tuesday, October 23, 1979 COOH asks o O daily nebraskan ' -- V II II II t t l fffbf xp r 1 1 '. : - I -svT i ii r fi if v i 1 Catiaman UOB 1 f his namsie ordinary? Kafp.V V What if the great men and women of history hadn't had those important sounding names so suited to their eventual achievements? Would they have failed to accomplish all that fate had in store for them? Or Hockstein's Heights? UirrH t rf r 11 1 ...I J . ' 0 M rusners wouia noi t oMSy have charged halfwav across a o I . . continent shouting "Hockstein's Heights or bust!" Just look at the names that fill our early history, William Tecumseh Sherman. Ulysses S. Grant. George Rogers Clark. Meriwether Lewis. J.E.B. Stuart. Susan B. Anthony. Lucretia Mott. Nobody fools around with people like that, And with a name like Adolph Coors, what else are you going to do but figure out how to brew a great beer in a better place than anybody ever brewed beer before. Did any of those city brewers ever climb a mile up in the Rockies, illivJ I . a V J? yxhl rV just to get pure mountain u 0--, : A wj Spring water, 01 For instance: Zebulon Montgomery Pike. "Pike's Peak? But what if his name had been something else? What would the Colorado country lewith ; Mountain? 1 r ' 1 ,) Kit i r a Ok sn . Av ii szpJZ spring water, or grow their own high country barley? Of course not.That's why Coors is special the only beer that lets you taste the high country. The beer that makes all the others just city beer. Coors. It's a great name. l(i''' 5 1 1 to (; f ? jn 1 - i 1 ADOLPH COORS COMPANY. GOLDEN. COLO.