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Headlines at Hopkins
News Release

Office of News and Information
Johns Hopkins University
3003 N. Charles Street, Suite 100
Baltimore, Maryland 21218-3843
Phone: (410) 516-7160 | Fax (410) 516-5251

May 9, 2002
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: Amy Cowles
amycowles@jhu.edu
(410) 516-7800


Johns Hopkins Cross-Country Bike Trip
to Raise Money, Awareness

Hopkins 4K for Cancer hits the road June 2
from the Homewood campus

Asking friends and family for money can be as precarious as learning to ride a bike. But several Johns Hopkins University students gladly peddled for a chance to pedal across America this summer in support of a worthy cause.

Eighteen Hopkins students will spend June and July perched atop 36 skinny bicycle tires, traveling a 4,000-mile route between the Homewood campus and San Francisco. Known as the Hopkins 4K for Cancer, the journey aims to raise both money for cancer research and awareness for the disease's prevention. The journey begins shortly after 9 a.m. on Sunday, June 2, when supporters will attend a bon voyage party before the students leave the university's Homewood campus, 3400 N. Charles St. in Baltimore. From Homewood, the students will ride to the Inner Harbor to dip their bikes' back tires in the water. When they reach San Francisco, the front tires will be dipped in the bay.

The ticket to ride is $2,500, which each of the 24 riders -- six of whom are students at four other universities -- raised by soliciting donations. The money will be used to sustain the students throughout the trip, but will primarily be put toward their goal of giving $50,000 to the American Cancer Society at the end of the road.

Businesses have put the group closer to their goal by paying to have their logos on the riders' jerseys. The Cliff Bar company has donated 200 of its energy bars. The Mount Washington Bike Shop in Baltimore donated a bike helmet for each participant. Le Monde gave Hopkins 4K a deep discount on a new road bike for each rider, and Lutherville Bike Shop in Baltimore County assembled the bikes free of charge. WOCT-FM 104.3, a Baltimore classic rock station, has asked the riders to call in during some morning shows this summer. The students are hoping to borrow a van that will be used as a pace car and to carry their gear.

Besides educating people in towns along the way and paying tribute to loved ones lost to cancer, the Hopkins 4K for Cancer is also offering the students a chance to see their country from over their handlebars rather than through an airplane window.

"It's a chance to be a tourist in my own country," says junior Jen Parker, of Newburyport, Conn., one of the group's five trip leaders. "And everybody knows somebody who has been affected by cancer."

That nearly universal cancer connection was what led sophomore Ryan Hanley of Hickory, N.C., to choose the American Cancer Society as the beneficiary of the cross-country bike trip he had always wanted to take and was finally going to embark upon this summer. He started spreading the word about the trip after arriving on campus last fall.

"Cancer has come really close to me, affecting my family," Hanley says. "There's not another charity that even crossed my mind. I really wanted to do something."

To gear up for the trip, Hopkins 4K for Cancer riders have been hitting the road, slowly increasing their distance and stamina. Most of the riders admit that the trip is going to be harder than they thought. Freshman Travis Snow of New Hartford, Conn., says he had no idea how he was going to get in shape or raise the entry fee. But he sent letters to family and friends and started working out.

"I now go to the gym and/or ride my new bike nearly every day for more than an hour," Snow says. "In the past three months, I've raised more than $3,100 and dropped more than 25 pounds. Preparing for the trip so far has taught me an important lesson: Big accomplishments are only a bunch of little steps done with persistence and focus. I know keeping this in mind will help me make it across the country."

"This trip will be an adventure in every sense of the word," says Adam Ruben, a first-year graduate student in biology from Wilmington, Del. "I chose to go on this trip in part because I want to tell my grandchildren that I biked across America, not that I spent another summer doing lab work."

To arrange an interview with the Hopkins 4K for Cancer riders before they leave on June 2 or throughout the summer, contact Amy Cowles at 410-516-7160. More information, including a list of scheduled stops and ways to contribute, is available online at www.hopkins4k.org.


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