Category: E-Books

corporate finance 11e pdf by ross
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Original price was: $68.88.Current price is: $12.00. $0.00
(Part of The Mcgraw-hill/Irwin Series in Finance, Insurance, and Real Estate) – Corporate Finance, 11th Edition, (PDF) by Westerfield, Ross, Jaffe & Jordan stresses the modern fundamentals of the theory of finance, while offering contemporary examples to make the theory come to life. The authors aim to provide corporate finance
Digital Control System Analysis & Design (Global Edition) - eBook
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Original price was: $55.88.Current price is: $10.00. $0.00
Digital Control Systems Analysis and Design, 4th Global Edition (PDF)  is appropriate for a one-semester/two-quarter senior-level course in digital or discrete-time controls. It is also a suitable reference for practicing engineers. This best-selling textbook places emphasis on the practical aspects of designing and implementing digital control systems. This program presents
Critical Heart Disease in Infants and Children (3rd Edition) - eBook
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Original price was: $179.99.Current price is: $25.00. $0.00
Reflecting recent significant changes in the field and now in brilliant full color, Critical Heart Disease in Infants and Children, 3rd Edition, (PDF) keeps you abreast of the skills and knowledge required to safely care for children with acquired and congenital heart disease in the ICU. Cardiologists, pediatric intensivists, cardiac
Economics (20th Edition) - eBook
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Original price was: $249.54.Current price is: $15.00. $0.00
With the Economics: Principles, Problems, & Policies 20th edition, (PDF), instructors and students will benefit from a new offering that expands upon the dynamic and super adaptive capabilities of LearnSmart: SmartBook, the first and only adaptive eBook. McConnell/Brue/Flynn’s tradition of innovation continues with the 20th edition, providing digital mastery and
Behavioral Addictions: Criteria, Evidence, and Treatment - eBook
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Original price was: $56.96.Current price is: $9.00. $0.00
DSM-V broke new ground in May of 2013, labeling a new disorder called “behavioral addiction.” Clinicians instantly wanted to know: how is a behavioral addiction different from an impulse control disorder? What are the criteria for determining that some behaviors are addictions instead of impulses? What, if anything, does this