★ U. S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE: 1972 - 747-189/2
The U. S. Atomic Energy Commission publishes this series of information booklets for the general public. These booklets explain the many uses of nuclear energy.
The booklets are listed below by subject category.
Members of the general public may obtain free, single copies of six titles of their choice. Librarians and teachers may obtain free a complete set of the booklets. These requests should be made on school or library stationery. Those wishing to obtain larger quantities may purchase them if stocks are available. Orders for booklets and inquiries on prices and availability should be directed to:
USAEC—Technical Information Center, P. O. Box 62, Oak Ridge, TN 37830
Comments are invited regarding this booklet and others in the series.
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA ATOMIC ENERGY COMMISSION
U. S. ATOMIC ENERGY COMMISSIONOffice of Information Services
TheTable of Contentsin each volume contains relative hyperlinks to pages in all three volumes ofWorlds Within Worlds:
These links function correctly if the books are read online, and can be made to work for books installed on a local drive or a website. (EBook-reader formats like ePub or Mobi do not support links between eBooks.)
To install these books in another file system, create a directory (calledlocalbooksin the example). Within that directory, create a subdirectory for each eBook, as in this outline view:
Note that each eBook’s directory name is the same as the Project Gutenberg number for the eBook.
Each eBook directory may contain files in various formats; only the HTML files are relevant here; other files are optional.
HTML files are in a subdirectory named by the Gutenberg number followed by “-h”.
The HTML file itself has a name consisting of the Gutenberg number followed by “-h”, with a file extension of “.htm”.
Associated media files (such as images, MIDI files, etc.) are contained in a further subdirectory “images”
To view these files, open any of the “*-h.htm” files in a web browser.