Principal of Finance Accounting Worksheet

8- The Burma Hat Company’s warrant is trading for $10.20. The warrant carries the option to purchase two shares of common stock for $48. What is the speculative premium if the stock price is $51.30?9- How much must you invest today at 10% interest in order to see your investment grow to $12,000 in 3 years?10- Firm X has a tax rate of 29%. The price of its new preferred stock is $65 and its flotation cost is $2.00. The cost of new preferred stock is 12%. What is the firm’s dividend? (Round your answer to 2 decimal places.)11- Ambrin Corp. expects to receive $5,000 per year for 13 years and $6,500 per year for the next 13 years. What is the present value of this 26 year cash flow? Use an 9% discount rate. Use Appendix D12- The “floor” or pure bond value of a convertible bond is found by13- Which of the following characteristics are drawbacks of convertible bonds?Conversion may be forced on the bondholder by call provisions on the convertible bond.14- Which of the following is true?15- A firm’s preferred stock pays an annual dividend of $2, and the stock sells for $71. Flotation costs for new issuances of preferred stock are 7% of the stock value. What is the after-tax cost of preferred stock if the firm’s tax rate is 35%? (Round your answer to 2 decimal places.)  

Production Processes Discussion

For chapter 19, please answer the following questions by composing a Word document using APA format. Your response must be a minimum of 200 words per question.1) When would upmilling be preferred to downmilling?2) What type of grinding wheel would be best for use on cut-off saws that are used to cut metal? Why?

PSY 120 CC Psychology Factors that Influence Learning Discussion

9 and 10: Factors that influence Learning and Conditioning and learning. Here are the terms to use in this Discussion:   Sorry there are a ton!!  This one is two chapters – so take your time!! CategorizeClassical conditioningConditioned response (CR)Conditioned stimulus (CS)ContextDiscriminative stimulusLaw of effectObservational learningOperant conditioningReinforcerUnconditioned response (UR)Unconditioned stimulus (US)Vicarious reinforcement1) Give an example of Classical Conditioning from your life  – USE THE VOCAB!!! 2) Give an example of Operant conditioning from your life  – USE THE VOCAB!! 3) When have you learned something by observation?  USE THE.. well vocabulary.. get it?4) What happened in your past learning that influenced you learning in the future?5)   6) Is this close to the book?The difference between classical and operant conditioning – Peggy Andover (Links to an external site.)Last – did they get it right?  If they did it right Like the post – if the did it wrong – be nice and post what you think is the correct use of the vocabulary.  7) ask question 

PSY 120 CC Psychology States of Consciousness Discussion Questions

11 States of Consciousness and 12 Consciousness This discussion is about your sleep – or lack of it!!   How much do you sleep each night?Without getting to preachy – the most important thing that you do it is 1) Sleep 7 to 9 hours a night2) Eat real food (non processed food) 3) Live an active lifestyle. 2) Take this survey and post you r (Links to an external site.) findings  (the survey is about 3/4 of the way down on the page)3) As you think about a nights sleep – think about this video (Links to an external site.) – how many of you wake up after 4 hours of sleep and then can’t go back to sleep??  3.5) Now Lets  Connect!!TEDxRiverCity – Robert Stickgold – Sleep, Memory and Dreams: Fitting the Pieces Together (Links to an external site.) _________  Now think about what consciousness really is used for.. Please use the following Vocabulary words to explain what they are talking about in the following videos.. CuesDissociationHallucinogensUnconscious MindfulnessPrimingConsciousness4) Anil Seth – and Do we see actual reality?? (Links to an external site.)5)  (Links to an external site.) Hoffman’s View on the same (have some coffee he is boring – but content is amazing!  (Links to an external site.)6) Is there a reality? Or is it a Construct of our Mind?  (no right or wrong answer on this BTW). 7)  Go to the Memory Chapter – what about Clive?8) Ask question 

PSY 220 Stratford University Psychology Attachments and Language Development Essay

Week 4: Jun 18Topic: Cognitive Development; Attachments and Language DevelopmentTask 4 (step 3) Read Types of AttachmentsPlease read Language Development and Psychosocial Development and Attachment found in Module 4. Task: Write 2 paragraphs: Identify the four types of attachments. In your opinion what is a negative and positive consequence of each type? APA formatLesson (activity 3) Read this link: Language Development of a Child: 8 Main FactorsLesson 4:  In your opinion, of the 8 main factors that influence language development of a child, which two are the most important to you and why?  Explain in 3-4 sentences.

NUR 3805 Florida National University Transition to Professional Nursing Community Nursing Paper

Health in the Global Community.Women’s health.Read chapter 15 and 17 of the class textbook and review the attached PowerPoint presentation.  Once done, answer the following questions;1.  Describe globalization and international patterns of health and disease.2.  Identify international health care organizations and how they collaborate to improve global nursing and health care.3.  Identify and discuss the major indicators of women’s health.4.  Identify and discuss the barriers to adequate health care for women.

PHI 2010 MDC Artificial Intelligence & Chinese Room Argument Essay

One of the tenets of Artificial Intelligence (AI) is that a computer can be so designed that it can simulate human intelligence — and, if it can simulate it well enough, such a computer might as well be called “a thinking machine.” For example, if we set up a Turing Test where we couldn’t tell whether a human or a computer was responding, many AI theorists would claim that it is reasonable to deem the computer (in conjunction with the program it is running)  “intelligent,” since there is no discernible difference between its output and the human’s response.A very prominent American philosopher, John Searle, proposed an ingenious thought experiment to show that computers can never be said to be “intelligent” or to have understanding. Your assignment is to (1) watch the video below, and then (2) comment on Searle’s argument. You also may want to (3) read the two optional short encyclopedia articles. Has he proven that artificial “intelligence” is a misnomer? Does this mean that human “understanding” proves that we have something special (a “mind”) that machines can never possess? Or is it possible that artificial “intelligence” might evolve or spontaneously emerge as computer algorithms become more sophisticated?Three links you’ll need to begin:

NUR 3805 Florida National University Transition to Professional Nursing Nursing Role and Scope Paper

After reading Chapter 10, please answer the following questions.  Each question must have at least 3 paragraphs and you must use at 3 least references (APA) included in your post.1. Describe the importance of evidence-based practice.2.  Describe how and where to search for evidence.3.  Describe strategies for the implementation of evidenced-based practice in nursing practice.

PHI 205 HC Difference Between Buddhism and Hinduism Discussion

with this Philosophy question so I can learn better. What are the most significant ways in which the teachings of the Buddha deviated from those of Hinduism?The Teachings of BuddhismThe foundation of the teaching of the Buddha is his doctrine of Interdependent Origination, according to which all things are interrelated and dependent upon other things for their coming-into-existence and continued existence. No thing, in fact, has an existence or identity that distinguishes it from all other things. The Buddha also taught that all things are impermanent. Nothing remains the same, even for a moment. Instead, all things are always in a state of becoming. These teachings have two important implications. The first is that, because we human beings are part of the vast web of interrelated things, we have no independent existence as a ?self? separate from other things. The second is that suffering will arise whenever we vainly try to grasp or control anything?including the so-called ?self??in a world that, because it is constantly changing, cannot be grasped. Those who wish to put an end to suffering must learn to live without attachment to things. Letting go of desire for and attachment to things that cannot be possessed brings an end to suffering and, ultimately, the bliss of nirvana.The three great traditions within Buddhism elaborate on the Buddha?s teaching, each in its own way. The Theravada tradition emphasizes monasticism and makes a hero of the arhat, the person who has attained enlightenment. The spiritual hero in Mahayana Buddhism is the bodhisattva, or ?enlightenment being,? who vows to aid all beings in their quest for enlightenment. Mahayana understands the historical Buddha as an earthly expression of the Dharma and teaches a complex cosmology. Vajrayana Buddhism shares the bodhisattva ideal with Mahayana but is distinctive in its emphasis on tantric teachings and rituals.The History of BuddhismSoon after the death of the Buddha his monks organized the First Buddhist Council (c. 483 B.C.E.) for the purpose of preserving his teachings. It was followed by several additional councils, all of which served to establish the Buddhist tradition. For a time, Buddhism thrived in India?and especially during the third century B.C.E. with the support of King Ashoka. During his reign Buddhism became an imperial religion, receiving state support. Ashoka sponsored missionary efforts that brought Buddhism to southern India, Sri Lanka, and Southeast Asia. By 400 C.E. it had arrived in China and Korea. It continued to spread throughout Asia, though in India its influence began to wane in the eighth century with the emergence of Hindu devotional cults, which proved to be more popular. Buddhism was largely unknown in the West until the 19th century. It assumed a presence in America in 1893 at the World Parliament of Religions in Chicago, attended by religious leaders from around the world. Another factor that promoted Buddhism in America was the immigration of Asian Buddhists.Buddhism as a Way of LifeBuddhists identify themselves as such by reciting the Three Refuges: ?I take refuge in the Buddha. I take refuge in the Dharma. I take refuge in the Sangha.? In doing so, they testify to their commitment to the Buddha and his teachings and their reliance on the entire community of Buddhists. Buddhists also embrace the Five Precepts, prohibitions of killing, stealing, sexual immorality, lying, and the use of intoxicants. Another basic feature of the Buddhist way of life is the Eightfold Path, which the Buddha offered as a prescription for the elimination suffering. Taken together, these represent the foundation of the Buddhist way of life.Many Buddhists, both monastics and laypeople, practice meditation in a variety of forms. Some techniques, such as Shamatha and Vipassana, calm and stabilize the mind, allowing one to watch its movements non-judging and detached attitude. Some are more complex, involving the contemplation of mandalas, recitation of mantras, and the visualization of deities.Another Buddhist practice is pilgrimage to holy places, and especially the places the Buddha?s birth, enlightenment, first sermon, and death. In many cases, pilgrimage destination sites feature stupas containing relics of the Buddha or of Buddhist saints.Perhaps the most popular of all Buddhist practices is the observance of holidays and festivals. The most important of these are Vesak, a celebration of the birth of the Buddha, andAsala, which commemorates the anniversary of the preaching of the Buddha?s first sermon. 

NUR 3846 Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College Foundations of Professional Nursing Discussion

The topics I find most interesting are the readings in ?Called to Care; A Christian Worldview of Nursing?. A section of the textbook made mention of Florence Nightingale and how patients were not religious and they had no morals (Shelly & Miller, 2006)…………(talk about this topic )1-What aspects of the topic readings do you find the most interesting? What is your view of the analysis of disease and healing in the readings? Explain.