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Stories In Focus

Around the World in Seven Days

Glen Avery, International Marathon Runner.

International marathon runner, Glen Avery, faculty at Houghton for 28 years, will participate in the World Marathon Challenge in January. The challenge is to complete seven back-to-back 26.2-mile marathons, one on each continent. The challenge from start to finish must be finished in 168 hours. This provides an 8-hour window to complete each individual marathon. Avery will join 14 other runners as they board a plane headed for Antarctica. The event starts at Union Glacier in Antarctica where the runners complete their first marathon. From Union Glacier, the runners fly to Punta Arenas, Chile for number two. From Chile, to Florida, USA to Madrid, Spain to Marrakesh, Morocco to Dubai, UAE, these 15 runners will participate in an event that few people dare to try. Some challenges in the event include altitude and weather changes. The event ends with a midnight marathon in Australia.

GlenAveryMedalsRGBAvery’s running career started long before he signed up for the World Marathon Challenge. On his 51st birthday in 2001, Avery began to be concerned about his physical health. He decided to start walking at the gym. In April 2002, he ran his first 5k in Geneva, NY. After this first event, he bought shoes and started running more. His first marathon was in Athens, Greece and what initially interested him in this race was of the history of the marathon. The Greek soldier, Pheidippides ran from Marathon to Athens to deliver the news of military victory over the Persians in the battle of Marathon.

Avery and his wife, Margery travelled to Greece. This started a pattern of internationally traveling and running. Avery has run a marathon on every continent, twice. In his first tour of the continents, he completed races in Greece, NYC, Hawaii, South Africa, Australia, Brazil, Thailand, and Antarctica. Avery explained that it is imperative to mind the penguins when running a marathon in Antarctica. His first cycle took 9 years and ended with running into the sunrise of Cheng Mai, Thailand on Christmas day, 2011. The second cycle took him 4 years. During the second cycle, he ran in South Africa, the Falkland Islands, Cuba, Spain, Antarctica, New Zealand, and the Philippines.

Avery recounted, “I’ve made connections and learned so much about culture from these experiences. That’s what I take away from all this.” He explained that one of his most impressionable intercultural experiences was in the Falkland Islands. Avery and 30 new friends from the Falkland Islands visited 1982 war sites of the 74-day war fought between Argentina and the Falkland islands. His new friends invited him for meals, visited battle sites, and cemeteries where he saw his friends grieve the losses of the causalities from the war. Because of experiences like this, Avery assures us, “I am going to continue to do international marathons. I can’t imagine my life without these experiences.”

This June, Glen and his wife Margery are retiring from Houghton after many years. Glen will retire from his current Instructional Technology Librarian position and Margery will retire from her current duties as head of Academic Records. When they are not working, the Avery’s enjoy traveling, reading, hiking, and serving others.
To prepare for the World Marathon Challenge, Avery intends to run four back-to-back marathons in the Western United States this summer. Avery continuously trains for events year-round. He states, “I’ll keep doing it as long as I can.” During his retirement, he plans on writing a book about all of his experiences as an international runner.

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News

Baseball Teams Heads to Florida for Championship

This past spring break provided time for the Houghton Men’s Baseball team to embark on the 26-hour drive from campus to Florida to participate in The RussMatt Central Florida Invitational.  The week-long trip was an opportunity for the team to build relationships between each other and test their skills on the field.  Ten games were scheduled; however one junior varsity game was rained out. A total of eight varsity games were played as well as one junior varsity game for freshman and sophomores.

Up to this point the baseball team had only participated in scrimmages.  The tournament consisted of mostly northern college baseball teams and was intended to provide extra playing time for an otherwise short season.  It also gives players the chance to encounter scenarios that do not surface while practicing indoors.

Having participated in the tournament two years previously, with a beginning record of 1-7, the team is excited about this year’s record of 4-4.

rp_primary_IMG_5194Pitcher and DH Seth Cornell, a junior, remarks on the team saying, “We have improved every year and it’s nice to see that we compete.”

Coach Brian Reitnour says, “The team was competitive in all the games and this gives us a look at the big picture in order to move in the right direction for the upcoming season.” Reitnour points to the two home runs and two triples by freshman Tommy Walker as just one example of the type of playing exhibited by Houghton during the tournament.

The trip involved many activities for the baseball team besides the tournament itself.  Just one example was the parents’ cookout that was held for family that travelled to see the team compete. Additionally, the team held a worship service for a time of praise and testimony, spotlighting players such as Mike Kerr and Kevin Cassar in which teammates were able to see each other in a more vulnerable light.  They were also able to spend time bonding during a Washington Nationals and Miami Marlins game where two home run balls were caught.

For freshman Joe Gilligan, the trip gave him just a small look at the camaraderie shared between the players.  Gilligan says, “I thank my teammates for making this such a great experience.”

This season’s team consists of 12 returning players, 17 new players, and no seniors.  Being such a young team means that they are “not experienced yet at such a level, but have a lot of promise,” says Reitnour.

Watching the players grow into new roles on the team, especially those who have been on the team since its start three years ago, has been exciting for Coach Reitnour.  He says, “the guys teach each other academically, socially, and athletically.”

With such a team, Reitnour added that, “they play for something more than themselves, making it more meaningful individually and collectively.”