Derby Day With A Tax Rebate Check To Spend
Fans Gather At Churchill Downs For The Run of The Roses
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Eric Williams of Chicago smokes a cigar outside the paddock before the 134th Kentucky Derby Saturday, May 3, 2008, at Churchill Downs in Louisville, Ky. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)
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Photo Essay 2008 Kentucky Derby Top thoroughbreds descend on Churchill Downs for the 134th "Run for the Roses."
Koepnick attended his 32nd straight Kentucky Derby on Saturday, making the annual trip from Grand Rapids, Mich., with his girlfriend. He estimated they'll spend about $500 on gas, lodging, tickets, wagers, food and drinks, all in the name of the Run for the Roses.
He said his tax-rebate check from the government was spent even before he received it. But he said it was worth every penny, calling the Derby a must-see event that's "a piece of Americana."
"We're going to stimulize the Derby," he said.
The rebates, which are expected to reach 130 million households, range up to $600 for individuals and $1,200 for married couples, plus $300 per child for eligible parents.
Among the throngs of resplendent Derby hats, Koepnick's was especially eye-catching. Koepnick, who calls himself "The Hat Man," was wearing a decorated hard hat featuring two motorized horses that were rotating.
The crowds thronged to the Churchill Downs infield despite heavy rains Friday and early Saturday that turned spots into mire. The morning rain ended, giving way to a mix of white clouds and blue sky.
Cynthia Myers, of Cincinnati, was sipping a mint julep by midmorning on the edge of the third turn in the infield, her beige pants trickled with mud spots and her shoes filthy. She brought an extra pair of shoes, hoping to swap them if conditions improved.
"It's never too early for a drink at the Derby," said Myers, who was with her husband, Burt, and a group of friends. "The party starts well before the race."
Harry Thomas, also from Cincinnati, was among fans waiting for the infield mudders to show.
"Hopefully a mud fight will bust out right here," said Thomas, who along with his three sisters had staked out a grassy spot close to the mud.
Thomas said he was more interested in watching the people than the horses.
"It's our own little Mardi Gras," he said.
Around the paddock, where colorful hats and casual horse watchers mixed with serious handicappers, some Derby-goers dressed for the occasion.
Charles Matasich was making his 41st Derby, wearing the latest incarnation of his annual outfit. Matasich, of Proctorville, Ohio, who calls himself "Derby Man," was wearing a hat covered in roses, with roses painted on his neck and cheeks and a vest covered in Kentucky Derby pins, some dating more than 20 years.
"The whole outfit was just to protect me from the weather," Matasich said. "I love everything about the Derby. I love seeing the horses."
The Derby even produced a truce among some fans. Wes Lower, an Auburn graduate, attended the day of racing with Matthew Monk, a friend who graduated from Alabama.
"We don't talk about football," Monk said. "It's for the horses today. If we start talking about football, there may be a fistfight."
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- OBAMA 08!!!!!!
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- I went to the Off Track Betting Parlor, to place a small bet on one of the horses in the race today. IT WAS PACKED WITH minorities, and looking over the shoulder of a few bettors, they were betting big money. Glad to see the stimulus money is staying in the USA. Those who were not betting on the races around the country, were playing the electronic poker machines. If you have never been, you need to go and see all the old and poor people betting their lives away.
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- "We''re going to stimulize the Derby," he said.
I feel like stimilizing some race horses, sign me up!
Remembering Barbaro: All guts, all heart
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barbaro
www.ntra.com/content.aspx?type=news&id=23090
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- WATCH OUT!
Money back to the people is not funny. - Reply to this comment




