TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 2016 | SERVING TEXAS A&M SINCE 1893 | © 2016 STUDENT MEDIA | @THEBATTONLINE
Silver Taps
TONIGHT WE HONOR THE FALLEN when 10:30 p.m. Tuesday where Academic Plaza In honor of Aggies who have died, the Ross Volunteer Firing Squad will march in Academic Plaza and fire three rifle volleys of seven shots. Buglers from the Aggie Band will play a special arrangement of Taps.
Anton Gridnev Monisha Borugadda 11/10/91 — 4/13/16
Jack Bryant 12/22/95 — 4/8/16
Zhong-Hao Chen 7/31/90 — 5/26/16
Alex Clarke 2/23/93 — 3/25/16
Callie Sisk 5/24/95 — 4/22/16
Cassidy Venable 11/8/97 — 6/15/16
Anton Gridnev 8/19/97 — 8/20/16
SILVER TAPS ON PAGES 2, 3, 4 & 5
BATT THE
THE BATTALION | THEBATT.COM
FILE
The first Silver Taps of the semester will be held at 10:30 p.m. Tuesday in Academic Plaza.
Silver Taps is more than a few names For loved ones of honorees, your attendance means a lot Sam King
A
@Sam_King372
nother school year has begun and with it the revival of several A&M traditions. Standing on the wood during football games. Saying “Howdy” to Aggies you pass by. But few traditions rival the importance of Silver Taps. I realize many of you have had the importance of Silver Taps pounded into your heads time and time again, be it through your Fish Camp, the various campus-wide emails you receive or wherever else. But at the risk of getting lost in the other requests, let me try to
convince you. Throughout my time at The Battalion I’ve written a few Silver Taps articles, stories like the ones you’ll read in today’s paper. And there is no experience more humbling. Listening to mothers cry as she fondly recounts the life of her child. Hearing a father’s voice break as he tells a favorite memory. Waiting while a best friend pauses on a sob as they tell me about the time their friend ate all the cupcakes they had made together. These people are not just names you scroll by in your inbox each month. They’re not just the SILVER TAPS ON PG. 3
Kevin Chou — THE BATTALION
Stowing Borrisov, aerospace engineering PhD candidate, takes the virtual reality set out for a spin.
FINAL VIRTUAL FRONTIER Aggies partner with NASA to create software to simulate, prepare for space By Christine Doran @cndoran
V
irtual space exploration is at the fingertips of graduate students working at the ASTRO Center as they take technology similar to Minecraft to give an innovative way to prep for space travel.
The program, called SpaceCRAFT, will be open source, meaning anyone who downloads the free software will be able to add models of any structure they can imagine, using mathematical equations or codes. However, SpaceCRAFT isn’t just for the math geniuses of the world. Once a model is uploaded onto the site, if the creator of that model chooses to keep it open source, anyone can use that model. Mauricio Coen, aerospace engineering PhD candidate and the project leader for SpaceCRAFT, SPACECRAFT ON PG. 6
MaroonLink enters second year of use FILE
Recreation, parks and tourism sciences senior Johny Manziel is taking online classes this semester to finish his degree.
FOOTBALL
Johnny Manziel to take online classes at A&M Former A&M and Cleveland Browns quarterback Johnny Manziel has re-enrolled in classes as of Monday morning. According to Ben Baby of the Dallas Morning News, a source close to Manziel confirmed his re-enrollment. Manziel is listed on the Texas A&M directory as a recreation, parks and tourism sciences senior. Manziel became a national and local celebrity after winning the
Heisman Trophy in his freshman season at A&M. After his second season in the maroon and white, Manziel elected to enter the 2014 NFL Draft where he was selected 22nd over all by the Cleveland Browns. In March, Manziel was released from the Browns and was involved in several off-the-field issues before returning to Aggieland. — Staff Report
New organization website rises above expectations By Josh Hopkins @texasjoshua1 An email sent out near the end of May 2015 heralded the death of over a thousand websites, and announced the official launch of a new organizational tool — MaroonLink. With the rise of MaroonLink, the decision was made to shut down the servers hosting organizational websites and prioritize the new system. Now in its second year, the number of students using MaroonLink has continued to increase. Ann Goodman, an associate director within Department of Student Activities on the Student Organization Conduct Board, said while in some ways it is replacing the old website system MaroonLink was introduced with a different
purpose. “A lot of students get confused and think it’s designed to be a webpage for their organization, which it’s really not designed to be that front facing webpage,” Ann Goodman said. “It’s designed to be a tool for their organization to coordinate all their activities, their membership, and it’s more of an internal place for business to be done.” Ann Goodman said MaroonLink was originally intended to focus on easing event planning for student organizations and departments. “We were trying to update and provide to students and departments across campus a mechanism to plan events that when they put the information into an online form it would route to the people MAROONLINK ON PG. 6
15,000 ACTIVE STUDENTS
1,355 GROUP PAGES
459
EVENT SUBMISSIONS
1,279
APPROVED EVENTS *data from May 2016 Olivia Adam — THE BATTALION