Again, I apologize for the lack of substantial posting. I have many submissions from my hundreds of readers that I haven't gotten to yet. Your mother told you, "Patience is a virtue!"
But I needed to post this one first. Greg Fredericks sent this along and it dovetails with all the talk of the 1968 Olympic Trials we have had lately.
Turns out that the former mayor of Lancaster, Art Morris, was a PSU middle distance star when Greg was just getting started. He ended up participating in groundbreaking Altitude Training Testing in Peru and Colorado.
Art Morris. |
In 1965, Art Morris, a sophomore distance runner, was among a group of six Penn State track athletes who were recruited to undergo testing at high altitude in Nunoa, Peru (13,000 feet), and Mount Evans, Colorado (14,264 feet).
The study, “Physiology and Performance of Track Athletes at Various Altitudes in the United States and Peru,” was underwritten by the U.S. Olympic Committee, the U.S. Army and Penn State’s Human Performance Laboratory (now Noll Laboratory) under the supervision of noted physiologist E.R. Buskirk.Art related that despite the high-altitude training, it did not result in better times when they returned home, closer to sea level.
Art eventually ran a 4:07 mile for the Lions. Huzzah for a pioneer!