ss

Author Archive

5-K run tomorrow to benefit Noemi Pagan scholarship

Friday, September 16th, 2011

LORAIN — About 125 runners are expected to take part in a 5-K walk-run Saturday to benefit a scholarship fund established in memory of Lorain teacher Noemi Pagan.

The run will begin at 9 a.m. from the Black River Landing in downtown Lorain. Registration begins at 7 a.m.

The event is designed to raise money for the Noemi Pagan Scholarship which honors Pagan, 38, a fourth-grade teacher at Lorain’s Garfield Elementary School teacher who died from injuries sustained in a head-on collision on South Broadway in Sheffield Township in June 2010.

“This is a way to memorialize Noemi and keep her memory alive,” Michelle Nimene, Pagan’s sister-in-law said.

Families are welcome to join the event, as are pets, Nimene said.

The fund awarded two $750 scholarships to a pair of college-bound Lorain City Schools graduates earlier this year.

To register or for questions, call Nimene at (440) 258-9203.

Prof gets $345,000 cancer grant

Saturday, August 27th, 2011

OBERLIN – An assistant professor of chemistry at Oberlin College has received a $345,000 grant from the National Cancer Institute to assist her and her team in searching for clues to detect deadly ovarian cancer.

The grant to Dr. Rebecca Jean Whelan and her team was announced by U.S. Rep. Marcy Kaptur, D-Toledo.

“We’re all rooting for Dr. Whelan and her team at Oberlin,” Kaptur said. “Ovarian cancer is the fifth most common cancer among women in the United States and claims approximately 15,000 lives each year.”

Whelan will oversee a three-year research project titled “Development of Aptamer-Based Detection and Therapy Strategies for Ovarian Cancer.”

Aptamers are molecules that bind to a specific target molecule and help facilitate research.

“The research that I’m engaged in now is invested in finding new ways of detecting ovarian cancer by looking at blood samples and searching within those blood samples for telltale indicators that the disease is present, even if it’s at a very early stage,” she said in a video posted on the Oberlin College website.

In an email Friday, Whelan said the research project is motivated by the need to develop reliable noninvasive tests for early stage ovarian cancer, since treatment is most effective when the disease is diagnosed early. Tests for biomarkers found in the blood of women with ovarian cancer are widely used by physicians, according to Whelan.

“Our goal is to develop new ways of measuring the amounts of three important cancer biomarkers,” Whelan wrote. “We also seek to develop new methods for looking at the surfaces of tumors and selectively killing cancer cells.”

Whelan’s funding comes from the Academic Research Enhancement Awards program that is administered by the NCI.

The NCI is part of the National Institutes of Health, which is one of 11 agencies that compose the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

The NCI was established under the National Cancer Institute Act of 1937 and is the federal government’s principal agency for cancer research and training.

Route 511 open

Tuesday, August 23rd, 2011

State Route 511, just south of US Route 20, is now open. The road was previously closed for a bridge replacement project.

UPDATED: Man critically injured in crash on Route 2

Sunday, August 21st, 2011

AMHERST TWP. – The driver of a car that crashed around 3 a.m. Sunday on state Route 2 and Oberlin Road east of state Route 58 was critically injured.

Ledonrick Pentorn, 24, of Sandusky, was in critical condition at MetroHealth Medical Center in Cleveland on Sunday evening. A driver said Pentorn passed her at a high rate of speed before veering right and then veering left, according to Trooper Joe Glascox of the Ohio Highway Patrol’s Elyria post.

Pentorn drove down a median, striking a drainage culvert and a concrete barrier. Pentorn was conscious and smelled of alcohol when he was extricated from his car by firefighters, Glascox said. Glascox said police will seek a subpoena for a blood test given to Pentorn to determine whether he was driving drunk.