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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 14, 1963)
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He interrupted his father's reading of the evening newspaper. "Why bother me?" the father asked impatiently. "Why don't you ask your mother?" "Oh," the boy replied, "I don't want to know fAof much about it!" Dan Bennett A labor leader wag having trouble with his wife, and. he went to an old associate to tell him his troubles. The asso ciate listened to the whole story, then shook his head. "I'm sorry," he said, "but in this case, I simply have to agree with your wife." "Good heavens," cried the labor leader, "I never thought you'd go over to management!" James Shurluck An irascible citizen approached a young politician after a civic meeting. "You bright young college boys in politics make me sick," said the old curmudgeon. "Why, I wouldn't vote for you if you were St. Peter." "If I were St. Peter," the young politician replied po litely, "you wouldn't be in my district." Wilfred Beaver General Taylor ( Continued from page 5.) The General's day begins at 6:45 with calisthenics, then a hearty breakfast. "We limit ourselves to two big meals and a diet supplement we have to watch our weight," says Mrs. Taylor, whose "fighting weight" must hover at about 125 pounds. When Taylor arrives at his large, paneled Pentagon office at 8:15, a red light flashes in all offices of the Chair man's area. In effect, it tells staff officers: "Stand by the General may need you at any time." Overnight in telligence reports are on his desk for immediate study, and by 9:30 he is ready for a series of meetings. On a typical day, there probably will be project officers, laden with charts and graphs, reporting on anything from Polaris missiles to infantry weaponry, from airborne transportation to Army organization. Eventually, these subjects will be taken up by the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Other meetings may involve briefings on the defense bud get, France's reluctant role in NATO, and the effects of the Nassau agreement. These are problems which will be brought before Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara and the President. One of the big questions that arose when the West Point four-star General returned to Washington was how he would get along with "Mr. Facta" McNamara of Big Busi ness (see FAMILY WEEKLY, July 22, 1962) and the informal Harvard atmosphere of the New Frontier. "Sure, it was 'Hi, Max' right from the start at the White House," says an aide. "But the General can nu-tch classical (lawrcal "He saved his money and bought me out." references and politico-economic philosophies with Mc George Bundy right down the line, so that 'Hi, Max' had all the respect of a military 'Yes, sir.' And when he went out to Bobby Kennedy's for a weekend and gave them a tough time in tennis doubles well, that did it!" With McNamara, an outstanding relationship between soldier and civilian boss has developed. "They think alike," says an aide. "They store up facts like a computer and re call them almost as fast. Neither likes to be a 'captive of his briefer' that is, to rely only on what an expert or a committee tells him. Each must know everything himself." Lunch is light and preordered, and the General is back in his office in 30 minutes. He locks his door for a 20-minute nap, then has conferences until 6 or 7. During good weath er, he may take an evening hour for tennis with an aide, then he is driven home with a brief case full of work. AT home, the General sometimes greets Mrs. Taylor l with: "It was another ulcer day," but that's as far as he goes with Pentagon affairs. ("I find," he explains, "that the women already know everything important.") The couple's deepest regret is that they rarely see their family: two grandchildren are in Bangkok with son Jack, and Tom is an officer in Germany with the Special Forces. Part of the General's daily routine is a brisk walk through Arlington National Cemetery every morning. He passes the gravestones of Civil War dead, and a link is established with the cavalry stories of Jeb Stuart spun by his grand father. Then he steps into a world of missiles and nuclear weapons. Yet there is always that bridge established be tween boy and grandfather, and it is summed up in words of Robert E. Lee, which Taylor frequently recalls: "Do your duty in all things. You cannot do more; you should never wish to do less." Ati'iii . Tamil W !. April 14, 1963