f Page 4 THE BATTALION Wednesday, November 28, 1951 Old Method Used ForRowePa in tings By PAUL CROSSLAND Battalion Staff Writer An old painting method was re discovered when Guy Rowe painted the characters for “In Our Image,” said Mrs. Ralph Terry, advisor and instructor for the MSC Art Gallery Committee.. During and before the middle ages, a mixture of wax, grease, and color chalk was used for paintings. After the middle ages, a new meth od was introduced whereby the use of oils on canvas was em ployed. This system has been used to the present days, she said. Introduces Old Method Rowe introduces the old meth od used on protectoide in his new paintings. This method is to paint the picture on the reverse side of the protectoide. This is believed to give the aft better color, achieve extreme detail and to protect it. Fifteen of Rowe’s 32 paintings are on display at the MSC. They make up an exhibition that not only art people enjoy seeing, but every person who enters the MSC. As T. H. Russel, senior from Ver non, said, “I’ve never seen any thing like it. I like them better Texas Flag Upside Down The little men in charge of flying the flags are living in; an upside world. For the past two weeks the Texas flag, flown in front of the Administratiort Building, has been upside down. What would the forefathers of the state say about this? What would Sully have to say? A patriotic student from B Artillery was reported to have stood at the flag pole’s base for hours yesterday with a large tub. He was afraid the upside down star might fall out of the blue field. What’s Cooking AGGIE CHRISTIAN FELLOW SHIP: Wednesday, 7:00 p. m., YMCA Cabinet Room. Pre-Bonfire meeting, singing, and personal testimonies; planned specifically for the parents and the girl friends. than any paintings I’ve seen.” Students, professors, and even little children gaze at the pictures with interest. Ernest Langford, head of the architectural depart ment, said, “Most magnificent paintings I’ve seen.” P. B. Goode, Proffessor Business Administra tion, said, “I like ’em.” Gained World Recognition The 32 masterpieces of “In Our Image” have gained world recog nition because of their realistic expressions, color, detail, and above all the touch of the artist. Rowe visualized his conception of the characters in the* Old Testament. People don’t just walk by this art collection. They stay, study, and shake their heads with amazement. G. A. Pratt, senior from San An tonio, said, “They are realistic without a doubt.” B. R. Bennett, senior from Sweetwater, said, “Pretty colorful, lots of age in hu man beings.” J. E. Adams, Prof essor of Agronomy, said, “They are marvelous pictures.” Nine year old Bob Fitts from College Station, leaned his nose against the glass and said, “I think they’re really all right.” Rowe painted clear images, im ages he studied for years to ob tain. He began these paintings in 1945 and completed them in, 1949. Artist Rowe studied the Bible thoroughly, read and re-read it, and he himself said, “Before I did these paintings, I was a nominal Christian. But now I hope to de vote the rest of my life to reli gious art.” Mrs. Henry Gilchrist Formerly Miss Pat Lynch Aggie Band Will March 200 Men at Texas Game The Aggie Band will march onto Kyle Field Thursday afternoon at the half-time of the TU-A&M foot ball game with a 200 piece march ing band under the leadership of James W. Rogers of Texarkana, Consolidated Band Drum Major. The Aggie Band drill this Thanksgiving Day will complete the Band’s 1951 marching season. The drill will be the eighth done by the Band this autumn at A&M football games. The drill will begin with the rSE BATTALION CLASSIFIED ADS TO UUY, SELL, KENT OR TRADE. Rates .... 3c a word per insertion with a !5c minimum. Space rate in classified section .... 60c per column-inch. Send 1,11 classified to STUDENT ACTIVITIES OFFICE. All ads must be received in Student Activities office by 10 a.m. on the day before publication. Band entering from the north end of the gridiron in 20 different ranks. Each rank will step off by itself marching down the field. The Band will then be flanked to the east sidelines where a diag onal countermarch led by the drum and bass ranks will begin. Two flanking movements followed by a double minstrel turn will bring the Band back into original march ing formation marching southward down the field playing the “Ag gie War Hymn.” Last Time To reverse the direction of the Band, a double and single lost-time countermarch will be executed. From regular band formation the Band will divide in half by com pleting eight minstrel turns. Each half of the Band will salute the football fans from the University of Texas by forming T-E-X-A-S to the tune of “Texas Tjaps.”’' Next the Band will salute the A&M Cadet Corps by forming A-G-G-I-E-S and playing “Wild cat.” The Band will conclude the half-time performance by march ing off the field holding intact the letters A-G-G-I-E-S. Directors Meeting (Continued from Page 1) El Paso Valley Compress Com pany, Fabens, contributed $453.52 for research on control of Verticil- lium wilt disease of cotton at the Ysleta substation. Texas Phenotbiazine Company, Fort Worth, gave $165 for travel ing expenses in connection with the station’s research on control of diseases in vegetable crops. Turf Assistantship A grant of $290 was received from Goldthwaite’s Texas Toro Company, Ford Worth, to support a turf assistantship in the Agron omy Department.. The American Dehydrators Asso ciation, Kansas City, renewed a $3,000 grant for research on nu tritional value of dehydrated al falfa meal. Grants of $1,400 and $100 came from Chipman Chemical Com pany, Bound Brook, N. J., to aid research on cotton defoliation and livestock feeding tests with rice straw sprayed with a chemical. Dow Chemical Company, Mid land, Mich, contributed $3,000 for study of crystalline amino acids as a supplement in turkey feeds. Poultry Research A grant of $2,500 from E. T. DuPont de Nemours & Company, New Brunswick, N. J., will be used in research on amino acid require ments of growing chicks and poults. The Entomology Department will use a $300 grant from Moorman Manufacturing Company, Quincy, II., for evaluating a mixture of DDT and methozychlor as an in secticide. A U. S. Public Health Service grant of $7,250 will be used to continue 1’esearch on nutritional requirements for embryonic de velopment and growth under di rection of the Biochemistry and Nutrition and Poultry Husbandry Departments. Other Gifts The board of directors accepted in addition to cash gifts and grants, • FOR SALE • MOTORCYCLE ’46 Chief. §155. Box 1522, D-4-Y, College View. 9 CUBIC FT. Frigidaire. Porcelain in and out, excellent running condition. Phone 4-9159. BIG BUY FOR BIG GUY: Fine uniforms in excellent condition. Two green blous es, 40 L, §25 each; two pairs pinks 32-33, §10; Short Coat, 40 L, $20; Long Overcoat 42 R, §25. Or, buy the works for §90. Cali 6-37S7 or see at 1006 Taurus. TURTLES, TROPICAL FISH, GOLD FISH, BIRDS, DOG AND CAT SUPPLIES Gilkey's Pet Cottage 301 E. 28th St. • SPECIAL NOTICE • FREE—$6 worth of Records with the pur chase of a §12.95 RCA 45 RPM Record Player. Shaffer’s Book Store, North Gate, Across from the Post Office. FREE: Black female puppy, half Cocker. Phone 6-1711. • FOUND • GREY OVERCOAT with Watson name on laundry mark. Picked up by mistake in MSC. Call 6-3571. HELP WANTED • REFINED white lady to assist in rear ing two motherless girls, age 2 and 4. Light housekeeping and cooking in new home for them and their father. State all qualifications and salary expected. Give references. Apply Box 1161, Texas City, Texas. • WORK WANTED • MY NURSERY open for Thanksgiving game. For reservations call 4-8479. Mrs. Bates, 1010 Milner. Near East Gate. Directory of Business Services INSURANCE of all lines. Homer Adams. North Gate. Call 4-1217. LEGAL NOTICE • • LOST • SHORT COAT taken by mistake from coat rack at Fountain Room of MSC. Two vertical gashes under AMC patch. Contained 2 pipes and green senior cap in pocket. Two gold class stripes and ground force patch. Valuable to owner. Contact Student Activities Office. WRIST WATCH, luminous face, red sweep hand, tan nylon band, foreign make. Please turn in to lost and found. GREEN PLASTIC garden hose, lost at College View wash rack. M. M. Grif fin, D-8-C, College Station. RADIOS & REPAIRING Call For and Delivery STUDENT CO-OP Phone 4-4114 Ordinance No. 167 An ordinance entitled “The Traffic Code of 1951” defining words and phrases; pre scribing regulations; providing for proce dure and methods of traffic control; pro viding for reports of accidents; prohibiting driving under influence of drugs and pre scribing a penalty therefor; prescribing driv ing rules; providing for safety measures in turning, starting, signaling, and stopping: prescribing right of way; providing for pedestrians’ rights and duties; regulating special stops and restricted speeds; regula ting stopping, standing, and parking; mis cellaneous rules; regulating equipment on vehicles; providing for inspection of ve hicles; prescribing a penalty for violation of this ordinance; prescribing procedure upon arrest; prescribing an effective date; repealing all ordinances in conflict here with; and providing a saving clause. Passed and approved this thirteenth day of November, 1951, A. D. Ernest Langford, Mayor Attest: N. M. McGinnis City Secretary Street Markers All Erected Here The job of erecting street mark ers in College Station has been completed, according to Ran Bos well, assistant city secretary. The markers are concrete. The street names are cut into the sidefe of the markers and painted maroon. Workmen were shifted from the street and water departments to complete the job which was started last summer, Boswell said. gifts of a number of items on which no specific cash value was placed. Included was a purebred Hamp shire gilt, given A&M by Vit-A- Way, Inc., Fort Worth. H. T. Bibb Feed Mills of Fort Worth gave a similar gift to Ar lington State College, and E. O. Gillam of Gillam Soap Works, Fort Worth, gave Arlington State a registered Hampshire sow. Gifts of various items of equip ment were accepted from Rototil- ler, Inc., Troy, N. Y.; Goldth- waite's Texas Toro Company, Fort Worth; Mathieson Chemical Com pany, Houston; Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Jones, Austin; Merck and Com pany, Inc., Rahway, N. J. Loans of livestock were accepted from the Coastal Cattle Associa tion, Beaumont; Jack 1 Williams, Paint Rock; Wade Reid, Fort Dav is; J. T. White, Hearne; Ed Stein- man, Yoakum, and S. S. Bundy and Son, Roosevelt. . An equipment loan was accepted from International Harvester Com pany. All-District Tigers Bobby Jackson Dan Williams Two more A&M Consolidated members of the 24-B All-District team are Bobby Jackson end and Dan Williams tackle. Eight Tiger players in all placed on the All-District offensive team. DeWerth Says Bottles Not Thrown Away Men in the campus grounds ' department do not throw soft drink bottles away when they are picked up, A. F. DeWerth, head of the Landscape depart ment told The Battalion yesterday. I DeWerth was questioned on the bottle pick up after rumors went out among the student body say ing the grounds men picked up the bottles and threw them away. The head of the department said the men cleaning the campus would gather the bottles and put them under the trees for the local bottl ing companies to pick up. How ever, he said, “If they are not picked up by the bottling company within a reasonable time we do throw them away. We give the company every opportunity to pick them up.” Dr. E. B. Evans Honored New Prairie View Building Named After Its President Highway Cash Big Problem For Legislature Finding revenues to maintain Texas highways will be problem facing the new state legislature when it convenes in January. State Senator William R. Moore from Bryan told members of the College Station Kiwanis Club Mon day part of the problem was caus ed by legislation which increased truck load limits from 48,000 pounds to 58,000 pounds. “The state spends about $119 millions annually for the main tenance of highways, which is about $100 millions short of what is needed,” the senator asserted. Senatorial redistricting was ex plained by Moore who emerged from the last congressional session representing District 11 instead of District 14. The law requires senatorial and representative districts be formed following every national census. The bill providing for new repre sentative districts failed to pass; however, senatorial districts were reformed. Under the new plan Central and North Texas lost four senators, West gained one, and South Texas gained two senators. Moore attri buted this to a shift in population since the last redistricting. Dr. E. B. Evans, who has served Prairie View A&M College 33 years and now is president of the institution, was honored today when the board of directors of the A&M System named the new Prai rie View animal industries build ing for him. The board order which named the new building said, “Dr. E. B. Evans . . . has worked unselfishly for the betterment of the institu tion and its service to the Negroes of Texas. Recognizes Outstanding Service “The board of directors of the Texas A&M College System recog nizes his as an outstanding service, not only to the Prairie View A&M College, but to the State of Texas as well. In recognition of his lead ership in education and particu larly to his outstanding service to Prairie View A&M College, it is ordered that the agriculture building just completed be named in his honor as the ‘E. B. Evans Animal Industries Building’ and that a bronze plaque bearing this name he placed on the building.” In recommending that the build ing be so named, Chancellor Gibb Gilchrist said, “Ordinarily I do not think it a good idea to name a building for a living person, but there are times when the exception rather than the rule should be adopted . . . Under the leadership of Dr. Evans, Prairie View has be come a moving, vital force in Negro education in the United States. He has made the school an important cog in the A&M Sys tem ...” During his 33 years at Prairie View, Dr. Evans has served as act ing principal, acting registrar, co ordinator of instruction, director of summer school and acting di rector of the division of agricul ture. Born in Jackson County, Mo., in 1894, he was reared in Texas. He was one of the first Negro graduates of Iowa State College, receiving a doctor of veterinary medicine degree in 1918. He also was one of the first Negroes in the nation to be elected to Phi Kappa Phi, national honorary scholarship society. Commissioned a second lieuten ant during World War I, he was a member of the Officers Reserve Corps for a number of years. Dr. Evans did graduate study at Iowa State College. He was vice principal of Prairie View from 1931 to 1945. He was one of the founders of the Southwestern Ath letic Conference in 1920, and in 1935, he and other athletic offi cials of the Negro colleges! in the Southwest founded the Coaches and Officials Association. Dr. Evans served as secretary-treasurer of the group until 1945, Highest Boy Scout Award He headed the F. E. R. A. Adult Education Summer School at Prai rie View in 1935, when 600 teach ers received their initial training in the field. For 10 years Dr. Evans headed the Boy Scout Cam- poral at Prairie View, and during that time attendance grew from less than 50 to 510. During the last year, he received the Silver Ante lope, highest award of the Boy Scouts of America, for his disting uished service to boyhood. In a recent meeting of the Asso ciation of Negro Land Grant Col lege presidents in Washington, D. C., Dr. Evans was elected vice president of the national organiza tion. Dr. and Mrs. Evans have two children, a son and a daughter. Their son, Edward, Jr., has served as an instructor at Texas State University, Houston. A SPILL ? CALL US! Don’t worry if coffee or something spills . . . Our fine service will remove any spots. Campus Cleaners GET SET... liLv GET READY I • A Large iPi? Stock of Football “MUMS” Order! Today! J. COULTER SMITH, Florist 1800 So. Coulter Road A Check Your Gift List With These ' College Station Merchants — Today » > » , » * Seniors! Increased inner satis factions from Post Graduation Studies. Dr. Carlton R. Lee OPTOMETRIST 303A East 26th (Across from Court House) Call 2-1662 for Appointment DeMolays Plan Church Services Thanksgiving Brazos County DeMolays will at tend Thanksgiving church services en masse Thursday morning a,t 9 at the First Baptist Church in Bryan. The Brazos Chapter Order of DeMolay extended an invitation to all DeMolays attending A&M to join them in attending the ser vice. ONLY ONE WITH " '/ // // // „ $1 . . . Will Get You 3 BOOKS at the BOOK SALE DECEMBER 5 AT THE EXCHANGE STORE HOLIDAY In line with other business interests the undersigned will observe Thursday, No vember 29, 1951 as a holiday and will not be open for business. First National Bank City National Bank First State Bank & Trust Co. College Station State Bank Bryan Building and Loan Ass’n. t i & i iigruu^mm '*&> Frigidaire Automatic Washer 1 IMPORTANT 1 REMINDER! Get Ready For CHRISTMAS Frigidaire's famous Life time Porcelain finish stays brilliantly white, withstands scuffing, stains from cleaning fluids or soaps —can never rust. See These Other Features, Too ! • Select-O-Dial Control • Live-Water Rinsing • Rapidry-Spin • Top-loading conven ience • No bolting down LEON B. WEISS BOYETT ST. <# $ I HAS IT! i# % Prices See a demonstration! C. E. GRIESSER ELECTRIC Reasonable!