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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (April 24, 1969)
•use Set ere 40 yean, - houj.' 'g a aequair; b iV’ dt. >1. who ii fort. tion wii ssmen t) e union on as youtlu, ia ch othei lV er, will th heart lucation,’ graduaj professm lepressitt >ney wu 'at mon 2d in th their It ■oom arc i, and th ■ conceh er, rent kind of i ii, notiig do. Th s of bed- ore fivi, Jdents ii fht theii ftentinw ixas, otb ise cam ventuallj said Mt- e located distant! lat time lege St>- away ji ■k Irani- md froo any prci lored 1>! id house- n motbei ody and 'or fat ve could iding fe cing en tile game years.' 1 bute this v retired ty, will >en the on the re Bol lucation; Science; icultural Blood- i on ar il. Me C. It ■ology. ■es bers "I Council , Mitty c Coinr Arthur ting tl 11 linistra- ial, the lavid E- ' Engi rt, the Mickey Liberal McGiEi r Medi- college ap from cted to d. Council ;rs who ncil. o, Leoa GaH' id Bot its rintinf 'spaP er spring article r’s a 1 " raliz^ mitg dieting is ^ ) while renicat revival spap* 1 Sheffield Passes Maroons Past Whites Jimmy Sheffield, junior quar terback from Houston, ran for one touchdown and passed for No. 1 In College Sales For Information Call: Steve Hillhouse ’66 (College Master Representative) Fidelity Union Life Insurance Co. 303 College Main — 846-8228 two more in sparking the Ma roons to a 36-0 victory over the Whites in a controlled scrim mage that marked the sixth ses sion of Texas A&M’s spring foot ball drills Wednesday. Sheffield scored on a four-yard run off the quarterback option. He hit tight end Ross Brupbacher with a 65-yard scoring aerial and then came back to hit the split end with a 39-yard touchdown heave. He completed 6 of 7 for 154 yards for the afternoon. Robert Stansberry, junior from Eden and Rocky Self, sophomore from San Antonio, also guided the Maroons to touchdowns. Tail back Steve Burks, the workhorse in the running department, scored once with Self at quarterback and against with Stansberry at the reins. Both were short plunges. Burks for the afternoon gained 100 yards on 24 carries. Linebacker Mike Caswell, sen ior from Houston Smiley, scored the other touchdown when he in tercepted a White pass and raced 70 yards. Brupbacher had a big afternoon in catching passes as he grabbed 6 for 127 yards and the one touchdown. He had another ap parent touchdown but was caught from behind after a 29-yard gain. Sophomore Edwin Ebrom of Karnes City, playing a defensive halfback post, intercepted two White passes while end Jim Pip er of Brownwood recovered one fumble. For the Whites, wingback Joey Herr turned in a fine job as a receiver. The Fort Worth young ster caught four for 65 yards, three thrown by Kyle Gary and one by Joe Mac King. The Aggies will resume drills Friday and will stage another scrimmage Saturday afternoon. The Texas Aggies covered vir tually all phases of play Tuesday *■1 " as spring football drills resumed this week. Punt coverage was one item and redshirt sophomore Mitch Robertson of Abilene Cooper was booming ’em high and far dur ing that session. The Aggies lost ace punter Steve McNeal after a three-year stint and Robertson leads the list of punting candi dates. THE BATTALION Thursday, April 24, 1969 College Station, Texas Page 5 Would You Believe? Fresh From The Gulf OYSTERS on the half-shell or fried to order Served Right Here on the Campus 5 to 7 each evening at the famous Oyster Room MSC Cafeteria 89« SPECIAL 3 Pc. Chicken Order Served with french fries, rolls, & honey FREE DORM DEUVERY-846-4111 THE CHICKEN HOUSE North Gate 314 Un-iv. Dr. This Offer Expires 25 April THURSDAY NITE, JAZZ SOCIETY, JAM SESSION. TAKE PART OR JUST LISTEN FREE ALSO Live Coffe House Entertainment FRIDAY & SATURDAY. ALL NIGHTS 8 - 12 THE BASEMENT (MSC) IN THE OPEN Ag-gie tailback Steve Burks breaks into the open for the Maroon team in a controlled scrimmage in Kyle Field yes terday. Burks was the day’s leading ball carrier with 100 yards on 24 carries as the Maroons took a 36-0 victory. (Photo by Mike Wright) Arts And Letters Blue Grass Pick LEXINGTON, Ky. <A>) — Arts and Letters and Traffic Mark head a field of six in the $25,000- added Blue Grass Stakes Thurs day at Keeneland. The l^-mile Blue Grass has produced a dozen Kentucky Der by winners and last year’s Derby purse winner, Forward Pass. Arts and Letters runs for Paul Mellon’s Rokeby Stable. Going against the favorites will be Poplar Hill Farm’s Mr. Coincidence, D. W. Scott’s Hot Coals, Benjamin and Jones’ Walking Stick and A. R. Donald son’s Dondougold. This campus is crawling with leg men Your legs get the once-over every time you turn around. And they’d better look great. Once over with the sleek new Lady Norelco, and they will. The rest of you will, too. Because the Lady Norelco isn’t just a fast, close, com fortable leg shaver. It’s a fast, close, gentle underarm shaver too. And it’s even an easy- to-handle trimmer that takes off those wispy little neck strands that sneak up on Sassoons between appointments. It’s a whole new way to stay great looking. So is the new Norelco Ladyshave pictured right. It comes in a purple and white travel purse and does a good job of pampering your legs, under arms and pocket- book. Lady Norelco and Norelco Ladyshave. Two fabulous new ladies’ shavers. For the benefit of man. kre/co' you can’t get any closer ©1969 North American Philips Corporation, 100 East 42nd Street, New York, N.Y. 10017 WHERE THE ACTION IS CIVILIAN STUDENT WEEKEND APRIL 25-16. 1969 FRIDAY, APRIL 25th 6:00-8:00 PM 8:00-12:00 PM 8:00 PM 8:00-12:00 PM 8:00-12:00 PM Coffee House in Lounge B-l sponsored by Moore, Crocker, and Mclnnis Halls. Coffee with music CSC-sponsored dance in Grove — “Gypsy Moth” — Admis sion free. Alternate — Assembly Room MSC. CSC-sponsored movie “We’ve Never Been Licked.” Con tinuous showings in Guion Hall. Admission free. MSC “Basement” — Folksinging program in coffee house atmosphere throughout evening. Admission 75^ stag or drag. Dance sponsored by Davis-Gary Hall. K-C Hall. “Ghost Coach”. $2.00 stag or drag. Free set-ups. BYOB. Casual dress. SATURDAY, APRIL 26th 12:30-4:00 PM 1:00 PM 1:30 PM 2:00 PM 2:30 PM 3:00 PM 3:30 PM 7:00 PM 10:00 AM 12:00 Noon Sweetheart orientation — MSC Social Room. For sweet heart candidates^ escorts, and selection committee. Barbecue — In Grove (Kyle Field alternate in case of rain). Presentation of Civilian Sweetheart Candidates. Presentation of Alpha Phi Omega Ugly Man. One ticket to spring dorm activity card holder. Date tickets are $1.00. (Pick up tickets from Counselors on or before April 21.) Moon Carnival — You and your date are invited to enjoy the Midway near the Grove. Admission free. Frisby Finals — Intramural Field near Grove - spectators welcome. Greased pig chase — Animal Husbandry Pavilion - spectators welcome. Mud Football — CE Field - spectators welcome. Tug-of-war — CE Field - spectators welcome. Sky diving exhibition by Texas A&M Parachute team — CE Field. Control line — stunt flying for your enjoyment - CE Field. “Town Hall” Regular — G. Rollie White. “Sandpipers”. Admission free with University Activity Cards. Date tickets $1.50 from Student Programs Office. 9:00 PM-1:00 AM “Gemini Twin” Dances — “Ambassadors of Soul” — Club Sbisa Annex “Paul Wayne and his Western Allstars” — MSC Ballroom Presentation of Civilian Week “Athletic” Awards Presentation of Civilian Sweetheart Ticket to fall dorm activity card holders, otherwise $3.00 stag or drag. (Pick up tickets from Counselors on or before April 21).