tag:news.nd.edu,2005:/news/authors/bill-moor tag:news.nd.edu,2005:/latest Notre Dame News | Notre Dame News | News 2004-08-02T20:00:00-04:00 Notre Dame News gathers and disseminates information that enhances understanding of the University’s academic and research mission and its accomplishments as a Catholic institute of higher learning. tag:news.nd.edu,2005:News/7139 2004-08-02T20:00:00-04:00 2021-09-03T20:57:05-04:00 (Commentary): They will run -- and run around -- the university It wasn’t exactly an “After you” push, but John Affleck-Graves made sure that the Rev. John I. Jenkins crossed the finish line before him in the Sunburst marathon earlier this summer.p. “Hey, he’s my boss,” Affleck-Graves says with a smile.p. While Affleck-Graves recently became the executive vice president of Notre Dame, Jenkins, a vice president and associate provost, will step up to president next June.p. If they can only run the university as smoothly as they run together.p. “John is a great person to run with,” Jenkins says. “He is constantly talking and encouraging while also solving the world’s problems. He can keep you going.”p. But in the final miles of their Sunburst marathon, Affleck-Graves looked over at his buddy-boss and decided it was time to zip his lips.p. “There comes the point when another runner can sense that you might be feeling a little stronger and it can be really annoying if you keep talking to him,” Affleck-Graves admits. “At mile 17 or 18, I knew John didn’t want to be talking about budgetary goals.”p. The two Notre Dame leaders also had run together in the Chicago marathon last fall. “But after 20 miles, I knew it would be better if I left John alone,” Affleck-Graves says. “So I went off on my own pace.”p. That was Jenkins’ first marathon.p. Affleck-Graves, a South African native and three years older than Jenkins at 53, has run 95 marathons in all — his fastest in 2:52. He also has run in two 56-mile endurance runs back in his homeland.p. “I definitely enjoy the training more than I do the actual racing,” Affleck-Graves admits. “I know I will do at least five more marathons and plan to make the Sunburst my 100th next June.”p. Jenkins may join Affleck-Graves for that one, too.p. “But John is a much more disciplined runner than I am,” Jenkins says. “I’m a fair-weather runner. I would rather swim in the winter than run.”p. Even so, Jenkins tries to get in about 30 to 35 miles of running each week — mostly on campus. Affleck-Graves usually runs between 40 and 50.p. “Since 1987, when I came to Notre Dame, I have run between 2,000 and 2,200 miles each year,” he says. “But I’m a Clydesdale, pounding the pavement in a way that everybody can hear me.”p. Affleck-Graves, who has two grown daughters with his wife, Rita, grew up playing rugby and cricket and didn’t even start running until he was 30.p. “I had gotten overweight at that time,” he admits.p. “And now, he doesn’t have an ounce of body fat on him,” Jenkins adds.p. Jenkins, a graduate of Notre Dame and Oxford University, was a top-notch swimmer while growing up in Nebraska.p. “He is actually a much better athlete than I am,” Affleck-Graves says. “John is a racehorse. I’m a plodder.”p. A plodder who has broken three hours in the marathon.p. They will continue to train together whenever they get a chance and talk over sports and politics and how to run the university while they are on the run.p. Are they the most dedicated runners in the Notre Dame hierarchy?p. “We have a lot of people out here who run,” Jenkins says. “Last summer, (athletic director) Kevin White ran 10 miles for 100 consecutive days for a charity.”p. And the Rev. Edward A. (Monk) Malloy, the university’s current president, has done his share of running while staying in shape for his beloved basketball.p. ‘We could never whip Monk," Affleck-Graves says.p. Both Jenkins and Affleck-Graves try hard to withhold their good-natured smiles.p. A runner’s high obviously is a healthy thing to have.

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Bill Moor
tag:news.nd.edu,2005:News/6947 2004-04-01T19:00:00-05:00 2021-09-03T20:55:35-04:00 Keeping the legacy. She works for her dad's cause COMMENTARY

When Sarah Craig Peterek was working at Saint Mary’s College, she would sometimes join her father, Notre Dame biology professor George Craig, for lunch.p. And for scores of hungry little mosquitoes, the two of them were the main course.p. “I would bring over a picnic lunch to his lab and we would sit with our arms in the (mosquito) cages for live blood meal feedings,” Sarah admits.p. Ouch, ouch and ouch.p. It was all in the name of science, of course.p. George Craig, who died of a heart attack at the age of 65 eight years ago, was one of the world’s leading authorities on mosquitoes and the diseases they transmitted.p. His wife, Betty, and their four children must have sometimes wondered if they were living on the Mosquito Coast instead of up by Kiefer Ditch in Clay Township.p. “I guess you could say my childhood was a little different than those of my friends,” Sarah says. "My dad would be driving us down the road and then suddenly pull over whenever he saw a bog.p. “Since I was the youngest kid, Dad would say to me, ‘Sarah, run over there and dip it.’ And I would, bringing back a sample (of any mosquito eggs and larvae) that we would often take home.”p. Sarah, now 41, married to husband Mike and raising three kids in their Niles home, even admits she would keep ticks for pets.p. “And, no, mosquito bites never were any big deal to me,” she says.p. Maybe that’s why she also didn’t mind all her crazy floor burns from being a volleyball setter both at Clay High 91Ƶ and Albion College.p. “It was wonderful being around my dad and learning how to look for the beauty in every living thing,” Sarah says. “With my mom also a biologist, dinner talk could be pretty gross at times.”p. Although she always liked her bugs, Sarah decided not to follow in her father’s footsteps — or try to match his bite marks.p. She went into development and administration — working for the American Heart Association, Saint Mary’s College and the Chamber of Commerce of St. Joseph County.p. But then last fall, she got the call back to the wild.p. The Rev. Thomas Streit, one of her father’s former students, phoned Sarah — while she happened to be sitting in her father’s office at her parents’ home — and asked if she would like to work for him in otre Dame’s Haiti Program. p. The program is part of the university’s Center for Tropical Disease Research and Training, which her father helped establish. Its primary mission is to eliminate the debilitating mosquito-borne disease of lymphatic filariasis (LF), the overwhelming cause of elephantiasis in Haiti.p. “How could I say no?” Sarah says.p. This is part of her father’s legacy, after all.p. So since November, she has served as the Haiti Program’s marketing manager. Her office is in the same Galvin Life Science building where her dad’s labs still are — and where she used to romp down the hall as a youngster.p. “I grew up in this place,” she says.p. And now, she is raising both the public’s consciousness and money for one of its programs, one that was infused with a $5.2 million grant from the Bill&Melinda Gates Foundation.p. “Even though my (academic) background isn’t biology, I can understand biologists because of spending so much time with my dad,” she says.p. The Haiti program, and its goal to thwart a mosquito-borne disease, would have been close to her father’s heart.p. “It is a great example of what Notre Dame does out in the world,” Sarah says. "This program is not just research, but a public health project that can change people’s lives.p. “LF is not known as a killer but is a maimer — one that leaves people with grotesque disfigurement. And because of that, society tends to ostracize those who are affected.”p. Although the political unrest in Haiti has not hindered the research, Sarah has had a couple of her own planned trips canceled to that country. She hopes to see the program firsthand later this spring.p. “I am ecstatic that Sarah is in the program,” her mother, Betty, says. “And I know her father has to be so very proud.”p. Sarah remembers when her father used to read to her three children — Maddy, now 14; Mitchell, 11; and Tyler, 9.p. His choices were stories like “The Butterfly Ball,” “Miss Spider’s Tea Party” and, of course, “Why Mosquitoes Buzz in People’s Ears.”p. Sarah still enjoys the sound of a mosquito’s buzz.p. “But I certainly don’t mind smashing them if they land on me,” she says. “I do have an appreciation for them, though.”p. They are, after all, a weird and yet wonderful reminder of her dad.

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Bill Moor