
The Union Square Farmers Market is gaining traction in 2021 after experiencing a tough period of low attendance in the previous year.
By Fernando Cervantes Jr.
Last Saturday, Union Square Farmers Market gathered for the third time in the 2021 season of the market. Located at the intersection of Somerville Ave. and Carlton St., the Farmers Market is looking to have a successful season following the struggles that 2020 posed.
Continue reading »
This past weekend, the city joined the state in lifting remaining COVID-19 restrictions. State guidelines will still require face coverings to be worn on public transit, in rideshares and taxis, in healthcare facilities, and in other settings hosting vulnerable populations, such as congregate care settings. For more information on the state’s reopening plan and guidelines, visit mass.gov/reopening.
Continue reading »
Eagle Feathers #230 – Flag Week
By Bob (Monty) Doherty
Bernard J. Cigrand is widely credited with being the “Father of Flag Day” in America. He was a United States Navy Lieutenant in World War I, teacher, Dean at the University of Illinois at Chicago and a historical author. He pushed for the holiday’s establishment for over 30 years, lecturing over 2,188 times on the flag and patriot-ism before President Woodrow Wilson proclaimed Flag Day on June 14, 1916.
Continue reading »
Somerville joined with the state in lifting the remaining COVID-19 restrictions last Saturday. This means that we can shop, be entertained, and hang out together, without the use of face coverings being mandatory except when using public transit, ride shares and taxis, or while in healthcare facilities, and in other settings hosting vulnerable populations, such as congregate care settings.
Continue reading »
*
Initiated in 2009, the Inside-Out Gallery, located in the CVS Window in Davis Square, is a unique space that allows the public to view an eclectic array of works from artists and local organizations each month. Through May to June, Bridget Galway is displaying her evocative and stunning art.
Continue reading »
*
Thomas DeFreitas was born in Boston in 1969 and graduated from the Boston Latin School. He attended the University of Massachusetts in both Boston and Amherst. His poems have appeared in Dappled Things, Ibbetson Street, Muddy River Poetry Review, Plainsongs, Soul-Lit, and elsewhere. His first chapbook, Winter in Halifax, is forthcoming from Kelsay Books toward the end of 2021.
Continue reading »
After a career at the Suffolk County Sheriff’s Department, she will oversee the university’s emergency management, fire safety, emergency medical services, and police functions

“When President Monaco committed Tufts to being an anti-racist community, I really wanted to be part of that,” Yolanda Smith said. “And in conversations I’ve already had at Tufts, everyone has been receptive to change.” ~Photo: David Hill
By Kim Thurler
TuftsNow
Yolanda Smith, an accomplished criminal justice leader, will become Tufts University’s next executive director of public safety, effective July 1, following a national search that attracted more than 100 professionals from across the country.
Continue reading »
Somerville Mayor Joseph A. Curtatone, Ward 1 Councilor Matthew McLaughlin, Ward 3 Councilor Ben Ewen-Campen, Ward 4 Councilor Jesse Clingan, and city staff invite you to the next virtual community meeting to discuss implementation of the Gilman Square Neighborhood Plan. City consultants will present updated conceptual designs for redevelopment at the Mobil gas station site, the former Homans Building site, and nearby green space called the Gilman Triangle on Medford Street behind Somerville High School.
Continue reading »
Reader Comments