The
See News, pg. 2
Shari Butler 1971-2013
Vol. 114, Issue 24
News
THE UNIVERSITY OF PORTLAND’S STUDENT NEWSPAPER
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Illicit Adderall use is common on college campuses, despite the risks
Living
BEACON
Thursday April 18, 2013 www.upbeacon.net
Shock and sorrow in Boston UP student gives his account of the bombings at the Boston Marathon
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How to spend summer days when you can’t get a job
Sports
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SamJam raised $7,500 for Friedreich’s ataxia research
Opinions
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Show support for alums’ clothing line and attend their launch party
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Katie Dunn Staff Writer dunn16@up.edu Grayson Penfield, an experienced marathoner, usually stays at the finish line after he finishes to cheer on the other runners. But Monday in Boston, he didn’t. It might have saved his life. “If I wasn’t waiting for my mom, I probably would have been at the finish line,” Penfield said. Penfield, a junior, finished with a time of 3:23:33, about an hour before the two bombs shook the city, killing three people and injuring more than 170. Penfield ran the marathon with his mother, Elena Parker, who finished 20 minutes before the first bomb went off. “I was a block away from the bomb, in an area where family members who have been waiting can meet up with you after the race,” Penfield said. He was waiting with his aunts for his mom to finish. She was on her way to meet them when he heard the explosions. At first unsure of the cause of the loud noises, Penfield knew something serious had happened when the shocked crowd fell silent. “My stomach dropped, and some people started crying immediately, and some started running away,” Penfield said. Standing a block away from the finish line, he saw only a cloud of smoke, but not the massive explosions that tore off people’s limbs and covered the ground in blood. “I thought it might be a bomb, but then I thought no one would even care to bomb a marathon,” Penfield said.
But Penfield knew it was serious, Flowers rest at a barrier near the finish line of the Boston Marathon. The two bombs that went off in the crowd on Monday were made out as the mood grew tense and terrified of pressure cookers and shards of metal, nails and ball bearings. as police and medical personnel flooded the streets. “I probably saw over a hundred ambulances, a bomb squad, the SWAT team,” Penfield said. “It was madness.”
“If I wasn’t waiting for my mom, I probably would have been at the finish line.” Grayson Penfield junior
He was worried about his safety but was also concerned about his mother. He had been texting her after she finished and was waiting for her with his aunts when the explosions went off. For more than an hour, he was unable to make contact with his mother, and began walking around the surrounding blocks searching for her. He finally found her on the same two blocks he had been circling, relieved to know she was safe. “For that whole period of time I had no idea where she was or how she was doing,” Penfield said. All public transportation was stopped, and most streets barricaded, so people had to walk to leave the city. Jackie Jeffers | THE BEACON
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Junior Grayson Penfield ran the Boston Marathon Monday. After the bombs exploded, he couldn’t find his mother, who also ran the race, for over an hour. Both returned safely to Oregon.