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'Keeping the Dream Alive'

By: Natalie Younts

Issue date: 4/12/04 Section: News
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<div align = left class = caption>By Ruben DeLuna</div>
By Ruben DeLuna


Mandy Lacombe won a diversity award without intending to be diverse."I didn't set out to do something in particular," she said. "I didn't make a formal presentation and force (people) to be diverse." 

Lacombe, a sophomore general studies major, said she has been a quadriplegic since breaking her neck in a car accident when she was in her mid-20s.

"I just became involved in activities I was interested in, and nobody else paralyzed was involved with them," she said. "So people were exposed to paralysis, and they had never been exposed to that before."

Lacombe received one of 18 Keeping the Dream Alive Diversity Awards April 5 at the Memorial Student Center.

Lacombe came to Texas A&M in fall 2002, and said she is considering applying to the Lowry Mays Business School.

Lacombe said she has been a counselor for Howdy Camp and T-Camp and served on the Student Government Association Development Team.

This year, she is going to be a Muster host and serves on two rodeo committees for the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo.

Lacombe said diverse groups are not just groups of people who are of a different race or religion or have a disability.

"For some reason, people just tend to focus on smaller groups as being diverse," she said. "Diversity is so much broader than people think." 

Lacombe said every person is diverse because every person is different in his own way.

"We're all diverse in our personality, likes and dislikes, and the way we look or the height we are," she said. "But, people focus on the people that may be their perception of being diverse." 

The Keeping the Dream Alive Diversity Awards have been held since 1991 to acknowledge and honor the efforts of members of the A&M community who strive during the year to promote understanding and appreciation of diversity at A&M.

Lacombe received the Gary Gray Memorial Student Recognition Award, which was named after a student who was quadriplegic and died while attending A&M.

"I was astounded and astonished and shocked, but very, very honored and humbled by it," Lacombe said. "Gary sounded like a really great person too, so it was really an honor."

Among other awards given out, John Scroggs, a graduate student in science and technology journalism from Corpus Christi, received the ALLIES Rainbow Award for his work in the gay and lesbian community.
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