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Word: sourcebook (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...rare for students students to spend hundreds of dollars for a semester's coursepacks. The $464.50 sourcebook that accompanied Spring 2004's Government 90qa, "Community in America" was met with so much student outcry that Malkin Professor of Public Policy Robert D. Putnam decided to print the coursepack elsewhere in addition to making it available online...

Author: By Asli A. Bashir, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Colleges to Get Consolidated Copyright Fee | 7/6/2007 | See Source »

...George Washington University has put together a Saddam Hussein Sourcebook that brings together multiple declassified documents on America's relationship with the dictator...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Final Days of Saddam Hussein: A Web Guide | 12/29/2006 | See Source »

...least the book is not hard to follow; I wish my sourcebook read this easily. Save your highlighters for the literature tome, as Oz highlights her own ideas for you in concise, bullet-pointed orange boxes...

Author: By Lee ann W. Custer, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: College Weight Gain Is Avoidable | 11/6/2006 | See Source »

...class covers too much, too hastily and too broadly. The lecturing is split up between three professors who vary in quality, and students complain that by the end of the semester, 10a is a better venue to grab a power-nap (undisturbed) than to peruse Western history. The sourcebook was too often lauded as something more “exciting” than the lectures. Coming after 10a, History 10b is more like a dessert than a hangover, whipping through modernity as fast as 10a covered the old stuff, but with more dexterity. Helped in the spring 2006 semester...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: History 10a and 10b, "Western Societies, Politics, and Cultures" | 9/14/2006 | See Source »

...That's not necessarily so, says Miami attorney and immigration law expert Ira Kurzban, who wrote Kurzban's Immigration Law Sourcebook, a textbook that even the government attorneys routinely refer to when presenting their cases. If the government wants to go back and reclassify Posada as a terrorist to keep him in detention if no nation wants to take him in, it may be able to. "The real question here is will the Administration apply its views on terrorism in an evenhanded way?" Kurzban asks. "If Mr. Posada was a member of al-Qaeda, would the Bush Administration do everything...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Why the Bush Administration May Let a Terror Suspect Go Free | 9/13/2006 | See Source »

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