| Boston Marathon includes School of Public Health athletes |
| April 25, 2008 | |
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Several members of the School of Public Health community, including one fast-moving graduate student, modeled healthy behaviors recently when they participated in the 26-mile Boston Marathon on April 21. ![]() photograph, Marc Jeuland finished 15th overall and third among American men in a field of more than 22,000 in the event. His time of 2 hours, 20 minutes, 57 seconds, was only 13 minutes longer than the first place runner, Robert Cheruiyot, of Kenya, who completed the course in 2:07.46. "At the finish, someone called out, 'You're 15th,' and I couldn't believe it," Jeuland said. Other participants from the School of Public Health
included:
Drew Steen, graduate student in the Department of Marine
Sciences and Jeuland's friend, praised Jeuland's performance in the race,
especially given that travel and illness had caused him lost training
time. "Marc's too self-effacing to talk about himself, but he's
had a number of running successes in his time at UNC," Steen said, "including a
strong showing at the U.S.
Olympic qualifiers in New York
in November 2007. He came to UNC after a three-year stint in the Peace Corps in
Mali,
where he was sufficiently instrumental in the construction of a new wastewater
treatment station that it was named after him." Jeuland's graduate research is focused on the impacts of climate change on the economics and planning of dams, with a particular focus on the Blue Nile Basin in Ethiopia. He worked with a local sanitation company near Bamako, Mali, on the wastewater treatment project. Jeuland says he runs "because it keeps me healthy, provides balance in my life and also is a way to unwind from the rigors of academic study and work." He enjoys the camaraderie of running with friends, especially those at the Carrboro Athletics Club. "Boston's
a great race, with a long history, a challenging course, and terrific crowd
support," he says, "and I came away from the race feeling very happy to be a
marathoner." ![]() photo, Dr. Harsha Thirumurthy
"I'm
ecstatic about my time, which was an improvement of 11 minutes over my previous
best. And I'm thrilled that I kept practically the same pace throughout
the race, with miles 20 to 26 being slightly faster than miles 14 to 20.
It was the first marathon in which I didn't slow down considerably towards the
end." ![]() photograph, Dr. Tricia Drummey "We decided," Drummey teased, "that's where the extra 13 seconds on my 3:30 time came from." ![]() photograph, Dr. David Leith
School of Public Health contact: Ramona DuBose, director of communications, (919) 966-7467 or ramona_dubose@unc.edu. |
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| Last updated August 01, 2008 |





