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  • RMCMI
    Legislative And Regulatory Issues Facing Western Coal - Federal Leasing and the Future

    By Michael A. Poling

    Ladies and gentlemen, I appreciate this opportunity to be with you, and to share my outlook on the future of Federal coal leasing. I'm told that you wanted the best speaker on this subject in th

    Jan 1, 1986

  • RMCMI
    Discussion Of Graham Bright's Paper

    A great many questions were asked Mr. Bright, and Mr. Bright's opinion was given on a number of subjects. He spoke at length on spring suspension of locomotives, bringing out the necessity for be

    Jan 1, 1922

  • RMCMI
    Don?t Embrace Change, LEAD IT!

    By Peter B. Lilly

    Thank you, Tom, I appreciate that generous introduction - and your generous welcome. When Doris Finnie asked me to speak here today, my decision to join you couldn't have been easier - for two

    Jan 1, 1997

  • RMCMI
    The Rock Dump

    GREETING Hail! Hail! the Coal Miner, Damn the operator, damn the operator, Hail! Hail to mining coal We'll tell 'em how to run the mines. Oh, we'll send out a questionnaire And w

    Jan 1, 1924

  • RMCMI
    The Western Challenge

    By Donald P. Brown

    [Mr. Brown did not make his speech available for reprint.] Productivity is the Answer - Always Was; Always Will Be When Bill Balaz invited me to speak here this morning, he asked me to examine

    Jan 1, 1988

  • RMCMI
    Morning Session - Thursday, June 23, 1938

    CHAIRMAN ALLEN: Gentlemen, I have been asked to call this meeting to order by Mr. Marchant, and am acting here temporarily in the absence of Mr. Nyman, who is unable to be with us. Mr. Nyman sends the

    Jan 1, 1938

  • RMCMI
    Morning Session July 1, 1959

    The final session of the meeting was preceded by a movie, "Contact That Kills," which was a color film clearly pointing out various causes of electrical accidents in mines and how such accidents could

    Jan 1, 1959

  • RMCMI
    Producing Productivity

    By Clifford R. Miercort

    When it was announced that the economy grew at an annual rate of 4.7 percent in the Fourth Quarter of 1992, it appeared that our long awaited recovery from recession was here. Unfortunately that much

    Jan 1, 1993

  • RMCMI
    Have Mining Engineers Accepted All That Developments in Machinery Apply?

    By R. Dawson Hall

    *This paper was not read as it arrived too late. In the beginning of the last century "cottage industry" gave way to the factory system, and at present manufacturing that was once performed in homes

    Jan 1, 1922

  • RMCMI
    Coal Mine Accidents and State Mining Law

    By D. Harrington

    At the time of mine accidents one frequently hears the expression "there will be accidents as long as there are mines", or it may be varied to state that the accident in question was unavoidable, or s

    Jan 1, 1922

  • RMCMI
    Discussion Of Report Of Safety Committee (064435c4-33d8-4762-85ef-4a5f94c386c8)

    MR. D. HARRINGTON (U. S. Bureau of Mines) : I happen to be a member of the Safety Committee, and the men on the Committee, I believe are the ones who will find the most fault with the report; but I am

    Jan 1, 1924

  • RMCMI
    Mechanical Loading Underground

    By A. W. Dickinson

    Since the day when one of the most progressive of our flat-head for- bears used a pry pole to loosen large rocks to crash upon the head of his, enemy, thereafter making notes of his performance on tab

    Jan 1, 1925

  • RMCMI
    Mudite

    By L. C. Clare

    In a meeting of this kind where everyone present is connected with or engaged in coal mining, and where each one is present with the set purpose of learning new thoughts or ideas, the subject of the s

    Jan 1, 1925

  • RMCMI
    Discussion

    PRESIDENT LITTLEJOHN: Is there any member that has any question to ask Mr. McCleary on the subject? MR. TESCHER: What do you figure it costs to do this? MR. McCLEARY: Between one and a half and one

    Jan 1, 1925

  • RMCMI
    Discussion Of The Paper Of A. L. Jones

    PRESIDENT WHITESIDE: The chair will now throw the meeting open to discussion. GEO. B. PRYDE: In the old days at Rock Springs we had electric plants situated about half a mile from our mines; we had s

    Jan 1, 1923

  • RMCMI
    Coal Mine Accounting

    By E. R. Gibson

    It is quite generally conceded that the coal mining industry is among the most progressive in the adoption of modern and efficient equipment and mining methods, but most woefully antiquated in many re

    Jan 1, 1921

  • RMCMI
    The Present Status of the Petroleum Industry in the United States - Rise Of The Industry

    By F. M. Van Tuyl

    The oil industry had its inception in the United States in 1859 when the first oil well was drilled by Col. Drake at Titusville, Pennsylvania. From, a production of 2000 barrels for that year there wa

    Jan 1, 1922

  • RMCMI
    Some Facts About Coal Mining

    By Sam Andrews

    Mr. President, Officers and Members of the Rocky Mountain Coal Mining Institute: This is my first attempt to prepare and read a paper before your association. The Rocky Mountain Coal Mining Institute

    Jan 1, 1921

  • RMCMI
    Mechanical Loading Review

    By Charles Gottschalk

    Some time after my arrival in Rock Springs to fill a short engagement with The Union Pacific Coal Company, Mr. Dickinson informed me that he had placed me on the program for a paper entitled "Mechanic

    Jan 1, 1924

  • RMCMI
    Mine Haulage

    By R. A. McAllister

    The haulage system employed to convey coal from the face to the outside, dates back to 300 B. C., when slaves carried the mineral from the face to the consumer. The British discovered coal on their is

    Jan 1, 1921