(K tr ■- * > T • , I i I FOUR. TYPES QF fftESHME* tl Alj ,A.4M. ON r ' REBISTfiJATOf DAY ml M \' 11 ‘} ■' >1 PI t !t I ni: I r, - \ . If L f ^ y T ^] r • 14 !i ^ f ;l mi I iTOcry TirrM^ N 1 , j A i }i- for AS n , IT - ' • ' Jj vl • * } ■ <. . ^ R '. u- ty l ■ i m h .i ' k. 0^1 C^). ! 7 I A j ! -I . m •O' n v ft -i K Jt ; . ;\ s ■ .. : .' s I-l It */ . . f v4.j i« .-i 1.1 ■vc , LV %>V J . ifc; , k- A we sick) S", I BEHOLD—The A. & M. melting pot. They come by droves. They arrive as indivicfuals, and leave still * more individualistic, but in each case there is a certain metamorphosis. I Freshmen—hundreds. and hundreds of them— and of this group there are always a few which typify some certain types into which all of them fall during the first few days of their stay at Aggie- land. Here’s eight of those types which you will easily recognize:* MILITARY—He’s fresh from t“Colonel Gi unday’s v School Militaire” or else he has just ended the junior R. O. T. C. course in high school as a brigadier- colonel. Now he’s coming to Aggieland to show the boys how this military is really done. HILLBILLY—Up from the country, he is the farm’s contribution to higher learning His will be a big time at college, and he’ll get allot out of it because he will put a lot into it. FOOTBALL—Brawn and more brawn. Picked by ever-watchful football scouts, )