2006.06.04: June 4, 2006: Headlines: Figures: COS - Ethiopia: Politics: Boston globe: Lowell may not be a garden spot today, but it has come a long way. Why? Start with two words: Paul Tsongas.
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2006.06.04: June 4, 2006: Headlines: Figures: COS - Ethiopia: Politics: Boston globe: Lowell may not be a garden spot today, but it has come a long way. Why? Start with two words: Paul Tsongas.
Lowell may not be a garden spot today, but it has come a long way. Why? Start with two words: Paul Tsongas.
The former Lowell city councilor who went on to become a United States senator did great things for his home town. While it would be ludicrous to credit Tsongas alone with Lowell's success, he was a catalyst for change there. Among its other problems, Lawrence had no Tsongas, no such charismatic figure with brains and passion to take it places, and it shows. The late Paul Tsongas, Senator from Massachusetts and candidate for President in 1992, served as a Peace Corps Volunteer in Ethiopia in the 1960's.
Lowell may not be a garden spot today, but it has come a long way. Why? Start with two words: Paul Tsongas.
A city's catalyst
Principal in Lawrence struggles against odds
By Sam Allis, Globe Columnist | June 4, 2006
LAWRENCE -- This old mill town has had more than its fair share of misery. The trifecta of poverty, crime, and scandal has taken its toll. The schools have had a terrible ride. Visionary leadership over the years has been spotty. To most outsiders, the place is in the weeds.
Its travails contrast with what happened to its sister city up the Merrimack that a few decades ago was in pretty much the same shape.
Lowell may not be a garden spot today, but it has come a long way. Why? Start with two words: Paul Tsongas. The former Lowell city councilor who went on to become a United States senator did great things for his home town.
While it would be ludicrous to credit Tsongas alone with Lowell's success, he was a catalyst for change there. Among its other problems, Lawrence had no Tsongas, no such charismatic figure with brains and passion to take it places, and it shows.
[Excerpt]
As if it needed any more trouble, Lawrence got hit with flooding recently, which cost it the first week scheduled for MCAS testing. The Observer decided to motor north to see how it was faring.
The city is not Helsinki to me. I grew up across the river and harbor fond memories of Bishop's, its late, great Lebanese-American restaurant, and the ghost of A.B. Sutherland on Essex Street.
I wandered into a huge building on Haverhill. No particular reason. You've got to start somewhere. It turned out to be the Henry K. Oliver School -- 680 children, first through eighth grade. Ninety-seven percent Hispanic. Ninety-seven percent Hispanic. What's up with that?
What's up is that the school struggles with esprit and moxie to educate its students against long odds. Its MCAS performance can be harrowing and its progress thin. Yet principal Beth Gannon and Ginni Sirois , assistant principal for grades 5 through 8, support the much-reviled test. ``It has really raised the bar," Sirois said.
Parents registering their children at Oliver are asked to indicate where the youngsters were born. According to school data, 387 were born in the Dominican Republic and 240 in Puerto Rico. The combined 627 out of 680 seems wildly improbable.
When this story was posted in July 2006, this was on the front page of PCOL:
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Story Source: Boston globe
This story has been posted in the following forums: : Headlines; Figures; COS - Ethiopia; Politics
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