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HomeMy WebLinkAboutCareer Articles Eagle Editorial Board Laurels To the College Station Noon Lions Club and the Post Oak Mall for splendid fireworks displays last weekend. To Tom Comstock, Bill Nash, Larry Smith, Alan Brown and Jerry Stuck, state champions in ham radio operating for the second year in a row. To Stage Center, for its annual melodrama running this weekend and next. A fun time for the community. To Peggy Calliham, director of the new College Station Community Center. 'To Jerry Windham and Leon Bard of Bryan, owner and strainer of Passem Lika Flash, winner of the Firecracker :Futurity horse race at Delta Downs last weekend. To Michelle Rosynek, sophomore at A&M Consolidated, winner of the 3,000 meter run in a national track meet in Spokane, Wash. She finished second in the 1,500 meter run. To William Alexander Engblom, Tanya Feltz, Tuyen Tran and Barbara Stroud, winners in the Brazos Civil Liberties Union student essay contest. To Teddy Sue Herron, an accounting student at Texas A&M, named Miss Cowgirl 10 in a local beauty contest. To Pete L. Rodriguez, new member of the Bryan Planning Commission. To Brazos County Court-at-Law Judge James A. Amis aJr., honored by the State Bar of Texas for half a century of xpracticing law. Calliham familiar with site of center a f By DAVID CRISP first four months of her Staff Writer 37 years, has been active Peggy Calliham, who in community affairs for took over last week as years. She has taught director of the College school at A&M Con- Station Community solidated Junior High Center, has a particular School and also was a interest in the building: home economics teacher she went to school there. in Snook. She attended A&M An A&M student now - Consolidated High completing a master's School about 20 years degree in public rela- Peggy Calliham ago when it was located tions, Calliham says she funds to pay for the at 1300 Jersey Street. takes a strong interest in A & M Consolidated Today, the Jersey working with the public choir trip to Vienna. Street building is a $1 and in improving the ci- "I'd like for this to be m i l i o n community ty's public image. not just another College center and the high She has done summer Station city building," school is on the FM 2818 work at the Information she said. "I'd like for bypass. and Hospitality Center people to feel like it's In returning to the of the Brazos Valley and their building to enjoy." former school site, is an intern with KAMU- The center includes six Calliham will be respon- T V' s F i f t e e n meeting rooms and an sible for booking con- Magazine." She also has auditorium that seats up ventions, club meetings, been involved with the 200 people. The most art shows and other College Station Jaycee- spectacular feature is events. Ettes, the March of curved wooden ceiling Calliham, who has liv- Dimes and the Choir above a gallery that cur- ed in the Bryan-College Props, the parent rently houses the Station area since the organization raising municipal art collection. Calliham likes building from scratch By MARGARET ANN ZIPP When Calliham was starting her "It was kind of nice to drive out Staff Writer year's graduate study at the universi- through the cotton fields to work, and Peggy Calliham is an innovator. ty in the summer of 1981, a new prog- then those kids were so happy to see "I guess, if you look at my past, I ram-called occupational investiga- me." kind of have a tendency to start new tion - opened up at A&M Junior The four years in Snook were not programs," says Call iham, the direc- High School. She was hired to head in her plan, Calliham says, but they for of the College Station Community it. turned out to be probably the best Center. "It was kind of a preparatory thing thing that ever happened to her. To take one (a program) that's for all eighth graders," she says, "to "I have to say," she says, "that I either not been done, or one that's get them ready for high school to took a faltering program and built it been faltering, and build it up to get them thinking in terms of direc- into, I think, a good program." something. tion." When Calliham began her tenure "I think it's a lot easier than fol- Led by Call iham, the young people as director of the College Station lowing someone who's done a inventoried some 15 different career Community Center, its role in local wonderful job to just take a job that clusters, assessing their own talents activities was still undefined. She nobody knows whether it can be done and skills and beginning to aim their says that when she was hired, City or not and see what you can do." academic efforts toward fields which Manager North Bardell told her that The center is the latest pioneering suited them. she would have to write her own job venture undertaken by the 40-year- It was an exhausting year, Calli- description. old Calliham, who has lived in Col- ham says. There were more than 300 "I have broadened it from what I lege Station since she was 4 months eighth graders enrolled in the school, would guess that they hired me for," old. Her curiosity about the renova- and before the 1981-82 school year Calliham says. "As community cen- tion of one of her old school buildings was over, she had taught every one of ter director, I could sit right here in led to her being offered the center them. She attended classes at Texas this building every day and just see directorship, shortly after she re- A'&M at night. that it's kept pleasant and clean and ceived a master's degree in educa- "I like kids," she says. "They managed for meetings and parties. tional administration from Texas know if you love them, and they "But it's also a base of operations A&M University in 1982. know if you don't. That was the thing to present the cit in a good light." It has been almost three years since I had going for me. I really loved the Calliham dropped by the former kids." school, which had become the Col- The first time that Calliham was lege Station Community Center, to called upon to accept a professional see what was going on. challenge was in 1977, when she "I found out the (director's) job joined the faculty of Snook High was open," she says, "and it sound- School. She became a teacher in a ed like an opportunity to do a lot of special home economics program de- the things I wanted to do, working signed to teach the students job skills. with people in this community." The program was designed for poten- In July 1982, Calliham became the tial drop-outs. center's first permanent director. She "The idea was to keep these kids in says the position gave her a chance to school," she says. "But if they did help strengthen the relationship be- drop out, they would have a skill. tween the City of College Station, "Something happed to me out which owns the facility, and the Col- there. It was absolutely the most un- lege Station Independent School Dis- glamorous situation. But somehow, trict, which had been her employer these kids needed me so badly, and it while she was studying at Texas was a difficult time in my life, be- A&M. cause I was going throe h a divorce. a i S M1 id'3A~Rtl9 oeeaoe6pBvooow `"f 1- o ege a ion Avg 5 25, 3YY ? %.ommunity ent 1300 JERSEY" x 1~Y~1_ ..2 v S Eagle photo by Dave McDertnand Peggy Calliham, College Station Community Center director Update COLLEGE STATION Pay Nor♦thgate ~a visit and tell 'em Peggy sent you All communities, in the name of progress, occasionally cause temporary disruptions and inconveniences for zens and businesses in order to improve the infrastructure. On a personal basis, most of us have experienced this type of interruption when we had to take time from our regular schedules to have some treatment or surgery we have been putting off for too long. Since the Northgate Business District is the oldest commercial area in College Station, it too has reached the time when some reconstructive surgery is needed. Ground was broken on the College Main reconstruction project on May 30. Tile section. of street between University and Church Street is targeted to open back up to traffic by Aug. 1. During this recon- struction, the businesses in the College Main section of Northgate have been especially inconvenienced and disrupted. Even though pedestrian access has remained open throughout the area, some of the regular patrons have been PEGGY CALLIHAM ~ ~ Spokeswoman ~.1 discouraged just by the sight of construc- tion. The city of College Station has tried to make this process as swift and painless as possible, but business has naturally waned temporarily due to the construc- tion. I visited with many of the merchants this week and we discussed their con- cerns and a couple of things about North ate that rha s the eneral ub- c might not know. First of all it is one of the few, if not the only, areas in College Station in which all of the businesses are owned and operated by local residents of our community. They are not sending their revenue to corporate offices in other cities or states. It stays right here in College Station and Brazos County. The area provides the _ sole means of livelihood- for 35-50 people. Secondly, four of the present busi- nesses have been there for at least 50 years: Holick's Bootmakers has been in business in Northgate since 1914; Loupot's Bookstore since 1934 and Northgate Barbershop and Aggieland Cleaners since 1935. In this day and time that is a real record. I can remember playing in and out of all these stores and up and down the side- walks of Northgate when I was a child. My daddy ran a bus station and taxi there back in the late 1940s. Even then it pro- vided almost everything a Texas A&M student needed. The city of College Station staff would like to encourage local residents to make a little extra effort to visit the Northgate merchants, let them tell you about the revitalization project and plans for the future, and give them a little help by patronizing their businesses. It is really not that hard to park if you know where to go. Take University Drive to Boyett Street, beside the old Campus Theatre (now Shadow Canyon) and then take a right on Patricia Street. G You can park free in the parking lot behind the Dixie Chicken and Duddley's Draw. In fact, if you are a new student in town it is still one of the few places you can take care of many of your personal needs. You can have your film developed at Campus Photo, your boots repaired at Holick's, take your cleaning over to Aggie Cleaner's, buy those school books at Loupot's, and have your hair cut at the Northgate Barber Shop. Oh yeah, and if you are into music, Northgate claims to be the CD capital of Bryan-College Station with Marooned I and Disc Go Round. Dead Lazlo's Coffee Pub (named from a Laverne and Shirley episode) has some great coffee and 'ea desserts, too. But I think they are closing Ra during July, so maybe you could stop by oja Sweet Eugene's, owned by the same peo- '10 ple, located just off of Kyle South. n~ There are other businesses that can al meet many of your personal needs, too. asol They include the Software Exchange, Sarge's Military Surplus, Lacey's Sterling a S and Silver, The Factory and Trade Winds ;ugi Bead Company. You might ask all of them about their T S "Construction Specials" and I think they will give you a great deal. Who knows, you may fmd the kind of local merchant and friend that gives you the type of per- sonal service you expect. Oh yeah, and tell them Peggy sent you. ■Peggy Calliham is College Station's spokeswoman. Register Now for Creative Classes in Self Improvement for girls, grades 3.12. Classes begin Oct. 2 Register Thursday 6-8 p.m. and Saturday 10 a.m.-1 p.m. in Sears Junior Bazaar 8 weeks of classes DISCOVERY I $15 DISCOVERY H $20 Price includes class, textbook and supplies Our Instructor Peggy Calliham " Mrs. Calliham is a gra- duate of A&M Consoli- dated High School. She r earned a degree in Home S Economics from Sam Houston State University. In October she will begin substitute teaching in Home Economics at Bryan High School. 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