Tag Archives: Public Garden

Remarks by the President at Interfaith Service in Boston, MA

By The White House

Cathedral of The Holy Cross
Boston, Massachusetts

12:04 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT: Hello, Boston!

Scripture tells us to “run with endurance the race that is set before us.” Run with endurance the race that is set before us.

On Monday morning, the sun rose over Boston. The sunlight glistened off the Statehouse dome. In the Common and the Public Garden, spring was in bloom. On this Patriot’s Day, like so many before, fans jumped onto the T to see the Sox at Fenway. In Hopkinton, runners laced up their shoes and set out on a 26.2-mile test of dedication and grit and the human spirit. And across this city, hundreds of thousands of Bostonians lined the streets — to hand the runners cups of water and to cheer them on.

It was a beautiful day to be in Boston — a day that explains why a poet once wrote that this town is not just a capital, not just a place. Boston, he said, “is the perfect state of grace.” (Applause.)

And then, in an instant, the day’s beauty was shattered. A celebration became a tragedy. And so we come together to pray, and mourn, and measure our loss. But we also come together today to reclaim that state of grace — to reaffirm that the spirit of this city is undaunted, and the spirit of this country shall remain undimmed.

To Governor Patrick; Mayor Menino; Cardinal O’Malley and all the faith leaders who are here; Governors Romney, Swift, Weld and Dukakis; members of Congress; and most of all, the people of Boston and the families who’ve lost a piece of your heart. We thank you for your leadership. We thank you for your courage. We thank you for your grace.

I’m here today on behalf of the American people with a simple message: Every one of us has been touched by this attack on your beloved city. Every one of us stands with you.

Because, after all, it’s our beloved city, too. Boston may be your hometown, but we claim it, too. It’s one of America’s iconic cities. It’s one of the world’s great cities. And one of the reasons the world knows Boston so well is that Boston opens its heart to the world.

Over successive generations, you’ve welcomed again and again new arrivals to our shores — immigrants who constantly reinvigorated this city and this commonwealth and our nation. Every fall, you welcome students from all across America and all across the globe, and every spring you graduate them back into the world — a Boston diaspora that excels in every field of human endeavor. Year after year, you welcome the greatest talents in the arts and science, research — you welcome them to your concert halls and your hospitals and your laboratories to exchange ideas and insights that draw this world together.

And every third Monday in

From: http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2013/04/18/remarks-president-interfaith-service-boston-ma

Boston Prayer Vigils Mourn Victims Of Marathon Explosion

By The Huffington Post News Editors

As Bostonians began to recover from the bomb explosions during Monday’s marathon that killed at least three people and injured more than 140, churches and houses of worship are opening their doors for prayer.

Boston’s Cathedral of St. Paul, a downtown Episcopal church, will open Tuesday for a special prayer service for victims at 12:15 p.m. with Bishop Gayle E. Harris presiding, while its neighboring Park Street church, an evangelical congregation, will open for prayers at noon. A nearby Unitarian Universalist congregation, Arlington Street Church, will hold a candlelight vigil Tuesday evening.

All are located by the Boston Common and Public Garden, two main public parks in the city that are a walk of less than 15 minutes east of where two bombs exploded Monday afternoon near the Boston Marathon finish line.

Read More…
More on Boston Marathon Bombing

From: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/15/boston-prayer-vigils-marathon-explosion_n_3089110.html

Lindsey Wixson and Aymeline Valade Star in Chanel's Spring 2013 Video

By Justin Fenner

Karl Lagerfeld must have gardens on the brain. After re-creating a full-scale pine forest for his Spring 2013 Couture show on Tuesday, he also released a video of models frolicking in the gardens of Paris’s Rodin Museum.

In the three-act story, entitled Public Garden, Lindsey Wixson and a fellow blond beauty alight on a bench in the gardens to examine recent purchases from Chanel’s Spring 2013 ready-to-wear collection. After they watch model Aymeline Valade stroll by, Brad Kroening and his 4-year-old son Hudson – who’s also Lagerfeld’s godson – come and sit on the adjacent bench.

Wixson and her friend encounter Valade and both of the Kroenig men in each of the subsequent acts, finally learning how the three are connected at the end of the film. A look at the story – and the all the clothing – in the video below.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at fashionologie