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Nathaniel Neil Callaway Dec. 20, 2002 — March 18, 2023
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Big history in a small package
A&M Forestry Service receives antique humidor By Jack Lee @JackTheBatt
In the back of Texas A&M’s forestry services building, 20 minutes off of the main campus, there is a wooden box in a storage closet. Beneath its unassuming appearance lies a tale of American history, Texas legends and Aggie family. The box, a humidor, a container to keep cigars moist, was recently donated to A&M by Henry Kirby “H.K.” and Roberta “Robbie” Pitts. Associate Director of Forest Resource Development Bill Oates said the humidor’s historical significance lies in its origin. “Back about 100 or so years before, I think it was in the Coolidge administration, they started remodeling the White House to remove some of the material that was installed after everything was burned [in the War of 1812],” Oates said. “They made various items out of the material that came out of the White House. They would give them away to people as gifts.” According to clippings of the Baltimore Sun provided by Oates, two humidors were originally built out of the White House roof materials, in addition to some other souvenirs. “A large part of the removed timber was purchased by the National Lumber Manufacturers’ Association,
Fentanyl epidemic, explained
graduated college, H.K. said he was an advocate of higher education and a supporter of A&M. “He was a big proponent of education and he admired Texas A&M,” H.K. said. “He was looking to provide a continuing thing rather than give a lump sum, so he gave A&M a big tract of his land.” The land, now known as the John Henry Kirby Memorial Forest, Oates said, was donated to A&M with the stipulation that the revenues from the forest be used to fund scholarships. “So far, during the time we’ve managed the forest, it’s generated more than half a million dollars,” Oates said. When Kirby died in 1940, H.K. said, his daughter was bequeathed many of his possessions, Photo courtesy of Bill Oates including the humidor, to H.C. Barnes, secretary manager of the Southern Pine Association, next to the humidor in 1929. Knox, who subsequently gave the humidor to H.K. which has presented some led a storied life, including the recipient of one of the upon her passing. “I just knew we had it in of the rough to various eager being a public school teach- two humidors built out of recipients,” the Baltimore er, an adjunct professor of the White House roof from the house,” Robbie said, “I Sun reported in 1929. “A history at A&M Kingsville the National Lumber Man- always thought it was such a few of these presents of his- and the inventor of the Uni- ufacturers’ Association. H.K. neat piece.” Though a University of torical material were made.” versity of Texas’ ‘hook ‘em said Kirby employed his parThe humidor at A&M, horns’ sign. H.K. said the ents and his grandfather and Texas alum, H.K. said he Oates said, may be one of the humidor fell into his posses- took a special interest in his donated the humidor to A&M because of its historical last surviving samples of the sion via family connection. aunt Maurine Knox. former White House. “I got it from my aunt “My aunt had — bless her connection to Kirby. “I knew of [A&M’s] as“There might still be stuff when she passed in the late heart — she had polio when sociation with Kirby,” H.K. still out there, but people [19]60s,” H.K. said. “It orig- she was about 19,” H.K said. said. “I said, since the Aggies may not even know what it inally belonged to Cousin “It froze her face into a contake care of that stuff, we is,” Oates said. “If you didn’t John Henry.” torted shape. I think that’s have a plate on it, like a metal John Henry Kirby, or one reason Cousin John should give it to them so it plate on it that describes it, Cousin John Henry, as he Henry worked so hard and can be shown to the masses. if it didn’t have that, people liked to be called, was a did so much for her. He kind Right now, they’re talking wouldn’t even know where Texas oil and lumber tycoon of felt sorry for her having about taking it to [the Bullock Texas State History Muit came from.” known as “The Father of polio which crippled her.” At 91 years old, H.K. has Industrial Texas.” Kirby was Though Kirby never seum] in Austin.”
[North]gatekeepers A look inside the life of Northgate bouncers By Ruben Hernandez @battandmuse In the Northgate district of College Station, attendees shed all their restraints and limitations out into the night’s breeze for a night of extravagant pleasure and risky business. The mediators of such recklessness, within their respective bars and clubs, are the St. Peters of paradise, composed of protein milkshakes and low-carb intake: the bouncers. It’s to no surprise why bouncers exist in the first place, since bars and clubs aren’t the exact hotspots for peaceful people of sane and practical mind. It is a given fact that any function that has servings of alcohol is bound to be ruined by someone who excessively drinks — aside from church during communion. Thanks to the trusty bouncer, bar
counters and dancefloors are kept safe for everyone else who are not too drunk to enjoy — although often, not without a fight. Tipsy Turtle bouncer Slater Milliken said, despite working for only two months, he has already faced violent encounters with drunk customers. Milliken said after a group of drunk men jumped the fence that divides Paddock’s from Tipsy Turtle, his manager prompted him to take the group out of the bar even after showing their identifications and proving to be of drinking age. “They were going to order their drink, I told the bartender to cancel their s---,” Milliken said. “One of their buddies just started recording me out of f---ing nowhere, just like shoving his phone on my face. I deleted the video and then shoved him out.” With one drunkard out the bar, Milliken said the remaining stragglers shifted to the back of the Kyle Heise — THE BATTALION bar. Him and three other bouncers approached the Northgate bouncer Matthew Burkhart outside BOUNCERS ON PG. 3
O’Bannon’s Irish Pub on Wednesday, March 29, 2023.
By Mia Putnam @MiaBatt25 If you are suffering with addiction or substance abuse, call the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration free helpline at (800) 662-4357. Fentanyl is one of the most prominent names in the news right now. The synthetic opioid has been causing an unprecedented number of overdose deaths in Texas, especially to vulnerable teenagers and young adults. According to the Centers for Disease Control, or CDC, there were over 75,000 fentanyl overdose deaths in a 12-month period between April 2020 and April 2021 in the United States. This issue hits close to home, as Texas Department of State Health Services reported that Texas had a 120% increase in deadly fentanyl overdoses since 2020. Dr. Jun Wang, a professor in the Department of Neuroscience & Experimental Therapeutics at the Texas A&M School of Medicine, said fentanyl is a synthetic opioid drug. An opioid is a very powerful pain suppressant and used clinically to suppress pain, he added. “Why fentanyl is so popular among teenagers [is] because fentanyl is a synthetic drug,” Wang said. “Some opioids, like heroin, have to be extracted from some product like a plant. But fentanyl is not, it can be synthesized in a lab. This makes the price very low and easier to access.” Along with fentanyl being relatively inexpensive compared to other opioids, it is a drug of choice due it being extremely potent and causing an increased high, according to the CDC. “Fentanyl is 50-100 times more potent than heroin,” Wang said. “This means it can come into your blood very quickly. A lot of chemicals cannot go to your brain … but fentanyl can get into the brain easier than heroin or other drugs, and it gets into it very fast.” Fentanyl can cause dangerous effects because it can get into the body system so quickly, Wang said. “Opioids suppress your respiratory system,” Wang said. “Whenever people take opioids and feel relaxed, they decrease their breath. If you have fentanyl going into your brain, it will suppress your respiratory system, and it happens so quickly and you cannot realize you need to go to the ER and this leads to overdose death.” Clinical assistant professor Joy Alonzo is the co-chair of the A&M Opioid Task Force and said teenagers and young adults have gotten access to this drug FENTANYL ON PG. 3
The Battalion wins Overall Excellence for print, audio By Michaela Rush @Michaela4Batt Last Saturday, March 25, The Battalion earned 29 awards from the Texas Intercollegiate Press Association, or TIPA, during the organization’s annual convention in Fort Worth. Twenty-eight of these awards included categories of writing, design, photography and audio production for content published during the 2022 calendar year. Assistant news editor Ana Renfroe also won first place during the live news writing competition during the convention. Notably, The Battalion earned two Division I Overall Excellence Awards, TIPA’s highest honor, in the newspaper and news production audio categories. The publication has not won the newspaper award since 2019, and this is its first win in the news production audio category. In addition to these achievements, Megan Williams, editor in chief of The Aggieland Yearbook, and Renfroe were elected to the
TIPA Executive Board as the student president and vice president, respectively. To support award-winning and independent student journalism, donate to The Battalion via Friends of The Battalion or The Battalion Excellence Fund, both 501(c)(3) organizations. Below is a full list of awards earned by The Battalion and its staff. Division I Overall Excellence Newspaper: The Battalion Division I Overall Excellence News Production - Audio: The Batt Signal and Home Turf First Place Live Contest - Print News: Ana Renfroe Cover Design - Newspaper: Ishika Samant, The Battalion — November 17, 2022 Podcast: Jordan Epp, Grant Gaspard, Tying things up with the Tigers Second Place Breaking News Photo: Ishika Samant, Roe v. Wade Protest Sports Action Photo: Robert O’Brien, Women’s Swim: A&M vs. Rice
Critical Review: Joey Kirk, Criticism: Tár Program Production - Audio: The Batt Signal General News: Kyle McClenagan, Drumbeat of war: Possibility of conflict causes study abroad to be scrapped Special Edition Design - Print: Robert O’Brien, Fall Sports 2022 Sports Feature Photo: Robert O’Brien, Baseball vs. South Carolina General Column: Caleb Elizondo, A modest proposal Third Place Best In Show - Website: The Battalion Staff, thebatt.com Static Ad Design: Robert O’Brien, 3rd Floor Cantina In-Depth Reporting: Casey Stavenhagen & Nathan Varnell, The Rudder Association Overall Design - Web: The Battalion Staff, thebatt.com Static Information Graphic: Cameron Johnson, Aggie Ring Day Sports Game Story: Jordan Epp, 3 seconds, 2 yards, 1 dream
Photo Illustration: Robert O’Brien, The Rudder Association Sports Column: Matthew Cobb, ‘Do or Die’: A&M must beat Miami to stay afloat General News Photo: Robert O’Brien, Muster 2022 Website: The Battalion Staff, thebatt.com General News Audio Story: Kenzie Finch, Episode 23: Exercising our civic duty Honorable Mention Editorial: The Battalion Staff, Print is not dead Overall Design - Newspaper: Robert O’Brien, The Battalion — November 10, 2022 Feature Reporting - Audio: Jack Lee & Caroline Wilburn, Norman E. Borlaug: The Aggie who fed the world Newscast - Audio: Kenzie Finch, Caroline Wilburn, Jamie Whitley & Amanda Hare, Episode 18: Books, ballots and Bush General Column: Robert O’Brien, The tragedy of the Class of 2024 photo