Good-delivery


Related Subjects: Global-fund
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Book reviews for "Good-delivery" sorted by average review score:

Bicycle Bear
Published in Unknown Binding by Parents Magazine Press (1983)
Author: Michaela Muntean
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Great Fun for Kids and their Parents
Poor bicycle bear gets stretched to his capacity, but he meets the challenge with rhyme, humor, and creativity. Can he really deliver everything? If so, HOW? You'll be delighted with the answers. My kids love it. I shared this book with our neighborhood boys aged 5-9 years old. They were enthralled!

Bicycle Bear Rides Again
If you (the reader) enjoy good rhymes, your kids will really enjoy this book. "You can name any place, any place that you like- I have been there and back on the seat of a bike". The creative illustrations will keep your kids 'tuned-in' to following the story about the value of teamwork.


Collaborative Customer Relationship Management: Taking Crm to the Next Level
Published in Hardcover by Springer Verlag (October, 2003)
Authors: Alexander H. Kracklauer, Daniel Quinn Mills, and Dirk Seifert
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A must read!!!
Read this book if you wish to know how collaboration based partnership concepts like CPFR, ECR, CCRM etc will rule management approaches. This is the way forward....

Harvard Editors Are Taking CRM To a New Level
Great Book, great value. It really seems Harvard is catching up with Wharton, Kellog and other marketing champions in the academic area. This book is outstanding; it links theory and business life nicely - the case studies do their work...You can read about the newest developments in the CRM field (mass customization, collaborative customer relationship management and category management, VMI and CPFR) and you understand how to boost your business. Just do the things the other companies displayed in the book did...

I really recommend this book!


A Good Death: Challenges Choices and Care Options
Published in Paperback by Twenty-Third Publications (May, 1998)
Author: Charles Meyer
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Rethinking Death
This easy to read, easy to understand, quick read on death and dying shows the dying process in an entirely different light than what I had previously envisioned in the physical aspect. As I read the book, I found that I reached a more comfortable feeling about death, both from the perspective of being the one dying and the potential caregiver. I feel so strongly about this book that I am going to buy copies for each of my family members and use it as as tool for friends who are facing decisions about dying either for themselves or loved ones.

Sensitive take on spiritual side of decisions at life's end
Meyer's book is the best I've read that gives a down-to-earth, lay-language explanation of the implications of end-of-life care decisions--like do-not resuscitate orders, tube feedings, etc.--from a religious and spiritual perspective. The author, an experienced hospital chaplain from Austin, Texas, in this brief book provides enormous insight and guidance to families and patients.


Austin, Texas - Street Map Guide & Directory
Published in Unknown Binding by Mapsco, Inc. (1999)
Author: Inc. Mapsco
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Pure greatness!
This map is great! Much better than anything else I have found for Austin. Be sure to buy this if you live in Austin or are traveling there.


Delivery
Published in School & Library Binding by Viking Childrens Books (September, 1999)
Authors: Anastasia Suen, Wade Zahares, and M. Cecka
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Gorgeous
Irresistable images steal the show. Simple rhyming text at the 'One Fish Two Fish' level. Appealing glimpse of early morning activity in a city, captures that sense of quiet anticipation. Like Seuss books, adults may want their own copies.


Delivery Trucks (Crestline Series)
Published in Paperback by Motorbooks International (October, 1999)
Author: Donald F. Wood
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Delivery Trucks (Crestline Series).
An outstanding book that must be read


For the Love of Teddi: The Story Behind Camp Good Days and Special Times
Published in Hardcover by Praeger Publishers (January, 1990)
Author: Lou Buttino
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Horror and Hope
Do not pick up this book if you are not prepared to weap...and be inspired as well. One cannot help but be moved by the story of a young girl (Teddi) who faces cancer with the strength and dignity rarely seen in adults--much less children. This book is wonderfully written and I was left wondering how I could feel so sad for the plight of this girl and so inspired at the same time. A must read.


Good But Not Perfect: A Case Study of Managed Care
Published in Paperback by Pearson Allyn & Bacon (07 October, 1999)
Authors: Maxine W. Epstein and Patti Aldredge
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Dilemmas of managed care -an entertaining read!
Listen folks, if you are a social worker, physician, pharmacist or physical therapist or nurse in hospitial practice, or if you teach one of the health professions, this is a must-read. Although written by health care social workers, the material is relevant to anyone in interdisciplinary (or multidisciplinary) health care pactice. The authors present the experience of a "case", an appealing person whose traumatic accident interrups her career and her marriage. Parallel to this tale, is the saga of the health care team working with her. The reactions of the team to the crises of transitioning to managed care are similar to those of the patient. (Teams experience denial, anger, bargaining, and resistance on their way to adaptation, just like individuals.) It's clever and it has the ring of real life. Although much of the material is written like a novel, the purpose of the book is to instruct; introductory and closing chapters are serious discussions of the history and dilemmas of managed care, with upbeat prescriptions for the future; each chapter includes analysis of the material, questions for discussion, and exercises to bring home the teaching points. I am a faculty person in a graduate school of social work, and our students love it. I read it just for the pleasure of its literary craft and for its insight and information.


Into That Good Night
Published in Paperback by Sam Houston State Univ (February, 2001)
Author: Ron Rozelle
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This is a touching tribute to the author's father.
Ron Rozelle does an amazing job of recalling the sights, sounds, and conversations in a small Texas town during his growing-up years in the 50's. He focuses on his father, the local school superintendant, who always seemed to have his world under control. As the book progresses, the author chronicles his father's decline into Alzheimer's disease and a loss of the control he had always exhibited. Rozelle alternates between his early years and his adulthood and tells his father's story with touching sensitivity. I thoroughly enjoyed this book and look forward to more from this author.

Into That Good Night
A memoir called Into That Good Night by Ron Rozelle,
is the story told from Ron's point of view when he was
growing up in Oakwood and even in his present day
life. It talks about segregation in schools and in
some stores throughout the town where he grew up. This
book shows the change Ron goes through with his family
when his mother becomes sick with lung cancer. Ron
learns to appreciate his family much more as he got
older and started to realize he won't have parents
forever. He ultimately realizes this when his father
looses his battle with Alzheimer's disease. You also
see segregation come to an end in Oakwood as time
progresses. You see the town where everyone knew
everyone suddenly become very lonely and empty after
most of the population got old and passed away. There
weren't many people moving in to Oakwood because it
didn't have many job opportunities.
Ron wrote this book in a then and now format. Every
other chapter switches, describing his child hood and
what happened in the future. It is a little confusing
but you catch on right away. It's very interesting
this way because it keeps you wondering, "What
happened to Ron".
Ron's ability to describe things just painted a clear
picture of what everything was like for him back then
in my mind. He gets right to the point when he rights,
it's not hard to comprehend or anything. That is what
is likeable about his style of writing. He writes in a
very appealing manner. Into That Good Night's main
focus is about Ron's relationship with his dad.
Ron and his father were very close because Ron's
father is a very calm kind of guy. He doesn't show
much emotion where as his mother is described as moody
and not afraid to yell when something makes his mad.
This is why he had more of a connection with his
father because in many ways he was like his father.
Ron is not quick to show emotion either. Ron and his
father form a special bond.
Ron graduates high school and is drafted in to the
military. He gets shipped off to Germany for a year.
In the mean time, his mother's health is decreasing.
She is getting worse and the doctors say she doesn't
have much time left. She started chain smoking when
Ron was a kid and that led her to her deathbed.
Fortunately Ron got to say goodbye to his mom right
before he headed off to the airport to be shipped off.
He felt that finally, he and his mother were at peace
with each other.
Ron and his dad form a strong bond after Ron gets
back from the Army and gets his own apartment. His dad
comes to visit him and they spend quality time
together. A few years later Ron's father eventually
re-marries and lives with his new wife. When Ron's
father gets in his older years he starts forgetting
things. His loss of memory starts increasing and he's
even forgetting simple things like where he is. He is
diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease.
What is Ron going to do when one of the most
important people in his life is starting to forget who
his own son is. What is it like to die not remembering
what your life was like and what your legacy will be.
This story was very easy to relate to. It is a very
easy understanding and likeable memoir of Ron Rozelle.

A beautifully written memoir
A beautifully written memoir by Ron Rozelle whose father had Alzheimer's. Set in the author's hometown, a small town in east Texas, this account reflects not only on the time Alzheimer's affected his dad, but there are flashbacks to his years of growing up in that town and remembered incidents in his family. This book, deservingly so, was a PEN America West Creative Nonfiction Prize finalist and a Texas Institute of Letters Carr P. Collins Nonfiction Award finalist. It is good, relaxing reading as a coming-of-age in a small town story as well as an Alzheimer's memoir.


Supply Chain Management, Second Edition
Published in Hardcover by Prentice Hall (01 May, 2003)
Authors: Sunil Chopra and Peter Meindl
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Excellent book overall but...
I refered and used this book in 2 grad level courses. The first was a business school course on SCM (with an above average quantitative focus for a B-school course) and again for a fully quatitative SC Engineering course. While I was initially very impressed with the book, using this over 2 semesters has raised a few gripes.

For the qualitative issues on SCM {make no mistake, these 'fluff' aspects are very important} there is no other equal. Chopra and Meindl do an outstanding and comprehensive job. They also bring out the importance of using scientific, quantitative techniques for SCM. This however is where my gripes start.

Having brought out the importance of quantitative tools for use in SCM, they do only a moderate job on explaining these tools. For example, the chapter on forecasting (only the most simple and commonly used models are explained) is unnnecessarily complex and confusing. The topics covered are adequete but need revision. Treatment of inventory management also could be more detailed and better explained.

This is an excellent book but for more comprehensive learning (if you want an understanding of the quantitative aspects too), I think this book needs supplementing (say with course notes) or another book like "Modeling the Supply Chain" by Shapiro.

Good reference material for practitioners
I found this book to be a great source of reference for managers. It is not really a good teaching source, as I thought it already starts with a fair amount of assumed previous knowledge and jargon.

The sections that are most well developed are the ones on inventory management and transportation logistics, where I found examples that were directly applicable to situations I encountered in a retail environment. The portion on forecasting was not as useful, and the part on e-business seemed somewhat contrived. Overall, this is the best reference I have found that does not require a heavy amount of mathematical familiarity.

Peter Meindl - The Godfather of modern supply chain mgt
Written by one of the leading minds in the field, Peter Meindl of I2 technologies has a lot to teach. This is an excellent text and as a fellow Dallas/Ft. Worth resident, I would enjoy meeting him. If you are an MBA student with a concentration in Operations Management, this text should be required.

Meindl, a management team member of I2, has helped develop I2 into the undisputed champion in enterprise software. While SAP may have the market share with their archaic DOS based application, I2 has windows functionality and everything that matters. They have raised the bar with their supply chain knowledge, leading solutions, and collaborative knowledge in supply chain strategy. This text will give you a big step forward in becoming a Supply Chain leader.


Related Subjects: Global-fund
More Pages: Good-delivery Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18