Evansville Police Teams with The Pub for Nathan Schroer Fundraiser April 11th
The Evansville Police Department are rallying around one of their own, and asking for your help in his fight against leukemia.
The Evansville Police Department are rallying around one of their own, and asking for your help in his fight against leukemia.
The numbers are simply astounding.
An uncomfortable few seconds could save a man's life.
It's even more fun with a friend!
It's Breast Cancer Awareness Month, and while all the pink we see on the players during NFL games in October mainly focuses our attention on how the disease affects women and what they can do about it, we should also keep in mind (or learn) that men, too, can contract breast cancer. According to the American Cancer Society, one in 1,000 men will fall victim to the disease, which claims the life of at least one man every day.
Lane Goodwin may have gotten his angel wings earlier this week, but his legacy lives on. The Goodwin family has started The Thumbs Up for Lane Goodwin Childhood Cancer Foundation, and this Saturday there is a huge fundraiser. It's all taking place at the Henderson County Fairgrounds.
If you're not familiar, Lane Goodwin is the the 13 year old Henderson boy who has captured the hearts of not only the Tri-state but the world with his uplifting spirit as he continues his fight against cancer. This Saturday there is a huge fundraiser to benefit Lane, and it's all happening at the Henderson County Fairgrounds.
The diagnosis will more than likely keep the first-time head coach off the sidelines for the remainder of the season.
In between memes, some e-cards, and venom from those on both the left and right of the political spectrum, a young boy in Beech Grove, Kentucky has united friends, family, and total strangers has he fights for his life.
Some promising new research has surfaced that indicates that tall people are less likely to suffer strokes, psychotic breakdowns or die from heart disease than the shorter of the breed. However, the same research says that these same vertically-endowed humans are doomed at best, to die of cancer.
There's not a parent on the planet that wants to hear the phrase, "your child has cancer". Unfortunately for Greg and Cathe, they didn't hear it once, they heard it twice...in less than a year.
Why should you become a Partner in Hope with St. Jude? Because your donation helps St. Jude give people like Jessica Turri a chance at living a normal life.