GBTC Remembers 1975! By Jeff Benjamin
The students of the young people and “Go to Boston” college, collecting a bunch of elderly people in athletics rest, may seem insignificant.
But that was certainly not.
Last Thuesday, the recent memories of the 1970s were a great gathering, when this group of individuals formed not only America but also the world’s largest distance team.

Boston’s larger club (GBTC).
Legendary Bill Rogers and Stroller Riforor Bob Hall were the main honors about their 50th birthdays, which fate in April. But the hall was filled with who, who, who is in a talented distance, who respects their skills under the bill under the late great coaches.

Mark Duggan, Bobby Hodji, Bobi Hodo, Dick Meconi, Jack McDonald, Dave McGillvray, Dave McGillvray, Jim Roy, Bob Flamigetti, John Ellis, John Berit, John Berit, John Berit, John Berit, John Berit, John Berit, John Berit, John Berit, John Berit, John Berit, John Berit, John Berit, John Berit, John Berit, John Berit, John Berit, John Berit, John Berit, John Berit Ricciato and local treadmill.
Joining the gathering was also Boston Champ Jack Fultz in 1968 as well.

One of the big chronic sports, Paul Clerich, also attended.
“If you look around this room,” said Rogers. “Many of them ran 100 miles a week.”
In 1979, this training led to an international exhibition, as it appears on these results of Boston.

Randy Thomas (8th) and Mahoney (10th) performances have shown a club depth, which has rarely seen.
As a Boston Marathon historian and GBTC historian and GBTC member Tom Dedian in the book “Boston Marathon”.
“Not only did the Boston club win all the other clubs entered in the race, they won all the other countries.”

“We had fun,” said Rogers about those times. “We had a real brotherhood of boys.”
Everyone agrees that it is because of the squares of the coaches.

“My father spoke to all of us not only about our other interests, but about our lives and what we would do in our lives,” said the son, Bill Queen’s Jr.

“There was a real feeling of taking care of a family.”
And that’s still there.
