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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 22, 1960)
THE BATTALION Page 6 College Station, Texas Tuesday, November 22, 1960 AGGIES LET AN AGGIE DO YOUR AUTO-REPAIRS ★ General Welding ★ Engine Conversions ★ Engine Overhaul ★ Exhaust Systems call on SPAW’S WELDING SHOP Class ’62 VI 6-7709, NIGHT VI 6-8367 (Next to Marion Pugh Lum ber Company) FISH LOSS Continued From Page 3) times before the yearlings took a Fish punt on the Fish 40-yard line and seven plays later Ford, the tough little halfback from San Angelo and leading ground gainer for the Yearlings, went the final two yards. After the conversion, the score stood 14-6. With 28 seconds left in the game, Eddie Hall, dropping back to pass for the Fish, was rushed by three Yearlings. It looked like Hall was simply thrown for a loss but Yearling center David Mc Williams stole the ball from Hall’s grasp and ran 36 yards for the Yearlings’ final score. Game Makes Difference; Just Ask Ronnie Brice mmk What a difference a game makes! During the first eight games this fall A&M’s sophomore quar terback, Ronnie Brice, saw little action with the third team. But in the Rice game last week the Andrews product took the Aggies in for both touchdowns and gave the Owls a big scare although the Cadets lost a close one, 14-21. The 6-0, 183-pounder threw an 11-yard touchdown pass to End Franklin Fisher of Brenham for the first Aggie score, then ran 13 yards for another and his ef forts quickly moved the studious young fellow to the first team. He totalled 86 yards on offense against Rice. Coach Jim Myers, who spent a hectic spring training period try ing to work one of four quarter back candidates into readiness for the 1960 season, saw a lot of po tential in Brice but the all-around prep star lacked confidence. Last spring Brice showed flashes of things to come as in the Rice game and was a top contender but ffl V ' 'u t \ FOR AIRLINE RESERVATIONS & TICKETS FOR INTERVIEW TRIPS BEVERLEY BRALEY Travel Service VI 6-7744 Special 30 day Credit Arrangements Available ■ -.■ r - .V, "■ ^ V ', \s ■ 1 ' ' “ Ml- — BROASTED CHICKEN Fkvuill! DELIVERY IT’S THE WORLDS FINEST EATING IT’S NEW! IT’S DIFFERENT! IT’S DELICIOUS! WHAT IS BROASTED CHICKEN? FRESH—TO GO IN 7 MINUTES!! Chicken Is Fresh — Not Frozen or Pre-Cooked IT. S. Government Inspected—Grade A j f_ —!-i n tifj c new TER. The instantan eously, sedrs the chicken, seals in all the flavorful natural juices, and cooks through to the bone in seven minutes. Breasted chicken is served to you golden brown, tender, and wonderfully pala table. It’s the fastest — it’s the finest 1 BROASTED CHICKEN DINNER % Chicken $1.50 Potatoes, Cole Slaw, Rolls, Honey BROASTED CHICKEN LUNCH 14 Chicken (Dark) $ .75 % Chicken (White) $1.10 Potatoes, Cole Slaw, Rolls, Honey 1 Whole Chicken (8 pieces) $2.00 V/> Chicken (12 pieces) 2.90 Tub Chicken (16 pieces) 3.85 Barrel Chicken (24 pieces) 5.75 (The above items are chicken only) CARRY OUT ORDERS A SPECIALTY iP* —a—■ % '' '•■h h ' ‘ v u : r a .. || :fj I WESTERN RESTAURANT | Hwy 6 VI 6-5121 . 20% Discount With This Coupon * J :|fSR13 Near Miss A long pass off the arm of Jim Linnstaedter was a near- miss into the arms of the Aggie Fish’s Travis Reagan (24) Saturday. Both receiver and passer had the range, but an unidentified Texas freshman popped into the picture to break things up. in the games this fall things seemed never to work right for him. After one good game under his belt Brice may have arrived and he’ll be the No. 1 offensive quar terback against Texas in Austin this week. “All Brice needed was confi dence,” Myers said. “He had the ability.” Brice was a four-sport athlete at Andrews where he was twice an all-district quarterback and all stater. He earned 13 letters— four each in football, basketball and track and one in baseball. His best high school game was against Levelland. Ronnie ran 30 and 50 yards for touchdowns off the spread offense and passed for another. He ran on the mile relay team that placed second in the state meet and won second in the open quarter-mile, but at Aggieland Brice has concentrated on foot ball. As a freshman he was the lead ing passer, hitting 14 of 28 for 129 yards. His quickness caught the eye of the varsity coaches. It was this quickness that helped Ronnie score the second touch- I down at Rice* He dropped back to pass, couldn’t find a receiver and reversed himself barely ahead of the rushing Owl linemen to score. Assistant Coach Elmer Smith, watching movies of the play, summed it up like this: | “Ronnie’s from the land of the jack rabbits and he came out of that pocket and ran across the goal line just like he was chasing them in West Texas.” Brice is quick with the hooks, too. He’s as mechanical engineer ing major with a solid B average and wants to enter some form of industry after graduation. Aggies hope he engineers some more touchdowns Thanksgiving Day in Austin. . : AU i Ifi If *G T, v ■: • m~ ft * | I Easy way to do your new-car sampling— Drive Chevy once around the Mock at your Chevrolet dealers one-stop shopping center! Just drop in and take a drive in one of the 30 spanking new ’61 models your Chevy dealer now offers under the same roof. With every drive, your dealer is giving away free Dinah Shore Christmas records while they last. So hurry! And you’ll find that here’s the easy, one-stop way to shop for the car you want. There’s a model to suit almost any taste or need—at a price to suit almost any budget. There’s a whole crew of new Chevy Corvairs, including four family-lovin’ wagons. New Biscaynes—the lowest priced full-size Chevrolets. Popular Bel Airs. Sumptuous Impalas. And America’s only true sports car—the Corvette. Come on in and pick your 4.1 , , . , , W CHEVROLET, new car the easy way—on a one-stop shopping tour! New ’61 Chevrolet IMPALA SPORT SEDAN You’ll see five models in the '61 Impala series—the most elegant Chevies of all. They’re sensationally sensible from their more parkable out size to their remarkably roomy in size. And note that trim new roof line. New '61 Chevrolet 2-DOOR BEL AIR SEDAN These beautiful Bel Airs, priced just above the thriftiest full-size Chevies, bring you newness you can use. Roomier dimensions reach right back to the easier loading trunk that lets you pile baggage 15% higher. New lower priced ’61 CORVAIR 500 CLUB COUPE See what Corvair’s got in store for you in ’61! Thriftier sedans and coupes with nearly 12% more room up front for luggage. That rear engine’s spunkier, too, with a gas-saving new axle ratio to go with it. New ’61 Corvair 700 LAKEWOOD STATION WAGON There’s room for almost everything but antifreeze in these new one- and-only 6-passenger Lakewoods. And they’re the only wagons with lockable trunk under the hood. Be sure to see the new Greenbriers, too. New ’61 Chevrolet 2-DOOR BISCAYNE 6 NOW—Big-Car Comfort at Small-Car Prices These new Biscayne 6’s*—the lowest priced full-size Chevrolets—let you save money in a big way, yet give you a full measure of Chevy’s new roominess—such things as higher easy chair seats, larger door openings, more leg room in front, more foot room in the rear. •Also available as V8 models See the Greatest Show on Worth at Your Chevrolet Dealer’s i ■""l ilSIill Over the Stripe Jim Linnstaedter (11) is way out front in staedter’s seven-yard scamper climaxed a a foot race to the goal line during Satur- 76-yard scoring drive that almost kept the day’s game with the Texas freshmen. Linn- Fish in the ball game. A&M Cadet Corps Has Brethren on ’60 Team The A&M Cadet Corps may yell a little bit harder at Austin this coming Thanksgiving because it has one of its brethren on the Ag gie football team. Joe “Buddy” Eilers, junior from Halletsville, is the latest in a long line of Twelfth Men who have come out of the Aggie student body to make the varsity team. The A&M Twelfth Man-4,000 member student body—will have an official Corps trip to Austin and following the parade down town Austin Thursday morning will stand throughout the game yelling for the team in a famed tradition that began in 1922. King Gill was the original Twelfth Man, who came out of the stands in Dallas when A&M Coach D. X. Bible’s team was depleted by injuries. Since that date the Aggie students stand yelling : throughout the game ready to “go in if need ed”. Through the intervening years there have been many from, the student body to suit up with Eilers coming to the Aggies from the Corps in 1957. When he finished an ordinary tackle career at Halletsville no col lege scouts were hanging around. So he decided to enroll at A&M in chemical engineering on his own. It might have been too discour aging for many—holding the tack ling dummy, scrimmaging with the fourth team against the varsity, day after day of making anony mous contact with the first team. But not Eilers. He stuck it out and Coach Jim Myers thought enough of his courage in the spring of 1958 that he invited him to stay, A hold out in 1958, Eilers played behind two seniors last fall and this year finally managed to make the starting unit at right tackle. Joe stayed on the second unit in the early games this fall but by the fourth game he was on the regular team and moved past a player who many called A&M’s top lineman of a year ago. In the past few conference games when the Aggies barely lost after playing them all the way, Eilers was the line star of the game. Against Rice last week for in stance, Buddy—called “Country Joe” by his mates—was all over the field, blocking huge chunks out of the enemy line and making sav ing tackles time after time. So if you hear that Aggie 12th Man Yelling just a little bit loud er at Austin Thursday, remember that the Corps has one of its own out on the field. BATTALION CLASSIFIED WANT AD RATES One day 3c per word 2c per word each additional day Mini charge—40<i mum charge- DEADLINES 1 p.m. day before publication Classified Displa •isplay 80c per column inch each insertion PHONE VI 6-6415 FOR RENT Four bedroom house, 1008 Welsh Ave., $40 per month, VI 6-7334. 35t4 Three bedroom house, $49 per month, furnished, 908 Fairview, VI 6-7334. 35t4 One bedroom concrete, tile house. Freshly repainted inside and out. 809 Fairview, $35 per month, VI 6-7334. 35t4 Pleasant furnished apartment for stu dent of couple, two blocks off campus. $35.00 per month. VI 6-6166. 34tfn Sewing machines, Pruitt Fabric Shop. 98tfn New apartments, nicely furnished, five walk-in closets, two blocks from the Campus. VI 6-7248 or VI 6-4820. 33tfn Furnished duplex apartment. Near North Gate. 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OFFICIAL NOTICES Official notices must be brought, mailed or telephoned so as to arrive in the Office of Student Publications (Ground Floor YMCA, VI 6-6415, hours 8-12, 1-5, daily Monday through Friday) at or before tha deadline of 1 p.m publication — Dire tions. ■ of the rector of Stui or before tha day preceding udent Publica- An undergraduate student may order the A. & M. ring if he has 95 hours credit including wliat he is passing at mid semester. Any student who may be in terested in ordering his A. & M. ring on the basis of his mid-semester grades for the fall semester 1960 should leave his with the Ring Clerk in restc the basis of leave his name cith the Ring Cler fiee. The record will be checked and elig ined by the Registrar’s Of- 1 checked and eligi bility determined by November 21. Orders be taken Nov •for the ring will be taken November 21 1961 inclusive. The Ring Clerk Monday through Frida a. m. to 12:00 noon. Rings ready for delivery on February 10, 1961. 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