International week features foreign culture and cuisine By Jay Blinderman Stajf Writer The Memorial Student Center will be occupied by ar mies of international students next week but the takeover will be temporary and friendly. March 3 through 7 will mark a short but busy International Week at Texas A&M, a pro gram sponsored by the Interna tional Student Association. It will include cultural displays, a food fair, a fashion show and a talent show. ISA assistant advisor Jim Lane says on Mar. 3-4, cultural exhibits will be displayed throughout the MSC. “That’s when we (ISA) take over the MSC for two days,” Lane says. After the cultural exhibits, there will be a one-day break before the evening presenta tions of fashion and talent. Thirty ISA clubs will participate in the cultural exhibit segment of international week, Lane says, doing their best to show the community a part of their culture, displayed within a 3 foot by 6 foot space in the halls of the MSC. A show featuring talents and fashions from differ ent lands caps off the ac tivities of International Week. The show begins at 8 p.m. in Rudder Audito rium on Friday, March 7. «rri 1 hey (the clubs) have to be pretty 7 imaginative to come up with something in that small an area, Lane says. "If your country 7 doesn't have anything extravagant, you'll have travel posters as the main part of your display.” The cultural displays have been limited in size so they can fit in the smallest hallway in the MSC. The type of construc tion is also limited and has to be approved by the ISA accord ing to University limitations. In a past International Week, one country 7 built small huts and populated their area with mock street vendors, Lane says. The display was good, but ex hibits that extravagant take up too much room and make it hard to fit all the exhibits in the MSC. In addition to the cultural ex hibits, students can buy tickets to literally get a taste of other countries. The food fair, the most popu lar event during International Week, will start Wednesday, March 5 at 6 p.m. This year the entire second floor of the MSC wall be used to serve food from more than 20 countries. Only 1,200 tickets are available this year as the result of overcrowd ing at last year’s gourmet affair. "Last year we sold as many tickets as we could,” Lane says. “But there were too many peo ple to comfortablv mingle about the different tables.'’ Admission will be $6 and en titles the curious to sample 10 international dishes. “After vou get 10 different countries on your plate, that will be all you can handle," Lane says. The only problem at the food fair will be with people who mix too manv different kinds of foods. “Don’t mix too many sweets with too many sours,” Lane says. International Week concludes with a fashion show and a tal ent show. Although both events occur on the same evening in Rudder Auditorium, they have separate coordinators and dif ferent participants, says fashion show chairman Sana Hamade. Hamade, who is a graduate stu dent in biological engineering, has participated in Interna tional Week for three years. Although the theme for the weeks’ events is “It’s a Small World After All,” the theme for the fashion show is set for “Masquerade Ball” in honor of the United Nations 40th anni versary. Fashions from twenty-five countries worn by more than 100 international students and their children, will be shown, Hamade says. Two student em cees wall tell the audience about the clothes being worn. The idea of the show, like that of the entire week, is to ex pose people to the history, continued on p.ll ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■I H