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Mineral Industries Education - Postwar Period Brings New Problems - Crowded Schools But Few Graduates for a Few YearsBy E. A. Holbrook
IN my thirty years of educational work in the mineral industries and other engineering fields, this past year has been the most unusual and difficult one. Contact with educators from other schools lea
Jan 1, 1946
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Nine Million Hadfield Manganese Steel HelmetsBy AIME AIME
N OW THAT the war is over it is possible to release data and correct some erroneous statements and impressions relative to the use of manganese-steel armor and helmets, which heretofore have been care
Jan 1, 1920
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The Conference Department At Lehigh University.By Henry S. Drinker
(Canal Zone Meeting, November, 1910.) FEW men reach middle life without having had the experience of failure in one or more undertakings; and most of us can look back with gratitude to help or advice
Jan 1, 1911
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Address at Utah MeetingBy J. V. W. REYNDERS
NOT only is your toastmaster silver-tongued in his references 'to myself, but he is also quite in the habit of "saying it in silver." I have analyzed with some care his statistics of the world&ap
Jan 1, 1925
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Coal in the Union of South Africa - Supply Adequate for Domestic and Export Demand, With Large Undeveloped ReservesBy Sidney H. Haughton
WHEN the white pioneers of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries advanced from the coastal settlements of southern Africa into the interior of the subcontinent, they found it inhabited, more or less
Jan 1, 1945
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What the College Expects of the .Operating Companies in Receiving and Training Its, GraduatesBy W. B. Plank
I HAVE been asked by the Chairman of the Engineering Education Committee to outline what the engineering colleges would like the mining companies to do with the young engineer just, out of college. It
Jan 1, 1929
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Research, Patents, and the Kilgore Bill ? Private Initiative in Research, With Patent Protection, a Proved Success in AmericaBy Anthony William Deller
MAJOR battles in the present war have been fought in American research laboratories. Without the outstanding contributions made by our scientists, engineers, and technologists in mining and metallurgy
Jan 1, 1945
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General PrinciplesBy T. A. Rickard
It has been stated, by Sir James M. Barrie, that "the man of science appears to be the only man who has something to say, just now-and the only man who does not know how to say it". The friendly jibe
Jan 1, 1931
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Human Resourcefulness Key To Mineral SuppliesBy Max W. Ball
Our ever-increasing use of minerals has been the outstanding fact in our American economic development. The rise in our standard of living in the past century is without equal in human history. Nowher
Jan 1, 1949
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Woman?s Auxiliary (55f0fd46-9aff-4bb7-8285-abcf06aebb63)The work of Americanism is getting under way slowly but surely. The purpose of the Auxiliary is to build for all time and it therefore wishes to lay its foundations securely, feeling that the true und
Jan 5, 1919
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Montreal Meeting - September, 1879Jan 1, 1880
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Biographical Notice of Sir Lowthian Bell, BaronetBy Henry M. Howe
THE death of Sir Lowthian Bell removes almost the last of the group of heroic leaders who made their age and ours the Age of Steel-a group which his luster and the luster of his peers, Bessemer, Sieme
Sep 1, 1905
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Minerals In Man's FutureBy Zay Jeffries
From the title of this chapter the reader could expect an attempt to outline the anticipated shape of things to come, mineralwise. We have no crystal ball and if we possessed one we could claim no exp
Jan 1, 1959
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Minerals In Man's Future (2c80c11d-6d0a-4134-909b-0d42a870bf1b)By Zay Jeffries
From the title of this chapter the reader could expect an attempt to out- line the anticipated shape of things to come, mineralwise. We have no crystal ball and if we possessed one we could claim no e
Jan 1, 1964
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Annual Report of the Woman's AuxiliaryANNUAL meeting of the Woman's Auxiliary of the American Institute of Mining and Metal-lurgical Engineers convened on Tuesday morn-ing, Feb. 20, the president, Mrs. H. W. Hardinge, presiding. Pres
Jan 4, 1923
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Boston and KeweenawBy J. Robert Van Peli
IT was a strange but highly fruitful marriage-that union of hardy explorers, seeking the rich treasures of copper in the Lake Superior wilderness, with Boston's aristocracy of brains, capital, an
Jan 1, 1948
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Montreal MeetingTHE first session of the Institute was held on Tuesday evening, September 16th, in the William Molson Hall, of McGill University, Dr. T. Sterry Hunt, Chairman of the Local Committee of Arrangements, i
Jan 1, 1880
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The- Kaffir Mine-Laborer.By Thomas Lane Carter
THE history of mining in South Africa differs somewhat from that of other countries in the part taken by the aborigines in the development ?of the mineral deposits. The Spaniards in America, and the f
Nov 1, 1908
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Velocity of Galena and Quartz Falling in WaterBy ROBERT. RICHARDS
I. INTRODUCTION The object of this paper is to enlarge the field of settling velocities treated by me in my former papers, Close Sizing Before Jigging, and Sorting Before Sizing.' There seemed n
May 1, 1907