Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 March 1951 — Page 6
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THURSDAY, MAR. 22, 1951 Ee | ATOTEM POLE OF BEAUTY v
Air-to-Air Missiles Have Terrific Power
Navy's Mighty Mouse
Highly Accurate
By MAX B. COOK
Seripps-Howard Aviation Editor
First of the operational air-to-Navy's
air rocket-missiles, the Mighty Mouse is rightly named.
For the new destroyer of enemy
planes is really a mouse in size, compared with the powerful misgiles the Armed Services now have under development and test. Some of the nation's best scientists and electronics experts now .are devoting full time to develop hypergonic speed missiles which can be guided accurately to a target whether it be close or thousands of miles distant, And the veil of secrecy. sur-. rounding this. project is almost as tight as that which kept the atom bomb a @ecret ‘until it was used. When. developed “and
both bombegs and -hghter
highly destructive warheads. Found Effective It is true that the Armed Servfces have been using air-to-ground "rockets for several vears. And they have been wreaking havoc against enemy forces in Korea. . The Mighty Mouse is a rocket- + missile and’ therefore the first of ' the operational missile group ; Hailed as the greatest’ aircraft armament development since World War II, the Mighty Mouse is fired from beneath the wings of a fighter plane, against enemy . bombers, possibly fighters. It is directed to its target by pointing the plane and its firepower is said to be much greater than the air-to-ground rockets now used. It is said to be effective at dis tances much greater than today’s ' rockets, ang! machine guns or ' 20° may;-cannon. THIF js. made
proved, |
..some of the missiles wit
| = Miss Martha Christian, of Lebanon, Purdue Relays Queen, bottom, reign over the ninth annual Boilermaker track classic at Lafayette Mar. 31. Members of her court, reading up, are: Joanne Bartlett, Springfield Gardens, N.Y.; Margaret Finley, Havertown, Pa.; Marilyn Lane, Chicago, and Patricia | Kreuser, South Bend.
will
Notre Dame Professor Named Prison Aid
tration at thé University of Notre Prof. Dame, has been appointed to the originals.
Times State Service
SOUTH BEND, Mar, .22
Hugh P. O'Brien, director of Cur- committee: nn personnel training minis- of American Prisons Association, ern Germany currency. ‘for
Titudam Jn Correctional Ad
COBURG,
eyes for toy dolls.
heightened until they
of the American zone.
“peninsula’ extending C‘ommunist - controlled Thuringia.
for various features.
house. hr !
city hall square was
‘ Nazi 'storm-troopers’
court: » cork A TROBE PEQESER Bie with its STETEr
now
Lies in Center Coburg lies at the center of a|
into
“sea” The city's surround-| however. At the toy show which
Unrelated as it may appear, _ sult of the plans of the peacemakers at Yalta and Potadam and the tyming which have made their Soviet's subsequént policy of isolating the eastern zone of Germany. | products much more acceptable. | ‘| The administrative boundaries ——————— set up at the end of the war to divide the responsibilities of the Allied armies have hardened and
cut
— THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES - : Germans Have Black Market in Doll Eyes °
By DAVID M. NICHOL
Germany, Mar. 22 (CDN)--This probably is the adult education program, only place in the world where there is a black market trade in has played a role.: Doll-makers,'
this curious traffic is the derect re- modern hair-styles and new cos-
; squarely across all the natural recovered much more slowly than supply routes and business con- { nections of this northern fringe
the
ing area is bordered along’three sides for a distance of about 40 miles by-Soviet-occupied territory.
It hag been notable in the past
Its grand
dukes have had close family connections with the . British royal Its ancient, cobble-stoned
the scene
riot.
munit
as long ago as 1922 of the. first
It
of |
boasted the first Nazi lord mayor; in (zermany, Franz Schwede, who ow is on trial before a loeal
y of
Neustadt long has been the cen-Jter-of#d prosperous and renowped doll manufacturing industry.’
Con What the peacemakers forgot
or overlooked when drawing boundaries is eves are made in-
that
they were
the
Sonneberg,
about 14 miles away as a courageous crow might fly, but in a dif: “ferent world so far as people are
* concerned. et lines,
Still Being Made
It lies within the Sovi-
Eyes still are being made in Sonneberg, for Hastern Germany
Fah industry, produced “in territory.
But a handful
SNe AE
possible through, its DEW ANOR Ol lS po RR RC al : > mn Fh in i AE BASE TAG il | ks . i unfold he rocket missile is @ : re Sage ; ’ ; fired and direct ‘it straight on its. won Mg RS tg 2 / - ; .
© course.
Using the fast Douglas Sky raider, the Navy has successfully completed many tests on the new rocket missile. Fired both singly and in galvos, it has proved highly accurate and*a powerful destructive force. : First air-to-air rockets were Aried out by the Nazis during World War 11 against Allied bomber formations. They proved ineffective and the percentage of hits: was very smAll. The air-to-ground rocket used in support of ground troops and for attacks on enemy tank# Installations ‘and troops, is very accurate Against stationary targets. It is ‘hot too effective against enemy , planes. The Mighty Mouse has more speed and flies in a straight line. Used against enemy bomber formations, it could create havoc, the Navy says. It will be used to arm inter- , ceptors and fighters augmenting the present machine guns. and cannon. While the Navy does not say so, it is highly probable that it may be thoroughly battle tested in Korea, especially if Ped bombers happen to show themselves south of the Manchurian border. “The ultimate in missiles, offi ‘ clals say, will be long and shortrange guided missiles—air-to-air, * ground-to-air and air-to-ground— which can be guided directly to targets through remote control. ————
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Measured by the carat, as jewels are, it isn't worth its weight in salt. So . . But measured by the ton, and burning fiery red in a steam boiler, it’s worth all the jewels in the
world a hundred times over!
Because coal generates the power that spins the wheels of Mid-American industry . . . it turns out the goods. . .
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Ninety-five years ago - this month the report of an Illinois Central geologist started Eastern business men talking about Mid-America as an industrial center. _
Today they're talking again. And today, more than ever before, they are seeing Mid-America as the land of renewed industrial and agricultural opportunity.
The Illinois Central today, as it has for 100 years, continues to work for the welfare of all those it serves, for the future of the Illinois Central is the future of MidAmerica.
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the)
ILLINOIS CENTRAL
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is trying to promote its own doll They also are being American-occupied
of Sonneberg ‘smuggled out in pocket, will get $4 or 85 in Westthe
4,
|
v
’
THURSDAY, MAR. 22, 1951
part of the American-supported also
for example, have been taught:
hardy border-crosser who wants’ The porcelain - manufacturing to take the risk. {village of Tettau, north and east! The doll industry and almost Of here. sometimes has been called
everything else in this fringe ar {the “richest village in Bavaria.” ying Be Area “It lies well within American:
did business in most other parts OcCuPled territory, yet it cannot
of Western Germany. Coburg and Pe reached by road or rail lines its neighbor Kronach, which suf- Which do not touch Soviet terri-
fered similar problems at one 'OFY at some point and are closed time, had. the highest unemploy- 8 2 result to Americans.
ment rate in Bavaria. ® * Td Family Favorite EEE. Smad ed-"y
Things are looking better now,
opened early this month in Neurnberg there were 77 firms represented from this region. American assistance has been a considerable factor in this recovery. Resident officers, like Hans P. Thomsen, Madison, Wis.. | are promoting community’ plan-| ning councils in. which the public| joing, a new concept in Germany The “People’s. High School.” 0
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