Peterson's Guide to Colleges in the Middle Atlantic States 1995


Book Description

Now used by more than 100,000 students each year, this popular series presents specific information on regional colleges for students who choose to focus their college search close to home. This edition provides detailed information on all colleges in Delaware, Washington D.C., Maryland, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Virginia, and West Virginia.




Peterson's Guide to Four-Year Colleges, 1995


Book Description

This year's edition of Peterson's bestselling guide features extended coverage of student life, faculty and programs, career-planning services, and financial policies, in addition to the unparalleled, detailed information on nearly 2,000 four-year colleges that readers have come to expect.







Forthcoming Books


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Books in Print


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State


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Peterson's Guide to Two-Year Colleges, 1995


Book Description

Here is complete, accurate information on more than 1,400 U.S. "two-year colleges"--schools that grant the associate degree as their highest degree. Backed by Peterson's more than 25 years of helping students find the right college, this guide presents concise statistical data plus in-depth descriptions of each college.




Peterson Reference Guide to Sparrows of North America


Book Description

Sparrows are as complicated as they are common. This is an essential guide to identifying 76 kinds, along with a fascinating history of human interactions with them. What, exactly, is a sparrow? All birders (and many non-birders) have essentially the same mental image of a pelican, a duck, or a flamingo, and a guide dedicated to waxwings or kingfishers would need nothing more than a sketch and a single sentence to satisfactorily identify its subject. Sparrows are harder to pin down. This book covers one family (Passerellidae), which includes towhees and juncos, and 76 members of the sparrow clan. Birds have a human history, too, beginning with their significance to native cultures and continuing through their discovery by science, their taxonomic fortunes and misfortunes, and their prospects for survival in a world with ever less space for wild creatures. This book includes not just facts and measurements, but stories--of how birds got their names and how they were discovered--of their entanglement with human history.