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Page 31 text:
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l954. 'ig E.M., 1949, iois. School of Engineering Jortant posi- lates backto and its im- 'owth of the ated. We ' Q Roston, Vaughn, Schoippel To simulate actual conditions, an ex- perimental mine composed ot nearly one thousand feet ot underground workings, is operated by the students. Petroleum engineering laboratories are equipped with the most modern apparatus for core analysis, mud drilling investigations, and 'tg Engineer- wed to foster udents in its eering, min- engineering. other illustrative petroleum engineering problems. The mining department strives in all its endeavors to produce graduates who are well schooled in the principles and practice ot mining engineering, s Mining Engineering Department g Christianson, Bruzewski, Pettit Pettit, Christianson, Bruzewski
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Page 30 text:
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Mining Engineering Department GEORGE B. CLARK Professor of Mining Engineering, 1954. B.S., 1935, M.S., 1946, University of Utahg E.M., 1949, Ph.D., l9S2, University of Illinois. Mud Filtration Test 'Natural Gas Lab As the name, Missouri School of Mines, implies, the Mining Engineering Department holds a very important posi- tion on campus. lts origin dates backto the beginning of the school and its im- portance in the continual growth of the campus canot be -underestimated. The tacilities ot the Mining Engineer- ing Department are all designed to foster the effective education of students in its three divisions, mining engineering, min- ing geology, and petroleum engineering. fe-N 2-1 uf af! i ' ' , , -'f :wvrE-'+'vv-- '5 Y '25 ' A 5 f - . -4 ,h a ' - 1 A ' ieifgyg-241,5-424,54 .g -.35 51-i,,p .Vi Q ,,.,fj-4 - - - ,- ,,. l, . ., , g gf, V ,, 1 as J-af-, .N . ..,,.,-4 ' ft... .- f,-..,, , ,Vg W 5 f ' --L is f at MM 9 --4 -1 -P i -Q X .-,,o, , ,,, c., ,,-- ..... -- , A .. N r H f ,VI 741, if ZZ n 2 Zz qff ,ff 5 . lqyf , w. 3' I ug, ff, 9 I , fi , 1, , , 'W ' ,f fel, 1 ,if 1 ,yy W, M WZ f ,Q ff 7, ' , , f 'X' f !0Mf WH 7 M , 'yr , , ,, ff ,, J ff W , f ,, f yf ff, ff V ,f f, ' fa f VW 1 , f W fwffli r f f, 2 ai, W ' , gf ,Q IWW! fy fum Zz if f 2 iff ! ! fi- f To simi perimenta thousand is operate engineerir with the r analysis, r other illu1 problems. in all its e who are x and practii it g, X X X N get e Q X is Y, 1 S ixgg .. -' jixisfi-5 s -. ii r c wt j s css 5-CTS X
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Page 32 text:
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. . ff -Zim-F1 . ALBERT W SCHLECHTEN Department Chairman Professor of Metallurgical Engineering i946 BS in Met E 1937 Montana School of Mines D Sc 1940 M I T Wolfe Eppelshelmer Could Straumanls v Metallurgical Engineering Department Placing Crucibles in a Muffler Furnace. The Met Department, as it is often called, was one of the first de- partments on campus. Originally, the department's curriculum was primarily centered around the crush- ing and grinding of ores and extrac- tion of metals, emphasizing practi- cal applications. Today, however, the scope of the curriculum offered covers every aspect of metallurgical engineering from the original ex- tractivemetallurgy, to physical met- allurgy, foundry metallurgy and even a nuclear option in metallurgy. Met: The Metal tensiv ects l Atoml tional Air F1 progr- here 3 an en ence r being newer be sta lurgy man's edge. oi-vi nrimhqsgx. N , 7, 'x 5N Yf X s it ,X W 3 .r , A H X . X , 3 1 9 . . . , , ' ' , , 5 . . ' ' - l Q -. , , Q . ., , . . . ' A we f ? y ' 5 X 2 , , an g V . xl , ' 1 1 1 , f l . L il s .3
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