Archive for November 6th, 2010

November 6th, 2010

Carl Sagan Day

by Andrew

For some reason, November 6th has been declared Carl Sagan Day, to honor the great communicator of science. I can’t find an explanation for why today was picked; perhaps it was the date of some major achievement in his career.

Last year I believe I posted a passage from his book Pale Blue Dot, a masterpiece of hope for humanity. Sagan always held an optimistic view of our future, a mentality that seems sorely lacking now, fourteen years after his death.

This year I thought I’d post a few videos that capture the same spirit that infused Sagan’s work, capturing both the poetry and majesty of the Cosmos.
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November 6th, 2010

The Lowell Sun and the Fifth Congressional District

by DickH

While many supporters of Niki Tsongas were upset about the Lowell Sun’s endorsement of Jon Golnik, some community leaders – men and women who think more about the strategic needs of the region than they do politics – were appalled. For at least a century, Lowell has been the epicenter of the Fifth Congressional District, a status that has been of great benefit to the city and the surrounding towns. These community leaders realized that had the voters heeded the advice of the local newspaper, the future of the Fifth District would have been placed in jeopardy.

Every ten years, Lowell’s Congressional primacy has been threatened by redistricting. Back in early 1992, the late Paul Sullivan, in a Sun column excoriating the city’s legislative delegation for failing to fight vigorously enough against a redistricing plan that would “cut the Greater Lowell area up like a piece of sushi” explained why retaining Lowell as the center of the Congressional district was so critical:

This city was taken from the mouth of despair as a result of the revitalization that occurred in the 1970’s and 80’s. And that revitalization was solely the result of funds that were pumped in by the federal government. It was no accident that the federal government had chosen Lowell as its site for an urban national park. The city was the hub of a congressional district. In that role, Lowell was the focus of attention of the congressmen that represented it.

In the summer of 2001 while then Congressman Marty Meehan was contemplating a run for governor, Greater Lowell was staggered by a redistricting plan released by house speaker Tom Finneran that would have dismembered the Fifth District. Meehan immediately dropped his gubernatorial bid, announced he would run for reelection to Congress and the entire region pulled together to “save the Fifth.” Once again, Lowell dodged the redistricting bullet.

With redistricting looming again in the aftermath of the 2010 census and the near certainty that the Commonwealth will lose one of its ten Congressional seats, the election of a novice Republican like Jon Golnik would almost guarantee that the Democratically dominated state legislature would obliterate the Fifth District to preserve the other nine held by Democratic incumbents. Reduced to an appendage to an existing Congressional district dominated by a distant city, Greater Lowell would suffer from diminished clout and sustain longterm harm from a disruption of Federal resources.

Fortunately, Niki Tsongas was overwhelmingly reelected and given her relative seniority and her status as the only woman in the Massachusetts delegation, the nightmare scenario described above is unlikely to occur. That would not have been the case had the voters of the Fifth District heeded the advice of the Lowell Sun and elected Jon Golnik.

But the leadership of today’s Lowell Sun does not think or act strategically. The paper’s “Being represented by nobody would be better than being represented by Niki” stance is emblematic of its reactionary approach to most issues. Still, it’s evident that the Sun’s leadership has felt this community criticism over the Golnik editorial. How else do you explain the pathetic editorial on Thursday that sought to justify the paper’s actions by pointing out that the candidates endorsed by the paper – almost all of whom lost the election – received more votes than their opponents within the Sun’s circulation area.

Echoing its slanted coverage during the Congressional race, the Sun’s apologia completely ignored the fact that none of the Congressional candidates it endorsed won anywhere. But the entire premise of the newspaper’s argument – that losing candidates prevailed within the paper’s circulation area – showed how backwards-looking the newspaper’s leadership truly is. The Sun contentedly counts the number of papers it prints each day while the rest of the news-delivery world zooms past on the boundary-less and border-less internet, leaving the local newspaper to fade further into irrelevance with each passing day.

November 6th, 2010

Lincoln elected president

by DickH

On November 6, 1860, voters across America went to the polls and elected Abraham Lincoln president which set the stage for the American Civil War. Here are the results of the election:

Abraham Lincoln (Republican) received 180 electoral votes and 1,865,908 popular votes

John C Breckinridge (Southern Democratic) received 72 electoral votes and 848,019 popular votes

John Bell (Constitutional Union) received 39 electoral votes and 590,901 popular votes

Stephan Douglas (Northern Democratic) received 12 electoral votes and 1,380,202 popular votes.

Lincoln won the following states: California, Connecticut, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New Jersey (4 electoral votes), New York, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and Vermont.

Breckinridge won Alabama, Arkansas, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina and Texas

Bell won Kentucky, Tennessee and Virginia.

Douglas won Missouri and New Jersey (3 electoral votes)

November 6th, 2010

Cardinal Sean’s Blog: Celebrates Mass in Lowell’s Immaculate Conception Parish and Lauds D’Youville Anniversary

by Marie

Cardinal Sean O’Malley commented on his blog this week about his visit to Lowell last Saturday evening. First he celebrated the 4 o’clock Mass at the Immaculate Conception Parish. The Immaculate  happens to be my parish -  Bill and I attended the Mass and the D’Youville event.

The Cardinal writes:

I spent Saturday evening in Lowell, where I celebrated Mass at Immaculate Conception Parish.

The vigil Mass at Immaculate Conception was in the lower church, since they are in the process of renovating the upper church.

Father Nick Sannella is doing an extraordinary job in that parish.

The church is a cathedral-like structure, a real monument and landmark in Lowell, and he has been working very hard to restore the church.

We look forward to going back for the rededication of the upper church.

They had a wonderful children’s choir at Saturday’s Mass made up of children from the parish school as well as the CCD program. They sang beautifully.

We had a very full church with a lot of enthusiasm. The people have obvious great affection for their pastor and the wonderful job he is doing.

The photo of the Immaculate was taken by Corey Scuito in the Spring of 2008 – passers-by will note the scaffolding surrounding the ediface these days as part of the restoration project. The roots of Immaculate Conception Parish go back to the arrival of the Oblates of Mary Immaculate in Lowell in 1868. Read more Parish history here.

The Cardinal later attended the 50th anniversary celebration of D’Youville Senior Care – originally known as D’Youville Manor – at the UML Inn & Conference Center along with over 400 other celebrants.  In his remarks he noted not only the D’Youville anniversary but the national Blue Ribbon education award given to Ste. Jeanne d’Arc School in Lowell whose prinicpal Sr. Priscille Malo is also a driving force with D’Youville and  Lowell native Sr. Pauline LeBlanc, Provincial of the Sisters of Charity of Ottawa and her work in both the Lowell community and in Papaua New Guinea. It was certainly “hats off” to the Grey Nuns serving Lowell in so many ways for over 125 years.

November 6th, 2010

Poems for Daylight Savings

by PaulM

From the NYTimes website, here are several poems in which the writers speak to the daylight savings time experience.  It’s a big deal when the NYT gives this kind of premium space to poets. The contributors are well known.

November 6th, 2010

Primary Head Start Architect Dies But Leaves His Mark

by Marie

The New York Times notes the passing onTuesday of Jule Sugarman – the primary architect of the 45-year old Head Start program.

Jule Sugarman, a primary architect of Head Start, the federal support program for millions of poor preschoolers, died Tuesday at his home in Seattle. He was 83

Mr. Sugarman, who also ran the program for most of its first five years, was executive secretary of the 13-member commission that planned Head Start in 1964 after President Lyndon B. Johnson declared his War on Poverty. Five-year-olds “are inheritors of poverty’s curse and not its creators,” the president said in introducing Head Start.

“Unless we act,” he added, “these children will pass it on to the next generation like a family birthmark.”

Yasmina Vinci, executive director of the National Head Start Association commented that:

“It’s the execution that counts, and the execution that makes it enduring. The proof that Jule did a great job is the fact that it has lasted for 45 years and 27 million children and families have had their lives transformed.”

Locally, the regional community action agency Community Teamwork, Inc. (CTI) has administered the Head Start program since its inception in 1965. Currently, CTI provides high quality  programming for nearly 700 children in Head Start and Early Head Start services. The program is based in the James Houlares Early Learning Center – a state-of -the-art facility on Phoenix Avenue in Lowell. For more information on the CTI programs check here at: http://www.comteam.org/headstart.htm.

Read the full NY Times article here.

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November 6th, 2010

For Perspective: A Big Picture

by PaulM

Cliff on right-side-of-lowell has a new link to a blog by freelance reporter Michael Yon in the AfPak zone that includes a new stunning photograph of Mount Everest. Yon made a side trip to the Himalayas. Here’s the link to see the image.

November 6th, 2010

Judyann Lamothe of the Community

by PaulM

For today’s paper, Sun reporters Andrea Gregory and John Collins wrote a moving account of the last hours of Lowell resident Judyann Lamothe’s life and gave readers a sense of her short life, including the brights spots and challenges. She was from my neighborhood, someone who lived at Bishop Markham Village. A tragic accident ended her life. Events like these make us stop to think about what’s important and about life’s baffling patterns. Read the article here.

November 6th, 2010

Textile Museum Honors Brenda Costello & Turns 50

by PaulM

A few hundred generous donors and friends of the American Textile History Museum last night gathered to recognize the extraordinary community service and leadership contributions of Brenda Costello. At the same time, the museum marked its first 50 years in the Merrimack Valley.

A good measure of the success of a party is the level of conversational buzz. Last night, the musuem had a loud crowd at the Vesper Country Club along the Merrimack. The annual gala has become one of the region’s better benefit events, and among the crowd were past recipients of the community service award: Nancy Donahue, George and Carol Duncan, Michael Creasey, Congresswoman Niki Tsongas, and others.

Lowell Nat’l Hist. Park Superintendent Creasey made a bee-line to the event in his veteran Volvo from the Big Apple, where he’s begun his four-month shift overseeing a cluster of Park sites in and around NYC. The night before he’d been at a major event in the Great Hall at Ellis Island. He got out of town as preparations for Sunday’s New York City Marathon were reaching a peak.

Many of the party-goers could not stop smiling about Congresswoman Tsongas’s re-election on Tuesday. They clapped and cheered every time her name was mentioned by the master of ceremonies, museum director Jim Coleman. The Congresswoman was there to present the award to her long-time friend, whose work with Girls Inc., MRT, the $4 million scholarship fund for Lowell High School, and other causes have earned her the enormous respect that led to the evening’s tribute.

Brenda Costello accepted the award in great spirit and much humility, saying she sees herself as a representative of the kind of community-minded people who were gathered around her. She spoke of her deep affection for her native city and urged everyone to help bring along a new generation of leaders and volunteers who will keep the city and its many institutions and organizations moving forward. (I’m glad to add that Brenda is a fellow graduate of the master’s program in Community Social Psychology at UMass Lowell.) She recalled the first grant given from the Women Working Wonders fund at the Greater Lowell Community Foundation, a grant to a group of women from the Lowell Transitional Living Center. She said that’s what it’s all about— encouraging and helping people and making life a little better for others.

Before the dinner, a silent auction of an array of goods, services, and experiences drew plenty of bidding. A certain editor was rumored to be working hard to remain the top bidder for a day in Washington, D.C., with our U.S. Representative. I wasn’t there for the final tally on bids. Another hot item was a beach scene painting by Tom Gill, a resident of Western Avenue Studios, and one of the first artists to join the Brush Gallery and Studios in the early 1980s. Several people competed for a Janet Lambert-Moore water-colored print of the museum building.

I mentioned there was a lot of talking. The best gossip item? Don’t ask me who told me, but mega-successful author Dan Brown, who lives on the New Hampshire coast, is telling people that he is back in the writing groove and working on a new book.

Other news, to me, is that the Textile Museum is planning a large Civil War-themed exhibition for 2012 and already has a $70,000 planning grant in play. The staff applied for a $200,000-plus National Endowment for the Humanities grant for exhibit development, which they will hear about in a couple of months. The current Bloomingdale collection haute couture show has bumped up museum visitation considerably. And a new curator will join the museum staff next week.