Page 4 College Station, Texas Tuesday, December 15, 1964 THE BATTALION "Sports Car Center” Dealers for Renault-Peugeot & British Motor Cars Sales—Parts—Service “We Service All Foreign Cars"! 1422 Texas Ave. TA 2-4517; I PARDNER You’ll Always Win The Showdown When You Get Your Duds Done At CAMPUS CLEANERS Loupot's Clothing >0 Shop Cadets Clout Cougars, 74-67 Aggies Capture Fifth Win In Six Starts AGGIE CAGE STARTERS . veteran quintet ready to start action. Twelfth Man Bowl On Tap Tomorrow The regular football season may be over but the leather is still popping over by Kyle Field. The Corps of Cadets will challenge the Civilian eleven at 4:15 p.m. Wednesday in the third annual Twelfth Man Bowl. The student Senate sponsors the Twelfth Man Bowl and all proceeds go to the Twelfth Man Scholar ship Fund. Unless there is a minimum at tendance of 1,000 this will be the last year the classic will be held. It has lost money the last two years. The price of the tickets is 50 cents. The game is shaping up as a fullback battle. The civilians have rumored professional back in Pete Brostek. Brostek, from Hawaii, is said to have played pro ball in California. The Corps answer to Brostek is Van Veselka, who raced 70 yeards against the Civilians last year for a touchdown. The head coach of the Civilians is John Brotherton this year’s co captain of the Aggie eleven. As sisting him is backfield coach Eddie McKaughan whose refer ences include being starting quar terback for the Ags last year. Line coaches are Yancy Bounds, Joe Wellborn and All-Southwest Conference selection Ray Gene Hinze. The brains behind the Corps is Ag co-captain Ronnie Moore. As sisting him are backfield coaches Jim Willenborg and Charles La- Grange. The defensive coach is Mike Pitman and the line coach is Larry Bates. Starting Lineups CORPS Wt. Pos. CIVILIANS Wt. backboards to keep the Fish close. Jack Roden 185 RE Mel Myers 195 With 1:21 left Mainord calmly David Pendry 225 RT Jim Benson 200 sank two free throws to tie the Lester Hatcher 195 RG Griff Tees 210 game 74-74. The ball then changed Tommy Stone 160 C John Hughson 240 hands two times before Pioneer Harry Stengel 205 LG Dick Emmell 193 sparkplug Brennan could hit on a Jim Caldwell 210 LT Chris Craig 225 12-foot jump shot with 28 seconds Don Caker 198 LE Ron Plodince 170 left to put the game on ice for Herb Pounds 165 QB Bill Murphy Pat McKinnis 170 the Pioneers. Rick Peters 175 WB 175 Fish Coach Jim Culpepper re John Chesney 178 TB Ronnie Sardford 173 ported, “This was the best game we Van Veseka 195 FB Pete Brostek 235 have played so far.” By LANI PRESSWOOD Sports Editor A brilliant first half made up for a sluggish second one as the Ag gies downed Houston 74-67, here Tuesday night. The win was the fifth in a row for the' Cadets. For the first 20 minutes they showed a crowd of 3,500 the form they used in sweep ing to the Southwest Conference championship last year. The Ags blistered the bucket at a 57 ^jer cent clip and rolled up a 48-33 halftime lead. Paul Timmins and John Beasley each collected 15 points. The first half rebound margin was 32-11 in favor of the Ags. Guy Lewis’ Cougars came out in a deliberate offense the last half and managed to slow the game down. At 11:48 the Coogs had sliced the margin to 55-47 Wharton J C Takes Thriller From Freshmen By BOB SPIVEY Asst. Sports Editor The Fish roundballers dropped a hard fought heartbreaker to the Wharton Junior College Pioneers, 76-74, here Monday night. Improved forward Terry Trip- pett tossed in 22 points as high man for the young Ags. Trip- pet also picked off seven rebounds to place third in that department. Pioneer guard Richard Brennan racked up 24 points to spark the visitors to their narrow win. The Fish enjoyed a 35-34 half time lead. The game seesawed back and forth with neither team getting more than a three-point advantage. Fish guard Kent Andrews set up key plays and forward Max Mainord continually cleared the Ml Mil SlliMW MU! a TOUGH IBS IT SWIMS Ford Motor Company’s new mili tary truck floats. Air-inflated seals and internal air pressure keep the body and mechanical components dry. Its water speed is 2.5 mph. IT CLIMBS STEPS Climbing over a 27-inch high step or negotiating a 60% grade when fully loaded is no problem for this Ford vehicle. Proof that it can go over rough cross-country terrain. ! IN FACT, THE ARMY’S NEW TRUCK GOES ALMOST ANYWHERE AMt’ll jw ft*. Early In 1963, Ford Motor Company received a contract from the U.S. Army to design and develop a 5-ton cargo truck for use in tactical military operations. Before the end of that year, the first test unit had been designed and built. This new vehicle, called the XM656 cargo truck, was sent to the Aberdeen Proving Ground for 40,000 miles of testing —twice that required for military acceptance. The vehicle was tested against road conditions that might be found anywhere in the world: swamps ... loose sand ... hilly back- country ... and highways. During the test, the truck carried a 10,000-lb. payload and, half the time, towed a 13,000-lb. load. Outstanding characteristics of the truck’s design are its floatability, improved cross-country mobility, light weight/ reduced need for maintenance and a multi-fuel power plant that will run on anything from diesel oil to gasoline. This is only one of many exciting new developments at Ford Motor Company. From manufacturing to marketing, we are finding better ways to do things. Career opportunities at Ford Motor Company have never been better. Schedule an interview with our representative to find one justrightforyou. THERE’S A FUTURE FOR YOU Y/ITH . . . An t^ual opportunity employer MOTOR COMPANY Th* American Road, Dearborn, Michigan Dickie Stringfellow then banked in a rebound and Ken Norman hit three straight field goals to put the Aggies out of reach. New Aggie football mentor Gene Stallings appeared briefly at half time. A&M swished their first five buckets shots in one of the fastest be "innings seen in G. Rollie White Coliseum in many a moon. Shelby Metcalf’s Aggies never trailed as they handed Houston its fourth loss in six starts. The widest Cadet lead came with 1:14 left in the first half. Tim Timmerman hit a 16-foot jumper from the left side to give the Ags a 19-point edge, 48-27. Beasley was the leading scorer and rebounder for the Maroons. The 6’ 9” center matched his 24- point average and hauled down nine rebounds. Other Aggies in double figures were Norman with 17 and Tim mins with 18. Norman had 8 of 13 from the field while Timmins sank 6 of 10. The Aggies dipped under the 50 per cent shooting bracket for only the second time this season, can ning 48 per cent overall. Hous ton hit 46 per cent. The rebound ing duel went to the Cadets, 48-34. Metcalf was pleased after the game, saying, “We played n the first half and they did! second half. They are a te well-disciplined club and werei to slow the pace down. A&M and Houston tangle it this week in the Bluebonnet Ba Classic Thursday night in Hoiu:| Wednesday night the Ags try at 9 p.m. in Houston. A&M Atkinson Rectoi r Timmins trinsrfello Stringfellow Norman Norn Gilbreath ■yno Beasley Gasway Timmerman PG 0 1 6 2 8 0 2 7 0 2 FT 0 1 6 0 1 0 1 10 0 0 SOUTH TEXAS" ORIGINAL DISCOUNT CENTER WHERE YOU BUY THE BEST FOR LESS" 7 ft. Scotch Pine Natural appearance, flame resistant, collapsable for storage. Compare At 29.95 13.88 No. CW-1B Holly Time COLOR WHEEL • 4-Color Wheel Red, Yellow, Green, Blue • ILL. 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