REFERENCES 



AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES. 



1960. Style manual for biological journals. Prepared by the Committee on Form 

 and Style of the Conference of Biological Editors. Washington, D. C, 92 p. 



AMERICAN STANDARDS ASSOCIATION. 



1943 (reaffirmed 1947). Engineering and scientific graphs for publications. Ameri- 

 can Society of Mechanical Engineers, Publisher, New York. 28 p. 

 1947. Time-series charts. A manual of design and construction. Sectional Com- 

 mittee on Graphic Presentation. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 

 f-^iblisher, New York, 68 p. 



Brings together inconvenient form procedures found successful in constructing 

 time-series charts. Flexibility of treatment is emphasized. 

 1953. A guide for preparing technical illustrations for publications and projection. 

 Sectional Committee on Graphics. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 

 Publisher, New York, 34 p. 



Informative and authoritative discussion of standards governing preparation 

 of legible and effective illustrations, written from the author's point of view. 



FRENCH, THOMAS E. 



1941. A manual of engineering drawing for students and draftsmen. McGraw-Hill 

 Book Co., Inc., New York, 622 p. 



KEREKES, FRANK, and ROBLEY WINFREY. 



1951. Report preparation, including correspondence and technical writing. 2d 

 edition. Iowa State College Press, Ames, Iowa, 449 p. 



LUTZ, RUFUS R. 



1949. Graphic presentation simplified. Funk & Wagnalls Co., New York, 202 p. 

 An excellent reference that provides basic information on the many types of 

 charts in use today in scientific, technical, business, and commercial pub- 

 lications. 



MELCHER, DANIEL, and NANCY LARRICK. 



1956. Printing and promotion handbook. How to plan, produce, and use printing, 

 advertising, and direct mail. 2d edition. McGraw-Hill Book Co., Inc., New York, 

 Toronto, and London, 438 p. 



Encyclopedic arrangement of subjects relating to printing process. Contains 

 information on selecting and cropping photographs; scaling photographs and 

 line drawings; handlmg art work in transit; and numerous other subjects of 

 interest and concern to authors. A good addition to the laboratory library. 



MODLEY, RUDOLF. 



1^7. How to use pictorial statistics. Harper & Brothers, New York and London, 

 170 p. 



MODLEY, RUDOLF, and DYNO LOWENSTEIN. 



1952. Pictographs and graphs. How to make them and use them. Harper &. 

 Brothers, New York, 186 p. 



OLSEN, YNGVE H., and JAMES E. MORROW, JR. 



1959. Guide for preparing figures. Bulletin Bingham Oceanographic Collections, 

 vol. 17, art, 1, p. 147-153. June. (Reprints available from Peabody Museum of 

 Natural History, Yale U., New Haven, Conn.) 



20 



