Thursday, February 2, 1956 THE BATTALION - Page 3 Chiefs Rap Aggies, 76-56 A&M lost a first-quarter lead Monday night and then played a losing game of rateh-up as the Oklahoma City Chiefs rolled to their 14th win of the season, 76- 66. A&M’s record now stands at 6-11 for the season. The Chiefs came from behind af ter trailing the first 10 minutes and steadily built up their lead to as high as 21 points at one time. Heaton Named To School Group H. L. Heaton, registrar, has been named a member of the State Com mission on School Accreditation. There are 28 members on the commission, composed of colleges, administration, instructional and school board personnel. G. E, Thompson, superintendent of the Wink public schools is chaii'- man of the commission and a meet ing of the membership will be held March 12 in Austin. Ken Loeffler’s Farmers just could n’t take up the gap. High point man for Oklahoma City and for the game was the Chief’s 6-10 sophomore center, Hu bert Reed, with a total of 30 points. High for the Aggies were guards Ken Hutto and Bill Brophy, both of whom dunked in 15 points. Larry Bradshaw of O.C.U. dropped in 14 during the game. A&M resumes conference play ASME Elects New President The student branch of the Amer ican Society of Mechanical Engi neers elected Harold Schildneck president for the second semester recently. Other officers elected were John Kelly, vice-president; John Shef field, secretary; Adrian Hackney, treasurer; and Roger Clark, out going president for the first se mester, reporter. •• Feb. 11 against Baylor at Waco. The Aggies are fourth in the con ference race with a 3-3 mark, while Baylor is fifth with a 1-3 loop rec- ord. * Okla. City (76) fg ft pf tp Lee . 3 3 1 9 Holloway 3 2 3 8 Griffin 1 0 0 2 Gilbert 1 0 1 2 Reed 10 10 3 28 Magana 3 1 3 7 Bradshaw 7 0 2 14 Dunbar 0 2 1 2 Jeter 1 0 0 2 Juby . 0 0 1 0 TOTALS 28 18 15 76 A&M (56) fg ft pf tp Connally 2 1 1 5 Fortenberry 3 0 1 6 Ha r rod 1 2 2 ' 4 Henry --------- 0 1 3 1 Bilbrey 1 2 2 4 Mehaffey 2 2 5 6 Brophy ... 5 5 3 15 Hutto 6 3 1 15 TOTALS . 20 16 18 56 Halftime: OCU 36-30. Executives Here To Study SW Industries Thirty-six executives from Texas and Southwestern bus iness and industrial firms be gan three weeks of training Monday at the Fourth Annual Executive Development Course sponsored by Texas A&M College. The course is devoted to study ing problems 'arising in southwest ern economy as the result of rapid expansion of industrial facilities in the past few years. T. W. Leland, head of the col lege’s Department of Business Ad ministration and director of the course, told students at the open ing morning session that the train ing of executives has become one of the most important phases of company thinking within the past decade. A recent survey of 460 major business and industrial organiza tions, he told students, shows, that 88 per cent of these companies have or are planning intensive training programs to develop bet ter executives. Students of the Fourth Annual Executive Development Course will study a wide range of problems of Southwestern organizations, rang ing from personnel selection and policy formation to accounting- methods and capitalization for ex pansion. Vet. B&H Head To Aid Research Dr. John P. Delaplane, head of the Department of Veterinary Bac teriology and Hygiene, has been made a member of the 12-man Poultry Research and Marketing Advisory Committee established by the Federal Research and Market ing Act of 1946. The committee, composed of members from 12 states, review research work and make recommendations for comple tion, continuation, re-orientation or expansion of research efforts of the U.S. Department of Agricul ture research program. OPEN FOR ALL BANQUETS, DINNERS RECEPTIONS, WEDDINGS AND LUNCHEONS MAGGIE PARKER DINING HALL TA 2-5089 “The Oaks” — TA 3-4375 BRYAN We Highly Recommend To You SPRED SATIN—TOO°/o Latex Paint $r.69 D o gal. $1.79 -L qt. SPRED SATIN is the most beau tiful, most washable, easiest-to- use paint we’ve ever seen. Do It Yourself and get beautiful results on walls and woodwork. CHAPMAN’S PAINT & WALLPAPER CO. 2ie W. 26th TA 2-1318. Bryan DYERS'FUR STORAGE HATTERS DIAL TA 2-1585 Students . . . Use Our Convenient Pick Up Stations At Taylor’s Variety Store — North Gate MATERNITY W E A R SALE ONE GROUP 2 PC. SUITS were up to $22.95 now One Group Were $22.95 „ $6-99 All Fall & Winter Items on Sale! 608 So. College JOYCE’S OIS Squeaks Past Sealy Team 53-51 Consolidated High School’s bas ketball team hit a stubborn Sealy bunch last week in Tiger Gym, but weathered the storm to. protect their district lead, 53-51. Earlier last week, the Tigers had remained unbeaten in District 25-A by nosing past Katy 31-30. Neither team commanded a safe lead during the fracas, with CHS having a slight advantage several times. Consolidated led 15-14 at the first quarter, a lead that Sealy wip ed out momentarily during the sec ond quarter to take a 26-22 lead. The Tigers rallied to own a 31-29 half-time margin. Garcia scored 23 points for Con solidated and Floeck bit 10. CHS had a very good 57.1 shooting per centage. Consolidated’s “B” team won the preliminary battle 25-21, with Jer ry Holland scoring 10 points. This was the Kittens third straight win. C.H.S. (53) ★ fg ft Pf tp Floeck 4 2 1 10 Garcia 10 3 3 23 Hickman 1 0 1 2 Hall 3 0 0 6 Perryman 2 0 2 4 Potts 3 0 2 6 Avera 1 0 1 2 TOTALS ..... 24 5 10 63 SEALY (51) fg ft Pf tp Schriener — 9 4 2 22 Lyons 0 2 0 2 Schroeder 2 0 1 4 Pacher ...... 4 4 4 12 Barrett 3 1 2 7 Krchnak . .. 2 0 0 4 TOTALS 20 11 9 51 Stead Battalion Classifieds Daily WELCOME FRESHMEN BUY YOUR . . . GREENS Tailored to Your Individual Measure. REGULAR PRICED AT $26.50 ON SALE — Only $22.95 SPECIAL ON KHAKI SOX Only — $.39 Shop and Save At — LEON B. WEISS Next to Campus Theatre CHARGE ACCOUNTS INVITED By A1 Capp By A1 Capp By A1 Capp LI’L ABNER By A1 Capp ASHCAN ANN I El, I'VE GOT A OOB FOR. YOU. HERE'S A DOLLAR, IN ADVANCE. ERM FRESHMEN FRESHMAN GREEN SLACKS $23.00 TAILOR-MADE TO YOUR INDIVIDUAL MEASUREMENTS RIGHT HERE AT COLLEGE STA TION IN OUR OWN SHOPS — ONLY 3 DAY DELIVERY TIME REQUIRED — ALTERATIONS WE CARRY .... 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