I Battalion Editorials Page 2 THE BATTALION TUESDAY, JUNE 1, 1954 Little League Baseball is Good Baseball College Station officially gets its Little League baseball park today, after a lot of people have done a lot of work to make the new park possible. These people deserve thanks from every resident of College Station, but we suspect the looks on the kids’ faces when they see their new park will be thanks enough for the men who donated their time and money to build it. Little League baseball is a lot of fun for the boys who play, and for the men and women who actively support it by giving their time. It also serves as a recognized training and character building program for the boys who play. It’s healthy, fun, and brings out fair play and good sportsmanship. It would also be fun for the parents and other residents of College Station. The Little League program could use support, but that’s a poor way to get people to come to the games—they won’t come if they »think it’s their duty. But many people do go to Little League games, and more would go if they would just go to one game and discover what the* draw to Little League baseball is. It’s just plain good baseball. Little League Schedule This is the schedule of College Station Little League games for the rest of the sum mer. All games on this schedule will be pla yed at the College Station Little League park at 5:30 p.m., except those games marked with an asterick (*), which are night games, starting at 7:00 p.m. Night games are played on the lighted Country Club Little League Park in Bryan. College Station teams are in the American League South, with Ray Oden as presi dent. The teams are Marion Pugh White Sox, Black’s Senators, Student Coop Orioles, and YEW Red Sox. June 1—White Sox vs. Senators 2— Orioles vs. Senators 3— Red Sox vs. White Sox 4— Orioles vs. White Sox* 5— Red Sox vs. Senators 7— Orioles vs. White Sox 8— Red Sox vs. Senators 9— White Sox vs. Senators* 10— Orioles vs. Red Sox 11— Orioles vs. Senators 12— Red Sox vs. White Sox 14— Red Sox vs. Senators* 15— Orioles vs. White Sox 16— Orioles vs. Red Sox 17— White Sox vs. Senators 18— Orioles vs. Senators* June 21—Orioles vs. Red Sox 22— White Sox vs. Senators 23— Red Sox vs. White Sox* v 24— Orioles vs. Senators 25— Orioles vs. White Sox 26— Red Sox vs. Senators 28— Orioles vs. Red Sox* 29— White Sox vs. Senators ^ 30— Orioles vs. Senators \ July 1—Red Sox vs. White Sox 2— Orioles vs. White Sox* 3— Red Sox vs. Senators \ 5— Orioles vs. Senators 6— Red Sox vs. White Sox \ 7— White Sox vs. Senators* V 8— Orioles vs. Red Sox \ 9— Red Sox vs. Senators 10—Orioles vs. White Sox Ruth Circle Fetes Sneeds, Mrs. Brown The Rev. and Mrs. Bob Sneed were honored recently by the Ruth circle of the A&M Methodist church. Also honored at the dinner meet ing was Mrs. Stewart Brown, re tiring circle chairman. Twenty-seven members attended the meeting which was at the home of Mr. and Mrs. K. R. Bailey. Those attending in addition to the host and hostess were Rev. and Mrs. Sneed, Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Don Dale, Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Horn, Mr. and Mrs. N. D. Durst, Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Sperry, Mr. and Mrs. L. A. DuBose. Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Holdredge, Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Mills, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Galloway, Mr. and Mrs. John Kincannon, Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Holland, Mrs. T. E. McAfee and Mrs. A. E. Denton. DIME FINES BOXED WAUKON, Iowa—(&)— — If you get a parking ticket in Wau- kon, don’t rush to the police station to pay the fine. Patronize one of the city’s “courtesy boxes”. The boxes, painted yellow, are attached to the parking meter posts. Parking tickets are placed in envelopes before they are stuck under the windshield wiper. The motorist places a dime in the en velope with the ticket and rops it into the box. Buckin’ Horse Badger ’“Threw By JACK HEWINS AP Newsfeatures LOOMIS, Wash.—Badger Moun tain was only a horse. But to Tim Bernard he was the greatest horse that ever held up a saddle—as he was to many other members of the Tribe of Ten Gallon Hats. But as long as there are rodeos, piggin’ strings and association saddles Badger Mountain will stay alive in the legends of the bucka- roos. The gallant old blood bay was 29 and three years retired from the dust of the arena when a vet erinarian dropped in at Bernard’s ranch here. He had to do a bit of filing on Badger Mountain’s teeth. The old campaigner had never liked the chute, but this time he walked in quietly to keep his dental ap pointment and, without fuss or drama, he died. This was the Badger Mountain that used to come blasting out of the chute like the Devil was pok ing him with a red hot pitchfork. He could be had, but late in his career he still was tossing 97 per- Mountain Them A1F cent of the guys who drew him. “You can name all the world champion bronc riders from 1934 through 1946 and Badger threw them all,” says Bernard, adding: “All except Nick Knight.” Nick had his number. He watched the Badger explode into the arena and after the second or third jump rear straight up, then pivot and come slamming down with a great sweep of his head. By that time most riders would be walking away, slapping the dust out of their chaps. Nick noticed the horse was al ways ridden with a loose flank strap—the “bucking strap” fasten ed behind the cinch. Says Tim, “How he figured it out I don’t know, but the first time Nick rode Badger he asked me if he could tighten the flank strap. I told him he could. Badger kicked at the moon and Nick stayed with him. “Nick rode him three times, but he never told another rider his secret. Once his brother Tommy could have won the Cheyenne show if he had known, but Nick played it square with the Badger.” Bernard and Leo Moomaw ran a string of rodeo stock that made the topnotch shows and Badger Mountain was just another new horse in the corrals when they bought him in 1934 at Douglas, Wash. The 1,220-pound bronc bucked first at Waterville, Wash., went on to Pendleton and from that time on was the featured horse at Pendleton and Cheyenne. He was unrideable at Cheyenne and Fort Worth. There have been a lot of famous buckers, like Steamboat and Mid night of an earlier day and Hell’s Angel and Five Minutes to Mid night of Badger’s time. The Badger tossed many men who rode his two rivals. Here was a horse that loved its work and made a game of it. You don’t teach a horse to buck, Tim will tell you. He must buck because he wants to; if he isn’t a natural bucker he doesn’t play long in a rodeo string. The fear some Badger Mountain bucked for 17 years. But it was always, with his ears pointed forward—the equine equiv alent of a warrior’s smile. You have Tim’s word that this blaze faced brute was “perfectly gentle. In his long career he never injured a rider. Take the saddle off and anyone could handle him.” The Battalion Lawrence Sullivan Ross, Founder of Aggie Traditions “Soldier, Statesman, Knightly Gentleman” The Battalion, official newspaper of the Agricultural and Mechan ical College of Texas, is published by students four times a week, during the regular school year. During the summer terms, and examination and vacation periods, The Battalion is published twice a week. Days of publications are Tuesday through Friday for the regular school year, and Tuesday and Thursday during examination and vacation periods and the summer terms. Subscription rates $9.00 per year or $ .75 pel month. Advertising rates furnished on request. Entered as second-class matter at Post Office at College Station, Texas under the Act of Con gress of March 3, 1870. Member of The Associated Press Represented nationally by National Advertising Services. Inc., at New York City, Chicago, Los Angeles, and San Fran cisco. News contributions may be made by telephone (4-5444 or 4-7604) or at the editorial office room, 202 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 republi cation 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. BOB BORISKIE, HARRI BAKER Co-Editors Jon Kinslow. Managing Editor George Manitzas City Editor John Akard .Feature Editor James Earle - ....Cartoonist Larry Lightfoot Circulation Manager Tomy Syler, Russell Reed, Pete Goodwin Roland Baird, and Narman Hill. Circulation Staff Cadet Slouch ... by James Earle Farm Service Work Recognized Nationally “The work that your farm-ser vice departments are doing is rec ognized nationally,” P. T. Montfort told executives of 12 electric com panies serving Texas here Tues day. Montfort, who is project director for the Texas P’arm Electrification committee, was reporting to the group on activity through the past year, at the 25th annual meeting of the committee. “Farmers generally haven’t re alized how much they can use elec tricity,” Montfort continued. Only when labor shortages became pro nounced did the farmer begin to realize that in electricity he had a real tool—one he could use to good advantage, he said. In 1945, for example, only 157,- 838 farms in the state had elec tricity—a total of about 41 per cent. Now, however, more than 305,000—or 92 per cent—have it, Montfort said, and added that he believed even more farms are ser viced than the records show. Dr. F. C. Bolton, president-emer itus of A&M, is chairman of the committee. John Shewmake of Southwestern Electric service, Dal las, is secretary. Both were re elected for the coming year during the meeting. R. C. Jaska, of the agricultural engineering department, reported on research in farm electrification during the past year, and E. M. Lewis of Southwestern Public Ser vice Co., Amarillo, reported on ac tivities of the Farm Youth sub committee, of which he is chair man. Supplementing Lewis’ report were Homer Gibbs of Texas Power and Light, Dallas; G. A. Bales of Texas Electric Service Co., Fort Worth; Lamoyne Goodwin of Gulf State Utilities, Beaumont; A. H. Gray, Southwestern Gas and Elec tric, Shreveport, La.; W. F. Ehlers of Houston Lighting and Power. Co., and H. O. Robers, Central Power and Light Co., Corpus Chris- ti, all members of Lewis’ commit tee. ‘It Isn’t Worth It’ Sun Tan Cm ‘ Dangerous Kir The therapeutic value of a sun tan probably isn’t worth the trou ble and risk it takes to get one. That’s the word from the state health department. They say a tan is nothing more than a mani festation of a skin injury. But these same health officials are first to admit that a sensible 22 Foreigners Expected For Cotton School About 22 persons from out side the U. S. are expected to enroll for the 45th Annual Summer Cotton school here May 31-July 10. Letters of admittance to the course—necessary for passport pur poses for those outside the U. S.— have been written to 15 persons from Lower California in Mexico, Professor J. M. Ward of the agri cultural economics and sociology department, said. Another five students are expected from other parts of Mexico. One letter has been written to a textile mill representative from Drummondville, Quebec, Canada, and a student from Israel, now studying in California, is expected. Total enrollment for the course —probably the oldest continuous short course offered by the college —is expected to fall between 50 and 60, Ward said. The Summer Cotton School is conducted to provide training for persons expecting to enter the cot ton trade; to growers who want to learn how to market their cotton more profitably; and to buyers who want to review grade and staple standards or to become more fa miliar with elements of quality in cotton, Ward said. Instruction, with laboratory work is given in grading, stapling, fiber quality, and cotton trade procedure, by men who have had “extensive successful practical experience in the business as well as in teach ing.” bask in the s tal pick-me-i first weeko the thing Sunshine i: you. More YORJ sucker” had^y nigi sun when h )nLro , it. Even at „ -1 • mean two ,,8 s t 1 }! and sleeple shirt is tort; 3 Wit ■ „ 2r mat h f°™ p " umbia able to tan, - “heliophobe.; 118 rel entire sum.- t’owru'l they’d get S stat blisters. 1 supp!; their skin la ach ac sary to prruse dirt each new e \ sa j ( bUrn * 3 SOlc But if yoicement that golden ng tho can avoid n-curity. by followin. nsibil 11 y t ions fromkny ipdi state health limsel f Assuming; tan—a “he. oint, Ei it by repeat the w five minute- attack three days icationa and ci couple more -ernecim 15 minutw '4.” Th After tha: is to safe as far or too ed. But tl examp of sun stiVt t or pu Sunshine re so cot D, as most; oppositi apparently is there ordinarily ems, at all the vit ise of so by normal L s docs Ever won ir fr | ed( of freckles v e rsion. so becoming re Know female nose problem The color apwledg determined 1 -’SW# 1 ’ 6 ,. , lot pen " reels 11 as a defer tizelis b Dark-comp d cifnzej considerable, like t ppositior and tim< albinos s, espec: the wo ment is unev^-pj e cam collects insjee hundr freckles. lines, —/alty.' News -.lists so LT. COL. CHARLES D. Trail ’39 is being transferred to England with the eighth air force. Mrs. Trail is the former Miss Billie Marburger of College Station. They have three children. A JOINT short course for the Texas Association of County Sup erintendents, the Texas Associa tion for Industrial Supervisors and Texas school administrators will be held here June 21-23, sponsored by the educational and psycology department. About 600 persons are expected. Brie the fvec y as m vide and FORMER ,id. “The Cobb of Moke view son of Hunt; tc> first solo flipely app cadets at h acteristi Florida. 3 indicat a na’ ENLISTED ri ne of reserve may p P ] y . us, but tary service s of th( , lor a period tr spoke cases, the it Volution units they'AS lath War II. achieve he addc P O G O ABNEJ