Raford .... Some answers to your questions:
"What is scaring the horse?" That is typical of the campusology questions we had to contend with back in the day. These came mainly as "cush questions" at meal time to qualify for dessert. And a person had to be familiar with every square inch of the campus to answer them consistently. In addition to knowing state and national leadership ... and Corps officers ... Fish were expected to know admin and faculty leaders. Plus all inscriptions on buildings such as the dozen name around the top of Cushing Library, the Coach Charley Moran plaque at Kyle Field and Sully's monument, of course. How many flags around Kyle Field?, how many trees around Simpson Drill Field?, where is the West Gate Memorial? and who were they dedicated to. And chicken questions like "how many bricks in the smokestack" and "where is the nickle."
What's scaring the horse? --- The answer is a rattlesnake and that is on one of the three weather vanes on top of the old stallion barn. Don't know where the old stallion barn is? In 1950 the college horse pasture was converted to a 9-hole golf course. The stallion stable was located across the street from the club house, near the intersection of Lubbock St and Bizzell St ... (between the Commons Dorm and Teague Research Center.) The stable was converted to offices in about '52 and is still in use today (look at the building today and you will immediately recognize it as a converted stable.)
(Who scored the first A&M touchdown at Memorial Stadium?, Where is Prexy's Moon?) Had enough?
Hazing? I spent some miserable hours during the Fish year but not anything I would call hazing. We complained to no end about the "abuse" but that was because we did not understand what was taking place. Prime example and this happened several times during the year: Some misconduct usually involving an upperclassman or his room would occur. The Fish would be turned out and exposed to a long harrange ending with "now if you know who did this dastardly deed you can save yourselves a lot of trouble by turning the name of the guilty party over to the First Sergeant ... then the group punishment would start. the first couple of days would be daylight CQ (all time when not in class), then it would progress to include Class A winter uniforms all day for a few days, the to include wearing P-pots and ponchos with the Class As, loss of all privileges and passes, and if no one confessed or pointed out the culprit it would progress to carrying a suitcase full of bricks when going to and from classes, etc. This would go on for a couple of weeks or so with ever increasing "punishment." Then the subject would suddenly be dropped. The lesson? --- Fish never rat on their Fish Buddies ... Period. (And if the Fish held together and endured the worst, the Fish were elated at their "victory." I know it sounds sort of dumb now but it was important to us at the time. (It also explains why 300 of my Fish Buddies showed up at our 50th Reunion.)
Another point that 3GA made about her father working as a vendor at Kyle Field in the 30s.
Let me tell you how this worked. Bryan Coca Cola set up a station in the Horse Shoe at Kyle Field. Students who wanted to sell Cokes at the game would buy cases of 8-oz bottles of Cokes in the old wooden cases. We would pay something like $2.40 for a case plus 2 cents deposit on the bottles. They would give us a stack of 8-oz cups. We would carry the cases to a likely ramp and go upward in the stands until we sold out. The procedure was someone down a row would signal how many Cokes he needed. The vendor would pop the top on the bottle, pour the Coke into a cup and pass the cups down the row. Then the folks in the row would pass the payment back up the row to the vendor, and if change was involved this would be passed back down (we sold the Cokes for 25 cents.) I teamed up with a buddy and we would each buy two cases, stack them at the bottom of a ramp then take turns selling in the stands or guarding the stash. It was hard, hot work but the payoff was pretty good if one hustled. We could each sell 10-15 cases before we gave out completely.
I also sold corsages before the games. I would order 100 at $1.50 each and have them delivered to Shaeffer's Book Store. then I would stand in the middle of the street and hawk them. The selling price varied according to the size car stopping ... and whether it was Ags or their parents. I just "charged" the ticket when I received the order and paid the ticket off with cash after I sold out. that was a nice payout provided it did not rain.
Pocket money was hard to come by in those days and most fellows had some sort of job or gimmick for turning a few bucks. I preferred working out my own ventures rather than working for some department. (The gig I really coveted was selling brooms and mops in the Corps Dorms during the first week of school because no one showed up the first week with brooms and mops ... but some other guys had that locked up solid!) Good times.
[This message has been edited by fossil_ag (edited 6/20/2006 11:44p).]
"What is scaring the horse?" That is typical of the campusology questions we had to contend with back in the day. These came mainly as "cush questions" at meal time to qualify for dessert. And a person had to be familiar with every square inch of the campus to answer them consistently. In addition to knowing state and national leadership ... and Corps officers ... Fish were expected to know admin and faculty leaders. Plus all inscriptions on buildings such as the dozen name around the top of Cushing Library, the Coach Charley Moran plaque at Kyle Field and Sully's monument, of course. How many flags around Kyle Field?, how many trees around Simpson Drill Field?, where is the West Gate Memorial? and who were they dedicated to. And chicken questions like "how many bricks in the smokestack" and "where is the nickle."
What's scaring the horse? --- The answer is a rattlesnake and that is on one of the three weather vanes on top of the old stallion barn. Don't know where the old stallion barn is? In 1950 the college horse pasture was converted to a 9-hole golf course. The stallion stable was located across the street from the club house, near the intersection of Lubbock St and Bizzell St ... (between the Commons Dorm and Teague Research Center.) The stable was converted to offices in about '52 and is still in use today (look at the building today and you will immediately recognize it as a converted stable.)
(Who scored the first A&M touchdown at Memorial Stadium?, Where is Prexy's Moon?) Had enough?
Hazing? I spent some miserable hours during the Fish year but not anything I would call hazing. We complained to no end about the "abuse" but that was because we did not understand what was taking place. Prime example and this happened several times during the year: Some misconduct usually involving an upperclassman or his room would occur. The Fish would be turned out and exposed to a long harrange ending with "now if you know who did this dastardly deed you can save yourselves a lot of trouble by turning the name of the guilty party over to the First Sergeant ... then the group punishment would start. the first couple of days would be daylight CQ (all time when not in class), then it would progress to include Class A winter uniforms all day for a few days, the to include wearing P-pots and ponchos with the Class As, loss of all privileges and passes, and if no one confessed or pointed out the culprit it would progress to carrying a suitcase full of bricks when going to and from classes, etc. This would go on for a couple of weeks or so with ever increasing "punishment." Then the subject would suddenly be dropped. The lesson? --- Fish never rat on their Fish Buddies ... Period. (And if the Fish held together and endured the worst, the Fish were elated at their "victory." I know it sounds sort of dumb now but it was important to us at the time. (It also explains why 300 of my Fish Buddies showed up at our 50th Reunion.)
Another point that 3GA made about her father working as a vendor at Kyle Field in the 30s.
Let me tell you how this worked. Bryan Coca Cola set up a station in the Horse Shoe at Kyle Field. Students who wanted to sell Cokes at the game would buy cases of 8-oz bottles of Cokes in the old wooden cases. We would pay something like $2.40 for a case plus 2 cents deposit on the bottles. They would give us a stack of 8-oz cups. We would carry the cases to a likely ramp and go upward in the stands until we sold out. The procedure was someone down a row would signal how many Cokes he needed. The vendor would pop the top on the bottle, pour the Coke into a cup and pass the cups down the row. Then the folks in the row would pass the payment back up the row to the vendor, and if change was involved this would be passed back down (we sold the Cokes for 25 cents.) I teamed up with a buddy and we would each buy two cases, stack them at the bottom of a ramp then take turns selling in the stands or guarding the stash. It was hard, hot work but the payoff was pretty good if one hustled. We could each sell 10-15 cases before we gave out completely.
I also sold corsages before the games. I would order 100 at $1.50 each and have them delivered to Shaeffer's Book Store. then I would stand in the middle of the street and hawk them. The selling price varied according to the size car stopping ... and whether it was Ags or their parents. I just "charged" the ticket when I received the order and paid the ticket off with cash after I sold out. that was a nice payout provided it did not rain.
Pocket money was hard to come by in those days and most fellows had some sort of job or gimmick for turning a few bucks. I preferred working out my own ventures rather than working for some department. (The gig I really coveted was selling brooms and mops in the Corps Dorms during the first week of school because no one showed up the first week with brooms and mops ... but some other guys had that locked up solid!) Good times.
[This message has been edited by fossil_ag (edited 6/20/2006 11:44p).]