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ACT OF JUNE 7, 1939 (53 STAT. 811) including core drilling, trenching, testpitting, shaft sinking, drifting,

cross

cutting, sampling, and metallurgical in-
vestigations and tests as may be necessary
to determine the extent and quality of
such deposits, the most suitable methods
of mining and beneficiating them, and the
cost at which the minerals or metals may
be produced.

(b) For the purposes of carrying out the
provisions of this section there is hereby
authorized to be appropriated out of any
money in the Treasury not otherwise ap-
propriated, for each of the fiscal years end-
ing June 30, 1940, 1941, 1942, and 1943,
the sum of $500,000, of which amount
$350,000 shall be appropriated to the Bu-
reau of Mines and $150,000 to the Geologi-
cal Survey.

S. 752

minerals, including core drilling, trenching,
test-pitting, shaft sinking, drifting, cross-
cutting, sampling, and metallurgical inves-
tigations and tests as may be necessary to
determine the extent and quality of such
deposits, the most suitable methods of
mining and beneficiating them, and the
cost at which the minerals or metals may
be produced.

"(b) The Secretary of Agriculture is
hereby authorized and directed to make
scientific, technologic, and economic inves-
tigations of the feasibility of developing
domestic sources of supplies of any agricul-
tural material or for using agricultural
commodities for the manufacture of any
material determined by the President, pur-
suant to section 3 of this Act to be strategic,
or substitutes therefor.

"SEC. 8. There is hereby authorized to
be appropriated, out of any moneys in the
Treasury not otherwise appropriated, such
sums as the Congress, from time to time,
may deem necessary to carry out the pro-
visions of this Act. The funds so appro-
priated, including the funds heretofore ap-
propriated, shall remain available to carry
out the provisions of this Act until ex-
pended and (exclusive of sums allocated
for the purposes of section 7) shall be
expended under the direction of the
Chairman.

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test-pitting, shaft sinking, drifting, cross-
cutting, sampling, and metallurgical in-
vestigations and tests as may be necessary
to determine the extent and quality of
such deposits, the most suitable methods
of mining and beneficiating them, and the
cost at which the minerals or metals may
be produced.

"(b) The Secretary of Agriculture is
hereby authorized and directed to make
scientific, technologic, and economic inves-
tigations of the feasibility of developing
domestic sources of supplies of any agricul-
tural material or for using agricultural
commodities for the manufacture of any
material determined pursuant to section 2
of this Act to be strategic and critical or
substitutes therefor.

"Sec. 8. For the procurement, transporta-
tion, maintenance, rotation, storage, and
refining or processing of the materials to be
acquired under this Act, there is hereby
authorized to be appropriated, out of any
money in the Treasury not otherwise ap-
propriated, the sum of $1,800,000,000: Pro-
vided, That not more than the sum set out
opposite each of the following fiscal years
shall be appropriated for such purposes
during such fiscal year:

"Fiscal year 1946-1947, $360,000,000.
"Fiscal year 1947-1948, $360,000,000.
"Fiscal year 1948-1949, $360,000,000.
"Fiscal year 1949-1950, $360,000,000.
"Fiscal year 1950-1951, $360,000,000.
"The funds so appropriated, including the
Lunds heretofore appropriated, shall remain

"SEC. 9. Any funds heretofore or here-
after received on account of sales or other
dispositions of materials under the pro-
visions of this Act, except funds received
on account of the rotation of stocks, shall
be covered into the Treasury as miscel-
laneous receipts.

"SEC. 10. Strategic materials purchased
from foreign sources for stock piling pur-
suant to the provisions of this Act shall be
admitted into the United States free of any
tariff duty, import tax, or other impost
applicable to importations. If any such
imported strategic material is disposed of
pursuant to section 4 of this Act, and if such
disposition is made at a price based on the
cost to the Government of such strategic
material rather than the market price cur-
rent at the time of sale, there shall be
added to such price the amount of any
tariff, duty, import, tax, or other impost
which would be due were such strategic
material imported at the time the sale is
made.

"SEC. 11. For the purposes of this Act the
term 'strategic materials' shall not include
petroleum or petroleum products.

"SEC. 12. This Act may be cited as the 'Strategic Materials Stock Piling Act'."

available to carry out the purposes for
which appropriated until expended, and
shall be expended under the joint direction
of the Secretary of War and the Secretary
of the Navy.

"Sec. 9. Any funds heretofore or here-
after received on account of sales or other
dispositions of materials under the provi-
sions of this Act shall be deposited to the
credit, and be available for expenditure for
the purposes, of any appropriation avail-
able at the time of such deposit, for carry-
ing out the provisions of sections 1 to 6, in-
clusive, of this Act.

"Sec. 10. This Act may be cited as the
'Strategic and Critical Materials Stock
Piling Act'."

EXHIBIT 30

[H. Rept. No. 2235, 79th Cong., 2d sess.]

STRATEGIC AND CRITICAL MATERIALS FOR NATIONAL DEFENSE PURPOSES

JUNE 10, 1946.-Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed

Mr. MAY, from the committee of conference, submitted the following

CONFERENCE REPORT

[To accompany S. 752]

The committee of conference on the disagreeing votes of the two Houses on the amendment of the House to the bill (S. 752) to amend the act of June 7, 1939 (53 Stat. 811), as amended, relating to the acquisition of stocks of strategic and critical materials for national defense purposes, having met, after full and free conference, have agreed to recommend and do recommend to their respective Houses as follows:

That the Senate recede from its disagreement to the amendment of the House and agree to the same with an amendment as follows:

In lieu of the matter proposed to be inserted by the House amendment insert the following:

"That the Act of June 7, 1939 (53 Stat. 811), as amended, is hereby amended to read as follows:

"That the natural resources of the United States in certain strategic and critical materials being deficient or insufficiently developed to supply the industrial, military, and naval needs of the country for common defense, it is the policy of the Congress and the purpose and intent of this Act to provide for the acquisition and retention of stocks of these materials and to encourage the con- ¦ servation and development of sources of these materials within the United States, and thereby decrease and prevent wherever possible a dangerous and costly dependence of the United States upon foreign nations for supplies of these materials in times of national emergency.

“Sec. 2. (a) To effectuate the policy set forth in section 1 hereof the Secretary of War, the Secretary of the Navy, and the Secretary of the Interior, acting¦ jointly through the agency of the Army and Navy Munitions Board, are hereby authorized and directed to determine, from time to time, which materials are strategic and critical under the provisions of this Act and to determine, from time to time, the quality and quantities of such materials which shall be stockpiled under the provisions of this Act. In determining the materials which are strategic and critical and the quality and quantities of same to be acquired the Secretaries of State, Treasury, Agriculture, and Commerce shall each designate representatives to cooperate with the Secretary of War, the Secretary of the Navy, and the Secretary of the Interior in carrying out the provisions of this Act.

"(b) To the fullest extent practicable the Secretary of War, the Secretary of the Navy, and the Secretary of the Interior, acting jointly, shall appoint industry advisory committees selected from the industries concerned with the materials to be stock-piled. It shall be the general function of the industry advisory committees to advise with the Secretary of War, the Secretary of the Navy, and the Secretary of the Interior and with any agencies through which they may exercise any of their functions under this Act with respect to the purchase, sale, care, and handling of such materials. Members of the industry advistory committees shall receive a per diem allowance of not to exceed $10 for each day spen' at conferences held upon the call of the Secretary of War, the Secretary of the Navy, and the Secretary of the Interior, plus necessary traveling and other expenses while so engaged.

"Sec. 3. The Secretary of War and the Secretary of the Navy shall direct the Secretary of the Treasury, through the medium of the Procurement Division of his Department, to

“(a) make purchases of strategic and critical materials with due regard to the objectives set forth in section 1 of this Act and pursuant to the determinations as provided in section 2 hereof, which purchases (1) shall be

made, as far as practicable, from supplies of materials in excess of the current industrial demand and (2) shall be made in accordance with title III of the Act of March 3, 1933 (47 Stat. 1520), but may be made without regard to section 3709 of the Revised Statutes. A reasonable time (not to exceed one year) shall be allowed for production and delivery from domestic sources and in the case of any such material available in the United States but which has not been developed commercially, the Secretary of War and the Secretary of the Navy may, if they find that the production of such material is economically feasible, direct the purchase of such material without requiring the vendor to give bond;

***(b) provide for the storage, security, and maintenance of strategic and critical materials for stock-piling purposes on military and naval reservations or other locations, approved by the Secretary of War and the Secretary of the Navy;

"(c) provide through normal commercial channels for the refining or processing of any materials acquired or transferred under this Act when the Secretary of War and the Secretary of the Navy deem such action necessary to convert such materials into a form best suitable for stock piling, and such materials may be refined, processed, or otherwise beneficiated either before or after their transfer from the owning agency;

"(d) provide for the rotation of any strategic and critical materials constituting a part of the stock pile where necessary to prevent deterioration by replacement of acquired stocks with equivalent quantities of substantially the same material with the approval of the Secretary of War and the Secretary of the Navy;

(e) dispose of any materials held pursuant to this Act which are no longer needed because of any revised determination made pursuant to section 2 of this Act, as hereinafter provided. No such disposition shall be made until six months after publication in the Federal Register and transmission of a notice of the proposed disposition to the Congress and to the Military Affairs Committee of each House thereof. Such notice shall state the reasons for such revised determination, the amounts of the materials proposed to be released, the plan of disposition proposed to be followed, and the date upon which the material is to become available for sale or transfer. The plan and date of disposition shall be fixed with due regard to the protection of the United States against avoidable loss on the sale or transfer of the material to be released and the protection of producers, processors, and consumers against avoidable disruption of their usual markets: Provided, That no material constituting a part of the stock piles may be disposed of without the express approval of the Congress except where the revised determination is by reason of obsolescence of that material for use in time of war. For the purposes of this paragraph a revised determination is by reason of obsolescence if such determination is on account of (1) deterioration, (2) development or discovery of a new or better material or materials, or (3) no further usefulness for use in time of war.

"Sec. 4. The Secretary of War and the Secretary of the Navy shall submit to the Congress, not later than six months after the approval of this Act, and every six months thereafter a written report detailing the activities with respect to stock-piling under this Act, including a statement of foreign and domesteic purchases, and such other pertinent information on the administration of the Act as will enable the Congress to evaluate its administration and the need for amendments and related legislation.

"Sec. 5. The stock piles shall consist of all such materials heretofore purchased or transferred to be held pursuant to this Act, or hereafter transferred pursuant to section 6 hereof, or hereafter purchased pursuant to section 3 hereof, and not disposed of pursuant to this Act. Except for the rotation to prevent deterioration and except for the disposal of any material pursuant to section 3 of this Act, materials acquired under this Act shall be released for use, sale, or other disposition only (a) on order of the President at any time when in his judgment such release is required for purposes of the common defense, or (b) in time of war or during a national emergency with respect to common defense proclaimed by the President, on order of such agency as may be designated by the President. "Sec. 6. (a) Pursuant to regulations issued by the War Assets Administration or its successor, every material determined to be strategic and critical pursuant to section 2 hereof, which is owned or contracted for by the United States or any agency thereof, including any material received from a foreign government under an agreement made pursuant to the Act of March 11, 1941 (55 Stat.

-31), as amended, or other authority, shall be transferred by the owning agency, when determined by such agency to be surplus to its needs and responsibilities, to the stock piles established pursuant to this Act, so long as the amount of the stock pile for that material does not exceed the quantities determined therefor pursuant to section 2 hereof. There shall be exempt from this requirement such amount of any material as is necessary to make up any deficiency of the supply of such material for the current requirements of industry as determined by the Civilian Production Administration or its successor. There shall also be exempt from this requirement (1) any material which constitutes contractor inventory if the owning agency shall not have taken possession of such inventory, (2) such amount of any material as the Army and Navy Munitions Board determines (i) are held in lots so small as to make the transfer thereof economically imprac ticable; or (ii) do not meet or cannot economically be converted to meet, stockpile requirements determined in accordance with section 2 of this Act. The total material transferred to the stock piles established by this Act in accordance with this section during any fiscal year beginning more than twelve months after this Act becomes law shall not exceed in value (as determined by the Secretary of the Treasury on the basis of the fair market value at the time of each transfer) an amount to be fixed by the appropriation act or acts relating to the acquisition of materials under this Act.

"(b) Any transfer made pursuant to this setcion shall be made without charge against or reimbursement from the funds available under this Act, except that expenses incident to such transfer may be paid or reimbursed from such funds, and except that, upon any such transfer from the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, or any corporation organized by virtue of the authority contained in the Act of January 22, 1932 (47 Stat. 5), the Secretary of the Treasury shall cancel notes of Reconstruction Finance Corporation, and sums due and unpaid upon or in connection with such notes at the time of such cancellation, in an amount equal to the fair market value as determined by the Secretary of the Treasury of the material so transferred.

"Effective whenever the Secretary of the Treasury shall cancel any notes pursuant to subsection (b) of this section, the amount of notes, debentures, bonds, or other such obligations which the Reconstruction Finance Corporation is authorized and empowered to have outstanding at any one time under the provisions of existing law shall be deemed to be reduced by the amount of the notes so canceled. "(d) Subsection (b) of section 14 of the Act of October 3, 1944 (58 Stat. 765), is hereby amended to read as follows:

""(b) Subject only to subsection (c) of this section, any owning agency may dispose of

"""(1) any property which is damaged or worn beyond economical repair; ““(2) any waste, salvage, scrap, or other similar items;

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“'“(3) any product of industrial, research, agricultural, or livestock operations, or of any public works construction or maintenance project, carried on by such agency;

which does not consist of materials which are to be transferred in accordance with the Strategic and Critical Materials Stock Piling Act, to the stock piles established pursuant to that Act."

"(e) Section 22 of the Act of October 3, 1944 (58 Stat. 765), is hereby repealed "Provided, That any owning agency is defined in that Act having control of materials that, when determined to be surplus, are required to be transferred to the stock piles pursuant to subsection (a) hereof, shall make such determination as soon as such materials in fact become surplus to its needs and respon sibilities.

"Sec. 7. (a) The Secretary of the Interior, through the Director of the Bureau of Mines and the Director of Geological Survey, is hereby authorized and directed to make scientific, technologic, and economic investigations concerning the extent and mode of occurrence, the development, mining, preparation, treatment, and utilization of ores and other mineral substances found in the United States or its Territories or insular possessions, which are essential to the common defense or the industrial needs of the United States, and the quantities or grades of which are inadequate from known domestic sources, in order to determine and develop domestic sources of supply, to devise new methods for the treatment and utilization of lower grade reserves, and to develop substitutes for such essential ores and mineral products; on public lands and on privately owned lands, with the consent of the owner, to explore and demonstrate the extent and quality of deposits of such minerals, including core drilling, trenching, test-pitting, shaft sinking, drifting, cross-cutting, sampling, and metallurgical investigations and

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