By Courtney Young
Where can you find live music, hundreds of craft vendors, community organizations, food trucks, circus performers in the middle of the street, free coffee, free ice cream, and people of all ages walking on stilts throughout the closed-off roads? Nowhere else than this year’s ArtBeat, going by the name of “FLIP.”
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Interview by Gilmore Tamny
Could you tell us a bit more about yourself and your background? Did you always want to be a poet and/or drawn to poetry?
Well, I was born in Manhattan in 1955. And my mother’s side of the family was long-involved in the book business. They started selling books from pushcarts on the Lower East Side of NYC back in the early part of the last century. My late Uncle David Kirschenbaum was a prominent book dealer, and eventually founded the Carnegie Book Store in New York City’s Book Row. So I was always around books, they were very much part the texture of my life. I started writing poetry in the 70s when I was living in a rooming house in the Back Bay of Boston. I recounted much of my life as a poet during this time in a lyrical memoir that was published, Portrait of an Artist as a Young Poseur: 1974 to 1983 (Big Table Books). I think what jump started me was when I inadvertently found On the Road by Jack Kerouac on the shelves of the now defunct Barnes and Noble in Downtown Crossing in Boston. From there I read all the Beat poets and writers, and then went on to other genres, Eventually I went on to graduate school to further my education.
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By Joseph A. Curtatone
(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)
Taking a closer look at this month’s notable city data.
8: That’s the percent of Somerville High School students who reported taking part in binge alcohol use (consuming 5 or more drinks in a row within a couple hours) on a recent Youth Risk Behavior Survey administered by the Massachusetts Department of Education. While this figure shows a significant decline from the 21 percent of students who reported binge drinking to the same degree in 2006, it proves there is still work to be done to ensure our youth are engaging in safe and productive behavior.
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– Photos by Claudia Ferro
Fire spinners, ice sculpting, and family-fun activities galore took place Saturday, March 1 in Union Square.
Professional fire spinners, A Different Spin, took the stage outdoors keeping everyone entertained while Don Chappelle of Brilliant Ice Sculptures, demonstrated his craft on two blocks of ice.
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By Izak Shapiro
A community budget meeting Thursday, Feb. 27, at the West Somerville Neighborhood School drew a fairly small audience. The meeting is one of three organized by the city in an effort to solicit input and tap the creativity of its residents. The first meeting was Feb. 24 and the third was held March 1.
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