May 21st, 2013

Markey needs to step it up by Marjorie Arons-Barron

by Tony

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

Senator John McCain is in Boston today to support Republican Gabriel Gomez’ bid for the U.S. Senate race.  Gomez, a former Navy SEAL,  is expected to step up his attacks on Democratic Congressman Ed Markey for being soft on homeland security.  The “soft” votes can be explained, but to so-called independents parachuting late into this low-visibility campaign, in the wake of the marathon bombings, the issue could gain some traction.  What matters is how Markey handles his response.

At issue is a pair of votes against resolutions in 2004 and 2006 expressing sympathy with the victims of 9/11.  Does Gomez really think Markey lacked sympathy for the victims of 9/11?  Indeed, the “no” votes by the Congressman came because the resolution linked that terrorist attack to Iraq, which, as the Markey campaign has pointed out, was by then “debunked.”

Gomez is also quoted in the Globe  attacking Markey for first being for the Patriots Act, then against it.  Many legislators were.  The Patriots Act was passed in the aftermath of 9/11, but afterwards. many thoughtful supporters have wanted to modify it, believing it  overly broad and insufficiently attentive to civil liberties.

Markey’s primary opponent Stephen Lynch tried to pin Markey with being soft on security.  Despite having been a key player in seaport security, nuclear reactor security and related issues, Markey was caught flat-footed and found it difficult to explain the nuances of votes that were legitimate.

In fact, one of Markey’s biggest problems in this campaign is that there are too many times when he has seemed to answer questions obliquely, talking around something and quickly pivoting to prepared talking points.   When pressed by WCVB reporter Janet Wu yesterday to say whether President Obama should be held accountable for the Justice Department’s probe of Associated Press phone records, Markey made a quick shift to say “We need a shield law.”  That didn’t answer the question.

When Wu pressed Markey on releasing his tax returns (Gomez has released six years’ worth. Markey has never released his returns), he said “yes, and soon.” “Will you do it next week?” she said. He responded, “In the very near future.”   Those returns probably will be made public this week, but Markey’s refusal to be pinned down just reinforced a sense that he sometimes unnecessarily sidesteps issues and that he lapses into Washingtonspeak.

Gomez is trying to make a big deal of Markey’s being in Washington too long though he has no problem bringing in McCain, who has been in Congress almost as long as Markey.   The up side of Markey’s long experience is his expertise in law-making, negotiating on bills, actually getting things done.

Right now, this is Markey’s race to lose, but he can’t afford to sit on his lead.  He needs to ratchet up the energy of his campaign, something even some in his inner circle acknowlege. The winner of the Democratic primary is no longer the automatic winner of the general election.  Unlike when Markey first went to Washington, Democrats now make up only 37 percent of the electorate here, and unenrolled or independents are now 52 percent of Massachusetts voters.  Of those independents, only ten percent, according to some polling,  view Gomez unfavorably while 44 percent have an unfavorable view of Markey. This is where the battleground will be, and the upcoming debate could be important.

Given the shortness of the campaign and the lateness of the preponderant unenrolled to tune in, a guerrilla tactic by Gomez supporters, involving Swiftboat-like distortions of particular votes or playing to a majority’s frustration with Washington in general, could land some blows.  Unlike Scott Brown, Gomez has declined to take the People’s Pledge, curbing the flow of money from Citizens-United-spawned national independent groups and individuals.  If those forces decided the race is winnable for Gomez, their money could alter the outcome for Markey.

Gomez is not Scott Brown, who had 12 years of legislative voting record behind him before running for Senate. Gomez is either evasive or uninformed about many issues of concern. Notwithstanding Scott Brown’s pledge to be independent, whenever Mitch McConnell really needed Brown’s vote, he had it.  Gomez is likely to do the same.

Ed Markey is not Martha Coakley. But, while he is running a much better campaign than she did,  he is still not running the campaign that he is capable of.

I welcome your comments in the section below.

May 20th, 2013

Markey for Senate Rally on June 1 in Lowell

by DickH

With the election on Tuesday, June 25, this gathering on Saturday, June 1 at 4 pm at Hookslide Kelley’s should fire up those who already support Ed Markey while also providing a great opportunity for those who are undecided to hear directly from Ed and from some of his strongest supporters such as Senator Elizabeth Warren and Congresswoman Niki Tsongas.

May 20th, 2013

Author Paul Theroux Reports on Lowell Visit for Barron’s Online

by PaulM

Acclaimed author Paul Theroux visited Lowell a few months ago on assignment from Barron’s online journal. The Medford native rode the train to Lowell, retracing his mother’s route to college in the late 1920s. She earned a teaching degree from Lowell Normal School. Theroux spent a day in Lowell, hosted by Deb Belanger of the Greater Merrimack Valley Visitors and Convention Bureau. The author of many notable travel books and other volumes was much impressed by the transformed textile-factory city. Read his descriptions and observations in a lengthy article released on May 18. 

It’s a city of reversals and, for that reason, a remarkable place of proud and engaged citizens–and quintessentially American. That certainly was the message of the most recent movie to be made in Lowell, Mark Wahlberg’s The Fighter (2010), about a Lowell boxer, “Irish” Micky Ward, battling his way back from the brink. Lowell has known the heights of fortune and the depths of economic depression. The mills were still spinning–three shifts in the Boott Mill, 24 hours a day, in 1928—when my mother was taking the one-mile walk from the station to Lowell Normal School, now the vastly expanded UMass-Lowell. Many mills were even spinning when Kerouac was a boy, as he recalls inThe Town and the City and Maggie Cassidy. But soon some transitioned to patent medicine, or munitions, or printing. Kerouac’s father, Alcide, ran a print shop here.

Paul Theroux (web photo by Jason Grow courtesy of online.barrons.com)

May 20th, 2013

‘Merrimack’ by Jane Brox

by PaulM

Merrimack

.

We live thirty miles inland along the old road to the coast, a road laid down on an early wagon track, which followed the Indian trace—a long day on sure feet giving way to oxcarts that took half the week to return from the sea with their burdens of salt hay. Now the coast is a scant hour’s drive along Broadway, North Lowell Street, Main, and also River Road and Water Street since the way sometimes skirts the muscular currents of the Merrimack, which salts at Newburyport, and pours into the Atlantic.

By the end of its journey the river is almost two hundred miles from the cold rose of its source in the White Mountains. In many places it flows through a yielding channel older than the ice ages. Where it courses over stubborn ledge, where the rock wears away at an incremental pace, are the waterfalls that were once the gathering places and fishing grounds of the Algonquin tribes. Merrimack is their word. River of sturgeon, swift water, strong place.

To the south of our fields and woods the river flows broad and braided and eastward. It is the strong line of our landscape. The low-lying hills slope towards its channel, and every vein of water—the icy melt and the murk, the mineral rich source and the field-drained runoff, waters that taste like metal on the tongue, waters redolent of balsam, and some of smoky tea—every vein drains into the Merrimack. Even the cut of the road depends on the river, since it nearly ghosts the water’s course though we sleep beyond earshot of a steady current, lulled instead by the fine-tuned motors of the night freight trucks that approach and then pass.

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From “Here and Nowhere Else: Late Seasons of a Farm and Its Family” by Jane Brox (Beacon Press, 1995). Copyright © 1995 by Jane Brox. Reprinted with permission of the author and Beacon Press. 

See more writing from the region at The Bridge Review: Merrimack Valley Culture


May 20th, 2013

‘South Campus Sailing’ by Richard Marion,1978

by PaulM

“South Campus Sailing” by Richard Marion, Copyright (c) 2013

See more artwork at www.richardmarion.net

The conditions were much better this past weekend for the big rowing competition on the Merrimack. Congratulations for a successful event to the Greater Merrimack Valley Convention and Visitors Bureau (including Tom Golden and Deb Belanger), UMass Lowell, Merrimack River Rowing Association, Lowell High School, and all the organizers and participants.

May 19th, 2013

Lowell’s Elinor Lipman Has Two New Books: NY Times

by PaulM

Read Dominique Browning’s NYTimes review of Elinor Lipman’s two new books: a novel, “The View FromPenthouse B,” and a collection of essays,”I Can’t Complain: (All Too) Personal Essays.

She is a graduate of Lowell High School and a past recipient of the LHS Distinguished Alumni Award. There is a rumor that the Parker Lectures will be bringing her back to Lowell for its new season in the fall.

I’m certain that a palm reader would trace a long laugh line in Lipman’s hand. “The View From Penthouse B” sparkles with wit. (Dominique Browning)

Elinor Lipman. (Web photo by Michael Lionstar, courtesy of nytimes.com)

May 19th, 2013

‘Belief and Technique for Modern Prose’ by Kerouac

by PaulM

The website brainpickings.org recently posted on Facebook this list made by Kerouac in the 1950s. The document is titled “Belief and Technique for Modern Prose.” The editor prefaced the list, saying, “With items like ‘No fear or shame in the dignity of yr experience, language & knowledge’ and ‘Accept loss forever,’ the list is as much a blueprint for writing as it is a meditation on life.” Item 23, “Keep track of every day the date emblazoned in yr morning” sounds like a note to future bloggers. — PM

  1. Scribbled secret notebooks, and wild typewritten pages, for yr own joy
  2. Submissive to everything, open, listening
  3. Try never get drunk outside yr own house
  4. Be in love with yr life
  5. Something that you feel will find its own form
  6. Be crazy dumbsaint of the mind
  7. Blow as deep as you want to blow
  8. Write what you want bottomless from bottom of the mind
  9. The unspeakable visions of the individual
  10. No time for poetry but exactly what is
  11. Visionary tics shivering in the chest
  12. In tranced fixation dreaming upon object before you
  13. Remove literary, grammatical and syntactical inhibition
  14. Like Proust be an old teahead of time
  15. Telling the true story of the world in interior monolog
  16. The jewel center of interest is the eye within the eye
  17. Write in recollection and amazement for yourself
  18. Work from pithy middle eye out, swimming in language sea
  19. Accept loss forever
  20. Believe in the holy contour of life
  21. Struggle to sketch the flow that already exists intact in mind
  22. Dont think of words when you stop but to see picture better
  23. Keep track of every day the date emblazoned in yr morning
  24. No fear or shame in the dignity of yr experience, language & knowledge
  25. Write for the world to read and see yr exact pictures of it
  26. Bookmovie is the movie in words, the visual American form
  27. In praise of Character in the Bleak inhuman Loneliness
  28. Composing wild, undisciplined, pure, coming in from under, crazier the better
  29. You’re a Genius all the time
  30. Writer-Director of Earthly movies Sponsored & Angeled in Heaven
May 18th, 2013

GLAD Fall Brunch / Distinguished Dem Event Rescheduled to November 10, 2013

by Marie
FYI ~ Due to a scheduling complication – the Annual GLAD Fall Brunch where we also honor Distinguished Democrats has been rescheduled to Sunday morning November 10, 2013 – still at 10am and at Lenzi’s in Dracut. Our Distinguished Dem honoree is former Middlesex DA Gerry Leone! Thanks to all for cooperating with this reschedule!
The original event post and information about Gerry Leone was posted on May 13, 2013 here: http://www.richardhowe.com/2013/05/13/glad-chair-announces-2013-distinguished-democrat-honoree-gerry-leone/
May 18th, 2013

More About the Lowell Cemetery Tours

by Marie

Another crosspost from Jen Myers’ “Room 50″ blog~ please follow the link for more photos and information…

 


Buried Treasure — A Tour of Lowell Cemetery

by juicegirl50

She was married and bored. He was interesting. She was enchanted. He was smitten.

It was July 1848 and famed poet Edgar Allan Poe was staying in Westford at the home of wealthy paper mill owner Charles Richmond and his wife Nancy. The couple, former Lowellians and big fans of Poe’s work, invited him to stay at their home rather than a hotel when they heard he would be lecturing in Lowell.

In the time before Facebook, the Kardashians and the 3D IMAX version of The Fast and the Furious 6 lectures by writers, intellectuals and political figures were the main source of entertainment and night-on-the-town socialization.

The eccentric writer was a night owl, sitting up all night long in front of the fireplace. Nancy joined him. Friendship blossomed into romance.

Poe wrote a series of passionate love letters; she visited him, unaccompanied by her husband.

The following April, Poe’s poem “For Annie” was published in Flag of Our Union, a weekly Boston-based publication. Nancy Richmond bragged to her friends she was in fact Poe’s “Annie.”

The final stanza of the poem reads:

But my heart it is brighter

Than all of the many

Stars in the sky,

For it sparkles with Annie—

It glows with the light

Of the love of my Annie—

With the thought of the light

Of the eyes of my Annie.

When Charles Richmond died in 1873, Nancy went to the probate court and had her name legally changed to Annie.

“It’s not a stretch to say Edgar Allan Poe’s girlfriend is buried at Lowell Cemetery,” local historian Richard Howe Jr. told a crowd of more than 50 who gathered at the sprawling 173-year-old garden-style cemetery off of Lawrence Street Fridayafternoon for the first guided tour of the spring.

The 90-minute tour was packed with fascinating stories of the souls who rest there. I will not give them all away, since you should take the tour yourself, but I will tease you with a few crumbs . .

There is John Swett, who Howe said “seemed like a nice guy,” and his four wives – Rebecca, Mary, Fanny and Elizabeth.

Swett lived at the corner of Liberty and Pine Streets in the Highlands and ran a livery stable on Green Street near the train depot where he provided horse-drawn carriages for visitors who arrived by train.

Rebecca died at the age of 26, six years after they wed. The next Mrs. Swett was Rebecca’s sister Mary, who died seven years later. At the age of 45, he married 22-year-old Fanny, who died a couple of years later. Elizabeth, wife number four, was older than John  . . . and outlived him.

At the cemetery the four women’s graves are marked by tall headstones. John’s sits flat on the ground.

“I think there is some symbolism that his stone is prostrate . . . with four wives . . . “ Howe said.

In addition to being a cemetery, the beautifully handcrafted monuments also make it a public art museum. One of the most striking pieces is at the grave of Louisa Maria Wells.

As a teen, she came to Lowell from Vermont to work at the Lawrence Manufacturing Company.  She never married or had children.

When she died in 1886 at the age of 69, her will stated all of her money should be put toward a suitable monument in honor of herself and her mother.

Louisa’s cousins, who wanted the money for themselves, contested the will.

“In a court case right out of a Charles Dickens novel,” Howe said, the case dragged on for 20 years, during which time the funds earned a considerably amount of interest.

The judge upheld the will and Louisa’s wishes. Famed sculptor Daniel Chester French, who had carved the statue of Abraham Lincoln at the Lincoln Memorial, was asked to create the piece.

He suggested his associate, Evelyn Longman, who had trouble getting work that was not awarded through blind design contests due to her gender.

“No one wanted to hire a woman for something as important as carving a statue,” quipped Howe.

The imposing piece depicts a comforting Angel of Death leaning over a kneeling mill worker, clad in a smock and holding a bobbin with the yarn cut, symbolizing the end of life’s yarn.

Howe has been conducting tours of the Lowell Cemetery for four years.The spring tours cover the Lawrence Street half of the burial ground, while in the fall the tour starts from the Knapp Avenue entrance.

For more information, including upcoming tour dates visit http://www.lowellcemetery.com.

Click to view slideshow.

May 17th, 2013

This week in Lowell real estate

by DickH

If you follow me on Twitter (@DickHowe) or if you glance at my Twitter feed in the righthand sidebar of this site, you have noticed that each afternoon I do a Tweet with that day’s real estate sales of property in Lowell (information that is freely available to anyone on the registry of deeds website, www.lowelldeeds.com). Several people have told me that they enjoy receiving this information, so I thought I would try recapping each week’s sales over the weekend. So here are the Lowell sales for this past week:

Monday – May 13
72-74 West Third St – $160,000
333 Princeton Blvd for $216,000

Tuesday – May 14:
54 Shadow Dr for $233,000
1506 Gorham St Unit 210 for $85,000

Wednesday – May 15:
246 Aiken Ave Unit 9 for $124,000
15 Westboro St for $308,000
55 Westview Rd for $330,000

Thursday, May 16:
155-169 Middlesex St for $820,000
37 4th St for $146,000
120 Crosby St for $190,000
174 Barker Ave for $252,000

Friday, May 17:
33 Marginal St for $172,000
936 Lakeview Ave for $230,000
491 Dutton St Unit 521 for $515,000
31 Waverly Ave for $419,000
200 Market St Unit B49 for $230,000