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==Run for Moore== ==Run for Moore==
{{main|Run for Moore}} {{main|Run for Moore}}
Following complaints from John Taylor, stressing that the (5K Race for Life) was in breach of "Section 29 of the 1975 Sex Discrimnation Act", which stated it was illegal to discriminate in the provision of Goods, Facilities and Services, the Equal Opportunities Commission wrote to Cancer Research UK which then launched the (5K Run for Moore). See http://www.gazetteherald.co.uk/archive/2006/02/16/Ryedale+Archive/6670131.Men_urged_to_run_for_their_rights/
Cancer Research UK's ] also organised a similar event exclusively for men, ]. The proceeds from this event only went towards ] research and campaigns and the venture was discontinued in 2010.{{not in source|date=March 2012}}<ref name="Moore"></ref>

The proceeds from this event only went towards ] research and campaigns and the venture was discontinued in 2010.{{not in source|date=March 2012}}<ref name="Moore"></ref>


==See also== ==See also==

Revision as of 10:41, 3 September 2012

Runners in a Race for Life wear a card in memory of the people they know affected by cancer.

Race for Life is a series of fundraising events for women only, organised by the British charity, Cancer Research UK. They involve running, jogging or walking a 5-kilometre course and raising sponsorship for doing so.
The money raised is donated to the charity to fund cancer research and campaigns, however, none of the money from the entry fee (£14.99 for adults and £10 for children in 2012) actually benefits Cancer Research UK, only the additional sponsorship raised by participants.

History

Race For Life 2011, on the grounds of the Cheltenham Race Course.
Race For Life 2011 at Parker's Piece, Cambridge.

Race for Life was conceived specifically for raising awareness of women's cancers. The first Race for Life event took place in 1994 when 680 participants participated in a race in Battersea Park, London and raised £36,000. Race for Life has subsequently grown to become one of the UK's largest fundraising events, which in 2006 involved 240 races, 750,000 participants and raised £46 million. Since Race for Life began in 1994, 4.7 million participants across the UK raised over £327 million for the charity. Notable participants include Jane Tomlinson, whose first fundraising event was a Race for Life in 2001 after being diagnosed with terminal breast cancer. She went on to raise over £1.75 million for charity before her death in 2007. In 2009 actresses Laila Morse and Lynda Bellingham became a Race for Life ambassadors in memory of Wendy Richard and Jade Goody, both of whom had recently died from cancer.

Run for Moore

Main article: Run for Moore

Following complaints from John Taylor, stressing that the (5K Race for Life) was in breach of "Section 29 of the 1975 Sex Discrimnation Act", which stated it was illegal to discriminate in the provision of Goods, Facilities and Services, the Equal Opportunities Commission wrote to Cancer Research UK which then launched the (5K Run for Moore). See http://www.gazetteherald.co.uk/archive/2006/02/16/Ryedale+Archive/6670131.Men_urged_to_run_for_their_rights/

The proceeds from this event only went towards bowel cancer research and campaigns and the venture was discontinued in 2010.

See also

References

  1. "Entry fees". Cancer Research UK Race for Life. Retrieved 2012-06-21.
  2. "About us". Cancer Research UK Race for Life. Retrieved 2010-07-05.
  3. Nico Hines, Jane Tomlinson, charity fundraiser, dies aged 43, The Times, September 4, 2007
  4. Race for Life women pay their tributes, The Press and Journal, 3 Marxch 2009
  5. Bobby Moore Fund website

External links

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