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This paper is designed to show how a typical sequential probabilistic model may be formulated in linear programming terms. In contrast with Dantzig and Radner, the time horizon here is an infinite one. For another very closely related study, the reader is referred to a paper by R. Howard. The...
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In publishing "Interindustry Economics," Hollis Chenery and Paul Clark have furnished the profession with a uniquely useful work -- both a readable textbook for the beginner, and at the same time a systematic treatise for the input-output practitioner. It is unfortunate, however, that the...
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This is a proposal for the application of discrete linear programming to the typical job shop scheduling problem -- one that involves both sequencing restrictions and also non-interference constraints for individual pieces of equipment. Thus far, no attempt has been made to establish the...
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