Page 12 THE BATTALION WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1977 focus ountry dancing, dressing Aggie style By MARY ALICE WOODHAMS Battalion Managing Editor 7 work at a factory ten hours a day I make good money but I work like a slave The pressure’s been building all week long But it’s Saturday night And they’re playing our song.’ —from “Slow Dancing” by Vern Stovall and Bill Palmer Outside the country-western ballroom, two middle-aged women with dangling earrings climb out of a new pickup truck. One carries a bottle, concealed in a sack, and the other holds open the door. They can’t remember how long they’ve been going to dances on Saturday nights. But their West Texas home town had a Veterans of Foreign Wars Hall, and that’s where they learned how to waltz. They say that was just about the only nightlife in those days. A local band, a wooden floor, and a man with good dancing feet in his boots: that’s the recipe. Back then, you never needed much excuse to have a dance. But nearly every good country wedding would find Grandma dancing with Grandpa, Mom waltzing with Dad, and Little Sister trying her luck with her first polka. Now the women remember: they learned “kicker dancing” when they were schoolgirls, at a country wedding. The experts of country-western lore say that kicker dancing proba bly began the first time someone played a fiddle. Since then, songwriters have produced music to dance to and lyrics that deal with the dancing itself. Some writers, like Stovall and Palmer, view dancing as a magic salve that alleviates pressures of the working world. But others, like television star Mary Kay Place, describe the dances as opportunities for meeting eligible mates. Her song, “Baby Boy,” tells how she met the blue-eyed man of her dreams at a VFW Hall dance. Inside the ballroom, the two women are seated at a table near the dance floor. Tonight the ballroom is high on couples, low on stag men. They quietly watch the dancers move to the strains of “Please Release Me.” par* NEW YORK SUB-WAY IS COMING! TO COLLEGE STATION Keep Watching This Space For More Information On NEW YORK SUB-WAY! The couples linger on the floor when the song ends. One woman wears a long, polyester gown adorned with an orchid corsage; her partner wears a suit and cowboy boots. Behind them, a pair who look at least 60 are clad in western-style apparel. Another man, wearing an Aggie t-shirt and a cowboy hat, bends to kiss his petite dance partner. On the dance floor, the difference in individual skill is most appar ent. Some can fake their way through a basic two step, imitate a waltz, stumble through a Cotton-Eyed Joe. But a fast-paced polka or schottische separates pseudo-dancers from their genuine counter parts. One solution is dance lessons. Terry Leone owns and manages Arthur Murray Dance Studios in Dallas, Fort Worth and Odessa. Although his customers usually ask to learn disco and ballroom steps. Leone says there’s an increasing demand for country-western dancing. In Ft. Worth, 80 percent of the studio’s phone inquiries come from people who want to learn kicker dancing. But in Dallas, that figure is only 40 percent. Dance lessons at Texas A&M take the form of Pam Morton’s PI classes (social and folk dance) or the Social Dance club, which Morti sponsors. Here students can polish up on their dance steps making public appearances. Morton teaches some kicker dance steps, but notes that C&W dancing is not really an accepted dance form. Morton says she stresses ballroom dance skills because she m kicker dancing is only popular in this part of the country. Leone says his instructors have names for certain types of dancers and warn their students against them. “Pump-handle Pete” is the man who keeps time with the musicln working his partner’s arm like a water-pump handle. “Show-' Sammy” dances so fast that his partner can t keep up. “Two-i Susie has had so much to drink that she can hardly stand up, yetslie Continued next page QUESTIONS Questions? I had a thousand questions within me. What do you want to do with your life? What will the future bring? Why is the world in such bad shape? As I grew older ques tions were generated within me. I began to see that life was not as simple as it was when I was a child. My friends and I would stay up until the early morning hours to “rap” about our questions and ideas. We had a lot of questions with hardly any answers. It seemed that we could not be satisfied with the answers supphed to us by society and religion. So the search began. I started with education and sports and stayed very busy, eventually winning an athletic scholarship from a small university. I played for one year and was disappointed. I was busy but knew this was not the answer. My activity was only putting off the issue. I left school and football; my family and friends were shocked. At this point in my life I was exposed to the drug culture that was prevailing among the young people at the time. My friends and I found ourselves swept up into this trap. At first we thought that this was the answer. When we were on drugs it seemed that all the questions were gone and we felt warm and peaceful within, but as we went on we became emptier and colder. I was for tunate to eventually realize that there was no answer in drugs either. They just made things worse. I was living in Houston at this time and was tired of all the people, noise, traffic, etc. May be this was my problem? “That’s it, I need to get away from here to a small town where life is slower,” I said to myself. So I quit my job and moved to a small town in Wis consin. There I lived quietly for almost two years. It was up in the hills of Wisconsin that I realized that the problem was not something objective, out side of me, but subjective. Something within me would not allow me to be satisfied. I would sit with friends for hours enjoying the beauty of nature in the peaceful hours of sunset. We would talk about nature, peace, love, life, joy & beauty. But I realized I needed peace inside of me. In man there is something deeper, a deeper need. We are not mere animals that can be satisfied with physical things nor are we just psychological beings that are satisfied with certain stimu- li. Man has a need that only God can satisfy. I came to these conclusions on my own through a lot of searching and thought and questioning. In Wisconsin I received letters from friends in Houston almost every week. One day I was told in a letter about a friend that was very close to me. He had changed. Something was different with him now. He had met the living Christ. I had to investigate. At first I was very skeptical. I had heard about Jesus—how He lived on earth about 1900 yrs. ago, and died on the cross and shed His blood for our sins and resurrected from the dead. I knew there was a God, just a- bout everybody in America knows that. But to me they were just stories of something that happened a long time ago and in no way could affect me today. One night my friend and I sat for hours talking about how he met Jesus. He didn’t say he had learned about Jesus or that he had decided to follow Jesus’ teachings. He said he had met the Lord Jesus, received Him with everything He accom- plished on the cross and now Jesus Christ was living within him. He said to be a Christian didn’t mean to follow some outward regulations or rules but it was to have Jesus Christ living in you. From within He would be all that you needed. As I was listening to him my heart was telling me this was right. So I went home and sit ting on my bed, I said, “Lord Jesus I beheve in you. Please forgive me for my past. Lord Jesus I receive You.” It wasn’t a religious prayer but simple & from my heart. At the moment I spoke the first word, the Lord Jesus came and flooded me within. I felt so clean and full inside. My first realization was, “Lord Jesus, you’re the one I’ve been looking for all these years. You are the answer to all my questions.” I had found the answer. Finally I had all the things we had talked about for years within me. Jesus is my peace, life, joy, happiness. And everyday He becomes something more to me because He is within and will never leave. That was al most six years ago and I have never been the same because Jesus has never left me. He is no longer just God far, far a- way but Jesus Christ within, very near and close. Rick Yeager, ‘79 846-9708 Paid for by Christian students on campus. Find the Aggie Peace Corps Office! Use this little map to locate the Soil and Crop Sciences and Entomology Building, Room 239, or Phone 845-7111 -. .And find out why Peace Corps needs Aggies! SEBRIHG men look like they just come from their stylist ... everyday! COURTEA Hair Designers 3808 OLD COLLEGE ROAD BRYAN Next to Triangle Bowl 846-3877 or 846-2924 for appt ^MnSattiy The Best Pizza in Town (Honest) Who say s you can't have a fast lunch and still enjoy intimate booths draft beer, cozy atmosphere and old-time movies? We Don't! LUNCH SPECIAL Monday-Friday Lunch Special also available at our pizza-mat. ry our new frozen yogurt, 98% fat free. 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Air Force ROTC offers 4-year, 3-year and 2-year scholarships with $100 monthly tax-free allowance, and contrary to what some people think, there is no military obligation during the first two years of the Air Force ROTC. Upon college graduation you’ll receive a commission in the U.S. Air Force and the opportunity to compete for a challeng ing job with advanced educational opportunities. Let’s get together and discuss Air Force ROTC further. Well give you all the facts and clear up the fictions. It could be one of the most important talks you’ve ever had with anyone. Air Force ROTC 4 YOU M <-