October 11, 2019

Page 1

Baylor Lariat W E ’ R E T H E R E W H E N YO U C A N ’ T B E

Friday, October 11, 2019

HOMECOMING

Opinion | A2

A&L | B4

Sports | C4

Golf is destined to win

Heart of Texas

Texas Tech Preview

Fair brings together Waco families

Can golf stay on par this year?

FOR HOMECOMING COVERAGE >>

@bulariat

@baylorlariat

Bears set for homecoming after 5-0 start Baylor Lariat

The Baylor Lariat

Homecoming Preview Homecoming Extravaganza Friday, 6 - 8:30 p.m. Fountain Mall •Includes symbolic passing of torch •Features the eternal flame in an artistic structure, a Baylor tradition since 1947

Massive Bonfire Friday,8:30-10p.m. Fountain Mall • To be led by four torchbearers • The fire will burn until 11, smoldering throughout the night •Concludes Friday’s official Baylor events

Homecoming Parade Saturday, 8 - 10:30 a.m. •Parade route starts in Waco •Route will wind through the city and will arrive on campus on 5th Street

Baylor v. Texas Tech Saturday, 3 p.m. McLane Stadium • Touchdown Alley opens at noon • Bear Walk on South Plaza at 12:30 p.m. • Gates open at 1:30 p.m.

Homecoming coverage by LTVN. Scan the QR code for more! Vol.118 No. 14

Lariat File Photo

BURNING PASSION Four torchbearers, one from each class will begin the burning of the bonfire, which will be lit and set aflame. The bonfire was started Thursday night, as freshman walked over from freshman Mass Meeting, and constructed the heap of wooden pallets for the festivities.

Tradition ignites Baylor’s spirit TYLER BUI Staff Writer The annual homecoming bonfire will be set ablaze at 9:45 p.m. tonight on Fountain Mall as just one of the many homecoming traditions taking place this weekend. It has been a part of Baylor’s homecoming celebration since it began in 1909, encompassing the tradition of homecoming, the eternal flame and honoring the story of the Immortal Ten since 1947. The bonfire experience began Thursday night during Mass Meeting, where the freshman class was told

Invasion! Ten more Homecoming Bears have invaded our issue! Find all of them!

MATTHEW MUIR Staff Writer The Baylor community will have the chance to relive history and learn about traditions at tonight’s Friday Night Flashback event. One out of many annual events taking place during homecoming weekend, Friday Night Flashback

the story of the Immortal Ten, honoring the 10 members of the men’s basketball team who were killed while traveling to an away game in 1927. At the end of Mass Meeting, the eternal flame, a representation of the Immortal Ten, was passed down to the freshman class to guard. The freshmen then walked together from the Ferrell Center to Fountain Mall, where they built and prepared the bonfire, guided by the Baylor Chamber of Commerce. Tonight, the bonfire will be lit by four torchbearers, representing

Lariat File Photo

BONFIRE >> Page A7

UN-BEARABLE HEAT The bonfire lit Friday night will burn from 8:30 p.m, with the flames expected to die late at 11.

Friday Night Flashback to highlight Baylor’s history

will give visitors the chance to “walk through a flashback of Baylor’s history and traditions” from 6 to 9 p.m. in the Bill Daniel Student Center. Highlighted traditions and history include All-University Sing and Pigskin Revue, Diadeloso, athletic highlights and more. Twin Falls, Idaho, junior Caitlin Colver serves as this

year’s coordinator for Friday Night Flashback. Colver said Friday Night Flashback appeals to visitors’ senses of curiosity and nostalgia alike. “The purpose of Friday Night Flashback is to show our homecoming guests some of Baylor’s best traditions,” Colver said. “It also allows our alumni to relive their favorite Baylor

memories.” Boerne senior Emma Ingram served as 2018’s homecoming chair. This year Ingram is helping advise the committee and is coordinating the sale of homecoming apparel with the Baylor Bookstore. Ingram said one of her favorite parts of Friday

FRIDAY >> Page A7

A guide to 2019’s Homecoming festivities MEREDITH HOWARD Staff Writer Baylor is known to have hosted one of the nation’s first homecoming celebrations, and is also considered to have the largest college homecoming parade in the nation. Baylor’s homecoming spans three days (as well as Monday’s Chapel service) and will offer a variety of events for the Baylor community to attend earlier in the week. Students were invited to Family Dinner with the Livingstones Tuesday, where they received a free meal from food trucks parked on the lawn outside Allbritton House.

Thursday

Baylor kicked off homecoming activities with the McLane Carillon Homecoming Recital, which took place from 5 to 5:30 p.m. This was followed by Queen

& Her Court, where Kaylin Blancas, nominated by Student Foundation, was crowned homecoming queen and the homecoming court was presented. Then came Pigskin Revue’s first performance, where the top eight performances from last spring’s All-University Sing put on an encore for a captive audience of alumni, students, family and friends. Next was Mass Meeting, the favorite tradition of Southlake senior CJ Foster, this year’s homecoming chair. The first Mass Meeting was held in 1928 to commemorate the loss of the Immortal Ten, 10 Baylor students who were killed in a tragic bustrain accident in 1967. This event was open only to male students until “the creation of a separate Women’s Mass Meeting in 1967, held the night before the men’s gathering.” “There’s really nothing like it,

First copy free, all additional copies 25 cents

getting the freshman class riled up each year. It’s really special,” Foster said of the Mass Meeting. After the event, freshmen walked together to Fountain Mall, where they built and prepared the bonfire.

Friday

Over 20 official homecoming events will be held today, including a variety of open houses and alumni reunions. Friday’s main events are the Extravaganza, pep rally and bonfire. The Extravaganza will be held from 6 to 8:30 p.m. at Fountain Mall. This tradition encompasses “the passing of a torch in honor of the immortal words of former Baylor President Samuel Palmer Brooks: ‘To you seniors of the past, of the present, of the future, I entrust the care of Baylor University. To you I hand the torch.’” Students can stick around Fountain Mall after the Extravaganza to take part in

the pep rally and lighting of the bonfire by four torchbearers, one from each grade level. “That’s the crescendo of extravaganza, the bonfire burning,” Athens senior Zach Loflin, chairman of the Baylor Line, said. “The fire will be 8 feet tall of pallets; it will burn the majority of the night down to ashes, but the flames will probably be gone by 11 or 12.”

Saturday

Homecoming concludes Saturday with the parade and football game against Texas Tech. The parade will be held from 8 to 10:30 a.m. and will travel from downtown Waco to the heart of campus with over 150 entries. The grand marshals will be the women’s basketball team and coach Kim Mulkey. The parade will also be broadcast live on KCEN-TV Ch. 6, as well as on KCEN’s website, Facebook, YouTube and Periscope. © 2019 Baylor University


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.