IHE BATTALION Wednesday, November 24, 1965 College Station, Texas Page 3 ’V-'V.'/V?-'- C- r- .iiV.'j- I I DON’T DON’T DON’T MIND MIND MIND EITHER meeting of the don’t minds If you don’t mind having all the details of planning a banquet or convention taken care of for you, call Ramada Inn. We’ll make sure your meeting is trouble-free . . . no matter what size your group ! Try our fast, friendly breakfast and luncheon service. RAMADA INN Bryan-College Station 846-8811 Pinkie Downs Is Walking Aggie Tradition By TOM HARGROVE “Lord, take care of the Aggies tonight and I’ll take over again tomorrow.” This has been and still is the prayer uttered night ly by Mr. A&M himself — P. L. “Pinkie” Downs. At an age when most men are HEAR, HERE! ALL NEW FROM son~y; Model 102 Tape Recorders BRYAN RADIO & TV SERVICE, INC. 1301 S. College Ave. superscope] CLOTHING Bardstown Merit SHOES Cole-Haan Edwin Clapp Florsheim FURNISHINGS Jayson & Wren - shirts Altman & Wren - sweaters Lakeland - jackets Briar & Ernst - ties Resistol - hats Robert Reis - underwear Alligator - all weather coats hLLEN’S clothing for men • DOWNTOWN - BRYAN Phone 822-6213 100 N. Main SL ready for wheel chairs and hos pital beds, this enthusiastic 81- year-old Aggie continues to work faithfully at his job as Official University greeter, never failing to “say a few words about A&M” at any opportunity. Pinkie Downs is legendary in Aggie lore for his numerous Ag- gieland antics. He wears noth ing but maroon-and-white ties. His garden is well stocked with maroon-and-white radishes, gladi- olas and other similarly colored plants. Carrots, onions — in fact, anything bearing the orange-and- white colors of Texas University are strictly forbidden to contam inate his sacred plot of maroon and white. He originated the well-known admonition, “Gig ’em Aggies!,” at an A&M-TCU foot ball game. Once prior to the traditional A&M-TU Turkey Day football game, the annual Aggie bonfire was not quite finished. Pinkie had the cutters come to his yard just off the campus and cut two of his largest trees for extra bonfire fuel. “Everyone thought I was kinda crazy,” says Pinkie, “but I knew what I was doing.” Pinkie was destined to be an Aggie. Born in Temple on Feb. 26, 1884, he was influenced at an early age by his namesake uncle, the late Col. P. L. Downs, who was a member of the first gradu ating class at A&M in 1879. His father, F. F. Downs, a graduate of Southwestern University in Georgetown, approved of his son’s decision to come to Aggie- land. “I’d wanted to come to A&M from the time I was 12, but they wouldn’t take me ’til I was 18,” complains Pinkie. He earned money to help pay college ex penses by working as a carrier boy on a horseback paper route. “I left Temple on Sept. 17, 1902, by rail, heading for A&M,” recalls Pinkie. “It was only 80 miles, but it took me six hours to reach College Station. My wife recently made the same trip by plane in about 30 minutes.” As a freshman, Pinkie was placed in Co. C Infantry. “There were practically no dropouts in those days,” he recalls. “We started the year with 300 stu dents, including 181 fish. At the end of the year we still had the same 300.” Naturally, fish Downs partici pated in the first Aggie Muster. “Back then a bugle blew ‘Fall In’ 15 minutes before classes and we marched to class,” said Pinkie. “On April 21, 1903, the Cadet Corps got together and decided to not attend class since it was San Jacinto Day. So, when the bugle sounded, the cadets march ed not to class, but to the home of the president. Dr. David F. Houston, and asked to be allowed to establish an annual Aggie Muster to pay tribute to those Texans who died at San Jacinto in 1836 and all Aggies who had passed away. Dr. Houston said if we’d just go back to class he’d turn school out at noon and we could have a muster every year from then on. One of the greatest Aggie traditions started that day,” Pinkie recalls. Pinkie, like many former cad ets, also spent his share of Sat urday afternoon marching the Bull Ring. “We’d carry that rifle an hour, rest 15 minutes, then start marching again,” remem bered Pinkie, with more than a faint trace of nostalgia. “Those were the days when A&M was all male and 100 per cent mili tary. I believe those experiences as a cadet were responsible for making me what I am today,” he says. Pinkie was a member of the Class of ’06. He holds a degree in marketing and finance, al though he now claims he majored in plain ol’ Aggie “Good Bull.” While a student he was a mem ber of the Ross Volunteers and the Sul Ross Literary Society as well as president of the A&M Tennis Club. After graduation. Pinkie re turned to Temple and entered the banking business with his father and uncle. Twenty-eight years later he accepted a position as a National Bank Examiner for the Comptroller of the Currency. He served as a member of the A&M Board of Directors from 1923-33. In 1940 Pinkie moved back to the college he loved so well to work with the fiscal department. Since then he has served as Ath letic Business Manager, Assist ant to the Director of Publicity and Information, University In formation Assistant and Official Greeter. He spent five years as a member of the Board of Direc tors of the Association of Form er Students. Besides his vast amount of work for Aggies, Pinkie is also well-known for the good deeds he privately performs for others without financial renumeration or any expectations of it. He has a particular interest in the 1,- 200 patients at the Veterans Ad ministration Center act Temple. The door to the Downs home (See Pinkie, Page 7) $8,000,000 THIS IS THE AMOUNT OF LIFE INSURANCE IN FORCE ON TEXAS AGGIES THROUGH THE THIS PARTIALLY EXPLAINS WHY THE AGGIELAND AGENCY HAS BEEN AWARDED THE LEADING AGENCY AWARD FOR IMMEDIATE INFORMATION CONTACT ONE OF THESE Aggieland College Master Representatives Melvin Johnson Charles Johnson Charles Thomas '64 '64 BHI Altman *•» 846-8228 Jerry Mitchell Larry Grewnhaw ’61 ’64 :r tup*' fiitl i«ti' iin« ! te » S otte lesif Hit 1 LOOK FOR GIBSON'S BIG PAGE CHRISTMAS CIRCULAR DELIVERED IN HOUR MAIL TODAY! OPEN THANKSGIVING DAY NOV. Z5TH PLENTY FREE PARKING PLENTY SALES PEOPLE TO SERVE YOU 9A.M. 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