| 
						
						
						 From 
						chemotherapy to the catwalk, cancer center stage at New 
						York Fashion Week 
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		[February 13, 2017] 
		By Melissa Fares 
		NEW YORK (Reuters) - Less than a week ago, 
		Tiffany Schwantes, 34, was hooked up to an intravenous chemotherapy drip 
		at her local cancer center in Huntsville, Alabama, receiving treatment 
		for cancer that has metastasized to her lungs. | 
        
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			 On Saturday night, she strutted a catwalk draped in a pale pink 
			strapless Dalia MacPhee ball gown for New York Fashion Week, one of 
			11 people with advanced-stage cancer transformed into models for one 
			glamorous night in Midtown Manhattan. 
 Adjusting her chestnut-colored wig in front of the mirror in her 
			hotel room before the show, Schwantes said, "I feel good. I feel 
			pretty."
 
 The stay-at-home mom was diagnosed with stage-four cancer of the 
			bile ducts and liver in 2012 when she was 29.
 
 "I had just had my baby girl two years before, so I thought I was 
			healthy," said Schwantes, whose son, Carter, is now 11 and daughter, 
			Madison, is 7.
 
 "Going from a young wife and mother to a full-time cancer patient 
			was hard. I wasn't used to going to the doctor two to three times a 
			week. I wasn't used to feeling so bad that I couldn't take care of 
			my children."
 
 For just a few hours on Saturday night, all that was almost 
			forgotten. The models, some of whom have had chemotherapy, surgery 
			or radiation, danced their way down the catwalk to Destiny's Child's 
			"Survivor," sporting floor-length gowns, diamond earrings, and 
			topping off their looks with long lashes and striking makeup.
 
 The "Surviving in Fashion" event was put on by YES!, a non-profit 
			organization that provides support to anyone affected by advanced 
			cancer, and SMGlobal Catwalk.
 
 Bill Ramey, 60, of Greenwood, Indiana, was in New York for the first 
			time to brave being the only man on the runway. He wore blue jeans 
			and a black sweatshirt that read: "LIVE LIFE, LOVE LIFE."
 
 "My goal is to make it down and back on stage and remain upright," 
			said Ramey, who was diagnosed with stage-four colon cancer on 
			Valentine's Day in 2013.
 
			
			 
			
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			"My first thought was that I wouldn't be able to see my daughter 
			graduate college or get married. Meeting my grandkids never even 
			crossed my mind," Ramey said. He then smiled.
 "I got to do all three this summer."
 
 After taking a deep breath, Ramey said, "I've accepted the fact that 
			I'll probably die from cancer. But God has given me some extra time, 
			and this is my way of paying it forward."
 
			 
			Schwantes, whose husband of 13 years was there to support her, said 
			she hoped the show would inspire others to feel as good as she did 
			for the night.
 "We get one night to dress in beautiful gowns and amazing jewelry 
			and just have fun. It gives us a night to feel like we are more than 
			just a cancer patient," Schwantes said. "I hope they can see me, 
			still going strong after five years, and it gives them a little 
			hope."
 
 (Reporting by Melissa Fares in New York; Editing by Leslie Adler)
 
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