Monday, May 7, 2012

Walking the Walk at the Amgen Dana Point Grand Prix

 
Brad Huff crossing the finish line
in the Men’s Pro final
event of the day
On Sunday, May 6, 2012, bike racers, kids, and anti-cancer advocates“occupied” downtown Dana Point, California at the 6th Annual Dana Point Grand Prix of Cycling. With almost 1000 racers and twelve races going from 7:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m., the DPGP is the biggest single-day cycling event in the country and it continues to grow every year. The delight of the day for me was the kids’ race; about 400 kids of all ages, from tiny to tall, pedaling their little legs off. I’m still smiling and laughing about it.

Closer to my heart, this day marked the 2nd Annual Breakaway from Cancer Walk. Clare Cameron, Pacific Meso Center’s Executive Director and Nurse Practitioner Ann Rorie joined hands with the hundreds of survivors, children, spouses and friends to show our fighting spirit and can-do attitude against cancer. Dana Point High School’s Drum Line led the walk around the 0.8 course winding through neighborhoods overlooking beautiful Dana Point Harbor. The young and old, the healthy and hurting, all showed up to both give and take hope and support. It felt good and it felt right.

Here I am with Sue Johnson (r)
I was proud to walk beside Sue Johnson and her grandson. Sue lost her beloved husband John earlier this year to mesothelioma. According to Sue, “Roger and his team did an over the top job in helping put on this amazing show of love and respect.  There’s so much grimness with this disease, it just feels good to walk in the sun with other survivors and their families.”

Sue’s son Michael “MJ” Johnson, racing for Amgen’s Breakaway from Cancer, which is co-sponsored by the Pacific Meso Center, raced like a champion in two big races. He didn't win, but he won the hearts of everyone with his full-throttle effort.

It was also uplifting to see Terry Latham, who continues to astonish us with his resilience, courage and optimism. He walked the walk with his wife Maryla, just as they did last year. Rosemarie Ganoe and her daughter Elena also participated in the walk after just hosting a successful fundraiser last month in San Pedro in honor of her husband Mark, whom she lost last year. The Faraqs were also on hand, all smiles and brimming with a thirst for more life.

Roger, my boss who doesn’t know the word “moderation,” competed in two races (he would use the word “hammered”) and also co-announced the day’s events.  He and Ann donated $25,000 to Pacific Meso Center to honor meso patients and their families who joined other cancer survivors in the Breakaway walk.
Rosemarie & Elena Ganoe
with Nurse Ann (l to r)

Events like this continue to remind us that if we are going to tame mesothelioma, we’ll need to pursue innovative therapies, which will require both a “team approach” and more funding. Meso is an unrepentant malignancy that will not give up the secrets to its demise, or even control, easily. Converting meso into a treatable chronic disease, like diabetes, is a fine goal and easy thing to say, but it’s far harder to actually achieve without the resources, which are sadly lacking. Mobilizing supporters is the first step in building the level of awareness we need to encourage our friends in the government, pharmaceutical, industry, labor and legal communities to invest in the fight.

We thank the City of Dana Point for hosting this incredible community event. We also want to thank the Amgen Corporation for sponsoring the Breakaway Walk and for taking an interest in mesothelioma.  We are looking forward to walking the walk every single day!

Julianna Farrell
May 7, 2012
 
Pacific Meso Center’s Executive
Director Clare Cameron with
Meso Fighter Terry & Maryla Latham














The Calm Before The Storm
Amgen's Breakaway from Cancer riders (baby blue) dominating
the pole position. From Left to right, Robb Mescher, Steve Strickler,
Malcolm Hill, Richard Meeker, Roger Worthington, and Roy Knickman.
 

Thursday, April 26, 2012

Ride for Glory, Cheer for Peace, Walk for Hope: Please support the Breakaway from Cancer Walk.

Friends,
So much going on. You’re racing your bike. Your kids are racing their bikes. You’re shopping at the Expo. You’re eating burgers. You’re drinking craft beers. You’re soaking up the sunshine and celebrating the good life.

It’s good to get, to receive, to be showered with gifts and accolades. But it’s even better to give. The
Dana Point Grand Prix Presented by Amgen Breakaway from Cancer is proud to give, but now we’re asking you, your friends and family to give back.

We’re asking you to support cancer survivors, caregivers, family members and advocates. How? Simply by walking. Walking and talking, cheering and laughing, reflecting and reaching out, in solidarity, in downtown Dana Point, on the race course, at prime time.

At 3:35pm, just before the Amgen Pro men’s race, we are opening the course to everyone and anyone who wishes to lodge their protest against cancer and support for survivors. Believe me, it feels good to work with others in a noble fight against a common enemy.

Courtesy of
Amgen’s Breakaway from Cancer (BfC) initiative, we will be offering BfC hats and bracelets to the first 150 participants. We will also make available “I ride for ____” BfC decals which you can fill out and affix to your clothing.

We know it’s not about the trinkets. It’s about showing support, giving back, making new friends, and serving a higher and bigger cause. We want to thank Amgen for this noble opportunity. We also wish to thank the
Pacific Meso Center, a non profit medical foundation whose mission is to develop innovative therapies that will convert deadly mesothelioma into a chronic and treatable disease.  

For more information on Amgen’s Breakaway from Cancer event logistics, please visit
here.

Walk On!

Roger Worthington ~ The Prez
The Dana Point Community Cycling Foundation, Inc.

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Get Your Pre-Race Carbo Load at Jack's Restaurant!
24462 Del Prado Dana Point, CA
Located 2 blocks north of the finish line!
949.489.1903
www.jacksdp.com
Jack’s Restaurant will offer a 25% discount off our entire pasta menu Saturday May 5th from 5pm-10pm plus $2.00 off all beers on tap 

Jack’s will serve breakfast & lunch starting at 8:30am on Sunday May 6th Grand Prix Specials: Pancakes, Italian Sausage and Eggs $4.95
Italian Beef Sandwich $5.95
Roast Chicken Ruben $5.95

Happy Hour on Sunday from noon-7:00pm

If you would like Jack’s to host your team’s pre-race dinner, please contact Jack at 949.842.6122 or at
jack@jacksdp.com



Monday, April 16, 2012

Worthington Law Firm to Support 2nd International Symposium on Lung-Sparing Therapies for Mesothelioma

Mesothelioma experts will gather on Saturday, May 12th 2012 at the Sheraton Delfina Hotel in Santa Monica, California for the 2nd Annual International Symposium on Lung-Sparing Therapies for Malignant Pleural Mesothelioma. Dr. Robert Cameron, Director of the UCLA Mesothelioma Comprehensive Research Program and Chief of Thoracic Surgery at the West Los Angeles VA Medical Center, will lead the symposium again this year. Dr. Cameron has been a leading proponent of the lung-sparing pleurectomy/decortication surgical procedure for nearly 20 years.

The distinguished faculty at this year’s meeting will include experts from Houston, San Francisco, New York and as far away as South Africa, with additional experts in a wide range of medical/scientific fields. The seminar, which offers continuing medical education credit, is primarily designed for physicians, but is also open to physicians-in-training, nurses, students, and mesothelioma patients, families and friends who want to learn more about the disease.

At the 1st International Symposium, specialists reviewed the Mesothelioma And Radical Surgery (MARS) trial from the UK and unanimously concluded that patients with mesothelioma no longer should be subjected to lung-removing surgery (EPP) and that more symposia should be held to discuss and promote lung-sparing therapies

"This symposium brings the best scientific and medical minds together to advance the treatment of mesothelioma," said Dr. Cameron. "Research and practice over the past several years have continued to evolve, working to improve cancer outcomes without unnecessarily sacrificing the affected lung. Clearly, it is best for the patient to treat mesothelioma as a chronic illness while preserving the function of both lungs."

The Worthington Law Firm is pleased to once again serve as a sponsor for this unique symposium which focuses on rational lung-sparing surgical and non-surgical therapies for treating pleural mesothelioma. The firm has donated $50,000 for this year’s symposium, matching its contribution of the same amount for last year’s first-ever symposium on lung sparing therapies. "A one-size fits all approach to mesothelioma simply hasn't worked," said Roger Worthington, who has been representing mesothelioma patients since 1989. "We applaud Dr. Cameron's efforts to invite the world's brightest doctors to take a fresh look at how to convert this nasty tumor into a chronic, treatable disease." 

Early Bird tickets to the symposium can be purchased before April 28th online at http://www.cme.ucla.edu/courses  or by calling UCLA’s Office of Continuing Medical Education (CME) at 310-794-2620.

For a copy of the seminar program, including the schedule, list of speakers and their bios, logistical information and the enrollment application and fees, please click here.

For more information, please contact CME or Clare Cameron at the Pacific Meso Center at the Pacific Heart, Lung, Blood Institute at 310-478-4678.

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Mountain Climber Who Survived Two Disasters on Mount Everest Succumbs to Mesothelioma at Age 56

Lincoln Hall, a world renowned mountain climber, adventurer, author and philanthropist lost his battle with malignant mesothelioma last Tuesday, March 20, 2012. He was 56. Lincoln developed the rare disease from exposure to asbestos as a child when he and his dad built cubby houses using asbestos cement flat sheet.

In 1984, Mr. Hall was part of the first Australian expedition to ascend Everest as it traced a new path for climbers not carrying oxygen. The expedition survived an avalanche, and two of his companions achieved the summit, but Lincoln did not, turning back a few hours short of the top when it became clear that to continue would have put him in grave physical danger.

In 2006 Lincoln did reach the summit, but collapsed from altitude sickness and was believed to have died, his companions in a Russian-led expedition were forced to leave him on the mountain. The following morning a group of climbers found him alive and were able to help him down to rescue and safety.

Lincoln helped found and was also director for the Australian Himalayan Foundation, whose aim is to help impoverished communities and set up schools in the Himalayas. He was committed to that work until his death.

Lincoln is survived by his wife Barbara and their two sons Dylan and Dorje. Friends will remember him for his intellect and his determination.

As a mountain climber who had summited the world's tallest peaks without supplemental oxygen, Lincoln clearly possessed an extraordinary level of cardiovascular fitness. Lincoln's story reminds us that, without much-needed advancements treatment and prevention strategies, no one is immune from the ravages of asbestos-related disease.

Monday, March 26, 2012

Michael Johnson Repudiates Suffering, Dedicates Redlands Criterium to Dad and Meso Patients

REDLANDS, CA. Michael Johnson thought he knew a few things about suffering.  As a former professional motocrosser and cyclist, he knew first hand what it felt like to push the body so hard that the mind nearly shut down in a dizzying fog of immeasurable pain.
The Spirit is Strong
Michael Johnson kisses his
Dad's dog tags as he
wins the Redlands Criterium
in epic fashion.  "When I
came out of the corners,
the dog tags would jingle
jangle against my jersey,
reminding me to push harder."

And then Michael’s Dad, John Johnson, died from malignant mesothelioma. MJ watched as his Dad went from a robust and wiry mountain biker to a cancer patient curled up in a lounge chair desperately struggling to breathe, like a fish out of water.  MJ learned about a new kind of suffering, the stupid kind, the kind that takes but doesn't give, and begets only more misery.

After mesothelioma took his Dad, MJ didn’t feel normal. Normally, he loved to race his bike. He loved the training, the intervals, the climbing, the sprinting, the prospect of a personal best or, better yet, the exhilaration of beating the best in the peloton. For seven weeks, MJ couldn't muster the energy to get back on his bike.

On Saturday, MJ returned to the field of battle.  Wearing his “Breakaway from Cancer” kit, in a tough pro race, he had made the breakaway, and his chances for winning looked very good. But bad luck struck. He flatted. Game over.  Dejected, but not defeated, he suited up the next day for one of the grittiest criteriums in the country at the Redlands Classic.

“No excuses,” he kept repeating, mantra like, as MJ lined up under forboding grey skies for the start of a technical, 50 minute criterium in downtown Redlands. Fittingly, the greatest criterium rider in U.S. cycling history, Davis Phinney, gave a send-off speech in which he celebrated the primal joys of watching his son carry the family torch.  Davis has progressive Parkinson’s disease. His son, Tyler, is one of the fastest time trialists in the world with a very bright future.

The gun went off.  The pack bolted.  The winds picked up as the skies grew darker. A storm was coming. Ten minutes into the race, bad luck again struck MJ. He broke a spoke on his front wheel. Frustrated, but determined, MJ pulled into the pit and grabbed a new wheel. When he re-entered the race, MJ’s focus took on an all new intensity.

“I wasn’t racing for myself,” he recalls. “I was racing for my Dad. What I’d normally call ‘pain’ – the fatigued legs, the gasping lungs – were no longer painful. They were simply a reminder that I was going for it, pushing myself, going bigger.”

MJ attacked. Against all odds. One man against 90. By his own accounts, not a textbook move. “I still had 40 minutes to go,” said MJ. “Normally it would make no sense. But today was different. I went into that sort of out of body ‘zone’ that people dream about. ”

Zone indeed. MJ pounded off the front, pedaling through each sharp turn, stomping out of the saddle to regain speed, carefully monitoring his gap on the hard charging field. With five laps to go, the crowd of 3,500 was on it’s feet, sensing that this move was no fluke. It wasn’t for show, or fleeting glory. This was real.

“I kept asking for strength. Asking myself. The skies above. The crowd. Even the trees.,” MJ revealed, in a whisper. “There’s a spirit out there. I know my Dad’s apart of that, and I was tapping into it, like I never have before, and may never again.”

The spirit moved him and kept MJ in full gallop all the way to the line. He crossed the finish line, raised his fist, and kissed his Dad’s dogtags that had been dangling from his neck.  Twenty seconds later, the peloton sputtered in, spent, as the skies opened up and the gutters filled with rain.

MJ had pulled off the unthinkable – against the odds, if not better judgment, he attacked, opened a gap, and held it for more than half the race against a field of raging chasers to whom both “gifts” and “giving up” were sacrilegious.

But was MJ “alone?”  “It was a solo V,” the powerfully built former fullback said, carefully choosing his wordw, as if entering unchartered territory. “But I wasn’t alone. My Dad was with me. My family was with me. My Mom, who had always come to my races with Dad. All cancer survivors were with me. Heck, your brother [David Worthington] was on the corner giving me splits and cheering for me. Your Dad was with me, too.” 

Michael “MJ” Johnson dedicated the win to his Dad, all mesothelioma survivors, and their families. MJ is sponsored by Amgen’s Breakaway from Cancer  initiative and the Pacific Meso Center, a non-profit medical foundation whose mission is to create new therapies that will convert meso into a chronic but not fatal disease.

Roger Worthington
Breakaway from Cancer
3/26/12

Monday, March 12, 2012

Brett Clare Powers Break Away to Victory: “Love ya Dad!”

Murietta, CA.  Brett Clare works hard, trains hard, and plays hard.  But when it comes to cancer survivors, he's understandably got a soft spot.

“I’m dedicating this win to my Dad,” Brett beamed, moments after winning the Tour of Murietta Criterium. “I know it sounds cliché but I wish my Dad could’ve been here to see it.”

Brett races for Breakaway from Cancer, the masters bicycling team co-sponsored by the Pacific Meso Center, a non-profit dedicated to converting fatal asbestos-caused lung cancer into a chronic and survivable diseases.  Breakaway from Cancer is an initiative of the biotech giant Amgen, Inc., which applauds PMC's clinical interest in immunotherapy. Three members of the BFC team have lost their Dads to asbestos cancer.

Brett’s Dad, Gene Otto Clare, a former US Marine and journeyman ironworker , passed away from asbestos lung cancer in 1995. “Dad died almost 17 years ago to the day,” said Brett, who speaks of his Dad as if he was still very much alive. “He took care of himself. He was an Eagle Scout. He played football. Enjoyed sports of all kinds. If it wasn't for working around asbestos for 30 years, he’d be alive today.”

This is Brett’s first year on the BfC team. “When the team offered me a spot,” said Brett, “I jumped on it. I’ve seen what cancer can do to even the strongest among us. I’ve always wanted to be part of the solution to this cruel disease.  Racing bikes has been fun, but I’ve never had an emotional connection to a sponsor like I have for Breakaway from Cancer and the Pacific Meso Center. I believe in what they do and it helps motivate me to go a little bit harder.”

Going hard is Brett’s trademark.  In the criterium, after his teammate and former Olympian Thurlow Rogers shattered the 100 man field after setting a blistering pace, Brett attacked with two other adversaries. The threesome stayed away despite a relentless chase by the field.

“Some days you just know you’ve got that little something special,” said Brett. “My legs felt strong, my lungs were relaxed, and I had this sort of zen tranquility as I approached the final turn at warp speed.  I felt lucky. Lucky to have the chance to race for cancer survivors… and my Dad...and win."

Luck, skill, dedication and teamwork all came together for Breakaway from Cancer, as the team dominated the three day stage race. Thurlow Rogers won the overall, while Brett took second, and teammate Steve Strickler scratched and clawed himself to  fourth place.  Well done Gents!

Roger Worthington
3/12/2012

Thursday, March 8, 2012

"Make Your Mark For Meso" - March 11, 2012

Rosemarie Ganoe already knows a thing or two about pulling together as a community for a worthy cause. Last year she was honored as a “Person of Distinction” by the Los Angeles Daily Breeze newspaper, receiving the female volunteer honor for her contributions to various fundraising committees and events. 
Rosemarie and Mark
Ganoe

This Sunday Rosemarie will be at it again when she hosts the first annual “Make Your Mark for Mesothelioma” fundraiser in honor of her beloved husband Mark, who passed away from mesothelioma almost exactly a year ago.

Rosemarie has organized a fabulous “Casino Night” of Roulette, Black Jack, great food and wine, entertainment, silent auction and raffle prizes.  All proceeds will benefit The Pacific Meso Center, an organization committed to finding innovative medical solutions for mesothelioma patients.

According to Clare Cameron, PMC’s executive director, “Rosemarie is the best negotiator I’ve ever seen. She has almost singlehandedly secured donations of services and prizes from countless individuals and businesses and in the process exceeded any preconceived expectations on how much they were willing to give. Her business acumen, prominence in the community, and infectious desire to help have given her church, clients, friends, family and community an exceptional opportunity to support her when she needs them most.”

According to Rosemarie, “I feel that no matter what I give to the community or what I volunteer, I could never give them back as much as they've given me. Never." Even tonight, Rosemarie will be joined by her dedicated group of volunteers, consisting of friends and family, to take part in an assembly line of sorts to organize and assemble all of the gift bags and auction and raffle prizes for the event.

Make Your Mark for Mesothelioma will be held at the Dalmatian American Club in San Pedro on Sunday March 11, 2012 from 6-11 pm. The event has completely sold out but if you still want to donate, please contact Clare Cameron at ccameron@phlbi.org or mail your donation to 1379 W Park Western Dr. #301, San Pedro CA 90732.

The Law Office of Roger G. Worthington is moved by Rosemarie’s commitment to mesothelioma research and support for Dr. Cameron’s mission to improve meso patients’ lives. We are donating $10,000 to support Rosemarie and are pleased to be part of the “Make Your Mark for Meso” event in memory of Mark Ganoe.