Alternatives needed on breast cancer display
"@ Forksmuggler, Caitlin Rose here. First of all I agree that the bra has sparked this debate is why they have somehow made aware. This is the "awareness" campaign, in all, I think it's put on a show of the disease. My point is, the position of facebook around with chest exposed with only the pink ribbon that covers the nipple * s is a bit much. Where do you draw the line? Will it be photos of the male or female reproductive system next? Why do not we see pictures of lungs or liver? People are dying of these cancers as well. Who decides where to draw the line between pornography and awareness? The bras, breast, squeeze, touch, yourself are ALL a part of the same campaign. I want as much as ANYONE to find a cure for EVERY kind of cancer. There is nothing worse than to see someone you love slowly fade to nothing and live in pain everyday....but there has to be a better way than this "gotcha" tactic.FAU Stadium a reality
Howard Schnellenberger didn’t weld any of the beams at FAU’s new on-campus football stadium, nor did he bolt in any of the 30,000 seats. He didn’t even help those workers being paid overtime lay down sod on the day before the stadium opens, nor help finish a parking lot behind the press tower.
Yet the FAU Stadium isn’t a reality if not for Schnellenberger.
When students walk into the stadium for Saturday’s inaugural game against Western Kentucky around the scheduled 4 p.m. start, they’ll do so wearing blue t-shirts that read: “The House that Howard Built.’’
It’s an obvious take on Babe Ruth and Yankee Stadium. In this case, it definitely works.
“The stadium is the essence of being enough for anyone who has been here ‘X’ number of years,’’ Schnellenberger said as ribbon-cutting ceremonies went on behind him Friday afternoon at FAU’s main campus in Boca Raton. “That’s for the players, the coaches, the students. Right now, the students are unreal in their love for this place. They think it’s really going to do something for their personal lives and their social lives. And it will.






When students walk into the stadium for Saturday's inaugural game against Western Kentucky around the scheduled 4 pm start, they'll do so wearing blue t-shirts that read: “The House that Howard Built.'' It's an obvious take on Babe Ruth and Yankee
About 30 of Ueltschi's relatives and friends wore T-shirts in his honor Saturday at the ALS Association Kentucky Chapter's fund-raising walk. The walk attracted about 300 people and raised about $50000 for research and to help support patients and




