Although it has only 126 pages the book is divided into: Introduction, Recipes, Appetizers and Salads, Soups, Meat, Seafood, Eggs and Cheese, Vegetables, Sides and Sauces, Desserts, Cakes and Pies, Cookies and Squares, Breads and Rolls, Confections, Entertaining, Table of Common Measure Conversions, Epilogue: The Official List of Cooking Skill Levels, Websites of Contributors. Over 100 recipes.
This introductory text surveys random variables, conditional probability and expectation, characteristic functions, infinite sequences of random variables, Markov chains, and an introduction to statistics. Geared toward advanced undergraduates and graduate students. The text does not require measure theory, but underlying measure-theoretic ideas are sketched.
In telling this story, Craughwell also provides something of a biography of Lincoln's cadaver, chronicling its long voyage to final rest. After the 1876 attempt, the "sacred remains" spent 11 years half-buried in a subbasement of the tomb, covered with boards, as a security measure, while thousands of pious citizens paid their respects to the empty sarcophagus above.
A good business case is so much more than simply the means to justify a decision. A well-written and well-researched business case will secure funding; make sure any project stays on the right side of regulation; mobilize support for the cause; and provide the platform for managing the project and the benchmark against which to measure progress. Ian Gambles' ""Making the Business Case"" shows you how to make sense of the task at hand, develop a strategy, articulate your options, define the benefits, establish the costs, identify the risks and make a compelling case.
Measure for Measure - The New Cambridge Shakespeare, Updated
Since the rediscovery of Elizabethan stage conditions early in the twentieth century, admiration for Measure for Measure has steadily risen. It is now a favourite with the critics and has attracted widely different styles of performance. At one extreme, the play is seen as a religious allegory; at the other, it has been interpreted as a comedy protesting against power and privilege.