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PAGE SIX
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BIG GUNS OF THE “BIG MO,” shown here in action off Korez,
with conventional 16-inch shells, could be the means of firing the
newest atomic weapon—an A-shell for battleships.
Atom Shells Have Bean Developed
For Big Guns On U. . Battleships
_BY DOUGLAS LARSEN
NEA Staff Correspondent
WASHINGTON. — (NEA) — A
brand new type of A-bomb is be
ing added to America’s fast grow
ing arsenai of nuclear weapons.
It is an atomic shell which can
be fired from the big guns of bat
tleships.
“The development brings the
coast lines and key port cities of
every Communist country in the
world into easier range of Amer
ica’s atomic bombs in case of war.
The big advantage of the shell
THE SANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
over an A-bomb dropped by ajr
plane is the same as that of the
Army’s new atomic artillery, It
is far more accurate and can be
delivered toc an enemy in any
kind of weather.
The significance of this latest
development in nuclear weapons
is that it will give U. 8. forces a
100 percent potential in all
weather atomic strikes from air,
land and sea. .
Details of the battleship atomic
shell are tcp secret, as is the pro
gress of its development and test
ing. However, a Navy spokesnran
admits that it should be perfertly
obvious that with the Army’s an
nounced development of an
atomic shell for a fieid piece, the
Navy would be working on. stuch
a projectile for itis big gunsy
Ordnance experts agree the ac=
tual firing of an atomic shell from
a battleshib presents no more
technieal difficulties than the: fir
ing of one from an Army cannon.
The- Army’s atomic shell is a
little larger in diameter than 11
inches, The big guns of a baftle
ship fire a shell 16 inches in di
ameter. This actually made the
design of a., atomic shell for the
Navy easicr than the Army’s job.
The size of the Army’s shell
was limited by ordnance factors.
A shell much bigger than 11 in
ches would have required a can
non so large and heavy it codldn’t
have been easily transported, The
one the Army ordnance experts
came up with ean be moved at a
speed of 35-miles-per-hour along
ordinary highways. ;
With 16-inch guns already
mounted on battleships, it’s pos
sible that the Navy didn’'t even
have to design a basically new
shell casing.
Based on the smraller size of the
Army'’s shell, it is obvious that the
Navy ordnance people would have
little difficulty fitting the nuclear
charge into a shell with a much
larger diameter. It is also believed
likely that the Navy’s atomic shell
can be firea from the battleship
with no modifications to the tur
ret or to the gun itself.
That is, unless.the Navy will
seek to inzrease the range of its
16-inch gun drastically. It nor
mally fires its projectile about 20
miles, and with extreme accuracy.
Navy experts see many uses
for the new shell, ‘lt obviously
enhances the role of the battle
ship, which, since World War I,
has been fading in importance,
There are now four battleships in
‘commission, the Missouri, the New
Jersey, the lowa, and the Wiscon-
Sin.
Carrying atomic shells, and stra
tegically-placed around the world,
the big battie wagons would be a
constant threat to enemy shores
and ports if a war was declared,
Bad weather would never be a
deterrefmt to the battleship as it is
to airplanes. And ship shelling is
far more accurate than bombing
from a plane.
Other uses would be in the pre
invasion shelling for a Marine
amphibious operation, or against
enemy submarine pens.
A few atomic shells could ac
complish as much as mrany hours
of shelling by a avhole fleet with
ordinary I'NT, One atomic shell
in a submarine pen could wipe it
out or neutralize it.
There is a top secret stamp on
many other plans for the use of an
atomic sheil by a battleship.
While this development is being
rushed, the Navy is also busy
converting two cruisers for use as
guided missile ships and is work
ing on a program to fit atomic
warheads in those gulded missiles.
SWAN SONG
Meeting place of thousands of
swans is the ancient swannery at
Abbotsbury, off the cost of Dor
set, England, King Canute granted
the land in 1023,
a
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~ Old Doc Smithers always car<
ries an assortment of red, white
and black pills in his satchel.
He says he has to be ready to
humor patients who tell him
how much good one color or an- |
other did for somebody else.
To tell the truth, the pills are
all the same, but Doc meets all
emergencies. 7 . \ ® NEA
SOULPTOR DOES TMPOSSIB
VISALIA, Calif, (AP) — Bx
perts told Mrs. Mester Sibley it
was impossible to hand-seulpture
progelain figures, but they were
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w T Toa EELECTRIC
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} ks TR A
193 E. Clayton St.
@ little late with thelr advice—
E ?ho had &ud' made a hobby of
| it.
: Porcelain #¢ a little harder to
, | work with than eeramie clay, said
Murs. Sibley, because it dries out
faster and requires a higher tem
perature for baking. But she found
nothing impossible about hand-
TUESDAY, JULY 1, 1952,
sculpturing her beautiful figurines figurines.
Her pieces of porcelain '
sharper detail than oonml.” t.arill
also have a pleasing translyce:
appearance, ’
Phone 1696