
All invited to online discussion and then to spring event with panel discussion, film screening, and celebration of the Task Force’s work
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Mayor Katjana Ballantyne and The Dept. of Racial and Social Justice hosted it’s MLK event at the East Somerville Community School on January 20, 2025 for a live panel discussion, a performance by The Floor Lords, and a non-perishable goods donation drive.

Wednesday night radio hosts get acquainted with the new podcast studio.
Somerville Media Center has reopened to the public and is bringing new facilities and services online for the Somerville community. Public hours are Monday – Thursday: 12 to 8 p.m., Friday: 12 to 6 p.m. and Sunday: 4 to 8 p.m., 12 Tyler Street.
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By Dennis Fischman
Any mystery set in the U.S. with a Black main character will have something to say about racism, intentional or not. As I wrote in my review of Blanche Passes Go, by the redoubtable Barbara Neely, “She is an outsider on the inside, a person who can be invisible as she goes about her tasks, yet someone perfectly placed to find out all the things that her employers want to keep secret.” A white woman would not have been quite so invisible. or receive so many secrets. But racism is really the reality in which the book operates, not its subject.
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Survey will help inform size, scope, and location of new PK-8 school
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Life in the Ville by Jimmy Del Ponte
(This article first appeared in the January 10, 2015 edition of The Somerville Times)
After graduating from Somerville High School in the early 70’s, with all the demonstrations, walkouts, and drama, I thought college would be a breeze.
It’s hard to imagine that 1975 was forty years ago. I was a sophomore at a Boston College in the Back Bay. I was driving my 1967 Dodge Dart back and forth. Often, I would drop off my pal John Glynn in Dorchester. He was my best friend in college. It was a perfect mix of an Irishman and an Italian from the inner city and together we had as much fun as was humanly possible without getting thrown out of school.
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Memorials such as the Women of the Union Square Post Plaque have been deteriorating at an Inner Belt Road storage lot in crates for the past five years. — Photos Courtesy of George McLean and Thomas Gorman
By Harry Kane
Somerville veterans are requesting updates from the Ballantyne administration regarding the historic veteran war memorials and monuments formerly located on Central Hill, which were removed during the construction of Somerville High School in 2018, and have fallen into disrepair in an outdoor storage lot.
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Maria Hahne, Olivia Presser, and Jason Viola at MICE, 2024. — Photo By Lauren Miller
By Mina Rose Morales
For months, the Boston Comic Arts Foundation has united Somerville’s comic community through its Picture + Panel events, but this February, the monthly series will wrap up at its current venue and move to a new location, though some events will continue to be held in Somerville.
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Connexion United Methodist Church not only provides spiritual sustenance for members of the community, but also nourishing meals, clothing, and other important necessities for those in need. — Photo courtesy of Connexion
By Jeffrey Shwom
Inside Rev. Jordan Harris’ office, a mural of a figure shows them holding a colorful depiction of the big room at his East Somerville church, with community members greeting and sharing each other’s company, while bright white lights radiate outward. It is a message of hope, Rev. Jordan tells us, painted by his husband (@nate_devarie on instagram). “The way we nurture community,” shared Rev. Christy Wright, is embodied in the painting. “Hope is so meaningful.”
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