10-10-12 The Lasso

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DENTON pg.6

PARTLY CLOUDY High 76° Low 67° Weather pg. 2

Wednesday │October 10, 2012 │ Vol. 99, No. 8

Texas Woman’s University | Student run since 1914

Students walk for heart

awareness Aaron Claycomb and Allie Beaurline Editor-In-Chief and Reporter Saturday, participants in the Denton Heart Walk lined up at the starting line at 9 a.m., bundled in jackets and sweaters, braced for the cold and wet weather. With children in arm, alongside friends and families, participants on Oct. 6 included heart disease survivors and heart walk supporters, and even some canine companions brought along for the walk. In addition to a three-mile walk, there were also games and activities on 1600 N. Bell Ave. in front of Hubbard Hall where supporters gathered Saturday morning. As of Oct. 6, the morning of the event, $29,464 had been donated for the walk at TWU, according to the Heart Walk website. The students responsible were Linh Pham and Ruth Mokua. Together they helped organize the event alongside the American Heart Association and the Leadership Institute at TWU. This was Pham’s second year to be involved with the Heart Walk, and the third year for the Leadership Institute. The Leadership Institute has

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Students keep the cause close to heart

Pink promise walk at TWU Kyla Rae Reporter

Students gathered in front of Hubbard Hall yesterday from 5:30–7 p.m. trying on and writing on their neon pink shirts, for Breast Cancer Awareness Month. Some used pink bandanas as headbands, wrapping them around their heads, while breast cancer facts were heard over the speakers. Before the walk began, students recited chants in support such as: “Prevention is best...Know your breasts...” and “Start the fight by living right...Pink Promises...” According to www. breastcancer.org, chances of breast cancer nearly doubles if an immediate family member has been diagnosed.“About fifteen percent of women who get breast cancer have a family member diagnosed with it.” Despite these statistics more than 2.6 million survived breast cancer last year. Student Health Services Health Promotion hosts this walk annually. This event will feature Coordinator for Academic Outreach and breast cancer survivor Jacqueline Folsom as a Photography by Jeni Berry

Participants in the Pink Promises breast cancer walk traverse the Denton Campus together.

Debate watch for Pioneers Megan Pillow Reporter

Photography by Amanda Amaral

Governor Mitt Romney and President Barack Obama butted heads last Wednesday, Oct. 3, in a presidential debate held at Magness Arena at the University of Denver while TWU students gathered in SU 207, for a live screening event with free pizza, popcorn and drinks as well life-sized cut-outs of both candidates for photo ops, and party hats labeled with “D” “R” or “L” to represent the wearer’s political stance in the race. The event started at 7 p.m., and the debate began at 8 p.m., with a house so full of students that a second location was opened in the purple lounge. The first live TWU debate Twitter

feed, moderated by campus professors, was displayed alongside the television screen, which Michele Lockhart, doctoral student in the rhetoric program, explained was a new idea that the faculty wanted to try this year. Lockhart stated that she wanted to focus on political rhetoric and analyze the language used in the debate. She also explained the importance of students experiencing this event as a group, rather than individually: to encourage more active, political involvement. “Our goal is to raise civic awareness,” Dr. Graham Scott, assistant English professor and director of First–Year Composition, stated. He felt that gathering the students together to watch the debate,

Students gathered Oct. 3 to watch Governor Mitt Romney and President Barack Obama debate.

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General Saunders to be inducted Dennis Barbee Managing Editor

Friday Major General (Ret.) Mary Saunders, executive director of the TWU Leadership Institute, will receive the Texas Women’s Hall of Fame Award in the Military category. The award, given every two years, was commissioned in 1984 to honor the state’s most accomplished women, according to the Commissions website. The award is given biennially and Texas residents submit nominations. A bi-partisan, independent panel of judges then selects the recipients who will be inducted. The permanent Texas Women’s Hall of Fame, located in Hubbard Hall on the TWU campus in Denton, which currently houses the biographies and

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INSIDE THIS ISSUE News

Features

Features

Sports

Hit–A–Thon..........................3 Memorial.............................4

News

Physical Therapy..................5

twulasso.com

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Special Section

Texas State Fair...................6

Wellness.................................7 Volleyball................................8

Opinions

Mid–Term Survival..................9

Arts & Entertainment

Halloween Movies..................10

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