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January 14, 2002
UCSC staffer and student will carry Olympic torch
By Jennifer McNulty
Elizabeth Conerly was a broke UC Berkeley student as Mother's Day approached last
year, but being penniless inspired her to give the best gift ever: Conerly nominated
her mother, Trish Virgadamo, a longtime UCSC employee, to carry the Olympic torch
on a segment of its cross-country journey to Salt Lake City.
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| Elizabeth Conerly nominated her mother, Trish Virgadamo, to carry the Olympic
torch. Photo: Jennifer McNulty |
The nomination, and the news that she was selected from more than 200,000 nominees,
still stuns Virgadamo, who will carry the torch along a portion of West Cliff Drive
on Friday, January 18.
"It was the greatest Mother's Day gift in the world," said Virgadamo.
"This is the biggest thrill and honor of my life."
It wasn't that long ago that Virgadamo and her family weren't sure she would ever
run again. Virgadamo, who began running with Conerly, 22, and her sister Melissa,
24, when the girls were on the Santa Cruz High School track team, was sidelined in
1994-95 by Hodgkins lymphoma.
Virgadamo was off work for 11 months, and though she beat the cancer, her lungs
were scarred by the radiation treatment and she hasn't ru
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| UCSC freshman Paul Stanfield will carry the flame in San Luis Obispo. |
n since.
In her nomination letter, Conerly, who graduated last month, cited her mother's
courage and determination during the illness.
"She is so positive," Conerly said of her mother in a description that
will resonate with anyone who has worked with Virgadamo over the years. "Even
when she was sick, she stood up and fought it and didn't let it get her down. Through
all of it, she was there for my sister and me, getting even more involved in our
lives. It was just beyond belief."
Virgadamo's determination is evident in her desire to run her .2-mile segment
of the relay Friday morning.
"I used to walk along West Cliff every lunch hour before I got sick, and
I ran several races there," said Virgadamo, whose family and friends will line
the route to cheer her on.
"This is so incredible," said Virgadamo, who has worked at UCSC since
1986. "It's just the most amazing thing. It's very special to have my daughter
think of me in this regard."
Virgadamo is one of 66 local torchbearers participating in the Monterey/Seaside
portion of the relay. Two days earlier, on January 16, UCSC freshman Paul Stanfield
will carry the Olympic flame in San Luis Obispo in honor of Charlie Parrish, a longtime
neighbor who succumbed to cancer September 30.
Stanfield's "leadership, determination, and compassion" were cited by
the torchbearer selection committee, but Stanfield felt Parrish deserved the nomination
as a man who had the ability to inspire others while attempting to overcome his own
adversity.
The Olympic flame was lit November 19 in Olympia, Greece, and is kept in a lantern
that has traveled with the relay. Each day, a torch is lit from the closely guarded
lantern, and torchbearers pass the flame from torch to torch during the relay.
The Salt Lake 2002 Olympic Torch will have traveled more than 13,500 miles across
the United States in 65 days by the time it arrives in Salt Lake City for the winter
games. A total of 11,500 torchbearers are participating in the relay, which is traveling
through 46 states.
Virgadamo will carry the torch on West Cliff Drive between David and Columbia
streets. Her segment is scheduled to begin at 7:50 a.m.
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