Synopses & Reviews
It has been five years since Jon Clayton was convicted of the rape and execution style murder of Donella Nash. It is springtime in an election year and, as part of the Governor's war on crime, Jon Clayton is scheduled to be excuted in October. Clayton stills swears he is innocent, but had a record of violence and the bullet found in Nash's head came from his pistol. Woody Thomas, an ex-Public Defender, is appointed by the court to pursue Clayton's final appeal. Woody relives the trial through the transcripts, then locates and questions the witnesses. The case looks solid, but federal agents begin to follow him, local police try to frame him, and someone is trying to kill him. As Woody troubles mount, the murder case begins to fall apart and the Governor signs Clayton's death warrant - five months early.
Synopsis
Written and updated by text author Roger Arnold, this thorough Study Guide reinforces student learning with a list of key concepts and terms, review questions and problems, short-answer exercises asking "what is wrong" or "what has been overlooked" in a list of statements, and multiple-choice, true/false, and fill-in-the-blank practice questions.
About the Author
Roger A. Arnold is Professor of Economics at California State University, San Marcos, where his fields of specialization include general microeconomic theory and monetary theory. A widely respected authority on economic issues, Dr. Arnold is a regularly featured expert on talk radio discussing the state of the economy. He is also a proven author who has written numerous academic articles, hundreds of newspaper columns, as well as the popular Economics In Our Times textbook and principles of economics supplementary text How to Think Like an Economist. Dr. Arnold has been a member of the economics faculty at California State University Northridge, University of Oklahoma, Hillsdale College, University of Nevada Las Vegas, and California State University San Marcos. He served as chair of the economics department for two years at University of Nevada Las Vegas and for seven years at California State University San Marcos. During his tenure at UNLV he was regularly one of the top five finalists for the teacher of the year honor (in the College of Business and Economics), and in 1987 he received the best researcher of the year award. Dr. Arnold earned a B.S. in economics in 1974 from the University of Birmingham in England and received his M.A. in 1976 and his Ph.D. in 1979 from Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University.