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Thursday, March 23, 1967 Griffin Daily News
JS
WASHINGTON (NEA)
To listen to some of our public figures, the moment is
nearly at hand to turn over to the nation’s swelling numbers
of young people the control of the universities, the economy,
and the government.
The young ones themselves are loudly asserting either their
daims to such, leadership or their total disdain for U.S.
society ingand on self-devouring. the ground it is hopelessly false, corrupt, unfeel*
The bedazzling statistic which underlies this considerable
ferment is.bounced off the wall by educators, politicians and
others with almost hypnotic regularity—soon the people who
are 25 years old and under will amount to half our grand
total of 200 million-plus.
Americans generally, captivated always by a national myth*
ology which ascribes to young folk a magic cluster of virtues,
youthful seem at times numbers. thoroughly intimidated by the sheer force of
that Yet, some citizens of consequence are daring to remind
more than half the U.S. population is still over 25, that
people have are living longer than ever, that some of them may
some talent and even a little feeling.
Author Barbara Tuchman, talking hot long ago to educa*
tors in Chicago, said of the time-tested American adult:
“If at 50 he does not believe that he has acquired more
wisdom and informed experience than is possessed by the
student at 20, then he is saying in effect that education has
been a failure.”
Admittedly, vastly better in some fields of schooling, the young of today
are few prepared than were their counterparts of
even a years ago.
But evidence of this sort is not generally overwhelming.
Surveys often have shown that students’ grasp of history,
politics Many and economics can be very spotty.
tend define today exhibit a commendable urge to be active but
to activism narrowly in terms of protest. Picket*
ing, sitting-in, “confronting” public figures like Defense Sec*
retary McNamara and Vice President Humphrey are among
their favored pursuits.
something Again, author Tuchman suggests that useful activism is
more—“The courage to be independent and stand
u^> for the standard of values one believes in.” She added in
“I lon’t mean the eourage to protest... or boo Secretary
McNamara which, though it may stem from the right instinct,
is a group thing that does not require very stout spirit..
If protest is not a sufficient response to the ills of war and
poverty, then neither is the inward-turning represented by
youthful flights into the fantasy-world of LSD.
Those who seek such total alienation from U.S. society
think they are investing themselves with a kind of nobility,
since system” they believe they are rejecting contamination by the
But they despise.
they they are eating off the system, living on a pass, while
tell themselves meanwhile that their idealistic purity is
unsullied. They are complaining but leaving to others the
hard work that flows from justifiable complaint.
WASHINGTON (NEA)
Red China’s nudear program -will be set back by the
political turmoil of the past year.
be Peiping’s startlingly technical successful development of few nuclear weaponry may
in the next years despite these
difficulties. But her strife-aggravated economic-political*
educational problems will be 8 serious drag on actual produc*
tion for years in the future.
Communist China has poured sizable amounts of her scarce
funds into a complex of nuclear research institutes, ore
refining and gaseous diffusion plants at Lanchow and in her
Lop Nor testing grounds.
Red China has a group of topflight nuclear and missile
scientists. She has concentrated the best of these at Lanchow
and at other research and development sites associated with
her .priority military nuclear program.
materials Peiping and has money invested into a the great exploration deal of skilled for uranium manpower,
She has concentrated ore.
geologists in this effort. a good part of her scarce first-rate
The Red leaders have been making plans for another com*
plex Lop of nuclear plants near Tsinghai Lake between Lanchow
and Nor. They have put a premium on training younger
nuclear scientists and missile men.
The mainland Chinese have had some highly successful
tests to date. But they have run into serious difficulties.
Peiping’s known uranium ore supplies are limited. They
are potential low grade. Present production is low and the production
not promising. Mining and processing these low*
grade ores is extremely expensive.
thin Despite backup. the small body of topflight scientists, Red China is
in She doesn’t have the necessary numbers of
scientists and technical men to divert to the nuclear produc
tion program without further upsetting her unsteady eco*
nomic development.
The disruption of Communist China’s colleges and scientist
associations as a result of the current political warfare has
spread to the nuclear research institutes. Certain reports
from Red China indicate some rugged infighting between the
pmy and civilian organizations over their control. A
lengthy fight continues over control of uranium prospecting.
Red China’s Western-trained scientists have been under
considerable suspicion.
China, Regardless of how the current struggle wifi for power in Red
turns out, its repercussions continue' to gum up
nuclear production prospects for some time to come.
. Atomic missile weapon output depends on smooth co
ordination between the nuclear scientists and the producers
of precision components and complicated priority schedules
for scare materials.
With politics taking precedence and with serious infighting
likely for several years to come, the technical-industrial net
work necessary for the building of a nuclear warhead and
missile delivery stockpile will be slow in developing.
CORRECTION
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18
* WASHINGTON COLUMN *
Despite Revolt, It's Not
A Young Man's World Yet
Bv BRUCE BIOSSAT
Newspaper Washington Correspondent
Enterprise Assn.
■
★ WASHINGTON COLUMN *
China Infighting Gums Up
Nuclear Weapon Output
By RAY CROMLEY
Newspaper Washington Enterprise Correspondent Assn.