How you could possibly live with the metric system: (read, "You probably could") : an examination of a possible national change, written from a human factors viewpointHuman Design Advocates, 1972 - 71 pages |
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Page 13
... report volumes you may need to skim , study , or purchase , this chapter ... volume ( s ) will not be available . The regional sales offices of the GPO ... report volume . 3. Methodology : concise description of the methods used in ...
... report volumes you may need to skim , study , or purchase , this chapter ... volume ( s ) will not be available . The regional sales offices of the GPO ... report volume . 3. Methodology : concise description of the methods used in ...
Page 29
... report volume . These industries include about 65 percent of the total U.S. employment , and represent a wide variety of economic activities , as this listing shows : Agriculture , Forestry , Fisheries Contract Construction Division A ...
... report volume . These industries include about 65 percent of the total U.S. employment , and represent a wide variety of economic activities , as this listing shows : Agriculture , Forestry , Fisheries Contract Construction Division A ...
Page 56
... Data . Odom , Jeffrey V. , Editor . U.S. METRIC STUDY INTERIM REPORT : TESTIMONY OF NATIONALLY REPRESENTATIVE GROUPS . SD Catalogue No. C 13.10 : 345-12 . Issued July 1971 ; 180 pages ; price $ 1.50 . 2. Content Summary . The report volume ...
... Data . Odom , Jeffrey V. , Editor . U.S. METRIC STUDY INTERIM REPORT : TESTIMONY OF NATIONALLY REPRESENTATIVE GROUPS . SD Catalogue No. C 13.10 : 345-12 . Issued July 1971 ; 180 pages ; price $ 1.50 . 2. Content Summary . The report volume ...
Contents
INTRODUCTION | 11 |
A Metric America | 14 |
Testimony of Nationally Representative Groups | 56 |
Copyright | |
1 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
activities adjustments advantages agencies Appendix areas associated authors benefits changeover Chapter companies concern Conclusions Congress considerable construction consumer contains Content conversion coordinated costs Customary deal decision describes detailed devices dimensions discusses documents economic effects effort engineering standards equipment established estimates example expected experience exports extent factors Federal findings firms groups Home Human impact important increased indicate industry interest Issued major manufacturing materials measurement units meter Methodology metric system Metric units necessary organizations participation percent period persons possible practical prepared present problem purchase question questionnaire recommended reference represent responses result sample selected sizes society specific summary survey tabulations technical tion trade transition U.S. customary units U.S. Metric Study usage values volume weights and measures