Zeta Tau Alpha members
from the University of Arkansas compete in the Sprite Step
Off National Finals, late February in Atlanta. Eighty teams
from fraternities and sororities at forty universities
participated in the competition which featured a grand prize
of $100,000 in scholarships, triumphing in the largest prize
pool ever of $1.5 million in scholarships.
White
group's
step
show win
causes
fiery
debate
over
integration
of
traditional
black
activity
Online
debate
rages
over
white
group's
step win
Visit
any of
the
nation's
more
than 100
historically
black
colleges
or
universities
and
you'll
see
clusters
of men
and
women
engaged
in the
rhythmic
clapping
and foot
stomping
routines
known in
black
Greek
circles
as
"stepping."
Now a
white
Arkansas
team's
win in
an
Atlanta
step
competition
has
started
a fiery
debate
over the
African-inspired
tradition
and
whether
the
integration
of a
once-ethnically
exclusive
activity
constitutes
a form
of
cultural
theft.
"What
has
happened
is black
youth
culture,
what
people
would
call hip
hop,
sort of
made
black
culture
accessible
and
appealing
to all
kinds of
people,"
said
Walter
Kimbrough,
president
of
historically
black
Philander
Smith
College
in
Little
Rock,
Ark.,
and an
expert
on black
Greek
life.
"It
really
now has
become
an
American
experience."
The
uproar
began
when the
all-white
Zeta Tau
Alpha
team
from the
University
of
Arkansas
beat out
five
other
sorority
teams to
win last
weekend's
national
final in
the
Sprite
Step Off
competition.
A
YouTube
video of
their
performance,
inspired
by the
movie
"The
Matrix,"
generated
hundreds
of
comments.
Posters
questioned
everything
from
whether
a white
group
should
have
been
allowed
to
compete
to
whether
judges
wowed by
the
unlikely
competitors
inflated
their
scores
to let
them
win.
"Good
Job but
let the
Black
folks
have
their
own
thing
for
once!!!"
wrote
one
commenter
posting
under
the name
"titetowers"
who said
the Zeta
Tau
Alpha
team did
well but
should
not have
won.
On
Thursday,
sponsor
Coca-Cola
announced
"scoring
discrepancies"
and said
the
runner-up
_ the
Alpha
Kappa
Alpha
team
from
Indiana
University,
whose
members
are
black _
would
share
first
place
and
receive
the same
$100,000
in
scholarships
that the
Zeta Tau
Alphas
won.
Members
of IU's
Alpha
Kappa
Alpha
sorority
compete
in the
Sprite
Step Off
National
Finals
on Feb.
20, in
Atlanta.
Eighty
teams
from
fraternities
and
sororities
at forty
universities
participated
in the
competition
which
featured
a grand
prize of
$100,000
in
scholarships,
triumphing
in the
largest
prize
pool
ever of
$1.5
million
in
scholarships.
It was
unclear
what the
discrepancies
were and
Coca-Cola
would
not
elaborate.
The
tournament
began in
September
with a
series
of
regional
qualifying
rounds
around
the
country.
While
scholars
have
debated
the
origin
of
stepping,
the
phenomenon
is
generally
believed
to have
originated
with
black
Greeks
around
1969.
Some
link it
to a
form of
African
"gumboot"
dancing,
which
involves
performers
rhythmically
slapping
and
stamping
their
feet.
It's a
form of
dance
made
popular
by
workers
in South
African
mines.
Pulling
from
things
like
military
cadences
and
dance
routines,
stepping
usually
involves
stomping
out
rhythms
in heavy
boots or
loud
shoes,
with
emphasis
on
precision
and
flair.
Step
crews
often
travel
from
coast to
coast to
earn
cash,
trophies
and
bragging
rights
for the
most
precise
or
clever
routine.
In the
early
1990s
the
fierce
competition
began to
gain
attention
off
black
campuses,
with
large
sponsors
hosting
events,
Kimbrough
said.
Before
then,
competitions
were
mostly
organized
by
fraternity
and
sorority
chapters.
As the
phenomenon
expanded,
other
Greek
groups
began
participating.
Now,
it's not
uncommon
for
white or
Latino
Greek
groups
to
participate.
Lawrence
Ross,
author
of "The
Divine
Nine:
The
History
of
African
American
Fraternities
and
Sororities,
said the
increased
interest
in
stepping
is a
natural
evolution,
much
like
other
urban
staples
such as
rap
music
that
went
from an
underground
phenomenon
to
mainstream.
"If
(black
Olympian)
Shani
Davis
was
prevented
from
speed
skating
simply
because
traditionally,
no
African-Americans
were in
the
field,
we
African-Americans
would be
up in
arms,"
he said.
Zeta Tau
Alpha
national
spokeswoman
Christy
Barber
said the
University
of
Arkansas
chapter
started
stepping
16 years
ago and
participants
were
originally
mentored
by the
school's
Alpha
Kappa
Alpha
chapter.
Arkansas
senior
Alexandra
Kosmitis
said she
and her
teammates
had
worked
hard and
were
very
excited
when
they
heard
they had
won
Saturday.
They
didn't
feel
their
title
was
diminished
when
Coca-Cola
told
them
they'd
have to
share
it.
"We feel
truly
blessed
to have
been
part of
the
competition
and to
have
gotten
scholarship
money to
further
our
educations,"
the
21-year-old
Pine
Bluff,
Ark.,
native
said.
"The AKA
chapter
from
Indiana
University
were
really
nice
girls
throughout
the
competition,
and
we're
glad
they are
also
getting
scholarship
money
too."
Kosmitis
has been
on the
step
team
since
she
joined
the
sorority
and said
it gives
her a
chance
to do an
activity
she's
come to
love
while
bonding
with her
sorority
sisters.
Melody
McDowell,
a
spokeswoman
for
Alpha
Kappa
Alpha's
national
office,
attended
the
competition
in
Atlanta
and said
her
sorority's
members
were
"very
talented
and
deserved
to win,
so we're
delighted
with the
outcome."
"We're
happy
that
whatever
problem
occurred
with the
judging
has been
resolved,"
she
said,
adding
that
both
teams
were
"very
deserving
winners."
McDowell
and
Barber
declined
to
comment
on the
Internet
controversy,
but both
said
they
were
disappointed
that
talented
young
women
who were
doing
what
they
love got
swept up
in an
ugly
online
controversy.