Battalion Editorials Page 2 '*W' TUESDAY, MARCH 6, 1951 We re Only in the ‘Hatching Stage Curfew Isn H the Answer US Must Arm During Critical Year r'lVIC LEADERS of Waco, Texas, are in ^ the middle of a hot argument as how to best combat juvenile delinquency. Hottest issue of the argument is wheth er or not to pass a curfew for teenagers. Supporters of the curfew point out that ex cept in unusual cases there is little reason for a youth to roam the streets after mid night. The district attorney, one of the op ponents of the plan, believes that it would be unenforcable. He especially opposes the proposal of a $10 fine for the parents of children caught violating the curfew. Sometimes stop-gap measures such as a curfew must be used to bring immediate ac tion against a bad problem. But it must be realized that curfew and like measures are merely levees thrown against a flood. They really do nothing to stop the flood. The real fault lies with parents’ failure to realize their obligations and responsibili- Now Our State Has No Communists HPEXAS HAS no Communists. *■ Or at least our good state has none who profess this affiliation and who will pub licly say so. The Legislature recently passed a bill which would require all Communists to “reg ister” with state officials. The time passed last week and Homer Garrison, director of the Department of Public Safety, hasn’t had a single Red confess to him. Now Garrison says he will throw the book at ’em if he finds any. They’ve had their chance to admit their faults, we suppose, and since no one has proudly waved the hammer and sickle, may be there are no Communists in Texas. We don’t think so. In the past, several men have boasted that they were party mem bers. As far as we know, quite a few of them still reside in the Lone Star State. But, no. Texas can’t have any Commun ists. If any were here, they would have reg istered. Sacre bleu! When are we going to stop wasting time and money with loyalty oaths and now “I’m a Red” pledges? If you were a Communist, you wouldn’t be shouting it from the housetops—not if you lived here. Neither would we. And neither will the Communists. ties. Juvenile delinquency is just one of the many glaring illustrations of the moral de generacy of our times. For too often, people are willing—indeed they try very hard—to gain the rights, plea sures, and social approbation of society which is given by marriage and family. But the parent has very definite responsibilities to his children. And those responsibilities are not fulfilled by “giving” to junior. Week ly allowance, loan of the family car, and allowing him personal freedom to come and go as he pleases will never make up to the youngster for lack of real care for his train ing and personal problems. Until an individual is willing to sacrifice much of his own personal pleasure to guide, help, 'and instruct his children, he has no right to be a parent. Childplay Can Be Made Useful THHE RIFLEMAN has been, and still is, a key figure in the development of our country. The frontier has vanished, or per haps we should say just moved several thousand miles to Korea. In one respect, at least, the fundamental picture has not changed. The American rifleman in Korea has or needs the same confidence in his weapon, physical strength, and woodsmanship as his forebears. He is also fighting alone against the usual high odds, but the above qualities will see him through now as well as in the foreseeable future. There has been a tendency on the part of the American soldier to relax in these fun damentals and rely on superweapons to even the odds. This attitude has indeed been ex pensive as the facts will show. With the draft of 18-year-olds a distinct possibility, the value of youthful experience in .22 marksmanship is measurable in view of the amount of training required under se vere time limits. Stripes and personal sur vival are the rewards for the man who knows his rifle and how to handle it. Until “push-button warfare” is a reality, individuals and clubs can perform a valuable public service in teaching youths the funda mentals of marksmanship. Without instruc tion, kids with .22’s are a nuisance; with in struction, they are instruments of security. (To survey the U. S. mobili zation scene, take the tempera ture of the countryside, and check on the progress—or lack of it — in the great defense buildup, the Associated Press assigned a special correspon dent to visit key areas of the home front. He has just re turned from a trip through the Middle West and summarizes general impressions in the ac companying story — the first of four daily articles. This be gins a series of Associated Press reports, which will cover the nation’s major production areas.) By RELMAN MORIN (AP Special Correspondent) r FHIS IS THE critical year for A the great program to re-arm the United States, re-build the strength of its allies, and thus— it is hoped—forestall the threat of further Communist aggression. It is critical because the gigantic American program—a matter of intense importance in the calcula tions of the Soviet Union, too—is still largely in the blueprint stage and necessarily must remain so for another six to 12 months. By the summer of 1952, military men expect to be breathing moi-e easily—that is, if there is not an other Korea or a major outbreak in Eui’ope. But this year is, at best, only a hatching stage for an immense mobilization effort. Briefly here are the major ob jectives: • Maintaining Operation Korea •—now quite plainly a campaign of attrition designed to prove to the world in general, and Asia in par ticular, that naked aggression does not pay. Rspi'inted from March 1951 Issue of Esqulr* Copyrighf 1951 by Esquire, Inc “Vve done my best to cheer him up, Doctor, at* ways telling him to forget losing his job . . • , forget the bills piling up . . .forget thOj threat of ill health . , .forget,, r f American Platoon Shakes Red Trap How It Would Be In Life Under Communist Rule By JAMES MARLOW WASHINGTON, MARCH 6—(A>> ” —I often wonder how it would feel to be a Communist, particular ly an American Communist, if the party ever took over in this coun try. I Don’t see how it could be a very safe feeling. In a country with political free dom and political parties, a man who cuts away from his party’s line, whether he’s a Democrat or Republican, may get defeated in the next election. But that’s the worst that can happen to him. And then he can go back to peddling bananas, run ning a bank or practicing law and if some of his old cronies ignore The Battalion Lawrence Sullivan Ross, Founder of Aggie Traditions ’'Soldier, Statesman, Knightly Gentleman” The Battalion, official newspaper of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas, is published by students five times a week during the regular school year. During the summer terms. The Battalion is published four times a week, and during examination and vacation periods, twice a week. Days of publication, are Monday through Friday for the regular school year, Tuesday through Friday during the summer terms, and Tuesday and Thursday during vacation and examination periods. Subscrip tion rates $6.00 per year or $.50 per month. Advertising rates furnished on request. Entered as second-class matter at Post Office at College Staton, Texas, under the Act of Con gress of March 3, 1870. Member of The Associated Press Represented nationally by National Advertising Service Inc., at New York City, Chicago, Los An geles, and San Francisco. CLAYTON L. SELPH, DAVE COSLETT Co-Editors John Whitmore, Dean Reed Managing Editors Andy Anderson, Bob Hyghson Campus Editors Ralph Gorman Sports Editor Fred Walker Associate Sports Editor Joel Austin City Editor Vivian Castleberry. ’ Women’s Editor Today’s Issue John Whitmore Managing Editor Bob Hughson - r Campus News Editor Ralph Gorman - Sports News Editor Joel Austin .City News Editor T. M. Fontaine, Carter Phillips Editorialists Allen Pengelly Assistant City Editor Leon McClellan, Jack Fontaine, Ed Holder, Bryan Spencer, Bob Venable, Dale Walston, Bee Landrum, Frank Davis, Phil Snyder, Art Giese, Cristy Orth, James Fuller, Leo Wallace, W. H. Dickens, Fig Newton, Joe Price, Pete Hermann, Wesley Mason, B. F. Roland, Ivan Yantis, Sid Ragsdale, Bill Aaberg, Ide Trotter, John Hildebrand, Chuck Neighbors, Bob Selleck, Bill StreiCh, Curtis Edwards, Howard Heard -...Staff Writers Jimmy Ashlock, Joe Blanchette, Ray Holbrook, Joe Hollis, Pat LeBlanc Sports Staff Writers Sam Molinary, Bob Alderdice Staff Photographers Sid Abernathy....:.. ...., Page Make-up Dick Kelly Club Publicity Co-ordinator Joe Gray Photo Engraving Shop Manager Tom Fontaine, Johnny Lancaster, Charles McCullough, R. R. Peeples, R. D. Witter Photo Engravers Autrey Frederick Advertising Manager Russell Hagens, Bob Haynie Advertising Representatives him on the street is doesn’t dim inish his life expectancy. But in a Communist country the man who breaks away from the party, or disagrees with it, is in bad shape and by this time every Communist everywhere must know it. There have been examples enough. Of course, it must be easy enough for any ardent Communist, now in good standing with the party, to say to himself: “If the party takes over I’ll get my re ward: I’ll have a big hand in run ning things.” But he forgets, as many seem to have forgotten, that maybe the time will come when he steps on a comrade’s toes, or annoys the big boss, or worse, begins having his own ideas, different from the party’s current ideas. There have been plenty of cases like this in recent years. When the party is just trying to come to power, as it is in Italy, a Com munist can still break away and live to a ripe old age, provided the party never wins. But it’s a lot tougher to “de viate”—fancy word for disagreeing —once the Communist party has seized power, as it has in . the coun tries behind the Iron Curtain. He “Deviated” Only last week Communists everywhere got a good insight— certainly not the first—into what happens to a gent who deviates. This was in Czechoslovakia, where Dr. Vlado Clements fell on bad days. Clements, former foreign minis ter who vanished mysteriously from his apartment in Prague Jan. 27, was in desperate shape, an an nouncement said: Clements and four others were held on charges of spying, plotting to assassinate President Element Gottwald, overthrow the govern ment, restore capitalism, and turn Czechoslovakia toward the West. Reading through the lines, it would seem Clements had a big difference of opinion with some of his comrades. The party published a report which said: “We shall prove that there .is a (See COMMIE LIFE, Page 4) WITH U. S. SEVENTH Division, ” Korea, March 6 —(tP)— Com munists in South Korean uni forms Sunday surprised a platoon of U. S. soldiers huddled in their frozen hilltop foxholes on the east- central front. The Americans were waiting for a platoon of South Korean troops to pass through their lines for an attack. In the early morning mist, a sentry’s challenge was followed by a reply of “ROK (Republic of Korea Soldiers.” A column of 60 soldiers wound up the hill. The Americans waved and yelled greetings. A moment later the Americans were hugging the bottoms of their foxholes. The troops were Com munists disguised In South Ko rean uniforms. The Communists poured burp (rapid fire) gun and rifle fire into the foxholes and tried to throw hand grenades. “We were pinned down,” said Sgt. Thomas D. Boyle, Odgen, Utah. “We could do nothing but lie there and pray. To rise up to shoot was to commit suicide.” Burp gun blasts cut the wires from the field telephone in Boyle’s foxhole. An unmanned radio and machinegun position was 25 yards away to the east on a small rise. Pfc. Elmo Tomlin, Stockton, Calif., spread the first alarm. As a runner, he was waking up the half of the platoon which was to go down the hill for early break fast. He humped into the last man in the column and discovered he was LETTERS Batt is Caught With Geography Down Editor, The Battalion: “From Austin, the man flew to Texas.” Sounds silly doesn’t it? However, whoever wrote that arti cle in the Batt of 27 February headed, “William Leaves for Tour of ‘Down Under’ Facilities,” made just such an error in the fourth from last paragraph. I quote: “From Sidney, they will fly to New South Wales ... (I underlined the name Sidney be cause the correct spelling is Syd ney.) Sydney, of course, happen to be, and has been for years, the capital of the State of New South Wales. Cecil M. Palmer, ’40 & ’51 (Editor’s Note—The offending reporter will be assigned a re search report of the “Land Down Under” with special emphasis on the State of New South Wales and its capital, Sydney (with a “y” that is). Thanks for the correc tion.) a Noi'th Korean. The Red pointed an American carbine at Tomlin while two other Reds tied his arms behind him. Tomlin said he broke his bonds, lunged at the Korean, grabbed him from behind and to gether they rolled down the steep hill. The other Redsi were too startled to act. “I banged that Gook's head on every rock and every tree within range,” said Tomlin. “We rolled on to the road below—he was out cold.” Bruised and scratched, Tomlin ran to the company command post and relayed the report to his com mander, Lt. Byron D. Meadows of Huntington, West Va. Meanwhile on the hill, Boyle and Cpl. William Byrd of Tucum- cari, N. M., made a dash for the machinegun position. Boyle rad ioed for help and directed mor tar fire. Byrd found the machinegun fro zen. He thawed is out with his body, heat, then cut loose with -a covering fire that permitted other American soldiers to get into pos ition to fire on the enemy. Lt. Gardner H. Marchand of Rochester, Mass., platoon leader, set up a new position to fire. He ran over the ground barefooted ■with his boots in his hand “be cause I didn’t have time to put them on when the shooting start ed.” Marchand ran more than half a mile up the hill to the scene of the battle and joined the fighting with his pistol. (See FLEE TRAP, Page 4) • Fortifying the Western Eu ropean allies under Gen. Eisen hower’s leadership and under plans still subject to great debate— with remaining political differences seeming mainly to boil down to differences of the degree of U. S. contribution. • The buildup of U. S. home defenses in all categories, plus the strengthening of hemispheric de fenses and our Pacific fortifica tions—with emphasis especially up on the buildup for the air forces and the acceleration of the atomic weapons program. All this calls for tremendous ex pansion in the training of man power as well as the production of armaments—at great cost to the American taxpayer. The goal in manpower for the armed forces has been set, tentatively, at 3,500,001) by the summer of 1952. The army’s target for this coming summer, alone, is 22 or 23 infantry divi sions. The dollar cost for purely mili tary purposes, according to the presidential budget report, adds up to more than $61 billion for the two-year period dating from the outbreak of the Korean war to the end of June, 1962. Other Billions Asked This figure includes President Truman’s estimate of nearly $41,- 500,000,000 for military expendi tures for the next fiscal year, be ginning this July. It is only part of the overall cost, however. Many more billions will go into non-mili tary foreign aid, civil defense pro grams, and the whole vast area of expansion in governmental activi ties—local, state and national. The blueprints are piled up—but the program is already rolling. Industry is buckling into the tre mendous task of spewing out the weapons, transport, clothing and all the thousand-and-one articles needed to put a fighting man in the field and keep him there, in action. But even with the enormous pro duction capacities of American in dustry, months will elapse before the United States is ready to fight. Why? Reasons for Delay Some of the reasons are physical . . . shortages in critical materials, freight cars and so on . . . also the technical problems of tooling up to make newer and more destruc tive machines than we used in World War II. Some are economic ... to rearm without cutting too deeply into the high American standard of living ... to produce for civilian use along with, and in addition to, pro ducing weapons. But the biggest appears to be psychological, a question of atti tude. So far as I have been able to observe, there is little or no general feeling of urgency anywhere. I have visited parts of the South, the Middle West and travelled the length of the Atlantic seaboard in the past two weeks. My impres sions are the same in every section of the country: a let’s-take-it-in- stride attitude. Average Man Unalarmed Some military men and govern ment officials are apprehensive, fearful of the possibilities of a fm-ther outbreak of war this year, this time in Europe. But very few people in factories, offices, on Broadway or Main Street, U.S.A., or in government generally, share opinions that can be classified as reflecting (a) alarm or .(b) a sense of real emergency. There are obvious factors con tributing to all this. “I have a duty ... to present publicly ... my conception ... of what is required to prevent another international catastrophe,” wrote Gen. George C. Marshall, U. S. Chief of Staff, in his final World War II report dated Sept. 1, 1945. Gen. Marshall then expanded at length on his recommendation for //i\ v with ' 2 THE RUBBING COVERS SCUFF MARKS I GIVES SHOES RICHER COLOR! Black, Tan, Brown, Dark Tan, Mid-Tan, srr | J 'ZE&ZsQZ \X 3r ®* ue ' Oxblood, 4sk kL ODOty [ ( Mahoga ny, nwramMBn Tk n 'Wi@r!i r and Neutral KIWI (KEE-WEE) SHOE POLISH a peacetime system of universal military training—a requisite to the nation’s security that, he said, George Washington originally pro posed. “We finish each bloody war with a feeling of acute revulsion against this savage form of human be havior, and yet on each occasion we confuse military preparedness with the causes of war and then drift almost deliberately into an other catastrophe,” Gen. Marshall wrote over five years ago. Cost Was Heavy “The cost of refusing his (Wash ington’s) guidance is recorded in the sacrifice of life and in the ac cumulation of mountainous debts. We have continued impractical. “We have ignored the hard real ities or world affairs.... We must start, I think, with a correction of the tragic misunderstanding that a security policy is a war policy. . . . Until it is proved that such a solution has been found to prevent wars, a rich nation which lays down its arms, as wc have done after every war in our history, will court disaster. ... “The technique of war has brought the United States, its homes and factories into the front line of world conflict. They escap ed destructive bombardment in the Second World War. They would not in a third. It no longer ap pears practical to continue what we once conceived as hemispheric de fense as a satisfactory basis for our security. We arc now con cerned with the peace of the entire world. And the peace can only be maintained by the strong.” Attitude Improves The attitude of defeatism about Korea is no longer as marked as it was in midwinter. While the great debate on foreign policy has been prolonged in Washington, Congress has evidenced no rush to meet administration demands for such things as extension of the draft age—to include 18-year-olds —or heavier taxes to finance vast mobilization costs. When the nation was apprehen sive, at is was at the start of the Korean war, and later, when the Chinese Reds appeared in the field, the defense effort moved more smoothly and more rapidly. Vice versa,' when in November the war appeared to be won, dif ficulties and bottle-necks suddenly re-appeared. The barometers of these changes are in industrial plants, the rec ords/ in procurement offices, and the story of labor relations. For example, ordnance procure ment authorities say that, a year agp, it was hard to got a factory to take a defense order. Korea changed that. Production figures went up in most factories during the emer gency-attitude periods., In those same months, disputes between management and labor dropped off. Union Troubles There weye some instances where a manufacturer took a defense or der on Monday. On Tuesday, he. received a union “request” foV a cost-of-living increase. There wene reports, too, that some union lead ers “discouraged” the incentive system in factories producing ma terials for defense. But the record also shows the many occasions when unions or dered their members to end a strike in order to get on with crit ical production. The nickel-plat ers, making plated pipe for the atomic energy commission, are one of many examples. These evidences of attitude shifted up and down. Public opin ion reacted quickly and faithfully to events, at home and abroad, as newspapers reported them. Just Democracy Today, labor, industry and gov ernment all have complaints against each other, arising out of the defense effort. That is do mocracy in action, huge, loose- jointed and intensely individual istic. In an explosive emergency—a Pearl Harbor, for example—these arc all put aside. In less decisive times, they can become big and dangerous. Attitude is a great factor affect ing the speed and smoothness of rearming. But it isn’t the only one. The late Hermann Goering said, when Germany was arming, “the German people would rather have guns than butter.” American in dustry believes it can supply both. Will Take Time That obviously takes time and greatly expanded facilities for pro duction. Automobile firms expect to go on making cars and tanks, simultaneously. They have the know-how, the experience of the last war, and they believe they can do it. Factories, generally, are trying hard to handle defense of- ders on top of their regular cus tomer orders. For that reason, months will elapse before vast streams of weap ons and equipment will rumble down the assembly lines. So this is the critical year. The United States is arming. Bift there’s a long way to go. unim Bryan 2’8 $79 NOW SHOWING KtMtu) uewMK wain fa nuna ■,<* v** QUEEN NOW SHOWING TODAY LAST DAY FIRST RUN —Features Start— 1:28 - 3:00 - 4:45 - 6:30 8:15 - 10:00 FORO-FLEMING'O’BRIEN NEWS — CARTOON STARTS WEDNESDAY FIRST RUN STORY of the infamous TRI-STATE GANGI LI E ABNER Dinnertime? By A1 Capp Bible Verse r THEN PETER said, “Silver and gold have I none; but such as I have give I thee: In the name of Jesus' Christ of Nazareth rise up and walk.” —The Acts 3:6.