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Community Corner

Buy Pizza to Benefit Breast Cancer Awareness and Other Shopping Support in the Southland

October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month, which means a variety of pink products will be hitting the shelves. An Orland Park pizzeria is among those offering to donate proceeds to the cause.

A wave of pink is flooding stores everywhere, as retailers participate in Breast Cancer Awareness Month. For the savvy shopper, it's an opportunity to donate to a good cause while snagging unique, pink-hued items.

Old Town Pizza Company in Orland Park will be donating 10 percent of their total sales on Friday to the Karen Mullen Breast Cancer Foundation. Buy pizza and support the cause.

Brighton Collectibles at Orland Square Mall has created a new limited-edition Power of Pink bracelet that will be available through the month of October while supplies last. Brighton stores will contribute $10 for each $50 bracelet sold to breast cancer awareness and research organizations.

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The Hair Cuttery in Tinley Park, 17121 Harlem Avenue, is giving away a breast cancer awareness key chain with every $20 Matrix product purchase. The location is also accepting donations for the Passionately Pink for the Cure, a program of the Susan G. Komen for the Cure. The Ratner Family Foundation will also match all donations, up to $10,000.

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In honor of Breast Cancer Awareness Month, rue21 at Chicago Ridge Mall and in Tinley Park has pants, tees, nail polish, rings and much more to show your support! Items starting at $2.99! A portion of the profits goes to Glimmer of Hope.

Throughout the month of October, you can help support Making Strides Against Breast Cancer by visiting Phillips Chevrolet at 9700 W. Lincoln Highway in Frankfort. Just a $1 or more donation earns you a place on the Wall of Hope in the service lounge. For $20 you can purchase a raffle ticket for a new 2013 Chevy Spark, donated by Phillips Chevrolet with all proceeds benefiting Making Strides Against Breast Cancer.

The Village Door, a gift and consignment shop that specializes in one-of-a-kind gift ideas and consignment items in Mokena and Homewood, donates a portion of each sale to the Cancer Support Center.

But before you plunk down your green for some pink, the nonprofits behind Breast Cancer Awareness Month want you to check the label.

Jenna Glazer, director of development for Young Survival Coalition (YSC), a global organization dedicated to helping young women who are diagnosed with breast cancer, said that buyers should be on the lookout for a label or tag that tells where the money from the purchase goes.

"If you walk into Bed Bath & Beyond and see something with a pink ribbon and no information about where the money is going, chances are it doesn't benefit the cause," she said.

Glazer said the best way for consumers to ensure that pink products are legit is to visit the non-profit's website for a list of its partners. YSC, which is based in New York City, lists Oakley, Nutra Nail, Liv/giant bikes, Ford and Urban Outfitters as some of its partners.

The amount of money donated to the nonprofit is also key, Glazer said. With YSC's partnership with Oakley, for instance, $20 from each pair of sunglasses goes right to the nonprofit, which offers resources, connections and outreach to young women with breast cancer. 

And for a group like YSC, which is on the smaller end of the spectrum of breast cancer awareness groups such as Susan G. Komen For the Cure, the check it receives is just part of the benefit. Each time YSC partners with a company, Glazer said, "It raises the profile of nonprofit and gets the word out to thepeople who need us."

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Here are a few pink products available online that breast cancer nonprofits are putting their names behind:

  • The Breast Cancer Research Foundation (BCRF) has partnered with Barnes & Noble, which is offering a pink leather Nook cover with a stitched ribbon for about $35, with $5 going to the foundation.
  • Susan G. Komen for the Cure sells its own official merchandise on its website. It has pink leather business card holders for $15 each, as well as candles, coasters, neckties and car accessories.
  • Hard Rock will celebrate its thirteenth season of Pinktober with a variety of merchandise, including a pink honeycomb robe for $80. 75 percent of the profits from each item sold goes to the Caron Keating Foundation.

Some retailers don't enter contracts with nonprofits but still donate a portion of their proceeds. Team Cheer, a website that offers gear for cheerleaders, is donating 5 percent of its pink profits to BCRF. From socks to bows to briefs, the company's Cheer for a Cure collection includes products from $5 to about $25. You won't see it advertised on the BCRF website, but according to foundation staff, Team Cheer has made donations for the past two years.

If you think a pink product is suspicious or you are wondering about the relationship between the company and the cause, give the non-profit a call. Representatives are usually happy to verify whether a company is really giving.

"I've actually gotten Google alerts and seen people say they are partnering with us and they aren't," Glazer said, adding that she follows up on those alerts and asks for a check from the retailer that made the claim. Sometimes, she said, retailers were unaware that they needed a contract with YSC and will send along the check happily.

But in some cases, she said, "I never hear back from them."

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