Page 6 THE BATTALION WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1977 WED. and THUR. NOV. 30 - DEC. 1 9:00 - 5:00 by THE RUDDER FOUNTAIN FOR INFO. CALL THE CRAFT SHOP - 845-1631 SPONSORED BY THE Q? CRAFTS & ARTS COMMITTEE What is By LIZ NEWLIN Ask an Aggie what the Aggie spirit is. It can be over the phone, in a plush office, on the sidewalk, in the Grove or in a classroom. The reaction is likely to be the same. A pause. A sigh. If he has a senior ring, he’ll look at it. Then a quizzical look at the questioner. “Hum. You can’t describe it.” Outwardly, the manifestations of spirit are awesome, like the sight of 20,000 or 30,000 bodies “sawing varsity’s horns off” as the Aggie band plays the War Hymn. Aggie spirit includes prohibiting other Aggies from crossing the foot ball field at midnight yell practice or requiring the class number of push-ups. The spirit was also the reason given for tearing down a 100-year-old tree in Houston. Is Aggie spirit used as a cover for de structive pranks and actions? People aren’t eager to say. “Collectively, I haven’t seen much of a problem.. .sanity did pre vail at the Rice game (four years ago). But it was a pretty sticky situa tion, said Dr. Carolyn Adair, vice president of student affairs. President Jarvis Miller does not November’s Specials.•• 44 a festival of music!" 5 ‘“ p f 8.99 album /§ qq 798 Series album q qq 1398 Series 12.99 ASYUUM album /t qq 798 Series 798 Series tape 795 Series album * QQ tape Q OQ 5 Series ^W k795 ROLLING STONES 7.66 8.99 ATLANTIC . . . Firefall and WARNER BROTHER . . . Leo Sayer. album 798 Series 4.99 tape 795 Series Spirit? include destruction in his descrip tion of Aggie spirit. He defines it as “Comradeship, brotherhood and a close personal feeling toward another Aggie; basic. It’s reflected, I think, in concern for other people.” Miller, a 1950 graduate of Texas A&M, takes a philosophical ap proach to Aggie spirit and traditions: “What we need to try to do is look for basic, important traditions and strengthen them...don’t get carried away on small things.” Traditions and spirit seem to flow from the same unexplained source, and exposure to one generally leads to developing and protecting the other. Joe Wright, senior yell leader, contends the spirit develops once students begin attending A&M. “And I say if they don’t have it be fore they get here, they’ll get it here.” Wright said the spirit is the most organized among colleges and ‘kinda unique.” He said he doesn’t think about it much, but neither do many other people. “It’s something you have to ex perience,” Dorothy Nunnelly, sophomore, said. “We as Aggies feel this special spirit most definitely while we are at A&M, but the fact that we will carry this love with us as we go our separate ways makes the Aggie spirit a unique trait unknown to other universities across the country.” David Johns, senior, might dis pute this. “Some people come to A&M stricly for academics,” he said. “Others have parents and grandparents who went and are more involved. I don’t consider my self a ‘two-percenter,’ but I’m not a ‘one-hundred-percenter’ either. Some of the letters to the editor in the Battalion about the ‘good Ag’ are kind of sickening. In a student body of 30,000, everybody is not going to have it.” He theorized the “gung-ho” Ag gies were probably like that in high school: “It’s in their personality. I have spirit for A&M. I don’t know if I have the ‘Aggie spirit’.” The nebulous, personal Aggie spirit develops, most agree, during a student’s college career at Texas A&M. “You get it by experiencing it with other people, by exposure. Most Aggies are genuine in their spirit, but not everyone at a football game is,” Glenn Mayberry, junior, said. “The spirit is a love for each other, a helping,” said Richard “Buck” Weirus, executive director of the Association of Former Stu dents. “It really as much a fraternity as anything else, and it has pretty much carried on since it becamq non-military and women came on campus.” The traditions, like the ring and Muster, can be carried on through life, he said, but they are learned on campus. Friendships and the loca tion, forcing Ags to create their own entertainment, contribute to the spirit. “Somehow, once a student goes here, the identification with this in stitution influences his whole life,” Weirus added. Senior Stephen Poe said the spirit- is created by the “closeness of the Corps and traditions like Silver Taps; we hold to. It carries bn. Former students stick together.” The first graduating class decided to meet at the campus each year, and the Association of Former Stu dents began near the turn of the century mainly as a job-placement service, Weirus said, adding “They still do it today.” Freshman orientation to tra ditions, which seemingly develop into spirit, begin before the first day of class. In addition to a two-day summer orientation and pre registration, Corps freshmen attend a week-long session to learn about Texas A&M, and about 1,300 stu dents last year went to Student Y Fish Camp. “The two-day programs, orienta tion and the people they see show them an awful lot of people here who care,” Carolyn Adair said. “Fish Camp is a four-day, intensive program. They stuff it (traditions) down your throat, almost. Aggie spirit, as Miller and others said, has broadened and changed over the years. Battalion photo by Michael Fi Aggie spirit stikes again in the form of an old-army spiritsignj hung from Legett Hall. The message is pretty clear, but the j Aggie who added the ’censored’ sign apparently wanted I clean up Bevo’s act. Jim Schultz, a first-year vet stu dent in the Corps, said, “The spirit changed. The quality is different now with non-regs and girls. It can’t be the same anymore. Seniors are always going to say it was better when they were fish. It’s not true. ” He said their pride makes their early college life and them “tougher, though it may not have been that way. Yell leader Wright said spirit is not waning. “Yell practices this year are a lot bigger than last year. The Kansas midnight yell practice (with about 30,000 people) was maybe the biggest in the school’s history. Security blanket may be answer The Aggie spirit. “It’s as hard to describe as it is easy to identify,” noted Weirus, and nobody knows, for sure where it’s going. But the spirit is here right now. United Press Internatiunal NEW HAVEN, Conn. — For men or women who have everything and don’t care what they get for Christmas: a security blanket. The young men marketing them at $5 each call them “blankettes They are 8-by-12 — inches, that is, not feet. The word “Security” is embroidered on each. They come in robin’s egg blue and sapsucker yel low. The booklet accompanying each blankette asks the buyer to fill out a form, giving his or her name, age, shoe size, favorite tuba player and preferred sleeping attire. The blankette is not for every body, Blanketeers Smirnoff Divi sion says. Gary and Alan Smirnoff and Clifford Skolnick say their product can be used by people who are afraid of some unusual asparagus, for example. Company representatives say! blankette is an ideal gift for | who get nervous reading i nitus, bruxism and other ailmei they didn’t even know existed Man gets ticket for leaving cl in lane of traffi SAW BEVO’S HORNS OFF . . . in one of the great contests at Taco Villa after the bonfire! FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 25 9:30 p.m.-? A WINNER EVERY HOUR Judged by Diamond Darlings! KTAM Uve Remote and Many Prizes ... includ ing $10 food certificates, T-Shirts, Hungry Glasses and Records. JUST A FEW OF THE CONTESTS 1. Pull the bull’s tail — 6 boys & 6 girls to a team 2. The Bevo-throw 3. Packin’ & Smashin’ — How many Aggies can cram in a Dodge Dart? 4. Bubble gum blowing contest 5. Jalapeno-eating contest 6. Chewin’ & spirtin’ contest (bring your own tobacco) 614 VILLA MARIA ACROSS FROM MANOR EAST MALL United Press International GOLDEN, Colo.—Chris ( iensen was given a parking ticketl blocking traffic by having his wks V chair in the center of a traffick n Police Officer Mike Walker he gave Christiensen the tickel cently for having the wheelchair! the lane going against oncoi traffic. J The statute prohibits bicyclt animals, skis, skates and toy vJ C eles on a highway. Christiensen,! is scheduled to appear bef) County Judge Leonard L. BealDt 2 to explain in which category wheelchair fits. an [ Service program^ are highlighted Publi c service programs at Talk A&M Univ ersity are in thespoltj ^ this week in conjunction «il • Saturday’s Aggie-Longhorn f ' game. Displays portraying how T« A&M University and other parti the Texas A&M University S)| serve the people are on Wednesday through Sunday in first-floor lobby of Rudder Tower Almost every area of Tesai touched. Besides education it , dents, Texas A&M aids homeM ers, farmers and ranchers, teache bankers and many others ini ways. They are reached th Texas A&M public service pro in agriculture, engineering, l and animal health, energy, scid and technology. * f { * Just in time for Christmas, EOS has received an exclusive line of Lasercraft custom desk accessories. These distinctive accessories, of beautiful walnut engraved by laser, make the perfect Aggie Christmas present. Engineering & Office Supply 402 W. 25th Bryan 822-2011 1412 Texas Ave. College Station 693-9553