The Sentinel-Record

ASMSA students to run in festival

- FROM STAFF REPORTS

The Arkansas School for Mathematic­s, Sciences, and the Arts will field the third-largest team in the Spa Running Festival today with 16 students taking part in the three events.

The race will take runners in the 5K, 10K and half marathon past the school on their way toward West Mountain. Race Director Cindy Baswell said almost 1,200 participan­ts had preregiste­red for the event by Thursday.

The festival was formerly known as the Spa 10K/5K. The Summit 2 Challenge Half Marathon, which will take runners to the summit of West Mountain

twice, has been added for the 43rd event.

The idea to form a team developed among a few co-workers who discussed their plans to participat­e. Dan Kostopulos, who serves as chair of the Humanities Department, suggested the school form a team for the run. Benefits would include providing an opportunit­y for ASMSA to be involved in a community event.

“I wanted to get the team together because I wanted people to see ASMSA involved in a community thing,” Kostopulos said. “It’s good for us to be visible and people see us out in the community doing things like that. I wanted people to see us doing something that’s important to Hot Springs, especially downtown Hot Springs.”

Other co-workers initially involved in getting the team off the ground were Julie LaRue, head of human resources, and Ashley Smith, associate director of finance. LaRue has participat­ed in the event several times and is a longtime runner. Smith began running with LaRue in January and will compete for the first time today.

Both LaRue and Smith mentioned another benefit of forming a team — developing camaraderi­e between various groups on campus. Once it was decided to form a team, Kostopulos, LaRue and Smith began to recruit faculty, staff, students, family and friends to sign up for the race.

“I was surprised by the number of people who are runners,” LaRue said. “Everyone has been real positive about it. It’s a kind of a common ground we all have.

“I like it because it connects people in a way that they haven’t connected before. So you’ll make work friends or at least have a connection with someone that you’ll have to network with in the future. It’ll make those conversati­ons more comfortabl­e because at least you have that common ground.”

The 16-member team is comprised of 12 ASMSA faculty and staff members, two spouses, a friend of a staff member and one parent of a student. No students signed up to participat­e in the event, but several are planning to be on the route and at the finish line to cheer on the team members, LaRue said.

Smith said several members of the team have run the routes as groups for practice. It has given them the opportunit­y to connect with each other.

“I feel like it has given us a common topic.” Smith said. “It’s given me the opportunit­y to engage with people that I wouldn’t normally interact with. Now when we see each other in the halls, we get excited and talk about it. It allows us to talk about something other than work.”

LaRue said participat­ion in the race serves as a good way to promote wellness on campus.

While no students signed up to participat­e in the run, some of their handiwork will be on display by the team. The Computer Science Club printed shirts for the team members to wear for the race.

The shirts will have the word “hard-core” with a capital A and R within the shape of Arkansas, in the style of the “remarkable” and other shirts students, parents, alumni and others have received over the past couple of years.

Smith said team members selected the T-shirt design from among several submitted. She said the decision was a team effort.

Nine of the team members will participat­e in the 5K and two will run the 10K. Kostopulos will run in the half marathon that will take runners up and down West Mountain twice.

Kostopulos said he decided when he turned 40 to do something he had wanted to do before but had never been able to do. He worked his way up slowly, building up to a 5K race and then on to a 10K race before moving on to the half marathons. He said he’d like to try a full marathon someday, but he is also “quite happy running a couple of half marathons a year.”

It will be Smith’s and other team members’ first time to run in a competitio­n. Kostopulos said taking the step to run competitiv­ely is a huge step for any runner.

“It’s one thing to go out and run on your own, but when you run in a group, when you run in a race, it’s a totally different sensory experience,” Kostopulos said. “It can be emotional. You run faster. You’re amazed by your time at the end. It’s a thrilling experience to run your first race.”

 ??  ?? GEARING UP: Seniors Nick Davis, left, and Hayden Aud, members of the school’s Computer Science Club, print T-shirts for members of Arkansas School for Mathematic­s, Sciences and the Arts team that will participat­e in today’s Spa Running Festival.
GEARING UP: Seniors Nick Davis, left, and Hayden Aud, members of the school’s Computer Science Club, print T-shirts for members of Arkansas School for Mathematic­s, Sciences and the Arts team that will participat­e in today’s Spa Running Festival.

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