Monday, July 28, 2014

Massachusetts Peace Action
 The terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 reopened what many people in America had long assumed was a settled ethical question: Is torture ever morally permissible? Within days, some began to suggest that, in these new circumstances, the new answer was "yes." Rebecca Gordon argues that September 11 did not, as some have said, "change everything," and that institutionalized state torture remains as wrong today as it was on the day before those terrible attacks. Furthermore, U.S. practices during the "war on terror" are rooted in a history that began long before September 11, a history that includes both support for torture regimes abroad and the use of torture in American jails and prisons.
Rebecca Gordon received her B.A. from Reed College and her M.Div. and Ph.D. in Ethics and Social Theory from Graduate Theological Union. She teaches in the Philosophy department at the University of San Francisco and for the university’s Leo T. McCarthy Center for Public Service and the Common Good. Previous publications include Letters From Nicaragua  and Cruel and Usual: How Welfare "Reform" Punishes Poor People.  She is a member of the War Times organizing committee.
Note: There has been a change in time and place for one of her talks below and the updated time and location has been included in the list below. 

Talks by Rebecca Gordon on Mainstreaming Torture:

Tuesday, 7/29 7:00 pm: Porter Square Books, Porter Square Shopping Center, Cambridge, MA
Thursday, 7/31 7:00pm: UU Church, 669 Union Street, Manchester, NH 
Friday, 8/1 2:00pm: Framingham Library, 49 Lexington St, Framingham, MA
Wednesday, 8/20 5:00pm: Chilmark Public Library, 522 South Rd, Chilmark, MA
Thursday 8/28 7:00pm: Rogers Free Library, 525 Hope St (rte 114), Bristol, RI
Tuesday, 9/2 7:00pm: Walpole Public Library, 143 School St, Walpole, MA
Contact Mass. Peace Action to arrange a presentation in your town.

Mainstreaming Torture: Ethical Approaches in the Post-9/11 United States (Hardcover)

$29.95
ISBN-13: 9780199336432
Availability: Available to Order
Published: Oxford University Press (UK), 5/2014  

Cole Harrison
Standing with you for peace,
Cole Harrison
Executive Director



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Manning, Snowden give Ellsberg “hope”, Ellsberg says at hacker conference

Tuesday, July 22 by the Chelsea Manning Support Network
Last weekend at the Hope X (Hackers on the Planet Earth) conference in New York, Daniel Ellsberg and Edward Snowden led a discussion touching on the importance of government transparency and whistleblowers in order for the public, as Snowden said, “to be given back its seat at the table of government.”
ellsberg_snowden_hopex
Ellsberg and Snowden speaking at the Hope X convention
Snowden continued, “If we’re going to have democracy, if we’re going to have an enlightened citizen, if we’re going to be able to actually provide the consent of the governed- we have to know what’s going on. We have to know at least the broad outlines of the policies. And we can’t have the government shut us out from every action they’re doing.
We have a right as Americans and as members of the global community to know the broad outline of government policies that have significant impact on our lives.”
Ellsberg stated that Chelsea Manning and Edward Snowden give him hope, emphasizing the rare and heroic nature of risking their personal freedoms and lives to put forth massive disclosures for the good of the public:
“Hope… which had not been in great supply for me.  Recently when I saw the name of this conference I had mixed feelings about it. My feelings of hope go up and down and haven’t been too high… and there’s no question I felt [hope] when Chelsea manning was revealed.
I used to… ask in a way, ‘How often do you need a Pentagon Papers?’- which is a massive disclosure that is unequivocal of documents that really shows- one document doesn’t really do it’ …They can say, ‘Well we changed that the next day, that was just some particular little department, some low level person.’ What you really need is the massive stuff, as in the Pentagon Papers, that shows, no, this is what they said the next day, and the day after that, and here was the official policy and so forth.
And I waited forty years to hear that and so I was pretty much  losing hope that there would be anybody inside who was willing to risk his freedom, his life or her life and freedom to put out what needed to be put out.”
Ellsberg discredits politicians, most recently John Kerry and Hilary Clinton, who attempt to claim his leaks were a proper example of whistleblowing but proclaim Manning and Snowden to be traitors.
“This bullsh*& in a way started with Barack Obama, when somebody actually took the occasion to ask him about Manning… and said, ‘Didn’t Chelsea Manning do exactly what Ellsberg did?’ What [Obama] said was, ‘Ellsberg’s material was classified in a different manner’—Well, that was true in a way-  as I mentioned earlier, everything Manning put out was ‘Secret’ or less- and everything I put out was ‘Top Secret’. That was the difference.
…Thanks to Manning, and now to [Snowden], I’m getting more favorable publicity than in forty years. Because suddenly people who were all for putting me in prison for life before now realize that I’m a pretty good guy, I was the ‘good whistleblower’.
When I read that Manning had said to Lamo, …[she] was willing to go to prison for life or even be executed, I said to myself I have waited forty years to hear somebody say that. That’s the way I felt forty years ago. And it’s taken this long. So I felt an immediate identification with [her]. So I identified with them, and I couldn’t bear to hear me getting good press, from the Secretary of State and from others, on the grounds that my motives were ‘different’.”
tabling_hopex
Tabling for Chelsea Manning at the Hope X conference, June 18, 2014
Ellsberg explained that he and Manning had similar humanitarian motives, and that he identified with Manning:
“My interest was not in setting the record straight, my interest was in ending an on-going war and for that I would much have preferred to put out current documents, which I at that moment didn’t have access to… It was a big secret what Nixon was up to, including nuclear threats. I hoped my documents would show a pattern that extended into the present and I failed.
Hardly anybody was willing to extrapolate and say, ‘Well, Ellsberg has shown that four previous presidents lied in the same way, escalated in the same way, made the same kind of secret threats: Truman, Eisenhower, Kennedy, and Johnson’… I thought, ‘Maybe they’ll figure out that maybe the current president is doing the same.’
But, no, it took documents and I didn’t have that.
So for years I’ve been saying to people it’s got to be with documents, even though it increases their risk. Well, people know that basically, but they weren’t willing to take the risk, I’m sorry to say.
So then Manning came out with [her]… hundreds of thousands of cables, and then [Snowden] with documents… it took those documents which took the risk… I saw it right away… without having met [Snowden], without having met Manning- this was someone I identified with and at the same time heroes.
Government treatment of Manning and Snowden sets chilling precedents in their attempt to discourage further whistleblowers. Manning was criticized for not reporting through “proper channels”, but Snowden brings up negative government reaction to whistleblower, Thomas Drake, regardless of his use of “proper channels”:
“We in the public, we see these stories, they come in the news- The justice department, the President, all talking heads- they say these guys are bad guys. They say they risk country, they say they are spies, they get charged under the espionage act, they did bad things.
But when you look at what happened, when you look at the bad faith the government used in their case, particularly against Thomas Drake… You’ve got to remember that inside the intelligence community they are trumpeting these things, they’re holding these guys up as examples to say look- if you say what’s going on, if you step out of line, even if you’re doing it for the right reasons, even if you’re doing it the right way- there will be repercussions.
They talk about internal channels and what not but these guys used internal channels, and they, people like Thomas Drake, they end up getting indicted”.
Ellsberg continues, pointing out the future potential threat posed even to journalists, who some accuse of ‘aiding and abetting’ the leakers:
“They haven’t yet gone against the freedom of the press idea by prosecuting journalists… It is my opinion that that lies next on the grounds… That supposed journalist, Michael Kingsley, accused Glenn Greenwald, and Peter King has done the same, …and that is, ‘you guys, you journalists are aiding and abetting a crime, a criminal.’
…But aiding and abetting is a legal term and it has to do with a crime and perpetrating. Wasn’t it David Gregory who asked Greenwald, ‘In so far as you are aiding and abetting’ he’s saying ‘in so far that YOU ARE A CRIMINAL why should you not be punished?’ To accept that the giving of the information is unequivocally criminal is the first step, I’m sure to going along with Kingsley and Gregory and so many others… Publishing is also criminal… and they will go after that as well.”

Click here to watch the complete discussion with Ellsberg and Snowden.

 Artist Clark Stoeckley set up a table in support of Chelsea Manning at the Hope X conference, featuring Stoeckley’s book and a donation box for Chelsea Manning’s upcoming legal appeals. Stoeckley’s novel, The United States versus Chelsea Manning, is a graphic account from inside the courtroom of Manning’s court martial last summer. Click here to purchase The United States versus Chelsea Manning or for more information.

***The Dog Days Of July-Musings On A 50th Anniversary High School Reunion  

 
 
The Trials and Tribulations Of Sam Lowell 

From The Pen Of Frank Jackman

A while back I wrote a couple of things about my old North Adamsville classmate Sam Lowell and his short love affair with one of our classmates, Melinda Loring,  an affair that wrecked his longtime relationship with his companion, Laura, and which has of now not recovered. That relationship with Melinda flowered not in some act of youthful hubris but very recently as part of his reaching out to fellow classmates to get them to attend our 50th anniversary of graduation from high school in 1964. Here is the germane part of the motivation for his getting involved in the reunion organizing effort from one of those things I wrote about the affair as a quick background note:

“….. Sam had been thinking about his 50th class reunion at North Adamsville High School since he had received an invitation to go to his 40th reunion back in 2004. At that time Sam had dismissed the invitation with so much hubris because then he still thought that the bad luck that had followed him for much of his life had been caused by his growing up on “the wrong side of the tracks” in North Adamsville. He told me, a number of times, that he had spent half a lifetime blaming that bad luck hometown affiliation on everything from acne to wormwood.” 

 

“Subsequently through some family-related deaths that took him back to the old town Sam had reconciled himself with his roots and had exhibited the first stirrings of a feeling that he might like to see some of his old classmates. In late 2013, around Thanksgiving he, at least marginally savvy on such user-friendly sites, created a Facebook  event page in order to see if anybody else on the planet knew of plans or was interested in making plans for a 50th reunion. One day, a few days after setting up the page, he got an inquiry asking what he knew about any upcoming plans.  He answered in a short note his own limited knowledge of any such plans but that his intention in setting up the page had been to seek others to help out with organizing an event if nothing had been established as yet….. ”

The subsequent affair as we know didn’t work out and went out with a bang rather than a whimper as I have also written about previously and which I am thoroughly sick of writing about, and Sam is in describing. He mentioned to me after the last blow-out between him and Melinda that at 16 or 68 (his current age) relationships do not get any easier but let’s be done with that one. The ever intrepid Sam though has continued to work on getting out the troops for the reunion and as part of that effort has been writing what he calls “mood” pieces about the old days in North Adamsville including pre-high school days on the class website.

Those pieces had elicited a little comment and some exchanges from fellow classmates and Sam thought I could use the material provided to, get this, let the world know, that the class of 1964, the generation of ’68 had not all gone to hell in a hand basket. I, to appease him frankly, have agreed to try to make some sense out of the exchanges. Personally, although at this point he has talked me into going to the reunion unless a better offer comes along, I would have let it rest, have let the old fogies who populate the site go discuss their grandchildren or some such worthy endeavor. The “mood piece” subjects, the July doldrums’ worthy subjects, included pieces on his childhood Fourth of July neighborhood celebrations, the positive effect that going to the various branches of the Timothy Clark Public Library in North Adamsville had on saving his life (and alleviating his teenage angst and alienation), and a certain childhood local bakery, Ida’s, that still brought ancient smells back to memory.  

From Sam:

Cindy-Thanks for remembering about that store next to Harold’s- wasn’t it a club for the North Adamsville Associates or whatever they called the group that ran the July 4th “time.” Also thanks for memories of Adams Elementary School and May Day. [Planetary orb May Day not the Red Square red scare Cold War best forgotten May Day.]- We did the same thing at Adamsville South and got those crepe May baskets as a reward. Of course May Day in Adamsville has always been associated with the wild boys and girls, circa 1600s, who gathered round some rogue Puritan’s maypole, a guy who believed in free love and free drinking on that day and others as well, and got kicked out of town after a while-yeah, we know-the puritan ethic that has us still in its grip as well-we created one in sixth grade I think.

Do you have any stories about Doc Andrew’s drugstore you want to share? I have one about my first liquor purchase (illegal) if anybody is interested in hearing it. I am being nice these days and not filling up this Message Forum with my long postings which from now on will be on my profile page. Although how would we have gotten to cutting up old touches about the old days if I hadn’t written that piece on the old North Adamsville Fourth of July. By the way (okay BTW) I noticed when I went on site to the cyberspace Magnet to check what activities you did in high school that you belonged to the nurses’ career club. Did you go in the health field after graduation? You also mentioned hospital around your late husband’s illness.  

From Cindy:

Ah...Yes Doc Andrews drugstore. My cousin lived upstairs over the store. We hung around there too and played his jukebox every afternoon after school, on days when we had nickels, dimes, and quarters. My brother, Billy, when he ran out of money from bottle returns used to hit our mother’s pocketbook for loose change-without asking of course. A venial sin which I hope he confessed up at Our Lady’s Church, although knowing him probably not. He probably thought it was his just do in order to keep those jukebox platters spinning.

I also remember being on the safety patrol in front of the school [Adams Elementary] with Mrs. DeYoung the Safety Officer? We went to "dirty Doc's" for a tonic or a candy bar after school or on our way to Norfolk Downs. 

As for my after high school life, I retired early from Adamsville General Hospital. My last years were spent working in the ER in administrative work, over seeing my phone operators, co-coordinators and registration. Working directly with nurses and doctors alike. There is nothing I haven't seen, from birth to death and in between. I do miss it though. I was with AGH for 23 years. I worked the night shift the entire time. My grandmother was my inspiration as she was an LPN at Mass General and had owned a nursing home.

I remember the go-cart races down Young Street in front of Doc's and sledding in the winter because cars would use Kendall or Sagamore Streets as Young Street was too steep with ice. 

From Sam:

Cathy-short note –If you can believe this I was a safety patrol guy complete with white belt and a small badge down at Adamsville South School (where a number of other NA64ers went including my much missed and wish he could be found friend Brad Badger, the great trackman from our class.  Believe me my career (read: life story) took a very different path, a very different path indeed, from the local kid cop who lorded it over the non-safety patrol kids.

Yes, we use to build box cars down Young Street which would stop about Coe Street. More later.

How about this thought- Let’s see how brave you were- Dave Vails reminded me of this a few months ago. Down in the old Adamsville projects we would “skid-hop” mostly the Eastern Mass buses because the driver couldn’t see us. You know we would hang on the back bumper and get a free ride for a distance as long as snow was on the ground. I did the same on Main Street too. Okay, girl, (you know I mean woman, okay) how about you? BTW we did not do it on cars after one guy almost killed us when he saw what we were doing and he sped up.

Finally- Cindy- we are all adults here-and I address this to everybody who reads this as well. How about some “‘now” photos. I have placed one on my profile page and would put more if others would not stay stuck in the summer of 1963 when you went into Boston to Bachrach’s to pose. Like I said we are adults here-oh BTW let’s avoid the photo shop we know ages here-do we know ages.         

From Sam:

Cindy -Greeting from Boston on a wet July Fourth- Thanks for the added information about the old days. I was just thinking about that summer rec program where we made those gimp bracelets and stuff. I remember one time that I made one, there two kinds I think the easy weave kind and square cross-over kind if you remember. I was very shy about girls as a kid (what else is new in the world) but I did give one of my first ones to a girl that used to sit on the picnic table. She accepted it with a slight smile, or what I thought was a slight smile.  Did a guy every give you a gimp bracelet back then. I already told you, shy I might have been, but my whole purpose in making the foolish things was to give to girls at Adamsville South and later Atlantic. Like I said they all thought I was from Mars or something. Also on the rec thing I use to make copper etchings or something like that from a kit they had. Also we did archery but I don’t remember being very good at it. Okay that settles the rec program for now. If you think of anything else let me know.

Thanks for the information on your late husband and sorry for the mistake I made about him being our classmate. Now that we are all of a certain age most of us have been through some experience like you had caring for your husband. Still it requires a hats off from your fellow classmates to keep him at home as long as you could. I could never really do that although I have had my share of care-giving.          

I agree the old Atlantic neighborhood doesn’t have the feel like in the old days on the several occasions I have returned over the last few years. The field is smaller and seems unused. Harry’s and all the old name stores are gone. The Red Feather is gone, and on and on. I think that part of it is the change in the groups who live there now, the pressures of today’s life for young  families to interact, and the loss of the old time working class feeling of everybody being poor as church mice and trying to help each other more. That is just a snap sociological opinion.

That brings me to my next point –the Midway and the Bargain Center-those pre-Walmart stores were where I (alright my mother) got our clothes. You know plaid shirts when they were not in style, some god awful pants. Yeah, that was the fate of the church mice poor. So you know I was no GQ guy. Funny I think that other NA students worked at the Bargain Center as well. I know my old friend and the great runner from our class Brad Badger’s mother worked there.      

I can’t believe that we did not know each other back then (unless you were the girl I gave that foolish bracelet to) because I used to go to the Post Office all the time looking for new stamps (when stamp-collecting was a real hobby), used to love (and still do) the sound of train whistles first heard I think for the Old Colony station. That was really the way to go into Boston if you had the dough. Forget the Eastern Mass buses. I would rather walk to the nearest subway stop over in Clintondale. And of course I used to use the tunnel to cross from Hancock Street to get over to Young Street where I would go frequently when home-life got to crazy and grandma’s house was my refuge.    

Funny too about Adamsville Beach which I wrote about recently here. I think one of our classmates’ mothers gave swimming lesson. I won’t even ask you about high school Adamsville Beach, day or night unless you want the world to know about “parking” and “submarine races” but I will ask you about that Newport Drive-In since you described it, and I quote as a “ passion pit.” On second thought some classmates may have not taken their high blood pressure medication and that kind of thing is best left for another time and another way of communicating.  

Finally, for now I guess, I ask you a question that I put to Rita Brady (did you know her?)- “What I don’t see you and Cindy Moore talking about in the tonic and ice cream scramble. Was that crazed rush to grab every off-hand bottle of tonic and ice cream a guy thing. I think they had the tables separated for boys and girls (what else was new). Frankie did it in the 1950s. When we moved back to North Adamsville in 1959 I know I did. Hell it was easier for me than Frankie since my grandparents’ house on Young Street was closer than Frankie’s. I assume that when they went around collecting dough they hit Bottoms Street. I don’t remember guys playing music on the flatbed truck but they did have a bullhorn.”

What’s your take on the tonic and ice cream scramble?

Later-glad that you are going to the reunion and have taken care of business. Funny as Bob Curry said today we are having the reunion in a place that used to be a Mecca for live dangerous swimmers-Friendly regards-Sam      

From Cindy:

Yes Sam, I did collect my share of sodas and Hoodsies back in the day. [July 4th when a group of residents organized a local celebration including a ton of sodas and ice cream] And as there were 4 of us girls at the time we had a good haul. My brother was only a baby then. Yes there were two lines as well [boys and girls]. There was a vacant cobbler store I believe next to Harry’s Variety that would showcase all the prizes leading up to the Fourth as well. I will have to look in my hopeless chest to see if I still have that bracelet.

Sorry Sam, no such luck on a picture [Sam had asked if Cindy had any photos from the period, from the 1950s]. But when I think that far back it comes to mind before the tennis courts they had tents set up also. Each tent had a bunch of games. There were about 6 or 8. Also before it was "Harry’s" the store it was called Whelan’s. Operated by Betty Whelan and family as my mother worked there part time. On the opposite corner was Stendell’s, a butcher shop with meats and deli. Betty Leahy was the head waitress at the Feather [a local barroom when all the fathers and older brothers did their drinking]. I did go to the summer rec program every year. Made pot holders, worked a gimp bracelet as well as see-sawed on those green ass splintered boards. They had 2 sets of swings too. Regular and baby seat with the bars. At night we would stand up on them to see how high we could go (fearless).

In the winter months the North Adamsville Public Works Department plowed the roads and dumped the snow on the ball field. [The field used for July 4th and for summer kid recreational programs.] We used slide down the mounds. They also used to flood the park to ice skate. 

I remember the factory across from the park as it made baby pacifiers among other things. The LeBlancs lived in the corner house at Young St. The Madsens’ lived in the ranch, the Gallaghers' lived across from the park on Young. Also in front of the Daley on the corner of Kendall and Hancock used to be North Adamsville Cab.

Don't want to bore you with much more.

From Sam:

Cindy -Thanks for all the great information about the old days in Atlantic. And no, no way are you boring anybody because look at the responses that are being generated. A couple of things about those Whelans when Betty got married (I forgot her mother’s name but she went to live with them) to a guy who worked at Duggan Brothers (now long gone) and sold the store they moved over to my street, Maple Street, a few doors down from us.

By the way when the store became Harry’s and I used to hang there to play the pinball machine (illegally since I was not sixteen) I found out that it was really a cover for a bookie joint. He had his book right out there in front. I would see Adamsville cops coming in to make their bets. Even my sainted grandmother knew about that operation before I did. Such is life. 

Speaking of grandparents mine, Daniel and Anna Riley, lived at 78 Young Street.  Classmates Jim McNally lived on one side at one time and Gary Davis on the other. Stendell’s is where I would go to get their meats since my grandfather had a stroke and my grandmother was house-bound due to a crippling injury in her 50s.

Amazing too we probably sat next to each other in summer rec (I was the shy guy who maybe gave you a little glance) because I made those gimp bracelets too. Reason: to give them to girls at Atlantic (or earlier at Adamsville South)-I guess I was girl-addled even then-but they dismissed me out of hand. I guess they wanted real bracelets like I gave a girl from North Adamsville one time later.

From Sam again:

Cindy -If you get a photo I can walk you through the process. I am not an IT wizard either -our super webmaster Donna walked me through it. I know and learn enough tech stuff to survive on the "information super-highway" and worry more about writing. The whole process is infinitely easier than about twenty years ago when I would rather use a typewriter than the world processor although some days I miss that old beauty.   

I have placed another photo on my profile page from California last month to lure everybody else out.

Yes we have come a long way from the days long ago when, as the English poet William Wordsworth said in one of his poems “to be young was very heaven”, and we thought we were immortal, were going to live forever. If you still have that winsome smile that you have on your class photo that will please everybody. No wrinkles could erase that I am sure.  

My favorite at Ida’s (beside the cupcakes now making a culinary resurgence) was to go on Friday to get her oatmeal bread so I could have peanut butter and jelly sandwiches at my grandmother’s. Guess what- I still like that kind of sandwich. 

Thanks for the remembrance of the Timothy Clark Public Library branch on Sagamore from early youth before it went to Appleton Street I think, or was it Atlantic. The branch down at Adamsville South  saved my life the summer of sixth grade, saved me from the corner boy life that I was taking dead aim at until I realized that I liked reading a lot more than the life of petty crime.     

From Sam [in response to memory postings by several classmates including Cindy]: 

***The Smells, Ah, The Smells Of Childhood- Ida's Bakery Over on Sagamore Street, For Rosemary 

There are many smells, sounds, tastes on the memory trail in search of the old days in North Adamsville. Of course one cannot dismiss that invigorating smell of the salt air blowing in from Adamsville Bay when the wind was up. And that never to be forgotten slightly oily, sulfuric smell at low tide down at Adamsville Beach, the time of the clam diggers and their accomplices trying to eke a living or a feeding out of that slimy mass. Or the smell of marsh weeds from up at the disfavored Montum end of the beach. Or the sound of the ocean on those days when the usually tepid splashing against the shoreline turned around and became a real ocean and acted to calm a man’s (or kid’s) nerves in the frustrating struggle to understand a world not of one’s own making.

I know I do not have to stop very long to tell this crowd, the crowd that will read this piece, about the tastes of that HoJo’s ice cream back in the days. Or those char-broiled hot dogs and hamburgers from your backyard barbecue pit or the ones down at the beach. But the smell that I am smelling today is closer to home, as a result of a fellow classmate’s bringing this to my attention. (Although if the truth be known I was already on the verge of “exploring" the subject). Ida’ Bakery over on Sagamore Street, the next street over from my grandparents’ house on Young Street across from the Welcome Young Field.

You, if you are of a certain age and neighborhood, remember Ida’s, right? She ran a bakery out of her living room in the 1950s and early 1960s (beyond that period I do not know). Now I do not remember all the particulars about her, about her operation, about what she made but I remember the smells of fresh oatmeal bread. Or of those Lenten hot cross buns. Or of the 1001 other simple baked goods that put my mother, my grandmother, your mother, your grandmother in the shade. And that is at least half the point. You went over to Ida’s to get high on those calorie-loaded goodies. And in those days that was okay. Believe me it’s was okay. I swear I will never forget those glass-enclosed delights but I need a little help here. I do not remember much about the woman, her life, where she was from, or any of that. If you do, let me know. This I do know- in this time of frenzied interest in all things culinary Ida's simple recipes and her kid-maddening bakery smells still hold a place of honor.

And This Too From Sam:

The Timothy Clark Public Library
 

Recently Cindy Moore in response to a sketch I wrote about Ida’s Bakery over on Sagamore Street mentioned that she inevitably stopped by that shop after having been to the library located almost next door if I recall. I remember that Thomas Crane Public Library branch early on when I used to go visit my grandparents on Young Street when I was in elementary school at Adamsville South. Later, after moving back to North Adamsville in 7th grade, I used to go to the branch when it was relocated on Atlantic Street (I think). And later when we were in high school I went to the bigger branch when it was built across from Sacred Heart Church. Needless to say I made a number of visits to the architecturally magnificent main library “up the Square.”

Many fruitful hours reading and research hours were spend in all those locations but today I wish to speak of the branch which was attached to the Adamsville South School when I was growing up (now located at the corner of Palmer and Sea Streets) and which saved my life. In late fifth and almost all of sixth grade I was caught up in the corner boy life of the “projects.” (And strangely was also a “cop” on the school safety patrol-go figure the vagaries of tween-ness.) You know hanging around with guys who were into petty crime. Mostly “clipping” stuff from the stores “up the Square” and other misdemeanors. I got into some minor trouble, mostly home trouble, a fair number of times but by the summer after sixth grade I was enthralled by “the life.”

One very hot day that July I went into the library to just cool off since we did not have AC at home and I was uncomfortably hot. I picked out a book (who knows what it was, probably a biography of Abigail Adams who I was crazy about then, except it was in the children’s section since you couldn’t officially go in the adult section until seventh grade) and started reading. Read that day until the place closed. And went back there every day for the rest of the summer. See I finally figured out that I liked reading a lot more than I liked fretting over the next criminal caper. Many of my corner boys, as their later “careers” testified to, were not so lucky. So a tip of the hat to the Timothy Clark.  

Oh yeah, I know at least one fellow classmate who sought refuge from teen angst and alienation and the craziness of home life at the main library. And she turned out well. Who else has a library story or for that matter has a special place refuge ("shelter from the storm") from the trials and tribulations of youth story.

From Sam:

Once Again on the Timothy Clark Library Branch

Cindy- I am always ready to stand corrected on a factual memory matter, or on any other. There have been many classmates on this site ready, more than ready, to help me see the error of my ways. I am therefore ready to defer to your memories. Almost. The reason I think I remember that Atlantic Street branch as being later than the Sagamore location was because in junior high I had a “crush” on a girl who used to go to that branch and I would constantly be passing by to see if she was in there. Don’t tell me I did all that walking and looking for nothing. Or worse, that my memory has let me down so badly that I was in the wrong place. Maybe a third party can help us out. Help! Later Sam        

From Cindy:

Well Sam you got on my facts being ass backwards. But I have an excuse. You see at this late time in my life with children, grandchildren and even a great-grandchild along with plans to attend the reunion, I am also getting married in 3 weeks. Plus I am trying to get two of our classmates to join in our reunion. Sounds like they are both planning to attend although they are not computer set up. I am planning on driving from Fl. to Ma.

From Sam:

Cindy -Thanks for note-You really had me going on the library question. I checked with some independent third party sources who shall remain anonymous since they have not been authorized to provide that information (hey, that sounds like a governmental press agent would say doesn’t it) and they have confirmed that Sagamore was first and then Atlantic Street. So I did not walk that street and peek in that storefront library window for that girl I had a crush on in junior high in vain (although doing so was since I never got to first base but that is a separate question). 

But with all you are up to these days I can understand the memory overload. I am not sure if I will run out of cyberspace before I finish but congratulations on each of your children. Each grandchild. The (for now) great-grandchild. Special congratulations on your up-coming marriage and I wish you and him well. Congratulations on your planned trek up to Ma from Fla and good speed. Finally congratulations on trying to get some classmates to come to the reunion as well although I am continually amazed at the number of people from our class we have not been able to reach because they too are not on the “information super-highway.”      

 
As The 100th Anniversary Of The Beginning of World War I (Remember The War To End All Wars) Starts ... Some Remembrances-

 
Marking 100 Years Since The Start Of WWI
Marking the one hundredth anniversary of the start of World War One. We’ll look at lessons learned and our uneasy peace right now.
U.S. Secretary of War Newton D. Baker watches as wounded American soldiers arrive at an American hospital near the front during World War I. (AP Photo)
U.S. Secretary of War Newton D. Baker watches as wounded American soldiers arrive at an American hospital near the front during World War I. (AP Photo)
A hundred years ago today, the world took a massive turn.  The Austro-Hungarian Empire declared war on Serbia, and World War I was on.  Within days, everyone was at war.  Decades of peace exploded into trenches and poison gas, tanks and bombs.  The world was literally remade.  Millions and millions dead.  Borders redrawn.  A century on we still live with the consequences – and some feel global chaos in the air again.  An old, familiar order teetering.  This hour On Point:  the onslaught of World War I, and lessons for an uneasy world right now.
– Tom Ashbrook

Guests

Margaret MacMillan, historian and professor of international history at the University of Oxford. Author of many books, including “The War That Ended Peace” and “Paris 1919,” among others.
Sean McMeekin, history professor at Koc University in Istanbul, Turkey. Author of “July 1914: Countdown to War” and “The Russian Origins of the First World War.”
Jack Beatty, On Point news analyst.

From Tom’s Reading List

The Guardian: Margaret MacMillan: ‘Just don’t ask me who started the first world war’ — “But why, when it was clear by the spring of 1915 that the war on the western front was hopelessly bogged down, didn’t they stop? ‘When that many people have died and you’ve asked your publics to make these sacrifices, how can you say: ‘Whoops, sorry, we made a bit of a mistake here.””
MarketWatch: 5 things we should have learned from World War I – “This is not some distant and dull historical anecdote. The first World War cost tens of millions of lives. It shattered the old world in Europe and paved the way for Stalin, Hitler, and, in 1939, the second World War. Historians today often call 1914-45 a single crisis spanning 31 years. When it was over, somewhere approaching 100 million people were dead. The wars united modern science and the horrors of the Middle Ages. We are still feeling the effects today.”
Boston Globe: What does World War I mean? A century of answers — “When World War I began 100 years ago, on July 28, 1914, every nation fighting thought it knew why. England, France, and Russia blamed Germany and Austria-Hungary, while the latter blamed the former. Socialists blamed imperialists, pacifists blamed warmongering leaders, and Americans blamed the Old World for succumbing to its usual barbarism.”
Please follow our community rules when engaging in comment discussion on this site.
Marking 100 Years Since The Start Of WWI
Marking the one hundredth anniversary of the start of World War One. We’ll look at lessons learned and our uneasy peace right now.
U.S. Secretary of War Newton D. Baker watches as wounded American soldiers arrive at an American hospital near the front during World War I. (AP Photo)
U.S. Secretary of War Newton D. Baker watches as wounded American soldiers arrive at an American hospital near the front during World War I. (AP Photo)
A hundred years ago today, the world took a massive turn.  The Austro-Hungarian Empire declared war on Serbia, and World War I was on.  Within days, everyone was at war.  Decades of peace exploded into trenches and poison gas, tanks and bombs.  The world was literally remade.  Millions and millions dead.  Borders redrawn.  A century on we still live with the consequences – and some feel global chaos in the air again.  An old, familiar order teetering.  This hour On Point:  the onslaught of World War I, and lessons for an uneasy world right now.
– Tom Ashbrook

Guests

Margaret MacMillan, historian and professor of international history at the University of Oxford. Author of many books, including “The War That Ended Peace” and “Paris 1919,” among others.
Sean McMeekin, history professor at Koc University in Istanbul, Turkey. Author of “July 1914: Countdown to War” and “The Russian Origins of the First World War.”
Jack Beatty, On Point news analyst.

From Tom’s Reading List

The Guardian: Margaret MacMillan: ‘Just don’t ask me who started the first world war’ — “But why, when it was clear by the spring of 1915 that the war on the western front was hopelessly bogged down, didn’t they stop? ‘When that many people have died and you’ve asked your publics to make these sacrifices, how can you say: ‘Whoops, sorry, we made a bit of a mistake here.””
MarketWatch: 5 things we should have learned from World War I – “This is not some distant and dull historical anecdote. The first World War cost tens of millions of lives. It shattered the old world in Europe and paved the way for Stalin, Hitler, and, in 1939, the second World War. Historians today often call 1914-45 a single crisis spanning 31 years. When it was over, somewhere approaching 100 million people were dead. The wars united modern science and the horrors of the Middle Ages. We are still feeling the effects today.”
Boston Globe: What does World War I mean? A century of answers — “When World War I began 100 years ago, on July 28, 1914, every nation fighting thought it knew why. England, France, and Russia blamed Germany and Austria-Hungary, while the latter blamed the former. Socialists blamed imperialists, pacifists blamed warmongering leaders, and Americans blamed the Old World for succumbing to its usual barbarism.”
Please follow our community rules when engaging in comment discussion on this site.
Defend The Palestinian People! No U.S. Aid To Israel 



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Dear pf,
I am writing to ask you to help the upcoming August 2 National March on Washington to Stop the Massacre in Gaza.
This is one of those moments in history that grassroots actions can become a real factor in the calculations and policies of governments.
Buses are coming to DC on August 2 from all over. People are also coming by car, car caravans, train and many are even flying to join this historic event in solidarity with the besieged Palestinian people.
Each bus from New York City costs $2,400. From New Haven the cost is $2,500. From Philadelphia it is about $1,500.
We are also producing materials: flyers, posters, logistical materials and more. 
Volunteers are working around the clock to make this happen. There is now an amazing grassroots response as people are taking to the streets throughout the country and the world.
You can make your tax-deductible donation online right now to help this mobilization of the people succeed.
If you prefer to write a check you can do by making it payable to ANSWER/Progress Unity Fund and mail to 617 Florida Ave., NW, Lower Level, Washington DC 20001. Again, all donations are tax-deductible.
We must continue to act together to stop the war crimes and crimes against humanity being perpetrated against our sisters and brothers in Gaza by the Israeli war machine. We, the people of the United States, will stand together on August 2 in front of the White House and demand an end to all U.S. aid to Israel.
Let Gaza Live!
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Brian Becker
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