THE BATTALION Thur sday, September 16, 1965 College Station, Texas Page 5 LAST VISIT TO A LANDMARK Charlie (Babe) Lopez paid the old Aggie- foundations for the building in 1925 and land Inn a last visit this summer before worked there most of the years until 1950. the building was razed. He helped lay the Especially To Babe Lopez Aggieland Inn Was Tradition A landmark in the life of Char lie (Babe) Lopez as well as Tex as A&M was removed when the old Aggieland Inn was razed this summer. Lopez helped lay the builidng’s foundation 40 years ago and served as its head waiter. The Aggieland Inn was once the only state - owned hotel in Texas. The inn was closed in 1950 when the Memorial Student Center opened and was convert ed into the Counseling and Test ing Center. The A&M Board of Directors approved plans to raze the building this summer. Charlie Lopez’ memories of helping lay the foundation are clear. He recalled his father al so worked in the labor crew. “They told us some supplies played out and we’d have to wait a week before doing anymore work,” Charlie said. “I couldn’t wait, so I went back to work at Sbisa Hall for Mr. W. A. Dun can.” “When it opened I worked one meal at the mess hall and then two at the Aggieland Inn, or however they needed me,” Char lie said. He left the campus job twice but returned to stay in June, 1935. In 1943 he was head waiter at the inn’s coffee shop when the draft called him. He returned to the inn after the war and, when it was closed, assumed store keeper duties in the Chemistry Department. “It was a very nice place to work,” he said of the coffee shop. “We got acquainted with prac tically everyone on the campus.” Charlie used “special., coffee and the best of equipment” to brew java which helped make the inn a popular place. University Archivist Ernest Langford records: “Its reputa tion as a place where one could get a nice- cool room and meals at moderate cost spread through out the state.” ~^lttention: ^tuclents, Jf^ro^eSdors and ddxes ^ want to thanl? aidoj?you J^or making Ole oCou what he is toda^. store was men as uou an d hi founded upon Such endured because oj? your patronage and your Spreading the yood word about cJLou. j dCounot S appreciate you, men. oL-oupi loohiny forward to many more years doiny business with the liheS ofiyou. of ddincerety, cdCoupot Color, Humor Mark Old A&M School Celebrates 89th Anniversary Texas A&M’s colorful past be gan 89 years ago in the fall of 1876 when 40 students attended the school’s first classes. A&M, the state’s oldest institu tion of higher learning, has grown to house a studentbody of over 8,000 and an academic struc ture of over 50 sections and di visions. In July of 1862 President Abraham Lincoln authorized the Morrill Act permitting the Fed eral government to offer each state a grant of public lands which could be used to raise funds for establishing colleges specializing in agriculture and the mechanical arts. In the first year of its exist ence, A&M’s enrollment jumped from 40 on Oct. 4, to 100 in January and 331 in the spring. In these early years, accom- modiations were insufficient for anything like this number. The second and third floors of Gath- right Hall and the second, third and part of the fourth floor of the Main Building were used for barracks. During cold winter months, students kept these rooms warm with fire wood. Each student had his own axe, cut his own wood at the common wood pile and carried it to his room in his arms. Wood piles were kept outside each building with the owner’s name above each, roughly on this order, “This is John Jones’ wood- pile. Keep your hands off of it!” The first floor of Gathright Hall was used as a dining hall with classes held on the first floor of the Main Building. As for the actual campus in these early days, one professor said: “The campus was such a wild waste that it was not considered safe for children to be out at night. The howling of wolves provided nightly serenades. On one occasion a wild animal wan dering over the campus threw the whole community in a frenzy of excitement. An alarm was given and the whole battalion of students and some professors turned out to kill it but in the high weeds of the campus it easily escaped.” The conduct of the professors also left room for improvement during the memorial ’76. Follow ing complaints from throughout the state the Board of Directors fired the entire faculty. A mathematics professor show ed his contempt for being fired by going fishing. “I can’t be bothered,” he said. In the late ’70’s and mid ’80’s, Garland James succeeded Gath right as president, four buildings were constructed and the entire curriculum was revised. The school slumped badly in the ’80’s until Lawrence Sullivan Ross was named president in 1890. Once the state legislature even considered abondoning the college, with the buildings to be used as a Negro insane asylum. Ross literally saved the school from destruction. During his eight-year reign, enrollment in creased tremendously, the first Corps trip was held in Houston property value reached $389,- 502.64 and most of all, the college for the first time acquired a good name among citizens of the state. Intercollegiate football first served to unite the student body in 1892 with the first clash with Texas University in 1894. In 1902, the Aggie were named “Cham pions of the South” after beating Tulane. First football games were played at the Bryan Fair Grounds, with bleachers accom modating 500. These bleachers were later moved to the campus, and Kyle Field came into being. During the first years of the century such events as a cane rush between freshmen and soph omores caused quite a stir. One morning mysterious no- tives had been tacked up at various places forbidding any freshmen to carry a cane past the band stand between 4:30 and 4:45 p.m. At the blast of a bugle, freshmen and sophomores emerg ed from every hall, clad in old clothes. A freshman, attended by a bodyguard, attempted the feat and the struggle was on. Reinforcements arrived and the battle raged for two hours, but without success on either side. President H. H. Harrington’s administration was rocked by a student strike. After several days, most of the students went home. One student, crossing the Brazos, was met by his father with a shotgun. He returned. Harring ton resigned. The same fate befell the administration of Col. R. T. Milner, and he resigned also. Two tragedies enabled the cam pus to first take on its present appearance. In 1911 the mess hall burned and in 1912 Old Main was gutted by fire. Soon afterwards Sbisa Dining Hall and the Academic Building sprang up. Also, not long after ward, Guion Hall was built. World War I gave the school its first test. The entire 1917 senior class enlisted. More than 2000 Aggie grads served in the war and 52 gave their lives for democracy. After the war the Reserve Officers Training Corps was established and A&M immediate ly became a member. With the change, the famed Aggie grey gave way to khaki and olive drab. 20% OFF ON ALL ENGINEERING SUPPLIES Rudder Becomes President Of State-Wide System; Other Staff Changes Made Texas A&M President Earl Rudder assumed duties as chief administrative officer for the state-wide A&M System Sept. 1. The joint position of university and system president was created by the Board of Directors last spring. Rudder replaced Dr. M. T. Harrington who served as chancellor since 1959. Harrington becomes coordinator of international pro grams for A&M. Rudder was appointed vice president of A&M on Feb. 1, tired Air Force major. 1958, coming over from his post of Texas Land Commissioner. In other staff changes during the summer: — Fred W. Dollar was appoint ed food services director. Dol lar, ’44, waited in both dining halls while a student here. — Jim Lindsey, director of Uni versity Information, was named chief of the system’s state-wide information program. All inform ation programs in the system were consolidated under Lindsey’s direction. — Joe Buser, director of the “Life Line” radio program and a former Battalion editor, re joined the A&M staff as assist ant director of information and supervisor of publications. — Rupert C. Woodward took over the reins as acting librarian. He will serve in that capacity until a successor is named for Robert A. Houze who became librarian at Trinity University. — William H. Little of College Station joined the library system as a junior cataloger, after serv ing as an instructor in the De partment of History and Govern ment last year. — Richard L. Puckett has be- j come head of the library’s circul- ! ation department. He is a re- FOR ALL YOUR NEEDS Approved By The Engineering Dept. Student Co-op Store ED GARNER ’38 — Harold Gaines, a retired Army Lt. Col., has assumed duties as student programs advisor for the Memorial Student Center. — Vergil B. Clark, A&M staff member since 1957, is now direc tor of physical plant for the Uni versity of West Virginia. Welcome— AGGIES- To- YOUNGBLOOD'S GOOD FOOD AT MODERATE PRICES FAST, EFFICIENT SERVICE FOR YOUR COMFORT AND CONVENIENCE Rock Building PHONE Midway Between Hiway 6 TA 2-4557 Bryan and College THE EXCHANGE STORE Novelty and Stationery Department Here you will find complete selections of Parker, Sheaffer. and Esterbrook fountain pens, ball points and mechanical pen cils. Here also you find many attractive designs of die stamped college stationery from the Houses of Montag, Charles Elliott, Carmelle and Eldridge. lust the thing for writing Mom or the girl friend. Every Aggie likes to have the college seal on his personal items. We have a dazzling display ranging from belt buckles to hitch hiking bags. Decals, pennants, stuffed animals, ash trays and many other gift items are available. You nam^ it, we have it! "IN ITS S8TH YEAR... SERVING TEXAS AGGIES'' STORE HOURS DURING REGISTRATION Your Exchange Store will be open until 8 p.m. on Thursday and Friday, Sept. 16 & 17 . . . and all day Saturday, Sept. 18.