...TO: Consultants FROM: Alyssa Pavlik DATE: September 19th 2013 SUBJECT: Forest Hill Cost Systems Forest Hill is a small company that manufactures paperboard in large reels. Since FHPC is a small company, they are forced to offer an array of products to remain competitive in today’s markets. They can produce 20 different grades of paperboard in both bulk and small-customized orders. In the past, FHPC has recorded many of their costs as conveniently as possible, which has resulted in incorrect allocation of costs. Our team has been hired by Forest Hill because they would like to have a better understanding of their own cost structure especially with the unstable market for their products. Key Issues As stated above, FHPC produces 20 different grades of paperboard at any volume requested. This is potentially costing the company far too much money than necessary. For instance, one-half is lost to scrap every single time a grade change is made. Some of the scrap can be recycled but other times it is simply thrown out. If FHPC continuous to make all twenty grades in one month, they are producing far more scrap paper than necessary. Additionally, certain paper cuts cause a substantial amount of depreciation on the knives used in the slitting process resulting in the purchase of more knives than potentially necessary. These certain grades require much more labor time than other grades because the knives causing more need for inspection often damage the paperboard...
Words: 489 - Pages: 2
...INSTRUCTIONS Forest Hill Paper Company Assigned: Wednesday, February 20, 2013 Due: Dr. O’Connor/Writing Lab by Friday, March 8 The Forest Hill Paper case represents an exercise in activity based costing to help you understand in greater depth how activity based costing is performed within organizations. The case suggests that developing the product cost is not the end point for the accountant – the proper evaluation and analysis of the “calculated” information is integral in making recommendations contributing to organization success. Assume that your group is a consulting group that has been hired by Forest Hill’s management team. Your group has listened to the discussions contained in the case and obtained the information contained in the exhibits. Your recommendations should be contained in a business memorandum addressed to Forest Hill’s management team. The memo should be no longer than three single spaced typed pages, excluding any relevant exhibits you may have prepared and referenced in the text of your memo. The exhibits may be attached at the end of your memo. The memo should, at a minimum, respond to the questions contained at the end of the case. This assignment will be graded in part on the “correctness” of the calculations and quantitative analysis. However, “getting the numbers right” is only the first step. A significant portion of the points will be earned by the appropriateness of your recommendations, your ability to identify...
Words: 298 - Pages: 2
...Forest Hill Paper Company Table 1 Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill, Forest Hill...
Words: 297 - Pages: 2
...1. For the following nondeterministic finite state automaton: [pic] For each of the eight possible strings of length 3, determine the set of possible states when the string has been processed. Note: Don't forget to use Λ. 2. For the following nondeterministic finite state automaton: Build a deterministic finite state automaton that accepts the same strings. Show the tree construction and label the states of the deterministic finite state automaton, using the convention to label the states as used in Week-by-Week section 3.1.7.3. [pic] 3. For each of the next 10 words, decide which of the following six machines accept the given word. (ι) Λ (ii) a (iii) b (iv)aa (v) ab (vi)aba (vii) abba (viii) bab (ix)baab (x) abbb [pic] 4. How many different TGs are there over the alphabet {a b}? Explain your answer. 5. Build a TG that accepts the language L1 of all words that begin and end with the same double letter, either of the form ee . . . ff or ff . . . rr. Note: eee and fff are not words in this language. That is, the beginning and ending double words cannot overlap. Therefore, ee and ff are also not in this language. 6. Let the language L be accepted by the transition graph T and let L not contain the word Λ. Show how to build a new TG that accepts exactly all the words in L and the word Λ. This problem refers to a transition graph in general, not one specific...
Words: 305 - Pages: 2
...To: Group 2 From: Britany Kouba Date: 9/24/2015 Subject: Forest Hill Paper Company Forest Hill Paper Company is a small closely-held manufacturing company that produces paperboard in large reels. Their strategy is to produce a full range of products and to create a niche by focusing on customer service and rapid response to customer needs. The company is currently producing twenty different grades of paperboard. Forest Hill competes against large companies in a commodity market, which is why they strive for having a variety of products and services. One issue facing the company is that paperboard industry’s demand fluctuates every three or four years. Therefore, the company will have large orders for a couple years and then minimal orders for a couple years. During the high demand years, the demand for paperboard exceeds the company’s capacity. Additionally, market share for domestic paperboard is declining as trends are growing for plastic and more environmentally friendly grades of paperboard. Forest Hill also has a large variety of products with different costs. Some of their products use more materials and take a longer time to produce, making the cost higher. As a team, we should look at how the company is figuring out costs for each product and understand the costs that come with manufacturing the different products. We should also look at how slitting and grade changes affect cost. The team needs to look at what the cost drivers are. Within the next...
Words: 403 - Pages: 2
...Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society http://bst.sagepub.com/ Green Advertising and Green Public Relations as Integration Propaganda Nina Nakajima Bulletin of Science Technology & Society 2001 21: 334 DOI: 10.1177/027046760102100502 The online version of this article can be found at: http://bst.sagepub.com/content/21/5/334 Published by: http://www.sagepublications.com On behalf of: National Association for Science, Technology & Society Additional services and information for Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society can be found at: Email Alerts: http://bst.sagepub.com/cgi/alerts Subscriptions: http://bst.sagepub.com/subscriptions Reprints: http://www.sagepub.com/journalsReprints.nav Permissions: http://www.sagepub.com/journalsPermissions.nav Citations: http://bst.sagepub.com/content/21/5/334.refs.html >> Version of Record - Oct 1, 2001 What is This? Downloaded from bst.sagepub.com at University of Wollongong on October 1, 2013 BULLETIN2001/SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY & SOCIETYPR Nakajima tober OF GREEN ADVERTISING AND GREEN / Oc- Green Advertising and Green Public Relations as Integration Propaganda Nina Nakajima University of Toronto lic perception must also be managed. To avoid a negative public image, companies can create the perception that they are effectively handling the problem. This way, public support can be maintained while actually doing very little to solve the problem. Technological change continues to accelerate, and with it come unintended...
Words: 11553 - Pages: 47
...WRITTEN REPORTS AND ESSAYS: GUIDELINES FOR REFERENCING AND PRESENTATION IN RMIT BUSINESS VERSION: 1.0 APPROVED: DECEMBER, 2003 REVIEW DATE: NOT LATER THAN DECEMBER, 2005 Contents TABLES iii STUDENT FEEDBACK iv 1 INTRODUCTION 1.1 Getting started 3 1.2 Editing 3 1.3 Confidentiality 3 1.4 Referencing 4 1.5 Reference lists 5 2 plagiarism 2.1 RMIT definition 5 2.1.1 What is plagiarism? 5 2.1.2 What is the penalty? 5 2.2 Examples of plagiarism 6 2.3 How to avoid plagiarism 7 3 referencing sYSTEM 3.1 Harvard system 8 3.2 Abbreviations 18 4 ESSAY WRITING Introduction 19 4.1 Checklist for success 19 4.1.1 Research materials 19 4.1.2 Critical analysis 20 4.1.3 Synthesis 20 4.1.4 Application 20 4.1.5 Argument 21 4.2 Sources of information 21 4.3 Common essay faults 24 4.3.1 Lack of argument 24 4.3.2 Lack of relevance 24 4.3.3 Poor level of literacy 24 5 ESSAY PREsentaTION How to format your essay 25 5.1 Title 25 5.2 Contents 25 5.3 Synopsis or abstract 25 5.4 Body of essay 25 5.5 Reference list 26 5.6 Appendices 26 5.7 Word Limits 26 5.8 Submitting your essay 27 5.9 Essays vs. Reports 28 6 REPORT WRITING 6.1 Business reports 29 6.1.1 Purpose 29 6.1.2 Form & content 29 6.1.3 Communication needs 29 6.1.4 Pertinent information 29 6.1.5 Simple, clear and concise 30 6.1.6 Repetition 31 6.1.7 Personal...
Words: 4912 - Pages: 20
...Moore−Parker: Critical Thinking, Ninth Edition 5. Persuasion Through Rhetoric: Common Devices and Techniques Text © The McGraw−Hill Companies, 2009 Chapter Persuasion Through Rhetoric 5 It’s just the way things are: Images and impressions tend to sell more products than good arguments do. At least some of the images are fun. Common Devices and Techniques W hen the military uses the phrase “self-injurious behavior incidents” regarding detainees at Guantánamo Bay, it means what most of us call “attempted suicides.” In fact, when the word “detainees” is used, it means what most of us call “prisoners.” “Waterboarding” sounds at first like something you’d expect to see young people doing on a California beach, not a torture technique that involves forced simulated drowning. Less remarkable, perhaps, but possibly more relevant for most of us, we’ve heard the term “downsized” used when someone is fired or laid off. “Ethnic cleansing” covers everything from deportation to genocide. What we have to say may be important, but the words we choose to say it with can be equally important. The examples just given are cases of a certain type of linguistic coercion—an attempt to get us to adopt a particular attitude toward a subject that, if described differently, would seem less attractive to us. Words have tremendous persuasive power, or what we have called their rhetorical force or emotive meaning—their power to express and elicit images, feelings, and emotional...
Words: 15202 - Pages: 61
...Joselline Plascencia English 1302.011 Dr. Veronica Pantoja 2/22/2016 Count Dracula Count Dracula is practically the protagonist and antagonist of this book. The book is literally named after him. Bram Stoker, the author, describes the count as “a tall old man, clean shaven save for a long white mustache, and clad in black from head to foot, without a single speck of colour about him anywhere…[h]is face was strong- a very strong- aquiline, with high bridge of the thin nose and peculiarly arched nostrils…[a] lofty domed forehead and hair growing scantly round temples, but profusely elsewhere…eyebrows were very massive, almost meeting over the nose and with bushy hair that seemed to curl in its own profusion. The mouth […] was fixed and rather cruel-looking, with peculiarly sharp teeth; these protruded over the lips. […] His ears were pale and at the top extremely pointed. The chin was broad and strong and the cheeks firm through thin.” In addition, he had sharp nails and very bad breath. What many don’t know, is that Stoker made a very distinct allusion to a real Dracula; Vlad Dracul III. The count has many similarities to Vlad Dracul but still differentiates to the extent of making Stoker’s Dracula a very popular icon. The book mentions three women living in his castle with him and even argues about how he doesn’t love in page 43 chapter 3. In response, Dracula states that they know how he has been able to...
Words: 3244 - Pages: 13
...A ROAD MAP FOR NATURAL CAPITALISM Business strategies built around the radically more productive use of natural resources can solve many environmental problems at a profit. BY AMORY B. LOVINS. L, HUNTER LOVINS. AND PAUL HAWKEN O ARTWORK BY CRAIG FRAZIER N SEPTEMBER i6, 1 9 9 1 , 3. Small gTOUp of s c i c n t i s t s w a s Isealed inside Biosphere II, a glittering 3.2-acre glass and metal dome in Oracle, Arizona. Two years later, when the radical attempt to replicate the earth's main ecosystems in miniature ended, the engineered environment was dying. The gaunt researchers had survived only because fresh air had been pumped in. Despite $200 million worth of elaborate equipment. Biosphere II had failed to generate breathable air, drinkable water, and adequate food for just eight people. Yet Biosphere I, the planet we all 145 A ROAD MAP FOR NATURAL CAPITALISM of those services doesn't appear on the business balance sheet. But that's a staggering omission. The economy, after all, is emhedded in the environment. Recent calculations published in the journal Nature conservatively estimate the value of all the earth's ecosystem services to be at least $33 trillion a year. That's close to the gross world product, and it implies a capitalized book value on the order of half a quadrillion dollars. What's more, for most of these services, there is no known substitute at any price, and we can't live without them. Some very simple changes to the way we run our This...
Words: 9179 - Pages: 37
...Course code: 15MA101 | Engineering Mathematics | L | T | P | C | | | 3 | 1 | - | 4 | Course Objectives | To train the students in basic mathematics essential for modeling and solving engineering problems. | Course Outcomes | 1. An ability to apply knowledge of mathematics, science and engineering. 2. An ability to identify, formulate and solve engineering problems | Differential Calculus: Review: Functions and graphs, Limits and Continuity, Differentiation, Maxima and minima of a function, Rolle’s Theorem, Mean Value Theorem. Indeterminate forms and L'Hopital's rule, Infinite sequences and series, Power series, Taylor's and Maclaurin's series, Convergence of Taylor's series, Error Estimates, Polar coordinates and Polar equations. Functions of two or more real variables, Partial derivatives of second and higher order, Euler’s theorem on homogenous function, Total derivatives, Differentiation of composite and implicit functions, Change of variable, Jacobians, Maxima and minima of functions of two or more variable, Lagrange’s method of undetermined multipliers. Integral Calculus: Estimating with finite sums and limits of finite sums, Definite integral, The fundamental theorem of calculus, Trigonometric substitutions, Integration by reduction formula for powers of some trigonometric functions, Improper integrals, Beta and Gamma integrals. Double integrals, Triple...
Words: 6651 - Pages: 27
...Running Header: “Greening” Waste Management “Greening” Waste Management Services at Booz Allen Hamilton Laura E. Johnson Assignment 5, Course 761.700 February 8, 2009 Executive Summary “Greening” is a growing requirement for our Government clients and increasingly important for our brand and to attract talent. We are likely to face challenges selling our clients on environmentally responsible practices if we are not ourselves forward-looking. This study specifically focused on improving Booz Allen’s waste management and recycling programs as part of its broader focus on corporate social responsibility. Interviews were conducted with key stakeholders in the office services and facilities teams to learn about existing “greening” efforts. Interviews were also conducted with employees to understand the perception of Booz Allen’s “greening” activities. This report concludes that Booz Allen is doing a lot already in the way of “greening” its waste management practices. The problem is that no one knows about it. Communications and training are the biggest challenges that Booz Allen must overcome. Near-term recommendations to address these challenges include: * Implementing a communications strategy for the “greening” campaign; and * Focusing on immediate “quick wins” to increase visibility of the effort. In the long-term, Booz Allen should develop and publish a sustainability plan, and develop a “Greening” tactical plan to...
Words: 5883 - Pages: 24
...Executive Summery This report focuses on the benefits of Corporate Governance (CG) and Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) engagement as well as the company’s strategies involving CSR by using The Body Shop as the main focus of the report. The Body Shop was regarded as one among the first companies in the cosmetic industry to publish a report on its social responsibility commitment. The Body Shop has been using Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) successfully established itself as leader in the arena of social responsibility, and increasing awareness of its name and product ranges. One of the company strategies is providing extensive programs aimed at educating its consumers about corporate actions and using Anita’s philosophy related to the Environment, Human and Animal rights and Fair Trading program for the selling point. The Body Shop went through the tough time later with the criticisms from the activist groups campaigning for consumer to ban The Body Shop. As these activist group accused the company of misleading the information and abusing the CSR for the benefits of the company. 1. The Body Shop History The Body Shop was founded in 1976 by Anita Roddick, selling natural soap and lotion products, in Brighton, UK (Van, Nijhof and Jeurissen, 2009), She was inspired to set up the shop after seeing a store called ‘The Body Shop’ in Berkeley, California, USA, that sold cosmetic like shampoos, lotions and body creams (Purkayastha, 2006). Also, having worked...
Words: 3929 - Pages: 16
...UNIVERSITY OF MUMBAI Bachelor of Engineering Information Technology (Third Year – Sem. V & VI) Revised course (REV- 2012) from Academic Year 2014 -15 Under FACULTY OF TECHNOLOGY (As per Semester Based Credit and Grading System) University of Mumbai, Information Technology (semester V and VI) (Rev-2012) Page 1 Preamble To meet the challenge of ensuring excellence in engineering education, the issue of quality needs to be addressed, debated and taken forward in a systematic manner. Accreditation is the principal means of quality assurance in higher education. The major emphasis of accreditation process is to measure the outcomes of the program that is being accredited. In line with this Faculty of Technology of University of Mumbai has taken a lead in incorporating philosophy of outcome based education in the process of curriculum development. Faculty of Technology, University of Mumbai, in one of its meeting unanimously resolved that, each Board of Studies shall prepare some Program Educational Objectives (PEO‟s) and give freedom to affiliated Institutes to add few (PEO‟s) and course objectives and course outcomes to be clearly defined for each course, so that all faculty members in affiliated institutes understand the depth and approach of course to be taught, which will enhance learner‟s learning process. It was also resolved that, maximum senior faculty from colleges and experts from industry to be involved while revising the curriculum. I am happy to state...
Words: 10444 - Pages: 42
...A peer-reviewed electronic journal. Copyright is retained by the first or sole author, who grants right of first publication to the Practical Assessment, Research & Evaluation. Permission is granted to distribute this article for nonprofit, educational purposes if it is copied in its entirety and the journal is credited. Volume 14, Number 13, June 2009 ISSN 1531-7714 A Guide to Writing the Dissertation Literature Review Justus J. Randolph Walden University Writing a faulty literature review is one of many ways to derail a dissertation. This article summarizes some pivotal information on how to write a high-quality dissertation literature review. It begins with a discussion of the purposes of a review, presents taxonomy of literature reviews, and then discusses the steps in conducting a quantitative or qualitative literature review. The article concludes with a discussion of common mistakes and a framework for the self-evaluation of a literature review. Writing a faulty literature review is one of many ways to derail a dissertation. If the literature review is flawed, the remainder of the dissertation may also be viewed as flawed, because “a researcher cannot perform significant research without first understanding the literature in the field” (Boote & Beile, 2005, p. 3). Experienced thesis examiners know this. In a study of the practices of Australian dissertation examiners, Mullins and Kiley (2002) found that, Examiners typically started reviewing a dissertation with...
Words: 8324 - Pages: 34