V 13^ Senior Yell Leader GIB SEARIGHT Gib Searight, a junior agro nomy major from Amarillo, is run ning for senior yell leader. Searight says he wants to re solve the growing differences be tween students. “As A&M grows it gets tougher to channel everyone’s enthusiasm to a positive direction,” he said. “It’s important that both non-reg s and c.t. s realize that we re all pulling for the same team.” “We have a great women’s program here and they deserve more attention than what they are getting,” he said. Searight says he would control crowds by becoming involved faster. “I would start the yells faster, ” he said. “This way it would be giv ing the fans more outlets and let them express themselves through yells, i.e. ‘The Horse Laugh’ or ‘Sit Down, Bus Driver.’” “The best way to instill tradition is to be a fired-up example,” he said, “and it will be my endeavor to be just that. Senior Yell Leader SARAH FINDLAY Sarah Findlay, a junior journal ism major from Lindale, says she is running for yell leader to ex press her support and spirit for Texas A&M. She says her enthusiasm, out going personality and ability to work with people qualify her for the position. Findlay says she will try to get off-campus Aggies more involved. “I will serve as a representative for off-campus Aggies’ school spir it,” she said. “I will help to drum up off-campus Aggies’ A&M spirit and involvement so all students could walk to the same beat.” She will encourage a personal relationship between students and yell leaders so the two groups would have more respect for each other, Findlay says. As for traditions, she says, “If a large number of students are straying from Aggie traditions, then the traditions need to be adapted to fit the new mode of thinking — without pulling away from the true Aggie traditions,” she said. Jr. and Sr. Y» Yell leaders hi to control Agg By CINDY GEE can Battalion Staff ^ The yell leaders — five men given the power to unc control the spirited shouts of thousands of Aggie and fans. tion But that power hasn’t always been bestowed tun upon yell leaders by a majority vote of the student mo 1 body. out Mark Outlaw, head yell leader, said yell lead- C ers originated before the turn of the century when leac cadets’ dates for football games had to be im- han ported from other schools. Upperclassmen met saic the girls at the train depot, and got dates before reft the freshmen did. Thus, there usually weren’t enough dates for gro all the freshmen. During halftime, trainers for the the team would get the freshmen to sing songs, and the do yells and skits to entertain the upperclassmen l and their dates. lea< Outlaw said the trainers all wore white, and ers that’s how the tradition of an all-white uniform of t started. However, another source had a different tea: idea on how the uniform originated. He said the sho freshmen, who then wore gray uniforms, would sch take off their coats so their white undershirts would distinguish them from the crowd. put Except for three men, the yell leaders have “Bi always been from the Corps. Outlaw said that the within the Corps, sophomores and juniors will tha nominate three or four juniors and four or five I seniors that they want to run for yell leader. It’s a but way of narrowing it down and assuring the Corps fish Senior Yell Leader ARTIE ANDERSON Artie Anderson, a junior recrea tion and parks major from Alta Loma, says he is running for yell leader because he feels civilian students need to be represented as well as members of the Corps of Cadets. Anderson says he feels Corps and civilian students need more equal representation. “We each have our own styles of doing things but we need to direct all of our energies to back ing the Aggies as best as possible,” he said. Anderson cited the recent lack of crowd control as a lack of re spect for the yell leaders by the predominantly civilian student body, since they did not elect them. Of traditions, Anderson says the attitude has not changed, but students are forming an attitude favoring a different lifestyle not based on the Corps. “These students will accept certain old traditions that they love and respect, but they will also start some of their own,” he said. Senior Yell Leader NORRIS HODGIN Norris Hodgin, a junior animal science major from Tilden, is run ning for senior yell leader. Hodgin says he would like to represent Texas A&M and its tra ditions. He cites leadership and his ability tq communicate with people as qualifications for the position. Hodgin says, “If the attitude of the student body was moving away from the traditions, I would use the available media and yell practices to bring about this reali zation and inform the students how vital traditions are at A&M. ” “Hopefully if the students are informed of what being an Aggie is all about, then they will realize that a large part of the role is con ducting oneself in a manner that upholds the meaning of the word ‘Aggie’,” he said. “This would in clude being a sportsman regard less of the outcome of the event. ” Rick Vogel, a junior chemical engineering major from College Station, says he loves Aggie spirit and is fulfilling a life-long dream by running for yell leader. Vogel is a member of the Corps of Cadets and the Singing Cadets. He says he has represented Texas A&M in the past and has what it takes to be an Aggie and a yell leader. Yell leaders are faced with the task of maintaining the Aggie’s dis tinctive identity and spirit as the University grows, Vogel says. He says he would do this by educating students in Aggie tradi tions. “As a yell leader, I would attempt to instiB in every student the pride that Aggies have for their school and its traditions,” Vogel said. Mike Thatcher, a junior agri cultural economics major from Spring, is running for senior yell leader. Thatcher was a junior yell leader for 1980-81. Thatcher feels his position as a junior yell leader and status as a member of the Ross Volunteers are qualifications for the role of senior yell leader. Thatcher says a more thorough understanding of traditions and a unified student body will allow these traditions to remain an im portant part of the University without interfering with the changing times. Thatcher feels crowd control must involve cooperation be tween the crowd and the yell leader. “I feel the answer to the prob lem of crowd control is to remind the student body that it should take it partially upon itself to maintain a controlled atmos phere,” he said. “The yell leaders can only do what the crowd allows them to do.” John Nisbet, a junior marketing major from Corpus Christi, is run ning for senior yell leader. Nisbet says he would like to see greater exposure of Aggie tradi tions presented to incoming freshmen. “The pride of being an Aggie can never be preached enough,” he said. Nisbet says he would also like to see the grode taken out of the role of yell leader and more spirit and excitement instilled in the Twelfth Man. “Yell leaders should be leaders not only at sporting events, but in every facet of Texas A&M,” he said. Nisbet says yell leaders should “command the respect of the Twelfth Man and initiate the leadership needed to control the rowdiness of the crowd.” Nisbet is a first sergeant of Company F-2 in the Corps of Cadets and has worked with Young Life. Kent Toppert, ter science major stown, Ill., says h< of the student bo< ing away from A but there is a lowe ness of traditions. “I would establ program where learn the reasons l tions, so they them,” he said. If elected, T would take a moi teaching the Twe the Aggie traditioi would make hims tive to suggestion dent body. “J feel that if d understands the Texas A&M, a bel wottld develop bel and myself as a j said. As a member < Corps, Toppert s veloped leaders Page 6 — Vofer s Guide