The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, December 11, 1963, Image 4

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

    BATTALION
Fish Meet Henderson County
In Quest Of First Victory
Shooting for its first victory of | the campaign, the A g g i e Fish
COACH NORTON’S PANCAKE HOUSE
35 Varieties of finest pancakes, aged heavy KC steaks,
shrimp, and qther fine foods.
Daily .... Merchant’s lunch 11 to 2 p.m.
LOUPOTS
is ready f or Christmas and want to
help you get ready too!
Shop while selections are good.
Easy Credit Terms Available
Christmas Store Hours
8-8:30 Mon. - Fri.
8 - 5 :30 Sat.
jaunt to Athens for a cage engage
ment with the Henderson County
junior college squad tonight.
After opening the season with a
close 69-66 loss to highly regarded
Lon Morris, the Fish will be out to
get on the winning trail before
they again take on the Bearkats in
a Saturday night repeat at Jack
sonville.
Despite the loss in the first
game, three players showed top
notch form by scoring in double
figures. J. C. Smith led the Fish
charge with a 21 point production
while teammates Curley Lenox and
Reggie Gilbreath racked up 18 and
13 points respectively.
Last year’s Fish team lost its
opening game but came back
strong winning five in a row and
finishing with a 9-3 slate. One of
those victories was over the Hen
derson County outfit, 60-55.
The probable starting lineup for
the Fish will find Curley Lenox
and Tommy Casey at the guard
posts while Reggie Gilbreath and
Larry Kirk will be at the forward
positions. At center will be J. C.
Smith.
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
WANT AD RATES
day ....
per word
Minir
. ... 3d per v
ach additional day
ions
mum charge—40d
DEADLINE
4 p.m. day before publication
Classified Display
80d per column inch
each insertion
PHONE VI 6-6415
CHILD CARE
FISHER NURSERY, STATE LICENSE,
open evenings for holiday parties and new
year’s. Truly a child’s dreamland. Your
child’s happiness and comfort are our
foremost interest. All ages, hot lunch,
two snacks, milk and diapers supplied,
big play yard, flexible hours, 906 South
College, Bryan TA 2-0597. 178t7
Sixteen months experience, child should
be at least 2 years old, indoor and outdoor
equipment, 7:30 till 5:30 or later, 25d an
hour, VI 6-8343. 178tfn
Openi:
Group
Will do baby sitting evenings, call Dian
Merica, VI 6-8076, call after 5. 145tfn
HUMPTY DUMPTY NURSERY, Li
censed by Texas State Dept, of Public
Welfare. Children of all ages. \
D. Jones, Registered Nurse, 3404
College Ave., TA 2-4803.
rgmia
South
61tfn
C-13-C CV, VI 6-7985.
Will keep children, all ages, will pick up
and deliver. VI 6-8151. Ultfn
SPECIAL NOTICE
AUTO INSURANCE—place your auto
insurance with Farmers Insurance Group
Dividends increased 50% over last year.
We accept persons, single and under age
25. Call today FARMERS INSURANCE
GROUP, 3510 South College Road, Bryan,
phone TA 2-4461. 146U07
HELP WANTED
Aggie wife for waitress, morning hours,
excellent working conditions, above average
salary, phone Bert Mullins VI 6-9968 for
interview, Dutch Kettle. 178tfn
EUROPEAN JOBS—TRAVEL GRANTS
for all students. T -' Jf j; — —— ’■
etc. For
Dept. C,
nue de
Luxembourg City, Grand Duchy of Lux
bourg.
170tl3
COINS
Wanted to buy old U. S. Coins of all
y. Box
170U0
Duy
denomination. Contact Richard Crosb;
1522, College Station,
WORK WANTED
Typing, experienced, VI 6-5900
TV-Radio-Hi-Fi
Service & Repair
GIL’S RADIO & TV
TA 2-0826 2403 S. College
• ENGINEERING AND
ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES
• BLUE LINE PRINTS
•BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS
SCOATES INDUSTRIES
608 Old Sulphur Springs Road
BRYAN, TEXAS
AGGIES
Do you change your own oil—?
—or work on your car—?
Then, why not save more on
your parts at JOE FAULK’S
DISCOUNT AUTO PARTS
Chev-Fd brake shoes 36-58 List $5.85
set of 2 wheels $2.90
Gulfpride and Havoline Qt. 37^
Your choice — Enco, Amalie, Mobil-
Pennzoil, Conoco Qt. 33<f
Texaco, Gulflube-Opaline Qt. 30tf
SAE 30-40 Recon. Oil -— Qt. 15<f
Seat Belts 3.95
Filters-Save 40%
RB Spark Plugs Ea. 29tf
Mufflers-Tail Pipes 30-40% disc.
Installed for $1.00
Wheel Bearings 30 to 60% discount
We have 95% of the parts you need at
Dealer price or less.
price
Latex inside paint
2 Gals.
Gal. $2.98
$5.49
4 New 670-15 tires $36.00 plus tax
750-14 $44.00 plus tax
Kelly Springfield
Plastic Vinyl trim seat covers
only $13.88
$19.95 value now
Shock absorbers as low as
Not off-brand
$3.88
tteries i
ler pric
12V at deal
Plenty of Prestone at our usual lowest
price.
JOE FAULK’S
25th and Washington
FOR SALE
Used tape recorder, reasonable. Call TA-
2-4894 178t7
1959 English Ford. $450.00. VI 6-7129.
178t3
Metal filing cabinet, Kodak standard
flash holder. Ladies bowling ball. VI 6-
5638. 178t3
One ‘‘Hot” 1961 Falcon. New paint job.
Call Capt. Pat Nance, Commanding Of
fice Squadron I, VI 6-5603. 178t2
Mahogany cabinet model, 17" television
set, good working order, $25.00 VI 6-6660.
178tfn
’56 Ford, 2 door hardtop, new chassis
throughout. New tires and electrical sys
tem. $350.00 or best offer. Mr. and Mrs.
Leslie Crabb, TA 2-6124. 178tfn
3/4 ton Fedders air conditioner, $50.
Kenmore washer, excellent condition, $75.,
call VI 6-7944 after 5. 175t8
Blonde wig for sale. Half price, never
worn or cut, VI 6-8087. 173t3
1960 Chevrolet good running condition,
see at 306-A Montclair, VI 6-6203 after
noons or Tuesdays and Thursday momin;
rnings.
173tfn
Two bedroom house. Garden Acres, Edge-
more Street, large yard, no down payment.
$85 monthly, including taxes and insurance,
VI 6-5694 after 9 a. m. 172tfn
1960 Oldsmobile at Texas Airmotive
LOST
Diamond engagement ring. Notify Mrs.
W. L. Sterling 1010-B Welsh, C.S. 176t2
OFFICIAL NOTICE
Official notices must be brought or
mailed 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 the
deadline of 1 p. m. of the day preceding
publication—Director of Student Publica
tions.
TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY
THE GRADUATE COLLEGE
Announcement of Final Examination for
the Doctoral Degree
(Defense of the Dissertation)
Full Name of Candidate: McKenzie, Roy
David
Candidate for Degree of Doctor of Philos
ophy In Physics
Title of Dissertation : "Api
Frank-Condon Principle”
ime of Exf“- J “ ^
2:30 P. M.
Place of Examination, Room 233, Physics
Building
Wayne C. Hall,
Dean of Graduate Studies 176t3
Dissertation: “Application of the
Ion
Time of Examination ; Friday, Dec. 13 ;
The English Proficiency Examination
will be held for Health and Physical
Education Majors Thursday, Dec. 12 at
4:00 p. m. in Room 113 Aggieland Inn,
Counseling and Testing Center. If you plan
this examination, you must registe
HOME & CAR
RADIO REPAIRS
SALES & SERVICE
KEN’S RADIO & TV
303 W. 26th TA 2-2819
LET US SET A DIAMOND IN
YOUR SENIOR RING.
CAMPUS JEWELRY
North Gate
College Station
TYPEWRITERS
ADDING MACHINES
RENTALS
ASK ABOUT OUR
RENTAL OWNERSHIP
PLAN
OTIS MCDONALD’S
429 South Main St.
Bryan, Texas
Regalia For The January 1964
Commencement Exercise
All students who are candidates tor tne
degree of Doctor of Philosophy are required
to order hoods as well as the Doctor’s caps
candidates for the
and gowns. The hoods are to be left
the Registrar’s Office no later than 1
p.m., Tuesday, January 14 (this will be
accomplished by a representative of the
College Exchange Store). The Ph.D hoodi
will not be worn in the procession sinCV
all such candidates will be hooded on the
stage as part of the ceremony. Candidates
for the Master’s Degree will wear the cap
and gown ; all civilian students who are
candidates for the Bachelor’s Degree will
wear the cap and gown; ROTC students
who are candidates for the Bachelor’s De
gree will wear the appropriate uniform.
All military personnel who are candidates
for the degrees, graduate or undergraduate,
will wear the uniform only. Rental of
caps and gowns may be arranged with
the Exchange Store. Orders may be placed
between 8:00 a.m., Wednesday, December
11 and 12:00 noon, Saturday, January 11.
The rental is as follows: Doctor’s cap and
gown $5.25, Master’s cap and gown $4.75,
Bachelor’s cap and gown $4.25. Hood
rental is the same as that for the cap and
gown. A 2% sales tax is required in
addition to these rentals. Payment is re
quired at the time of placing order.
C. E. Tishler, Chairman, Chairman
Convocation Committee 178tl0
The English Proficiency examination for
Modern Language Majors has been
scheduled for 2 :30 p. m. Tuesday, December
17, 1963 in Room 129 Academic Building.
All Junior and Senior Modern Language
Majors are required to take this exam and
should register for it immediately in the
Modern Language Offce.
J. J. Woolket
. Head
Department of Modern Languages 178tfn
Those undergraduate students who have
95 semester hours of credit may purchas
95 semester hours of credit may purchase
the A&M ring. The hours passing at the
time of the preliminary grade report on
November 11, 1963, may be used in satis
fying the 95 hour requirement. Those
students qualifying under this regulation
may leave their names with the ring clerk
in the registrar’s office in order that she
may check their records to determine their
eligibility to order the rings. Orders for
the rings will be taken between November
18 through November 27 and December
9 through January 7. These rings will be
returned for delivery on or about February
14, 1963. The ring clerk is on duty from
8:00 a. m. to 12:00 noon, Monday through
Friday of each week.
H. L. Heaton Director of
Admission and
Director of
Registrar
Room 231 of the Chemistr
Tuesday, December 10, 1963.
g on
173t4
TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY
THE GRADUATE COLLEGE
ANNOUNCEMENT OF FINAL EXAMI
NATION FOR THE DOCTORAL DEGREE
(Defense of the Dissertation)
Full Name of Candidate: Robertson,
Walter V.
Candidate for Degree of Doctor of Philos
ophy in Zoology
Title of Dissertation: “The Phylogeny of
Myomorph Rodents Based on Brain
Morphology”
Time of Examination: December 10; 2:00
P. M.
Place of Examination: Room 203 ; Plant
Sciences Building
Wayne C. Hall
Dean of Graduate Studies 173t4
SOSOLIKS
T. V., Radio. Phono., Car Radio
Transistor Radio Service
713 S. Main
TA 2-1941
TYPEWRITERS
Rentals-Sales-Service
Terms
Distributors For:
Royal and Victor
Calculators &
Adding Machines
CATES
TYPEWRITER CO.
909 S. Main TA 2-6000
AUTO REPAIRS
All Makes
Just Say:
“Charge It”
Cade Motor Co.
Ford Dealer
CASH AVAILABLE FOR BOOKS, SLIDE RULES & ETC.
5,000 AGGIES CAN’T BE WRONG
LOUPOTS
New Store Hours — 8 a. m. ’til 5:30 p. m. g Days A Week.
KubalaToPlay
In Shrine Game
A&M’s Ray Kubala, signed by
the Denver Bronchos of the Amer
ican Football League, will join six
other Southwest Conference play
ers on the West team in the an
nual Shrine football game to be
played Dec. 28 in San Francisco.
Kubala, who captained the 1963
Aggies, is one of two centers chos
en and will no doubt see a great
deal of action.
Other SWC players are quarter
back Don Trull, tackle Bobby
Crenshaw and fullback Dalton
Hoffman of Baylor, and David
Parks of Texas Tech, fullback
Tommy Crutcher and guard Robert
Mangum of Texas Christian.
UTAH TONITE
Utags Slaughter Ags
Below freezing weather outside
and equally frigid Aggie shooting
gave a fine Utah State team a 94-
71 victory over the Cadets in Lo
gan, Utah, Tuesday night.
Led by junior Wayne Estes’ 41
points, the Utah Aggies out-shot,
out-rebounded and out-played the
young A&M team to post their
third victory of the season against
no defeats. The loss evened A&M’s
record at 1-1.
The contest started out slow
with the score tied at 8-8 after
five minutes. The score was knot
ted twice more at 10-10 and 12-12
before the Utags and Estes broke
Longhorns Await
New Year 9 s Battle
AUSTIN (A*)—It’s going to be a
football showdown when Texas and
Navy meet Jan. 1 in the Cotton
Bowl at Dallas.
“This’ll go a long way to set
tling things,” said All-America
tackle Scott Appleton of the Long
horns Tuesday.
HE HAD JUST been told that
the final Associated Press poll had
given Texas the top rating — the
national title. Navy is No. 2 and
the team the Longhorns must beat
to prove themselves worthy of the
top spot.
“It would be a big mar on our
record to lose to Navy in the Cot
ton Bowl game and that is some
thing we’ve got to be working on,”
Loyola Holds Lead
As Top Cage Team
Associated Press
Loyola of Chicago, last season’s
national champion, has taken a
commanding lead in The Associat
ed Press’ weekly college basket
ball poll on. the strength of im
pressive victories in its first two
games this year.
said Appleton, the big man in a
Texas defense that allowed only 65
points in an all-winning 10-game
season.
“WE’VE HEARD a lot about
Roger Staubach. They take up a
lot of newspaper space for him,”
said co-captain Tommy Ford, Tex
as’ stocky tailback.
“He’s all I imagined,” Appleton
said of Staubach, Navy’s sensa
tional All-America quarterback
and key figure in the Middies’ ex
plosive offense.
“HE’S A GREAT football player
and he’s going to hurt us some
where. What we’ve got to do is
keep it from happening too often.”
“I’ll be glad when the game gets
here,” said Tony Crosby, whose
shoeless kicking of field goals and
extra points was a major factor
for Texas this year.
“I’ll be happy if I’m called on
to kick a lot of extra points.”
“I AM REAL happy and real
excited to be playing Navy,” said
quarterback Duke Carlisle.
“Navy was my first choice for
the Cotton Bowl,” said end Charles
Talbert. “They have good passing
and running and certainly will be
one of the toughest teams we’ve
played this year.
1.
Chicago Loyola 32
2-0
353
“IT WON’T be easy to beat
2.
NYU 4
2-0
312
them. We’ll have to get up for
3.
Duke
3-0
272
this one just like the rest of them.
4.
Arizona State
2-0
149
I’m looking forward to the game.”
5.
Kentucky
3-0
144
Texas players have seen little of
6.
Cincinnati
2-1
141
Navy in action this year except
7.
Michigan
3-0
116
through films of the Middies de
8.
Ohio State
3-1
113
feat by Southern Methodist and
9.
Oregon State
4-0
64
their televised victory over Army
10.
Kansas
2-0
61
last Saturday.
it open. Utah State fired in 17
points before the Cadets hit the
scoreboard again and the rout was
on.
A&M’s all-American candidate
Bennie Lenox netted the goal that
tied the score at 8-8 and was held
scoreless the rest of the night by
an alert and aggressive Utag de
fense.
Estes tallied 33 points in the
first half as the teams left the
floor with A&M trailing 57-31.
The second half was about even
with A&M having an edge in»
ing, 40-37, but was unable to ovet.
come the Utah State lead.
Sophomore T i m Timmem:
paced the Aggies with 18 point!
followed by two other sophs—Job
Beasley with 16 and Dick Strap
fellow with 11.
Center, 6-9 Troy Collier anl
guard Leroy Walker each nett;:
16 for Utah State.
Wednesday night, A&M move
over to Salt Lake City to test
Utah University.
AGGIES ... DON’T DELAY!
Order Your Boots Now For Future
Delivery - Small Payment Will Do
YOUR BOOTS MADE TO ORDER
Convenient Lay-Away Plan
ONLY $55.00 A PAIR
Economy Shoe Repair & Boot Co.
509 W. Commerce, San Antonio
CA 3-0047
of a
Books make gifts
very special kind.
They don't break,
They don't wilt,
They don't age.
They are like the
cake in the fairy tale,
which can be eaten but
still doesn't diminish.
THE EXCHANGE STORE
“Serving Texas Aggies Since 1907”
^ ExcitingThings Happen at Ford Motor Company !
THE 100,000-MILE
ENGINEERING TEST
THAT SET OVER 100
NEW WORLD RECORDS
It began September 21 in Florida, when a team of four
1964 Comets, specially equipped and prepared for
high-speed driving, set out to do the equivalent of four
earth orbits at Daytona International Speedway—100,000
miles at speeds well over 100 miles an hour, round
the clock for 40 days, through weather fair and foul.
They did it, all four of them, and they made history!
They did it in the full glare of publicity. In semi-tropical
heat. In the teeth of torrential squalls that fringed two
hurricanes. Including time out for refueling and mainte
nance, the lead car averaged over 108 miles an hour,
toppling over 100 national and world records!*
For all practical purposes this was an engineering trial
—the most grueling test of staying power and durability
ever demanded of a new car. Only near perfection
fEiBptl
■ WSSsill
could stand the punishment dished out to parts and
components hour after hour, mile after mile. Brakes,
engine's, transmissions, ignition systems—every single
part a pawn in a grim game of truth or consequence,
with fofa/ product quality the stake. And they all came
through hands down!
Now thqt it’s over and in the record books, what does
it mean? New proof of Ford-built stamina and dura
bility! New evidence that Ford-built means better built!
Yes—and more, it is a direct reflection of the confidence
and creative know-how, the spirit and spunk pf Ford
Motor Company's engineering, styling and manufac
turing team—men who find rewarding adventure in
technical breakthroughs.
More proof of the exciting things that happen at ruiu
Motor Company to bring brighter ideas and better-
built cars to the American Road.
•World Unlimited and Glass C records, subject to FIA approval
MOTOR COMPANY
The American Road, Dearborn, Michigan
WHERE ENGINEERING LEADERSHIP BRINGS YOU BETTER-BUILT CARS