The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 01, 1959, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    '
yourshoppinglist,
•‘.•KvXv)v
KM ^ •••”•>• •-
Imperial
SUGAR
WESSON OIL
Gladioia FLOUR
Grade “AA” Med.
MAYFIELD’S EGGS
BISCUITS Ballard or Gladioia . .
Adolphus KICE
SLICED PINEAPPLE Hillsdale
OLEO Armour’s Banner . . . .
WOLF CHILI .......
Silverdale Frozen—Chopped Broccoli, Spinach, Cut Corn, Green Peas
VEGETABLES
BREADED SHRIMP Golden Brown
ELCOR TUSSUE . . . . .
FAB WASHING POWDER . . .
Qt. Btl.
doz.
39c
can 5c
2 lb. box
29c
flat can
l«c
. . lb.
13c
No. 2 can
59c
• 7 P k gs-
89c
10 oz. pkg.
39c
Roll
5c
giant box
59c
LIBBY'S SALE
FRUIT COCKTAIL
4 C 3 Z $1oo
VIENNA SAUSAGE
5 Cans $100
CATSUP
5 m?" $100
TOMATO JUICE
4 tZ $100
GARDEN SWEET PEAS
6 S $100
TOMATO SAUCE
12 Cans $100
PORK & BEANS
6 Snl $100
FRENCH GARDEN SPINACH
7 Cfms $100
FROZEN ORANGE JUICE
4 ca!S $100
CUT GREEN BEANS
6 c 3 Z $100
CREAM STYLE CORN
6 Cans $100
TROPICAL PINEAPPLE JUICE
3 4 c 6 ;^ $100
Jonathon Cooking
California
Long White
No. 1
Cello Bag
APPLES 4139
POTATOES
No. 1 Cello
CARROTS
Fancy
FRYERS
Fresh
10c LETTUCE FrMh 2
10 Ba g 35c
Heads 25c
Fresh
ground meat
lb
Whole Lb.
Fresh
GULF SHRIMP Lb. 59c
PORK SAUSAGE R ?L ,.3^1 $1.00
Fresh Lean
PORK ROAST Lb. 39c
SLICED BACON
Hormel
Dairy Lb.
49c
SPECIALS GOOD AUGUST 13 - 14 ■ 15
MILLER'S
3800 TEXAS AVENUE
SUPER
MARKET
VI 6-6613
PAGE 4
Thursday, October 1, 1959
THE BATTALION
Frosh Fighting for Positions;
Face TCU Wogs October 8
Freshman Coach Tom Chandler
sent his charges through a hard
day of drills and scrimmage yester
day as he rushed to get his frosh
ready for their October 8 date
with the TCU Wogs.
Changes are still being made
daily in the first two teams with
no one man nailing down a cinch
starting berth before game time.
Ronnie Brice, the Andrews flash,
continues to lead the candidates for
quarterback, while his running
mates at the present time are half
backs Bill Lager and Ronnie Led
better and Fullback Leeroy Caffey,
a 6-3, 205 pounder from Thorndale.
Other members of the first ele
ven are Ends M. Davis and Don
Ramsey; Tackles George Hogan
IAI
and James Walton; Guards Jim
Harper and James Phillips; and
Center Jerry Hopkins.
The frosh this year could field
one of the heaviest teams in the
conference, and they should out
weigh their upperclassmen by some
20 pounds. The seven named above
average out at a 209 pound av
erage. Largest men on the team
are tackles Walton and Hogan,
both men weighing at 225.
Tommy Janik is quarterbacking
the second unit. Halfbacks are
Jon Mason and Eddie Dolezal
while the fullback is Sam Byer.
Ends are Bill Sanders and Bob
by Huntington; Tackles Alan Hug
gins and Hubert Wilson; Guards
Stuart Beebe and Walter LaGrone;
and Center Alex Cortese.
,<£5IHJL XOVbH
OX HOOONS
nODX nOA 303rV|,
0
X
D
1
a
1
J-
3
3
1
3
S
JY
0
1
V
A
V
v
I
V
a
v
D
«3/V\SNV 1GDM
Now Gather Around Me, Boys
Freshman Coach Tom Chandler takes time on the football field. The Frosh meet the
out from the practice field to lecture his TCU Wogs Thursday, October 8.
gridders on what they can and can not do
ATTENTION
AGGIE WIVES
VISIT OUR LADIES
Ready-to-Wear Dept.
★ Coordinated Skirts and Sweaters
★ Maternity Dresses and Slacks
and Skirts
★ Blue Swan and Movie Star
Lingerie
★ Ship ’N Shore Blouses
★ MOJUD HOSIERY
The Friendly Store
LEON B. WEISS
2 Doors from Campus Theatre
Cotton Bowl Group
Eyes SWC Teams
DALLAS—No group of football
fans will be watching the impend
ing Southwest Conference gridiron
championship race with more in
terest . than the 38 men who make
up the board of directors of the
Cotton Bowl Athletic Assn.
The conference champion, of
course, automatically becomes the
host team for the New Year’s Day
Cotton Bowl Classic, which is the
official Southwest Conference post
season bowl game.
In addition to their natural in
terest in the outcome of the race
because of the Cotton Bowl affilia
tion, the majority of the CBAA
directors will have a more personal
reason to keep tabs on the con
ference football warfare.
This is because 32 of the 38 di
rectors were placed on the board
by the seven Southwest Conference
schools now competing for the foot
ball championship. Texas Tech
does not compete in football until
KGDL
KROSSWORD
No. 2
ACROSS
1. Occult
theosophy
7. Beer Barrel,
Pennsylvania,
etc.
13. One of the
• Frankies
14. Famous Fifth,
not drinkable
15. This is choice
16. Take umbrage
at
17. October
activity of
small fry
19. Nixes
20. What you must
do to get
in 26 Across
22. A Kool, in
short
23. Birdland sound
25. Scoreless tie
26. No car for a
drag race
27. Oral ends
of Kools
28. When you need
a real change—
try a
30. Beginning of
solar system
34. What Kools
have
38. It’s just south
of the border
39. “TheNakedand
the Dead”
author
40. Kind of pitch
in the ball park
41. Aver
42. Scene of a
famous parting
£9. PrezEOEte.rM“5
DOWN
1. Do it with
aspersions or
fly rods
2. Allege
3. Island famed
for native girls
4. Unbottled
Guinness
6. Fore, pad or
hammer
6. A Marked man
7. More than
two couples
8. Dance too
enthusiastically?
9 majeste
10. Baker or
masseur
11. Marne
and Charley’s
12. Shampoo
follower
18. Time of the 20’s
21. Summer in Paris
22. Where Kool
tips grow?
24. Kind of sails
at Christmas
time
26. Minx from
England
27. Me,
29. Scarlett gal
31. More eyes
than nays
32. Bound to
allegiance
33. Sheridan’s Bob
34. He has lawn
parties
35. Girl situated
in Oklahoma
36. Head shakes
37. Favorite pursuit
of the female
38= U (Russia)
1
2
3
4
5
6
13
15
17
ARE YOU KODL.
ENOUGH TO
KRACK THIS?"
19
134
38
40
42
35
22
25
18
28
36
29
7
8
9
10
11
12
14
16
llll
20
21
'
23
24
126
33
30
31
32
37
39
41
43
When your throat tells
you its time for a change,
you need
a real change...
YOU NEED THE
KGDL
I “yf? ^
MILO MENTHOL'
king-size
) 1959, Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp. "
1960.
Most of the CBAA directors are
alumni or ex-students of the vari
ous conference institutions.
The make-up of the CBAA board
underscores the close relationship
of the Cotton Bowl classic to the
conference and indicates how di
rectly the bowl association is tied
in with the institutions that make
up the conference.
There are 24 CBAA institutional
directors, three each from Arkan
sas, Baylor, Rice, SMU, Texas,
A&M and TCU. There are also
eight ex-officio directors, seven of
whom are past presidents of the
CBAA who were formerly institu
tional directors placed on the board
by their schools. The eighth is
the secretary-treasurer of the
CBAA, who is also executive sec
retary of the Southwest Confer
ence and was chosen by the con
ference schools.
The other six CBAA board mem
bers are custodial directors from
the original group of Dallas civic
leaders who started the Cotton
Bowl game in 1937 and then turned
it over to the Southwest Confer
ence in 1940. Needless to say, they
all follow football just as avidly
the other directors and have
their own favorites among the con
ference teams.
The president of the Cotton Bowl
Athletic Assn, is John B. Lowe, a
Rice man. Robert B. Cullum is
chairman of the board and was
made a director by SMU. Roland
Bond, first vice-president, was
named by TCU, and Jay W. Dick
ey, second vice-president, by Ar
kansas.
Hospitalization & Life Insurance
TOM WASSON
Representing
Metropolitan Life Insurance
Company
TA 2-6232 Office TA 2-6995 Res
2016 Texas Avenue
William B. Roman, Jr., M. D.
ANNOUNCES
the opening of his office
for the practice of
Obstetrics and Gynecology
624 Mary Lake Dr. VI 6-6715
BE A MAGICIAN
WRITE
MEYER-BLOCH
DIR.-CONJURORS’ CLUB
240 RIVINGTON ST.
N. Y. C. 2
THE A&M SMOKE HOUSE
Real Pit Bar-B-Q
Plate Lunches
Bar B-Q Sandwiches
Come & Taste The Difference
4410 College Main