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Update: UH to resume classes Saturday

UH will not have classes Friday. | File photo

UH will remain closed Friday after shutting down Thursday afternoon due to a water main break. | File photo

Update 2/29 11:22 a.m.: The City of Houston lifted the boil order Saturday morning. Residents are urged to flush out their water systems by running it for several minutes.

Update 2/28 6:40 p.m.: The University on Saturday will resume classes, CASA testing and women’s basketball, according to a UH alert.

Houston is still under a boil water notice until at least 7 a.m. Saturday. Those visiting campus are urged to bring their own bottled water and snacks as there will be no food service.

Restrooms will operate with intermittent water pressure and there will be port-a-potties around campus, according to the alert.

Original: UH will remain closed Friday after a broken water main forced much of the city and campus to close, according to a UH alert.

Campus closed Thursday afternoon after a 96-inch water line that serves 40-50 percent of the city busted open, flooding parts of the city and lowering water pressure for hours.

On-campus residents had limited dining options and the University was forced to bring in port-a-potties following the drop in water pressure across campus closing restrooms.

A boil order was issued for Houston due to the drop in water pressure increasing the risk of bacteria. The boil order was issued with no end time.

All University activities will be canceled Friday except baseball’s matchup against Texas State at 6:30 p.m., according to the alert.

news@thedailycougar.com


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Jasmine Khademakbari wins SGA presidency in election sweep

Jasmine Khademakbari won the 2020 SGA presidential election with 60 percent of the vote. | Kathryn Lenihan/The Cougar

Jasmine Khademakbari won the 2020 SGA presidential election with 60 percent of the vote. | Kathryn Lenihan/The Cougar

Jasmine Khademakbari, in a sweep with the rest of the Students Unite party, will be the next SGA president, the election commission announced Thursday. 

Khademakbari, currently a College of Natural Science & Mathematics senator, and her vice president, Hiba Rashid, represented the Students Unite party and earned 60 percent of the vote. 

#ForTheStudent’s Isaiah Martin garnered 33 percent of the vote and Abraham Arackathazhath running with YouH earned 7 percent.

The results were planned to be announced Thursday at 7 p.m., but were published earlier due to campus closing because of a water outage across campus and parts of Houston.

A total 2,729 votes were cast in this year’s election, down from last year’s 3,376.

The past two SGA presidents, Allison Lawrence and Cameron Barrett, also ran under the Students Unite party name. 

Khademakbari and Rashid will mark the second in a row female-female winners in SGA since Lawrence and her vice president Maysarah Kazia did last year, the first since 1975.

The incoming president hopes to bring affordable housing to UH along a university-wide mentorship program during her upcoming tenure.

Students Unite won most of the Senate races, giving the party control of the executive and legislative branches for the upcoming administration.

At the SGA presidential debate last week, Khademakbari received around 56 percent of the vote in an exit poll conducted of by The Cougar that asked attendees who won the debate.

The full election results are below:

Election Results 2020

news@thedailycougar.com


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Campus closed for rest of Thursday due to water outage

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Update 3:38 p.m.

Mayor Sylvester Turner at a 3 p.m. news conference said the broken water line has been capped on both ends but will continue to spill water for the next several hours until it drains.

Around 40-50 percent of the city gets water from the broken line, Turner said.

“The water pressure will continue to be low for the next several hours,” Turner said

Dining Services starting at 4 p.m. will hand out pre-packaged items and have limited service out of Cougar Woods Dining Commons.

Food trucks will remain on campus later than usual, with most staying until 8-9 p.m.

Original: UH has canceled classes and all University activities for the rest of Thursday due to a water outage impacting campus and much of Houston.

UH Sugar Land and UH Katy will remain open, President Renu Khator said via Twitter.

The water outage occurred midday Thursday after a water main line on Clinton Drive in east Houston broke causing massive flooding in the area.

“Facilities is aware of the situation and we are working on the timeline and solution,” Associate Vice President of Facilities and Construction Management David Oliver said in an email.

Mayor Sylvester Turner said via Twitter that contractors are working to fix the broken lines and much of the city will experience low water pressure for the next several hours.

“The University is working to make sure campus residents have access to bottled water, restroom facilities and meals,” the University said via Twitter. 

“Housing is in the process of ordering port-a-potties and bottled water to support (student) needs,” UH spokesperson Chris Stipes said. 

Dining Services will provide bag-lunched style meals out of Cougar Woods and there will be hand-washing stations near the port-a-potties outside residence halls. Students can pick up bottle water at their residence halls front desk. 

The residence halls’ boilers are shut down “so the temperatures in the buildings may cool down as a result,” Student Housing and Residential Life said in an email.

Stipes said the outage will leave only the food trucks and market stores open for students.

A UH Alert email said that “essential accommodations” for those who live in student housing will be addressed so they can remain on campus.

The Student Centers will remain open until 4 p.m.

The Sugar Land shuttle route will operate normally, according to Parking and Transportation Services. Shuttle service will begin reducing at 3:30 p.m. and all will stop at 6 p.m.

news@thedailycougar.com


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SGA Supreme Court issues campaign sanctions against #ForTheStudents

| Deaunte Johnson/The Cougar

The SGA Supreme Court met Tuesday evening and issued a campaign sanction against candidates Isaiah Martin and Waseem Sarakb with #ForTheStudents. | Deaunte Johnson/The Cougar

The SGA Supreme Court ruled that #ForTheStudents violated another campaign sanction and their top two candidates will be banned from campaigning on Wednesday from 8-11:30 a.m. 

The decision comes just a day before the 2020 SGA election ends at 11:59 p.m. Wednesday. The court issued its ruling Tuesday night. 

The violation of the SGA Election Code by #ForTheStudents was for its presidential candidate Isaiah Martin having an active link in his bio on Monday to another Instagram page advertising #ForTheStudents when the party was already prohibited from campaigning

Attorney General Cameron Barrett decided late Monday that Complaint 20 filed against #ForTheStudents about the Instagram page and link had merit, issuing a Class D violation, which was taken to the SGA Supreme Court.

The court ruled that the Instagram account was a work product and #ForTheStudents should have taken it down despite #ForTheStudents arguing the owner of the linked Instagram page had left the campaign before the sanctions.

“The fact they lost control of it, that’s their fault and their problem,” said Chief Justice Elliot Kauffman.

Martin and his running mate Waseem Sarakbi will not be allowed to campaign Wednesday from 8-11:30 a.m., but #ForTheStudent’s senate candidates can. 

Kauffman warned the #ForTheStudents representatives that if they had another campaign violation the court would have no choice but to issue a Class D violation and disqualify them. 

The decision to take the violations to court came from indecision on whether presidential candidate Sarakbi should have been disqualified from the election based on violations.

Barrett felt Martin and Sarakbi should not be disqualified from the election, suggesting the court determine a campaign sanction within an 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. time window instead. Barrett continued to say he did not believe #ForTheStudents was intentionally promoting their campaign and that it was most likely an honest mistake.

Martin defended himself and his party by saying linking another Instagram page in a personal Instagram bio does not constitute endorsing the page or its posts.

The attorney general made the argument that the responsibility of the Instagram account is under #ForTheStudents, saying that the party could contact the former campaign manager to not advertise during the sanctioned period.

Sarakbi argued back that because the Instagram page was not actively being endorsed by #ForTheStudents affiliates, it should not be the cause of a Class D violation. By having the link to the campaign’s Instagram in Martin’s Instagram bio, Sarakbi said no violations were being broken.

The sanction explicitly banned referencing all giveaways during the sanction period, which is what the campaign Instagram linked in Martin’s Instagram was doing, Barrett said. 

Justice Mike Floyd argued that the inclusion of the campaign Instagram’s link in Martin’s Instagram bio was not worthy of receiving a Class D violation. 

“I’ve got to be honest, this has got to be the most stupid case this court has ever heard,” Floyd said. 

In their defense stated in Complaint 20, #ForTheStudents claimed social media marketing that occurred during the sanctioned period was posted by a campaign manager who no longer has any affiliation to the #ForTheStudents party.

In his analysis, Barrett believed the #ForTheStudents party should be held accountable for the Instagram marketing and said the party was able to reach out to the account to refrain from campaigning. 

This was the fourth time #ForTheStudents were found violating campaign sanctions, receiving three Class B penalties from three separate complaints last week. #ForTheStudents originally received the sanctions for issues related to branding and marketing.

In response to last weeks’ three violations, #ForTheStudents attempted to file an appeal against Barrett’s ruling that #ForTheStudents affiliates’ Instagram promotions were violating the sanction against campaigning. The appeals were not approved by the SGA Supreme Court and the additional sanctions were still issued from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Monday.

news@thedailycougar.com


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Khademakbari wins SGA presidential debate exit poll

Jasmine Khademakbari won the 2020 SGA presidential debate exit poll conducted by The Cougar. | Kathryn Lenihan/The Cougar

Jasmine Khademakbari won the 2020 SGA presidential debate exit poll conducted by The Cougar. | Kathryn Lenihan/The Cougar

Students Unite presidential candidate Jasmine Khademakbari on Tuesday won the post-debate exit poll conducted by The Cougar following the 2020 SGA presidential debate that took place in the Student Center Theater.

Khademakbari received 42 out of 75 total votes, or 56 percent. #ForTheStudents presidential candidate Isaiah Martin received 29 votes and YouH’s Abraham Arackathazhath earned 4 votes.

Attendees were given a paper ballot that asked “Who do you think won the debate?.” Attendees gave their ballots to The Cougar staff members at the end of the debate.

Voting for presidential and senate candidates begins Thursday and finishes on Feb. 26 at midnight. The results will be announced on Feb. 27.

news@thedailycougar.com


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D’Eriq King transferring to Miami

Quarterback D'Eriq King has decided to transfer to Miami after announcing last week he had entered the transfer portal. | File photo

Quarterback D’Eriq King has decided to transfer to Miami after announcing last week he had entered the transfer portal. | File photo

Former UH quarterback D’Eriq King is taking his talents to South Beach, according to a Twitter post he made on Monday.

King, whose decision to enter the transfer portal last Monday shocked many,  joins a Hurricanes program in the midst of its biggest rebuild in decades.

The Canes, recovering from a season that saw UM go 6-7 with losses to FIU and Louisiana Tech, gain a promising dual-threat quarterback in King who led the American Athletic Conference in touchdowns with 50 in 2018.

The Athletic reported first on Sunday that King had chosen Miami and will begin classes as soon as Tuesday.

King redshirted in 2019 after Houston started the season 1-3. He threw for over 600 yards, six touchdowns and two interceptions in his four games for the Cougars in the season. The transfer will be immediately eligible to play under Canes head coach Manny Diaz after his graduation from UH in December.

sports@thedailycougar.com


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Women are not the only ones who need access to abortions

When Nick Thixton, who uses pronouns they/them, needed an abortion in Texas as a trans person, they felt alienated at times. Despite a few hiccups along the way, Thixton was able to have their abortion in an environment that was respectful and gender affirming.

In the 43 years since Roe v. Wade legalized abortion, states have enacted 1,074 abortion restrictions, according to Guttmacher Institute, a research and policy organization. States like Alabama, Georgia, Missouri and Ohio have passed near-total abortion bans.

“People making these restrictions think that all pregnant people are women and that women don’t know what they need,” Thixton said. “The entire conversation is dominated by women this, women that, trust women — she/her is the default.”

Targeted regulation of abortion providers laws, or TRAP, are designed to systematically shut down 75 percent of all abortion providing services in Texas, according to the National LGBTQ Task Force.

Thixton like other LGBTQ members want and need to be included in the reproductive healthcare conversation because women are not the only ones seeking abortions.

“It is alienating when all the language centers on women, because it’s like you’re talking about my body but erasing my existence,” Thixton said. “It’s like an out-of-body experience reading some of this literature because they are talking about my body and the experience that I went through. So, I know that I had this experience physically and I’m reading about it but there is no room for me as a person in this narrative.”

There are more obstacles blocking gender-queer and trans people from safe and affordable abortions. Because most abortion seekers are women, there’s a misconception that the people in need of these services are only females. Many abortion care providers and organizations have slogans that exclude everyone who is not a cisgender woman, who can still get pregnant.

Reproductive rights organizations like the Planned Parenthood Federation of America, have made an effort to use inclusive language about “people” throughout their website. The transition to gender-inclusive language is motivated by the need to ensure that every person is included.

Though Thixton was able to have an abortion in a timely manner at a facility that accommodated their needs, there were still moments when the language used was gender non-affirming.

Thixton believes that having a well-educated staff will significantly decrease the amount of assumptions made about a client’s sexuality and gender. Despite the efforts made by several reproductive health care clinics, there seems to be a disconnect between the patient-care aspect of using gender affirming language.

“I would like the conversation to move to a place where the default would be to not name it ‘woman’s’ this and that,” Thixton said. “If we move the conversation to the point where we’re defaulting to gender-neutral language, then people wouldn’t think to name it that.”

Fund Texas Choice is a non-profit organization that formed after Texas House Bill 2 was passed and caused the closure of nearly 75 percent of all abortion providing services in Texas.

“As (abortion) currently exists, it’s something that’s only accessible to people who have the resources to get to the clinic safely, who can pay for the service,” said Stephanie Gomez, chair of community engagement at Fund Texas Choice.

Gomez emphasizes that Fund Texas Choice is focused on being a gender inclusive organization that provides transportation and accommodation.

When people reach out to the organization, it’s out of need for equitable access to abortion  services. While the abortion itself is not paid for, there are other avenues of assistance including gas, Uber rides, plane tickets, hotels, etc.

Gomez applied to the board of directors at Fund Texas Choice, motivated by the lack of safe transportation available for abortion seekers.

“I consider my abortion the first time I think, that I ever felt empowered in my life,” Gomez said. “It was the first time that I decided I was going to do what was best for me, and I wasn’t going to do something based off of what I had been told by society, by my parents, by the Catholic Church.”

A few weeks after Gomez turned 18, she was prompted by her friends to take a pregnancy test, as a joke.

“There was a bathroom in our classroom,” Gomez recounts. “I went into the bathroom in my classroom and they hear me sobbing because my pregnancy test came out positive.”

Gomez was raised by her devout Catholic family and had adopted the same views on abortion, but when the pregnancy test read positive, she instantly knew that abortion was best for her.

At the time, she couldn’t turn to her family and reluctantly turned to her abuser.

“I had to beg my abuser to drive me to a Planned Parenthood center,” Gomez said. “That was the reality for me and for a lot of people across Texas.”

Both Thixton and Gomez experienced some hardship in financial access to their abortion providers. In addition to the lack of access, financial barriers severely infringe on a person’s access to reproductive health care.

The nationwide cost ranges between $350 to $950 for an abortion during the first trimester, according to Planned Parenthood. The farther along in a pregnancy, the heftier the cost.

For LGBTQ people, financial barriers can be further debilitating. A 2013 study by the Williams Institute at the UCLA School of Law found that 14.1 percent of lesbian couples and 7.7 percent of gay male couples receive food stamps, compared to 6.5 percent of different-sex married couples. A 2015 report from the National Center for Transgender Equality estimates that compared to the general public, transgender people are three times as likely to be unemployed.

People who seek abortions are further inconvenienced by waiting periods during their search for a safe and legal abortion provider. Waiting periods are disguised as a benefit to the client by presenting them with the opportunity to fully consider the decision. But these state mandated waiting periods result in dramatically higher costs.

“In total, the mandatory waiting period could increase the monetary cost of obtaining an abortion by a total of over $900 when accounting for fees, transportation costs, lost wages, and child-care,” according to a 2015 study by the National Bureau of Economic Research.

Clinic Access Support Network is a 501(c) nonprofit organization that believes everybody deserves access to reproductive healthcare. CASN provides their services to people regardless of their income, socioeconomics, living situation, race, gender identity and sexual orientation.

CASN heavily relies on the power of approximately 80 volunteers to mobilize abortion seekers and aid them by providing transportation, accommodation and childcare assistance.

“Last year we drove over 700 people,” said Sahra Harvin, board co-chair at CASN. “We have several people a day who need rides, and it’s hard to staff even the local one’s.”

While CASN currently does not have an office, the volunteer-based organization functions by using different apps for scheduling and communication to provide transportation for abortion seekers without access.

“We get usually between 5 and 15 new volunteers like every other month and we lose maybe about 1 or 2 every month,” Harvin said. “We’ve been hovering around the 80 person mark since the 2016 election.”

Harvin explained when a caller leaves a voicemail or texts the hotline, a case manager will respond to gather intake information. The caller can expect follow-up questions regarding the location, time and type of appointment they are requesting CASN’s services for.

“It’s really powerful to know that you’re a part of this moment in somebody’s life that’s so transformative,” Harvin said. “I hope she’s okay. People don’t really stay in touch with us afterwards.”

Per CASN policy, drivers are prohibited from initiating a relationship with the callers. But Policy aside, Harvin believes that the caller sometimes wants to move on.

Sharing personal abortion stories can easily and safely be done online through the We Testify website. Both Thixton and Gomez are storytellers of We Testify, a project of the National Network of Abortion Funds.

Aimée Pezina is a journalism senior and can be reached at opinion@thedailycougar.com


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Transgender people deserve abortion and health care services too

Jiselle Santos/The Cougar

Abortion is a polarizing issue, but every person who can conceive a child is worthy and capable of making a private decision about whether to have the procedure or not.

The crusade against abortion began by targeting cisgender women. But women are not the only people who can get pregnant, and not all people receiving abortions are cis women — transgender men, intersex and gender non-conforming people can get pregnant, too.

We cannot continue to exclude trans and gender non-conforming people from reproductive health care and abortion conversations. Everybody deserves access to safe and legal health care.

The reproductive rights of gender-queer people have been under attack by the Trump Administration from the beginning of his presidency. If retroactive laws continue to be implemented across the country, entire communities of people will face legalized discrimination.

The National Center for Transgender Equality (NCTE) has maintained a current record of Trump’s major policy changes that have been proposed or implemented. On his inauguration day, all mentions of LGBTQ people were removed from the websites of the White House, Department of State and Department of Labor.

One of the most absurd rules proposed by the Department of Health and Human Services in January 2018 allowed medical providers to deny treatment to trans people in need of reproductive care.

Thirty-six states and four territories, including Texas, do not have laws that provide LGBT people with inclusive insurance protections, according to the Movement Advancement Project. Only 12 states, one territory and D.C. have laws to prohibit health insurance discrimination based on a person’s sexual orientation or gender identity.

The general public needs to be more active to ensure that every person has the right to equal and non-discriminatory health care providers. By supplementing existing and current health care providers with non-stigmatizing information, there will be an increased awareness of these unconstitutional laws.

It’s critical to understand that people across the spectrum need abortion and reproductive health care services, too.

Feelings of isolation often lead to anxiety, severe depression and, in many cases, attempted suicide. The National LGBTQ Task Force estimates that the attempted suicide rate for multiracial transgender people is 33 times higher than the general population.

The NCTE found that “some trans people who need access to abortion funds and other support may be put off by ‘women’s’ branding,” resulting in gender dysphoria.

Abortion and reproductive health care access are viewed as women’s issues, and this has been seen in the language used by health care providers. By simply using inclusive language and pronouns, health care providers could avoid making a person feel alienated.

The fight for equal access to abortion and reproductive health care for the LGBTQ community is ongoing. But everybody has the ability to help by allying with the community to support their basic human rights. Even people who are not actively or heavily involved in the community’s activism can make a difference by being an ally.

Guest columnist Aimée Pezina is a journalism senior and can be reached at opinion@thedailycougar.com


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The case for a Texas high-speed railway

A high-speed rail system would be a game changer for the state of Texas. Not only would it move millions of people across the state, it would connect cities as a means of sharing talent, opportunities and innovation heading into the future.

File art

Last year, 3,642 people died on Texas roads. In Houston, 640 people die every year in traffic, which is the highest among the largest metropolitan areas in the country. Drug and alcohol-related crashes are the highest per capita of any city, and a study of traffic data from the Houston Chronicle showed the numbers are only getting worse.

It’s past time for the city to act, and the path to a solution starts with getting cars off the roads.

It’s no secret Houston needs more mass-transit options. Drivers spend nearly 75 hours stuck in traffic each year, wasting $1,400 in time and fuel, according to a report from Texas A&M University.

Car dominance is bad for the environment. Emissions from vehicles contribute to smog and soot that leads to poor health outcomes, and the CO2 from millions of cars’ exhausts on the road worsens the effects of climate change.

A high-speed rail system would be a game changer for Texas. Not only would it move millions of people across the state, it would connect cities as a means of sharing talent, opportunities and innovation heading into the future.

Texas Central has set out to create a high-speed rail line that will connect Houston to North Texas, a corridor with a distance of 240 miles. Inspired by the Shinkansen trains in Japan, the rail system would connect two of the fastest growing economies in the state and lower the drive time from Houston to Dallas to 90 minutes.

The success of Japan’s system offers an insight into what’s possible. In 1964, the Shinkansen Bullet Train was unveiled. The initial rail covered a distance of 320 miles, connecting Tokyo to Osaka. The trains could reach speeds close to 140 mph.

Today, the bullet train moves nearly half a million people per day through thousands of miles of track. With hundreds of trains that crisscross the country, Japanese cities have become a network of commerce and opportunity.

Any talk of large construction projects in the state is bound to be met with skepticism because of the competing interests of lawmakers, tax payers and land owners. The creators of the Shinkansen believed in the vision for the project, and today it’s seen as a shining example of what can be accomplished through dedication and persistence. Our leaders should feel empowered to show the same amount of commitment.

The numbers are clear: the Texas Bullet Train would take 14,630 vehicles off the road per day on Interstate 45, save 81.5 million gallons of gasoline and, being 100 percent electric, the environmental impact would be immeasurably low.

Over 10,000 jobs per year are expected to be created during the train’s construction in the next couple decades, with $36 billion of revenue going into the Texas economy. The populations of the areas along the projected route are expected to double by 2035, so the time is now for bold, forward-thinking solutions.

A functional high-speed rail system would make Houston stronger, safer and an environmental leader heading into the future. If the city is going to be successful in the 21st century, improving connectivity is a great way to start.

Houston has always been known as a boomtown, and with the glory days of the oil industry in the past, the new road to prosperity is going to be built using mass transportation.

Drew Jones is a print journalism senior and can be reached at opinion@thedailycougar.com


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Staff editorial: More time was needed to advertise Homecoming Concert

Yung Deuce, Yung Me and Mike Jones perform at the last homecoming concert in 2017. | File photo/The Cougar

Yung Deuce, Yung Me and Mike Jones performed at the last Homecoming Concert in 2017. | File photo

Waka Flocka Flame will take the stage at Lynn Eusan Park on Thursday as the highlight event for this year’s homecoming week. 

The problem is, students had only three days’ notice as to who the headline performer was going to be. That makes it tough for students to plan to attend or even simply drum up interest that a major artist is coming to campus to perform a free concert. 

Before a major event like this can be advertised, the University has to sign off on everything and give approval.

Normal events put on by various departments within the University usually have several weeks of advertising, while a well-known artist being paid tens of thousands of dollars gets only three days. That doesn’t seem right.

These concerts help build tradition at the University and get students to come together before everyone’s finals come around and many go home for winter break.

There was no Homecoming Concert last year because the Student Fees Advisory Committee, which funds these events and organizations like The Cougar, chose not to allocate funding, citing low attendance.

But this isn’t fair to the organizations responsible for upping attendance numbers. It’s on the University to get these performances finalized sooner so the student organizations that plan these events can do their job getting as many people to attend as possible. 

Come post-Homecoming, if the concert doesn’t have many attendees, that’s on the University. It won’t be the failure of the student organization hosting these events. There needed to be more time to get the word out that Flame was coming. 

Getting these major deals worked out does take time, but big money is going into these concerts, and the University should hustle to get everything figured out. 

As for students, we encourage you to consider staying late on Thursday to check out Flame. His show is said to be fun for students. 

editor@thedailycougar.com


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