THURSDAY, AUGUST 31 | SERVING TEXAS A&M SINCE 1893 | © 2023 STUDENT MEDIA
Silver Taps How to beat the Texas heat By Mia Putnam @MiaBatt25 Walking across Texas A&M’s campus, you can see thousands of sweaty, red-faced students walking to class. The culprit of this new epidemic is none other than the heat-wave that continues to break records across the nation — especially in Texas. On Aug. 20, Bryan-College Station reached a temperature of 112 degrees and tied for the hottest day in the city’s history. However, College Station isn’t the only city in Texas breaking records for heat. This past Sunday, San Antonio had its 60th day of over 100 degree heat for the year, breaking the previous record for the longest stretch of over 100 degrees in the city’s history since 1962. Similar stories can be found in cities and counties across Texas and around the country. A&M atmospheric sciences professor and Director of the Texas Center for Climate Studies Andrew Dessler shed some sunlight on why this summer is hotter than others. “There are two factors in any heatwave,” Dessler said. “One factor is random weather variability, and we happen to have a set-up where there is a high pressure system parked over Texas. The other [factor] is climate change. Climate change is lifting the base climate, so all heatwaves are hotter now because the climate is hotter.” A study from NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information in 2022 found that Texas has warmed 1.5 degrees since the beginning of the 20th century. Dessler said this warming should be a cause for concern for Texans. “Higher temperatures have a lot of negative impacts on society,” Dessler said. “It’s more expensive because you have to run your air conditioner more, and it’s unpleasant. We are adapting to it, but the life we have HEAT ON PG. A3
Lorena Maria Casares Oct. 31, 2001 — June 17, 2023
Madison Taylor Dovie Hall June 4, 2001 — April 28, 2023
Samuel Hartsfield Raines Jackson
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William Harrison Hall July 5, 2000 — May 1, 2023
Andrew Thomas Henges Sept. 17, 2003 — April 29, 2023
Gregory Angus McFarlane, Jr
Orion James-Padric Mitchell
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Oct. 16, 2001 — July 28, 2023
Luke Anthony Morse May 6, 2004 — July 8, 2023
A new start for Arts and Sciences Kyle Heise — THE BATTALION
Interim Dean of the College of Arts & Sciences Mark Zoran during an interview with The Battalion on Monday, Aug. 21, 2023.
Interim Dean Mark Zoran plans to push forward despite recent controversies By Nicholas Gutteridge @nico_gjc Under new leadership, the College of Arts and Sciences looks to further integrate the different colleges and expand hiring, with the Interim Dean Mark Zoran, Ph.D., emphasizing communication and collaboration. Following the resignation of José Luis Bermúdez, Ph.D., on July 31, the Texas A&M Board of Regents appointed Zoran as interim dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, assuming the role effective Aug. 1. Zoran joined A&M in 1991 as a researcher in the biology department, where he focused on brains and animal nervous systems.
“Over a decade and a half ago, I was asked to oversee the graduate programs here at [A&M] and in the former College of Science, and that got me into administration,” Zoran said. “From there, I’ve been kind of sort of working my way up through the administrative ranks to now being the interim dean until the university decides who wants to be the permanent dean of the new College of Arts and Sciences.” Zoran was appointed as the executive associate dean of the College of Arts and Sciences in June 2022, where he spent a year building the new college. “We were tasked with the job of basically, in a year, of standing up a new college at [A&M],” Zoran said. “And that was being stood up by taking three legacy colleges — legacy geosciences, legacy science and legacy liberal arts — and combining those three colleges, all their faculty, staff and students into one new college.” During that time, Zoran said he worked on multiple initiatives, such as ensuring promotional and tenure guidelines for new faculty. “We had to do that time and time again, for
large tasks or for very small tasks of, ‘How are we going to do this?’ or, ‘How are you going to do that?’ and there are literally thousands of those things that we had to accomplish,” Zoran said. Zoran said within the next couple of years, the university will host over 80,000 students, with more than a quarter of those entering the College of Arts and Sciences. “That’s a big task,” Zoran said. “It’s just a massive endeavor that we were tasked with getting up to speed, and we think, humbly, we’ve done a pretty good job of [standing] up the largest college at [A&M] — kind of too many of us it seems, overnight, we were asked to do that.” Zoran spoke about a long-term and shortterm goal: effective integration between the colleges and increased hiring, respectively. “So my long-term goal is to get our faculty in the geosciences, the sciences, in the liberal arts, to think more of themselves as one and become one,” Zoran said. “When you bring different viewpoints and different cultures together, and ZORAN ON PG. A2
Aggies open season against Lobos New roster prepares for fresh start in 2023 By Luke White @lukewhite03 First impressions are everything. Coming off a 5-7 campaign, Texas A&M football’s season-opener versus New Mexico at Kyle Field on Saturday, Sept. 2, at 6 p.m. gives the Aggies an opportunity to show the 12th Man that this team is different. Different from the 2022 squad that failed to develop a consistent offensive attack. Different from the Aggies that couldn’t stop opponents’ rushing attacks to save its life. Different from last season’s group that lacked discipline and maturity. The maroon and white want to put last season behind them. Last year is last year, and the focus has shifted to 2023. That starts against the Lobos, who are aiming for a bounce back season of their own after going 2-10 and ending 2022 on a nine-game losing streak. While New Mexico is no opponent to write home about, last year’s
home loss to Appalachian State showed the importance of taking one game at a time and not overlooking any opponent. Sure, fans and even players could be tempted to look ahead to the Sept. 9 matchup at Miami, but the Aggies need to take care of business versus the Lobos first. “Each and every year you learn from your mistakes, you learn from the past,” coach Jimbo Fisher said. “Every game is a big game. Every game is an important game, and that’s the way you have to look at it … Hopefully maturity will understand that, hopefully leadership will get that across. The coaching staff, we’ve been preaching that all the way through too.” Regardless of A&M’s role as 38-point favorites, the first game of the season presents a challenge to all teams due to a lack of knowledge of what to expect from opposing offenses and defenses. In New Mexico’s case, the Lobos brought in Bryant Vincent from UAB as offensive coordinator after averaging just 13 points per game in 2022. “First games are a pain,” Fisher said. “You don’t ever know what somebody does in the offsea-
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Current graduate WR Ainias Smith (0) fakes out New Mexico LB Ray Leutele (30) after landing a hurdle during a game vs. New Mexico on Saturday, Sept. 18, 2023 at Kyle Field.
son. You’ve got new people, new schemes, new coordinators, what they do, have they changed? … First games are always nerve-wracking in
that there’s no film out there to go off of, so they’re very challenging.” It may be Fisher’s sixth season as the headman in College Station, but
he needs a strong season-opener. He’s not necessarily on the hot seat, PREVIEW ON PG. B3