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  • AIME
    Engineers Need More Than Technical Capacity

    By J. L. Perry

    FOR many years, you and your fellow members of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers have devotedly and ably applied yourselves to the art of making iron and steel. having forem

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Accelerated Programs in Engineering Schools-Their Good and Bad Features

    By J. L. Bray

    ACCELERATED programs, as discussed in this paper, refer to the year-around operation of a college or university with three sixteen-week or four twelve-week terms per year, with pauses between sufficie

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Wise or Unwise?

    By P. D. Merica

    MY remarks are addressed to the question whether a program of international mineral control can effectively serve as a means of maintaining world peace in the kind of world envisaged by the Atlantic C

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    How New and Better Industrial Explosives Are Meeting All Wartime Demands

    By N. G. Johnson

    ALL of us are only too familiar with the fact that first the defense program, and finally the war, required vastly increased production from existing sources, and the discovery and development of new

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Phosphorus in the Metal Industries

    By Frank T. Sisco

    The discovery of phosphorous is usually credited to the German alchemist Brand, in 1669, and the element was rediscovered the next year by Boyle in England. IT was more than 100 years later, however,

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Held Outside Engineering Building for First Time, Annual Meeting Draws Record Crowd

    By AIME AIME

    MONDAY, Feb. 21, evokes memories of the Silver Corridor at the Waldorf to be recalled and reflected upon for time to come when thoughts drift to the Annual Meeting of 1944. Crowded though it was, on o

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Some of War's Effects on Engineering Colleges Discussed by Education Division

    By Tell Ertl, Will Mitchell

    THE Mineral Industry Education Division made the headlines when Columbia's President, Nicholas Murray Butler, welcomed it in a provocative address made before a record crowd of over 100 members a

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    The War's Impact on the Mineral Industry of Washington

    By Milnor Roberts

    WAR struck the mineral industry of Washington with cross currents that produced a peculiar result. The State's production of coal, industrial minerals, and metals for 1941, valued at $28,507,282,

    Jan 1, 1944

  • NIOSH
    IC 7375 Report on Investigations by Fuels and Lubricants Teams at the I. G. Farbenindustrie A. G. Works, Ludwigshafen and Oppau, edited

    By R. HOLROYD

    The Ludwigshafen and Oppau plants are largely independent I. G. factories situated some 23 miles apart on the west bank of the Rhine facing lannheim. The former factory is a general organic chemical w

    Aug 1, 1943

  • NIOSH
    IC 7255 Summary of State Laws Pertaining to Explosives. Part 5. District H

    By BUREAU OF MINES

    This summary of State laws on explosives was compiled primarily to ascertain what subjects relating to their control have been acted upon by each State legislature and , in general , how they have bee

    Jul 1, 1943

  • NIOSH
    RI 3711 Increasing Pig Iron Output Through Improved Coke

    By L. D. Schmidt, W. C. Schroeder, A. C. Fieldner

    "INTRODUCTION The highly mechanized character of modern warfare makes steel the most vital raw material. The shortage of steel scrap in the United States is forcing the use of increased quantities of

    May 1, 1943

  • NIOSH
    RI 3698 Work of the Safety Division, Fiscal Year 1942

    By R. R. Sayers

    A series of coal- mine catastrophes in the latter part of the first decade of this century focused public attention on the need for safety in mines and resulted in the establishment of the Federal Bur

    Apr 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Papers - Nonferrous Reduction Metallurgy - Adherence of Electrodeposited Zinc to Aluminum Cathodes (Metals Technology, Oct. 1938)

    By H. R. Hanley, Charles Y. Clayton

    One of the most important contributions to the art of electrolytic zinc production has been the aluminum cathode. This has been used in all major production since its commercial development in 1916. T

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Production in West Central Texas in 1942

    By M. G. Cheney

    Careful estimates indicate that during 1942 new discoveries and extensions in West Central Texas added oil reserves slightly in excess of the eight million barrels produced. Drilling activity fell 40

    Jan 1, 1943

  • CIM
    The Mining Town of Malartic, Que.

    By William B. Hetherington

    Communities are the foundation upon which the whole structure of society rests and upon which the nation builds its hope for the future. They are not established to serve any one particular generation

    Jan 1, 1943

  • CIM
    The Young Technical Graduate After the War

    By J. M. Turnbull

    THE primary objective of the young graduate, after the war, will be to obtain a suitable position within the Industry, with adequate pay and opportunity to advance. The positions available to meet thi

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Production in West Central Texas in 1942

    By M. G. Cheney

    Careful estimates indicate that during 1942 new discoveries and extensions in West Central Texas added oil reserves slightly in excess of the eight million barrels produced. Drilling activity fell 40

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Papers - Nonferrous Reduction Metallurgy - Adherence of Electrodeposited Zinc to Aluminum Cathodes (Metals Technology, Oct. 1938)

    By H. R. Hanley, Charles Y. Clayton

    One of the most important contributions to the art of electrolytic zinc production has been the aluminum cathode. This has been used in all major production since its commercial development in 1916. T

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    The "Big Inch" Pipe Line

    By Finney, W. R.

    MUCH has been said and written of the "Big Inch," of the terrific obstacles encountered in its construction, of the colorful and tough men engaged in its building, but little has been publicized of th

    Jan 1, 1943

  • CIM
    Job Evaluation

    By A. L. Irwin

    THE problem of compensation for labour is probably the oldest and most complicated one in history. The wage that a man receives is possibly the most concrete thing he gets out of his job and, rightly

    Jan 1, 1943