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  • AIME
    Summary

    DESIRABLE as it is to summarize what has been set forth in preceding chapters, the task can only be approached with great hesitation. What follows represents the personal views of the author at the mo

    Jan 1, 1941

  • AIME
    Engineering And Project Management Of Crushing And Grinding Plants

    By John C. Loretta

    INTRODUCTION Organizations that regularly use project management services will almost certainly have their own views on the preferred systems and procedures. This chapter, therefore, describes Pro

    Jan 1, 1982

  • AIME
    Copper Embrittlement, IV

    By L. L. Wyman

    THE resultant embrittlement caused by the exposure of oxygen-bearing copper when hot and exposed to reducing gases has been the subject of many studies.1 Little attention, however, has been given to t

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Papers - Underground Mining - Effects of Immediate Roof Thickness in Longwall Mining as Determined by

    By Phillip B. Bucky, R. S. Taborelli

    The term "longwall mining" is best known to coal men, although modifications of the method are continually being used in other fields. Longwall mining is of interest today because it makes for greater

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME
    Papers - Underground Mining - Effects of Immediate Roof Thickness in Longwall Mining as Determined by

    By Phillip B. Bucky, R. S. Taborelli

    The term "longwall mining" is best known to coal men, although modifications of the method are continually being used in other fields. Longwall mining is of interest today because it makes for greater

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME
    St. Louis Paper - The Dunnachie Continuous Regenerative Gas-Kiln for Burning Fire-Brick, Pottery, etc.

    By Thomas Egleston

    The adoption of the regenerative principle for burning fire-bricks, pottery, etc., has been delayed beyond what would naturally have been expected, because there bas been until recently little necessi

    Jan 1, 1887

  • AIME
    Woman's Auxiliary (af6a0e68-78e0-4a6a-ab55-fe57f29a0aad)

    AMERICANIZE THE MINING INDUSTRY Americanization is the snaking of American citizens; men and women controlled by the ideals of American citizenship, which have been built up by this country's he

    Jan 8, 1918

  • AIME
    Mine Taxation - Effects of the Undistributed Profits Tax Should Be Weighed Carefully

    By H. B. FERNALD

    THE first year to which the Revenue Act of 1936 has applied is now passed. It is appropriate to try to give some calm thought to the plan of Federal income taxation as now imposed and what it will mea

    Jan 1, 1937

  • AIME
    A National Spokesman for Engineers

    By A. B. Stickney

    UPWARDS of 200,000 engineers in this country are sufficiently interested in engineering as a profession to have joined a society, but not over 10% of them belong to any one society. There is a widely-

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Publicity for Engineers

    By JAMES H. McGRAW

    P UBLZCLTY and engineers do not mix. In the very words of my subject, there is an apparent contradiction. In the past, publicity has been abhorrent to the engineer. It seems to be true that the engine

    Jan 1, 1920

  • AIME
    Use of Coal in Zinc Production

    By W. M. Peirce

    COAL'S importance in the metallurgy of zinc may be gauged by the fact that approximately a million and a half tons is so employed annually in the United States. This brief paper will show in what

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    Notes on Conservation of Lake Superior Iron Ores

    By C. K. Leith

    The question as to what grades of ore it pays to conserve for the future, and the valuation of low-grade reserves, are becoming immediate and definite as applied to the individual ore deposits, and se

    Jan 1, 1915

  • AIME
    Washington Survey - Mineral Issues In Flux

    By Freeman Bishop

    Copper production has been under Government scrutiny for many years because it's known as a concentrated industry which in turn creates what many economists label administrative prices. Neither o

    Jan 1, 1970

  • AIME
    Management Controls In Mining - Modern Methods Need Wider Acceptance

    By Theodore Barry

    The task of developing controls in the mining and manufacturing industries to give them a tighter grip on operating costs has afforded this author an interesting vantage point for observing certain pr

    Jan 11, 1962

  • AIME
    The Future of the Mineral Industries

    By W. C. Lacy

    The last crop of graduates from our colleges and universities who sought employment in the mineral industries found that they needed to hustle to find a job. There was no longer a list of waiting empl

    Jan 1, 1960

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Simple Orientation Relationships for Secondary Recrystallization in Si-Fe

    By C. G. Dunn, P. K. Koh

    TWO recent review papers have considered the origin of primary and secondary recrystalliza-tion textures from the point of view of oriented nucleation and oriented growth theories."' Both theorie

    Jan 1, 1958

  • AIME
    Papers - New York Meeting – February, 1929 - Some Aspects of Corrosion Fatigue. (With Discussion)

    By T. S. Fuller

    The work of D. J. McAdam, Jr.1,2 at the U. S. Naval Engineering Experiment Station, Annapolis, Md., on what has been called by him "corrosion-fatigue" has focussed the attention of the engineering pro

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    Papers - New York Meeting – February, 1929 - Some Aspects of Corrosion Fatigue. (With Discussion)

    By T. S. Fuller

    The work of D. J. McAdam, Jr.1,2 at the U. S. Naval Engineering Experiment Station, Annapolis, Md., on what has been called by him "corrosion-fatigue" has focussed the attention of the engineering pro

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    Some Aspects of Corrosion Fatigue

    By T. S. Fuller

    THE work of D. J. McAdam1,2 at the U. S. Naval Engineering Experiment Station, Annapolis, Md., on what has been called by him "corrosion fatigue" has focussed the attention of the engineering professi

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    Microscopical Structure Of Anthracite

    By Homer Turner

    COALS, other than anthracite, have been so thoroughly studied under the microscope during recent years, that we now know what kinds of plants and what parts of plants form the bulk of lower rank coals

    Jan 2, 1925