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Might. In New London, Conn., before the graduating class of the Coast Guard Academy, he was the tough-talking Commander in Chief. The U.S., he said, possesses a military power against which "the combined destructive power of every battle ever fought by man is like a firecracker thrown against the sun. We have now more than 1,000 fully armed ICBMs and Polaris missiles ready for retaliation. The Soviet Union has far fewer and none ready to be launched beneath the seas. We have more than 1,100 strategic bombers, many of which are equipped with air-to-surface...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Presidency: That's Quite a Platform | 6/12/1964 | See Source »

Peace. A few hours later, at a nuclear submarine keel-laying in nearby Groton. Conn., Johnson was the Great Peace Seeker, warning against the rash use of military might. In an obvious crack at his probable November opponent, Barry Goldwater, Johnson said: "Those who would answer every problem with nuclear weapons display not bravery but bravado, not wisdom but a wanton disregard for the survival of the world and the future of the race...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Presidency: That's Quite a Platform | 6/12/1964 | See Source »

...Aluminaut, probably the biggest research submarine under construction, is now being built for Reynolds Metals Co. by the Electric Boat Division of General Dynamics at Groton, Conn. It will be 50 ft. long and made mostly of 6½-in.-thick aluminum. To be launched this summer, it is expected to cruise comfortably three miles down and can stay submerged three days with a crew of three...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Oceanography: Deep-Down Submarines | 6/5/1964 | See Source »

...next five years, and in Washington the company was awarded a $237 million contract to build the Centaur mooncraft. In Quincy, Mass., it laid the keel for the first vessel-an attack submarine-that it will build in the shipyard it bought last January from Bethlehem Steel. In Groton, Conn., General Dynamics launched its first civilian submarine, a research sub for the University of Pennsylvania. It also broke ground for a lime-processing plant in Detroit and delivered a 160-passenger CL-44 turboprop plane to Icelandic Airlines. Altogether, General Dynamics has rebounded from a 1961 loss of $143 million...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Corporations: The Rescue | 6/5/1964 | See Source »

Anderson (N.Mex.) McGovern (S.Dak.) Bartlett (Alaska) Mclntyre (N.H.) Bayh (Ind.) McNamara (Mich.) Brewster (Md.) Magnuson (Wash.) Burdick (N.Dak.) Mansfield (Mont.) Church (Idaho) Metcalf (Mont.) Clark (Pa.) Monroney (Okla.) Dodd (Conn.) Morse (Ore.) Douglas (III.) Moss (Utah) Engle (Calif.) Muskie (Me.) Gruening (Alaska) Nelson (Wis.) Hart (Mich.) Neuberger (Ore.) Hartke (Ind.) Pastore (R.I.) Humphrey (Minn.) Pell (R.I.) Inouye (Hawaii) Proxmire (Wis.) Jackson (Wash.) Randolph (W.Va.) Kennedy (Mass.) Ribicoff (Conn.) Lausche (Ohio) Symington (Mo.) E. V. Long (Mo.) H. A. Williams (N.J.) McCarthy (Minn.) S. M. Young (Ohio) McGee...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: CLOTURE ROLL CALL | 6/5/1964 | See Source »

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