Mr. R_. C_.,
Shaughnessy,
Vancouver, Canada
My Dear Father:
I hope that this letter finds your convalescence well advanced. The nerve of the Government, keeping a man of your age under such strain, so long, and for such absurd reasons! Thanks to your letter, at least I understand the concern better now. The more that I hear about the effects of one of those pedestrian, old-fashioned "regular" atom bombs at Nagasaki, the less I want to know about tritium-boosted "super" bombs.
But you are released, and all it cost you was being delivered through your front door in a wheelchair. I wonder what your neighbours thought when the Army ambulance pulled up the back lane?
For us here in Santa Clara, it is a moment to be amazed at just how quickly the academic year comes to an end. "Miss V.C." is a sight unseen, up in her rooms at the junior college in Palo Alto, preparing for final examinations. (Or so she says.) Equally little is heard from your son, and that in spite of his work for the Navy, which is apparently extending over a machine shop in New Haven, where Ensign Wong is now seconded from his Alaskan vacation paradise. One delightful by-product of this is that your youngest has seen rather more of "Lieutenant A.," who is hard on the heels of a supposed Communist spy ring operating at Yale.
As I mention below, Uncle George has finally resumed an interest in business, and will be your neck of the woods --almost-- over the next week, on a fact-finding tour of the smelter at Trail. It is not the kind of business which engages his interests, but news of the world lead shortage cannot be ignored. He is also gently probing the possible resumption of the "all Red route." The harbour transfers are getting hair-raising, and I would much prefer to see our new clients dropped politely off on some rain-soaked British Columbia dock, if that is possible. If the civil war really does resume next year, we will have more business than we would care to contemplate were it not for the need to keep the Benevolent Associations happy. It is so frustrating. Parents and kin are one thing. It is the old men shopping for spouses for their grandsons who frustrate me. Just get an American girl for your boy, I want to yell at them, but it will do me no good. The New World has a corrupting effect on filial piety, it is firmly and sincerely explained.
A charts-topping hit of 1959 invites us to reconsider the question of bringing down Western Civilisation. If you want to skip ahead, there is a linked video with a less offensive version, if you have autoplay activated. Otherwise, it's on to Gunther's version.
So, if we can find a port in British Columbia through which we can move people, it would be good to have the procedures for "midnight baptisms" at the river crossing nailed down. The Canadians built up all sorts of bases on the coast during the late war. Perhaps there is someone at one or the other of them who would not mind a new stream of business? Then it will only be a matter of arranging road transport through the province to Trail. And there's the price of lead, zinc and copper to consider.
A final word: quite a large expenditure will appear in the accounts, appended. I make no apologies. Housing, never mind actual houses, are dear around San Francisco these days, never mind Berkeley,> It is expensive, I admit, but the loyalties of the Wongs and of Fat Chow, are not, to my mind, a negotiable asset. If there is blame, she said, quick to deflect it, blame our brave warriors, who have done noble work in their recent visits. To put it mildly, Queenie and "Miss v. Q" are not going to be in a position to share an apartment, especially with the littlest Wong walking already.
Subtle subtext about the role of a society's demographic profile in maintaining consumer demand is subtle. |
"GRACE."
The Economist, 2 March 1946
Leaders
“The Economic
Debate” The paper thinks that the estimates are “not unsatisfactory.”
However, the decision to return to the “pre-war” “mid-1939” (not actually the same thing!) expenditure level of £1700 million might be a bad thing, in that
the “munitions industry” is being reduced to “less than its normal size.” Also,
technology, mechanisation, demobilisation, conscription. So many things that
could go wrong. Also, we can go from that to the shortage of labour in the
United Kingdom in one leading article. Because of demobilisation? Or because
the munitions industry is being reduced too far, but has too much labour? I’ve
actually read the article (appearences notwithstanding), and I don’t
understand!
“Foreign Audit”
The English audit swarthy foreigners? No doubt they’ll all prove to be on the take.
No, actually, it is an audit of Britain’s foreign relations. With everybody. We
have too many troops in too many places. We must extricate ourselves from
“aggressive self defence” in those places where are troops are. We must find
money. We have not enough dollars. If we only had 20 million tons of coal to
export, we would “be mistress of most of Europe.”
(Probably not what the paper meant to say.)
So, in short, Britain must
“liquidate” its most “onerous” foreign commitments. It should get out of
Trieste; everyone should get out of Austria, and leave it to the Austrians and
the kangaroos. They should get out of Indonesia in “the next few months.” It is
hoped that the impeding Cabinet Mission will lead to “the end of all the
internal responsibilities of Great Britain in the sub-continent.” “Responsibilities.”
That’s a good one.
On the other hand, Malaya needs more Britain. Because of
internal –stuff. Lebanon and Syria should be evacuated in the next few weeks,
and Egypt in only slightly more time. Bases in Iraq, Palestine, Sudan and
possibly Cyprus are enough.
“Doctors and the
Health Service” Doctors still want to be able to treat rich people for fees,
and to buy and sell practices, and they still won’t be allowed to do either,
but doctors’ salaries are still open for negotiation.
“The Fourth Five
Year Plan” Did you see the fourth The Thin Man Goes Home? Probably not, as I recall there was a war on last year.
My point is, I hope that the fourth sequel to the Five Year Plan is better than
the fourth sequel to The Thin Man! It
is interesting to hear that there has been a “spontaneous rush” to the
liberated western regions that the central government is powerless to control.
Not what you expect of the all-embracing power of the Supreme Soviet!
Notes of the Week
“Housing Progress
Report” 112,000 families have been rehoused in England and Wales since last
March. Only 350 are living in
permanent homes built by local authorities, another 1100 in houses completed by
private builders. Labour erecting temporary houses has risen from 4000 to 34000,
and overall building labour has risen to 425,000 from 347,000 last June, but in
June of 1939, total labour in building nwas 1.4 million, while the total across
industry and civil engineering today is only 690,000. So: 1,909 new permanent
homes; 12,025 temporary ones; 24,491 permanent homes under construction, 13,600
temporary ones; 9,945 homes converted or adapted; 70,221 repaired and brought
back to use; 2,985 temporary huts occupied, to give a total of 99,123 families
rehoused in England and Wales, 2200 or so in Scotland. Private builders look to
be able to do a much larger share of the work than the government is willing to
concede, the paper concludes.
“No Agricultural
Policy” There is to be talking about talking about it, though. The Government
is against further agricultural specialisation, while the paper is on fire for
a recent paper by Viscount Astor and Mr. Seebohm Rowntree calling for more
dairy.
“Indian Violence”
The Indian Royal Navy riots are over after ten days. 270 people have been
killed, 1500 injured, and there was much looting. Credit for suppressing the
riots must go not only to British troops, but Indian leaders, above all Mr.
Gandhi.
“The Riots in Cairo” The paper takes a long time getting around to calling for British troops
to evacuate Cairo and Alexandria.
“Without de
Gaulle” The French crisis, etc., etc. The paper is pleased to see the Army
drawn down, though.
“The DefenceWhite Paper” Has been released.
“Coal –More
Remedies” Mr. Shinwell is open to the idea of extra rations for coal miners. A
letter to the Times points out that
Dutch miners get 4400 calories a day, and look at their output! British miners
are down to 2700, and their output has fallen with their food intake. Recent
signs of hope (more hires than departures, a rise in output), are fragile and
may be reversed by the recent cold weather, so more food it is! If the public
can be persuaded.
In case you can't wait till next week to see what those lucky duckies are getting. Obligatory Monty Python ref. |
“Resorts and
Ports” Seaside resorts have clamoured successfully for relief they do not
really need, while the ports of south Wales are in awful and unheeded decline.
“Franco Tightens
His Grip” The recent call to Spaniards to get rid of Franco for themselves has
had the most unexpected result, including the execution in Madrid of Cristino Garcia and nine companions.
Pictures of Garcia aren't hard to find. The other nine, not so much. |
“Japanese
Politics” Japan is to have parliamentary elections on 31 March. Since many on
the right are barred from running, the Social Democrats and Liberals are
expected to do well.
“One Party System
in the Russian Zone?” Question mark?
“University
Progress” There is to be more money for the universities and colleges –£3.8
million more than the 5.6 million of last year—and the paper hopes for a
National College of Technology at the apex of the new national system of
technical colleges and industry.
“London’s
Hospitals” Should have a comprehensive plan.
“The Civil
Estimates” Quite a lot of money will be spent, but since there is no comparing
it with 1939, the paper doesn’t.
“Wages and Trade
Unions” The paper sees the Government as picking a fight with the unions over
settling wages.
“The Palestinian
Commission Goes East” At the end of their tour of the DP camps, Mr. Bartly C.Crum said that “[i]f we do not clean up the DP camps, we shall have either mass
suicides of Jews, or else they will try to fight their way to Palestine.” Since
there is need for an immediate solution, the only thing is for the Commission
to go east and talk about talking.
Counsel, the Aga Khan, and Rita Hayworth. Another day at the office. |
“Claims on Italy”
There is some thought that the former Italian colonial territories might go to
various Allies, many of whom want Cyrenaica, because chasing Senussi through the desert is fun.
In shorter notes,
the number of men and women released from the armed forces in January was
444,860; a 62,602 increase over
December. Fruits and vegetables are about to be imported from France and
Holland in “substantial quantities.” There will be a ban on imports at the peak
of the British season, but, until then, in they come.
American Survey
“Topside on the
Ship of State, II” From A Correspondent in Washington
The State
Department is like an ostrich, in that the various formerly independent “ABC”
agencies that it is swallowing up one by one are making bulges in its neck on
the way down like an ostrich eating oranges; and also because it sticks its
head in the sand! Clever. And a good way of filling a full page, since many of
the ABCs have quite long names.
“Liquidity in
American Business” From Our New York Correspondent
American business
and American individuals have accumulated a great deal of liquidity in the form
of bank deposits and Government securities. “Between December 1941 and March
1945, The net working capita of non-finance corporations has increased by 46%
from $32.1 billion to $46.9 billion.” 11.1 billion offsets increased
liabilities, there has been a $14.8 billion increase in working capital. Much
of this has been due to high corporate
earnings, although direct government investment in war plant has also been a
factor.
1947 will see an all-time high in dividend payments and continuing high earnings, although generous wage settlements (without increasing productivity or higher price ceilings) may also be a factor. A Department of Commerce survey of railways, utilities and manufacturers shows that they intend to invest $11 billion next year, with 75% of the outlays from internal sources, although the amounts are so large that there will still be heavy draw on bank loans. Smaller manufacturers (and new ones, I suppose, like the ones we are interested in) will draw more on the banks. Larger manufacturers especially will issue securities, and 1947 will see the highest issue ever. However, lower interest rates might cut off the loans because they are not then worthwhile due to their risk and expense?
From Mobile, Alabama, some ships they built. |
1947 will see an all-time high in dividend payments and continuing high earnings, although generous wage settlements (without increasing productivity or higher price ceilings) may also be a factor. A Department of Commerce survey of railways, utilities and manufacturers shows that they intend to invest $11 billion next year, with 75% of the outlays from internal sources, although the amounts are so large that there will still be heavy draw on bank loans. Smaller manufacturers (and new ones, I suppose, like the ones we are interested in) will draw more on the banks. Larger manufacturers especially will issue securities, and 1947 will see the highest issue ever. However, lower interest rates might cut off the loans because they are not then worthwhile due to their risk and expense?
“Another
reawakening echo which should be reported in this connection is the prewar oversavings
argument that a long term trend exists towards a progressively greater
retention of business earnings, which imperils business stability. This is a
moot question, but studies to date apparently provide no conclusive evidence of
such a trend.” Whatever that means.
American Notes
“Spy Scare” “If British
tables groan under the weight of powdered eggs next winter’ we can credit your
cipher clerk. The paper says that it is not worth the cost of bad relations
with Russia and the bottling up of nuclear research, however. Others think that
Canada has been too-secret, and point to the President’s appointment of an
all-civilian board to evaluate the results of the Operation Crossroads trials
as proof that, if America can avoid a red scare like 1919, all will be well.
Source; Christy Schroeder's 2007 UGeorgia senior thesis. |
“Homes for
Veterans” Wilson Wyatt has launched a plan for 2.7 million moderately-priced
homes for veterans within 22 months: 500,000 makeshift and 1.2 million
permanent in 1946; 1.5 million, all conventional, in 1947. Veterans will have preference,
and the price will be fixed at $6000 or $50 rent/month. This will require
virtually prohibiting all other kinds of building, Mr. Wyatt thinks, and
finding 1.5 million workers. Congress, convinced by its mail bags, is actually
willing to act. There only remains the paper’s beloved talking about talking
(regulations, inspections, price ceilings in the supplying industries, trade
restrictions, etc.)
“Stabilising the
Bulge” In the cost of living, that is. This is the daily drumbeat of news:
strikes, wage demands, complaints over price ceilings, the black market. In an
attempt to stand out from the headlines, the paper fixates on the effort in
Washington to persuade Congress to extend the WPA’s authority to set prices
past 30 June.
Shorter Notes
Harold Ickes will
be succeeded by J. A. Krug. The Full Employment bill, now toothless, has been
signed into law. The House has voted to limit the powers of Mr. Petrillo,
“under extreme provocation.” Specifically, his attempt to prevent the broadcast
of foreign music, “presumably because its performers had not paid their dues.”
The World Overseas
“The German
Zones” The transfer of Germans from the eastern provinces has been temporarily
halted, but if it continues, the population of the west will rise from the
present 64 to 72 million, and the population density from 364 to 518, compared
with 501 for the United Kingdom. The Americans want to create some kind of
German federal government. The other occupying powers have other ideas. It is
all makeshift, and desperately demands talking about talking.
“India at the
Polls” Congress and the Moslim League win big, the Hindu Mahasabha party has been eliminated. The limited franchise means that
only the best-educated and most prosperous have voted, but their preference for
Jinnah’s League (on the Moslem side) is telling. Now come the state elections.
I think we can all join The Economist in regretting the defeat of the anti-indepedence Hindu nationalist party. I sure hope they don't do something rash! |
Letters to the Editor
Charles Avery, of
San Francisco, writes to defend the Import-Export Bank of the United States
against the charge that it “discriminates” in favour of American business.
Roger Gibb, of Crabtrees, Long Bottom, Beaconsfield, Bucks, writes that large,
American-style rail wagons are so a
good idea, neener-neener. T. Balogh, of 19 Bradmore Road, Oxford, violently
attacks Professor Jewkes’ violent attack on official secrecy (in the field of
negotiating international trade deals).
The Business World
“The Budget Takes
Shape” Britain does not yet have a budget, but there is enough information that
the paper can splatter it over three pages. I am not sure what to say about
this. The taxation information will be of the greatest interest to the Earl,
but he surely doesn’t need this letter!
“The Lead
Shortage” Lead was not short during the war, but now it is. The paper
especially notes the wrecking of the Bawdwin Mines in Upper Burma in the late
war. Great-Uncle would be pleased that what his dacoits could not do, the
Japanese have. Speaking of family history, Great-Uncle's sensible decision to invest in Canadian mines while bringing Western
Civilisation down in Burma means that, between industrial demand, the market for TEL, and the worldwide shortage of mining labour, we probablly need to check in with the smelter in Trail. They may not be Uncle George’s
beloved electrical engineers, but it is nice to have pull where the river flows across the
border. Uncle has agreed to go up and take a look around. We are all very glad that he is taking an interest in business again.
Business Notes
“The Nationalised
Bank” It has only been a fortnight since the Bank of England was nationalised,
and already the most exciting things have happened. For example, the number of
directors has been reduced from 24 to 16, and they include various persons of
the highest virtue. Also in Parliament-nationalisation talk,
the paper contemplates the Investment Bill. To underline the value of National
capitalism, the paper can point to the wild sell-off on Wall Street, while in
defence of free market capitalism one can point to Mr. Dalton’s much to blunt
and frank comments on the Japanese bonds issue, and to the opposition to
railway nationalisation.
The LNER has
increased its dividend, there is to be no fresh credit for France, various
French financial agreements come under scrutiny, the use of sterling in the
wider Area may be freed somewhat as the American agreement comes into effect, The Bankers Clearing House is returning to the
City from the Country, fur auctions are to be resumed, the industrial diamond
trade is doing well, and average workers’ earnings are up 80% since October
1938, the highest since the beginning of the war with the exception of July
1944, which must have seen a surging flood of overtime, looking back. Retail
trade profits and dividends are up, and Warner Brothers has bought Associated
British Picture Corporation to improve access for its films. (Including,
perhaps, even British films in America!)
Flight, 7 March 1946
Leaders
“False Alarms”
Air Vice-Marshal Bennett disappeared last week, taking off in his plane without
telling anyone where he was going. (Just like Charles Lindbergh used to do, and
look how innocent that turned out to be!) The press got excited about it, but
it really shouldn’t have, because it was all innocent, and the Air Vice-Marshal
is a swell fellow.
“Bilateral
Agreement” Great Britain and France have concluded an up-to-date civil aviation
agreement. I am going to go look “concluded” up in a dictionary, because this
passage can’t possibly mean it seems to mean. No more talking about talking?
“The Atlantic Gap”
It has been announced that the BOAC transatlantic flying boat service from
Poole to Bermuda via West Africa and South America will make its last run on
the 7th. One flight in either direction a week in winter, and four
in summer has been a “stop gap,” and the Boeing flying boats are worn out. BOAC’s
new Constellations will take over the service this summer. This will make for a
four month gap in British civil transatlantic air services, and the paper is
not pleased.
“’Indicator’
Discusses Topics of the Day: Let Us be Honest: The Continued need for
Uncompromising Realism: Too Much Publicity-consciousness: Prototype Development
No Easy Matter: Hard Work Ahead” “Indicator”
thinks that the English shouldn’t exaggerate about their aircraft, or on the
other hand just assume that American planes are better. He is upset about the
way that the Lockheed P-80’s coast-to-coast flight was covered. He thinks that
there is too much inaccurate publicity about planes. He thinks Americans are
awful. He thinks that the English should try not to be awful. He thinks that all the new airliners promised in America are actually a
long way off.
“Departure of the
U.S. Army 8th Air Force: Last Lend/Lease Airfield Handed back to the RAF” The 8th Air Force goes away some
more. The paper takes a moment to remind us that the American daylight bombing
effort started small, back in 1942. This sort of thing just reads as defensive.
Here and There
The RCAF Mail
Squadron has been disbanded, and its work taken over by Trans-Canada Airlines.
The RAF Transport Command Dakotas flying the “Bandoeng Express” broke their own
cargo tonnage record for the third time in six days this week by flying 188
tons of supplies from Batavia to the hill statin of Bandoeng and flying out 72
women and children. Isn’t the “figure of merit” (to talk aviation talk) 200,000
people? S. S. Manela, the [a?] RAF’s flying boat tender in the Indian Ocean, is
returning to England with 500 demobilised RAF personnel and their families
aboard. Mascot Airport, New South Wales, is too congested.
“Research by Robot”
The paper notices that the atomic bomb tests in the South Seas will be
monitored by ten remote-controlled B-17s. If the teams can just get them flying
reliably. “They will take off, transmit data, and land (assuming that they
survive) by radio control.” It’s the landing part that is tricky, I’m told. Uncle Henry is
promoting the old Stearman-Hammond pusher as the Kaiser-Hammond. Mr. Upson is very critical of the twin-boom
cabin pusher on the grounds that the boom structure is inefficient on this
scale. Why am I not surprised?
Speaking of Mr. Upson, have some hilarity. |
“Tiresome” An
officer in the Combined Intelligence Objectives Sub-committee involved in
swanning about Europe looking at intelligent stuff
is very tired of the time-wasting, lack of organisation, and un-necessary labour,
and wishes he knew what, exactly, they were looking for. Eire imported £15,000
in aircraft and parts last year; the Swordfish shadow factory in
Serburn-in-Elmet has been sold to W. and T. Avery, the scales makers. Fifty
RCAF airfields have been declared surplus and are to be turned over to Canadian
municipalities. The First Australian National Airlines Skymaster flew from San
Francisco-Melbourne in 30h 51 minutes flying time, and will be used on the Melbourne-Perth service. By the end of June, 711,000 of the 1,110,000 men and
women in the RAF last VE-Day will have been demobilised.
“Freighter and
Wayfarer: Bristol Type 170 Described: ‘Bread and Butter’ Cargo or Passenger
Aircraft: Simple Construction and Maintenance’ Just in case the reader had not
guessed from the way that almost every one of the many ads in this number are
about the bubble-nosed Bristol Freighter, here is its technical write-up. It’s
boring, and will be cheap to operate. Everyone should
buy one. If they don’t need to fly cargo from Batavia to Bandoeng, at least
they can live in it. The “Wayfarer” is the proposed
passenger-carrying variant, with room for 32 seats.
The paper
celebrates the RNZAF’s second V.C., won by Squadron Leader Leonard Henry Trent,
flying a Ventura, in a 1943 raid on a power station near Amsterdam. Paul S. Johnston,
formerly of Aviation, has been
appointed director of the Institute of the Aeronautical Sciences. Perhaps hewill compose a box score of American science!
“Canadian FoxMoth: Post-War Production of Economical Light Transport: Landplane, Seaplane
and Skiplane Versions” Very old plane will still be produced if people want it.
Northrop has its
own Technical Training Institute near Los Angeles, and the RAE is to formalise
its own training as the RAE Technical College. The paper gets into the
education business with reprints of its recent four-page “Explanation of Gas
Turbine Principles,” available by mail for 6d postage free from the paper’s
offices.
Anthony Fletcher,
M.A. (Oxon), “Stress Without Strain: A Simplified Method of Airscrew Blade
Stressing, with Special Reference to Wood or ‘Improved Wood’ Blades” Engineers
can’t do math, and it is quite unreasonable to expect that they should.
Therefore, this simplified method of designing an airscrew blade where the
designer doesn’t have to bother his head with all the hard stuff, because Mr.
Fletcher has done it for them, and reduced it all to a set of graphical aids
and tables. Well, then. No more worries from me about my husband flying on business!
“Berlin Air
Safety Centre: International Flying Control Section for German Capital” The
centre is a four-power operations room in the heart of Berlin, which controls
all flights by the four powers into and out of Berlin. When any plane of the
four powers reaches a point 275 miles from Berlin, it radios into the centre
and receives full weather reports and landing instructions. The Centre uses
American procedures, and the British section is under Squadron Leader R.
Aldous. In other safety news, the paper has learned that Sun Insurance has
extended its world travel insurance to air travel without additional premiums,
since flying is just as safe as any other form of transportation.
Civil Aviation
“Anglo-French
Agreement: Standing Committee to Co-ordinate Mutual Air Services: Route
Capacities to be Equally Shared” I think the title says it all.
The Danes, Swedes
and Norwegians are to form a joint Scandinavian Air Lines company. Skymasters will
be used in a three-a-week service between the three Scandinavian capitals and
New York, beginning next May.
Several new of the great and good have been appointed to PICAO [Charles Clark, Miss J. M. Woolaston, “formerly J. B. Priestley’s secretary.”) Various authorities are looking into air transporting Florida produce again. Short delivers some Sunderlands to Argentina more. With all eyes on cabin heating, Lockheed is looking at cabin cooling, using both the vapour-compression and dry ice methods. It eventually decided on an “air-expansion turbine refrigeration-unit weighing 115lbs.” It will keep the Constellation’s cabin temperature at 75 degrees when the ground temperature is as high as 100, and is in the now-CAB approved Constellation, now rated for an all-up takeoff weight of 90,000lb.
De Havilland has just sent Mr. Frederick C. Plumb to Canada to work for its Canadian division. The Gare des Invalides has been taken over by Air France as Paris’s new air terminus. Long range flights will still use Orly, and local ones, Le Bourget, and the Gare des Invalides station is conveniently located between them, so that passengers can be conveniently transported there for additional interminable waiting. Blackpool’s airport, Squire’s Gate, has been settled. Miles Aircraft has gone in with Aer Rianta to form an aircraft maintenance concern at Dublin airport. Scottish peers want a Scottish utility corporation to operate Prestwick and conduct air services, but are not going to get one, because of efficiency.
Several new of the great and good have been appointed to PICAO [Charles Clark, Miss J. M. Woolaston, “formerly J. B. Priestley’s secretary.”) Various authorities are looking into air transporting Florida produce again. Short delivers some Sunderlands to Argentina more. With all eyes on cabin heating, Lockheed is looking at cabin cooling, using both the vapour-compression and dry ice methods. It eventually decided on an “air-expansion turbine refrigeration-unit weighing 115lbs.” It will keep the Constellation’s cabin temperature at 75 degrees when the ground temperature is as high as 100, and is in the now-CAB approved Constellation, now rated for an all-up takeoff weight of 90,000lb.
De Havilland has just sent Mr. Frederick C. Plumb to Canada to work for its Canadian division. The Gare des Invalides has been taken over by Air France as Paris’s new air terminus. Long range flights will still use Orly, and local ones, Le Bourget, and the Gare des Invalides station is conveniently located between them, so that passengers can be conveniently transported there for additional interminable waiting. Blackpool’s airport, Squire’s Gate, has been settled. Miles Aircraft has gone in with Aer Rianta to form an aircraft maintenance concern at Dublin airport. Scottish peers want a Scottish utility corporation to operate Prestwick and conduct air services, but are not going to get one, because of efficiency.
“Radio and Civil
Aviation: Aids to Schedule-keeping: Safe Reduction of Factors of safety:
Additional Radio Preferable to Additional Fuel: Summary of a Lecture to the
International Conference on Radio and Radar, by Sir Robert Watson-Watt” The
lecture notes that the heavy night bombers of 1944 carried 1300lbs of radio
equipoment, of which the principle items were a GP set T.11554/R.1155 M/F, H/F,
W/T and D/F, a VHF TR 1143 and HF TR 1196 for local control and inter-aircraft
R/T communications; an IFF Mk III (T. 3090); an ARA 5083 Gee for navigation,
and an SBA R 1124/R 1125A for track guide and approach. (I hope the Air Ministry comes around to leaving out all the periods in the abbreviations before it runs out of typewriter ribbons.). The current planned load of radios on British civil aircraft is in all
cases less than this, with the Brabazon I to carry 1056, and the Ambassador
665. This growing array of black boxes may seem excessive, but a modern
airliner “does not drink less than a gallon a minute,” and even at the world’s
best organised and most efficient airport (probably La Guardia), landing delays
are not less than 75 minutes. This requires an additional 75 to 300 gallons of
fuel, which, if spared, could be used for payload. Thus, more radios, not less.
Also, there are weather reports to be considered. This would require
rationalising the world’s use of radio so that more frequencies are available
for aircraft. He praised American work on pulse systems in his comments after
the end of the talk, and, of some relevance for this letter, inasmuch as there
have been some wild claims about Alfred Lee Loomis “inventing” it, Watson-Watt was
less flattering to the recent American Loran.
Correspondence
Vivian Cox adds
up the axial loadings given for the DH Goblin and comes up with 2500 lb instead
of the 3000lbs given by the article. The editors explain. “All First Class Mail
by Air” makes his point. John Howard points out that errors in C.G.
calculations can lead to plane crashes. He is especially critical of spacious
fuselages supported by only two engines, notably the Dakota. He speculates that
overloading with demobilised men has led to some of the recent air crashes. He
thinks clearer terminology might help.
CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=206479 |
The Industry
Messier Equipment
is very excited about its new forklift. Mr. Shackleton is back from America, where
he toured a number of American and Canadian factories. (Because Canada is in
America. La la la I can’t hear you!) Continental Motors is the latest company to
confuse the “1946” on its calendar for “1936” and offer a new 9 cylinder medium-powered (direct drive!) radial
engine for civil work. Alex Henshaw has
joined Miles Aircraft as handsome-test-pilot-in-charge-of-stock-pumping.
Alex Henshaw in 1941 with unidentified older male, left. After the Miles bankruptcy, he never flew as a pilot-in-command again. |
The Economist, 9 March 1946
Leaders
“The Two and the
One” Did you know that Winston Churchill has given a speech in Fulton,
Missouri? You did? You heard about that? (She imagines you saying.) The paper
interprets the “Iron Curtain” speech as a proposal for an open alliance between
the United States and the United Kingdom within
the Uno, which I suppose means that Russia is outside it? The paper is pleased, because it thinks that Britain is
not nearly anti-Russian enough.
“The Production
Drive” The Government’s campaign for greater productivity is a good thing, but
“has not started before its time.” It’s Dunkirk, all over again! (Everything is
Dunkirk, now.) However, labour ministers don’t want to come out and say in
public that trade union men must do an honest day’s work, instead of
lollygagging about. Also, the government is too cutting to businessmen.
“Manchuria Again”
The wording of the Three Power Agreement at Yalta that restored Russia’s former
rights in Manchuria has now been made public. The response in China is
understandable even to the paper. The paper points out that those rights have
mostly lapsed anyway, that China has never given up sovereignty over Manchuria,
which is mostly “ethnic Chinese,” whatever that means. It then goes on to sound
like a Luce organ in talking about how “every obstacle” was put in the way of
Nationalist troops trying to occupy the region by marcing in unopposed from American ships and
Communist-controlled-railways. The paper supposes that the Nationalists, as the
true representatives of the Chinese people, will triumph on a groundswell of
national feeling as soon as the Americans volunteer to do their fighting for
them, as the Nationalist marshals have better things to do with their men and
ammunition, such as fight in the Communist-Nationalist civil war in the next
campaigning season.
“Housing Policy”
The paper thinks that the Government is BUNGLING housing. Both too much money
is being spent, and too little (no, that’s what it says! The key of the paradox
is that too much is being spent on public building, too little on private), and
it is all unimaginative and short sighted.
Notes of the Week
“The Russians
Stay in Persia” The Russian Communists are terrible hypocrites who are not
leaving Persia.
“Fall in German Rations” You would not think that they could fall, but the reduction is, on
average, 500 calories a day, and the average civilian ration falls to 1,014
calories a day. “This is the Belsen level up to a few weeks before the finalcollapse.” And hideous as it is, it will fall further in the next few weeks. In
the British zone, where rations have hitherto been higher due to expectations
of greater grain imports, they must fall very drastically; but there is no case
for inequality between the zones. Local surpluses must be shared across the
borders; stockpiles must be unearthed, cattle slaughtered, and German fishermen
allowed back to the coast of Scotland. “Even the energy to turn the wheel of
industry will be lacking.” Britain should do more.
“Unrra Supplies”
The underlying causes of the sudden cut apply also to the other Unrra
countries. The paper is especially appalled that the Uno has lifted controls on
grain and flour. A protest to Mr. Lie has had no effect, and now Unrra has to
go onto the market and buy what it can.
Source. Remember this? Those silly Europeans. |
“Defence Policy”
Is being BUNGLED.
“Troop Movements
in the Middle East” British troops were out of Persia by 2 March, will have
left Syria by 30 April, and now Egypt wants a treaty. The paper calls for British troops to at least leave the barracks in the middle of Cairo. Sudanese,
meanwhile, are not sure that they want Egyptians in control.
“Boo to General
Franco” The three powers give General Franco a stern look-at, and
once again invite the Spanish to relieve themselves of the General.
“Spy Ring” The
paper reviews the arrests made in Canada so far and concludes that he Russians
were looking for technical information (which is a problem given that science
ought to be international, and spies ought
to be seeking information about foreign explosives), and for information
about the imminent American attack across the German border, which tends to
show that the Russians are as nuts as we are.
“The Future of
London” There should be talking about talking about London local government and
development.
“Queen Anne is
Dead” She is! And so is some old institution of the Church of England that she
started. I think this is an old joke told for the last time, as surely more recent people are going to be “dead” at some point.
“Early
Retirement” Old civil servants are sometimes dead weight, and should be allowed
to retire early and take all their information about contracts to their old
friends in private busi—I mean, enjoy their years in the sun.
“Staggered
Holidays” The lower classes don’t really need
Christmas Day on Christmas. They can have it on, oh, say, January 6th.
And then be offered overtime for working that day. And then told that they
don’t actually qualify for overtime.
“The French
Re-occupation of Indo-China” Is going ahead, and will surely end well, if the
experiences of Tang and Ming are anything to go by. In unrelated news
of foreign upheavals, the Greek elections are still going ahead.
“Forward from the
Right” Mr. Eden calls for efficiency and hard work, but also some modicum of
control, and state enterprise, at least as long as imports have to be
controlled.
“Future of British Restaurants” The institution, which began during the Blitz, as a means
of providing for bombed out families, still exists even though there is no Blitz.
So, what next?
“Coupon
Concessions” Sir Stafford Cripps has capitulated and allowed the issue of new
coupons, with the clothes to come from potential export stocks. The paper
disapproves of this, and of the relief from the Austerity designs.
Shorter Notes
IN answer to
parliamentary questions, the government releases information about just how
much food the lucky coal miners are hogging in their pithead canteens.
American Survey
“Republican
Anticipations” From a Correspondent in Ohio
The GOP is
increasingly confident that it will take the House in November. It will also
make gains in the Senate, but cannot hope to flip it over. So, with
eight-months-from-now taken care of, it can move on to worrying about
two-years-and-eight-months-away. The GOP’s old corps of Midwestern Progressives
is fading, leaving the party more united than ever. For example, the drastic
Case Labour Bill is supported by 153 Republicans in the House, as opposed to
only 15 against. It is thought that the party’s Midwestern heartland has become
more conservative, which is why Taft and Bricker, both Ohioans and
conservative, are popular names for ’48. But what of the returned soldier vote?
Meanwhile, the “Old Guard,” led by men like the Engineer, still want to reverse
the whole New Deal. They are followed by many Republican journalists, who think
that the party lost the last three elections by being too moderate and not
offering the public a clear alternative to Roosevelt. A real conservative would
erase Dewey’s defeat, they say. Hogwash. Governor Warren is the man!
American Notes
“Friendly
Firmness” Senator Vandenberg and Secretary Byrnes agree with Churchill. So it’s
settled. We have to be firm with Russia, in a friendly way,and possibly have quite a friendly atomic war with them.
“Moneylender’s
Finance” Ambassador Kennedy and Phil Murray have spoken out in favour of the
Briitsh loan this week. The ambassador because it shores up the bulwarks of
anti-Communism, and Mr. Murray because he is a CIO man, and they like that sort
of thing. The paper goes on to quote various people who think that the loan
should squeeze Britain until the pips squeak, etc.
“Strikes to Come”
The Administration is BUNGLING labour relations.
“Food from the
Farms” The Secretary of Agriculture has asked farmers for another million acres
each of corn, wheat, peas and soya beans, but the call comes late, and “there is little jam to coat the pill.” That is, only 4 cents to the bushel above the
price ceiling, not a lot of incentive to sell the grain instead of using it to
feed livestock. Also, inflation and signs of an agricultural slump.So paying more for more food to meet the actual demand of hungry people will be futile because agriculture will "slump," and producing more food will lead to inflating food prices.
Shorter Notes
Besides the Patman Bill,
Mr. Wyatt’s plan, discussed last week, is being heavily attacked by the real
estate lobby. Really, price ceilings on houses is one thing –but the homeowners
will own the land. It is deemed
increasingly unlikely that Mr. Pauley’s nomination as Secretary of the Navy
will succeed.
The World Overseas
“Le Rouge et
Noir”
The latest stage
of the French crisis involves my eyes glazing over. Skipping to the end, I
discover that the current reaction to the Communists (Reds) is not Fascist
(Black), but “middle class.” So that’s all fine, then.
“Russian Military
Government at Work” By Our Special Correspondent The Russian nation reveals
itself to be still a primitive peasant mass; which, on the other hand, is doing
well enough in ruling Saxony, which looks positively bucolic; though on the
other hand again, it wasn’t bombed; though on the other hand again, the Saxons
have not reconciled themselves to Russian rule; though on the other hand again,
they are not that discontented; though on the other hand again, they think that
they are superior to Russian peasants.
“Irish Trade”
From Our Dublin Correspondent
ODC admits that
Ireland still has trade, and probably should have trade, just so long as the
wrong sort of people don’t end up with money in their pocket. Ireland needs
full agricultural efficiency!
Source. I mean, imagine what Irish prosperity would do to day labour wage rates on the farm! This guy is the biggest asshole "corresponding" with The Economist. And there's a competition. |
Letters to the Editor
F. V., of London,
E.C. 3, writes to explain Pay-As-You-Go income tax some more. G. Mainzer
explains about small railway waggons some more. He is on the side of larger
cars, which means shorter trains, but, on the other hand, heavier axle loads.
Joseph T. Simon notes that British import restrictions lead to Danish farmers
breeding small, expensive pigs, rather than large, cheap ones, and that this is
bad. Although he then admits that the weight limit is to keep fat pigs out of
England rather than meat ones, and so it is actually a good policy (presumably,
I do not really know) –but perhaps not right now.
Alfred Mainzer, Dessed Cats, Passsengers and Train, 1926. Source. An early effort in a fifty year career of painting dressed cats for novelty postcards that includes one of cats on the Moon. (Check back here in 2039 for that one.) |
The Business World
“Filling the
Export Gap” Prewar British exports are compared with future prospects. There is
a short run opportunity in coal, and a long-run problem replacing it, once
German mines get back into action. Textiles, another major prewar export, are
going to be hard to bring up to previous totals, as also iron and steel. That
leaves the chemical industry as a prospect for expansion, including new textile
materials, and also automobiles. Not a single mention of engineering!
“Building
Efficiency” The paper finds evidence for a lack of, what else, full technical
efficiency.
Business Notes
A Canadian loan
is coming. And in ready cash it is one-quarter of that coming from America,
from a country of one-twentieth the national income! The paper moves on to
financial news of the kind that make me feel like a child prattling to the
Earl: he surely does not want my opinion of the control of investment bill, the
Chancellor’s timetable for the next bond issue; the limitation of dividends
initiative now being called for; the first days of Bretton Woods; and Mr.
Dalton’s increasingly, brutally clear statements that British holders of
Japanese bonds cannot expect any compensation of any kind.[!]
From the above. Foreign-held bonds are written off, I guess? |
“Nationalisation of Steel” Mr. Alexander recently said to some steel workers that this was
government policy. The paper demands clarification if it is an undeclared
policy. Indian economists note that the country has an embarrassing sterling
surplus and dollar deficit, and perhaps Britain could spare some of its hard
currency reserves. South Africa’s budget funds its “Kaffir” bonds quite
satisfactorily. Professor Jewkes challenges the idea that British industry is
inefficient in the latest number of The
Manchester School. The paper cannot really argue with his devastating
demonstration that reliance on PMH to the exclusion of OHM is completely
misleading, but it still thinks that he is wrong.
“Demobilisation
of Shipping” This began on 2 March, and led promptly to a rise in rates. For
example, grain from the St Lawrence, at 2s 9 ½ d per quarter, is now 12s. This,
it is said, is due to the rise in operating costs and in particular to the high
price of coal. The question of how long the American charter will be permitted
to continue is also in the air, and a problem for us and all of our dear
competitors.
“Shanghai
Exchange Market Re-opening” Unfortunately, Father says that we will have no
share of it even if we kowtow to the Soongs. Perhaps we will be squeezed out of the Chinese market; and perhaps the Communists will sweep across the Yang-tse next summer.
There are
increased Treasury bill offerings, and the London Stock Exchange has agreed to
facilitate small investors who want to come onto the exchange. The Ministry of Labour Gazette has published
industry wages as from last July. Engineering is the best business to be in for
labour.
Flight, 14 March 1946
Leaders
“Preparing for
To-morrow” To-morrow is only a day away, and where in Heaven’s name are our
turbine airliners?
“The New Rates of
Pay” The White Paper on Defence establishes new rates of pay for senior
officers. The paper thinks that it is too little, too late.
“’Indicator’
Discusses Topics of the Day: Passenger Psychology: The Price of Pressurisation:
Considering the Farepayer’s Mental Comfort: Control Cabin Screen Layouts”
Cabins that can take pressurisation need to be circular or near circular, and
window space needs to be reduced. This is a problem, and “Indicator” floats the
idea of not pressurising the flight cabin at all, since the nose of the
aircraft is so much harder to pressurise, and windows there more important. He
also notes just how hard pressurisation is, and says that, contrary to the
public relations people, the problems are far from solved. Cabin furniture, he
thinks, will break up the dreaded circular section effect, and so is
worthwhile, even if it adds to weight. He also prefers tricycle gears, since
passengers are not mountain climbers, and notes that the window problem is really serious already, and that
pressurisation will make it worse. He likes the movable fairing of the Republic Rainbow as a solution.
“The ‘Brabazon I’
Controversy: Are Big Aircraft Worth While: All-Out or Nothing” The Brabazon I
prototype will not fly until 1947 or 1948, and it will not be in service until
1950/1, so now is the time to plan in a big way, since it will have
turbine-airscrew units, and the big Americans will not, since no suitable
American power plants are in development. Thus, the Brabazon may well rout the
giant Americans from the field. People who worry about runways worry too much.
Here and There
American
water-skiing champion Bruce Packer has water-skied behind a Luscombe. The RAF is
to make some long-distance training flights to the Dominions, India, the Far
East and such. Dr. Cecil Gordon, who applied operational research to double
Coastal Command anti U-boat raids, has moved on to the Board of Trade, where he
is in charge of More! Exports! Isn’t everyone in charge of More! Exports!? A
paper to the Scottish Engineering Students establishes that radar is just the
age-old principle of sending out and signals and receiving them back. Which it
is not. The "return" signal is re-radiated.
But this is clearly too hard to understand.
The U.S. Navy has “recently disclosed” that the first, although unpremeditated, jet landing on an aircraft carrier was recently carried out by a Ryan Fireball whose piston engine had failed. The paper is livid, since, of course, it was a de Havilland Vampire that claimed that honour, several months ago. Great Western Railway is ordering an experimental gas-turbine locomotive, rather like the one that Brown-Boveri has been operating for years in an attempt to drum up business. Those poor Swiss.
The U.S. Navy has “recently disclosed” that the first, although unpremeditated, jet landing on an aircraft carrier was recently carried out by a Ryan Fireball whose piston engine had failed. The paper is livid, since, of course, it was a de Havilland Vampire that claimed that honour, several months ago. Great Western Railway is ordering an experimental gas-turbine locomotive, rather like the one that Brown-Boveri has been operating for years in an attempt to drum up business. Those poor Swiss.
The paper also
notices “Prudence,” The RAF safety pin-up girl, created by Section Officer Ruth
Walker.
“Cunliffe-OwenConcordia: Useful 10-12 Seater Feeder-line Type Under Construction: Tricycle
Undercarriage: Alvis Leonides Engine” Cunliffe-Owen, the indefatigable aircraft
builders behind no aircraft ever actually offered for sale, propose to enter
this already over-full market with a plane powered by yet another “modern,” “medium
power” nine-cylinder, single row radial engine.
“Turbine/Piston
Aero Engine: Summary of an Interesting Paper Read Before the RAeS by Dr. H. R.
Ricardo, F.R.Ae.S.” The famed diesel pioneer is back to explain how a piston
engine hooked up to a sufficiently powerful turbosupercharger is already
effectively a gas turbine aero engine, and with a two-stroke diesel you can
take this all the way. He notes the thermodynamic advantage of pistons over a
compressor burner arrangement, and skates over the additional mechanical
complexity.
“The Monaco
Engine[?]: New British Flat-Four Light-Aircraft Engine in 75hp and 100hp Sizes:
Simplicity Allied to Advanced Design Features” That’s it. I am officially
giving up on “value plays” and throwing in with Uncle Henry. There is no limit
to the amount of money stock pumpers are ready to take from the dumber would-be
aviation technology investor.
“An Ingenious Light
Twin: Points from the Portsmouth Aviation Aerocar Series: Comfort and Full
Equipment: Ambitious Designs: Cirrus or Gipsy Engines” Etc.
Dr. F. W.Lanchester, who invented everything, has died. Fortunately, Alfred Lee Loomis,
who also invented everything, is still alive, as see below.
“British Fighters
To-day: Graceful Passing of the Airscrew Era: ‘Jets’ Make Their Debut” Jet
fighters exist more! Also, Tempests and Spitefuls and Hornets are very pretty!
(I would say that about Firebrands, but I would be lying.)
Civil Aviation
“Transatlantic
Trio: BOAC’s Boeing Service to Bermuda Withdrawn: Regular Flying Schedule
Maintained Since 1941 with Three Flying Boats” With extra fuel tanks, these
planes, bought from Pan-American in 1941, were originally intended to fly a
direct route Poole-Takoradi to provide a link to the trans-African route to
India. Then the notion of flying them on to America came from somewhere. Many
famous people have flown on the clippers. Servicing, at Lagos, was very
challenging in the early days, and major overhauls had to be scheduled at
Baltimore, minor ones at Hythe.
A primtive transport vehicle of another era. Also, a dhow in the foreground. |
“Planning for
North Atlantic Safety: First of a Series of Conferences: Standardisation of
Navigational Aids and Practices” Standardising practices is the best sort of
talking about talking! No, I’m sorry. To give The Economist its due, local government planning is the best sort
of talking about talking, although “Standardising practices” might be the best you
can do in aviation.
Civil Aviation News
An order for
Wayfarers has been received from the Channel Islands Airways, so they are not
theoretical any more. The Tudor II has been trialled. Seventy-nine have been
ordered. BOAC’s Constellations will be delivered next month. BOAC has further
extended its European services. BOAC transatlantic passengers will no longer be
required to report at Terminal House in London the week before their flight for
a briefing. A new agreement has cut transatlantic fares. (For example, New York
Londono has gone from 93 15 to 90 0. A Lancastrian has flown a new record to
New Zealand. Of note, it was carrying three copies of last week’s Flight for lucky colonials, who will not
have to suffer with (old) facsimiles, as I do. While it is there, it will have
to do with “Pacific Affairs” with Lords Winster and Knollys.
Dorothy has the nicest house on the aiport tarmac! |
American Newsletter
“Kibitzer”
explains about how the Foreign Liquidations Committee is dumping American
surplus on the world, and that Americans are convinced that they will be done
out of foreign markets by wily British salesmen, so there is no point
complaining that it is not fair, because the Americans also think that British salesmen are not fair. The Loan bill, which is now before Congress, is being bitterly
resisted by Burton Wheeler and Edwin C. Johnson, because, of course, that is
what they do. (“Kibitizer” is less sanguine, and seems to think that Wheeler
believes what comes out of his own mouth, when the truth is that he doesn’t
even hear it.) Work continues at
Idlewild. He suggests that some method, perhaps oil spraying, needs to be found
to lay the dust at Idlewild, as it can be a problem both in summer and winter.
The Philadelphia airfields will be even grander than Idlewild, and “Kibitzer”
reports that Americans think that the British should not be bothering with
Tudors, etc, and should move on directly to new designs.
Anthony A.
Fletcher, “Stress Without Strain, Part II” This new, simplified method requires
two articles to explain.
“Liquid Ignition”
A method of igniting an internal combustion engine with spontaneous ignition of
a liquid sprayed into the piston heads was perfected in Germany in 1942—3. This
“Ring-Process: “appears to be an interesting but minor development.”
Correspondence
C. Nepean Bishop
thinks that the Government is BUNGLING club subsidies. “474” wishes that
private flying was cheaper so that he could do it now that he is demobilised. “Realist”
agrees with “Indicator” that Americans are terrible and bad. “Indicator”
replies that his point was actually that everyone should be realistic. D.
Theobald explains what the private flyer wants. It is yet another twin-boom
pusher design. J. Lobley of Gloster corrects
the paper’s calculations, which seem to give the Sea Fury greater thrust
efficiency than the Meteor. Roy H. Brett explains that people should want light
aircraft, and once they realise that, we should make them and export them to
all the foreigners we have explained at.
Fortune, March 1946
Fortune’s Wheel
Saul Steinberg is
a method cartoonist who ate all the breakfast cereals he was commissioned to
draw ads for as part of work which involved him in soap operas, which get a long article in this number.
Alfred Loomis is so footloose that he challenged even the paper’s team, which has been wandering all over the continent to secure interviews with Karl Compton of MIT, Earnest Lawrence of Berkeley, and to catch James B. Conant anywhere. It finally visited Mr. Loomis on his private island off Georgia. The paper also tells us that it has been trying to get Lise Meitner into the country for four years, and now she is finally here to split atoms for us. The paper also has a story by editor John Kenneth Galbraith, which is an outgrowth of his work for the Strategic Bombing Survey in Germany and Japan. The paper tells the story of how Galbraith was so engrossed in a conversation in Tokyo that, walking down the street, he fell into an open manhole , only things went well, because in Japan the holes are so short that the enormously tall Galbraith still towered above it. A tall tale?
Of course he didn't try all the detergents, because doing laundry is women's work. |
Alfred Loomis is so footloose that he challenged even the paper’s team, which has been wandering all over the continent to secure interviews with Karl Compton of MIT, Earnest Lawrence of Berkeley, and to catch James B. Conant anywhere. It finally visited Mr. Loomis on his private island off Georgia. The paper also tells us that it has been trying to get Lise Meitner into the country for four years, and now she is finally here to split atoms for us. The paper also has a story by editor John Kenneth Galbraith, which is an outgrowth of his work for the Strategic Bombing Survey in Germany and Japan. The paper tells the story of how Galbraith was so engrossed in a conversation in Tokyo that, walking down the street, he fell into an open manhole , only things went well, because in Japan the holes are so short that the enormously tall Galbraith still towered above it. A tall tale?
Editorial
“Watch the AF of L.” For the last ten years,
the CIO has dominated the scene, but look to the AFL to come back and split off
some of the CIO’s member unions.
“Back to the
Twenties?” Uncle Henry’s attempt to crash Detroit depended heavily on
stock-issue financing, and there are questions about how the SEC came to
approve it, and whether it should have. So will Uncle Henry eventually sell cars, as well as shares? The question had not even occurred to this girl. (Imagine that you can see my eyes rolling! I'm sure yours are.)
Willow Run is ready for new tenants. |
“The Budget and
Subsidies” Hardly anyone ever looks at the Federal Budget, but the paper has.
It likes what it sees. Receipts of 31.5 billion, outlays of 35.8, deficit of
4.3. The paper disapproves of any deficit at all, but at least it is small, and cutting
government expenditures is clearly hard. The one area where it should clearly
cut, and cut hard, is on subsidy payments.
“Stretching a
Point Too Far” Before the war, the U.S. consumed some 500,000 tons of rubber,
almost all of it natural, from Southeast Asia. This year, it will produce
900,000 tons of synthetic rubber. Military men are arguing that this industry
should be supported by subsidy in case World War II happens again. The paper
thinks that if we’re going to spend buckets of dough on bases all through the
Pacific in case WWII happens again, perhaps we can economise here. The industry
replies that it can “stabilise” the world market. The paper says that this isn’t the least fishy,
considering that the people arguing for government-run
rubber plants have interest in bidding for them.
“Plain Speaking”
If we can’t have WWII again, perhaps we can move on to WWIII? The paper is very
pleased with Mr. Bevin’s blunt speaking with the Russians over Greece and such.
“Reversal in
Rubber” My bet is that the American industry will wither away, and that there
is considerable room to expand the planting side, so I am going to ignore this
article, even though it has pretty pictures. Though Detroit’s
annual demand of 1.5 million tons means that the synthetic industry will take some
time to wither.
“A Good Man is
Hard to Find: The OSS Learned How, With New Selection Methods That May Serve
Industry” I had occasion to mention OSS’s success in finding good men to Fat
Chow. The laughs, the good times, the stories. . .
“Adventures of
Henry and Joe in Auto land” More detail on Uncle Henry’s adventure. The stock
subscription was $53 million! “The company may vanish in an iridescent burst,
like a new South Sea Bubble; or it may rocket ahead to dislocate the Big
Three.” At least I haven’t heard from the Earl on the matter of why we haven’t
bought. . . On the other hand, even Uncle Henry may make a go of it with Willow
Run in gift.
“War Surplus:
Sell It While It’s Hot: Which Means by Next Autumn, or It Will Burden the U.S.
Economy for Years” I am not sure why there’s a deadline, but I will take one of
those new battleships for five pennies, an apple core and some orange peel! (I
would use some “Southern Grammar” to go with my Tom Sawyer impression if I knew
how to translate it. . . .)
It is like one of those ads about how business should invest in Santa Clara County, or the Puget Sound area, or Kansas, except that it is a full article. |
“Mobile, Alabama:
A Portfolio of a Southern City after the War Boom” Mobile was a typical
southern city with a few small industries and a lot of Jim Crow until the war
boom got there and filled it with war industries and got whites and Coloureds
competing for the same jobs at the same wages. Now that the war boom is over,
it will go back to the prewar status –except Mobilians hope that it will keep
the industries. To help in this, it is neglecting things like schools and
paving, which would just lead to trouble. ON the other hand, the $312 million
paid out in war wages over two years is in large part still in bank deposits,
and will be hard to contain. One would think that a city determined not to give
Coloureds with money opportunities will just lose the Coloureds. . .
Pretty much the point the paper is trying to make here. Hands up anyone else who misses pro-civil rights Republicans. |
“Soap Operas” It
would never have made the paper two years ago, but radio domestic dramas (not
that the kind of things that happen on soap operas happen in many real homes)
are big business. Serials take up about half the broadcasting time during the
day on NBC and CBS, so commerce had better pay attention! The paper is appalled
by their humourlessness and the fact that they “flatter” women, but a very
respected doctor (Herta Herzog) thinks that they re driving women crazy by
encouraging them to express themselves, which can lead to nothing good.
The paper is appalled by their humourlessness and the fact that they “flatter” women, but a very respected doctor (Herta Herzog) thinks that they re driving women crazy by encouraging them to express themselves, which can lead to nothing good.
The paper is appalled by their humourlessness and the fact that they “flatter” women, but a very respected doctor (Herta Herzog) thinks that they re driving women crazy by encouraging them to express themselves, which can lead to nothing good.
I felt so smug when I came up with this "theory" for myself as an undergraduate. |
“Japan’s Road
Back: The Hurdles: Starvation and Inflation, Reparations and Reform” Comparing
Tokyo and Berlin, on the one hand, three quarters of Tokyo burned down. There
is nothing like the empty prairie of occasional corrugated steel shelters in
Berlin that one sees from the train in Tokyo. ON the other hand, the train, and
street cars, do run in Tokyo; and water and electricity were also soon
restored. Tax collectors, post men, and creditors continue to make their
rounds. More burning, less smashing, and the dark art of “annihilation of
organisation” was carried less far. Whether the Japanese can rebuild and
recreate themselves as peaceful citizens of the world is still in doubt.
Industry, which was, before the war, and still after it, mostly light, has much
to do. Even in the peak war year, stell production was only 8 million tons. Much
of Japan’s light industry was also attacked by recycling efforts to meet war
needs. Pipes and radiators and cables torn out, etc. A large part of its
merchant fleet has been lost. At least the hydroelectric infrastructure, which provided
80% of the country’s power, is intact, but not coal mining, which has suffered mightily.
The country also needs to restore its relationship with its traditional
markets, and find food for the population. “There is little real hope that it
will be solved in time.” The trusts need to be broken up, and there is still
the question of reparations. Patience, and American support is needed.
“Alfred Lee
Loomis: Amateur of the Scientists: Business is to Brain Waves as Wall Street is
to Tuxedo Park: Proof: This Wealthy Adventurer in Apparatus” The paper wants to
be invited to Mr. Loomis’s next party.
“The Nature of
the Atom” The paper is jealous of all the money that Grade 120 junior science
textbooks make. Other people whose parties the paper is eager to be invited to,
but not that eager, are James Mooney, Charles Sorensen, Frank W. Abrams, Arthur
B. Homer and Harry Shulman. Who is sad because he doesn’t have a middle
initial.
It turns out that the "Asian girls like science" stereotype is decades older than I thought. |
Books and Ideas
The paper reviews
Professor A. G. B. Fisher’s EconomicProgress and Social Security. As a liberal professor, he thinks they go
together, because only with security can their be mobility of labour. Other
thrillers of the month include Orville McDiarmid’s Commercial Policy in the Canadian Economy and Keith Hutchison’s Rival Partners: America and Britain in the Postwar World, plus Frederick L. Schuman’s Soviet Politics at Home and Abroad and A. Phillip Randolph’s The Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters.
There is also a one-paragraph review of a book about stock ownership for wage earners.
Fortune’s Management Poll
American businessmen think that there should
be no link between profits and wages, and that they are the custodians of social
consciousness in business. Labour has no sense of responsibility, although they
are willing to concede that responsibilities like health and full employment
belong mostly to other people.
Business Abroad
France’s black
market is producing odd results, such as a case where the easiest and cheapest
way to get wool to make a blanket was to unravel white socks. France is still
making trouble for American movie exports. So are other countries. The Belgian
coal crisis is over, thanks to the conscription of German POWs. France,
however, still depends on imports, especially with so much production
“leaking.” Germany, which is exporting a million tons a month, is in even worse
shape. Russia, meanwhile, wants electric power and plans to build ten million kilowatts,
mostly hydroelectric. The Labour government will carry through with the
Churchill government’s plan for a public monopoly on west African cocoaexports. The franc is being devalued.
Fortune Shorts
This feature
covers Finn H. Magnus’s plastic mouth organs, and controversy over the question
of whether America is, or is not, short of strategic minerals. For example,
current reserves give “only” 34 years of copper. On the other hand, there is
195 years of coal, which is deemed sufficient. Check back in 194, one might
suggest. Stocks are down, and the paper notes the XB-42 crash as an
introduction to the question of aerial insurance. It appears that not everyone agrees that its crash was just something that happened. Some people even think that there isn't enough engine cooling in the arrangement!
Ladd Haystead’s
column does not appear. Oh, no.
Aviation, March 1946
Line Editorial
James H. McGraw
thinks that the “President’s Wage-Price Control Policy Won’t Work,” mainly
because controls must be relaxed much more slowly and gradually.
Finland is operating DC-2s and Ju 52s, and is awaiting Russian permission to operate a Stockholm service with eventual extension to London.
Aviation, March 1946
Down the Years in AVIATION’s Log
Twenty-five years
ago, the British had developed a dirigible mooring mast, the Army had a new
night observation plane, the USXB1-A, with a “Wright Model H” engine.
Eighty-eight aircraft operating companies in America and Canada flew 3,136,550
miles that year. Air mail was crossing America in 33 hours 20 minutes, and the
Handley-Page London-Paris air service was discontinued because all the
investors’ cheques had already been cashed because of French competition.
Fifteen years ago, American commercial airlines flew 100 million passenger
miles, and their 26 fatalities was six times better than European lines. The
War Department budgeted $1,190,000 for new aircraft, and Goodyear introducd a
self-propelled dirigible mast. Ten years ago, UAL ordered ten DC-3s, Fairchild
delivered 10-place Clippers to Pan-American for “Brazilian and Chinese river
service,” and General Mitchell died of heart trouble.
Line Editorial
James H. McGraw
thinks that the “President’s Wage-Price Control Policy Won’t Work,” mainly
because controls must be relaxed much more slowly and gradually.
Aviation Editorial Leslie Neville
thinks that General Arnold is a swell guy.
Looking at the
unpromising table of contents, I see a selection of articles on private
airfield operations and the importance of trained salesmen for aircraft sales.
In the way of research, there is quite a good design analysis of the BMW 003 by
Major Rudolph Schulte, but who cares? J. S. Alford, at
the Aircraft Gas Turbine Division of General Electric, writes on “Designing
Ducting Systems to Gain Better Turbojet Performance,” which seems important,
but hardly novel.
W. O. Meckley tells us that “Exhaust Ejector Improves Both Turbo Cooling and Propulsion,” which, again . . James will point out that Rolls Royce has been doing this for years, and the line from America then was that it was better to use the residual overpressure in the exhaust precisely to run the turbochargers.
W. O. Meckley tells us that “Exhaust Ejector Improves Both Turbo Cooling and Propulsion,” which, again . . James will point out that Rolls Royce has been doing this for years, and the line from America then was that it was better to use the residual overpressure in the exhaust precisely to run the turbochargers.
C. E. Wilderman, a
metallurgist at Utica Drop Forge and Test Corporation, has an interesting paper
on “Controlled-Stage Process Finish-Forges Turbojet Blades.” The reason that it
took so long for combustion gas turbines to follow steam is precisely that it
was so hard to make turbine blades which delivered useful power. Now that we
understand fluid dynamics so much better, we can also understand how important
accurate profiles and a smooth finish actually are. Drop forges would not seem
to have much of a place in this work, since they are usually understood as
being for cheap, rather than accurate work. For the latter, pressure forging is
usually considered superior, and even for cheap work, extrusions are making
inroads. So it is certainly interesting to hear that Utica is making progress
with more closely-controlled drop forges.
Showing a weak
grasp of what “aviation research” might actually be, the paper also has an eighth installment of Upson on “Designing
Tomorrow’s Personal Plane,” which is all about “solving for x,” where “x” is
the thing that the buyer actually wants. Someone’s high school algebra teacher
needs a talking-to. Though at least that’s better use of paper than E.G. Stout’s
fourth installment on landing analysis of water planes. Chester S. Ricker
explains how “Engine Reliability Enhanced by “Stresscoat” Analysis, II.”
In the news, the
XP-81 is being put through Army trials, and Mr. Hoadley is pleased with new
plans to promote exports.
Aviation News
The Army and Navy
are moving to all jet fleets. The AAF has the Northrop XB-49, the Boeing XB-47,
the Martin XB-48, the Douglas XB-43, the North American XB-45, and the Convair XB-46 on order. The Curtiss XA-43 is yet another “attack plane” to take over
the role from fighter bombers.
New jet fighters include the Republic XP-84, McDonnell XP-85, and North American XP-86. Boeing’s giant conventional fighter gets another mention. The Navy has the Ryan Fireball, a jet version of the Vought Corsair, and the McDonnell XFD-1 Phantom, while North American offers the XFJ-1. Jet engine development continues at Wright, Packard, Allison, General Electric, Westinghouse, and a company whose name ends with “-plet” and which has been blotted out in my proof copy.
New jet fighters include the Republic XP-84, McDonnell XP-85, and North American XP-86. Boeing’s giant conventional fighter gets another mention. The Navy has the Ryan Fireball, a jet version of the Vought Corsair, and the McDonnell XFD-1 Phantom, while North American offers the XFJ-1. Jet engine development continues at Wright, Packard, Allison, General Electric, Westinghouse, and a company whose name ends with “-plet” and which has been blotted out in my proof copy.
In less
day-after-tomorrow news, Lt. General Levin H. Campbell, the retiring Chief of
Army Ordnance, recently disclosed that the army has a radio-controlled rocket
weapon capable of a 50 mile altitude, from which it can reach any target on the
Earth. In the future, even gun-fired projectiles will have rockets to sustain
momentum. The First Experimental Guided Missiles Group has een activated at
Elgin Field, Florida. In much -more day-after-tomorrow news, the Army “Sees
Radar as Key to Space.” On the one hand, the recent radar contact with the moon
shows that space machines can be electronically controlled beyond the
atmosphere. On the other, it makes it seem possible that machines carrying
people may eventually operate in interplanetary space.
The paper
believes that the new budget favours the air, and reports that, with modern
technology, all-weather flying can be “scouted.” The paper thinks that military
aviation should be integrated, and hopes that the atom test will resolve
important questions. The IAS Annual Meeting gave several awards to seveal
people. James perked up at reading that Doc Draper got the “Sylvanus Albert
Reed Award,” but the others do not ring a bell, and sometimes seem deliberately
vague. “Richard Hutton [receives] Lawrence Sperry Award for contributions in
development of carrier-based aircraft.”
Washington Windsock
Wherever Blaine
Stubblefield has been for the last two months, he is back, and just as vapid.
H. Stokes Walesby says that from now on, cities should be built around airports,
rather than airports around cities! The Army and Navy fought in American in the
past, and the Japanese army and navy fought in Japan, and Stubblefield thinks
that the American army and navies will fight in peacetime! “Some backers of
private flying want NACA to tackle propeller and engine noise, folding wings. .
.” etc. Others think –what? That NACA should keep its nose out of the following
arbitrary list of research items? That it should stop researching and become a
rival major baseball league? How does this man get paid for this?
Worlddata By “Vista”
Also back is the guy who is paid to reprint
stuff from Flight. (Why, yes, I am
worried about my job!) He reprints all the very big numbers about the ATA that
you can read there. Thank you! We are told that KLM is expanding, and has 20
C-54s, and wants 4 DC-4s, 4 Constellations, and a DC-3 in the first half of
1946. It might also buy the Martin 202,
and is said to be ordering 72 cargo gliders from Fokker, which would be one of
the first indications I am aware of that the “air train” is actually going to
happen. Making up for earlier neglect, “Vista” notices “Heath Row,” the “World’s
greatest airport,” which will cost 100 million dollars, and have 4 miles of
300ft concrete runways. Located 12 miles from central London, it will be within20 minutes once the railway spur is completed.Finland is operating DC-2s and Ju 52s, and is awaiting Russian permission to operate a Stockholm service with eventual extension to London.
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