Monthly Archives: March 2016

Truly “Parking Within The Stripes”

Spotted earlier today in Parker Harding Plaza:

(Photo/David Conneely)

(Photo/David Conneely)

Jim Garvin’s Journey: From Westport To Mars

When national debates turn to scientific matters, some seemingly contradictory themes emerge. We want more emphasis on STEM (science, technology, engineering, math), while denigrating the humanities. Meanwhile, many prominent politicians cast aside — even mock — scientific evidence in areas like climate change.

It’s time to listen to Jim Garvin.

He’s NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center chief scientist. He got his undergraduate and Ph.D degrees from Brown University, a famously liberal school (with a killer space exploration program).

And he’s a very proud graduate of the Westport school system, where a parade of of committed teachers inspired a love for not only science, but history and languages too.

Jim Garvin. Yes, that's Mars in the background.

Jim Garvin. Yes, that’s Mars in the background.

The other day, Garvin took time out from mapping Mars to talk about the map that — more than 40 years ago — took his family from Beirut and Australia to Westport.

“I was like a kid in a candy store” at Long Lots Junior High and Staples High School, Garvin says. “I had so many great opportunities to exercise my intellectual curiosity.”

In 7th grade, he and his friends wanted to study tides. Their science teacher hustled them into his VW, then drove them to Burying Hill Beach. They wandered around for hours.

That same year, Garvin told social studies teacher Tom Marshall he’d like to draw an ecological map of all the trees surrounding Long Lots. For an entire academic quarter, he did just that.

Staples was even more encouraging for a self-described “eccentric kid,” the 1974 grad says. He was profoundly influenced by physics teacher Nick Georgis (and  his amateur radio club), and AP Chemistry (where Garvin lit fires — “not smart, but they were always contained”), along with advanced French instructor Alice Adolph (“absolutely phenomenal, and very funny”) and AP US History with Dave LaPonsee (“one of the most invigorating educational experiences of my life”).

Garvin says, “I hope those academic freedoms are still alive in Westport.”

Jim Garvin, speaking at his alma mater.

Jim Garvin, speaking at his alma mater.

At Brown — where he was mentored by legendary planetary scientists Jim Head and Tim Mutch — Garvin found his life’s work.  Among his many accomplishments, he’s served as chief scientist for Mars exploration, and led a team of scientists who use the Hubble Space Telescope to explore the lunar surface in search of potential resources for human exploration.

Garvin was born around the time Sputnik was launched. Barely a decade later, men landed on the moon. Then came a robot on Mars.

Garvin is well aware of the power of science. But — in his role with NASA, and in testimony before Congress — he’s also seen the “total lack of scientific awareness” among some prominent people, and the “lack of desire to even care” in others.

Science — funding it, and encouraging students to study it — is not an easy sell, Garvin knows.

“It’s hard,” he says. “Taking AP Physics and advanced multivariable calculus at Staples is tough.” But the challenges are well worth it — individually, and for everyone on our planet, he says. (Not to mention whatever might be lurking on other planets.)

Garvin is thrilled to meet students who share his passion. A recent mentee is Nick Stern — a Staples grad now at Brown, who’s a budding astrophysicist himself.

NASA GoddardBut that’s Westport. Some older, more well-known names in Washington may not share Garvin and Stern’s beliefs in the power of science.

“It’s easy to say ‘I don’t understand climate change’ or ‘Why do we even want to go to Mars?’ Garvin says.

“But we’re all in this together. Our planet is a spaceship hurtling through an enormous universe. We have to be aware of that.”

Education, he says — in the humanities as well as the sciences — can fill an important role, at a time of a certain amount of ignorance and fear of the unknown.

His work has pioneered and directed much of what man knows about Mars — and other space exploration — and could shape our planet’s destiny for centuries to come.

And not just in space. The technology Garvin supported that’s mapped Mars in 3 dimensions is now being used to map ice sheets on earth.

The Mars Curiosity Rover in action. Jim Garvin played a key role in its development adn deployment.

The Mars Curiosity Rover in action. Jim Garvin played a key role in its development and deployment.

Garvin calls himself “the luckiest guy alive.” He went to a high school, then a college, that offered enormous academic freedoms. He reached his dream of working in a field he is still “tinglingly passionate” about.

“When I got up this morning, I turned on my computer and had a message from Mars,” he says.

“How cool is that?”

Click below for Jim Garvin’s TEDx talk on the frontier of space:

Click below for a video of Jim Garvin explaining his path from Westport and Brown to Mars (the sound improves after the introduction):

It’s Called Violet Lane…

…but today the road off Myrtle Avenue was all about crocuses:

(Photo/Fred Cantor)

(Photo/Fred Cantor)

But don’t open the pool quite yet.

Snow showers are possible Friday and Sunday.

06838: The Sequel

Last March, alert “06880” reader and proud Green’s Farms resident Nico Eisenberger noted that his neighborhood post office — convenient, friendly, with plenty of parking (shhhh!) — bore an unfortunately dilapidated sign:

Greens Farms PO

He wondered what could be done.

It’s taken 11 months. You and I might think that’s 335 days. But in government terms, it’s warp speed.

Today, the Green’s Farms post office sports a spiffy new sign:

(Photo/Nico Eisenberger)

(Photo/Nico Eisenberger)

Best of all, it’s punctuated the correct — or, at least, official — way.

Trey Ellis Tells Tuskegee Airmen’s Tale

Trey Ellis had done a lot of things in his life.

He’s written movies, books and TV shows. He’s been a political pundit, a social critic and a Huffington Post contributor. He’s won a Peabody, been nominated for an Emmy and shortlisted for a PEN Award.

Trey Ellis

Trey Ellis

He teaches at Columbia University, was a non-resident fellow at Harvard, and taught or lectured at Yale, NYU, the University of New Mexico, and in Brazil and France.

But until a decade ago, the Westport resident had never written a play.

That’s when the Lincoln Center Institute commissioned a work by Ellis about the Tuskegee Airmen. He’d already earned honors for a 1995 HBO film on the African American pilots who overcame fierce racism to become one of World War II’s finest US fighter groups. They never lost a bomber.

Ellis and Ricardo Khan turned the movie into an hour-long play, called “Fly.” Originally aimed at students, a longer version was staged a few years later at the Vineyard Theater in Massachusetts, then the Crossroads Theater in New Jersey — one of America’s leading black companies.

It’s since moved on to Ford’s Theatre in Washington — where several of the real Tuskegee Airmen saw it — and the Pasadena Playhouse.

Ellis is very proud of “Fly.” The other day — quoting Martin Luther King — he noted that while the arc of the moral universe is long, it bends toward justice. However, the playwright added, recent racial strife in America has made stories like the Airmen’s more relevant and important than ever.

Fly - Trey Ellis

Now “Fly” — which the New York Times called “a superior piece of theatrical synergy” — is coming to the New Victory Theater on 42nd Street. It runs March 11-27.

Ellis will be there. So will his family — including his son Chet (the name of one of the show’s main characters), and Chet’s friends.

But there’s one more place Ellis would like to see it produced: the Westport Country Playhouse.

“I go to as many productions there as I can,” the playwright says. “I would love to bring this to my adopted hometown.”