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Show THE BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH HAT I RING . . . Former Ala-bama representative, La Fayette L. Patterson, says he nil! seek the Democratic nomination for Presi-dent. He declares he wants to the hih moral leadership of Gandhi, Wilklc, Roosevelt and Wilson. L SPCRTSCCPIE MAHONEY LADV RA S S I E RSJMM TELEVISION HAS SlFL REALLY MADE THE PUB-- 'Jjk rZ-Z- L LIC CONSCIOUS OF -- LC &Z7 ''jC s THE MUSCLE MOLLS ' FfppT-- AND MANY A PRETTY s2f 1 I "X V I BLONDE HAS TAKEN TO VSJ J J'x' THE GRUNT AND GROAN V7 V I A. circuit, it's for . his. I REAL PAY TOaMILDKED35r-- a A BURKE HAS BEEN I 1 EARNING 30,000 - , TS&WL A YEAR, MAE WESTON STiK TOPS I5,000 AND MANY A M DAMSEL IS HITTING 5000 FOR APPLY- - ING A FULL NELSON A FEW NITES A WEEK. kJj?; y 'follow the sun "the rlw f" TT) movie that is the life U I --M V STORY OF BEN HOGAN, SjO Ji. 7P ACTUALLY HAD BEN AS THE --"" K v0 J TECHNlCAL ADVISOR. C vw7'i VY Tm A glen ford plays the J CJN Vsritd5A Pi TITLE ROLE, AND IN ''7,Wi fcwflr hfl THE WEEKS HE STUDIED WWwV'''' I ir1 WTH BANTAM BEN ON Trt, J III' HOW TO ACT 4 PLAY "SiJ SB l GOLF LIKE HIM, GLEN ffiAaffipJarl AMATEUR GAME! .ylni I K TvT fcXfiti ctcur boys! i VHC'YJ LI. jJ v.- miA ...irt-fc.- i ..mlW&Ufa ,., Ck. - - Wrf- - J RED rKOI'AGANDA . . . The famous "thumbs down" picture of Gen-er- al Dwight D. Eisenhower was made In Copenhagen last January during a tour of military installations. Recently, the Reds of east Berlin caricatured it, adding the dollar sign and a grinning skull and carried the picture in a parade. The Reds have Interpreted the picture as they chose, Indicating that General Elsenhower turned thumbs dowji on using American youth in the armies of Europe. SPORTUGHT Cadets Victims of rWinr Disease B- v GRANTLAND RICE Here is the Bible's finest plea A line that can never be turned or budged Write this down for them all to see "Judge not, that ye be not judged"! The Glory (?) of Winning Possibly one of the worst obses-sions connected with competitive sport is what one might call "The glory of winning." There is very little actual glory in winning. The glory from a game not only lies In giving 100 per cent of all you have but in the contest itself. Yet foot-ball coaches, especially, have been almost completely overwhelmed by this hell-be- desire for victory. There isn't a bet-ter football coach nor a more honora-ble man in the coun-try than Earl Red Blaik. But Red Blaik, like so many, many other coach-es, was caught in this swirl of victory importance. He was caught in a system, football players in all other Ameri-can colleges would have been able to come through safely and clean, as things were set up. The West Point System We still say that any system that involves so many cadets in deadly serious trouble through so many years must be wrong. When the first West Point news broke there were only 90 mentioned. As we understand it, there are pos-sibly 200 involved, not counting the other hundreds who go back through some 10, 12 or many more years. These kids who come to West Point are as clean and as decent as any kids the country has. They come to a honor system that has been broken and violated through a decade, or longer. They were entirely wrong. But they were not cheating for profit. They were out of line to stay with a tough job, that too often ends in death or mutila-tion. West Point and Annapolis are no baby-sitte- r enterprises. They give you 17 hours a day of rough going-over- , mental and physical. When you throw in football work ex-tremely important to the Academy and a wearing test you add greater pressure. Few can take it in such doses. You can't also ask these men or boys to be stool pigeons and snoopers. The only honor test worthwhile affects only the individual involved. There is still very much we must hear from the baffled and confused Pentagon group. Many at West Point have failed in a number of respects. But don't forget that West Point's higher com-mand has failed even more dismally and so has the ruling body at thf Pentagon. not of his Wn k" Grantland Ric. ing, a system that covers the country. Win win win, and win at any price, is an alumni slogan win or get fired. This covers the football map north and south, east and west. The coaches know the an-swer. So do the players who are recruited, proselyted, pampered and paid for in many cases not even forced to. attend classes. Today It has gotten so that over a winning football team there Is too often a heavier cloud or shadow of scandal thaa the losers know. "How much did they cost?" "How much do they get?" After a debacle around 1941 or 11942, when Army teams were crushed, Army (I mean Army Brass) decided to get a winner. !Army did. I was never impressed with Army's war teams, gatnerea, as Navy's were from civilian col-leges, meeting kids or 4F's. Both Army and Navy went completely haywire those war years. I think they know it now. But in the desire to have win-ning teams, Army, and possibly Navy, brought in stars who couldn't pass the scholastic test. So they cribbed. It wasn't nice. But I wouldn't have agreed to the Army honor code that in-cluded stool-pigeo- n work and snooping. Army's system was 100 per cent 'wrong. Any system that involves from 90 to 200 cadets in any such snarl is entirely wrong. I don't believe 10 per cent of the OBNOXIOUS PARAGON . . . C. J. Harrington (above), Truman's nominee for judge, Is opposed by Sen. Douglas (III.) on old formula he Is personally obnoxious. But, says Douglas, he Is "good family man, religious, and competent Judge." RURAL SCHOOL Kansas Village Home of Model Rural School HOLCOMB, Kansas-T- he pleasant village of Holcomb, population about 200, received wide publicity recently with the publication of a report on the town's consolidated school. One of the first of its kind and a model of elementary and secondary schooling, the Holcomb school has been leading rural educational trends for the past 30 years. The latest report on the school's ad-vancement is outlined in a 44 page booklet. The village is located on trans-continental highway 50 and the main line of the Santa Fe railroad, eight miles west of Garden City, Kansas. The consolidated school is the dominant Institution. There are an alfalfa-dehydratio- n plant, a post office, and two filling stations, one of which carries a small stock of groceries, in the vil-lage. There is no church, no bank, no general store. For the services of these institutions, the people go to Garden City. The town is well shaded by a large number of good-size- d trees. It is an excellent site for a rural school, as it provides for teachers and pupils a maximum of quietude and a physically attrac-tive rural environment. Twenty Acre Campus Included in the physical plant of the school are lar.d, buildings and equipment, and facilities for providing utilities, heat, light, water and sewage disposal. The school is located on approximately 20 acres, all In one tract. The land includes the campus, on which the school buildings stand, the athletic field, a school farm, and the sites of the school-owne- d faculty hous-ing. The buildings owned by the school are: 1 Main School building, a brick two-stor- y structure 105 feet by S3 feet, completed In 1921. 1 Grade school building, a stucco structure 41 feet by 99 feet. 1 Vocational agriculture building, a one-stor- y stucco structure 100 feet by 48 feet. 1 Teacherage, a frame two-stor- y structure 33 feet by 63 feet. 1 Bus garage, a by one-stor- y brick structure. 7 Teachers' cottages, all frame structures and varying In floor dimensions from 24 feet by 32 feet, a two-stor- y duplex, to 40 feet by 50 feet, the two story residence of the superintendent. Educators contend hundreds cf rural schools districts could con-solidate and have a school as good as Holcomb. Communly Backs School The amazing thing about the school, now serving five districts, is the importance it has assumed in the eyes of the community. The visitor to Holcomb soon senses an attitude of community pride In the school and a marked popular solic-itude for the school's welfare. The solicitude extends not only to athletics and other extra-curricul-activities but also to courses offered and to the maintenance of good academic standards. The visitor gains the impression that the community, for all its enthu-siasm for athletics, would feel much less disturbed by a "disas-trous" basketball season than by a reduction in the school's rating by the Kansas department of edu-cation from Class A to Class B. SISTER KENNY INCURABLY ILL . . . Sister Kenny, Australian nurse who became leading crusader In war against polio, declared re-cently that she is Incurably ill and "has little time left In this world." Still, she went ahead with plans to attend International polio conference in Copenhagen. She receives mall In Australia from all over the world. ; I I DEFENDS RFC . . . W. Stuart ... Symington, new administrator of the RFC, tells senate banking com-mittee of reforms he has instituted In lending agency. He says 99.9 per cent of the organization consists of honest, conscientious, o a p a b I e Americans. RHpyj;j riBy Jim Fishing Pressure A contributing factor to the pan-fish-getting out of hand is the dif-ferential fishing pressure. The fish-erman prefers to take home the large bass and crappie. He is not usually satisfied to take home a catch of smaller perch or bluegills or sunfish. He cannot brag about them or does not feel happy show-ing them to his friends. But give him a four or five pound bass and you hear about it for weeks. Thus by taking his limit in big fish he is reducing the potential of that lake for keeping the more prolific panfishes under control. It is known that some fishermen fish only for bass and take no perch, bluegills, sunfish or small crappies at all. It sometimes seems as though it would be a wise policy to insist that fishermen be required to take some panfish when they take bass or other predatory fishes. This, of course, would be almost impossible to enforce but a code of i ethics on the bass fishermen's part might go a long way toward help- - j ing this unfavorable situation. For farm ponds the stocking recommendation for a ratio be-tween bass and bluegills is 10 bass to 100 bluegills. Carrying this over, then it would seem logical to have the fishermen attempt to take 10 bluegills for each large bass he caught. I AAA Aof So Crazy l "Crazy like a goose!" Ever hear that expression? But don't believe it! Colorado's i experience the past winter in live- - trapping and banding the wild Canadian goose at Two Buttes Res- - t rvoir has convinced at least those assigned to trap them that geese are far from crazy. The trapping project was Colorado's first venture on geese, although the department has trapped and banded thousands of ducks the past few years. Last fall and winter over 16,000 wild geese used the Two Buttes Reservoir, almost twice as many now as when the refuge was first established. So it is quite evident that where protection and proper environment prevail, the flocks show a steady increase. It was discovered almost imme diately that, although some duck trapping techniques were similar, j goose trapping would call for sev eral basic changes, due to the unique social patterns and habits of geese. For instance: hungry ducks readily decoy to the baited trap areas and walk into the trap. ' Geese decoy to the traps but there the similarity stops. It was found that they would not hurry into the trap for bait. In addition, mated pairs seemed to be together at all times and would not leave each ether near the traps. Wild ducks, on the other hand, generally pair off in the spring and are therefore much easier to separate and trap during winter. AAA The nostrils of the giraffe are heavily lined with stiff hairs as potection against the great number of insects the animal disturbs when it browses in the branches of trees. A A Use A Dog When you meet a hunter who is accompanied by a sleek-coate- d retriever, you usually may place the man in the ranks of the wildlife conservationists with-out knowing anything more about him, the Wildlife Management In-stitute comments. Each year, many game birds are shot but not recovered by hunters. Inexperience at judging range and poor marksmanship account for many birds which are brought down but which retain enough life to slip into a tangle of rushes where the most conscientious search will fail. Others, clean-kille- may drop in water inaccessible to boats or into impenetrable thickets. Whatever the cause, the result is one more bird, uncounted in the bag, elimin-ated from the game population and wasted. In making these humanly impossible recoveries, the retriever finds his greatest joy. The occa-sional freak shot that brings a duck plummeting into the blind, excising enough to the hunter, cheats the waterfowl dog of his greatest thrill. What he craves is the action of launching himself after a duck downed in some rush-grow- n quagmire where a mere human would flounder to the crown of his cap. The use of a dog, in such cases, means the difference between bitter disappointment and a red-lett- hunt. AAA Good Technique Have you ever had the aggra-vating experience of being on a good bream or crappie pond with an excellent "rise" on and still couldn't interest any of the fish in your flies? It's happened to us often, but we have one technique that frequently overcomes the prob-lem. That is to give your leader a quick jerk just as the Dies are about to settle on the water. If this doesn't interest the rising fish retrieve the fly slowly. V . --I n f A al . CLEAN-SHAVE- PEACHES . . . Soon, thanks to this machine being tried in Spartansburg, S. C, your peaches will come to you In shining nudity. The gadget Is a peach polisher designed to take the fuzs off the peach and apply a thin coat of wax to seal in the natural flavor of the fruit and reduce shrinkage. Revolving brushes do the job. Examining some newly-shave- d peaches as they come through the machine are Les Collier and Ben Gramling. No, an electric razor won't work. t t V - ' v ii I- - ' ' 1 I JOHN D. MARRIES . . . John D. Rockefeller, Jr., one of the world's wealthiest men, was married to Mrs. Martha Baird Allen at the bride's Providence, R. I., home. Her late husband was a classmate of Rockefeller's at Brown Univer-sity. Many Robinson Angles There are many angles in the Robinson-Turpi- n affair. Just how much fighting ability did Robinson'j Paris invasion remove from hi; system? Robinson has been fightinj many years. How far back has he gone? Just how good is Turpin? Was it Turpin's ability or Robin son's fading that brought about the result? The majority feeling we have rur across to date is that Robinson wil be another fighter in September. Few thought John L. Sullivan wai sUpping when he met Jim Corbett It has been that way ever since The champ can do no wrong unti he's licked. cmtommiM 'fi;SH HOOK . . FISHHOOKS DULLED AGAINST ROCKS MAY BE SHARPENED BY RUBBING POINTED ENDS ACROSS SCRATCHING SURFACE OF ABOOK OF MATCHES.1 Chlorination Urged To Make Water Safe HATTIESBURG, Miss. In a mes-sage aimed at the farmers and rural dwellers across the nation, George Klumb, director of the Cul-liga- n Soft Water Institute, recent-ly pointed out that impure water supply was a major and important problem for non-cit- y dwellers. "Drainage and seepage can foul water from wells, springs, and streams and make it a lethal po-tion," Klumb explained. Bacteriological tests of private water supplies by the state or local board of health is an absolute neces-sity, even though the water is sparkling clear and pleasant to the taste, he declared. Organisms which cause water-born- e diseases such as typhoid and dysentry are invisible to the human eye and can be found only through examination by experts. Chlorination is the most widely accepted method of making water safe for human consumption, as large city reservoirs testify. The increase of rural poulatlon over the nation in late years has put heavy demands on available water supplies. For a small water system, the chlorine necessary to protect the water may be added in the form of hypochlorite solution made from ordinary household bleach. The Culligan chlorinator system is through use of an elec-trically controlled positive dis-placement pump connected to the water supply system and responding ' to the same switch that starts and stops the well pump. Chlorine is introduced into the water ahead of the pressure tank to allow ample time for the solution to perform its germ killing action. The solution is usually placed in an earthen-ware crock of at least 10 gallon capacity. tii ... t f t r:-.,- I SHARP DIPLOMAT ... Dr. Yon Chan Yang, ambassador of Korea, shows White House newsmen his snany tie with pattern of the U.N. emblem and Korean national colors. He had conferred with President Truman. f t ft TOUGH TALK . . . Using the American Legion national headquarters dedication as bis forum. President Truman charged that "scare mon-gers and hate mongers" are seeking to destroy the guarantees of the Constitution. Left to right are Rep. Edith Nourse Rogers (R. Mass.); Erie Cocke, Jr., national commander of the American Legion; Navy Secretary Dan Kimfcall (dark glasses, rear); and Mrs. Willis Reed, president auxiliary. |