Twenty-one perennial favorites arranged by veteran music educator Dolly Moon for easy playing by little hands. Red River Valley, On Top of Old Smoky, My Darling Clementine, plus 18 more classic cowboy
Finish Carpentry draws on years of accumulated knowledge and experience in the cutting and installation of interior trim, and is a one-stop resource for learning about this highly regarded craft, con
Shit Just Got Real!AK’s, GLOCKS, and RUGERS, the Dunbar’s are back and death and destruction continue to follow them wherever they go. Revenge from unknown enemies’ is a game changer and no one plays
This book explores the recent advances in designing and synthesizing one- and two-dimensional metal chalcogenide nanostructures, along with their practical applications, helping readers understand wha
Falling in love is one of life’s greatest joys.So imagine the endless joy of falling head over heels for God. Falling in love is one of the most magnificent experiences of human life. Remember what it
More than one hundred individuals who lived in Detroit at some time during the period from 1918 to 1967 share stories about everyday life-families and neighborhoods, community and religious life, scho
The content of this book would be based on Prof. Hwang’s one-semester lectures on “Special Topics on Semiconductor Materials” for graduate students. The lectures are based on the new understanding of
Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) studies have evolved as one of the mainstreams in business strategy. This book presents a comprehensive perspective on the motivations behind the studies, the effects o
The word holor is a term coined by the authors to describe a mathematical entity that is made up of one or more independent quantities, and includes complex numbers, scalars, vectors, matrices, tensors, quaternions, and other hypernumbers. Holors, thus defined, have been known for centuries but each has been developed more or less independently, accompanied by separate nomenclature and theory. This book demonstrates how these complicated subjects can be made simple by using a single notation that applies to all holors, both tensor and nontensor. The authors consider all possible types of holors and develop holor algebra and holor calculus in the most general sense. Thus the reader will learn to develop a new holor that fits the application, rather than forcing an application onto a holor representation that is known but that does not perfectly describe the application. The discussion includes nontensors having no transformation and holors that transform in more complicated ways than al