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What can happen when an 80-year-old Dallas widower meets an 80-year-old Austin widow and they discover they have a lot in common? Several things, one right after another. They start emailing and texting each other, telling each other their stories from eight decades of living apart; then, in a matter of weeks, deciding to get married, and, soon after, resolving to tell a broader audience the stories they had been telling each other. Front and center is their courtship experience itself told through their emails, combined with Charles and Nancy’s separate accounts of growing up. Charles details his parents’ attempts to polish him and wise him up about sex; his efforts to combat his social...
This book includes techniques to tweak the corporate culture and continually improve operations as well as organizational climate. What's in it for everyone? Those who use the practices in this book will become more empowered to change their working life and their personal life for the better. What is a 'situation intervention'? Can this get you increased profit, less headaches and reduced stress? Interventions can be kaizen events, lean thinking, or any other strategy that can be modified to fit your organization. Planned interventions, when matched to your organization's culture, can get more improvements in number and magnitude as other strategies. Using continual assessment makes the intervention a 'personal thing'. Workers support and buy-in faster with Hanna methods. You can use the techniques in this book to choose the best practices and implement them in your organization without betting the whole company or experiencing significant fallout.
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This book fills a gap in the linear programming literature, by explaining the steps that are illustrated but not always fully explained in every elementary operations book - the steps that lead from the elementary and intuitive graphical method of solution to the more advanced simplex tableau method. Most of the world, even those technically trained, can get along very well by seeing a few illustrations of simple linear programming problems solved graphically, followed by instruction in the use of computer software for solving real-world problems. But there needs to be a coterie of initiates who understand the process well enough to explain it to others, to know what the pitfalls, ramifications and special cases are, and to provide further developments. I have used an informal narrative style with a number of worked out examples and detailed explanations, to put the topic within reach.
Robert Boyd (ca. 1705-1751) was of Scottish descent. He immigrated from Ulster Province, Ireland and settled in Cumberland (later Franklin County), Pennsylvania about 1737. Descendants and relatives eventually scattered throughout the United States.