Saturday, May 3, 2008
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Monday, April 21, 2008
At the finish line
Spectators often forget that Marathon participants are not the only ones exhausted from after the races many demands - thousands of volunteers also spend the whole day standing and performing repetitive tasks like handing out drinks or answering spectators' questions. Wolfe said spending more than eight hours on his feet proved a challenge despite its rewards.
"I never said I was tired until after I was done," he said.
At first, Wolfe said he found the finish line area surprisingly quiet even as wheelchair racers closed in on the area. Then the first wave of women's runners streamed in, followed by the men, and with them came a crush of rowdy onlookers.
As the Marathon's star harriers finished their 26.2-mile trek, Wolfe remembers being astonished as the top athletes "walked off nonchalantly" rather than collapsing at the finish line, still mustering the energy to walk off to awards ceremonies and press conferences nearby. On the whole, Wolfe said he had an ideal first marathon experience.
"The closer you can get to it, the better," he said.
Sox come first
"Not really," she said. "I mean, I choose the Sox over everything."
This year, the traditional Patriots' Day game at Fenway Park had a different impact on the race because the marathon began a few hours earlier than the usual start time around noon. Because of this, most game attendees began leaving Fenway while the middle and late finishers in the Marathon passed through Kenmore Square. Though the entire marathon route is more crowded than it was as the men's and women's leaders passed, so far the crowd is manageable and sidewalks still have a little space.
1-mile marker
Though he has never run a full Boston Marathon (he has run "two halves," he said, which might as well be considered "one whole"), McKidden said he understands the trials of running cross-country from his own athletic club in New Hampshire.
"Right about here, they're happy to be here," he said.
Cheruiyot wins again
Drumming up support
"My hands are getting tired," he complains, but the show must go on. Esposito said he has a running tradition of playing the drum in Boston until people start dancing around him.
This is not Esposito's first marathon - growing up in nearby Holliston, Mass., Esposito said he has seen more marathons than he can count. It is, however, his first marathon in a tie-dye shirt and baby blue tuxedo-style blazer, an addition Esposito said he added to "spice it up a little."
Though there are no takers yet, Esposito said he is confident people will loosen up as the day progresses. Last year, Esposito said dozens of people started randomly dancing in the streets.
"I'm not sure what the catalyst was," he said. "Maybe alcohol."
From the sidelines
The gatekeeper
Traffic is a problem, Riley says, but the event shouldn't come as a surprise to anyone in Massachusetts.
"It's been the same route every year for 112 years," he says. "This is advertised in the local papers and on TV, so it's no secret."
This race is different, Riley said, because it starts at 10 a.m. rather than the traditional noon, a change made thanks to a particularly hot marathon that exhausted so many runners that local hospitals had to set up mobile stations.
Now, the weather is perfect and the sky blue, which may be a boon to runners but a headache for local cops. Revelers get rowdiest when the temperature lets them get out and barbecue. On a day like today, Riley says local college students are likely to get out of control.
"As a cop, you pray for rain," he said.
Live blogging the Boston Marathon
All day today, the media will offer vignettes of the some of the race's more notable runners: Seven-time Tour de France champion Lance Armstrong will compete, as will 2007 champs Robert Cheruiyot and Lidiya Grigoryeva. Many more students, professionals and retired people will test their own limits making it to the finish line. Some will race for charities supporting everything from Esplanade upkeep to cancer research, while other disabled participants, some of them in wheelchairs, will depart early from rural Hopkinton, Mass. to prove they belong here as much as anybody.
Yet to the average Bostonian, the story is as much about cheering bystanders and traffic snarls as it is about a friend competing in the race. Thousands of volunteers are turning out to maintain this local circus by providing first aid to runners, keeping crowds in check along the route's more crowded corridors and preventing the most daring spectators from swiping mile markers for personal souvenirs. Throughout the day, this blog will hear these people's stories and give irregular updates on the state of the race as it tears through Boston for runners' final few miles. Wi-fi willing, you will hear about it as it happens.
Thursday, April 10, 2008
Debaters trade barbs on biofuels
Energy specialists differed sharply and at times personally on the merits of so-called biofuels Wednesday night at
The debate, which was chaired by
“Biofuels are an energy solution that are for the most part good and have the potential to be great,” said Brooke Coleman, founder of the Northeast Biofuels Collaborative, a nonprofit that advocates biofuel use.
From the negative side, Robert Bryce of the anti-biofuel magazine Energy Tribune decried the economic costs of ethanol subsidies, calling the federal ethanol funding that Congress recently extended this year “fiscal insanity.”
“Corn is perhaps the biggest and the longest-running scam in American history,” he said.
Coleman defended the subsidies as necessary in light of similar handouts to oil companies, adding that biofuels have revitalized once-foundering state economies in the country’s midsection, where most of the crops for biofuels are grown, pointing to the large number of Midwestern states that have balanced their budgets.
“Is this evil? I don’t think so,” he said.
Though they had fewer hard facts with which to back up their case, student debaters Neil St. Clair and Ashan Walpita took broader views of renewable energy. Arguing for the affirmative side, St. Clair used flourishing rhetoric to tout the benefits of biofuels as an integral part of a “dynamic competition” that used solar, wind and other alternatives to fossil fuels.
Walpita, a junior at B.U.’s
“We are going to see job losses and we are also going to see slower economic activity,” he said.
Using a highly emotional appeal, biofuel advocate Sean O’Hanlon stressed the high stakes – namely, global warming and pollution – of not switching from fossil fuels. He noted that his own 8-year-old son suffers from pediatric asthma.
Not to be outdone, American Enterprise Institute scholar Kenneth Green said he grew up with asthma himself.
“I, too, am adamant that we will not make asthma worse, but ethanol will,” he said.
At the end of the debate, the audience was told to stand to one side or the other of the hall to show which side had debated most convincingly. Though the event, which was modeled after the debates pioneered at
Zelnick thanked the participants for a spirited debate despite the poor turnout and promised as he had at the beginning of the debate that the debaters would soon “retire to a fine
Tuesday, February 5, 2008
Bush touts legacy in final State of the Union
In a tempered speech that attempted to define his legacy as much as to persuade an increasingly uncooperative Congress, Bush advocated limited government intervention on economic and social issues while repeating his vow to spread democracy worldwide.
Repeating past warnings, Bush stepped up his criticism of congressional earmarks and pledged to veto the latest budget proposal unless Congress eliminated 151 “wasteful or bloated” allocations from the bill.
Though he avoided mentioning specific economic issues during a time of increasing domestic uncertainty, Bush began by acknowledging Americans’ worries about home foreclosures, falling stocks and rising fuel prices.
In response to these fears, Bush touted a $150 billion economic stimulus package his administration hammered out with House leaders last week and warned Congress against modifying it.
“That would delay it or derail it, and neither option is acceptable,” he said.
Bush added, however, that the stimulus package was only a temporary fix for an economy that would eventually return to normalcy by leaving economic choices to individuals. Over the course of his speech, he used the word “empower” 12 times to drive home his point.
The president also defended the No Child Left Behind Act he signed in 2001 while alluding to the need for charter schools and advocating Pell Grants to help underprivileged high school students.
Internationally, Bush toned down the confrontational rhetoric that marked earlier speeches. Unlike the 2002 address in which he grouped opposing nations into an “Axis of Evil,” this year’s address singled out only
“Wherever democracy advances in the Middle East, it seems
On
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