Girls Basketball Senior Indira Evora scored her 1,000th point on January 21, 2013 vs. the Vikings of Winthrop. Evora led the team with 24 points beating the Vikings 66-55. Evora is one of four females in the history of the program to score 1,000 points for Somerville.


Somerville Writer Dan Kimmel
Arrests:
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Micheal Crawford, 47, of 70 Bishop Allen Dr., Cambridge, January 14, 9:15 p.m., arrested at 3 Snow Terr. on a charge of felony nighttime breaking and entering.
Dina Dimartino, 34, of 16 Willard, Medford, January 15, 2:21 p.m., arrested at 52 Bay State Ave. on a charge of larceny over $250.
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The 2013 SCATV Annual Meeting and Award Ceremony will take place on Thursday, January 24 at 7:00pm in the SCATV studio in Union Square, and will be cablecast live on Channel 3. The Annual Meeting will begin with comments from U.S. Representative Michael Capuano, Senator Pat Jehlen, and Representative Denise Provost, followed by short reports from SCATV Board of Directors and staff. Clips of some of the year’s best programs will be included, as well as awards for Volunteers of the Year.
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City Hall and Somerville Public Schools will be closed and trash collection will be on a one-day delay. Parking meters will not be in effect.
Mayor Joseph A. Curtatone, the Somerville Office of Commissions and the Somerville Public Schools announce the annual Martin Luther King, Jr. Celebration event, entitled, “Equality Through Access,” to be held on Monday, January 21 in accordance with national MLK Day remembrance. The 2013 event will be held at the Somerville Theatre from 11 a.m. – 1 p.m, and will include a keynote speech by Lorraine Cordeiro, Assistant Professor and Family Research Scholar at UMass/Amherst as well as live music, readings from Somerville student essays in response to the 2013 theme “Equality Through Access,” and an award presentation to community members who exemplify MLK’s legacy in the Somerville community. The event is free and open to the public.
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Children’s books make a fun and informative specialty choice for collectors.
By Amy Whorf
Children are often the recipients of new books, at least new to them. Adults who purchase them enjoy picking titles that they recall fondly from their own childhood. In some cases it’s to re-read themselves or for the first time while reading aloud to the next generation. The post-holidays are a good time to encourage their habits of reading the time-tested tomes from many genres.
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