Archive for January, 2012

January 31st, 2012

Flags at half-staff

by DickH

At work I subscribe to an email service from the Governor’s office that notifies recipients anytime the Governor orders flags to be flown at half-staff. The text of one that arrived today went something like this:

Please be advised that Governor Patrick has ordered that the United States flag and the Commonwealth flag be lowered to half-staff at all state buildings from sunrise until sunset on Wednesday, February 1, 2012 in honor of Mayor Kevin H. White of Boston, Massachusetts who died on January 27, 2012.

While the passing of Mayor White is certainly a solemn occasion, I found just a little bit of irony in the timing and substance of this notice given the communal discussion we’re engaged in here in Lowell about the propriety of lowering flags in honor of the passing of local election officials. Gerry Nutter had posts here and here on the topic and Councilor Rita Mercier filed a motion at last week’s council meeting. I didn’t watch tonight’s meeting so I don’t know if there has yet been a reply. According to the minutes of last week’s meeting, the motion and the discussion was as follows:

City Council set policy as standard procedure to automatically lower the flag on city property to half mast when elected officials die. RE: Congress, State Senators, State Representatives, Mayors, City Councilors and School Committee Members. In Council, read and adopted. So voted. C. Martin stated that he is under the belief that only the Governor can order any municipal building to fly flag at half-mast. C. Kennedy stated that this is a situation when you go ahead and do it until you are told not to.

As I said, I hadn’t been paying much attention to this issue until the Kevin White notice arrived today. Curious, I did a little Googling and found that 4 US Code section 7 makes it pretty clear that only the President or the Governor of a state may order the flag lowered to half-staff. I’m not sure if an express Federal law prohibiting something meets the “do it until you are told not to” test but it probably does. Not that I’m criticizing that approach; “it’s easier to get forgiveness than permission” has helped me overcome innumerable bureaucratic obstacles. Still, the law’s the law.

Another outfit, USFlag.org, also addresses this issue. When you read their post on half-staff flags, you can tell they’ve been severely criticized for saying “no half-staff” in the past:

[National Flag Foundation] points out these “good-faith misunderstandings” not to criticize or embarrass anyone, but rather to head off a growing trivialization of this memorial salute, and to preserve the dignity and significance of flying the U.S. flag at half-staff. To any readers who may think that NFF is insensitive for raising these breaches of etiquette, please be assured that our motives are pure. We grieve these human loses deeply; however, we believe proper respect for our flag must be maintained – no matter the circumstances.

Everyone involved in this discussion wants to do the right thing which is to appropriately honor those decedents who have rendered valuable service to the city of Lowell. There’s no doubt that working together, appropriate and standardized methods of recognition can be found and implemented.

January 31st, 2012

Archdiocese of Boston Losing the Chancellor

by Marie

The Boston Globe is reporting that the current Chancellor for the Archdiocese of Boston James P. McDonough has decided to step down after six years on the job. Complimenting McDonough for getting the finances of the archdiocese on a sound footing, Cardinal Sean O’Malley announced that he has chosen John E. Straub to fill the role of interim chancellor. Straub currently serves as executive director of finance and operations for central ministries with the Archdiocese. Straub had previously directed the White House’s Office of Administration during the George W. Bush administration.

The timing of McDonough’s leaving coincides with recently released annual financial report for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2011. The January 26 report was accompanied by this statement from the Cardinal:

 ”The Archdiocese of Boston has greatly benefitted by the financial management of recent years that has achieved and sustained a balanced budget. The stabilization of our finances has led to increased confidence among our many generous benefactors, who provide us the means to invest in our parishes, schools, evangelization and the important mission of serving the poor and those in need. We are aware that there remain challenges to be addressed, but are encouraged by the progress being made in rebuilding our local Church. Going forward, we will maintain our commitment to be a sign of the presence of the Lord to the Catholics of the Archdiocese and the wider community.”

Among the highlights of the report:

  • Central ministries, a component of central operations, achieved a balanced budget maintained for second straight year;
  • Parish offertory increased 3 percent;
  • Enrollment grew in over half of the Archdiocese’s Catholic schools and increased by 1 percent in Boston for the first time in 20 years.

Read the full financial report by linking here to The Pilot. The Globe story can be read here at boston.com.

January 31st, 2012

Video Surveillance for Downtown?

by DickH

The behavior of (some) late night occupants of downtown Lowell has been a trending topic in Lowell’s blogosphere with kad barma writing about it here and here; Left in Lowell here and here; and our own post here. The police have increased their presence which is a good thing; a high density of officers in uniform creates a deterrent and making arrests where appropriate at least might keep those defendants under control for a while. But the police can’t be everywhere all the time.

Is it time for the city to bring video surveillance cameras to downtown? I’m not sure I like the idea because it would be a bit of an invasion of privacy of the vast majority of law-abiding citizens, but life is all about trade-offs. If cameras could help apprehend those who destroy property and soil our sidewalks and doorways and provide the police with a valuable tool in enforcing the law, then might that level of intrusion be worth it? I’m guessing that the acquisition costs for such a system would be tolerable, certainly within the budget of a typical regional public relations campaign that gets washed away by a single widely-covered crime.

Perhaps the time has arrived to have a public discussion on video surveillance cameras for downtown Lowell.

January 31st, 2012

An Idea for a Lowell Video

by PaulM

Watch this video that celebrates one day in San Francisco and think about what a Lowell version would look like.

A Day in the Life: San Francisco

UPDATE: Here’s the video

January 31st, 2012

Postcard video of Lowell

by Tony

This is a great video of Lowell put together by Buddy 212002 using postcards. There are some amazing old scenes of the the downtown area.

This video is titled “Greetings From Lowell”.

January 30th, 2012

‘Variety’ Writer Tweets About ‘On the Road’ Film

by PaulM

Jerry Cimino of the Beat Museum in San Francisco has an intriguing segment in his latest newsletter, which I’m reproducing in full because the effect would be lost in paraphrasing. So, courtesy of www.kerouac.com, here’s news about the now-completed “On the Road” film that is expected to premiere in France this spring. The tweets must be read from the bottom up.

In related news, a reporter from Radio France, the national public radio network, will be in Lowell tomorrow as a guest of the Greater Merrimack Valley Convention and Visitor Bureau to prepare a story about Kerouac and Lowell in connection with the film’s release in Europe.

B).  Variety Says On The Road is Gonna Be Great


JOSH DICKEY WRITES FOR VARIETY and he was at the Sundance Film Festival last week and as he was
boarding the plane for his flight back to LA he sent out the following excited five tweets on Twitter.  We copied them below and you need to read them from the bottom up:

27 Jan  Josh Dickey @Variety_JLD
        •       Reply
Retweet Favorite ·
And that’s all I know. (At least, that’s all I can tell you!) Hope it’s new to somebody; I don’t follow as close as some of you guys.

27 Jan  Josh Dickey @Variety_JLD
        •       Reply Retweet
Favorite ·
There were no problems w/ film; just awaiting the right moment to show & actively start seeking distribution.

27 Jan  Josh Dickey
@Variety_JLD
        •       Reply Retweet Favorite ·
… it would not be a stretch to see it open Cannes. Producers are thrilled with the result & eager to at least have it there. More …

27 Jan  Josh Dickey
@Variety_JLD
        •       Reply Retweet Favorite ·
OTR is finished. Took 1 year to edit, and is very, very good. According to a discerning and in-the-know viewer, it’s so good that …

27 Jan  Josh Dickey
@Variety_JLD
        •       Reply Retweet Favorite ·
ON THE ROAD fans, I have some cool news to share with you. Just got to the airport so stand by…
—————–

January 30th, 2012

National Catholic Schools Week 2012 ~ “Catholic Schools: Faith. Academics. Service.”

by Marie

It is National Catholic Schools Week! The theme for Catholic Schools Week 2012 is “Catholic Schools: Faith. Academics. Service.” The annual observance officially started yesterday –  the last Sunday in January and will run all week to February 5. Schools typically celebrate Catholic Schools Week with Mass, open houses and activities for students, families, parishioners and the community at large. Locally, we’ve seen newspaper ads, special coverage in The Pilot and talk about Catholic Schools in our weekly parish bulletins. Many schools celebrate by honoring a distinguished school alum as the Immaculate Conception School did last Saturday with its recognition of ICS grad Kevin Ahern.

Catholic schools have a long and rich tradition in Lowell and in the Merrimack Valley.  Of  those schools still open and active in Lowell: St. Patrick’s School in the Acre opened in 1852, the Immaculate Conception School in 1880, St. Michael’s in 1889, St. Jeanne d’Arc School in 1910, St. Margaret’s School in 1941, Franco-American School in 1963 (opened as orphanage in 1908) and Lowell Catholic High School in 1989 as the successor to its  legacy schools – Keith Academy(1926) and Keith Hall (1926), Keith Catholic, St. Patrick’s HS,  St. Joseph’s HS and St. Louis Academy.

Catholic Schools Week – a time for students to celebrate their unique path of learning within the parish, community and nation – will celebrate its 40th anniversary next year.

What are your memories of Catholic schools in Lowell and the Catholic school experience?

 

 

January 30th, 2012

Lowell Cemetery

by DickH

Images from Lowell Cemetery, by Tony Sampas

January 30th, 2012

The Future of Books

by DickH

Books were very much on my mind this weekend. I’m nearing the end of “Midnight Rising: John Brown and the Raid that Sparked the Civil War” by Tony Horwitz. The book is about the abolitionist John Brown’s attack on the armory at Harper’s Ferry, Virginia (now West Virginia) that hardened attitudes in both the north and the south (and especially here in Lowell) and greatly contributed to the coming of the Civil War. Horwitz, who also wrote the wonderful “Confederates in the Attic”, will appear in Chelmsford along with his author-spouse Geraldine Brooks this coming May 12th as part of the town’s One Book Chelmsford event.

Then yesterday, the lead story in the Business Section of the New York Times was “The Bookstore’s Last Stand: As Barnes & Noble Fights for Its Future, the Publishing Industry Holds Its Breath” which shared the epic battle now being waged between Barnes & Noble and Amazon. The article’s author, Julie Bosman, doesn’t miss the irony that the same publishers who a decade ago condemned B & N for (1) putting so many independent bookstores out of business and (2) using its scale to squeeze ever lower prices from the publishers, have now made Barnes & Noble the sole standard bearer of the publishing industry which sees in Amazon a huge threat to its existence. That is not to say that Amazon is anti-books, rather that Amazon is anti-middleman (Amazon recently started its own publishing unit and is already signing up major authors, cutting traditional publishing houses out of the equation).

The battle between Barnes & Noble and Amazon doesn’t seem like a fair fight. Despite having 703 bookstores spread through all 50 states, Barnes & Noble is valued at $719 million while Amazon is worth $88 billion. Plus, Barnes & Noble seems caught between two worlds: it sees the future as the e-book (the “Nook”) yet it must maintain the large costs of all of those big retail stores. The Times story asks, “How does B & N present itself from becoming nothing more than a coffee shop with digital connections?” The company is planning new things, adding toys and games to its shelves, eliminating the CD/DVD sections, and devoting more space to Nook sales.

But the core business of a bookstore is selling books. The article points out that only one-third of the people who enter a bookstore do so with the express purpose of buying a book. All other in-store sales are impulse purchases. I can certainly attest to the serendipity of wandering through the aisles of a bookstore, spotting an interesting cover, and buying a book that I’d never even heard of minutes before. As much as I enjoy reading on electronic devices (I’ve read books on the Kindle and the iPad), I think we will always have printed-on-paper books, perhaps just not as many. If the goal is to allow people to browse, there are other ways to allow that to be done. The computer is great for that but sometimes it takes a communal setting. How about the public library? Or a coffee shop like Brew’d Awakening or The Java Room where one could use either a personal or a communal electronic device to browse titles in the company of others. I’m not advocating the closure of big box bookstores; I’m just suggesting that if a place like Barnes & Noble is no longer economically feasible, there are alternatives.

Finally, I think the difficulties of the national publishing and bookstore businesses present an opportunity for small local writers and publishers. On Saturday at the “Lowell area small press book publishers round-up” we may have caught a glimpse of the future of writing and publishing. In that room full of talented authors, entrepreneurial publishers, and interested readers, there was a real synergy. I don’t know how many books were sold or how much money was made, but it was a great concept that has huge potential to grow, especially if big box bookstores become obsolete. We’ll still be able to buy bestsellers with a click of the mouse and the rumble of the UPS truck (which is how I came to own “Midnight Rising”), but our literary curiosity will be satiated locally by people we know or by people who we’ll get to know. To me, that’s not such a bad thing.

January 30th, 2012

Peace and Tranquility

by PaulM

Over at www.leftinlowell.com there’s a gathering discussion about the condition of the quality of life after dark in downtown Lowell. A comment by a reader named Jane stands out. She reported that she changed her mind about moving into the downtown after reading/hearing about recent disturbances on the streets and complaints by residents.