Answer:
Journal Entry
Date Account Titles and Explanation Debit Credit
Jan 1 Cash $511,875
Bond payable $450,000
Premium on bond payable $61,875
($450,000*13.75%)
(To record issue of bonds at premium)
N Salem Village in the Massachusetts Bay Colony, Bridget Bishop, the first colonist to be tried in the Salem witch trials, is hanged after being found guilty of the practice of witchcraft.
Trouble in the small Puritan community began in February 1692, when nine-year-old Elizabeth Parris and 11-year-old Abigail Williams, the daughter and niece, respectively, of the Reverend Samuel Parris, began experiencing fits and other mysterious maladies. A doctor concluded that the children were suffering from the effects of witchcraft, and the young girls corroborated the doctor’s diagnosis. Under compulsion from the doctor and their parents, the girls named those allegedly responsible for their suffering.
On March 1, Sarah Goode, Sarah Osborne, and Tituba, an Indian slave from Barbados, became the first Salem residents to be charged with the capital crime of witchcraft. Later that day, Tituba confessed to the crime and subsequently aided the authorities in identifying more Salem witches. With encouragement from adults in the community, the girls, who were soon joined by other “afflicted” Salem residents, accused a widening circle of local residents of witchcraft, mostly middle-aged women but also several men and even one four-year-old child. During the next few months, the afflicted area residents incriminated more than 150 women and men from Salem Village and the surrounding areas of satanic practices.
In June 1692, the special Court of Oyer and Terminer ["to hear and to decide"] convened in Salem under Chief Justice William Stoughton to judge the accused. The first to be tried was Bridget Bishop of Salem, who was accused of witchcraft by more individuals than any other defendant. Bishop, known around town for her dubious moral character, frequented taverns, dressed flamboyantly (by Puritan standards), and was married three times. She professed her innocence but was found guilty and executed by hanging on June 10. Thirteen more women and five men from all stations of life followed her to the gallows, and one man, Giles Corey, was executed by crushing. Most of those tried were condemned on the basis of the witnesses’ behavior during the actual proceedings, characterized by fits and hallucinations that were argued to have been caused by the defendants on trial.
In October 1692, Governor William Phipps of Massachusetts ordered the Court of Oyer and Terminer dissolved and replaced with the Superior Court of Judicature, which forbade the type of sensational testimony allowed in the earlier trials. Executions ceased, and the Superior Court eventually released all those awaiting trial and pardoned those sentenced to death. The Salem witch trials, which resulted in the executions of 19 innocent women and men, had effectively ended.
Answer:
$1905
Explanation:
Here we will have to calculate Economic Order Quantity to lower the ordering ordering and holding cost as much as we can. So here we will use the following formula to calculate the best number of units that we should order, which is as under:
Economic Order Quantity = SquareRoot (2 * Annual Demand * ordering cost per order / Holding cost per unit per year)
Here
Annual Demand = 900kg of palm oil per day * 52 weeks * 5 day a week / 7
Annual Demand = 900 * 52 * 5 / 7 = 33,429
And
Ordering cost per order = $57 per order
Annual holding cost per unit per year is 20% of $5.25 per kg which is $1.05.
So by putting values, we have:
Economic Order Quantity = Square Root (2 * 33,429 * 57 / 1.05)
Economic Order Quantity = 1905 kgs
1. Mountain Tourism is a type of "tourism activity which takes place in a defined and limited geographical space such as hills or mountains with distinctive characteristics and attributes that are inherent to a specific landscape, topography, climate, biodiversity (flora and fauna) and local community.
2.
Inland trips means trips to the part of the country away from the coast, without specifying who is taking those trips. Such trips may let the world know about your country, or they may not.
Foreign trips. on the other hand, is fatally ambiguous. It can mean, and has been taken by others here to mean, trips by foreigners to your country, which would be what is asked for. But technically, a foreign trip is just a trip to a foreign country and the trip-takers should be presumed to be your fellow-countrymen; if they travel abroad, that would give them information about the world, not the other way about.
So the choice is between a bad answer and a very bad answer. I would say inland is less bad, but if the examiner thinks one choice is correct, you need to know how he thinks, not how the English language works.
I hope some of that may help I found it off the web.. sorry if it dosent