The CliffsStudySolver workbooks combine 20 percent review material with 80 percent practice problems (and the answers!) to help make your lessons stick. CliffsStudySolver Algebra I is for students who want to reinforce their knowledge with a learn-by-doing approach. Inside, you’ll get the practice you need to tackle numbers and operations with problem-solving tools such as
Julia, remains poignant more than 50 years after its 1949 publication. "Nineteen Eighty-Four" paints the bleak picture of a society in which all information is controlled by the government, also known as Big Brother. Here is a ready-reference tool for students interested in this dystopian classic, especially those with an eye toward research. Offering 50 percent new material over the previous edition, "1984, Updated Edition", includes the most relevant critical interpretations available.
Lung cancer—the uncontrolled growth of abnormal cells in the lung tissues—is the number one killer among cancer patients: Lung cancer alone accounts for 28.5 percent of all cancer-related deaths. Yet, in over 85 percent of the cases, the disease might have been prevented by eliminating its main cause: smoking. Lung cancer is especially deadly because it has no distinct, exclusive symptoms. And by the time it is detected, the disease is usually too advanced to cure.
Did you know that 84 percent of Americans say they're not in their ideal jobs? Eighty-four percent! With roughly 153 million people in the U.S. labor force and the average American poised to hold 10.5 jobs in his or her lifetime, one thing's for certain: That's a lot of job dissatisfaction. To guide you through the sometimes scary world of work, we've compiled this handbook for every step of your career. Why mess with one book for résumés, another for interviewing and still another for salary negotiation?
Read by Jeff Woodman (Unabridged) 4 CDs Can we really learn to be happy? Yes, we can. Each semester, nearly 1,400 students sign up for Harvard professor Tal Ben-Shahar's life-changing class "How to Get Happy". Currently it's the hottest course at Harvard, taken by 20 percent of graduates.