Battalion Editorials Page 2 THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 1951 NOW, IF THE MACHINE JUST FUNCTIONS’ Preparation Beats Fighting ZOOMING events cast their shadows before ^ them. On April 1, 1951, the Air Force was composed of 700,000 men. When it reaches its authorized strength, 1,060,000 men will be included. These figures were published There is nothing as pompous as an “authority” ivho has to maintain his reputation. How Long? OOW long? How long will we keep fighting in Korea with one hand behind our back ? How long must our soldiers stand and wait while hordes of Chinese attack, retreat, and re-attack?* How long will we listen to scared, shaky- kneed British diplomats begging us not to “anger” the Red Chinese? How long will we stand by while these same scared Britishers gleefully sell supplies to the men who are shooting our soldiers down? How long will our men stand and fight and die in Korea while neatly pressed diplo mats argue and talk and wonder how we will end it all? How long will we quake at the words, “Russia might attack us?” How long will the American people put up with it all? How long? by the House Appropriations Committee af ter hearings on a supplemental bill for this expansion. The objectives of this program, accord ing -to Gen. Hoyt S. Vandenberg, are: • “To deter global war by continuing to refine and augment our capability of de livering atomic bombs against any aggres sor.” • Adequate defense of this hemisphere against air attack. • To continue to develop a greater ca pacity to perform the Air Force role in uni fied operations. • To fulfill the commitments that the United States has made to the North Atlan tic Treaty organization.” Many men now in school will be called upon to perform some of these tasks. While it may mean that feathering of any civilian nest will be delayed several years, the actual fact of preparedness may forestall a major war. Those who have yearned for a high al titude foxhole will agree that three years of active preparation beats any time spent in combat. In other words, it is far better to be ready and not have to fight than to have to fight because you were not ready. During Red Offensive Alice Burke Takes Feminine Lead in ‘Milky. Way, Cast About half the people of the world are busy trying to direct the lives of the other half. British Want to Know Which Comes First, Living Standard or Rearmament By J. M. ROBERTS JR. AP Foreign Affairs Analyst J70BEIGN Minister Herbert Morrison has made the unequiv ocal statement that rearmament comes ahead of Britain’s living standard, a question brought to the fore by the resignation of Aneurin Beyan from the cabinet. The foreign minister’s state ment is not likely to quell the de bate on the subject which occupies not only Britain, but all of Western Europe and a good part of the thinking in America. Beyan is not being looked upon in kindly fashion for grasping the issue and bringing it to a head now in his battle with the Attlee faction for control of the British Labor party. He is sus pected of playing with a danger ous issue for partisan purposes. It is true that Sevan’s whole life has been devoted to attain ment of the social welfare bene fits which he now fears will go down the drain in the path of ex penditures for preparedness. He is not alone in Europe. The issue has been raised in every country where a just-reviving economy is threat ened by new military budgets. Everywhere there are those who insist that normal industrial ex pansion can not be detoured in favor of arms without doing just what Russia wants—preparing the road for Communist infiltration and a Kremlin victory without war. The answer, of course, is that without rearmament now there is danger of losing not only all that has been gained since the war, but of losing everything that is hoped for in the future. Thus the British government is willing to compromise some of its socialist aims for the moment in favor of preserving the opportun ity to work them out later. Morrison’s statement came as the Attlee government reached an agreement with Sevan not to dis rupt its parliamentary majority. But few doubted that public revulsion against controls and the split within the Labor Party would produce a general elec tion, and very probably a Con servative victory, before the end of the year. The agreement with Sevan will do nothing to halt the economic argument which his resignation re vived. It is a question of which will be paramount, long range economic and military preparations for de fense, or the pressure of cu'rrent budget-making. The Battalion Lawrence Sullivan Ross, Founder of Aggie Traditions "Soldier, Statesman, Knightly Gentleman” News contributions may be made by telephone (4-5444) or at the editorial office. Room 201, Goodwin Hall. Classified ads may be placed by telephone (4-5324) or at the Student Activities Office, Room 209, Goodwin Hall. The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in the paper and local news of spontaneous origin published herein. Rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. The Battalion, official newspaper of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas, is published by 4 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. Scout Leader Course Starts Here April 30 A Spring training coarse for Boy Scout leaders will be held at the Girl Scout “Little iHouse” April 30 and May 1, 2, and 3. The meetings, which will begin at 7:30 p. m., are designed with the purpose of enrolling scout masters, assistant scout masters, institutional representatives, and troop committeemen, a member of the training committee said. Essentials to be taught during the coarse are as follows: ® How to help the individual boy to grow. • How to organize troops and patrols for most executive service. • How to plan patrol and troop programs and meetings. • Aids in camping and hiking in scouting. • How to enlist scouts and scout leaders, how to finance and keep scout records, how to promote healthy advancement, how to get committees to function. Normally a six night course, this training program will be con densed into a four night session. The course for A&M students will be held in room 203 of the Agriculture Building and will be put on by the Scout Class 408. A certificate will be given for the completion of the course, the training committee representative said. As Mae Sullivan, sister of the pugilistic milkman, Alice Burke will provide the chief love interest in “The Milky Way,” three-act com edy which the Aggie Players will present in the Assembly Hall May 14-15 as their final production of. the season. “The Milky Way” is predomin antly a masculine play with the two prize fighters who are the principal characters providing high comedy throughout the action. However the romance between Mae and Speed McFarland, the champ ion, John Caple, is an integral part of the plot and furnishes enough sentiment to give the drama finesse. Although this is only her first year as a member of the college drama group Alice has been active in every production this season. She played the lead in “Kind Lady” last December and served as di- Ag Experimenters Get $1,000 Grant A check for $1,000 has been re ceived by the Agricultural Experi ment Station. The money will be used for the purpose of making “an organizational analysis of ag ricultural marketing cooperatives of Texas,” Dr. R. D. Lewis, station director says. The money is from the Texas Federation of Cooperatives, Dal las, and is an additional contribu tion of numerous contributions to the. TABS for the purpose outlined. rector for “Antigone,” the Greek tragedy presented early this month. Born in Palestine where her parents, Col. W. M, Burke, USAF, retired, and Mrs, Burke, still re side, Alice, who is about to com plete her second year as assistant manager of the campus office of Western Union, now calls College Station home. A niece of the celebrated stage and screen actress Billie Burke, Alice has been interested in dra matics all her Ijfe. She worked with the high school drania group and Civic theater in Palestine and was associated with both the Univer sity players and Waco Little Thea ter while attending Baylor Univer sity. ■ ■ Alice is extremely versatile, not only in the theater where she has portrayed roles ranging from Mary, mother of Jesus, in a religious drama to Gwen in “The Royal Family” but off stage as well. It’s part of her job to keep the eight Western Union printers on the campus in good repair, and she can sew too. She has just finished designing and making her costume for “The Milky Way.” Brcjan NOW SHOWING dStimniruf ) grSJStasI mmmm ' " 0*1/06 TOM EWELL mmL® wtA MARINA 8ERTI • JEFFREY LYNN A UNIVERSAL-INTERNATiONAl PICTURE • FRI. NITE PREV. 11 P.M. ’loVEAMUmi IT’S ALL ABOUT THE BIRDS AND THE BEES... D HUMANS TOO> MIRIAM HOPKINS; TltflMA MTTflt Entered as second-class matter at Post Office at College Staton, Texas, onder 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 Hughson Campus Editors Fred Walker Sports Editor Joel Austin City Editor Vivian Castleberry Women’s Editor Today’s Issue John Whitmore..... Managing Editor Andy Anderson •. Campus News Editor Fred Walker 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.... jl : 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 Appropriations Bill Lists BAFB Fund Washington, April 26—ISP)—Bry an Air Force Base would receive a construction fund of $3,541,000 un der a bill sent to the house yester day by its appropriations commit tee. The bill would authorize con struction money totalling more than $67,000,000 for seven Texas Air Force bases. The money is part of a $300,- 000,000 lump sum item for the Air Force in a supplemental appropria tion bill. Other Texas bases and amounts for each: Amarillo, $13,670,000; Connally (Waco), $4,911,000; Lackland (San Antonio), $30,287,000; Randolph (San Antonio), $1,624,000; San Marcos, $78,000; Sheppard (Wi chita Falls), $12,978,000. HELD OVER Bible Verse AND JESUS said to him, “No man, having put his hand to the plow, and looking back, is fit for the kingdom of God.”—Luke 9;62. Have You Always Wanted a New AUTOMATIC WASHER? The New Frigidaire IS A DREAM COME TRUE See it ... . Watch it ... . Try It ... . FREE Demonstration JUST CALL 4-9876 and make an appointment to see the FRIGIDAIRE RAPIDRY AUTOMATIC WASHER e Install it Anywhere ® New Live-Water Action • 1140 RPM Spin • One Dial Does All • Lifetime Porcelain Finish C. E. GRIESSER Electric Co. Southside College Station CALL 4 - 9 876 Retreat Casualties Low By ROBERT EUNSON I^IGHTH Army Headquarters, ^ Korea, Thursday, April 26—<7P> —The United Nations forces in Korea are carrying out a success ful retreat, and casualty figures prove it. In the first two days of the Communist Spring offensive, which began. Sunday night, less than 200 allied soldiers were killed. Less than 1,000 were wounded. Yet in the west alone, United Nations artillery and planes cov ering the withdrawal have killed or wounded 25,000 Communists. The figures may go even higher Former A&M Prof Has Book Printed C. V. Polland, former A&M in structor and now associate profes sor of Germanic languages at Tex as University, has recently pub lished a book, “The Practical Solu tion to German Translation,”, which gives his method of learn ing the German language in record time. Polland’s method teaches stu dents to translate the most diffi cult German after a very short period of time. Vocabulary build ing can be started In two months, the average time required to learn the rules and master the method, according to Polland. The new book contains a 25,000 word vocabulary in various fields of academic study including psy chology, philosophy, anthropology, and reading material in the physi cal and biological sciences. There are no simple lessons in the book and students delve immediately into the most difficulty reading mater ial. when all the results'are inU One U. N. division is so busy killing Reds it has not taken time to send in its casualty count. In the center, where one U. N. division collapsed and let the Reds go streaking 20 miles south, there has been some grim fighting to save the exposed flanks. But the ones who really paid were the Chinese Communists. Artillery, catching them from both sides, laid down a gauntlet of steel that even fanatical Reds found hard to take. The enemy pilsh was contained yesterday, and fbrtfes bolstering the shattered lines seem sure of holding the vital Seoul-Chunchon road. Cutting the Seoul Chunchon road was the Communists’ aim in the » center. If the 150,000 troops they were pouring in here could get Kapyong they would be on a paved highway about 30 air miles northeast of Seoul. TODAY & FRIDAY Wmm guerrilla HTHE PHILIPPINES TODAY thru SATURDAY FIRST RUN —Features Start— 1:24 - 3:35 - 5:38 - 7:49 - 10:00 in AN ISLAND Louis Debra JOURDAN PAGET Jett CHANDLER 20th Contury-FoK Pictur® NEWS — CARTOON MINIMUM PRICES • GROCERIES • BITS-O-SEA GRATED—REGULAR SIZE Tuna - kiNo. 2 .cans Whole Green Beans 29c 4? ,>c 2—NO. 2 CANS KIMBELL’S Small New Potatoes . 25c QUART JAR DIAMOND—SOUR OR Dill Pickles ..... 25c 3 LB. CAN Crisco 99c 2—12-OZ. CANS NIBLETS Whole Kernel Corn . . 35c 2—12-OZ. TUMBLERS KIMBELL’S APRICOT or Peach Preserves .... 43c 2—303 CANS MUSSELMAN’S Apple Sauce 35c 46-OZ. CAN HAPPY HOST—PINK MEAT Grapefruit Juice . . . . 27c 5 POUND BAG IMPERIAL Pure Cane Sugar .... 39c 46-OZ. CAN TEXAS CLUB Orange Juice 27e 1 ROLL REYNOLD’S WRAP Pure Aluminum Foil . . 39c — 1 Roll Limit —• ® MARKET ARMOUR’S SMOKED Picnics lb. 45c SHORT CUT—NO BONE ^ Ham Slices ...... lb. 69c DECKER’S TALL KORN Sliced Bacon . lb. 46c PEN FED BABY BEEF T-Bone Steaks . lb. 89c AZALIA—COLORED . Oleo Margarine ... lb. 27e @ PRODUCE ® WINSBORO Red Ripe Strawberries GREEN VALLEY Cabbage lb. 5c CRISP VALLEY Carrots bch. 5c CARTON Tomatoes 20c 490—SUNKIST JUICY Lemons ....... doz. 19c FANCY WINESAP Apples 3 lbs. 25c WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT ALL SALES Specials for Friday & Saturday - April 27th & 28th Charlie's Food Market North Gate College Station — WE DELIVER — LI’L ABNER A Fool And His. Honey Are Soon Parted ^ _ ' ^ By A1 Capp THERE GOES MV LI'L ABNER/T-OH/T- WON'T > >HE BE SURPRISED WHEN! YOU CHANGE! MV FACE TO THE ONE WE FINALE CHOOSE.' TH' GAL WHO GOT TH'OLfVy FACEJN ALL TH' WOFLO, AH COULD REALLW LOVE EE-) C'MON, • , SWE&TPANTS/^ HOUSE.—MUUL-D SHE ESE 1 RAT ENOUGH T'E/ARRY HIM, MERELY ESECUZ AH /S MARRY/N’ SOMEONE ELSE AN’BECUZ a HE IS TWICE AS NICE AS ME, ANYHOW?-?") NAME IS YANCEY SWEETPANTS. HE (-c H uCK<-E:r-) THINKS HE KIN TAKE MAH PLACE IN YORE HEART— Kin.rr STEP IN, MISTER SWEETPANTS. 1 ?’ GOOD NIGHT. mister YOKUM