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The Battalion

The Student News Site of Texas A&M University - College Station

The Battalion

The Student News Site of Texas A&M University - College Station

The Battalion

Sophomore LHP Shane Sdao (38) reacts after a strikeout during Texas A&Ms game against Texas at Disch-Falk Field on Tuesday, March 5, 2024. (CJ Smith/The Battalion)
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May 12, 2024
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The Northgate district right adjacent to the Texas A&M campus houses a street of bars and other restaurants.  
Programs look to combat drunk driving
Alexia Serrata, JOUR 203 contributor • May 10, 2024
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Junior Mary Stoiana reacts during Texas A&M’s match against Oklahoma at the NCAA Women’s Tennis Regional at Mitchell Tennis Center on Sunday, May 5, 2024. (CJ Smith/The Battalion)
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Roman Arteaga, Sports Writer • May 17, 2024

No. 13 Texas A&M women’s tennis met Virginia in the quarterfinal of the NCAA Tournament on Friday, May 17 at the Greenwood Tennis Center...

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Beekeeper Shelby Dittman scoops bees back into their hive during a visit on Friday, April 5, 2024. (Kyle Heise/The Battalion)
Bee-hind the scenes
Shalina Sabih, Sports Writer • May 1, 2024

The speakers turn on. Static clicks. And a voice reads “Your starting lineup for the Texas A&M Aggies is …” Spectators hear that...

Kennedy White, 19, sits for a portrait in the sweats she wore the night of her alleged assault inside the Y.M.C.A building that holds Texas A&M’s Title IX offices in College Station, Texas on Feb. 16, 2024 (Ishika Samant/The Battalion).
'I was terrified'
April 25, 2024
Scenes from 74
Scenes from '74
April 25, 2024
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Farewell from the graduating Battalion staff of 2024
Farewell from the graduating Battalion staff of 2024
The Battalion May 4, 2024

Silver Taps: Connor McCasland

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Connor McCasland was never without a smile. His infectious happiness and excitement was a source of joy to those around him, and friends often sought his presence to relieve the stress and homesickness found in college. McCasland never hesitated to place others first — a trait friends and family say he lived above all else.
McCasland grew up in California and heard of Texas A&M through his dad, a former student. Casey Hudgson, supply chain management senior, met McCasland during the Corps of Cadets Freshman Orientation Week. They became close friends, but Hudgson said McCasland’s personality stood out to her during their first difficult days adjusting to Corps life.
“Connor was just really funny because he was one of the only ones that [didn’t seem] nervous and just went up to all of us and said, ‘Hi, I’m fish McCasland, nice to meet you,’” Hudgson said. “He’s from California and didn’t know anyone, but he just jumped right in there and was excited to be with all of us while everyone else was kind of awkward.”
It was this outgoing personality and the ease with which he made every situation seem humorous that McCasland’s friends remember well. Karissa Robertson, engineering technology senior and McCasland’s childhood friend, said one of her favorite memories of McCasland came during their freshmen year in a rough part of training.
“He’d be across the hall making faces at myself and my roommate while we were trying to not get yelled at,” Robertson said. “The upperclassmen would be trying to talk to us about something and we’d be standing in our doorways, and he’d keep making weird faces at us to try and get us to laugh and get in trouble.”
Cody Scarborough, psychology senior and McCasland’s roommate for a time, said their dorm would often fill with people seeking McCasland’s help. Whether science homework or simple advice, McCasland never turned them away.
McCasland made it a point to find a way to help others, no matter the situation. Scarborough described a rough part of Corps physical training where McCasland’s best quality was made apparent.
“We were doing an exercise program, they had us doing sit-ups,” Scarborough said. “We had been doing a real heavy workout for probably 15 minutes. Whenever we were doing these sit-ups, we got to the point where there was one of our buddies who was really struggling with the sit-ups. He just came over and said, ‘Here, I’ll help you’ and linked arms with her and then all of us linked arms … and we did the sit-ups together. He used all of us and what we were doing to help her up.”
McCasland loved the Corps, particularly the Aggie Band, but left his sophomore year to focus on academics. His friends said the Corps was central to McCasland’s life, even after he moved off the Quad.
“He loved the Corps, it was his favorite thing,” Scarborough said. “He put his whole heart into what he was doing with the Aggie Band.”
After he left the Corps, McCasland continued to maintain the relationships he had made.
“Even though he wasn’t in the Corps with us last year, he always made a point to be there for all of our major Corps events, hang out with us, and go out to eat with us whenever he could get the chance to,” Robertson said. “So he was still really involved with our class despite having left the Corps.”
His death came just before he was to order his Aggie Ring, and McCasland’s family donated his ring to the Association of Former Students to serve as the Memorial Collection’s 2015 class ring.
Picture provided.

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