THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1 | SERVING TEXAS A&M SINCE 1893 | © 2022 STUDENT MEDIA
Football returns to Aggieland on Sept. 3
The Path Forward & MGT update: 1 year later
SPORTS SECTION ON B1
MGT ON A4
Silver Taps
Blake Douglas Barnes July 21, 2003 — May 23, 2022
Benjamin David Hamilton Jr. May 1, 2002 — May 20, 2022
Victoria Christine Solarek Jan. 14, 2000 — July 24, 2022
Audrey Arballo Valim Dec. 9, 1999 — April 19, 2022
Harrison Miller Fuller May 11, 2000 — April 7, 2022
Tyler Wade Ryan Aug. 11, 2001 — May 14, 2022
Eric Tuck-Otero Dec. 24, 1981 — July 12, 2022
Ivan Zabrodin Dec. 29, 2001 — April 8, 2022
TRIBUTES ON PAGES A6 & A7
Stacks on stacks: Impact pulls 653 tickets Teach, train, prepare University Police Department provides training to community for active shooter situations By Caroline Wilburn @CarolineWilburn
efficient manner. I texted all the chairs if they wanted to pull in a very large block. That information was disseminated to everybody and people started dropping sports passes off to me.” Mubarak said getting the tickets was a gradual process, so they didn’t have to gather all the sports passes at once. “Individual camps first gathered their ticket, then the freshmen gave it to their [camp] parents who gave it to their [camp] parents,” Hayes said. By the time the Ziploc bags of sports passes got to him, Mubarak said 20 to 40 camps were planning on pulling tickets. Mubarak
As of May 25, there have been 27 school shootings in the United States. An active shooter is defined as one or more individuals who attempt to kill or cause life-threatening injuries to persons in a confined or populated area, according to Texas A&M. In the event of an active shooter on campus, the university encourages students, staff and faculty to “Run. Hide. Fight.” University Police Department, or UPD, Officer Robert Leseth said the department has conducted annual advanced law enforcement rapid response training, or ALERRT, for over 10 years to provide officers with the knowledge to respond appropriately to an on-campus active threat. “[The training] includes using our equipment, which [includes] our patrol rifles, our breaching tools and our [self-aid buddy aid] kits,” Leseth said. ALERRT, a Texas State System, studies multiple facets of active shooter response and law enforcement best practices. Beyond law enforcement training, ALERRT offers civilian resources as well. UPD Lieutenant Bobby Richardson encourages community members to request Civilian Response to Active Shooter Events, or CRASE, classes. “Those trainings are free and are offered by our Community Services Unit, to faculty, staff and students upon request,” Richardson said. “We do a lot of those every year, so that’s another option to educate [community members] in what to do [in case of an emergency].”
TICKET PULL ON PG. A2
COMMUNITY TRAINING ON PG. A2
Photo courtesy of Michael Mubarak
Impact Camp’s Michael Mubarak and Katie Hayes at ticket pull on Monday, Aug. 29 after pulling a total of 653 tickets.
Two Impact Camp counselors make big waves for fishes’ first game By Kathryn Miller @kathrynmiller0 With the first football game of the season coming up this weekend against Sam Houston State, students lined up first thing in the morning on Monday, Aug. 29, some starting even earlier, to pull tickets for themselves and their friends.
Among them were Michael Mubarak, petroleum engineering senior, and Katie Hayes, Class of 2022, two Impact co-chairs. Standing together in line at the ticket window for group pulls, they held 653 sports passes between the two of them. Mubarak said though a lot of attention was brought to the fact they pulled over 650 tickets this year, they did something similar during the last football season. “Not everybody knows about this, but last year Impact, in a less organized fashion, pulled 413 tickets,” Mubarak said. “It was more so [Impact] people finding each other in line and getting together. This year, I thought that it can be done in a much more
A solemn tradition: Silver Taps explained
FILE
The Silver Taps statue, located off of Academic Plaza, facing the Albritton Bell Tower, shares the remembrance tradition year-round.
By Battalion Staff Silver Taps is one of Texas A&M’s most solemn traditions — a tribute held for any current graduate or undergraduate students who have died during the year. The ceremony is held on the first Tuesday of the month in Academic Plaza at 10 p.m. All campus flags are flown at half-mast and the names, classes and majors of the fallen Aggies are displayed on
cards at the base of the flagpole in Academic Plaza and on the Silver Taps Memorial. As on-campus lights are extinguished and hymns play from Albritton Bell Tower, students and the families of the fallen Aggies gather in Academic Plaza at 10:15 p.m. The Ross Volunteer Company marches in at a slow cadence and fire a three-volley salute in honor of the fallen Aggies. After the last round is fired, buglers
atop the Academic Building play a special version of “Taps” called “Silver Taps,” unique to A&M, three times — once to the north, once to the south, and once to the west, but not to the east, as it is said the sun will never rise on that Aggie again. Silver Taps was first held in 1898, and no other university honors fallen students in this way. As the student-run paper of A&M, The
Battalion tells the stories of Aggies and our beloved community. This includes those of our peers who have fallen. The Battalion’s staff is honored to deliver the stories of students who have passed, and to share the perspectives of the fallen’s friends and families as a way of ensuring their legacies and memories are shared and honored throughout the A&M community.
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