THURSDAY, APRIL 7, 2016 | SERVING TEXAS A&M SINCE 1893 | © 2016 STUDENT MEDIA | @THEBATTONLINE
CAMPUS
BATT THE
THE BATTALION | THEBATT.COM
Leah Kappayil — THE BATTALION
Five panelists, including graduate student Blaine Balliett, talked about the difficulties of having disabilities Wednesday.
Panelists share their experiences with disabilities By Chevall Pryce The sidewalks, doors and buses that many students use without a second thought can pose unique challenges for Texas A&M’s disabled community — a theme discussed at Wednesday’s Insightful Connections’ disabled students panel. Five students with various disabilities such as blindness, spinal muscular atrophy and oculocutaneous albinism talked about their daily lives and answered questions from audience members in Rudder Tower. The students discussed transportation, accommodations they have to use, as DISABILITIES ON PG. 2
FALL 2016
The 3-D braille map made by engineering freshman Tyler Wooten gives visually impaired students a customized map of campus. is lex
ll —
Wi
N
IO
AL
TT
A EB
TH
A
A FEEL FOR CAMPUS Engineering freshman develops 3-D braille map for visually impaired
PREREGISTRATION BEGINS THURSDAY Preregistration for the fall 2016 semester opens Thursday. An individual’s time for preregistration can be found in Howdy. — Staff Report
STATE
CADETS ALLEGEDLY DROP DEAD DOG ON BAND FIELD Three freshmen in the Corps of Cadets now face criminal charges after allegedly leaving a dead dog on the band’s practice field, according to KBTX According to KBTX, the body was found on Joe T. Haney Drill Field on the morning of March 7. A Corps lieutenant identified the perpetrators as Atticus Johnson, Garret Kale and Sterling Hampe, according to KBTX. The 18-year-old students claimed the dog was dead when they found it and that they only placed it on the field. According to KBTX, the dog was covered in blood and “bodily fluids” and was dressed in a Texas A&M baseball cap typically given to Corps freshman while propped on several pieces of firewood. The freshmen were charged with illegal dumping and will avoid animal cruelty charges. — Staff Report
STATE
RICK PERRY’S ABUSE OF POWER CASE DISMISSED The abuse-ofpower indictment against former Texas Gov. Rick Perry has been officially dropped as of Wednesday. The case was dismissed in the state’s highest criminal court and was based on actions Perry Rick Perry took in 2013 while he was governor. After Rosemary Lehmberg, a Travis County district attorney, declined to resign following a drunk-driving incident, Perry vetoed state funding for the public integrity unit overseen by her. Perry has defended his actions despite a complaint filed by Texans for Public Justice, which led to a 2014 indictment accusing Perry of abuse of official capacity and coercion of a public servant. The coercion charge was dropped in 2015 by the 3rd Court of Appeals. Earlier this year the Court of Criminal Appeals dismissed the abuse charge. A judge signed the dismissal Wednesday morning, making it official. — Staff Report
BAT_04-07-16_A1.indd 1
By Chevall Pryce
A
3-D printer and hours of work by one A&M freshman will go toward helping the visually impaired navigate A&M’s campus. Tyler Wooten designed and 3-D printed a portable braille map of A&M’s campus to be used by students and faculty who are blind or visually impaired. The map is a direct copy of main and west campus with each building raised by a quarter of an inch. “There’s braille on top of the main buildings — like MSC, Rudder, Kyle Field and Sbisa,” Wooten said. “It helps someone who is blind or visually impaired find out where a building is … You can use it to help figure out where you are and orient where you are on campus.” Wooten said he came up with the idea
after he thought about how difficult it is for visually impaired students to navigate through campus and decided to take advantage of his 3-D printing class. Wooten used the 3-D printer in the Engineering Innovation Center and his own money to purchase the materials and print the individual drafts of the map. For the original draft of main campus, Wooten had to design the map from scratch. “For main campus, I had a picture of the map up on one screen, and I had SolidWorks open on my other screen and I was just eyeballing it, drawing all of the buildings,” Wooten said. “Enough people had heard about it that they taught me how to do it better. Now I can take a screenshot of the map, put it in SolidWorks and just trace the buildings.” The map is less than an inch thick, and
is made of gray Polylactic Acid, or PLA, a lightweight durable material. The maps are heat resistant and waterproof, said Wooten, who stress-tested the maps. Each section of the map is 5-by-9 inches and can connect with another section by sliding into place in order to make a full map of campus. Each map takes five hours to print, not including the hours put into the design. After his initial stage or production, Wooten reached out to Kaitlyn Kellermeyer, economics senior and activist for people with visual impairment, to get her opinion on the project as well as to help test it. Due to low production costs, Wooten said Kellermeyer, who has a visual impairment, suggested printing a 3-D MAP ON PG. 4
FOOTBALL
NFL Pro Day tests talent from A&M 14 football players look for place in next level By Lawrence Smelser Despite Germain Ifedi being the only player considered draftable in the first round by many pundits, 30 NFL teams had scouts on hand for Texas A&M’s Pro Day Wednesday morning. Fourteen Aggies made their case for playing at the next level, including offensive guard and tackle Germain Ifedi, punter Drew Kaser, special teams member and defensive back Sam Moeller, running back Tra Carson, kicker Taylor Bertolet, offensive guard Joe Cheek, cornerback De’Vante Harris, center Mike Matthews, defensive end and tackle Julien Obioha, defensive tackle Alonzo Williams, defensive back Devonta Burns, runningback Brice Dolezal, running back Blaine Townsend and cornerback Brandon Williams. The players were tested in the bench press, vertical jump, broad jump, 40-yard dash and the 5-10-5, three-cone and long shuttles along with personal drills. Mike Matthews finished first in the bench press. The center was able to do 30 reps of 225 pounds. Julien Obioha and Taylor Bertolet finished behind Matthews with 27 reps apiece. Cornerback De’Vante Harris ran the fastest 40 time at the A&M Pro Day. Harris, 5-foot-10, ran a 4.44 which was faster than his time of 4.56 at the NFL Combine. Harris was also able to log the fastest time in the shuttle with a time of 11.38 seconds. “I improved my 40 time, [and] I feel like I did real good in my drills,” Harris said. “They looked real smooth and [also] in my transitions. I caught the ball real well and I just came out here with some confidence and really enjoyed it. I had fun and the other guys did as well.” In the broad jump, the former 12th Man Sam Moeller came out on top along with Devonta Burns. Both players posted jumps of 9 feet, 8 inches. Running back Tra Carson was an inch behind the two with a jump of 9 feet, 7 inches. Carson was able to clock a 4.54, despite having surgery just after the Music City Bowl on his big toe. The Pro Day PRO DAY ON PG. 3
Lawrence Smelser — THE BATTALION
Senior cornerback De’Vante Harris runs the 40-yard dash in front of NFL scouts and executives.
4/7/16 12:04 AM