252 ANNUAL REPORT SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION, 1953 



10. Revolutionary automation at Ford operated with iron hand. Automotive 



Industries, Nov. 15, 1948. 



11. Backgrounds of power, by Roger Burlingame. Nevp York, 1949. 



12. Depreciation, by Eugene L. Grant and P. T. Norton, Jr. New York, 1949. 



13. Dynamic equipment policy, by George Terborgh. New York, 1949. 



14. Mechanization takes command, by Siegfried Giedion. New York, 1949. 



15. Automation. Mechanical Engineering, May 1949. 



16. Key to the automatic factory. Fortune, November 1949. 



17. Record playback control. General Electric Co., 1950. 



18. Coming — Tools that read blueprints. Business Week, Apr. 22, 1950. 



19. Automatic machining reaches the market. Business Week, July 15, 1950. 



20. Forerunner of the automatic factory. Product Engineering, August 1950. 



21. Making the automatic factory a reality, by John T. Diebold et al. Chicago, 



1951. 



22. Elements of automatic stock feeds. Tool Engineer, January 1951. 



23. How a robot factory would work. Business Week, July 21, 1951. 



24. Napalm making is mechanized. Business Week, Sept. 22, 1951. 



25. The automatic factory. Harvard Business Review, November 1951. 



26. The robot with paper brains runs any machine tool. Business Week, Nov. 



10, 1951. 



27. Push button plants come of age. Iron Age, Nov. 29, 1951. 



28. OflSce robots. Fortune, January 1952. 



29. World's first automatic piston factory. U. S. S. R. Information Bulletin, 



Feb. 11, 1952. 



30. How Ford automates production lines. American Machinist, Mar. 17, 1952. 



31. Automation: A factory runs itself. Business Week, Mar. 29, 1952. 



32. The factory of the future. Factory Management and Maintenance, April 



1952. 



33. A numerically controlled milling machine. Servomechanisms Laboratory, 



Massachusetts Institute of Technology. 



