Disposal of Rubber Plants: Hearings, Eighty-third Congress, First Session, on S. 2047, a Bill to Amend the Rubber Act of 1948, as Amended, to Provide for the Sale of Government-owed Rubber Producing Facilities, to Repeal and Modify Certain of Its Provisions Affected Thereby, and for Other PurposesU.S. Government Printing Office, 1953 - 293 pages |
Expressions et termes fréquents
agency alcohol butadiene annual capacity antitrust laws assure Attorney B. F. Goodrich bidders bids butadiene facilities butadiene plant butane butyl plant butyl rubber butylene CHAIRMAN chemical cold rubber Commission committee competitive component materials Congress consumers consumption copolymer plant cost CRAVENS crude rubber Defense Corporation depreciation disposal agent disposal plan Endicott Johnson Corp fair value feedstock Government GR-S interest inventory isobutylene JOHNSON lease legislation Lessee long tons manmade rubbers MANSURE manufacture ment million national security natural rubber negotiation percent petroleum butadiene plant disposal Port Neches President private industry proposed recommendations Reconstruction Finance Corporation Rubber Act Rubber Company rubber fabricators rubber plants section 9 f sell Senator BENNETT Senator BRICKER Senator DOUGLAS Senator ROBERTSON short tons small business sold standby stockpile stocks styrene supply synthetic rubber facilities synthetic rubber program tion Tire & Rubber transfer period YOHALEM
Fréquemment cités
Page 61 - IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have caused their corporate seals to be hereunto affixed and these presents to be signed by their duly authorized officers, as of the day and year first above written.
Page 43 - Without, legislation, the objective of these bills, the setting up of a joint venture, would violate sections 1 and 2 of the Sherman Act and section 7 of the Clayton Act which are on the books to protect the public.
Page 285 - SEC. 5. The Commission shall proceed as promptly as practicable conducting such hearings as may be necessary, with the disposal of the rubber-producing facilities in compliance with the provisions of this Act. SEC. 6. (a) Without regard to the civil-service laws or the Classification Act of 1949...
Page 284 - States of sufficient productive capacity to assure the availability in times of national emergency of adequate supplies of synthetic rubber to meet the essential civilian, military, and naval needs of the country. It is further declared to be the policy of the Congress that the security interests of the United States can and will best be served by the development within the United States of a free, competitive synthetic-rubber industry. In order to strengthen national security through a sound industry,...
Page 35 - Administrator or interested executive agency shall furnish or cause to be furnished such information as it may possess which the Attorney General determines to be appropriate or necessary to enable him to give the advice called for by this section or to determine whether any other disposition or proposed disposition of surplus property violates the antitrust laws.
Page 89 - I want to thank you again for giving us this opportunity to express our views on this important legislation.
Page 123 - Considering that it is necessary and advisable that steps should be taken to regulate the production and export of rubber in and from producing countries with the object of reducing existing world stocks to a normal figure and adjusting in an orderly manner supply to demand and maintaining a fair and equitable price level which will be reasonably remunerative to efficient producers...