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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 7, 1951)
xan nue tually came to Miss ing it, she told this . magine the storm fought down on the % ‘ ? And all over 28 g the case further I :axpayers hundreds | iman Element case back to the & vith the word that be technically cor- weigh the human p the matter, per- ier to claim the sojj started her career to then Gov. Pat , was taking under® it the University oM d-1920s. Later she , work in El Paso* work in San Antonj^| le came to Wash- ; .taut Secretary to , ecome a member of ; iation board. She school at the same for her law degree, I ier Drink )U UP Like ?Pfter VER PREFER )WN SOFT DRINK :xas—it’s made in owins with Texas! :ver, it's a favorite am to enjoy "A Lift for Life" with Dr. Pepper at 10,2, and 4! < NATIVE Of TEXAS, IN YOUR HOWE! s sparkling drink, ' you’ve tasted, that gy within 2 to 8 you new LIFE fast, n you’re low. Noth- one loves it. Keep at hand, for a real oda fountains, too! I Texas Producf ie Crosses First By JOE BLANCHETTE Battalion Intramural Writer Bill Gillespie trotted across the finish line in 8:09.7 minutes to win the 1951 Intramural Cross- TODAY & SATURDAY FIRST RUN —Features Start— 4:10 . 2:54 - 4:25 - 0:09 7:40 - 9:24 r NEWS — CARTOON PREVUE TONIGHT 11 P.M. FIRST RUN : k' mm s i / NEWS — CARTOON PREVUE SATURDAY 11 P.M. I. FIRST RUN “Lost Continent” —with— Cesar Romero NEWS ~ CARTOON Country race. Gillespie, running for K AF, was 25 yards ahead of his nearest competitor, Bill Roland representing A QMC. A Infantry claimed the team championship when three of its runners finish ed in the top ten and the remain ing two team members finished LAST TIMES TODAY “Folsom Prison” SATURDAY ER ROGERS THELMA RITTER scwouiwbyedithsomwi!' ADAKTATIOIt 0» MORCt CWllWCIMtH ivm« '" ot>uCro BT cuffcrro rt W JERR^WALD BRETAIGNE W1NDUST SATURDAY PREVUE Sunday & Monday I^Ucan cost y° url1 ^ thirty-sixth and fifty-ninth, re spectively. The starting field numbered 200 and were closely bunched until they hit the first turn, of the 1.7 mile course. After the first turn the field became increasingly scat tered until the distance between the leading man and the last place man in the back stretch was. at least 200 yards. Early Lead Gillespie assumed the lead early in the race and held it constantly until the finish. He was nine' sec onds off the record for the course which is 8:00.2 minutes. Gillespie and Roland finished first and second, Harvey Duennen- berg of A Infantry, third; and Milton McFeren also of A Infan try finished fourth. The winning team from A Infan try was composed of Duennenburg, third place; McFeron, fourth place; Spencer Buchanan, ninth; W. C. Torbett, thirty-sixth; and George Skaldal, fifty-ninth. A Ordnance and K AF tied for second place in the team group with 136 being the total of the place score. B Athletics won the third place position with 324. H AF was the fourth place team with 325. Gained 30 Points A Infantry added 30 points to their Intramural season standings with the win, A Ordnance and K AF added 17% points, B Ath letics, 10 points; and H AF five points. The cross-country race only tightened the race for the Intra mural flag this year between A In fantry and B Athletics as the standing now looks. B Athletics won the Intramural Cage crown by topping the infan- tryment in the finals, 40-19. The cross-country found the infantry company garnering back lost points by finishing first and the athletic company finishing third. Old Camera Is Exhibited London—UP)—A camera bought in 1887 for 25 shillings, is one of the exhibits at the jubilee exhibi tion of the Institute of British Photographers. A British all-metal camera, it has plates 1% inches square and a simple drop-shutter. WHAT’S SO DIFFERENT ABOUT ENGLEWOOD, N. J. ? In Englewood, the local telephone exchange looks pretty much like the telephone building in any other town. And Englewood’s telephones seem just the same as the twenty- seven million other dial telephones in the country. But there’s a difference ... You can pick up a telephone in Englewood and dial San Francisco telephone numbers direct! In fact, you can dial any one of eleven million telephone numbers in thirteen widely scattered areas from coast to coast. That’s what makes Englewood different - the new kind of Long Distance telephone service on trial there by the Bell System. Long Distance dialing is another example of the Bell System’s constant search for ways to provide you with ever-better telephone service. ln.x. ifelv •«r I # © BELL - TELEPHONE "SYSTEM^ On Lion’s Mat Card Fritz Schnuble * ★ ★ Rudy Valentino Big and Little Mat Men Promise Varied Show (Continued from Page 1) greet him the way other wrest ling fans have, Rudy might have found a new home. Fritz (Hissss) Schnable Last but certainly not least on the evenings menu will be Fritz Schnable. (Pronounced Shnable)- Said to be one of the meanest and toughest mat slammers in the business, Schnable is one of the most cursed at wrestlers in the ring today. He is a past master at the art of eye-gouging, skull cracking, bone breaking, and mayhem. He has been booed, hissed, and hated from one side of the country to the other, but one thing is cer tain ... he is as tough as they come. If weight has anything to do with it, his 470 pounds should win any match, and if the rough tac tics enter in, he should have a cinch. Some critics say Schnable has reformed, but others say he has come to Texas with revenge in his eyes. He says he wasn’t treat ed with the best of greeting and ovations on his last trip, and he is here with the purpose of working his way to nothing short of the top. With such a wide variety of per sonalities and methods, the Lion’s Club program next Friday should prove to bq very different from the usual run of wrestling, and should present a very interesting even ing’s entertainment. *' r * Friday, December 7, 1951 THE BATTALION Page 3 Coach John Floyd’s Quintet To Meet U of H Cougars Coach Floyd’s Aggie Basketball team will meet the University of Houston Cougars tomorrow night in Houston in the Cadet’s second game of the 1951-52 season. A&M’s Maroon and White lost its first tilt of the year to North Texas State College in an over time game 43-46, last Monday night, and will be out to get even. This will be the season opener for the Cougars, and will be the first of a three game series be tween the two squads. Last year the Aggies split a two-game series with the Uni- Aggie Lippman Makes West Team Glenn Lippman, leading ground gainer of the SWC, has been add ed to the West football team which will play in the East-West Game Dec. 29, in San Francisco. Lippman was chosen for his ground gaining ability and record which credits him with 801 yards on 118 carries. He ran halfback most of the season, but showed he could also handle fullback scores when, in the University of Texas game, he took over fullback Bob Smith’s spot, and played one of the best games of his college career. Lippman saw a great deal of fullback play during the past sea son since Smith was often hinder- er by injuries. Also added to the West team ros ter were Johnny Bright, negro halfback from Drake University; Jack Jorgenson, tackle from Colo rado University; Gerald Price, Tex as Tech tackle; and Frank Simon, end from University of Nebraska. TH/S SANTA SHOPPED At W.S.D. Clothiers Where he found a complete line for .. HIM.. HER.. JUNIOR Make It a ‘ONE - STOP’ Shop ping Spree With Everything You Want at W.S.D. . . OUR COMPLETE XMAS STOCK IS NOW READY FOR YOUR CHOOSINCx THIS SANTA DIDN'T . . . and now he’s sorry he didn’t take advantage of W.S.D.’s wonderful com plete line of Clothing and Accessories! He’s all ‘wrapped out’ — but W.S.D. will do it for you. Gift wrapping and wrapping to mail, done free for your convenience. 108 N. MAIN BRYAN 109 COLLEGE MAIN COLLEGE STATION W.S.D CLOTHIERS versify of Houston, losing the first one, 45-52, and taking the second contest 55-46. Out of the 26 men on Coach Pasche’s Cougar squad, 21 stand over 6 ft. tall. And to add to the heighty average of the Cougars, only one of the Short boys is under 5 ft. 11 in. Leading the Red and White greeters from Houston will be Royce Ray, one of the four retum- ing- lettermen from last year’s team. Ray was picked for honorable mention last year in the Missouri Valley Conference for his 13-point- a-game avei’age. Sparking the game for the Ag gies will be Jewell McDowell, All- SWC guard, and Buddy Davis, All- SWC center. It will be height for the Cougars against experience for the Cadets as the two near-by schools vie for first blood of the three-game ser ies. Coach Floyd Jewell McDow'ell Doctors warn smokers about throats. Kaywoodie Pipes have Three Throat-Guards to give extra throat protection. FIRST THROAT-GUARD: "Wider-opening’’bit. Spreads out smoke, helps cool it. No hot smoke to irritate throat or "bite” tongue. SECOND THROAT-GUARD: Exclusive, patented ‘'DRINKLESS" device. Cuts down irritating tars...keeps every pipeful lit longer. THIRD THROAT-GUARD: World’s best im ported briar. It’sspeciallyheat-resistant and porous. Makes smoke cooler...less irritating. ions Only KAYWOODIE pipes have these Three Throat-Guards for extra throat protection! Don’t gamble with your throat! Kaywoodie has three Throat-Guards working for you, protecting your throat as no other smoke can. They reduce tars and make smoke cooler. And just hold that Kaywoodie! Feel the satin-smooth briar. It’s the world’s best. Admire it as you would the finest piece of sculpture. And what a real smoke a Kaywoodie gives you...what a man’s smoke! Plus so much extra throat protection! Kaywoodie imports the finest briar—and then throws 90% ofi it away. Keeps only the finest 10%, the very heart, for cool, sweet smoking. A NEW YORK • LONDON 9 Kaywoodie Pipes are available in a wide variety of shapes and Finishes. $4 to $25 SINCE i® 5 I Lbck for the Kaywoodie cloverieaf trads-mork. 2! i Read Battalion Classifieds