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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 13, 1960)
Traditional n , II || hTruvaV $400 You’ll get excited about these new trimmed Shirtail Ivy sport shirts by Truval. Styled specifically for the fashion conscious young man, these sparkling iri- descents come with contrasting trim on top-center, inside cuffs and inside of collar band. This shirt has the added feature of a new continental cuff. Choose yours now’ ^Jlie ^xchanae anc^e “Serving Texas Aggies” ore SPORTS Syracuse, Ole Miss Ripe for Plucking By WILL GRIMSLEY Associated Press Sports Writer PITTSBURGH—They say com placency has set in at Syracuse and Mississippi and the two pow ers are ripe for plucking. But these two teams still have the horses—and races go to the swift. So we spurn the heady wine of upsetitis and pick the Orangemen and Ole Miss to win their tough assignments of the week. Last week’s score: 38-12 for .760. Mississippi 24, Tulane 12; The nation’s No. 1 team, has. too much raw speed for the Greenies. Syracuse 14, Penn State 8: Orangemen are determined to win back their No. 1 rating. UCLA 20, Washington 14: Hus kies aren’t the same team which won in the Rose Bowl. Tennessee 7, Alabama 0: Sounds of bones cracking will be heard throughout the Tennessee Valley. Ohio State 18, Purdue 7: Buck eyes are as imaginative and subtle as a sledge hammer blow in the face. Texas 24, Arkansas 14: Long horns still riding the wave of their Oklahoma victory. Pittsburgh 28, West Virginia 7: Panthers are much too powerful in this traditional head-knocker. Michigan State 19, Notre Dame 6: Fighting Irish are still dizzy from hitting the canvas. Navy 21, Air Force 7: Falcons don’t have a home run hitter to match Navy’s Joe Bellino. BA IT ALIGN CLASSIFIED WANT AD RATES day 3^ per per word each additional day Minimum charge—40^ DEADLINES 5 p.m. day before iblication Classified Display 1 inch y before put isified Displa; 80^ per column each insertion PHONE VI 6-6415 FOR RENT Furnished brick duplex, corner Louise and First St. VI 6-6332. 15tl One bedroom furnished house with utili ses, $38.00 ; three bedroom furnished house. iaO.OO. VI 6-7334. 13t3 late. Joe Speck, Dorm 16, Koom ear > 219. Nice, clean furnished apartment. Screened porch and garage. Near Southside Shop ping Center. Call VI 6-6884 days or VI 6- 4462 after 5 or anytime weekends. 9tfn Clean, one bedroom furnished apartment, 18 Foster, College Hills, walk-in closets, roll-away bed, garage, call VI 6-6266 or Redmond Real Estate Co. Itfn Small furnished apartment. Near North Gate. Ideal for two boys who want to study and get by cheap. Rhone VI 6-7248. iHotfn Nice 2 bedroom furnished house, ideal for student and working wife. Reasonable. VI 6-7037 after 5 and weekends. 135tfn i Furnished three room apartment. Con- | venient to campus. 403 Boyett, Call VI 6- i Two bedroom furnished apartment, re decorated, hardwood floors, ample closet space, window fan, tile drainboard. 304 East 22nd. TA 2-7430. 134tfn Small room in brick garage. Also room in home. One block South of Drill Field. VI 6-5638. 134tfn One bedroom brick duplex unfurnished apartment. Central heating, 220 wiring, carport, 312 Second St.' Rhone VI 6-6468. 134tfn Furnished one or two bedroom duplex’s. Extra nice, reasonable price. On East Gate bus line, at 900 East 30th. TA 2-1552 or TA 2-3739. 133tfn Sewing machines, Pruitt Fabric Shop. 98tln Two bedroom unfurnished three year old apartment. Stove and refrigerator furnished. 509 First Street. VI 6-8150. IJUtfn Student apartments North Gate. Newly refurnished. $35.00 & $40.00. VI 6-6165 128tfr, Apartment two blocks from campus. New building, nicely furnished, walk-in closets, hardwood floors, formica drain- board, Venetian blinds, 220 wiring. VI 6- 7248. 117tfn FOUND Man’s watch at final review last spri Pay for ad Post Office. spring. and identify at South Station 12t6 BRYAN AQUARIUM CO. TROPICAL FISH Aquariums - Plants - Supplies Tanks Repaired Open Weekdays 5 :30 P.M. - 9 P.M. Saturday 9 A.M. to 10 P.M. Sundays 2 P.M. - 9 P.M. 518 W. Carson Phone TA 2-6385 TV - Radio - HiFi Service & Repair GILS RADIO & TV TA 2-0826 101 Highland FOR SALE For Sale By Owner In North Oakwood Restricted Section Home, 5-room, frame, with woodburning fireplace and big screened back porch. Well built, excellent condition, on V2 acre lot. Cast iron sewer pipe from house to city main. Out door fireplace. Many big trees and full' grown shrubs. Also, vacant lot 125 x 130 ft. with big trees. Call VI 6-7456 15t2 1953 Mercury, very clean, white walls, automatic transmission, call VI 6-8412. 14tfn Used Frigridaire, 7 Cu. Ft. refrigerator, $55.00. Used Frigidaire washing machine, $50.00. Used 7(6 hp Elgin boat motor, $50.00. See at 706 A Cross St. after 5 p. m. Call VI 6-7843. 14t3 Karmann Ghia 1958 model, red and black, . excellent condition. Apt. B-5-W College View. W. S. McGinnis. 14t3 WORK WANTED TYPING Typing done electrically. Near Campus. Very reasonable. VI 6-8400. lit32 Our nursery for children all ages. Pick up and deliver. VI 6-8151. No answer call back. Iltl4 Will keep 3 children weekdays. Play room, balanced noon meal, snack and milk. Convenient to College. Mrs. Beth Andrews, 906A Inlow, VI 6-8666. 10t7 Children kept daily by Mrs. Lloyd Little, Aggie wife, at 109 Moss St, College Sta tion, VI 6-4430. 6tfn Would like to keep children ages 1-3 in my home. Am Aggie wife and have son 18 months old. 506 A Milam, College Sta tion, VI 6-4996. 133tfn Why wait until last minute to get your Theses reports, etc. to Bi-City Secretarial service? Electric typewriters, offset printing, negatives and metal plates made. 3408 Texas Ave. VI 6-5786. 87tfn Southside Coin Operated LaundeYette —Open 24 Hours— 326 Jersey St. JIM M. PYE ’58 REPRESENTING Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. VI 6-5055 TA 2-6232 401 Cross St. C. S. DEMOCRATS FOR NIXON - LODGE Those interested in forming this student association please contact L. O. WOODARD VI 65384 or JAMES W. SNELGROVE VI 6-S637 Paid Political Advertisement OFFICIAL NOTICES Official notices must jr telephone >f Student notices must be brought, mailed led so as to arrive in the Office t Publications (Ground Flooi fMCA, VI 6-6415, hours 8-12, 1-5, daily Monday through Friday) at or before the deadline of 1 p.m. of the day preceedins publication — Director of Student Publica tions. Identification cards which were made in connection with registration of September 16, 17, for the current semester are now ready for distribution in the EXCHANGE STORE. They should be claimed in person immediately. H. L. Heaton, Director of Admissions and Registrar I3t4 ion for Administra- 25, 1960 Students should regis' Division of later than 5 p. m. Monday, October 24, 1960. 13t8 will be given Tuesday, October 25, at 4 p. m. in Room 202 Francis Hall, mts who plan to take this examination d register in the main office of the Division of Business Administration not Any student who normally expects to e re of Ref app to be conferred at the end of the current iy student wfto normally expei complete all of the requirements for a de- id of _ _ igistrar’s and make formal application for a degree reqi gree at the end of the current semester should call by the Registrar’s Office NOW semester. This deadline applies to both graduate and undergraduate students. H. L. Heaton, Director of Admissions and Registrar 9tl2 All town otticers a Cashier’s the C. E. Gosper Club Advisor 7tl8 SPECIAL NOTICE Senior Girl Scout Troop 36 will hold a nursery at the A&M Christian Church during the’ A&M-TCU football game. Call VI 6-4144. ‘ 14t2 A new service. Bring us your small mce repairs. Most makes of irs, mixers, and many other ances. Joe Faulk’s Auto and Ap- irons, other small appliance rep; toasters, mixers, appliances. Joe pliance Store. 214 N. Bryan. Bryan, Texas. 14t3 Clean place to fish and is, sand boxes for ‘ miles from College, South Hwy. 6 picnic. )P I Ov tots, 9% 5tfn Electrolux Sales and Service. Williams. TA 3-6600 G. C. 90tfn DAY NURSERY by the week, day or hour. Call Mrs. Gregory, 502 Boyett. VI 6-4005. 120tfn Early Bird Shoppe, Inc Cartaina — Fabrics — Toys Ridgecrest Village SOSOLIK’S TV - RADIO - PHONO SERVICE 713 S Main TA 2-1941 » RNIHNEEKINU AND ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES • BLUE LINE PRINTS • BLUE PRINTS * PHOTOSTATP SCOATES INDUSTRIES MS Old Sulphur Spring! Bud BRYAN, TEXAS | / / /' f I Where the Art of | | ^Motard A Cafeteria Cooking Is Not Lost | Carter Franklin Striving To Stay Off Smokey’s Team There are two types of teams at A&M. There’s the Aggie varsity and then there’s Trainer Smokey Har per’s team. Smokey’s team is the one Carter Franklin, senior guard from Kerens and one of A&M’s steadiest performers, wants to stay off of. He wants no part of Smok ey’s training room team—the one composed of the injured, the sick and the lame. Carter has had good fortune in his four-year career at Aggieland. UntU this week the only time Franklin appeared on Smokey Har per’s team was a two-week period as a freshman in 1957 when he had an injured leg. Through his sophomore season in 1958 and last year as a junior Carter has missed not a single practice and has appeared in every game his Aggies have played. But the 203-pounder who was an all-state tackle at Kerens high school came up Monday with a bruised hip and is fearful Smokey will keep him out of uniform for a day or two. He figures to be ready for the TCU game here Saturday afternoon, though. It’s hard to keep Carter out of the lineup even in practice. Franklin has been one of the Aggies’ most consistent linemen the past three seasons and he’s always graded high when the coaches scan each play over and over from the game films. Carter is the starting right guard but he’s had to fight for his job with his roommate, James “Bull’ Phillips of Freeport, one of the team’s many fine sophomore line prospects. “I think Jim (Phillips) is one of our top sophs,” Carter says, “and if he continues to improve he should be one of A&M’s top guards.” Assistant Coach Matt Lair, who Consolidated Begins District Play Friday By RUSSELL BROWN Battalion Sports Editor The A&M Consolidated Tigers begin to play for keeps this week end as Coach Ed Logan’s crew tackles their first District 19-AA foe in Caldwell on Friday. The Tigers, runners-up in Dis trict 21-AA last year, were picked by experts to cop the 19-AA crown with relative ease, but the Maroon and White has come out on top in only one of their six non-district titles thus far. Only a 16-14 win over Madisonville mars their lost column. Two touchdowns have fig ured in the outcome in five of the Bengals’ six contests, with only the 31-0 Huntsville shellacking being a true runaway. Coach Ed Logan’s club should be near full strength for the con ference opener, with two or three boys still on the doubtful list. The Bengals have worked on sharpen ing their offense and their goal- defense during the week, working in some passing plays. The Bengals who had good luck with the aerial in the first part of the season, have stuck mostly on the ground for the last three tilts. Coach Logan indicated his start ing eleven will shape up as Bob Adams, 175 senior and Larry Ran dolph, 155 junior at ends; Alex Quisenberry, 205 senior or John Litzler, 170 senior and Mark Lu ther, 195 senior at tackles; George Outlaw, 145 senior and Bob White, 180 pound senior at guards; and Charlie Roeber, 170 pound junior at center. In the backfield Condy Pugh, 175 pound senior will run the club at quarter; John Pedigo, 155 senior and Cyril Burke, 165 pound junior will be at the halves; and Frank Hagler, 170 pound senior will be at fullback. works with the guards on de fense, thinks a lot of both Franklin and Phillips and has this to say about Carter: “He’s been doing a fine job for us both on offense and defense. He’s a good leader, very consist ent and has a fine attitude. Carter is the first to be on the field and the last to leave.” Franklin hopes to continue his leadership qualities he has learned at A&M into the coaching and teaching field after graduation. He wants to become a coach and biology teacher and his course of study at Aggieland fits into his plans very well. He’s a physical education major and is taking a minor in biology. Which brings up a third team Carter would like to make. That’s the all-Southwest conference aca demic team picked annually. This team is composed of players for their work in the class room as well as on the field. And Carter’s credentials are okay. He’s posted a B+ grade point average while at A&M. Franklin started eight games as a soph in 1958 but played behind Buddy Payne last fall. This fall he has started all four games to date and hopes to stay on that first team and away from Smok ey’s team. “Don’t get me wrong,” Cartel says. “I like Smokey. He’s great. I just don’t like being on his team.” A former fullback and tackle at Kerens, where he was on a team with a 9-2 record his senior year, Franklin was mover to guard as a frosh at A&M and he’s been there since. Carter feels he “found himself” in the A&M-Arkansas game of 1958 mid-way through his soph season. He claims the (terrific Ar kansas linemen he played against really “taught me what fooball is all about”. So for . two days this week Franklin has been giving Smokey that mean look and it will sur prise no one around A&M if he’s back on the playing team by Sat urday at 2 p. m. -GROCERIES- CRISCO 3 Lb. Can 69c Washburns Pinto Beans 2 Lb. Bag 25c 300 Size Cans—Ranch Style BEANS 2 Cans 25c 12-Oz. Cans—Doles Pineapple Juice 4 Cans 39c No. 2Vi Cans—O’Sage Elberta Peaches 4 Cans 1.09 Folgers COFFEE 1 Lb. Can 63c Folgers Instant COFFEE 6-Oz. Jar 89c 7%-Oz. Bottles—Towies Stuffed Olives Bottle 35c 12-Oz. Package—Ritz CRACKERS Package 29c 18-Oz. Glass—Krafts Grape Jelly Glass 25c 300 Size Cans—Hunts Solid Pack Tomatoes .... 4 Cans 59c 303 Cans—Trellis Green Peas 2 Cans 25c No. 2 Cans—Libbys Tomato Juice 2 Cans 27c 14-Oz. Cans—Johnsons Klear Liquid Floor Wax Can 39c 7-Oz. Spray Can—Johnsons PLEDGE Can 39c -FROZEN FOODS- Libbys Beef, Chicken, Turkey, Tuna Noodle or Tuna Pot Pies 5 For 1.00 Libbys Green Peas, Peas & Carrots, Spinach, Chopped Broccoli 3 For 50c BORDENS MILK 2—Vz Gallon Cartons .. 91c 1—1 Gallon Jug ,87c BISCUITS 4 For 39c -MARKET - Deckers—Tall Korn Sliced Bacon .. 1-Lb. 49e Wisconsin—Medium Aged Cheddar Cheese .. 1-Lb. 59e Armours Star All Meat Franks .. 1-Lb. 49c Armours Star Sliced Bacon . l-Lbi 55c Ground Meat .. 1-Lb. 40c Meaty Short Ribs ... 1-Lb. 33c Round Steak .. 1-Lb. 75c Loin Steak . 1-Lb. 75c -PRODUCE- Fancy Delicious Apples Lb. 15 Tokay Grapes 2-Lbs. 25c Bell Peppers 2-Lbs. 25c Cabbage 2-Lbs. 9c SPECIALS GOOD THURSDAY AFTERNOON, FRIDAY, AND S^^$D|lY, OCTOBER 13-14-15 FOOD MARKET CHARLIES NORTH GATE —WE DELIVER- COLLEGE STATION THE BATTALION Thursday, October 13, 1960 College Station, Texas Page 5 Carter Franklin .. want’s to stay off Smokey’s team |~look for this sign ■4V tip. Fimfotu • ■■■' . WINTER SAFETY SERVICE 10-60 Geo. Shelton, Inc. College Ave. At 33rd TA 2-0139 FREE PARKING TA 2-0130