The Baron Coburg Case Once upon a time many‚ many years ago‚ there lived a feudal landlord in a small province of Westerns Europe. The landlord‚ Baron Coburg‚ live in a castle high on a hill. He was responsible for the well-being of many peasants who occupied the lands surrounding his castle. Each spring‚ as the snow began to melt‚ the Baron would decide how to provide for all his peasants during the coming year. One spring‚ the Baron was thinking about the wheat crop of the coming growing
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analyses. In order to put both Ivan and Frederick in common terms‚ acres of land were used as the common denominator. Ivan: At the end of the year Ivan’s net income was 214 bushels of wheat. After determining net income of 214 bushels‚ I divided that by the 20 acres that he was allotted to determine that he produced 10.7 bushels per acre. Ivan’s operating expenses per acre and total expenses per acre were $0.35 and $1.45 respectively. Ivan’s balance sheet depicted a 318% positive change from the beginning
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1. Whose financial statements should we prepare (e.g.‚ the baron‚ vassals‚ farms‚ etc..?) Solution: The financial statements will be prepared for “Vassals” i.e. for Ivan and Frederick and additionally for “Baron”. 2. What financial statements should we prepare? Solution: The financial statements which should be prepared are as following: Income Statement Statement of Retained Earnings Statement of Cash Flows Balance Sheet 3. What period do these statements cover and
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1. Whose financial statements should we prepare (e.g.‚ the baron‚ vassals‚ farms‚ etc..?) In this case I believe the financial statements should be prepared for each Farm (Piece of Land). My reasoning for this is that each section of land is the entity that is generating the ‘product’. The Vassal is acting as the resource that is managing it. In a current context‚ one would produce financial statements for a company (the Farm in our case) and not the individual resource or resources in control of
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WHEAT Wheat from which flour is made‚ is the most essential grain used in bread making because it is the only cereal that contains the proper combination of glutenin and gliadin. When two proteins glutenin and gliadin‚ are mixed with water will formed a gluten. Gluten is both plastic and elastic. It can stretch and expand without easily breaking. Wheat special properties allow bakers to produce an astonishing array of product‚ from pastry to cakes and cookies. Not only wheat is used for baking
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http://www.lef.org/ Life Extension Magazine October 2011 Wheat: The Unhealthy Whole Grain Book Excerpt: Wheat Belly By William Davis‚ MD Flip through your parents’ or grandparents’ family albums and you’re likely to be struck by how thin everyone looks. The women probably wore size-four dresses and the men sported 32-inch waists. Overweight was something measured only by a few pounds; obesity rare. Overweight children? Almost never. Any 42-inch waists? Not here. Two-hundred-pound teenagers
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Baron Coburg (from Anthony‚ Reece‚ and Hertenstein‚ 1995‚ “Accounting: Text and Cases”‚ p. 21) Once upon a time many‚ many years ago‚ there lived a feudal landlord in a small province of Western Europe. The landlord‚ Baron Coburg‚ lived in a castle high on a hill. He was responsible for the well-being of many peasants who occupied the lands surrounding his castle. Each spring‚ as the snow began to melt‚ the Baron would decide how to provide for all his peasants during the coming year.
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The Baron and His Baroness Before he left for a visit to his outlying districts‚ the jealous Baron warned his pretty wife‚ “Don’t leave the castle while I am gone‚ or I will punish you severely when I return!” But as the hours passed‚ the young Baroness grew lonely‚ and despite her husband’s warning decided to visit her lover who lived in the countryside nearby. The castle was located on an island in a wide‚ fast-flowing river‚ with a drawbridge linking the island to land at the narrowest point
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you think Ngugi should emphasize weaknesses in characters rather than heroic individuals in the days leading up to the Uhuru? Ngugi begins A Grain of wheat with a quotation from the bible. It reads. ‘You foolish man! What you sow does not come to life unless it dies. And what you sow is not the body which is to be but a bare kernel‚ perhaps of wheat or of some other grain’ (I Co 15:36). He chooses to focus his attention on the weaknesses of his characters. One may ask why Ngugi takes this path.
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The Red-Bearded Baron Once upon a time many‚ many years ago‚ a feudal landlord lived in a small province of Central Europe. The landlord‚ called the Red Bearded Baron‚ lived in a castle high on a hill. This benevolent fellow took responsibility for the well-being of many peasants who occupied the lands surrounding his castle. Each spring‚ as the snow began to melt‚ the Baron would decide how to provide for all his serf dependents during the coming year. One spring‚ the Baron was thinking about
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