Incoming Resources
- Statistics of cotton. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting copy of communication from the Secretary of Commerce and Labor submitting estimate of appropriation to carry into effect the provisions of H.R. 19403, An Act Authorizing the Director of the Census To Collect and Publish Statistics of Cotton. July 22, 1912. -- Referred to the Committee on Appropriations and ordered to be printed
- Memorial of Samuel Forry, praying Congress to provide for the publication of a meteorological and statistical register. December 27, 1839. Referred to a select committee, consisting of Messrs. Calhoun, Linn, and Spence, and ordered to be printed
- National Training Center lessons learned, data requirements, Carol A. Johnson
- The decline and fall of type II error rates, Steve Verrill, Mark Durst
- Message of the President of the United States, communicating a digest of the statistics of manufactures according to the returns of the seventh census. January 21, 1859. -- Read, and ordered to lie on the table. January 28, 1859. -- Motion to print the usual number referred to the Committee on Printing. March 2, 1859. -- Report in favor of printing the tabular statements only submitted, considered, and agreed to
- Statistics. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting a report, with results of statistical information, &c. January 7, 1846. Read, and referred to a select committee of five
- Importance of a Statistical Bureau. February 7, 1845. Read, and laid upon the table
- The numbers game, the commonsense guide to understanding numbers in the news, in politics, and in life, Michael Blastland and Andrew Dilnot
- Statistical analysis of experimental parachute test data, D. Teichroew
- Selected economic characteristics, Duval County;, 1960 U.S. Census, census county division basis
- Statistics of grade and staple length of cotton. January 25, 1927. -- Ordered to be printed
- Selected economic characteristics, city of Jacksonville;, 1960 U.S. Census, census tract planning unit basis
- Conquering statistics, numbers without the crunch, Jefferson Hane Weaver
- A test for statistical control applicable to a short series of observations, Churchill Eisenhart, Edgar P. King
- Statistical studies by Department of Commerce upon payment of cost thereof. June 6 (calendar day, June 8), 1934. -- Ordered to be printed
- In the Senate of the United States. April 1, 1880. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. McMillan, from the Committee on Commerce, submitted the following report, The Committee on Commerce, to which was referred the memorial of Merrick, Fowler & Esseltyne and other business men and firms of Michigan, praying for the appointment of a marine statistician, has considered the same and respectfully submits the following report ..
- Super crunchers, why thinking-by-numbers is the new way to be smart, Ian Ayres
- Handbook of labor statistics, 1924-1926. [U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Bulletin No. 439. Miscellaneous Series. June 1927.]
- Chances are, the only statistics book you'll ever need, Steve Slavin
- To provide for the collection and publication of statistics of tobacco by the Department of Agriculture. June 3, 1926. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed
- Statistics
- Collecting, compiling, and publishing statistics of foreign commerce of the United States. January 21, 1921. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed
- National Academy of Sciences. Letter from Professor A.D. Bache, transmitting a report of the operations of the National Academy of Sciences during the past year. April 20, 1864. -- Referred to the Committee on an Uniform System of Coinage, Weights, and Measures
- Observations at the Magnetic and Meteorological Observatory, at the Girard College, Philadelphia, made under the direction of A.D. Bache, LL. D. and with funds supplied by the members of the American Philosophical Society, and by the Topographical Bureau of the United States, 1840 to 1845. Printed by order of the Senate of the United States, and under the direction of the Topographical Bureau
- Index to the distributions of mathematical statistics, Frank A. Haight
- Proceedings of the twelfth annual meeting of the International Association of Public Employment Services, held at Chicago, Illinois, May 19-23, 1924. [U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Bulletin No. 400. Employment and Unemployment Series. September 1926.]
- Table of the first moment of ranked extremes, National Bureau of Standards
- Size effects in ceramic materials, computational issues associated with parameter estimations, Stephen F. Duffy and Eric H. Baker
- Collection and publication of tobacco statistics. February 21, 1927. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed
- New York -- Corporation of Troy -- navigation of Hudson River. May 26, 1834. Referred to the Committee of the Whole House to which is committed the Bill (H.R. No. 159) making an appropriation for the improvement of the navigation of the Hudson River
- Business statistics, Douglas Downing, Jeffrey Clark
- Statistics 101, from data analysis and predictive modeling to measuring distribution and determining probability, your essential guide to statistics, David Borman
- Report of the Secretary of the Senate, (in compliance with the Resolutions of the Senate,) with statement showing the number of persons who signed memorials, &c., for and against the Executive measure of removing the deposites from the Bank of the United States. June 19, 1834. Read, and ordered to be printed, and that 1,000 additional copies be printed for the use of the Senate
- Interactive application of quadratic expansion of chi-square statistic to nonlinear curve fitting, F.F. Badavi, Joel L. Everhart
- Statistical uses of administrative records, recent research and present prospects, compiled and edited by Beth Kilss and Wendy Alvey
- Memorial of the Chamber of Commerce of New York praying that provision be made for collecting commercial statistics in taking the census. February 14, 1860. -- Ordered to lie on the table and be printed
- Statistics of the United States. February 25, 1845. Read, and laid upon the table
- Steamboats on the Mississippi and northern lakes. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting a statement in relation to steamboats on the river Mississippi and the northern lakes. February 22, 1843. Read, and laid upon the table
- Message from the President of the United States, communicating (in compliance with a resolution of the Senate) information relative to the operations of the United States squadron on the west coast of Africa, the condition of the American colonies there, and the commerce of the United States therewith. February 26, 1845. Read February 28, 1845. Ordered to be printed
- Factors influencing the enlistment aspirations and decisions of hispanic, black, and white male youth, Donna R. Morrison and David E. Myers
- Statistical Abstract of the United States, 1898. Twenty-first number. Population, finance, commerce, agricultural and other leading products, mining, railroads and telegraphs, immigration, education, public lands, pensions, postal service, prices, tonnage, etc
- Business statistics, Douglas Downing, Jeffrey Clark
- Memorial of the American Statistical Association, praying the adoption of measures for the correction of errors in the returns of the sixth census. December 10, 1844. Referred to the Committee on the Library, and motion to print referred to the Committee on Printing. December 11, 1844. Ordered to be printed
- Magnetic Observatory, at the Girard College, Philadelphia. Extraordinary magnetic observations, maxima and minima, from July to December, 1844
- Basic statistical concepts and methods for earth scientists, by Ricardo A. Olea
- Bureau of Statistics. Letter from the Secretary of the Interior, in answer to resolution of the House of the 12th instant, relative to the expediency of establishing a bureau of statistics in connexion with the Department of the Interior. January 20, 1863. -- Read, referred to the Committee on Commerce, and ordered to be printed
- Statistical work, United States government. Letter from the Chief of the Bureau of Efficiency, transmitting, in pursuance of the acts of Congress of March 1, 1919, and November 4, 1919, a report on the statistical work of the federal government. September 22, 1922. -- Referred to the Committee on Reform in the Civil Service and ordered to be printed, with illustrations
- Chance, luck, and statistics, Horace C. Levinson
- Statistics, Alan Graham
- Statistics without tears : a primer for non-mathematicians, Derek Rowntree