Archive for March 3rd, 2012

March 3rd, 2012

Save the Date: Sunday, April 22, South Common Haiku Book Project/Earth Day Event

by PaulM

Web photo of historic view of the South Common in Lowell, Mass., courtesy of cardcow.com

What: South Common Haiku Book Project: An Earth Day Celebration in Lowell

When: Sunday, April 22, 2 pm to 4.30 pm

Where: Location to be announced soon

What’s going on?: Join well-known maker of artist books Susan Kapuscinski Gaylord of Newburyport and me for a hands-on workshop where participants will make their own copy of a limited edition, collectible book composed of the South Common haiku that I wrote this winter and shared on Facebook. The afternoon program will begin with a guided tour of the South Common Historic District led by Dick Howe Jr. Other expected activities include a display of design drawings for South Common landscape improvements produced for the City of Lowell planning department, live unplugged music, information on community gardening, and more.

This event will be free and open to the public.

Web photo of modern view of the South Common courtesy of Creative Commons/TWP on Wikipedia.

March 3rd, 2012

Lowell Tweet-n-Greet big success

by DickH

Thanks to the nearly 50 people who came to LTC this morning for our Tweet-n-Greet. The attendees covered a wide range of Twitter abilities and personal and professional backgrounds and was, in many ways, reflective of Lowell. Thanks to everyone on the staff at LTC who worked on the event and thanks especially to LTC Board President Mimi Parseghian who donated the refreshments.

Before we went our separate ways, I asked many of the attendees for suggested “next steps” for the Lowell Twittersphere. Here are some of the ideas:
 

  • Don’t wait six months to have a follow-up activity; do it much sooner
  • Create a publicly available on-line list of Lowell Twitter users to make it easier to find folks to follow
  • Compile a list of “writing prompts” for those struggling to find things to Tweet about
  • Hold a workshop of intermediate users to brainstorm community uses of Twitter’s advanced functions – envision a space with wifi so everyone can connect vial laptop, iPad or smart phone

Those are the ones I remember.  Please use the comment section for additional “next steps”.  Thanks again to all who made this morning such a great success.

March 3rd, 2012

Snowe departure hollows out center by Marjorie Arons-Barron

by Tony

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

Republican Senator Olympia Snowe has announced she won’t run for reelection, and, as disappointing as that is, who can blame her? A thoughtful moderate, a person who can work across the aisle for the good of the country, she will not run for a fourth term. Congress is no longer working on issues, she said. The two parties are working in parallel universes.

The Senate used to be a place for moderating the ideological extremes of the House of Representatives, now made worse by redistricting patterns. Snowe’s departure intensifies the hollowing out of the center.

Snowe will be turning 65 soon and apparently can no longer stomach the dysfunctionality of Washington. Certainly, it’s difficult to watch from the outside. One can only imagine what courage and determination it takes to work effectively inside that system. Snowe was a throwback to liberal/moderate Republicans of yore, like Brooke, Kuchel, Javits, Keating, Case, Percy, Goodell and Hatfield, fiscally cautious, but reformist on social issues. Snowe, putting country ahead of party, crossed the aisle to support reproductive rights, the stimulus bill and Dodd-Frank She voted for the health care reform in the Senate Finance Committee in order to bring the bill to a vote, though she cast her vote on the floor against the final version.

The once “big tent” Republican Party of Abraham Lincoln and Teddy Roosevelt has long made its liberals pariahs, Log Cabin Republicans embarrassments and Ripon Society members quaint relics. Increasingly even its moderates like Arlen Specter, James Jeffords and Lincoln Chafee,were told they weren’t welcome, disparaged as RINO’s (Republicans in name only).

Even upstanding conservatives like Richard Lugar and Orrin Hatch have faced challenges because they weren’t true believer enough. Is there any wonder that Snowe would bow out? Sadly, she is but the latest to be beaten down and driven out by the poisonous atmosphere. It will be interesting to see how she follows through on her stated desire to advance a public agenda, working from the outside.

Even though Snowe’s safe Republican seat is now up for grabs, possibly by a Democrat or even Independent former governor Angus King, it’s almost a clichéd sad commentary that the atmosphere in Washington is now so toxic for the likes of Snowe. Her announcement makes me want to reach out to her compatriot Susan Collins, also a Republican from Maine, hug her and tell her to hang in there. But then , unlike Olympia Snowe, she just voted for the Blunt Amendment and is a paler version of departing colleague . But she too is under attack from purist zealots who’ve captured the heart (if not the head) of the GOP. Have we reached the point where, like the sea wall erosion on Nantucket, once- inland property, becomes desirable waterfront?

March 3rd, 2012

Special Guest Blogger: Paul McCartney

by PaulM

From Sir Paul’s website, this newsy blog post about his few days in Los Angeles recently, getting honored as MusicCares person of the year, going to the Grammy Awards, attending the unveiling of his star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, chatting up Neil Young, and more.

http://www.paulmccartney.com/web/guest/news/-/blogs/still-buzzing-on-la?