Best of the Mess from April 5, 2000 – Walking in the midnight sun – Aitkin Independent Age

Posted: April 13, 2020 at 5:46 am

Grace Mitchell cant wait to get on the road again.

And when she hits the road this time, shell be bound for Anchorage, Alaska, to take part in the Mayors Midnight Sun Marathon on June 17.

Grace will be participating in a 26.2 mile walk, sponsored by the Leukemia Society of America.

I completed the Honolulu Marathon in December of 1998, Grace said. I raised almost $5,000.

This is Graces second year as part of the Leukemia Societys Team in Training program. Money raised during the marathon is given to researchers at the Mayo Clinic, Hughs Institute and the University of Minnesota. Research funded in the past by the Leukemia Society has helped to develop new treatments for other cancers as well. Funds raised this year will be used to fight leukemia, myeloma, lymphoma, and Hodgkins disease. Grace and her husband own a summer cabin on Mille Lacs Lake and have been coming to the area for many years.

Inspired by his story in the Messenger, Grace is walking this year in honor of Abel Vanderpoel, son of Mary Jo and Keith Vanderpoel of Onamia.

Abel Vanderpoel was diagnosed with leukemia in September. He recently received stem cells from his sister Betsy and is undergoing treatment at Fairview Medical Center in the Twin Cities.

Grace will also be walking in memory of Patrick Kluck, who passed away in July of 1990 from leukemia.

Although not official honorees this year, in my heart, I will also be walking in memory of Catherine Malmquist and to honor Tanner Mielke, she said.

Two years ago, Grace was diagnosed with myelodysplastic syndrome, a pre-luekemia disease.

This is a cancer that attacks the bone marrow that produces the red blood cells, she said. At the present time, they do not know what causes the disease, and there is no cure. Thanks to tremendous prayer support, my disease is stable. My hope and prayer is that by the time my disease progresses, a treatment an cure will be found through continuing research.

Teams in training began in 1968 in New York when a woman named Lucy Duffy wanted to do something positive in response to her husbands struggle with leukemia. As a runner in the New York City Marathon, she passed out pledge forms to solicit donations for each mile she completed in the race. Her husband lost his battle two months after she ran the marathon, but she had raised $22,000 in his honor. Last year, over 23,000 runners, walkers and cyclists participated in the worlds major marathons on behalf of the Leukemia Society of America.

The Minnesota Team in Training began in 1994 and has raised nearly $2 million for research and patient aid in Minnesota, South and North Dakota.

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Best of the Mess from April 5, 2000 - Walking in the midnight sun - Aitkin Independent Age

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