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The Campus Store at Palm Beach Atlantic University goes beyond the typical offerings at a college bookstore. Since we’re part of PBA, Florida’s top Christian college, we infuse our store with Christian values. We do that through: Partnering with groups on campus to support events through local non-profits “Hugs From Home,” so family and friends may order gift baskets and packages for their favorite PBA student and local vendors can supply special occasion cakes to be delivered in residence halls. Acting as a collection site for PBA-wide programs and providing incentives for participation. Growing our selection of Christian books, including Bibles, devotionals, biblical references and Christian Social Ministry. Can’t find what you’re looking for at the bookstore? Taking online courses or can’t get to the Campus Store? You may order books online and have them shipped directly to you! The Campus Store isn’t just a great place to purchase the textbooks you need for class.
The Campus Store is located on the first floor of Oceanview Hall at the corner of Dixie Highway and Pembroke Place *Extended hours Wednesday, Friday and Saturday varying on Athletics events. See hours for each week on the campus store website. We are closed Sundays, but have extended hours for SOAR, Open House, and other Campus Events. Check the Campus Store website for the most accurate information regarding hours of operation.Contact us at (561) 803-2180 Connect with us on Facebook and InstagramAbout 25 protesters picketed a building that houses the officers of the city’s largest police union Wednesday morning. Ten protesters showed up at about 8 a.m. at 125 Broad St., and tried to get up to the Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association’s offices but were blocked at the lobby turnstiles by security, witnesses said. Those 10 people, who had chained themselves together, were taken out in handcuffs, after police cut the chains. They were charged with disorderly conduct and trespassing.
In all, about 30 people participated in the protest, which was organized by the Black Youth Project 100 and a Million Hoodies. “We chose this building because it's the headquarters of the PBA, and our plan is to confront an institution that protects and defends cops who kill black people,” protester Jewel Cadet said. Protesters chant in front of the Patrolmen's Benevolent Association's offices Wednesday. The groups said they want to "defund" the PBA because it "protects and defends" cops who kill black people, according to a spokesman. tie dye hoodies zumiezOne protester called the PBA a “fake a-- union.”philadelphia flyers hoodie 3x The PBA is funded by members’ dues.tantra hoodies
They also demanded the NYPD fire Officer Wayne Isaacs, who shot and killed Delrawn Small in Brooklyn on July 4 during a road rage confrontation. The protesters carried signs which read, “PBA protects killer cops” and “Stop cops, fund black futures.” Police remove Bryant Brown's chains after he chained himself to the entrance turnstiles inside the PBA's offices on Wednesday.  (Jefferson Siegel/New York Daily News) PBA President Patrick Lynch said their anger is misplaced.nickelson hoodie “City Hall makes policy,” he said. csm hoodie“The police officers and the PBA don't make policy. boston bruins maternity shirtsThey should be protesting outside of City Hall. 350gsm hoodie
They should be supporting the police officers, who are out here protecting their right to protest.” “Once you step on to private property, you have violated the law and police officers are obligated to arrest you,” he added. Lynch said he had no plans to speak with the protesters. Demonstrators called for the PBA to be “defunded.” Roughly 30 employees of the American Civil Liberties Union, including some lawyers, came to the lobby and joined the protesters in chanting. Organizers said the protest will be followed by a “national day of action” Thursday. "New York has a very strong activist community that supports people when they take action,” said Amity Paye, a member of the Black Youth Project 100.The Black Youth Project 100, Million Hoodies Movement for Justice, and Black Lives Matter occupied police union offices in Washington, D.C. and New York City Wednesday morning, as part of a new #FreedomNow campaign against police violence. The groups’ foremost demands are police accountability and a greater push to defund law enforcement.
Activists in the nation’s capital blocked off an entrance to the National Fraternal Order of Police (FOP). According to the BYP 100 website, members of its DC chapter and BLM DC are there to demand that cops stop paying dues to the union.“The FOP acts like a college fraternity and is responsible for maintaining the harmful, lethal, unethical, and unaccountable culture of policing while the families and communities impacted when officers brutalize civilians are left to mourn with little, if any, semblance of justice,” BYP 100 spokeswoman Clarise McCants said. “Just like college frats that further rape culture by closing ranks to protect members who are sexual assailants, the FOP has proven that their primary commitment is to protect the worst of their members behind the ‘Blue Wall of Silence’ — even in the most heinous of circumstances. The FOP is the most dangerous fraternity in America and they need to be stopped.”Meanwhile, the New York City chapters of BYP 100 and Million Hoodies are staging a sit-in at the Patrolmen Benevolent Association’s (PBA) headquarters.“
We are here today, to demand three things: disband the PBA, fire Officer (Wayne) Isaacs, defund the police, and fund black futures,” a demonstrator chanted. According to protesters, money would be better spent on affordable housing, improved education, and mental health resources in black communities. “These things have been proven to increase the safety of our communities,” a second protester said. “It has never been proven that the cops keep communities safe.”Isaacs was recently stripped of his gun and badge, for fatally shooting an unarmed black driver on July 4. Video shows Delrawn Small walking up to Isaac’s car, after the off-duty, plainclothes officer reportedly cut him off. Isaacs fires his gun as Small approaches. But the officer claimed he fired his weapon because Small punched him several times and opened Isaacs’ door.The officer is now on desk duty.“The police are trying to manipulate the conversation. They are trying to manipulate all of us into believing that they are at risk.
They are not at risk. Police officers are the threat,” BYP 100’s New York City chairperson Rahel Mekdim Teka, wrote on the organization’s website. “Police do not keep us safe. Police do not protect us. They are the danger that keeps Black people unsafe. We [must] divest from institutions that do not value us and instead invest in Black communities.”Activists are targeting unions because the organizations wield extreme influence in law enforcement agencies and courts. Groups like the PBA and FOP negotiate powerful protections for cops accused of misconduct or brutality. In D.C., for example, members placed on leave for killing someone must receive monetary compensation, and they’re allowed a break before they’re interrogated by investigators. Officers are also given access to information about the cases against them, a privilege that civilians aren’t afforded and one that makes it easier for cops to defend themselves.In the rare cases when officers are fired for excessive force or misconduct, police unions also fight to get them reinstated via backdoor appeals.