The Lowell City Council returned to its regular meeting schedule on Tuesday after a three-week gap due to Christmas and New Year’s. However, City Manager Tom Golden and City Councilors Sokhary Chau and Kim Scott were absent, so the agenda was relatively light. The dominant issue at Tuesday’s meeting was…
America’s Rotunda by Rich Grady The roads and sidewalks were still covered in a mush of snow and ice. The snow was not the pure white blanket of a day ago, but a dirty mix of sand, salt and slush. I decided to walk the two or three miles to…
One of my goals in retirement is to watch more movies and sporting events and to read more books. Another goal is to write more articles for my website, richardhowe.com, so writing reviews of what I watch and read helps advance both goals. **** By the time I reached age…
Lowell enthusiastically welcomes 1925 – (PIP #52) By Louise Peloquin Lowell celebrated 1925. May 2025 celebrate Lowell! L’Etoile – January 3, 1925 Lowell welcomed in the New Year more enthusiastically than in recent years – Halls, theatres, clubs and restaurants swarmed – Beautiful religious celebrations in all our churches…
This past Tuesday was my final day as the register of deeds for the Northern Middlesex District. Most people know that the registry of deeds keeps land ownership records but details of how the office operates are only vaguely understood. While our system of land ownership developed in medieval England,…
The Greeks Get the News By Stephen O’Connor Help me, O Muse, to tell this crazy story. As dawn spread out her fingertips of rose, captains of ships and men gathered by the smoldering fire before the spreading tented pavilion of Agamémnon, son of Atreus, and commander of the Argive…
This article was originally posted on this site on December 31, 2010. I repost it each year to acquaint readers with a little-known offensive expedition launched by the colonists in the first year of the American Revolution. This is especially relevant now for two reasons: 2025 is the semiquincentennial of…
Duly celebrated – (PIP #51) By Louise Peloquin New Year’s festivities survive the passage of time. Perennial celebrations, like flowers, bear colorful promises. May L’Etoile’s wishes for a Bonne et heureuse année offer hope for the future. L’Etoile – December 30, 1924 New Year’s Day in our community The city’s Franco-American organizations have…
The entry below is being cross posted from Marjorie Arons-Barron’s own blog. It was a scorcher of a day in the summer of 1975, more than a year before the presidential election to determine whether Jerry Ford could withstand public contempt for his decision to pardon Richard Nixon and win…
The entry below is being cross posted from Majorie Arons-Barron’s own blog. Polls show that two thirds of Americans are mentally exhausted and taking a break from a steady diet of news consumption. Count me among them, at least aspirationally. Since the election, mainstream newspapers, cable and network news have bled readers…