Archive for May 24th, 2011

May 24th, 2011

Our Next Blogger Meetup: June 9 at Gary’s Ice Cream

by DickH

Mark you calendars for the next gathering of the Greater Lowell blogosphere. It’s Thursday, June 9 from 6 pm till 8 pm at Gary’s Ice Cream, 131 Gorham Street (Rte 3A), East Chelmsford. Everyone – blog writers, commenters and readers as well as those on Facebook and Twitter are all invited to attend.

This will be the third such gathering and the first two – last August at Elliott’s Hot Dogs and this past December at Top Donut – were huge successes. We have no agenda, no schedule, no one in charge. Just show up, grab a hot dog, some chili, or dessert from Gary’s extensive selection of ice cream, and spend a couple of hours socializing with your fellow new media-ites from Greater Lowell.

Spread the word – everyone is invited.

May 24th, 2011

Memorial Day Weekend Schedule

by DickH

The Greater Lowell Veterans’ Council and its constituent organizations have a full schedule of activities over the upcoming Memorial Day weekend:

FRANCO-AMERICAN WAR VETERANS: Memorial Service; Sat., May 28th
@9:15am, MOH Joseph Ouellette Memorial Service @ St. Joseph’s Cemetery, Riverneck Rd., Chelmsford, MA

LOWELL VETERANS’ COUNCIL: Memorial Service, Sat. May 28th @ 10:15am, Ladd -Whitney (Front of Lowell City Hall) Reading of deceased. 11:00am @ Lowell Memorial Auditorium, East Merrimack St., Lowell, MA

MERRIMACK VALLEY VIETNAM VETERANS: Memorial Service, Sat. May 28th @ 2:00pm Veterans’ Park on North Rd. Chelmsford, MA

GREEK-AMERICAN LEGION – POST 1: Memorial Day Service. Sunday, May 29th.
Line up @ 12:30pm, Start @ 1:00pm. 228 Worthern St. Lowell

POLISH-AMERICAN VETERANS: Memorial Day Service. Sunday, May 29th @ 11:00am. Polish-American Post, 210 Coburn St. Lowell

KOREAN-WAR VETERANS: Memorial Day Service. Sunday, May 29th @1:30pm @ St. Joseph’s Cemetery ,Riverneck Rd. Chelmsford MA

Monday, May 30, Parade in Andover, MA @ 2:00pm; Memorial Day Parade in Tewksbury, MA

AMERICAN LEGION POST 313 + 312: Memorial Day Parade, Monday, May 30 in No. Chelmsford Center @ 10:00am.

AMERICAN LEGION POST 247: Memorial Day Service Pawtucket Blvd. May 30,Tyngsboro, MA – Old Town Hall Dedication at Veterans’ Stones 11:00am Parade (Essay awards at Post after Parade)

DRACUT AMERICAN LEGION: Memorial Day Parade, Monday, May 30 @ 11:00am start from Greenmont Ave. School, Dracut, MA

PORTUGUESE-AMERICAN VETERANS: Memorial Day Service, May 30–Mass @ 11:30am @ St. Anthony’s Church. Procession to Charles St.(tentative) Lowell

ARMENIAN-AMERICAN VETERANS: Memorial Day Service @ 8:00am. Veterans’ Breakfast at Radison Hotel, Chelmsford 9:00am Service at Grave sites of past Members.

VETERANS’ of ST. LOUIS PARISH: Memorial Day Service. Monday May 30th @ 9:00am @ Veterans’ Park, Ennell St. Lowell

May 24th, 2011

This Is Important: Manning Gift Yields $5 Million for UMass Lowell

by PaulM

Did I mention UMass Lowell alums Robert and Donna Manning and the $5 million for the development of a new home for Management studies: The Robert Manning School of Business? See below for another post with links to media articles. Robert Manning will be the Commencement speaker at the Tsongas Center on Saturday.

May 24th, 2011

On Bob Dylan’s 70th Birthday: A Film Clip from Lowell

by PaulM

Thanks to Lowell Celebrates Kerouac! on Facebook and the blog Reader’s Almanac of the Library of America for this film clip and commentary about Bob Dylan, Jack Kerouac, and Allen Ginsberg. The footage is from November 1975 in Edson Cemetery in Lowell, when Bob Dylan was in the city with his Rolling Thunder Revue for a concert at the brand new University of Lowell (now UMass Lowell). Here’s the link.

Bob Dylan and Allen Ginsberg at Jack Kerouac’s grave in Lowell’s Edson Cemetery (Photo by Ken Regan (c) 1975)

May 24th, 2011

Barney Frank’s back to his old self, provocative and, this time, unsettling by Marjorie Arons-Barron

by Tony

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

It was vintage Barney Frank at last Friday’s meeting of the New England Council. He was savagely funny, insightful, acerbic and provocative. This was particularly true when he discussed the federal deficit and lifting the debt ceiling, the deadline for which seems to have now been moved from May back to August. He ruffled more than a few feathers.

“The debt limit isn’t being raised as a favor to me,” the Fourth District Congressman scoffed, noting “I didn’t vote for what caused that deficit (two wars and the Bush tax cuts).” And he’s right, a lot of the sanctimonious hand-wringing by so-called deficit hawks is being done by the very solons who advocated borrowing heavily against our grandchildren’s futures rather than call for shared post- 9/11 sacrifice and paying for our wars out of current revenues. These are also the same wise ones who told us that deficits caused by the Bush tax cuts didn’t matter and would be good for the economy.

We would expect neophyte legislators swept into office by Tea Party hysteria last fall to take reflexively stupid positions, saying simply as they have just “cut spending and we won’t default.” As Barney notes, there is waste everywhere in government, but it’s not layered around the edges and able to be easily trimmed. It’s marbled throughout the system and requires careful cutting. But that requires hard work, and is not susceptible to ham-handed demagoguery.

Frank agrees that Medicare needs to be addressed “but not alone,” adding people want to be well- treated when they’re sick. For years a prime Frank target has been what he calls unnecessary military spending , particularly that which is spent on the defense of NATO countries . The rationale for the post-WWII commitment protect them against Soviet communism is long gone.. Nor do we need the overkills from three different deterrent forces, the Army’s ICBM system; the Air Force’s SAC (Strategic Air Command) power and the Navy’s nuclear submarine fleet. Give up just one of the three, and you could save $15 billion – $20 billion a year.

He also asserts it’s time to leave both Iraq and Afghanistan. As for the enduring Al Qaeda threat, he added, we can’t create political will from the outside and …we can’t plug every rat-hole in the world.” Furthermore, he says: “We’re 3500 miles from Libya. France and Italy could spit and hit Libya if the winds are at their backs. Why does the world depend on us?” Big cuts can be made in DOD, but so far there are few takers on the other side.

So we return to the looming debt ceiling crisis. Barney correctly notes that an important point being missed is that the debt limit is not about the future, but about past obligations. But then he disturbingly concludes that, given the congressional impasse, we just may have to resign ourselves to not increasing the ceiling on schedule.

Applying an inapt domestic analogy to the international stage, he matter-of-factly says the inability of Republicans and Democrats to agree to a new cap may lead inevitably to a “temporary hiatus—a day, a week or two– in our ability to pay our bills.” Seemingly untroubled by that outcome, he reminds us that Congress only passed the 2008 emergency Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) after an earlier NO vote sent the market to its biggest one day drop ever.

This shock therapy would mean the first time in United States history that this nation will have defaulted on the payment of principal and interest on government bonds. Frank’s apparent flippancy on this is more than a little unnerving. Failure to maintain the nation’s creditworthiness could have global implications, none of them pretty. It could plunge us back into recession, according to Alan Blinder , Princeton University economics professor and former vice chairman of the Federal Reserve, in the WSJ.
Interest rates would rise dramatically, Blinder warns, as other nations begin to see debt ceiling politics as a permanent part of American political gamesmanship. It could also affect the willingness of other countries to regard the US as a safe haven in troubled times and could hasten moves to switch investments to a basket of currencies, not the dollar.

The fact that some Republicans are willing to contemplate cuts of 40 percent so as not to exceed the debt ceiling is, as Frank says, “evidence of a dark, self-destructive impulse.” That Barney Frank would, even for the rhetorical sport of shocking his audience, at which he often excels, toy with going that route, is unsettling and discouraging.

Maybe I’m overreacting and this is just part of a clever Brer Rabbit strategy. But I fear it is really rooted in his very bleak assessment of the current political landscape. “John Boehner has lost control of the House,” he says. “The most right-wing elements have taken over.” The Tea Party is in charge because once-thoughtful Republican conservatives now fear losing their primaries to more radical right candidates. And the Senate, undemocratic and dysfunctional with its 60 vote distortion of the Constitution and American history, is little better.

If Tom Coburn walks away from one effort and Barney Frank from another, where are we to look for leadership? Ironically, the most reasoned recent response to the debt ceiling date came on WBUR’s On Point from David Stockman, Ronald Reagan’s old budget director, who took both parties to task and spoke truths that current politicians are afraid to embrace.
Please let me know your thoughts in the comments section below

May 24th, 2011

The Robert Manning School of Business at UMass Lowell

by PaulM

 

Robert Manning

UMass Lowell today announced a donation valued at $5 million from alumni Robert and Donna Manning. A new home for the university’s College of Management will be named the Robert Manning School of Business. Read the Boston Herald report here, and get the Herald if you want to read more. Read the Boston Globe report here, and get Globe for more reporting like this. Read Chris Camire’s article in the SUN here, and get the SUN for more local coverage.

Robert Manning, executive officer of MFS Investment Management in Boston

May 24th, 2011

Lowell Spinners bobble head schedule

by DickH

There’s nothing that will match Jack Kerouac bobble head night at the Lowell Spinners, but a mailing I received yesterday with this year’s special event schedule discloses some interesting choices:

    Carl Yastrzemski (June 18)
    Rich Gedman (June 27)
    Bobby Doerr (July 1)
    Terry Francona (July 20)
    Ryan Kalish (July 25)
    Freddy Sanchez (August 2)
    Sgt Mickey O’Keefe (August 18)
    Sen Scott Brown (August 22)
    Dustin Pedroia (August 26)

In addition, the 2011 New York Penn League All-Star Game will be played at LeLacheur Park on August 16. For more info about tickets and special events, check out the Spinners website.

May 24th, 2011

May 24, 1861: Butler and the end of slavery

by DickH

One hundred fifty years ago today, just two days after taking command of Fort Monroe in Hampton, Virginia, Lowell’s Ben Butler made a decision that changed history. Sometime during the night of the 23-24 of May, three slaves who had been digging gun positions for the Confederate forces besieging Fort Monroe, escaped and showed up at the fort asking for asylum. What to do with slaves who came into custody of the Union Army was a dicey proposition, fraught with legal peril. While it would be absurd for the Union Army to send such slaves back to their Confederate owners, neither could they set them free. To do so would be to inflame the non-abolitionist sentiments in the North and would also likely tip the three border states, Maryland, Kentucky and Missouri into the Confederacy.

With no guidance from higher headquarters, Butler drew upon his legal training to make his decision. The long-time Lowell lawyer knew that under the laws of war, if one side came into possession of personal property of the other side that was being used to advance that side’s war activities, it was proper to keep that property as “contraband of war.” Butler therefore decided that slaves that came into the custody of him command would be held as contraband of war. He telegraphed his decision to Washington and his policy was soon adopted throughout the Union Army. This precipitated a flood of escaped slaves streaming into Union lines and began influencing Lincoln’s thinking on the subject of slavery, an evolution that resulted the following year in the Emancipation Proclamation.