Word: poseidons
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When news of the tentative decision leaked last month, it seemed a great victory for the State Department and arms-control advocates. To stay within the missile limits set by the unratified SALT II accord, President Reagan had agreed to dismantle two aging Poseidon submarines when a new Trident sub is launched this month. The complex compromise, reached at a secret National Security Council meeting, seemed to have something for each of the warring factions in the Administration: though it preserved SALT II for the moment, it also accelerated work on the small mobile missile known as the Midgetman...
...coming next month, when another U.S. submarine equipped to fire Trident II nuclear missiles puts to sea. To stay within the ceilings imposed by the SALT II treaty, which both sides are observing even though it has never been ratified, the U.S. would have to dismantle two older Poseidon submarines the moment the Trident begins sea trials. The Pentagon, contending that the Soviets have already violated the treaty, argues that the Poseidon subs instead should be dry-docked so that they could be quickly returned to sea. Opponents contend that such an outright breach of SALT II would be supremely...
...When the Navy begins sea trials of the U.S.S. Alaska Trident submarine in September, the U.S. will have 14 more than the 1,200 multiwarhead land- and sea-based missiles each side is permitted. To stay within the limit, it must either retire and disable an older 16-missile Poseidon sub or destroy at least 14 Minuteman land missiles. Hard-liners argued against taking either course; they wanted the U.S. to exceed the limit deliberately. Reagan chose a halfway measure: mothballing or converting a Poseidon rather than cutting it up as the treaty requires...
...would be the first to ban existing companies. Charles Stark Drapen Laboratories, located in Tech Square, has contracts with the Department of Defense totaling $140,000 and the firm's officials have said that 85 percent of Draper's work including development of guidance systems for the MX and Poseidon missiles-would be outlawed...
Mazzei, a former managing editor of Gentlemen's Quarterly, concurs: "Many people under 35 do not know how to behave in the business world." His answer to that problem is The New Office Etiquette (Poseidon Press; $13.95), which has been selling briskly since publication last month...