An Uncommon Aggie Experience
Grogin was born in Bryan in 1926. His father, Joel Groginsky, attended Texas A&M for a short time, while his uncles, Philip ’14 and Ross Groginsky ’22, were both graduates. The Groginsky family left Bryan in 1935, moved to Houston and dropped the “-sky” from their surname. There, Grogin became friends with Melvin Maltz ’47. The two attended Texas A&M together and remain best friends to this day.
The Aggieland experience for the Class of 1947 was a bit surreal. The 16-year-old Grogin and fellow freshmen lived on a campus that had been transformed by the U.S. War Department into a military training base.
“The federal government nationalized Texas A&M in 1943,” Grogin explained. “They allowed the university to conduct classes for freshmen, sophomores and some juniors, but sent all the seniors to Officer Candidate School and most of the juniors straight into the military as privates. They took over the entire south campus and built their own barracks there.”
The remaining 2,200 underclassmen, Grogin said, were relegated to the northside dorms with meals in the Sbisa basement, while several thousand military personnel lived on the rest of campus and dined in Duncan and Sbisa.