Archive for December 4th, 2010

December 4th, 2010

Travel by Bookstore in San Francisco

by PaulM

The NYTimes today has a long travel article about the bookstore culture in San Francisco with the expected mention of Lowell’s Jack Kerouac. Read the article here, and get the NYT if you want more.

December 4th, 2010

UMass Lowell Women Are Nat’l Champs of Field Hockey!

by PaulM

Completing a 24-0 undefeated season, the UMass Lowell field hockey team today beat Shippensburg 1-0 to win the NCAA Championship in Kentucky. They are the Division II National Champs. Read the UMass Lowell Athletics Dept. report on the game here.

Web photo courtesy of UMass Lowell Athletics

December 4th, 2010

Lowell Blogger Meet Up a Big Success

by DickH

Thanks to everyone who gathered at Top Donut this morning for our Blogger Meet Up. To those who couldn’t make it, don’t worry: everyone who was there wants to do it again, so maybe you’ll make it next time. As I’ve written before, Greater Lowell has a very active online community. Participants in the blogosphere easily make friends online, so it was great to meet everyone in person in such a relaxed setting.

December 4th, 2010

What Did I See @ the Meet-Up?

by PaulM

This morning’s bloggers’ meet-up at Top Donut in Centralville exceeded my expectations. People arrived before 9 a.m., and the crowd grew to about 50, according to Dick’s count. It was a high spirited bunch of writers, readers, photographers, designers, and comment-makers. People stayed until almost 11.30 a.m., well past the posted wrap-up time. I was also glad to see how busy the donut shop was without our group. The walk-in and drive-up business was steady all morning. All Lowell businesses would be doing well at that pace.

I think the most active blogs were all represented, including the City Life LTC video bloggers, with John M on hand. Dick used his phone to make a video record of the event, so I’ll let him show who was on hand. I met a man from Tyngsboro who wanted to tell me how much he appreciated my post in favor of preserving the Pawtucket Falls Dam. I learned from Alex and Anne R that UMass Lowell students “blog” via Facebook and are less interested in the now-traditional type blogging that I’m doing now. I talked to Corey S about the car-wreck-appeal of the anonymous blogging/mugging via Topix on the Sun site. There was a sidebar conversation with Phil L and Allegra W about organizing a short-form video contest for Lowell videos as part of the “Lowell 175″ celebration planned for 2011-12 in honor of the city’s 175th anniversary. I met Sopheak S, one of the activists from www.fobclothing.com  at Western Ave Studios, who told me about the group’s “premier urban t-shirt line.” I learned that Lynne L is teaching in the Business of Music program at UMass Lowell, which I should have known, being in the same building.

Mark L told me he’s careful about what he eats, but that once in a while he gets the marshmallow donut at Top Donut, which he says is the best flavor and may be the closest thing to the legendary marshmallow donuts at the old, original Eat-a-Donut on School Street. When I was a kid, my father would drive our family from Dracut to the donut shop on a Sunday afternoon to get a fresh dozen (12 always meant 13 there), which we would of course begin to eat in the car. I always chose marshmallow.

People had a lot to say, and they enjoyed seeing one another after so much interaction online. The virtual community became an actual community for a few hours. There was a camaraderie among people involved in a joint enterprise in its pioneering phase in Lowell. This is all relatively new and evolving. We’ll see what’s next.

December 4th, 2010

‘Hey Jude’ in Trafalgar Square (via T-Mobile)

by PaulM

Next week will mark 30 years since the death of John Lennon, so it’s worth reflecting on the lasting goodness of his legacy as an artist and the endurance of The Beatles’ music. T-Mobile in April 2009 organized a meet-up/flash mob in Trafalgar Square, London, for a “Hey Jude” sing-along. People were told it would be a dance event, but were surprised when they arrived. Here’s the video, forwarded to us by one of our regular readers, John Wooding.

(web photo courtesy of saatchikevin.com)

December 4th, 2010

Poetry Benefit for the People of Haiti

by PaulM
One of our regular readers forwarded this notice about a poetry benefit event in Cambridge. Some of the poets involved have read recently in Lowell at the Kerouac Literary Festival and Massachusetts Poetry Festival. Sales of the anthology will support the work of Partners in Health in Haiti, which was founded by Paul Farmer and is now led by executive director Ophelia Dahl, one of the readers at the Dec. 8 event.—PM

A Benefit Poetry Reading and Book Launching

Poets for Haiti: An Anthology of Poetry and Artwork

Wednesday, December 8th, 7:00 p.m.
Porter Square Books
Porter Square Shopping Center
25 White Street, Cambridge

Please join Porter Square Books, Partners in Health, and Whole Foods for a very special evening of poetry.  Reading this evening will be: Robert Pinsky, Daniel Tobin, Fred Marchant, Marilene Phipps-Kettlewell,  Tom Daley,  with Ophelia Dahl.

Six weeks after the city of Port-au-Prince was brought to its knees by one of the most destructive earthquakes on record – 18 remarkable writers including Robert Pinksy, Rosanna Warren, and Gail Mazur, joined together at Harvard University campus and demonstrated the power of the spoken word. That benefit reading was a vital and galvanizing event, and this anthology, Poets for Haiti, has been created to capture some of the magic that was sparked that night. With stunning artwork by some of Haiti’s most prominent visual artists, the volume is itself a work of art. All proceeds from the sale of this anthology will go to Partners in Health to benefit the people of Haiti. 
December 4th, 2010

Lowell, Lawrence and Haverhill Back on Globe Santa’s Gift List

by Marie

A week or so ago Bill Kirk of the Eagle-Tribune told Merrimack Valley residents in need in the communities of Lowell, Lawrence and Haverhill, the the Globe Santa Fund had stricken them from the annual “gift” list. This ruling would have affected over 30,000 families in need. See our post here.

Kirk tells us in today’s Eagle-Tribune that the decision has been reversed.

Citing a shortfall in donations and an increase in need, Powers (Bob Powers, Globe vice president of marketing and communications) said last month that the Globe couldn’t afford to buy presents for those Merrimack Valley families.

But on Thursday, Powers said in an e-mail to The Eagle-Tribune that “we are able to restore the Globe Santa program in Lowell. Lawrence and Haverhill.”

He said the initial decision to cut gifts to Lowell, Lawrence and Haverhill an “extremely difficult decision for us to make, and understandably since our announcement we have received many heartfelt requests to reconsider.”

A letter will be sent out shortly to eligible families from the Department of Transitional Assistance, informing them of the decision to restore Globe Santa, Powers said.

“We are excited to report that despite the shortage of funding from donations, The Boston Globe will restore the Globe Santa program to the best of our abilities in the Lowell, Lawrence, and Haverhill area,” the letter says. “However, if you would like to apply for Globe Santa gifts, time is of the essence. … Requests for Globe Santa received after December 15 cannot be fulfilled. … We hope that the restoration of Globe Santa in your area can help make your holidays brighter.”

My guess is that longtime Globe Santa Fund supporters in the Merrimack Valley mounted a protest over the decision to by-pass these three cities. The reader consensus must have made “checking it twice” a better option -the Globe “marketing” VP knew the reversal had to be made. Good marketing politics prevailed for the good of thousands of Valley families.

Read the full article here in the Eagle-Tribune. Note is also taken by the Lowell SUN in today’s edition.

December 4th, 2010

From the Pilot Catholic News: The Light Is On For You – Redeux

by Marie

In this week’s edition of the AB official newspaper The Pilot, the Archdiocese of Boston has announced the return of  “The Light Is On For You” –  a weekly Sacrament of Reconciliation initiative begun in Lent and  now being broadened into the Advent season.

As part of the Lenten initiative, Cardinal O’Malley asked every church and chapel of the Archdiocese of Boston to be open Wednesday evenings for private confessions. This Advent season, every church and chapel  (my bold) will be open on Dec. 15 and 22 from 6:30 p.m. to 8 p.m.

 

There is an official website for this initiative – http://www.thelightisonforyou.org/.  Click on the site  for tips for confession, guides for the examination of conscience, reflections on the value of the sacrament and parish resources for promoting the initiative. The site launched in Lent was recently updated and includes a link to the Pilot Parish Finder.  A particular feature of the ParishFinder is a map of the Archdiocese with a series of “church”  icons that pinpoint the location of each Catholic Church.

To help as many Catholics as possible participate in this program, the archdiocese’s Pilot Media Group has developed PilotParishFinder.com, a website and iPhone application that will assist Catholics in locating churches around the archdiocese.

Read the full article here  on TheBostonPilot.com website.

 
December 4th, 2010

Merrimack Valley State Senators Lauded As They Retire

by Marie

Stories in Friday’s Boston Globe, Lowell Sun and Eagle-Tribune cover the final plaudits and and farewell speeches of eight retiring members of the Masachusetts State Senate - two represent the Merrimack Valley and one has connections … State Senator Steven Panagiotakos of Lowell, State Senator Sue Tucker of Andover and State Senator Rob O’Leary raised in Lowell.

From Senator Steven Panagiotakos in the Lowell SUN:

In a heartfelt address, Panagiotakos focused on his constituents. It was helping a student get into college, an unemployed person land a job, or a grandparent find a nursing home that gave him the most fulfillment.

“I always told my staff that for someone to call my office, it’s got to be pretty damned important to them, so it had better be pretty damned important to us,” said Panagiotakos.

From Senator Sue Tucker in the Eagle-Tribune:

In closing, she said, “I know some of you have been through such tough races, just stay close to the people who sent you here. Try to look at things through their lenses. So hard when you get under this golden dome, the people you represent feel so far away. I hope I have been a small part of your lives, because you have been a huge part of my life.”

From Senator Rob O’Leary noted in the Globe:

“I’ve come to know the good and bad of both state and federal campaigns and elections,’’ said Robert A. O’Leary, a Barnstable Democrat who ran unsuccessfully for the 10th Congressional District. “I’ll miss the good, but I’m happy to say goodbye to the bad.’’

The most powerful conflict in politics today is not between liberals and conservatives, O’Leary said, but “between idealism and cynicism, between those who embrace public service and those who want to denigrate it.’’

In case you missed them – read the Globe story here;  read the SUN story here; read the Eagle-Tribune story here.

December 4th, 2010

Timothy Egan Sizes Up Hitchens & Richards

by PaulM

NYTimes op-ed contributor Timothy Egan sizes up the memoirs of author/political commentator Christopher Hitchens and musician Keith Richards. Read his column here, and get the NYT if you want more.