Economic Concentration: Hearings Before the Subcommittee on Antitrust and Monopoly of the Committee on the Judiciary, United States Senate, Eighty-eighth Congress, Second Session [-Ninety-first Congress, First Session].U.S. Government Printing Office, 1964 |
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Common terms and phrases
American applications ARONSON automobile automotive basic Basic Oxygen Process battery BLAIR blast furnace capacity capital cost cent Chairman chemical Chrysler CHUMBRIS commercial competition concentration Corp corporate custom molder economic efficiency electric car electric furnace electrode equipment existing facilities farms fiber glass field financing fuel cell gas turbine GOURDINE growth heat hydrazine increase innovation installed interest inventor investment Iron and Steel largest less loans machine manufacturing materials medium-size ment metal miles molding open hearth open hearth furnaces operation output oxygen converter patent percent plant plastics pipe potential pounds powerplant prestressed concrete problems production reciprocating engine scrap Senator FONG Senator HART small company small firms smaller steel industry steelmaking subcommittee temperature tion U.S. Steel United vehicle venture capital Wankel engine watt-hours
Popular passages
Page 3348 - Administration, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, the Atomic Energy Commission, and the Federal Aviation Agency ; and to related subcontracts, including purchase orders.
Page 3001 - A material that contains as an essential ingredient an organic substance of large molecular weight, is solid in its finished state, and, at some stage in its manufacture or in its processing into finished articles, can be shaped by flow.
Page 2997 - Sharply rising world demands threaten to exhaust the best and most accessible deposits of minerals. Rapidly changing demands for materials are bringing changes in our mineral needs. We must understand the technological and economic changes taking place. The last comprehensive study of these problems was completed by the President's Materials Policy Commission in 1952. Much has happened in the past decade and a half. A new examination is needed.
Page 3099 - the industry bought 40 million tons of the wrong kind of capacity — the open hearth furnace," while the Europeans and Japanese were installing the cheaper and more productive oxygen converters at a breakneck pace.
Page 2790 - WHEREAS, the Subcommittee on Air and Water Pollution of the Senate Committee on Public Works, in its 1966 report "Steps Toward Clean Water...
Page 3001 - SPI is composed of approximately 2,500 member companies and individuals who supply raw materials, process or manufacture plastics or plastics products; engineer or construct molds or similar accessory equipment for the plastics industry; and engage in the manufacture of machinery used to make plastics products or materials of all types.
Page 3090 - American and foreign trade and engineering journals with respect to the efficacy of oxygen steelmaking. "Undoubtedly the most interesting and extensive recent development in steelmaking has been improvement in quality, by the use of oxygen in basic Thomas...
Page 2995 - In the future. Strong State and local standards — essential to pollution control — cannot be effective if neighboring States and cities do not have strong standards of their own. Nor can such local standards gain the support of. industry and the public, unless they know that plants In adjoining communities must also meet standards at least as strict. We need the means to Insure comparable emission levels for a given Industrial source of pollution throughout the country.
Page 3087 - Thus, the basic oxygen furnace— considered the "only major breakthrough at the ingot level since before the turn of the century" was invented in 1950 by a miniscule Austrian firm which was less than one-third the size of a single plant of the United States Steel Corp.
Page 2999 - There is much to be done. And we are losing ground. The air and water grow heavier with the debris of our spectacular civilization.