"We could all write a treatise on what needs to be done, " Cuomo said.
Consider it a treatise on the cost of war, at least the way the Fed wages it.
But Mr Bonner's book is not a treatise against the death penalty.
His principal forerunner is the putative author of "A Treatise of Fishing With an Angle, " published in 1486 in The Book of St.
That's because Brad Garlinghouse--the senior vice president who penned last year's infamous Peanut Butter Manifesto, a treatise on everything wrong at the Web portal--has left.
In "The Prince, " a treatise on the art of politics, the 16th century Italian philosopher Niccolo Machiavelli insisted that compassion got in the way of eminence.
It turned out to be partly a self-help book, partly a management manual, and partly a treatise on the principles of natural selection as they apply to business.
"We all have a basic need for acceptance and approval by social groups, " says Orville Gilbert Brim, author of The Fame Motive: A Treatise on its Origin and Life Course.
The 15th-century Florentine Leon Battista Alberti was a ridiculously gifted painter, composer, poet and philosopher--not to mention the author of the first scientific analysis of perspective, a treatise on the housefly and a eulogy for his dog.
Two centuries before Rand arrived on the scene, Adam Smith had already written The Wealth of Nations, a powerful treatise demonstrating why self-interest offers a more secure foundation for a rational society than a selfless dedication to the common good.
But the book was less an offering of easily-digested novelties, than a mathematical treatise dealing with the seven ways in which things are likely to collapse suddenly.
But last November, he published a devastating treatise that drew on Islamic law and jurisprudence to argue that resorting to violence is banned and so was rebelling against a Muslim ruler.
Marc Edelman is an Associate Professor of Law at Barry University School of Law and author of the Harvard law journal article, A Short Treatise on Fantasy Sports and the Law.
But Lycett crowns his design with a majestic domed cover whose pierced and ramified lily-pad repeat and overall shape closely reproduce the shape and ornament of a Turkish incense burner that had been illustrated in a French treatise on ceramic history published in 1873.
The first is a very good treatise offered by the American Association of Individual Investors (AAII) called How to Buy Individual Bonds: A Fixed-Income Toolkit.
This could have been a dry, academic treatise, but Bolton wisely begins each chapter with a case study, in which women or composites of women whom she and her associates interviewed describe the work-life issues with which they grapple.
CNN: Career - Review: Career encounters with 'the third shift'
More commonly, it is read as a story of man's alienation from the socially adhesive forces of family and legal authority (and subsequently from his own motivation and desire), or as a seminal existentialist treatise (to Camus's exasperation).
His treatise survives as a literary rather than a clinical accomplishment.
But The Recession is not a top-to-bottom sociopolitical treatise.
So the loophole: in its treatise on derivatives, Congress left out a market: OTC equity options.
He has written an interesting treatise on the subject (having had a change of heart) and proposed, as other tax and legal scholars, that IRC 107 is unconstitutional.
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