In an interview for this month’s issue of Texas Monthly, Governor Rick Perry said that he though Bonfire would return to Texas A&M, and soon (maybe 2011 or 2010).
This has caused quite the firestorm. He is the governor, former student, former yell leader, future president (?) of the university after all.
Murano said while president that it was the responsibility of the Board of Regents.
Many have said that it would take a vast majority of the students taking the initiative to bring Bonfire back…..
I would bet that many students didn’t know they had a choice. Many have probably been told there is no way it could happen again.
The fact is that the Bonfire of old couldn’t happen again, certainly not the way it was. The university just couldn’t deal with a second tragedy, and the insurance (if it could be secured) would be astronomical).
The old Bonfire is gone. Forever. End of discussion.
BUT – what of a new Bonfire ? Given the choice of NO BONFIRE, or NEW BONFIRE, I think most everyone would vote for NEW BONFIRE.
Attention Aggies, THIS IS YOUR NEW BONFIRE.
1) Students Cut only
2) Camp out, have your activities out at the field, where your pots, do what you do, except.
3) Engineers, Contractors, CRANES build stack. Not students. Sorry, it just isn’t an option anymore.
4) Stack is fenced off for safety
5) Bonfire fee, everone pays, 100 a semester
6) Bonfire Endowed Scholarship. 12 are given. Parents of those fallen to be on the board for the scholarship.
7) First 12 minutes after Bonfire is lit, there shall be absolute silence – to remember the fallen…. 12 cannon shots, will end the 12 minutes of silence.
Here are the facts. The vast majority of ags want Bonfire. The vast majority of Aggies didn’t help cut it, stack it, load it or have anything to do with it until the night before the texas game. For a “student run” activity, very few students actually participated or gave a rip about it other than the day before the game.
While I appreciated the effort of those that cut the logs and built the stack, I don’t really care WHO did the work, just as long as there was a huge fire festivus the day before the texas game, and I would bet that most Aggies would feel the same. There cannot be students on stack ever again. The alternative is no Bonfire. Choose wisely.
It is the best tradition we had. It needs to come back. It just can’t be the same as it was.
This has caused quite the firestorm. He is the governor, former student, former yell leader, future president (?) of the university after all.
Murano said while president that it was the responsibility of the Board of Regents.
Many have said that it would take a vast majority of the students taking the initiative to bring Bonfire back…..
I would bet that many students didn’t know they had a choice. Many have probably been told there is no way it could happen again.
The fact is that the Bonfire of old couldn’t happen again, certainly not the way it was. The university just couldn’t deal with a second tragedy, and the insurance (if it could be secured) would be astronomical).
The old Bonfire is gone. Forever. End of discussion.
BUT – what of a new Bonfire ? Given the choice of NO BONFIRE, or NEW BONFIRE, I think most everyone would vote for NEW BONFIRE.
Attention Aggies, THIS IS YOUR NEW BONFIRE.
1) Students Cut only
2) Camp out, have your activities out at the field, where your pots, do what you do, except.
3) Engineers, Contractors, CRANES build stack. Not students. Sorry, it just isn’t an option anymore.
4) Stack is fenced off for safety
5) Bonfire fee, everone pays, 100 a semester
6) Bonfire Endowed Scholarship. 12 are given. Parents of those fallen to be on the board for the scholarship.
7) First 12 minutes after Bonfire is lit, there shall be absolute silence – to remember the fallen…. 12 cannon shots, will end the 12 minutes of silence.
Here are the facts. The vast majority of ags want Bonfire. The vast majority of Aggies didn’t help cut it, stack it, load it or have anything to do with it until the night before the texas game. For a “student run” activity, very few students actually participated or gave a rip about it other than the day before the game.
While I appreciated the effort of those that cut the logs and built the stack, I don’t really care WHO did the work, just as long as there was a huge fire festivus the day before the texas game, and I would bet that most Aggies would feel the same. There cannot be students on stack ever again. The alternative is no Bonfire. Choose wisely.
It is the best tradition we had. It needs to come back. It just can’t be the same as it was.