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HomeMy WebLinkAboutVolunteerism a full-time jobVolunteerism. afull-time job Rodriguez devoted to helping others By THOMAS TASCHINGER Staff Writer If Pete Rodriguez had a dollar for every hour of volunteer work he devoted to helping people in Bryan-College Station, he might be a rich man. But he'd have no time to spend his money. Rodriguez, the operations manager for the chemistry department at Texas A&M University. has served with so many civic and charitable organizations he can't remember them all. "Let's see if I can find a list of them here," Rodriguez said modestly as he rummaged through his small, -cluttered office in the university's Chemistry Building. "Some are too insignificant to mention." The list includes the Bryan Bee's Recreational Club, which he helped establish as the forerunner of the Boy's Club of Brazos County. He now helps that club. Rodriguez also is a member of the Bryan Plann- ing Commission and the Bryan Community Development Citizen's Committee. Previously, he served on the Bryan Parks and Recreation Advisory Board, the Bryan Ways and Means Committee and the Bryan Referral Council. Rodriguez also has worked for the Friends of the Boy Scouts of America, the March of Dimes, the United Fund, the Brazos County Juvenile Court, the Mental Health Advisory Board and the now- defunct YMCA Board of Directors. He is active in the Amigos of Bryan, a group dedicated to aiding Spanish-speaking firefighters who study at the university's firemen training school. \I/1....7 L...7 ..:ail "Because of my experience," Rodriguez said. "I think I can still contribute to this community. I like to follow through with organizations. I remember way back how things were and I want to change them. "I don't believe in handing out anything - that's the worst thing you can do to someone. I do think some people need help getting started, but they shouldn't get too dependent on outside aid." For his lifelong efforts to help others, Rodriguez has received such prestigious honors as the staff award for distinguished achievement from A&M's Association of Former Students, the national Medal of Honor from the Daughters of the American Revolution and the Bronze Key and Medallion from the Boy's Club. His determination to help others is reflective of his own life. His parents were not wealthy and Rodriguez never was able to go to college. In 1933, he worked as a bellhop at the old Aggieland Inn for $30 a month and meals. But over the next seven years, he was promoted to desk clerk and accountant. "Dr. Charles Hedges used to eat there," Rodriguez said of the former chairman of A&M's chemistry and chemical engineering department. "He said he'd hire me if I could learn something about chemistry." Rodriguez took up Hedges' offer and started as a laboratory stores and procurement officer with the university in 1940. After that, he said, "one thing led to another." Three years ago he was appointed operations manager, a position in which he is responsible for purchasing the department's equipment and sup- plies and managing a staff of 55 assistants. He and his wife, Frances, have raised two sons who have established careers - one as a high school teacher in Katy and the other as dean of engineering sciences at Kilgore College. Although Rodriguez believes in helping people regardless of race or background, he always has been especially concerned about hispanics. "Mexican-Americans need to get involved in the American way of doing things," he said. "If you don't want to be a follower all your life, you should prove that you're worthy of recognition and work hard to participate. "We have a silent majority of Mexican- Americans who, if something bad came up, would crush it like an insect, but otherwise they don't get involved and are satisfied with the status quo. "Some have low self-esteem and think they have w }Jlr,15yvM~n ulG1uJG1YGJ w a JrlVUP vi %,IUU. allcll 11 they hear a resounding speech, they could spend the rest of their life defending a belief instilled when they were young. I think you should be independent and use your head instead of letting someone use it for you." Rodriguez said he learned to use his own abilities during his childhood. "Once, when I was young and times were hard," he said, "I wanted to quit school and work to help my family. My dad wouldn't permit it. He said the greatest weapon against discrimination is educa- tion. He said if I had that, I'd make it in life. "I've never forgotten that. I tell kids that even if they finish school, they should keep reading and form their own opinions. If you follow that ap- proach, you're using the best way to get ahead."