Archive for May 15th, 2011

May 15th, 2011

Congresswoman Giffords Gets Fly-By View of Endeavour

by MarieS

From Florida Today this story:

Today at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida: U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, the wife of Endeavour commander Mark Kelly, has arrived at Kennedy Space Center to watch Monday morning’s launch, her staff has reported.

“Gabrielle landed safely in Florida. Smooth flight with STS 134 astronaut Greg Johnson’s family,” read the post on the Arizona congresswoman’s Facebook page, which includes a dramatic aerial photo of Endeavour on its pad (left). “Thanks to NASA for great fly by of launch pad.”

“Glad to have you here,” KSC staff said via Twitter.

May 15th, 2011

This Is Interesting

by PaulM

In a season of commencement speeches, here’s a memorable bit of speechifying from the world of movies: Network

Actor Peter Finch in the film “Network,” a role for which he won an Oscar.

May 15th, 2011

‘On the Road’ Film News Update in Variety

by PaulM

Film distributors far and wide are signing deals to show the film adaptaton of Jack Kerouac’s  “On the Road” in their countries. No US distributor yet, oddly enough. Read the update in the entertainment industry sheet Variety, picked up from Tess A. on Facebook.

May 15th, 2011

She Made A Difference – Mary J. Bacigalupo Awards Tomorrow Night

by Marie

*

Noted in today’s Lowell Sun about an event scheduled for tomorrow night – The Lowell Citywide Parent Council will host its Mary J. Bacigalupo “You Make a Difference” Awards Night on Monday at the Stoklosa Middle School, 560 Broadway St., at 7:30 p.m.

Who is Mary J. Bacigalupo?
Back in 2000, Community Teamwork Inc. honored Mary Bacigalupo (1942-2001) as a Local Hero – a tribute that aptly capped-off her twenty-five years of community work in Lowell. Her vision, energy, compassion and generosity helped move forward a process of community change that uimproved the quality of life for countless people, both young and older, in the city. She was so connected to her city! Her educational, civic and community activities included everthing from the Citywide Parent Council, the Greater Lowell Community Foundation and Human Services Corporation to the Lowell Cultural Plan, Family First Night, Lowell: the Flowering City, the Lowell Model for Excellence in Education, the Pollard Memorial Library Board of Trustees, Small Grants for Teachers, the Parish of St. Michael’s in Lowell and so much more. In 1998, she scripted, directed and inspired Lowell’s award-winning entry in the All-America City competition. An educator, social worker, writer, mentor and committed activist, her work was both public and private – much beyond what we will ever know.

Mary had a way with words. One of my favorite Mary B comments is: “We are urban gardners and tinkerers. You can make a difference by changing how people feel about themselves, but your work is never done.” Good words for the award recipients to take to heart. Mary B words for the Lowell community to remember: “Lowell draws its power from the diverse streams that flow together as one.”

Mary was a friend and mentor to me… I’ll always remember. Congratulations to those to be honored in her name.

Read the full “You Make a Difference” awards artcile here in the Lowell Sunday SUN: http://www.lowellsun.com/schools/ci_18068329

Note: The picture above is the stone dedicating a downtown Lowell garden to Mary B.

Mary J. Bacigalupo Victorian Garden

*The Mary J. Bacigalupo Victorian Garden is dedicated to the memory of Mary J. Bacigalupo a well-known community advocate and educator who loved gardening. This garden is supported by the Bacigalupo family. Community Gardens Greenhouse personnel help to maintain the garden.

May 15th, 2011

Dylan…and Kerouac…in China (Bob’s Report)

by PaulM
Bob Dylan on stage in Beijing, April 2011
Web photo courtesy of bbc.co.uk

bbc.co.uk today reports that Bob Dylan via his website has responded to critics who claim he submitted to Chinese political censors’ demands and sent authorities the list of songs he planned to play on a recent visit there. Dylan stated that he played everything he “intended” to play and gives the background on the set lists provided before the performance. He also mentioned that his concert was framed in the Chinese media as a performance by one of the rebellious figures of the 1960s, including Jack Kerouac. Read the complete article here. 

Dylan wrote:

“The Chinese press did tout me as a sixties icon, however, and posted my picture all over the place with Joan Baez, Che Guevara, Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg,” he wrote on his website.

“The concert attendees probably wouldn’t have known about any of those people.

“Regardless, they responded enthusiastically to the songs on my last 4 or 5 records. Ask anyone who was there. They were young and my feeling was that they wouldn’t have known my early songs anyway.”

By the way, Dylan played his first concert in Vietnam today on the other side of the date line. Read the report on bbc.co.uk here. The concert at a university drew 8,000 people.

“Bob Dylan’s music opened up a path where music was used as a weapon to oppose the war in Vietnam and fight injustice and racism,” Tran Long An, 67, vice-president of the Vietnam Composers’ Association told AP.

And here’s an advance Happy Birthday! to Bob Dylan, who will turn 70 on May 24.

Final note: In a recent Rolling Stone magazine poll of “musicians, writers, and academics,” Dylan’s song “Like a Rolling Stone” was ranked the best and most important song he has composed and recorded.

May 15th, 2011

Lowell Historical Society Annual Meeting today

by DickH

The Lowell Historical Society will hold its annual meeting today. The meeting itself begins at 1 pm, but it will be followed at 1:30 pm by a public program on “Civil War Stories” about Lowell. This program will consist of a panel discussion featuring Jack Herlihy of the Lowell National Historical Park, Martha Mayo of the UMass Lowell Center for Lowell History, and me. Each of us will share several stories about little known or little appreciated Civil War era people and events related to the city.

The meeting and the program are both open to the public and will be held at Middlesex Community College’s Federal Building at 50 Kearney Square.

May 15th, 2011

“Doors Open Lowell” a big success

by DickH

The Middlesex Superior Courthouse in Lowell was one of 31 historic buildings open to the public this weekend during Doors Open Lowell. With nearly 60 people visiting the courthouse between 10 am and 1 pm, the event was a huge success from our perspective. An informal survey disclosed that the visitors were split 50-50 between Lowell residents and visitors from nearby suburbs, with folks from Lexington, Mass and Nashua, NH being the visitors from the most distant locations.

For the event, we set up a museum-like display of historic photos and documents of the registry, the courthouse, and the people who have used them through the years within the registry space. Once a group of visitors would congregate, I would then lead them on a tour of the interior the building. Of the six tours conducted, the largest group was 20 and the smallest (right at the end) was two. The highlights of the tour were seeing the interior to the two stately courtrooms, seeing the exact location where multiple scenes from “The Fighter” were filmed, and getting an overall appreciation of the magnificent interior architectural details of the nineteenth century building.

That last point would more accurately be “buildings” since the story of the construction of the courthouse is perhaps most fascinating of all. For those unfamiliar with the tale, the original courthouse, a three-story, red brick, Romanesque-revival structure was constructed in 1848, a little more than 20 years after Lowell’s incorporation as a town and ten years after its becoming a city. That building was constructed right along Gorham Street where the entrance to the present courthouse is now located. In 1894, the Middlesex County Commissioners voted to enlarge the courthouse. Rather than add onto the back of the existing structure, they decided to move that structure – all three stories of it – backwards a distance of 60 feet and to build the addition in front of it. According to an article in the August 31, 1894 edition of the Lowell Daily Courier, the original building was propped up on 800 jacks and then other jacks were used to propel the building backward. It moved at an inch an hour and “progress was so slow and steady that work continued in the registry of deeds as before.” By my calculations, if they worked for 12 hours each day and they moved it one inch each hour, that would mean they covered one foot each day. Working seven days per week, it would take two months to cover that distance. The entire project took four years to complete, for the dedication exercises of the new courthouse (shown above) were held in September 1898.

Today, those who work inside the courthouse have heard this tale so often that the magnitude of this engineering accomplishment is sometimes lost on us. Seeing the looks of amazement on the faces of our visitors yesterday when they heard this story was a refreshing reminder of the fascinating history of this building.