V Senior Boot Bag NEWS The Battalion I 3.24.15 Price Includes Logo and Name (More logos available) Shop for Little Aggies to an Aggie Xmas: etsy. com/shop/aggiesan dbows by Charlotte, Reveille’s Seamstress Store Location: A&B Self Storage 1701 N Earl Rudder Fwy Bryan, TX 979-778-2293 charboeg@yahoo.com Second Location: Craft and Antique Mall CS 2218 Texas Ave. South College StatioN, TX 979-255-8905 If You Have Something To Sell, Remember Classifieds Can Do It! Call 845-0569 the battalion Brazos Natural Foods ‘>4 World of Healthy Products for Your Family!” Wide Selection of 100% Pure Essential Oils * SNOW LOTUS CERTIFIED ORGANIC * Aura Cacia * The Herb Bar «es3 4303 S. TEXAS AT ROSEMARY 8RYAN • 979-846-4459 SHON-FRI 9 TO 6 • SAT 9 TO 4 Cehbtxtiitg 26 Yean ol Serving the Biuzos Vatkyi H5S Mark Dore, Editor in Chief THE BATTALION is published daily, Monday through Friday during the fall and spring semesters and Tuesday and Thursday during the summer session (except University holidays and exam periods) at Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843. Offices are in Suite 1400 of the Memorial Student Center. Newsroom phone: 979-845-3315; E-mail: editor@thebatt.com; website: http:// www.thebatt.com. For campus, local, and national display advertising, call 979-845- 2687. For classified advertising, call 979- 845-0569. Office hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Email: battads® thebatt.com. College Station Chiropractic Chiropractic • Acupuncture • Massage 1605 Rock Prairie #318 College Station.Tx 77845 www.collegestationchiropractic.com Dr. Craig Raschke has returned to Aggieland and joined with College Station Chiropractic. 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Slam poets vie for five spots on Mic Check team By Kelsey Routh tv. Poets involved with Mic Check, a nonprofit spoken word group, will compete this weekend to com pete for one of the five finalist posi tions in the Southern Fried poetry festival this summer. Madison Parker, president of Mic Check, will be among the competi tors this Sunday. “I’ll probably be using some of my poems that I have used more in slams — ones that I have more ex perience with and that I know the audience likes,’’ Parker said. “You kind of have to test out your poems sometimes.” Davis Land, vice president of Mic Check and telecommunication me dia studies sophomore, said people can expect to hear personal pieces. “At Mic Check we like to en courage people to draw inspiration from wherever and write about whatever,” Land said. Kalena Thwaits, Mic Check so cial media officer and women’s and gender studies junior, said repre- MIC CHECK what Competition for 5-poet team. when 8:30 p.m. Sunday where Revolution Bar and Cafe senting Mic Check through the slams is an honor for members. “For them, to be able to compete at that high of a level is amazing for this community and amazing for Mic Check and amazing to inspire all poets around College Station,” Thwaits said. The finalists will be selected through three elimination rounds. During each round, poets will be re quired to perform a different poem lasting no more than three minutes. Judges will be randomly selected from the audience and will judge the poems on a 10-point scale. „REATTY * r ' CRUZ CONTINUED substantially to the right of the American center, it doesn’t matter that you’re substan tially out of hne from where most people in America are — you’re appealing to the right of the right,” Edwards said. “So Cruz fits in there — his views are compatible with many people on the right.” One possibility as to why Cruz declared early is to secure donations and campaign funding, said Paul Kellstedt, associate pro fessor of political science. “Him declaring early, I think, is an attempt to thwart the donor money that is flowing toward Jeb Bush right now,” Kellstedt said. “I think Senator Cruz was concerned that if he didn’t get his candidacy announced, more and more money would flow to Jeb Bush and the race would be over before it started.” Edwards said Bush could be seen as slight ly less right wing than Cruz, which could have an effect on donor activity. “You’ll notice some of the old hands, big donors, et cetera, have gravitated toward Jeb Bush, who they see as a more moderate con servative and that’s correct on a number of matters,” Edwards said. “They want to win the general election but Cruz’s job right now is to win the nomination and the nomination is decided on the right of the right.” Martin Medhurst, a former A&M profes sor of speech communication who is now a professor of rhetoric and communication and political science at Baylor, said it is up to the candidate’s discretion when they choose to declare, but an announcement is usually in light of some strategic purpose or advantage. “Cruz is relatively unknown nationwide, which suggests he needs to get out front and get some name recognition,” Medhurst said. “It makes perfect sense he would announce early on. Someone like Hillary Clinton isn’t under any great need to announce early.” Medhurst said the decision to be the first to announce is advantageous in that it helps focus the spotlight on Cruz, but with the spotlight comes greater attention and scru tiny. “The more exposure you have the more chance you have of making a mistake,” Med hurst said. “While Ted Cruz is obviously a bright fellow, the fact is as soon as you turn on the green light, every media outlet in the country is going to be gunning for you.” Overall, Edwards said he doesn’t think the decision to announce early will be all that significant. He attributes this to the sheer number of candidates that haven’t formally declared yet. “I don’t think its going to be terribly sig nificant, particularly because so many other candidates are making the rounds — visit ing Iowa, visiting New Hampshire, contact ing donors — so the fact they haven’t of ficially declared is something of an artifice,” Edwards said. “It’s a full field —Jeb Bush, Rick Perry, Marco Rubio, Rand Paul from Kentucky, Mike Huckabee. There are a lot of people who are sticking their toe in the water and will no doubt have their toes in for a good many months to come.” COCKROACH CONTINUED with the antennae method. Jorge Gonzalez, an entomologist who worked with the group, said this method is more effective than those de veloped in the past. “When we implanted the electrodes into the ganglia the period for becom ing accustomed [to the signal] was much slower,” Gonzalez said. “The other thing is that after a short period of rest you can start sending the signals again. ” Gonzalez said cockroaches make for a near-perfect organism when it comes to this project. They are easily available and tough — cockroaches can deal with a surprising amount of physical stress. In fact, after having the electrodes im planted and later removed, the roaches go on to live normal lives. These controllable cockroaches may Developing technology # could turn * $\ cockroaches a # 1 Ml into data 11 gathering *** ^ organisms for ^ . researchers. P* have significant uses outside of academic research. Because roaches are so strong, they could be outfitted with many dif ferent instruments for data recording. This technology could be used in sur veillance for areas that humans have trouble reaching, such as rubble after a major earthquake. “You can have multiple backpacks and set them up as a routing system, so one can communicate with the next Mary Reyes —THE BATTALION and next, all the way to the home base,” said Carlos Sanchez, the head graduate student working on the project. The communication system would allow for the cockroaches to be net worked and have their data combined and collected to give a better picture of the situation. With this new foim of surveying, Sanchez said lives could be saved in places where before, help was slow to reach. THE TEXAS A&M STUDENT MEDIA BOARD INVITES APPLICATIONS FOR Editor* ’Ch i €i”lf BATT The Independent Student Voice of Texas A&M since 1893 Fall 2015-Spring 2016 (The fall and spring editor will oversee print and digital editions, and serve Aug. 16,2015, through May 14, 2016) Qualifications for editor-in-chief of The Battalion are: REQUIRED • Be a Texas A8iM student in good standing with the University and enrolled in at least six credit hours (4 if a graduate student) during the term of office (unless fewer credits are required to graduate); • Have at least a 2.25 cumulative grade point ratio (3.25 if a graduate student) and at least a 2.25 grade point ratio (3.25 if a graduate student) in the semester immediately prior to the appointment, the semester of appointment and semester during the term of office. In order for this provision to be met, at least six hours (4 if a graduate student) must have been taken for that semester. PREFERRED • Have completed JOUR 301 or COMM 307 (Mass Communication, Law, and Society) or equivalent; • Have at least one year experience in a responsible editorial position on The Battalion or comparable daily college newspaper, -OR- Have at least one year editorial experience on a commercial newspaper, -OR- Have completed at least 12 hours in journalism, including JOUR 203 (Media Writing I) and JOUR 303 (Media Writing II) or JOUR 304 (Editing for the Mass Media), or equivalent. Application forms should be picked up and returned to Sandi Jones, Student Media business coordinator, in Suite L406 of the MSC. Deadline for submitting application: 5 p.m. Tuesday, April 7, 2015. HELD OVER BY POPULAR DEMAND TWO MORE DAYS to have your portrait made for the 2015 Aggieland yearbook. Just walk in 9 a.m-5 p.m. today or Wednesday to Suite L400 of the MSC. All Texas A&M students welcome. There is no sitting charge. (if you haven't) RESERVE YOUR 2015 YEARBOOK Pre-order your 2015 Aggieland yearbook by April 6, 2015. for S75 (including shipping) plus tax, and SAVE. The 113 ,h edition of Texas A&M University's official yearbook will chronicle traditions, academics, the other education, athletics, the Corps, Greeks, ResLife, and campus organizations, and will feature gg~>-y-"—•• student portraits. Distribution will be during Fall 2015. Go to http://aggieland.tamu.edu or call 979.845.2696 to order by credit J ^ S |j a | g card. Or drop by the Student Media office, Suite L400 in the MSC from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday-Friday. ]L . .