1 What changes when an ion is formed from an atom? A. Neutrons are lost or gained. B. Protons are lost or gained. C. The nucleus disintegrates. D. Electrons are lost or gained. E. Either protons or electrons are lost or gained. 2 When comparing a 10.00 g sample of iron with a 10.00 g sample of lead: A. each sample has the same number of atoms. B. there are more iron atoms than lead atoms. C. there are more lead atoms than iron atoms. D. it is not possible to tell which sample contains
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in the United States only. the Dietary Reference Intakes are to be used on food labels. the Daily Values are a better way of determining nutrient goals of individuals. the Dietary Reference Intakes do not account for age or gender. Question 2 1 out of 1 points When referring to the DRI recommended intakes‚ it is important to remember that: Selected Answer: they are based on the latest available scientific research. Answers: they are designed to help an individual recover from an
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PSYC111 Dr. J. L. Taylor Case Study 2 I would begin to reassure Melindah and Jermain about their concerns for a healthy baby by explaining that their worries about the new child’s behavior ( shyness) is not genetic but behavioral and those characteristics that are believed to be genetic such as mental illness and addiction are often the result of environment and their expressions can be diminished or modified by warm and intelligent social interaction with parents and by
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Chapter 1: the Nature of Marketing. The focus of marketing is on customers and their changing needs. Goal of marketing: long term customer satisfaction. Three conditions which must be met before the marketing concept can be applied: * Company activities should be focused on providing customer satisfaction instead of producing products. * The achievement of customer satisfaction relies on integrated effort (marketing is the responsibility of everyone in the company.) * Management must
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A DESCRIPTION OF FOUNDATIONS OF FINANCE SUPPLEMENTS For the student: 1. A Study Guide‚ which provides the following: a. An orientation of each chapter‚ along with an outline of the important topics being addressed. b. Sample problems for the student to complete‚ with the worked-out solutions. c. Self-test questions (true/false and multiple choice) with answers. d. A tutorial on understanding the internal rate of return. e. An in-depth self-teaching supplement on capital-budgeting
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Unit: The Foundation of the United States This Unit Activity will help you meet these educational goals: Inquiry Skills—You will develop questions and plan investigations; use content knowledge to develop compelling questions or supporting questions; apply disciplinary concepts and tools; analyze societal issues‚ trends‚ and events; evaluate change and continuity over time; gather‚ evaluate‚ and use evidence; develop credible explanations of historical events and developments based on reasoned interpretation
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Case Study 2 – Internal Control 1. Inform the President of any new internal control requirements if the company decides to go public. As per the accident that happened in the company about some employees was viewing pornography on company computer and he had a hard time to get his employees admitted that they were the one who doing it. He should use limit access by individual passwords for each person to log in the computer systems. To make sure that which person was log on in the computer and
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David Shim Case Study #2 A) What is the break-even point in passengers and revenues per month? Unit CM = $160 – $70= $90 Unit of Sales = 3‚150‚000 / $90= 35‚000 passengers Unit of Sales = 35‚000 x $160= $5‚600‚000 revenue B) What is the break-even point in number of passenger train cars per month? Unit of Sales = 35‚000/63= 555.5= 556 passenger cars C) If Springfield Express raises its average passenger fare
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Culture – the way of life of a people. Shared & human-created strategies for adapting & responding to one’s surroundings (people & creatures) Can be as vast as US culture or smaller like a family or school Blueprint that guides & determines behavior Cultures are learned at birth & passed down from generation to generation. Material culture –natural & human-created objects which people have assigned a name to & attached a meaning. iPods‚ cars‚ clothing‚ tattoos‚ trees‚ diamonds offers clues
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Business Ethics: Case Study 2: Starbucks’ Mission: Social Responsibility and Brand Strength 1. Why do you think Starbucks has been so concerned with social responsibility in its overall corporate strategy? * Starbucks achieved social responsibility by taking steps to follow guidelines‚ minimize its environmental “footprint”‚ and became involved with the community. This is important to the company because ethical companies do better in the long run. Customers feel good about bringing business
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