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Komen Walk in Schenley Park draws thousands touched by breast cancer | TribLIVE.com
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Komen Walk in Schenley Park draws thousands touched by breast cancer

Jack Troy
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Shane Dunlap | TribLive
Elyse Mastrostefano walks with her Shiba-Inu dog named Kada and her friends and co-workers, who are nurses at Allegheny Health Network Wexford hospital, on Sunday in the Susan G. Komen More Than Pink Walk in Schenley Park.
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Shane Dunlap | TribLive
Participants walk on Schenley Drive on Sunday during the Susan G. Komen More Than Pink Walk in Schenley Park.
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Shane Dunlap | TribLive
Krista Sanpietro, center, of Canonsburg, with her niece, Alaya Sanpietro, left, of Washington, as the family climbed Schenley Drive together on Sunday in the Susan G. Komen More Than Pink Walk in Schenley Park.
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Shane Dunlap | TribLive
Bri Smedley, of Pittsburgh, who was walking for a family member, gets her face painted on Sunday during the Susan G. Komen More Than Pink Walk in Schenley Park.
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Shane Dunlap | TribLive
Camryn Owens, an employee with Crumbl, works on face painting at the Hope Village tent on Sunday at the Susan G. Komen More Than Pink Walk in Schenley Park.
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Shane Dunlap | TribLive
Volunteer and committee member Cambria Zebley talks with walk participants while they enter the Hope Village tent, before the start of the walk Sunday during the Susan G. Komen More Than Pink Walk in Schenley Park.
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Shane Dunlap | TribLive
Participants walk along Schenley Drive on Sunday during the Susan G. Komen More Than Pink Walk in Schenley Park.
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Shane Dunlap | TribLive
Participants climb Schenley Drive on Sunday during the Susan G. Komen More Than Pink Walk in Schenley Park.
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Shane Dunlap | TribLive
Selena Calloway, of Monroeville, with the Pirates Parrot while with her friends from the sorority Delta Sigma Theta, on Sunday during the Susan G. Komen More Than Pink Walk in Schenley Park.
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Shane Dunlap | TribLive
Participants walk along Schenley Drive on Sunday, May 18, 2025 during the Susan G. Komen More Than Pink Walk in Schenley Park.
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Shane Dunlap | TribLive
Participants wave as the start the walk Sunday, May 18, 2025 during the Susan G. Komen More Than Pink Walk in Schenley Park.
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Shane Dunlap | TribLive
Participants begin the walk at Flagstaff Hill on Sunday, May 18, 2025 during the Susan G. Komen More Than Pink Walk in Schenley Park.
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Shane Dunlap | TribLive
Participants walk on Sunday, May 18, 2025 during the Susan G. Komen More Than Pink Walk in Schenley Park.
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Shane Dunlap | TribLive
Participants begin the walk at Flagstaff Hill on Sunday, May 18, 2025 during the Susan G. Komen More Than Pink Walk in Schenley Park.
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Shane Dunlap | TribLive
Participants begin the walk at Flagstaff Hill on Sunday, May 18, 2025 during the Susan G. Komen More Than Pink Walk in Schenley Park.
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Shane Dunlap | TribLive
Pink-clad walkers are seen across Schenley Park on Sunday, May 18, 2025 during the Susan G. Komen More Than Pink Walk.
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Shane Dunlap | TribLive
Participants walk on Sunday, May 18, 2025 during the Susan G. Komen More Than Pink Walk in Schenley Park.

Tammy McMillan has been attending the Susan G. Komen More Than Pink Walk for years in support of loved ones affected by breast cancer. But she wasn’t so sure about doing this year’s 2-mile stroll through Schenley Park.

The 56-year-old Penn Hills resident was diagnosed with breast cancer in November.

The dynamics of the event have shifted. In years past, it was a celebration of how her sorority sister Selena Calloway, 55, of Monroeville had endured cancer and come out the other side.

“Last year, I’m hopping around, I’m hugging people,” she said. “Now, it’s like, I’m in it.”

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Shane Dunlap | TribLive
The beginning of the Susan G. Komen More Than Pink Walk at Flagstaff Hill in Schenley Park.

Thousands of cancer survivors and their family, friends and co-workers turned out Sunday for the 33rd year of what was formerly known as the Race for the Cure. Organizers changed the name in the late 2010s to reflect a broader mission and eliminated a 5K race to acknowledge most participants’ preference for walking.

The event raises funds and awareness for breast cancer research, care, prevention and advocacy.

One individual pulled together almost $9,000 as of about 9 a.m., and the most productive fundraising group nearly cleared $10,000. The event had raised about $365,000 as of noon.

It also brought together survivors at all points in their journey with the disease, from the newly diagnosed to those who’ve long been in remission.

“I’m kind of like a beacon of encouragement,” Calloway said. “You have to be strong for other people who are going through the process.”

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Shane Dunlap | TribLive
Participants pause for a moment of silence for those lost to cancer.

The walk and pre-walk gathering on Flagstaff Hill can be solemn. In one tent, postcards with names of lost mothers, grandmothers, wives, daughters, sisters and aunts dangled in the wind.

But there’s a festival-like energy to it, too, and a willingness among participants to have a laugh. Jerry Broderick, 66, of Shaler was there to support his wife, Betty, who has been cancer-free since 2010. He stuck out in his bright pink wig.

“When your wife survives cancer, she asks you to wear a wig, you wear it,” he said.

Jessica George and friends, all of Williamsport, wore matching T-shirts Sunday with the slogan “Boobs and Beer,” a nod to the craft brewery one of them owns.

George, 47, is undergoing treatment for breast cancer. The Komen Walk gave her and her crew “an excuse to get together and get into some shenanigans,” she said.

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Shane Dunlap | TribLive
Volunteer Pete Schramm hands out pink roses to survivors entering the Hope Village tent.

Amid the generally uplifting vibe were reminders of the gaps in screening and treatment that make such events necessary.

Amy Mroz, 58, of Forest Hills walked and talked about how she got regular mammograms for about 20 years. Then, her insurance company weighed in to say they were no longer necessary.

A few years later, she was diagnosed with metastatic breast cancer.

Mroz has another surgery on the horizon but said she’s through the worst of her treatment. Like so many others, she was doing the walk for the first time as a survivor.

Her hard-won advice to other women: “You can be your own strongest advocate.”

Jack Troy is a TribLive reporter covering business and health care. A Pittsburgh native, he joined the Trib in January 2024 after graduating from the University of Pittsburgh. He can be reached at jtroy@triblive.com.

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