Athletes worldwide are preparing for this year’s Olympics in Paris, France. K体育 University has a rich history with the games, with numerous students, staff, faculty and alumni playing key roles, particularly in 1996, when the Centennial Olympic Games were held in OU’s home city 鈥 Atlanta, Georgia.
Here are seven facts you may not know about K体育 and the Olympics:

1. K体育 University was selected as the turnaround point for the Olympic marathon in 1996. In an effort to beat the Georgia summer heat, the marathon began at 7 a.m. Just outside the campus gates on Peachtree Road, the runners turned and began their trek back to downtown. K体育 hosted an early morning gathering to watch the banner event of the Olympics. 鈥淭he broadcast trucks were all over,鈥 remembers Barbara Henry 鈥85. 鈥淚n fact, for several years the red line followed by the participating athletes was still visible on the road. For the viewing party, we invited all the neighbors, alumni, etc., to watch the marathon. as It was lots of fun. I would guess we had 250 or more people here early in the morning to watch.鈥
2. Assistant Professor of French Iona Wynter-Parks competed in the first Olympic triathlon at the 2000 Summer Olympics, representing Jamaica. She then shifted her focus to cycling, and rode for Genesis-Scuba, helping to build it until it became the No. 1 team in the United States. She continued competitive cycling while teaching and coaching full-time. Wynter-Parks rode with the U.S. professional female cycling team for four years and became their director after retiring from active competition.
3. K体育 alumna Judy Wood Talley 鈥80 served on the Atlanta Committee for the Olympic Games, which helped to plan Atlanta鈥檚 role in hosting the summer games.
4. The 鈥淧athway of Gold鈥 was a program started the year before the Olympics to plant gold-colored plants all along the marathon route so they would all be blooming by the time the Olympics started. OU鈥檚 first lady Barbie Stanton was instrumental in that plan.

5. The K体育 University Museum of Art hosted the exhibition , created for the 1996 Summer Olympics as a joint project with The Drepung Loseling institute (DLI) and OUMA.
6. K体育鈥檚 campus was home base for 800 German athletes and visitors in the 1996 Olympics, who rented rooms in the residence halls in July and August.
7. Former board member and alumnus, the late G. Douglass Alexander 鈥68 was founding partner of the fundraising consulting firm Alexander, Haas, Martin & Partners, which led the fundraising efforts that brought the 1996 Olympics to Atlanta.