Issue 38, Volume 79

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LIFE AND ARTS

HALLOWEEN

BASKETBALL

Painting the campus orange Rules come with adjustments From haunted houses to pumpkin carving, students get in the spirit of Halloween with events across campus.

Players will not be able to hand check during games. SEE PAGE 5

SEE PAGE 7 OCTOBER

CALENDAR CHECK: 31

Halloween. Have a spooky and safe night this Hallow’s Eve.

THE DAILY COUGAR

T H E

O F F I C I A L

S T U D E N T

N E W S PA P E R

O F

T H E

U N I V E R S I T Y

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Issue 38, Volume 79

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H O U S T O N

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ONLINE EXCLUSIVES AT THEDAILYCOUGAR.COM

ACTIVITIES

Conducting new methods to generate electricity Ciara Rouege Staff writer

The Texas Center for Superconductivity, located in the UH Science Center, focuses on developing cutting-edge technologies for several disciplines | Justin Tijerina/The Daily Cougar

Researchers are racing to create methods and designs that increase the effectiveness of superconductivity material while at the same time decreasing the cost decades after physics professor Paul Chu discovered a high-temperature superconductor above 77 kelvins. “There is a lot of research going on here at UH and other places around the world to improve the performance of the wire,” said Steve Eckroads, technical executive at the Electric Power Research Institute. The Texas Center for Superconductivity and CenterPoint Energy

are hosting the 11th EPRI Superconductivity Conference, which will feature 20 presentations concerning advancements in electricity-generating and transmitting machines, at the Hilton UH this week. “The Electric Power Research Institute conducts research, development and demonstration projects related to the generation, delivery and use of electricity,” according to a UH press release. “The international membership supporting EPRI’s work comprises more than 1,000 organizations, including electric utilities, government agencies, corporations and public and private entities.”

Superconductivity involves the study of zero-resistance material that can generate or transmit electricity with no loss of energy. Contributions from the field have already prompted improvements in the medicine, transportation and communications fields. According to the Coalition for the Commercial Application of Superconductors, 25 percent of electricity in the U.S. is consumed by industrial motors. Scientists in the field are targeting companies that could dramatically benefit in productivity and profits by using ELECTRICITY continues on page 3

ALUMNI

Donation keeps dancing spirit alive Diana Nguyen Staff writer

Ho u s t o n i a n n a t i v e Pa t s y Swayze, who trained her late son actor Patrick Swayze on his way to “Dirty Dancing” fame, was a resident choreographer at a number of local institutions and taught dance at the University for 18 years. She died at age 86 in September. Swayze A m o n g those many dance students was alumna Judy Jones. Jones worked for Swayze at her private studio and studied under her while a student at UH. Judy and her husband Walter launched the Patsy Swayze

Scholarship Endowment at the School of Theatre and Dance. The endowment was created with an initial gift of $25,000, which will support the scholarship for UH dance students. “She was always so excited about working with people. That’s how she was all the time; enthusiastic about her work. When you’re a student of Patsy’s, you’re a part of her family. Her family was always at the dance studio,” Jones said. “Her daughter, her sons — they were coming and going. Her husband was the kindest person. You get spiked up in her energy and enthusiasm. Appreciation for movement, life and action: That was Patsy.” With Swayze’s ever growing influence on Jones, Jones decided DANCING continues on page 3

Blood drive beckons for Cougar donations Blood donations to The United Methodist Hospital drive, stationed inside Campus Recreation and Wellness Center, will go to the Eileen Murphree McMillin Blood Center. More than 50,000 blood components are transfused each year for a variety of diseases and conditions by the hospital, according to its website. Fernando Castaldi/The Daily Cougar


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