
Wall to Wall: Art Builds Community will be on exhibit at the Nave Gallery, 155 Powder House Blvd, Somerville, from September 24 to October 30.
By Sanjeev Selvarajah
The Nave Gallery is holding the upcoming community event, Wall to Wall, calling on all who want to highlight and help their community using the Arts: there is a $15 entry fee. A maximum of three pieces may be entered for consideration. Submissions will be accepted through August 15. The Nave Gallery will retain only 30% commission for work sold.
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Yes, we were assured that the Annual Mayor’s Senior Picnic is being held today, Wednesday, August 3, at Powder House Park in West Somerville. It was not advertised on the City of Somerville’s website like the other Council on Aging events are. Is the Director, Cindy Hickey, trying to keep it a secret? Maybe she decided not to invite those elderly that don’t live in elderly housing? We will be there to check it out this year. We think it’s at around noontime, but who knows?
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It’s an issue that dogs us, left, right, and center. No matter which side of it you agree with, the “Black Lives Matter” banner hanging at City Hall has polarized many of us, and for some compromise is just not in the cards.
Last week, a gathering took place at City Hall organized by our local police union and attended by members of that body as well as the general public and the press.
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Eagle Feathers #109 – It’s All About WampumBy Bob (Monty) Doherty
One of the most acclaimed tales about New York City was its purchase 390 years ago in 1626. Six years after the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth in the settlement of New Amsterdam, its Governor Peter Minuet acquired today’s Manhattan. The cost of the transaction between the Dutch and the Algonquin Indians was 66 guilders, or 24 dollars worth of “wampum” and other trade goods. To the Indians, land was like oxygen. It belonged to everyone, so the barter was in their favor.
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Somerville-Cambridge Elder Services recently distributed $36,000 worth of free farmers’ market coupons, which can be used to purchase produce at several local markets.
Some 1,400 local residents will receive a windfall of fresh produce this summer, thanks to a recent collaboration between Somerville-Cambridge Elder Services (SCES) and the Farmers’ Market Nutrition Program.
Administered through the Massachusetts Department of Agricultural Resources (MDAR), the program delivered $36,000 worth of free farmers’ market coupons for SCES to distribute in late July.
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Joshua Michael Stewart has had poems published in the Massachusetts Review, Louisville Review, Rattle, Night Train, Evansville Review, Cold Mountain Review, and many others. His first full-length collection of poems, Break Every String, has been published by Hedgerow Books in April 2016. He received his BA from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. He’s a Teacher/Counselor, working with individuals with special needs. Visit him at www.joshuamichaelstewart.com.
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The 36th Annual Mayor’s Senior Picnic will be held Wednesday, August 3 from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Powderhouse Park (rain date: Friday, August 5). There will be food, dancing, music, entertainment and prizes galore.

By Ross Blouin
Ida Azzolino, daughter of Marianna Nicoli Solari and John Solari was a life-long resident of Somerville. She was born in September 1912 at her grandmother’s home on Board Alley in the North End of Boston and then brought home to live on Somerville Ave at Porter Square. Ida would have been 104 years old in September.
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Arrests:
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Hughes Julien, of 3 Washington Ave., July 26, 8:00 a.m., arrested at Washington St. on warrant charges of destruction of property under $250, assault and battery with a dangerous weapon, and assault and battery on a household or family member.
Ryan Nash, of 9 Kearsarge Ave., Roxbury, July 26, 6:32 p.m., arrested at Middlesex Ave. on warrant charges of larceny under $250 and larceny from a building.
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