More Pages: Stanley Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100


A beautiful devotional that will keep you...In Touch

If you love problems, then this is the book for youIn addition to the classification scheme and the problems based on that scheme, there is the following additional reference material:
I. A list of the problems grouped by journal and the page of this book on which they appear.
II. A chronology of the problems, grouped by journal.
III. A listing of the problems, based on authors.
IV. A listing of the problems, in the alphabetical order of their titles.
V. A section listing the particular issues of the journals covered in this work.
VI. An abbreviated description of many journals that have a regular problem column. This includes several journals whose problems are not included in the book.
VII. A list of those problems that remained unsolved as of June, 1991. In general, this is defined as one whose complete solution has not appeared in the journal where it appeared. This includes thirty-nine from the pages of JRM.
VIII. An index of problem citations.
IX. A bibliography, glossary and keyword index.
And all of the above are superbly done. This book is also easy on the eyes, with very crisp lettering.
A work that is long overdue, one is pleased to read that additional indexes are planned. This book, and all subsequent issues, are necessary additions to all academic libraries and those of anyone with an interest in problems. Also, any teacher of undergraduate mathematics can find a wealth of material here.
Published in Journal of Recreational Mathematics, reprinted with permission.


An excellent book for avid hockey fans

Todos los amigos de los perros deberían leerlo.

From E-Streams - May 2003The resource is divided into eight sections. Section 1 is the largest section and takes up half the book. You will find an alphabetical list of hazardous chemicals and their manufacturers names. It also lists the country of the manufacturer if not made in the U.S.
Section 2 (International Directory of Manufacturers of Hazardous Chemicals) is an alphabetical list by country of chemical names and their manufacturer. Each entry includes address, phone, fax, email, and website. It may also include parent company, subsidiaries/affiliates and stock listing.
Sections 3 (International Chemical Industry Organizations), Section 4 (Professional Environmental Health and Industrial Hygiene Organizations) and Section 5 (International Environmental Protection Agencies) are all organized alphabetically by country and list organization or agency name, address, phone, fax, email, and website. Some entries include a brief description of the organization. Only federal agencies are listed for the United Statesin Section 5.
Section 6 (State Environmental, Health and Occupational Safety Agencies) is organized by state or U.S. territory and includes agency name, address, phone, fax, email, and website.
Section 7 lists Hotlines, Databases, and Useful Web Sites. The hotlines appear to be U.S.and Canadian only. Hotline or database name, responsible organization, hotline number, email, website and organization descriptions are listed. Useful websites include those from .com, .edu, .org, and .gov websites. Many of the listed hotlines from federal agencies. Many database listings include contact phone numbers, which is a great feature.
Section 8 (Poison Control Centers) is organized by state and lists organization name, address, emergency phone number or hotline, and the area served. The book also includes an index.
This is an excellent resource. It is very easy to use and includes quality sources. It will serve as a nice jumping point for further research. This reviewer gives International Resources Guide to Hazardous Chemicals: Manufacturers, Agencies, Organizations, and Sources of Information an enthusiastic recommendation to all libraries concerned with environmental and chemical safety issues.


Just a correction of the price

Excellent- Great way to start your day

Post Industrial Era in Hong Kong.After the Rapid changes of Internet Age, Globalization is the next development in the coming decade. But it makes more competition and prices down in the Global markets. All the traditonal and industrial products are over supply than demand in these two years.
When you think back on the rapid development in Computer and Internet business since year 2000, they have over one time growth for every 18 months and the price is down for 50%. Thus, it makes the competition are so quicky and fast in year 2002 or even in the coming decade.
" Post Industrial Era " is coming now. It means that all the industrial products are over supply in the Global markets. Now we are needing the Elite people and knowledge workers to help all industries to re-fresh and re-build their new roads. High-tech skills and people are welcome in the developmet of Globalization.
New Business models and E-business structures are the only way for us to go and keep on running in the year 2003!
In order to keep your business in the rapid growth of the global markets, please try to absorb more Elite people in your Corporation in time.


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Refreshingly interesting