How to Create Great Reports in Word
English | 2020 | ISBN: 9788740333138 | 83 pages | EPUB | 1.93 MB
If you need to write a report in Word, you have probably done manually what is actually built into Word. This book covers all the main features you need to write a slick published report. You will learn about the power of styles to speed up your formatting and the more advanced features to enhance the layout and look of it.
How to Create Great Reports in Excel
English | 2020 | ISBN: 9788740333268 | 64 pages | EPUB | 1.76 MB
If you regularly need to summarize and prepare reports using Excel data, this report gives you the techniques you need from initial data cleansing to getting your chart into a PowerPoint presentation. It also covers automating your work. Learn why clean data is the solution to a lot of problems. Learn about how to set up pivot tables, add pivot charts and slicers and add colour to highlight unusual entries. Learn how to get your chart into PowerPoint and keep it updated.
How the World Really Works By Alan B. Jones
1997 | 320 Pages | ISBN: 0964084813 | PDF | 2 MB
More and more Americans are coming to feel that something has gone fundamentally wrong in our society. We have suffered repetitive wars, big and small, some won and some lost, but with the peace always lost. This book intends to expose and stop the destruction, and help to guarantee a future of freedom rather than slavery for our children.
Ph.D. John D. Foubert, "How Pornography Harms: What Today's Teens, Young Adults, Parents, and Pastors Need to Know"
English | ISBN: 1489710248 | 2016 | 266 pages | EPUB | 269 KB
Pornography is menacing people, relationships, and society, and this book has the research and stories to prove it.
Tirthankar Roy, "How British Rule Changed India's Economy: The Paradox of the Raj"
English | 2019 | ISBN: 3030177076 | PDF | pages: 167 | 4.0 mb
This Palgrave Pivot revisits the topic of how British colonialism moulded work and life in India and what kind of legacy it left behind.Did British rule lead to India's impoverishment, economic disruption and famine? Under British rule, evidence suggests there were beneficial improvements, with an eventual rise in life expectancy and an increase in wealth for some sectors of the population and economy, notably for much business and industry. Yet many poor people suffered badly, with agricultural stagnation and an underfunded government who were too small to effect general improvements. In this book Roy explains the paradoxical combination of wealth and poverty, looking at both sides of nineteenth century capitalism.
Keith Tuffin, "House Sharing and Young Adults"
English | ISBN: 0367751860 | 2022 | 150 pages | PDF | 3 MB
House Sharing and Young Adults offers unique insight into the dynamics of successful house sharing among young adults and questions some of the myths fostered by the negative stereotyping of housemates. Illustrated with research from interviews with young adults, it explores co-residence, interpersonal relationships and young people's development.
Jacky Hyams, "Hoop Skirts and Ponytails: A True Story of Growing Up in the 50s"
English | ISBN: 1786061392 | 2017 | 288 pages | EPUB | 362 KB
A teenager in Londons East End in the 1950s, Jacky Hyams looks back to midway through the decade, when Britain emerged from post-war austerity, consumerism arrived and Elvis was king.
Suchismita Banerjee, Ashwin Khurana, "Homework Encyclopedia"
English | 2011 | ISBN: 1405363851 | PDF | pages: 450 | 123.7 mb
Ian Christopher Levy, "Holy Scripture and the Quest for Authority at the End of the Middle Ages"
English | 2012 | ISBN: 0268206309 | PDF | pages: 338 | 1.6 mb
All participants in late medieval debates recognized Holy Scripture as the principal authority in matters of Catholic doctrine. Popes, theologians, lawyers―all were bound by the divine truth it conveyed. Yet the church possessed no absolute means of determining the final authoritative meaning of the biblical text―hence the range of appeals to antiquity, to the papacy, and to councils, none of which were ultimately conclusive. Authority in the late medieval church was a vexing issue precisely because it was not resolved. Ian Christopher Levy's book focuses on the quest for such authority between 1370 and 1430, from John Wyclif to Thomas Netter, thereby encompassing the struggle over Holy Scripture waged between Wycliffites and Hussites on the one hand, and their British and Continental opponents on the other. Levy demonstrates that the Wycliffite/Hussite "heretics" and their opponents―the theologians William Woodford, Thomas Netter, and Jean Gerson―in fact shared a large and undisputed common ground. They held recognized licenses of expertise, venerated tradition, esteemed the church fathers, and embraced Holy Scripture as the ultimate authority in Christendom. What is more, they utilized similar hermeneutical strategies with regard to authorial intention, the literal sense, and the appeal to the fathers and holy doctors in order to open up the text. Yet it is precisely this commonality, according to Levy, that rendered the situation virtually intractable; he argues that the erroneous assumption persists today that Netter and Gerson spoke for "the church," whereas Wyclif and Hus sought to destroy it. Levy's sophisticated study in historical theology, which reconsiders the paradigm of heresy and orthodoxy, offers a necessary adjustment in our view of church authority at the turn of the fifteenth century.
Dmitry Degtev, "Hitler's Air Bridges: The Luftwaffe's Supply Operations of the Second World War"
English | ISBN: 1526789930 | 2022 | 296 pages | EPUB | 8 MB
Much has been written about the famous fighters and bombers of the Luftwaffe which proved so successful in the invasion of Poland, the Battle of France, the Battle of Britain and in the early operations in Eastern Europe. Little attention, however, has been focused on the Luftwaffe's transport aircraft which played a vital role in supplying German forces in every theater.