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Book industry

F. V. Tooley, Handbook of Class Manufacturing Books Industries, Inc., New York, 1974. [Pg.38]

Machinery Hand Book. Industrial Press Inc., 200 Madison Avenue, New York, USA. [Pg.48]

A list of some of the more common, commercially available hydrocolloids, their names, and their structural formulas, as far as they are known, has been prepared for ready reference and is given below. Several of these formulas have been reproduced from the book, Industrial Gums, through the courtesy of Academic Press. [Pg.3]

Historic resources (newspaper clippings, articles, city directories, fire insurance maps, plat books, industrial surveys)... [Pg.58]

Ceramics Data Book, Industrial Publications, Chicago, 111. [Pg.77]

In the more than 10 years, since the publication of the first edition of the book Industrial Inorganic Chemistry , the structure of inorganic industrial chemistry has not changed fundamentally. [Pg.647]

Next, with another of his students, he turned to editing the book Industrial Gums. Now in its third edition, Industrial Gums is a praetieal book that deseribes the chemistry, properties, and applications of water-soluble or water-dispersible polysaccharides and polysaccharide derivatives with commereial value or potential. In the introductory chapter of this book, Professor Whistler presented important concepts about the relationships of structure to properties of polysaeeharides, an area he championed after it had been introduced by D. A. Rees. [Pg.14]

Glanville, A. B. 1971. The Plastics Engineer s Data Book, Industrial Press, New York. [Pg.379]

H. W. Heinrich has had more influence on the practice of safety than any other author. Even if a safety practitioner has never heard of him, Heinrich s influence may stiU be felt in what the safety practitioner does since Heinrich s premises have been adopted by many as certainty. They permeate the safety literature. Four editions of his book Industrial Accident Prevention were printed, the last being in 1959. Many of the Heinrich premises are questionable, as follows ... [Pg.82]

Several of the premises about which validity was questioned in our discussions are found in the work of H. W. Heinrich as expressed in the four editions of his book Industrial Accident Prevention A Scientific Approach. My colleague suggested that I review the origin of those premises, how they changed over time, and their validity. Findings of that review are set forth in this chapter. [Pg.122]

Heinrich introduced the accident pyramid in his book. Industrial Accident Prevention A Scientific Approach. This pyramid illustrated his accident causation theory. Heinrich believed that unsafe acts led first to minor injuries and then over a period of time to a major injury event. The accident... [Pg.32]

A more complete description of manual and automated cutting processes, as well as individuahties of spreading moods performed in manual and automated spreading, can be found in the book Industrial cutting of textile materials (Vilumsone-Nemes, 2012). [Pg.230]

In 1969, a study of industrial accidents was undertaken by Frank E. Bird, Jr., who was then the Director of Engineering Services for the Insurance Company of North America. He was interested in the accident ratio of 1 major injury to 29 minor injuries to 300 no-injury accidents first discussed in the 1931 book Industrial Accident Prevention by H. W. Heinrich. Since Mr. Heinrich estimated this relationship and stated further that the ratio related to the occurrence of a unit group of 330 accidents of the same kind and involving the same person, Mr. Bird wanted to determine what the actual reporting relationship of accidents was by the entire average population of workers [6]. [Pg.69]

Fletcher, in his interesting book. Industrial Electrochemistry, demonstrates reasoning that can sometimes lead to a decision on the most probable reaction path when an adsorption step is involved. Electrocatalysis is of major importance industrially. Use of dimensionally stable anodes in the chlorine industry is a good example. [Pg.121]

Since the comic book industry operated on a lead time of several months, the abrupt end of the war in August 1945 caught them by surprise. For the most part, it was early 1946 before writers were able to come out with any atomic-themed comic stories. In January 1946, Real Life Comics placed the atomic bomb on its cover, but the issue lacked any interior story. An unnamed editor, however, wrote a lengthy introduction that set the tone for the next decade ... [Pg.47]

The comic book industry faced a similar problem with the story of nuclear power plants. Indeed, the tale of the slow constmction of a gigantic power plant contains few dramatic moments. I have been able to discover only two nuclear power plant adventure stories in comic book form. In one, the Peacemaker discovers a hidden nuclear power plant imder the South Pole, created by "a minor Balkan nation," and destroys it. In the other, a firefighter hero halts a nuclear power plant blaze at the very last minute. Like the theme of nuclear medicine, the... [Pg.75]

The most vigorous assault on comics came from social psychologist Fredric Wertham. In 1954, he wrote Seduction of the Innocent, a potboiler that essentially laid the blame for postwar teenage social problems at the comic book industry s door. Eventually a US Senate subcommittee held hearings on the matter, later issuing an official report entitled Comic Books and Juvenile Delinquency (1955). ... [Pg.80]

Spread Cold War anxiety. The hopes for atomic cars, planes, trains, and electricity had all sputtered out, save for occasional mention In educational comics and the fanciful illustrations of popular science magazines. And comic book creators could find no vocabulary to convey the authentic advances in nuclear medicine or the mixed potential of the nation s nuclear power plants. Almost by default, the comic book industry fell back on tales of (potential) apocalypse and post-holocaust survival adventures. The cartoon atomic world had become very solemn, indeed. [Pg.86]


See other pages where Book industry is mentioned: [Pg.235]    [Pg.4]    [Pg.1211]    [Pg.18]    [Pg.369]    [Pg.235]    [Pg.471]    [Pg.17]    [Pg.235]    [Pg.344]    [Pg.769]    [Pg.85]    [Pg.726]    [Pg.1141]    [Pg.1142]    [Pg.432]    [Pg.223]    [Pg.19]    [Pg.1517]    [Pg.322]    [Pg.272]    [Pg.253]    [Pg.10]    [Pg.24]    [Pg.47]    [Pg.123]    [Pg.126]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.1517 ]




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