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Full Download PDF of Solution Manual For Supply Chain Management: A Logistics Perspective, 10th Edition, John J. Coyle, C. John Langley, JR., Robert A. Novack Brian J. Gibson All Chapter
Full Download PDF of Solution Manual For Supply Chain Management: A Logistics Perspective, 10th Edition, John J. Coyle, C. John Langley, JR., Robert A. Novack Brian J. Gibson All Chapter
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Solution Manual for Transportation: A Global Supply
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Another random document with
no related content on Scribd:
AMERICAN labor year book, 1919–1920; ed. by
Alexander Trachtenberg. (v 3) *$2 Rand school of
social science 331
“Part I of this book deals with labor in the war, with the
organization of many governmental boards of adjustment and policy-
making, and with the actual administration of those laws which were
drawn to curb ‘seditious activities.’ Part II is a record of organized
labor, with historical reviews of different trade union ventures
(including such interesting experiments as the work of the United
labor education committee) and with records of strikes and lockouts
during the last two years. The third section of the book contains a
digest of new labor legislation, of court decisions affecting labor, and
of the progress of plans for health insurance, pensions and the
minimum wage. Part IV is a more general discussion of social and
economic conditions. It deals with the cost of living, profiteering,
unemployment, woman suffrage, plans for public ownership of the
railways, and the history of the Nonpartisan league in North Dakota.
Part V is a short record of the recent activities of cooperative, labor
and socialist movements in some thirty different countries. And the
final section of the book is devoted to the socialist movement in
America.”—New Repub
20–4778
“The greater one’s knowledge of the literature dealt with, the more
likely one is to approve the care and reading which she displays.” G:
Saintsbury
20–10160
“This volume contains prose-poems or rhapsodies in free verse on
nature, Indian mythology, sentimental or ideal themes, in a style
analogous to that of Sir Rabindranath Tagore.”—Ath
“Mr Achārya is not as inspired by any means and he does not get
the atmosphere and charm into his lines that Tagore did. But he is
interesting, for he presents the thought of the East.”
19–19929
A volume brought out by the Carnegie endowment for
international peace as one of the preliminary economic studies of the
war. An introduction sketches in broad outline the effects of the war
on money, credit and banking in the countries of Europe and the
United States. The author then takes up in detail the various
problems involved in the case of France, with a briefer treatment of
the United States. Tables, charts, etc., are given in an appendix and
there is an index.
Reviewed by C. C. Plehn
20–6432
This is a book of inside gossip about social Washington, where
“there is always something new under the sun.” The author has met
and listened to the “‘senators, honorables, judges, generals,
commodores, governors, and the ex’s of all these, as thick as
pickpockets at a horse-race, ... ambassadors, plenipotentiaries, lords,
counts, barons, chevaliers, and the great and small fry of legations’
who make the life here so varied and fascinating. Some politics, a
touch of history, a dash of description, with a flavor of social affairs—
such are the ingredients of my ‘pie,’ which, whatever its faults, I hope
may not sit heavily on the reader’s digestion.” (Chapter 1) The book
is well illustrated and the contents are: Looking back; “A red torch
flared above his head”; Rough Rider and buccaneer; Parties and
politics; Enter Mr Taft; Sundry visitings and visitations; Cruising and
campaigning; Divers democrats; Allied missions; Pies; A topsy-turvy
capital; Royalties arrive.
20–8245
“The author tells nothing very new about Roosevelt, but he relates
in a charming manner what he knew of him.” J. S. B.
20–20944
A story in short chapters suitable for bedtime reading. It is a book
about three happy children, Jehosophat, Marmaduke, and little
Hepzebiah. They live on a farm, and children who read the book will
learn all about their three dogs, the other farm animals, the
scarecrow and their friend the Toyman. The pictures are by E. Boyd
Smith.
20–27471
Reviewed by R. C. Benchley
20–18577
“Delightful reading.”
[2]
ANDERTON, DAISY. Cousin Sadie. *$1.75 (3c)
Stratford co.
20–13144
20–11679
“This art has passion and humanity and a strange fervor. But to
many its glow will seem the glow of phosphorescence and decay.”
20–6561
“Well told, with the chief points brought out with admirable
directness. The arrangement is simple and the indices ample.”
20–11077
This is the first volume in the Century foreign trade series, edited
by William E. Aughinbaugh. The author, who is lecturer on
economics in New York university, says in his preface: “Within the
limits of a volume like the present it is possible only to touch upon
even the fundamentals of ship management and operation.... The
aim has been to exclude, as far as possible, the academic and
legalistic, and to make the book what its title implies—a practical, if
elementary, guide, based on experience, rather than a theoretical
treatise based on maxims.” The book is divided into three parts. Part
I, The ship, has chapters on An American merchant marine; Range of
the business: Freight rates; The labor problem; Officering and
manning; The cargo carrier, etc. Part II is devoted to The office, with
discussions of Machinery of foreign trade; Foreign exchange; Traffic
manager; General cargo, etc. Part III devotes thirteen chapters to
Charters. There are six illustrations, appendices and index.
“The language is simple and direct and free from technical terms.
It has evidently been the aim of the writer to produce a book of
thorough practical value to those engaged in ocean shipping.”
“Excellent manual.”
20–6708
“Here writing is done with the big stick. They are tales of the
noisier passions, executed with meticulous consideration for the
formidable detail, since D’Annunzio writes with all the heat and
strength of pulse that is supposed to belong to the southern
temperament. The translation, with the possible exception of parts of
the conversation, is very smoothly done.”
“In their English dress, certainly, they are not overwhelming. One
can with a fairly good conscience own to the impression that, with all
their marvel of detail, several of them are oppressively squalid and
even tedious; squalor and tedium having, of course, their part, a
relative part, in the spectacle of living.” H. W. Boynton
20–8450