with the terms of the loan agreement.Accrued interest 12/31/X2DisclosureAccount to
be changedOriginal
AmountJan - FebMar-AprMay-JunJul-AugSept-OctNov-DecCh 7 Ex 4Salary expense5000051,00052,00053,00054,00055,00056,000QuestionsYOUR ANSWERS BASED UPON COURSE START DATESalary expenseSocial Security PayableMedicare PayableFed Taxes PayableState Taxes PayableInsurance PayableCashPayroll Tax ExpenseSocial Security PayableMedicare PayableState unemploymentFed unemploymentAccount to
be changedOriginal
AmountJan - FebMar-AprMay-JunJul-AugSept-OctNov-DecCh 7 Pb 212/1 Note payable2000025,00026,00028,00030,00031,00033,00012/1 Interest rate015%15%15%15%15%15%Warranty2027202820292030203120322033Purchase on account1600017,00018,00019,00020,00021,00022,000Note payable50006,0007,0008,0009,00010,00011,000Warranty repair162172182192202222232Salary accural14001,5001,6001,7001,8001,9002,000Vacation6%360006%37,0006%38,0006%39,0006%40,0006%41,0006%42,00012/26 interest120$ 120$ 120$ 120$ 120$ 120$ 120a. Prepare journal entries to record the preceding transactions and events.CashNotes PayableWarranty expenseWarranty LiabilityMerchandiseAccounts PayableCashNote PayableWarranty LiabilityCashSalary ExpenseSalary PayablePayroll ExpenseAccrued Vacation Payableb. Determine accrued interest as of December 31, 20XX, and prepare the necessary adjusting entry or entries.12/1 one month accrual12/26 60 day note-accrue 5 daysTotal Interest Acc.
WEEK 2HW Due in LEO no later than 1100 PM on 30-AUG-2015 U.S.docxmelbruce90096
WEEK 2
H/W
Due in LEO no later than 11:00 PM on 30-AUG-2015 U.S. Eastern Time (Washington, DC)
Brief Exercise 15-1
Moby Inc. is considering two alternatives to finance its construction of a new $1.60 million plant.
(a)
Issuance of 160,000 shares of common stock at the market price of $10 per share.
(b)
Issuance of $1,600,000, 8% bonds at face value.
Complete the following table. (Round earnings per share to 2 decimal places, e.g. 0.25.)
Issue Stock
Issue Bond
Income before interest and taxes
$701,100
$701,100
Interest expense from bonds
Income before income taxes
Income tax expense (25%)
Net income
$
$
Outstanding shares
541,100
Earnings per share
$
$
Indicate which alternative is preferable.
Net income is if stock is used. However, earnings per share is than earnings per share if bonds are used because of the additional shares of stock that are outstanding.
Brief Exercise 15-2
Meera Corporation issued 3,770, 7%, 5-year, $1,000 bonds dated January 1, 2014, at 100.
Prepare the journal entry to record the sale of these bonds on January 1, 2014. (Credit account titles are automatically indented when amount is entered. Do not indent manually.)
Date
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
Jan. 1
Top of Form
Bottom of Form
Prepare the journal entry to record the first interest payment on July 1, 2014 (interest payable semiannually), assuming no previous accrual of interest. (Credit account titles are automatically indented when amount is entered. Do not indent manually.)
Date
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
July 1
Bottom of Form
Prepare the adjusting journal entry on December 31, 2014, to record interest expense. (Credit account titles are automatically indented when amount is entered. Do not indent manually.)
Date
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
Dec. 31
Bottom of Form
Brief Exercise 15-4
Frankum Company has issued three different bonds during 2014. Interest is payable semiannually on each of these bonds.
1.
On January 1, 2014, 1,110, 7%, 5-year, $1,200 bonds dated January 1, 2014, were issued at face value.
2.
On July 1, $726,200, 8%, 5-year bonds dated July 1, 2014, were issued at 104.
3.
On September 1, $315,400, 6%, 5-year bonds dated September 1, 2014, were issued at 98.
Prepare the journal entries to record each bond transaction at the date of issuance. (Credit account titles are automatically indented when amount is entered. Do not indent manually.)
Date
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
Jan. 1
July 1
Sept. 1
Brief Exercise 16-1
Ownbey Corporation purchased debt investments for $47,020 on January 1, 2014. On July 1, 2014, Ownbey received cash interest of $3,800.
Journalize the purchase and the receipt of interest. Assume that no interest has been accrued. (Credit account titles are automatically indented when amount is entered..
Week Four Exercise AssignmentLiability1. Payroll accounting. A.docxalanfhall8953
Week Four Exercise Assignment
Liability
1. Payroll accounting. Assume that the following tax rates and payroll information pertain to Brookhaven Publishing:
· Social Security taxes: 6% on the first $55,000 earned
· Medicare taxes: 1.5% on the first $130,000 earned
· Federal income taxes withheld from wages: $7,500
· State income taxes: 5% of gross earnings
· Insurance withholdings: 1% of gross earnings
· State unemployment taxes: 5.4% on the first $7,000 earned
· Federal unemployment taxes: 0.8% on the first $7,000 earned
The company incurred a salary expense of $50,000 during February. All employees had earned less than $5,000 by month-end.
a. Prepare the necessary entry to record Brookhaven’s February payroll. The entry will include deductions for the following:
· Social Security taxes
· Medicare taxes
· Federal income taxes withheld
· State income taxes
· Insurance withholdings
b. Prepare the journal entry to record Brookhaven’s payroll tax expense. The entry will include the following:
· Matching Social Security taxes
· Matching Medicare taxes
· State unemployment taxes
· Federal unemployment taxes
2. Current liabilities: entries and disclosure. A review of selected financial activities of Visconti’s during 20XX disclosed the following:
12/1
Borrowed $20,000 from the First City Bank by signing a 3- month, 15% note payable. Interest and principal are due at maturity.
2/10
Established a warranty liability for the XY-80, a new product. Sales are expected to total 1,000 units during the month. Past experience with similar products indicates that 2% of the units will require repair, with warranty costs averaging $27 per unit.
12/22
Purchased $16,000 of merchandise on account from Oregon Company, terms 2/10, n/30.
12/26
Borrowed $5,000 from First City Bank; signed a note payable due in 60 days.
12/31
Repaired six XY-80s during the month at a total cost of $162.
12/31
Accrued 3 days of salaries at a total cost of $1,400.
Instructions
a. Prepare journal entries to record the transactions.
b. Prepare adjusting entries on October 31 to record accrued interest.
c. Prepare the Current Liability section of Red Bank’s balance sheet as of October 31. Assume that the Accounts Payable account totals $203,600 on this date.
3. Notes payable. Red Bank Enterprises was involved in the following transactions during the fiscal year ending October 31:
8/2:
Borrowed $75,000 from the Bank of Kingsville by signing a 120-day note.
8/20:
Issued a $40,000 note to Harris Motors for the purchase of a $40,000 delivery truck. The note is due in 180 days and carries a 12% interest rate.
9/10:
Purchased merchandise from Pans Enterprises in the amount of $15,000. Issued a 30-day, 12% note in settlement of the balance owed.
9/11:
Issued a $60,000 note to Datatex Equipment in settlement of an overdue account payable of the same amount. The note is due in 30 days and carries a 14% interest rate.
10/10:
The note to Pans Enterprises was p.
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Scroll Down to See Details of the Questions Transactions for Mehta Company for the month of May are presented below. Prepare journal entries for each of these transactions. On July 1, 2014, Crowe Co. pays $15,000 to Zubin Insurance Co. for a 3-year insurance policy. Both companies have fiscal years ending December 31. For Crowe Co., journalize the entry on July 1 and the adjusting entry on December 31. Dresser Company’s weekly payroll, paid on Fridays, totals $8,000. Employees work a 5-day week. Prepare
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Scroll Down to See Details of the Questions Transactions for Mehta Company for the month of May are presented below. Prepare journal entries for each of these transactions. On July 1, 2014, Crowe Co. pays $15,000 to Zubin Insurance Co. for a 3-year insurance policy. Both companies have fiscal years ending December 31. For Crowe Co., journalize the entry on July 1 and the adjusting entry on December 31. Dresser Company’s weekly payroll, paid on Fridays, totals $8,000. Employees work a 5-day week. Prepare Dresser’s adjusting entry on Wednesday, December 31, and the journal entry to record the $8,000 cash payment on Friday, January 2 Side Kicks has year-end account balances of Sales Revenue $808,900; Interest Revenue $13,500; Cost of Goods Sold $556,200; Administrative Expenses $189,000; Income Tax Expense $35,100; and Dividends $18,900. Prepare the year-end closing entrie To convert cash receipts from customers to revenue
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Scroll Down to See Details of the Questions Transactions for Mehta Company for the month of May are presented below. Prepare journal entries for each of these transactions. On July 1, 2014, Crowe Co. pays $15,000 to Zubin Insurance Co. for a 3-year insurance policy. Both companies have fiscal years ending December 31. For Crowe Co., journalize the entry on July 1 and the adjusting entry on December 31.
The following information is available to reconcile Clark Company’s .docxadelaider1
The following information is available to reconcile Clark Company’s book balance of cash with its bank statement cash balance as of July 31, 2011.
a.
On July 31, the company’s Cash account has a $26,193 debit balance, but its July bank statement shows a $28,020 cash balance.
b.
Check No. 3031 for $1,380 and Check No. 3040 for $552 were outstanding on the June 30 bank reconciliation. Check No. 3040 is listed with the July canceled checks, but Check No. 3031 is not. Also, Check No. 3065 for $336 and Check No. 3069 for $2,148, both written in July, are not among the canceled checks on the July 31 statement.
c.
In comparing the canceled checks on the bank statement with the entries in the accounting records, it is found that Check No. 3056 for July rent was correctly written and drawn for $1,250 but was erroneously entered in the accounting records as $1,230.
d.
A credit memorandum enclosed with the July bank statement indicates the bank collected $9,000 cash on a non-interest-bearing note for Clark, deducted a $45 collection fee, and credited the remainder to its account. Clark had not recorded this event before receiving the statement.
e.
A debit memorandum for $805 lists a $795 NSF check plus a $10 NSF charge. The check had been received from a customer, Jim Shaw. Clark has not yet recorded this check as NSF.
f.
Enclosed with the July statement is a $15 debit memorandum for bank services. It has not yet been recorded because no previous notification had been received.
g.
Clark’s July 31 daily cash receipts of $10,152 were placed in the bank’s night depository on that date, but do not appear on the July 31 bank statement.
references
3.
value:
3.00 points
Problem 6-4A Part 1
Required:
1.
Prepare the bank reconciliation for this company as of July 31, 2011.
(Input all amounts as positive values. Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
CLARK COMPANY
Bank Reconciliation
July 31, 2011
Bank statement balance
$
$
$
Problem 6-4A Part 2
2.
Prepare the journal entries necessary to bring the company’s book balance of cash into conformity with the reconciled cash balance as of July 31, 2011.
(Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
July 31
[removed]
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Transactions for Mehta Company for the month of May are presented below. Prepare journal entries for each of these transactions.
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Your company name
Your name
Instruction Page
1. On the cover page
a. Replace ‘Your Company Name’ with your company name, city and state
b. Replace ‘Date’ with the date of the plan
c. Consider inserting graphics:
i. Company logo
ii. Insert a picture or graphic of your product or service
iii. Photo of your facilities
iv. Photo of your location
2. Replace ‘ENTER YOUR COMPANY NAME HERE’ with your company name on the page with the Statement of Confidentiality & Non-Disclosure
3. Open the document header and enter your company name and your name
4. Update the table of contents as you build your business plan.
Delete this page before submitting your business plan.
Business Plan
Your Company Name Here
City, State
Date
Statement of Confidentiality & Non-Disclosure
THIS BUSINESS PLAN CONTAINS PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION.
All data submitted to the receiver is provided in reliance upon its consent not to use or disclose any information contained herein except in the context of its business dealings with ENTER YOUR COMPANY NAME HERE (Company). The recipient of this document agrees to inform its present and future employees and partners who view or have access to the document's content of its confidential nature.
The recipient agrees to instruct each employee that they must not disclose any information concerning this document to others except to the extent such matters are generally known to, and are available for use by, the public. The recipient also agrees not duplicate or distribute or permit others to duplicate or distribute any material contained herein without the Company's express written consent.
The Company retains all title, ownership and intellectual property rights to the material and trademarks contained herein, including all supporting documentation, files, marketing material, and multimedia.
Disclaimer Notice
THIS BUSINESS PLAN IS FOR INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY AND DOES NOT CONSTITUTE AN OFFER TO SELL OR THE SOLICITATION OF AN OFFER TO BUY ANY SECURITIES.
The Company reserves the right, in its sole discretion, to reject any and all proposals made by or on behalf of any recipient, to accept any such proposals, to negotiate with one or more recipients at any time, and to enter into a definitive agreement without prior notice to other recipients. The company also reserves the right to terminate, at any time, further participation in the investigation and proposal process by, or discussions or negotiations with, any recipient without reason.
BY ACCEPTANCE OF THIS DOCUMENT, THE RECIPIENT AGREES TO BE BOUND BY THE AFOREMENTIONED STATEMENT.
Table of Contents
Introduction and Overview 6
Executive Summary 6
Objectives 6
Mission 6
Keys to Success 6
Company Summary 6
Company Ownership 6
Start-up 6
What We Sell 7
Summary 7
Our products 7
Our services 7
Market Analysis and Sales Forecast 8
Market and Sales Forecast Summary 8
Total Market 8
Target Market Summar.
Your Company NameYour Company NameBudget Proposalfor[ent.docxhyacinthshackley2629
Your Company Name
Your Company Name
Budget Proposal
for
[enter years here]
BUSN278
[Term]
Professor[name]
DeVry University
Table of Contents
Section
Title
Subsection
Title
Page Number1.0Executive Summary
2.0Sales Forecast
2.1Sales Forecast
2.2Methods and Assumptions
3.0Capital Expenditure Budget
4.0Investment Analysis
4.1Cash Flows
4.2NPV Analysis
4.3Rate of Return Calculations
4.4Payback Period Calculations
5.0Pro Forma Financial Statements
5.1Pro Forma Income Statement
5.2Pro Forma Balance Sheet
5.3Pro Forma Cash Budget
6.0Works Cited
7.0Appendices
7.1Appendix 1: [description]
7.2Appendix 2:
[description]
(Please put page numbers in the last column of the table of contents above, because they apply to your finished assignment. Do this after your project is complete. Remove this text and all text that is in italics in this template when finished with your project.)
(Also, please submit your Excel spreadsheet that shows your supporting calculations.)
1.0 Executive Summary
The first paragraph of this executive summary should give a brief description of the business to which this budget applies. Very briefly describe the products and services of this company, the geography or demographics of the customers it serves, and why people purchase the main product of this business. Much or all of this information will be found in the business profile provided to you. Please use your own words, and please do not simply copy and paste the explanation in the course materials. Make assumptions if necessary.
Also, provide a second paragraph that describes how the budget supports the company’s strategy.
Finally, provide a third paragraph in which you summarize the key points from your budget, including the planning horizon; the amount of up-front investment; the NPV, payback, and IRR of the project; and key figures from your income statement, cash budget, and balance sheet.
Remember, this is not a thesis or introduction of what you will talk about—it contains the major, specific content of each section. The second and third paragraphs should be written after you have completed all other sections of this template.
As you complete sections of this template, please remove all italicized text in all sections of this template and replace it with your own text or you will lose points!
2.0 Sales Forecast
Briefly introduce the sales forecast section.
2.1 Sales Forecast
Here you should include a simple table showing the years and the total sales for each year, along with a brief explanation of why sales are expected to rise, fall, change, or stay the same in certain years. Provide a brief explanation of the sales forecast, indicating why you expect sales to rise or fall during the planning horizon. Your explanation should be consistent with the trends and changes in sales found in your table.
Year 1
Year 2
Year 3
Year 4
Year 5
Sales
2.2 Methods and Assumptions
Here you should describe how you arrived at your sales forecast in sect.
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Similar to 1.value3.34 pointsFollowing are selected transactions Des.docx
WEEK 2HW Due in LEO no later than 1100 PM on 30-AUG-2015 U.S.docxmelbruce90096
WEEK 2
H/W
Due in LEO no later than 11:00 PM on 30-AUG-2015 U.S. Eastern Time (Washington, DC)
Brief Exercise 15-1
Moby Inc. is considering two alternatives to finance its construction of a new $1.60 million plant.
(a)
Issuance of 160,000 shares of common stock at the market price of $10 per share.
(b)
Issuance of $1,600,000, 8% bonds at face value.
Complete the following table. (Round earnings per share to 2 decimal places, e.g. 0.25.)
Issue Stock
Issue Bond
Income before interest and taxes
$701,100
$701,100
Interest expense from bonds
Income before income taxes
Income tax expense (25%)
Net income
$
$
Outstanding shares
541,100
Earnings per share
$
$
Indicate which alternative is preferable.
Net income is if stock is used. However, earnings per share is than earnings per share if bonds are used because of the additional shares of stock that are outstanding.
Brief Exercise 15-2
Meera Corporation issued 3,770, 7%, 5-year, $1,000 bonds dated January 1, 2014, at 100.
Prepare the journal entry to record the sale of these bonds on January 1, 2014. (Credit account titles are automatically indented when amount is entered. Do not indent manually.)
Date
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
Jan. 1
Top of Form
Bottom of Form
Prepare the journal entry to record the first interest payment on July 1, 2014 (interest payable semiannually), assuming no previous accrual of interest. (Credit account titles are automatically indented when amount is entered. Do not indent manually.)
Date
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
July 1
Bottom of Form
Prepare the adjusting journal entry on December 31, 2014, to record interest expense. (Credit account titles are automatically indented when amount is entered. Do not indent manually.)
Date
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
Dec. 31
Bottom of Form
Brief Exercise 15-4
Frankum Company has issued three different bonds during 2014. Interest is payable semiannually on each of these bonds.
1.
On January 1, 2014, 1,110, 7%, 5-year, $1,200 bonds dated January 1, 2014, were issued at face value.
2.
On July 1, $726,200, 8%, 5-year bonds dated July 1, 2014, were issued at 104.
3.
On September 1, $315,400, 6%, 5-year bonds dated September 1, 2014, were issued at 98.
Prepare the journal entries to record each bond transaction at the date of issuance. (Credit account titles are automatically indented when amount is entered. Do not indent manually.)
Date
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
Jan. 1
July 1
Sept. 1
Brief Exercise 16-1
Ownbey Corporation purchased debt investments for $47,020 on January 1, 2014. On July 1, 2014, Ownbey received cash interest of $3,800.
Journalize the purchase and the receipt of interest. Assume that no interest has been accrued. (Credit account titles are automatically indented when amount is entered..
Week Four Exercise AssignmentLiability1. Payroll accounting. A.docxalanfhall8953
Week Four Exercise Assignment
Liability
1. Payroll accounting. Assume that the following tax rates and payroll information pertain to Brookhaven Publishing:
· Social Security taxes: 6% on the first $55,000 earned
· Medicare taxes: 1.5% on the first $130,000 earned
· Federal income taxes withheld from wages: $7,500
· State income taxes: 5% of gross earnings
· Insurance withholdings: 1% of gross earnings
· State unemployment taxes: 5.4% on the first $7,000 earned
· Federal unemployment taxes: 0.8% on the first $7,000 earned
The company incurred a salary expense of $50,000 during February. All employees had earned less than $5,000 by month-end.
a. Prepare the necessary entry to record Brookhaven’s February payroll. The entry will include deductions for the following:
· Social Security taxes
· Medicare taxes
· Federal income taxes withheld
· State income taxes
· Insurance withholdings
b. Prepare the journal entry to record Brookhaven’s payroll tax expense. The entry will include the following:
· Matching Social Security taxes
· Matching Medicare taxes
· State unemployment taxes
· Federal unemployment taxes
2. Current liabilities: entries and disclosure. A review of selected financial activities of Visconti’s during 20XX disclosed the following:
12/1
Borrowed $20,000 from the First City Bank by signing a 3- month, 15% note payable. Interest and principal are due at maturity.
2/10
Established a warranty liability for the XY-80, a new product. Sales are expected to total 1,000 units during the month. Past experience with similar products indicates that 2% of the units will require repair, with warranty costs averaging $27 per unit.
12/22
Purchased $16,000 of merchandise on account from Oregon Company, terms 2/10, n/30.
12/26
Borrowed $5,000 from First City Bank; signed a note payable due in 60 days.
12/31
Repaired six XY-80s during the month at a total cost of $162.
12/31
Accrued 3 days of salaries at a total cost of $1,400.
Instructions
a. Prepare journal entries to record the transactions.
b. Prepare adjusting entries on October 31 to record accrued interest.
c. Prepare the Current Liability section of Red Bank’s balance sheet as of October 31. Assume that the Accounts Payable account totals $203,600 on this date.
3. Notes payable. Red Bank Enterprises was involved in the following transactions during the fiscal year ending October 31:
8/2:
Borrowed $75,000 from the Bank of Kingsville by signing a 120-day note.
8/20:
Issued a $40,000 note to Harris Motors for the purchase of a $40,000 delivery truck. The note is due in 180 days and carries a 12% interest rate.
9/10:
Purchased merchandise from Pans Enterprises in the amount of $15,000. Issued a 30-day, 12% note in settlement of the balance owed.
9/11:
Issued a $60,000 note to Datatex Equipment in settlement of an overdue account payable of the same amount. The note is due in 30 days and carries a 14% interest rate.
10/10:
The note to Pans Enterprises was p.
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Scroll Down to See Details of the Questions Transactions for Mehta Company for the month of May are presented below. Prepare journal entries for each of these transactions. On July 1, 2014, Crowe Co. pays $15,000 to Zubin Insurance Co. for a 3-year insurance policy. Both companies have fiscal years ending December 31. For Crowe Co., journalize the entry on July 1 and the adjusting entry on December 31. Dresser Company’s weekly payroll, paid on Fridays, totals $8,000. Employees work a 5-day week. Prepare
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Scroll Down to See Details of the Questions Transactions for Mehta Company for the month of May are presented below. Prepare journal entries for each of these transactions
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Transactions for Mehta Company for the month of May are presented below. Prepare journal entries for each of these transactions.
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Scroll Down to See Details of the Questions Transactions for Mehta Company for the month of May are presented below. Prepare journal entries for each of these transactions. On July 1, 2014, Crowe Co. pays $15,000 to Zubin Insurance Co. for a 3-year insurance policy. Both companies have fiscal years ending December 31. For Crowe Co., journalize the entry on July 1 and the adjusting entry on December 31. Dresser Company’s weekly payroll, paid on Fridays, totals $8,000. Employees work a 5-day week. Prepare Dresser’s adjusting entry on Wednesday, December 31, and the journal entry to record the $8,000 cash payment on Friday, January 2 Side Kicks has year-end account balances of Sales Revenue $808,900; Interest Revenue $13,500; Cost of Goods Sold $556,200; Administrative Expenses $189,000; Income Tax Expense $35,100; and Dividends $18,900. Prepare the year-end closing entrie To convert cash receipts from customers to revenue
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Scroll Down to See Details of the Questions Transactions for Mehta Company for the month of May are presented below. Prepare journal entries for each of these transactions. On July 1, 2014, Crowe Co. pays $15,000 to Zubin Insurance Co. for a 3-year insurance policy. Both companies have fiscal years ending December 31. For Crowe Co., journalize the entry on July 1 and the adjusting entry on December 31.
The following information is available to reconcile Clark Company’s .docxadelaider1
The following information is available to reconcile Clark Company’s book balance of cash with its bank statement cash balance as of July 31, 2011.
a.
On July 31, the company’s Cash account has a $26,193 debit balance, but its July bank statement shows a $28,020 cash balance.
b.
Check No. 3031 for $1,380 and Check No. 3040 for $552 were outstanding on the June 30 bank reconciliation. Check No. 3040 is listed with the July canceled checks, but Check No. 3031 is not. Also, Check No. 3065 for $336 and Check No. 3069 for $2,148, both written in July, are not among the canceled checks on the July 31 statement.
c.
In comparing the canceled checks on the bank statement with the entries in the accounting records, it is found that Check No. 3056 for July rent was correctly written and drawn for $1,250 but was erroneously entered in the accounting records as $1,230.
d.
A credit memorandum enclosed with the July bank statement indicates the bank collected $9,000 cash on a non-interest-bearing note for Clark, deducted a $45 collection fee, and credited the remainder to its account. Clark had not recorded this event before receiving the statement.
e.
A debit memorandum for $805 lists a $795 NSF check plus a $10 NSF charge. The check had been received from a customer, Jim Shaw. Clark has not yet recorded this check as NSF.
f.
Enclosed with the July statement is a $15 debit memorandum for bank services. It has not yet been recorded because no previous notification had been received.
g.
Clark’s July 31 daily cash receipts of $10,152 were placed in the bank’s night depository on that date, but do not appear on the July 31 bank statement.
references
3.
value:
3.00 points
Problem 6-4A Part 1
Required:
1.
Prepare the bank reconciliation for this company as of July 31, 2011.
(Input all amounts as positive values. Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
CLARK COMPANY
Bank Reconciliation
July 31, 2011
Bank statement balance
$
$
$
Problem 6-4A Part 2
2.
Prepare the journal entries necessary to bring the company’s book balance of cash into conformity with the reconciled cash balance as of July 31, 2011.
(Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
July 31
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Transactions for Mehta Company for the month of May are presented below. Prepare journal entries for each of these transactions.
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Transactions for Mehta Company for the month of May are presented below. Prepare journal entries for each of these transactions.
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Transactions for Mehta Company for the month of May are presented below. Prepare journal entries for each of these transactions.
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Transactions for Mehta Company for the month of May are presented below. Prepare journal entries for each of these transactions.
Similar to 1.value3.34 pointsFollowing are selected transactions Des.docx (20)
Your company name
Your name
Instruction Page
1. On the cover page
a. Replace ‘Your Company Name’ with your company name, city and state
b. Replace ‘Date’ with the date of the plan
c. Consider inserting graphics:
i. Company logo
ii. Insert a picture or graphic of your product or service
iii. Photo of your facilities
iv. Photo of your location
2. Replace ‘ENTER YOUR COMPANY NAME HERE’ with your company name on the page with the Statement of Confidentiality & Non-Disclosure
3. Open the document header and enter your company name and your name
4. Update the table of contents as you build your business plan.
Delete this page before submitting your business plan.
Business Plan
Your Company Name Here
City, State
Date
Statement of Confidentiality & Non-Disclosure
THIS BUSINESS PLAN CONTAINS PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION.
All data submitted to the receiver is provided in reliance upon its consent not to use or disclose any information contained herein except in the context of its business dealings with ENTER YOUR COMPANY NAME HERE (Company). The recipient of this document agrees to inform its present and future employees and partners who view or have access to the document's content of its confidential nature.
The recipient agrees to instruct each employee that they must not disclose any information concerning this document to others except to the extent such matters are generally known to, and are available for use by, the public. The recipient also agrees not duplicate or distribute or permit others to duplicate or distribute any material contained herein without the Company's express written consent.
The Company retains all title, ownership and intellectual property rights to the material and trademarks contained herein, including all supporting documentation, files, marketing material, and multimedia.
Disclaimer Notice
THIS BUSINESS PLAN IS FOR INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY AND DOES NOT CONSTITUTE AN OFFER TO SELL OR THE SOLICITATION OF AN OFFER TO BUY ANY SECURITIES.
The Company reserves the right, in its sole discretion, to reject any and all proposals made by or on behalf of any recipient, to accept any such proposals, to negotiate with one or more recipients at any time, and to enter into a definitive agreement without prior notice to other recipients. The company also reserves the right to terminate, at any time, further participation in the investigation and proposal process by, or discussions or negotiations with, any recipient without reason.
BY ACCEPTANCE OF THIS DOCUMENT, THE RECIPIENT AGREES TO BE BOUND BY THE AFOREMENTIONED STATEMENT.
Table of Contents
Introduction and Overview 6
Executive Summary 6
Objectives 6
Mission 6
Keys to Success 6
Company Summary 6
Company Ownership 6
Start-up 6
What We Sell 7
Summary 7
Our products 7
Our services 7
Market Analysis and Sales Forecast 8
Market and Sales Forecast Summary 8
Total Market 8
Target Market Summar.
Your Company NameYour Company NameBudget Proposalfor[ent.docxhyacinthshackley2629
Your Company Name
Your Company Name
Budget Proposal
for
[enter years here]
BUSN278
[Term]
Professor[name]
DeVry University
Table of Contents
Section
Title
Subsection
Title
Page Number1.0Executive Summary
2.0Sales Forecast
2.1Sales Forecast
2.2Methods and Assumptions
3.0Capital Expenditure Budget
4.0Investment Analysis
4.1Cash Flows
4.2NPV Analysis
4.3Rate of Return Calculations
4.4Payback Period Calculations
5.0Pro Forma Financial Statements
5.1Pro Forma Income Statement
5.2Pro Forma Balance Sheet
5.3Pro Forma Cash Budget
6.0Works Cited
7.0Appendices
7.1Appendix 1: [description]
7.2Appendix 2:
[description]
(Please put page numbers in the last column of the table of contents above, because they apply to your finished assignment. Do this after your project is complete. Remove this text and all text that is in italics in this template when finished with your project.)
(Also, please submit your Excel spreadsheet that shows your supporting calculations.)
1.0 Executive Summary
The first paragraph of this executive summary should give a brief description of the business to which this budget applies. Very briefly describe the products and services of this company, the geography or demographics of the customers it serves, and why people purchase the main product of this business. Much or all of this information will be found in the business profile provided to you. Please use your own words, and please do not simply copy and paste the explanation in the course materials. Make assumptions if necessary.
Also, provide a second paragraph that describes how the budget supports the company’s strategy.
Finally, provide a third paragraph in which you summarize the key points from your budget, including the planning horizon; the amount of up-front investment; the NPV, payback, and IRR of the project; and key figures from your income statement, cash budget, and balance sheet.
Remember, this is not a thesis or introduction of what you will talk about—it contains the major, specific content of each section. The second and third paragraphs should be written after you have completed all other sections of this template.
As you complete sections of this template, please remove all italicized text in all sections of this template and replace it with your own text or you will lose points!
2.0 Sales Forecast
Briefly introduce the sales forecast section.
2.1 Sales Forecast
Here you should include a simple table showing the years and the total sales for each year, along with a brief explanation of why sales are expected to rise, fall, change, or stay the same in certain years. Provide a brief explanation of the sales forecast, indicating why you expect sales to rise or fall during the planning horizon. Your explanation should be consistent with the trends and changes in sales found in your table.
Year 1
Year 2
Year 3
Year 4
Year 5
Sales
2.2 Methods and Assumptions
Here you should describe how you arrived at your sales forecast in sect.
Your company recently reviewed the results of a penetration test.docxhyacinthshackley2629
Your company recently reviewed the results of a penetration test on your network. Several vulnerabilities were identified, and the IT security management team has recommended mitigation. The manager has asked you to construct a plan of action and milestones (POA&M) given that the following vulnerabilities and mitigations were identified:
The penetration test showed that not all systems had malware protection software in place. The mitigation was to write a malware defense process to include all employees and retest the system after the process was implemented.
The penetration test indicated that the data server that houses employee payroll records had an admin password of “admin.” The mitigation was to perform extensive hardening of the data server.
The penetration test also identified many laptop computers that employees brought to work and connected to the internal network,some of which were easily compromised. The mitigation was to write a bring your own device (BYOD) policy for all employees and train the employees how to use their devices at work.
Complete
the 1- to 2-page
Plan of Action and Milestones Template
. (Must use this template!)
.
Your company wants to explore moving much of their data and info.docxhyacinthshackley2629
Your company wants to explore moving much of their data and information technology infrastructure to the cloud. The company is a small online retailer and requires a database and a web storefront. Currently, only IT is over budget on database maintenance. The initial analysis points to significant cost savings by moving to a cloud environment.
Research
the differences between Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS), Software as a Service (SaaS), and Platform as a Service (PaaS).
Discuss
the differences between IaaS, SaaS, and PaaS. Give an example of the appropriate use of each of the cloud models (Iaas, SaaS, and PaaS).
.
Your company plans to establish MNE manufacturing operations in Sout.docxhyacinthshackley2629
Your company plans to establish MNE manufacturing operations in South Korea. You have been asked to conduct a cultural audit focusing on leadership behaviors of South Korea. The results of your report will be used for internal training for plant managers due to be reassigned to work with South Korean managers in a few months. You are aware of a high-collectivism culture with a Confucian code of ethical behavior in South Korea. What kinds of South Korean leadership behaviors would you expect to include in your report? Describe these in terms of interaction between the U.S. and Korean managers as well as interaction between Korean leader-followers.
By
Saturday, June 21, 2014
respond to the discussion question assigned by the faculty. Submit your response to the appropriate
Discussion Area
. Use the same
Discussion Area
to comment on your classmates' submissions and continue the discussion until
Wednesday, June 25, 2014
.
Comment on how your classmates would address differing views.
.
Your company just purchased a Dell server MD1420 DAS to use to store.docxhyacinthshackley2629
Your company just purchased a Dell server MD1420 DAS to use to store databases. the databases will contain all employee records and personal identified information (PII). You know that databases like this are often targets. The Chief Information Officer has asked you draft a diagram for the server and 3 connected workstations. The diagram must use proper UML icons.
- Research:
network topology to protect database server (Google Term and click images)
-
Create a diagram using proper UML
icon, the protects the server and the 3 workstations.
-
Include where Internet access will be located
, firewall and other details.
- The
body (Min 1 page)
- Provide a summary after the diagram how and why you topology should protect the database.
.
your company is moving to a new HRpayroll system that is sponsored .docxhyacinthshackley2629
your company is moving to a new HR/payroll system that is sponsored by a firm called Workday.com. You have been asked to oversee the stakeholder management aspects of this project. Identify some of the key stakeholders at your company and describe how you plan to keep them engaged during your year-long project. Be sure to include the appropriate methods since not all of your stakeholders are located at the HQ office in Herndon, VA.
.
Your company is considering the implementation of a technology s.docxhyacinthshackley2629
Your company is considering the implementation of a technology solution to address a business problem. As a member of the IT team for a manufacturing company, you were asked to select a product to address the identified needs, informing the stakeholders about its fit to the identified needs, and providing implementation details. Several past process changes have been unsuccessful at implementation and user acceptance. You will create two artifacts that communicate product information tailored to meet the needs of each of the following stakeholder groups:
• Audience 1: executive leadership of the organization, such as the CIO, CFO, etc.
• Audience 2: cross-functional team, including members from IT who will be implementing the product
.
Your company is a security service contractor that consults with bus.docxhyacinthshackley2629
Your company is a security service contractor that consults with businesses in the U.S. that require assistance in complying with HIPAA. You advertise a proven track record in providing information program security management, information security governance programs, risk management programs, and regulatory and compliance recommendations. You identify vulnerabilities, threats, and risks for clients with the end goal of securing and protecting applications and systems within their organization.
Your client is Health Coverage Associates, a health insurance exchange in California and a healthcare covered entity. The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) enables individuals and small businesses to purchase health insurance at federally subsidized rates. In the past 6 months, they have experienced:
A malware attack (i.e., SQL Injection) on a critical software application that processed and stored client protected health information (PHI) that allowed access to PHI stored within the database
An internal mistake by an employee that allowed PHI to be emailed to the wrong recipient who was not authorized to have access to the PHI
An unauthorized access to client accounts through cracking of weak passwords via the company’s website login
Health Coverage Associates would like you to
develop
a security management plan that would address the required safeguards to protect the confidentiality, integrity, and availability of sensitive data from the attacks listed above and protect their assets from the vulnerabilities that allowed the attacks to occur.
Write
a 1- to 2-page high-level executive summary of the legal and regulatory compliance requirements for Health Coverage Associates executives. The summary should provide
Accurate information on the HIPAA requirements for securing PHI
FISMA and HIPAA requirements for a security plan
Scope of the work you will perform to meet the Health Coverage Associates’ requests
Compile
a 1-to 2-page list of at least 10 of the CIS controls that provide key alignment with the administrative (policies), physical (secured facilities), and technical safeguards required under HIPAA to protect against the attacks listed above. Include corresponding NIST controls mapped to the selected CIS controls.
Write
a 1- to 2-page concise outline of the contents of the security management plan. Include
Policies Health Coverage Associates will need to manage, protect, and provide access to PHI
The recommended risk management framework Health Coverage Associates should adopt
Key elements Health Coverage Associates should include in its plan of actions and milestones
Cite
all sources using APA guidelines.
.
Your company has just sent you to a Project Management Conference on.docxhyacinthshackley2629
Your company has just sent you to a Project Management Conference on the latest trends in project scope management. When you return to work, you will have to provide a report at the staff meeting on what you learned.
In your initial post
, share some of the trends that you heard at the conference. Conduct research and use sources to support your findings. Be sure to acknowledge any sources you use.
.
Your company has designed an information system for a library. The .docxhyacinthshackley2629
Your company has designed an information system for a library. The project included a new network (wired and wireless), a data entry application, a Web site, database and documentation.
Design a generic test plan that describes the testing for an imaginary system, make sure to address unit, integration and system testing.
Create a one-page questionnaire to distribute to users in a post-implementation evaluation of a recent information system project. Include at least 10 questions that cover the important information you want to obtain.
.
Your company has had embedded HR generalists in business units for t.docxhyacinthshackley2629
Your company has had embedded HR generalists in business units for the past several years. Over that time, it has become more costly and more difficult to maintain standards, and is a frustration for business units to have that budget “hit.” The leadership has decided to move to a more centralized model of delivering HR services and has asked you to evaluate that proposition and begin establishing a project team to initiate the needed changes. The project team is selected, and you must now provide general direction.
.
Your company You are a new Supply Chain Analyst with the ACME.docxhyacinthshackley2629
Your company: You are a new Supply Chain Analyst with the ACME Corporation. We design specialty electronics that are components in larger finished goods such as major appliances, automobiles and industrial equipment. Manufacturing is outsourced to low-cost suppliers due to the significant labor contribution and closeness to electronic component suppliers.
Your product: ACME Corp. designs a leading-edge family of devices branded as “Voice Assistants.” These are add-on boxes that many OEMs are using as plug-and-play devices in a wide variety of Internet-of-Things products. They are also sold directly to consumers as after-market items, but only for IoT devices that were built with our proprietary data-port.
Figure 1: Product line of ACME Corp Voice Assistant IoT Add-on Boxes
Your task: Your Chief Supply Chain Officer (CSCO) is requesting a review of supplier-to-customer processes as related to recent growth in our company and increasing demand for faster responsiveness to customers. One alternative is to decentralize our inventory into regional Distribution Centers; however, our ERP system is currently limited in the data available to make some of these decisions – and the output reports are very antiquated. Starting off the process, the CSCO directed that your Analysis Team use population data to pro-rate our national sales data as a starting point. For this analysis, you are asked to focus only on the flagship product, Voice Assistant IoT Add-on Box, 4GB, SKU #123-456789. The challenge is now yours to complete some computations and interpret the results!
Your data: A detailed report from your ERP system along with secondary data from the U.S. Census Bureau (reference: https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/popest/data/data-sets.html) is provided. (Note: Sales to Alaska, Hawaii and Puerto Rico are handled by a 3PL provider and therefore are NOT part of this analysis.) The consolidated EXCEL® file has incorporated several tasks already performed by the Analysis Team --- sort, cleanse, inventory optimization, etc. Other tasks remain for your team.
Detailed Requirements: Prepare a formal report summarizing your results and providing recommendations that are supported by facts. The required layout follows:
A. Supply Chain Management:
a. Identify a single key supplier and a single key customer for your product, including a brief description of their product.
b. Identify the proper type of business relationship that your company should have with the supplier and customer from Part A, above, then briefly describe the data that you would share with them.
c. When implementing Supply Chain Management with your #1 key supplier for the first time, create a timeline that lists each of the six SCOR processes in the order that you recommend implementation; include process leader (by job title), primary contact at supplier/customer (by job title), and duration to implement.
d. Briefly describe each of the four enablers of supply chain .
Your company has asked that you create a survey to collect data .docxhyacinthshackley2629
Your company has asked that you create a survey to collect data on customer satisfaction related to their health care experience at your hospital.
Assignment Details (4-5 pages)
Please Add Title to page
Page 1:
A brief summary of the health care issue/topic (wait time, medication errors, etc.)
Number and access of source to sample and population
Limitations of the survey (parameters)
Time line for completion of survey
Page 2: Survey Questions
Survey questions: Limit the questions to 10
Page 3: Compilation of Data
Time line for assessment and evaluation of data
Challenges faced during this process
Page 4: Results and Conclusions
Results of study
Conclusions and potential value of the findings
Reference page
Deliverable Length
4–5 pages
Title and reference pages
.
"Your Communications Plan"
Description
A.
What is your challenge or opportunity?
The topic I would like to present is pitching an Project idea for some investor to invest in my Women’s Resources center.(Voices Of Women)
B.
.
Why is this professionally important to you?
Goal
A.
What goal or outcome do you want to achieve with this communication?
I.
Is it clear, concise, and actionable?
Audience
A.
Who is you target audience?
What are the professional positions of the audience?
I.
What demographic characteristics will the audience comprise?
II.
What is your relationship to the audience?
III.
What background knowledge and expertise does the audience have?
IV.
What does the audience know, feel about, and expect concerning this communication?
V.
What preconceptions or biases do you possess that might prevent you from building rapport with your audience?
B.
What information is available about your audience?
A.
b.
c.
I.
What research/sources will you use to obtain information about the audience?
II.
What conclusions have you been able to draw about the audience?
C.
What tone will you
"Your Communications Plan"
Description
A.
What is your challenge or opportunity?
The topic I would like to present is pitching an Project idea for some investor to invest in my Women’s Resources center.(Voices Of Women)
B.
.
Why is this professionally important to you?
Goal
A.
What goal or outcome do you want to achieve with this communication?
I.
Is it clear, concise, and actionable?
Audience
A.
Who is you target audience?
What are the professional positions of the audience?
I.
What demographic characteristics will the audience comprise?
II.
What is your relationship to the audience?
III.
What background knowledge and expertise does the audience have?
IV.
What does the audience know, feel about, and expect concerning this communication?
V.
What preconceptions or biases do you possess that might prevent you from building rapport with your audience?
B.
What information is available about your audience?
A.
b.
c.
I.
What research/sources will you use to obtain information about the audience?
II.
What conclusions have you been able to draw about the audience?
C.
What tone will you use to convey your message?
I.
Is the setting casual or formal?
II.
Is the communication personal or impersonal?
Key Message
A.
What is the primary message you must convey to your audience?use to convey your message?
I.
Is the setting casual or formal?
II.
Is the communication personal or impersonal?
Key Message
A.
What is the primary message you must convey to your audience?
.
Your community includes people from diverse backgrounds. Answer .docxhyacinthshackley2629
Your community includes people from diverse backgrounds. Answer the following questions related to how culture affects nutrition.
1. How does your culture shape decisions that you make about nutrition? (Culture includes history, values, politics, economics, communication styles, beliefs, and practices.)
2. Describe at least 1 different cultures present at your community. How do these cultures impact food choices?
3. Describe how you interact with someone from another culture related to diet. Provide specific examples.
4. Assume that you are preparing a Thanks Giving dinner for a group of your classmates that represent a variety of cultures. Describe how you will prepare the menu and set the table. Include how you will address food safety at the picnic.
Explore ways to address the problem of food insecurity in your community.
1. What programs are available to meet the nutrition needs of individuals in the area?
2. What types of options exist in the area to purchase food?
3. What role do you believe society should take to ensure that individuals have access to adequate healthy food?
4. What do you see as your role in the community related to proper nutrition?
.
Your Communications Plan Please respond to the following.docxhyacinthshackley2629
"Your Communications Plan"
Please respond to the following:
Provide a brief overview of your Strategic Communications Plan. Include a short description for each of the following
in bullet point format
:
- The purpose of the communication
- Your goal
- Audience
- Key Message
- Supporting Points
- Channel Selection
- Action Request
Note:
Remember, feedback is a powerful and essential tool. Thoughtful, useful feedback is specific. It combines suggestions for improvement with the recognition of good ideas. When you offer feedback, you should contribute new ideas and new perspectives to help your peers learn and move forward.
.
Your Communication InvestigationFor your mission after reading y.docxhyacinthshackley2629
Your Communication Investigation
For your mission after reading your assignment, you are to take yourself and a notebook into your environment and observe human interaction for 15 minutes noting two persons and their interpersonal exchange(s) but don't join the conversation. This can be a place of your choosing but describe it in some (not complete) detail. Note significant features of the communication environment. Using terms from our textbook write down your observations.
Identify the elements from our Transactional model
Briefly describe the transactional nature of the communication of the persons you are observing. Do you see attempts at ‘communicare’ of "making something common"? What is it that you saw that led you to this conclusion? Sender? Receiver? Message?
Report back to us
Describe the communication behavior you observed in a brief but specific report. What got your attention? Why? What elements of the transactional communication model did you see as you were observing their behavior? What about your 'decoding' of the scene? Do you think you had any personal 'noise' or bias that may have affected how you saw or interpreted the scene?
Post your report to the Discussion Board and then read all of the posts
Post your replies to two classmates and using your skills in perception take a position of empathy
.
Explain how you perceive the scene your classmate reports and take a perspective demonstrating empathy as defined in our textbook in chapter 2 (page 52) putting yourself in the place of either or both persons your classmate observed. What you can learn from the description of the scene reported by your classmate and you considering Empathy, Perception, and observed Communication. More through reports and replies will receive higher scores.
.
Your Communications PlanFirst step Choose a topic. Revi.docxhyacinthshackley2629
"Your Communications Plan"
First step: Choose a topic. Review the Communication Challenge Topics and choose one that is relevant and interesting to you. Make sure to review the examples and anecdotes that follow each topic in this document. You can also find this information under the Course Info tab.
Second step: Review the Strategic Communication Plan example. Your plan should mirror this example in format and length. You can also find this example under the Course Info tab.
Third step: In this discussion, please respond to the following:
Part 1: What is your topic?
Part 2: Provide a rough draft of your Strategic Communications Plan for peer review and instructor feedback. Your draft should include enough detail that we can provide strong constructive feedback and input.
COM510 ASSIGNMENT COMMUNICATION CHALLENGE TOPICS
In the world of business, we can create opportunities through strategic communication. Throughout our professional careers, there are key events that raise the stakes of our communications approach.
WHAT YOU’LL DO
1) Review the Communication Challenge Topics and their accompanying case study examples.
2) Select 1 topic that is professionally relevant for you.
3) Use for your COM510 assignments (the topic you have selected, not the case study example).
Note: If there is another challenge or current opportunity in your professional life that is more relevant for you, you may choose a topic that is not on this list. Keep in mind that the communication challenge you select must in- clude both written and verbal communication elements to meet the needs of this course. (Your professor must approve your selection before you proceed.)
1
Examples of each scenario are provided to demonstrate what thoughtful, professional communication would look like in each of these situations. These are only examples and should not be used for completing the assignment. You can create and establish all necessary assumptions. The scenario is yours to explain.
COMMUNICATION CHALLENGE TOPICS
Choose one of the following topics for your assignments.
• Internal Promotion Opportunity
• New Job Opportunity Interview
• Running a Meeting
• Coaching Your Direct Employees
• Pitching a Project Idea
INTERNAL PROMOTION
Seeking a promotion from within your company is one opportunity in which strategic communication could mean the difference be- tween success and failure. If you choose this scenario, you’ll need to create both a written and a verbal (audio or video) communica- tion. These elements should explain why you are the right person for the internal promotion while addressing potential questions you might need to answer as part of the process.
Things to Consider
• Have you checked the listings on your company’s job board lately?
• Is there a new position you would like to secure?
• Have you taken on more responsibility at work?
• Have your outcomes been positive?
• Do your job title and job description match what you do? .
Your coffee franchise cleared for business in both countries (Mexico.docxhyacinthshackley2629
Your coffee franchise cleared for business in both countries (Mexico, and China). You now have to develop your global franchise team and start construction of your restaurants. . You invite all of the players to the headquarters in the United States for a big meeting to explain the project and get to know one another since they represent the global division of your company.
You are concerned with the following two issues. Substantively address each in a two-part paper, applying Beyond the Book, MUSE, Intellipath and library resources to support your reasoning
Part 1: Effective communication with participants
What are the implications of the cultural variables for your communication with the team representative from each country in the face to face meeting?
Address Hall’s high and low context regarding verbal and non-verbal communication. The United States is a low context culture, while each country is high context.
Tip: Write at least one substantive paragraph for each country
Video on Hall's high and Low Context Communication
Part 2: Effective communication among participants
What are examples of barriers and biases in cross-cultural business communications that may impact the effectiveness of communication among the meeting participants and in potential negotiations?
What are some of the issues you should be concerned about regarding verbal and nonverbal communication for this group to avoid misinterpretations and barriers to communication?
Please submit your assignment.
.
This is a presentation by Dada Robert in a Your Skill Boost masterclass organised by the Excellence Foundation for South Sudan (EFSS) on Saturday, the 25th and Sunday, the 26th of May 2024.
He discussed the concept of quality improvement, emphasizing its applicability to various aspects of life, including personal, project, and program improvements. He defined quality as doing the right thing at the right time in the right way to achieve the best possible results and discussed the concept of the "gap" between what we know and what we do, and how this gap represents the areas we need to improve. He explained the scientific approach to quality improvement, which involves systematic performance analysis, testing and learning, and implementing change ideas. He also highlighted the importance of client focus and a team approach to quality improvement.
Ethnobotany and Ethnopharmacology:
Ethnobotany in herbal drug evaluation,
Impact of Ethnobotany in traditional medicine,
New development in herbals,
Bio-prospecting tools for drug discovery,
Role of Ethnopharmacology in drug evaluation,
Reverse Pharmacology.
Synthetic Fiber Construction in lab .pptxPavel ( NSTU)
Synthetic fiber production is a fascinating and complex field that blends chemistry, engineering, and environmental science. By understanding these aspects, students can gain a comprehensive view of synthetic fiber production, its impact on society and the environment, and the potential for future innovations. Synthetic fibers play a crucial role in modern society, impacting various aspects of daily life, industry, and the environment. ynthetic fibers are integral to modern life, offering a range of benefits from cost-effectiveness and versatility to innovative applications and performance characteristics. While they pose environmental challenges, ongoing research and development aim to create more sustainable and eco-friendly alternatives. Understanding the importance of synthetic fibers helps in appreciating their role in the economy, industry, and daily life, while also emphasizing the need for sustainable practices and innovation.
Instructions for Submissions thorugh G- Classroom.pptxJheel Barad
This presentation provides a briefing on how to upload submissions and documents in Google Classroom. It was prepared as part of an orientation for new Sainik School in-service teacher trainees. As a training officer, my goal is to ensure that you are comfortable and proficient with this essential tool for managing assignments and fostering student engagement.
We all have good and bad thoughts from time to time and situation to situation. We are bombarded daily with spiraling thoughts(both negative and positive) creating all-consuming feel , making us difficult to manage with associated suffering. Good thoughts are like our Mob Signal (Positive thought) amidst noise(negative thought) in the atmosphere. Negative thoughts like noise outweigh positive thoughts. These thoughts often create unwanted confusion, trouble, stress and frustration in our mind as well as chaos in our physical world. Negative thoughts are also known as “distorted thinking”.
Palestine last event orientationfvgnh .pptxRaedMohamed3
An EFL lesson about the current events in Palestine. It is intended to be for intermediate students who wish to increase their listening skills through a short lesson in power point.
The Roman Empire A Historical Colossus.pdfkaushalkr1407
The Roman Empire, a vast and enduring power, stands as one of history's most remarkable civilizations, leaving an indelible imprint on the world. It emerged from the Roman Republic, transitioning into an imperial powerhouse under the leadership of Augustus Caesar in 27 BCE. This transformation marked the beginning of an era defined by unprecedented territorial expansion, architectural marvels, and profound cultural influence.
The empire's roots lie in the city of Rome, founded, according to legend, by Romulus in 753 BCE. Over centuries, Rome evolved from a small settlement to a formidable republic, characterized by a complex political system with elected officials and checks on power. However, internal strife, class conflicts, and military ambitions paved the way for the end of the Republic. Julius Caesar’s dictatorship and subsequent assassination in 44 BCE created a power vacuum, leading to a civil war. Octavian, later Augustus, emerged victorious, heralding the Roman Empire’s birth.
Under Augustus, the empire experienced the Pax Romana, a 200-year period of relative peace and stability. Augustus reformed the military, established efficient administrative systems, and initiated grand construction projects. The empire's borders expanded, encompassing territories from Britain to Egypt and from Spain to the Euphrates. Roman legions, renowned for their discipline and engineering prowess, secured and maintained these vast territories, building roads, fortifications, and cities that facilitated control and integration.
The Roman Empire’s society was hierarchical, with a rigid class system. At the top were the patricians, wealthy elites who held significant political power. Below them were the plebeians, free citizens with limited political influence, and the vast numbers of slaves who formed the backbone of the economy. The family unit was central, governed by the paterfamilias, the male head who held absolute authority.
Culturally, the Romans were eclectic, absorbing and adapting elements from the civilizations they encountered, particularly the Greeks. Roman art, literature, and philosophy reflected this synthesis, creating a rich cultural tapestry. Latin, the Roman language, became the lingua franca of the Western world, influencing numerous modern languages.
Roman architecture and engineering achievements were monumental. They perfected the arch, vault, and dome, constructing enduring structures like the Colosseum, Pantheon, and aqueducts. These engineering marvels not only showcased Roman ingenuity but also served practical purposes, from public entertainment to water supply.
1.value3.34 pointsFollowing are selected transactions Des.docx
1. 1.
value:
3.34 points
Following are selected transactions Deshawn Company for 2010
and 2011.
2010
Dec.
13
Accepted a $28,000, 45-day, 7% note dated December 13 in
granting Latisha Clark a time extension on her past-due account
receivable.
31
Prepared an adjusting entry to record the accrued interest on the
Clark note.
2011
Jan.
27
Received Clark’s payment for principal and interest on the note
dated December 13.
Mar.
3
Accepted a $22,000, 10%, 90-day note dated March 3 in
granting a time extension on the pastdue account receivable of
Shandi Company.
17
Accepted a $20,000, 30-day, 8% note dated March 17 in
granting Juan Torres a time extension on his past-due account
2. receivable.
Apr.
16
Torres dishonors his note when presented for payment.
May
1
Wrote off the Torres account against the Allowance for
Doubtful Accounts.
June
1
Received the Shandi payment for principal and interest on the
note dated March 3.
Prepare journal entries for the above transactions for 2011. (Use
360 days a year. Do not round intermediate calculations and
round your final answers to nearest dollar amount. Omit the "$"
sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
2011
Jan.
27
5. June
1
2.
value:
3.33 points
Hawk Company establishes a $360 petty cash fund on
September 9. On September 30, the fund shows $89 in cash
along with receipts for the following expenditures:
transportation-in, $53; postage expenses, $54; and
miscellaneous expenses, $153. The petty cashier could not
account for a $11 shortage in the fund. Hawk uses the perpetual
6. system in accounting for merchandise inventory.
(1)
Prepare the September 9 entry to establish the fund. (Omit the
"$" sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
Sept. 9
(2)
Prepare the September 30 entry to reimburse the fund. (Omit the
"$" sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
Sept. 30
7. (3)
Prepare an October 1 entry to decrease the fund to $315. (Omit
the "$" sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
Oct. 1
3.
value:
8. 3.33 points
Frederick Clinic deposits all cash receipts on the day when they
are received and it makes all cash payments by check. At the
close of business on June 30, 2011, its Cash account shows a
$14,853 debit balance. Frederick Clinic's June 30 bank
statement shows $14,746 on deposit in the bank.
a.
Outstanding checks as of June 30 total $2,295.
b.
The June 30 bank statement included a $65 debit memorandum
for bank services.
c.
Check No. 919, listed with the canceled checks, was correctly
drawn for $389 in payment of a utility bill on June 15.
Frederick Clinic mistakenly recorded it with a debit to Utilities
Expense and a credit to Cash in the amount of $398.
d.
The June 30 cash receipts of $2,346 were placed in the bank's
night depository after banking hours and were not recorded on
the June 30 bank statement.
Prepare a bank reconciliation for Frederick Clinic using the
above information (Input all amounts as positive values. Omit
the "$" sign in your response):
FREDERICK CLINIC
Bank Reconciliation
June 30, 2011
$
$
Add
10. Adjusted book balance
$
check my workeBoo
4.
value:
3.33 points
Frederick Clinic deposits all cash receipts on the day when they
are received and it makes all cash payments by check. At the
close of business on June 30, 2011, its Cash account shows a
$13,551 debit balance. Frederick Clinic's June 30 bank
statement shows $12,803 on deposit in the bank.
a.
Outstanding checks as of June 30 total $2,076.
b.
The June 30 bank statement included a $65 debit memorandum
for bank services.
c.
Check No. 919, listed with the canceled checks, was correctly
drawn for $474 in payment of a utility bill on June 15.
Frederick Clinic mistakenly recorded it with a debit to Utilities
Expense and a credit to Cash in the amount of $511.
d.
11. The June 30 cash receipts of $2,796 were placed in the bank's
night depository after banking hours and were not recorded on
the June 30 bank statement.
Prepare the adjusting journal entries that Frederick Clinic must
record as a result of preparing the bank reconciliation. (Omit
the "$" sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
June 30
check my workeBook LinkView Hint #1references
12. 5.
value:
3.33 points
The following information is from the annual financial
statements of Waseem Company.
2011
2010
2009
Net sales
$
302,000
$
233,000
$
283,000
Accounts receivable, net (year-end)
31,400
29,200
25,900
13. Compute its accounts receivable turnover for 2010 and
2011. (Round your answers to one decimal place.)
Accounts receivable
turnover
2010
times
2011
times
[The following information applies to the questions displayed
below.]
Sami Company recorded the following selected transactions
during November 2011:
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
Nov. 5
Accounts Receivable—Surf Shop
4,591
Sales
4,591
15. 30
Accounts Receivable—Surf Shop
3,144
Sales
3,144
references
6.
value:
3.33 points
1.
Prepare a general ledger having T-accounts for Accounts
Receivable, Sales, and Sales Returns and Allowances. Also
open an accounts receivable subsidiary ledger having a T-
account for each customer. Post these entries to both the general
ledger and the accounts receivable ledger. (Record the
transactions in the given order. Omit the "$" sign in your
response.)
General Ledger
Accounts Receivable
20. check my workeBook LinkView Hint #1references
7.
value:
3.33 points
2.
Prepare a schedule of accounts receivable. (Omit the "$" sign in
your response.)
Sami Company
Schedule of Accounts Receivable
November 30, 2011
$
Total
$
21. 8.
value:
3.33 points
Following are selected transactions Deshawn Company for
2010.
Dec.
13
Accepted a $28,000, 45-day, 7% note dated December 13 in
granting Latisha Clark a time extension on her past-due account
receivable.
31
Prepared an adjusting entry to record the accrued interest on the
Clark note.
Prepare journal entries for the above transactions. (Use 360
days a year. Do not round intermediate calculations and round
your final answers to the nearest dollar amount. Omit the "$"
sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
2010
22. Dec.
13
31
check my workeBook LinkView Hint #1references
9.
value:
3.34 points
On June 30, Roman Co. has $154,700 of accounts receivable.
July
23. 4
Sold $8,810 of merchandise (that had cost $5,638) to customers
on credit.
9
Sold $21,658 of accounts receivable to Center Bank. Center
charges a 5% factoring fee.
17
Received $4,846 cash from customers in payment on their
accounts.
27
Borrowed $12,376 cash from Center Bank, pledging $16,089 of
accounts receivable as security for the loan.
Prepare journal entries to record the above selected July
transactions. (The company uses the perpetual inventory
system.) (Do not round intermediate calculations and round
your final answers to the nearest dollar amount. Omit the "$"
sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
July
4
26. 3.34 points
Diablo Company applies the direct write-off method in
accounting for uncollectible accounts.
June
11
Diablo determines that it cannot collect $9,200 of its accounts
receivable from its customer Chaffey Company.
29
Chaffey Company unexpectedly pays its account in full to
Diablo Company. Diablo records its recovery of this bad debt.
Prepare journal entries to record the above selected transactions
of Diablo. (Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
Date
General Journal
Debit
Credit
June
11
28. following February 1, Alvare decides that the $343 account of
P. Coble is uncollectible and writes it off as a bad debt. On June
5, Coble unexpectedly pays the amount previously written off.
Prepare the journal entries of Alvare to record these
transactions and events of December 31, February 1, and June
5. (Omit the "$" sign in your response.)
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