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Pink Ribbon Run
Every Woman Can, a breast cancer charity that picks up where the Susan G. Komen Foundation left off when the local chapter dissolved recently, put on its first large event, the Pink Ribbon 5K Run, Sunday, April 23, 2017. Hundreds of runners and walkers, including many cancer survivors, circled Riverfront Park Sunday morning.
Section:Gallery
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Walkers and runners wind their way through Riverfront Park at the first Pink Ribbon Run Sunday, April 23, 2017. The organization Every Woman Can, which has picked up where the Susan G. Komen Foundation left off, sponsored the first time event.
Jesse Tinsley The Spokesman-Review
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Walkers and runners walk through Riverfront Park to start the first Pink Ribbon 5K Run Sunday, April 23, 2017. The organization Every Woman Can, which has picked up where the Susan G. Komen Foundation left off, sponsored the first time event.
Jesse Tinsley The Spokesman-Review
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Walkers and runners use the Centennial Trail along the Spokane River to complete the first Pink Ribbon Run Sunday, April 23, 2017. The organization Every Woman Can, which has picked up where the Susan G. Komen Foundation left off, sponsored the first time event.
Jesse Tinsley The Spokesman-Review
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Walkers and runners walk through Riverfront Park to start the first Pink Ribbon 5K Run Sunday, April 23, 2017. The organization Every Woman Can, which has picked up where the Susan G. Komen Foundation left off, sponsored the first time event.
Jesse Tinsley The Spokesman-Review
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Walkers and runners use the Centennial Trail along the Spokane River to complete the first Pink Ribbon Run Sunday, April 23, 2017. The organization Every Woman Can, which has picked up where the Susan G. Komen Foundation left off, sponsored the first time event.
Jesse Tinsley The Spokesman-Review
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Diane Bahr holds a sign for “Team Kristen”, which included almost 50 family and friends walking for her daughter Kristen Wall, a fifth-grade teacher at Pasadena Park Elementary who has been treated for breast cancer, at the first Pink Ribbon Run Sunday, April 23, 2017. The organization Every Woman Can, which has picked up where the Susan G. Komen Foundation left off, sponsored the first time event.
Jesse Tinsley The Spokesman-Review
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The Lakeside High Schoolcheerleaders encourage runners and walkers near the finish line of the first Pink Ribbon Run Sunday, April 23, 2017. The organization Every Woman Can, which has picked up where the Susan G. Komen Foundation left off, sponsored the first time event.
Jesse Tinsley The Spokesman-Review
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Bill Peterson wears a spiked wig while participating in the first Pink Ribbon 5K Run Sunday, April 23, 2017. The organization Every Woman Can, which has picked up where the Susan G. Komen Foundation left off, sponsored the first time event.
Jesse Tinsley The Spokesman-Review
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Cancer survivor Tammy McMahon, in black jacket at left, greets her co-workers from the Central Valley School District the first Pink Ribbon 5K Run Sunday, April 23, 2017. The organization Every Woman Can, which has picked up where the Susan G. Komen Foundation left off, sponsored the first time event.
Jesse Tinsley The Spokesman-Review
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First and second place finishers of the first Pink Ribbon Run Sunday, April 23, 2017 in Riverfront Park were Steve Kirschke, left, and Jody Shapiro. The two are both 45 and ran against each in high school, Kirschke at Rogers and Shapiro at Lewis and Clark. The race is a qualifier for Bloomsday.
Jesse Tinsley The Spokesman-Review
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