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WEDNESDAY | SEPTEMBER 21, 2011*
A&E Page 4
Fighter 2.0
“Warrior” seems a lot like last year’s “Fighter”, which has people asking if it’s just another underdog story
NEWS Page 6
SPORTS Page 5
Realizing the need for a National Association of Hispanic Journalists on campus, two students head the effort
As the A&M SEC drama seemed it couldn’t get worse, a new billboard on I-35 has Baylor even more fired up
Bringin’ it back
Real-life rivalry
Vol. 112 No. 13
© 2011, Baylor University
Uproar signs new artists
In Print >> Hey, fashionistas
The Lariat wasn’t joking when we asked for your Best-Dressed Bear picks, and there’s still time to send in your choice.
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By Joshua Madden A&E Editor
>> A bit defensive
After an intense audition and selection process, Baylor’s Uproar Records label has signed five artists for the upcoming year. The artists will all have the opportunity to have their music recorded professionally through Uproar Records. Three individual artists – Layne Lynch, Trannie Stevens and Holly Tucker –were signed in addition to the duo O, Loveland and a band consisting of Cameron Butcher, Byron Roldan and brothers Jacob and Michael Agnew that has yet to be named. “I’m just really happy to be here. I know there’s a reason behind it and I’m just curious to find out what it is,” Stevens said. The genres of the artists varied widely. While Stevens called her music “poppy-jazzy”, Tucker considers herself to be primarily country and Lynch said she has a Regina Spektor-sound with Mumford & Sons lyrics. Tucker said she tries to “put a little soul” into her country, although she stressed that she
Baylor forced its first shutout since 1995 in Saturday’s win over SFA, and the Bears’ defense was at the forefront.
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>> Great performance Mark Wood lit up the stage on Saturday at the Waco Cultural Arts Festival and showed why he’s an Emmy-award winning artist.
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Viewpoints “As tempting as it may be to find other uses for the [Baylor] texting system, it’s simply not a good idea.” Bear Briefs The place to go to know the places to go
By Jade Mardirosian Staff Writer
Bulb ban Baylor’s Young Conservatives of Texas is hosting an event called “Save The EasyBake Oven” from 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. today in the Vara Martin Daniel Plaza to raise awareness about the consequences of the incandescent light bulb ban.
Distinguished guest James Davison Hunter, the Labrosse-Levinson Distinguished Professor of Religion, Culture, and Social Theory at the University of Virginia, will give a public lecture, “Christianity, Politics and Power” from 3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday in Bennett Auditorium.
would not classify her music as twangy country or pop music Tucker said she felt it was important to “stick to [her] country roots.” The two collaborative acts were even more difficult to classify. O, Loveland, which consists of junior Clark Jones and Dallas sophomore Amy Boykin, who is Uproar’s only returning artist, said that they were unsure of how to label their music. The artists said they were best described as “folk and dance, but just because we like the word “dance.” The other band blends several genres because of the mix of both rap elements and more traditional vocals. “The fact that we could rap and sing gave us an element that some of the other bands don’t have,” Butcher said. The band originally met playing baseball together in south SEE
UPROAR, page 6
Manuscripts allow advanced research
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Art talk The Martin Museum of Art will feature a gallery talk by Ann Ekstrom from 5:30 to 7 p.m. Thursday. Ekstrom’s large-scale oil paintings of miniature, everyday household objects are on display in the museum until October 1.
Photos of newly signed Uproar artists and bands INSIDE on page 4
Matt Hellman | Lariat Photo Editor
A cultural
cymbal
Jasper senior Logan Dean rolls on suspended cymbals as part of a group sequence performed by the Baylor Percussion Group on Sunday during the Cultural Arts Fest on the Waco Suspension Bridge.
Education combats global killer
By Jordan Hearne Reporter
This week, students can learn how to keep their heart healthy and find out if their cardiovascular health needs improvement. The Heart Health Fair hosted by Baylor’s Peer Nutrition Educators is from 3-5 p.m. each day this week through Thursday in the McLane Student Life Center lobby. The event Jordan Hearne is an effort to educate students about heart disease and habits that help the cardiovascular system. Houston senior and peer nutrition educator Bekka Limon stressed the importance of teaching students when to begin thinking about the condition of their
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heart. Peer nutrition educators provide free appointments for dietary analysis and daily nutrition planning to students and faculty. “A lot of people don’t know that when you turn 20, you should start getting your cholesterol levels checked by your doctor,” Limon said. She said most students turn 20 years old during their sophomore year at college. In response to this, Baylor’s peer nutrition educators want to make students aware that a healthy diet and exercise coupled with education about blood pressure and cholesterol levels can benefit the heart. The fair was inspired by World Heart Day on Sept. 29, created by the World Heart Federation as a national day dedicated to educating others about cardiovascular disease. At the Heart Health Fair, faculty and students can find information about the American Heart Association’s guidelines for adult heart health. According to the website, there are seven factors that people should monitor in order to keep the heart in good
shape, including weight control, cholesterol control and a healthy diet. Other factors include staying active, managing blood pressure, reducing blood sugar and avoiding cigarette smoke. Limon said she hopes knowledge gained from visiting the Heart Health Fair table will help to prevent future cardiovascular problems. “Heart disease is the number one killer of Americans today,” Limon said. “We hope that students and faculty that stop by will gain more information on how to take care of their heart and if they are a student, start getting their cholesterol levels checked on a yearly basis.” Students can monitor their body’s changes and cholesterol levels at the health center on the second floor of the Student Life Center. Sharon Stern, medical director of Baylor Health Services, said students can get their cholesterol checked by scheduling an appointment, and it’s best to come
TheLariat
SEE
HEART, page 6
Baylor students are being given the unique opportunity to practice ancient languages and complete advanced research on rare manuscripts, ultimately leading to the publication of important, unknown texts. These experiences are made available to undergraduate, and some graduate, students through the Green Scholars Initiative, a research program focused on giving undergraduate students hands-on research opportunities. Dr. David Lyle Jeffrey, distinguished professor of literature and the humanities in the Honors College, said this type of research for undergraduate students is almost unheard of. “The Green Scholars Initiative allows students to do undergraduate research that results in publication, [which] is a distinct advantage for many types of graduate programs,” Jeffrey said. “Beyond that, the advantage to the students is [that] they get to work with manuscripts in a way that no other undergraduates in the country get to.” This semester the Green Scholars Initiative will include about 18 to 20 students — mostly sophomores, juniors and seniors — who will begin working on manuscript projects.
Jeffrey explained the manuscript projects typically take a year to finish, with some possibly taking as many as three. Alexandria, La., senior Stephen Margheim is involved in one of the first projects implemented through this program. Margheim was assigned papyri fragments to research and identify. “It took me a week to identify [the papyri] as Homer from the Iliad,” Margheim explained. Dr. Jeffrey Fish, associate professor of classics, is serving as Margheim’s mentor for this project. Margheim explained that the two would now work together to write an article to publish in an academic journal. “I’ve been thrilled with his work from the very start,” Fish said. “He was able to tell what the papyrus was without a database and he was so enthusiastic about reading it that I had to give him bits of it at a time. He has done superb work.” Margheim explained that this semester he would also work as a mentor to students who will be completing other projects through the program. He said the program puts a real focus on undergraduate research through hands-on experience. “I think it is, in fact, a once-ina-lifetime opportunity, that’s not SEE
RARE, page 6
Baylor University
Undergraduate humanities students sort through ancient papyri fragments retrieved from paper-mache-like wrappings from the mask of a mummy on loan to Baylor.
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