kindly accepted the ring and thanked his students, Sophie Roberts and Jacqueline Gutierrez, over roaring applause.
It was 34 years ago when Arnold LeUnes lost his original Aggie Ring to a house fire caused by a gas unit in the ceiling. His six children and wife, Judy, are his most important concern, so he had
“It’s exciting; I haven’t had a ring for 34 or 35 years,” LeUnes said.
Roberts said although LeUnes is a reserved man by nature, she could tell he was pleased with the surprise reveal.
“He’s kind of quiet,” Roberts said. “I think he is very happy … I feel like getting it replaced by students who love and adore you is more special than when he probably got it the first time.”
One table over from the LeUnes family, a group of students was finishing their meals at the time of the ring reveal. Robert Eichhorn, business administration sophomore, and Emma Wiegand, health junior, were both emotionally affected by the surprise.
Wiegand shared these sentiments. She said the weekend had been filled with overwhelming Aggie spirit from Friday’s Muster Ceremony and the Aggie Ring reveal she witnessed.
“I just think it’s a beautiful thing that obvious- ly he made such an impact on these two students’ lives that they would go out of their way to raise the funds to replace that Aggie Ring,” Wiegand said. “They said that he gave 51 years of service to Texas A&M and I just think that’s amazing. It’s just something that you would ever see hap- pen anywhere else, and that’s just a part of the reason that makes Texas A&M so special.”
To plan the reveal, Roberts reached out to LeUnes’ wife, Judy. She gave Roberts a zip tie to measure his ring size, which she then took to James Avery for an estimate. They had originally planned to give him the ring in December, but after medical complications in the family, the two decided on his birthday celebration.
“Sophie called, and I didn’t know her, and she said, ‘We want to raise money, is this okay?’” Judy LeUnes said. “What I think is so wonderful, to them, that was the greatest compliment that they could give him — an Aggie Ring that he had lost, because they cared so much about him.”
Judy said it was touching to see the impor- tance of the Aggie family come to life during this experience.
“For that to be that important to these kids, really touched me,” Judy LeUnes said. “Once an Aggie, always an Aggie. I’m just real excited; now he’ll probably have the shiniest Class of ‘60 Aggie Ring ever.”
After LeUnes’ 51 years of teaching at the uni- versity, Gutierrez said it felt like giving him a ring was the right thing to do.
“It really was the Aggie responsibility — just to pay for all the years of service he has given our campus,” Gutierrez said.
LeUnes’ large family knew about the surprise and worked to keep the secret until the reveal. His son, Chay LeUnes, traveled from Cypress and was glad to see his Dad receive his Aggie Ring.
Over the years of being a professor, LeUnes has created a memoir of the students who have impacted his life.
“The kids have been wonderful,” LeUnes said. “I’ve written a 1,000- page memoir about my years at A&M and I have a tribute of 1,000 stu- dents from 1966 to today, who I consider huge parts of my life … You could not be treated better by the students than I have been.”