Music Trade Review

Issue: 1951 Vol. 110 N. 1

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
WASHINGTON
HIGH LIGHTS
Excess Profits Tax of 1950
Became a Law on January 3rd
President Truman signed the Excess
Profits Tax Act of 1950 on January 3rd
and notified the country anew that the
defense program would require still
"more and much heavier" levies.
The bill that became law by the Pres-
ident's action increases corporation
taxes $3,300,000,000 a year, as com-
pared with his original request for
$4,000,000,000. It combines a $2,700,-
000,000 levy on profits defined as ex-
cessive with a $600,000,000 advance in
regular rates.
The bill is retroactive to July 1 with
respect to the excess-profits impost. For
most affected corporations, the increase
in regular rates takes effect as of Jan-
uary 1st. Corporations earning less than
$25,000 a year are exempt from both
provisions.
Excess profits, under the new law,
will be subject to a levy of 77 per cent.
They are defined by the act's primary
formula as earnings in excess of a cor-
poration's average annual earnings dur-
ing its most profitable three years of the
four-year period, 1946-49.
Optional formulas are keyed to speci-
fied returns on the corporation's capital
investment. Relief provisions and spe-
cial formulas are designed to prevent
undue hardship in unusual circum-
stances.
By the act's provisions relating to
"normal" profits, the 45 per cent rate
on profits above $25,000 is increased-
to 47 per cent.
Copper Conservation Order
Doesn't Name Pianos
To conserve copper vitally needed for
defense, the National
Production
Authority on December 30th issued an
order governing the use of copper in
the manufacture of a wide range of
products, starting March 1.
20
"This action was taken to provide
copper for defense and defense-support-
ing needs," William H. Harrison, NPA
Administrator, said. "Although every-
thing possible is being done to increase
production, there is not enough copper
to meet our expanding defense needs
and to supply all civilian demands.
"The order permits the use of copper
where it serves a functional purpose and
where no practical substitute is avail-
able. It will not be used where it is non-
functional—in the manufacture of orna-
ments or for use in decorative parts, for
instance—or where a satisfactory sub-
stitute can be used.
"The order provides copper cannot
be used in certain less essential items,
but it does not forbid the manufacture
of the article itself. In many cases manu-
facturers will be able to use substitute
materials."
Mr. Harrison pointed out manufac-
turers are permitted to complete and sell
affected items if they were in the process
of manufacture on or before March 1
and are completed not later than April
30. He also emphasized the order pro-
vides, thru appeals procedures, for ad-
justments and exceptions where undue
hardship occurs.
"Recognizing that this order may
bring about hardship cases, particularly
involving employment, every effort will
be made in the administration of the
order to relieve hardship cases," Mr.
Harrison said.
Contained in the order is a list (List
A) of articles in which no form of
copper may be used beginning March 1.
The list includes items in the following
categories: Builders' hardware, building
materials, burial equipment, clothing
and dress accessories, furniture and fix-
tures, hardware, home furnishings and
equipment, household appliances, jew-
elry, gifts and novelties, miscellaneous
articles, motor vehicles, and passenger
transportation equipment. Pianos and
musical instruments are not listed.
Previous NPA actions designed to
effect savings in the use of cepper prior
to March 1, remain in force. Manufac-
turers are permitted, during January
and February, to use 85 per cent of the
average monthly amount of brass mill
and wire mill products they used during
the first six months of 1950, but they
are permitted to use copper in foundry
products at the same quarterly rate as
they did during the first six months of
1950.
Regulation W and Wire Recorders
The Federal Reserve Board has ruled
that tape and wire recorders come under
the terms of Regulation W when pur-
chased for home use. The 25 percent
minimum down payment and 15 months
maximum maturity provision does not
apply when recorders are purchased for
use in radio or television stations or
other commercial establishments.
NPMA Executive Committee
Met in New York in December
The Executive Committee of the Na-
tional Piano Manufacturers Association
held a Meeting at the Hotel New Yorker,
New York City, on Tuesday, December
5th.
Those present were: Webster E. Jans-
sen, Association President, Janssen
"Piano Co., Inc., Vice President J. F.
Feddersen, Jesse French & Sons Division
of H. & A. Selmer, Inc.; Henry Z. Stein-
way, NPMA Treasurer and head of the
Class Piano Instruction Committee,
Steinway & Sons; Robert A. Hill, Presi-
dent of Aeolian American Corp.;
Eugene Wulsin, The Baldwin Piano Co.;
Harry J. Sohmer, President, Sohmer &
Co., Inc.; George H. Stapely, President,
Everett Piano Co.; James V. Sill, Vice
President, W. W. Kimball Co.; Henry
G. Wickham, Vice President of Wick-
ham Piano Plate Co.; and H. R. Rine-
hart, Executive Secretary of the Asso-
ciation.
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW, JANUARY, 1951
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
-ADICKPHONO
RE CORDS-ACCESSORIES
A.'...
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Gov't Restrictions Limits
Use of Cobalt for TV
The Government invoked rigid con-
trol on December 29 over the distribu-
tion and use of cobalt, a strategical
metal vital to the production of jet en-
gines and many other defense items.
Manufacture of television and radio
receivers will be affected by the action
as well as that of other electrical appli-
ances, according to a spokesman for the
National Production Authority
Cobalt, a vital metal of many uses,
will go under almost complete Govern-
ment allocation Feb. 1. The order af-
fecting it is the most stringent of its kind
yet issued by the National Production
Authority. After Feb. 1 every purchase
of more than twenty-five pounds of
cobalt must have N.P.A. approval.
Essential uses of the metal include
the manufacture of radar, of heat-re-
sistant steel, such as that needed for gas-
turbines, jet engines and gun-barrel lin-
ings, of cutting tools and of hard facings
for dies.
Permanent magnets used in radio and
television speakers contain cobalt. The
industry plans to switch to other types
of speakers, but production is expected
to be affected at least temporarily.
The United States obtains 95 to 99
per cent of its cobalt supplies from
Africa, mainly the Belgian Congo. It is
also produced in Canada, but none of
the Canadian output 'has been made
available to this country.
Supplies are extremely short, mainly
because of requirements for jet engines.
Consumption by the radio and television
industry increased about 200 per cent
in a year.
As an interim measure, the N. P. A.
reduced civilian use of cobalt in Jan-
uary to one-third of the total used in
January of 1950.
When the order takes full effect Feb.
1, monthly allocation authorizations
will have to be obtained from the N.P.A.
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW, JANUARY, 1951
for the sale or purchase of more than
twenty-five pounds of cobalt. Use for
specified pigment-making purposes will
be limited to fifty pounds in any t'hree
months. Inventories will be limited to
one month's minimum requirements or
"a minimum practicable working inven-
tory," whichever is less.
RCA Victor 1951 TV Line
Has 14,17 and 19-Inch Tubes
RCA Victor's 1951 Million Proof
line of television receivers will feature
14, 17 and 19-inch picture tubes and
will be introduced later this month, it was
announced recently by Allan B. Mills,
General Sales Manager of the RCA Vic-
tor Home Instrument Department.
Suggested list prices for the 1951 line
will range from $219.95 for a 14-inch
table model to $825 for a 19-inch con-
sole with AM-FM radio, 45-rpm phono-
graph, combination 33 1/3 and 78-rpm
phonograph and generous record storage
space, Mr. Mills said.
Current models being carried over
into 1951 will have the suggested list
prices which prevailed at the end of
1950, Mr. Mills disclosed.
RCA Record Executives
More to New York Offices
To effect closer coordination of RCA
Victor Record Department sales, mer-
chandising, and promotional activities
with Artists and Repertoire functions
now located in New York, top executives
of the department have moved their
headquarters from Camden, N. J., to
New York.
Involved in the move, which is effec-
tive immediately, are Lawrence W.
Kanaga, General Sales and Merchandise
Manager; David J. Finn, Advertising
and Sales Promotion Manager; Robert
M. Macrae, Merchandise Manager; Ed-
ward 0 . Welker, Sales Planning Man-
ager; and Edward Dodelin, Field Sales
Supervisor.
Crosby and Gable Pictures on
Zenith Phonevision Test
After 191/2 years of research and the
expenditure of millions of dollars,
Zenith Radio Corp. launched its gov-
ernment authorized, limited commercial
test of Phonevision on January 1.
First full length feature motion pic-
tures without advertising to be offered
by Phonevision to the 300 Chicago fam-
ilies who are participating in the test,
at a home admission fee of $1 for each
picture ordered and seen, were January
1—4:00 P.M.—April Showers starring
Jack Carson and Ann Sothern; 7:00
P.M.—Welcome Stranger starring Bing
Crosby, Joan Caulfield, and Barry Fitz-
gerald; 9:00 P.M.—Homecoming star-
ring Clark Gable and Lana Turner.
These three pictures are of a caliber
never before presented to the home
video screen—since their release they
have grossed more than twelve million
dollars at theater box offices.
Following this "premiere" of thePhone-
vision test, feature films supplied by
Hollywood and European producers
will be presented to the Phonevision test
audience three times daily, at 4:00, 7:00
and 9:00 P.M. The film shown at 4:00
P.M. one day will be shown at 7:00
P.M. the next, and at 9:00 P.M. on the
third day. Hence, each family will have
the opportunity on three different days
to see 'each film, and will at the same
time have a choice of three different
pictures on any particular day.
Radio-TV Production Record
At the peak of the Fall boom, the
Radio-Television industry was produc-
ing television receivers at an annual rate
of 10,000,000 sets, and radios at the
rate of 17,000,000 units, according to
R. C. Sprague, President of the Radio-
Television Manufacturers Association.
An all time record for the industry will
be set for 1950 when manufacturers'
billings of television and radios exceed
$1,500,000,000.
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