V Page 4 THE BATTALION Thursday, November 8,1951 Revenge Seeking Freshmen Clash With Rice In Houston " \ .yf •> A '-ll -k ' ?•'/ '< , fX'Y' / By GUS BECKER Battalion Sports Writer The Aggie Fish will be out to avenge a 52-6 licking by the Rice Owlets Friday night at 7:30 p.m. at the new Rice Stadium in Hous ton. The game is pia.ycd under the sponsorship of the Athletic Com mittee of the Chamber of Com merce with the proceeds going to the United Fund. This is the last game of the sea son for the Owlets who have won only one game out of four. The A&M Freshman are undefeated this season, having played three games. Last week the Owlets came out on the short end of a 13-7 game || R sPIilii CPS BIG BROTHER ________________ * Barnes S Noble COLLEGE ‘ OUTLINE 'SERIES V.■-7.. ' ' ATLAS OF HUMAN ANATOMT....- ACCOUNTING, Elementary ALGEBRA, College ANCIENT, MEDIEVAL & MODERN HISTORY- ANTHROPOLOGY, Outline of General BACTERIOLOGY, Principle* of— BIOLOGY, General BOTANY, General BUSINESS LAW CALCULUS, The CHEMISTRY, Pint Year College CHEMISTRY, Mathematic* for General CHEMISTRY, Organic . CORPORATION FINANCE DOCUMENTED PAPERS, Writing- ECONOMICS, Dictionary of ECONOMICS, Principle* of >~ ECONOMICS, Reading* in..— EDUCATION, History of ENGLAND, History of- EUROPE, 1500-1848, History of EUROPE, Since 1815, History of EXAMINATIONS, How to Write Better.. FORESTRY, General FRENCH GRAMMAR —SI.75 ... 1.00 ,. w 1.00 w 1.25 — .75 __ 1.25 — 1.25 _ 1.75 .... 1.00 1.00 ..... 1.50 ... 1.25 __ 1.25 __ 1.00 — 1.75 — 1.25 _ .75 _ 1.50 — 1.25 _ 1.75 — 1.00 _ 1.00 __ 1.00 LATIN AMERICA Civilization. Reading* in LATIN AMERICAN Economic Development—.^. LITERATURE, American ., LITERATURE, English, Dictionary of —« LITERATURE, English, History of, to Dryden LITERATURE, English, History of, since Milton.. LITERATURE, German LOGARITHMIC & Trigonometric Tables MIDDLE AGES. 300-T500, History of MONEY & BANKING MUSIC, History of- PHYSICS, First Year College— PHYSICS without Mathematics.- PLAY PRODUCTION POLITICAL SCIENCE . I'.25 t PSYCHOLOGY. Educationol . PSYCHOLOGY, Genorol PUNCTUATION RUSSIA, Hlltory of . SHAKESPEAREAN Nom.i, Dictionary of . SHAKESPEARE'S PLAYS, Oullinoi of SLIDE RULE, Practical Use of — SOCIOLOGY, Principles of. SOCIOLOGY, Reading* in SPANISH GRAMMAR STATISTICAL METHODS - GOVERNMENT, American... INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS JOURNALISM, Survey of ........... IATIN AMERICA, History of. LATIN AMERICA in Mcps..^..^ »c TRIGONOMETRY, Plone & Spherical , * TUDOR AND STUART PLAYS, Outlines of .uu UNITED STATES in Second World War— 1.50 UNITED STATES, to 1865, History of....— 1.50 UNITED STATES, since 1865, History of- 1.75 WORLD, since 1914, History of - 1.50 ZOOLOGY, Oenerol PRICES SUBJECT TO CHANCE THE EXCHANGE STORE “Serving Texas Aggies” with the Texas University Short horns. The Fish eleven were idle last week preparing for the Fri day night contest. Although the Owlets are not go ing to be an easy touch the fresh man Maroon and White squad will enter the game as heavy favorites to add another victory to their string. Comparing scores against the same opponent the Owlets have an edge as they won their opener against the TCU Polliwogs 21 to 13 and the Fish just edge out the Wogs 20-9. Morris Stone of Kerrville and Mac Taylor of Lubbock, two of the owlets top running backs were injured in the Shorthorn game, but are expected to see limited service against the Fish. Roach-Proctor ■Quarterback duties for the “little Owls” will be shared by Claude Roach of Houston and Atchley Proctor of DeKalb, while Don Cos ta will start at the fullback slot. Sparking the Owlet forward wall will be Kenny Paul of Houston, Layton Coleman of Kerrville, Bob Pacharzina and Larry Lundstedt of Austin. The Aggie Fish have several players who are not expected to play in the Owlet game. Ben Tal bert, a 190-pound center, Guards Billy Roberts, Henry Arnett and Marvivn Tate, and ends Dickie Dowell and Paul Kennon, are def initely not going to be ready for the Owlet tilt. In the A&M Freshman backfield Edward Kachtik hasn’t worked out this week because of an injured ankle and will probably not be able to play Friday. Kachtik is the leading Fish scorer with four touchdowns and has carried the ball 15 times for 184 yards. Powerhouse Patton Virgil Patton, a powerhouse full-, back, has scored two TD’s for the Freshman, has carried the pigskin 25 times for 152 yards this season and is expected to start against the Rice Freshman. Another fullback Gerald San dusky has crossed the goal line once this year for the Fish eleven and James Self, a scatback from Wichita Fals, has made two touch downs for the Freshman. Sandusky has punted four times for a 36.8 yards per kick average and Patton has booted the ball five times for a 33.2 average. —Beat SMU— Kw can shop here /or both ### • GROCERIES • 3-POUND CARTON MRS. TUCKER’S Shortening 75c 2—12-»OZ. CANS—.NIBLETS—WHOLE KERNEL Mexicorn 39c QUART JAR IMPERIAL Queen Olives 79c 2—303 CANS TRELLIS Tender Peas 29c 1 CAN AUSTEX Chili 53c 1 CAN TAMALES—FREE 2 CANS—STAR KJST—BLUE LABEL Solid Pack Tuna 71c 300 SIZE PACKAGE Kleenex 23c 2—46-OZ. CANS TEXAS CLUB Grapefruit Juice .... 41c 5 POUND BAG IMPERIAL Pure Cane Sugar .... 46c 2—1 -POUND CANS HERSHEY’S Chocolate Syrup .... 33c 2—NO.-2ft CANS LIBBY’S Sliced Peaches . . . LARGE PACKAGE Tide or Oxydol 29c FROZEN FOODS ® —PICTSWEET— 12-OZ. PACKAGE Corn . . 19c PACKAGE - Cut Green Beans . . . . 21c • PRODUCE • 5 POUND. BAG Oranges 30c CALIFORNIA CRISP Celery 2 stalks 25c YELLOW Onions lb. 5c FANCY DELICIOUS Apples . . . . . .2 lbs. 27c • MARKET • DECKER’S TALL KORN Sliced Bacon .... lb. 43c WISCONSIN. MILD CHEDDAR Cheese , lb. 55c Loin Steaks ..... lb. 93c Porter House Steak, lb. 79c SHORT CUT—NO BONE Ham Slices lb. 79c ARMOUR’S—1 POUND ROLL Sausage 47 c ... WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES Specials for Friday & Saturday — Nov. 9th & 10th Charlies Food Market North Gate — WE DELIVER — College Station SMU Head Coach Russell Creates Sting Of Mustangs Dick Frey Frey Selected As Top Defensive Man Dick Frey, Cadet tackle, has been chosen as one of the out standing Defensive Linemen of the Week by the Battalion. Frey was picked for his ag gressive and quick action in the Aggie battle with Arkansas. He spent most of his time bottling up the Razorback offense. Many times he appeared as the unwanted fifth man in the middle of the Hog backfield stopping some plays before they could really get started. Frey is 6 ft. 2 in., 212 pound junior who was originally from California but now lives in Houston. Being only a junior it is likely that Frey will play a big role in shaping the Aggie forward wall next year. He has already seen enough action in the last two years to be labeled a veteran. Last year he played at guard and lettered. This year he has been switched to tackle and so far has turned in a job well done. Frey transferred from Pasadena Junior College. He is especially noted for his fast charging and hard hitting. He is also one of those rare boys that can play both on offense and defense. Frey is equally talent ed in both roles, always perform ing more than, his share. This very powerful letterman tackle takes football seriously and is always ready to give everything he can win, lose, or draw. Frey has seen lots of action this year and the Arkansas tilt is only an, example of what he is capable of doing andd what he will still have the chance to do in the re maining games for the Cadets. If Frey continues to play the way he has in the past he is defin itely due for Southwest Conference resognition by the time the end of his senior year rolls around (Alvin Langford, another outstanding lineman for the Arkansas game will follow in tomorrow’s paper.) H. N. Russell is the man behind the deadly sting of the SMU pass ing attack. Russell, head football coach at Southern Methodist University, started his sport career at Howard Payne Academy in Brownwood where he was a basketball player. Russell played football for How ard Payne College in 1915, 1917, 1920 and 1921. In those days ath letic scholarships were unknown and he had to drop out of school from time to time to make money to pay for his education. During World War 1, Russell served in the Army seeing action in France. In 1922, after receiving his de gree, Russell became coach at Granger, Texas, where he devel oped a strong team. The next four years were spent coaching at Tem ple High School where he was as sistant coach for two years and head coach for two seasons. In 1927 Russell became head coach at Masonic Home, Fort Worth, where he and his Mighty Mites gained national recognition for their gridiron achievements. Working with small squads, Rus sell developed teams that grasped the imagination of the public by their aggressive, smart, alert play. In the sixteen years that he coached them, the Mites won 132 games, tied nine and lost thirty. For four seasons the Mites were unbeaten in high school competi tion, while the 1931 squad set a record for high school scoring, making 425 points. During the yeai-s that coach Rus sell was at the Masonic Home, which was in the highest bracket of the interscholastic league, his elevens won six district titles, tied for another, lost in bi-district twice, went to the semi-finals three oc casions, and to the finals once where they lost to Corsicana on penetrations. Highland Park High School was the next stop in Coach Russell’s career. There his teams won 27 games, lost four and tied two. The 1943 squad lost to San Angelo 20 to 21 in the semi-finals and the 1944 club was beaten 20 to 7 in the finals by Port Arthur. In February, 1945, Russell be came acting head coach at SMU, with the understanding that he would be the first assistant coach when Commander Matty Bell re turned from duty with the USNR. Coach Bell returned to his duties with the Mustangs in September of 1945 and the Ponies finished sec ond in the Conference, using the offensive that was taught by coach Russell. Head coach Bell voluntarily re tired at the, end of the 1949 season and Russell now became head coach. His 1950 team was at the top of the national standings after winning the first four games of the season, then three-point losses to Texas and Baylor and a five- point loss to A&M reduced them from this position. The club end- “MUMS” THE WORD FOR FOOTBALL 1903 College Road Ph. 3-1003 Ph. 6-6694 brings you the FINER POINTS' of pipe-smoking pleasure! add it up- smokes 3 ways better! New Process Promises Greater Smoking Enjoyment for Pipe Fans Yes, Briggs’ new process brings you the finer points of pipe-smok ing pleasure in a measurable way! When you pack your pipe full of friendly, easy - drawing* Briggs, you’re getting the finest in pipe tobacco smoking enjoyment! You’ll like its steady burning qualities ... it’s cool mild flavor. Remember, Briggs is aged and mel- low ed in oaken casks to assure you of the finer points of smoking plea sure. It’s all you can ask for in supreme smoking pleasure! So today . . . put BRIGGS in your pipe and smoke it! ' - v ^tlll Joey Maxim won the American? light- heavyweight championship from Gus Lesnevich on May 23, 1949. YOU’RE ALWAYS AWARE OF ITS SMARTNESS WHEN YOU WEAR A GRENADIER TOPPER A distinctive corded gabardine in exclusive tones you’ll know what’s new. when you see our “PATTERNFUL” WONDERFUL .* n: •. v.y yyv v- /OACiMAKtOS'fOQ SMART AMTRKA' VC': VV* •'v < X-/VVvCv.-X V ; SPORT JACKETS In “new tone” tweeds rich tone checks muted stripes and subdued clan plaids. Co/ Men’s Clothing Since 1896 * BRYAN, TEXAS