This coming Saturday, March 24, from 9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m., the Somerville Teachers Association will be having an “alumni tour” of the old high school. This is a chance to see and walk through the old corridors once again before the school is torn down to make room for the new one. No admission fee is being charged, but donations to the STA scholarship fund will be gladly accepted. It’s a great opportunity to reminisce about your days at the old high school. Parking is available around the school in various lots. Please enter at the main entrance of the school.
Continue reading »

Drawing a cardioid with straight lines during Pi Night at the East Somerville Community School.
A great way to celebrate a transcendental number
*
By Tom Bannister
Wednesday, March 14 was Pi Day (3.14). What better excuse is there to have a celebration of math with middle schoolers than π? Last Friday night, well over 250 students, parents, teachers, and volunteers from the high school, PTA and community celebrated π at the East Somerville Community School by eating pizza for dinner then spending an evening estimating, creating, collecting data, answering questions, and ending with pies for everyone. Luckily the Math Fund celebrated early, since many schools had a Snow Day on Pi Day, thanks to the third Nor’easter this March.
Continue reading »

All cars must be moved to the ODD side (unless otherwise posted) by Wednesday at 4 p.m. to avoid ticketing and towing.
City offices, Schools, and Libraries will be open as scheduled. Afterschool activities are canceled.
The City of Somerville has declared a snow emergency to go into effect at noon on Wednesday, March 21. There are some changes to parking rules for school lots for this particular snow emergency, so please read the following information carefully.
Continue reading »

Eagle Feathers #149 –The Paper Trail
By Bob (Monty) Doherty
Somerville natives have always had words to say and listened to those who said them. Her roots go deeper than Boston’s. On the eve of April 19, 1775, Somerville was the first to hear Paul Revere’s warning as he rode up Winter Hill that the British regulars were on the move. The following January, General Washington raised the first American flag on Prospect Hill which was designed and delivered by Benjamin Franklin.
Continue reading »

The 2017-2018 Massachusetts Charter School Athletic Organization State Tournament Champions, the Prospect Hill Academy Lady Wizards. — Photos by Correen Demers and Fatima Benmimoun
By Katie Harris
This year’s Massachusetts Charter School Athletic Organization (MCSAO) girls’ basketball season started with 21 schools divided into three divisions – North, Central and South. Any team with as many wins as losses or better during the regular season, regardless of division, would earn a berth in the MCSAO’s end of season championship state tournament. Nine teams qualified for this tournament. The Prospect Hill Academy Lady Wizards (14-1), the North Division regular season champion, qualified as the second seeded team – bested only by Community Charter School of Cambridge (14-0), the Central Division champion and the #1 seed. Additionally, PHA’s only loss this year was a 40-24 setback to Cambridge late in January.
Continue reading »

*
An anthology by homeless people and those touched by homelessness
*
I am really honored that our Ibbetson Street Press, based in Somerville, is publishing Spare Change News Poems: An Anthology by Homeless People and those Touched by Homelessness.
Years ago, I assisted the then poetry editor Don DiVecchio with his poetry column in Spare Change News and wrote a few features for the all-poetry issues. I learned a lot working with the former editor of the paper Linda Larson, and the assistant editor Cindy Baron. Now noted poets, Lee Varon and the current poetry editor Marc Goldfinger are putting out this anthology of verse through us.
Continue reading »

*
David Gullette was one of the first editors of Ploughshares and is Literary Director of The Poets’ Theatre, which presented his adaptation of Seamus Heaney’s translation of Beowulf in December 2015 and his The Boston Abolitionists in March 2017 at the Boston Athenaeum. He has also acted with the ART, Christmas Revels, Actors Shakespeare Project, and NPR’s The Spider’s Web. His book of poems, Questionable Shapes, was published by Cervena Barva Press (Somerville, MA.) in 2017.
Continue reading »



















Reader Comments