featuring Special Lunches Monday Thru Friday 11:30 til 2:00 Also Steaks, Shrimp and Other Fine Foods. East Gate Highway 6 So. However, the ball park was only the studio for a vast audi ence to see the bout on closed circuit television which had over one million seats available at prices ranging from $4 to $10 ATTENTION BOWLERS MIXED LEAGUES Being Formed at M.S.C. Lanes Starting Wednesday Night at 7:00 P. M. September 26. All Interested Couples Call or Come By M.S.C. BOWLING GAMES DESK. Patterson may receive the rich est purse of any fighter in history with a chance of pocketing $1.7 million to Liston’s $400,000. The old record is the $990,445 that Gene Tunney was paid for beating Jack Dempsey in the famous “long count’’ fight in Soldier Field, Chicago, Sept. 22, 1927. Despite the odds favoring the hulking 6-1, 212-pound Arkansas- born challenger from Philadel phia, a poll of newsmen covering the bout showed a 60 per cent preference for Patterson on a 51- 32 edge of 83 votes. The pick here is Patterson in 15 rounds. Jerry Stovall Cracks Aggie Defense LSU halfback and All-America candidate Jerry Stovall (21) and fullback Jerry Rogers (33) close in to lend a handy! bangs into a host of Cadet defenders at Baton Rouge’s Stovall led LSU’s formidable Tigers to a 21-0 shutoutove| Tiger Stadium Saturday night. In the background halfback the Ags in the season-opener for both teams. (Photo l)| Ken Kipp (25) already has a band on'the triple-threat back, Ronnie Fann) while end Bobby Huntington (81), guard Jim Harper (63) Tigers Blank Farmers, 21- BATTALION CLASSIFIED WANT AD RATES On* day ....3^ per word 2c per word each additional day Minimum charges—40^ DEADUNE 4 p.m, day before publication Classified Display 30c per column inch each insertion PHONE VI 6-6415 FOR SALE Two boy’s 26” bicycles, newly recon ditioned. *20.00 each. Call VI 6-7032. 3t3 1958 Cruisaire scoot< windshield, *200. VI 6-' er, ft 7935. :ood condition An "ECONOMY” life insurance plan for college students, underwritten by Texas’ largest life insurance company. Has con vertibility features for your protection after graduation. Ideal plan for married after graduation, ideal plan for man students who are hard-pressed for funds but Intel Eugene Kush Box KK, College Station, or call VI 6-6611 (VI 6-5656 at night) Xtfn students who are hard-pressed for but want to protect their families. If detail^ drop a card to Colle; interested We have received a shipment of reject slab doors. All sizes. Ideal desks, coffe for study coffee tables, or new construction. able legs from 12" to 29”, desk height. See at the Marion Pugh Lumber Co., 4 blocks south of Kyle Field, old Highway 6. Phone VI 6-5711. 2t8 Also tal height. Dinette set and drapes. 1011 Milner lt3 downtown Bryan. aint re, ffice, 137t9 FOR RENT Clean furnished large apartment. Bed room, private bath and entrance. 2 boys preferred. 917 South College. 3t2 Furnished house, TA 2-3669. Two large comfortable bedrooms. 401 ‘ 128tfn Two large comf >exter, VI 6-4233. OR. G. A. SMITH OPTOMETRIST • PSOLALIZINO tm CYft CXAMINATJON ^•nd CONTACT LENSIS DRY AN OPTICAL CLiNIC 1 0 5 N o A I N • e.R,YA N . T.E X A 3 NOW from MAKY CAKTKK economy priced STELLAR QUALITY PAINT $2.66 per gal. MARY CARTER’S finest enamel plus a top quality trim brush regular $2.09 value NOW 49^. MARY CARTER PAINTS 305 Dodge Bryan TYPEWRITERS Rentals-Sales-Service Terms Distributors For: Royal and Victor Calculators & Adding Machines CATES TYPEWRITER CO. 909 S. Main TA 2-6000 AGGIES NOTICE SAE 30 Motor Oils 15< Qt. Major Brands Oils 27-31^ QL For your parts and accessories AT a DISCOUNT See us— Plenty free parking opposite the courthouse. DISCOUNT AUTO PARTS Brake shoes. Fuel pumps. Water pumps. Generators, Starters, Solenoids, etc. Save 30 to 50% on just about any part for your car. Filters 40% discount AT JOE FAULK’S 25th and Washington YOUR DISTRIBUTOR FOR • EICO KITS • Garrard Changers • HI-FI Components • Tape Recorders Use Our Time Payment Plan CHILD CARE If mama works to help daddy get his education, an outsider must of necessity look after the kids. Both parents want this to stop when he graduates. But it could become permanent if daddy should die —• Unles: ly shoui ■ss There Is Adequate Life In surance To Pay The Bills. So That Mama largest life le ry low-eost students that will Can Stay Home! Texas' insurance company has plan for col.legi these bills. See Eugene Rush at Nor Gate for details. Or call VI 6-6611 (VI 6-5656 at night) and he will come to see you. No High Pressure Itfn FEMALE HELP WANTED Waitress, experience not necessary, must be 18 years of age. Ferreri’s triangle Restaurant, TA 2-1352. 123tfn HELP WANTED ■COS L pay orth Lab Assistants for 218, 219, and 220. Any students who has taken one or more Babysitting from 8 to 5, experienced. C-8-B College View. Itfn I will keep child in my home. Close to campus. 200 Montclair. VI 6-7617. 136tfn Will keep children in my home. Con venient to Bryan and College. TA 2-3828. 134tfn Will keep infant child or children in my home. TA 3-5129. ISOtfn HUMPTY DUMPTY NURSERY Children of all ages, weekly and hourly rates, 3404 South College Avenue, Bryan, Texas. Virginia Davis Jones. Registered Nurse. TA 2-4803. 124tfn Will keep children, all ages, will pick up and deliver. VI 6-8151. llltfn WORK WANTED Typing - electric typewriter. Experience: Secretary, business teacher.' VI 6-8510. 85tfn 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, dally Monday through Friday) at or before the deadline of 1 p. m. of the day preceding publication — Director of Student Publica tions. All Student Organizations should apply for Official Recognition for 1962-63 ; Stu dent Finance Center, Memorial Student Center by October 15. MSC Student Finance Center 3tll Ph. D. Language Examination Examinations for meeting the foreign language requirement for the Ph. D. de gree will be given Monday, Oct 1st at 6 :00 p. m. in Room 129, Academic Build ing. Students wishing to take this ex amination should leave the material over which they wish to be examined With the Secretary in the Department of Modem Languages not later than 6:00 p. m. Fri day. Sept. 28th. Department of Modern Languages J. J. Woolket Head 139t7 HOME & CAR RADIO REPAIRS SALES & SERVICE KEN’S RADIO & TV 303 W. 26th TA 2-2819 NOTICE ELECTROLUX SALES SERVICE & SUPPLIES By Authorized Dealer We service and have parts for all other makes and models Used vacuum cleaners 1 year warranty 1003 S. College Ave., Bryan, Texas 4 TA 2-4143 semesters of Physics and is interested in by the Physics Office, Room 231. , 3t4 working hysn .ab Assistant, please come SPECIAL NOTICE SPECIAL NOTICE: LADY FAIR BEAUTY SHOP takes pleasure in announcing two new mem bers to their Beauty Shop Staff. Linda Oliver, an Aggie wife from Greenville and Delores Marquart of Bryan. Both with much training and experience in the practice of Cosmetology. Other operators are Patsy Willingham, Barbara Turner, Thelma Pohl, and Pansy Cook. LADY FAIR BEAUTY SHOP Townshire Shopping Center Phone TA 2-1711 3tl Service and counsel on all life insuran matters. (If married, is your wife her ficiary on your old policies?) Provid for ydUr convenience at no charge. MSC, yoi ficiary on your old policies?) Provided •ge. Room 2-C. from ! to 5 p. m. each Wednes*- day. Eugene Rush, B.A., LL.B., Insurance Counsellor. 3tfn ito insurance through div- Farmers In- ?ge, Bryan. TA 2-4461. ■ We insure single men under 25 at standard rates. 136tfn Save on auto insurance thr< idends, call George Webb, Far surance Group, 3510 South Colleg Now start your fall fishing and picnicing right at Hilltop Lake, if rained out, come bake, if rained out, \>ack free, 9% miles south of colleg' highway 6. VI 6-8491. ge on 136tfn Electrolux sales and service. G. C. tVilliams, TA 3-6331. 90tfn SOSOLIKS T. V., Radio, Phono., Car Radio Transistor Radio Service 713 S. Main TA 2-1941 • ENGINEERING AND ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES • BLUE LINE PRINTS • BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS SCOATES INDUSTRIES 608 Old Sulphur Springs Road BRYAN, TEXAS TV - Radio - Hi-Fi Service & Repair GILS RADIO & TV 2403 S. College TA 2-0826 SHIPLEY DONUT & COFFEE SHOP For The Best Coffee & Freshest Donuts ANYWHERE Hamburgers — Short Orders — Fountain Service Cash Available For Books, Slide Rules & Etc. 5,000 AGGIES CAN’T BE WRONG LOUPOTS By VAN CONNER Battalion Sports Editor Nationally-ranked LSU made Saturday night a bleak one for new Head Coach Hank Foldberg’s ’62 Aggie football squad by powering to a 21-0 victory before an over capacity crowd of 68,000 in Baton Rouge. The Tigers had class, power and speed. They used it too, plus capi talizing on Cadet penalties, to give their new head mentor, Charles McClendon, a flashy start. Though the Ags’ offense was well-contained by the Tigers and the defense leaked devestatingly at times, Foldberg “saw what he wanted to see,” in his soph-stud ded team. FOLDBERG’S POST-GAME at titude was hardly one of despair. “LSU has a very outstanding ball club,” he emphasized, “a team of veterans deep in two years of ex perience. I thought our boys play ed hard and they never stopped hit ting.” “We have several phases of the game to be worked on before we meet Houston,” he continued. The ex-Wichita coach told Sun day TV-viewers that he was happy with the way his Cadets rebounded from mistakes at Baton Rouge. Nearly every un-injured Aggie ballplayer saw a lot of action in Tiger Stadium as Foldberg looked carefully at the game performance of his first three teams and many different combinations of gridders. THE FIRST HALF Avas the scene of little action except for an orderly and sustained drive by LSU that carried them 61 yards to their first touchdown. Standout halfback Jerry Stovall started this drive rolling with gains of eight and five yards and the Tigers’ first first down. The ball was on the Cadet 48 then, and after LSU fullback Charles Cranford gained three over the middle, ace quarterback Jim my Field came up with the big play of the drive. The senior stand out shot a 23-yard aerial to end Jack Gates to set the Tigers up on the Aggie 22. After three and four yard gains by Bo Campbell and Ray Wilkins, respectively, Go team quarterback Lynn Amedee threw an 11-yarder to Wilkins for a first and goal on the Cadet four. On the next play, hard-running Campbell carried a- cross for LSU and seconds later Amedee converted for seven count ers with 5:22 left in the quarter. PENALTIES STOPPED both teams from started offensively for the remainder of the first period. The first real thrill for Aggie fans came during this time, however, when quarterback John Erickson lobbed a pass across the flow of the play on a third and 19 situa tion to Raymond Kubesch for 12 yards. The Ags crossed the midfield stripe early in the second quarter, and moved Avell toward paydirt until Stovall showed his defensive prowess in stopping George Har gett short of a first on the Tiger 41. Fullback Jerry Rogers red-dog ged from his linebacker position on the Tiger’s next play from scrimmage, throwing LSU soph Danny LeBlanc for a six-yard loss and messing up any Tiger ideas of starting- a drive. As soon as the Cadets tried to move the ball, however, Field inter cepted a James Willenborg pass and ran it back to the Aggie 33. The Ag defense tightened fast, then, and inspired work by Jerry Hopkins, Rogers and Ronnie Brice curtailed the LSU scoring bid in short order. THE HALF ENDED minutes later, after several Aggie passing attempts failed to produce points. Cadet scatback Jim Linnstaedter left the game early in the first period with a head injury. Al though the trouble was not serious, Linnstaedter stayed out for the It rest of the game. The second half opened fii quick LSU touchdown, spartei Stovall’s 58-yard kickoff rei After slashing runs by LeBi Field and fullback Steve ft Sto\^all hit for seven over ii| tackle and then for one anil score over left tackle. And made it 14-0. THE BALL CHANGED twice, then, with neither able to get going. Late in the period the Tigers took overs began a long, drawn out drive carried over into the last and brought LSU its final tot down. LeBlanc, who had appara j been curtailed during the f I e three quarters by the Ags, a P ar 1 back to be the key figure inw 11 * ' kL T letJ I 'CM K ,it.»r last scoring driv^e. Helpedalaf 6 P 1 Ward and the ev^er-tough Stoi« ^ the Tigers moved the ball al#, ^ le the ground, grinding out 54 niff h ; in 13 plays. Inside the 10, lff en Blanc and Ward alternated tiff^ a ing a determined Aggie lineff Ward finally bulled over fiffP ^ pis a the one. LSU led in the rushing F ::in ' ment, 192 yards to 97, andrl® 6 ^ had 16 first downs to the Cai ^el nine. The Ags had the edge aff e S e with 106 yards passing to lff et 11 52 "Jffothe —ff Corn jto arr Bhese Freezer Specials — Completely Processed For Your Freezer or Locker BABY VEAL HIND QUARTER 60 to 80 Lbs. — 59c Lb. 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