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MSC Closed House

By: Ian McPhail

Issue date: 1/26/09 Section: Opinion
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Media Credit: Kelli Jasso
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The upcoming closing of the Memorial Student Center has induced a sort of panic in Texas A&M students equivalent only with the upcoming 2012 Mayan apocalypse or this year's loss to Baylor. "It is going be hard to replace a building as important to students as the MSC. They are taking away more than just a building, and depriving students of one of the best ways for freshman to meet each other." said Rick Creecy, a classics major and the former historian of Aggies for Life.The impending disappearance of the MSC as a study haven, social gathering and shopping center seems a grim enough reason for the gnashing of teeth, but what is overlooked is the impact the renovations will have on important University functions, such as the semi-annual MSC Open House.

With more than 200 University-recognized groups able to showcase their finer aspects at this club fair, the event already requires some spillover into G. Rollie White. Official plans for the relocation of the Open House have neither been finalized nor released, and an Open House representative declined to comment on any plans. Pondering how the MSC Open House will exist without the MSC may seem unimaginable; however, if students pause long enough to take a deep breath, they will see several remaining viable options for the Open House that can suffice for the three years the MSC will be under repair.

A large amount of room is necessary for the relocation of Open House. At the Blocker building, there appears to be more than enough classrooms and hallways to hold the vast number of groups who wish to recruit new members. However, there may be a need for an additional building to contain spillover, and there is no free parking.

Reed Arena corrects a few of these flaws with a larger floor plan, more than enough hallway space and copious parking spaces nearby. Reed was also built with the obvious advantage of being specifically designed to contain large numbers of people, many coming from off campus.

A more desperate option would be holding the Open House in the great outdoors at one of the University's many fields. Duncan Field would easily provide enough room for everyone with easy organization. The danger exists in a reliance on the elements. January weather in College Station varies from day to day, and a pleasant afternoon outside could quickly be ruined by freezing drizzle. Holding the Fall Open House outside could result in an rash of heat strokes. This should remain a last-ditch option, though, only to be used if Reed Arena and Blocker are unavailable.
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