The Battalion: January 16, 2014

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thebattalion ● thursday,

Aimee Breaux The Battalion

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texas a&m since 1893

● first paper free – additional copies $1 ● © 2014 student media

Corps embarks on academic initiatives, measures success Jennifer Reiley The Battalion

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n an effort to be leaders in every aspect on campus, the Corps of Cadets has put into place initiatives to raise the academic standards of both the Corps and the University. Since 2008, the overall Corps GPR for a fall semester hovered around a 2.7. However, for 2013 the GPR jumped to 2.89, the same as the overall University GPR. The improvement has been credited to a number of programs that have been started within the Corps to help the cadets with their academics. Corps Commandant Brig. Gen. Joe Ramirez said the motivation to establish academic assistance programs for See Corps on page 4

William Guerra — THE BATTALION

hen sophomore political science major Hayden Greer noticed flashing police lights and officers with automatic rifles and shot guns outside his neighbor’s house Tuesday night, he did the first thing that came to mind — tweet about it. An hour after the College Station Police Department SWAT and Hostage Negotiations Team were activated Tuesday night in response to a family disturbance call on the 600 block of Harvest Street, Greer became the city’s live news source. According to a police report, officers were dispatched at 10:09 p.m. Tuesday after a gunshot was fired in a domestic dispute between 20-year-old College Station resident William Herrin and a family member who fled the house shortly after. The SWAT and Hostage Negotiations team set up a perimeter as Herrin evaded arrest until 12:09 a.m. Wednesday when he was caught and taken into custody, according to the report. As the event unfolded, Hayden tweeted from a closet on the second floor of his house. “It didn’t seem to be real,” Greer said. “We had never really seen anything like this. We’re all small-town people.” Greer posted tweets such as, “He’s back outside sneaking in backyard. We can see from second story police cannot.” Greer said a police officer came to his door

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crime

Twitter offers bird’s eye view of SWAT arrest

january 16, 2014

Jenna Rabel — THE BATTALION

Sophomore history major Joseph Sherer studies on a computer in Evans Library Annex.

See Greer on page 4

military

Aggie theatre professor helps veterans share their stories Performance seeks to close gap between soldiers and civilians John Rangel The Battalion

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o the average American, war is distant. It shoots from TV screens and claims millions in cash in a blockbuster movie weekend, but the fact that America has had a military presence in two countries for more than a decade points to an unprecedented disconnect — the gulf between the American warrior and the U.S. citizen has rarely been wider, said Jonathan Wei, national program founder of “The Telling Project” and “Telling Aggieland.” A Difficult Story It was 2008 and the U.S. was embroiled in conflict across Afghanistan and Iraq, yet the day-to-day lives of

American citizens reflected little of the overseas strife. “I was at the University of Oregon at the time, and what we saw was basically there was a significant understanding gap between military service and military families and their civilian community counterparts,” Wei said. “It wasn’t necessarily because there was any kind of hostility, it was just because no one really knew how to get the conversation started.” The apparent gap that Wei noticed prompted him to found “The Telling Project” in 2008, a nonprofit organization that gives veterans and those closely affected by conflict a chance to tell their story to the community in a professional production setting. Fifteen projects have taken place across the U.S., and “Telling Aggieland” will take place on campus at the end of the semester to give students and residents a chance to glimpse at war through firsthand accounts of See Telling Aggieland on page 3

religion

Breakaway sees spring attendance drop

Tanner Garza — THE BATTALION

Each unit of the Corps of Cadets attended A&M’s 75-67 win Wednesday over South Carolina.

A&M beats USC, stays perfect in SEC Jenna Rabel — THE BATTALION

The Jeff Johnson band worships before Breakaway on Tuesday in Reed Arena.

Lindsey Gawlik The Battalion

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reakaway Ministries annually claims a higher attendance rate throughout the fall semester than the spring, and Tuesday night’s 5,797 attendees represented the same decreased numbers when compared to those seen throughout the fall. Lydia Irion, office manager for

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Breakaway Ministries, said the momentum brought by the incoming freshmen slows once some freshmen find their own niche. “In the fall, there is a lot of anticipation since for [the freshman] it’s something new, and then in the spring a lot of freshman get involved in other things and may not be consistent with coming,” Irion said. One of Breakaway’s major goals, she said, is trying to help

students get connected. “Our goal is just to help students get connected to local churches so by the spring we hope they have found other ways to be involved in ministries,” Irion said. “Even if that may mean Breakaway might not be the place they are coming consistently.” Breakaway is held most Tuesdays in the fall and spring semesters at 9 p.m.

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he Texas A&M men’s basketball team pushed its SEC record to 3-0, defeating South Carolina 75-67 Wednesday night at Reed Arena in a game where South Carolina led for most of both halves. Texas A&M came out of the gates slowly, allowing South Carolina to go on an early 14-3 run in the first half and an 11-5 run to start the second half. The Gamecocks maintained their lead for most of the second half until junior guard Jamal Jones gave the Aggies a 58-57 lead with just under seven minutes remaining in the game. Jones led the Aggies offensively, scoring 22 points while adding two

steals and two assists. A&M was helped by the scoring contributions of freshman forward Davonte Fitzgerald and redshirt freshman guard Shawn Smith, who each contributed 13 points. The Aggie victory moves the Aggies to 12-4 and 3-0 in SEC play while improving to 2-0 all-time against the Gamecocks. A&M will next take the hardwood against the Vanderbilt Commodores at noon Saturday at Reed Arena. Conner Darland, sports reporter For the full story, go online at thebatt.com

1/15/14 10:20 PM


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