4 positive and 4 negative 2) Use your mouse pad to rub the balloon against the sweater. -What are the charges that are NOW found on the balloon? All the sweaters negative charges are on the balloon and the balloon is sticking to the sweater. -What are the charges now found on the sweater? Just a bunch of positive charges no negative any more -What happens when you let go of the balloon? It sticks to the sweater. 3) Take your
Premium
The Theory of the Firm The firm’s goal is to maximize profits‚ !. In order to do this it must decide what quantity of a good to produce given costs‚ technology and demand. A competitive firm is assumed to be able to sell as much as it wants at the market price without affecting price. So it takes price as exogenous (beyond it’s control) and does not worry about demand. In addition‚ for our purpose we’ll assume the firm operates efficiently‚ that is‚ whatever the level of production that the firm
Premium Supply and demand
Social Norm Project Sweater Backwards Behavior: Walk around with my sweater backwards. For this project I plan to walk with my sweater on backwards around parks‚ family‚ friends‚ and random people I see in stores. I also plan to observe and record their reactions. I think if I walk around with my sweater backward a lot of people will notice and give weird looks or laugh because it is out of the ordinary. Experiment: Trial 1- I went to nob hill with my Oregon sweater on backwards. Some
Premium Psychology Laughter Sociology
and challenges that she doesn’t face with her fellow classmates. For example‚ Rachel loses herself when challenged by her teacher‚ Mrs. Price. So there was an ugly old sweater that had been sitting in the locker room for months and the teacher‚ Mrs. Price had gotten sick of it sitting in there so she asked the class whose the sweater is so somebody could take it home and it would no longer be sitting in the locker room wasting valuable space. So when Mrs. Price
Premium
ECON101 Tutorial 2 Questions Chapter 3 Question 4 Suppose that there are 10 million workers in Canada and that each of these workers can produce either 2 cars or 30 bushels of wheat in a year. a. What is the opportunity cost of producing a car in Canada? What is the opportunity cost of producing a bushel of wheat in Canada? Explain the relationship between the opportunity costs of the two goods. b. Draw Canada’s production possibilities frontier. If Canada chooses to consume 10 million
Premium Economics International trade
Sandra Cisneros is a story about a girl and her insecurities of wearing an ugly sweater that she is accused of owning by her teacher. The overall purpose of this memoir is to share her experience with the readers so that they will be more aware and will not have to go through the traumatic experience like she did. When the teacher asks the class whose sweater it is‚ someone says it is hers. The teacher put the sweater on her desk and when she tried to get rid of it‚ the teacher made her wear it. She
Premium English-language films Conflict
INVENTORY PROBLEMS: 1. DAT‚ Inc.‚ produces digital audiotapes to be used in the consumer audio division. DAT lacks sufficient personnel in its inventory supply section to closely control each item stocked‚ so it has asked you to determine an ABC classification. Here is a sample from the inventory Records: Develop an ABC classification for these 10 items. 2. A particular raw material is available to a company at three different prices‚ depending on the size of the order: The cost to place an
Premium Inventory Reorder point Economic order quantity
expected demand of 30‚000 and a standard deviation of 5‚000. Each of the other three styles has an expected demand of 8‚000 with a standard deviation of 4‚000.Currently all sweaters are produced before the start of the season. Production cost is $20 per sweater and they are sold for wholesale price to $35. Any unsold sweaters at the end of the season are discounted to
Premium Supply chain management Mobile phone Normal distribution
industry is labour intensive; Knitting is more capital intensive; men`s sweaters-less susceptible to style changes and quicker to embrace technological advancement 2 Sweaters will be in fashion again. 3 Competitors Analysis: EXHIBIT 1 Major competitors profiles Name Location Age in years Employees Sales($000 000) Exporting Male product Standard Knitting Ltd Winnipeg 23 100 <$25 Yes-U.SEurope‚Latin Amer Man`s sweaters Straton Knitting Mills Ltd Toronto 57 175 <$25 Yes-U.SJapan‚Asia<$1000
Premium Marketing Brand
in their difficult lives. June and Sandra both have struggles in their lives. June is being bullied by another girl named June in the story. June has to move to a new school and house. Sandra has to wear an ugly sweater that isn’t hers‚ her teacher is making Sandra wear the ugly sweater that and that made Sandra start to cry. Sandra feels that nobody understands her or her problems. June and Sandra both wish for something good to happen in their lives. June wishes that the bully could stop picking
Premium Family Mother Woman