Mabel Staton, the Black track and field standout who broke through racial barriers at the 1952 Helsinki Olympics, has died.
An antidiscrimination lawsuit on her behalf helped lead to one of the first multiracial track teams in the Midwest.
Staton, who went by the name of Mabel Landry when she attended DePaul in the 1950s, before the school had a women's track team, was inducted into the university's athletic Hall of Fame in 2011.
Typically, distance runners should aim to start this work in an ‘off season’ period of foundation training to allow the space ...
The Flying Scotsman arrived in Peterborough last night at the start of its three week stay at Nene Valley Railway. The historic locomotive finally arrived last night. It is running at Nene Valley ...
While this is the first time in 10 years that the Budweiser Clydesdales have been featured in the top-rated ad for the Super ...
The 3,000m steeplechaser from Kelowna, B.C., is the new host of Canadian Running's The Shakeout Podcast, with the first ...
The original Pennsylvania Station New York opened for service in 1910 and lasted a mere 53 years. It was a magnificent ...
Bicapitate has created a custom Raspberry Pi-powered 3D-printed map of Manhattan that displays the location of subway trains ...
Wednesday’s announcement of $3.9-billion for a five-year planning phase is the latest step in a long-running debate over ...
The London -bound train was travelling at 85mph when it crashed into the rail, causing the front coach to derail. The South ...
Commuters are enduring another day of delays on the TTC and GO Transit due to the extreme wintry weather in the GTA.