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  • AIME
    Planning for the Anthracite Area

    By AIME AIME

    FEW indeed are the sections of the country where trained or partly trained workers have not already been hired by a war industry plant or will be within the near future. Yet right in the midst of the

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Iron and Steel Developments in Relation to the War Emergency

    By Wm. A. Haven

    As soon as the likelihood of American participation in the war was established, and in spite of the fact that we can produce almost as much as all other countries combined, the demand for prompt deliv

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Production Research Involves Many Problems in Physics

    By Allen D. Gorrison

    EFFORT to develop fundamental quantitative information and improved technique in the production of petroleum has long been faced with difficulties of a particularly evasive nature, owing to a combinat

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Uses of Silver in Wartime

    By J. L. Christie, R. H. Leach

    SO much has been written recently about the use of silver to replace scarce metals that certain facts about silver and its uses should be of interest. Figures for the production and use of silver, ta

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Enlarging Magnesium Output a Hundredfold

    By Philip D. Wilson

    SPEED is essentiaI in this war program and it is hard to keep up with developments. When the title of this paper was chosen, the contemplated magnesium production for which plants were then under cons

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Petroleum Refining Industry Ready to Meet Phenomenal Demand Made on It

    By Walter Miller

    ALTHOUGH confident of its ability to meet any demands which may be made, the petroleum refining industry is not complacent about the situation and realizes that the quantities of petroleum products to

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    How Engineers Can Speed Victory

    By Brehon B. Somervell

    SOMEONE has called this war a war of gadgets. Someone else says it is an engineers' war. It is a war of production, transportation; a war in the sky; a war on wheels; a civilians' war. Let

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Anthracite Production

    By Evan Evans

    WITH the expiration on April 30, 1941, of the agreement between the anthracite operators and the United Mine Workers of America, a new agreement was entered into, providing for a general wage increase

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Structural Design in the Reduction Works

    By C. W. Dunham

    DESIGN of the structures for the Morenci Reduction Works involved many interesting problems. Naturally, the chief purpose of these structures is to house and support the equipment and other things nec

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Plentiful Supply of Nonmetallic Minerals Aids War Effort

    By Paul M. Tyler

    FOR the same reason that water is not missed until the well runs dry, the roles of many industrial minerals in wartime are often overlooked. In contrast to the growing shortages of many metals, our su

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    C. H. Mathewson, New President, A.I.M.E.

    By AIME AIME

    MODERN metallurgy is an art and a science. The art is process metallurgy-extracting metals from their ores, refining them, and alloying them with one another and with certain nonmetals to produce ther

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    War Demands Bring Changed Attitude Toward Scrap Metals

    By S. M. Shelton

    SINCE the Saar started. the real progress in scrap-metal recover is in the change of point of view regarding secondary metals. The tendency had been to regard scrap as the normal outgrowth of obsolesc

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Coal Research and Covering a Wide Field

    By E. R. Kaiser

    COAL research during 1941 had a marked increase in activity on problems bearing directly on furthering the increased and improved use of coal in homes and industry. Coal producers and fuel engineers e

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    NBC Broadcasts "Engineer At War"

    By AIME AIME

    BEGINNING Thursday, July 16, the National Broadcasting Co. is broadcasting from 6:30 to 6:45 p.m., over its nationwide network and possibly also by short wave a series of eleven radio programs dealing

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Mineral Needs of a World at War

    By JOHN R. SUMAN

    IT appears now that the conflict with the totalitarian states will be a long-drawn-out struggle. The course of this war up to now indicates that this may well be the first major conflict where man pow

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Carroll A. Garner, Director, A.I.M.E

    By AIME AIME

    Few men in the coal-mining industry have had experience in metal mining as well, as has Carroll A. Garner. He went to the Arizona copper country immediately after graduating from Penn State in mining

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Many Coal Companies Now Interested in Scholarships

    By George H. Deike

    DURING the past year a survey was conducted by the Committee on the Promotion of Student Interest in Coal Mining to determine whether the program as laid down in past years was operating effectively.

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Platinum at Work in 1942

    By E. M. Wise

    THOUGH known as the platinum-group metal- the sextuplet, platinum, palladium, iridium. rhodium, osmium, ruthenium, might well be called the American metals or perhaps Pan-American metals, as the ore c

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Geophysical Survey in Australia

    By AIME AIME

    UNTIL recently, practically all geophysical prospecting in Australia was conducted by government departments, either by the Aerial, Geological and Geophysical Survey of Northern Australia or the New S

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Production Speeded Up and Organized on War Basis

    By Lyon F. Terry

    SPEED-UP of production of crude oil and its products, accompanied by rising prices and the organization of the industry on a war basis, featured the economic aspects of petroleum in 1941. Early in th

    Jan 1, 1942