Tuesday Open Line


For much of history, a cooked meal was followed by the drudgery of scrubbing the pans used to prepare it. But something was discovered this week in 1938 that changed all that, a solidified refrigerant gas that we now know as Teflon. Developed by Roy Plunkett of the DuPont Company, slippery Teflon revolutionized cooking utensils in the 1960s. By the time he died in the early 1990s, 3-out-of-4 of all cooking pans in the nation where coated with his invention. Today, Teflon is used in everything from semiconductors to communications cables and even clothing. The nation’s chemical industry generates more than $716 billion a year in sales and provides jobs for over 800,000 workers. You can find more facts about America from the U.S. Census Bureau, online at <www.census.gov>.