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Scientific And Technical Employees Of The Government In Washington Organized
Steps were taken for a permanent organization of the scientific and technical employees of the Government at their mass meeting on May 8. This was the result of an informal meeting on Apr. 23 of thirt
Jan 6, 1919
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Scientific Installations For The Economical Burning Of Liquid Fuel Of Any Specific Gravity.
By William Best
OIL burners, oil furnaces, and methods of installation, have been the subject of many articles, but information concerning oil-burning systems, based upon scientific principles, is still in great dema
Jan 2, 1914
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Scientific Methods to Design Crushing and Screening Plants
By Malcolm D. Flavel
This article synopsizes the major conclusions of Allis-Chalmers research into crushing and screening plant design. The full text of the research findings, together with the supporting mathematical det
Jan 7, 1977
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Scientists Probe Cosmic Rays in Underground Laboratory
In the time it takes you to read this sentence, you'll be "zapped" by about 40 cosmic rays. Though harmless, their existence is being probed by a team of Texas A&M University physicists. What&apo
Jan 6, 1978
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Scope And Content Of The Petroleum Engineering Curriculum
By Lester C. Uren
Tars paper reviews the industrial trends and changes in educational concepts that have led to the development of the modern petroleum engineering curriculum. A trend toward emphasis on engineering fun
Jan 1, 1941
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Scope And Content Of The Petroleum Engineering Curriculum (7ba4c0d7-8291-4094-a7fa-76dc3a9f62c5)
By Lester C. Uren
THIS paper reviews the industrial trends and changes in educational concepts that have led to the development of the modern petroleum engineering curriculum. A trend toward emphasis on engineering fun
Jan 1, 1941
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Scope Of The Light-Weight Aggregates Industry
By H. Herbert Hughes
THE trend in modern building construction is definitely toward the use of weight-reducing materials. The basic advantage of lighter structural weight is obvious; reduction of dead load with retention
Jan 1, 1931
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Scott Turner - An Interview
By John V. Beall
Let's start at the beginning, Mr. Turner. Where and when were you born? In Lansing, Mich., on July 31, 1880. And what was your education? I went to the University of Michigan, where I got an A
Jan 1, 1949
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Scott Turner : the New President
By AIME AIME
FRIEND recently remarked that the career of Scott Turner is characterized by Work and Wild -A Ducks. To these might be added Accomplishment and Persistent Fishing. All of these elements are manifestat
Jan 1, 1932
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Scranton Paper - A Tilting-Ladle Car for Molten Metal or Slag
By John Birkinbine
An item of considerable importance to the producers of pig-iron is the disposition of the slag or cinder from the blast-furnace; and various plans have been adopted at different works to care for the
Jan 1, 1887
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Scranton Paper - A Water-Cooled Gas-Producer
By W. J. Taylor
Every one having practical experience in making heating-gas knows how much room there is for improvement,, in order to avoid not only the production of poor gas, when good gas is most wanted, but also
Jan 1, 1887
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Scranton Paper - American Mining Schools. (Supplement to Address on p. 309.)
By Robert H. Richards
While yet in correspondence with the heads of the several mining schools for the purpose of bringing the details of my Address into the best form for publication, a severe illness overtook me, and bef
Jan 1, 1887
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Scranton Paper - Apparatus for Volumetric Determinations with Potassium Permanganate
By Clemens Jones
A FORM of apparatus for volumetric determinations which shall possess the features requisite for the constant use of potassium permanganate, is a very desirable fixture in a well-appointed laboratory.
Jan 1, 1887
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Scranton Paper - Comparison of Some Southern Cokes and Iron-Ores
By A. S. M’Creath, E. V. d’Invilliers
The rapid development of the southern coal and iron-ore fields during the past few years, and especially in the latter half of the year 1886, and the avidity with which everything relating to the indu
Jan 1, 1887
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Scranton Paper - Concentration and Smelting at Tombstone, Arizona
By John A. Church
The operations of the Tombstone Mill and Mining Company, in Arizona, have been extensive and interesting; and I will eudeavor to describe what is novel in their work, without attempting to go over the
Jan 1, 1887
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Scranton Paper - General Description of the Ores Used in the Chattanooga District
By H. S. Fleming
My original intention was to give a full account of Southern furnaces, ores and cokes; but, owing to the difficulty of getting reliable information, I confine this paper to a general description of th
Jan 1, 1887
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Scranton Paper - Geology and Mining in the Northern Coal-Field of Pennsylvania
By Frank A. Hill
A visitor to the Northern anthracite coal-field in 1844 wrote: " History and song have hallowed the valley of Wyoming, and everything pertaining to it seems wrapped in an atmosphere of romance." So
Jan 1, 1887
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Scranton Paper - Indicative Plants
By R. W. Raymond
In a paper on the Divining-Rod (Transactions, xi., 411), presented at the Boston meting, in February, 1883,I suggested, among other signs of which the skilled prospector might consciously or unconscio
Jan 1, 1887
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Scranton Paper - Magnesium Carbonate as a Non-Conductor of Heat
By E. Luttgen
The substance referred to in the title is the artificially prepared basic carbonate of magnesia, a compound of the carbonate with the hydroxide. It is the "block-magnesia " of commerce, the magnesia a
Jan 1, 1887