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Dr. Russell Crandall
International Exposure
Randy Mayes March 2000 For the Washington Running Report
Growing up in San Francisco, Russell Crandall ran 9:27 for two
miles in high school. He moved on to Bowdoin College, a liberal
arts school in Maine, where he participated in cross country and
track his first two years. As a government major, he spent his
junior year in Chile doing research. During his senior year, he
took a break from running after deciding he would enjoy the
cross-country ski team more. In 1994, Crandall started his first teaching job in a small town
in Honduras with first graders. He recalls surprising several
rural farmers while training in the countryside. Being
fascinated with the Latin American culture, he enrolled as a
graduate student at Johns Hopkins University and received a
Master's Degree in International Relations in 1997. He also
worked on a project in Colombia, South America that provided
financial and logistical support to human rights teams
throughout the country. He cautiously continued training as he
often worked in zones of conflict. In 1998, after a year of working and training at 10,000 feet in
Colombia and Ecuador, Crandall began competing in road races in
the Washington, DC area. He was ninth at the GW Parkway 15K
(50:34) and won the Buck Elliot Half-Marathon (1:12:00) and Jug
Bay 10K (32:21). Last year, he placed fifth at the GW Parkway 15K (48:20) and
second at the Lawyers Have Heart 10K (32:50). He won the MS Half-
Marathon (1:09:21), Jingle Bell 10K (29:59-short course), Buck
Elliot Half-Marathon (1:10:16), and the Jug Bay 10K (32:16).
After a return trip to Columbia, this time to do field work,
Crandall finished his Doctoral Thesis on "U.S. Policy Towards
Columbia in the 1990s" while living and training in the Cascade
Mountains of Oregon. With a map and no idea of mileage, he did
three to five hour trail runs through snowfields, meadows, and
across rivers. On matters relating to South America, he has testified before
Congress, appeared on television, and has been quoted and
published in numerous newspaper articles. As a lecturer at Johns
Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies in Washington
D.C., Crandall teaches the Evolution of the Latin American
Political and Economic System class. He recently finished
defending his doctoral thesis and plans to continue teaching
college and doing public service and volunteer work related to
foreign policy. While frequently training with the Washington Running Club, he
logs 50 to 60 miles per week. In the Fall Runner Rankings (Jan-
Feb '00 issue), Crandall was ranked third in the open division.
While not caught up in the marathon fad, he has set a
challenging goal to run a sub- 1:06 half marathon. He is
currently somewhere in the Peruvian mountains working on an
economic development project.
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