Word: polarises
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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If it should ever come to nuclear retaliation, the U.S. has to be sure that the right targets are chosen in advance, that each target is assigned to some bomber or missile force, and that striking power is not wasted through duplication. As long as the Strategic Air Command held...
College News Conference (ABC, 1-1:30 p.m.). Rear Admiral William Raborn Jr., the Polaris pioneer, faces the undergraduates and Moderator Ruth Hagy.
The new plans-first sketched out in Ike's message to Congress and detailed later on by Defense Secretary Thomas Gates-called for spending about $476 million more, $150 million of it in fiscal 1961 (ending next June 30). The money will be distributed among a variety of projects...
To many a company such sweeping write-offs would be fatal, would send the stock skittering down. But Bob Gross guessed that he could get away with it, timed the announcement to follow the successful launching from a submarine of the Lockheed-manufactured Polaris missile.
The Polaris, which accounts for a big share of Lockheed's $1.1 billion backlog, is also being talked about as a possible NATO weapon because it is so versatile, can be fired as easily from railroad cars or barges as from submarines.