Book Description
With this new, less expensive Value Edition of Browning & Zupan’s
Microeconomics: Theory & Applications, you get a rich array of everyday-life microeconomic applications and clear explanations of theoretical concepts, at one great price. But that’s not all. This Value Edition also features:
New Excel-based tutorials that will help you improve your grades
A registration code packaged inside this text gives you access to new Excel-based tutorials. These tutorials guide you through key microeconomic topics with interactive graphs and charts, integrated help boxes, and page references to the text for further review.
20 new real-life applications (for a total of over 140 applications!) These applications help make microeconomics interesting, relevant, and easier to understand. New applications include: Why State and Local Policymakers Are Not Fond of Online and Catalog Commerce, The Economics Behind Anti-War Protests, Making Telemarketers Pay, an d more!
Customer Reviews:
economic "bad" ? .......2005-09-26
The closer I read this book, the less I understand. It is written in a very labrynthine and overly-detailed style, jumping between examples and terminology.
It does a very poor job of giving an overview of the theories. This book over-complicates even the simplest concepts of economics, most likely to be in compliance with the 14% new material rule for textbook editions. It presumes a knowledge of algebra and eventually some calculus, but spends a paragraph explaining the derivation of circumfrence, and how Pi is roughly equivalent to 3.14, in my favorite example of the authors bogging down in petty details.
If you are assigned this book in class, I highly recommend changing to a different class, or hoping that the prof (as is my case) gives clear lectures and uses the book to provide some further depth, but doesn't overly engage in using or testing from it.
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Best Team Skills: Fifty Key Skills for Unlimited Team Achievement
Lewis Losoncy
Manufacturer: CRC
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Binding: Paperback
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ASIN: 1574440853 |
Book Description
Best Team Skills gives you the tools you need to achieve the highest performance through the most productive encouragement and motivational methods available. Dr. Losoncy identifies the 50 skills that will most encourage your team members. Using 100 encouragement opportunity exercises, he works as your personal trainer to reinforce your progress. Just as there are vital technical skills that team members need in their own areas of expertise, there are also consequential team skills that are necessary to build responsible, involved and committed team players. If you want to become a more encouraging team member or help your entire team to become mutual encouragers, Best Team Skills is for you. Written not only for your work team, you can also can also apply Losoncy's techniques to your home or sports team. Presented in an easy-to-read format, each skill is put to use quickly for immediate feedback and success.
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Insects and Mites Feeding on Olive: Distribution, Importance, Habits, Seasonal Development and Dormancy (Applied Entomology Library)
M. E. Tzanakakes
Manufacturer: Brill Academic Publishers
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ASIN: 9004132716 |
Book Description
This review of literature includes an introduction on the origin of the olive tree and lists 116 species of insects and 30 species of mites known to infest it. It treats the geographical distribution, host plants, feeding habits, voltinism and seasonal history of 34 species of phytophagous insects as well as of 7 species of mites. Most of these are monophagous or oligophagous and closely associated with the olive tree. Of the species covered, 16 are Homoptera, one Hemiptera, one Thysanoptera, five Coleoptera, four Diptera, seven Lepidoptera, six Eriophyoidea and one Tetranychoidea.
The review shows that all species, except one, have a seasonal dormancy and for most of them diapause is certain or reasonably suspected to occur. Seasonal displacement does occur in a number of species, especially shortly before or after dormancy.
Differences of opinion on seasonal history between authors are pointed out and conclusions drawn based on the most convincing papers. Suggestions are made for further research on important, yet neglected aspects of the life history of olive arthropods.
Book Description
A tour de force work by a leading scholar, "Race" Is a Four-Letter Word explores the history of the concept of race in America, the reasons why the concept has no biological validity, and the ways in which it grew to become accepted as an idea that virtually everyone regards as self-evident. An ardent and eloquent opponent of typology, essentialism, and stereotyping, C. Loring Brace has based this engaging study on the "Problems of Race" course that he has taught at the University of Michigan for the past thirty-five years. Opening with an explanation of why the concept of race is biologically indefensible, "Race" Is a Four-Letter Word shows how the major elements of human biological variation have unrelated distributions and cannot be understood if the existence of "races" is assumed as a starting point. The book then examines the course of events that created the concept of race, journeying through time from Herodotus through Marco Polo; to the Renaissance and the role of the New World; on up to the American Civil War, the curious results of the alliance switch in World War I, Arthur Jensen, The Bell Curve, J. Philippe Rushton, and the Pioneer Fund in the twenty-first century. Ideal as a supplementary text in anthropology courses, "Race" Is a Four-Letter Word can also be used in history of science courses and sociology courses. It is captivating reading for professionals and anyone else who seeks enlightenment on the socially debatable issue of "race."
Customer Reviews:
Excellent, comprehensive, historical review.......2007-05-15
This is an excellent book for those of you interested in the historical development of the concept of 'race', as well as having contemporary debates on race put into perspective. In particular, those offered in "the Bell Curve" and "Race, Evolution, and Behavior".
That said, race is a concept that cannot be discussed coherently because it is linked to so many emotive issues that reflect personal moral and political views about the world. As reflected in many of the reviews for other books on this topic.
This is perhaps one of the primary insights of this book: that many of the scientists engaged in research on 'race' and who take 'race' as a legitimate object of analysis are motivated for reasons other than the scientific pursuit of knowledge, and more in the interests of supporting views they already hold about the nature of people.
That said, this is book is no exception, and is certainly on the 'left' of the spectrum.
However, what is refreshing about (most) of the claims made in this book is direct way in which Brace addresses the arguments he is against, and the level of documentation he provides.
Highly recommended for its depth and comprehensive coverage of the history and current status of the 'race' debate.
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Will Barnet: Painting Without Illusion: the Genesis of Four Works from the 1960's
Patrick McGrady
Manufacturer: Palmer Museum of Art
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Will Barnet
ASIN: 091120959X |
Book Description
"My interest has been in developing further the plastic convictions that have been evolving in my abstract paintings; so that a portrait, while remaining a portrait, becomes in this sense an abstraction: the idea of a person in its most intense and essential aspect." Will Barnet, 1962
Will Barnet (1911-), much like Chuck Close and Alex Katz, has approached painting through sustained exploration of the relationship between abstract, geometric forms and the processes of perception. In this book, which accompanied an exhibition of the same name at the Palmer Museum of Art and the Alexandre Gallery, Patrick J. McGrady examines the paintings, drawings, and prints Barnet made in the 1960s, the decade when Barnet portrayed his family and renegotiated his commitment to pure abstraction.
As McGrady traces work during this decisive period in Barnet's career, he shows how drawing became increasingly important in the evolution of such major paintings as Mother and Child, The Blue Robe, and Eden. In addition, McGrady provides a richly documented discussion of critics' responses to the profound changes in Barnet's art and Barnet's own commentary on his goals as an abstract artist.
Will Barnet illustrates many of the forty-nine works in the 2003 exhibi-tion and includes a checklist of the exhibition as well as reproductions of comparative works.
Patrick J. McGrady is Charles V. Hallman Curator at the Palmer Museum of Art and Affiliate Assistant Professor of Art History at Penn State University.
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Genesis Four
George Tagoe
Manufacturer: Trafford Publishing
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Binding: Paperback
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ASIN: 1553955692
Release Date: 2006-07-06 |
Book Description
After declaring the author's death by the Revolution on the 2nd day, junior ranks in the Armed Forces overwhelmingly jubilated and rejoiced only to realise after retrieving his car, riddled with bullets that four of their own soliders who earlier on seized and commandeered the car had all been killed or destroyed, instead of Sqn. Ldr. Tagoe.
The aftermath was a drama.
Genesis Four seeks to proclaim God's message about His endless supreme power to mankind. It also seeks to prove beyond all reasonable doubts that in the dispensation of man's deliberation, God exists and that He rewards good deeds and punishes evil deeds committed by every man.
All I have seen teaches me to trust the Creator, more for all I have not seen.
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Awesome Sega Genesis Secrets Four (Gaming Mastery Series)
Zach Metson , and
J. Douglas Arnold
Manufacturer: Sandwich Islands Publishing
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ASIN: 0962467626 |
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Word count: 723.
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Ten Volumes
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Advances In Parasitology Volume 36 (Advances in Parasitology)
J.R.,ED. BAKER
Manufacturer: Academic Press
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ASIN: 0120317362 |
Book Description
Advances in Parasitology is a series of up-to-date reviews of all areas of interest in contemporary parasitology. It includes medical studies on parasites of major influence, such as typanosomiasis and scabies, and more traditional areas, such as zoology, taxonomy, and life history, which shape current thinking and applications.
Customer Reviews:
Animal's Parasitic key.......1999-01-20
Oviedo University (Spain
Book Description
The Martial Arts Instructor's Desk Reference is a complete guide to advanced teaching concepts and martial arts school administration. Author and veteran martial arts instructor Sang H. Kim covers a wide range of essential topics for the professional martial arts instructor including:
*teaching children with ADD, behavioral problems and learning disabilities
*creating lesson plans and teaching specific curriculum elements
*combating boredom through hundreds of drills and training ideas
*marketing, advertising, publicity, staffing and customer service
*instructor training and evaluation
*tournament management
Based on our popular special report series, this book brings together a wide range of essential topics.
Customer Reviews:
Thorough Instructions on how to run a great martial arts school........2007-09-05
This book has a wealth of information about running a dojang (dojo). From dealing with the difficult student to organizing a class with specific drills, this book covers everything a good instructor needs to at least think through. I particularly liked the aspects of running a business; when to advertise, how to run a radio spot, what to do when enrollment drops, when to expand and when not to. If your business is teaching martial arts, you must have this book.
great book.......2007-05-14
Martial arts desk reference is a wonderful guide that no instructor should be without. Good ideas,for high ranking , as well as student instructors. great book
Great Reference for Instructors and School Owners.......2006-07-22
I found this book to be a great reference in running my school. I have made it required reading for all my instructors and staff members. I highly recommend this title to all those running a martial arts school.
Don't Even Hesitate.......2006-03-10
If you are a martial arts instructor - or soon to be one don't hestitate to buy this book. The book has an incredible amount of school operations widsom. It is obvious the author is a seasoned martial arts instructor.
Use it daily.......2005-07-13
I've had this book for only a few weeks and I find myself using it daily, especially the sections on class drills and marketing ideas. I love the way its set-up - no heavy reading, no long theories to wade through, lots of bulleted lists and short articles that I can read while I'm stuck on hold with the phone company or waiting for an appointment. Not to say there isn't in depth information - the articles teaching ADHD kids and kids in general are excellent, as are the class management articles. Overall, this is an invaluable reference for instructors who have their own school and even for those teaching at school owned by someone else. Another excellent reference by Sang H. Kim.
Amazon.com
Learn about the hidden and often surprising histories of and connections between English words and their non-English ancestors. Perhaps the best inexpensive etymological dictionary available today.
Book Description
The average English speaker knows approximately 50,000 words-almost 25 times more words than there are stars visible in the night sky. The Dictionary of Word Origins uncovers the often surprising connections between words. In more than 8,000 entries, the dictionary reveals the origins of and links between words like beef and cow, secret and crime, flour and pollen, imbecile and bacteria, plankton and complain. Written in a clear and informative style, the Dictionary of Word Origins shows how English today has developed from its Indo-European origins and how diverse influences on the language have intermingled. This highly browsable reference also looks at the many new words and coinages that enter the language every year.
Customer Reviews:
Wonderful!.......2005-01-03
This is a wonderful book! It is indispensable to students or anyone who reads books that have been written in the past, or for those with a curious nature.
The dictionary is in alphabetical order with stories of how each word came into the English language and has evolved over time.
For example:
Alcohol - Originally, alcohol was a powder, not a liquid. The word comes from Arabic al-kuhul, literally `the kohl'--that is, powdered antimony used as a cosmetic for darkening the eyelids. This was borrowed into English via French or Medieval Latin, and retained this `powder' meaning for some centuries (for instance, `They put between the eyelids and the eye a certain black powder made of a mineral brought from the kingdom of Fez, and called Alcohol,' George Sandys, Travels 1615). But a change was rapidly taking place: from specifically `antimony,' alcohol came to mean any substance obtained by sublimation, and hence `quintessence.' Alcohol of wine was thus the `quintessence of wine,' produced by distillation or rectification, and by the middle of the 18th century alcohol was being used on its own for the intoxicating ingredient in strong liquor. The more precise chemical definition (a compound with a hydroxyl group bound to a hydrocarbon group) developed in the 19th century.
If the OED seems to obtuse for you..........2004-10-23
...Then this is the book you want. Outside of the Oxford English Dictionary, it's the best (and least expensive) etymological reference I've come across, even better than The Oxford Dictioary of Word Histories, published by Oxford University Press.
Here's an example of a terrific entry:
PREY Prey comes via Old French prei from Latin praeda 'booty' (from which was derived the word paredari 'plunder', source of English depradation and predatory). This was a contraction of an earlier praeheda, a noun formed with the prefix prae-'before' from the same base (*hed- 'saize', source also of English get) as produced the verb praehendere 'seize'. This has been a rich source of English vocabulary, contributing through different channels such a varied assortment as prehensile, prison, and prize 'something seized in war', not to mention prefixed forms like apprehend, comprehend, comprise, impgregnable, reprehensible, reprieve, and surprise. It is also the ancestor of French prendre 'take'.
Here's the Oxford Dictionary of Word Histories entry for the same word:
PREY [Middle English] Early noun use included the sense 'plunder taken in war' (=that which is 'seized'); it comes from Old French preie, from Latin praeda 'boot'. The verb is from Old French preir, based on Latin praedari 'seize as plunder', from praeda. The verbal phrase prey upon is found from early times.
Both are complete entries, but one is obviously more complete than the other.
Great For Word-Clearing.......2004-08-31
Since buying this book I use it continually to get a real conceptual understanding. Its derivations are vastly better than most dictionaries and written in simple English with almost no symbols.
Yesterday I used it to clear the derivation of "manifest" as in "manifestation of the misunderstood word" and the room brightened up. Some other really good derivations were "mandarin" and "daughter".
Recommend it thoroughly as a study and word-clearing tool.
ARC,
Simon
Amazing........2004-04-10
Among the memorable events of my life, is the discovery of etymology. Among the disovery of etymology, is this book. Wow.
Ayto's style is simple, clear, and full of not only the technical details you might like (Indo European roots - Latin/Greek/etc. roots) but I continue to sift through Ayto's work even after consulting mammoth dictionaries such as Chamber's. He has insight, and offers some of the anacdotes that make the history of words so fascinating. Famous examples are Sandwhich, etc. but who knew that 'Alcatraz' is related to Pellicans is related to the Arabic word for 'Buckets' that have sprouts shaped like Pelican beaks?
I quickly run out of breath reading his work as I fing myself so often saying 'Huh!' ... 'Ho!' ... 'Huh?'
I love it.
WITH APOLOGIES TO THOSE WHO PREFER THE GUTENBERG FEEL..........2003-07-21
...but take a look at "Wikipedia" ... or the online Merriam-Webster ...both of which between them contain a much more comprehensive (and updated) etymology of words and their origins. Being online they are also siginificantly faster for most people than rummaging through the pages of a fat tome. In my experience, the online stuff is also more detailed, for instances, check up the words "veranda" or "rickshaw". Hope this is useful.
Book Description
The first young woman murdered had a bite mark on her neck, prompting the media to dub her killer “The Rottweiler.” As the number of killings grows to two, three, and beyond, that nickname sticks, even though it has become clear that the original bite was incidental. The Rottweiler is a serial garroter, distinguished by his habit of taking a small trinket from each victim as a macabre souvenir.
The strangled young women all lived in the same ethnically diverse London neighborhood near Lisson Grove, so it is here that the police focus their investigation. Soon their suspicions lead them to an antiques shop, where items taken from the victims start turning up amid the clutter. As we get acquainted with the odd assortment of characters who work in and pass through the shop, we sense that one of them will be the Rottweiler’s next victim...unless the meticulous killer makes an uncharacteristic mistake.
Ruth Rendell is in top form here as she deftly propels the narrative, alternating between the inner life of a compulsive killer and the daily affairs of those who live nearby, unknowing yet somehow aware of the unnerving shadow of his presence.
“Ruth Rendell has written some of the best novels of the twentieth century.” —Frances Fyfield
“Rendell’s clear, shapely prose casts the mesmerizing spell of the confessional.” —The New Yorker
Customer Reviews:
Tame Mystery, Full of Quirky Characters.......2007-09-21
I am not a die-hard mystery reader, although I do like the occasional mystery, and this is my first Ruth Rendell novel. I can't say that it made me want to read more of her work.
The Rottweiler revolves around a small antique store in London. The characters who work in, visit, and hang around the shop are the key to a series of murders in the city. Mistakenly dubbed "the Rottweiler" because a bite mark appeared on his first victim, the murderer garrotes young women and removes trinkets from their bodies as souvenirs. From the intuitive widow who owns the antique store, Inez, to a good-looking laborer with the intelligence of a six-year-old, Will, all of the characters are quirky outsiders in their own way and all have a part to play in the mystery.
The premise of the story is rather standard, but the idea of the characters made it more interesting. Unfortunately, Rendell didn't carry it off. Despite the characters' quirkiness, none of them are sympathetic enough to draw the reader into the story. All of them instead seem more like stereotypes, especially Will, who seems like a shallower version of Tim, the very special, fascinating character created by Colleen McCullough. The narrative itself jumps around between the characters, which, instead of giving the reader a complete picture of the scene and action, makes the story feel a bit plodding. On the subject of the mystery itself, the serial killings, the reader finds out the identity of the killer about halfway through the book and there isn't enough suspense to take the place of that mystery. Instead, the reader is supposed to be drawn into why the killer kills, but I just found myself waiting for the end of the book. Also, mysteries are all about attention to detail and it really bothered me that the writer (and her editor) kept mixing up the trinkets the killer kept. In one scene, the trinkets include a lighter, some earrings, and a keyring. In another, later, scene, the keyring is replaced by a watch, which was planted in the antique shop by the killer earlier in the book (this isn't a spoiler - this information is on the jacket). Since these trinkets were key to the plot, this was an important oversight.
Overall, The Rottweiler was fine. It wasn't awful and it wasn't fantastic. I wanted to find out what happened, but was not surprised, delighted, or shocked when the end came - instead, it was exactly what I expected and I didn't really care what happened to the characters after the action's conclusion. I can't say that this book made me hungry for any more of Rendell's work, despite the predominately positive reviews.
Rottweiler has plenty of teeth.......2006-12-12
This is a late (for the book's age) review, but I wanted to add my admiration for Rendell's unfailing ability to construct wonderful stories that are even better character studies. Her principal characters are usually way off center, but not perceived as being as dangerous or as bizaare as they really are by the rest of the world. "The Rottweiler" is a very good example of mundane/normal/boring vs. crazy/malevolent. A good read and worthy of Rendell's well-earned reputation as a master writer of good literature, not to mention one of the best mystery writers alive.
Lacks the zip of her earlier work.......2006-09-27
At her best -- and I think you have to go back a decade or so to find her best non-Wexfords -- Rendell creates a wonderful sense of tension by portraying characters who have some flaw or tendency that inexorably draws them into the darkness. That kind of tension is really lacking in this book.
We have the setting Rendell/Vine uses so often: a London house full of disparate residents and their friends. But none of them really engages us; in fact, some of them are mere caricatures. Even the killer seems far too rational and self-examining to have committed the crimes we are told he or she is guilty of. We spend a lot of time with characters who have almost nothing to do with the main story. The police drift in and out of the picture as if they are investigating a serial killer in their spare time.
My advice if you need a Rendell fix: go back and read Live Flesh or A Demon in My View. They're far more gripping and believable.
One minor gripe: why do American publishers feel they need to rewrite books for their audience? No one in Britain refers to football as "soccer", and seeing this word in a British context is really jarring. One wonders how much other local color has been eliminated or rewritten for fear that poor ignorant American readers will be confused.
Not her best but still very very good.......2006-07-13
This is typical Rendell and as always she'll keep you turning the pages. Not really a mystery since we know very early in the book who the rottweiler is. Yet her unusual but believable characters will keep you reading. Interesting take on care for the high functioning developmentally disabled also.
Distinctly Average.......2006-05-24
The weakest RR novel that I have read.
The plot-lines and characterization were weak.
It seemed to be a hurried effort-had some good ideas but these were not developed enough and only showed the usual RR quality in flashes.
Let's just hope that this novel was just a temporary blip and not the shape of things to come.
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- Mission-Based Management: An Organizational Development Workbook with CD-ROM (Wiley Nonprofit Law, Finance and Management Series)
- Money Matters Family Tool Chest: Family Night Tool Chest : Creating Lasting Impressions for the Next Generation (Heritage Builders , No 5)
- Moral Leadership: Getting to the Heart of School Improvement (The Jossey-Bass Education Series)
- Native to Nowhere: Sustaining Home And Community In A Global Age
- Networking Smart: How to Build Relationships for Personal and Organizational Success
- Never Run Out of Cash
- Option Valuation Under Stochastic Volatility: With Mathematica Code
- Priceless: On Knowing the Price of Everything and the Value of Nothing
- Project Management for Business and Engineering, Second Edition: Principles and Practice
- Putting Knowledge Networks into Action: Methodology, Development, Maintenance
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