Proceedings May General Meeting

- Organization:
- The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 3
- File Size:
- 272 KB
- Publication Date:
Abstract
The May General Meeting of the Institute was held in Kelvin House, Johannesburg on 20th May, at 4.30 p.m. Mr V. C. Robinson (Vice-President) was in the Chair in the absence, overseas, of the President, Mr J. K. E. Douglas. There were also present 16 Fellows: Messrs J. A. Adamson, R. S. J. du Toit, J. A. Drummond, D. F. A. Grave, T. L. Gibbs, G. H. Grange, D. V. Howat, P. H. Kitto, Dr P. J. LIoyd, Messrs B. H. L. Leach, J. de V. Lambrechts, Dr J. T. McIntyre, Messrs C. S. MacPhail, P. W. van Rensburg, S. G. Taussig, W. S. Rapson. Six Members: Messrs E. L. Atkinson, R. Hemp, Dr J. Martinson, Messrs A. H. Munro, G. J. van Jaarsveld and J. H. Qwilliam. Two Associate Members: Messrs B. H. van Rensburg and H. Triiter. Four Visitors: Prof J. E. Kerrich, Dr G. K. Sluis-Cremer, Messrs D. Kisbey-Green and L. W. Isserow. For Secretariat: Mrs S. de Gersigny. Total present: 27. OBITUARY The Vice-President: "It is my sad duty to announce the death of Stephen Ring, a member who joined the Institute in ]961, and passed away on the 31st of December, 1969. I would ask you all to rise and observe a moment's silence. Thank you." MINUTES The Vice-President: "May we confirm the minutes of the Special General Meeting and Monthly General Meeting, held on 20th February, 1970, as published in the April issue of the Journal?" MEMBERSHIP The Vice-President: "I have much pleasure in announcing that the names of the undermentioned candidates, having been published in accordance with By-Law 5 2.2, Council has elected them to membership of the Institute in the following grades: Fellows: Denis Ian Field, Arthur Cecil Waiter Comyn, John Hall, Leon VercueiI. Members: Jan McLellan Vosloo, Jan van Velze. Graduates: Richard Darnley Beck, John Edward Andrews, Roderick Nowell Randell. Associates: Alexander Duncan Ross, Ian James Terrill. Students: Hendrik Jacobus Oostenwald Prins Smith, Graham Peter Gooding, Rudannes Raath Homan. "I welcome the newly, elected members to the Institute." GENERAL BUSINESS The Vice-President: "Are there any matters which you wish to raise under 'General'? There being no matters to raise under 'General', we will proceed to the next item on the Agenda." PAPER FOR PRESENTATION The Vice-President: "It is my pleasant duty to call on Dr du Toit to deliver his paper, entitled, 'The functional relationship between dust hazard and the rate of collecting funds to pay compensation for pneumoconiosis'." After the presentation of the paper (published in the March Journal) the Vice-President said: "This paper is a very important addition to the considerable volume of work applications on this subject of pneumoconiosis. The disease, in all its various forms, has received attention from many, many great men, both in the medical world, and engineers. The fact that there is this big volume of publications of literature on it still doesn't mean that we can get anywhere beyond the old, simple injunction, that the prevention of pneumoconiosis does not depend on compensation, levies or anything else. It simply depends on allaying dust as quickly as possible. "This paper, however, is another scientific landmark and I think, in a cold and dispassionate way, it sets out some important points in this whole subject of the relationship of the levy - the money of compensation to the dust which causes it. "I have, personally, very little to criticise in this paper but when I listened to Dr du Toit's final conclusions, I wondered whether the words, 'Within the data available', aren't the key to this whole situation. I agree that he has demonstrated a workable relationship between the current industries for levy and dustiness, but among the factors which he lists as being important, I know that there is one which is missing. This is extremely difficult to evaluate. It's a factor which has destroyed, on so many occasions, the work which has been done by so many genuine, intent, honest people working in this field, and this is this unknown factor, this hidden factor of political opportunism, which has so often played a very important part in pneumoconiosis compensation. "How many of us have seen the grubby, grasping fingers of power-mad demagogues, and I can name them for you - but I won't - and also the blatant vote-catching of certain politicians interfering in this field. How, at the end of all that, the poor scientist, the poor dedicated man in the Mines' Department, who has to write the law of compensation, can operate, I do not know. "From this picture the ordinary layman recoils in horror. Among the casualties in this particular war, which has been fought over so many years, I am perfectly certain, are some of the criteria of certification, especially in '56/,57, when that extraordinary condition, known as 'pulmonary disability' was introduced. I am sure there were casualties then, in the criteria of certification. "Nevertheless, this paper is a worthy addition to the long list of scientific work done on this so-important
Citation
APA: Proceedings May General Meeting
MLA: Proceedings May General Meeting. The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy,