It goes without saying that references to currencies no longer in use should
be eliminated. But it is important to use the correct names, abbreviations,
and capitalization for the euro. Note that 1 euro = 100 cents -- not 100
"eurocents," a word that does not exist. The word "euro" is not capitalized
as the words "dollar" and "pound" are not capitalized when referencing them
in sentences.

Best regards,
Brent

  _____




-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On
Behalf Of M R
Sent: 6 May 2002 08:54
To: U.S. Metric Association
Subject: [USMA:19940] USMA & French Franc


In USMA's currency page
http://lamar.colostate.edu/~hillger/currency.htm
"The United States  pioneered decimal coinage
(the U.S. dollar consisting of 100 cents)  in 1786.
Now all nations have decimal currencies,
for example: the French system (1 franc = 100
centimes)".

With French people approving Euro & European policies,
I think its time to retire French franc in our USMA
webpage example.  I suggest we should replace it with
"1 Euro = 100 Eurocents".

Similarly in everyday page
http://lamar.colostate.edu/~hillger/everyday.htm
"Area:
10 000 square meters = 1 hectare
100 hectares = 1 square kilometer"

We can add '1 are = 100 square meters'.  This may
lead people to use the unit.

Madan



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