Word: garrisons
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Cobb '31, who won the 1000-yard and the mile run to help the Crimson defeat Dartmouth and Cornell. Hockey was not so successful as the Crimson went down to defeat before Yale twice, while winning only once against the Blue. '31's brightest light on this team was Garrison, who alternated between first and second line center...
...Smith gave personal reasons, e.g., settling his mother's estate, for resigning. President Eisenhower named as Smith's successor Chicago-born Accountant Garrison Norton, 56, onetime (1947-49) Assistant Secretary of State, who has been serving as a consultant to Air Secretary Donald Quarles...
...intercontinental (5,000 miles) ballistics missile, is pushing its Atlas ICBM development program. But the Army argues that the ballistics missile is actually a sort of artillery shell, points to its own service mission of destroying enemy ground forces wherever they may be found-presumably including a Soviet garrison. On that basis the Army won authorization to work on Redstone, a 200-mile range missile, and with the Navy on Jupiter, an intermediate-range (1,500 miles) ballistics missile. The Army hopes that Jupiter, the IRBM, or Redstone can eventually be extended to ICBM range-a fact that...
...indicates a recognition that armaments are not the primary defense against Communism. The redefinition is a frank if belated acknowledgement that NATO can never hope to attain its original objective, to become a major deterrent force in Europe. It is a confession that NATO cannot be a military garrison which could contain and repel any sustained large-scale Soviet land attack Westward. No European army raised by the NATO countries within the limits of their economic and military capabilities could long stand up to an all-out Soviet march to the Channel...
William D. Garrison, William R. Cranik, Robert H. Hesse, Jae C. Park, Andrew L. Warshaw (captain and manager), Anthony D. H. Wilbur...