Department of Defense Appropriations for 1951: Hearings Before a Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations, House of Representatives, Eighty-first Congress, Second Session, Volume 9, Parts 4-5U.S. Government Printing Office, 1950 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 1724
... ported to maintain our war production and civilian economy . The vic- tory in war could not have come if the ships that carried these cargoes had not gotten through . It is well to remember that a great many Allied 1724.
... ported to maintain our war production and civilian economy . The vic- tory in war could not have come if the ships that carried these cargoes had not gotten through . It is well to remember that a great many Allied 1724.
Page 1725
... production army of American industry and agriculture forged the tools of victory . Because the same com- bination will be needed to meet or to stamp out any future threat of war . we must preserve all the components in that combination ...
... production army of American industry and agriculture forged the tools of victory . Because the same com- bination will be needed to meet or to stamp out any future threat of war . we must preserve all the components in that combination ...
Page 1728
... production more quickly than ever before . Our plans and budget for industrial mobilization have been correlated with those of the other two services . As stated earlier in testimony of the Chairman of the Munitions Board , our proposed ...
... production more quickly than ever before . Our plans and budget for industrial mobilization have been correlated with those of the other two services . As stated earlier in testimony of the Chairman of the Munitions Board , our proposed ...
Page 1733
... production . ( k ) The manufacture of equipment and spare parts will be limited to those items and amounts considered essential for the support of the operating forces . ( 1 ) The program for the rehabilitation and storage of all ...
... production . ( k ) The manufacture of equipment and spare parts will be limited to those items and amounts considered essential for the support of the operating forces . ( 1 ) The program for the rehabilitation and storage of all ...
Page 1786
... production . Admiral HorwOOD . Yes , sir ; that is right . Mr. ENGEL . Like the personnel in your naval gun factories and the personnel in your powder plants and so forth and so on . Admiral HOPWOOD . Production people in shipyards are ...
... production . Admiral HorwOOD . Yes , sir ; that is right . Mr. ENGEL . Like the personnel in your naval gun factories and the personnel in your powder plants and so forth and so on . Admiral HOPWOOD . Production people in shipyards are ...
Common terms and phrases
1951 were provided activity in 1951 Admiral CLARK Admiral Fox Admiral HopwOOD Admiral NOBLE Admiral PRIDE Admiral ROPER Admiral SHERMAN Admiral SWANSON Air Force aircraft ammunition amount Army average number aviation base budget Bureau of Ordnance Bureau of Ships Bureau of Supplies cataloging change in program Chief of Naval classes 08 construction cost decrease Department of Defense ENGEL enlisted personnel equipment estimate 1951 estimate estimate for 1951 expenses facilities fiscal year 1951 Grade Guam hospitals June 30 MAHON maintenance and operation Marine Corps Reserve material ment military personnel National Guard Nature of item Naval Operations naval personnel Naval Reserve ordnance over-all overhaul Pay increases percent personal services planned PLUMLEY procurement provided in 1950 Public Law 429 reduction reimbursable repair research and development Salaries SHEPPARD SIKES stations Supplies and Accounts tion Title of appropriation TRACY transportation United UNITED STATES NAVY vessels Yards and Docks
Popular passages
Page 2527 - When authorized by an appropriation or other statute, the head of an agency may procure by contract the temporary (not in excess of 1 year) or intermittent services of experts or consultants or an organization thereof, including stenographic reporting services.
Page 2449 - Division in the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations, and the Office of the Deputy Chief of Staff for Installations and Logistics, Headquarters, US Marine Corps.
Page 2521 - ... or produced in the United States or its possessions, except to the extent that the Secretary of the Department concerned shall determine that a satisfactory quality and sufficient quantity of any articles of food or clothing or any form of cotton or wool grown, reprocessed, reused, or produced in the United States...
Page 2224 - ... the location of the character is not disastrous, a fair amount of variation in size and orientation can be tolerated, the degree of selectivity between characters can be controlled by varying the frequency content of the filter, * The work reported here was made possible in part by research contracts with the Department of the Army and the Department of the Air Force.
Page 2411 - Defense, the Secretary of the Navy, the Chief of Naval Operations and the Commandant of the Marine Corps, we have a multitude of initiatives well underway to make our infrastructure more effective and less costly.
Page 2593 - We have some people here who are qualified to answer any questions which any member of the committee may desire to propound.
Page 2527 - The head of any department, when authorized in an appropriation or other Act, may procure the temporary (not in excess of one year) or intermittent services of experts or consultants or organizations thereof, including stenographic reporting services, by contract, and in such cases such service shall be without regard to the civil-service and classification laws (but as...
Page 2491 - ... El Paso, Tex., and will maintain field construction headquarters during a portion of the year. No estimate is submitted for new funds during 1941, as the project will be completed during 1940 except for possible additional grade controls and bridges. For this purpose it is requested that the words "the unexpended balance of the funds made available under this head in the Department of State Appropriation Act, 1940, are continued available until June 30, 1941," be added to the appropriation language...
Page 1951 - I would like to have you place in the record a statement showing the amount Congress appropriated for research and development for the Navy in 1949, 1950, and 1951.
Page 1734 - ... the levels planned for fiscal year 1951. Again using the example of the large carrier air groups, this involved a reduction from the planned 24 (actually about 16) in fiscal 1950, to the figure of 9. Fluctuations in plans for operating ships were less marked, but tended to follow the same pattern. Thus, it may be seen that the Naval Establishment as it now exists reflects a year of demobilization, a year and a half of shrinkage, about a year of moderate expansion, and about a year of rapid cut-back.