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Announcements for the following year included in some vols.
What would happen if you... ...forbade everyone in your company from ever saying "no" to a customer? ...posted your contact information on the company's public website and required all of your executives and department managers to do the same? ...turned cash planning from a financial exercise into an operational priority where the VP of Finance was the last to weigh in? ...paid your customers to read your advertisements? ...took a huge pay cut rather than lay off employees?
In v.1-8 the final number consists of the Commencement annual.
Susie Miller, a 40-something Life Sciences lawyer unwittingly stumbles into the murky and dangerous global biotechnology arms-race and the struggle to control its power and wealth. She takes readers through an eye-opening journey of discovery and intrigue through the complex and secretive world of gene-editing. Her fascination with the creation of the world’s first gene-edited babies in 2018 triggers alarm bells. Her research quickly sparks interest from the military, governments, private entities and various intelligence services which intensifies as the global Covid-19 pandemic unfolds. Susie’s specific paradigm in understanding the bigger picture begins to unlock the secrecy and obfus...
Mark McCray wasn’t the only boy who loved Saturday morning cartoons, but he may have been the only one to call the networks and tell them what he liked and disliked about them. For instance, he was blown away by the direction Hanna-Barbera took with Josie and the Pussycats, the kids in the wrong place at the wrong time who rose to the occasion and saved the day. It wasn’t long before he was writing his own newsletter, titled The Best Saturdays of Our Lives, which he circulated to animation and television executives, networks, studios, and comic book publishers. The newsletters chronicle the origins of competitive Saturday morning programming—from the 1966–67 season straight through to the 1990s—and they’re compiled in one place for easy reference in this book. You’ll get an insider’s look at the inner workings of the cartoon and television industries, competition between broadcast networks, and how the industry has changed over the years. Mark’s curiosity, probing insights and love of television, come together to create The Best Saturdays of Our Lives.
This controversial book rejects the view that the growth of Irish nationalism, Afrikaner nationalism and Zionism was due primarily to issues of race, religion or language. Instead, drawing on a new analytical framework and close historical analysis, it shows how their ultimate success was the result of political, economic and organisational factors conditioned by sustained conflict with the existing state and other ethnic groups.