Battalion Editorials Page 2 MONDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1951 THE RED MEDLEY Authority Misused IN SETTING up any order, the commander must take into consideration what will happen if there is an exception or a violation of the rule. This is not an abstraction, but it is a cold fact. * * ;* «»4Kiall Bringing it closer to home, it is a problem that is con fronting the cadet leaders. A short time ago the corps leaders set up a system of afternoon bullrings. This was published under the order set ting up company punishment. The motive for making such a method of extra duty was to get around the old use of the board. Under one of the numbered paragraphs of the order it specified that a man would not be given more than one hour per offense nor would he be made to walk more than two afternoons a week. This ruling has not been carried out. There are men who are gettinng more than one hour per offense. Sh as not to pull an illustration out of the air take the case of one junior who was ill and did not make a yell practice. • His company commander looked upon this as a serious crime and worthy of the most severe penalty. In the past times he would have ordered the junior to his room and ad ministered corporal punishment. But at the request of the members of the corps, such corporal punishment is ruled out and what remains is the afternoon bullring. SancitityoflndividualsVioIated In Atrocity Killings in Korea By HAL BOYL New York—(A 5 ) — There is no parallel in American history to the cold-blooded massacre of some 5,500 U.S. prisoners of war by the Communists in Korea. It is by far the gi’eatest atrocity committed against our nation since its founding. It negates the principles upon which our republic is built—the value of individual and human rights. In the seven-year struggle to achieve American independence the U.S. Army estimates “at least 4,044 American soldiers were killed” in battle. Yet in less than a year-and-a- half of the “police action” in Ko rea the enemy has murdered in cold blood more than 5,500 cap tured and defenseless American troops. They have murdered more Lovers Overcome Trials In MGM’s 6 American In Paris’ By FRANK DAVIS Battalion Staff Writer (“An American In Paris,” star ring Gene Kelly, Oscar Levant, George Guetary, Nina Fock, and in- . This company commander gave the junior twelve hours vrmSnt^MinneU^nT’produced 1 by on the afternoon bullring. No interpretation of the order Arthur Fredd, MGM. Showing could make this punishment justifiable—a man can not get over one hour per offense. When queried about the punishment, the junior said, if he did not get the hours all at once he would probably get them for a dirty sink twelve days in a row. Now we are attempting to say the punishment was out of keeping with the breach of Aggie rules. But we are saying, it is a breach of the ruling. The corps leaders must decide now whether or not the new order gives them enough room to administer a just pun ishment. If it doesn’t, let them ask for an expansion on the order. If the order is not to be changed, let each of the com pany commanders follow it. through Saturday at the Queen.) Love at first sight still hap pens realistically in the movies. Boy meets girl. Something in the mind snaps and says “this is it.” That’s the way it was when Jerry (Gene Kelly), an Ameri can ex-GI painter in Paris, saw Lisa (Leslie Caron) sitting at another table in a French cafe. Lisa, being a nice girl, at first Red Complaint To Divert Big Soviet Blunder resisted the advances of Jerry, but force of personality eventually wore her resistance down. Conflict entered the plot, when Jerry learned Lisa was going to marry George Guetary, a French A1 Jol- son, who had “nearly saved her life” during the war. While Lisa was picking up hus bands, Jerry was picking up ad mirers, ie, a rich sun tan oil heiress (Nina Fock), who just lov ed to sponsor talented artists, mus icians, or whoever might come along. Then there was unforgetable Os car Levant to complete the main cast in “An American In Paris.” As the misunderstood concert pian ist who had never given a con cert, Levant only had to act natur ally to be convincing. Complications rapidly worked themselves out to a happy end ing which delights any audience. Jerry and Lisa return to each others arms after Guetary nobly stepped aside. Levant and Miss Fock are lost in the shuffle. \ Besides the brilliant photogra phy, realistic street scenes, and song and dance routines, one mag- “An American in Paris” is con sidered by some as better than “Royal Wedding” starring Fred Astaire and Jane Powell, but Americans than died to make us a free people. The figure is almost too shock ing to comprehend. For these out right murders of our men arc only a small fraction of our total Ko rean casualties—now at the 100,000 mark. And the murders of our men are only a small fraction of the murders committed by the Reds among captured South Korean troops and the South Korean civilian population. But the number of disarmed Americans they have brutally shot down or clubbed to death makes the Custer Massacre of the Indian wars or the Malmedy Massacre of the last world war look like mis demeanors. These endless, fruitless and use less slayings by the Chinese and North Korean Reds must put be fore civilized mankind again its oldest Question—does human life hold any dignity, or must peoples feed upon each other as animals? The 20th century mind, brought up in a time of atrocity, is dulled to the very word atrocity. It tends to regard atrocity and propaganda as the same word. There are people today who already are willing to believe that Hitler’s human death fac tories were only legends. Gen. George S. Patton was aware of people’s tendency to shrug away government did to helpless men. These massacres in Korea are no more legendary than the massacres of Hitler, and no more to be con doned. In the prison at Taejon is Sept. 1950, I saw the corpses of 400 civilians shot by the retreat ing Reds. What crimes had these dead folk committed? The crime of many consisted in the fact that they owned a rice pad dy, were landlords or merely had remained indifferent to the Communist cause. In the courtyard of the Taejon city jail I watched as they dug out the bodies of a line of American soldier prisoners. They had been tied together at the wrists, forced to kneel in a quickly dug ditch, then shot down. Two of the Amer ican boys died holding each other in a final handclasp. There have been scores of mas sacres like this in Korea, some smaller, some larger. How can these dead soldiers ev er rest easy in their graves until America does somthing about it? A Dog’s Life Cold Monday Finds Roomey Love Sick By LESTER McIVER Battalion Staff Writer You know it’s funny about these fillies—a fellow never knows exactly where he stands with ’em. One minute he thinks he has her right in the palm of his hand—and bingo there she goes leading him around by the nose. Well something like this always pops up after every inferior to‘“Slmw Boat”"featured distasTeful facts.”"When hls & Third corps trip. A fellow goes to the big city with all the hope ill Katherine Grayson and Howard Keel. With the music of Jerome Kern, “An American in Paris” is anoth er highlight in Hollywood’s road to getting classical music across to the public. Army captured a Nazi concentra tion camp, he forced the civilian population o fthe nearest town fro walk through the camp and gaze at the inmates—the piled dead, the starving living. He wanted them to remember forever what their Day-Night Fighter Fleet In AF Future By ELTON C. FAY Associated Press Military Affairs Reporter Religion is a great blessing if you really have it but it can be a nui- * sauce if you only think you have it. Conduct Commendable Washington, Nov. 19—(fl?)—The Air Force is beginning to build to ward a new interceptor fleet in which all fighter planes instead of only a few will have electronic Washington, Nov. 19 UP) nificient thing was done in the eyes for hunting down enemy The latest Russian complaint m ^ e - . , ,. .. , m . , . . j The fantastic workings of the concerning Tlieste is Viewed } luman mind were illuminated, re- by officials here as an attempt vealing in each instance the hid- to divert world attention from den depths in the actor’s person- what they consider a blunder made a bty- Utilizing the full effects of not seem to make sense to havfe by Soviet Foreign Minister Vi- imagination, Jerry’s mind, in the interceptor planes which can work land of make believe, saw himself only in daylight and in good visual the world. A couple of nights later he heads back to the institution with all the energy and ambition of a broiled oyster. Take for instance the case of my roommate. He got ready to go down to the big city on the corps trip. Roomy isn’t the type of fellow to worry much. He’d been going with this gal for some time and as a matter of fact he didn’t even bother to go through the formal channels of asking for a date. The last time he wasi in the big city he just said, I’ll pick you up in time for the dance .... and that was it. Now I don’t know what it is, but something like that just seems to rub a gal the wrong way. Guess it all gets down to the simple rule a girl is not to T , ., be taken for granted. But why—well, bud it is just one of the ^bl^ < to ) ^make 6 a 1 surprise 0 strike things you have to take into account when you think, talk, timed to bring the bombers in over or dream about the female of the species, the United States under cover of But all of the philosophizin in the world won’t ever cure darkness and, if possible, in cloud f ee ij n g y 0U g e t when you start heading back to the covei ‘ _ campus. You just kinda sit back and look at the lights An alert from the radar warning S q U i r ten aroun dthe columns of the Administration Building ii r*r» vt ervvi^»ri nn /"vr nrhi/»h ic ■nocn* A j i i •ji 1.1 those damned women—I m through with then? bombers in any kind of weather, day or night. Discussing the trend toward the “all-weather” fighter force, one ofr ficial commented today that it did IIOUSTON WAS a town of disappointment. The Aggies were unhappy because they lost a football game. But there was also another person in Houston that was unhappy armament, for another reason. The iron curtain countries’ press shinsky at Paris, Vishinsky told the U. N. General Assembly last week that he had stayed awake all night laughing about Western proposals for dis- made no mention of this in report- He was a reporter for one of the big papers in the city, ing Vishinsky’s speech. And the wa ™ reaction when Lisa returned belief here is that the Kremlin u ls arms - sees now that a serious proposal ... Levant, in an unforgetable as a pursued male, sought by all conditions. females except the one he loved. Back of his comment was the . Finally in his escape from real- f act that the best conditions for a ity, Jerry won the lady of his modern bomber force, equipped been some indication that the day heart, but this was iollowed by a with radar bomb sight, is in the fighter MIG-15s are using at least cold awakening. Ot course, the blanketing protection of darkness some airborne radar equipment in net, construction of which is neai ing completion, therefore might be flashed at night. Whatever the flying conditions, the interectpor force would have to go into action instantly. All Weather Fighter The Soviet Air Force reportedly has in use at least one type of all-weather fighter to bolster Rus sia’s defense against attack — a twin-jet Lavochkin night fighter. Also, in recent months, there has He was waiting around the police station for some Aggies to be arrested. He is unhappy. No Aggies, by an unofficial check, were arrested for any violation of the rules of the city of Houston which warranted taking them to the Police Station. This is a commendable turn of events, not saying that any Aggies should have been jailed or have been jailed in the past. Tfee student body conducted itself in a commendable manner throughout the weekend. It is surprising to find this out, because any student body that loses a ball game is generally a discontented group. for ending the arms race comes too close to the lives and fortunes of people to be dismissed with ridicule. It was against this background that State Department press offi cer Lincoln White said yesterday American officials are convinced Russia’s new charges about West ern military development of Trieste was an effort to revive an old issue as a diversion. The Soviets are “beating a dead horse,” White asserted. . ... ., „ ... „ • , The essence of -the Russian Adding it all up we say, “Men you did a swell job of charges, in notes given to ambas- cold awakening was followed by a, an( j clouds. The move toward a complete all- weather force started some time ago, but now is being accelerated scene, imagined himself as the misunderstood genius. Via the vehicle of imagination, Levant pictured a concert hall, with himself as the composer, direct or, orchestra members, and cri tics. Needless to say he was ac claimed by all during his mental escapade. representing the school.’ Progress: The old man who used to brag about doing thirty miles an hour has a .son who brags about 350 an hour. sadors in Moscow, is that the U.S., Britain and France are carving up the Trieste territory to establish military and naval bases. The note also revived old com plaints that the Western powers have long violated the Italian peace , , • ,. w . , treaty which provided for division of the port city and the surround in the USAF’s new aircraft pro curement program. Quantities of all-weather fighters are on order to add to planes already delivered. Urgency Revision ,of estimates during the last two years of Russia’s strate gic bombing capabilities have given urgency to an effort to provide the air defense; command with a com plete force of interceptor’s capable of operating at any time under any conditions. Russia has added large numbers of long range bombers, based on the American B-29 design, Editor, The Battalion: to her strategic force and has Has anyone seriously considered demonstrated she now has the the cost of sewing stripes on shirts a t° mjc homo, of all non-commissioned officers? Strategists assume that if Rus- The average NCO would have to sian navigation and radar equip- have about ten sets,' of stripes ment has progressed at the pace mt uniforms of the Soviet bomber and jet fight- LETTERS Down With Stripes working against American B-29s and jet fighters. Three Types The U. S. Air Force now has in operation three types of all-weath er fighters, two of them jets—the Lockheed F-94C and Northrop F- 89, and the piston-engined, twin Mustang North American F-82, an older plane outclassed by the jets’ speed. Currently, test models of the North American F-86 sabre, the day fighter which has had the most frequent duels with Soviet-made MIG-15’s over Korea, are being tried as night fighters. Radar equipment has been fitted into the nose of the new senes, designated as F-86D. and think- .... I’ll die before I look at another one. Well now I guess you know just about how roomy felt when he came back to the campus this weekend. I had to help him off with his boots and remind him not to step on the laundry bundle on the floor .... guess I spoke to him just a little too harshly, because he start ed out telling me about woitiei\ . . . (both the specific kind and the general kind. After a while he started talking about the woman. It seems as if this gal he had been carring the torch for just looked at him carring the torch and laughed. This puts out even the biggest fire in a man. Well Roomy is down in the dumps. All he does is just sit and look at the snap shot picture he has of her and says .... nope I’d better not tell you what he says on accounta the linotype operator takes this copy home for his wife to read. But it all adds up to this—What makes women the fickle delectable creatures they are? I asked Roomy to answer this question and all he would sdy was—Goodnite. DALLAS 1 hr. 52 minutes (five issued shirts, a field jacket, Deepest of several underwater canyons in the Pacific is the Min danao Trench, four times the area of the Grand Canyon. Phone 4-5054 for information and resemtions-or call your travel asent The Battalion Lawrence Sullivan Ross, Founder of Aggie Traditions "Soldier, Statesman, Knightly Gentleman" The Battalion, official newspaper of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texea, is published by students five times a week during the regular school year. Puring 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 between Yugoslavia and the Wcst- terms, and Tuesday and Thursday during vacation and examination periods. Subscrip- gj- a nations, tion rates $6.00 per year or $.60 per month. Advertising rates furnished on request. ing territory between Italy and and a blouse). Most cadets have at Yugoslavia least two shirts of their own and These charges, White said, have a ,^ en shil ' t and a summer scr S e been answered before, both direct , ,, , » . ,, to Moscow and in the U. N. f Let alone the cost of sewing, the He added that there had once ^npes would cost each man six been some talk about the possibility dollal \ Sewing mcidcntally costs of building up Western military as much stn P e / Throughout strength at Trieste to assure g e corps thm wouM cost several speedy assistance to Yugoslavia thousand dollais. Undoubtedly, this should that country be attacked ! s S ood n ? WS t0 , thc Mici ' ent al * from beyond the iron curtain. But teration shops and we wonder who he said any basis that ever existed e !f’, Is there a ni ^ cr ln thc wood for this kind of development had P 1 ? ’ , been swept away with the working , A 3 on K as ’ we are m the stripe out of a military aid arrangements business, let s give the fish and sophomores private stripes so that P O G O K mc m- Item fawninb] lit Fo aft me‘cause f di detiVeF ihe'Juiftle into iteiV hano* TueRfi'e CAve mOUQH FOI? woee By Walt Kelly said? pite is an ^ innocent man notice ton/w’ to-frame and pieysvd. Femembe? tlif next innocent man might YOU AN INNOCENTtkAN?! WHAT A 0ASE CANAEP/ 'AN OUTJPAO£l^ Entered aa second-clasa Watter at Post Office at College Staton, Texas, Under the Act of Con- fress of March S, 1870. Member of The Associated Press Represented nationally by National Advertising Service Inc., at New York City, Chicago, Los An geles, and San Francisco. 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. News contributions may be made by telephone (4-5444) or at the editorial officer Room 201, Goodwin Hall. Classified ads may be placed by telephone (4-5324) or at the Student Activities Office, Room 209, Goodwin Hall. JOHN WHITMORE Editor _ Joel Austin Managing Editor the fines! band in the land, both field jacket? we can recognize our subordinates, as they are supposed to recognize their superiors. Incidentally, could you tell us where we can get some rubber cement for gluing stripes on rain- new army” Wrong Letter Editor, The Battalion: If someone has any gripes bleeds about this school or any coats. Wc expect a part of it, he should at least be order any day now. man enough to sign his own name In closing we offer two more to it without falsifying thc name suggestions: 1. lighter material of another to his letter. We are for stripes on underwear, and 2. making reference to the letter a low rate for tattooing, which appeared in The Battalion P. S. Does the colonel of the concerning the band. corps have a different set of dia- We regard the Aggie Band as monds for each shirt, blouse, and -19 YOU 6HOUU? OF PUNCHEP HIA\ EI6HT IN TH£ EVE. LI’L ABNER Weather Clear, Track Fast By A1 Capp Bill Streich News Editor Bob Selleck Sports News Editor Pat Morley Women’s Editor T. H: Baker. E. R. Briggs, Benny Holub, Bryan Spencer, Ide Trotter Edgar Watkins, Carl Posey, Gene Steed, Jerry Bennett, Bert Weller Staff Writers Bob Cullen, Jack Brandt Staff Cartoonist Frank Scott Quarterback Club Director Dick Zeek Staff Photographer Pat LeBlanc. Hugh piillippus, Gus Becker, Joe Blanchette Ed Holder Sports Staff Writers John Lancaster Chief Photo Engraver Russell Hagens Advertising Manager Robert Haynie. Advertising Representative Sam Beck Circulation Manager in playing and marching, and any one who does not feel the same as we has just never realized what a really good band is. As for the appearance of the letter, we neither know the reason it was written or by whom, and would greatly appreciate it if the low-life, whoever it is, would make himself known. Bert Gorrod, ’52 Bob Blum, ’51 Claude G. Elliott, ’53 S/Sgt. Douglas E. Flatt, ’53 S/Sgt. Pete Hutgren, ’53 Tech/Sgt. Jess M. Thughett ’53 S/Sgt, Eugene Zesch ’53 S/Sgt. Gordon Shearer ’53 S/Sgt. Jack Crockett ’53 S/Sgt. Ralph Hartman ’53 S/Sgt. Jim Moore ’53 1st Sgt. Benny A. Hood ’53 S/Sgt. Charles Slone ’53 Tech/Sgt. Dub Holland ’53 Tech/Sgt.