Tuesday, September 11, 1951 THE BATTALION Page 5 Ends Weak (Continued from Page 4) ented junior who played on defense last year—Jack Little. This 220- pound giant has the makings of one of the best tackles in the con ference. A&M appears weakest at the of fensive end positions. Coach Fold- berg has adequate defensive ends in Clinton Gwin, Walter Hill and Charles Saxe, but he has no stand- o u t offensive terminal men. Charles Hodge and Walter Hill will probably see first line service, but they lack the pass-snatching abil ity of all-conference Andy Hill- house who completed his eligibility last year. A&M must solve two big prob lems in order to fulfill its advance- season-billing. It must throw more aerials, thereby keeping the op posing defenses loose for the run ning game. Finally, the Aggie ends must acquire a permanent habit of catching passes and car rying out blocking assignments. Good Service - Best Gas ! • Drive up for a tank of our quality gaso line, and have your tire pressure, battery water level, radiator water level and crank case oil level checked without charge. You take off feeling SURE! Drive up for service, now! f sKEEP IT RIGHT Inside and Out. DRIVE UP AT » TOM McCALL’S PHILLIPS 66 SERVICE STATION . College Station, Texas Hwy. 6—N. Corner of Campus PHONE 4-4792 MSC Art Committee Plans Classes, Lectures, Exhibits MSC Art Exhibit Mothers-Dads Club Schedules Tea Twenty portraits by Guy Rowe illustrating the book “In Our Image” by Houston Harte, owner of the San Angelo Standard Times, will be exhibited in the MSC Nov. 25 to Dec. 10 under the auspices of the MSC Art Gallery Commit tee. The portraits have not been ex hibited before in this area, accord ing to Mrs. Ralph Terry, instructor for the Art Gallery Committee. Harte is expected to make a per sonal visit for the exhibit which includes such character studies as “Samson,” “David and Jonathon,” and “Adam and Eve.” The MSC Art Gallery Committee was organized in 1949 to substitute for a Fine Arts Department which A&M lacks. A full time program of classes, lectures, and exhibits Cadet Eleven (Continued from Page 4) Molberg. But these two-year-let- termen are holding Marshall Rush, a squadsmen, and Alvin Langford, a converted tackle, at bay. Offensive center is set with Hugh Meyer, co-captain, high in the saddle. Meyer has started in the AggiesMast 19 games, and he is expected to provide the spark for the linebacking specialist James Fowler. Cooper Robbins and Robert Shaeffer rank on the sec ond Aggie defensive team. Little shuffling has been done in the returning backfield. Apparent ly Dick Gardemal will be starter for his third year as the man un der, and there is little likelihood that Glenn Lippman and Billy Tid well will be displaced as left and right halfbacks. Bob Smith, Aggie co-captain, will start at fullback. Lary Gets Set Yale Lary shook off final ef fects of a pulled muscle over the weekend, and he is re-establishing himself at safety. Pairing with Lary are defensive halfbacks Char les McDonald and Augie Saxe. Development of a passable aerial attack has pleased the Aggie coach ing staff. The quarterbacks showed an unusual ability to place the ball in the second week of practice, and the Aggie ends apparently have ap plied glue to their fingers. A few more days of practice might per mit A&M to develop the areial attack on a par with coming oppon ents. is provided for all students, faculty and staff members, free of charge. Instruction in Media In the classes, instruction is giv en in still life, landscape, figure drawing, and portrait, using such mediums as charcoal, pen and ink, pencil, water colors, oil, and casein. Composition, philosophy of painting, and abstraction are taken up in the classes and lectures. Members of the Art Gallery Com mittee will have an opportunity to exhibit work during the year, since two judged art shows are planned. The MSC Art Gallery Committee held its first exhibit during the Summer. Sixty-seven paintings and drawings were judged and win ners selected by three members of the Department of Architecture. Besides the regular woi’k, out standing traveling and private ex hibits, lecturers, and prominent artists are scheduled. Plans are to exchange exhibits with other Southwest Conference schools, Mrs. Terry said. Big Year Planned Some of the outstanding exhibi tions which have been planned for the coming year are as follows: four Dallas artists will have a show at the MSC, Sept. 12-26. The art- ists. are Ramon Froman, portraits; Adele Brunet, still life and por traits; Fred D a r g e , Western scenes; and Inez Staub Elder, con ventional and decorative florals and still life. The weekend of the football game with The University of Okla homa, Oct. 6, Lone Star Gas Com pany will bring an exhibition of work by seven Texas artists to A&M. The artists included are Olin Travis, Otis Dozier, Perry Nichols, Emily Guthrie Smith, Jer- ry Bywater, Ed Beaden, and Fred Dorge. Twenty paintings by Xavier Gon zalez, winner of the Nation’s Award for Arts and Letters last May, are expected to be exhibited Oct. 12-26. Gonzalez, under whom Mrs. Terry is presently studying, will be present for the showing. French Painter An exhibition of imaginary por traits by the French painter Marcel Vertes is planned for April 4-25. The collection, owned by Neiman Marcus, Dallas, includes portraits of Tallulah Bankhead, Winston Churchill, Albert Einstein, and Gypsy Rose Lee. The A&M Consolidated Mothers and Dads Club will hold its annual tea and reception tonight from 7:30 till 9:30, in the Consolidated High School gymnasium. Tonight’s reception chairman is Mrs. H. W. Barlow, who will be assisted by Mrs. Armstrong Price. High school girls will help at the tea table, and Mesdames Les Rich ardson, L. E. Boze and W. T. Riedel will pour. Publicity chair man is Mrs. C. G. “Spike” White. Christmas cards, the sale of which will bring The main source of revenue for the club this year, will be on display tonight. Mrs. Sid Loveless will take orders from anyone wishing to reserve cards early. FREE DINNER Watch for Your Name in This Space, Each Week, The . . 12th MAN INN Will give away a free dinner to the person whose name appears. • WATCH FOR YOUR NAME • Bring This By - - - - It’s Yours Free Yance W. King 16-228 MSC’s PA System Gets Revamping Public address system in the MSC is being supplemented with material recently made available to the Center, M. E. Thomas, as sistant to the director, announced. Speakers in the Ball Room, As sembly Room and the Starlite Ter race are being replaced with ones designed to reproduce music to a better advantage than the old mod el in the building now. Members of the recently organ ized Sound and Set-Up department are also in the process of replacing steel wire with copper wire leading into the sound speakers. In places where the wire route could be shortened, Thomas said, they are cutting down the distance. This will reduce the loss of sound quality through the resistance of the wire. Replacement of sound equipment in the building is under the super vision of the EE department and H. C. Dillingham is acting as con sulting electrical engineer. -FRESHMEN- ORDER YOUR DARK GREEN SLACKS TAILOR MADE TO FIT YOU — GUARANTEED FIT We Also Carry — READY MADE GREEN S'LACKS REGULATION KHAKI SLACKS AND KHAKI SHIRTS Our Alteration Department is handy to sew patches on shirts and cut them down on the sides. WE ALSO CARRY A FULL LINE OF MILITARY SUPPLIES SUCH AS SOCKS, BELTS, TIES, CAPS, BRASS INSIGNIAS, ETC. Experienced Alteration Department Bring us your issue uniform to get it altered properly and sew the patches on—You won’t regret it. . . . —ZUBIK’S— UNIFORM TAILORS 1896 — 55 Years of Tailoring — 1951 NORTH GATE WELCOME AGGIES Save On Your School Needs By Buying Second Hand Drawing Instruments Slide Rules Study lamps Uniforms New and Used Books T-Squares & Bicycle Repairs Stickers . . . Pens . . . Pencils . . . Gift Novelties . . . Sporting Goods . . . School Supplies THE STUDENT CO-OP ED GARNER, Proprietor Next to College Station State Bank