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  • AIME
    The Future of the Lead and Zinc Markets

    By Clinton H. Crane

    DR. TILNEY, the great expert on the study of the development of the brain of human beings and animals, tells us that the greatest difference between the human brain and the brain of animals is that ma

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    The Magma

    Human progress has a visible material phase, easily discernible, that is expressed in the standard of living. This material phase, however, is only the outward expression of a spiritual or mental phas

    Jan 1, 1950

  • AIME
    Liberty and Progress in the American Way

    By AIME AIME

    THE graduating class whom I am particularly addressing are going into the world at least a month earlier than normal, because of the war. You have been free to choose your work. You have chosen to be

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Engineering: A Profession

    By A. B. Parsons

    LECTURE, it appears, is a discourse that is supposed to be instructive. I am quite sure that you will derive no instruction from what I have to say. I will be satisfied if my remarks provoke thought a

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
    Training of Workmen for Positions of Higher Responsibility

    By F. C. Stanford

    THE work of an engineer is to direct natural forces so that they bring about the results that he wishes to secure. Heretofore he has concerned himself chiefly with physical forces and inanimate object

    Jan 2, 1918

  • AIME
    Training Workmen For Positions Of Higher Responsibility

    F. C. HENDERSCHOTT,* New York, N. Y.-I am going to take, as the text of what I shall discuss, a portion of the second paragraph of Mr. Stanford's paper. It read as follows: "The most vital need o

    Jan 4, 1918

  • AIME
    New York Paper February, 1918 - Training of Workmen for Positions of Higher Responsibility (with Discussion)

    By F. C. Stanford

    The work of an engineer is to direct natural forces so that the: bring about the results that he wishes to secure. Heretofore he ha concerned himself chiefly with physical forces and inanimate objects

    Jan 1, 1918

  • AIME
    The Opportunity of the Engineer

    By PHILIP N. MOORE

    IT is a pleasure to realize even at that day the dignity of the engineer's calling was upheld. May I also add my firm belief that today there be many engineers who will qualify to the specificati

    Jan 1, 1926

  • AIME
    The Machine Representation Of Geological Information

    By Colin J. Dixon

    The full realization of the potential of computers in geological in- formation system demands new approaches to the machine representation of information. At the same time, the feasibility of such a s

    Jan 1, 1969

  • AIME
    Baltimore Meeting

    THE first session was held in the small hall of the Academy of Music, on Tuesday evening, February 18th, 1879. The proceedings were opened by the reading, by President Eckley B. Coxe, of the follow

    Jan 1, 1879

  • AIME
    Preconcentration Of Native Copper And Porphyry Copper Ores By Electronic Sorting

    By R. W. Nash, A. E. Schwaneke, V. R. Miller

    The Bureau of Mines developed a detector for controlling sorting devices to separate the copper-bearing fragments from the barren portion of Michigan native copper and western prophyry copper ores. A

    Jan 8, 1978

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Punctuation (f21533c0-7a01-483d-a332-f533ddb519c1)

    By T. A. Rickard

    A knowledge of the principles of punctuation is essential to effective and intelligible writing, for the ease and pleasure of the reader, and even his understanding, may depend upon the choice and the

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    Reward of Loyalty and Labor

    By Charles Schwab

    WHEN I leave this life, as an employer of labor there is no one thing that I want so much to be engraven upon my monument as the fact that I have been one of the men who have worked, whether with my b

    Jan 12, 1922

  • AIME
    Wallace E. Prattr Director, A.I.M.E

    By AIME AIME

    TEXAS not only produces millions of barrels of petroleum daily, but supplies the oil industry with an asset infinitely more valuable than liquld gold. That asset is leadership. The oil industry was bu

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    New York Paper - The New Spirit in Industrial Relations (with Discussion)

    By Herbert M. Wilson

    We of the employer class represent labor in the social organization and in industry just as truly as do those who labor only with their hands, and, because our labor is chiefly with our brains, the du

    Jan 1, 1919

  • AIME
    Boston Paper - Some Thoughts and Suggestions on Technical Education - Presidential Address

    By T. Egleston

    FOR a great part of the progress of the world we are indebted to the works of engineers. It is to them that we owe our means of rapid transportation, our canals, our railroads, our bridges, many of ou

    Jan 1, 1888

  • AIME
    Clyde Evarts Weed - Director, AIME

    By Clyde Evarts Weed

    SOME one once affirmed his great belief in luck, adding that he had found that the harder he worked the more luck he had. Clyde Weed is a firm believer in this method of courting the fugitive lady. He

    Jan 1, 1947

  • AIME
    Preventive Maintenance Of Control Equipment For Excavators

    By M. Safiuddin

    Within the mining industry, open-pit mining has progressed to a point where a 200-yard walking dragline is as conceivable today as a 35-yard dragline was just a few years ago. This is possible due to

    Jan 9, 1967

  • AIME
    Some Problems of Today

    By Thomas A. Edison

    We have not yet begun. to realize the possibilities of automatic machinery, in part because we have not developed the designing brains, and in part because we have not sufficiently simplified industry

    Jan 1, 1929