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As soon as Congress adjourns, Malin Craig will gladly surrender to George Marshall the responsibility for an Army which he has ably prepared to be the biggest in peacetime U. S. history. The new Army necessarily must give more relative importance than did the old to the ever-expanding Air Corps (see col. 3). But Army men do not doubt that air-minded Infantryman Marshall will get along well with the Air Corps chief, Major General Henry H. Arnold.
Buttressed by his new prestige, able George Marshall will turn diplomatist shortly. He is soon going to South America, where uniforms and titles are esteemed, to further military cooperation with the Brazilian Army, whose Chief of Staff he may invite to Washington.
