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4/23/13 12:57 PM With Admitted Student Weekends Disrupted, Universities Went Online | Boston Magazine Page 1 of 2 http://www.bostonmagazine.com/news/blog/2013/04/22/with-admitted-student-weekends-disrupted-universities-went-online/print/ With Admitted Student Weekends Disrupted, Universities Went Online With the city in lockdown, universities that would have welcomed prospective students had to recruit in creative ways. By Lisa Kashinsky | Boston Daily | April 22, 2013 5:15 pm As universities shuttered their campuses and canceled activities during Friday’s lockdown, prospective students who had come from around the country for open house visits suddenly found themselves stranded and without answers to the many questions that would influence their college decision. After acceptances get sent out, April is typically the final push for universities to lock in their new freshmen class by inviting them to campus through scheduled open houses. But as the manhunt began, suspending much of the travel to and from Boston and requiring that much of the city stay inside, schools with scheduled admitted students weekends, including Boston University, Harvard, Tufts, and Northeastern quickly pulled the plug on their events. To cope, Both Harvard and BU took their prospective student outreach online. Representatives and students who volunteer in the Admissions Office began posting on the BU Class of 2017 Facebook page and using the hashtag #BU2017 on Twitter, offering to answer questions for students who were either stranded in Boston or hadn’t begun their journey here yet. But it didn’t stop there. “Once I realized that this was starting to go viral in the BU community—when other current students, alumni, staff members, and other departments started offering to join in and help—I decided to created the Google spreadsheet so we could have a resource to help organize what was going on,” said Gordon Ryan, digital and social media marketing manager for BU Admissions. The document, which was created around 10:25 a.m., had grown to around 450 students and alumni by 7 p.m., according to Ryan, as more and more of the BU community found links to the document through social media. NEWS RESTAURANTS FASHION & STYLE HEALTH ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT WEDDINGS HOME DESIGN BEST OF BOSTON IN THE MAGAZINE

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  • 4/23/13 12:57 PMWith Admitted Student Weekends Disrupted, Universities Went Online | Boston Magazine

    Page 1 of 2http://www.bostonmagazine.com/news/blog/2013/04/22/with-admitted-student-weekends-disrupted-universities-went-online/print/

    With Admitted Student Weekends Disrupted, Universities Went OnlineWith the city in lockdown, universities that would have welcomed prospective students had to recruit in creative ways.

    By Lisa Kashinsky | Boston Daily | April 22, 2013 5:15 pm

    As universities shuttered their campuses and canceled activities during Fridays lockdown, prospective students who had come from around the country

    for open house visits suddenly found themselves stranded and without answers to the many questions that would influence their college decision.

    After acceptances get sent out, April is typically the final push for universities to lock in their new freshmen class by inviting them to campus through

    scheduled open houses. But as the manhunt began, suspending much of the travel to and from Boston and requiring that much of the city stay inside,

    schools with scheduled admitted students weekends, including Boston University, Harvard, Tufts, and Northeastern quickly pulled the plug on their

    events.

    To cope, Both Harvard and BU took their prospective student outreach online. Representatives and students who volunteer in the Admissions Office

    began posting on the BU Class of 2017 Facebook page and using the hashtag #BU2017 on Twitter, offering to answer questions for students who were

    either stranded in Boston or hadnt begun their journey here yet. But it didnt stop there.

    Once I realized that this was starting to go viral in the BU communitywhen other current students, alumni, staff members, and other departments

    started offering to join in and helpI decided to created the Google spreadsheet so we could have a resource to help organize what was going on, said

    Gordon Ryan, digital and social media marketing manager for BU Admissions.

    The document, which was created around 10:25 a.m., had grown to around 450 students and alumni by 7 p.m., according to Ryan, as more and more of

    the BU community found links to the document through social media.

    N EW S RESTAU RAN TS F ASH I O N & STYL E H EAL TH ARTS & EN TERTAI N M EN T W ED D I N GS H O M E D ESI GN BEST O F BO STO N I N TH E M AGAZI N E

  • 4/23/13 12:57 PMWith Admitted Student Weekends Disrupted, Universities Went Online | Boston Magazine

    Page 2 of 2http://www.bostonmagazine.com/news/blog/2013/04/22/with-admitted-student-weekends-disrupted-universities-went-online/print/

    Were thrilled, to say the least. Im humbled, Ryan said. While I knew there would be a core group of our Admissions students who would help out to

    some extent, I did not anticipate such an outpouring of help from the entire BU community.

    At Harvard, too, current students, alumni and faculty were reaching out to prospective freshmen through the hashtag #virtualvisitas. The Harvard

    Crimson also reported that students stepped up to lead unofficial tours and answer questions on Saturday for prospective freshmen and their families that

    had made it to Boston.

    At Tufts, where Dean of Undergraduate Admissions Lee Coffin estimated about half of the 800 expected visitors made it to Boston for the schools Jumbo

    Days open house, the event was restructured and moved inside for safety.

    We offered them an abbreviated program the welcoming remarks, a student-to-student conversation and a spontaneous presentation by Tufts

    president while we assessed the external situation, Coffin said.

    Rather than outright reschedule it, BU, Harvard and Tufts are already working on providing alternatives to the missed weekend.

    Were already talking about a virtual open house and how we can give them [the prospective students] as close to the same experience online as we do

    when they are on campus, Ryan said of BUs plans.

    Similarly, Coffin said Tufts is planning to videotape elements of this Fridays Jumbo Day to share with students from last week.

    Northeastern University, which also canceled its open house, has already rescheduled it for Sunday, April 21.

    Colleges pay close attention to their yield, and given the violence and tragedy that occurred in Boston, coupled with the canceled accepted students days,

    its fair to wonder whether universities will have more trouble than usual attracting the students theyve admitted this year.

    According to John Baworowsky, current vice president for Enrollment Management at Dominican University of California, Boston should prove resilient

    in the end.

    It doesnt implicitly speak to the nature of the safety of Boston or to the people who live in Boston, said Baworowsky, who has worked in college

    admissions and higher education for about 30 years. From what I see, Boston has always been a very popular location with some of the best colleges in

    America, so I suspect that they will recover.

    Baworowsky said, however that acts of violence do play into the decision process.

    I think it affects the parental influence in the process, he said, as parents take a closer look at campus safety.

    But quality of education remains a strong factor as well. Baworowsky said that college attendance in New York City following the September 11th attacks

    remained strong due to the quality of education, and that he expected a similar reaction in Boston.

    People rally around schools and institutions when stuff like this happens and they tend to do fine, he said.

    Ryan said he has already seen a reaction along these lines from prospective students.

    Nearly all the students I have talked to or seen posts from through social media have expressed that they are even more excited to come to BU and to

    Boston because of how strong the sense of community is both within the university and throughout the city, he said. Bad things can happen anywhere, at

    any school; they know that when they come here, they become part of a community they can count on.

    Source URL: http://www.bostonmagazine.com/news/blog/2013/04/22/with-admitted-student-weekends-disrupted-universities-went-online/

    Copyright 2013 Metrocorp, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

  • 4/23/13 4:15 PMCopley residents, workers face tighter security, closed offices - Back Bay - Your Town - Boston.com

    Page 1 of 2http://www.boston.com/yourtown/news/back_bay/2013/04/copley_residents_workers_face.html

    BACK BAY, NORTH ENDCopley residents, workers face tighter security, closedofficesPosted by Anne Steele

    April 16, 2013 02:33 PM

    By Lisa Kashinsky, BU News Service

    In the moments and hours following the explosions at the 117th Boston Marathon on Mondayafternoon that threw Boylston Street into chaos, people who live and work in the surroundingbuildings were faced with confusion, disorientation and ultimately, evacuations.

    Rebecca Hildreth, 22, a Boston University student, was with friends at her apartment in Avalon at thePrudential, just behind the entrance to the Prudential Center shopping mall on Boylston Street. Assoon as her friends, who were watching the race from her 15th-floor window, saw smoke billowing intothe street and people pouring out of the food court, they knew they had to run, taking the stairs to getout of the building.

    Hildreth doubled back for her cell phone, worried about finding her father, who was working within ablock of the finish line.

    I went to try to run to Copley to find my dad but saw people running toward me crying and soterrified, Hildreth said. They wouldnt let anyone go near the blast. A girl who saw both explosionstold me what happened and we were both bawling together.

    Unable to get closer to the explosion site, Hildreth said she ran to her parents apartment where hermother and young niece were. Her father returned two hours later.

    He said he saw pools of blood and it was chaos, Hildreth said.

    David Marx, 37, a North End resident who works near Copley Square, said he first learned about theexplosions through a text from a friend at 3:30 p.m. He was evacuated from his office at 4:55 p.m.

    When I got outside it was eerie because you knew what had already happened, yet things seemed kindof normal for a post-race day lots of police, ambulances, runners, race volunteers, which is normalfor the race, he said. But there were lots of stunned looks on faces.

    Marx said he is working remotely today as the Copley Square area remains closed off.

    With all of the people in the area, photos and videos they took, surveillance cameras, there must besome clue or clues that can help the FBI, he said.

    Within the designated crime scene area, security has been greatly increased for residents.

    Hildreth was unable to get back into her apartment Monday night as police said no one was allowed inthe area. She was finally able to gain entrance shortly after noon on Tuesday, but was met with

  • 4/23/13 4:15 PMCopley residents, workers face tighter security, closed offices - Back Bay - Your Town - Boston.com

    Page 2 of 2http://www.boston.com/yourtown/news/back_bay/2013/04/copley_residents_workers_face.html

    heightened security.

    I couldnt go in the normal ways and had to go through this tunnel in the garage, she said

    This article is being published under an arrangement between the Boston Globe and the BostonUniversity News Service.

  • 4/23/13 4:07 PMJournalism student watches the chaos from a 15th floor window - Quincy, MA - The Patriot Ledger

    Page 1 of 1http://www.patriotledger.com/topstories/x333079861/Journalism-student-watches-the-chaos-from-a-15th-floor-window

    HOW TO HELP: Where to donate to Boston Marathon bombing victims

    BOSTON

    Journalism student watches the chaos from a 15th floor windowBy Lisa KashinskyFor The Patriot LedgerPosted Apr 15, 2013 @ 09:22 PM

    Four hours into the 117th Boston Marathon, fans outside the Prudential Center cheered and held up signs as runnersneared the finish line in Copley Square. Nine minutes later, the first bomb went off. Seconds later, a second bomb.

    From a 15th floor window, I watched the Prudential Center courtyard on Boylston Street turn to chaos. Spectators began to backaway, then run towards the Hynes Convention Center. People poured out of the Prudential Center Food Court and followed the crowdaway from the finish line.

    Runners on the course stopped in their tracks. A few turned and began running in the the opposite direction.

    My friends and I ran down the Fairfield Apartment Complex stairs and ended up on Huntington Avenue, where Boston PoliceOfficers directed people away from the Prudential Center.

    The sound of sirens filled the air as police officers, fire trucks and ambulances rushed toward Copley Square.

    Cell phone service was down, as many people tried to make calls that would not go through. Text messages were delayed in bothsending and receiving messages, and 3G service was slow, if it worked at all.

    Red Sox fans and Boston University students crossed through the Boston Marathon path on Commonwealth Avenue just pastKenmore Square on Charlesgate Street, mingling with runners who had yet to finish the marathon as they made their way back downCommonwealth Avenue towards Allston.

    Lisa Kashinsky is a BU journalism student and former news intern at The Patriot Ledger

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    Page 1 of 3 16/04/2013 12:32 PM

    'It was borderline chaos at times': Locals, witnesses discuss Boston MarathonexplosionsWritten by Staff reportApr. 15 pressconnects.com

    Paul McMahon had every reason to be in a celebratory mood upon finishing the Boston Marathon in 3 hours, 39minutes, 29 seconds.

    For me, turning 64 in three weeks, I didnt think I still had a sub-3:40 in me. But how can you celebrate? hewondered, given the tragedy that struck Monday afternoon.

    A Binghamton resident who has run Boston eight of the past nine years, McMahon was hoping to settle in for hiscustomary post-race massage a couple of blocks from the finish line when he heard one boom, then a second, butdid not know the nature of the blasts.

    Bombing forensicsMap/timeline

    There was an announcement that they were evacuating the building. They said to take your time, but that they hadto evacuate, he said. Once outside and unaware of what had transpired, he and the rest of those evacuated wereinstructed not to head toward the finish line.

    Paul and wife Jan had secured lodging about three miles away. With subway service shut down, he was forced towalk to the room.

    It was crazy that runners didnt know what was going on, but you walk into a bar and look at a television that saidTwo dead, 23 injured, he said.Paul does not carry a cell phone when in marathon mode, and enlisted the help of a stranger to text-message Jan thathe was OK.

    As I was walking back to the room there was a moment when I felt like I was disappointed, he said. I wanted tocelebrate a good marathon. Then it hit me: This doesnt matter, Im alive! You realize that this is so small in the bigpicture.

    He added, My son remarked, You guys should never go back to that race. I said, No, this is the American way.You dont let terrorists stop you from doing what you want to do. People get scared, but you cant let them stopyou.

    Below are accounts from people with ties to the Binghamton area and their accounts of the tragic explosions:Tuesday at the Boston Marathon

    'Blessed we're OK'

    Having completed her first Boston Marathon, Liz DiCosimo, along with husband Joe and 8-year-old daughterAdriana, were in their car.

    There was a ton of traffic and we heard a huge explosion, sounded like a truck back-firing. Soon after, we heardanother, Liz said. The windows were down and we heard a lady yell, Two bombs just went off at the finish line!They were stuck in traffic. Helicopters hovered, emergency vehicles tried to negotiate the traffic Sirens andnoise and people looking around with panicked looks on their faces. No one knew what to do, she said.

    We feel thankful and blessed were OK, and feel for the people and the families of those who are not.

  • http://www.pressconnects.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/201304150240/NEWS01/304150050&nclick_check=1

    Page 2 of 3 16/04/2013 12:32 PM

    She had received messages from friends congratulating her on her finish, but it was clear that those sending were notyet aware what had happened. So Liz informed them what Boston was experiencing.

    My husband told me afterward, If you finished 20 minutes later, youd have been right there.

    From Lizs perspective, one uplifting experience came out of an otherwise tragic situation. A local newscasterreporting on the incident was choked with emotion as he shared accounts of marathoners passing directly from thefinish line to a medical facility to donate blood.

    Thats the human spirit, she said.

    'Heard the bangs'

    It was hardly what Brian Cupp expected of his first running of the Boston Marathon.

    It was the toughest course Id ever run but the crowd support was amazing. Everyone was happy, smiling, cheeringeverybody on unfortunately it was marred by that incident, said Cupp, a 48-year-old resident of Newark Valley.

    He completed the race and was at the family meet area two blocks from the finish line.

    You heard the bangs but didnt think a whole lot of it, maybe a car backfiring or whatever, he said. But then, thecommotion commenced, people running here and there, word spread as emergency responders rushed about. (I) Justwanted to get out of there.

    It was not until making it through traffic to the Thruway and stopping at a rest area when it hit.

    I got down about half-a-slice of pizza, that was about it, Cupp said. There were a number of runners there, someof them in tears, trying to get a hold of friends and family.

    Separated at first

    Ten or so minutes had passed since Binghamton resident Drew Wasko had felt the satisfaction of completing his 21stBoston Marathon. But then, about a block from the finish line, other senses spelled something was amiss.

    The bomb went off and I felt something, like compression, and I saw smoke. We had no clue (what was going on),then the second one went off, he said. People had blank looks on their faces, like no one knew what was going on. You saw all the SWAT teams and the ambulances.

    An eerie feeling. It was like, this cant be happening here. It was borderline chaos at times.

    While driving home from work, Drews wife Julie flipped the radio on and first heard about the explosions at therace. Their two children Andrew, 20, and Emilianna, 16 and other family members were at the race asspectators.

    My son and daughter were waiting in the area where the runners meet their families and theyre all thankfully OK,Wasko said, following a frantic scramble to reach her family.

    Her first contact came through text message exchanges and eventually got a cellphone call through to her children,all the while watching graphic images from the scene flash across her television.

    I was just relieved to hear them; I just needed to hear their voices, she said.Drew, who was running his 21st Boston Marathon, had finished shortly before the first explosion, Julie Wasko said,adding he said he felt a blast prompting mass confusion among the large crowd near the finish line. Meanwhile, theirchildren had been at a gathering point nearby and rushed to find Drew amid the chaos.

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    Page 3 of 3 16/04/2013 12:32 PM

    Theyre all OK, and theyre just trying to find their way home now, she said.Drew Wasko, 60, was separated from family members at the time of the explosions, and used the word emotionalto describe the moment they met up with one another We all hugged each other. They were in as much danger asI was.

    Bridge Run organizers saddened

    Stacey Duncan, race director of Greater Binghamton Bridge Run, said they are deeply saddened by the tragic eventsat the Boston Marathon.

    A day filled with joy and inspiration should not end on such a tragic note, she said. Our thoughts and prayers goout to the victims and their families.

    Confusion on the streets

    Lisa Kashinsky, a Vestal native now living in Boston, was on the 15th floor of an apartment building about twoblocks away from the Boston Marathon finish line.

    She recalled looking out the window and seeing confusion on the streets before hearing the second explosion a fewseconds later.

    I saw people on the street outside the Prudential Center on Boylston Street panicking and both spectators andrunners running away from the finish line, said Kashinsky, a former Press & Sun-Bulletin intern and current BostonUniversity student.

    She then ran down to the street where police were directing people and traffic, adding nobody seemed to have detailsabout what happened. Everyone was concerned about getting away from the area, she said.

    I spoke to police and they did not know what was going on beyond that, Kashinsky said.

    'Very relieved'

    Terry Spring, of Binghamton, followed a stream of text updates from her daughter, Colleen Spring, 25, who hadfinished the race about an hour before the explosions. The mother remembered spending a few moments fearing theworst before hearing from her daughter.

    I heard from her almost immediately. She sent group text messages out throughout, and everybody was relieved.Thank God for that technology because I dont know what I would have done, Terry Spring said. Right now, Imjust relieved, very relieved.Shortly after the story broke, Terry Spring also relayed news of her daughter to concerned neighbors who had startedstopping by her Binghamton home. Colleen Spring, who had yet to work out her return to Binghamton because hercar was parked near the explosion site, was participating in her second Boston Marathon.

    She had run track at Seton Catholic Central High School and went on to compete at Marywood University inScranton, Pa.

  • BU Student Reporter Hears BlastPublished on April 15, 2013 Add Comment

    By BU News Service Staff

    Lisa Kashinsky, a student covering the marathon for BU News Service, was standing at a window in an apartmentbuilding behind the Prudential Center when she heard two back-to-back explosions. She immediately left andheaded towards her apartment near Boston University.

    When I got to Kenmore, I saw a woman sitting on a bench trying to call someone on their cellphone, crying, shesaid.

    She was one of a team of reporters who were expecting a routine day coving a marathon and instead became a partof the story.

    Standing at the window, she saw the response.

    I heard the second one and at that point I saw people running away from the Prudential Center food court, shesaid. I saw a couple runners on the track turn around and start running in the other direction.

    When she reached the ground, police were directing people away from the Prudential Center and surroundingbuildings. While there was confusion, everyone remained notably orderly.

    No one was flat-out panicked running, she said, but they were worried and hurried. Lots of people were trying touse their cell phones but there wasnt cell phone service.

    Kashinsky reports that text messages also wouldnt go through immediately and that Green Line T services wereshut down by the time she got to Kenmore Station.

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  • 4/23/13 4:46 PMBoston Marathon 2013 Runners Served Pasta, Smiles

    Page 2 of 4http://bunewsservice.com/marathon2013/runners-served-pasta-smiles-at-annual-dinner/

    Boston Chief of Public Property Michael Galvin (right) serves food to runners outside City Hall on Sunday evening during the

    annual pre-marathon pasta dinner. (Lisa Kashinsky/BU News Service)

    By L isa KashinskyBy L isa Kashinsky

    BU News Service

    City Hall was transformed into a sea of blue and yellow Sunday evening as thousands of runners donning their official race

    jackets poured into the sunlit plaza for the annual pre-marathon carbo-loading dinner.

    Groups of Wellesley College students enthusiastically greeted runners, their families and friends, as they exited the Government

    Center T stop, causing many to break into grins. Music floated through the air as runners chatted animatedly while waiting to fuel

    up for the 117th Boston Marathon tomorrow morning, imbuing the plaza with a festive atmosphere.

    Its a celebration of people who run, said David Lindgren, 55, a Minneapolis resident who is running the marathon for the 11th

    time in a row this year. Its part of the ambiance of the whole event.

    More than 400 volunteers were on hand to help run the event and serve approximately 3,000 lbs of pasta to 9,000 guests this

  • 4/23/13 4:46 PMBoston Marathon 2013 Runners Served Pasta, Smiles

    Page 3 of 4http://bunewsservice.com/marathon2013/runners-served-pasta-smiles-at-annual-dinner/

    yeara third of the 27,000 total runnersaccording to event coordinator Melissa Goodhart.

    Its a labor of love, Goodhart said. This is my 27th year doing this and I watched it grow from a 4,000 person thing into a big

    deal.

    Of the volunteers, 175 were Wellesley students, the mark of a longstanding tradition of student involvement with the race.

    First time volunteer Stephanie Kim, a Wellesley senior, had a constant smile on her face as she directed runners through the

    waiting line for food.

    Theres a sense of camaraderie there that theyre going to be doing something amazing tomorrow and for us to be a part of it,

    said Kim, 22. One of them thanked me for volunteering and I was like, no, thank you!

    Wellesley College senior Jean Lee also said she enjoyed meeting the runners. Lee, 21, has volunteered at the pasta party dinner

    for four years and has been a coordinator for the last three.

    Its very different than cheering them on during the marathon, Lee said. Here you actually get to interact with them. Theyre very

    supportive of us. They love Wellesley and the Wellesley scream tunnel.

    Lindgren grinned as he spoke about the signs made by Wellesley students in the tunnel, many of which include phrases about

    kissing.

    The fan support is fantastic, he said. You dont go very far without hearing someone cheering for you.

    Bostons Chief of Property Management Michael Galvin gave runners encouragement and support from the city as he spoke on

    behalf of Mayor Thomas Menino, who was in the hospital undergoing surgery for a leg injury.

    Other speakers included 1973 Boston Marathon champion Jacqueline Hansen and 1983 winner Greg Meyer, the last American

    male to win the event. The speakers joined volunteers in serving pasta, salad and rolls of bread to runners.

    Meyer plans to join Lindgren and a sea of other repeat runners who are racing either professionally or for charity. While

    Lindgren said he has qualified in the past, he is running this year as part of the American Medical Athletic Association.

    Its wonderful wandering through the New England countryside, Lindgren said. This is my 116th marathon and Boston is my

    favorite.

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