Archive for March 28th, 2011

March 28th, 2011

Poet Tom Sexton Reading in Lowell: April 3 & April 4

by PaulM

Tom Sexton, a Lowell High graduate and Alumni Hall of Famer and former Poet Laureate of Alaska, will read from his work in progress, which is a collection of sonnets about growing up in Lowell in the 1940s and 50s. He will also read from his new book, “I Think Again of Those Ancient Chinese Poets,” a collection of eight-line poems, and discuss the craft of poetry.

Tom will appear in the Parker Lectures Series at Lowell National Historical Park Visitor Center, Market Mills, 246 Market Street, on Sunday, April 3 at 2 pm.

On Monday, April 4 at 3 pm, Tom will read at UMass Lowell in Coburn Hall, Room 205 (top floor), at the corner of Broadway and Wilder Street. He will also talk about his many years as poetry editor of The Alaska Quarterly Review.

Both readings are free and open to the public. Tom will sign books after the readings.

March 28th, 2011

Libyan strikes spur rampant ambivalence by Marjorie Arons-Barron

by Tony

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

I listen to Cong. Michael Capuano and Niki Tsongas criticize President Obama for not taking the Libyan military action to Congress and, as an old anti-Vietnam War activist, I applaud their stance. It’s hard not to be concerned that what starts out as a police action may suck us into something more prolonged, costing American lives, blood and national spirit. But, mindful of America’s failures to take action in the Rwandan genocide and even President Clinton’s slowness to take action in Kosovo, I find myself also joining those critical of President Obama for taking three weeks to participate militarily enforcing the Libyan no-fly zone.

Was he simply weighing American interests and his personal interest in the 2012 reelection campaign, or was he just hoping that the squirrelly Arab League and others wouldn’t get it together to get the United Nations to act, giving him cover?

So I look to the President’s scheduled speech to the nation tomorrow night to clarify just what is America’s policy in the fermenting Middle East generally, and what the end game is in Libya in particular. On the Sunday morning political affairs discussion programs, even Defense Secretary Bob Gates and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton were not exactly singing from the same hymnal regarding how vital Libya is to our vital national interest.

Clinton talked about the intervention as a way of keeping Ghaddafi’s military from killing civilians and preventing the bloodshed from driving refugees into the precarious environments of Egypt and Tunisia. In a Meet The Press roundtable discussion, Koppel pointed out the hypocrisy, saying our air action was the “humanitarian defense sweepstakes of 2011.”  Five million civilians were killed in the Congo, two to three million in the Sudan, and, he noted, the United States did nothing. Nearly a million refugees were driven out of the Ivory Coast, and the United States did nothing. We clearly pick and choose in what righteous cause to involve ourselves. Where is the guiding principle?

Our military is spread too thin already, which helps to explain why Obama wants others to take the lead and describes our expected presence as getting in and getting out. But it’s more than practicality that spurs our ambivalent position. Who are the rebels in Libya anyway? Whose cause are we backing? How many of the rebels are the same ones who joined Al Qaeda and went to Iraq to kill Americans? How many want to replace Ghaddfi with an anti-American Islamist state more sympathetic to Iranian interests? Who in the U.S. government has the answers to that? Will we hear those answers tomorrow night?

Barack Obama was the anti-war candidate in 2008. He can’t be happy about who he is now. And we can’t be entirely happy about what he is doing.

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

March 28th, 2011

Ben Butler saves Washington DC

by DickH

Thanks to everyone who attended yesterday’s lecture on “Lowell and the Coming of the Civil War.” While the riot in Baltimore on April 19, 1861 which cost the lives of Luther Ladd, Addison Whitney, Charles Taylor and Sumner Needham and left two dozen of their comrades in the Sixth Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry Regiment seriously wounded was a big part of the story, the events of the following week were also discussed.

The Sixth Regiment was the first organized and fully armed military unit to pass through Baltimore in response to President Lincoln’s call for 75,000 volunteer troops to put down the rebellion. Because Baltimore was essentially a southern city, dominated by those sympathetic to the Confederates, the passage of Northern troops through town, especially those from that hotbed of abolitionism Massachusetts, was an outrage. After the Sixth Regiment made it through town, the mayor and police chief of Baltimore decided to burn the railroad bridges north of the city to prevent any more troops from arriving, something they feared would precipitate even more rioting and damage to the city. Between the civil unrest and the destroyed bridges in an around Baltimore, the primary route to Washington from New England and the Atlantic states was blocked as of the evening of April 19.

The previous day, Confederate militia had captured the US Arsenal at Harper’s Ferry, Virginia. Besides providing the Confederates with thousands of rifles that were stored there, this also blocked the primary rail route into Washington from the northwest. On April 20, Confederate forces seized the Gosport Naval Yard, now known as the Norfolk Naval Shipyard, which at the time was the main base of the United States Navy. It’s capture handed the Confederates several ships, countless cannon, and tons of gunpowder and other munitions. Confederate control of Gosport also blocked the entrance to Chesapeake Bay, which was another possible route into Washington. read more »

March 28th, 2011

This Is Interesting: Local Manufacturing

by PaulM

If you’re interested in Lowell’s and the Merrimack Valley’s economic future, read this piece in the NYTimes today: Allison Arrief’s “The Future of Manufacturing is Local.”  If you want more of this kind of writing, get the NYT daily.

When Marie posted about the food company on Phoenix Avenue producing soups and more in large quantities for resale, I had a similar thought about the prospect of jobs and manufacturing locally. The Food sector seems like a promising one for places like Lowell. Look at the profitable hummus mine and bakery yielding great local products for Cedar’s (Ward Hill) and Joseph’s (Lawrence) in the Merrimack Valley. With our international culture in this region, shouldn’t we have a more robust local food manufacturing sector?

March 28th, 2011

Wild Turkeys in Wilmington

by Tony

OK, I agree, at this point we have all seem wild turkeys freely roaming around the Merrimack Valley, but this group filmed in an industrial park in Wilmington seems to be especially bold.

March 28th, 2011

The face on the facade of the Pollard Library

by DickH

One of the photographers at the Lowell High photo blog zoomed in on this face carved in the facade of the Pollard Memorial Library.

March 28th, 2011

Earth Day Coming Up

by PaulM
Save the Date!
 5th Annual FREE Earth Day Festival!
Hosted by Lowell’s Community Gardens Greenhouse

Sunday, April 17 | Noon to 4pm
Rain or Shine
  220 Aiken Street, Lowell
Lowell National Park Maintenance Site 

View/download the event flyer!
 
 

Free hands-on fun for the whole family!
* Create arts and crafts from the earth
* Participate in educational workshops
* Tour the greenhouseEarth Day box logo
* Learn about nature, gardening, and the environment
* Free plants, prize drawings, food, live entertainment, and more!

Find out about improving our environment through:
* Community Gardening
* Organic Agriculture
* Recycling
* Composting
* Canal Water Cleaning
* Plant-a-Row for the Hungry

 

 Earth Day Logos

Community Gardens Greenhouse is a not-for profit initiative, the beautification sub-committee of Keep Lowell Beautiful, dedicated to creating social change through the art of gardening and growing communities from the ground up.

Learn more about Community Gardens Greenhouse!  communitygardensgreenhouse.org

Get fresh, local produce, while supporting a new generation of local farmers
with the World PEAS CSA!

 A weekly farm-share with the World PEAS CSA combines produce grown by beginning, immigrant and refugee farmers enrolled in the New Entry Sustainable Farming Project, along with berries, melons, tree fruit, and sweet corn from other local farms.

Shares are delivered each week to several convenient pickup locations in:
Lowell  *  Dracut  *  Chinatown  *  Porter Square  *  Andover  *  Harvard University  *  Medford/Somerville  *  Charlestown   *  Bedford  *  Winchester  *  East Boston  *  Lexington  *  Burlington
 
Shares are limited so join SOON before they fill up!

 
 For more information or to register, see the brochure or visit www.worldpeascsa.org. You may also contact Matthew Himmel at mhimmel@comteam.org or call 978-654-6745.

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March 28th, 2011

UMass Lowell Robotics Lab

by Tony

The UMass Lowell Robotics Department created this video. It demonstrates a drone guided by a DREAM Controller. What’s a DREAM Controller? More explanation below.

This AR Drone is flown using the Dynamically Resizing Ergonomic and Multi-touch (DREAM) controller on the Microsoft Surface. The DREAM controller spawns when one or both hands are placed down, conforming to your hand size and position. There is full analog control with both hands for flight movement, as well as buttons to take off and land. The interface uses the Parrot AR Drone SDK to communicate with the AR Drone over ad-hoc WiFi.

This video was originally posted by UMLrobotics.