A notification is generally given at the bottom of the first page, but placing it at the end is viable as well, especially on a relatively short document.
Generally the copyright symbol does not appear with the name (as it would for a trademark); it usually appears at the bottom of the first page, with the year of copyright and the rightsholders name. For example, see the bottom of this page.
The reverse of the title page should have all of the copyright information.
The copyright and catalog-in-publication data should be on the reverse of the title page.
It should be in the edition notice, also known as the copyright page, on the reverse of the title page.
Yes. Prentice-Hall books should have a copyright page. In most of their books it is after the title page.
Each edition would have a different copyright date. It should be printed on the reverse of the title page.
What you write is automatically protected, and the way to notate this on the page depends on what blogging application you're using. The easiest option is simply to put a copyright notice at the end of each entry, but you'll want to have something appear automatically on each page, and instructions to do this should be documented by the creator of the app.
The copyright page of a book is typically on the reverse of the title page.
The copyright page is generally found on the reverse of the title page.
This type of bibliographical information is generally on the copyright page, on the reverse of the title page.
The copyright page of a book is typically on the reverse of the title page, and includes copyright notifications and cataloging data for the national library of the country in which it was published.
Notification will be on the copyright page, which is generally the reverse of the title page.