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Personal (ce440d07-f76e-411c-8058-6c1e68ac0279)The following is an incomplete list of members and guests who called at Institute headquarters during the period Dec. 10, 1918 to Jan. 10, 1919. P. G. Bandy, Mexico City. Wm. B. McKinley, Yonkers, N.
Jan 2, 1919
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Mental Factors In Industrial OrganizationBy Thomas Read
READJUSTMENT Of the industrial world to a peace .basis after more than 4 years of war will involve many fundamental and far-reaching changes that cannot as yet he clearly foreseen or definitely provid
Jan 2, 1919
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Static, Dynamic, and Notch ToughnessBy Samuel Hoyt
SOME of the more important properties of finished materials are strength, ductility, toughness, resistance to alternating and repeated stresses, etc: Of these, the property that appears to have receiv
Jan 2, 1919
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A Study Of Shoveling As Applied To MiningShoveling ore cost so much at Tyrone during the year 1917 that it was deemed advisable to conduct tests to see where the fault lay. These tests were in the nature of time studies and extended over a p
Jan 2, 1919
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Standards For Brass And Bronze Foundries And Metal-Finishing ProcessesBy Lillian Erskine
WHILE brass and other copper alloys have long been listed as offering health hazards to their workers, it is questionable if the metals involved are alone responsible for the trades' records of m
Jan 2, 1919
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Investigations Of Aerial Transport In Mining Districts In South AmericaBy George Dyott
THERE are many who may consider a paper on aerial transport and its possibilities in connection with mining operations somewhat premature. Nevertheless, as there is considerable interest manifested in
Jan 2, 1919
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Development Of Grain Boundaries In Heat-Treated Alloy SteelsBy R. S. Archer
IN the microscopic examination of aircraft-engine parts made of heat-treated alloy steels, the writer has been forcibly impressed by the failure of the usual etching processes to disclose any but gros
Jan 1, 1919
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Suggestions For Preparing ManuscriptsHave your name and address on the first page of your manuscript. Typewritten manuscript is preferred, but is not essential. If you have the manuscript typewritten, have it double spaced and written on
Jan 1, 1919
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Employment Of Mine LaborBy Herbert Wilson
THIS topic was discussed at the meeting in St. Louis in September, 1917, and at the meeting in New York in February last, but in the interval the war has accentuated in measurable degree the necessity
Jan 1, 1919
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RI-2020 - The Potash Industry of the United States, and its Possibilities for Future Production"The present and possible futures commercial production of potash from various sources in the United States is discussed below under the following heads:1. Potash from the saline lakes.(a),Nebraska la
Jan 1, 1919
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Dinner To Ambrose SwaseyA dinner was given to Ambrose Swasey by the United Engineering Society, at the Engineers' Club, on November 14. Those present -included -twenty-one presidents and past presidents of the Founder S
Jan 1, 1919
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New York Paper - Automatic Copper Plating (with Discussion)By J. W. Richards
Plating iron with copper has received great attention from practical and scientific men, but, aside from the deposit secured by immersion of iron in copper salts, by electro-plating, or by welding tog
Jan 1, 1919
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Milwaukee Paper - Symposium on the Conservation of Tin: Solder, Its Use and AbuseBy M. L. Lissberger
entirely suitable for certain uses and even possess advantages over present solders at high temperatures, but they are certainly not suitable for all uses. However, it is conceivable that their use in
Jan 1, 1919
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Milwaukee Paper - Symposium on the Conservation of Tin: Babbitts and SolderBy Babbitts and Solder
G. w. Thompson,* Brooklyn, N. Y.—This subject has two aspects, neither of which can be ignored: these are the economic aspect and the technical aspect. Under ordinary conditions, economic law will tak
Jan 1, 1919
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Milwaukee Paper - Symposium on the Conservation of Tin: The Tin-plate Industry (with Discussion)By D. M. Buck
greatly restricted and every effort is being made to do away with it where possible, and to substitute a lead-base babbitt or a babbitt with 50 per cent,. tin. The amount of solder having the compo
Jan 1, 1919
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Meeting Of American Society Of Mechanical EngineersHuman engineering was the keynote of the thirty-ninth annual meeting of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, which was held in New York, December 3-6. This note was sounded by President Charl
Jan 1, 1919
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New York Paper - Standards for Brass and Bronze Foundries and Metal-finishing Processes (with Discussion)By Lillian Erskine
While brass and other copper alloys have long been listed as offering health hazards to their workers, it is questionable if the metals involved are alone responsible for the trades' records of m
Jan 1, 1919
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A Study Of Engineering EducationThis study of engineering education arose out of the action of a joint committee on engineering education, representing the principal engineering societies. The committee had gathered so much material
Jan 1, 1919
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Colorado Paper - Electrolyte Zinc (with Discussion)By C. A. Hansen
Page Introduction............................206 Power Characteristics in Zinc Sulfate Electrolysis........... 207 Current Efficiency......................... 207 Corrosion Rates..................
Jan 1, 1919
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New York Paper - Mental Factors In Industrial OrganizationBy Thomas T. Read
Readjustment of the industrial world to a peace basis after more than 4 years of war will involve many fundamental and far-reaching changes that cannot as yet be clearly foreseen or definitely provide
Jan 1, 1919