Tuesday, October 2, 2018

g ristori pubmed.irg ristori+ bcg tells breast man

and take my picture please woman that the nassau county medical center fails to treat people with bcg whose lives can be imoroved. the breast man collects $25,000 a month from nassau otb for no more rhan a breadth of air

nassau county mefical center may be improved with the work of a great whit eoman from boston
faustmanlab.org pubmed.org faustman dl  uspto.gov inventor search faustman

al is like newsday a rag for shooting with a camera  useless and wirse


NEWSHEALTH

Survivors kick off Breast Cancer Awareness Month with nassau otb's $25,000 month "lobbyist"

While leading advocates in the battle against breast cancer on Long Island said the movement has made great strides in the past 25 years, they also contend that more needs to be done to fight the disease.



  1. Nassau kicks off Breast Cancer Awareness Month
  2. Fifth-graders in Bethpage build Lego flood gates in new STEM lab
  3. Telegraph fire alarm boxes still used in Nassau
  4. New training for LI student musicians
  5. Puuurrfect reason to paw your way to Sayville
  6. Cops: 1 killed, 4 injured in DWI crash in Manorville
  7. Barbara Allan: Advocate for prison families
  8. Hempstead crossing guard still dancing
  9. Harborfields homecoming raises funds for Maggie's Mission
  10. Whitebread regatta takes sail for 25th year
  11. Suffolk student government encouraging students to get out and vote
  12. Students conduct hands-on marine life research
  13. Seniors participate in Suffolk County Golden Games
  14. LI fighters excited for Bellator fight at home
  15. Huge fire at Lindenhurst recycling facility
  16. Testing for algal blooms in Southampton’s Lake Agawam
  17. National Day of Remembrance for murder victims
The Nassau University Medical Center announced Monday it was naming a 3-D Breast Cancer Detection Vehicle
after breast cancer survivor and advocate Geri Barish. The vehicle will travel to hundreds of communities to provide screenings to women.  “We are living longer. Because of the awareness we are saving more lives,” Barish said at a ceremony at the center attended by Nassau County Executive Laura Curran, marking the start of Breast Cancer Awareness Month. (Credit: News 12 Long Island)
Some 25 years after they launched what turned into a major breast cancer awareness program on Long Island, two leading advocates said Monday the movement has made great strides, but more needs to be done.

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