October 29th, 2010
by Marie

In today’s Lowell Sun veteran sports writer, author and Red Sox scorekeeper has good things to say about the face-lift given to the former Tsongas Arena – now UMass Lowell Tsongas Center. Scoggins has given us a quick recap of the changes:
- New million-dollar video score board hanging over center ice;
- The Lowell Five Pavilion featuring 70 leather-backed seats overlooking the ice with cocktail seating for 175 and three high-definition plasma televisions;
- The new spacious, comfortable Talon Club located directly beneath the Pavilion open to club members;
- Rowdy’s Roadhouse – a new restaurant and bar – open to the public located at the north end of the arena where the Talon Club used to be;
- Function rooms – located at north end of the arena - as well as a UMass Lowell Athletic Hall of Fame Gallery, a display honoring the school’s national champions, and a niche for the Legends of Lowell Hockey
- A new sound system featuring two six-foot racks of amplifiers and 60 new speakers.
From the Scoggins description it seems that season ticket holders, hockey fans, concert goers, UMASS Lowell students and alums – any one or any group using the Tsongas Center facility will appreciate the changes. With the Massachusetts Democratic Convention coming to the Center in June, 2011 for the fifth time since the opening in 2000, I look forward to an even better delegate experience.
Read the entire Scoggins article here.
Culture, Current Events, Greater Lowell, Lowell, Politics |
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October 29th, 2010
by PaulM
This is for Dean! I was saving Willie for the second inning.—PM



Culture, History, Lowell |
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October 29th, 2010
by Marie
The Boston Globe is reporting on “breaking news” that Supreme Judicial Court Justice Francis Spina held a hearing on the sale of the Caritas Christi Heath Care system to Cerberus Capital Management today. Justice Spina signed-off on the transaction tranferring the assets of a non-profit entity to a for-profit entity. This was the final approval needed since Attorney General Martha Coakley already approved – with conditions – and the Department of Public Health agreed to the licensure of the six hospitals in the system under the new ownership.
While there are still skeptics and opponents of the deal with Cerberus, supporters say that the the “viability of the hospitals, formerly run by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston” is now assured. Caritas has hospitals in Boston, Brockton, Fall River, Methuen and Norwood. Caritas Holy Family Hospital in Methuen is part of the system and serves many consumers in the communities of the Merrimack Valley.
Read the full article here at Boston.com.
Culture, Current Events, Greater Lowell, Politics, Science |
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October 29th, 2010
by Marie

Computerworld on-line notes that the “broadband stimulus program” wasn’t created just to bring broadband to underserved rural areas but it was also designed to create education centers to teach and train people to access and use the Web.
There has been a particular need for such centers in cities such as Lowell, Mass., where many people have lost their jobs in the manufacturing industry and are now looking to change their careers. Shannon Robichaud, the director of education and training at the non-profit Community Teamwork, Inc. (CTI), says many workers who have had the same jobs for a long time simply had no idea how important computers and the Internet have become to finding a new job.”I’ve had people who have worked on machine their whole lives and they’re coming in to learn the basics,” she says. ”To even apply for any kind of job nowadays you have to go online.”
UMass Lowell is an important partner and player in this education process:
Lowell became a testing ground for broadband adoption and education programs earlier this year when the University of Massachusetts in Lowell won a $783,000 grant to build 11 public computer centers in and around the city. The grant was awarded as part of the $4 billion in broadband stimulus funding released by the government last year. Six months after receiving the grant, UMass and its partners in the Lowell community had all 11 public centers up and running and ready for classes, which typically occur twice a week and are taught by UMass Lowell students. Class subjects range from basic computer literacy courses to advanced classes in online media development.
Read more here about about the education centers – not just for job training - but those that are sited in such places as the local Boys and Girls Club and the Senior Center. As Cheryl Amey the associate executive director for Workforce Development at CTI notes
“We want this program to really make a difference in peoples’ lives. After all, you can’t get very far today without strong computer skills.”
Culture, Current Events, Lowell |
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October 29th, 2010
by DickH

Tony Sampas brings to a close two weeks’ worth of images of Lowell signage with these shots of Merrimack Rug and Linoleum at 297 Market Street.

Lowell |
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October 29th, 2010
by DickH
A new Suffolk University poll released late last night shows Deval Patrick with the same size lead over Charlie Baker has been seen in other recent polls. According to Suffolk, among likely voters, Patrick has 46% to Baker’s 39% and Cahill’s 9%. The leader of Suffolk’s polling operation, David Paleologos, observed that while Baker had gained some ground in Suffolk County, he had also lost support from women and in Southeastern Massachusetts which Paleologos attributed to Baker’s public support for Congressional candidate Jeff Perry.
Here are the results of other polls in this race as reported by the 538 blog on the New York Times:
Sept 1 – Rasmussen: Patrick – 44; Baker – 42; Cahill – 8
Sept 19 – Suffolk: Patrick – 41; Baker – 34; Cahill – 14
Sept 22 – UNH: Patrick – 35; Baker – 34; Cahill – 11
Sept 23 – WNEC: Patrick – 39; Baker – 33; Cahill – 16
Sept 28 – Rasmussen: Patrick – 47; Baker – 42; Cahill – 6
Oct 16 – Rasmussen: Patrick – 47; Baker – 42; Cahill – 6
Oct 21 – WNEC: Patrick – 44; Baker – 36; Cahill – 8
Oct 27 – UNH: Patrick – 43; Baker – 39; Cahill – 8
Oct 28 – Suffolk: Patrick – 46; Baker – 39; Cahill – 9
As for other state races covered in the Suffolk poll, both Treasurer and Auditor were deemed too close to call. For Treasurer, Steve Grossman received 39% and Karyn Polito received 36%. For Auditor, Suzanne Bump received 28% to Mary Connaughton’s 26%. For Attorney General, Martha Coakley led comfortably, receiving 57% to Jim McKenna’s 31%. On Question 3, the rollback of the state’s sales tax, those opposed to the rollback were ahead, 51% to 39%.
Election 2010 |
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October 29th, 2010
by Tony
The entry below is being cross posted from Marjorie Arons-Barron’s own blog.
Condoleezza Rice was in Boston yesterday promoting her new family memoir, Extraordinary, Ordinary People. Often lampooned on Saturday Night Live, the former Secretary of State under George W. Bush is anything but a stick figure. She is charming, highly intelligent, thoughtful and articulate. And the lessons she has learned along the way help explain her positions on issues facing us still.
Rice grew up in Birmingham, Alabama before civil rights legislation started to peel away Jim Crow laws. Her parents taught her, “You may not be able to control your circumstances, but you can control your response to those circumstances.” While away from home, her parents would make her wait until she could use the bathroom at home so she wouldn’t have to use “Coloreds Only” facilities. They wouldn’t allow her to drink from a “Coloreds Only” water fountain. Each of their rules was to preserve their dignity and pride. When the public accommodations laws were passed under President Lyndon Johnson, the Rices were among the first to go to newly integrated restaurants. It would still be two years before her parents were allowed to vote. And attitudinal changes toward blacks took longer still.
Our own history, Rice says, reminds us it’s hard to replace habits of tyranny with habits of democracy. Looking at Iraq and Afghanistan, she reflects, “Who are we to scoff at people having difficulty with democracy?” But, she says, change will come. She recalls having met with a conservative cleric in Iraq, with whom she could not shake hands because she was an unrelated female. At the end of their meeting, he called in his modestly covered 13-year-old granddaughter to meet the Secretary of State, and the granddaughter told her, “I want to be foreign minister too.” read more »
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October 29th, 2010
by PaulM
Legendary San Francisco poet and founder of City Lights Bookstore and publishing company Lawrence Ferlinghetti is a baseball fan, too. The card-carrying Beat writer and publisher of Allen Ginsberg’s “Howl” and several books by Jack Kerouac, including “Book of Dreams” and “Pomes All Sizes,” has a most fitting poem for this World Series week. Click here to hear Ferlinghetti reading the poem.—PM
.
Baseball Canto
.
Watching baseball
sitting in the sun
eating popcorn
Reading Ezra Pound
and wishing Juan Marichal
would hit a hole right through
the Anglo-Saxon tradition
in the First Canto
and demolish the barbarian invaders
When the San Francisco Giants take the field
and everybody stands up for the National Anthem
with some Irish tenor's voice
piped over the loudspeakers
with all the players struck dead in their places
and the white umpires like Irish cops
in their black suits and little black caps
pressed over their hearts
standing straight and still
like at some funeral of a blarney bartender
and all facing East
as if expecting some Great White Hope
or the Founding Fathers
to appear on the horizon
like 1066 or 1776 or all that
But Willie Mays appears instead
in the bottom of the first
and a roar goes up
as he clouts the first one into the sun
and takes off
like a footrunner from Thebes
The ball is lost in the sun
and maidens wail after him
but he keeps running
through the Anglo-Saxon epic
And Tito Fuentes comes up
Looking like a bullfighter
in his tight pants and small pointy shoes
And the rightfield bleachers go mad
With Chicanos & blacks & Brooklyn beerdrinkers
"Tito! Sock it to him, Sweet Tito!"
And Sweet Tito puts his foot in the bucket
and smacks one that don't come back at all
and flees around the bases
like he's escaping from the United Fruit Company
as the Gringo dollar beats out the Pound
and Sweet Tito beats it out
like he's beating out usury
not to mention fascism and anti-semitism
And Juan Marchial comes up
and the Chicano bleachers go loco again
as Juan belts the first fast ball
out of sight
and rounds first and keeps going
and rounds second and rounds third
and keeps going
and hits pay-dirt
to the roars of the grungy populace
As some nut presses the backstage panic button
for the tape-recorded National Anthem again
to save the situation
but it don't stop nobody this time
in their revolution round the loaded white bases
in this last of the great Anglo-Saxon epics
in the Territorio Libre of Baseball
.

---Lawrence Ferlinghetti (c)
Culture, Education, History, Lowell, Poetry |
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