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PIMA Magazine 1994: Vol 76 Index PDF

3 Pages·1994·0.63 MB·English
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PIMA Magazine 1994 |Inde@X ae AF&PA Education June: Are “English-only” rules at work le- “Improving Tomorrow’s Environment To- “Cultural diversity goes back to school,” p. gal? day,” (insert) p. 17, November. 37, October. July: LOTO penalties OSHA’s “Wake-up” August: The fight against workplace vio- Alkaline Papermaking Engineering lence “Alkaline papermaking: Relying on good “Engineering the cluster rule,” p. 49, September: Investigating sexual harass- chemistry,” Janice Bottiglieri, p. 30, April. September. ment October: Bad apple=big problem Alpha Cellulose Corp. Environmental November: Hiring: Handling pre-offer in- “Alpha celebrates golden year,” p. 31, Feb- “Engineering the cluster rule,” p. 49, quires ruary. September. Machine Clothing Appleton Papers Environmental Affairs “Machine clothing: More layers, more “Training's the ticket for Locks #7,” Alan “SARA 313: A big program gets bigger seams, better paper,” Alan Rooks, p. 36, Rooks, p. 37, September. still,” p. 46, December. May. “World class communications,” Laurey Environmental Law “Machine clothing: The cutting edge,” Berk, Phillip Clampitt & Paul Muhs, p. 46, “Environmental Law,” bimonthly column p- 32, December. November. by Manning Gasch, Jr., Hiton & Williams. January: EPA tackles cross-media pollu- Maintenance Arbitration tion “Maintenance: Cost cutting vs. profit mak- “You are the Arbitrator,” monthly column March: Market forces reduce acid rain ing,” p. 30, July. by Ted Pons, American Arbitration Asso- June: New rules for pine conversion ciation. August: FDA seeks dioxin risk comments “Keeping a lid on roofing costs,” p. 36, July. January: Was facer’s firing a snow job? October: EPA updates audit policy February: One scuffle: twice the punish- December: Calculating natural resource “The top job: A fable for maintenance,” p. ment? damages 40, October. March: You snooze, you loose? April: Finders keepers? Felt Conditioning “Preventive maintenance yields big re- May: Was this firing according to form? “Felt conditioning: Mills get with the pro- turns,” p. 42, December. June: Discharged for sleeping sickness? gram,” p. 40, December. July: Was confession coerced? Manager’s Tipsheet August: Reckless or just luckless? Financial “Manager's Tipsheet,” monthly column by September: This policy a wrong number? “Review and outlook: The recovery is here!” various authors. October: Defective box top his final run? Alan Rooks, p. 28, December. January: The new way to plan the year December: Sleeper or thinker? February: The supervisor as coach Forming Trends March: Hired hands lead to short-handed- Champion International Corp. “Reforming the forming section,” Alan ness “Old news is new at Champion,” p. 30, Rooks, p. 26, February. April: Involving employees January. May: Managing for total responsiveness GRAS September: The risk of winging it Coating “What is GRAS by self-affirmation?” Chris October: Planning for project success Coating cooks up a new look,” Victoria Brown & Lyn Smallwood, p. 29, July. November: Breaking the cost cutting habit Higgins, p. 31, May. December: Complexity: The silent killer Health Care Communications “Taking the pulse of health care,” Leslie Management “World class communication,” Laurey Lipner, p. 46, August. “The right staff,” Jan Bottiglieri, p. 38, Berk, Phillip Clampitt & Paul Muhs, October. p. 46, Nov. “Health care: An update,” Leslie Lipner, p. 35, September. Mini Mills Consolidated Papers “Mini mill relies on ‘Corr’ community,” “PIMA Interview: Consolidated looks to Information Systems Martin Koepenick, p. 34, January. the future,” Alan Rooks, p. 21, “IS: The client/server connection,” p. 21, October. April. Paper & Water Chemistry “Managing chemical decisions,” p. 25, Oc- CPPA Investment Planning tober. The Canadian Pulp and Paper Association “The need for new investment planning,” announces PaperWeek International. In- Cecil E. Stapley & Russell E. Butner, p. 38, “A pipeline for cost control,” p. 31, formation on the technical program and August. October. tra\dm areket affairs is included. October . Labor and the Law “Getting back to basics,” Paula Krauza, Crestbrook Forest Industries “Labor and the Law,” monthly column by p- 34, October. “Crestbrook’s mill makeover,” Janice Bot- Terry Schraeder, Alaniz & Schraeder tiglieri, p. 30, November. January: Civil Rights Act spurs lawsuit “Paper Chemistry,” monthly column by February: Working withan assertive OSHA various authors. Edge Waves March: Ready for federal labor audits January: Rethinking deinking “Getting an edge on edgewaves,” Doug April: Promoting females: A ‘90s challenge February: Wire deposit control and barrier Newcombe, p. 26, April. May: Handbooks: Keep muscle, lose fat chemistry 74 PIMA Magazine / February 1995 PIMA Magazine 1994 |Inde@X ae AF&PA Education June: Are “English-only” rules at work le- “Improving Tomorrow’s Environment To- “Cultural diversity goes back to school,” p. gal? day,” (insert) p. 17, November. 37, October. July: LOTO penalties OSHA’s “Wake-up” August: The fight against workplace vio- Alkaline Papermaking Engineering lence “Alkaline papermaking: Relying on good “Engineering the cluster rule,” p. 49, September: Investigating sexual harass- chemistry,” Janice Bottiglieri, p. 30, April. September. ment October: Bad apple=big problem Alpha Cellulose Corp. Environmental November: Hiring: Handling pre-offer in- “Alpha celebrates golden year,” p. 31, Feb- “Engineering the cluster rule,” p. 49, quires ruary. September. Machine Clothing Appleton Papers Environmental Affairs “Machine clothing: More layers, more “Training's the ticket for Locks #7,” Alan “SARA 313: A big program gets bigger seams, better paper,” Alan Rooks, p. 36, Rooks, p. 37, September. still,” p. 46, December. May. “World class communications,” Laurey Environmental Law “Machine clothing: The cutting edge,” Berk, Phillip Clampitt & Paul Muhs, p. 46, “Environmental Law,” bimonthly column p- 32, December. November. by Manning Gasch, Jr., Hiton & Williams. January: EPA tackles cross-media pollu- Maintenance Arbitration tion “Maintenance: Cost cutting vs. profit mak- “You are the Arbitrator,” monthly column March: Market forces reduce acid rain ing,” p. 30, July. by Ted Pons, American Arbitration Asso- June: New rules for pine conversion ciation. August: FDA seeks dioxin risk comments “Keeping a lid on roofing costs,” p. 36, July. January: Was facer’s firing a snow job? October: EPA updates audit policy February: One scuffle: twice the punish- December: Calculating natural resource “The top job: A fable for maintenance,” p. ment? damages 40, October. March: You snooze, you loose? April: Finders keepers? Felt Conditioning “Preventive maintenance yields big re- May: Was this firing according to form? “Felt conditioning: Mills get with the pro- turns,” p. 42, December. June: Discharged for sleeping sickness? gram,” p. 40, December. July: Was confession coerced? Manager’s Tipsheet August: Reckless or just luckless? Financial “Manager's Tipsheet,” monthly column by September: This policy a wrong number? “Review and outlook: The recovery is here!” various authors. October: Defective box top his final run? Alan Rooks, p. 28, December. January: The new way to plan the year December: Sleeper or thinker? February: The supervisor as coach Forming Trends March: Hired hands lead to short-handed- Champion International Corp. “Reforming the forming section,” Alan ness “Old news is new at Champion,” p. 30, Rooks, p. 26, February. April: Involving employees January. May: Managing for total responsiveness GRAS September: The risk of winging it Coating “What is GRAS by self-affirmation?” Chris October: Planning for project success Coating cooks up a new look,” Victoria Brown & Lyn Smallwood, p. 29, July. November: Breaking the cost cutting habit Higgins, p. 31, May. December: Complexity: The silent killer Health Care Communications “Taking the pulse of health care,” Leslie Management “World class communication,” Laurey Lipner, p. 46, August. “The right staff,” Jan Bottiglieri, p. 38, Berk, Phillip Clampitt & Paul Muhs, October. p. 46, Nov. “Health care: An update,” Leslie Lipner, p. 35, September. Mini Mills Consolidated Papers “Mini mill relies on ‘Corr’ community,” “PIMA Interview: Consolidated looks to Information Systems Martin Koepenick, p. 34, January. the future,” Alan Rooks, p. 21, “IS: The client/server connection,” p. 21, October. April. Paper & Water Chemistry “Managing chemical decisions,” p. 25, Oc- CPPA Investment Planning tober. The Canadian Pulp and Paper Association “The need for new investment planning,” announces PaperWeek International. In- Cecil E. Stapley & Russell E. Butner, p. 38, “A pipeline for cost control,” p. 31, formation on the technical program and August. October. tra\dm areket affairs is included. October . Labor and the Law “Getting back to basics,” Paula Krauza, Crestbrook Forest Industries “Labor and the Law,” monthly column by p- 34, October. “Crestbrook’s mill makeover,” Janice Bot- Terry Schraeder, Alaniz & Schraeder tiglieri, p. 30, November. January: Civil Rights Act spurs lawsuit “Paper Chemistry,” monthly column by February: Working withan assertive OSHA various authors. Edge Waves March: Ready for federal labor audits January: Rethinking deinking “Getting an edge on edgewaves,” Doug April: Promoting females: A ‘90s challenge February: Wire deposit control and barrier Newcombe, p. 26, April. May: Handbooks: Keep muscle, lose fat chemistry 74 PIMA Magazine / February 1995 ‘ES Nae ae PIMA Magazine 1994 index March: Preventive chemistry for contami- Product Scope RittenhouseTown nants January: Betz Laboratories: Service elimi- “RittenhouseTown revival: Papermaking May: Performance papermaking nates drum deliveries history comes to life,” Paula Krauza, p.45, June: Microbial growth in starch February: Take a peak at retention December. July: Microparticle: Real or tabloid news? February: Precis aims for the cutting edge August: Microparticle leads to macro March: Simpson’s West Linn focuses to Roll Balancing benefits win “The benefits of roll balancing,” Robert H. September: Building the end user into the March: Pavillion predicts process path McNally, p. 33, July. loop May: QUNO relies on G2 for perfect blend October: “Partnerships” gain momentum July: Board mill benefits from process con- Roll Systems November: Alum chemistry: Friend or foe? trol “PIMA Magazine Roundtable: Changes rock roll systems,” p. 41, May. Pulping and Beaching P. H. Glatfeiter Safety “Recovery boiler spurs green gains,” p. 49, “Crestbrook’s mill makeover,” Janice Bot- “Getting it right on lockout, tag out poli- November. tiglieri, p. 30, November. cies,” p. 54, August. “Pulping and Bleaching: Weighing the al- Scott Paper Co. PIMA ternatives,” Janice Bottiglieri, p. 38, No- “The three Rs grow in the “90s,” Victoria “PIMA: 75 years,” p. 32, June. vember. Higgins, p. 27, March. “Birth of an association,” p. 34, June. “A ‘closed’ case,” Sven Edstrom, p. 40, Supplier Profile November. “Satellite program blasts off,” p. 46, January “Refocus on mariagement,” p. 44, June. Quality “Impact packs profile punch,” p. 36, Febru- “PIMA’s future: Growing strong,” p. 54, PIMA Magazine's Customer Focused Qual- a“rNya lco finds key to single sourcing,” p. 40, ity supplement. This supplement to the June. February. March 1994 issue of PIMA Magazine has “Kveerner pulping rings in the new,” p. 51, “Willis Potts on change, balance and chal- articles about a decade of total quality, the May. lenge,” p. 23, July. politics of quality, ISO 9000 and building quality partnerships. “ISO & research: Partners in innovation,” “The odd one,” Syd Dolan, p. 35, July. p- 72, June. Quality at Work “Creativity is Buckman hallmark,” p. 72, “Gene Cartledge on the paper industry and August. “Quality at Work,” monthly column by its people,” p. 30, August. “Kveerner: Pulping systems for the ‘90s,” p. Robert L. Yeager, Integrated Marketing 44, October. “Highlights from the 75th Annual PIMA International. “Quaker tracks total quality,” p. 61, No- January: A one-year old, 10-year-old mill Conference,” p. 44, August. vember. February: Customer-focused quality for “PIMA recognizes the paper industry’s top 1994 “Roll tracking: Modular, economic,” p. 51, December. achievers,” p. 52, August. April: Millwide: The quality connection May: Death of a salesman Training “The challenge of change,” Victoria June: The “open” dilemma Higgins, p. 28, September. July: Customer is the focus at PIMA\IS “Training's the ticket for Locks #7,” Alan Rooks, p. 37, September. August: It’s an act of God! PIMA Training Institute September: Process data drains alligator Also see “Manager’s Tipsheet” “Asystem of involvement,” Daniel Fusting, swamp p- 36, April. October: Riverwood goes beyond ISO 9000 Union Camp Corp. November: TQM: Dying fad of new foun- “Union Camp counts on savings,” Victoria Planning & Partnering dation? Higgins, p. 32, January. “Gene Cartledge on the paper industry and “Planning & partnering equal success,” p. 46, September. Recovery Boilers its people,” p. 30, August. “Recovery boiler spurs green gains,” p. 49, November. Viewpoint Process Control “Viewpoint, ” monthly column by Alan “Views from the paper mill,” Alan Rooks, “Recovery Boilers,” bimonthly column by Rooks, Editor in Chief. p- 33, March. Tom Grace, T. M. Grace Co. January: Cleaning up after hurricane re- “Riding on the info highway,” p. 40, April. June: Can kraft mills be potassium-based? cycle August: Thirty years of cooperation February: The legal tide is rising “Lights, cameras, action find defects,” November: Where does gasification fit? March: Look back, look out p- 56, July. December: A Christmas crossword puzzle April: Help wanted? May: Is prosperity around the corner? “Green, global and guaranteed,” p. 34, Feb- Recycling June: Good Morning ruary. “Recycling: A legal roundup,” Daniel E. July: The paperless society? Read about it Boxer, p. 27, January. on paper “Living with “legacy” systems,” p.54, May. “The three Rs grow in the ‘90s,” Victoria August: Notes from the bleaching wars “Talking the talk: Anopen systems digest,” Higgins, p. 27, March. September: Better business made easy p- 38, July. “Old news is new at Champion,” p. 30, October: Customers speak, so listen up! January. November: Happy days are here again? “Mills win with cooperative alliances,” p. “Mini mill relies on ‘Corr’ community,” December: Santa’s empowered workplace: 42, October. Martin Koepenick, p. 34, January. A Christmas fable aa PIMA Magazine / February 1995 75

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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.