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The 2007 Aggie Muster at Reed Arena: The Ross Volunteers stand at attention as candles are lit for the deceased. Aggie Muster is a tradition at Texas A&M University which celebrates the camaraderie of the university while remembering the lives of alumni who have died, specifically those in the past year. Muster officially began on April 21 ...
TexAgs is an independent Texas A&M University fan website. It features articles, chat, forums, and recruiting information about Texas A&M Aggie sports. The website receives an average of 1,000,000 pageviews per day, [2] and as of June 2008, TexAgs was the sixth most-visited college sports website [3] and the most visited NCAA Division I-A website. [4]
The Sam Houston Sanders Corps of Cadets Center is a museum on the campus of Texas A&M University in College Station, Texas, dedicated to the school's Corps of Cadets. Since its opening in 1992, the Center has become home to thousands of Aggie artifacts, the Metzger-Sanders gun collection, over 60 exhibits, and over 600 photographs.
Texas A&M has two active, long-time rivals, the LSU Tigers and the Arkansas Razorbacks. After playing LSU sporadically throughout the 20th Century, the LSU–Texas A&M Rivalry is the Aggies' seventh oldest, with the series dating back to 1899. Since Texas A&M joined the SEC in 2012, fans have anticipated LSU to become Texas A&M's primary rival.
Aggie Bonfire as it burned in 1989. The Aggie Bonfire was a long-standing annual tradition at Texas A&M University as part of the college rivalry with the University of Texas at Austin. [1] [2] For 90 years, Texas A&M students—known as Aggies—built a bonfire on campus each autumn, known to the Aggie community simply as "Bonfire". The event ...
Andrew Davis Bruce, [14] 3rd President of the University of Houston; Pat Olsen, [15] engineer and namesake of Olsen Field at Blue Bell Park; Tyson Voelkel, President of the Texas A&M Foundation and Corps Commander from 1995-1996. [16] Bill Flores, U.S. Representative for Texas's 17th congressional district from 2011 to 2021.
Houston ended up in an unexpected fight, but advanced to face Duke in the Sweet 16. March Madness: Houston survives Texas A&M rally, buzzer-beater to advance past Aggies in OT thriller Skip to ...
The Fightin' Texas Aggie Band (also known as The Noble Men of Kyle, The Pulse of Aggieland or the Aggie Band) is the official marching band of Texas A&M University. Composed of over 400 men and women from the school's Corps of Cadets , [ 44 ] it is the largest military marching band in the world.