tacker

Most airlines consistently operated in the red and engaged in price wars in order to capture market share (Vasigh, Fleming, & Tacker, 2013).

The great gold rushes of history are limned, and, along the way, the geology and mining history of famous gold provinces ("Gold Fever in the Southeastern USA," by Chris Tacker; "California and All That Is Golden," by Wayne Leicht; "Australian Gold: Mega-Nuggets from Down Under," by Dermot Henry and Bill Birch; "The Rush for Gold Turns North to Canada and Alaska," by Mark Mauthner; "Farncomb Hill: Colorado's Finest Gold Specimens," by Ed Raines).

"We easily saved $100,000 and probably a good deal more," added Dan Tacker, acting vice president of CCCS-IT.

Tacker, director of information services at New Mexico Tech, one of 182 U.S.

Installed a Bravo Saddle Stitching Line with a Model 1540 Apollo compensating counter tacker at Corning Publishing Co.

will seek to sustain the momentum with the "Corona Zona" program, providing retailers with point-of-purchase materials designed to create a tropical look, including a six-foot palm tree wall tacker.

Until 1996, the Suzuki-built Tacker was available only in two-door form.

The introduction of the Asselin rotary tacker in the mid-1970's caused many needlepunchers to re-examine pre-needling practices and Dilo's Rontex concept for producing tubular needled structures provided new niches for specialty applications.

The heavy-duty electric tacker from Stanley Tools has a work-contacting lever feature which allows firing only when the tacker contacts the work surface.