'SM iSSAlTO niered tlui ise that was iiO yards a back) Ear more than Coach Bel- ing’s got w a use I think ids in that >xas AiMt .inner ever, for a mem- to pickup ;r( C rivaltr ived undet ant during was there,' lidn’t kno" leant- It " ,a! tor the year- d the next with it ^ le game- h jli/e that it alumni ano game gotto the longed it with coat igh, we hao game w'a sa to it beconr -v because O' com peti ll0 J I think K'it» Traditions involve manyA&M students The photographs on this page show some of the more well-known traditions at Texas A&M. From the solemnity of Muster to the gaiety of Elephant Walk, Aggies join in en thusiastically. In the photo above, the flames of the Bonfire, which is held before the Texas A&M vs. the University of Texas football game, silhouette one of the students who put in hours of time to complete the stack. To the left, graduates identify their major at spring commence ment ceremonies. Heads bowed and candles lit, the students pictured below honor de ceased Aggies at the annual Muster held on April 21. And at the bottom of the page, se niors and juniors celebrate the El ephant Walk. Elephant Walk is quite a sight — seniors, a.k.a. dying el ephants, wander aimlessly around the campus. The wandering in- - eludes splashing through every fountain on campus, bottom right. Juniors aren’t left out of the fun. They go on an elephant hunt to put the poor dying elephants out of mis ery, bottom left.