volume 78, issue 44
DESCRIPTION
Cougars sans Sims suffer tough homecoming loss, SFAC members deliberate about student fees, and homecoming keeps campus redTRANSCRIPT
T H E O F F I C I A L S T U D E N T N E W S P A P E R O F T H E U N I V E R S I T Y O F H O U S T O N S I N C E 1 9 3 4T H E O F F I C I A L S T U D E N T N E W S P A P E R O F T H E U N I V E R S I T Y O F H O U S T O N S I N C E 1 9 3 4
THE DAILY COUGAR
Bias becomes the new normal
OPINION
Court keeps Houston red
LIFE+ARTS
Cougar fans left disappointed
SPORTS
Monday, November 12, 2012 // Issue 44, Volume 78 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
Christopher SheltonAssistant sports editor
On Saturday, redshirt junior running back Charles Sims proved he could have an effect on the out-come of a football game from the sidelines.
In the two games Sims has missed, the Cougars have lost by 65 combined points and have scored 13, including Saturday’s 41-7 loss to Tulsa.
Against Tulsa, UH fi nished with 78
rushing yards and had trouble mov-ing the ball.
Redshirt freshman running back Kenneth Farrow rushed for 55 yards — leading the Cougars in that cat-egory on 15 carries. Farrow said the offensive line opened running lanes early but the fl ow of the game took the rushing attack away.
“At the very beginning of the game we had the holes there and we were running pretty good,” Farrow said. “We couldn’t convert on third downs,
just like last week we got down and started passing. We tried to stay bal-anced in the second half but you can’t do that when you’re down.”
Including 139 yards on the ground in a 37-6 loss to UCLA, the Cougars have averaged 108 yards rushing per game in Sims’ absence compared to 149 yards per game with him.
Sims has 849 yards rushing, 11 touchdowns and has eclipsed the century mark in four games this season but the Cougars may miss his
presence in the locker room most. Head coach Tony Levine said the loss of both senior corner D.J. Hayden and Sims left UH lacking some veteran guidance.
“There’s no question we lost lead-ership without them,” Levine said.
“They’re two of our best players and two of our best leaders. They are two of our four captains, so there’s no question, but there are also no
UH Offense inept without Sims
SIMS continues on page 5
Redshirt sophomore quarterback David Piland scrambles for yards as Tulsa defensive end Cory Dorris is in hot pursuit. | Justin Tijerina /The Daily Cougar
SFAC to deliberate organizations’ fatesMolly HillContributing writer
The Student Fees Advisory Committee hearings came to a close on Nov. 5, marking an end to financial appeals made by numer-ous campus organizations and departments and the start to the review process that includes delib-eration on each request made.
The committee of 10 represen-tatives now has the task of decid-ing as a group where funds will go
and the significance they will have, according to its website. The orga-nizations and departments put reports together using templates provided by the committee to guide them through the request-ing process.
“The SFAC will discuss each request carefully and thoroughly,” said William F. Munson, associate vice president of Student Development representative in SFAC. “We will come to a conclusion based on reaching a consensus on each request.”
Mu n s o n e m p h a s i z e d t h e importance of these decisions and the process that unfolds after the committee comes to its own conclusions.
“The SFAC develops a final report that will include recom-mendations regarding allocation of Student Service Fees,” Munson said. “The final report will be transmitted to the Vice President of Student Affairs and the Presi-dent and will also be posted to the SFAC website.”
Final decisions about where finances will go will be made by the UH System Board of Regents in Spring 2013 using the report provided by SFAC, Munson said.
This was the second year for the completely electronic budget requests and review process, he said. PowerPoint presentations were made by the groups to pres-ent their budgets and what they would like to receive from SFAC.
STUDENT FEES
SFAC continues on page 3
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NOVEMBER 12-16, 2012
Inaugural Ceremony Monday, November 12, 12:00 pm - 1:00 pm UC Satellite, Patio
Study Abroad Photo Contest https://www.facebook.com/StudyAbroadUH
A World of Hospitality
Wednesday, November 14, 10:30 am – 1:30 pm Conrad N. Hilton College, South Wing Lobby
Bauer College Study Abroad Programs and Global Initiatives Wednesday, November 14, 11:00 am and 1:30 pm
Rotunda Area, First Floor of Melcher Hall
International Marketplace Thursday, November 15, 11:00 am - 2:00 pm Butler Plaza International Day, College of Pharmacy Thursday, November 15, 11:00 am – 1:00 pm Arbor between UC Satellite and SR 2
Freshmen International Student Reunion
Friday, November 16, 2:00 pm-4:00 pm Cougar Village, LSS Room 112
For more information, visit our website: http://www.issso.uh.edu/events/iew2012.html International Student and Scholar Services Office, 302 Student Service Center1
Inaugural Ceremony Monday, November 12, 12:00 pm - 1:00 pm UC Satellite, Patio
Study Abroad Photo Contest https://www.facebook.com/StudyAbroadUH
A World of Hospitality Wednesday, November 14, 10:30 am – 1:30 pm Conrad N. Hilton College, South Wing Lobby
Bauer College Study Abroad Programs and Global Initiatives Wednesday, November 14, 11:00 am and 1:30 pm
Rotunda Area, First Floor of Melcher Hall
International Marketplace Thursday, November 15, 11:00 am - 2:00 pm Butler Plaza
International Day, College of Pharmacy Thursday, November 15, 11:00 am – 1:00 pm Arbor between UC Satellite and SR 2
Freshmen International Student Reunion
Friday, November 16, 2:00 pm-4:00 pm Cougar Village, LSS Room 112
For more information, visit our website: http://www.issso.uh.edu/events/iew2012.html International Student and Scholar Services Office, 302 Student Service Center1
WHO: Open to all UH studentsWHEN: Nov. 14 & 15 at 4–7PM each dayWHERE: Social Work Building, Room 101 & 102
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2 \\ Monday, November 12, 2012 The Daily Cougar
ABOUT THE COUGARThe Daily Cougar is published Monday through Thursday during the fall and spring semesters, and Wednesdays during the summer and online at thedailycougar.com. The Daily Cougar is supported in part by Student Service Fees. The fi rst copy is free. Additional copies cost 25 cents.
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CALENDAR
Today
Ethics in Science Seminar Series: From 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. in Philip G. Hoffman Hall room 232, the National Science Foundation will host a lecture featuring history of science professor at the University of Pennsylvania. The lecture is part of a series highlighting ethics in scientifi c fi elds and will focus on scientists’ strategic management of militarization.
Free Lunch: From 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the atrium in the A.D. Bruce Religion Center free lunch will be provided for students.
Guest Master Class: From 7 to 8 p.m. in Dudley Recital Hall, Moores School of Music will host a master class featuring Russian pianist Alexei Lubimov.
Tuesday
Apollo 13: The Longest Hour: From 7 to 8 p.m. in the Science & Engineering Classroom room 100, Seymour Liebergot, former NASA fl ight controller will present a lecture to talk about what it was like to be a fl ight controller in NASA’s mission control during the Apollo 13 mission.
UH Women’s Basketball vs.
Alabama: At 7 p.m. in Hofheinz Pavilion, women’s basketball
will compete against Alabama University.
Jazz Concert: At 7:30 p.m. in Moores Opera House, Vacek Jazz Artist Residency will host a concerts featuring works by Nestico, Gabbart and Radiohead.
Wednesday
Texas Freedom Network Meeting: From 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. in the LGBT Resource Center, the Texas Freedom Network will hold an informational meeting. The group is politically active and focuses on issues like LGBTQ equality, sex-ed reform, religious freedoms and separation of Church and State.
The Asia Project: From 7 to 9 p.m. in the Houston Room in the University Center, the Council of Ethnic Organizations will host a spoken word performance by Asia.
Public Lecture: From 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. in Blaffer Art Museum. This event will feature a lecture by Shannon Jackson, arts and humanities professor at the University of California, Berkeley, followed by conversation with artist Lynne McCabe.
A weekend calendar will be avail-able in Thursday’s issue of The Daily Cougar.
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The Daily Cougar Monday, November 12, 2012 // 3
NEWSEDITOR Julie Heffl er
EMAIL [email protected]
ONLINE thedailycougar.com/news
Six megatrends affecting the world
Coordinator of the event Janet Faulkner
and student Armond Smith listen to a debate panel at Megatrend Future Day, an event exploring the six Mega-trends featured in the Bertelsmann Foundation’s recently published book “Megatrends in Global Interaction.“
— Hannah Laamoumi/The Daily Cougar
Researchers compound proteinJulie HefflerNews editor
Doctoral candidates at the UH Cullen College of Engineering have found a platform that may be useful for protein engineering by manipulating the surface proteins on bacterial cells. It was previously unknown if certain proteins — those containing disulphide bonds — could be moved from the inside of the cell to the surface of the cell and still support their function-ality, said engineering doctoral candidate Balakrishnan Ramesh. It turns out that they can.“People were not sure if proteins of inter-est, when they contain disulphide bonds, could be displayed on the surface (of cells) or not. We showed that it could be and that it is func-tional,” Ramesh said.
Moving proteins to the surface of cells is not a new application, said Navin Varadarajan, assistant professor at the College of Engi-neering. It was unknown if these d i s u l p h i d e - b o n d - c o n t a i n i n g proteins in particular could keep
up their functionality after being moved on to the cell surface. Some of these proteins could be useful in protein engineering or degrada-tion, he said.
“What we are trying to do now is a real application of this. Because we can study this one cell at a time, we can modify the property of any protein that’s being displayed on the surface,” Varadarajan said. “We can engineer the properties of whatever protein we’re interested in. We consider this a platform technology for engineering pro-teins of interest.”
The proteins that Varadarajan and Ramesh are interested in uti-lizing are inaccessible unless dis-played on the surface of the cell. Diffusion into and out of a cell is considered a major problem, Vara-darajan said.
“If you consider the proteins within the bacteria, they have no access to the outside. They’re stuck inside one or more lipid bi-layers. This makes it so that there is access to whatever you want,” Varadarajan said.
“Whatever you add into the solution containing the bacteria, the bacteria will have access to. I can bind to stuff; I can catalyze the reactions and do all kinds of stuff without having to worry about the molecule of interest having to dif-fuse into the cell.”
This new discovery could be useful in various applications from catalysis to vaccination, Ramesh said.
“We want proteins of interest on the surface of bacteria. These pro-teins of interest refer to proteins that are already useful for various applications,” Ramesh said.
“We could display enzymes on the surface and use it as a whole-cell catalyst for many reactions.”
Within their department, Vara-darajan and Ramesh worked with associate professor Patrick Cirino to assist them by the sharing of equipment.
“ H i s c o l l a b o r a t i o n w a s extremely important in that sense,” Varadarajan said.
SCIENCE
SFAC continued from page 1
“I hope that in the future each requesting entity will be able to appropriately update the com-mittee of the success and changes of their programs and adequately articulate what additional funding
there are asking for and why,” said Stacy Garcia, a Student Govern-ment Association representative in SFAC. “While we did get a number of organizations who did this very well, I hope that eventually they all can.”
The members of the commit-tee are currently in this process of reviewing all presentations to meet their goals and responsibilities
of making recommendations on behalf of these organizations.
“I am happy to say that I do believe we are holding up well,” said Rex Mann, the SGA represen-tative and vice chair for SFAC.
“The members are sharp and dedicated and the deliberations are running smoothly.”
4 \\ Monday, November 12, 2012 The Daily Cougar
Sarah BackerStaff columnist
Throughout this year’s highly contentious presi-dential election, party lines
and affi liations have been tightly drawn. I suppose this is why the inherent and pervasive bias of the mainstream media has become so shockingly clear. This is worrisome in that news is being spun in so many ways that the American public has no place to hear the unadulterated facts. This could be the new normal or a long-standing tradition — or a little of both.
The American press has tradi-tionally existed in a highly partisan and propagandist form. The fi rst truly successful newspaper outlets, such as the Boston Gazette and the New York Gazetteer, were forged during the American Revolution as Patriot and Loyalist forces to wage their own journalistic war of words. This merely continued into the debates of 1787 and 1788 on whether to ratify the Constitution. It is even speculated by scholars that the extreme Pro-Federalist bias of the newspapers at the time can
take credit for its ratifi cation.History shows that the press
has a tendency to showcase its tilt and predilection during times of intense polemics.
Although the 21st century newspaper has been forced to take a more sober, conventional and moderate stance in compliance with the desires of the advertisers and business community that sup-ports them, there is still a distinctly partisan bias. However, the new problem is in the overwhelmingly biased television news organiza-tions. Let’s look at the six major
providers of television news: ABC, CBS News, CNN, Fox News Channel, MSNBC and NBC News. Of these, FNC has a conservative standpoint. The other fi ve are left-leaning, if not outwardly liberal.
Journalists and news anchors are entitled to express their party affi liation and personal political opinions. But when these beliefs keep networks from dutifully reporting the facts and investigat-ing the truth, there is a problem.
On Sept. 11, the U.S. consulate in Benghazi, Libya was strategically attacked by a heavily armed group
suspected to be part of al-Qaida. Four Americans were killed, two of which died in a stand-off seven hours after the State Department had informed the White House of the attack.
For weeks, the Obama admin-istration alleged that the attack was the result of a riot over an anti-Muslim video. Everyday more information is uncovered that strongly insinuates that the admin-istration not only knew it was a preplanned attack and lied about it, but also could have deployed a Special Operations team in the nearby Sigonella, Italy. And yet, an urgent request for military aid was denied by the chain of command.
Whether Democrat or Repub-lican, this is an issue that matters. Put yourself in the shoes of those four brave Americans. If something was done wrong, we need to fi x the system so nothing like this happens again. It is the job of journalists to not only present the facts, but to earnestly investigate the truth. Only one of the six major news networks has made Benghazi a top issue.
The liberal media has treated President Obama as their fi rst-born son; he can do no wrong and all critics of his policies should be tied to the stake. With 21 percent of U.S. adults reading below a fi fth grade level, television media is an impor-tant and primary news source for a large block of Americans.
The media has had a long-standing tradition of partiality. But this recent disregard of the basic duties of a media outlet is unacceptable when the press is expected to act as a check on the government. People cannot allow this dereliction of duty to become the new normal.
Sarah Backer is a business sophomore and may be reached at [email protected].
JOURNALISM
OPINION EDITOR Lucas Sepulveda
EMAIL [email protected]
ONLINE thedailycougar.com/opinion
STAFF EDITORIAL The Staff Editorial refl ects the opinions of The Daily Cougar Editorial Board (the members of which are listed above the editorial). All other opinions, commentaries and cartoons refl ect only the opinion of the author. Opinions expressed in The Daily Cougar do not necessarily refl ect those of the University of Houston or the students as a whole.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR The Daily Cougar welcomes letters to the editor from any member of the UH community. Letters should be no more than 250 words and signed,
including the author’s full name, phone number or e-mail address and affi liation with the University, including classifi cation and major. Anonymous letters will not be published. Deliver letters to Room 7, University Center Satellite; e-mail them to [email protected]; send them via campus mail to STP 4015; or fax to (713) 743-5384. Letters are subject to editing.
GUEST COMMENTARY Submissions are accepted from any member of the UH community and must be signed with the author’s name, phone number or e-mail address
and affi liation with the University, including classifi cation and major. Commentary should be limited to 500 words. Guest commentaries should not be written as replies, but rather should present independent points of view. Deliver submissions to Room 7, University Center Satellite; e-mail them to [email protected]; or fax them to (713) 743-5384. All submissions are subject to editing.
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THE DAILY COUGARE D I T O R I A L B OA R D
EDITOR IN CHIEF Joshua MannMANAGING EDITOR Amanda HilowASSISTANT MANAGING EDITOR Channler HillNEWS EDITOR Julie Heffl erSPORTS EDITOR Andrew PateLIFE & ARTS EDITOR Allen LeOPINION EDITOR Lucas Sepulveda
ASSISTANT EDITORS
Bryan Dupont-Gray, Ellen Goodacre,Christopher Shelton
Media bias: the new normal?
David Delgado / The Daily Cougar
The Daily Cougar Monday, November 12, 2012 // 5
SEPT. 1L, 30-13 Texas State
OCT. 18L 72-42SMU
SEPT. 8L 56-49
Louisiana Tech
NOV. 10L 41-7 Tulsa
SEPT. 29W 35-14 @ Rice
OCT. 27W 45-35
UTEP
OCT. 6W 44-21
North Texas
NOV. 17@
Marshall
SEPT. 15L 37-6
@ UCLA
NOV. 3L 48-28@ East Carolina
OCT. 13W 39-17
UAB
NOV. 24vs.
Tulane
GAMEDAYSIDELINE REPORT
STAND OUTS
WEEKEND UPDATE
Everett Daniels had a career night, registering 18 tackles, which was a game-high. Daniels also racked up his third sack of his career that registered a fumble with 10 seconds remaining in the first quarter. | Justin Tijerina/The Daily Cougar
Zachary McMillian intercepted Cody Green for his fourth career interception with 9:48 remain-ing in the fi rst quarter. McMillian was a big part of a secondary that held Green to 130 yards passing on the evening.
Frustrated fans snooze at Robertson Stadium once the homecoming game against Tulsa gets out of hand. | Justin Tijerina /The Daily Cougar
This week in college football by Christopher Shelton
RUSH DEFENSE
TULSA CONTROLS PACE
SCORING DEFICIENCY
Tulsa gained 363 yards rushing on Saturday. Three different running backs ran for more than 60 yards, and a fourth, Trey Watts rushed for 57 yards. The Golden Hurricanes were able to chew up yardage and control the clock once they took the lead.
For the second consecutive week, UH lost the time of possession battle by a wide margin — the offense never found rhythm. The Cougars had six drives that all lasted less than a minute, wearing down the defense.
David Piland completed less than 50 percent of his passes against the Golden Hurricanes. Piland threw for 148 yards and was sacked three times. He failed to score a touchdown this week.
Three-headed monster gains yards
Cougars lose time of possession battle again
Piland fails to find rhythm
Manzur VazquezStaff writer
Tulsa had a big day on UH grounds Saturday, and the Cougars just couldn’t fi nd their rhythm on offense.
Head coach Tony Levine said the game got away from them late in the fi rst half.
“We made mistakes. (We) got behind in the second quarter and couldn’t catch up,” Levine said.
The Cougars were able to finish the first quarter down
by a field goal.Redshirt sophomore quar-
terback David Piland could not jump-start the offense. He threw an interception and the offense did not score while he was behind center. The Golden Hurricanes gained 363 yards rushing and three running backs rushed for more than 60 yards.
“We knew that with D.J. (Hayden) being out we would have to step up. We prepared really hard this week,” said senior linebacker Everett
Daniels. “A lot of things didn’t go our way this week.”
The offensive line had a hard night keeping Tulsa’s defense from their quarterback and Piland was sacked three times. Redshirt freshman running back Kenneth Farrow was held to 55 yards and zero trips to the end zone.
The only Cougar touchdown came when redshirt senior quar-terback Crawford Jones came in for Piland, and threw a pass for freshman running back Ryan Jackson in the fi nal minutes of
the fourth quarter.But that play came only after
one of Jones’ passes was inter-cepted and returned for a touch-down by Tulsa defense. Levine said Tulsa’s defense deserves praise for the turnovers.
“We had dropped to many passes, and turned the ball over four times. I give Tulsa credit,” Levine said. “Tulsa is probably the most complete football team we have played this sea-son in all three phases.”
Mistakes, turnovers lead to loss
excuses.”Their problems extended
past the ground on Saturday; the Cougars could not find rhythm in the passing game or stop the run either.
R e d s h i r t s o p h o m o r e quarterback David Piland threw for 148 yards and did
not lead the Cougars on a scoring drive. Redshirt senior quarterback Crawford Jones threw a 16-yard touchdown pass to freshman running back Ryan Jackson late in the fourth quarter.
Tulsa had 350 yards rush-ing against the Cougars.
UH had similar issues capping drives with scores against UCLA.
Its lone score came on an
86-yard run by Piland late in the fourth quarter. Piland also threw five interceptions.
With Sims in the lineup, UH’s lowest scoring output was 28 against ECU. Sims was injured late in the second quarter.
If the Cougars want to win their final two games and garner a bowl invitation, a healthy Sims is imperative.
Levine said Sims’ status for
next week against Marshall is still uncertain.
“I d o n’t k n ow a b o u t Charles’ health at this point. “I’ll have more of an idea tomorrow and hopefully know more Monday,” Levine said. “I hope we go from doubtful to day-to-day, but again that’s wishful thinking as I sit here in front of you.”
SIMS continued from page 1
6 \\ Monday, November 12, 2012 The Daily Cougar
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The Daily Cougar Monday, November 12, 2012 // 7
Parade keeps Houston red
HOMECOMING
Molly HillContributing writer
The Homecoming parade kick-started the final day of a week of festivities that brought out fans to support campus organizations as they made their way around Rob-ertson Stadium on Saturday after-noon riding decorated floats.
The annual parade is part of a tradition that brings out UH alumni and students.
“Keep Houston Red” was the theme and goal of this year’s parade and the tissue-paper cov-ered floats displayed each orga-nizations’ interpretation of the theme.
Trucks were used to pull them along as they blasted music and carried group members and their homecoming-themed creations.
“It’s great to see UH keeping the tradition alive and seeing so many people coming out to watch the parade and cheer on the team,” said construction management junior Stephen Montalvo.
“We are all out here striving to keep Houston red in our own
ways.”Fans lined the streets around
the stadium to see the floats that depicted common sights on campus and Houston landmarks. Various floats threw prizes to the onlookers including koozies and miniature footballs.
The Homecoming court kept the tradition alive as they took the lead in the parade and waved to passing fans and the UH Fron-tiersmen followed with a display of large UH and Texas flags. They were accompanied by loud sirens that signaled the start of the parade.
“I’m so proud to have UH alumni come out with their fami-lies to support their Cougars,” said Cyndi Diaz, a float-rider and kinesiology senior.
“This is what I have to look for-ward to after graduation, getting to return to UH and giving back to the school that gave so much to me.”
Apart from the student tailgat-ing tents that ran along Cullen Boulevard, areas for alumni were
set up facing Scott Street — where various catering events provided food and entertainment for the crowd leading up to the football game.
Throughout the week, many events allowed organizations to compete for the Spirit Cup.
The events included the Coo-glympics, Paint Shasta, a T-shirt design competition, Kick-Off Pep Rally and Strut Your Stuff, in addi-tion to the parade.
When the points were totaled, the Kappa Sigma fraternity and Chi Omega sorority were revealed as the winners of the Spirit Cup Competition.
“(Keep Houston Red) is a celebration of the University of Houston and its impact on the ever-growing and beautiful city of Houston,” said the 2012 Home-coming Board.
“We encourage participants to focus on Houston and the University’s culture, pride and traditions.”
The 2012 Homecoming court rode in the annual fall parade Saturday before the UH vs. Tulsa game. The event invited alumni and students out to wear red and celebrate their University along Cullen Boulevard. | Hannah Laamoumi/The Daily Cougar
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8 \\ Monday, November 12, 2012 The Daily Cougar
LIFE+ARTS EDITOR Allen Le
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Greeks strut their way to winners circle
TALENT SHOW
Walk to stop Multiple Sclerosis
The National Multiple Sclerosis
Society organized the MS Walk: Hous-
ton — a fund raising event that supports
research progress — which challenged
participants to march for either 5 kilometers
or 1 mile Sunday from UH. The average par-
ticipant raised $225, according the society’s
website. Multiple Sclerosis affects the brain
and spinal cord, and early symptoms include
blurred vision, numbness and tingling. —
Bethel Glumac/The Daily Cougar
Desiree AlvarezContributing writer
Running around onstage in an inspired Ron Burgundy suit and mustache for Homecoming’s “Strut Your Stuff” talent show Wednesday evening, Pi Kappa Alpha brother Ben O’Connor believed in keep-ing Houston red by celebrating the University.
O’Connor, and 850 other stu-dents, came to the University Cen-ter Houston Room to celebrate the anticipation of Saturday’s football game against Tulsa.
“It’s very important to love where you go to school and be a part of it,” O’Connor said. “This event has been going on for many years. It’s important because it is tradition. The more we cherish tradition, the more we strengthen our identity as the University of Houston.”
According to Homecoming Chair Rowin Cordon, the week is planned every year to encourage student involvement and create ongoing traditions.
“Strut your Stuff” gave student organizations — big and small — the opportunity to showcase their school spirit and special talents.
Most of the groups choreo-graphed dance routines or funny skits. A new category this year allowed groups to submit videos or mini-fi lms.
Of the 11 participating groups, the American Advertising Federation won fi rst place in the video perfor-mance category.
In the stage performance cat-egory, Kappa Sigma fraternity and Chi Omega sorority took home fi rst place. Second place went to Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity and Delta Zeta sorority and third place to Phi Kappa Phi fraternity and Alpha Chi Omega sorority.
“Strut Your Stuff” celebrates Homecoming by introducing the 10 students on the Homecoming court.
History senior and president of Zeta Tau Alpha Jessica Avila, was one of the members on the court.
“Homecoming is one of those traditions that not only focuses on current students, but the alumni and the community,” Avila said. “It’s important to put a lot of focus on that and it’s also a time to showcase your own pride.”