Archive 1 Archive 2

Hello

User Drunkenmonkey told me to assist in removing that last 2 posts by MRPreston and reporting them as vandalism. I'm a newcomer and don't know what I'm doing here. But I hope I'm doing right.--Oda Mari 05:12, 16 May 2007 (UTC)

Hello

I sent Drunkenmonkey a note that the comment he felt was vandalism was actually factual and verifiable and should be put back in the site. I don't really know how to notify either. --MRPreston --

Stick to Merits and Facts

Now that the debate about deleting this article has been closed, let's keep this article to WP:N and WP:COI standards. The only notable achievement is running 52 marathons in one year.

Neither Dane, nor his sockpuppets, nor his naked IP addresses should attempt to edit this article.Xcstar 22:38, 5 November 2007 (UTC)

Let's please try to keep the article balanced and objective. Let's discuss changes on this page before we make major changes to the article itself. Thanks, Xcstar (talk) 22:18, 29 November 2007 (UTC)

However, that is not looking at the point of the notability. Obviously, the times run are not that great in and of themsleves. But strung together over 52 consecutive weekends, they most assuredly are notable. In an attempt to find the other times this has been done, I was only able to find Mr. Rick Worley's times all of which were at or above 5 hours. The times of the predecessor whos recod he broke are difficult to obtain.

I do not see why the one user above appears convinced Mr. Rauschenberg himself added the information. It appears Mr. Rauschenberg is very forthcoming with any information necessary in either the interviews he has given or on his own website.

As for the other races listed for Mr. Rauschenberg, I think their relative nonuniqueness gives context to how very unique this Fiddy2 was. It does not appear anyone needs to know how many other runners were in the races Mr. Rauschenberg ran. The times listed are evidently not of world-class standards.

I feel the merger of these two articles is best. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 12.165.242.67 (talk) 00:13, 7 December 2007 (UTC)

* The times are not even worthy of regional-class standards, which can be verified by using the WAVA tables.
* The subject of multiple marathons as an endurance undertaking is now covered at: Marathon#Multiple marathons. Wikipedia users would be better served if we directed our energy into expanding that section instead of attempting to burnish Mr. Rauschenberg's reputation. Instead of a wikitable listing Mr. Rauschenberg's 52 marathons, how about producing a table showing the ten longest undertakings of running marathons on consecutive weekends. Mr.Rauschenberg was not the first person to run 52 marathons on 52 weekends, he was not the fastest, and there are several people who kept on going in a series longer than 52 weekends. Xcstar (talk) 03:16, 11 December 2007 (UTC)
Xcstar, you need to realize that WP:N is only criteria for inclusion in Wikipedia - see Wikipedia:N#Notability_guidelines_do_not_directly_limit_article_content - the content of the article is not limited by WP:N. Once it's been determined that Rauschenberg meets WP:N criteria for inclusion, the content of the article can be anything that is verifiable and biographically relevant to the subject of the article. A wikitable listing his marathons certainly is biographically relevant, and verifiable as well (if nothing else, by going to the results of the 52 marathons & looking for Rauschenberg). Complaining about the lack of a different table is pointless - people work on the articles they feel like working on - if you're so fired up that such a table should exist, MAKE IT. Cutting information out of an article because other information doesn't exist in other articles borders on vandalism. If you're really interested in making Wikipedia 'valid' to the running community, you should spend your time working on articles about runners you feel are notable, rather than wasting your time editing an article about someone who you don't feel is notable. No one else is directing their energy into attempting to burnish Rauschenberg's reputation, they're just interested in keeping you from hacking up an article because you feel that Rauschenberg and his efforts are just so much puffery. CruiserBob (talk) 03:12, 10 January 2008 (UTC)

Please give a reference to the person(s) who have done them faster. All research shows Mr. Rauschenberg WAS the fastes (by a large margin) to complete 52 marathons in 52 weekends. Your obvious contempt for Mr . Rauschenberg is apparent and colors every one of your edits (so much that you continue to blame Mr. Rauschenberg for editing this page!) Runnerman (Runnerman) 16:53, 12 December 2007 (UTC) —Preceding unsigned comment added by 66.182.58.106 (talk)

  • Runnerman welcome to the editing of this page. Please discuss changes on this discussion page, because we are trying to maintain a balance in this article, which started off on the wrong foot by WP:COI violations. Xcstar (talk) 13:55, 13 December 2007 (UTC)

Runnerguy, Danerunsalot, Arric, Revertedlesbo and 68.55.224.168 have all been blocked as Wikipedia editors. Wikipedia:Requests_for_checkuser/Case/Runnerguy They are the same person, and I surmise that they are all Mr. Rauschenberg. Xcstar (talk) 14:12, 19 December 2007 (UTC)

Fiddy2

Per Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Fiddy2, the content from Fiddy2 has been merged into this article. Feel free to edit down as required. Neil  11:21, 6 December 2007 (UTC)

This article is way over the top, and I agree it must be paired down and the WP:COI removed. Do people believe that the wikitable of 52 races is necessary? Xcstar (talk) 17:09, 7 December 2007 (UTC)

Notability and Reliability of Sources

The Wikipedia policy states:

Self-published material may never be used in BLPs unless written by the subject him or herself. Subjects may provide material about themselves through press releases, personal websites, or blogs. Material that has been self-published by the subject may be added to the article only if:

The problem with this article is that it is "based primarily on such sources." This article is an artifact of a shameless effort at self-promotion, and should be drastically cut back.Xcstar (talk) 19:47, 7 December 2007 (UTC)

The ((spam)) tag is appropriate when external references are used to drive traffic to a website, such as fiddy2 .org. I have removed the links to fiddy2 .org, where Mr. Rauschenberg sells fiddy logo merchandise. Xcstar (talk) 02:37, 11 December 2007 (UTC)
  • The spam tag is entirely inappropriate. The pages linked are exclusively relevant details explicitly permitted as self-published material, without any indication that any attempt is made to sell anything. That the presence of a link that happens to do fundraising on the same site qualifies the entire article as spam is ludicrous on its face. Alansohn (talk) 02:47, 11 December 2007 (UTC)
  • This is a clear application of WP:SPAM which states, "Adding external links to an article or user page for the purpose of promoting a website or a product is not allowed, and is considered to be spam. Although the specific links may be allowed under some circumstances, repeatedly adding links will in most cases result in all of them being removed." The original author is trying to drive up the Google rating of fiddy2 .org and to drive traffic to that website. Xcstar (talk) 03:08, 11 December 2007 (UTC)
  • Other than your bad faith, you have no evidence to support your baseless claim that the fiddy2.org link is intended "to drive traffic to that website". Unless you have evidence to support your claim, it will be removed. If you insist that there are issues with notability, it's probably time to start a second AfD. Other than that, your notability tag also cannot be justified, as evidenced by the refusal of the community to support your previous attempt at deletion. In your new AfD, I encourage you to site WP:SPAM as justification for deletion. Other than that, your edits are simply a massive and persistent WP:POINT violation. Alansohn (talk) 04:43, 11 December 2007 (UTC)

Notability

I removed notability tag. If NPR and The Washington Post, and even the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette are writing about you, you are notable objectively. --Richard Arthur Norton (1958- ) (talk) 05:03, 11 December 2007 (UTC)

  • First of all, let me say it is good to see someone who is not a member of Dane's immediate family contributing to this article. Next, please note that reliable sources, such as the Washington Post, still does not count if it is advertisements, announcements columns, minor news stories, and coverage with low levels of discrimination." WP:N Mr. Rauschenberg sent out numerous press releases and some were picked up in "coverage with low levels of discrimination." A good example is the new references to the Arlington Sun-Gazette, which is a limited distribution, advertising supported newsprint publication. The fact that Mr. Rauschenberg's close friend, unpaid writer Jay Wind, has a puff piece published, does not make the reference the work of a paid journalist with the normal levels of journalistic judgment and discrimination.
  • Assuming that an argument can be made that being one of several people to have run 52 marathons on 52 consecutive weekends is notable, the question remains as to whether it warrants separate coverage, or whether this entire matter should be treated in Marathon#Multiple marathons where Mr. Rauschenberg can be viewed in the same context as other people who have run 52, 79 or even 159. Xcstar (talk) 19:50, 11 December 2007 (UTC)
  • There seems to be a deep and fundamental understanding as to what the term "notability" means in general and in Wikipedia. Notable does not mean "fastest", "best", "most" or "unique". Notability means that one is "worthy of notice". The entire effort to try to "prove" that others have run more marathons, done so in a shorter period of time or raised more money is not only irrelevant, but seems to be part of a deliberate effort to drag in unrelated issues that are unconnected to the article's notability. While one may quibble about some of the sources, the year-long coverage from The Washington Post, NPR and the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, among many, many others, is a prime example of the "significant coverage in reliable sources that are independent of the subject" that WP:N defines as supporting a subject that is "presumed to be notable". Your monomaniacal obsession with this one article simply does not stand up to any objective scrutiny. If you truly believe that the article does not meet Wikipedia's notability standards, it's time to start a second AfD or move on to some other article that can be the target of your newest obsession. Alansohn (talk) 00:52, 12 December 2007 (UTC)
  • I agree that something does not have to be unique to be notable. "Man bites dog." would be notable even if it happened a dozen different times and each is reported in the newspaper by professional journalists. The problem is that this article is "Dog bites man," coupled with a systematic effort at self-promotion, including the creation of two Wikipedia articles. We need a notability standard that can be objectively applied to prevent runners from creating wikitables of all of their past races. There are websites for that purpose, such as yourrunning.com or marathonmaniacs. My fundamental concern is that Wikipedia needs credibility in the running community to attract editors and gain valid, competent coverage. This article has received widespread attention and ridicule, and is doing damage that outweighs any gain in providing reference information to the few people seeking objective data on Dane Rauschenberg. I hope WP:RUN can work up a standard. Xcstar (talk) 17:02, 12 December 2007 (UTC)
  • Your fundamental obsession is with this article, to a point where you have edited the article two or three times more than any other editor. Your edit history shows that all but ten of your nearly 150 edits are related to this one article. You have already acknowledged that you are a sockpuppet. My concern is that notability has already been demonstrated, consensus is that the article should stay as is and you are still working day and night to disrupt this one article. I will tell you again that it's time to start another AfD or to move on; $#!+ or get off the pot. Move on, already. Find a new hobby. Perhaps running. Alansohn (talk) 17:08, 12 December 2007 (UTC)
  • Thank you for your suggestion. If we can control the WP:COI contributions from the friends and family of Mr. Rauschenberg, I would not object to continuing the existence of the article. I will edit any changes from IP-address-users who seek to shift the article from neutrality into a puff-piece of favorable publicity. My AfD on Fiddy2 was prompted by unrelenting puff-piece editing by the Pro-Rauchenberg editor(s). Xcstar (talk) 17:18, 12 December 2007 (UTC)
  • That's an interesting offer, but the biggest problem with WP:COI on this article seems to be your persistent obsession with inserting WP:POV edits. Other than trying to create stilted comparisons to other notable efforts or to make snide comments about how the feat was accomplished, you've done nothing but disrupt this article. Please start the second AfD already and see if there is anyone who agrees with you. Otherwise, it's time to end this obsessive-compulsive behavior. Start running, say, five miles a day. After a week, you'll be 35 miles away from your computer and be far less disruptive on this article. Alansohn (talk) 17:24, 12 December 2007 (UTC)

Presque Isle

Runnerguy has asked whether we should continue to designate Presque Isle as a "non-competitive" event. My concern is that if you don't include the word non-competitive, people will assume that it was a competitive ultramarathon race. As for 84 miles being noteworthy, there are no records maintained for 12-hour races. Official records are maintained for 1-hour track runs and 24-hour track runs. By way of comparison, the US record for 24-hours was set in 1999 by Mark Godale who ran 261,454 metres (162 mi). [1] So assuming that a national-class runner would run much more than half that distance in 12 hours, Mr. Rauschenberg's performance would not set a record. The article probably should not mention the event at all, but certainly not twice. Xcstar (talk) 16:55, 13 December 2007 (UTC)

  • I respectfully disagree that there is reliable documentation for the 84 miles, and I am trying to verify the claim. This is not like the NYRR's 24-hour run or the Ft. Meade 24-hour run where there are officials counting your laps. The new footnote is an effort to capture the casual, non-competitive nature of the event. The 2007 edition did use transponder timing, but I have made inquiries as to how the laps were recorded in 2003. Xcstar (talk) 21:24, 13 December 2007 (UTC)

It is essential for the accuracy of the article to state that the Presque Isle event was non-competitive, if the event is to be mentioned. I personally think that the event is not notable. Xcstar (talk) 15:48, 31 December 2007 (UTC)

Reliability of Sources

Wikipedia requires reliable sources. "'Reliable' means sources need editorial integrity to allow verifiable evaluation of notability, per the reliable source guideline. Sources may encompass published works in all forms and media. Availability of secondary sources covering the subject are a good test for notability." A major problem here is that Mr. Rauschenberg (with his unique world-view) is the ultimate source of much of this information. If he asserts a fact, and it gets repeated on a blog or in print media without fact-checking such as the Arlington Sun-Gazette, that does not establish the fact as true.

The Guidelines confirm this: "'Independent of the subject' excludes works produced by those affiliated with the subject including: self-publicity, advertising, self-published material by the subject, autobiographies, press releases, etc." Most of the stuff here is just rehash of the fiddy2 press releases or are blog submissions.

Is there a source, other than Mr. Rauschenberg, that saw him run 84 miles at Presque Isle? How do we know whether his expenses were self-funded vs. donated? While Mr. Rauschenberg's statements are reliable if they are "admissions against interest,' they should not be accepted without fact-checking. Xcstar (talk) 13:45, 14 December 2007 (UTC)

  • Sources are not reliable or verifiable if they are based on the untested assertions of the subject. A sports story in the Washington Post is a good source. A puff-piece written by an unpaid friend for the local penny-saver is not a good source, as demonstrated by the false assertion that there were no other marathons on Christmas weekend 2006. Mr. Rauschenberg would be presumed to have known about the race, because it was featured on the website of one of his organizations, marathonmaniacs.com —Preceding unsigned comment added by Xcstar (talk • contribs) 18:43, 14 December 2007 (UTC)
  • If you believe a specific source is in question, use a "fact" tag and try to have a meaningful discussion here of what your real issue is. A reliable and verifiable newspaper source has been added about the 84 miles run at Presque Isle. If you have an issue with this source, I would suggest trying to have the WP:V and WP:RS Wikipedia policies rewritten. Other than that, it's time to find move your abusive crusade to some other article that might benefit from your disruption. Alansohn (talk) 19:05, 14 December 2007 (UTC)
  • I believe that WP:V and WP:RS support my position and not DR/Runnerguy. If DR self-reports "I ran 84 miles," and then the Erie Club lists everyone's self-reported distance without any claim that it was something more than an non-competitive, unofficiated, self-reporting event, and the Erie Paper reports that DR self-reported the 84 miles, there are no "reliable, third-party published sources with a reputation for fact-checking and accuracy." It could be that DR believes he ran 84 laps, but most people cannot keep accurate count during 12 hours of hard running. Xcstar (talk) 20:36, 17 December 2007 (UTC)
  • Here's the problem: I've added reliable sources from both the sponsor and from a reliable newspaper source for the Presque Isle event. These sources re in complete and total compliance of WP:RS and WP:V. If the next step of your disruptive jihad is to continue to attack the individual and the sources, the burden on you is to come up with a reliable and verifiable source that contradicts the information in the sources already provided. Other than that, all we have is your bad faith presumption on your part of an inaccuracy. Alansohn (talk) 22:14, 17 December 2007 (UTC)

Fundraising Component of Fiddy2

By Mr. Rauschenberg's own admission, he did not undertake Fiddy2 as a fundraiser. He added a fundraising component a few months into the planning of the project. http://www.coolrunning.com/forums/Forum9/HTML/001605.shtml We need to avoid any implication that fundraising was an initial component. Xcstar (talk) 16:24, 31 December 2007 (UTC)

  • True. DR states that it took months of planning in 2005 before starting the project. The Jan 8 article was the result of DR's initial blast of press releases in 2005. To quote Mr. Rauschenberg himself, he "added L'Arche Mobile as the beneficiary of the endeavor a few months into the planning." He decided to run the marathons, and then decided later to add a fundraising component, when the non-charity version of Fiddy2 did not capture media attention. Xcstar (talk) 16:55, 31 December 2007 (UTC)
  • Misleadingly False The article does not state that the marathon plan and fundraising goal began simultaneously. Nor is there any reason other than pushing your own POV to turn this into an issue. As the article stated before your vandalism, the first race of 2006 was run with the goal of running one marathon per week AND to raise $52,000 for the Mobile, Alabama chapter of L'Arche International. If you have a reliable and verifiable source to rebut that claim, please provide it. Your depiction of the fundraising effort as a "controversy" on the L'Arche article is patently despicable POV pushing on your part. This type of behavior will not be tolerated. Alansohn (talk) 17:03, 31 December 2007 (UTC)

I find this kind of information to be completely irrelevant in the L'Arche entry. If someone wants to start a L'Arche Mobile page, then start one and put this information there. L'Arche has over 100 chapters in the world and falling short of $10,000 is an irrelevant factoid that is more than distracting, it's annoying. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 67.55.18.149 (talk) 03:57, 3 January 2008 (UTC)

Other projects

By Mr. Rauscheberg's own admission, he did not research other on-going running projects to see if a 52-consecutive week marathon streak would be outstanding. What public attention he got was from people who did not realize how his 52-week effort compared with the other projects. This article should not repeat that mistake. Xcstar (talk) 16:24, 31 December 2007 (UTC)

  • There is a requirement that we acurately state the facts and place the project in context. Otherwise the article becomes a puff piece. Suppose Fiddy2 was one of thousands of family vacations to drive across the country by car. Wikipedia would not write "Dane Rauschenberg completed his impressive goal of driving his car across the country from Washington to California." Xcstar (talk) 16:59, 31 December 2007 (UTC)
  • The only inaccuracies are being inserted on your part. I couldn't care less how you or anyone else spend your vacation time. Notability is not determined by whether or not you think the goal is interesting, unusual or unique. Notability is based on how notable the individual is based on reliable and verifiable coverage, a standard that has clearly been met by this article. The goal was stated before the marathons started, it was regularly reported on before, during and after the 52 marathons, and the Wikipedia:Notability standard could not be more clearly satisfied. Other than your pathetic efforts to insert your own bias, the article is neutral and balanced. If you persist in your BS claim that he is not notable, please start a new AfD. Otherwise, please move on. Alansohn (talk) 17:09, 31 December 2007 (UTC)
  • Isn't this just an article about how Mr. Rauschenberg chose to spend his weekends and vacations in 2006? My point is that the article should place this activity in its context so that the reader will know there were other people doing similar things contemporaneously, but were doing them with more impressive attributes. Otherwise the article becomes a puff piece. Xcstar (talk) 21:01, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
  • Certainly it's an article about how Mr. Rauchenberg chose to spend his weekends and vacations in 2006. But the media coverage of how he spent his weekends indicates that it is something more notable than how a couple hundred million other Americans spent their weekends in 2006. The article has all the context it needs - Mr. Rauschenberg spent his weekends running marathons to raise money for a charity, and it was covered by numerous media outlets. CruiserBob (talk) 02:51, 10 January 2008 (UTC)

Amateur status

A long-time contributor to this article User:69.143.1.252 (talk) continues to raise the question of whether Dane Rauschenberg can be classified as an amateur athlete and whether it matters. An argument can be made that because DR sought financial support with the goal of providing all of his expenses for the year-long project, it is arguable that it can be classified as an "amateur" undertaking. Rather than get into this issue, the best solution is to be silent. Certainly that characterization does not belong in the lead paragraph. The debate emerged previously, when some editors sought to compare DR with other runners who had successfully raised corporate support for their multi-marathon projects. (E.g., Dean Karnazes and Chuck Engel are "professional" runners.) All three sought financial support for traveling around the country during 2006, and the "amateur"/"professional" label is not meaningful in that context. I welcome the thoughts of others. Xcstar (talk) 19:05, 9 January 2008 (UTC)

  • The NPR reference does not address the amateur status issue. If DR introduced himself to the interviewer as being an amateur, the NPR reporter would have no way to independently evaluate it. Please state what your definition is. DR and his sockpupets sought to draw a distinction between DR and Dean Karnazes and Chuck Engel -- DR was unable to gain financial support, while Karnazes and Engel were successful to a limited degree. Perhaps it would be better to use the "unsuccessful"/"successful" label instead of the more confusing (and emotionally ladden) "amateur"/"professional" distinction. By the way, I objected to characterizing Karnazes and Engel as professionals in the article which lead DR to try to label himself as an "amateur." In the business of running 50+ marathons within a year, there is no amateur or professional status.
  • Alternatively, perhaps you are trying to label DR's fundraising efforts as "amateur." I doubt that anyone with good business judgment would solicit funds expecting to receive them from a 170-member running club. Xcstar (talk) 20:55, 9 January 2008 (UTC)

Better flow

I have now spent two hours on this Wikipedia contribution. I hope everyone will find it an improvement. The article was confusing because it does not keep separate the fundraising for the project and the fundraising for the charity. It is better to keep those separate. Also, I have added materials on Mr. Rauschenberg's new job -- they are hard to find because his new employer keeps mispelling his name. I would like to accurately report his job title, but he notes that he is still negotiating his title and role.[1] (It takes a great deal of courage to move to Utah for a new job without knowing what it is.) He has changed his LinkIn page to describe his profession as "Race Director/Course Designer", but that does not sound like a job title. Runreston (talk) 19:24, 19 January 2008 (UTC)


Disruptions to article

The only disruptions to the article are the repeated edits by Mr. Alanson and Mr. Rauschenberg. It is time that they set this aside and let other people try to develop an accurate article. It's rather hard to take the latest abuse seriously given that it's coming from a confirmed sockpuppet, but let's deal with the nonsense in a systematic fashion:

  1. Rauschenberg's primary claim to notability is running 52 marathons in 52 weekends in 2006. The latest changes from User:Racepacket make it appear that his primary claim to notability is as a motivational speaker. Assuming he has started this position as a speaker / race organizer, this all drives off of his running accomplishments. A major aspect of the 52 marathon accomplishment was a fundraising goal, which reached no less than $43K of a $52,000 goal. There is no justification for removing these accomplishments from the lead, which now bears no relevance to Rauschenberg's extremely strong claims of notability.
  1. A "biography" section was added by User:Racepacket, focusing on major background information of Rauschenberg's life, which consists of the following: 1 & 2) he went to Penn State and attended an unnamed law school. 3) a twisted allegation that a mention of Rauschenberg in a 2004 article in The Washington Post somehow shows that "Rauschenberg started testing his ability to gain free publicity by obtaining a Washington Post article and photograph covering his efforts to use craigslist to obtain a blind date for a 2004 New Years Eve party." 4) an unsupported non sequitur that he continues to blog for his current employer. The entire paragraph seems to have been thrown together to be a place to toss in an entirely unsupported (and unsupportable) allegation.
  1. An inordinate and twisted series of misinterpretations aims at defaming Rauschenberg by implying that waivers of entry fees, meals and sneakers were somehow improper, based exclusively on unjustifiable misreadings of blog posts. Statements such as "He continued to attempt to obtain outside funding of fiddy2 expenses even after the end of 2006." are provided without any support or source.
  1. You gotta love the claim (see above) that "Rauschenberg was very vague as to his criteria for selecting the races to enter. Among his criteria was whether his running friends were going to be there. I have left this issue out of the article.", which would be hardly worth mentioning by any rational person. There seems to be no reason that Rauschenberg could not -- or should not -- have selected the 52 marathons and way he saw fit, even if, God forbid, his friends were participating in some or all of these marathons.

In summary, these latest changes take a useful, descriptive article, and attempt to turn it into a meaningless pile of false and misleading insinuations. To make a long story short, I have no idea what bug User:Racepacket and his growing family of sockpuppets have up their behind about Mr. Rauschenberg, nor why anyone would devote so much of their time to trying to defame him. Given that the article has been stable and that there is strong agreement on its current wording, any editor will need to demonstrate that any proposed changes are properly supported and meet consensus for change before any edits are made to the article. Alansohn (talk) 18:39, 3 February 2008 (UTC)

New Efforts at Unity

I am hoping that we can confine the article to just the facts and leave Mr. Alansohn's editorial comments about Mr. Rauschenberg's motives out of the article. Runreston (talk) 19:37, 22 February 2008 (UTC)

Despite the clearest possible instructions specifying that consensus needs to be obtained before making any more disruptive changes has been ignored again. It is rather disturbing that another User:Runreston has come along with a rather unhealthy obsession that has him dedicating 90% of his edits to this one article. User:Racepacket justified his sockpuppetry based on supposed concerns that Mr. Rauschenberg was going to beat him up. I'd love to hear what the excuse is for our latest incarnation and his obsessive monomania. Alansohn (talk) 05:33, 10 February 2008 (UTC)

The article is progressing nicely under the "New Efforts at Unity" discussion. Please respond the the specific concerns expressed in each of the subsections below instead of just reverting all of the work of the group from the past two months. 158.59.27.249 (talk) 18:04, 29 March 2008 (UTC)

Lead paragraph

Although the paragraph is hopeless confusing, I am leaving it alone except for the sentence regarding the last race which is moved to the fiddy2 discussion. I have added the fact that there was a quid pro quo for adopting L'Arch as the beneficiary, to avoid a terribly misleading lead sentence. Runreston (talk) 20:44, 9 February 2008 (UTC)

Boosterism

I have removed the gratuitous quotes which are not objective, and tend to booster the fund raising. Runreston (talk) 20:29, 9 February 2008 (UTC)

Cause and Effect

I find Mr. Rauschenberg's posts very revealing, particularly: http://www.coolrunning.com/forums/Forum9/HTML/001605.shtml Retrieved Jan 19, 2008. I would urge everyone to read this before making further edits. I don't understand why Mr. Alanson keeps deleting it without explanation. The charity fundraising was a response to Mr. Rauschenberg approaching the First Light Marathon for free entry and travel expenses. The quid pro quo was to pledge to raise money for L'Arche. Runreston (talk) 20:29, 9 February 2008 (UTC)

Amateur Status

See discussion above. There is no such thing as a professional mulitiple marathon runner, nor is there an amateur. There are just people who run a lot of marathons. Mr. Rauschenberg disparaged Engel for being a professional, and when that attack was removed, then the debate turned to labeling Rauschenberg as an amateur. It does not matter! Runreston (talk) 20:29, 9 February 2008 (UTC)

[2] and [3]. The concerns apply to Rauschenberg as well. Most competitive runners seeking funding strive to perform above the threashold that attracts sponsorship. Here we have Rauschenberg labeling Karanzes and Engel as "professionals," yet Rauschenberg, Karanzes and Engel all earn their livings with jobs related to running, and not by prize money and the sponsorships that come from elite running performances. The word "amateur" does not mean "holds a full time job," nor does it mean "has no monetary stake in his performace." Perhaps "non-elite" or "middle of the pack" would better fit the sentence than "amateur" or just avoid characterizing Rauschenberg altogether. 207.91.86.2 (talk) 19:18, 21 February 2008 (UTC)

Awards

Only outstanding awards should be included in articles, not minor awards conferred by a 4 person website or a 170 person running club. There are National Awards and honors for runners, but the two first added by Mr. Rauschenberg do not have anywhere near that stature and should be deleted. Runreston (talk) 20:29, 9 February 2008 (UTC)

Merger

see other discussion. Runreston (talk) 20:29, 9 February 2008 (UTC)

Listing Marathons

There is no reason to list individual marathons unless there was something exceptional about them. I have a sentence saying he has run 71 marathons, and I've kept the three bullets about the three races which Mr. Rauschenberg listed in is early autobiographical attempts here. Nothing special about the others in the biography paragraph worth discussing. Runreston (talk) 19:51, 23 February 2008 (UTC)

  1. ^ http://www.50anddcmarathongroupusa.com/personalinfo.cfm