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Posts with tag t-shirt
Posted Apr 3rd 2007 10:00AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Fundraisers, Opinion, Daily news

All Samantha Kuehn had on her mind when she wore her new t-shirt to school -- with the slogan
save the ta-tas plastered across the front -- was her mom, who was diagnosed with breast cancer last month and just received a mastectomy two weeks ago.
But officials at Oklahoma Union High School in Nowata County are not happy about the senior student's decision to wear such a shirt to school. The moment they saw it, in fact, they sent her home. And they told her not to return until she changed the shirt.
Kuehn and her mom, Michelle Bishop, are stunned that the shirt caused such an uproar.
"I was so surprised that my shirt would cause so much trouble," said Samantha. "Other girls wear low cut shirts or belly shirts and the boys wear shirts with put downs on them and no one bothers them. My shirt isn't really vulgar or offensive at all, and it means something to me. The principal told me 'It could be taken the wrong way'."
Principal Steven Barth believes he made the right call.
"If you check the Web site, the clothing sold there is suggestive," explained Barth. "I feel for the condition of her mother, but the shirt was inappropriate to wear to school."
Kuehn and her mom plan to take the matter to a Board of Education meeting on April 11. And you can bet Kuehn will be wearing her shirt.
Visit
savethetatas.com for more information on this breast cancer initiative. Sales of all clothing items -- pick your size, slogan and color -- benefit the fight against the disease.
Posted Dec 28th 2006 12:38PM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Chemotherapy, Hodgkin's Lymphoma, Young Adult Cancers, Products, Cancer Survivors

Although there are more cancer survivors alive today than ever before, being told you have cancer can still leave you standing in the darkest place of your life, as you face the challenge of fighting a disease that threatens to take your life sooner than you expected your life might end. Finding the thinnest sliver of light lingering at the outer edge of your new reality, and then pulling that light towards you so that it fills and replaces the darkness is an act of optimism creating hope in its purest form.
When 26-year-old graphic designer Chad McComsey was diagnosed with Hodgkins lymphoma, he decided to start a t-shirt design business as a way to stay focused on something positive and as a way to help with the financial costs of cancer treatment.
Starting a t-shirt business had been a dream of McComsey's for some time, and now it seemed the perfect time to make his dream a reality. As the practicality of his dream took form, he was reading Ernest Hemingway's biography. Hemingway's mantra was "Above all, endure." This became the slogans for McComsey's t-shirts.
You can find McComsey's t-shirts at
MySpace and on the website
Endure. Posted Oct 20th 2006 4:31PM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Celebrity fundraisers, Products, Cancer Survivors

Grammy-award winning singer, songwriter, and breast cancer survivor Sheryl Crow was honored with the Breast Cancer Research Foundation's Humanitarian Award at the annual symposium and luncheon event at the Waldorf Astoria in New York City. Crow has joined the
Breast Cancer Research Foundation (BCRF) to promote breast cancer prevention and raise funds for research in finding a cure.
During her music tour with John Mayer, Crow donated 50 cents of every concert ticket sold to the breast cancer organization. She also offered a
breast cancer t-shirt with her logo design for sale with 100 percent of the profits donated to BCRF. The t-shirt is now available on Crow's website.
In addition, Crow has lent her support to jewelry designer Mauri Pioppo, who created a very special
Sundari necklace to benefit BCRF during October. According to the product details, "Sundari is the Hindu Goddess of beauty and grace, and Mauri Pioppo was inspired by Sheryl Crow's courage in the face of her personal experience with breast cancer to createthe Sundari necklace."
Crow is an incredibly talented singer songwriter. She is also an awesome lady with a healthy sense of humor. During the luncheon in which she was given the Humanitarian Award, she remarked to the audience, "In a show business world that puts so much emphasis on cleavage, I was never known for my breasts until I got breast cancer."
Posted Oct 2nd 2006 9:00AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Opinion, Cancer Survivors

I just read a breast cancer survivor's commentary about the color pink -- about how she hates pink, is sick of seeing pink, is tired of companies capitalizing on the breast cancer color in order to sell products. She calls the color wimpy and too feminine -- and while she accepts that she may just be grumpy about this topic, she is not too happy that pink is the color that symbolizes a serious disease. She would have preferred red or purple, colors that signify strength and power. But pink is what we've got -- and I happen to be okay with it.
I'm okay with pink because I like the color. I'm okay with it because it's recognizable -- and there can't be too many people out there who don't know that pink and breast cancer go hand in hand. To me, the color itself raises awareness. If I buy a pink vacuum cleaner and am reminded of the words
breast and
cancer each time I suck up dirt from my carpet, then I'm in the loop -- even if minimally. And if it prompts me to check my own breasts or schedule a screening appointment, then I benefit. I'm not sure a green vacuum cleaner would have the same effect. And when I wear my new
Key to the Cure t-shirt -- with a pink ribbon gracing the front -- and someone inquires about the shirt, I will have an opportunity to spread some words about breast cancer. Pink doesn't have to be wimpy. It can be powerful.
There are surely companies out there taking advantage of the color pink because it sells. But if sales truly benefit breast cancer research, then it's a win-win situation in my opinion. I am happy that $31 of my $35 t-shirt goes directly to breast cancer initiatives. Sure, the shirt was a bit expensive. But so is breast cancer -- and I have the bills to prove it -- so if simply buying a pink ribbon t-shirt allows me to walk around as a billboard and allows breast cancer research some more momentum, then I am game.
I will wear my new shirt when I run in the
Making Strides Against Breast Cancer 5K event in two weeks. And I will wear a bright pink ribbon in my hair. And I may even wear pink shorts. Because I think pink is empowering. And I'm happy it's everywhere -- because it illustrates that breast cancer is everywhere. And that is not okay.
Posted Sep 28th 2006 10:00AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Pink products, Cancer events, Celebrity spokesperson, Fundraisers, Products

Glenn Close is the 2006
Entertainment Industry Foundation (EIF) ambassador to the Saks Fifth Avenue
Key to the Cure campaign. Oscar de la Renta is the 2006 designer of the Key to the Cure t-shirt -- available now at Saks Fifth Avenue stores for the price of $35. For each t-shirt purchase, $31 will benefit EIF's Women's Cancer Research Fund. T-shirts are available
on-line and in retails stores everywhere.
All Saks Fifth Avenue retail stores and
Saks.com will contribute to Key to the Cure by donating 2 percent of all profits during October 12-15. Off Fifth stores will donate 1 percent of profits during the same time period to benefit local and national women's cancer charities.
Key to the Cure is a women's cancer initiative founded in partnership with EIF's Women's Cancer Research Fund. The program receives on-going support from
Mercedes-Benz USA -- set to donate one million dollars to the cause. EIF is the entertainment industry's leading charitable organization and has shared hundreds of millions of dollars in support of critical issues facing our society. Like breast cancer.
Posted Sep 4th 2006 9:00AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Childhood Cancers, Cancer events, Research, Events, Fundraisers

Chili's restaurant is the place to be on September 25 -- because 100 percent of profits earned on this day will go to
St. Jude's Children's Research Hospital -- the only hospital for sick children that does not require anyone to pay for treatment. So fundraising is key -- and Chili's has cooked up all sorts of creative ways to help conquer cancer in children.
Besides
Donate All Our Profits Day, Chili's is sponsoring a program called
Creativity for a Cause -- where customers make a donation and then color a rendering of a pepper. The coloring sheets are displayed at participating restaurants in a chain-like fashion, hanging from the ceilings.
Create a Pepper gift cards are also available. For every $25 spent on gift cards, Chili's will donate $1 to St. Jude's. And t-shirts -- black with a white pepper gracing the front -- can be purchased for $12. Kids can even have fun
on-line with Chili's crafty creations, including an interactive pepper coloring activity.
All this fundraising goes hand in hand with the development of the
Chili's Care Center -- a St. Jude's state-of-the-art building dedicated to groundbreaking research on brain tumors. The center is scheduled to open in Fall 2007 -- thanks to Chili's professionals who over the course of 10 years have donated a historic $50 million to St. Jude's.
Posted Jul 23rd 2006 10:30AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Cancer events, Fundraisers, Exercise

Someone raced for the cure -- in celebration of me. I am honored and flattered and so thrilled to have received in the mail today a t-shirt and the crumpled piece of pink paper than hung from my aunt's back -- with my name on it -- as she ran this 5K race in Aspen, Colorado on July 15. It was the 16th annual Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure in Aspen, and my aunt has run for me for two years now. I have a t-shirt and pink piece of paper from last year too. Maybe one day I will run it for myself. First, I have to master the whole running thing.
The
Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation Race for the Cure began in 1983 with 800 participants. Today the Komen Race for the Cure is the largest 5K event in the world. And in 2005, more than one million people participated in more than 100 races designed not only to raise funds but to also educate the public about early detection -- about how it
is the most effective method of surviving this life-threatening disease. The five-year survival rate is 95 percent when the disease is discovered while still confined to the breast. I'm proud to have found my own lump early, before it had spread outside my breast. And I am proud to have been a part of a race -- even in name only -- that might make this early discovery possible for many more women to come.
Posted Jul 5th 2006 10:00PM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Prevention, Celebrity fundraisers, Celebrity spokesperson, Products

With the sale of a designer logo t-shirt, Fashion Targets Breast Cancer, launched in the UK by
Breakthrough Breast Cancer, is celebrating its tenth year as the UK's leading fashion charity breast cancer campaign. The fundraiser began after Ralph Lauren's friend, fashion editor of the Washington Post, Nina Hyde, died from breast cancer. While Ms. Hyde was still battling cancer, she asked Lauren to promise he would do something to raise awareness for breast cancer. Fashion Targets Breast Cancer and the designer logo t-shirt is his promise fulfilled.
Fashion Targets Breast Cancer is a worldwide campaign with celebrity spokespersons such as Saffron Aldridge, Yasmin Le Bon, Gisele Bundchen,
Helena Christensen, Jodie Kidd, Elle Macpherson, Jade Jagger, Lily Cole, Eva Herzigova, Claudia Schiffer, Jasmine Guiness, Yasmin Le Bon, Laura Bailey, Erin O'Connor and Jerry Hall.
To support breast cancer charity, you can purchase a Fashion Targets Breast Cancer designer t-shirt
here. In addition, by submitting a photo of you and your best dressed friends to the 10 best dressed gallery you are entered in a contest to win tickets to the London Fashion Week this coming September.
Posted Jul 5th 2006 8:33PM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Prevention, Celebrity fundraisers, Celebrity spokesperson, Products

Victoria's Secret international supermodel, television and film actress Helena Christensen was in Dublin Ireland last week to launch Fashion Targets Breast Cancer campaign to raise money for
programs supporting young women under 45 diagnosed with breast cancer. All money raised through the sale of the t-shirts go to Action Breast Cancer, a project of the Irish Cancer Society and Europe Donna Ireland, the Irish Breast Cancer Campaign.
Christiansen told the Irish Medical Times that it is important that women practice self-exams for early signs of breast cancer -- and that women don't ignore any warning signs out of fear. "My doctor from an early age told me to touch myself around the breasts and under the armpits, and not feel weird about it! Especially when you're young, you get a little bit intimidated by your body. It's going through so many changes."
Last year, the sale of
Fashion Targets Breast Cancer designer t-shirts raised €240,000 for services provided to young women in Ireland facing breast cancer. Christiansen added that women who felt worried should see their physician and not leave their health to chance. "I've always thought it's better to go to the doctor one too many times than to postpone it."
Posted Jun 23rd 2006 4:30PM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Childhood Cancers, Celebrity spokesperson, Research

I just received in the mail my
Certificate of Completion for St. Jude's Campaign for a Cure. I have never really known much about
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital -- except that I can be brought to tears by the television specials that showcase sick children whose lives depend on the research and treatment that this hospital offers. But I came to know more about St. Jude this year after a friend asked me to make a donation for the
Up 'til Dawn program he sponsors on the college campus where he works -- a program that involves more than 150 college campuses nationwide and partners faculty, staff, students, and communities in an extravaganza of activity, education, and fundraising to benefit the children at St. Jude. So I made a donation and then was contacted by St. Jude with an invitation to help them further -- and I did. I sent out 10 pre-written letters to friends and family asking for their support. I was given an attainable fundraising goal. And I met it. So this is why I received my certificate -- and some cheery address labels too.
Continue reading Partnership with St. Jude's saves children sick with cancer
Posted May 15th 2006 5:13PM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Alternative Therapies, Ovarian Cancer, Prevention

Get Hands On has joined with the Entertainment Industry Foundation and the Revlon/UCLA Women's Cancer Research Program, to offer a special thank you limited-edition celebrity handprint t-shirt for those who donate $45 dollars or more to the foundation for breast and ovarian cancer awareness and research programs. Available while supplies last. Contribute to making a difference for breast and ovarian cancers -- and
get a conversational t-shirt in the process.
The Women's Cancer Research Fund, a program of the Entertainment Industry Foundation, was established to support research, education, and outreach programs for more effective approaches to the early diagnosis, treatment and prevention of all women's cancers. Honorary chairs include Kate Capshaw and Rita Wilson.
Posted Apr 11th 2006 8:30AM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Prevention

In honor of Earth Day and to benefit
The Breast Cancer Site, Peter Max has designed a t-shirt with the same stunning brilliance of color and original
graphic design that has made Max and his art famous.
The
Earth Day Peter Max T-Shirt is
a limited-edition, specially licensed, Earth Day-themed design. Max, an artist of multi-dimensional and unique creative
talent, is a socially-aware human being who is dedicated to making this world a better place to live.
The
Breast Cancer Site of The GreaterGood stores donates a portion of the purchase price of each Earth Day Peter Max
T-Shirt to fund mammograms for women in need. To learn more about the visionary psychedelic pop artist Peter Max, and
view his art, visit the
official Peter Max website.