Archive for July 15th, 2010

July 15th, 2010

A Poem by Dr. Joseph H. Roy

by PaulM

I missed taking note of Bastille Day (July 14), but my family has been following Le Tour de France on the Versus Channel. The coverage is first-rate—and worth watching as a travelogue as much as for a bicycle race. In honor of the French (mostly French Canadian) roots of many people in the Merrimack Valley, here’s a poem by Joseph H. Roy (1865-1931), who was a physician and poet in Lowell. He lived at 14 Wannalancit Street where he and his wife raised nine children. His daughter Berangere taught at Butler Junior High School, and his daughter Carmen was on the faculty of the Franco-American Orphanage. In 1902, his collection of poems “Voix Etranges” (Strange Voices) was published by L’Etoile, Lepine & Co. of 613 Merrimack Street. He cited as his influences the French classicist poet Nicolas Boileau-Despereux (1636-1711), as well as the French Symbolist poets of the 19th century, including Baudelaire, Mallarme, Verlaine, and Rimbaud. Several years ago I translated some of his poems with the help of Maryann Mercier Brady, longtime foreign language teacher at Tyngsboro High School. “Voix Etranges” is in French, so very few people knew what he had written. One of the poems had a Kerouackian slant in the title, which surprised me. I don’t think it’s a missing link in the Kerouac literary chain, but it’s interesting to note the convergence of thinking. Here’s the translation:—PM

.

On the Dark Road

Small orphan on the road,

You’ll cry a long time because you never knew

The one who soothed you to pure sleep

And waited for you to wake and kiss you. Sure,

.

You recall a bit, everything’s not blank.

Your innocent mind cradles images

Of mother smiling at her favored child,

A cherub spilled from heaven’s gate.

.

Yes, you recall—vague as it may be—

A kind of dim dream, faded by the years.

And on the dark road, where are you headed, weary,

.

The tears, child, running down your face!

And that you’ll endure because you never knew

The one who soothed you to pure sleep.

.

Joseph H. Roy (c) 1902

[translated by Paul Marion and Maryann Mercier Brady, (c) 2010]

July 15th, 2010

Casinos: A Preservation and Battleground Issue in Gettysburg

by Marie

On the eve of the Sesquicentennial of the Civil War, the National Trust for Historic Preservation reminds us that while many among us respect the sanctity of Civil War battlefields such as that of  Gettysburg – others have different ideas. While many see the historic and cultural heritage  value in these sacred spaces, others would exchange a national treasure for other gain.

Historic preservationists are pitted against the realities of a tough economy and high unemployment. Preservationists declare that a casino so close to the battlefield is inappropriate while proponents claim that a casino will enhance the tourist options and provide jobs. In his Preservation Magazine article, Darrin Youker notes:

At issue is a new casino proposed for a location just half a mile from the site where Union troops pushed back Confederate forces and turned the tide of war. In 2005, preservationists and residents led a grassroots effort to defeat a similar casino proposal. Now, the same developer, Gettysburg businessman David LeVan, wants to build a casino inside the Eisenhower Resort and Convention Center on the famed Emmitsburg Road.

From his interviews on both sides of the issue:

“Adams County can no longer depend on its Civil War tourism legacy alone,” says David La Torre, a spokesman for the casino developer.  “Unemployment here is over eight percent, the highest in a quarter-century. Gaming has created 12,000 full-time jobs across Pennsylvania.”

Jeff Kline, spokesman for Pro Casino Adams County, told the Patriot-News that Adams County needs more tourism venues.

For opponents it’s about the location: “It is a nationally important Civil War site that was preserved in memory of one of the nation’s bloodiest battles,” says Walter Gallas, director of the Northeast Field Office of the National Trust for Historic Preservation. “The developer saying that he wants to piggyback on that and put in a casino is an inappropriate response.”

“It’s a major insult to this nation,”  says Susan Star Paddock, a Gettysburg resident leading the fight to defeat the casino. “A casino would never be considered this close to Ground Zero, or the Arlington National Cemetery.”

And so the debate continues. Read the full article here. Stay tuned.

A Massachusetts Connection – Here is the 2nd Massachusetts Infantry Monument on the Battlefield at Gettysburg. (Of  local note: Many men from Tewksbury made up part of  a company of soldiers that took heavy casualties in this area during the battle at Culps Hill.)

The inscription reads:

From the hill behind this monument on
the morning of July third 1863 the
Second Massachusetts Infantry
made an assault upon the Confederate
troops in the works at the base of Culp’s
Hill opposite. The regiment carried to
the charge 22 officers and 294 enlisted
men. It lost 4 officers and 41 enlisted
men killed and mortally wounded and 6
officers and 84 enlisted men wounded.
To perpetuate the honored memories of
that hour the survivors of the Regiment
have raised this stone. 1879.

 

July 15th, 2010

Massachusetts Ranks Low on the “Pain Index”

by Marie

Rick Newman on U. S. News & World Report.com  has looked at the funding ”crunch” across the fifty states and devised what he calls the “Pain Index.”

The recession might technically be over, but the funding crunch in state and local governments could actually get worse. The stimulus act passed in 2009 sent about $250 billion to states, to help offset a plunge in tax revenues, which is how most states fund schools, roads, Medicaid, welfare, and many local services. Even with that federal aid, states have had to cut spending by nearly $50 billion, and raise taxes by another $30 billion or so. The combined effect of higher taxes and fewer services directly affects Americans’ quality of life—and it could get worse as stimulus spending starts to run out and the federal government begins to deal with its own mismatch between spending and revenue.

Using data provided by the National Association of State Budget Officers, Newman devised his “index” by combining tax increases and spending cuts enacted in each state since 2009.  According to his measurement the Commonwealth of Massachusetts ranks #40 out of the 50 states on the “pain index.” Alaska ranks #1. See the full list and story here.

In 2009:

Massachusetts: $135 in new taxes / -$150 in spending cuts with the pain per person at:  -$15

The  ”quality of life” issue has long been a frontline consideration in Massachusetts. What’s your view of Newman’s analysis? Is our “quality of life” in danger in Massachusetts – or – not so much?

July 15th, 2010

Hand-held cell phones: driving to distraction by Marjorie Arons-Barron

by Tony

The entry below was cross posted from Marjorie Arons-Barron’s own blog.

The following people are just some of the reasons that safe driving advocates like State Senator Brian Joyce must be so frustrated. The owner of a blue Toyota, MA license 693HG8, on June 25 swinging onto Morrissey Bouldvard, swerving in front of us because her cell phone use prevented her even being aware that she was cutting us off.

Or, the driver of a dark Audi, MA license 55X600, at 6 p.m. on June 29, totally ignoring a yield sign on I-95 so totally absorbed was he in his cell phone conversation.

Or, the owner of a silver car (sorry, I didn’t get the make) MA license 718W81 at exit 4 to Portsmouth, New Hampshire, on July 2nd, slithering across three lanes, cutting in front of us, without a signal because, of course, he had one hand on the steering wheel and the other holding the cell phone to his ear. (Please be assured that I was not driving while making these observations and writing down license numbers.)

These folks obviously don’t know each other, but they certainly have a lot in common. They are representative of the driving danger that adult cell phone users present and who get off scot-free in the Safe Driving Law recently passed by the Massachusetts legislature, a watered down version of what Brian Joyce has been pushing for years.

Joyce, of course, has been particularly focused on elderly drivers and the desirability of having them tested routinely for competency. What emerged was a meek requirement that those 75 years or older have a vision test every five years and go the Registry to apply for their renewals. I’m not there in age (though every year I get closer), and it would also have been fine to set the age limit at 80, but frankly I’ve seen and read enough about crashes caused by older drivers to think some additional testing would be supportable. There’s broad support of limits on teenagers due to their inexperience. Our oldest drivers have plenty of experience, but it’s counter-intuitive to think that, as a group, we/they aren’t subject to a higher rate of physical and cognitive deficits.

Yes, it’s good that lawmakers banned texting while driving (a no-brainer) and cell phone use by teens. But lawmakers didn’t go far enough. Tom Vanderbilt, in his comprehensive book “Traffic: Why We Drive the Way We Do (and What it Says about Us), notes that nearly 80 percent of all crashes and 65 percent of the near crashes involved drivers who were not paying attention to traffic for up to three seconds before the event. That’s why the legislature still needs to deal with hand-held cell phone use by adult drivers.

This map shows states that ban driving while using a hand-held cell phone. One can only hope that the next legislative session will produce a requirement that all drivers use a hands-free device.

Vanderbilt writes that “cell phones in cars have contributed to the seeming death of signaling for turns.” (See my third example.) He also points out that “keeping one’s eyes on the road is not necessarily the same thing as keeping one’s mind on the road.” Cell phones take up brain capacity to process other unexpected events, especially hazards coming from our sides, those in our peripheral vision.

Yes, simply talking is still a distraction, but so are putting on lipstick, quieting down the kids in the back seat, listening to talk radio, or eating a sandwich. However, it’s unrealistic to think of eliminating these. Add hand-held cell phone distraction to the mix, stir in a measure of travel frustration and inter-driver competition, and you have a potentially lethal brew. Hand-held cell phones are something that can be controlled, and, next session, that’s exactly what the legislature should do.

- Please let me know your thoughts in the comments section below

July 15th, 2010

50 Years Ago JFK Wins Nomination

by Tony

Fifty years ago (July 13, 1960) John F Kennedy won his party’s nomination for President of the United States. At the convention held in Los Angeles, Kennedy beat…Lyndon Johnson, Senate Majority Leader-Texas; Adlai Stevenson, former Governor of Illinois; Stuart Symington’ Senator from Missouri; Hubert Humphrey, Senator from Minnesota; and several other prominent Democrats to win the nomination. Shortly after Kennedy’s victory these two campaign songs hit the airwaves.

And this song, sung  by Frank Sinatra…

Everyone is voting for Jack
Cause he’s got what all the rest lack
Everyone wants to back — Jack
Jack is on the right track.
‘Cause he’s got high hopes
He’s got high hopes
1960 is the year for his high hopes.
Come on and vote for Kennedy
Vote for Kennedy
And we’ll come out on top!
Oops, there goes the opposition – ker -
Oops, there goes the opposition – ker -
Oops, there goes the opposition – KERPLOP!

K–E–DOUBLE N–E–D–Y
Jack’s the nation’s favorite guy
Everyone wants to back — Jack
Jack is on the right track.
‘Cause he’s got high hopes
He’s got high hopes
1960 is the year for his high hopes.
Come on and vote for Kennedy
Vote for Kennedy
Keep America strong.
Kennedy, he just keeps rollin’ – a -
Kennedy, he just keeps rollin’ – a -
Kennedy, he just keeps rollin’ along.