Word: silver
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...runners will battle Heartbreak Hill and the strain of running without a break for three hourse. Bill Kraus, a Lowell House senior, is a sure bet to lead the Crimson contingent. He ran last year and turned in an impressive 2:39.05 to finish 79th. Kraus ran in the Silver Lake Marathon (Hopkinton to Newton, a course similar to the BAA race) in February and finished with a 2:50 and 11th-place position in near-blizzard conditions. The Akron, Ohio resident says he's looking to run the Marathon today in a time under...
Mather House will contribute two official entries--sophomore David Sullivan and Joel Arnason, a junior. Sullivan also qualified in the Silver Lake Marathon, running a 2:47.48 in his first effort. Sullivan, who has a track and cross-country background said last week there's some pressure to the race: "All these people keep telling me that they're going to come down and watch me and Jeez, what if I drop out? I tell everybody that it's my problem, not theirs. After it's all over I'm going to get drunk...
Cross-country runners Kraus and Sullivan will be joined by teammate Bill Berkeley, formerly of Winthrop House and New Canaan, Conn., who has 2:40 ambitions for his second marathon. Berkeley finished the Silver Lake jaunt in 2:48, but his 50-to-70-mile training regimen has "been inconsistent because of school work...
While the official entrants are talking confidently of sub-2:50 times, several unofficial Harvard runners are just hoping to cross the finish line on Hereford Street. Chris Bergonzi of Adams House and Armonk, N.Y. "had a horrendous time" when he ran in the Silver Lake race. Injured Harvard baseball player Steve Shevick of Evanston, Ill. has no previous racing experience but spent the last four weeks averaging ten miles a day in a crash training program. Despite his nonchalant planning, Shevick is looking forward to a 3:15-to-3:30 race, "if I finish...
Tomorrow will also provide sweet revenge for Chem 20 students as Professor Jim Wuest exchanges his lab apron for gym shorts and a "Cincinnati" T-shirt. Wuest has been running for three years and trained heavily for the past two months. After a 3:04 time in the Silver Marathon in Lowell last month, he modestly aspires to a sub-three-hour effort...