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Playing in the Sandbox is a practical guide for the soon-to-be and
new lawyer, outlining the situations they will likely encounter
during their legal career. Charles J. Goldman is an experienced
attorney who presents each topic in an easy-to-read and engaging
manner. The information that he provides applies to sole
practitioners and midsize and large firms as well. While the
chapters have humorous headings, the humor is not a reflection of
the authors opinion of the practice of law, as he has a great
respect and admiration for the Law, the majority of its
practitioners, judges, and support personnel as well. Rather, it is
through humor that he effectively presents the topics that can make
or break a new lawyer. His chapters include: * Dont go into the
Alamo the Day Before the Mexicans Come Over the Wall * Courtesy
Counts * Write What You Mean and Mean What You Write * When in
Doubt, Dont Remember the Advice, Stop, Look, & Think * Dont
Research for an Hour When a One Minute Phone Call Will Get You the
Answer ]among others. is a wise investment in your career as a
successful and savvy lawyer
Recent work on emotional regulation gives a powerful new lens
through which to view the evolution across childhood and
adolescence of the lived experience and clinical presentation of
depression.? We have a richer picture of the depressed child, and
the child at risk for depression, in interaction with family and
wider world.? We know more about the development and the
developmental psychopathology of coping strategies. These advances
give provocative clues to the actual processes whereby
well-established risk and protective factors might interact to
produce, sustain or curtail a depressive syndrome.? This in turn
opens the door to treatment and prevention approaches that are
truly developmentally informed. This is the philosophy behind this
completely updated and comprehensive analysis of childhood
depression.
Shark conservation and management is often hindered by a lack of
basic biological information for most species. An understanding of
the age structure and growth dynamics of a population is important
for effective conservation and management because this information
is often utilized for determination of natural mortality and
longevity. Ultimately age and growth information is used for
calculation of vital rates in population models. Over the last few
years there have been advances in the quantitative study of age and
growth of chondrichthyan fishes. Novel approaches to ageing of
various chondrichthyan fishes continue to arise. This volume is a
collection of papers on several of these topics that include new
hard parts (e.g. caudal thorns) for assessments of age, new
techniques for validation (e.g. bomb radiocarbon) and
reexaminations of previous age and growth models.
In The Eternal Books Retold, Alex J. Goldman takes on the role of a
friendly, dedicated teacher as he summarizes the 39 books of the
Bible. Rabbi Goldman writes: "My purpose in retelling and
explaining the ancient books of The Holy Scriptures is to place the
whole body of this religious literature within the covers of a
single volume, easily intelligible to readers of all ages, for
their enlightenment, and inspiration, and to perform the service of
a personal guide through the labyrinth of the world's foremost
book." Rabbi Goldman captures the flavor of The Torah (Pentateuch),
The Prophets (Neviim), and The Writings (Ketuvim), giving each its
own life, character, freshness, and insight. Reading The Eternal
Books Retold thus becomes an exciting journey through the history
of formative civilization. The familiar stories from Genesis,
through the Prophets, Judges, Psalms, Proverbs, Job, the Song of
Songs, Ruth, Esther, Daniel, and many more, are revitalized by the
author's literary gifts and Hebrew scholarship.
Although traditional texts present isolated algorithms and data
structures, they do not provide a unifying structure and offer
little guidance on how to appropriately select among them.
Furthermore, these texts furnish little, if any, source code and
leave many of the more difficult aspects of the implementation as
exercises. A fresh alternative to conventional data structures and
algorithms books, A Practical Guide to Data Structures and
Algorithms using Java presents comprehensive coverage of
fundamental data structures and algorithms in a unifying framework
with full implementation details. Recognizing that software
development is a top-down process, this applications-centered book
provides careful guidance to students and practitioners. Complete
and thoroughly integrated Java implementations expose key
differences among a wide range of important data structures,
including many useful abstract data types not provided in standard
Java libraries. Fundamental algorithms appear within the context of
their supporting data structures. Case studies, examples, decision
trees, and comparison charts throughout the stylized presentation
illustrate and support an efficient methodology for the careful
selection and application of data structures and algorithms.
Appendices summarize major features of the Java programming
language, introduce asymptotic notation and complexity analysis,
and discuss design patterns applied in the book. A true marriage of
theory and practice, this book sets a new standard as a
comprehensive practical guide to data structures and algorithms.
Practitioners and students will reach for this book often to
quickly identify the best data structure or algorithm for their
applications.
This book contains a series of contributions from internationally
renowned academics with special expertise in one or other diseases
which collectively are grouped under the heading myeloproliferative
disorders. There have been many recent developments in
understanding the pathophysiology and a number therapeutic
innovations in this area. A feature of this book is the speed with
which it has been produced - an important factor in this rapidly
moving field.
This volume offers a collection of papers on the quantitative
assessment of age and growth in Chondrichthyan fishes. It details
new hard parts for assessments of age, such as caudal thorns; new
techniques like bomb radiocarbon for validation; and reexaminations
of previous age and growth models. It also examines the importance
of assessing the precision and accuracy of statistical formulas,
analyses, and models used in age and growth studies.
"The Lawyer's Almanac" is a practical guide for the soon-to-be and
new lawyer, outlining the situations they will likely encounter
during their legal career. Charles J. Goldman is an experienced
attorney who presents each topic in an easy-to-read and engaging
manner. The information that he provides applies to sole
practitioners and midsize and large firms as well.
While the chapters have humorous headings, the humor is not a
reflection of the author's opinion of the practice of law, as he
has a great respect and admiration for the Law, the majority of its
practitioners, judges, and support personnel as well. Rather, it is
through humor that he effectively presents the topics that can make
or break a new lawyer. His chapters include: Don't go into the
Alamo the Day Before the Mexicans Come Over the Wall Courtesy
Counts Write What You Mean and Mean What You Write When in Doubt,
Don't Remember the Advice, "Stop, Look, & Think " Don't
Research for an Hour When a One Minute Phone Call Will Get You the
Answer ...among others. is a wise investment in your career as a
successful and savvy lawyer
Political ecology and science studies have found fertile meeting
ground in environmental studies. While the two distinct areas of
inquiry approach the environment from different perspectives--one
focusing on the politics of resource access and the other on the
construction and perception of knowledge--their work is actually
more closely aligned now than ever before.
"Knowing Nature" brings together political ecologists and science
studies scholars to showcase the key points of encounter between
the two fields and how this intellectual mingling creates a lively
and more robust ecological framework for the study of environmental
politics. The contributors all actively work at the interface
between these two fields, and here they use empirical material to
explore questions of theoretical and practical import for
understanding the politics that surround nature-society relations,
from wildlife management in the Yukon to soil fertility in Kenya.
In addition, they examine how various environmental knowledge
claims are generated, packaged, promoted, and accepted (or
rejected) by the different actors involved in specific cases of
environmental management, conservation, and development. Finally,
they ask what is at stake in the struggles surrounding
environmental knowledge, how such struggles shape conceptions of
the environment, and whose interests are served in the process.
Tells the story of 1,564 Torahs stolen by Nazis from synagogues in Czechoslovakia, rescued twenty years later, and placed in the hands of people who love them.
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