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Percent foreign versus domestic crude oil production, chart_
Relationship of petroleum imports to demand and production,
1935-53, table..

Summary of position of domestic oil producers –

Telegrams from oil associations authorizing representation before

committee..

United States imports and exports of crude oil and refined

products, yearly averages, 1918-52, table-

United States petroleum imports, 1928-53, chart.

Inland Steel Co., letter from L. B. Block, vice president..
Insulation Board Institute, statement of Charles M. Gray, manager_-
International Brotherhood of Operative Potters, statement of James
M. Duffy, president....

1012

1013

930

2026

571

581

Iroquois China Co., letter from R. F. Evans, vice president__
Javits, Hon. Jacob K.:

2025

Share of Eastern Europe and China in Western Europe's trade
with the outside world, 1938..

1691

Share of Eastern Europe and Communist China in Western
Europe's trade with the outside world, 1952.

1691

Text of H. R. 4724__

1688

United States balance of payments, 1952 and 1951, table-

1689

Labor Department, statement of Hon. Martin P. Durkin, Secretary-
Lace & Embroidery Association of America, Inc., letter from David E.
Schwab, president

794

400

Lerch, John J.: Should the Power to Tax be Vested in the President,
speech of Hon. James M. Beck, House of Representatives, March
24, 1934...

482

Luggage and Leather Goods Manufacturers of America, Inc., memo-
randum by Jack Citronbaum, executive vice president..

296

Luxford, Ansel F., letter from_.

567

Lyons, Frank P., letter from_.

1923

Manufacturing Chemists Association: Supplementary statement of
Fred G. Singer.......

235

National Association of Cotton Manufacturers: Statistics concerning

cotton textile employment and manufacture, tables. 1831-1833, 1836-1839

National Association of Photographic Manufacturers, Inc., statement
of William C. Babbitt, managing director...

552

XII

Additional information submitted for the record by-Continued
National Association of Waste Material Dealers, Inc., letter from Max
M. Teisch, vice president, foreign trade division -
National Association of Wool Manufacturers: Correspondence be-
tween Treasury Department and a group of Senators and Repre-
sentatives

1646

214-216

Foreign Oil Policy Conference, executive committee of ....
Letter from Tom Pickett, executive vice president, transmitting
summary of statements of witnesses..

1081

1199

Resolution of, on residual oil imports..

1080

Sponsors of legislation to limit importations of foreign residual
fuel oil into the United States___

1082

National Congress of Petroleum Retailers, Inc., letter from William
D. Snow, general counsel..

1410

Supplemental statement of Otis H. Ellis, general counsel..
Work stoppages in bituminous coal mining, 1927-52, table__

National Renderers Association, letter from F. B. Wise, secretary-

treasurer

117

907

1931

565

1515

351

1352

1348

203

1463

1219

817-819

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Providence (R. I.) Chamber of Commerce, letter of authorization

from...

Philbin, Hon. Philip J., letter from, transmitting letter of John O.
Dahill, secretary-treasurer, New England Conference of Typo-
graphical Unions...

Pin, Clip & Fastener Association:

Application for investigation and public hearing and imposition

of an absolute import quota with respect to safety pins.

Correspondence with Tariff Commission..

Legal duties and functions under the Antidumping Act, 1921----

Letter to Hon. Daniel A. Reed__

Presbyterian Church, U.S.A., statement of Clifford Earle, secretary,
department of social education and action..

Radio-Television Manufacturers Association, letter from W. M.
Adams, chairman, export committee__

1396

1395

1395

1396

1395

1392

1454

Seattle Chamber of Commerce, resolution of

1945

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Additional information submitted for the record by-Continued

Stringfellow, Hon. Douglas R., lead production in the United States,

1952, table...

Thompson & Cowger Co., Inc., United States exports in 1951 to
Venezuela, by commodity groups and principal commodities, show-
ing distribution of production of such products by geographic
region and principal States, table....

Tile Council of America, letter from Norris E. Phillips--
Tobacco Associates, Inc., statement of J. B. Hutson, president..
Toledo Chamber of Commerce, letter from Wayne E. Kakela, execu-
tive manager..

Tollefson, Hon. Thor C., statement of..

Tri-State Lead & Zinc Ore Producers Association: Data on mining

companies

1718

562

905

1944

Tube Turns, Inc., letter from John G. Seiler, executive vice president.

Tuna Research Foundation, supplementary statement of..

Tydings, Millard E.: American watch factories, chart.............
Typewriter Manufacturers Export Association, letter from Eric T.
King, secretary__

1883

1459

Underwear Institute, statement of..

United Aircraft Export Corp., letter from J. M. Barr, president_
United Mine Workers of America:

Letter from Hon. Harold F. Linder, Assistant Secretary of State.
Letter to Hon. John Foster Dulles, Secretary of State__

United States Cuban Sugar Council, United States trade with Cuba-

Selected material from Sugar Facts and Figures, 1952, chart and

tables..

357

Haysi (Va.) Kiwanis Club, resolution of....

Westland, Hon. Jack, statement of

Virginia Coal Operators Association, telegram from George H.
Esser, president..

1071

1069

Wine Institute: Communications from members of wine industr. 536-540

546

549

1433

1176

1175

TRADE AGREEMENTS EXTENSION ACT OF 1953

MONDAY, APRIL 27, 1953

HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES,
COMMITTEE ON WAYS AND MEANS,

Washington, D. C.

The committee met, pursuant to call, at 10 a. m., in room 1102, House Office Building, Hon. Daniel A. Reed, chairman, presiding.

The CHAIRMAN. The committee will come to order.

Mr. Reporter, first of all, I would like to introduce H. R. 4294 in the record.

(H. R. 4294 is as follows:)

[H. R. 4294, 83d Cong., 1st sess.]

A BILL To extend the authority of the President to enter into trade agreements under section 350 of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended, and for other purposes

Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That this Act may be cited as the "Trade Agreements Extension Act of 1953".

SEC. 2. The period during which the President is authorized to enter into foreign-trade agreements under section 350 of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended and extended (19 U. S. C., sec. 1351), is hereby extended for a further period of one year from June 12, 1953.

SEC. 3. The second sentence of section 3 (a) of the Trade Agreements Extension Act of 1951 (19 U. S. C., sec. 1360) is hereby amended by striking out "serious injury to the domestic industry producing like or directly competitive articles" in clause (1) and in clause (2) and inserting in lieu thereof “unemployment of or injury to American workers, miners, farmers, or producers, producing like or competitive articles, or impairment of the national security" and "such unemployment, injury, or impairment, or threat thereof,", respectively. The last sentence of such section 3 (a) is hereby amended to read as follows: "No such foreign-trade agreement shall be entered into with respect to any article imported into the United States until the Commission has made its report with respect to such article to the President."

SEC. 4. Section 4 of the Trade Agreements Extension Acts of 1951 (19 U. S. C., sec. 1361) is hereby amended to read as follows:

"SEC. 4. The President shall not enter into any trade agreement under section 350 of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended, which, when effective, would—

“(1) require or make appropriate any modification of duties or other import restrictions, the imposition of additional import restrictions, or the continuance of existing customs or excise treatment, which modification, imposition, or continuance would exceed the limit (as found and reported by the Tariff Commission under section 3) to which such modification, imposition, or continuance may be extended without causing or threatening unemployment of or injury to American workers, miners, farmers, or producers, producing like or competitive articles, or impairment of the national security;

or

"(2) fail to require or make appropriate the minimum increase in duty or additional import restrictions required (as found and reported by the Tariff Commission under section 3) to avoid such unemployment, injury, or impairment, or threat thereof."

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