Page 4 THE BATTALION Tuesday, June 23, 1953 ( i P v si C( p ti Plea For Peace (Continued from Page 1) up to the Naktong River and the infantry boys said, “Here come our tanks — now we’ll show the The only catch was that our tanks werent’ half as good as the Russian-built T-34. One day my tank and an other one ran into a T-34 along the fringe of the Pusan perim eter. We fired a round and it bounced right off the T-34 tur ret. The T-34 fired and blew the turret off the tank that was with us. Three men died in the tank and the other two sneaked out the escape hatch and got away. My tank pulled around and we did a bugout (retreat). One night we set up our perim eter near Taejon and Gook artil lery opened up. My buddies and I ran to a hill and began digging with our helmets. I found I was digging in a mound and pretty soon I unearth ed a dead G. I. who had been buri ed sitting up. In his lap was a burned-up Browning automatic rifle and I knew the G. I. was burned alive with a phosphorus grenade. I pushed him out of the way an,d sat there all night, try ing not to look at him, while enemy artillery kept on. I was about ready to call it quits that night. In a prison at Taejon we found six. G. I.s all with hands tied be hind their back and bullet holes in their heads. Someone had used one of the six for bayonet pi’actice We moved up the road about half a mile. There we found a big Catholic church. Inside we found more than 2000 Korean corpses, stacked up like cordwood. They had been machine-gunned in the church basement and then gasoline had been poured on them and they had been set afire. This was what they got for being anti communist. Outside the church, in the yard, were a dead priest and two dead nuns. In a trench outside the church we found something that really made us sick. Kids. Hun dreds of dead, half-burned chil dren in a trench. That’s What they got for being the offspring of anti- Communists. We got bulldozers and buried all the thousands of dead. That day. I realized we weren’t fight ing humans—-we were fighting dogs. In Pyongyang, I remember two dead Russian officers in the street ■—in Russian uniforms and black Russian pistols and one was wear ing some kind of Russian medal. I still have it. We moved into abandoned North Korean army headquarters of Gen. (Marshal) Kim II Sung. Korean and Russian, flags, flew- outside the headquarters. I Avalked inside and. a portrait of Uncle Joe Stalin frowned at me. We went on north. The M-24 tank I was in suffered heavy damage when a gook slipped a thermit grenade into the am munition trailer we were pulling, but we got out before the big ex plosions. In late November we were far north—north of Anju. A string of Allied vehicles came crashing down the road, head ing south. A G. I. hollored, “The Chinks are in the war— They’ve hit us.” It was the first word of a sickening, disheart ening retreat. Our tank, run ning on one engine, went south with the I’est. The retreat, by early 1951, carried south of Seoul. And then the hard fight northward began. Gen. Matthew B. Hidgway was in command and • he was later re placed by Gen James A. Van Fleet—a commander just as ag gressive as Ridgway. I joined the 24th Division in central Korea. On my first night of reconnaissance patrol, in a jeep, we ran into an enemy road block. Two guys with me were killed. I dived over the side and into a ditch and somehow I got away and ran back to headquarters. A Tank Mission They posted me as a guide on the lead tank of two tanks and we went back to get the roadblock. On the side of my tank, I re member, was a cheeful little Negro soldier named Jones. Just as we got near the roadblock we ran over a daisy chain of mines. The explos ion played hell with our tank and a piece of metal clipped off the top half of Jones’ head. But the two tanks finished off the road block. Fifteen gooks died behind it. I was a sergeant now and be gan leading foot patrols. Just to show how things can happen to a soldier, I’ll tell a little about one patrol, A second lieutenant, fresh fi-om the states, arrived at headquarters one afternoon and was assigned to go on patrol with me and some others the next night. He told me: “I’m new at all this and I’ll probably catch a bullet right between the horns.” Only One Patrol The patrol went all right until we started wading across a river about five feet deep. A Chinese machine gun opened up on us. I got across the river and blew it up with a grenade but not before a bullet hit the second lieutenant. He fell by the side of the river, a bullet right between the eyes, as he had predicted. We had to leave him there because another gun started firing. A slug got me in the hip but not too bad. All of us got back to the lines except the lieutenant. I left Korea in November, 1951, served in the states and Tokyo, and didn’t get back to Korea until last May. I think patrols are just as dangerous now. The enemy is better trained and better equip- _ ed and just as fanatical as ever. But the men in my outfit don’t mind fighting- to end this war because we didn’t want to see our kid brothers messed up in it. So if we have an armistice, let’s make it stick. Let’s enforce it. Guys have died over here. Let it be for a good reason. !n!!iiiiiiijiui!^ IfttrY, SEIX, RENT OR TRADE. Rates .... 3c a word per insertion with a t5c minimum. Space rate in classified Section .... 60c per column-inch. Send »ll classified to STUDENT ACTIVITIES OFFICE. All ads must be received in Student Activities office by 10 a.m. on the day before publication. • FOR SALE • KELVINATOR Refrigerator 535.00. Apply B-ll-W C. V, (1) DESK, (9) CHAIRS. (2) tables, (2) setees, (1) living room suite (oak divan, chair, coffee table). Sealed bids will be received in the Office of the Auditor, College Administration Building, until 10 a.m., Monday, June 29, 1953. The right is reserved to reject any and all bids and to waive any and all technicalities. Ad dress Auditor, A&M College of Texas, College Station, Texas for further in formation. • FOR RENT • THREE ROOM FURNISHED apartment, large rooms, cool, near campus and shopping center, Venetian blinds, nice yard, good neighborhood. $50.00. Call 6-3777 after 5. See at 605 Montclair St. 6EWING machines. Pruitt’s Fabric Shop. LAWN SERVICE Lawn Mowing by College Student Work done on a weekly basis or by day Call Student Labor Office, 4-5014 or after 5 call 6-2188 K&B DRIVING Dr. Carlton R. Lee RANGE OPTOMETRIST NOW OPEN 303A East 26th On Fin Feather Road Call 2-1662 for Appointment Bryan, Texas (Across from Court House) • HELP WANTED • BEAUTY OPERATOR. Excellent tunity. Pruitt’s Beauty and Shop. LOST LOST Friday—two boys’ bathing suits; one cap and one towel; between College pool and East gate. Call John Hamner 6-3351. Directory of Business Services [NSURANCB of all kinds. Homer Adam*. North Gate. Call 4-1217. • SPECIAL NOTICE SUE ROSS LODGE NO. 1300 A.F. & A.M. Called Meeting Thursday, June 25, 7:00 p.m. Public Installation of Officers. A1 B. Nelson, W.M. N. M. McGinnis, Sec. Official Notice ‘‘Applications for degrees are now being accepted in the Office of the Dean of the Graduate School from students expecting to complete requirements for their degree by the end of the current term. Applications must be filed by July 1, 1953. IDE P. TROTTER, Dean’* Ui&M SISTERS REUNITED—Mrs. Alfred Romero (left) of Port Arthur, and Mrs. William H. Collig-an of Pittsburgh, Pa., are shown as they met in Port Arthur for the first time in 29 years. The sisters were separated after their mother, Mrs. Mabel McGreogr, placed them in a Tulsa, Okla., or phanage. Mrs. Colligan was five and Mrs. Romero was three at the time. Soon after they were adopted by differ ent families. 66 Scouts Receive Awards A t Camp A rrowmoon Outing Sunday’s Court of Honor closing the annual Boy Scout outing at Camp Arrowmoon Sunday after noon saw 66 boys receive 120 awards emblematic of acquisition of scouting skills. Nine boys advanced from tender foot to second class, seven to first class, six to star rank, one to life rank, and one boy received a silver palm on his Eagle Scout badge. In addition, 96 merit badges were awarded to 42 boys. Eleven troops* from Brazos and Robertson Counties were represent ed at the court, which was under direction of L. S. Paine, Brazos district advancement chairman. College Station Troop 102 awards were: Bill Jones, Alex Rush, Kenneth Bailey, to second class; David McNeely, Michael Luther, to first class; Tom Ivy to star rank; Tom Ivy, Michael Luther, Jack McNeely, David Mc Neely, Ernest Tanzer, Jim Simp son, George Litton, Gwinn Thomp son, merit badges. Litton received a silver palm on his Eagle badge. College Station Troop 411 awards were: Richard Reiser to second class; Jack Burns and Richard Miller, to Star rank; Jack Burns Center Work Resumed Construction on the Catholic Student Center was slowed down last week due to some sub-soil dif ficulties, but work was resumed Monday and everything else is coming along nicely, Rev. Tim Val- enta, announced. Fun Night I Visiting Del r o Fun night for t: ferences being held day through Wedt and Walter Dahlerb, merit badges. Awards were presented to a large number of scouts for sup- I held Tuesday nigki erior ratings in various camping room of the MSC. activities by D. C. Jones, Jr., | The Manning Si | ; 'Jurnbe camp director. Jack Spell also pre- : charge and there Aik seated riflery proficiency certifi- dancing and cates to boys who earned skills in I T h e festivities ' that field. I way at 8 p. m. Late model TYPEWRIT for rent ?ai h Royal-Olympia-Smith, Corona, RemkJ and Underwood Portables Convenient terms /ASHIN Federa BRYAN BUSINESS M ACIIIW - ds it r< Dialoold in ised the on’s coi five and 429 S. Main—Bryan W. B. ADAMS ’51 ars. -he resi re to eaf DYERS'FUR STORAGE W mono Yea ffere ;yle F 210 S. Main Bryan KTaV Id Stadiu mer stu< ember 1 .fter No\ be oflVi on a fii is, aecor( red Cron (hager of lach opfi a ticket s at all id for th •ptipns a iletic Cou h. A tin n worked students purchase 'hose usii may sei 1 for $2i erstainlin t of $1; ie within of appli $15. per third pa; he date < here will ^ for opti that tint each gam ons may I be regi owner 1 ncil. e net pn is to 1: *'/ of additii - of Kyle The road to battle is not a smooth one. And these foot soldiers of the 25th Division are thankful for a ride, as they sprawl on lumber ing M-4 tanks, somewhere in Korea. Their business is obvious—to keep America militarily strong overseas. 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S. Government does not pay for this advertising. The Treasury Department thanks, for their patriotic donation, the Advertising Council and U. S. Savings! e piano r< een avail* due to al sound meed Wa The Battalion ndalism i done by o nts of th ark. rk said 1 room s. e latter P