Another Olympic Moment 0s The last time the Winter Olympics came to North America, at Lake Placid, N.Y., in 1980, the Soviets had just invaded Af- ghanistan, U.S. diplomats had just been taken hostage in Teheran-and Ameri- cans chanted "U.S.A.! U.S.A.!" for their gold-medal hockey upstarts and speed- skater Eric Heiden. Gold medals may be rare for U.S. athletes this year, but the Olympic thrill will return beginning Feb. 13 in picturesque Calgary, Alberta. On the Fast Track The finish line can be the most frighten- ing part. Swinging out of a 180-degree curve at almost 80 mph, the rider struggles to sit up on his small sled, yanks hard on the runners and, looking very much like Fred Flintstone braking his prehistoric Ferrari, digs his heels into the icy track. Or, as Olympic luger and college junior Frank Masley puts it after practice at Lake Placid, "You just keep sliding un- til you stop." Easy for him to say. The cool, calculated nature of lugers runs counter to their reputations as reck- less speed demons. American lugers ("luge" is French for sled) long labored in anonymity, not to mention penury. Bob Hughes, marketing director for the United States Luge Association, used to carry a wallet-size photo of a luger in action so he could identify the sport for potential do- nors. "They'd say, 'Oh, that'," he recalls. But their familiarity could soon increase. U.S. Olympic lugers this year are finally on a fast track-in more ways than one. Masley, 27, has an excellent chance of finishing in the top 10 at Calgary, which would be the highest-ever singles finish for an American Olympic luger. Masley took up "sliding" after watching it on television during the 1976 Games. After a two-week training course and lots of practice, he won a junior competition and a three-week trip to European luge tracks. His family and friends thought it was a whim, Masley re- calls. "They thought I'd get over it." He didn't, and went on to win five national singles titles. Masley now majors in me- chanical engineering at Philadelphia's Drexel University, after studying at a com- munity college and working as a computer draftsman. Drexel's quarterly co-op sys- tem allows him to take classes in spring and 0 I I ALEC PYTLOWANY-SPORTSCHROME Quadrennial convergence: Outside Calgary, ski lodge lies beneath Olympic Mountain summer; in fall and winter, Masley com- bines luging with academic credits by de- signing and building sleds. This will be his third and last Olympics, Masley says; he is determined to graduate next spring. Lugers have been competing since 1883, when the first contest was held in Switzer- land. The winner completed a 2.5-mile course in just over nine minutes. Luge has been an Olympic sport since 1964, and today's sliders whiz through more than a dozen turns on a 1,000-meter track (slightly shorter for women) in about 47 seconds. Victories are determined by the combined time over several runs. (During the first Olympics competition, lugers poured hot oil into their hollow sled run- ners to increase speeds, but heating is no longer allowed.) The slider begins by pushing off with his 4 PHOTOS BY NANCIE BATTAGLIA Like a child on a sled-sort of: Slider Frank Masley, who will compete in his third Olympics, swinging around curve on the Lake Placid track at up to 80 mph 1 1 26 NEWSWEEKMON CAMPUS MARCH 1988