The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 27, 1958, Image 4

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    PAGE 4
Thursday, February 2ft, S9S8
ATTENTION
AGGIES
Have You Tried The
TEXAN SPECIAL
STEAK
Sirloin Or T-Bone
At
THE TEXAN
3204 College Rd.
The Battalion College Station (Brazos County), Texas
Maj. Henri St. Cyr of Sweden
won the world dressag^ riding
honoi’s at both the 1952 and 1956
Olympic Gaines .
A&M MENS SHOP
, 'r '
103 MAIN NORTH GATE
AGGIE OWNED
Cadets Play Well In Spoiler Role;
Jumble Conference For Third Time
BETTER FOOD FOR LESS!
MARYLAND CLUB
C O f F E1
SNOWDRIFT
SHORTENING
11b.
Can
3 lb.
Can
69
59
Chunk Style
STAR KIST TUNA y 2 Size Can 29c
Food Club 1
MAYONNAISE ;. . . 16 Oz. Jar 29c
TJ. S. Choice Heavy, Table Trimmed
Bonded Beef
Giuck -
Roast Lb. H
9
TURKEY HEMS Farmer Brown
ib 49c
CHUCK ROAST u s choice B ° neiess
ib 75c
STEW BEEF B » neiess
ib 75c
VELVEETA ^
2 ib. RQ r
Loaf y L
Big Eye
SWISS CHEESE s
6 Oz. O C
Pkg.
LUNCH MEAT
59*
ASSORTED CHEESES
© American
© Pimento
0 Swiss
y>
59
Jumbo, Sunkist
LEMONS 12<°r35
Fresh, California
ASPARAGUS
Jumbo
CALAVOS
South American
BANANAS Go,den Ri P e
ib 39c
2 for 35 C
ib. 5 C
We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities
THESE SPECIALS GOOD
Thurs. - Fri. - Sat., Feb. 27. 28 - Mar. 1
!
By GARY ROLLINS
Battalion Sports Editor
After further scrambling the
confci'ence standings by thumping
Texas Tech Tuesday night, 79-63,
the dark-horse Aggies have sudden
ly loomed as the all-deciding factor
in the comedy-of-errors that is call
ed the race for the SWC champion
ship.
Southern Methodist will have to
beat the Texas Aggies this Satur
day night if they are to win their
fourth consecutive Southwest Con
ference crown.
Coach Bob Rogers’ unpredictable
cagex-s have menaced the hax-d-
woods on many occasions this sea
son, and brought grimaces of pain
and disappointment from other
schools as they were rudely de
throned from the top slot.
As the conference stands now—
on shaky ground—the Cadets in
habit a berth at third place along
with TCU.
However, the powers-that-be, or
the Ponies, Hogs and Raiders have
Freshmen!
We have the very flowers
for your girl to wear to the
Fish Ball.
WE DELIVER
NAN'S
M
SL
Call TA 2-1658
oddom
1105 S. College
all felt the sting of the Farmers
and carry seal’s to prove it.
If Southern Methodist had beat
en the Cadets in White Coliseum
last Jan. 17, they would have been
well on their way to their foui’th
straight champiohship, possibly
have cinched it. As it stands, the
Ponies must beat down the arro
gant Farmei*s this Saturday night,
or they will fall back into the rat-
race with Rice, Arkansas and Tex
as Tech.
Ax-kansas was thoroughly ham
strung in College Station last Sat
urday night by the hit-and-run Ag
gies, and found themselves sudden
ly entrenched in second place after
a long stay in the top spot.
Against Texas Tech, the Aggies
created Black Tuesday on t^e cam
pus in Lubbock by stripping the
cocky Raiders of their honor-—and
their seat on top of the heap.
The indications are that the con
ference dash for the roses is far
fx-om over. Southern Methodist
must still play both A&M in Dal
las and Baylor at Waco.
Rice must contest Texas on the
Longhorn’s home court and Texas
Tech in Lubbock.
Ax-kansas hosts Baylor on
their home floor, which is appar
ently the least difficult schedule of
all—since the Porkers hold an ad-
»)Ci* V)C*v *
'.The case of the typing paper
that erased without a trace ——or.
* ■ v
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and leave no "clues”, when you use
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Never smears, never smudges — be
cause Corrasable’slike-magic surface...
erases without a trace! (A flick of the
wrist and a pencil eraser puts things
right!) This fine quality bond paper
gives a handsome appearance to all
your work. It’s a perfect crime not to
use it!
Erasable Corrasable is available in all the weights you might require—from
onionskin to heavy bond. In convenient 100-sheet packets and 500-sheet
ream boxes. A Berkshire Typewriter Paper, backed by the famous Eaton nam«
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AGGIES GET YOUR ....
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THE EXCHANGE STORE
“IN ITS 50TH YEAR OF SERVING TEXAS AGGIES”
vantage “in the hills.”
Thanks to the Aggies, basket
ball in the Southwest Conference
has been interesting this year.
The Ever-Changing Standings
w
SMU 8
Rice 7
Arkansas 7
Texas Tech 7
Texas A&M 6
TCU 6
Texas 4
Baylor 3
Pet Pts Opp
.667 831 769
.683 829 817
.683 703 680
.683 829 792
.500 726 702
.600 846 802
8 .333 802 904
9 .260 706 804
Intramurals
“A” Infantry kept up the win
ning way of the Infantx-y teams,
yesterday by defeating “B” Armor
in class B volleyball by a score of
2-0.
Members of the winning team
were William Olvetton, Tommy
Nelson, Gary Bateman, Billy
Gressett, Harold Brown, and James
Haygood.
But “B” Infantry didn’t fare
so well—th^y lost to Squadron 16
by the same score, 2-0.
Gerald Kallina, Tom Wilson,
David Wilson, Jex-ry Johnson, Jim
Humphries, and Charles Olbrich
made up the Squadron 16 team.
Maroon Band also shutout “A”
Transportation Corps, 2-0.
Members of the winning team
were Don Copley, Tommy Terrell,
Herman Henkamer, Frank Steinle,
Fred Buckner, and Weldon Hoff.
“C” Infantry forfeited to Squad
ron 15 in the other scheduled game.
Wrestling activity also con
tinued yesterday.
The match between Buster
Brown and Gerald Griffin is a good
example of the fine matches that
have been fought since competition
began.
Brown is on the wrestling team,
but Griffith seemed determined to
overcome his experience. It was a
vigorously fought match, and at
the end of the third two-minute
period, the score was tied at seven
points each. But Brown got two
points in the final round to take
a close decision, 9-7.
Louie Lidz, Squadron 17, pinned
Gwinn Thompson of “A” Com
posite in the second round. Lidz
is on the wrestling team, and his
experience and conditioning were
too much for Thompson.
Some of the matches didn’t last
very long.
For instance, Regal of “B” Engi
neers pinned Lewis Reddeil,
Squadron 13, early in the first
round. Reddeil was thrown to the
mat in the early seconds and never
seemed to recover.
Thompson, Squadron 5, and
Fraziei-, “B” AAA, also won early
in the first round over Singleton,
Squadron 13, and Maxwell, Squad
ron 8, respectively.
DALUS
1 hr. 37 mins.
LUBBOCK
4hrs. ISmiiB.
LOS ANGELES*
8 hrs. 47 nrins.
*VU DC-6 AIRCOACH FROM
HOUSTON
YOU GET
THERE FASTER
WHEN YOU
hh ^^HeD
Continental
jkxxt Mjancm
Gftf OmtifunUl 4t n 6~47tt
YOU CAN SHIP Alt FttIGttT ON
EVERY COftmNEMTAL PLIGHT