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...With Ash Can & Grater. Lithium's industrial champion is chunky, soft-spoken Harold J. Ness, who began experimenting with the restless metal during the depression, when his work as a metallurgist with a forging company slackened. His first laboratory was his coalbin, and the first lithium furnace was made from ash cans. The lithium was powdered with a common kitchen cheese grater...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Restless Metal | 6/7/1943 | See Source »

...their games with Eliot and Kirkland. The 13 to 5 victory over the Elephants was just a matter of pilling up runs behind the stellar pitching of Norm Cameron. The 13 to 1 walk over Kirkland came when the Bunny swatters got their eye on the Deacons pitcher, Ash Carter...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PAIR OF GAMES GO TO LEVERETT TEN | 4/30/1943 | See Source »

Success Means the Ash Can. But that 175,000-ton gap might make the difference between success and defeat. Unless every U.S. citizen conserves his tires, unless the Army & Navy cut their needs to the rim, the nation's rubber reserves may be nonexistent by Christmas. Said Rubber Czar William Jeffers: "The country is not yet out of the critical stage." But Rubberman Jeffers, no crier of "Wolf! Wolf!," was optimistic, gaily predicted that U.S. factories would be producing 850,000 tons of synthetic a year within a twelvemonth-more than enough for all military needs...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: RUBBER: Here Comes Synthetic | 4/12/1943 | See Source »

Late last week ex-Brakeman Jeffers proudly bounced an all-synthetic military tire before the Senate Agriculture Committee, added that the synthetic program was going so well that many substitute plans had been ash-canned, and he himself hoped to go back to his railroad by summertime. The once-ballyhooed guayule plan has been slashed from 200,000 acres to a paltry 15,000; schemes like cryptostegia vines, home-grown rubber trees and dandelions are headed the same way (see p, 54). Then he sent the hopes of U.S. motorists up: "By April 1944 . . . civilians will begin...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: RUBBER: Here Comes Synthetic | 4/12/1943 | See Source »

...British air force's four planes, one (a Farman biplane) belonged to the officer who flew it. The other three were Government-owned Bristol Box Kites, contraptions of ash, spruce, cotton fabric, weighing half a ton and held together with "a tangle of piano wire." Pilots who wanted to test the rigging were said to place a bird in the pilot's seat. "If the bird managed to get out, they knew that there must be a wire missing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: A History of the R.A.F. | 4/12/1943 | See Source »

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