Bonfire 10 years on...
Posted: Fri Nov 13, 2009 3:48 am
10 years ago the ATM family lost 12 of their members. Thoughts and prayers to those who lost their friends and family.
On a state level we saw what the rest of the country experienced two years later on 9/11. Everyone felt for the Aggies and reached out in any way they could. My wife still talks about the halftime show at the Texas game when the Texas band played amazing grace and then Taps. Not a dry eye in the house in her words and the start of her acceptance that Texas and Longhorns really aren't evil.
Recently the Gov of the State of Texas came out and said he expects Bonfire to be back on campus by 2011 and possibly 2010. Texas Monthly also has a story on Bonfire this month which is told completely by those involved in Stack. It is a good read and plays it pretty much right down the middle. It talks of the benefits the students gained and the first hand leadership skills practiced. It also talks about the team building and how many felt that cut and stack really got them involved as a part of the ATM family.
Further it also presents the side that not all was positive, again from those there on the night of the collapse. They discuss how it started out as being about football thru the 60's and then how it changed post 60. The article talks about the teepee style used prior to going to the wedding cake design. It lays out the decisions the red and brown pots made to remove certain elements that over the years made the design less sound. It also touches on alcohol use and other hazing type activities that made it such a dangerous environment.
It finishes by making the case for a against the return of Bonfire to campus. Excellent points made both ways. One opinion from a former Red Pot is very telling how the feeling has changed from those who were involved from the mid 80s on felt. He said the only reason to burn it is because that is the easiest way to remove it so they can build it again next year, and really has nothing to do with football or the Texas game.
My opinion doesn't matter but here on the net I get to offer it. I don't see Bonfire back on campus in any way that resembled the student lead one from a decade ago. Given the money the school has paid out, future insurance policies are going to be excessive. And what with the Athletic Dept having to borrow money from the University's General Fund, I don't see a multi million dollar expense being approved for Bonfire. My wife at one time wanted it back, but now she is really neutral. She would attend if it returned, but she doesn't think it is worth any student's life.
Anyway my point in all of this was to remember the 12 (that number means a lot around ATM)
On a state level we saw what the rest of the country experienced two years later on 9/11. Everyone felt for the Aggies and reached out in any way they could. My wife still talks about the halftime show at the Texas game when the Texas band played amazing grace and then Taps. Not a dry eye in the house in her words and the start of her acceptance that Texas and Longhorns really aren't evil.
Recently the Gov of the State of Texas came out and said he expects Bonfire to be back on campus by 2011 and possibly 2010. Texas Monthly also has a story on Bonfire this month which is told completely by those involved in Stack. It is a good read and plays it pretty much right down the middle. It talks of the benefits the students gained and the first hand leadership skills practiced. It also talks about the team building and how many felt that cut and stack really got them involved as a part of the ATM family.
Further it also presents the side that not all was positive, again from those there on the night of the collapse. They discuss how it started out as being about football thru the 60's and then how it changed post 60. The article talks about the teepee style used prior to going to the wedding cake design. It lays out the decisions the red and brown pots made to remove certain elements that over the years made the design less sound. It also touches on alcohol use and other hazing type activities that made it such a dangerous environment.
It finishes by making the case for a against the return of Bonfire to campus. Excellent points made both ways. One opinion from a former Red Pot is very telling how the feeling has changed from those who were involved from the mid 80s on felt. He said the only reason to burn it is because that is the easiest way to remove it so they can build it again next year, and really has nothing to do with football or the Texas game.
My opinion doesn't matter but here on the net I get to offer it. I don't see Bonfire back on campus in any way that resembled the student lead one from a decade ago. Given the money the school has paid out, future insurance policies are going to be excessive. And what with the Athletic Dept having to borrow money from the University's General Fund, I don't see a multi million dollar expense being approved for Bonfire. My wife at one time wanted it back, but now she is really neutral. She would attend if it returned, but she doesn't think it is worth any student's life.
Anyway my point in all of this was to remember the 12 (that number means a lot around ATM)