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"I (heart) boobies!": Judge says Pa. schoolgirls can display message on breast cancer bracelets

The Keep A Breast Foundation's "I (heart) boobies!" breast cancer awareness bracelets CBS

(CBS/AP) PHILADELPHIA - The message is "I (heart) boobies!," and it was displayed by two Easton, Pa. middle school girls wearing breast cancer fundraising bracelets.

On Tuesday, a federal judge in Pennsylvania issued a preliminary ruling that the bracelets are not lewd or vulgar and can't be banned by public school officials who find them offensive.

The students had defied a ban on the bracelets during their school's Breast Cancer Awareness Day.

"The bracelets ... can reasonably be viewed as speech designed to raise awareness of breast cancer and to reduce stigma associated with openly discussing breast health," U.S. Judge Mary McLaughlin wrote in a 40-page ruling. She added that the school district had not shown the bracelets would be disruptive in school.

The American Civil Liberties Union, representing the girls, had sued to overturn the ban and stop the school from punishing their clients. McLaughlin issued a temporary injunction that bars the Easton Area School District from banning the $4 rubber bracelets until the case goes to trial.

Easton school officials argue the slogan suggests a sexual double entendre and leads to in-school distractions. They also suggested two boys had tried to touch the girls inappropriately.

Easton is one of several school districts around the country to ban the bracelets, which are distributed by the Keep A Breast Foundation of Carlsbad, Calif. The nonprofit has said it sells the bracelets to engage young people in breast cancer awareness.

Students Brianna Hawk and Kayla Martinez testified that they did not intend the message to be sexual. They received in-school suspensions last fall but hope to have their disciplinary records expunged.

Martinez fought the case in memory of a late aunt who battled breast cancer, she said. Friends have told her that teachers have called the lawsuit a waste of time.

"I thought it was worth my time," Martinez, 13, told The Associated Press on Tuesday. "In our generation, all the teenagers ask me about the bracelet. So it shows the bracelets teach a lot to kids."

The Keep A Breast Foundation - which concedes their message isn't for everyone - gets $1.50 from each bracelet sold by an outside retailer and $4 from its own sales.

Schools from Florida to California have banned the bracelets. One Oregon high school said the message was getting lost on the ninth-grade boys who were wearing them.

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