Singer Art Garfunkel, a real estate magnate and an investor are putting $2 million in gold bullion on the line to inspire researchers to cure blindness by 2020, establishing through Johns Hopkins Medicine one of the world’s largest prizes for a scientific advancement.
The men, one-time roommates at Columbia University, intend for the prize to trigger research into the variety of diseases that cause blindness — 80 percent of which are preventable — in 39 million people around the world.
Dr. Peter McDonnell, director and ophthalmology professor at the Wilmer Eye Institute at Johns Hopkins, said Friday that the time between this week’s announcement and the day the prize will be awarded is exactly the same period, 2,978 days, from President John F. Kennedy’s challenge to put a man on the moon and Neil Armstrong’s first steps on its surface.