Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, May 21, 1956, Image 4

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    I
Page 4 Section 1
Capital AJournal
An Independent Newspaper Established 1888
BERNARD MAINWARING. Editor and Publisher
GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emeritus
Published every ofternoon except Sunday at 280 North
Church St. Phone 4-68 I
Ill S !,hI!!.L,-.e.5"i"Y.l '"'"" the u" puhllMtion of
also n.wi Buhu;;f,".'" " "r """ "o in mi. p.p., .nd
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
NATIONAL WHIRLIGIG
Reds Benef it from Arms Cut
As Allies Can't Cut Further
THE CAPITAL JOURNAL
The Great Demobilization
By RAY TUCKER
WASHINGTON, May 21 The
Western Powers' inability to ac
cept Russia's proposed reduction
of military personnel has had the
effect which the Kremlin intended
with its Machiavellian scheme.
The allies cannot reduce their es-
o.C'ri,: .nth"' " 811 M"n"" ': One nr. (is oo b mill in : tablishment for the simple reason
UoQthir ti u' a unVth. on' w-b mm oumm or.ioo: that their total strength in con
Two Ki.sing lmil)ians
Many men strive for political proferment, but few
civ mucn oi I. I hp snvnrn .in iw,
that raises one's hopes and dashes
Western recruits (usually only 18
months), the Communist troops are
hardened veterans. They need no
protracted physical shape-up, for
their thin living at home makes
them adaptable to the rigors of
field and barracks hardships.
Moreover, these 10.000,000 sol
diers would fight on or attack from
ivcnlion.il ground forces amounts favorable, interior lines that is,
. to only a hollow shell. I from the Kurasian heartland. Their
The challenge has resulted in a1 units could be shifted with rela-
rutliless and realistic reappraisal , live ease from one front to an
ot the West s military potential on other. Their industrial centers
' :iiu :t f.nmmiri.rl with llin I'm,. ....... 1,1 1 .,,.., nn.-ln..nl.(
PW 31' llnvn '. .............. ...v , .., i- u(lv iu wii.nouiii
verv much nf it ti,o ,. '.. . iiuir.isis might. While the Penta-i from the air. Thev eniov geo-
- - oui ci i-itii ui'iiiiif1 1 1 n , 1 1 v s:iv i no u-mi-m .... ... -
" , j ..... n alio COneiPSS SO I.'l 111 P over ni-mh'..;i uni tv nn.l m il l u hoc.
dllUUlCl .V r.VLTV OieCI On f .. .-n nl ntir n:itmn:i iti'lfittn nr.. . ...ILt...... ...I. .,!..
DnmarV fir Onnnral ...... , u-t..... . - A!..,..:. I. . i b""L ""'" "b"
..ivi toots inu .Mmuiu UI Mime, MirinKS lliai Kiani, imis .nuivc.y ui.scioses mat
otners. Who were the princiiial beneficiaries of the Oriinn ' o far behind the Comr
Two, as we study the now nearly complete returns, both
presently dwelling in Salem. They are (iovernor Elmo Smith,
a newcomer to the statewide ballot, and Stale Senator Mark
Hatfield, nominated for secretary of stale.
The governor's renomination was conceded when Congress
man Walter Norhlad withdrew his gubernatorial candidacy
auer nc naa tiled and no other leading Republican filed
against him. An Albany merchant, unknown outside his own
county, did file
nists that there is no comparison
As a result, and
offer has helped to emphasize the
point. " West's principal reliance
in any World War III must be
tactical nuclear weapons atomic
and hydrogen bombs, shells, ro
ckets and guided missiles. They
will have to make up for our weak
ness on the ground, for our woe
ful lack of trained manpower.
However the governor acted as if he had . 1 's. a.J""sp'
major opposition, probably looking ahead lo the fall campaign, j jn- ra!ili (lf Britain. France. Get
and visited most of the communities of Ihe state, making a: many. Italy, etc., inasmuch as
uniformly good personal impression as he did in handling they would be under retaliatory
me atlllCS OI nis oil ire. ; .mimic me
Smith's vote surprised everyone, lie won over his opponent
10 to one, which is remarkable. More remarkable was the
fact that he received almost as many votes as President Eisen
hower, his party's No. 1 ballot box performer, when Smith
had opposition and Eisenhower didn't. Furthermore he led
the field for convention delegate at large. He demonstrated
the hold on Ihe voters that wins elections.
Mark Hatfield won nomination by about 50.000 majority
and he received more than twice as many votes for convention
delegate from the first congressional district as the No. 2
Russia's Armed Strength
Russia is estimated to have at
least 4.000,000 men under arms
now. Her proposed cut of 1,200,
O't with Ihe recent reduction of
fi40.000 soldiers, would leave her
wilh slightly more than 2,000.000.
Our total will soon be down to
about 2,000.000.
Communist China, however, has
an army and trained reserve of
Deceptive Figures
n their public statements. Al
the Russian ; lied military men boast that the
democracies possess an over - all
force of about 200 divisions, or
between 4,000,000 and 5,000.000
men. Hut a factual breakdown re
veals that these figures are ex
tremely deceptive. They arc more
nominal than real. They present
an imposing but a flimsy military
facade.
General Alfred K. Gruenther, for
instance, has only about 10 full
divisions in his NATO command,
mostly American and British.
French troops may be pinned down
in North Africa for years. German
rearmament is at least three years
distant. The Japanese may not re
militarize at all.
man llilin nn I ha il.l.i.mnlnU n.nrnl ...on nhW L'lMrnn, nf 1.UUU..WII. I lie SilllMI Ill'S Can
oi in n- n m i . i . r' r. . ' . . mobilize at least another 2.000,-
odium. William w. (.iiauwicK, also oi aaicm, was ciose io000. 0n ,h(, lit,niy questionable
fiiiMiuin anu couiu overiasc mm.
Both of these men are newcomers to the statewide political
spotlight and both are young enough to stay in it for a good
many years. The primary election gave each a boost not
rivaled by anyone else on those long ballots in either party.
Two other Republicans gained increased stature in their
party, Phil Hitchcock for his clean campaign and his splendid
vote, which mark him as a man to be watched, who will win
nominations for major offices if be continues to seek them
and Robert T. Mautz, who was elected Republican national
committeeman in his first bid for elective office.
For the Democrats, Girard Davidson probably improved h
position the most in winning his party's national committee'
man post. Robert D. Holmes became a statewide figure for
the first time in winning the Democratic gubernatorial nom
ination, but he will be a long time overcoming the fact that
he barely beat a man who wasn't running. .lason I.ec of
Salem moved up a big notch in winning a congressional nomination.
g jnd that China and the puppet
untries are independent states,
Moscow pretends that she cannot
influence their military policies by
forcing them to curtail.
Reds' Military Advantages
In addition to this numerical
st. eriority, there are other equally
disturbing discrepancies. As
West Forces Scattered
The balance of the West's forces
are scattered all across the world,
and the reliability of many units
is dubious. They could not leave
their homelands defenseless for a
mobilization in Kurope, the Middle
East or the Ear East. In atomic
war, no land would be a sanctu
ary. Even if they could respond to
an overseas emergency, it would
bp a ragtail-bobtail, multilingual
and disunited collection drawn
from Korea, Turkey, Greece, the
British Commonwealth, the Philip
pines and other faraway places.
This analysis explains why the
United States cannot agree to Rus
sia's proposal, despite the adverse
psychological effect refusal may
ft c-iSfV SWfc.V
I
i
MANNINfr$
POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER
atfainst the short-term training of ; have on allies and neutrals.
I Steveiisoii'sPopularity Goes
Up to 41 Pet.; Kefauver Off
By GEORGE GALLUP
I Director, Aniurican Institute of Public Opinion)
Rubber Air Springs for Autos
From Akron, Ohio, the rubber capital, comes reports that
major lire companies are planning many new uses for rubber.
These include a smoother than ever aulo ride on rubber
springs by 1958 models, filled with compressed air, rubber
fuel lines, rubber gas tanks, moving rubber sidewalks, rub
berized roads, rubber raised crossings as well as rubber roll
ing tankers and rubber airplanes, carried in car truck and ' fauver a margin of only 6 per-
inflated w th a ire nunin. iKt. imis.
The Wall Street Journal says that many new products are
being designed by sales and research centers of the industry
to keep rubber company sales climbing, as the list of prod
ucts lengthens, the major rubber companies are leaning less
IMtlNCKTON, N. J.. May 19-1
The recent downward trend of
Adlai Stevenson's popularity has
come to a hnll and. in fact, has
been reversed in the latest Insti
tute test of candidate strength
among Democratic voters.
One month ago, the former Il
linois governor was the Number
One favorite of 3!) per cent of
Democrats, compared to .1,1 per
cent who favored Sen. Ksles Ke-
Today. I hat margin has widened.
I with, Stevenson's popularity climb
ing to 41 per cent, while hefntrver
has dropped back to 211 per cent.
However, Stevenson has some
on tire sales, though tires will remain the No. 1 product. The ( distance to go before he reaches
Journal adds:
"Take auto uses of rubber. A cutback in Detroit cuts over-all
rubber consumption, but the amount used per cor has kept on
climbing. Goodyear Tire and Kubber Co. engineers recently strip
ped a lf)5B Dodfie and counted 550 parts requiring 100 pounds of
rubber not including fi5 pounds in the tires. Non-tire rubber
use in autos has gone up steadily and now is three times what it
was 20 years ago, a Goodyear engineer estimates.
Major non-tire rubber products include chemicals and plas
tics, close chemical cousins of rubber processing. Rubber
companies, like other big chemical concerns, have developed
plastic films and sheeting for such products as packaging mate
rials, shower curtains and upholstery and industrial fabrics
In addition, their production of strictly rubber products has
been swinging steadily to non-lire items.
The suspension rubber air spring is already in use in many
buses and truck trailers. The "springs" use eight pounds of
rubber to each auto and are being produced for busses. Some
have been used on trailers since l!tr0. I
Patents on air springs are over a century old but not until
recently utilized, with a compressed air supply, small reservoir
tanks and rubber bellow containers.
Air springs absorb the driving shocks without passing them
on to the car body and keep the vehicle at the same height.
Air Is automatically metered into the rubber springs, through
self-regulating valves. Operation is quiet, maintenance easy.
Luxury cars will be Ihe first lo get them. (I. V,
Some Obstacles Slill Stand
his prc-Alinnesota primary popir
lanty.
Kefauver partisans can take
comfort in the fact that the sen
ator has widened his earlier lead
over Stevenson among Independ
ent voters and today runs ahead
of Stevenson by a margin of 3-to-2.
Gov. Avercll llarriman, who this
week became an active candidate
for the Democratic nomination,
runs third among Democratic
voters today with fi per cent.
Interviewing in the survey was
completed just prior to llarriman's
open bid for Western slate support
at Tody, Wyo. What el feet his an
nouncement will have on Demo
cratic candidate standings will be
measured in future Institute sur
veys.
All voters classified themselves
Democrats were banded a list
ot men who have been mentioned
as possible Democratic presiden
tial candidates, and asked:
"Which ONK would you like
to see nominated n the Demo
cratic ciimtUlntc for PresUlenl'."'
The trend of the vote among
Democrats since March of this
In a survey among Democratic
county chairmen, reported in
April, Stevenson came out on top
as the favorite of 29 per cent of
the county leaders, with Kefauver
polling 21 per cent, Symington 12
per cent and Harriman 8 per cent.
If the convention choice were
narrowed down to Stevenson arid
Kefauver, a majority of Demo
cratic voters today would favor
Stevenson. On the other hand, if
the choice were between Kefauver
and Harriman. the Tennessee sen
ator would have a 2-to-l advantage
over the New York governor, as
follows:
"Suppose the choice were nar
rowed down to Stevenson and
Kefauver. Which one would you
prefer to have the Democratic
convention selrcl?" (The same
question was asked concerning
Kefauver and Harriman.)
The vote:
STKVKNSOX or KKFAUVKR?
DEMOCRATIC VOTERS ONLY
Stevenson 55Co
Kefauver 38
No opinion . . 7
KKK.U VKR or HARRIMAN?
DEMOCRATIC VOTERS ONLY
Kefauver .. 57rfr
Harriman . 28
No opinion . . 15
Copyright, l!)."fi, American
Institute of Public Opinion
Mountaineer the Original U.S.
Praeticer of fDo It Yourself
By HAL BOYLE
HAWK, NC. Wi The moun
taineer is America's original do-it-yourself
fan.
He had to be. If he couldn't do
a thing for himself, there was no
one else lo do it for him.
The tradition that he can do any
thing he sets his mind to all alone
and by himself is slill bone-deep
in the southern highlander. whose
greatest pride is his rugged independence.
.Such a man is Kony M. Buenan-
here.
"My father and his father be
fore him was a mica miner," he
said. "Often they'd bring home
pretty pebbles they found in the
mines, and I loved lo study them."
lioby finished only the eighth
grade in school. At 15 he ran away
and lived three years in the west.
Then the memories of his native
mountains called him home to
stay.
He got a job in a grist mill.
an, the self-taught Tiffany of the Time often hung heavy on his
and look at it," he explained. He
has built up a personal collection
that would make the eyes of a
Texas multimillionaire's wife bug
out in emerald envy.
Roby lives simply in a neat
white cottage in the nearby hills,
and money doesn't ride his mind.
Two signs in his small worship
by a bubbling creek tell his philos
ophy. One sign says, "We lick rocks,
we buy rocks, we sell rocks, but
we don't throw rocks."
The other sign is a quotation:
"He who works with his hands
: is a laborer. He who works with
i his hands and his head, is an
! artisan. But he who works with
his hands, his head, and his heart
is an artist."
Few would deny that Roby Bu
chanan, mountaineer, is an artist.
Salem, Oregon, Monday, May 21, 1956
OPEN FORUM
' l r 11 n cause Sandblast was criticiied in
Non-Lawyer Count oe a our co,umns we publish hij reply.
Justice, Sandblast Sayi
To The Editor: Glad to Find Others
This is my answer i 'alttr J: , f ,0 Don't Like 3Iorse
Foster, George A. Khoten nnu
Philip Hayter who wrote a letter: To the Editor:
pnblished in your issue May 15. Thank you for your Saturday
They contend that Governor Elmo editorial's few words of recogni.
Smith cannot appoint from other !tjon t the few Democrats left in
than Ihe ranks of lawyers to the oregon. i was beginning to fear
Supreme Court of Oregon. They was the only one left so I take
are in error, and here are someigrrat hope from jour 80,000 esti-
legal reasons: I mate.
1 There is not a word in our j it has been with deep regret
state constitution that requires a! that I have watched the leader
justice of the Supreme Court to i ship and a great majority o' my
be a lawyer. party members take all of Nor-
2 In New Jersev all of the mem- man Thomas' platform, plank by
bers of the highest court have plank, but a the same time de
been 1-lawyers .prior to cl.ne to register as Socialists.
3 Section 2020 ORS definitely is! " "iit Morse-,
unconstnutiona if it prohibits the lot of us don't like h m. However.
Zemoro Oregon to appoint from ! have one advantage over the
governor oi Yri.uiiiu Ki- R b,lcans we get to
other ranks than lawyer an thlf i aginst Morse twice this year,
is based (0n the s mole fact that the r
constitution must ..".las to how we will vote this fall??
fnr Qiirh an act COUld POSSlbly De, .....xir . nT,,
consuiuuonai.
My reason for believing it would
give good balance to the Supreme
Court to have some appointments
made from other ranks than law
yers is that it would tend to give
us "common-sense justice" less
lonrfenrv to exercise trial jurisdic
tion. No provision is made in the
constitution requiring members of
the legislature to be lawyers, or
that United States senators, gover
nors, representatives or any other
official must be lawyers.
The only error made in my stale-1
ment in the Voters Pamphlet was
omission of time the New Jersey
constitution was amended, which
I looked up but too late to change
the statement therein.
As our constitution reads today,'
any person is qualified to seek i
election as a member ot tne
Supreme Court of Oregon if he has
the qualifications I set forth in
my statement in the Voters
Pamphlet.
L. B. SANDBLAST,
912 Loyalty Bldg.,
Portland.
(Editor's Note This letter ar
rived after election day but be-
615 N. 14th, Salem
WELCOME RELIEF
Sherman County Journal
Anyway that ends the candidates
for awhile.
ACCOUNTANT
Office Manager
Available
1 June 1956
Mfg. - Lumber - Construction
38 B. A. Business
Administration
F. C. McKenna
Box 2385
Portland 14, Ore. AV 6-1250
hills. All alone and by himself
he became the greatest jewel
craftsman of the Blue Ridge
Mountains. His gems are prized by
collectors from New York to' India.
During the summer about 1,000
visitors a month como to his rude
tar paper workshop shack it's
"20 miles up a dead-end road"
to wateh Roby cut and polish the
gem rocks he bulldozes himself out
of the hills.
It is a matter of complete indif
ference to Roby whether they buy
or not.
"I just like to have 'em conic
nere ana su ana uiik wniie i , (j0
worK. said ne. iioDy nas no trou
ble marketing the 500 to 600 rings,
bracelets, pins and brooches he
makes each year, all done by
hand, lie isn't interested in large
scale production.
"I'm not trying to run Tiffany or
any body else out of business,"
he said. "What I do is different
from what thev do."
bbl CORRKCTION
in 103 national make it read
Milwaukee 01 101 00031 0
hands, and he began studying "the
pretty rocks" again rough small
chunks of sapphire, moonstone,
amethyst, ruby, aquamarine, and
20 other kings of gems.
In his mind's eye he could see
Ihe imprisoned beauty glowing
deep within the rough stones
stones that had to be cut and pat
terned and polished to set the
hidden beany free. Roby made up
his mind he had to learn the art
Salem 47 Yrs. Ajjo
By BEN MAXWELL
May 21, JS09
Salem's mountain water commit
tee consisting of members of the
council had visited the Upper
Brietcnbush and Gold Creek mines
seeking a potential source of water
supply for the city. There they
of doing this or life wouldn't be:,ollna lnose so,lrcl-'s s0 Daal-V con"
right for him I taminated with copper solutions
"I wrote awav to 50 'jewelers in fr"m ,,hc mincs a,s lo make ,hem
big cities and a'sked them what to unf,t for .pal usage.
Roby recalled. "They Wrote A ranil.nl .Innrn.il ..rfilnriat hart
back that, considering where I j declared: "the people want a gov
was, I'd have to learn to do it crnr wn0 is not afraid to take a
on my own. legislature by the nape of the neck
Roby did. He was so ignorant! and shake it out of its boots."
at first that he tried "to lick the I
rocks." as he calls it, by holding Marion county court had granted
a stone on one hand while attemp- i a liquor license to James Sears of
ing to cut it with a chisel held in ! Gates to conduct a saloon in that
the other.
He read every book he could
find on the subject. He exper
imented with crude tools, home
town for a period of three months.
Cottage Underlining parlors, 293
North Cottage street, had adver-
made techniques. Now. after more ': Ust,,d a complete funeral including
Roby, whose keen blue eyes at
than 30 stubborn years, he is rec-
51 outmatch the faded blue of his ."; .
overalls, fell in love as a boy with! "c "as Pa,d, . rr , hc ''Is
"the pretty rocks" he found. There , vm "l -""'"l'
are ahout 30 varieties of stones
and minerals in the mountains
Armed Services Don't Want
To Go the Wav of the Horse
day he gets up to $2,300 for a
brooch. Sometimes, when he turns
out a fine stone that catches his
own eye, he refuses to sell it at
any price.
"I kinda like to keep it around
lots closer to enemy territory, than
casket, burial robe, use of hearse
and embalming for $35.
Columbia Iron & Wire Fence
works of Portland had contracted
for building a fine wire fence in
front of Oddfellows cemetery and
around the property of .1. A. Car
son on South V1" street.
Striking stut.i-.iis at Silverton
high school had returned to classes
when County School Superintendent
DKMOCKATU
The Salem City Council ami riMirini City Manager J. F
iranzen urn uicir uimosi ut near the way and K've a running .V(lt strvrnsnn
start to the new city manager who will take office July 1. -ywn Krianvrr
and clear his path of many obstacles in the fu st years of liis Avrrrll Harriman
administration. Hut the voters weren't as considerate, and in ii.minn Johnson
VOTKKS ONLY
TO- Ar. Mar.i
DAY l!t'fi IP.-ifi
alarm system.
This means that Kent Matbew son. the next city manager,
will have plenty of head scratching to do for some years as
he sets up the annual city budget and tries to make public
money meet public demands. Hut no doubt he and future
city councils will work out the hard way. just as has been i Speaker Sum R;yhurn of
done in the last 10 years. jCov
In the liiiht of rising costs of lands, building materials t "Kan
By JAMK.S MAKLOW
Associated Vrcss New s Analyst
WASHINGTON w What hap-1 tore war.
pened to the horse is what the J minimi from the contradictions
Army, Navy and Air Force don't 'among the armed services over
want to happen to them. They're the elfect of new weapons on. one
in a eat-atul-dng fight over the: another, there is some bewilder
roles they should play in a future 'ment among them too. It would
war. F.aeh wants to he bigger, j not be the first time it happened.
Hut the conflict between them' The horse, which had been the
noes deeper than sie or money: i Army's main reliance for making
they don't ayree on what a future fact progress, became obsolete
war will lu like or how it has lo only 16 years ago. And it took
he fouqht. It's plain they don't the German conquest of Europe
know, that they're guessing. to prove it.
Their dispute came to light over J The Army now seems to have
the weekend when documents pre- doubts about what the Air Force
pared inside the services were will do in a future war; the Air
made available to newsmen. This ( Force doesn't see much place for
broke into the open a fteht which 1 the Army: and the. Air Force
had been going on for years inside : thinks the Navy is getting too big
the Pentagon anyway. 'for its britches.
It nueht have been thought from I The Army arguments: Since the
V r e s i d e n t V.' u-nhower's state- I'nited Stales ai ( Russia are head-
. G. Menneu Williams of Mich- . , 1 1 i T 1 , f. ! .7
,,.. ,,,,, , force this country needed that the where neither will want to hit the
the Air Force bases scattered : S11"1
around the perimeter of Russia. I principal, W. L. Ray and ruled
This fight is just beginning, (aguiu.
OVER 100 PATTERNS.
TO CHOOSE FROM
AMERICA'S FINEST MANUFACTURERS
Register Your Own Pattern Now
REED & BARTON TOWLE GORHAM WALLACE
INTERNATIONAL FRANK SMITH HEIRLOOM
D-l-V-l-D-E-D Payments No interest or carrying
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(ft)
mm
STATE AND LIBERTY, SALEM PHONE 4-2224
REEB & BARTON
STERLING
j'-ffir Wt
Sluarl Syiuinxlnn
Ollirrn.
no preleri'llee
A' M' sr
19 3.1 IS
6 6 8
4 3 2
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2 2 1
12 II 14
I'nder "olhers'
lOir'r llUl'V ltltl'r
were liu luileil j
Texas. :
and nearly all other items, anil the i-erUin requirements of '"ls- -sen- lrry V. Hynl of ir-
of Kcnliuky.
KotmiytM- took the leail over Sle
vcuson aiHitnii lmlrpi'iiilent voters
tor the lust time ill the April sur
vey. The t'li'nt ot the Tennessee
si'n.ilor s ;ui ;iul;ii;e .imon&: Inilo
ni'tuU'iiis today is shown in the fol
lowing toltle:
I IMIKI'KNUKNT VOTKKS ONLY
TO- Apr. Mar.
DAY
K-f
a growing community, the city administrations program was
on the side of economy, anil an affirmative vote on those meas
ures would have been a vote for economy, notwithstanding
some Increase in taxes.
However, let's not gripe. The voters exercised their rii;lit.
and should be commended for approving measures for the
much needed water line, street widening and replacement of
obsolete bridges. These are immediate needs and the people
so recognized them.
military loaders wore in asrec- j other with hydrogen bombs since
ment. 'retaliation would wipe out the a?-
In his budget message to Con- cressor too then what place will
gross last January Kisenhower
said lie was einphasi.ini: "air
atomic power, winded missiles, re
search and development, conli-
the huce 'ons - ranye bombers
have'' Or will the wars of the fu
turebecause of a niuiear stale
mate ho small wars, like Korea.
A Smile or Two
Wall Street Journal
A man who had just bought a
lisht plne was giving his wife
hr first ride. "
"What I like about traveler this
way," he said, "is that nU Ihe
strain is gone. There't) a Tot nf
room once you set from the I Farmers nucht set mY.re gov
airports. ou don t have In worry Prnmr,it help if they could iffy
. about r'dejtrians. and there't no arrans to lyua n lcctfcl i
auehUlfcu a traffic jam." I year. O O 1
O0
"Also." he continued. "I don't' Krlauvrr
think 1 11 be troubled with backseat sirvrnsnn
driving up here." Lausehe
Peering through Ihe windshield. Hnrrimnn
his wife snapped, "Watch out for Douglas
those birds." I Symington
I KHyhurn .
AKUANf'.K THIS, PI.KASE j llvrd
Shrrnmn Pnulv JnitrnnT. Johnson
Hiltlanu
Others,
no prclertnct
. j:
O
13
nental detense" and a minimizing where the Army will have to do
ot 'numbers of men by maximum the main fighting" The Army ar
use of science ..." gument then requires a bigger, not
He has whittled down the si?e . a smaller, army,
of the Armv while letting the Air i The Air Korce plays down the
Force and Navv assume lamer I role of the Armv in the future
I9.6 1956 stature, the Navy through new ami blasts the Navy wilh its big
carriers and bombers. carriers and bombers. This argu-
.ov me Army challenges me mem goes: , ne carriers are sit
future role of the Air Force and ting ducks for enemy bombers
the Navy. The Air Force mini-, which can $pot them hundreds of
mizes the role of the Army and miles away with radar; Navy
swts at the Naipv, which swipes , bomhrs are far moi limit.! in
hack at the Ait Force. range lhn Air Force planes and
The public has been told the could reach o:0v a limited nunv
development of ntO wrftions is her of Soviet targets and then
fantastic t, for security asons. only if the carriers could get close
in.ji u can jpe loin mnyi awui cnovsn
thi As a resul' it is bewildered The Naw argument: Carrier?
lout tht DAtuiA and hap of fu-,can movt(6jund W morvnd
.14
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