Life in the Ville by Jimmy Del Ponte
This article was originally published in the October 5, 2013 edition.
I know this may seem really stupid to some of you but with all the bad news out there, I figured I’d do something completely mindless. I’m very good at that sort of stuff. When I asked the question on Facebook I never dreamed it would get the response it did.
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Several local residents got out early to vote in the presidential primary on March 3. This was the scene at East Somerville Community School where Ward 1 Precinct 3 voters turned up to do their civic duty. We salute and thank them, one and all!
See how Somerville voted in the March 3, 2020, presidential primary here.
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By Rachel Sharples
Somerville residents of all ages flowed in and out of City Hall last week to vote early in the presidential primaries. Although early voting was available in the 2016 presidential election, this year was the first that people could vote ahead of time for a primary election.
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The annual Somerville Maple Syrup Project has returned for its 17th season. It began with a local maple tree tapping on the Tufts University’s Somerville/Medford campus. The project will culminate in the Maple Syrup Boil Down at the Somerville Community Growing Center, 22 Vinal Ave., just outside Union Square, this weekend on Saturday, March 7, 10:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. (Rain date March 14, 10:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.) If you are interested in learning more or volunteering for the project, email volunteer@thegrowingcenter.org.
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By Shira Laucharoen
What does it mean to be an occupant? This is the question that Cyrus Highsmith, type designer of Occupant Fonts, poses. Occupant is an open-ended word, he says. To be an occupant, one must be present and open-minded. It implies a temporary stay, but the place of occupancy can be “as much of a home as a permanent one,” he states. “Typefaces occupy, engage, and express within spaces often structured by others.”
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Eagle Feathers #198 – The First of March
By Bob (Monty) Doherty
On March 1, 1945, in the twilight of World War II in Europe, four-term elected President Franklin Delano Roosevelt made his last speech before Congress. The President, a polio victim, spoke officially for the first time while seated, setting aside his heavy leg braces. He would succumb to the disease within the following month.
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Who thought this thing up anyway? Spring forward, fall back. Or is that fall forward, spring back? The only way we can ever be sure is if we’re early or late for church Sunday morning, or whatever it is you do on Sunday morning.
To be fair, there’s usually someone around smart enough to know the difference, if it isn’t you yourself.
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Inside the Combat Zone: The Stripped Down Story of Boston’s Most Notorious Neighborhood
“Upscale restaurants, majestic theaters, and luxury condos line the streets of downtown Boston today. Students, office workers, doctors, and shoppers navigate the busy sidewalks along Washington and Boylston Streets, giving little thought to the historical significance of their surroundings. The bustle distracts passersby from what may be the city’s dirtiest little secret: these blocks were once home to Boston’s most notorious neighborhood. The Combat Zone, a five-plus-acre, city-sanctioned adult entertainment district, was as sordid and alluring as anything found in Amsterdam or Vegas. Indeed, Boston’s now toney neighborhood once resembled the set of HBO’s The Deuce, all with the blessing of city officials.”
— From the author’s website
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