I don't know who wrote your formula sheet but it appears to be wrong. If you define [itex]\Delta E[/itex] as the change in energy and [itex]\Delta V[/itex] as the difference in voltage (electric potential) and drop the p then your formula would be right.
Look at the units, look at the units, look at the units!
1 Volt = 1 Joule per Coulomb. You have the formula built into the units.
Volts times Coulombs equals Joules
Voltage difference times charge equals energy!
w.r.t. 63 check your arithmetic and keep your units. The difference in potentials is 75volts - 12volts = 63volts. Multiply that by the charge to get the energy.
I'll say it some more... units units units units units units... and I can't emphasize enough UNITS! Raw numbers are meaningless. If you want to understand the physics you MUST pay attention to units. If you want to do well on tests you really need to understand the physics.
Sorry to vent at you but this is one of my biggest gripes with my students. They drop units and loose any track of what they're doing. Remember that you aren't saving time or work if you have to repeat the attempts over and over. Work it once with the units carefully included and you'll get there more quickly and with, what is more important, confidence in your answer.