IVew Student Edition Xumber 2fi2: Volume 5‘3 Battalion Section Two rOTXFGE STATION, TEXAS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 19, 1954 Price 15 Cents A&M Students, Community Use MSC For ‘Living Room’ Center Offers Variety Of Committee Programs Student Activities Complete College A FAMILIAR SIGHT—The Memorial Student Center may not be the geographical cen ter of the campus, but it is the activity center. Everything a student could want is found somewhere in the big, modern MSC. FSA Aids School Projects The Association of Former Stu dents is a non-profit corporation organized for the purpose of aid ing, in every way possible, A&M and of providing a means to main tain lasting friendships made on the campus. As entering freshmen, you will automatically become members of the Association and your name will be added to the rolls upon gradu ation or leaving the college. ^ k There is no such thing as an ex- Aggie—once an Aggie, always an Aggie. To give an idea of the scope of the organization, there are some Dances Brighten Year at A&M A&M has many dances through out the year, with one reserved especially for the freshman, the Fish Ball. On football game weekends when the game is at College Station, there is an All-College dance in spacious Sbisa hall, with a name fcand playing. During the spring, the various rampus and corps groups have dances- - - the regimental balls, the class balls, and various club fourtions. The big one for military stu dents is the annual Military Ball, a^d there is a civilian ball planned fiir civilian students. The Freshman Ball goes about mid-way through the spring se mester, and it is for the freshmen only* - « . The tegenL around the campus says that the prettiest girls always come to the Fish Ball, and it seems to be true. The freshman class, through its class officers, do«s all the planning for their dance. 28,000 A&M men on its rolls—75.4 percent of these reside in Texas, 20.2 per cent in other states and 4.4 per cent located in foreign countries. A&M men are in every state in the union, and in foreign nations throughout the world. A&M men reside in more than 3,000 cities and towns in the U.S. Supervising the campus office of the Association, which is located in .the west wing of the Memorial Student Center and is open daily from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., is J. B. (Dick) Hervey, class of 1942. His job as the Executive Secretary of the Former Student’s Association is to coordinate the activities of the 180 .active A&M clubs throughout the nation; publish a monthly newspaper, The Texas Aggie, which* contains news of the Association, the campus, and the activities of all fonjier students; plan and exe cute class reunions, keep individual biographies of all former students up-to-date; and do his best to ful fill all requests which A&M men might make of the Association. The Student Loan Fund, under the administration of Lonnie B. Locke, class of 1922, is another most worthwhile activity about which little is known except by the boys who receive needed financial assistance year in and year out. At present, there Is a large sum on hand to lend to worthy students. It is interesting to note that in the last five year, $235,000 has been loaned to students. This amount represents 4,815 individual loans. The loss on unpaid loans is under one percent. Perhaps fhe most Important phase of fhe Association program however, is the Development Fund which provides money for many valuable worthwhile projects which the college needs but for which other funds are not available. Through the Development Fund, the Former Student’s Association has given to the College such things as $234,000 in bonds for the construction of the Memorial Stu dent Center; $50,000 for the Gold Star Fund to aid in the education of sons and daughters of A&M men killed in both WW II and the Ko rean campaign; $100,000 for the establishment of the Opportunity Award scholarships, and $60,000 for the Endowed Scholarship Trust fund. There are those who say that 'jook-lamin’ is only half of a col- ege education—the other half is he extracurrliclar activities and >ther things you do at college. A&M’s student activities depart ment, headed by W. L. Penberthy, is concerned with almost every thing that happens on the campus and doesn’t involve books. All clubs, military units, dormi tories, and classes plan their activi ties and dances with the help of the student activities department. The department also sponsors Town Hall, the theater program that brings classical and semi- classical performances to the cam pus; Guian hall, w'hich shows first- rate movies at low prices; and con cessions, which operates candy and soft drink machines in the dormi tories. A tentative schedule for this year’s Towm Hall offers Marge and Gower Champion and the Voices of Walter Schuman, the Caine Mutiny Court Martial Trial, twin-pianists Whittemore and Lowe, a male Student Labor Has Part-Time Jobs No one looks down on the boy who is working his way through school at A&M. They can’t; there are too many of them doing it. The college operates a student labor office to make it easier far the students to get jobs. If you are interested in earning part of your expenses, write the student labor office now for information—the jobs go fast. The address is Student Labor Office, Texas A&M, College Sta tion. But first a word of warning: The collage discourages students from trying to take too much part- time work their first year. This doesn’t mean that they won’t help you get a job; it just means that they know the first year you are going to need more time to .study gnd get adjusted' fco college life. The college also suggests that no one try to earn more than hali 1 of their expenses. Getting a col lege education js a full-time job. Almost aH the student, labor positions are on the campus. There are no big industries or other labor markets around Bryan to hire stu dents. The usual wage for student labor is 60 cents an hour, but if you have a special skill, you can get a job at the prevailing wage for that skill. Types of work open to students include laboratory assistants, metal and wood shop work, clerical, stenographic, landscape gardening, drafting, library work, farm work and livestock handling, janitor work, compiling reports and statists! data, and the famous "Sbisa voulunteers,” the student dining hall waiters. You have to be in good scholastic standing to get a student labor job, and ordinarily only those stu dents who actually need help in getting through school are con sidered for jobs. Work assignments are based primarily on n«ed and sincerity of purpose. And, finally, get your application in early. quarter, a musical comedy, and a Texas symphony orchestra. To make it easier and cheaper for the student to participate in these actirities, all of them, except organizational dances, are included in a student activity fee. The fee is $21.90 a semester, payable when you register. The fee is optional, but if you buy separate tickets for each thing the cost is more than double. A break down of the activity fee is as follows: Athletics, $8; Battalion news paper, $4.50; Aggieland yearbook, $5; choice of student publication magazine, $.80; Town Hall, $2.60; Great Issues and Recital series, $1. The Great Issues series is a lecture series bring big - name speakerh, and the Recital series features classical music. Both are sponsored by the Memorial Stu dent Center. In the athletic ticket are in cluded all intercollegiate athletic contests sponsored by the A&M athletic department. Student Senate Serves As Voice The Student Senate, A&M’s stu dent government, serves as a voice for the students and as an exe cutive group for them. It is composed of representives from each class and dormitory, both military and civilian, elected in the spring general elections. The vice- president of the freshman class is the representative for the first-year men. Meeting monthly, the Senate dis cusses and votes on matters of stu dent life, campus improvements, and other facets of the school. Their action, which is reviewed by the student affairs department, takes the form of a recommen dation to the college authority con cerned with that particular item. Lost and Found Has Two Offices There are two lost and found offices on the Campus. One is operated by the Campus Security Office, on the first floor of Goodwin hall. The other, less well-known, is in the Memorial Student Center. You can ask about lost articles at the main desk. Mail Service Available Two Places While at A&M, you will get all your mail through a post office box. There are two post offices on the campus: one at the North Gate area, and one in the Memorial Student Center. Get your box early, and get it at the post office that will bd closest to your dormitory. The college has a special delivery service, and special delivery let ters should have your dormitory and room number on them. To ship packages or footlockers to school before you come, address them to yourself, Texas A&M Col lege Station, and send them by rail. You can then pick them up at the railroad station. For emergencies, there is a telegraph office in the Memorial Student Center which receives tele grams at any hour of the day or night. You can also send telegrams there. The MSC also operates a long distance telephone service. All incoming long distance calls come through the housing office, W’here messengers are on duty day and night to get the person being called. The living room of Texas A&M is the Memorial Student Center, a spacious, modern building located just south of the main drill field. Popularly known as the MSC, it has been serving the college and the community since 1950. It is the gathering place for all campus groups and is run by the students. The Center contains under one roof bowling alleys, game rooms, shops, club meeting rooms, guest rooms, a browsing library, record playing rooms, a piano room, and television lounges. Besides a regular dining room, the MSC has a fountain room for coffee, snacks, or cafeteria lunches. The MSC invites all incom ing freshmen to sign up for the various committees and activities. There’s something to suit the tastes of everyone, so read on and take your pick. House Committee The House Committee begins its year with an Open House for freshmen. Thoughout the year it sponsors student-faculty coffees, decorating parties for special holi days, and, for Mother’s Day, a large reception for all Aggies and their Moms. Dance Committee One of the activities most widely participated in is the dance classes sponsored by the dance committee of the MSC. Instruction is given in all types of ballroom dancing. The committee also sponsors Rue Pinalle, A&M’s version of a French night-club. Music Committee This group selects music to be played over the MSC’s loud speak er system, and records for the re cord playing rooms. The committee sponsors musical programs and the inter-collegiate talent show. Art Gallery All art exhibits in the MSC throughout the year are planned by the Art Gallery committee. The committee also sponsors free art lessons in all medias. Crafts Committee All students, amateurs and mas ters, are invited to join the Crafts committee and use the various facilities of the craft shop. Radio Committee The Radio committee has as its members “Ham" operators and others interested in radio. Mem bers of the committee can work with the sets or just sit and shoot the bull about the latest rig. Camera Club Amateur photographers who join the Camera club have available to them fully equipped darkrooms, contests, and instruction in photo graphy. The Camera club sponsors outstanding photography exhibits in the Center. (See A&M’S, Page 6) Fish Pick Officers At Mid-Year Each class at A&M elects its own class officers to speak for the class and to handle plans for the class’s dance and other functions. The freshman class will elect officers about mid - way through the year, when every one has gotten to know his class mates. Dating Is About the Same, But Few Local Girls: You Have By-KERSTIN EKFELT Battalion Woman’s Editor [ At'a .coeducational' ’college a pate is a pretty routine affair, not much’different from a date back pome. You ask a girl about a week in advance, she accepts, you piyk her up at her dorm, you bring her back by curfew time. But at A&M the situation is slightly dif ferent and merits some attention. Here’s the set-up: The College Station-Bryan area Roasts pn all-male military college with more than 5,000 students, an air base with some 3,000 personnel, jU»d a military prep school with an enrollment of about 1,000. But the two cities also have, besides a business college, two high schools, and in these institu tions are Girls. The only problem is to find a way (preferably re spectable) to meet them. The easiest method is to go to church. The local churches are loaded with young women who are o^ly too happy to extend a wel come to a-homeless Aggie. And nothing surpasses this in respecta bility. The girl can tell her par ents, "He’s an Aggie, but it’s all right—»I met .him. at church.” • Another good way to get a date is to have a car (i.e., anything with four wheelfc and a motbr). Once your buddies, find out that you have a means of transporta tion, you W'iil be swamped with offers of blind.dates. -With no ef fort at all bn your* part, you can havp a date any night. - Other Way* There are other good ways to meet the few fair females of the community. Some of these ways are, in brief, working on the var ious committees of the Memorial Student Center, visiting professors who have daughters between the age* of 12 and 25, enrolling in the MSC dancing classes (this is a dandy, incidentally), attending community functions, hanging a- round the doors of the high schools at 3:30 in the afternoon, and hav ing friends or relatives tn Brazos county. Once you’ve met a girl, the ac tual date is simple as pie. Any advice you may need on-the sub ject can be found in, an .etiquette book or an advice to the lovelorn column. So .let’s consider another facet of the dating problem at A&M. Sup posing that another guy made it to the phorje book 'first, and you’re without a date for the big game and alt-college dance afterward. Dp not despair;.you can import a glfj from jjut-of-town. - Most dates for big weekends are-gotten-this wajr. The procedure here is .a littla more com plica tad. The first thing to do is to invite the girl—at least three weeks in advance. Your let ter should be casuaL It won't be the last one you will write to her about this particular week-end, so you can save the vital statistics for the follow-up. Just be sure to mention what the occasion is, when you expect her to come, and how long you want her to stay. Ten days later you will get a letter saying that she’d love to come. The delay doesn’t bother you; you made all the arrange ments before you asked her, know ing that if she declined the invi tation you could always get some one else. Your next move is to write a letter of information, a delicate composition which must tell her everything she needs to know with out giving her the impression that you doubt her sophistication. In- this letter be sure to say: How to get to A&M and when. It’s all right to let her look up the train schedules, but it's safer to tell her what train to ake out of what station at what time arriving where, when. It’s nice, especially if she’s new at this, to find out which of her school mates are coming down for the week-end, so that shell have a wing to tuck herself under if she wants one. How to find you when she ar* To Bring One In rives. You'll meet her at the sta tion if she comes by train or bus. If she comes by car, arrange a spe cific place and time for you to meet her. (The MSC is a good spot—it’s easy to find and has comfortable chairs to sit in while you wait.) What to Wear What you two will do when she arrive*. This clues her as to what to wear for the trip- Shell want to know if she’s going to have a chance to change her clothes or if shell go directly to a party. Where she will stay. The suave move is to billet her in the MSC, but chances are 999 to one that the place is booked up solid until June 5, 1957. So if neither of you hive friends around College Station, youll either keep her in one of the Bryan hotels or else see the hous ing office for a list of rooms for rent. (These are in the homes of local families and are usually very inexpensive.) Be precise not only about the name, address, and telephone num ber of the spot (emergency infor mation), but also about the kind of place it is. Whether it’s an adjoin ing-bath or a cold-dormitory type of stopover spot makes a difference in her packing. And then what. You don’t have to spell this out quite as carefully as you’ve planned it; the whole idea is to coach her on what to wear where. You should be direct about the big events—tell her if the dance is formal or the picnic calls for jeans. If you don’t tell her everything she wants to know, she’ll either guess (and guess wrong) or play it safe in her little "basic black” that she can dress up or down. Make the plans for the weekend with at least one other classmate, because the secret of collegy-week- ending is to be with a crowd. Un less you and she are exceptionally crazy about each other's company, to be alone together on a college w«>*k-end is to be lonely and left out. The way to avoid it is to plan in advance with ydur friends. Don’t leave anything to the girls; noth ing will dismay them more than to have to speak up about what they’d like to do. Expense Is On You As for expenses, they’re all on you—from the moment your date arrives to the moment she leaves the campus. You pay for her room, usually in advance. If you have put her up with local friends where there is no question of pay ing for the lodging, you give the hostess a bread-and-butter present, and you pay for your date’s meals. The only thing she pays for is her transportation. If she brings a car and turns it over to you, you might fill the tank for excursions during the week-end, but you wouldn’t pay for her to-snd-fro gas any more than you’d send her her railroad ticket To sum up the whole mess, your career at A&M need not be a ae ries of stag parties. There are women around—they’re harder to find here than at Denton, for in stance, but they exist