Newstalk – 7/21/10

On July 21, 2010, in Commentary, by The Somerville Times

Rumor has it that one of the remaining out of the city potential candidates for Chief of Police is just using Somerville as a stepping stone so he can become Chief of Police for his home city.  We only hope that the mayor as well as the Board of Aldermen can see through this and ask enough questions so we don’t have to go through this process every two years.

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Our sincere condolences to the Capuano Family on the passing of Rita Capuano this past weekend.   Rita was a very nice lady and was seen all over, very active over the years especially at Council of Aging events; she was the mother of Congressman Mike Capuano.

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Happy birthday to Dellio Sussi of Amelia’s Restaurant who is celebrating his birthday all week long we hear. Drop by and say hello and wish him well, and if we do say so ourselves have something to eat, you will enjoy.

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Big Congratulations to Carrie and Mike Holland on the recent birth of their newest daughter Charlotte was born last month weighing in at 7lbs, 2oz, best wishes to them.

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Mayor Curtatone’s annual boat cruise is coming up real soon on August 4; join him and many  other Somerville residents enjoying Boston Harbor off Long Wharf. Call Bill Tauro at 617 293-2016 for tickets.

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The News is moving to Ball Square, this week and our new exclusive site will be up and running sometime this week as well. For those that missed the regular blogging and commenting on our site, you can now blog and join in, and share your view on all the issues going on here in the city.  The site will allow everyone to see items not previously online such as Ms. Cam’s Olio and ‘Villens on the Town, the SCATV schedule and more. You can even download the entire paper as printed off our web site. We are going to be doing and upgrade as well over in Cambridge and look for us to break into Medford within a month as well.

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We’ve seen candidate for State Senator, Dave Carnevale, out in the streets of Somerville – in particular Winter Hill – and we hear he’s getting a great reception. We know his opponent won’t be knocking door to door now will she? We love to see a debate between the two of them, her and her 35 years as a career politician and him as a 25 year old first timer, out on the streets running on new ideas and new energy.

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Skyline Dry Cleaning in Ball Square finally opened after going through hoops to get their permits, they opened last Friday and the owners are so pleased that business has been very very good, they thank all those that have come in. Go to our front page for a coupon with a 25 percent off price. We need to support new business here in the city. We wish them well, especially since they are one of us now in Ball Square.

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Head over to the Washington Street Art Center at 321 Washington Street on August 7 for the opening reception of an exciting new art show, Stitched by Danielle Festa. The Washington Street Art Center houses Gallery 321; hosts studio space for more than twenty visual artists; and presents exhibitions, concerts, film series, and other art initiatives. The Center participates in Somerville Open Studios each May, and in an annual open studios and craft fair in December. The Washington Street Art Center is between Union Square and Beacon Street; a five-minute walk from Union Square and a ten-minute walk from Harvard Square (two blocks from Beacon Street). The Center is near or on the following bus routes: 87, 83, 86, and 91. Parking is free and ample.

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Thirty-eight residents from Somerville are riding in the Pan-Massachusetts Challenge, the nation’s most successful athletic fund raising event, to raise money for cancer research. This is a great event and we thank all the riders for their sacrifice and dedication.

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Redbones is firing up its portable smoker for a traditional Southern Pig Pickin’ and fund raiser for The Somerville Homeless Coalition (SHC) on Monday, August 2 (rain date is August 9). The  event takes place on Chester Street in front of the restaurant from 6 to 9 PM and features slow smoked pork pulled off the bone with all the fixin’s. Tickets are $25.00 for adults and, this year, $5.00 for kids under 10 (last year – $10) for a family friendly evening out.  Proceeds from ticket sales go to the SHC.  Information available at 617.628.2200 and www.redbones.com. The first Pig Pickin’ was such a success that Redbones owners Robert Gregory & Caryn Whitney made it an annual event and fund raiser for the Somerville Homeless Coalition, a non profit with head quarters just steps away from Redbones.   By adding the community component, the Pig Pickin’ became closer to its Southern roots and social ritual.  Pig Pickin’s are frequently political or church gatherings in the South;  they are always reason to come together, where ever there is space available, and spend hours smoking a pig until it’s ready for the pickin’ to begin. Redbones custom made ‘pig rig’ will be fired up in front of the restaurant early Monday morning (August 2) and whole hogs will go on the spit for six to 10 hours of slow roasting. Folks are encouraged to stop by for look and everyone is invited to come later for pork picked off the bone, loins, butts, bellies and cracklin’s plus sides of slaw, corn on the cob, greens, corn bread and watermelon and a choice of drinks including beer.  For entertainment,  there will be live music by The SAPS and other local bands.

 

Somerville Police Crime Log for the Week of July 12-18

On July 21, 2010, in Crime Reports, by The Somerville Times

Arrests

Elsides Mejano, 28, of 215 Pearl St., July 12, 4:02 a.m., arrested and charged with assault and battery.
Charles Retakes, 79, of 26 Rogers Ave., July 12, 7:25 p.m., arrested and charged with assault and battery.
David Greene, 35, of 64 Conwell Ave., July 14, 10:32 p.m., arrested and charged with assault and battery with a dangerous weapon and destruction of property over $250.
Henry Sousa, 58, of 8 Dana St., Cambridge, 6:25 p.m., July 15, arrested and charged with resisting arrest and assault and battery with a dangerous weapon.
Patrick Medley, 20, of 57 Rutland St., Boston, July 16, 2:25 a.m., arrested on warrant charges.
Travis Summit, 22, of 860 Broadway, July 16, 4:24 a.m., arrested and charged with assault and battery.
David Goggin, 44, of 8 Everett St., July 16, 4:29 p.m., arrested and charged with possession of a class B drug and possession of a class A drug.
Vincenzo Raia, 21, of 65 Sycamore St., arrested on warrant charges.
Jon Lee, 32, homeless, 1:25 a.m., July 17, arrested and charged with disorderly conduct, breaking and entering in the nighttime for a felony, resisting arrest and assault and battery on a police officer.
John Mastronardi, 26, of 138 Summer St., 4:21 a.m., July 17, arrested and charged with aggravated assault and battery.
Lucas Schneider, 25, of 112 Sycamore St., July 17, 5:37 p.m., arrested and charged with assault and battery.
Kristen Good, 28, of 31 Highland Ave., Arlington, July 17, 7:49 p.m., arrested and charged with negligent operation of a motor vehicle, operating a motor vehicle with a suspended license, drunk driving and warrant charges.
Northam Von-Posten, 26, of 33 Capen St., Milton, July 18, 11:31 a.m., arrested and charged with assault and battery.
David Lyle, 28, of 21 Spring Hill Terrace, July 18, 11:31 a.m., arrested and charged with assault and battery.

Incidents of note

Motor vehicle break-ins

July 12, 6:04 a.m., report of motor vehicle break-in at 37 Dartmouth St. #1
7:43 a.m., report of motor vehicle break-in at 88 Porter St. #2
10:44 a.m., report of motor vehicle break-in at 27 Sidney St.
11:55 a.m., report of motor vehicle break-in at Bow Street and Somerville Avenue.
July 14, 9:09 a.m., report of motor vehicle break-in at 32 Madison St.
10:18 a.m., report of motor vehicle break-in at 6 Madison St.
1:43 a.m., report of motor vehicle break-in at Madison and Sycamore streets.
July 15, 7:13 p.m., report of motor vehicle break-in at 18 Benton Rd.
July 16, 9:02 a.m., report of motor vehicle break-in at 34 Oxford St.
10:26 a.m., report of motor vehicle break-in at 27 Maple Ave.
2:49 p.m., report of motor vehicle break-in at 28 Moreland St.
3:07 p.m., report of motor vehicle break-in at 14 Westwood Rd.
3:18 p.m., report of motor vehicle break-in at 28 Moreland St.
July 18, 4:37 p.m., report of motor vehicle break-in at Target, 180 Somerville Ave.

Break-ins

July 12, 10:42 a.m., report of a break-in at Just Smile Dental, 622 Somerville Ave.
6:23 p.m., report of a break-in at 125 Jaques St. #1B.
July 13, 3:30 p.m., report of a break-in at 40 Temple St.
July 14, 3:45 p.m., report of a break-in at 60 Heath St., Floor 2.
July 18, 3:51 a.m.,  report of a break-in at 24 Wyatt St.
July 18, 4:18 a.m.,  report of a break-in at 101 Elm St.

Other incidents

July 15, 11:20 p.m., report of a robbery at Central and Medford streets.
July 13, 5:33 a.m., report of a hypodermic needle found on Glendale Ave.
July 13, 6:24 p.m., report of fraud at All Checks Cashed at 12 Union Square.
July 17, report of larceny of a bike at O Davis Square, MBTA station on Holland Street.

 

Somerville Police: Drunk driver nodded off behind wheel

On July 21, 2010, in Crime Reports, by The Somerville Times
   
By George P. Hassett

An Arlington woman was arrested for drunk driving Friday night after a concerned citizen called police to report an erratic motorist driving with her head down.

Kristen Good, 28, of 31 Highland Ave., Arlington, was arrested and charged with negligent operation of a motor vehicle, operating a motor vehicle with a suspended license, drunk driving and warrant charges.

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Off The Shelf – 7/21/10

On July 21, 2010, in Community/Arts, by The Somerville Times

Somerville gets poet laureate – of Maine

By Doug Holder

Poet Steve Luttrell is the newly appointed Poet Laureate of Portland, Maine. He is also the founder of the well respected, and much lauded small press literary journal “The Cafe Review.” I was glad to speak to Luttrell so I could ask him how it has been being a Laureate, and pick his brain about his fine literary journal. It is always good to have a poet laureate on my show on Somerville Community Access TV “Poet to Poet: Writer to Writer,” especially when there is no official Somerville Laureate selected by the city to interview.
Doug Holder: Steve you started the Cafe Review in 1989. Most small press journals fold after a year or two. What is the secret to your success?
Steve Luttrell: I think the big part is how fortunate I have been to work to work with the people I have. It has not been a solo effort. Over the years there have been a dozen people that have worked with me. They are currently working with me, and they are poets, artists and writers. They are people who volunteer their time. We are a volunteer staff so everybody gets along well. We have our differences of opinions–there is a lot of give and take.
DH: Can you tell us about the interview you conducted with the poet Robert Creeley 15 years ago or so?
ST: He was at his summer residence on the Maine coast. He told me to meet me at a well-known diner Moody’s. I walked in and he said, “Could I get you a cup of tea or coffee?” I was in the presence of this man I read and admired for years and he was asking me if I’d like a cup of coffee. The point being was that he was a real down to earth–feet on the ground–type of guy. He had a lot of interest in different things. So I did the interview in his summer home, and put it on tape. I transcribed the tape and sent it to him. We kept going back and forth. We finally came up with a product we both liked and we published it.
DH: I am told that The Cafe Review was sort of birthed in a cafe.
ST: Well, there is a small cafe in Portland, Maine, where a bunch of us used to read poems in the backroom. This was in the mid 1980s. The owner was happy to see us because we bought stuff. That went on for a number of years. At one point someone suggested that we had a lot of great poetry being read, and said we should save some of the stuff. I started going around after our readings and gathered the poems up and put them in a little stapled 20-25 page chapbook.
In those days we were a monthly. I must have been insane to think that I could keep up with that. In 1992 we switched to a quarterly, which is a much more doable format. We started dealing with more than local poets and brought in visual artists. The Review sort of evolved on its own.
DH: You are the newly appointed Poet Laureate of Portland, Maine. I know Robert Pinsky was a very active poet laureate–bringing poetry to the people so to speak. Do you have the same style?
ST: I don’t know much about the man’s poetry. I do agree with you that he was a real man of the people. I admire that. I am a huge fan of the new poet laureate W.S. Merwin. We will have to see what he does. I just like his work. I think he done some wonderful translations. But Pinsky was a wonderful laureate. You have to give back to the community that honors you in that way.
DH: What would you say to the City of Somerville to encourage them to appoint a poet laureate?
ST: If you are honored by a city and you return the honor it can only be a good thing. I think Mayor Curatone should consider it. The Poet Laureate position in Portland, Maine has brought attention to the fact that there are some very creative people in the city and that the city has a rich literary history.
DH: You have been quoted that “you know what you like” when it comes to poetry. Well what do you like?
ST: I’m pretty eclectic. For me it is a poem that I can read a certain amount of times and still think I get something out of it. It is like a good home movie. The title of one of my poetry books is “ Home Movies.” I view poems that way. They are like home movies. They are tracks in the snow. I can see where I have been. I consider it a good poem if it places me back when I wrote the poem, where I was, when I “found” the poem.
DH: I always joke with Gloria Mindock of Somerville’s Cervena Press that we are “holy fools” because we spend a lot of time publishing and make little or no money from it. Why do you do it?
ST: It feeds my spirit. It puts me in a position where I am reading and interacting with a wide variety of poets in a more direct way–much more than I normally would.

 

Lyrical Somerville – 7/21/10

On July 21, 2010, in Community/Arts, by The Somerville Times

Somerville poet Jim Cronin writes the LYRICAL: “Although I was reared on ‘Old Cape Cod,’ my  father was raised in an old-school Irish-Catholic family in Somerville in the 1940s, and my mother was born there as well. I have since followed the lead of my forebears and now live near Magoun Square.”

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Memories of the Elevated Subway

Sauntering, sluggish, overshadowed
by the tall company of close buildings, until
blossoms of sunlight scatter across the floor
beneath a spider-webbed window, lightening
hands latched onto poles and newspapers.

Steel wheels grind rails,
a dark tunneling overture for the descent.
Riding the metro, day
after day, the days themselves
repeating themselves themselves themselves.

Where are you now? I hear your voice echoing
the squeal and push of chafing steel,
feel your fingers pressing metal
for balance as the train corners hard
toward the portal to the underground.

At the tunnel, in the last moments
of light, I glance up––cool blue electricity
escaping drawn apartment drapes.
Two shapes cross the window, outlines
of the early evening blurred by dusk, still hovering

among tracks intersecting drafty triple-deckers.
I smell the mint leaves
you bathed your hair in, fresh goldenrod
you kept beside the bed. We sat up nights
on rooftops, dreaming of a someday Eden. Instead,

we kept one room, space for tarragon and basil,
the planter falling from the window box
as you clubbed both arms against my chest,
shattering on the street below, ending the year
of elevators and airplanes you never boarded.

– Jim Cronin

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To have your work considered for the Lyrical send it to:
Doug Holder, 25 School St.; Somerville, MA 02143.
dougholder@post.harvard.edu

 
   
By George P. Hassett

Two Somerville men were accosted and robbed of a wallet by three teenage suspects July 15 on Medford Street, according to police.

The victims were walking near Tennyson Street when three males stopped them and pushed them to the ground, police said. A witness heard one of the assailants say, “Yo, yo get his wallet,” police said.

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Somerville Alibrandis build momentum with win streak

On July 21, 2010, in Sports/School, by The Somerville Times

Alibrandis is in second place in their summer baseball division. - Photo by Andrew Firestone

By Mike Rubin
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Even as thunderstorms canceled summer baseball, the Somerville Alibrandis built some momentum with a pair of wins last week.
After cruising to a 12-5 win over the McKay Club Beacons, Alibrandis rolled to an impressive 9-3 win over the South End Astros.
With two rainouts on Wednesday and Friday, Alibrandis stand at 14-5-1 and are locked in second place in the Bill Stewart Division.

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By George P. Hassett

A Cambridge man struck an AJ Wright security guard with a bicycle lock July 15, according to police.

Henry Sousa, 58, of 8 Dana St., Cambridge, was arrested and charged with resisting arrest and assault and battery with a dangerous weapon.

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~Photos by Dave Krugman

Artists cooled Davis Square off in the midst of a heat wave with a frigid dose of creativity and a water theme at the annual ArtBeat festival in Davis Square Saturday.

 
   
Copyright © 2010 Beacon Hill Roll Call. All Rights Reserved.
By Bob Katzen
THE HOUSE AND SENATE. Beacon Hill Roll Call records the votes of local representatives and senators on four roll calls from the week of July 12-16.

APPROVE MUNICIPAL MANAGEMENT BILL (H 4877)

House 137-15, Senate 32-6, approved legislation that would give cities and towns more management flexibility and options.

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