Archive for November 24th, 2010

November 24th, 2010

President Obama’s Photographer Profiled on PBS

by PaulM

I just watched a wonderful documentary on PBS about the offical photographer of President Obama, Pete Souza, whose work was captured by a National Geographic Society team for about a year, culminating in the passage of the health care reform bill last spring. The program offers a look inside the Obama White House and manages to convey the humanity and decency of everyone involved. All the President’s fiercest critics should chill out and watch this TV program; they might wind up having a little more respect for the man. Check listings for repeat showings or look for it On Demand.  See more about the program here on the pbs.com site.

November 24th, 2010

‘The Fighter’ to Premiere in Lowell

by PaulM

Regular reader and contributor Patty Coffey sent this from the Sun’s breaking news site. Get the Sun if you value the reporting:

http://www.lowellsun.com/breakingnews/ci_16702259

LOWELL — Roll out the red carpet.

After weeks of negotiations, Lowell has landed a premiere showing of the highly anticipated Micky Ward biopic The Fighter on Thursday, Dec. 9, one day before the movie hits theaters nationwide. . . .

Read more: http://www.lowellsun.com/breakingnews/ci_16702259#ixzz16Fi7Tph1

November 24th, 2010

Forget Football for Five Minutes (see below)

by PaulM

The Globe and boston.com are running a series that’s a lot of fun. Chad Finn is presenting his favorite Topps baseball cards a five-pack at a time in synch with Topps’ 60th anniversary effort to identify its top 60 cards since 1952. See installment two today, and click the first installment link at bottom.

williamsted1105.jpg

Tags:
November 24th, 2010

‘Kicking the Leaves’ by Donald Hall

by PaulM

I was out with our family’s Boston Terrier this morning, kicking through the leaves on the South Common, and thought of this poem. Here’s an exerpt from New Hampshire poet Donald Hall’s poem “Kicking the Leaves.” Click here to read the entire poem.—PM

Kicking the Leaves (an excerpt)

. . .

Kicking the leaves today, as we walk home together
from the game, among the crowds of people
with their bright pennants, as many and bright as leaves,
my daughter’s hair is the red-yellow color
of birch leaves, and she is tall like a birch,
growing up, fifteen, growing older; and my son
flamboyant as maple, twenty,
visits from college, and walks ahead of us, his step
springing, impatient to travel
the woods of the earth. Now I watch them
from a pile of leaves beside this clapboard house
in Ann Arbor, across from the school
where they learned to read,
as their shapes grow small with distance, waving,
and I know that I
diminish, not them, as I go first
into the leaves, taking
the way they will follow, Octobers and years from now.

. . .

Now in fall, I leap and fall
to feel the leaves crush under my body, to feel my body
buoyant in the ocean of leaves, the night of them,
night heaving with death and leaves, rocking like the ocean.
Oh this delicious falling into the arms of leaves,
into the soft laps of leaves!
Face down, I swim into the leaves, feathery,
breathing the acrid odor of maple, swooping
in long glides to the bottom of October —
where the farm lies curled against the winter, and soup steams
its breath of onion and carrot
onto damp curtains and windows; and past the windows
I see the tall bare maple trunks and branches, the oak
with its few brown weathery remnant leaves,
and the spruce trees, holding their green.
Now I leap and fall, exultant, recovering
from death, on account of death, in accord with the dead,
the smell and taste of leaves again,
and the pleasure, the only long pleasure, of taking a place
in the story of leaves.

.

—Donald Hall (c) 1978

November 24th, 2010

“In Living Color” Thanksgiving

by Tony

Warning: This is a little gross by absolutely hilarious…

Damon Wayans and Jim Carrey wish you a Happy Thanksgiving.

November 24th, 2010

Stained glass at Pollard Memorial Library

by DickH

Tony Sampas shows us two of the incredible stained glass windows in our city’s Pollard Memorial Library

UPDATE: Tony sent along the following information about these two windows

From the Pollard’ website: “Altogether a creditable building” boasted a local newspaper when Lowell’s Memorial Building opened in 1893… A disastrous fire in 1915 nearly destroyed this beautiful building, and left the Memorial Hall a blackened ruin. Immediately the city began to rebuild. Frederick W. Stickney, architect of the original structure, planned the reconstruction of Memorial Hall…The eight original leaded glass commemorative windows were reproduced, at a cost of $1,475.”

My guess is that the first image is of the archangel Gabriel and the second (with the shield) is the Greek goddess Athena.

November 24th, 2010

Airport Security

by DickH

Today is known as the busiest travel day of the year. I’m thankful that my journey, such as it is, will be by automobile and not by airplane. All the recent furor about enhanced pre-boarding searches at airports leaves me frustrated.

Just eleven months ago, on Christmas Day 2009, 23-year old named Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab boarded Northwest flight 253 in Amsterdam bound for Detroit. Sewn into his underwear was a six-inch long packet of plastic explosives, enough to destroy the aircraft and all on it. But for the failure of his detonator, that’s what would have happened.

Now the Transportation Security Administration has deployed full-body scanners that yield a silhouette of the body of the person being scanned, ignoring clothes but detecting any “anomalies” such as quantity of plastic explosives. If the scanner is unavailable or if the passenger refuses to be scanned, the passenger is “patted down” by a TSA agent. Not surprisingly, the areas searched include the spot where Mr. Abdulmutallab hid his bomb.

I don’t fly very much, only a couple of times each year, so I haven’t experienced these new searches first hand. Even so, I find the furor that has arisen over these searches both incredible and incredibly disheartening. Hiding a bomb in one’s underwear is not some fanciful fiction – the bad guys have already tried it. To avoid taking steps needed to prevent that from happening again would seem especially reckless, so why all the fuss?