Archive for February 3rd, 2011

February 3rd, 2011

In the Merrimack Valley: Eagle-Tribune Photo Goes Global

by Marie

Readers of the Eagle-Tribune I’m sure weren’t surprised to see the stunning photo of an accident scene on Rte. 93 yesterday “go global.” The image of the car involved in the storm-related accident actually standing on its nose at the side of the highway – in both video and photos - taken by Eagle-Tribune photographer Tim Jean circulated widely in print and online and last night was part of NBC’s Nightly News. Fortunately, the drive escaped unhurt.

A 41-year-old Derry woman experienced a close call about 9:30 a.m. Tuesday, when her car slid off the highway and down a slight embankment. Instead of coming to a stop at the bottom of the 8-foot embankment or overturning, the car rose into the air and its front-end became stuck in 3 feet of snow.

Read the entire article about the accident here in today’s Eagle Tribune.

February 3rd, 2011

Out of service

by DickH

The swing in this photo by Tony Sampas appears to be temporarily out of service.

February 3rd, 2011

richardhowe.com featured on national travel site

by DickH

Last week our “Fighter” location map was featured on the Channel 5 news segment about the Oscar nominations for the filmed-in-Lowell movie, “The Fighter.” This week, Gadling, a national travel blog, includes the map on a post titled “A Travel Guide to the 2011 Oscar Movies”.

For those of you unfamiliar with Gadling, here’s how it describes itself:

Gadling is the world’s top travel blog, written and edited by passionate travelers and writers. Covering fun, interesting, and relevant travel, Gadling is the premiere source for everything from general travel news to highly specific travel tips, from budget travel to adventure travel — and for everything in between

In a post that makes recommendations about traveling to the locations of various Oscar-nominated films, Gadling says this about “The Fighter”:

The Fighter – Location: in the grand tradition of Oscar winners Good Will Hunting and The Departed, the Mark Wahlberg boxing flick was filmed in Massachusetts, in Micky Ward’s real hometown of Lowell, 30 miles north of Boston. Go there: For a map of locations in Lowell, check out this blog post and perhaps spot Micky Ward at the West End Gym

And of course, the link is to a recent blog post on this site that contained “The Fighter” map. Perhaps we’ll have our own segment on the Oscar telecast.

Thanks to reader John B for passing along the Gadling link.

February 3rd, 2011

African violence against women brought home at Huntington Theatre by Marjorie Arons-Barron

by Tony

The entry below is being cross posted from Marjorie Arons-Barron’s own blog. Check it out.

Last week’s referendum on South Sudan may provide a respite in the stories of one of the most savage and dehumanizing conflicts in Sub Saharan Africa, but we must not turn away from the uncomfortable news that persists elsewhere on that continent. The current Huntington Theatre production delivers this message in a most disturbing way.

Lynn Nottage’s Pulitzer Prize-winning play Ruined illuminates the horror of how cheap the life of women is in the war-torn Democratic Republic of Congo, where “rape has become a weapon of war.” The production is a result of her interviews with war refugees from Congo, Sudan and Somalia. The powerful acting drives home to the audience the unspeakable brutality that girls and women suffer at the hands of both sides of African conflicts, no matter who may prevail from one day to the next. Nearly 20,000 U.N. “peacekeepers” are unable to secure the peace, much less keep it.

Rape, it is said, is cheaper than bullets. And, when girls and women survive the unspeakable brutalizing, their families refuse to take them back in. The setting is a bar/brothel in a small mining town in a rain forest. The owner, Mama Nadi played superbly by Tonye Patano, is herself a “ruined” woman who has somehow survived the horror of having her own body ravaged by setting up this micro-business. She insists she is saving the girls who work for her from the worse horror of being raped repeatedly by government militia or rebels roaming the jungle, but clearly she is also exploiting these teenagers. And yet at least she cares about them, trying to protect them from the worst violence, trying, unsuccessfully as it turns out, to arrange medical help for one of the “ruined” girls.

According to director Liesl Tommy’s notes, “200,000 females have been reported raped in the past decade” in just the eastern part of the Congo. One of the causes of the deadly fighting is to determine who will have access to coltan, a metal necessary to the manufacture of cell phones and computer chips. Eighty percent of the world’s supply of coltan is in the Congo. The play’s point is that we all, as consumers of electronics, are linked to this brutal war, whether we know it or not.

And we know it better as a result of “Ruined,” which runs through February 7th at the Huntington.  Without giving away the ending, I will point out that the play does end on a note of hope. Playwright Tommy said in a Globe interview that “The ability to find ‘the joy in the tragedy,’ is extremely African.” It is also a slim reed on which to survive.

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

February 3rd, 2011

Methuen Mount Loop

by Tony

Sure the snow has made it tough here in Lowell, but check this video out, shot on the other side of the Merrimack Valley (Methuen) and posted on YouTube by The Eagle Tribune.

February 3rd, 2011

Green Bay for the Sake of Starr

by PaulM

I’m going with the Packers on Sunday because they were my favorite team when I was a kid. Quarterback Bart Starr was my favorite player. He was very effective but not flashy, and the steady, determined leader of a team that would find a way to win. The cards shown here are 1964 (top) and 1968 (bottom), which were my peak years of collecting. Like every other American male born between 1946 and 1960 (approx.), I can report losing a shoebox-ful of precious bubble-gum cards to some fit of cleaning or thinking I was too old for that stuff, so these cards are not from my collection. I had a bunch of old Packers, though, including Jim Taylor, Paul Hornung, Boyd Dowler, Max McGee, Forrest Gregg, Henry Jordan, Willie Wood, Jerry Kramer, and Jim Ringo. For a long time I saved a couple of big newsprint tablet drawings I’d made with crayons on my living room floor while watching the first Super Bowl on TV in 1967. I was 13 years old. Green Bay beat the K. C. Chiefs 35-10. The drawings also went into the trash.

In those days I had a t-shirt with the number 15 like Bart Starr. It was a thin, blue-and-white short-sleeved shirt from Stuart’s Department Store or maybe Beaver Brook Mills (not a fancy green-and-gold uniform shirt with a special NFL tag), which I wore over a sweatshirt when playing outside. Nothing was more fun than playing neighborhood football after school on a day when it was snowing just enough to make the grass crazy slippery on the farmer’s field at the top of Crosby Road. Usually we played touch football, but once in a while we’d play “tackle without equipment.” That was particularly wild in the snow. I don’t remember any broken arms or legs in all those years, and the hits were real hits.

Few of our neighborhood players were on town junior-league football teams, and nobody was on the high school football team, although several were good enough to have made it. We were a sub-neighborhood sports hotbed that ran four seasons: baseball, football, basketball, and hockey. When I say “we,” I mean guys and any girls who wanted to join in. Elaine Lacourse went on to become an excellent high-school athlete. Also, lucky for us, Elaine’s father built a hot-topped tennis court in the mid-’60s that gave us a chance to be tennis players in the days when Channel 2 would broadcast matches in black-and-white, featuring Australians like Rod Laver ( “A man hanging from a huge left arm,” said Bud Collins.). We were a youth sports militia organizing ourselves, and we didn’t need “no stinking uniforms or badges.”

We had our heroes back then, so I’ll be pulling for the Pack on Sunday.