Aggie lawyers have stepped forward to help with the citations. Has any thought been given to recruiting former-student public relations professionals to put together a positive publicity campaign for next year?
It seems as though you have lots of strengths that remain unexploited. One of them is your professional engineer, who goes by the handle WillD on this forum. It seems as if he has put together a design that negates the danger of a 1999 style collapse. However, your members are always explaining the concept of all logs touching the ground and the stability enhancement devices like the "Whiddle Sticks."
The average citizen who saw pictures of this year's Bonfire probably could not distinguish it from the multi-tier stacks of old.
Could this become the subject of a publicity campaign so that writers like John Lopez don't have to dig out the information by themselves? Would WillD be willing to conduct a dog-and-pony show for the media? Perhaps somebody could build a cut-away model.
Does Will want to stay in the background for professional reasons, or is it part of the Bonfire culture to deemphasize the contributions of former students and other consultants so as not to detract from the student-run nature of the project? Maybe it's time to bring people like him out into the open.
Perhaps it would be better in the long run if the general public doesn't think that such a complex project is being built by undergraduates without expert help.
Another positive enhancement seems to be improved discipline vis-à-vis alcohol and horseplay. When my family visited Hot Rod Hill Saturday night, in the company of another family with their children, we saw nothing that detracted from a wholesome environment. That's quite a change from the Aggie Bonfire of old, where so many people in the crowd were intoxicated.
Events regarding the burn ban are rather unfortunate. They tend to reinforce old stereotypes about bonfire being built by a bunch of rule breakers.
As I see it, there's a lot more discipline in the new ASB than in the 1990s version of Bonfire that used to burn on campus.
If you agree, is there some organized way we can get the news of these improvements out to the general public? The information is available if somebody digs for it, but a public relations professional would know how to run a proper campaign.
It seems as though you have lots of strengths that remain unexploited. One of them is your professional engineer, who goes by the handle WillD on this forum. It seems as if he has put together a design that negates the danger of a 1999 style collapse. However, your members are always explaining the concept of all logs touching the ground and the stability enhancement devices like the "Whiddle Sticks."
The average citizen who saw pictures of this year's Bonfire probably could not distinguish it from the multi-tier stacks of old.
Could this become the subject of a publicity campaign so that writers like John Lopez don't have to dig out the information by themselves? Would WillD be willing to conduct a dog-and-pony show for the media? Perhaps somebody could build a cut-away model.
Does Will want to stay in the background for professional reasons, or is it part of the Bonfire culture to deemphasize the contributions of former students and other consultants so as not to detract from the student-run nature of the project? Maybe it's time to bring people like him out into the open.
Perhaps it would be better in the long run if the general public doesn't think that such a complex project is being built by undergraduates without expert help.
Another positive enhancement seems to be improved discipline vis-à-vis alcohol and horseplay. When my family visited Hot Rod Hill Saturday night, in the company of another family with their children, we saw nothing that detracted from a wholesome environment. That's quite a change from the Aggie Bonfire of old, where so many people in the crowd were intoxicated.
Events regarding the burn ban are rather unfortunate. They tend to reinforce old stereotypes about bonfire being built by a bunch of rule breakers.
As I see it, there's a lot more discipline in the new ASB than in the 1990s version of Bonfire that used to burn on campus.
If you agree, is there some organized way we can get the news of these improvements out to the general public? The information is available if somebody digs for it, but a public relations professional would know how to run a proper campaign.