Page (< bers o won ] use : BUY, 85c t jcctloi *11 cl OFFIl dent lay b U) bids \ Execu May : reject and a Assist Colleg forma PAIR calf fiel< 1947 mis S69 Coi: A SE 1 Ph( IT'S Vie Hand Evap' Studi* B-5-J Elect r Maro Couc! < B-40 •49 C L ( si: Mor an 6-i EX'! pa 1946 19 MU! A Ji FOl ni b FU ( TY TY 1 6= Battalion Editorials Page 2 TUESDAY, MAY 15,1951 Greater Recognition . . . JT IS very easy and convenient to be a mod- LETTERS All letters to the editor must be signed by the writer and free from obscene and libelous references. Letter writers wanting their name withheld must make a personal request to the co-editors. No unsigned letters will be published. Thanks for Support Of Crippled Clinic HOMETO^OOST ern Candide and take the view that A&M is the “best of all possible Colleges in this best of all possible worlds.” Yet, there are times when we are forced to consider things under the heading of “what is scholastically wrong with A&M?” The obvious method would be to start with the undergraduate school and work up to the graduate school, but we believe that there is reason to start with the graduate school and show its importance and close correlation with the undergraduate school. Unless this is done, the fact that recog nition of undergraduate degrees frequently depends on the quality of the corresponding graduate school is not immediately obvious. In other words, the graduate school is a mat- • Can We Afford Not To? IF THE Russians will cooperate and make •*war by appointment in 1953, the best Washington estimates indicate that we will be prepared to meet the challenge. The At lantic Pact will be more than a piece of paper; blueprint armies will be in the field; design ers dreams will be tangible aircraft ready for combat; and all this will have been done in a calm orderly manner with no extra ef fort involved. Senator Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. has been sufficiently concerned about some of our major deficiencies to gather all existing mili tary and civilian facts. His conclusions from these facts are rather shocking to say the least. These statements stand out sharply: • “The cold brutal fact is that the U. S. does not have air supremacy, air superiority, or anything like it. We excel them (Russia) only in the quality of our long-range bombers and in numbers of atomic bombs. On this single fact, our security hangs by a delicate thread.” ® “Without tactical air support, (planes supporting troops directly) the most mobile troops with maximum firepower per pound are still as naked as men in their underwear.” The big question is—what to do about it ? Senator Lodge recommends at least 150 “wings’—preferably 175. Approximately 48 of these Air Force Wings would be com mitted to tactical support. We agree with the Senator that this is not a question of “can we afford it?” It is a question of “can we afford not to?” Editor, The Battalion: ter of concern to all students who want pro- rfB^afSd'couSe fessional recognition, rather than an ex- station render a service to the elusive problem for the relative minority of £*4h\Sr d c“tribn™™’in to the students actually engaged in graduate bottles placed at the business wor j£ houses, they more than contribut ed the Kiwanis Club’s contribu- While we agree wholeheartedly with the tion to this Crippled Chrildren’s expenditures that provide “eyewash” for Clinic - visiting dignitaries, we do not believe that st ^ e S! nt l ’ ,> S er in wh t e h r c e the firm foundation Of graduate study dents made their contributions should be neglected collected a large amount of money. Unfortunately some classes of research £ he p ri Ppied Chrildren’s Com- J . mittee is grateful to the business require more equipment than a package of men who cooperated and to all seeds, or a stack of assorted books. Budgets J? 1 ? 0 made , contributions in making „ . . this year’s clinic our most suc- frequently place very sharp limits on expen- cessful clinic. ditures of this type. In addition, the fact that graduate stu dents can teach at a PhD. level while being paid as student assistants largely precludes student manufacture of equipment as a rem edy to the acute financial problem. Increased emphasis on this and other as pects of graduate study would do a great deal to attract favorable attention to A&M. A good football team, and the luxuries of the MSC may increase the enrollment, but they must be regarded as “necessary, but not sufficient.” An equivalent amount of grad uate program financial support would great- Daniel Russell Agronomy Society Slates Barbecue The Agronomy Society will hold “Parents are urged to come” a barbecue at 5 p. m. Tuesday, Loupot emphasized, “and bring 7r oo ■ A A j» l their children.” He also said the™ May 22, m Area One of Hensel wou ] ( j jje no “dish washing,” be- Park, honoring graduating sen- cause people have been hired to iors of the society. perform that task. —&k . AS? ' Annual Presbyterian Church Picnic Wednesday, May 16, at 5 p.m. At Country Home of Mrs. and Mrs. C. I. Miller, on Highway 6. Presbyterians and Friends of Presbyterian Church Welcome BOATIJNC, BASEBALL, HOKSESHUES, WASHERS, INDOOR HOCKEY AND FOOD. W hat Role for Germany if We Fight WW III? By DON DOANE East Germany can contribute in AP Staff Writer the years immediately ahead. Manpower Advantage in West Frankfurt—If war comes, Ger- In manpower, West Germany , , ,. , « . , ,, , many is almost certain to be right also has a tremendous advantage ly enhance the value of every student S goal in the middle of it. over East Germany—almost three —the coveted sheepskin. What role would the Germans to one. mi- j., ii • xi jv i n Play m such a war? Would they That’s why the Russians are so Inis, after all, is the final measure of a fight? On whose side? concerned about the prospects of College—professional recognition of its de- These are amon g the world’s the western allies recruiting West biggest questions today. Much of Germany as a full military partner. ST® 68, the east-west diplomatic maneuv ering is an attempt to make sure • 9 of the answers. When you talk about “Germans” nowadays, you have to divide r 8 /l/f ' them. In one group are the 18,- JL !Itiiiito iraOvV 000,000 East Gennans, living in the one-third of Germany occupied prefer them to Russia and are op- T HERE were lots of A&M people who help- ky Soviet Russia. timistic that they will join them . . TT . , In the other group are the . ed make our Open House weekend a sue- 47,000,000 West Germans, living American and steel a year. Power production has been raised from the 1937 figure of 1,819 million kilowatt hours a year to 5,905 million. In a Russian occupation, the Soviets would also gain 7,000,000 slave laborers, the best railway stock in Central Europe, and small supplies of aluminum, cop per, lignite and anthracite. FREE DINNER Watch for Your Name in This Space, Each Week, The . . Thomas D, Turley Box 2498 12th MAN INN Will give away a free dinner to the person whose name appears. • WATCH FOR YOUR NAME • Bring This By - - - - It’s Yours Free The material and manpower re serve of the two areas are easier to assay than it is to determine how the Germans themselves will desire to wield these resources. The western allies are con vinced that most West Germans cess, but there was one group which worked i? French Zones. overtime at the job. While other exhibits militarily. Neutrality Movement Strong But there’s a strong and appar- and departments Russians Act ently growing movement among West Germans—even those who dislike Russia—which preaches German neutrality. , o West German leaders have warn- them. They’ve already armed near- ed these people that no graphical , ly 200,000 of them in “police form- position — in the middle between Our Memorial Student Center did a big ations.” Of these, 50,000 are giv- east and west—can hope to re- job selling A&M this past weekend. Besides allies have "A„ “"‘nltoager feeling than maintaining a pleasant campus “living launched a campaign to enlist the this might weaken the loyalty of room ” MSC Commitfppc: nrpnnrprl and die. West Germans as soldiers on their East Germans to the Russian mum, 1USU committees prepared and dis- side> cause. Many East Germans are , 1 . The Russians obviously are try- locked their doors when the five 0 clock whis- ing to make sure that in case of tie sounded Saturday afternoon, the MSC trouble, the East Germans fight for 17 7 TVtQiTNro ol^ooHir ovmorl noov staff didn’t even notice it. So far, this campaign has not , . , gone beyond the stage of prelimin- sands of Political prisoners taken inary talks. If war broke out with- the Russian attest to this. - - - - +Viq ^non-nle^s! Tvnl^Vo ,, whom played some of the finest exhibits shown over the weekend. Everyone from the director to the dining ilTthc "next yeai-rthcre*wouldn’t be ardent anti-Communists, The thou- room personnel to the cooks kept on the job fi^ht^ German to provide parents with as pleasant a visit as possible. We think our MSC staff deserves a well earned thanks for a long, hard and trying job—competently and courteously done. U11 u uc Even the “people’s police soldier armed are losing the trust of the Russians. They are deserting to the west by hundreds yearly. If the West Germans agree to There appears little doubt, how- join the West European army, they ever, that in event of war soon, might be able to whip 150,000 men Russia could get more military into uniform by 1953. Many would help from its zone than the west- be battle-tested veterans. ern allies could get from theirs. Allies Turn Western Germany Into Industrial Powerhouse Rich Austria Is Prize For Russia or West By BRACK CURRY AP Staff Writer steel and chemicals, and prog resses through the manufacture of high grade machinery, preci sion instruments and electrical equipment — all kingpins of a modern defense effort. John J. McCloy says that the Ruhr “can provide immense support to the requirements of defense.” I7RANKFURT—Disarmed West- Even with direct war industries ern Germany is becoming an in- banned, the Germans can produce dustrial powerhouse for the west- more industrial equipment and pro em defense program. ducers’ goods for the common de- Even while the Germans de- fense than any country in West- bate direct military participation ern Europe except Britain, Me in the Atlantic Pact, the vast Ruhr Cloy says. Eurone is producing a growing torrent of In prewar Europe, a third of all ^ ‘ Bupplies for the Atlantic forces. industrial production came from Bctore me war me .Germans This torrent is expected to Germany. Luckily for the west, ^m produced and used 40 per swell during 1951 as the Allies the great bulk of prewar Ger- cen ^ P European steel. Even with relax their bans and limits on many’s industrial capacity lies in ‘wartime bombing and postwar dis- Western Germany’s war poten- Allied-occupied Western Germany, mantling, then - great steel works tial industries. German industrial efficiency are grinding out 13,000,000 tons of American High Commissioner begins with supplies of coal, Industrial Help For Allies Meanwhile, West Germany’s role in the preparedness race will be chiefly as a supplier of coal, steel Vienna—Vast dollar investments and machinery for rearming Eu- in Austria since 1945 have made rope. the country’s industry an impor- This alone can be a mighty con- tant asset for either Russia or the tribution. The big smoky Ruhr West in the event of war. valley twice armed Germany so Austria cannot exist alone. But well that it nearly conquered the geared to either economic sphere, world. it can provide steel, iron ore, crude Allied occupation laws still for- and refined oil and electric power bid the Germans from making for large areas of Europe. West German coal amounts to about 25 per cent of all the coal produced in Western arms. But they can provide the means for others to make arms. Russia can expect no such ma terial from poorer East Germany. o A little coal, some food, and such Two great steel plants in the U output manu f ac f ui ’ers as optical and elec- S. and British zones now can turn I- r,f trical instruments are about all out almost 1,000,000 tons of crude Since 1945, through either di rect aid or the Marshall Plan $750,000,000 have gone into re building the country’s industries. GIs in Korea Are Learning ‘Professional Approach' WASHINGTON, May 15—(A>) — The Battalion Entered as second-class Hatter at Post Office at College Staton, Texas, Bnder the Act of Con- |ress of March 3, 1870. Member of The Associated Press Represented nationally by National Advertising source in Europe of many chemi- Semce Inc., at New York ca i s ne eded by western defense City, Chicago, Los An- , , „ J geles, and San Francisco. PUUHS. • Allied and German officials CLAYTON L. SELPH, DAVE COSLETT Co-Editors are now planning the full mobili- John Whitmore, Dean Reed Managing Editors za . t 'o 1 ’ ' l \ cs } German industrial Andy Anderson, Bob Hughson Campus Editors mi Kbt behind the defense pro- Fred Walker Sports Editor £ ram steel a year. The steel industry is exporting said today the Eighth Army in Ko- 180,000 tons of rolled products a rea has acquired the professional’s month—most of it to the west—de- approach to killing Chinese Reds, spite official protests that more Michaelis, former commander of steel should be retained for the the hard hitting Wolf Hound Div- home market. ision, illustrated his point: Western _Germany is the major — ~ — ' Engineer Essayists Will Get Awards The three winners of the Sen ior Engineers Essay Contest will “The men now 1 will fight back and forth against the enemy just because headquarters has order ed it.” He said troops no longer are blowing up every bridge and road they pass as they draw back from the enemy. “They know they will be back up the road in a few weeks so they don’t blow everything up,” he ex plained. He said the Americans inflict so many casualties on the enemy than U. S. forces suffer, that morale is high. Michaelis said some Chinese sol- Joel Austin .’.ZZ” City Editor As one sten U S economic aid be awai ' ded their P rizes tonight at diets that are definitely second VNn'ar, -nr TTtj.-i .. ... ^Up, U. C>. economic am _ . ,, p; -I r, T rQlo have nnnpnrpH in TCnrpn Vivian Castleberry Women’s Editor to Western Germany will be pump- 7:30 in the Civil En g ineerin g Lee- rate have appeared in Korea. Today's Issue Joel Austin - Managing Editor Bob Hughson Campus News Editor Ed Holder Sports News Editor Allen Pengelly .City News Editor ed into firms that are producing Room, for defense in order to expand „ The c ° nte f’ SP 0 ?, 801 ^ c the out/nut Brazos Chapter of the Texas Soc- LFL ABNER T. M. Fontaine, Carter Phillips.. Allen Pengelly Editorialists 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 Joe Gray Photo Engraving Shop Manager Tom Fontaine, Johnny Lancaster, Charles McCullough, R. R. Peeples, R. D. Witter Photo Engravers a n d wqiev’s Autrey Frederick Advertising Manager ‘ * Russell Hagens, Bob Haynie ^__.__Advertising Repr«antativea Pick Kelly Club Publicity Coordinator Europe S defense. output. And the western allies proba bly will lift controls on such war potential industries as steel, ship yards, synthetic oil and rubber. Production of munitions still will Civil be outlawed. Of equal importance with the strategic products which the Germans are turning out is the fact that west Germany is West ern Europe’s one highly indus trialized country whose capacity is incompletely utilized, McCloy points out. Thus the outlook is that the Ruhr, which stoked the Kaiser’s war machines, will become a strongpoint in Western iety of Professional Engineers, was held a few weeks ago and winners have now been decided. The speaker at the joint meet ing will be Spencer Buchanan of Engineer Depai’tment who will talk on professional standards for engineers. The cash prizes are to be pre sented by Dean Barlow and re freshments will be served by the T. S. P. E. .. /NANCV O. IS READY , | T'SHOW ME HER BIG SURPRISE?.^ -AH DIDN'T GIT UR AN' EAT, J I ONCE, LAST NIGHT-IN CASE IT'S PO’K CHOPS . r . r — Bible Verse W/HO SO sheddeth man’s blood, ” by man shall his blood be shed: for in the image of God made he man. —Genesis 9:6. Goodbye, My Nancy