Assignment #3: Julia’s Food Booth Quantitative Methods 540 Buddy L. Bruner‚ Ph.D. Shirley Foster 11/25/2012 Assignment 3: Case problem “Julia’s Food Booth” Page 1 A. Julia Robertson is making an allowance for renting a food booth at her school. She is seeking ways to finance her last year and believed that a food booth outside her school’s stadium would be ideal. Her goal is to earn the most money possible thus increasing her earnings. In this case
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Assignment #3 The following variables will be used: X1 = Slices of Pizza X2 = Hot Dogs X3 = BBQ Sandwiches The objective is to maximize profit. maximize Z= 0 .75X1+1.05X2+1.35X3 Subject to: 0.75X1+1.05X2+1.35X3≤1‚500(Budget) 24X1+16X2+25X3≤55‚296in2 (Oven space) X1≥X2+X3 X2X3≥2.0 X1‚ X2‚ X3≥0 Julia’s Food Booth Food items: Pizza Hot Dogs Barbecue Profit per item: 0.75 1.05 1.35 Constraints: Available Usage Left over Budget ($) 0.75 0.45 0.90 1‚500
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Customer loyalty and customer satisfaction Customer Loyalty can be difficult to define given the different views that are presented within the literature. Zithaml‚ Berry and Parasuraman (1996) determine that loyalty includes a customer’s intention to stay with an organisation and that loyalty includes four elements: repurchase intentions‚ recommending the service provider to other customers‚ less complaints and tolerance of price increases. Oliver‚ (1999) provides a different definition and
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Teaching the book ‘Our World Bardi Jaawi‚ Life at Ardiyooloon’ in the early stage 1/stage 1 classroom requires a level of understanding regarding reading and writing models‚ visual literacy‚ and sensitivity towards Indigenous culture. The text is quite content dense and filled with illustrations and photographs‚ making an extended close study of the book appropriate. ‘Our World Bardi Jaawi‚ Life at Ardiyooloon’ is a considerably long book‚ in comparison to what could generally be found in early
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Catherine Edmonson Writing as Inquiry Ms. Allen February 12‚ 2014 What are the effects of tanning beds? Meet Natalie. She started tanning when she was 16 years old because she was convinced it made her feel prettier. During her college years‚ she would go once every 2 weeks and then began going once a week. She always joked about how she would get skin cancer‚ but thought it would never happen to her. When she was 21‚ her doctor noticed a spot on her back‚ which turned out to be melanoma; she went
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Andrew McClarren 12/1/12 Stanford Prison Study Paper The Stanford Prison Study was a very eye opening experiment because it was performed in 1971‚ before modern American Psychological Association guidelines were implemented. As young adults we’ve never seen anything like this experiment before. The power of this situation was exceptionally strong‚ especially to us. In the study‚ how easily normal students could be transformed into either a satanic guard or a submissive prisoner was astonishing
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Abstract This experiment involves a social dilemma‚ where participants had to choose whether or not to betray their partner. In 1950‚ while researching game theory‚ Flood & Dresher devised a model‚ that Albert Tucker later interpreted and named the Prisoners Dilemma. The participant receives a high reward of they betray their partner and their partner does not betray them‚ a medium reward if they and their partner both don’t betray each other‚ and no reward if they both betray each other. In Tuckers
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Stanford Prison Study (SPE)‚ Zimbardo carried out‚ an experiment. This experiment had 24 final participants. The guards’ task was to humiliate the prisoners and make the prisoners feel powerless. The result of this experiment was that the guards identified themselves as the in-group and the prisoners as the out-group. In SPE‚ the participants signed consent to be part of the study. The participants were debriefed and offered money at the end of the experiment. The researches were carrying out
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If you were placed in the same situation as the participants in the Stanford Prison Experiment‚ how do you think you would react? If I was placed in this experiment‚ I think‚ would react differently whether I was a guard or a prisoner. If I was a guard I think conform more to the group influence because of the effect of having the power over someone else. I think that it would be easy to get caught up in having all the power in this experiment. However I think my attitude would be different If
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The Stanford Experiment of the 1970’s was a test of human nature conducted by the Stanford Psychology Department. A total of 24 students with no criminal or physiological health background were selected to be either guards or prisoners. The experiment was planned to last two weeks‚ but after only six days it had to be stopped for it was becoming too much to handle for everyone involved. The guards had disobeyed their instructions and began to physically abuse the prisoners‚ while the prisoners began
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