Ohio Northern's Swimming and Diving Teams Join Athletes Around the World in the "Hour of Power" Relay
By Tim Glon
ADA — Ohio Northern's 37 members of its men's and women's swimming & diving teams will join thousands of athletes from around the world on Tuesday from 3-5 pm in the ninth Annual Ted Mullin "Leave it in the Pool" Hour of Power Relay for Sarcoma Research at the ONU Sports Center Natatorium, sponsored by Carleton College swimming and diving teams.
ONU Swimming & Diving has participated in this event in all ten years of its existence.
The Hour of Power event honors those who are fighting or have succumbed to cancer, including former Carleton swimmer Edward H. "Ted" Mullin, who passed away from synovial sarcoma, a rare soft-tissue cancer, in September 2006.
The annual swim relay, which now includes dryland teams as well, has grown from 15 teams in its first year to more than 160 teams and more than 8,400 athletes in recent years.
Participating swim teams engage in continuous relays of any stroke for a full hour of all-out swimming. Dryland teams engage in their particular sport non-stop for a full hour.
The all-out 60-minute relay is a challenging workout that fuels team spirit and fosters cooperation among team members. The event aims to generate awareness of sarcoma, a rare cancer that disproportionately affects adolescents and young adults.
Over the first ten years, participating teams have raised over $630,000 to support research at the University of Chicago into the causes and treatment of sarcoma, a rare soft-tissue cancer.
The funds have been used for a variety of projects that evaluate the genetic basis of sarcomas, the identification of novel markers of disease diagnosis or progression, and the development of new small molecule and cell therapies for resistant disease.
Each summer, the University also hosts Ted Mullin Fund scholars, offering four to five Hour of Power participants an opportunity to advance their interest in science and cancer biology by spending 10 weeks in a laboratory under the mentorship of a pediatric cancer researcher within the Section of Pediatric Hematology/Oncology, at the University of Chicago.