
World figure skating championships pause to remember those who died in plane crash
BOSTON (AP) — Before the skaters in their sequins and brightly coloured costumes took the ice at the world figure skating championships on Wednesday night, a choir dressed all in black sang a solemn hymn for those who died in a plane crash on their way back from a camp for up-and-coming skaters this winter.
Boston’s Coro Allegro performed “Precious Lord” to close an emotional ceremony before the pairs competition at the TD Garden in Boston, about a half-hour’s drive from the home club for six people who were killed in the crash.
“Tonight we honour those members of our skating community who are no longer with us,” said emcee Ben Agosto, an Olympic ice dance silver medallist. “Their spirit remains in every edge traced on this ice, in every moment of triumph, and every heart that beats for this sport.”
Sixty-seven people died Jan. 29 when American Airlines Flight 5342 crashed into a military helicopter on approach to Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport and fell into the icy Potomac River. Among those killed were more than two dozen members of the skating community returning from a national development camp after the U.S. championships in Wichita, Kansas.