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Yawny: Not Just Another Bigfoot Story By: Tim Swope When fact and fiction collide into a faded memory of a journey down the river of life. With advice and insight from a life many years lived, Tim Swope’s Yawny: Not Just Another Bigfoot Story shares his personal struggles, insights, and advice to guide you along your own path. Swope emphasizes in his fictionalized retelling the importance of family and their impact on your decisions.
Silent Retail Killer: 10 Survival Strategies for Bricks Grocers to Compete with Clicks Grocers By: Eddy W. Holleman CONFRONT THE CRISIS THREATENING BRICKS RETAILERS Traditional bricks grocers are falling victim to clicks. They're in doom-or-denial mode, ignoring the threat or not adapting rapidly enough. And in their wake, clicks are taking over as the fastest-growing faction of grocery sales. But at the intersection of the physical and virtual worlds, there is hope. Eddy W. Holleman combines the strengths of both clicks and bricks to forge a 10-strategy survival plan for bricks grocers who are looking to stay savvy and compete in today's changing retail atmosphere. Savvy Retailers Will: Learn the new service mantra Drive traffic and build loyalty Reverse old business wisdom Differentiate a brand Fulfill orders faster Move customers' emotions Compete with Amazon TAKE COMPETITIVE STEPS NOW TO STAY ALIVE.
Covers receipts and expenditures of appropriations and other funds.
This book details the Depression era history behind the simultaneous creations of the Civilian Conservation Corps and the Shawnee National Forest in southern Illinois, where enrollees at twenty-six camps worked on soil and forest conservation projects. A camp compendium provides photographs, the work history and company rosters of each camp.
Send the Alabamians recounts the story of the 167th Infantry Regiment of the WWI Rainbow Division from their recruitment to their valiant service on the bloody fields of eastern France in the climactic final months of World War I. To mark the centenary of World War I, Send the Alabamians tells the remarkable story of a division of Alabama recruits whose service Douglas MacArthur observed had not “been surpassed in military history.” The book borrows its title from a quip by American General Edward H. Plummer who commanded the young men during the inauspicious early days of their service. Impressed with their ferocity and esprit de corps but exasperated by their rambunctiousness, Plummer ...
Vols. 41, no. 11-v. 42, no. 5 include Space digest, v. 1-2, no. 5, Nov. 1958-May 1959.