Last Tuesday night, I watched Greta Van Susteren of Fox News' On The Record as she interviewed Brittany Lietz, Miss Maryland 2006. Greta asked Brittany what her Miss Maryland job entails. Brittany told Greta her full-time job is to represent her platform -- skin cancer.Brittany didn't choose just any topic for her platform. She chose one that is entirely personal.
Skin cancer has left more than 20 scars on Brittany's body. One, on her back, marks the site where a stage two melanoma was removed when she was just 19 years old. It presented as a mole, a little smaller than a nickel, she says. In all likelihood, the cancer was caused by two years of tanning bed use. Brittany says she probably tanned every day for two years. Her pursuit of bronzed skin began when she was 17 and wanted a tan for her prom. It ended after doctors told her she had cancer.


Who and what was the most googled in 2006? The
Check out Self magazine's 2006 breast cancer handbook that is available online. Some of the features and articles include How to help your friend diagnosed with breast cancer, which gives tips to support your friend every step along the way of her cancer journey. You can also learn how to be more informed about breast cancer yourself by taking the breast cancer IQ test or reading the article The Stages of Breast Cancer to better understand the disease.
Miss Tidewater Brittany Lietz, skin cancer survivor and nursing student, was crowned Miss Maryland on Saturday night.
The perfect tan. Hours of each day devoted to the sun. Visits to tanning salons on cloudy days. For many sun worshippers, a golden tan is the currency of beauty. Currently Miss Tidewater, aspiring to win the coveted title of Miss Maryland, Brittany Lietz is a young woman who once aspired to having the perfect tan in the belief it would win her more beauty pageants. At only 20 years of age, her 







