
Life in the Ville by Jimmy Del Ponte
Even though it was in Cambridge, an awful lot of Somerville kids went to Matignon High School. The school is closed for good so I asked for peoples’ memories of Matignon. My own two sons graduated from there and we used to get involved with the social activities. I think it’s a shame that it’s closing. Each new comment is in quotes.
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Members of the Kiwanis Club of Somerville: Seated L-R, Rod Laurenz, Catia Aruda, President Haley Adams, Susan Callahan and Paul Upton. Standing, Bill Lemos, Tom Bent, Frank Wright, Bob Poupolo, Steve Coughlin and Bob Nissenbaum.
For the fourth year, members of the Kiwanis Club of Somerville have been providing school supplies and backpacks for middle school and high school students who are most in need of assistance.
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Homelessness in the city is reaching a critical stage according to some city officials and residents. — Photo by Bobbie Toner
By Yoko Zhu
Somerville City Council members requested that the mayor declare homelessness a public state of emergency at the latest Somerville City Council meeting on Thursday, August 24.
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(The opinions and views expressed in the commentaries and letters to the Editor of The Somerville Times belong solely to the authors and do not reflect the views or opinions of The Somerville Times, its staff or publishers)

By Will Mbah
Candidate for Somerville City Councilor at Large
Each year at this time, when the state of Massachusetts finishes its budget, our finance officers at city hall must take a careful look at what the governor and legislators have done, in order to determine what new monies or cuts in funding the city can expect.
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Massachusetts State House Employees union organizer Morgan Simko appeared before the Somerville City Council to advocate for a resolution in support of the union’s efforts to allow collective bargaining for its members.
By Cassidy Beek
The Somerville City Council Meeting was called to order on Thursday, August 24, by Ward 3 City Councilor Ben Ewen-Campen. Topics included the unionization efforts of the State House staff, an update from Mayor Ballantyne on the Winter Hill School and a discussion about the Armory building.
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In 2022, the Somerville community lost 22 residents due to opioid-related overdose. To commemorate our friends, neighbors, and loved ones who passed away, City of Somerville will place 22 purple flags on the front lawn of City Hall on August 31. One larger flag will also be displayed, representing all Somervillians who have been lost to an opioid-related overdose in the past. City Hall will also be illuminated purple in recognition of National Recovery Month. The flag and light displays will be viewable for the entire month of September.
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While its precise origins in the late nineteenth century are a bit unclear, the observance of Labor Day has generally come to signify a celebration of the common working class in America, in a somewhat similar fashion as that of International Workers Day on May 1 throughout other parts of the world.
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Urban oasis … — Photo by Denise Provost



















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