Word: wars
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...atomic blitz, and an inadequate weapon-the Air Force's six-engined B-36 bomber. Said Radford: "The B-36 has become, in the minds of the American people, a symbol of a theory of warfare-the atomic blitz-which promises them a cheap and easy victory if war should come...
Then Radford moved in to attack the whole theory of "atomic annihilation." Even if it could bring victory, which he doubted, "a war of annihilation would be politically and economically senseless . . . [and] morally reprehensible." Said Radford: "This basic difference of military opinion concerning the bombing blitz has been at the root of our principal troubles in unification...
...instruments. Of course they also had no uniforms, no music and, since the officers were all undergraduates, they had no records and didn't know anyone who could help them. There were, however, a few recordings lying down in Paino music building--they had been made before the war...
After the 18-year lapse, the two teams resumed relations. West Point now had for a superintendent one Douglas MacArthur, whose theory that "wars are won on the fields of friendly rivairy" won one war and 11 Army-Harvard football games...
...been all of 30 years since the first notice appeared calling on instrumentalists to try out for "a band to play at football games." It was the fall of 1919--one year after the first war to end all wars. They played--45 men--most of them former army bandsmen. They sat right where the band will sit today, section 35. There's no record of how well they played, but perhaps that's all the better...