Word: m
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...very good at the moment, British radio. I'm seriously thinking that we could start a pirate radio station that's going to play across the board, from punk to techno to dub, but just underground music, because most stations in the U.K., they have advertising, so they have to find a mainstream audience, to sell adverts. [BBC] Radio One, evening-time, is bearable... you know John Peel? He's probably the most famous radio DJ in the U.K. He's always interesting, but I don't really listen to the radio or watch...
...would like to thank J. Mitchell Little for his article (Sports, Nov. 30) concerning Bonfire and Texas A&M University. It is very easy to sit back and criticize another university for traditions, events and behaviors without experiencing or understanding something one feels to be so different from one's own little world...
Little has pointed out something that is at the heart of A&M: The Aggie Family is very important. Former students, parents, siblings and friends are all part of this wonderful, supportive, cohesive group. Bonfire isn't about a pep rally or game. It is an event that builds character as well as comraderie. Aggies will, indeed, give their all for one another. Thank you for your positive article...
Kristen E. Meyer's "Bonfire Tradition Not Worth the Cost" (Opinion, Dec. 2) about the tragedy at Texas A&M University trivializes the loss of the lives of those 12 students who died...
Bonfire is one of the most important traditions at A&M, as evidenced by the fact that 75 students were up at 2:30 a.m., hauling logs and constructing the Bonfire as a testament to the pride of the school. We cannot even comprehend such school spirit, and in suggesting that a school get rid of one of its most important traditions is ludicrous...