Tuesday, Januaiy 29, 1991 The Battalion Sports Editor Alan Lehmann 845-2688 Aggie eagers seek first SWC win tonight By SCOTT WUDEL Of The Battalion Staff The Texas A&M basketball team could use some good news. The Aggies have lost nine of their last 10 games and hope to climb out of a rut against the University of Houston tonight at 7:30 at G. Rollie White Coliseum. A&M, 5-13, is winless in seven contests against Southwest Confer ence opponents this season. The Aggies have not been 0-8 since 1954, when they lost their first 10 conference games before fin ishing 1-11. The Houston Cougars bring a 12- 6 record to the Coliseum and hope to improve their 4-3 SWC mark. UH was upset by Southern Methodist University last Saturday 81-75. The game will be televised region ally by Home Sports Entertainment. A&M coach Kermit Davis Jr. is well aware of the team’s problems this season. “Nobody likes getting beat, no body likes losing,” Davis said. “No body on our staff, nobody on our team has accepted losing, that’s part of the trials and tribulations of get ting something going.” A&M’s last win came twp weeks ago, when they rolled over noncon ference opponent Centenary 103-82 in College Station. The Aggies have been defeated by more than 20 points in each of their last two meetings against SWC teams in the last week. Davis said opponents see A&M as an easy target. “When you have a lack of size and a lack of depth, no matter what, de fensively you get taken advantage of,” he said. “When you’re not win ning a lot of games, teams feel more confident playing against you.” Davis said he plans to take advan tage of cheap baskets against the Cougars, or slow down UH by run ning time off the clock. “The way we have to play Hous ton, you’ve got to either score in the first 10 seconds of the (shot) clock, or the last 15 seconds,” he said. “A- HUY THANH NGUYEN/The Battalion A&M guard Brooks Thompson, who scored a career-high 22 points against Rice on Saturday, and the rest of the Aggies play the Houston Cougars tonight in G. Rollie White Coliseum. nything between that is not a good shot for us.” Davis also said A&M rebounding is critical to the Aggies’ chances of upsetting Houston. The Cougars boast one of the top rebounding tandems in the confer ence. Alvaro Teheran, UH’s 7-1 center, posts up for more than nine re bounds a game, while 6-5 forward Darrell Mickens pulls down a 9.2 av erage. The Cougars leading scorer is By ron Smith, who is averaging more than 18 points a game. The Aggies are lead by Lynn Suber, with 14.4 points a game. Houston has won seven ot the last eight meetings against A&M, includ ing both contests last season. A&M last victory over the Cougars was in the 1989 SWC Postseason Classic. Davis said he believes tonight’s game will be decided in the first five minutes. The Aggies are 3-4 at home. Legendary Gridder Grange dies of pneumonia LAKE WALES, Fla. v (AP) — Red Grange, football’s “Galloping Ghost” whose blazing speed catapulted the game to front-page headlines, died Monday at a Lake Wales hospital af ter a lengthy illness. He was 87. Grange, who had been hospital ized since July and on the critical list for a week, died of complications from pneumonia about 4 a.m. , After a sensational career at Illi nois ended in 1925, Grange signed a contract with the Chicago Bears. His impact was immediate. On Thanksgiving Day, a crowd of 36,000, then a record for a pro foot ball game, packed Wrigley Field to watch the Bears play a scoreless tie with the Chicago Cardinals. With Grange the drawing card, the Bears went on a 12-day, eight- city barnstorming tour. The Bears drew 73,000 to the Polo Grounds for a game against the New York Giants, a turnout that did much to save the financially troubled New York fran chise. Another 75,000 turned out in the Los Angeles Coliseum to watch the Bears play the Los Angeles Ti gers. A glimpse of the future was pro vided when, before the 1926 season, his agent demanded a five-figure salary and one-third ownership of the Bears on the threat of Grange holding out. Bears owner George Halas re fused the demand, and Grange’s ap peal was such that he was able to field a nine-team American Football League to challenge the NFL. The rival league lasted a year. Grange finished up his pro career with the Bears. He spent 13 years as player, coach and promoter of pro football and was a charter member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame. He wound up his playing days in 1934 with the Bears, finishing his ca reer as a pass receiver and defensive back. Grange scored 56 touchdowns in his pro career. Grange, nicknamed “Red” in his younger days for his hair color, made his jersey number “77” famous during the years 1923-25 at Illinois. Rebels’ stronghold on No. 1 loosening Associated Press UNLV continues unbeaten, but the Runnin’ Rebels’ domi nance is no longer unquestioned. For the first time in four weeks UNLV (15-0) failed to get all 64 first-place votes in weekly poll of sports writers and broadcasters. Arkansas remained in the No. 2 position after victories over Texas A&M and Baylor. In other Southwest Confer ence news the Texas Longhorns UNLV were hoping to jump into the Top 25, but the team failed to even come close. Seton Hall, the No.25 team, re ceived 161 votes while Texas could only manage 21 after victo ries over Texas Tech and Texas Christian. In the poll released Monday, two voters picked Ohio State as No. 1. The Buckeyes moved from fourth to third after beating In diana and Minnesota last week. Ohio State (17-0) was one of four teams in last week’s Top 10 which did not lose. The others were UNLV, a win ner over UC-Santa Barbara and Louisville; Arkansas and St. John’s, which jumped from No. 10 to fifth with victories over Connecticut and Villanova. UNLV, the defending national champion, is on a 26-game win ning streak and has been No. 1 for 11 straight weeks. In the latest poll, the Runnin’ Rebels got 1,598 points, 82 points more than Ar kansas and 108 more than Ohio State. Completing the Top 10 are No. 4 Indiana, St. John’s, Ari zona, Duke, Syracuse, North Car olina and Kentucky. Arizona dropped to sixth from fifth; Duke moved from ninth to sev enth; Syracuse dropped from sixth to eighth; North Carolina dropped from No. 7 to No. 9 and Kentucky dipped from eighth to 10th. Nebraska (17-2) advanced three spots to No. 11. Completing the Top 25 areU- CLA, Utah, Louisiana State, Vir ginia, East Tennessee State, Southern Mississippi, George town, Pittsburgh, New Mexico State, Oklahoma, New Orleans, Georgia Tech, Kansas, Seton Hall. Georgia Tech, which also beat Clemson and North Carolina last week, returned to the rankings after having missed four of the last six weeks. The Yellow Jackets had been as high as 14th earlier in the season. Kansas is in the poll for the first time this season after being No. 1 for four weeks last season and never falling out of the Top Five. The Jayhawks beat Wichita State and Colorado last week. Seton Hall (13-4), which handed Connecticut its fifth straight loss on Saturday, re joined the Top 25 after dropping out last week. Connecticut, which was 19th, dropped from the poll after matching last season’s loss total when the Huskies went 31-6 and fell just short of their first Final Four. Michigan State (12-6), which was 22nd last week and had been No. 4 in the preseason poll, lost both games last week and dropped out, while South Caro lina (14-5), which had been No. 25, split two games last week but fell out as well. Top 25 pod. First-place votes are In parentheses, foat week's portion and records through Jen. 27 are listed: L UNLV (62)1 15-0 2. Arkansas 2 20-1 3. Ohio St. 4 17-0 4, Indiana 3 18-2 5. St. John’s 10 15-2 6. Arizona 5 16-3 7. Duke 9 16-4 8. Syracuse© 17*3 9. North Carolina 7 14-3 10. Kentucky 8 15-3 11. Nebraska 14 17-2 12. UCLA 11 15-4 13. Utah 20 19-1 14. LSU 16 13-4 15. Virginia 18 14-4 16. E. Tennessee St 12 15*2 17. Southern Miss. IS ; 12-2 18. Georgetown 21 12*5' : 19. Pittsburgh 17 15-5 20, New Mexico St. 23 15-2 21. Oklahoma 13 14-5 . 22. New Orleans 24 17-2 23. Georgia Tech 12-5 24. Kansas 13-4 25. Seton Hail 13-4 schistosomiasis | schoolhouse (shlum • bur • zha) n. 1. a 5 billion dollar international measurement and systems and oilfield services company noted for recruiting the brightest engineering and scientific minds from all over the world. 2. 50,000 self-motivated, enterprising achievers totally committed to excellence. 3. A place for self-starters in virtually every scientific and engineering discipline to launch exceptional careers. ENGINEERING GEOSCIENCES APPLIED SCIENCES PLEASE NOTE: Open to all interested students. Your attendance at the Information Meeting is a prerequisite to our interviewing process. Please attend. Casual attire. 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