Archive for September, 2011

September 30th, 2011

Terry Francona: former manager of Red Sox

by DickH

Maybe the Globe sports section is following the lead of the Red Sox and cleaning house. Somebody named Matt Pepin is now writing about the Red Sox but that’s not a bad thing because he has a great account of Terry Francona’s final press conference. Whatever you think of Francona, his performance shows a lot of class and was very diplomatic, but he did make it pretty clear that some of the players were a big problem and that ownership bailed on him.

On another note, the New York Times’ statistics guy, Nate Silver, who writes the excellent 538 political blog, shows up on the sports page today, retroactively calculating the odds of the American League East regular season race turning out the way it did. Here’s a sampling:

The following is not mathematically rigorous, since the events of yesterday evening were contingent upon one another in various ways. But just for fun, let’s put all of them together in sequence:

The Red Sox had just a 0.3 percent chance of failing to make the playoffs on Sept. 3.

The Rays had just a 0.3 percent chance of coming back after trailing 7-0 with two innings to play.

The Red Sox had only about a 2 percent chance of losing their game against Baltimore, when the Orioles were down to their last strike.

The Rays had about a 2 percent chance of winning in the bottom of the 9th, with Johnson also down to his last strike.

Multiply those four probabilities together, and you get a combined probability of about one chance in 278 million of all these events coming together in quite this way.

When confronted with numbers like these, you have to start to ask a few questions, statistical and existential.

Read Silver’s full story HERE.

September 30th, 2011

Lowell Open Studios this weekend

by DickH

The annual Lowell Open Studios event will take place this Saturday and Sunday from 11 am until 5 pm each day at various venues around the city. Open Studios is a great opportunity to check out the local art scene and to support the artists working in our community. Almost all of it is inside, so if the predicted rain cuts down on your outside activities, use the extra time to visit Western Avenue Studios or one of the other sites involved in the event. For more details, check out the Lowell Open Studios website.

September 30th, 2011

No tours of Lowell Cemetery this weekend

by DickH

Back during the summer, there was confusion about the dates of this fall’s tours of Lowell Cemetery. One set of tours were originally set for today and tomorrow (Sept 30 and October 1) but that quickly had to be changed because of circumstances beyond my control. Even though all advertising and mailings by the cemetery identified the tours as happening on September 9 & 10 and again on September 23 & 24 (which is when the tours did take place). I’m concerned that some folks might be under the impression that there’s another tour tomorrow morning, but there is not. I’m sorry to anyone who might be inconvenienced by any confusion over this. The next tours will be conducted in the spring and the dates for them will be set in late March.

September 30th, 2011

In the Merrimack Valley: A Difference of Opinion on Casino Bill

by Marie

Jonathan Phelps has a story in the Eagle-Tribune about a difference of opinion among two Merrimack Valley legislators – Senator Steve Baddour (D-Methuen) and Barry Finegold (D-Andover) and former State Senator Sue Tucker. Tucker – who did not seek reelection – is  a longtime opponent of casinos and slots and has been  working with United to Stop Slots in Massachusetts, a non-partisan organization opposed to “predatory gambling” in the state.

State Senator Barry Finegold who succeeded Tucker in the Second Essex Middlesex District seat  is also against the expanded gaming bill while State Senator Steven Baddour supports it.  Finegold rejects the predicted economic claims while Baddour sees the casino bill creating  short and long-term jobs. Tucker sees the bill as “a rip off for Massachusetts.”

Read the full article here at the eagletribune.com.

September 30th, 2011

Mass Humanities Fall Symposium: Cyberspace & Civic Space

by Marie

The Mass Humanities  Eighth  Annual Fall Symposium has a timely  focus on the influence of the internet on our politics, society and culture. The three session  symposium will  be held at Boston College on Saturday November 19, 2011 from 12:30 – 5pm.  Callie Crossley – popular WGBH host and commentator  - will moderate the event. Panelists include political strategist Joe Trippi, Boston Globe writer Hiawatha Bray and New York Times columnist Virginia Heffernan.

The event is free and open to the public. Check here for more information.

September 30th, 2011

Red Sox sink like great Titanic by Marjorie Arons-Barron

by Tony

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

Karl Marx believed that religion is the opiate of the masses. I have always thought that sports are the true “opium of the people.” What better escape has there been from the news about the European debt crisis, volatile domestic financial markets, quotidian social incivilities, and the self-destructive atmosphere of current politics, than a summer in which the Red Sox were one of the two best teams in baseball? The “best team ever?” Better than the 1927 Yankees, 1990s Bulls or 1960s Celtics!

Today’s morning- after headache and nausea ( worse than that in 1978), the need for sports talk-show grief counseling, take me back to all those decades of what it truly means to be a suffering Red Sox fan. My grandmother, at whose knee I learned to love the Metropolitan Opera and the Boston Red Sox, never knew what a Red Sox winning season was, though she was thoroughly versed in local legends Dom Dimaggio, Ted Williams, Jackie Jensen and Jimmy Piersall. My 11-year-old grandson lives on another planet. He has never known the traditional hometown failures, the soaring only to plummet. And here I am, buffeted by the drama of the day, trying to understand.

The two highest payrolls, New York and Philadelphia, won their divisions. But shelling out over $157 million didn’t cut it for the Red Sox. And, as Brian McGrory wrote, the “overpaid underachievers” of the 2011 team never represented Boston. Going with the most lucrative contract doesn’t equate to being an authentic part of the home town. Rooting for the Red Sox (or any team) may well be, as my husband claims, merely rooting for the Hessians and cheering for laundry. But there’s something more at play.

J.D. Drew, John Lackey and Carl Crawford together earned more than the entire Tampa Bay roster. Despite the obsession with sabermetrics and the errant celebration of Billy Beane, his progeny and statistics-driven Money Ball, Tampa Bay, which gave up its top stars last year to free agency and concentrated on nurturing its young players, has become the feel-good story of the season. . They showed heart, energy, and determination. As the Wall St. Journal notes, it’s about more than numbers. Don’t forget about “gut instinct, tradition, money, mystery – and plenty of dumb luck.”

An organization can amass all the talent on paper it wants, but the team has to execute on the field. A big payroll team may well win the World Series, and the Rays can crash early in the playoffs. But clearly Sox salaries were inversely proportionate to their September performance. Jim Rice, in his NESN post mortem, decried the spa-like orientation of the team and said that, though Theo or Terry might become scapegoats , the players themselves were most culpable.

In recent years, parts of Red Sox Nation have taken on a narcissistic swagger more reminiscent of Yankee fans. It’s sometimes cheaper to fly to Baltimore and go to Camden Yards than it is to park and visit Fenway. And Red Sox fans in Baltimore have been known to behave offensively not only to hapless Oriole fans inside the park, but boorishly to others in bars and on city streets. Add to that the classless behavior of some of our pitchers who during the season threw intentionally at Baltimore batters. Bad blood existed between the two teams right up to the end, and the last series between the erstwhile juggernaut Red Sox and the Eastern Division cellar dwellers had the makings of a mini morality play.

Yet we hung on until the very last minute, inoculated by 2004 and 2007, and sure that, like the Titantic, the great ship promoted as that “which God himself could not sink,” we would be victorious in the end.

Rather than being an escape from day-to-day conflict and challenge, the historic collapse of the Red Sox seems to be a metaphor what’s happening in the larger world. In both sports and politics, events have challenged our understanding of the way things are supposed to work. Unlike baseball, however, government and politics offer an opportunity to confront old questions with new answers. It is the beginning of a Massachusetts Senate race and a Presidential season. We can still set right the course of the ship of state. There’s nothing we can do about the 2011 Red Sox. As my grandmother would say, wait till next year.

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

September 30th, 2011

‘Cyberspace and Civic Space’: Nov. 19 Conference

by PaulM

Mass Humanities, the state agency affiliated with the National Endowment for the Humanities, will host a conference about the internet and democracy at Boston College on Nov. 19. The folks at MH have assembled a set of high-powered speakers with connections to moveon.org, TED, and bigtime media outlets and academia. See the schedule and  speakers here.

A more transformative and far-reaching technology has never been invented. And yet the Internet’s unparalleled potential to educate and empower citizens is being thwarted by other interests. How does the Internet influence our politics, society and culture? How can we ensure that cyberspace allows room for a safe and robust civic space? How might we minimize its potential harms? Join a distinguished group of scholars and journalists, activists and innovators for an examination of these increasingly important questions.

September 29th, 2011

MassBenchmarks’ Latest on Mass. Economy

by PaulM

Boston.com has a bulletin on the latest read on the Mass. economy from the MassBenchmarks group of UMass. Our own Prof. Bob is a contributor to this group, wearing his historian home uniform jersey. He should have been mentioned as UMass Lowell’s scholar in the group with the lights from Harvard and MIT.

The economists said the answer to the economy’s struggles isn’t government budget cutting. Instead they called for fiscal stimulus — more federal spending, tax cuts, or both — to help right the economy.

“It is clear that the economy is not going to heal itself, and that fiscal austerity in the short run will only prolong economic suffering,” the summary said. “The economically prudent policy — more fiscal stimulus in the short run coupled with deficit reduction that takes effect as the economy recovers — can be achieved only is we reach political consensus.”

The group — which includes economists from the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, Boston University, Harvard, and MIT — said interest rate reductions and other steps taken by the Federal Reserve have “reached the limit of their effectiveness,” and called upon federal policy makers to take additional steps.

September 29th, 2011

COOL Anthology of Younger Creative Lowellians: 10/6

by PaulM

A week from tonight a lot of people from Lowell and environs will be at the Appleton Mills atrium for the launch of a new book that collects the work of dozens of writers, visual artists, and musicians who live and work in the city. Titled “Young Angel Midnight,” the anthology will make a huge statement about the vitality of the creative sector of Lowell. This is something new and different. The Cultural Organization of Lowell (COOL) commissioned Bootstrap Productions, a local publisher, to produce a document that would capture the imaginative and intellectual energy surging through the community’s nervous system. I try to keep up with what is going on, but I was surprised to see the variety in the work of younger creative people in the city. The quality is high throughout.

Here’s a link to the COOL event announcement.

 

September 29th, 2011

King Cotton & CW

by PaulM

Cotton production is today’s topic in the Disunion series on Civil War history in the NYTimes. Frederick Law Olmsted shows up as a journalist rather than a landscape architect in this installment. Historian Susan Schulten of the University of Denver is today’s author. Read it here, and get the NYT on your porch or online if you want more.

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