
Life in Ville by Jimmy Del Ponte
Back In the 60s there was a guy who worked at the YMCA on Highland Avenue and we called him Brownie. He would help out in the pool area and exercise programs. I don’t really remember too much about him So I asked our neighbors to share their memories of Brownie. His name was Knowlton Brown.
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The city’s Grand Union’s flag-raising at Prospect Hill Park took place last Sunday, January 1. — Photos by Bobbie Toner
The city’s annual kick off for the new year took place on Sunday, January 1, with a ceremony for the anniversary of the Grand Union’s flag-raising at Prospect Hill Park.
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By Maeve Lawler
The Somerville Redevelopment Authority (SRA) reviewed the Request for Qualifications (RFQ) draft to go forward with the redevelopment plans for 90 Washington Street at its December 21 meeting.
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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)
I am a 7th grade teacher at the Arthur D. Healey School in Somerville. I recently had my students write editorials on why school start times should be later for teenagers. — Emma Daniels
By Lan Patterson-Vides, 7th Grader at the Arthur D Healey School
Here’s a question, do you like zombies? Brainless, Braindead piles of flesh, you like those? No? Well what if I told you that almost every teen is a zombie. Well, they aren’t really rotting undead corpses, but from the moment most teens wake up, they are so tired that they basically are zombies. Now why is this? It’s because teens have to get up to the horribly early start times of most schools. 7:45 A.M., 7:15 A.M., 7 freaking A.M.! They also have to get up an hour before the start of school, so most kids are waking up at 6 in the morning! They also have to stay up late doing homework, so most teens end up running on about 4 hours of sleep! And they are expected to learn and be engaged! So now you see why almost every single teen is a zombie, and if you don’t, well you have the rest of this gosh darn paper to read.
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Jac-Lynn Stark was born in the Bronx and currently lives on the North Shore of Boston where she enjoys pondering life either from near the ocean or in the woods. She recently retired from 14 years of teaching English at Bunker Hill Community College in Boston. Some of her previous work has been published in Muddy River Poetry Review, Global Poemic, Drunk Monkeys, Zig Zag Folio, and forthcoming for an anthology called American Graveyard, calls to end gun violence from Read or Green Books.
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Spring Hill Sewer Separation Project

Beginning on or around January 3, City contractors will begin working on subsurface utility improvements in the intersection of Highland Ave. and Central St.
While work in the intersection is underway, access to Highland Ave. from Central St. will be restricted (details below).
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