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Reproduction of the original: The Squire’s Daughter by Archibald Marshall
The third edition of this popular volume continues to supply an up-to-date, nuts-and-bolts learning tool for students and an everyday reference for investigative professionals at all levels. More relevant than ever, this edition adds two new chapters on death and terrorism investigations and several new sections, including insurance fraud, fire and arson investigation; indicators of online marital infidelity; obtaining governmental reports; service of subpoenas for witnesses in federal courts; the Rules of Professional Conduct; niche markets in the investigative industry; and managing and marketing an investigative practice.
"The Squire's Daughter: Being the First Book in the Chronicles of the Clintons" is a novel about life and manners in Victorian-era Britain. The novel includes a bit of a love story, paired with some intrigue and philosophical theme of the opposition of different strata of society. The book is a part of a series telling the stories of various members of the Clinton family.
Since the publication of the first edition of this volume, many new certification programs have begun in private and community colleges, including a course designed by the author for Boston University and a specialty certification by the U.S. Association for Professional Investigators. Reflecting the surge in interest into the investigative fi
Jack Kalman was very good at what he did. Counter-terrorism was a dirty business and he understood he had to play dirty to win. He liked what he did when politics didn't get in the way. Agents couldn't always play by the rules and Jack usually didn't. This time the Bureau was dead wrong. He knew it. The truth was better than the phony P.R. and Jack was going to prove it even if it ended his career. Praise for the author's previous work: "A winner . Sharp, clever, super suspense." -Nelson DeMille "A fast-paced slickly-told story " -Sunday Telegraph, London, UK "Nice surprises and shocks " -The Sunday Times, London, UK "Arnold is a writer to watch." -Ellery Queen Magazine "Attorney-turned-author Arnold clearly knows what elements are necessary for a good thriller." -Publishers Weekly
A cunning thief is desperate to wreck the opening of a historic landmark -- and Nancy is his target! On Gramercy Park in New York City, the magnificent Van Hoogstraten mansion with its priceless collection of glass birds is about to open to the public. Nancy, Bess, and George are invited, but a series of sinister events puts everything in chaos. When the centerpiece of the collection, a beautiful crystal bird, is stolen, Nancy gets on the case. From family members with motives to keep the house, to an antiques dealer with a personal grudge, suspects abound. And when Nancy goes to the family's abandoned camp in the Adirondack forest, she zeroes in on the truth. In a violent nighttime thunderstorm on a solitary lake, Nancy confronts the culprit. The case is solved -- if she can get to shore alive!
Playwrights for Tomorrow was first published in 1969. Minnesota Archive Editions uses digital technology to make long-unavailable books once again accessible, and are published unaltered from the original University of Minnesota Press editions. Three plays are published in this sixth volume of a series of collections of plays by dramatists who have participated in an experimental program conducted by the Office for Advanced Drama Research (O.A.D.R.), University of Minnesota. Dr. Arthur H. Ballet, editor of the series, is the director of the program. The plays in this volume are The Thing Itsel.
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