Page 10 THE BATTALION THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1978 focus Freaky, decadent, bizarre,.. Mardi Gras struts out By GLENNA WHITLEY Battalion StafT It’s a spectacle, a decadent dream of a Ringling brother, a drunken Rose Bowl parade. Masks cover those that taunt the E shouting, hooting, begging crowd. Some masks are curtains of satin, some are clear plastic that make the flesh below look embalmed. Other masks are works of art — elaborate fantasies of silver, feathers, bright stones and spikes that make the crowd ooh and aah. The effect is ghoulish. “Give me some beads. C’mon, throw me something,” shouts a middle-aged woman whose black hair is piled in curls on her head. She runs into the street and pounds on a masked man straddling a horse. He grins, holds out a string of yel low plastic beads. She grabs, squeals and runs back into the crowd. It’s Saturday night, and the Krewe of Endymion has started its parade. Thousands of people line Canal Street. The crowd is four persons deep. Boys and boys-at-heart are perched on every street-light and every tree in sight. Those lucky enough to own a business, or to know someone who owns one along the parade route, lean from bal conies or hang out windows. They scream and wave as frantically as the people down in the street. It’s only a parade. There are marching bands, Shriners in little go-carts, horses and riders, floats with silly themes, and people dressed in costumes waving to the crowd. But it’s more. It’s legitimate craz iness. Official, anything goes. The city’s attitude is — Do what you want, (short of putting someone in the hospital) and spend lots of (money. -What makes the parades truly fun is that the people who ride the floats throw things to the spectators: Strings of beads, little dolls, trin kets, and specially-minted coins called doubloons. Some of the doub loons are collector’s items. Some will get you two free pieces of chicken at Popeye s Chicken Stand, however most are worthless. But the doubloon-and-trinket- tossing is what makes the parades participatory. Without that, Mardi Gras would be nice costumes, floats and music. Instead it’s a cut-throat battle. The first thing I was told about the parades was not how beautiful they were, or how much the elabo rate costumes cost, but how to catch doubloons. “You don’t dare grab with your hands,” said a native I met at the airport. “First step on it and then reach under your foot to pick it up. Otherwise you’ll get your hand stomped on.” It’s true. Caught up in the ex citement of the floats, music and something for nothing, some people are dead serious about catching as much junk as possible. I How ridiculous it seemed»Tex; minute later I noticed my lawst c the air waving “Gimme, s footba and my friend, in size 12, stetjof inte boots, stepping on a smaillncl tennis shoe to get a doublooiBck c Guess who kept the doubt in the But if the beads hit thefiloom forget it. The crowd issoderwowed beads are crushed. You bad A catch those in the air. Aggies Some people are so seriouBThi catching vast quantities oftliB the they rig up nets, cut off them Tex: of Clorox bottles and moumBnt t on poles to get above the years i the crowd. Bnt t But the parades are onlyM Be: Mardi Gras. Different krn pne thi definitions) put on fancy dresBAno but these are by invitation |>y the freaks, transients and are not invited. Formal! to be the essence of Mardi for the cream of New ciety. Needless to say, I mj vited. But I ve heard they’re stifj boring anyway. Then there’s the French!) with Bourbon Street at itss probably safely designatedd hub of debauchery for Mardil I had heard all the storiesl you-won’t-believe-its from hi So I was looking forward toi[ some Romanesque. People vamping, taking dl ous articles of clothing, dancr 011 the streets to funky jail, •m sniffing nnusua] drugs. Yoiis^ 1 expected it. Frankly, I was disappoinrij Debauchery mainly amm drinking. Everyone carrieil) or a scotch and water, or aka in a huge styrofoam cup. The crowd is diverse:aB* 1111 aged couples on vacation. B r ’ ! kids, bums, Jesus freaks, gRP ’ gays arm-in-arm, busineR'I; 1 women, housewives. EveraRr, , drunk. R- Joints are passed atouwhl I? 01 corners. Po/feemen are evenuly 1 '^ Imp but few arrests are made - seem not to care what you do: I’ ^ as no one gets hurt. In fact.* y the arrests made during thisB P 1 Mardi Gras were for vagml ” sleeping in the bus terminal■T People pass the strip joint*, e fashioned r-arnival barkfirsshB* Hofs Pgh Ked First, some definitions fashioned, carnival barkerssi wares. “See the pretty boil want to be girls, chants ajjl gray man in front of a bar t!L, tures female impersonators. ■ Everyone strains for a glitlr e flesh through the open doorF-— ever, most keep going. Lto But the temparature mat R kept the debauchery dowB minimum this year. After alj naked? Maybe I’ll go back next yt| By GLENNA WHITLEY Mardi Gras in New Orleans is many things. Natives can love it or hate it. They can build their social group around it, or leave town when that time comes around. But no one in New Orleans ig nores it. First some definitions: Carnival is the two weeks before Mardi Gras, when more than 50 parades are held all over the city, its suburbs and neighborhoods. Mardi Gras, or “Fat Tuesday” is the final day of that period—the Tuesday before Ash Wednesday. This year Mardi Gras was Feb. 7. Since it occurs 40 Len ten days before Easter, Mardi Gras can happen anytime in a six-week period in February and March. It hasn’t started any earlier than this year’s date in about 50 years. Though the adjective “fat” is odd to use for a day, the word “gras ”, or fat is used as in the French phrase foie gras—or sinfully rich. It describes the insanity per fectly. Mardi Gras is different from any other festival or parade in the coun try. Instead of being put on by city hall, or the fire department, or the American Legion, Mardi Gras is put on by private clubs called “krewes. ” The sole reason for the krewes’ exis- tance is to stage parades and balls during Carnival. These krewes are closed organiza tions. Their selectivity often is a re flection of the social status of its members. Some of the top krewes are very exclusive. They have few Jews and no blacks. However, there are kre wes that have only black members. The names of the krewes are mys tic and colorful: Rex, Bacchus, Zulu (a black krewe), Endymion, Pro teus, Nefertari, and Thoth for example. Krewes choose a King or Queen,(sometimes both,) or some other type of monarch, an Emperor or Pharoah. In some of the exclusive old krewes, the King’s name is a se cret. Other krewes, like Endymion and Bacchus, have celebrity kings and guests. Cheryl Ladd, of television’s “Charlie’s Angels,” singer Wayne Newton, singer, and trumpet player Doc Severinson, were featured in the Endymion parade this year. Ed McMahon, Tonite Show co host and beer spokesman, was the King of Bacchus. Battalion Photos by Glenna Whitley A clarinet player jazzes up Mardi Gras with “When the Saints Go Marching In” on one of the floats in the Venus parade. By MICHELLE SCUDDER Mardi Gras was fun for some, but a lot of hard work for a few Texas A&M organizations who'went to the celebration. The Corps of Cadets came out in mass to enjoy the festivities, but mainly worked to win awards in drill competition. The Ross Volunteers, Women’s Drill Team, and Fish Drill Team all participated in Mardi Gras parades and activities. “We had a good time at Mardi Gras,” said John Stine, Fish Drill Team commander. “We had a yell practice at Pat O’Briens, and col lected beads and coins thrown from the parade floats. It was pretty fun.” The Fish Drill Te£»m placed first in the Tulane Invitational Drill Meet held this last weekend. Drill team adviser Leonard Gulig Corps joins the festivities said he thinks their performance may help the group regain the state championship. The team had the title from 1971 to 1976. The first of a three-meet competition for the state title will be held at the University of Texas on March 4. The Ross Volunteers, also made their mark on the Mardi Gras scene by making their 27th consecutive appearance as the lead unit in the Rex Parade. RV commander Bill Rademacher said Mardi Gras wasn’t as wild as last year. “The general concensus in New Orleans that this was one of the least crazy Mardi Gras in a long time,” Rademacher said. “It seemed to be due to the cold weather and the previous Super Bowl.” However, Susan Graesser, com mander of the women’s drill team. “A lot of French culture can be learned in New Orleans,” Graesser said. “We got to meet a lot of people and enjoy them. And we saw a lot of Aggies, there, too.” The Women’s Drill team marched in the Krewe of Jupiter parade, and participated in the Tulane Invitational Drill Meet on a noncompetitive status. They were graded on inspection and exhibition drill formation. The defending Texas champion women’s team will also compete for the state cham pionship in March. The U.S.S. Francis Marion, a 4roop transport currently docked at New Orleans, served as hotel to all three organizations while they were there.