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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
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The Fontana Steel Plant and Its Raw Materials Supply
By GEORGE D. RAMSAY
ABOUT three miles west of Fontana San Bernardino County, California, and fifty miles east of Los Angeles, the Kaiser Co., Inc., has built an integrated steel plant. By integrated, I mean that from its
Jan 1, 1944
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Powder Metallurgy
By Frances H. Clark
DEVELOPMENTS in powder metallurgy have been disappointing in 1943. If any new part has gone into large-scale production, knowledge of it has been restricted by considerations of national security. Nor
Jan 1, 1944
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Development of the Mineral Industry in Peace and War
By J. R. Finlay
BEFORE entering into the statistical part of this article, some general comments may be ln order. Each important war seems to introduce a new atmosphere and a new epoch. The Civil War led to the perio
Jan 1, 1944
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A Mining Boom Again Strikes Yellowknife
By W. G. Jewitt
YELLOWKNIFE, the most northerly Canadian gold mining district, is once more in the throes of a boom. Touched off by spectacular and well-publicized diamond-drilling results on the property of Giant Ye
Jan 1, 1944
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Section and Division Delegates Discuss Mutual Problems
By AIME AIME
ALL 32 of the Local Sections of the Institute in the continental United States and practically all of the Divisions as well, had representatives present at the Conferences of Local Section and Divisio
Jan 1, 1944
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U. S. Foreign Policy for Oil
By George A. Miller
THE outstanding characteristic of the American business man is that he likes to run his own business his own way, without any interference from his wife, his friends, his bankers, and least of all fro
Jan 1, 1944
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Paricutin?Newest Volcano?Now Fifteen Months Old
By Ezequiel Ordonez
MOST spectacular of Nature's contributions to the making of the postwar world is the Paricutin volcano, in Mexico, which I described in the July issue of this magazine last year, a few months aft
Jan 1, 1944
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Phenomenal Accomplishments Made by Petroleum Refiners Since Pearl Harbor as All Actual War Needs are Met
By Walter Miller
DURING the second year of America's active participation in the war the main objectives of the petroleum refining industry were again to provide the four most important product needs for war: 100
Jan 1, 1944
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This Phosphate Industry of Ours
By Chester A. Fulton
SUPPLYING as it does a necessity for healthy animal and vegetable phosphate production is a most important industry. We human beings also are animal as this war so surely proves. Unlike many other ele
Jan 1, 1944
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Ferrous Physical Metallurgy
By Morris Cohen
NO slackening of research and development in the physical metallurgy of iron and steel was evident in 1943-our second year since Pearl Harbor. Of course, many of the achievements were of a military na
Jan 1, 1944
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Contents
Jan 1, 1944
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By-laws
Sec. 1. The membership of the Institute shall comprise six classes, namely: 1. Members; 2. Honorary Members; 3. Senior Members; 4. Associates; 5. Junior Members; 6. Rocky Mountain Members. All shall b
Jan 1, 1944
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Progress Recorded in Gravitational, Seismic, and Geochemical Methods, and in Well Logging
By L. W. Blau
RESEARCH work in exploration and production was further reduced during 1943 owing, partly, to difficulties in the acquisition of apparatus and, principally, to the exodus of research men to government
Jan 1, 1944
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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
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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
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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
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The Zinc Industry
By Arthur A. Center
HIGH GRADE zinc stocks were reported short early in 1943, but not Prime Western. Maximum production of High Grade was expected to be reached before the middle of the year, and demands of new brass mil
Jan 1, 1944
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Oscar H. Johnson, Director, A.I.M.E.
By AIME AIME
BORN a Chicagoan, on Aug;. 31, I879. Oscar Johnson lived in that city until young manhood. As a youth delivering newspapers he set his sight on the l university of Chicago and at sixteen years of age
Jan 1, 1944
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Iron & Steel Process Metallurgy
By W. O. Philbrook
ALTHOUGH the actual output of about 89 million tons fell a little short of the hopes and more optimistic predictions of the beginning of 1943, the American iron and steel industry last year produced t
Jan 1, 1944