Dear Sirs,
I'm trying to help a friend in the Purchasing dept, meron po ba sa inyong me alam kung saan sa atin sa 'Pinas meron nagma-manufacture ng copper alloy plates? (I myself can't think of one). Maraming salamat po and God bless. Vivian
Papers presented during the 2010 MINECON can now be downloaded by registered members of this site. Having said that, only members who have logged in can view the download links.
Good morning mga sir, saan pwede i-download ang tentaive sked and activities ng MINECON2010... yung link kasi sa downloads ay broken... hndi ma kapag download... Thanks.
Beatty is 'ideal' for green energy project
Officials discuss poetential renewable energy program
By RICHARD STEPHENS (http://www.pahrumpvalleytimes.com)
Beatty Economic Development Corporation Chairwoman Kitty Shubert speaks of green energy Saturday as (left to right) Commissioner Joni Eastley; Connie L. Petritz, Nye County Brownfields Project, Terr Stagg, Valley Electric Power Resource Manager; and Laura Padilla, a consultant with Ponderosa Dairy listen.
Gold fever breaks out again
People have been drawn to gold since before 3000 B.C., when the Egyptians mastered the art of beating it into leaf.
It's little different now, after a week when gold's market price topped $500 per ounce for the first time in decades. The precious metal ended the week with a bang. Gold for February delivery rose 70 cents to close at $507 an ounce on the New York Mercantile Exchange Friday, the highest since February 1983.
Mine Your Own Business
WASHINGTON—One would think only a crazy couple would declare war on environmentalists by presenting them on film as snobs, hypocrites and enemies of the poor. Luckily for those of us who think one-sided debates are boring, Phelim McAleer and Ann McElhinney are just crazy enough to question the environmentalists' opposition to mining projects in poor countries in a documentary—“Mine Your Own Business”—that is gaining attention.
New museum exhibit digs into mining history
ported fom Citizen-Times Story by Jill Ingram
published October 8, 2005 6:00 am
Asheville - When employees at the Colburn Earth Science Museum decided to build an exhibit about the local history of mining, they explored their resources, namely a lot of local people.
"We got a lot of firsthand accounts of mining," said Jim Fox, the project manager. "The more people we talked to, the more people they recommended we talk to."
By mining locals for information, the museum was able to put together an impressive new permanent exhibit on the subject, and that helps the museum toward its evolving mission of covering earth sciences, said Deborah Mowrey, executive director.