Aggies Take On Krebs, Ponies Here Tonight A&M will try to play the role of “spoiler” here tonight against SMU’s Mustangs, currently dead locked for second place in the Southwest conference cage race. The Mustangs, only one game back of front running TCU, need every possible win to stay up with the fast moving Frogs. SMU is led by gangling Jim Krebs, a 6-8 sophomore who has A AM (76) Smith * x Harrod " ” 3 Brophy 3 2 Mehaffey 10 Bilbrey 1 0 ForteiUjerry 6 4 Gattis 1 3 Love' .. 1 1 Henry 2 6 fg. ft. fl. tp. 2 5 8 4 8 5 22 2 2 5 16 4 5 0 3 4 10 TOTALS TKXAS (80) Howps 8 23 24 28 30 76 fg. ft. fl. tp. 4 39 4 15 5 6 Groogan 1 Olmstead 7 Hooten 2 Schmidt [ . ’ 3 ' Howard ". 2 Kidd 0 0 0 0 Gage o 0 0 0 Stewart 0 4 13 3 5 0 TOTALS ..... 23 34 25 80 Halftime score: Texas 42, A&M 36. Fish Swim Team Downs Owlets 58-17 A & M’s Fish swimming team started its season by outpointing the Rice Owlets 58-17 here Saturday, winning firskplaee in all events except the 180-yard medley relay. Rice won that after A&M was disqualified. In an exhibition, varsity man Dick Weick set a new pool record of 2:33.7 in the 200-yard breast stroke. The varsity medley relay team of Weick, Tommy Devenport and Gayle Klipple splashed to a pool record, of 3:00.2 in another exhibition. The meet summary follows: 160-yard freestyle relay—1. A&M (Rags dale, Jones. Fletcher, Merino); 2. Rice Time—1 :19.7. 40-yard freestyle—1. Merino. A&M; 2. Ebanks. Rice; Terrell. Rice. Time—19.3 100-yard breaststroke 1. Price A&M- 2. Barlow, A&M; 3. Wardlaw, Rice. Time -—1 :07.5. 200-yard freestyle—1. Ragsdale, A&M- 2. Fletcher, A&M; 3. Loucks, Rice. Time —2:16.7. 100-yard backstroke—1. Dye. A&M; 2 Bdlingslea, A&M; 3. Murray, Rice. Time 100-yard freestyle—Mount. A&M; 2. Bell Rice; 3. Cook. A&M. Time—57.1. 180-yard medley relay—1. Rice (Moser Warlaw. Buelll ; 2. A&M. 120-yard Individual medley—1. Smith A&M; 2. Price, A&M; 3. Murray. Rice- Time. 1:23.3. Diving—1. Godfrey. A&M. 138.7 points- 1. Simmons, A&M. 129.8; 3. Chase, Rice’ ’Mural flig/i lights Gene Wismer and Jerry John son 4cd D infantry to a 13-6 vic tory over squadron 15 yesterday in upperclassmen intramural foot ball. Wismer and Johnson both scored on end runs. In the only other football game played, squadron 7 won over B armor, 24-0. Bill Lennox bucketed 12 points as squadron 22 lost to B engineers, 26-10, in freshman basketball; Ronald Moates sank nine points to help D infantry to a 17-14 vic tory over squadron 2. Henry Gonzales rang up nine points as C field artillery won over squadron 21, 22-17; and Wayne Lybecker scored eight points to give B field artillery a 28-16 triumph over C anti-air craft artillery. already broken the school’s all time scoring record for a single season with 394 points. Krebs is second in scoring over the full sea son among SWC players. Coach John Floyd won’t change his defense to cover Krebs, prefer ring the man for man type used all season. g Floyd plans to start Ted Harrod and Bill Brophy at the guard posts, John Henry and John Fortenberry at forwards and George Mehaffey at center. Abilene Christian College’s A Cappella chorus under the direction of its blind conductor, Dr. Leonard Burford, will present a halftime program. Wrestlers Beat UT 30-10 In Op ener A&M wrestlers won four matches on pins and swept to a 30-10 vic tory over the University of Texas before about 1,000 fans in De- Ware field house Friday night in their season opener. Coach Jim Griffith’s team meets the Steers again March 18 in Aus tin, after a March 12 date here with Rice. The Aggies got an early 15-0 lead, winning the first three match es on pins. Cadet A1 Clachar, 115 pounds, put down Bob Riess in 3:50. Don Burchard, 130-pounder, and Bob Beattie, 137-pounds, pin ned their opponents in 3:51 and 3:40, respectively. Ken Jones, 177 pounds, pinned Longhorn Kenneth Hogue in 5:38 and 191-pounder Carl Hazlewood took UT’s Bob Holsumback in 4:14. Texas heavyweight Lymon Pres ton pinned A&M’s Frank Liles in 5:36. Aggie Dub Bailey tied Rue- ben Montgomery, 2-2, in the 147- pound match. Aggie Steve Scott lost to John Dearborn, 2-0, in the 157-pound match and Jerry Pyle 167-pounds, decisioned Texas’ Gerald Travis, 4-0. A&M set a scoring record for Aggie teams in the Aggie-Texas series last Saturday night, but lost a close 80-76 contest to the Long horns. The Aggies led most of the sec ond half taking the lead with 13:33 left in the game and held on until Texas’ Ellis Olmstead tipped in a field goal, and then added a free throw with 35 seconds left. Center George Mehaffey was high point man for the Aggies with 22 tallies. A&M hit almost 50 per cent of its shots, bucketing 24 of 50 field goal attempts. The Aggies out- rebounded Texas, 77-55. Pistol Team Rips Texas In Alamo Go A&M’s pistol team captured first place in the college di vision of the Alamo Rifle and Pistol club match at San An tonio this past weekend. Jimmy Arledge was high point man for the Aggie squad which won over two Texas University teams. Other members of the team included Frank Norvell, Ken Snipes, and Joe' Martinez. The Cadets amassed 1,013 points to Texas’ 984. Two members of the Cadet squad were crowned champ ions in individual shooting events. Team captain Toby Chandler won .22 cal. rapid fire honors and Ken Snipes took first place in the .22 cal. slow fire event. Other squad members tak ing part in the match were Claude Heslip, Winfield Mas- sie and Sam Nichols. The team is sponsored by Col. Henry L. Phillips and is coached by Sgt. Robert G. Cox. CHS Loses 64-53 In 25-A Title Game A furious second half rally pac ed by Bobby Adams shot Cypress- Fairbanks past tenacious A&M Consolidated and gave the Bob cats a 64-53 win Friday night and the district 25-A cage title. The Tigers, winner of 11 out of their 12 previous starts, hit a fab ulous 61 per cent of their shots— 20 of 33—and led 17-11 at the first quarter mai’k and 31-27 at the half. Adams had 13 points for the Bobcats at that point, and his lay up shortly after the intermission tied the score, 33-33. Ben Tilotta s ink two free throws for the Bob cats, then the two teams exchang ed goals. •\lanuel Garcia dropped in two , r ity tosses to tie it for the last tinie at 37-37. C-P, with Adams, Rogers and Charles Stansel the scoring, drove i n for ‘ ° ven straight points to take a 44- Or? Jecld. Ti£ er center Jeriy ° Floeck 6 Garcia 5 Perryman O Oden 3 Pardue 3 Carroll 1 Englebrecht 2 Ik. ft. n. ii». .6 1 3 13 TOTALS . . . . CYP.-FAIKHANKS (61) 20 13 19 53 fg. rt. n. tp. Adams 11 Rogers 3 I.apham 3 Reifel 1 Tilotta 1 Stansel 2 | Campbell 1 A.R.E VOU M/WlKlC P£.Ce>l_E.M uow: t uv ATULETIC QUlPMEKTr PROM TV4E. R.XCWKkiq€l ^rroee. amo emjoy VOU' -URT EQUIPMCUT • BAR BEUL.’b • BAbE BKIO- i • UAViDBAoL EQUIP. EXUteMCE AFTER. J Tuesday, February 15, 1955 THE BATTALION Page 3 Leon Hillard ‘The World’s Greatest Dribbler’ Record Crowd Seen For Trotters The biggest crowd ever to see an indoor attraction here appears due for the doublehcader featuring the Harlem Globetrotters tomorrow night in White coliseum. The expected crowd of 7,427 won’t ;see the Trotters play a push- °j# iLospi's of just ; sey.enr. ganios in 4*0 starts last year, tin- crew of Goose Tatum, Walt Dukes, Leon Hillard, Ermer Robinson, Joshua Grider, etc., takes on the Philadel phia Sphas in the second game. The Washington Generals play the Toledo Mercurys in the 8 p.m. opener. Twice the Sphas, oldest team in professional basketball, have brok en Trotter winning streaks after they had passed 100. Philadelphia has coach-guard Pete Monska, 6-3, West Chester (Pa.) State teach ers; Bob Lojewski, 6-10, Temple; Bob Peterson, 6-10, University of Louisville; Tom Brennan, 6-6, Vill- anova; Paul Brandenburg, 6-4, North Carolina State; and many others. . Bill Spivey, the 7-foot former alFAmericair'center for the Gen erals, has . returned to the Univer sity of Kentucky to work on his degree. Doors will open at 7 p.m. A few $2.25 reserved seats are left. General admission tickets are $1.25. They are on sale at the student activities office in Goodwin hall and at WSD clothiers in Bryan. 50 million times a day at home, at work V or on the way There’s nothing like a PURE AND WHOLESOME ... Nature’s own flavors. BRIGHT, EVER-ERESH SPARKLE... distinctive taste. REFRESHES SO QUICKLY ... with as few calories as halt an average, juicy grapefruit. 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