Word: united
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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While Harvard and most other colleges remained quiet, Amherst College yesterday declined the Air Force offer which would have allowed its AFROTC unit to remain. At the same time Amherst's President Charles W. Cole revealed here-to-fore unknown conditions which the college would have to accept in order to keep its unit...
Cole listed two reasons for his decision: 1) the Air Force unit would be allowed to remain only on a trial basis, and could be suspended again in a "year or two," and 2) a general lack of interest in the program itself. Cole said that a majority of Amherst students preferred to serve in the military forces under the draft. He added that he thought retaining the unit would be "neither fair to the Air Force nor the students here...
...trial basis under which a college would be allowed to retain its unit strengthened earlier reports that Harvard might not look with favor upon retaining the unit. An Administration official said yesterday that no decision has been reached. He explained that the University has not yet begun negotiations with the Air Force, but did not elaborate...
Today Gruenther proclaims proudly: "Our resources are from four to five times what they were in those dark days of 1951." There is a plan, and "each unit knows what to do." The call to Oslo takes three minutes and goes direct. NATO has spent $1.9 billion building miles of road, miles of pipelines, supply depots and bases. Greece, Turkey and West Germany have joined NATO's ranks. Gruenther even makes a virtue out of his frustrations, pointing out the democratic problems in allocating costs for such things as airfields. "What should Norway pay for an airfield in Turkey...
...action will affect some 47 sophomores and freshmen in the unit here who might not have been able to receive their commissions if the original order had been carried...