Has A Teacher Changed Your Life? We Want To Know

Published May 12, 2011

http://cdn.wbur.org/media/special/2011/wbur_0511_teachers-series-intersect

5/23 Update: Our series has begun. But please continue to add your stories via Intersect.

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Ahead of our upcoming series, “What Makes An A+ Teacher?”, we’ve asked you some specific questions, about rewarding teachers and improving teaching, to guide our reporting.

But we also want to provide a place for you to share memories and anecdotes of teachers who played a role in your life. We’re using the website Intersect.com (that’s the map above), to allow you to share your personal stories with others. Intersect will post your story and map it with the year and place where you came into contact with your special teacher.

We’re hoping you’ll share a name, year and location of a teacher who had an impact on your life. There’s space on Intersect for you to tell us how this teacher impacted your life, too. Who knows, maybe even your teacher will see it and respond to your post?

Here’s how to add your story to our map:

  1. Go to Intersect.com;
  2. Either create an Intersect account, or sign in with Facebook or Twitter;
  3. Once you’re logged in, “share a story,” at the top right of the page;
  4. In the available fields, title your entry, compose your entry, enter a “time” for your entry and enter a “place” for your entry;
  5. Important: “Tag” your story with the following tag: WBURteachers (that’s how these responses are collected on the map);
  6. Save and preview, then publish your story.

Thanks in advance for sharing!

Related:

Thursday Morning: House Combats Probation Patronage

Published May 12, 2011

The Massachusetts House unanimously approved a bill yesterday designed to eliminate patronage in the Probation Department. The bill, however, goes against Gov. Deval Patrick’s plan that would see the department put under his direction.

The nearly 20-year-old murder of a Worcester homeless woman has been solved, authorities say, thanks to DNA evidence from the body of an exhumed Alabama man. Denise Comeau was murdered in Worcester in December of 1992, but her killing had been unsolved until now.

Former Mass. Gov. Mitt Romney is scheduled to give an address on health care in Michigan this afternoon. He’s been traveling the country defending Massachusetts’ universal health care coverage law that he signed when he was governor. His defense is going over well among New Hampshire Republicans.

Boston cab drivers say delays and technical problems are making it hard for them to comply with the city’s two-year-old policy requiring cabbies to accept credit cards. WBUR’s Adam Ragusea reports that Boston’s cab drivers voiced their displeasure over the credit card requirement yesterday.

Young triumphed over old, to the dismay of Bostonians. Miami’s new Big Three beat the Celtics’ old, bouncing the team from the playoffs. With Kevin Garnett and Ray Allen looking toward the end of their careers, many wonder if this team’s championship window has closed.

What we’re following: We’ll continue to report on yesterday’s commuter rail hiccup that caused massive delays, Massachusetts legislators possibly getting a look at photos of Osama bin Laden’s death and Romney’s health care speech.

Vigil Pushes For Journalists’ Release From Libya

Published May 11, 2011

A screengrab of James Foley reporting from Libya. (Courtesy GlobalPost)

A screengrab of James Foley reporting from Libya. (Courtesy GlobalPost)

It’s Day 36 for four journalists detained in Tripoli, Libya. And for the first time, the two American journalists were able to receive a visitor — an intermediary who said they are in good health.

James Foley, of New Hampshire, was one of the reporters who was arrested in Libya on April 5 by forces loyal to Moammar Gadhafi while covering the conflict near the eastern town of Brega. He’s a correspondent for the Boston-based news agency GlobalPost.

GlobalPost CEO Phil Balboni told WBUR that a diplomat was able to meet with Foley and fellow captive Clare Morgana Gillis, a Harvard graduate who has written for USA Today and The Atlantic.

“I can’t imagine that there’s any stone that’s been left unturned here to try to get them home, and we do hope that they will be home soon,” Balboni said.

The two are in good health, according to a GlobalPost report, and Balboni said the indications are that they will be released soon.

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Wednesday Morning: Key Witness Testifies In DiMasi Trial

Published May 11, 2011

Sal DiMasi’s longtime law associate, compelled by federal prosecutors to testify against the man he calls his mentor, took the stand yesterday as a key witness in the former House speaker’s corruption trial. The government alleges Steven Topazio, who is not on trial, funneled payments to DiMasi from a software company hoping to receive a state contract.

The content of ads on T property will be examined more closely, according to the MBTA, after T riders complained about the “Judgment Day” ads seen around town. A group called Family Radio sponsored a nationwide ad campaign claiming that the end of days is approaching — on May 21, to be exact.

Dee Dee Milton traveled from Revere to Kathmandu, Nepal, to adopt a daughter. After she took custody, however, she couldn’t get her daughter a U.S. visa after the U.S. shutdown all adoptions from Nepal, alleging corruption and fraud. Months later, she and her daughter are home in Revere, confounded by confusing U.S. policy.

State Police last night arrested a man on the tarmac at Logan who had allegedly tried to open a plane door mid-flight. Witnesses said the man appeared to be drunk and that the flight crew removed the man from the exit row of the Orlando to Boston flight.

The Celtics face a must-win game in Miami tonight, down 3-1 in their playoff series against the Heat. Is this the end for Kevin Garnett, Ray Allen, Paul Pierce and company?

What we’re following: We’ll continue to report on a possible tax on soda, the vigil for reporters being held in Libya and the Constitutional Convention on Beacon Hill.

Bruins Fever Stirs Stanley Cup Memories

Published May 10, 2011

Bobby Orr flies through the air after driving the winning goal by St. Louis Blues' goalie Glenn Hall in sudden death overtime to win the Stanley Cup. (AP)

Bobby Orr flies through the air after driving the winning goal by St. Louis Blues' goalie Glenn Hall in sudden death overtime to win the 1970 Stanley Cup. (AP)

It’s great to see the Boston Bruins doing so well this season. I’m an admitted casual fan, but always get caught up in the hoopla as the team moves further along in the playoffs.

It takes me back to my youth when it seemed like everyone in the 617 area code — back then that was all of eastern Massachusetts — followed the big, bad Bruins. The names Orr, Sanderson, Esposito and Cheevers were spoken with reverence. People actually went out and bought new TV antennas so they could watch the games on TV-38.

Today marks the 41st anniversary of one of the greatest moments in Bruins history. May 10, 1970 was the date Bobby Orr scored against the St. Louis Blues in the opening minute of overtime to capture the Stanley Cup for the first time in 29 years.

I was only eight years old on that hot and muggy Mother’s Day Sunday when the B’s ended that drought. At that age, I assumed that 29 years beforehand, dinosaurs were still roaming the earth. It was basically ancient history.

Continue reading

Tuesday Morning: House May Combat Streetwalking

Published May 10, 2011

In an effort to combat prostitution, the Massachusetts House is considering a bill that would define pimps as “human traffickers.” Advocates say that changing the law would focus law enforcement’s attention on pimps and johns instead of prostitutes.

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and Maria Shriver announced yesterday that they’re separating after 25 years of marriage. The daughter of the Kennedy dynasty and the former California governor had seemed to be living separate lives since Schwarzenegger left the governor’s office, according to many observers.

The recipient of the nation’s first full face transplant showed off his new life yesterday. Dallas Wiens told the Herald, “To me the face feels natural. It feels like it has become my own.”

The mayor of Newton announced yesterday that he’s entering the race to become the Democratic challenger to Sen. Scott Brown. Mayor Setti Warren is in his second year of his first term as the state’s first popularly elected black mayor.

Jurors in the federal corruption trial of former House Speaker Sal DiMasi got a lesson in lobbying and influence peddling in state government yesterday.

Quincy Market may soon be under new management. The financially struggling management company that currently owns the lease is looking to unload the historic property.

The Celtics gave away Game 4 in overtime last night, 98-90. The team heads back to Miami down 3-1, facing three must-win games.

What we’re following: We’ll continue to report on the philanthropists who’ve signed away half their fortune, changes to wind turbine ordinances in Falmouth and horse racing at Suffolk Downs.

Patrick Outlines Youth Violence-Prevention Plan

Published May 9, 2011

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Two days after a 19-year-old became Boston’s ninth homicide victim of the year, Gov. Deval Patrick today proposed tougher gun laws in an attempt to reduce youth violence.

Patrick says he’s filing legislation that “provides public safety officials with new criminal sanctions and investigative tools to go after guns and gangs.” It would also create three new felonies:

  • assault and battery with a firearm;
  • assault with a firearm;
  • being a felon in possession of a firearm.

Additionally, the governor says he wants to create a public-private fund of $10 million to pay for existing anti-violence resource gaps and intervention programs.

“We’re losing too many children to gun- and gang-related violence,” Patrick said. “The life of any young person is not expendable. We have to act and we have to act together.” He spoke at Mattapan’s Mildred Avenue Community Center, and was joined by Boston Mayor Thomas Menino, Attorney General Martha Coakley and other political and community leaders.

The proposal comes a day after the 15th annual Mother’s Day Walk for Peace in Dorchester and two days after a yet-to-be-identified 19-year-old man was shot and killed when an afternoon fight broke out at Dorchester’s Savin Hill T stop.

Saturday’s killing was the city’s ninth homicide — and second teen victim — of the year. Boston’s overall murder figure is down, compared to this point last year.

Earlier:

Monday Morning: Menino Watches Cable Companies

Published May 9, 2011

Following multiple rate hikes by Comcast, Boston Mayor Thomas Menino is asking the federal government to give the city control over cable rates. Menino plans to file an emergency petition with the FCC asking for permission to regulate the cable industry in Boston.

Police departments across Massachusetts are noticing a big jump in certain types of crime and they’re attributing much of it to the rise of prescription drug addiction, WBUR’s Deborah Becker reports.

Stuck in a doctor’s waiting room, it always feels like you’ll never get in to have that sore throat examined. Turns out, wait times in many doctors’ offices across the state have been climbing and many Mass. doctors aren’t taking new patients.

Some analysts predict that sky-high gas prices will tumble back to earth just in time for the summer driving season, according to the Herald. At just about $4 per gallon, falling gas prices will be welcome relief.

It looks like high prices have hit everything that can get you going. Gas prices are high, sure, but the price of coffee beans is at a historic high and that production cost is being passed on to consumers.

The South Shore saw an influx of immigrants from Asia, according to numbers from the latest census. Chinese immigrants are still the region’s most populous immigrant group, but immigrants from India and Vietnam have surged in the last decade.

The Celtics will look to even their playoff series with the Miami Heat tonight at the Garden. Celtics guard Rajon Rondo played through an elbow dislocation in the team’s win Saturday, and he’ll need to continue to energize the team if the Celtics hope to head back to Miami with the series knotted at two.

What we’re following: We’ll continue to report on the continuing developments in the DiMasi corruption trial, the full face transplant recipient who is ready to leave the hospital for home and Menino’s foray into cable regulation.

The League Of Women Voters Takes Sides

Published May 6, 2011

Ever since U.S. Sen. Scott Brown excoriated the League of Women Voters for taking sides in the congressional battle over whether the Environmental Protection Agency should have the power to regulate greenhouse gases, I’ve been thinking he’s got a point.

I had this image of the League as that organization that organizes debates and takes sides in issues that have to do with how the electoral process is run. The League was one of the biggest backers of the citizen-passed Clean Elections Law, for instance, before the Legislature overturned that law.

In case you missed the tit-for-that between Brown and the League, here’s the Brown press release:

Today, U.S. Senator Scott Brown issued the following statement in response to the partisan attack advertisement being run by the League of Women Voters:

“This ad reeks of political demagoguery and exposes the League of Women Voters as nothing more than a pawn in the Massachusetts political machine. It is outrageous for an allegedly non-partisan group to use sick children to misrepresent a vote about jobs and government over-regulation. These type of over-the-top distortions have no place in our political discourse.”

And here’s the ad Brown is so upset about:

[youtube url=”7vTd9nmSpbI”]

But it turns out that the League of Women Voters often takes sides on issues it cares about.
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Boston University Dean Takes Charles River Plunge

Published May 6, 2011

You can call Boston University Dean of Students Kenneth Ellmore a man of his word.

Ellmore made good on a pledge he made to jump into the Charles River if the class of 2011 was able to reach a goal of 2,011 donations to its class gift in time for commencement on May 22.

Although this year’s graduating class has yet to hit that benchmark, Ellmore, tuxedo and all, took the plunge today after the class of 2011 set a university record of finding more than 1,600 donors.