NEWS The Battalion I 2.12.15 4 Live without regrets. Learn without borders. Discover where you'll study abroad at usac.uor.edu *&|USAC studyabroadusac@ H |Q] Cl now on sale WE'VE GOT YOUR NUMBER 2015 Texas A&M Campus Directory Convenient listings of administrative offices, departments and other information about A&M. PN EPARTMENTS: You may charge and pick up Campus Directories in the Student Media office in Suite L400 of the MSC. Cost is $5 per copy. Please bring a Student Media Work Order. Call 845-2646 for info. ^TUDENTS AND OTHERS may purchase directories Jfor $5 plus tax each in MSC L400 (by cash, check or credit card). Hours: 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Monday-Friday. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Dear Chancellor Sharp ’72, I’m writing to you to congratulate you on the selection of Michael Young as the next president of our flagship university, and also to protest the recent policy you announced concerning the future of the President’s House on campus. Since the days of General Earl Rudder the House has served as a connection between Texas A&M stu dents and their leaders, and severing this unique symbol of Aggie unity to make raising money easier is a terrible mistake. In the last couple of days I’ve spoken to former and current students, from Bonfire Redpots to current student leaders, who treasure the memories they made while inside the house. Even those who never went inside have spoken of the strong sense of kinship they felt from having their campus leadership live among them. Such a feeling is integral to the development of Aggie unity, and reserving a key position on campus for rich donors is a slap in the face to the community access on which Rudder and the University once prided them selves on. Your comment this week, that the President’s House is “way more important in terms of fun draising,” and that “these guys could go find an other place to live” shows a great misunderstand ing of what this House represents to the A&M community, which is embodied in every student just as much as it is in high-powered donors. If the MSC, Hagjer Center and other such buildings do not fit current outreach needs, then I strongly urge you to consider designating the Reed House, present home of the A&M System Chancellor, as an alternative location to house donors and hold fundraising events. Located just across the street from the Bush School, it is close enough to campus to be convenient for visiting VIPs, and could certainly be repurposed for, as you recently said, “a lot of goodwill, fundraising, and things that are far more valuable than having somebody live there.” Dear Board of Regents: Congratulations on your selection of Michael Young to be the next Presi dent of Texas A&M University. With this search complete the university we all hold dear can now begin to turn the page with fresh, bold, new leadership. In order to accomplish the task of new leadership it is important to note a “STUDENTS FIRST” priority should be demonstrated. To this effect, President-designate Young should be allowed to live in the President’s home on campus. Established under President Rudder, this home allows the university president to show solidarity with the campus and provide access to students and visitors. By transforming the home into a guest palace for dignitaries and donators, you are sending the message you have a greater priority on fundrais ing as opposed to the unique connect edness between the President and the campus. Furthermore, onboarding a new Pres ident by saying, “Get your own damn house,” seems unprofessional and un welcoming to the campus’ new leader. Please reconsider this decision and allow President-designate Young the oppor tunity afforded to Presidents before him — the chance to integrate with Aggies, visitors, and those donors and dignitaries from the Presidents home. At the same time, the Hagler Center nearby the campus and football stadium could easily be used for fundraising initiatives. Perhaps a suggestion would be to add on to the Hagler Center with an overnight complex for dignitaries to stay? Congratulations again on your selection of a new President. Michael Dror Robert Christopher Ferguson Class oj 2014 Class of 2001 { MUSIC Panel finds intersection of rap r economy By Taylor Siskind MSC Carter G. Woodson Black Aware ness Committee and the Africana Studies Program, along with several other depart ments, will host “Rap Sessions: Global Hip- Hop and Economic Recovery,” an event that seeks to connect hip-hop to social issues and the economy. The panel will be a follow-up of the movie screening “Unstoppable: The Roots of Hip- Hop in London,” which took place Wednes day. Composed of hip-hop artists Akua Naru and Blitz the Ambassador, professor Dawn- Elissa Fischer and author Giuseppe Pipitone, this panel will discuss the entrepreneurial strat egies of hip-hop. “What hip-hop artists have done, like Boogie Down Productions, KRS-One spe cifically, and even the distinct Kanye West have argued is that black people need to be their own producers,” said associate sociol ogy professor Tommy Curry. “So we need to take the buying power, the consumerism that drives black society, to imitate larger, white society in many ways because of rela tive deprivation. We need to take that power and produce our own goods, support our own businesses, create our own investments, banks, firms, etcetera.” Bakari Kitwana, the creator of Rap Ses sions, said she hopes to inform college students that a traditional job with a company is not necessarily the path one has to take, and in to day’s economy is not the most reliable either. “From the standpoint of students, I think it’s soothing because first of all, if they are in terested in hip-hop, there are many opportu nities out there, and also, even if they aren’t, to just begin to start to think about ways of how you can be viable independently,” Kit wana said. Thursday’s event seeks to link hip-hop with larger issues to aid people of all types and back grounds. “That exposure can really help any student of any color of any background understand more about what rap is,” said Chaance Graves, electrical engineering junior and co-director of the educational sub-committee of the WBAC. The discussion will be at 7:30 p.m. in the Preston Geren Auditorium of the Langford Architecture Building. MOSTLY WATER CONTINUED to be just before the first edi tion was printed in October 2014. “I was about to print the first edition and didn’t have a title, so I typed the first thing I could think of into InDesign,” Land said. “I actually really don’t like it because I think the wit of it only comes across when you say the full thing, and it often just gets abbrevi ated to ‘mostly water,’ which isn’t my favorite thing in the world. ” “Mostly water” is open to any type of visual or written art submission and is published on a monthly basis. Leaf said they are try to stay away from categorizing submissions. “The categories can limit an artist,” Leaf said. “Artistic ex pression doesn’t work in cat egories. Many times, journals can feel limiting. We don’t want to do that.” Among some of the work submitted to and published by the journal are a series of Snap- chat images and photocopies of receipts. “The photocopies of re ceipts were kind of used to depict and tell a story,” Land said. “It was really interesting, the artist used the items on the lists to tell a story.” Land said authenticity in a poem is what draws him in. “I like it when I read some body’s stuff, and you can tell that they’d be writing whether someone else is going to be reading it or not,” Land said. “I like it when you can see the ghost of the poet’s past and their poetic tradition.” At the same time, Land said they try to emphasize that much of the selection does come down to personal taste. “We don’t claim to be some grand arbitrators of art,” Land said. “What we end up select ing is what James and I like and what we think that other people should be exposed to and read.” Land and Leaf work to keep the journal free for residents of Bryan-College Station, and have shipped the journal both nationally and internationally. Land said the majority of the journal’s funding comes from the two students’ personal funds. However, Land said the two have also received support from Horence Davies, Uni versity Writing Center admin istrator and academic adviser for The Eckleburg Project. “When Davis and James first told me about ... ‘pretty much everything is water’ I knew almost immediately I wanted to help them in any way I could,” Davies said. “The experimental and expe riential art they hoped to re ceive, as well as their process of selecting pieces, absolutely blew me away. ” Davies said the journal felt fresh and electrifying and that she could feel the heart put into its creation. “These days with everyone on earth trying to blog for a hot dollar, the idea of two humans printing off zines in someone’s bedroom, making art for art’s sake is something you don’t come across very often,” Da vies said. “You hear a lot of braggadocio about wanting to change the local art scene, but it’s another thing entirely to tangibly create something that’s doing just that.”