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  • RMCMI
    RMCMI Eighteenth Annual Scholarship Award Winner Profiles

    Profiled here are the eight RMCMI 2001 Scholarship Award winners. Seven of the eight attended the 97th Regular Meeting and Convention at the Steamboat Springs Sheraton Resort in Steamboat Springs, Col

    Jan 1, 2001

  • RMCMI
    Prepared Discussion By Edward K. Judd, New York

    In this very interesting paper, Mr. Harrington mentions a considerable variety of materials suitable for use in the rock dusting of coal mines; this suggests that you may possibly be interested in sam

    Jan 1, 1925

  • RMCMI
    Screening and Preparing Coal at the Tipple

    By Benedict Shubart

    The subject of this paper may seem threadbare to, many of you, but even if I repeat what you already know, just smile to yourself and think how much wiser you are than your neighbor, for it is startli

    Jan 1, 1921

  • RMCMI
    City Planning and Landscape Architecture for Western Coal Camps

    By S. R. DeBoer

    A study of Western cities reveals the fact that a city where people make their homes for permanent residence is always a city with, well-shaded avenues, with parks and playgrounds; in other words, a b

    Jan 1, 1924

  • RMCMI
    Guessing or Knowing! Which?

    By Eugene McAuliffe

    The subject of my few remarks addressed to the Rocky Mountain Coal Mining Institute, "Guessing or Knowing! Which," may perhaps suggest but little to you here today. However, I am sure you will all agr

    Jan 1, 1924

  • RMCMI
    Ventilation of Working Faces Under the Various Systems of Concentrated Mining

    By C. H. Trik

    Any article or discussion on the ventilation of Working Faces under different systems of concentrated mining is of little value to any practical man unless based upon facts gleaned from actual experie

    Jan 1, 1926

  • RMCMI
    Discussion Of Harrington's And Clare?s Papers

    D. HARRINGTON: Owing to lack of funds, the United States Bureau of Mines have made no experiments in the Bruceton mines in the use of mudite. MR. McAULIFFE: I doubt that mudite cam be delivered at f

    Jan 1, 1925

  • RMCMI
    The Possible Substitution of Pulverized Coal for Fuel Oil in Smelting Operations in the Southwest

    By T. H. Brien, O&apos

    At nearly all of the copper smelters in the Southwest, at some time, calculations have been made having in view the economy of replacing fuel oil with pulverized coal as a heat-producing medium for sm

    Jan 1, 1923

  • RMCMI
    Personal Dangers

    By John Bevan

    In a discussion of the personal dangers that may arise from mine gases, it is necessary to take into consideration the gases which may result from an underground fire, or a fire in or about the downca

    Jan 1, 1922

  • RMCMI
    Experiments In Roof Control By The Colorado Fuel And Iron Company

    By D. A. Stout

    Mr. Chairman and Members of the Rocky Mountain Coal Mining Institute: Your Secretary has asked me to write upon a subject' which is a most interesting one, and which has a very wide scope. In v

    Jan 1, 1925

  • RMCMI
    A Theory on the Cause of Spontaneous Combustion

    By C. P. Crawford

    Bureau of Mines Technical Paper 172, by S. H. Katz and H. C. Porter, entitled "Effects of Moisture on the Spontaneous Heating of Stored Coal", says at the outset, "Spontaneous fires in storage piles o

    Jan 1, 1925

  • RMCMI
    Mudite Discussion

    PRESIDENT LITTLEJOHN: We have with us a gentleman from Utah, who is familiarly known -as the "Mudite King," Mr. Reid, of the Lion Coal Company. Here is a letter I would like to read, and probably Mr.

    Jan 1, 1925

  • RMCMI
    Discussion Of H. I. Smith's Paper

    (Referring to map) If there are any methods to improve on this I would like to have some suggestions on it. The maps there are on a scale of one inch to two hundred feet. At the time of each extension

    Jan 1, 1924

  • RMCMI
    Discussion Of Graham Bright's Paper

    A great many questions were asked Mr. Bright, and Mr. Bright's opinion was given on a number of subjects. He spoke at length on spring suspension of locomotives, bringing out the necessity for be

    Jan 1, 1922

  • RMCMI
    Minutes of the Thirteenth Semi-Annual Meeting of the Rocky Mountain Coal Mining Institute, Held at Rock Springs, Wyo., and Salt Lake City, Utah, June 28, 29 and 30, 1921

    On Monday, June 27, 1921, at 6 p. m., twenty-four members of the Institute from. Colorado and New Mexico, left Denver on the Union Pacific for Rock Springs, Wyoming, arriving there at 9:42 a. m., June

    Jan 1, 1921

  • RMCMI
    Discussion ? Safety In Mechanical Loading

    MR. DICKINSON: There is an increase of dust in machine loading, especially with the McKinlay loading and cutting machine which was extremely dusty. MR. FORRESTER: Declared more dust must be expecte

    Jan 1, 1925

  • RMCMI
    Accident Rate - Discussion

    SECRETARY SHUBART: This letter will not surprise you. (Reads) UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE Bureau of Mines Washington Sept. 4, 192G. Benedict Shubart, Secy, Rocky Mountain Coal Mining I

    Jan 1, 1926

  • RMCMI
    Address - At the Annual Dinner Meeting of the Rocky Mountain Coal Mining Institute, Denver, June 3, 1931

    By C. B. Huntress

    "We have ourselves to blame in the steel industry for our condition." These words were addressed twelve days ago by James A. Farrell, President of the United States Steel Corporation, to his "comrade

    Jan 1, 1931

  • RMCMI
    Minutes of the Thirtieth Regular Meeting of the Rocky Mountain Coal Mining Institute held at Denver, Colorado June 3, 4, 5, 1931

    The thirtieth regular meeting of the Rocky Mountain Coal Mining Institute was called to order at 11: 20 o'clock A. M., Wednesday, June 3, 1931, President G. A. Kaseman presiding: PRESIDENT KASE

    Jan 1, 1931

  • RMCMI
    Mechanical Stoking of Domestic Fuel

    By Joseph Harrington

    It is sufficiently correct to say that domestic solid fuel is universally hand fired and it is almost as correct to state that a very large proportion of hand-fired domestic fires are extremely ineffi

    Jan 1, 1925