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  • AIME
    Increasing Responsibility of the Engineer in Public Life

    By Mark Eisner

    ONE'S JOB is the watershed down which the rest of one's life tends to flow write the Lynds in the first pages of their classic social study, "Middletown in Transition." Certainly engineers w

    Jan 1, 1940

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    Contents

    Jan 1, 1940

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    Contents

    Jan 1, 1940

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    Contents

    Jan 1, 1940

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    Dust Control In Large-Scale Ore-Concentrating Operations

    By Robert T. Pring

    IN addition to the humanitarian aspects of a dust-control program, certain economic benefits are becoming more fully recognized and now furnish a greater incentive to the mill operator to eliminate th

    Jan 1, 1940

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    Deleterious Coatings Of The Media In Dry Ball Milling (1940)

    By Fred C. Bond, Fred T. Agthe

    WHEN some materials are ground dry in a ball mill, a stage of comminution is reached at which the finely divided particles begin to adhere to the balls and to the mill lining. As grinding progresses,

    Jan 1, 1940

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    Are You Going to "Present a Paper"?

    By S. Marion Tucker

    THE aggregate number of "papers" read within any one year before more or less bored and bewildered audiences is simply appalling. We have seventy to eighty engineering societies alone, not to speak of

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Cheap Bonneville Power Should Attract ElectrometallurgicaI Industries

    By Walter W. R. May

    FOR more than 25 years a few business men who represent virile private enterprise in the Pacific Northwest have been trying to awaken the community to the potential benefits of an open Columbia River.

    Jan 1, 1940

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    A Message to Young Engineers

    By D. C. Jackling

    I BESPEAK your indulgence for a brief expression of the views of a patriarch in the field of mineral industry technology relative to young men's problems in that sphere of education and endeavor.

    Jan 1, 1940

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    Eastern Magnetite - Year End Brings Greatly Increased Activity

    By H. M. Roche

    MAGNETITE mining and milling in the Eastern States in 1939 showed considerable improvement over 1938. For the first eight months of the year production of magnetite proceeded at a normal rate but oper

    Jan 1, 1940

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    The Future of American Industry

    By Merlin H. Aylesworth

    THE subject assigned to me is peculiarly appropriate to the anniversary of the birth of Abraham Lincoln. If we applied to our present problems the ideals and methods of the Great Emancipator, the futu

    Jan 1, 1940

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    Metal Mining - Activity Increases at Iron Ore Properties - Improvements in Mechanization Noted

    By Verne D. Johnston

    ALTHOUGH the stocks of Lake Superior iron ore on dock or at furnaces at the beginning of the year were about 6,000,000 tons less than at the beginning of 1938, the steel industry was operating at only

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Robert C. Stanley ? First Rand Medalist

    By AIME AIME

    FOUK fields of activity are now recognized by the A.I.M.E. in its award of medals for conspicuous achievement: the Saunders medal for mining, the Douglas medal for non- ferrous metallurgy the Lucai me

    Jan 1, 1940

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    Beneficiation of Spodumene Rock by Froth Flotation

    By James Norman

    SPODUMENE is a lithium-bearing pyroxene, and is an important source of lithium compounds. Because of its high alumina and lithia content it might be a desirable constituent of glass batches. The use o

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Coalesced Copper-Its History, Production and Characteristics

    By H. H. Stout

    IN the early fall of 1025, the writer was conducting, in the Ledoux and Co. labora-tory, New York, experiments directed to-ward ascertaining the effect on its impurity content when cathode copper was

    Jan 1, 1940