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Though some officials still think the domestic industry should go on under protection, one Interior Department tungsten expert disagreed. Said he: "We're jerking out of the ground tungsten that we shouldn't have to pull out for the next 50 years. McKenna is right. Since we've got enough tungsten for an emergency, let's leave it in the ground...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: INDUSTRY: From Boon to Boondoggle | 3/11/1957 | See Source »

...each of its past three wars, the U.S. has paid heavily for lack of a sizable domestic tungsten industry. Each time it has been gouged by foreign producers for the vital metal needed to toughen high-grade steels. After the Korean war, when world prices per standard 20-lb. unit leaped from $18 to $90, the Government finally began 1) stockpiling tungsten for defense and 2) fostering a domestic industry with a $30 million annual subsidy to buy U.S. tungsten at $63 per unit, about twice the world market price. Last week the tungsten subsidy was blasted from an unexpected...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: INDUSTRY: From Boon to Boondoggle | 3/11/1957 | See Source »

Philip McKenna of Kennametal Inc. told a House committee that the U.S. already has enough tungsten to last 18 years. He called the stockpiling program an out-and-out "boondoggle," called further appropriations "silly." A recent House report had said that of some 700 producers who were supposed to benefit from the program only 49 have actually participated, and the top nine have received 87% of the funds. McKenna added further facts: Kennametal's subsidiary mine, Nevada Scheelite Corp., has taken in $10 million from selling tungsten solely to the U.S. Government. For its own needs, Kennametal, a Pennsylvania...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: INDUSTRY: From Boon to Boondoggle | 3/11/1957 | See Source »

...supplemental 1957 subsidy, displeased Western mining state Senators, who restored the request and raised the subsidy in the Senate appropriations bill to $40 million. They argue that ending the subsidy would end the domestic industry within 90 days. Actually, loss of the subsidy would probably not put all domestic tungsten miners out of business, since far more are selling to industry than to Government. But with the Government out of the market, tungsten prices might go down. In any case, there seemed no doubt that the U.S. has plenty of tungsten on hand. Defense Mobilizer Arthur Flemming himself said that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: INDUSTRY: From Boon to Boondoggle | 3/11/1957 | See Source »

...driller that cuts the hardest metal-e.g., tungsten carbide-without touching it. Made by Cincinnati Milling Machine Co., the cutting edge is a stream of electrons a sort of manmade lightning. ¶A lathe with a mechanical brain, which computes the correct cutting speed for each job. Its makers, Monarch Machine Tool Co. of Sidney, Ohio, estimate that the brain alone can increase production 25% ¶A Cleveland Tapping Machine Co device that cuts threads on iron pipe fittings at the rate of 85 feet a minute, producing 1,480 fittings an hour, compared to the previous standard...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: INDUSTRY: Mechanized Marvels | 9/19/1955 | See Source »

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