A COVID-Conscious Market with a $15 SNAP Match
Union Square Main Streets kicks off the 18th season of the Union Square Farmers Market in Somerville this Saturday, May 14 from 9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. This season the Market returns to its longtime location on the Union Square Plaza, and will be open rain or shine each Saturday through October 29.
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By Ryan DiLello
Somerville’s PorchFest returns this year on Saturday, May 14, 12:00 – 6:00 p.m. The event is “not a festival per se,” but an open invitation for artists to perform on local porches across the city. Artists also raise money for local charities. Each year, PorchFest raises thousands of dollars for local and global charities.
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The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) raised the COVID-19 Community Level for all of Middlesex County including Somerville to HIGH on Thursday evening, May 5. The city is strongly encouraging that high-quality masks be worn indoors in public while the CDC COVID-19 Community Level remains high and that all persons ensure they are up to date on vaccination. Free KN95 masks provided to Somerville by the Commonwealth are being offered to residents at all city libraries and at City Hall. For more information visit https://www.somervillema.gov/departments/programs/coronavirus-covid-19-information-and-resources
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Eagle Feathers #253 – Menotomy
By Bob (Monty) Doherty
Until 1842, Charlestown Beyond the Neck, as Somerville was then called, consisted of present-day Somerville and a northwest extended area called Charlestown End. This area that stretched beyond Alewife Brook Parkway included part of today’s East Arlington and its Morningside section.
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Well, sometimes it seems like we take one step forward, just to be pushed back two steps again and again. After an invigorating period of relaxed guidelines for unmasked gatherings indoors, it looks like we’ll have to raise our guards once more as we deal with another unwanted surge in COVID cases in our area.
News that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) raised the COVID-19 Community Level for all of Middlesex County including Somerville to HIGH last week has thrown us a nasty curve for the time being.
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Philip Henry Vokrot, 86, resident of Cobble Hill in Somerville, MA, died peacefully at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston on April 29, surrounded by his beloved wife and three children. Born in Pennsylvania to parents who emigrated from Latvia, Philip and his two sisters worked on the family’s Bucks County farm growing up. Philip graduated from Quakertown High School and Ursinus College. His college years were interrupted by service in the United States Army. Philip began his working life in marketing at the Radio Corporation of America (RCA) in Lancaster, PA. In 1975, Philip joined Cornell Dubilier Electronics (CDE), a New Bedford, MA corporation as Materials Manager for CDE’s manufacturing plant in Taiwan. In 1979, he was promoted to General Manager and resided in Taiwan until 1982. Upon his return to the US, Philip held subsequent positions for several electronics companies in both Massachusetts and Florida before his retirement.
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Long ago, Denise Provost attended Bennington College to study poetry. She then became a lawyer, worked in local government, and served in the Massachusetts House of Representatives for fifteen years She has published in such journals as Ibbetson Street, Muddy River Poetry Review, qarrtsiluni, Quadrille, Poetry Porch’s Sonnet Scroll, Sanctuary, and Light Quarterly. Provost received the Best Love Sonnet award from the Maria C. Faust Sonnet Competition in 2012, and the New England Poetry Club’s Samuel Washington Allen Prize in 2021. Her chapbook Curious Peach was published by Ibbetson Street Press in 2019. Her collection City of Stories was published by Cervena Barva Press in 2021.
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A Special Commemoration of an Unknown British Soldier at took place at Milk Row Cemetery on May 5. The program included a brief history of the Battle Road events leading up to the burial of the British solider, the laying of several symbolic poppy wreaths, and remarks by the British sponsors of the custom marker to be installed on site.
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