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Two Daves and Two Joes take on Buffalo Marathon

Published: June 12, 2003

By DONNA LONGENECKER
Reporter Assistant Editor

Long-distance running has always captivated the imagination—just visit a few running sites on the Web and note how often the word "mythic" is used to describe either a particular marathon or runner.

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"Two Daves and Two Joes" are, from left, Joseph Atkinson, David Kofke, Joseph Mollendorf and David Gerber.
PHOTO: DONNA LONGENECKER

And then there's the association with ancient Greece, where runners were employed as messengers bearing news of war and revered for being able to cover long distances on foot in a short amount of time. In fact, Achilles and Theseus both were runners.

UB has its own mythic messengers—"Two Daves and Two Joes"—four Chancellor's Award winners who are long-distance runners, as well as being top-notch teachers.

Members of the team—Joseph Mollendorf, professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering; Joseph Atkinson, professor of civil engineering; David Kofke, professor of chemical engineering, and David Gerber, professor of history—hence the team name "Two Daves and Two Joes"—joined up to run last month's Buffalo marathon as a relay team.

After spending a few minutes with these guys, one quickly realizes that along with humility, all of them embody the ancient Greek maxim of "a sound mind in a healthy body."

Gerber has been running for 30 years, and at age 58, still runs about 25-30 miles a week. It was Gerber's "spontaneous suggestion," according to Joseph Atkinson, to form a relay team to run the marathon. On a recent afternoon in Delaware Park, this reporter spotted Gerber running, listening to his walkman through headphones and not looking a bit winded—he passed this reporter twice on the ring road during a quick stroll around the park. That day, he says he ran six miles.

Gerber says he works out "knotty" problems while running, both with his writing and in his work as a historian, and also finds that it's the one time of the day he can catch up on the news while listening to his walkman.

"It's just part of who I am," Gerber says about his passion for running. "It's helped me in so many ways just to live." He's also developed a group of friends in the community that he says he might not have gotten to know otherwise—men and women of all ages, from all walks of life, from truck drivers to special education teachers.

Mollendorf, while outwardly less philosophical about his reasons for running, clearly is a zealot—his energy and enthusiasm is contagious. At 58, he runs a 9-minute mile when most people half his age can't even walk a mile in that time. But then, he's been running for 20 years.

"I just really enjoy it," he says, calling himself "the weakest link" of the team. Yet, he ran the last leg of the Buffalo Marathon—the longest leg of the race at 12 kilometers, compared to the other three legs of 10 kilometers each—and has run a full marathon, a total of 26.2 miles.

"I find it therapeutic—mentally and physically stimulating. I just let my mind wander," says Mollendorf, who averages 15 miles, three times a week. He works out at the Jewish Community Center, arriving every day at 6:30 a.m. and leaving at about the time Gerber arrives around 8:30 a.m. Mollendorf jokes that as the oldest runner in the group, he has the most work to do, but it's clear that his teammates admire his stamina. Running with the others, he says, just inspires him to keep pushing harder.

A runner since 1977, Atkinson says the sport is a nice meditation of sorts and a great way to work through both personal and professional issues. After completing his 10K leg of the marathon, he continued on with Gerber, racking up a total of 20 kilometers.

"I may think of ways to explain things in a lecture and I often think about how the students are doing," says Atkinson of his time spent running. Kofke echoed that, adding that he sometimes hashes out political debates with himself or ponders a research problem.

Kofke and Atkinson are the two youngest members of the team, hovering somewhere in their 40s.

Kofke, who ran the third leg of the marathon, runs and swims every week—totaling about 11 miles altogether. Although this was his first marathon, he says he's willing to do it again next year and everyone else enthusiastically agreed.

"Next year, we'll win a trophy," Gerber predicts.