Page Two - THE BATTALION, College Station (Aggieland), Texas, Saturday, April 26, 1947: The Shultz Letter... Since the storm in Austin over the Shultz letter, many people have asked the Batt, “What is the Shultz letter?” That letter, which was circulated early in February and print ed in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, was similar in many re spects to the prepared statement read by Dr. Walton at the investigation recently. The letter was sent to a number of newspapers in the state, but was considered libelous by most of them, (as it unquestionably was, under Texas or other state laws). The Star-Telegram, however, did print it. At the top of the let ter, as read at the investigation last week, were the words, “verified and supported by the senior class” and at the bot tom “written by Delbert V. Shultz, ’46.” On the witness stand in Austin last week, Shultz testi fied that he wrote the letter after an interview with Dr. Wal ton, who gave him the information on which three of the seven charges were, based. The letter was read to the sen ior class at a meeting before being mailed to the newspapers, according to Shultz, who was no longer a student but was on the campus at the time. (This was during the period when the cadet officers were holding out.) Apparently, this letter was not circulated on the cam pus. Later, during the fuss over Brandt and Nelson, another letter was drawn up and published in the name of the senior class, similar only in one point to the Shultz letter. Charges of suppression of news were made against some of the newspapers for not printing the letter, by students who apparently do not understand libel laws. Charges of a criminal nature, or that tend to defame, are not publishable in a newspaper unless the charges are made in court or before an investigating committee, legis lative body or church court. The fact that a letter or state ment is signed by someone else does not relieve the news paper of libel. Sometimes newspapers take a chance, but it is a dan gerous proceeding. The paper can be sued, the editor and publisher can be arrested. On the Battalion, for instance, Allen Self and Vick Lindley can be held personally respon sible in court of law for any libel printed, whether attributed to someone else or not. If the person quoted denies that he was quoted correctly, the editors are left holding the bag. Which is one reason why editors get wrinkled so young. ‘Something Galled Fission’. In August, 1945, the press suddenly became very in terested, indeed, in the atom. But it cannot be said that its interest has contributed very much to general enlightenment. With few exceptions, newspapers fumbled the atom badly. They were unprepared, for the most part, to satisfy the im mense public curiosity aroused by the Bomb. A measure of the newspapers’ failure is the fact that all over the coun try, clubs and groups of people, failing to find adequate ex planations in the papers, besought scientists and even pseudo experts to come and explain to them the elementary facts about atoms and the Bomb. Nor can it be said that newspapers have been helpful in guidance on what to do about the Bomb. Most people clung to blind belief that the scientists would somehow find a de fense against it, in spite of the scientists’ attempts (ill-sup ported by the press) to assure them to the contrary. The press nudged false hope along by printing silly little stories, like the one that Bing Crosby’s brother had discovered a way to stop the Bomb. And newspapers, particularly Hearst’s, have done much to foster the illusion of safety in secrecy— “We must not give away the secret!” The press could have rendered the American people a great service by killing this idiotic notion, which has obsessed and be-deviled Congress’ entire approach to the problem. It has been clear to scien tists all along, and they said it again and again, that the Bomb could not long remain a secret; U.S. insistence on re taining exclusive possession of the secret (and continued manufacture of the bombs) could have only one result: to stimulate other countries to arm themselves with atomic ■weapons of their own. Of matters scientific, the American people are appal lingly ignorant. The press is not entirely to blame for this (incredible as it may seem, in view of all the press and radio attention to the Bikini bomb tests, a 1946 poll showed that 20% of the people had never heard of the events at Bikini). If the Bikini bomb tests were intended to contribute to public enlightenment, the press certainly muffed the ball. Hundreds of reporters covered the event, but most of them seemed to have no idea of what happened, except that there was a big, beautiful explosion. The failure of their stories to agree, or to present an informative account, is understan dable, since many of the reporters, to make sure of meeting deadlines, wrote their stories before the explosions actually took place. After the big flash, newspapers quickly lost interest; few bothered to follow up to find out what, if any, scientific findings developed from the test. Like atomic energy, radar dazzled, mystified and then soon wearied the press. After the first dramatic descriptions of radar’s accomplishments as a military weapon, the papers dropped it, and radar’s application to improving the safety of commercial aviation, due to lack of public drive, was de layed. Science, in the social as well as the physical realm, is important to a modern democracy, for democracy rests, at bottom, on scientific method. It functions best in a climate of public respect for facts and for expertness. Moreover, science is a universal, unifying language; like music, it makes the whole world kin. Its most momentous achievement, the atomic bomb, was the joint product of Austrian, German, Italian, Danish, British, French and American scientists. The -world-wide fraternity of science gives us an internation al bond which the press is bound to develop and safeguard. Freedom of science and freedom of the press are two sides of the same coin. —The Nieman Reports. The Battalion The Battalion, official newspaper of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas and the City of College Station, is published tri-weekly and circulated on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday afternoons. Member PHsocioted Gr>lle6iate Press Entered as second-class matter at Post Office at College Station, (Aggieland), Texas, under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1870. Subscription rate 4.00 per school year. Advertising rates on request. Represented nationally by National Advertising Service, Inc., at New York City Chicago, Los Angeles and San Francisco. Allen Self Vick Lindley Charles E. Murray J. K. B. Nelson David M. Seligman Paul Martin Corps Editor — Veteran Editor Tuesday Associate Editor Thursday Associate Editor Saturday Associate Editor . .— .......—.... ... Sports Editor Larry Goodwyn, Andy Matula, Jack Goodloe, Dick Baker, Earl Grant Sports Writers Wendell McClure Advertising Manager D. W. Springer Circulation Manager Ferd B. English, Franklin Cleland, William Miller, Doyle Duncan, Ben Schrader, Wm. K. Colville, Walter Lowe, Jr., Lester B. Gray, Jr., Carl C. Krueger, Jr., Mack T. Nolen Reporters In the Pacific . . . U S Looks To 623 Former Jap Mandatedlsles By A. D. Bruce, Jr. Saipan, Tinian, Kwajalein, and Truk, on which many A.&M. vet erans fought, plus hundreds of other islands of wartime interest, constitute an inheritance of former Japanese-mandated areas which gives the U.S. a Pacific “enpire”. The Marshalls, the Carolines and Marianas, which Japan had held un der mandate of the League of Nat ions, comprise 623 islands and thousands of islets, and cover near ly 3,000,000 square miles of water just north of the equator, an area about as large as the continental U.S. itself. But their total land area is only 829 square miles, twice the size of Los Angeles. Their population of 85,000 is less than half that of Miami, Fla. The island inheritance, however, is important for other reasons. PEOPLE added to U.S. responsi bilities are largely a race of brown skinned, friendly folk, who are skill ed at wood carving and fishing, but little else. They need aid to im prove their economic and health conditions. Teachers, doctors, and administrators should be sent to help rehabilitate the natives from effects of the war and prolonged Japanese rule. RESOURCES of the islands are minor. They are limited largely to phosphorous ores in the form of guano, to cocanuts and copra. Fish are plentiful and a fish-drying in dustry was developed there by the Japanese before the war, but offici als doubt that it will be revived. Actually, in most of the island groups food is plentiful and the in centive for work is missing. More over, the soil on most of the is lands is unsuited for anything ex cept cocoanut palms and a few shrubs. STRATEGIC IMPORTANCE of of the islands is limited now and the Navy’s plan to invest $1,000,000, 000 in a network of bases there has been abandoned. Prospects are that Tinian, Saipan, and Kwajalein will be made into permanent bases, the first two as auxiliaries to a major naval base at Guam, and with Kwajalein primarily as an air base. Truk is likely to be kept solely as a service recreational center. From a military viewpoint the importan ce of U.S. possession of these is lands is largely in keeping other nations from gaining a foothold within the Hawaii-Guam-Alaska defense triangle. AIR-LINE SIGNIFICANCE of Texas City Rates Next to 1865 Blast in Major US Blow-Ups is great. Here, U.S. possession means that a network of commer cial airfields can cover the broad est expanse of ocean between this country and Asia. It means that the U.S. will be linked closely in peacetime with the Philippines, with China and Japan, and with Australia and the East Indies. This is likely to bring more trade and closer economic ties with those areas. VACATION LANDS also are subject to development in the tropi cal island groups. However, it will take considerable time to convince many Pacific veterans that any of these islands might make a suit able resort spot. ADMINISTRATION presents a big question. The Navy is govern ing all the islands at present. The Interior Department, which runs Alaska, believes that it can do a more efficient job. A new agency to run all U.S. territory in the Pacific from headquarters in Hawaii has been suggested to Con gress. ★ Island by island, the major real estate now coming under perman ent U.S. control through this Pacif ic inheritance presents the follow ing picture: TRUK is a circular atoll that could safely berth all the world’s navies at one time. It has a native population of 9,000 and now is be ing cleaned up by former Japanese soldiers who outnumber the 2,000 U. S. Marines stationed there. There are potentially good, though now bombed-out, airfields on three islands in the atoll, an excellent harbor, a few Quonset huts and large numbers of thatched-roof houses among the palm trees, and extensive fortifications on all the islands in the Truk group. SAIPAN is a single island 13 miles long and 5 miles wide. It has a vast airfield, once used for B-29 attacks on Tokyo, a good harbor, and a population of 20,000 mostly Japanese. Sugar and fish ing industries had been developed here before the war, but now are virtually stopped. Most of the nat ives have become either farmers or fishermen, TINIAN, separated from Saipan by only three miles of water, is a slightly larger island and retains a small garrison of U. S. troops and a few bombers still used for training. YAP, in the western Carolines, was important as a cable station before the war and may return to that status. It is a group of four is lands connected by bridges, the islands are covered with dense jungles and a network of paved roads. An American camp oper ates around an ancient Spanish citadel on the largest island. KWAJALEIN, now a full- fledged U.S. air base, has no nat ive population and its vegetation consists mostly of four imported palm trees. It is only six feet above sea level at its highest point. But its position makes it invaluable as a military and com- Why ammonium nitrate explodes violently as it did in the Texas City ship, yet won’t explode when hammered or penetrated with high-powered’rifle bullets, still re mains a chemical mystery, un solved after decades of investiga tion. ‘Good Will Week’ Between Us-Canada “Friendship of the United Stat es and Canada serves to strength en the hope that all nations every where may come to enjoy the benefits of a similar understand ing with one another”, said Trygve Lie, secretary general of the United Nations, in connection with the U.S.—Canada Good Will Week sponsored annually by Ki- wanis International and scheduled this year for April 27-May 3. Close and cordial understand ing between neighbors can lead to development of similar feel ing around the globe, Lie said. The fact that the governments and the peoples of the two nations have found it possible and mutual ly advantageous to live side by side in harmony over a period of many generations, serves to strengthen the hope that all nat ions, everywhere, may come to enjoy the benefits of a similar understanding of each other, he added. Kiwanis International, which embraces 2,600 clubs and more than 174,000 members in the U.S., Alaska and Canada, long has pro claimed the friendship of this country and its neighbor to the north as an outstanding example of international good will, accord ing to Joe Sorrells, president of the College Station Kiwanis Club. During the week, April 27-May 3, many clubs in the two countries will interchange speakers. by Richard Alterman + When the French freighter Grand Camp, loaded with a cargo of ammonium nitrate exploded at Texas City last week, a series of blasts that resounded throughout the nation was started. By the time the explosions had ended and the fires put out, over 575 had been killed, 3,000 had been injured, and a property damage of about $50,000,000 had been recorded. Never since August 24, 1865 had such a great loss of life in an ex plosion occurred. When the ship Sultana, carrying exchanged Union prisoners of war, was destroyed-*—— — seven mHes north of Memphis, KiwanianS SnOUSOT 1,405 lives were lost. This explos- x ion was the worst ever recorded in the history of the United States. Until the Texas City disaster, the second worst explosion in this country occurred at Port Chica go, California on July 17, 1944. A total of 322 lives were lost when the navy munitions depot there went up in smoke. Following close behind this in number of lives lost is another Texas explosion—the New London school blast—of which most of us probably remember reading. When a boiler in the school’s basement blew up on March 18, 1937, 294 children were killed. On May 8, 1918, more than 200 persons were killed in a blast at the Aetna Chemical Company plant near Pittsburg. An explosion and fire on October 21, 1944, at the East Ohio Gas Company in Cleve land killed at least 135 persons. Just this year on March 25, a mine explosion at Centralia, Illi nois took the lives of 111 miners. And when the destroyer Turner exploded in New York Bay on Jan uary 3, 1944, more than 100 per sons lost their lives. On May 15, 1929, 100 persons were killed in a Cleveland hospital clinic when X-ray film exploded, filling the building with gas. Lightning striking a naval am munition depot at Lake Denmark, New Jersey on July 10, 1926, killed 21 men and inflicted damage amounting, to $50,000,000. When a perclorate bath at an electro-plating company in Los Angeles blew up on February 20 of this year, 15 persons were killed and $1,500,000 worth of damage was done. In the past 30 years, major ex plosion disasters have killed more than 2,100 persons. Of this num ber more than 700 have been killed in 1947. PENNY’S SERENADE W. L. Penberthy The chemical villain in the Texas City disaster, a harmless-looking die, a hundred million pounds are manufactured each year for fertili zer or explosives use. Only infrequently does ammon ium nitrate go off with great vi olence, as it did at Texas City and as it did at Oppau, Germany in 1926. As a leading explosives expert put it: “When ammonium nitrate explodes, it is always mysterious.” ‘Wholesale’ Items Bring Up to $500 The National Association of Wholesalers has announced a $1,500 prize contest for outstand ing articles on wholesaling gener ally, or any major aspects of wholesaling. A first prize of $500 and twenty-three additional prizes will be awarded after the closing of the contest October 30. Recently, President Kolodony, president of the association, stated, “We are especially interested in attracting the students in our col leges to the opportunities for a successful career in the wholesale trades. We hope many of them will enter this competition and that this study of distribution will de velop a lasting interest in this field.” The contest is open to anyone except members of the Association, their families, and employees. Man uscripts should be about 5,000 words in length. Rules of the con test can be obtained from Ches ter C. Kelsey, Executive Vice-Pres- i d e n t, National Association of Wholesalers, 200 Fifth Avenue, New York 10, New York. Ag* Grads Can Meet Extension Service Agent for Work The Agronomy Society extends an invitation for all seniors in the field of agriculture to attend a meeting in the Animal Industry Lecture Room April 29 at 7:30 p.m. Joe H. Matthews, extension per sonnel supervisor, has arranged for all of the district Extension Serv ice agents to be present at this meeting to meet graduating seniors discuss' possibilities of employ ment in their districts. This meeting is to be informal and refreshments will be served. Openings in the Extension Service will be discussed and students will be given an opportunity to meet men with whom they will be work ing if they intend to go into this type of work. Department heads and club pres idents in the School of Agriculture are urged to contact graduating seniors in their departments and arrange for a representative group to be present. The Extension Serv ice is interested in all fields of study and men interested are urged to be present. Penny I got a kick out of “The Neighs Have It” which appears in the cur rent issue of the Reader’s Digest. This is a sym- posium on “Horse Sense — If Any” which appear ed in the Feb ruary edition. I did not read “Horse, Sense —If Any” but it appears that the author did not give hor ses credit for having the a- m o ufo t off sense accredit ed to them. The “Neighs Have It” is a collection of letters that were written in upholding the horse as an intelligent animal, and many letters stated specific in stances to prove this point. The members of our family are particularly fond of pets, and we have quite a collection of pets which include two different species of ducks, a canary bird, any num ber of squirrels, an Irish Setter dog, and a horse. The horse is the latest pet to be acquired, and personally I have derived a differ ent kind of pleasure from my as sociation with him than with any of the other pets, so I naturally have a soft spot in my heart for horses. When I was a student in college I remember one of my professors in discussing human behavior made it a point to emphasize the fact that we should have one purpose and that is to do the intelligent thing. My own definition of in telligent behavior would be to make the correct reaction after all con tributing factors in a situation had been considered. So many times we are guilty of jumping to hasty conclusions and acting before we have collected all the facts. Recently, I heard a min ister in preaching a sermon make a very fine distinction between common sense and horse sense. The difference, he said, was that horse sense was not common. BOWLES-DAVIS FLYING SERVICE Plane Rental and Rides at Reasonable Rates Timberlake Airport 3/4 M. N. of North Gate Records and Players, Paints, Varnishes, Wall Paper. CHAPMAN’S Next to P. O. Bryan A Limited Number — OF — TAILOR-MADE SUITS ARE NOW AVAILABLE Check with L O U P O T for appointment for the personal measuring of BOB DALTON 15 Years Experience Measuring Men’s Suits in the Southwest mercial airfield two hops west of Hawaii. GUAM, which has been an American possession for 50 years, is located nearly in the center of these trusteeship islands and now serves as their capital. As a large, permanent naval base, it is propably the cleanest and one of the most beautiful of the islands in this area. The islands, taken during the war at a cost of 6,267 U. S. lives, are to broaden the U. S. empire and complete the job of making the Pacific a U. S. lake. Their strategic value is limited, as is shown by Russian willingness to let the U.S. acquire them. But their importance as U.S. way stations in the Pacific, as future vacation spots, and as a new U.S. obligation abroad is to become more and more apparent in the period ahead. GUION HALL THEATER Opens 1:00 p. m. Daily MICKEY’S HOME... and in the arms of a 8-4* Giamazon tHE SECRET THE WHOLE WORLD WANTED! SEE *THE BEGINNING OR THE END* First Full Course Under GI Bill To Be Finished in June First man to complete a normal four-year course at A. & M. under the GI Bill of Rights will be Bil ly R. Blair of Fort Worth, who will receive a bachelor’s degree in industrial education in June, it was announced today. Blair, 22, entered school as a freshman in September, 1944, after receiving a disability discharge from the U. S. Marine Corps and by means of attendance at sum mer sessions, is receiving his de gree after two years and nine months. A large number of Aggies who left for the war lacking only a few semesters of graduation have re turned and received their diplomas, but Blair is the first to go all the way under the GI Bill. Opens 1:00 p.m. Ph. 4-1181 SATURDAY LAST DAY in DYNAMITE TOGETHER PREVIEW 11:00 p. m. SUNDAY, MONDAY, and TUESDAY