The Montana· School of, Mines •
Volume 6, No. 15
A MPLIF I-E R Miners Ba/seball Conference Champs' PUBLISHED
BY THE ASSOCIATED
STUDENTS
OF THE MONTANA
Friday,
SCHOOL OF.MINES
June. 3, 1960
Forty-Two Degrees To Be .Given
Forty-two degrees for work in<e>--course will be awarded at the six- 'ford D. Anderson, Butte; Wifliam tieth commencement of Montana G. Callaway, Jr., Great Falls; Wal,school of Minels' on Monday, J~ne ter I. Enderlin, San Francisco; Kel. 6' at 8 p.m. There are nine gradu- ly P. Hemmert, Butte; Robert W. ate and thirty-three undergraduate Hoy, Butte; Robert G. Mock, degrees. Butte; Robert T. Rask, Butte; Syed The recipients of the nine gradu- Hamid Raza, Quetta, Pakistan; Gaate degrees follow: Master of. Sci- ry W. Rile-y, Roundup, Montana: ence in Mining Engineering, Don- Marvin L. Smith, Great Falls'; and R. Corson Bigfork and Sidney Douglas H. Wadman,' Cut Bank .. B. Peyton, Butte; Master of Science In addition "to the degrees' in in Metallurgical Engineering, Har-' c~urse~ an honoray Doct~r of Enold L. Collidge, Jr., Lewistown and gmeermg degree, honoris causa, Calvin L. Stevenson, Anaconda; will be conferred upon Wayne E. Master of Science in Mineral Dres- Glenn, the. commencement sp~aker. sing' Engineering, Johannes ~. Four professional degrees will ~e Dreyer, Kamieskroon, South Afri- conferred on Edward P ~ Ca~well, ca: Albert R Rule Butte' Donald Walter E. DUncan, both Mineral E ' Zipperian' Great Falls: Master Dressing Engineer, and William H. • Qf Science i~ Petroleum Engineer- Love, and Neil Arthur' O'Donnell, ing, Lilburn H. Lueck, Ennis; Mas- both E~gineer of Mines. ter of Science in Geology, Kenneth Special ack~owledgemen~ of. Dr. F Fox Jr Hardin Montana. Reno H. Sales many contributions . ,." to science will be made by- Dr. EdThose receiving' undergraduate win G. Koch, president of Montana , degrees are: Bachelor of Science in School of iMines. , Mining Engineering, Richard W. Banghart, Tsumeb, South Africa: . James P. Connell (with. honor) State College, Pennsylvama; K.en- . • neth H. Erickson, Grand Rapids, Minnesota; James C. Kirchner, Dr. Koch announced recently Fountain City, Wisconsin; Robed that bids .for the Copper Lounge Ray Utter, Eureka, Montan~; furniture have been let, and that Bachelor of Science in Meta llurgr- the building would be open for cal Engineering, Arthur C,. Big- fun use by the beginning of school ley, Jr., Anaconda, John G. Bjele- next fall. ' tich, Butte; William R. Byrne, Butte' James F. Donovan, Anaconda; Raymond Dugdale, Butte; Leonard Greeley, Great Falls; ElOC don J. Nicholson, Great Falls; Dr Edwin G. Koch, presidenf'' of James E. Thompson, Butte; Bach- Montana School of Mines, has acelor of Science in Metallurgical cepted appointment to the Educa,Engineering (Mineral Dressing Op- tion Advisory Committee of the tion), George A. Grandy, Butte, Upper Midwest. Research and .De(with high honor); Bachelor of Sci- velopment Council! j ence in Geological Engineering The Council, jointly with the Un(Mining Option), Alec E. Lin~- iversity of Minneso·ta, is sponsorquist, Whitehall; BachelQr. ()f ~C1-.ing an economic study off the Ninth ence in GeolGgical Engmee·rmg Federal Reserve District with the (Petroleum OptiGn), Javaid Munir hope Oof . accelerating economic Alvi, Gujraniwala, Pakistan; Har- gr-owth on a sound basis throughvey J. Hannah, Shelby; Donald K. out the area. It is financed by the Roberts, Whitehall; P a u I J. Ford Foundation and by business. Schultz Cicero, Illinois; Arthur The Eduhation Advisory ComL. Sto;y, Cut Hank; Richard R. mittee will render advice in special Vincelette Billings (with high hon- cases. It will be an integral partor)' Bach~lor of Science in Petro- ner with committees on governleut'n Engine.ering, Javaid Munir ment, agriculture, labor and busiAlyir, Gujraniwala, Pakistan; Clif- ness.
.
,
Copper Loung'e Furniture Due
Dr. K
h on EAC .
is proud to. present the Oredigger nine that brought the CGnference title back to. our schoolthe, first time since 1951-by defeating Western 7 to. 4 in nine inOn Saturday, May 21, the Mon-~·--'-------------!!!ngs. tana School of Mines took the con- to compliment their work on the ference baseball title .by defeating mound. . Wes,tern 7 to 4. It \was the first tItle that the Mines has won.since In the morning game Pete Gross \ worked behind errorless support 1951. The final game came as a and pitched a three hitte·r to de~ fitting climax to a fine season feat Northern Montana of Havre / On Wednesday, May 1·8, Albert turned in by the Oredigger nine. by a score of 3 to O. The hitting R. Rule, who is a graduate stu-l The squad was under the able di- of Dan Trbovich and Tom Liebsch dent, gave his continuation of his rection of Bill Cullen, oldtime star was Ii key factor. for the Mine's February 17 seminar, which was and president qf (the. Copper victo,ry. In tbe other morning gaml(' entitled "Determination of Elec- League. Duggan MemorIal Park Western defeated Rocky by 4 to 3 trokinetic Potential and Surface. was the scene of tfe annual tourn~- to earn the right to face the Mine.rs Charge for' Highway Aggregates." ment play. in the final. He presented and described th~ , Pete. C])OSSan~ .Ken Erickson Northern annexed the (lonsolahe made since his' last each p1tched a V1CtOry and both tion round by defeating RoC'ky .in He discussed the rela- played the o~tfield for the game the afternoon opener by a score between Electrokinetic they Were hurling. Both men of 8 to 6. Potential and the adhesion of an turned in fine days at the plate The first three. games were aggregate to an asphaltic emulsion. played over the seven. inning route He explained how highway surwhile the final game went nine faces can be improved by selectinnings. ing the proper aggregate-emulsion A bik:, seventh inning was the combination through Electrokindeciding factor for the Mines. In On May 2·0, Mr. lion CQrson ,etic studies. that inning they piled up five· runs \ On Thursday, May ,19,Donald E. spoke before a seminar on the to ice the issue. bick Crnich opened Zipperian, also a graduate student, "Application of Statistical Analy- ,the inning by beating out a his seminar entitled sis on Pilot Plant Research". Th~ dropped third strike. Liebsch then .c.U1Ul"lUU Flotation of a Nonmag- seminar' included a discussion, an proceeded to crack out a double of the results, and which sent Crnich home. E[oickson netic Taconic Ore." The amen- interpretation ability to beneficiatiqn of a Mesa- a statistical analysis of Mr. Cor- singled' to send Liebsch home and Bronson walked to set the stage bi Range Taconite ore has been son's· thesis. Mr. Corson outlined the tech- for Gross's triple which sent Erickthe subject of' his investigation. niques and interpreted ,the results son and Bronson home. A bad Froth flotation, high-oil-emulsion of his study- on slurry and pipe- throw allowed Gross to come home flotation, ~nd low-oil-emulsion system proved, to be capable of re- line floW of a pilot plant. He also and complete the inning. covering slimed valu~s and em- explained how his techniques difThree errors and a single by Dephasis has been directed toward fered from the conventional meth- glow accounted for three I'11ns in ods of study on slurry and pipeline' the eighth for ",estern evaluating this system. but they THE COPPER LOUNGE, suddenly transfQrmed intG a scen~ Qf merflpw. wer,e not enovgh to overtake the Cha:qges in percentage composiriment and festivity, was the site of MQntana School of Mines annual Mines. Twd errors in the ninth put JuniQr PrQm held Satur4ay ni~ht, May 21. Dancini' to. the mysic of a tion of the emulsion Ysystem have two men on base for Wes,tern but been analyzed infterms of flotation local band, the prQm lasted. until 1:00 a.m., and was enjGyed by all. Erickson tightened up and closed K To Picnic results. Also, the effect of some Circle up the inning unhurt. modifying and controlling rehgents /. . \_ At the last meet~ng of the .19'59The Box Score: have been given consideration. 60 school year the members of Western ab r h rbi Mines ab r h rbl Inversion -and stability of the <;:ircle K laid the ground wprk for Adams 2b 3 1 1 0 Dwyer cf 4 1 2 0 Thmpsn 3b 3 1 2 ,0' Trbvch as 3 1 0 \, emulsion system have been exam- Its annual picnic. The picnic is Hrrngtn ss 4 1 l' 0 Crnich If 4 1 1 1 0 JUNEined by electrical resistance meas- scheduled to be' held after final Warren c.f 2 1 1 0 Lbach 1b 4 1 1 2 3-No classes at Larry Judd's Deglow ef 2 0 1 2 Ericksn'p 4 1 2 2 urements. These have been related examinations Slovak 1b 3 0 0 0 Bronsn 2b 4. 1 1 0 Removal of campus cars for cleanlip ' to flotation results. Aided by ex- ranch at Silver Star. Erwinrf 4 0 1 0 Kotowc 4 0 I) 0 Nchlsn If,p 4 0 I) 0 Quillici rf 3 0 1 0 4-Exams start at 9:00 a.m. ! perimental evidence, a qualitative Following the discussion of the Campbell c 2 I) 0 0 Brown rf 1 0 0 0 Alumni dinner for seniors at Finlen hypothesis of the mechanism of picnic, John Ruffatto, Circl~ K's Armstrg c 2 0 0 0 Gross rf 3 1 1 2 the flotation reaction has been newly elected president, took McKinney p 2 0 1 0 6-Senior luncheon for seniors at country club 1 0 0 0 extended; , \ cn~r,ge of the meeting. Mr. Ruf- Hogart If Luncheon for senior wives at Finlen Totals 32 4 8 8 rotals 37 7 to\ 6,. Interested faculty and students x-Struck out for Brown, in 4th fatto outlined several plans for Commertcement 8:00 P.M; . RH.B attended both of the well-presentthe 1960-61 schoO! year and then Western lO-Semester ends _......... 100 000 03(}-4 8 S ed seminars. adjourned the meeting. Mines _.._....... 100 001 50x-7 10 6
iMiners ;rop Western 7~4
· I 0 resslng' · MInera
S·emil nars G·Iven
COf.So,n Co,nd ucts
Seminar
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