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Bevo and is
Rio Grande is home to the University of Rio Grande / Rio Grande Community College, the alma mater of Bevo Francis, who set and still holds the NCAA basketball single-game scoring record.
Bevo became part of the popular culture of the time, and is mentioned in various popular songs and Vaudeville skits of the era.
Bevo is also mentioned in the short story " The Killers " by Ernest Hemingway ; as well as in Babbitt by Sinclair Lewis.
It is often colloquially referred to as " Bevo ".
The current Bevo is fourteenth in the line of longhorns that have been the university's mascot.
Bevo is a steer, as an intact bull would be too dangerous in a crowded environment like a stadium.
The gesture is meant to approximate the shape of the head and horns of the UT mascot, the Texas longhorn Bevo.
Bevo Francis ( born Clarence Francis on 4 September 1932 on his family's farm outside of Wellsville, Ohio ) is a former American basketball player.
This call sign, named after the University of Texas ' mascot " Bevo ", was formerly used on the new channel 42 which is now KEYE-TV and is shared with sister station KBVO-CD.
The KBVO callsign, named after the University of Texas mascot, " Bevo ", was formerly used on channel 42, which is now KEYE-TV.

Bevo and name
The name " Bevo " was coined from the word " beverage " and the Slavic language word for beer " pivo ", and was pronounced " Bee-vo ".
The University of Texas named its mascot " Bevo ", a name which has stuck to this day.
Bevo rides in a special burnt orange livestock trailer with his name on the side.

Bevo and mascot
* Bevo ( mascot )
Two failed attempts to maintain a live beaver mascot include Bevo Beaver ( rescued from Mary's River in 1921 and later stolen ) and Billy Beaver ( made mascot in 1935, and later fell ill and died ).
Bevo XIII, originally named Sunrise Express, was a champion steer at the age of 3, before becoming the UT mascot.
* Bevo ( mascot )
One of his notable projects was a series of cartoons featuring the Texas Longhorns ' mascot " Bevo " for the University of Texas at Austin in the 1950s and 1960s.

Bevo and at
In 1951, his only year of varsity basketball at Wellsville, Clarence Bevo Francis scored 776 points in 25 games for an average of nearly 32 point per game.
The Bevo building, with the Renard character prominently displayed at the corners, still operates as a bottling facility at their main brewery in St. Louis, Missouri.
Bevo makes appearances at all home football games of the University of Texas, as well as many away games.
* Bevo XIII dead at 22

Bevo and Texas
The most recently retired and longest-serving Bevo was Bevo XIII, which like the current Bevo was supplied to the university by John T. Baker, owner of the Sunrise Ranch in Liberty Hill, Texas.
* Mack Brown Texas Football: Proud Traditions: Bevo
* Texas Traditions: Bevo

Bevo and with
Production rose greatly with national prohibition in 1919, and Bevo was by far the most popular of the many " cereal beverages " or " near beers " of the time.
Renard with a mug of Bevo, depicted in Glazed architectural terra-cotta | terra cotta on the interior walls of the Bevo building, St. Louis
Some Bevo advertising featured the character " Renard the Fox " ( based on the protagonist of a medieval French folk-tale ), and promotional mugs with this character were manufactured.
Bevo II once charged a SMU cheerleader, who had to defend himself with his megaphone.
Bevo Francis, teammate Al Schreiber, and his coach Newt Oliver later signed with Boston Whirlwinds, a barnstorming team that played against the Harlem Globetrotters.

Bevo and .
In addition, a special award was given to Bob ( Bevo ) Nordmann, the 6-foot-10 center who missed much of the season because of a knee injury.
Bevo was congratulated for his efforts to stay in shape so that he could help the team if his knee healed in time.
Bevo was a non-alcoholic malt beverage, or near beer, brewed in the United States by the Anheuser-Busch company beginning in the early 20th century.
Bevo enjoyed its greatest success during the time of prohibition, when beer, wine and distilled liquors, were made illegal for thirteen years.
The Anheuser-Busch company started brewing Bevo when alcoholic beverages were prohibited in 1916 by the United States armed forces.
At the peak of its popularity in the early 1920s, more than five million cases of Bevo were sold annually.
In 1930 Anheuser-Busch built a series of boat-bodied cars in its St. Louis shops called the " Bevo Boats " which were used for promotion.
A contemporary advertisement read " Cooling and invigorating, Bevo the Beverage.
Irving Berlin included a paean to the drink, " You Can't Stay Up on Bevo ", in his 1917 army revue, Yip Yip Yaphank.
The Bevo Mill, St. Louis | Bevo Mill, St. Louis, in 2008
The landmark Bevo Mill, constructed by August Anheuser Busch, Sr. in 1917.

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