
Somerville Police Chief David Fallon recently looked back on his first year as head of the Department, and reflected on its policies, goals and achievements.
By Josie Grove
Over the last year, police departments have been under intense public scrutiny after a series of high-profile instances of police violence and community protest. This month marks the grim anniversaries of the deaths of Michael Brown and Eric Garner, and the beginning of the Black Lives Matter movement.
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Stan Ridgway entertains at Johnny D’s this Wednesday night.
By Jim Clark
Stan Ridgway, founding member and former lead singer of the 80’s new wave group Wall of Voodoo, can easily be described as a musical whirlwind of versatility. He is adept at playing various musical instruments; is widely regarded as an uncommonly talented songwriter; and has enjoyed a prolonged career as a performer as well as a composer of music for film and television.
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Today, Wednesday, at Powder House Park is the 35th annual Mayor’s Senior Picnic. Mayor Joseph A. Curtatone invites all to attend this popular yearly event running from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. It’s a wonderful day of dancing, music, entertainment and prizes galore. Tickets are available at the following locations: Holland St Center, 167 Holland St.; Cross Street Center, 165 Broadway; and the Mayor’s Office/City Hall, 93 Highland Ave.
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— Photos by Claudia Ferro
som|dog’s annual Pet Palooza took place over the weekend at Somerville’s Assembly Row. The two day festival had test-it-out rings, ask the trainer, unique local pet vendors, a day focused on pet adoption, music, and face painting for kids were a few of the fun features the festival brought to the community.
By Ross E. Blouin
Publisher of The Somerville Times
I CAN’T STAND IT ANYMORE! The recent editorial in the Somerville Journal, July 30, 2015 (“De-escalate Police Aggression”) has driven me over the edge. The facts in the editorial are sketchy. Seems a 16-year-old bike rider, Osvaldo Lima, was pulled over by the Somerville Police for riding down a one-way street the wrong way. Lima did not offer proper identity. The bike rider was rude and uncooperative with the officer. A skirmish broke out as the officers tried to make an arrest and the officers tried to use pepper spray. The bike rider broke free from the police and ran away. Those are the facts according to the Somerville Journal editorial.
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Eagle Feathers #84 –The Couriers
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By Bob (Monty) Doherty
“Neither snow nor rain nor heat nor gloom of night stays these couriers from the swift completion of their appointed rounds.” These words were written 2,500 years ago by Greek historian, Herodotus, and have become the unofficial motto of the United States Postal Service. The official mission statement of the post office is as follows, “The postal service shall have as its basic function, the obligation to provide postal services, to bind the nation together through the personal, educational, literary, and business correspondence of the people. It shall provide reliable, and efficient services to patrons in all areas and shall render postal services to all communities.”
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Food For Free’s Ride For Food on Sept. 20 will help raise funds needed to support the effort to get healthy food to those in need.
Join in the Ride For Food, Sunday Sept. 20
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By Tom Bannister
Maybe you’re a spandex-wearing 50-mile type. Or, perhaps pedaling shorter distances for a good cause is more your speed. Either way, local nonprofit organization Food For Free is looking for cyclists like you to join its team in the upcoming Ride For Food event, set for Sunday, Sept. 20.
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Somerville Community Access Television won the 2015 Hometown Award for Overall Excellence from the National Alliance for Community Media (ACM). The competitive Hometown awards are given annually by the ACM, the national trade organization of public access stations across the country. The contest recognizes excellence in station operations ands programming produced by members and staff. To win the award, SCATV submitted a compilation video of clips from over twenty outstanding programs produced at SCATV in 2014. The award plaques will be given out at the ACM’s national conference in Pasadena, CA in August.
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Have you ever had a significant encounter with someone at Market Basket– in– say, the frozen food section? I can’t say that I have…but while fondling a yam—I had an idea for a poem, but I digress. In playwright Christopher Durang’s play “ Laughing Wild,”presented by the Hub Theatre Company of Boston, at the Club Cafe in the South End of the city, something significant happens between two conflicted characters in the tuna fish aisle at Gristede’s in New York City. The play ( set in the 1980s) directed by former Somerville resident Margaret Ann Brady, uses this encounter between an unnamed man and woman as a conduit for an exploration of ontological questions like: why can’t I find love? a job? meaningful work? spiritual fulfillment? etc…
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