Announcing Crawl for the Cure’s 4th annual charity pub crawl

Great news, the registration process is going well but:
WE STILL NEED MORE TEAMS!
It’s important to note we’re definitely sticking with the team-based fundraising theme leading up to the event, since it was such a success last year. Don’t forget to pickup your forms, here’s a direct link to forms you can download and print yourself:
We’ve also locked down the date, the event will be:
Saturday, August 19th – 7:00pm-midnight
The first stop will be the Chris Rock Tavern on 48 Albert Street in Moncton, NB.
Sorry for making people wait on the final date, but as they say, good things come to those who wait. We’ve got a fresh shipment of bracelets in, I know they are going like hotcakes so your best bet is to track me down in person or send an email request to:
crawl4thecure@hotmail.com
Other good news is that I can confirm is that I was interviewed by CBC Radio One – Moncton about the event, and the full 10-minute discussion should be aired on Information Morning and possibly replayed during Maritime Noon.
Last but not least, let’s keep the fundraising going leading up to the event.
If you want, you can even donate directly via the form attached below (or CBCF Atlantic Chapter’s directly):

BC$ = Behavior, Content, Money

The goal of the BC$ project is to raise awareness and make changes with respect to the three pillars of information freedom - Behavior (pursuit of interests and passions), Content (sharing/exchanging ideas in various formats), Money (fairness and accessibility) - bringing to light the fact that:
1. We regularly hand over our browser histories, search histories and daily online activities to companies that want our money, or, to benefit from our use of their services with lucrative ad deals or sales of personal information.
2. We create and/or consume interesting content on their services, but we aren't adequately rewarded for our creative efforts or loyalty.
3. We pay money to be connected online (and possibly also over mobile), yet we lose both time and money by allowing companies to market to us with unsolicited advertisements, irrelevant product offers and unfairly structured service pricing plans.