The Park BulletinHydeVolume 16, Issue 40 October 5, 2017Readville Neighborhood Brainstorming session held for Hyde Park’s 150th anniversaryWatch has questionsabout Yard 5 Matt MacDonald IAG’s concern with the pos- sibility of dirt contaminated Staff Reporter by gas leaks being stored on the site, Garibaldi an- The Readville Neighbor- nounced that he had a letterhood Watch met on Thurs- hand delivered that day byday, Sept. 21 at the Sunset First Highland (the devel-Bocce Club located at 65 oper) confirming that theDanny Rd. National Grid portion of the The first order of busi- More than a dozen residents came by to discuss and give out ideas for the celebration of Hyde Park and its 150 years. PHOTO BY TRENESE FRANKLIN Trenese Franklin to hopefully get people to join pose for the session partici- the five to seven committees that pants was to write down the ac- Staff ReporterAn aerial view of the proposed Readville Yard 5 development (high- On Sept. 27, the CEOs of will immediately form at the end tivities they’d like to see on thelighted in red). SC Group, Scott Smith and of October. sticky notes for each category Michele Consalvo, hosted a and stick them onto the white SOURCE: FORT POINT ASSOCIATES, INC brainstorming session for Hyde “We have 40-plus people posters taped to the walls. Park’s 150th Anniversary. here tonight and we had 40-plusness for Frank Garibaldi was site will not be used to hold the other night; we’re going to Before participants wereto update the group on the contaminated waste, particu- The session was geared to- have literally hundreds of people broken up into their groups toReadville Yard 5 Impact Ad- larly dirt removed in order to wards developing ideas for – I hope – volunteering for this,” brainstorm, Smith told peoplevisory Group (IAG) meeting repair underground gas events and activities that the Smith said. what he was looking for.that had taken place on Mon- leaks. community would like to seeday, Sept. 18. take place to celebrate Hyde Consalvo presented the “I want you all to think “It’s in writing that the Park’s 150th year. agenda to the audience and went grandiose, think as big as you After going over some of lease contract does not ap- over key steps on how the ses- possibly can,” he said.the details regarding Na- prove it, and all they’re go- “I want to make sure that sion would be broken down. Totional Grid’s proposed ten- everyone fully understands that help with organizing the ideas The categories providedancy on the site, and the Yard 5 there is nothing planned, it of those in attendance, the par- were family, children, adult, starts with brainstorming and ticipants were broken into two seniors, historical and celebra- Continued on page 13 tonight is just the start,” Smith groups. For each group, there tion. Smith explained that said. were six posters, with six cat- some of the core values for thisVerizon FIOS Expanding egories taped to the walls on two celebration were to build a Both Consalvo and Smith separate ends of the room. Pro- sense of community pride and explained the purpose of the vided on everyone’s chair were to also increase volunteerism brainstorming session. The ob- yellow sticky pads and pens to and create memories. The goal jective was to build ideas and write down their ideas. The pur- 150th Continued on page 6Jeff Sullivan Portrait as essence at Staff Reporter The City of Boston and the Menino Art Center exhibitionVerizon telecommunicationscompany announced a new Matt MacDonaldagreement last week thatwould double the areas of the Staff Reportercity served by the company’sfiber-optic network. and Roxbury. The agreement The Menino Arts Center at Robin Radin and Mark “Red” Wylie sitting in front of Radin’s “Before will also bring partial service 26 Central Ave. is currently the Fast.” The photograph won an Honorary Mention at the MAC Por- The company initially be- to South Boston and the South hosting Portraits until Oct. 19. traits exhibition, as did Wylie’s photograph “Safe Space.”gan its foray into the city at Boston Waterfront.the end of last year, starting The juried exhibition PHOTO BY: MATT MACDONALDconstruction in Dorchester, “We are a proud partner in opened on Sept. 13 and theDudley Square and West expanding access to broad- Artists’ Opening ReceptionRoxbury after an agreement band choice to more Boston was held on Friday evening,reached in April of 2016 to re- neighborhoods and communi- Sept. 22, during which timeplace the city’s copper-based ties,” said Boston Mayor gallery visitors could meetinfrastructure with the new Walsh. “Providing constitu- some of the artists and talktechnology. This new amend- ents with fast and affordable with them about their work.ment to the agreement will broadband helps us supportbring the company’s coverage the ongoing efforts to spur in- In the crowded main exhi-from 28 percent of the city to novation and economic op- bition room, MAC Curator56 percent, bringing service portunity in all neighbor- and exhibitor Sasja Lucas ex-to all of Jamaica Plain, Hyde hoods.” plained how the juried exhi-Park, Mattapan, Roslindale Verizon Art Exhibition Continued on page 13 Continued on page 11
Page 2 The Bulletin October 5, 2017YMCA hosts ribbon cutting Doyle Day for new pocket park undeterred by rain Local residents, the Mission Continues volunteers, and the DCR braved torrential rains to clear brush from the Doyle Playground in order to prepare it for further development before the winter comes.On Monday, Sept. 18, the Thomas M. Menino YMCA held a ribbon PHOTO BY: MATT MACDONALDcutting ceremony for its new “pocket park” located at its front en- Matt MacDonald again be an asset to the neigh- POHWER. He estimates that thetrance. In a collaborative effort and with the help of many commu- borhood. playground has been closed fornity partners including District 5 City Councilor Tim McCarthy, the Staff Reporter about 15 to 20 years, based onY and Wentworth Institute of Technology were able to officially open Coordinating this effort was his own recollections of playingtheir community space and dedicate it to those who helped make it This past Saturday morning, SWBCDC Community Orga- in it as a 12-year-old.happen. This space is for the community as a whole. Sept. 30, the transformation of nizer Alex Nadel, who spent a Doyle Playground (located on good part of the morning mov- “It was an actual play- PHOTO BY: MATT MACDONALD River Street, opposite Rosa ing from one work group to an- ground.” He describes the equip- Street) began in a deluge of rain other; taking photos to document ment and where it was: a big,To advertise, call (617) 361-8400 that began just before the sched- the effort being made. wooden structure with a big uled start time. metal slide and some smaller 4BUVSEBZ$MBTTFT According to Nadel, the day’s ones, a tire swing, seesaws, “and 8FFLFOE$MBTTFT Nonetheless, members of acronym-laden rehabilitation ef- a jungle gym... Right over the\"DDFMFSBUFE4DIPPM7BDBUJPO$MBTTFT Southwest Boston Community fort began on Sept. 17, 2016, asphalt.” Wyche chuckles at that Development Corporation when he and a small group of before going on. “To remember\"EVMU-FTTPOT 0OMJOF4DIFEVMJOH (SWBCDC), POHWER (People residents of the neighboring 1 playing here with my brothers of Hyde Park Wanting Equal Rosa St. and River Place got to- and my friends, to seeing it just3PBE5FTU4DIFEVMJOH 8FFLFOE%SJWJOH)PVST Representation), The Mission gether with him to pull some turned to nothing... to seeing Continues veterans volunteer weeds from the lot and have a people dump their trash... to a$BMM5PEBZo group, the Department of Con- little picnic. He mentioned a con- couple of weeks ago seeing DCR servation and Recreation (DCR), cept that he returned to several start the process of clearing theǁǁǁ͘ƉĂƌŬǁĂLJĚƌŝǀŝŶŐƐĐŚŽŽů͘ĐŽŵ and a small but intrepid group of times as he talked: the idea of asphalt... It’s all really exciting to Hyde Park residents showed up resident involvement as the be a part of.” ϭϳϱϮĞŶƚƌĞ^ƚƌĞĞƚ͕tĞƐƚZŽdžďƵƌLJ͕DϬϮϭϯϮ at the appointed time – dressed spark. for the weather and the work – The job, which was supposed picked up landscaping tools, and “I think the idea is that we to go until 3 p.m. wraps up at slogged out into the vacant and activated the space. We got 12:30 p.m. but there’s a notice- increasingly-muddy lot. DCR’s attention.” able difference from just the work began at 10 a.m. The brush The job description was ba- As he speaks, a DCR bull- has largely been cleared away sic: clear brush from the site’s dozer rolls by, shovel up, mov- and the playground will be ready fenced and walled perimeter. ing brush. It’s a far different scene to be seeded and loamed some- However, the simplicity of the than the weeding picnic from al- time in the next couple of weeks. task being carried out belied the most exactly a year earlier. In greater importance of the act it- explaining how DCR got there, A soggy Joe Smith trudged self: continuing the process of Nadel spoke of the Fairmount through the mud. As a kid in the restoring this long-neglected Greenway Task Force that coor- 1950s, he’d come to the neigh- place (there was no trace of an dinates efforts to increase and borhood to visit his grandmother. actual playground anywhere) to maintain green space along the Fairmount Line. He also noted “We didn’t want to hang how the playground – right along around, so all the cousins came the river bank – fit in as a piece down here and we played for of the ambitious Neponset most of the day.” Greenway plan. But he circled As he remembered it, the park back to local resident involve- went down close to the river,-RLQXVIRUDIUHH+HDWLQJDQG,QVXODWLRQ:RUNVKRS ment. where it was fenced in. “We used “There are local residents to walk right down to the river...+\GH3DUN0XQLFLSDO%OGJ_b 5LYHUb6W+\GH showing interest and, you know, and there used to be more swings it puts a little flame under the down there and that’s where we3DUN0$ butt.” used to play, because this was6DW2FWREHUbb_bDPØDP If the day had been nicer, kind of hard topped... I can’t re- graphic designer Lawrence member.” Wyche would have been hang- The rain is slowing as Smith*UHDWGLVFRXQWV UHEDWHVRQLQVXODWLRQKHDWLQJV\VWHPDQGDSSOLDQFHVb ing out by the blank green wall looks out at the muddy lot fromb*UDQWVIRUTXDOLILHGZLULQJXb SJUDGHVbDQGDVEHVWRVUHPRYDOb that borders part of the play- under the shelter of a tent. “This ground side closest to Mattapan, was a nice oasis for us, and we1RFRVW/('OLJKWEXOEVVKRZHUKHDGVWKHUPRVWDWVSRZHUVb WULSVb PRUH sketching out suggestions for enjoyed playing here, so it’s good5693bbKWWSELWO\[X'& wall mural designs. Since it’s to see it coming back.” raining, that idea has been The tentative plan – accord-'RRU3UL]HDQGUHIUHVKPHQWVZLOOEHVHUYHG scratched, but he was still hang- ing to Nadel – is for visioning ing out by the wall wrestling with sessions to occur over the winter a hand saw as he tried to section and for Phase 2 to start up at the off a felled tree. beginning of next summer. To Wyche is a longtime local check for updates, contact resident and member of www.swbcdc.org.
October 5, 2017 The Bulletin Page 3Making Strides against Breast $11281&(6Cancer celebrates 25 years of giving $FWLQJ %DOOHW &ODVVHVIRU&KLOGUHQ $JHV²<HDUV6$785'$<6 DW)LUVW%DSWLVW&KXUFKLQ-3 &HQWUH6W-DPDLFD3ODLQ0$ 7RUHJLVWHUSOHDVHHPDLODOODERXWXVLQF#DROFRP RUFDOO &YQFSU5FBDIJOH4NBMM(SPVQ$MBTTFT\"õ PSEBCMF3BUFT '\"--41&$*\"- 8&45309#63: 30$)&\"3&/\" 4VOEBZT1. 4UBSUT 0DU $MBTTFTGPSUIF 1SJDFPG .VTUDBMMBOENFOUJPOBEUPHFUEJTDPVOUSBUF /P\"EEJUJPOBM3FHJTUSBUJPO'FFTTens of thousands of residents, supporters and cancer survivors came out on Sunday for the 25th annualMaking Strides Against Breast Cancer fundraiser. `ljbav=kfdeqCOURTESY PHOTO Jeff Sullivan so I told her I’m going down that in 2012, her oncologist said ~í=íÜÉ next year to walk with you. that in 2008, she had actually Staff Reporter Little did I realize I was going had another type of breast can- fêáëÜ=pçÅá~ä=`äìÄ to have all these other events cer that was treated that they The 25th annual Making cropping up, like Norwood did not see initially called 1BSL4USFFUStrides Against Breast Cancer Day, today’s Strides, Walpole, Triple Negative Breast Cancer. 8FTU3PYCVSZ.\"Walk/Run slammed the Hatch so it’s been kind of crazy.” The process of treatment afterMemorial Shell Sunday morn- that was extensive, but even 4HYTGJWing as tens of thousands of par- DiFlaminies said it’s going though initial test came backticipants flooded the area. to be refreshing to participate with negative results, %PPSTPQFOBUQN in an event she did not have to DiFlaminies said she elected to 4IPXTUBSUTBUQN Pink shirts could be seen as organize herself. take further action.far away as the Boston Com- iÉååó=`ä~êâÉmon as the event strolled “I’m looking forward to go- “It was at this point my doc- GSPNUIFIJUNPWJFthrough the neighborhoods. ing to Florida, because I don’t tor me I fit the criteria for theThe event was part of a national have to plan anything, it’s just BRCA1 gene, and I agreed to i4USPOHFSweffort from the American Can- going to four days in the sun do the test because I didn’tcer Society (ACS) to raise walking with my girls and rep- think it was going to come back `ÜêáëíáåÉ=eìêäÉófunds and support for cancer resenting Robin’s Breast positive,” she said. “There’s no GSPNUIF.POUSFBM$PNFEZ'FTUJWBMresearch and patient support. Friends and Boston,” she said. history of breast cancer in my BOEUIF5SPQJDBOB)PUFMJO-BT7FHBT family. The results came back, Michelle Shlahger, her hus- DiFlaminies was originally and I was stunned to learn that BOEmÉíÉ=`çëíÉääçband Bruce and several of their diagnosed with breast cancer in I had tested positive. This di-children came out to the event 2008, and underwent surgery to agnosis led me to the decision eçëíÉÇ=Äó=gçÉ=cáååto show support for survivors have the mass removed. Later,and the cause. Michelle her doctor called her and said Making Strides cçê=íáÅâÉí=áåÑç=Å~ää=SNTJTRRJPPUSShlagher said she herself is a she had Stage 1 Invasive Duc-22-year survivor, and has been tal Carcinoma. Continued on page 13coming out as much as she canin that time to support Making “I underwent numerous \"/34/.
Page 4 The Bulletin October 5, 2017 Editorial How Boston is helping the WHATEVER HAPPENED people of Puerto Rico TO PEACE AND JOY? Our thoughts and prayers Mayor’s Column can to support the needs of the continue to be with the people Hispanic community, and all We initially resisted using this space to discuss the of Puerto Rico, those who live Martin J. Walsh the communities that makeevil, horrific mass slayings in Las Vegas. here and those who are on the Boston such a thriving city. island, as they recover from the tural heritages. Diversity That’s why we’re working to- Inside baseball: routine writing about a tragedy of devastating impacts of Hurri- shapes our neighborhoods and gether to make sure that everythat sort is easy. Recount the events, express a carefully cane Maria. I am incredibly our identity as a City. decision we make, we makebalanced recipe of sympathy and anger, and top off with proud to share that we are step- together. From early educationa healthy dollop of “thoughts” and “prayers.” ping up as a City to support That’s why this month to senior services, we will con- them in their time of need. To- across Boston, and across the tinue to build a Boston for all. As formulaic as that sounds, the exercise isn’t nec- gether with The Boston Foun- United States, we are celebrat-essarily banal or uncaring. The sad reality is that events dation, we have established the ing Hispanic Heritage Month, We will continue to em-of this sort have become so routine and common that Massachusetts United for honoring the important contri- power the Hispanic community,patterns have emerged. Puerto Rico fund, a fund that is butions that members of the as well as the strong diversity dedicated to the relief and re- Hispanic community that have within the Hispanic commu- The aftermath of recent events, as easily predicted, construction of Puerto Rico and helped shaped Boston to be the nity. In this time of national di-is a political debate. In one corner, anti-gun forces with will support any Puerto Rican city it is today, having influ- vision, cities need to step up asunrealistic expectations of how legislation might stop person arriving in Boston and enced every sector of Boston leaders. That’s exactly whatevents like this from happening. The other side, just as the Commonwealth who have life, from our culture, to our we’re doing in Boston. Westubborn and foolish, will defend any, and all, personal been impacted by Hurricane industries, to our economy. His- stand for all our people. Weweaponry as vital to their vision of the American way Maria. I encourage residents to panic heritage is an important stand for the diversity thatof life. It is telling that NRA-fed Congressmen had to visit https://tbf.org/puertorico presence in our civic life, and makes our City great, becauseyank a bill legalizing gun silencers at the last minute, to learn more about the fund. is an ever-growing part of Boston is a city for everyone.lest the optics do more harm than good. Boston’s strength - today and Together we are sharing the in the future. And we will reach beyond This space, today, isn’t about the Second Amendment. important message to the our borders to show the sameFeel free to continue the terrible dance that strikes up people of Puerto Rico that we We’re doing everything we level of support and compas-the band after every spree killing on your own time. are here to help, for as long as sion for the people of BostonWhat distresses up is a far more fundamental question: they need. In Boston, we have with those in need in other parts“Why?” a strong Puerto Rican commu- of the country. We will lift the nity made up of over 32,000 people of Puerto Rico up Terrorism, foreign or domestic, is easy to figure out. residents. These residents, to- through this hard time, and willThere are agendas, philosophies, religious fervor, and gether with our greater Latino support them every step of theblind allegiance to dissect. Evil permeates the agenda, population, make up nearly 20 way. The people of Puerto Ricobut there is at least some sliver of comprehension to be percent of our City. will always have a friend inextracted and inform the battle. An act like this, as ran- Boston.dom as it is premeditated, is beyond any simplistic analy- In Boston, we know that oursis. What happened in Vegas is too methodical to ex- strength lies in our diversity. Please visit boston.gov/re-cuse as mere insanity, yet too insane to ascribe to reli- We take pride in being a City lief-efforts for more informa-gion or politics. Terrorists, although not always in time, made up of people from all dif- tion about Boston’s efforts tocan tip their hand. How can a crisis be averted when ferent backgrounds, represent- support Puerto Rico, or visitperpetrated by an otherwise indistinct American holed ing many ethnicities and cul- https://tbf.org/puertorico to do-up in a hotel in a city that prides itself on anonymity? nate. What is it about our society where such brutality is Italians don’t get no respectbecoming so common? What can we do when, in addi-tion to grand scale acts of violence, there are the daily This upcoming week, al- My Kind had not “discovered”terrors of random crime? Every day young men are kill- ways at the beginning of Oc- of Town/ America and opened up theing each other in inner cities. Every hour, someone dies tober, is the usual time for trade routes (and assumingby knowingly pumping their blood full of deadly drugs. bashing Italians. Joe Galeota nobody else did), all of us with European ancestry Console yourselves if you must with the busy, repeti- But don’t bash the title of sorts of trouble to the Ameri- would not be in the Unitedtive work of defending and attacking firearm laws. Offer this piece because I already cas - disease, racism, murder, States; we would be squeezedall the thoughts, prayers, condolences and Facebook of- realize there’s a purposeful etc. This is not doubted, but into Europe and everybodyferings of “white light” that make you feel better. None grammatical mistake in the who is to say that other Eu- with Asian ancestry would beof it matters. The nihilistic reality is that records will be title: the somewhat insidious ropean explorers would not on the other side of the Pa-broken. More men, women, and children will die in ever- double negative. have done the same? cific.increasing numbers because someone read a holy book acertain way, or had deadly delusions of grandeur. The Very few will argue that Of course, if Columbus The good news is thatthing we pray will never happen again will, indeed, hap- Christopher Columbus was there would have been nopen again until the incomprehensible cycle is broken. the first one to land in the slaves imported from Africa. New World. Maybe these few Some 12.5 million were Everything these days seems predicated on anger. Poli- are the type who argues shipped to the New Worldtics. Neighborhood squabbles. Bullying. Police relations. against global warming. but, according to HarvardEven sporting events inspire outrage, sometimes before Professor Henry Gates, onlythe game even starts. Something must give. “Let there be Archeologists make the 388,000 did arrive in thepeace on earth,” a popular church song urges. More im- sound case that the Vikings United States, the rest to theportantly, is the refrain: “And let it begin with me.” and perhaps St. Brendan were Caribbean and South the first Europeans to land America. The Bulletin Newspapers, Inc. here. Some, and I say some, anti-Italians delight in verita- Italian-Americans have “Your Hometown Newspapers” bly trumpeting this not-so- made their way to the Capi- new revelation. • West Roxbury • Roslindale • Hyde Park Galetoa• South Boston • Jamaica Plain • Allston • Brighton And then there is the case that Columbus brought all Continued on page 14 • North End • NorwoodBoston Office Norwood Office661 Washington St, 661 Washington St,Suite 202 Suite 202 Letters to the EditorNorwood, MA 02062 Norwood, MA 02062Tel: (617) 361-8400 Tel: (781) 769-1725Fax: (617) 361-1933 Fax: (781) 501-5611email: [email protected] email: [email protected] I WORK FULL-TIME AT is not easy city to live in this service workers at Northeastern NORTHEASTERN BUT I city. As long as I have lived in had just organized a union and Web Sites LIVE IN LOW-INCOME Boston, I have lived in low-in- joined UNITE HERE Local 26, HOUSING come housing. winning wage increases, betterwww.bulletinnewspapers.com • www.norwoodrecord.com working conditions, and a voice To the Editor: Five years ago, I came to on the job. Published weekly Boston has always felt like work at Northeastern Univer- home to me. I believe in its sity looking for an opportunity LettersThe Bulletin Newspapers, Inc. and the Norwood Record assume no financial to better my future. The foodresponsibility for errors in advertisements printed herein, but will reprint, with- people and its community. But Continued on page 14out charge, that part of the advertisement in which the error occurs. No part ofthis newspaper may be reproduced without the express written consent of TheBulletin Newspapers, Incorporated.
October 5, 2017 The Bulletin Page 5 5*&3/&: 3 & \" -5 : ( 3 0 6 1 ]XXXUJFSOFZSHDPN )256$/( 1(:35,&(1\"55*&3/&: &23&0\",%17**-6-2& 21 ):%&1\"3,(0-'$0634& .*$)\"&-)6/5 0QQPSUVOJUZLOPDLTXJUIUIJTSPPNCBUI #SJDLGSPOUSBODIPORVJFUTJEFTUSFFU IPNFXJUIWFSTBUJMFĘFYJCMFĘPPSQMBOVQBOE CFESPPNTQPUFOUJBMBEEJUJPOBMMJWJOHTQBDF EPXOCFESPPNTJODMVEJOHIVHFNBTUFSPSUFFO JOIFBUFEMPXFSMFWFM'FODFEZBSEBOEPČ HFUBXBZ(BSEFOFST1BSBEJTF TUSFFUQBSLJOH 81'(5&2175$&7 81'(5&2175$&7.\"3$*\",*.. ):%&1\"3, 4506()50/ /FXDPOTUSVDUJPOIPNFXJUIFWFSZUIJOHZPVXBOU (SFBUGBNJMZIPNFXJUICFESPPNTBOE BOEAOPUIJOUIBUZPVEPOUy MPUTPGBNFOJUJFT#6%.\"34)\"-- 62/' 62/' +0&'0-&: 8&45309#63: 8&45309#63:(3&(-07&-- -PPLOPNPSFZPVSGVUVSFIPNFJTIFSF1PUFOUJBM \"EPSBCMFBOE\"ČPSEBCMFDBQFJOTVCVSCBOTUZMF OFJHICPSIPPEyCFESPPNTBOEĕOJTIFE GPSCFBVUZHSFBUMPDBUJPO MPXFSMFWFM 62/' 62/' /035)\".150/ 304-*/%\"-& (SFBUVOJUCSJDLCVJMEJOHBOJOWFTUPSEFMJHIU SPPNCFESPPNDPOEPyHSFBU7JMMBHFMPDBUJPO+6%:.D/6-5: 5*&3/&:3&\"-5:(3061*4\"-8\":4-00,*/('03/&8&91&3*&/$&%\"(&/54
Page 6 The Bulletin October 5, 2017 0%
October 5, 2017 The Bulletin Page 7Don’t let acontract holdyou back.Fios GigabitConnectionwith TV, Phone$69.99/mo.for 2 years, w/2-yr agmt, plus taxes, RSN, FDV & other fees.Online price. Up to 940/880 Mbps. plusHBO® or Multi-Room DVR Serviceincluded for 2 years. Go to verizon.com/gofios or call 1.877.744.3467 to get a credit of up to $500 to help cover your early termination fee*.*Offer for new Fios Internet and/or TV res. custs., is non-transferable and has no cash or refund value. Documentation of early termination fee (ETF) for TV, Internet and/or wireline phone from your prior serviceprovider must be provided w/in 90 days of installation and offer will be fulfilled via bill credit, to your Verizon account, in the amount of the ETF up to $500. You remain solely responsible for paying the ETF toyour prior service provider. If you cancel your Verizon service w/in 90 days of installation, the ETF credit will be charged back to your final bill. Other terms apply.Availability varies. Gigabit network connection to your home. Actual speeds vary due to device limits, network and other factors. Avg. speeds betw. 750-940 Mbps download / 750-880 upload. Limited-time offerfor new TV & Internet res. custs. in select areas of Boston, MA. Promo rates via bill credits and increase after promo periods. HBO offer requires subscription. 2-yr. agr. req’d. Beg. mo. 2, up to $230 ETF applies.$12/mo. STB, $10/mo. router charge, $3.49/mo. Broadcast, $6.39/mo. Regional Sports Network, $0.99 FDV Admin. & other fees, taxes, & terms apply. Subj. to credit approval & may require a deposit.
Page 8 The Bulletin October 5, 2017 Around the Neighborhoods HYDE PARK STORY TIME WITH THE Join us on Oct. 7 at 2 p.m. signals, and the relocation of the benefit church projects. Thank BOSTON BALLET for a concert featuring Hyde bus stop in Wolcott Square. you!ARTIST CRITIQUE GROUP Park’s own Tony Cibotti per- Share your work in an infor- On Friday, Oct. 6 at 10:30 forming classic tunes from past CITYWIDE CITY OF BOSTON TO a.m., children and families are decades. A favorite program for HOST NEIGHBORHOODmal setting in a friendly and sup- welcomed once a month to hear adults of all ages! BOSTON PUBLIC LI- CAREER FAIR SERIESportive exchange Saturday, Oct. stories about a famous ballet or BRARY AND BOSTON EVENT IN JAMAICA14, 2017, 10 a.m. to noon at the dancer. The story time is also Free and open to the public. PHILHARMONIC PLAINMenino Arts Center, 26 Central supplemented with a movement Located at the Hyde Park ORCHESTRA OFFERINGAve, Hyde Park. This is a FREE experience that highlights ma- Branch of the Boston Public FREE PERFORMANCES On Thursday, Oct. 19, theevent welcome to all local art- jor themes of the story. All story Library. ACROSS THE CITY City of Boston will host dozensists. Bring refreshments to times are led by Boston Ballet of City departments and partici-share. For more information faculty dance educators. This F.E.N.C.E. Boston Public Library (BPL) pating employers in a career faircontact Larry Johnson, ph. 617- program is for children ages 2 A Domestic Violence Aware- and Boston Philharmonic Or- to help connect Boston residents364-1739 or email and up. Younger children will chestra (BPO) will offer free to employment [email protected] need parental supervision. The ness Event presented Black Lip- performances across the city in within the City of Boston and(plenty of free parking in the program is located at the Hyde stick Conversations, Inc. on a new collaborative venture be- at private companies and non-Municipal Lot on Harvard Park Branch of the Boston Pub- Oct. 7 from 1 to 4 p.m. Located ginning on Saturday, Sept. 30, profits.Street) lic Library, 35 Harvard Ave., at the Hyde Park Library - at 10 a.m. in Rabb Hall at the Hyde Park. Menino Room. Central Library in Copley The event will be held at En-HYDE PARK YOUTH Square, with one of Maestro glish High School in JamaicaBASKETBALL PLAY AND LEARN AFTER SCHOOL Benjamin Zander’s world-re- Plain at 5:30 p.m. - 7:30 p.m.,ASSOCIATION BLOCK PARTY TUTORING PROGRAM nowned interpretation classes, and residents are encouraged toREGISTRATION Interpretations of Music: Les- attend and learn more about ca- On Saturday, Oct. 7 at 10 The BCYF Hyde Park Com- sons for Life. The partnership reer opportunities within theThe Hyde Park Youth Bas- a.m., come play, build, and learn munity Center will offer an Af- program also includes addi- City of Boston and its agencies. together at a block party – li- ter-School Tutoring & Enrich- tional concerts in Rabb Hall,ketball Association will hold brary style. Playing with blocks ment Program once again this several Concerts in the Court- BOSTON’S CHRISTOPHER provides opportunities to learn year. Is your child grades ONE yard in summer 2018, and edu- COLUMBUS PARKregistration for the 2016-2017 about math and science, pre- through SIX? Is he/she in need cational concerts in up to 12 CELEBRATES FALL WITH reading skills, social skills, and of Reading or Math Help? How branch libraries through May ANNUAL FESTIVAL ANDseason on: motor skills. Various building about Homework help? Then 12, 2018. All classes are open CHARITY DRIVE blocks will be available includ- this After-School Program is for to the public. The first Interpre-Saturday, Oct. 14, Saturday, ing wood blocks, magnetic you!! Drop by and pick-up your tation Class features works by Please join us on Oct. 9 blocks, KAPLA blocks, soft registration packet at the BCYF J.S. Bach, Mahler, and Cassado. where we will bring communityOct. 21 and Saturday, Oct. 28. blocks, and baby blocks. No Hyde Park Community Center together for fun and giving registration is required. Located (“MUNI”) 1179 River St. Hyde BPO/BPL branch concerts, back. Friends of ChristopherBoys and girls between the at the Hyde Park Branch of the Park or for more information known as the Mosaic program, Columbus Park Fall Festival and Boston Public Library. please call us at (617)635-5178. will focus on the following Pine Street Inn Food Drive willages of 6-14 may register at Hyde This program is made possible themes: Women, African Ameri- host their annual Fall Festival on CHESS AND CHECKERS by The City of Boston Mayor’s can, Latin-American, Boston- Columbus Day. This free neigh-Park Municipal Building be- WITH CHARLIE Office of Boston Centers for based, and living composers, the borhood event, which draws Youth & Families history of classical music, people of all ages from acrosstween the hours of 9 a.m. and On Saturday, Oct. 7 at 1 Thoreau UnCaged (a special the city and surrounding sub- p.m., children are welcome to THE BOSTON program featuring composer urbs each year, will be heldnoon. Fees for the season range come and learn to play chess or TRANSPORTATION John Cage’s setting of Henry Monday, Oct. 9 from noon-4 checkers with Charlie Cleary on DEPARTMENT MEETING David Thoreau’s writings in- p.m.from $50-60, although a $5 dis- Saturday afternoons. Sponsored cluding Walden and “A Civil by the Friends of the Hyde Park The Boston Transportation Disobedience”), and selections C.Y.O. BASKETBALLcount is available for on time Branch Library. Free to all. Lo- Department will be hosting a from Berio’s Sequenzas. With The CYO basketball pro- cated at the Hyde Park Branch meeting on Tuesday, Oct. 10 at varied thematic repertoire, the(October) registration; parent of the Boston Public Library. The St. Anne School (Blue Hills BPO and BPL seek to represent gram is organizing for the 2017- Collaborative School) hall at 6 the diversity that makes Boston 2018 season! Anyone who is in-signatures are required. For more p.m. It is a public meeting to dis- such a strong community and to terested in participating in the cuss the signalization of the Fa- break down the barriers that program should contact theirinformation, check out the ther Hart Bridge, the upgrade of stand between people and their local parish for information. soon to be discovered love of You can access informationleague website at: classical music. about the basketball program online at http://HydeParkYBA.com. The concert schedule can be www.bostoncatholic.org/ viewed via www.bpl.org/calen- CYO.aspx?pid=506 The CYO TONY CIBOTTI CONCERT dar and via basketball program sponsors www.bostonphil.org/education/ boy’s and girl’s teams in the fol- /FX1BSL\"WFOVF3PTMJOEBMF.\" interpretation-classes. lowing age:&ODIBOUJOHDFOUFSFOUSBODF$PMPOJBMPOBTNBMMTJEFTUSFFUCFUXFFO8FTU3PYCVSZ1BSLXBZBOE#FFDI4USFFU.PNFOUTUPTIPQTSFT 41ST ANNUAL BAZAAR & 5th & 6th grade, 7th & 8thUBVSBOUTQBSLTQVCMJDUSBOTJUFUD.FUJDVMPVTMZNBJOUBJOFECFECBUIIPNFGFBUVSJOHBGSPOUUPCBDLMJWJOHSPPNXJUImSFQMBDF FOOD FAIR PLANNED grade, 9th & 10th grade boysCFBNFEDFJMJOHBOEPWFSTJ[FEXJOEPXTLJUDIFOXJUIDVTUPNDBCJOFUSZ44BQQMJBODFTHSBOJUFDPVOUFSTMBVOESZBOEEJSFDUBDDFTT teams, 11th & 12th grade boysUPUIFCBDLZBSEBOEQBUJP'PSNBMEJOJOHSPPNXJUICVJMUJOTBOEVQEBUFEIBMGCBUIDPNQMFUFUIFTUnPPSOEnPPSGFBUVSFTGSPOU St. George Antiochian Or- teams, 9th thru 12th grade girlsUPCBDLNBTUFSCFESPPNXJUIEVBMDFEBSDMPTFUTBOEXJOEPXTFBU3FOPWBUFEGVMMCBUIBOEUXPNPSFCFESPPNTDPNQMFUFUIFOEnPPS thodox Church of Boston is teams. The Archdiocesan CYOSEnPPSIBTOJDFTJ[FECFESPPNTBOPUIFSXFMMBQQPJOUFEGVMMCBUISPPN)BSEXPPEnPPSTUISPVHIPVU/FXSPPGJOGSFTI proud to announce their 41st EMASS Tournament will beQBJOU)FBUJOHTZTUFN#MPXOJOJOTVMBUJPO6OmOJTIFECBTFNFOUJTPQFOTQBDJPVTXJUIUIFQPUFOUJBMGPSNPSFDBSHBSBHF Annual Bazaar & Food Fair to held in early March and the NewPĊFSTBEEJUJPOBMPWFSIFBETUPSBHF1BUJPZBSEBSFMFWFMMVTIQSJWBUF\"OVSCBOPBTJT-JTUJOH\"HFOU.BUU(PSFo1SJDF be held at their community cen- England CYO Basketball Tour- ter located at 55 Emmonsdale nament will be held the last Rd., West Roxbury, on Friday weekend of March. and Saturday, Oct. 20 and 21 from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. and Sun- BOSTON BLOOMS WITH day, Oct. 22 from noon – 3 p.m. DAFFODILS PROGRAM – FREE ADMISSION/ RETURNS WHEELCHAIR ACCES- SIBLE. Full kitchen service and Mayor Martin J. Walsh has take-out available. Authentic announced that the “Boston Middle Eastern Cuisine and Blooms with Daffodils” beauti- Pastry, American Foods and fication initiative will distribute Pastry, Country Store, Photo 20,000 daffodil bulbs this fall to Booth, White Elephant Table volunteers for planting on pub- and much more. Do your Christ- lic ways citywide. mas shopping here at St. George. Purchase Galaxy Raffle The plantings will take place tickets to win fabulous prizes! in approved locations along the There’s something for everyone City’s public ways on the week- at the St. George Church Ba- ends of Oct. 28 and Nov. 4. zaar! For more information, Groups with approved planting please call the church at locations will be contacted by (617)327-6500. Proceeds to the Parks Department and given Calendar Continued on page 12
October 5, 2017 The Bulletin Page 9 \"$)*&7&34 $ & / 5 3 & 4 5 3 & & 5 8 & 4 5 3 0 9 # 6 3 : t ʤ ʥ ʰ +855,&$1(5(/,() '21$7,21'5232)) :HZRXOGOLNHWRWKDQNWKRVHZKRKDYHGRQDWHGtĞĂƌĞĐŽůůĞĐƟŶŐŶŽŶͲƉĞƌŝƐŚĂďůĞĨŽŽĚ͕ŶĞǁĐůŽƚŚŝŶŐ͕ƚŽŝůĞƚƌŝĞƐ͕ĞƚĐ͘ĂƚŽƵƌŽĸĐĞDŽŶĚĂLJƚŚƌƵ&ƌŝĚĂLJϵ͗ϯϬͲϮ͗ϯϬ͘ %JBOF$BQPEJMVQP &SJD,MFJO ,BSFO,FMMZ -BVSFO.BD&BDIFSO 4UFWF8BSE \"SMFOF)BOBåO 5JOB&SUJ.FSOFS $ISJTTJF5FBHVF .FHIBO3VTTFMM 0GåDF.BOBHFS $0.*/(400/ %JBOF )PVTUPO4USFFU %JBOF 1BSLMBXO3PBE %JBOF $MFNFOU\"WFOVFo &SJD #BLFS4USFFU8FTU3PYCVSZ$BQPEJMVQP 8&45309#63: $BQPEJMVQP 8&45309#63: ,MFJO (SFBU$PMPOJBMVQEBUFELJUDIFO $BQPEJMVQP 6OJU8&45309#63: #30,&3 #30,&3 MBSHFGFODFEJOZBSEEFDL %JBOF!%JBOF$BQDPN %JBOF!%JBOF$BQDPN #30,&3 åOJTIFECBTFNFOU %JBOF!%JBOF$BQDPN &SJD,MFJO!HNBJMDPN /&813*$& +20(2)7+(:((. 6/%&3\"(3&&.&/5 \"SMFOF )JMCVSO4U3PTMJOEBMF %JBOF (BSOFU3PBE )BOBmO $BMM\"SMFOF $BQPEJMVQP 8&45309#63: )BOBåOGPSNPSFEFUBJMT #30,&3 )BOBåO!NTODPN %JBOF!%JBOF$BQDPN 6/%&3\"(3&&.&/5 6/%&3\"(3&&.&/5 %JBOF 0SJPMF4USFFU 8)*5&1-\"$&6/*5#300,-*/&7*--\"(&_ 4UFWF 5BDPNB4USFFU$BQPEJMVQP #&--&76&)*-- #FBVUJGVMCFESPPNGVMMCBUIUPXOIPVTFXJUIåOJTIFEMFWFMTPGMJWJOH 8BSE ):%&1\"3,_ #FESPPN#BUI$PMPOJBM #30,&3 TQBDF6QEBUFELJUDIFOXJUI7JLJOHBQQMJBODFTDVTUPNTPGUDMPTFDBCJOFUSZ %JBOF!%JBOF$BQDPN $IBSNJOHåSFQMBDFEMJWJOHSPPN1BSLJOH$FOUSBM\"$)8ýPPSTSFDFTTFE 4UFWF8BSE!ZBIPPDPN MJHIUJOH'BOUBTUJDMPDBUJPOXBMLUP#SPPLMJOF7JMMBHFUIF5-POHXPPE 4UFWF8BSE t4UFWF8BSE!ZBIPPDPN6/%&3\"(3&&.&/5 /&813*$& 3&/5\"- 40-% &SJD \"SCPSåFME3PBE3PTMJOEBMF &SJD )FSFGPSE3PBE ,BSFO (BMMJWBO#MWE6OJU -BVSFO &MNWJFX1MBDF ,MFJO $IBSNJOH3BODIOFXGVSOBDF ,MFJO 8\"#\"/ ,FMMZ %03$)&45&3 .BD&BDIFSO %&%)\". BOEXBUFSIFBUFSCJHMFWFMZBSE CFECBUI PORVJFUTUSFFU &SJD,MFJO!HNBJMDPN -BVSFO.BD4FMMT!(NBJMDPN ,,FMMZ!ZBIPPDPN &SJD,MFJO!HNBJMDPN
Page 10 The Bulletin October 5, 2017BPD Drug Control Unit makes presentation at Pierce watch meeting, cleanup details released Mary Ellen Gambon bution sources and find friends conscious choice about getting Residents at the most recent Pierce Street meeting. and family of the diseased who help, we work with Judge Staff Reporter may need resources. Kathleen Coffey at West Roxbury PHOTO BY MARY ELLEN GAMBON District Court to get a Section 35. More than a dozen concerned “We come in. We get the re- This is a civil commitment.” father’s face! It was like a ghost volved,” she said.residents and law enforcement ports, and then we get the infor-officials attended Tuesday night’s mation from the neighborhood to At that point, a person can be coming back from the grave. But She added that Hyde Park ismeeting of the Pierce Street get the answers,” Stanford said. sent to a treatment facility with-Neighborhood Watch group. out his or her consent. the man is still alive. beginning preparations for its “We are connected with an Drug Control Unit Officer organization called PAATHS The unit also reaches out to “What happened was that, 150th anniversary. Ideas are be-Linda Stanford introduced a new (Providing Access to Addiction Massachusetts General Hospital,officer, who will be working un- Treatment Hope & Support),” she Tufts Medical Center, Boston back in the 90s, businesses used ing taken in suggestion boxesdercover in Hyde Park. For rea- noted. “We find that people who Medical Center and Faulknersons of confidentiality, his name know the victim are often in need Hospital. to advertise on the front of shop- at Blue Hills Bank and Cappy’scannot be released. of treatment. And addiction is a disease.” “In addition, since some over- ping carts,” she continued. “The Pizza on Truman Parkway. Pos- This special citywide unit, dose victims are from communi-based in Charlestown, consists of PAATHS provides informa- ties including Norwood and picture was of his father, a local sibilities include an interna-four officers, two detectives and tion about and access to treatment Shrewsbury, we reach out to othera sergeant detective, according to for addiction and auxiliary sup- police departments to let them chiropractor, Dr. Jordan Arbit.” tional food festival, fireworks,Stanford. Its focus is strictly on port services and referrals. It also know about what we have found.”overdoses. It sprung up in re- connects clients to detox pro- While that was a positive ex- a cemetery tour and other his-sponse to the rise in fentanyl over- grams, outpatient treatment and In other neighborhood news,doses over the past year. prevention programs. residents spoke of the recent suc- perience, Lisa Consalvo from torical events. cessful Neponset River Cleanup. “My duties and mission were Stanford also works with There were more than 200 volun- Rep. Angelo Scaccia’s office la- Karen Rickets, a servant atalways about trying to save lives,” people who may not be capable teers who removed 9.5 tons of gar-said Stanford. “This unit is the flip of making the decision to seek bage from the river, including 80 mented that, while volunteers the Family Life Fellowshipside. I’ve been a member of the treatment. rubber tires and many shoppingDrug Control Unit for seven years, carts. from the New England Foursquare Church, announcedand I have been with this unit since “Sometimes we will go to aApril. I’ll be transitioning into an person’s house and ask if they feel Hyde Park activist and group Aquarium and local colleges in- that there will be a meetingeducational role while (the under- safe and comfortable speaking member Barbara Baxter men-cover officer) is in the commu- with us,” she said. “We go in plain tioned that she captured a price- cluding Wentworth Institute of Thursday morning at 10 a.m. atnity.” clothes. Once we begin talking less picture from the cleanup on and assess the situation, we dis- her cell phone. Technology participated in the the church to plan an interfaith The overdose response unit cuss the options for help. We al-not only investigates the death of ways treat the person with respect, “A young man was pulling a cleanup, only 10 percent of the Thanksgiving Celebration. Aan overdose victim, but also re- because everyone deserves re- shopping cart out of the water,”searches the neighborhood to spect. she said. “It looked like there was volunteers were Hyde Park collection will be taken onlearn about potential drug distri- a license plate on the front. When “If the person can’t make a he went to clean it off, he saw his residents. Thanksgiving of nonperishable “We should have more food and money to donate to the people from Hyde Park in- Hyde Park Food Pantry. .BSHJF7PHU#SPLFS 6MUBO$POOPMMZ &SJO7PHU .-PVJTF4DIJBSJ[[J .BVSFFO)BZFT3PTTJ 1BUTZ#SFOOBO 3JDIBSE3FFE /BODZ,JMMJPO )FMFO5BSBOUJOP \"OOJF:PVTTPVmBO .JOB1BQPVMJEJT ɧ F(BĊOFZ5FBN +PF%POOFMMZ %JBOB#SBEMFZ -JBOOF3JDI $ISJT,FOOFEZ %BWF.BHVJSF +PF3FHBO .JDIBFM(SJċO \".)PNF5FBN t 01&/)064&46/%\":Ǖ1. 01&/)064&4\"5Ǖ 46/Ǖ )0.&0'5)&8&&, /&8-*45*/( )&-%6/453&&58&45309#63: :PVOHBOETQBDJPVTIPNFCVJMUJOTUSJLJOHLJUDIFOXJUIIVHFJTMBOE \"/40/*\"30\"% CFESPPN #\" /FX PQFOTUPMJWJOHSPPNXJUIHBTmSFQMBDFGPSNBMEJOJOHSPPNmSTUnPPSPG 8&45309#63: SPPG/FX8JOEPXT/FX mDFPSCFESPPNBOEmSTUnPPSGVMMCBUIMBVOESZPOUIFmSTUMFWFMBOEOE 3FGSJHFSBUPS OFX 3BOHF nPPSUISFFTQBDJPVTCFESPPNTPOOEnPPSJODMVEJOHNBTUFSTVJUFXJUI .\"3$&--64%3*7& IBSEXPPE nPPST /FX XBMLJODMPTFUBOETQFDUBDVMBSCBUICBTFNFOUIBTUXPTFQBSBUFFOUSBODFT /&850/ JOUFSJPS QBJOU HPPE TUPS POFTJEFJTCFBVUJGVMMZmOJTIFEPUIFSDBOCFmOJTIFEGPSBEEJUJPOBMMJWJOH BHF JO CBTFNFOU %FDL TQBDF UPUBM TRVBSF GPPUBHF IVHF ESJWFXBZ GPS QMFOUZ PG PĊTUSFFU PWFSMPPLJOH MFWFM GFODFE QBSLJOHEFDLPWFSMPPLTFODMPTFEZBSEXJUIMPBETPGHBSEFOTQBDFNBOZ JOZBSE DVTUPNGFBUVSFTBNVTUTFF $)3*4,&//&%: .\"3(*&70(5ɠɠ ɠɠ 1\"54:#3&//\"/ɠɠ 3&/5\"- 4FMEPNBWBJMBCMFCSCBUI 01&/)064&5)634'3*Ǖ1. -PDBUJPO -PDBUJPO VOJU XJUI SFDFOU VQEBUFT -PDBUJPO -PWFMZ $)&45/651-\"$& UISPVHIPVU'JSTUn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i%wMJOF 3PYCVSZTUPQ .-06*4& 4$)*\"3*;;* )&-&/ .\"63&&/ ɠɠ 5\"3\"/5*/0 )\":&43044* ɠɠ ɠɠ 1\"54:#3&//\"/ ɠɠ$FOUSF4U8FTU3PYCVSZtBOE$IVSDI4U%FEIBNt WPHUSFBMUZHSPVQDPN '0--08640/
October 5, 2017 The Bulletin Page 11Art Exhibition continued from page 1bition worked for this show. talking to people as I do actu- Silvina Mizrahi poses next to her sculpture “Soul’s Breeze”shortly after winning the Director’s Choice awardThe entry period lasted for ally taking the photographs be- at the MAC Portraits exhibition. The exhibition will go until Oct. 19.about a month, during which cause I feel like that is how I’mtime artists could enter up to going to get them more inti- PHOTO BY: MATT MACDONALDthree pieces of their work. By mate,” she said.the end of this period, over uct.100 works of art falling into As Radin remembered it,the portrait category had been she made about 40 exposures “It’s magical to bring a To advertise, call (617) 361-8400entered. of Fareena – using a tripod and cable – over the afternoon they piece to a place (a foundry) in The exhibition was juried spent together in her apartmentby Sally B. Moore, who was on the day before Ramadan wax, and then go and pick itbrought in by the MAC. Typi- many years ago.cally, juried exhibitions have up and the piece is in bronze,”one judge, sometimes two. They had met at an old styleNational shows might have pharmacy in Jamaica Plain that Mizrahi said.three. In the case of this exhi- had its regulars who would gobition, Moore worked blindly; in to get their lunch and hang She didn’t submit her en-she had only the work and its out at the soda fountain. Be-title – and submitted .jpg files, coming a regular there herself, tries until the last day; sherather than the actual pieces Radin got to know a lot of them– to judge by. She was given as she was taking their photo- wasn’t convinced that they 07&3$0.*/(\"35)3*5*4-*.*5\"5*0/4four days to review and make graphs, and soon became more qualified as portraits. Win-her choices. Of the more than curious. ning a prize was a very happy /FBSMZ IBMG PG JOEJWJEVBMT BHFE DPVSBHJOHOFXTGPSBSUISJUJDTFOJPSTXIP100 pieces entered, 57 were surprise for her, obvious from ZFBSTBOEPMEFSIBWFQIZTJDJBOEJBHOPTFE XBOUUPTUBZNPCJMFchosen. “I became interested in her beaming expression as she BSUISJUJT8IJMFUIJTJOnBNNBUPSZDPOEJ ɨF HPBMT PG BSUISJUJT USFBUNFOU BSF knowing what their life was is photographed next to UJPODBOCFNBOBHFEXJUIQBJONFEJDB UP SFEVDF KPJOU QBJO BOE JOnBNNBUJPO Many entries fell well like outside of that public “Soul’s Breeze.” UJPO UIFSF JT BMTP FWJEFODF UIBU SFHVMBS XIJMF JNQSPWJOH BOE NBJOUBJOJOH KPJOUwithin the traditional param- space, and I’d ask people if I BDUJWJUZDBOIFMQPMEFSBEVMUTXJUIBSUISJ GVODUJPO 4UBZJOH WJUBM BOE MJWJOH XFMMeters of visual portraiture, could come and photograph “You know, it’s nice for the UJTTUBZJOEFQFOEFOU)PXNVDIBDUJWJUZ BSF BDIJFWBCMF HPBMT BU %&654$)&4while others seem to blend them at home,” she said. soul, because sometimes you JTOFDFTTBSZZPVNBZBTL &WFOUIPVHI \"-5&/)&*. 1MFBTF DBMM UP TDIFEVMFinto other categories. Still oth- are doing this job and it’s, like, GFEFSBMHVJEFMJOFTSFDPNNFOENJO B DPOTVMUBUJPO BOE UPVS PG PVS TFOJPSers don’t seem to fit at all. As The chair by the unseen ‘Should I keep it?’” she said. VUFTPGNPEFSBUFFYFSDJTFQFSXFFLGFX DPNNVOJUZ BU $FOUSF 4USFFULucas explained, Moore window overlooking South PMEFSBEVMUTXJUIBSUISJUJTDBONFFUUIJT 8FTU 3PYCVSZ CZ DPOUBDUJOH VT UPEBZwanted to expand the param- Huntington Avenue was a For Mizrahi – and for many TUBOEBSE 'PSUVOBUFMZ SFTFBSDIFST IBWF i\"TLBCPVUPVS4DISBìU1BWJMJPOGPS\"Meters of what a portrait is: comfortable spot for Fareena, of the other artists here – GPVOE UIBU PTUFPBSUISJUJT TVĊFSFST CF [IFJNFS%FNFOUJB$BSFBOE&EFMXFJTTfrom something beyond what another important ingredient there’s really only one answer UXFFOUIFBHFTPGBOEXIPFOHBHFE 7JMMBHFwyou see to what you feel. in Radin’s work. to that question. JOPOMZNJOVUFTPGNPEFSBUFBDUJWJUZ 141IZTJDBMBDUJWJUZBOEFYFSDJTFIFMQ QFSXFFLXFSFQFSDFOUNPSFMJLFMZUP DPNCBU BSUISJUJT CZ TUSFOHUIFOJOH UIF Lucas focuses on a striking “People can relax and be Portraits will be at the JNQSPWFUIFJSXBMLJOHTQFFEBOEBCJMJUZ NVTDMFTUIBUTVSSPVOEUIFKPJOUTBOESFphoto of a man curled up in the themselves in a space that they UP QFSGPSN MJHIU BDUJWJUJFT ɨJT JT FO MJFWJOHQSFTTVSFPOCPOFBOEDBSUJMBHFfetal position in a bathtub identify with,” Fareena said.(Mark “Red” Wylie’s “Safe Menino Arts Center until Oct.Space.”) His face is covered; In one of the smaller rooms,by traditional portrait guide- Radin is relating the circum- 19.lines, its key element is ob- stances of her high contrastscured. Lucas, however, view- portrait of a black musician Ask The Doctoring it in a broader sense, saw playing the accordion by Ja-it very much as a portrait. maica Pond (“Slow Boat”) Junior Damato began servicing vehicles in 1969. He owns a 10-bay auto repair when the sound of organized service center in Hyde Park and an 8-bay center in Middleboro. Junior is an “It reflects an emotion,” gathering floats in from the ASE-certified Master Technician, ASE-certified L-1 and ASE-certified Natural Gas.Lucas said. “The essence of be- main room. Prizes are beinging... Beyond the literal, it a awarded: Juror’s Choice Two Very Different Trucksportrait can express essence, ($100), three Honorary Men- You want a truck to drive daily? To tow a car or boat? To go off-roading with? Here are two very differentmemory, or personality.” tions (free MAC membership), pickups: a Dodge 2500 Power Wagon and a Ford Raptor. Both have four doors, automatic transmissions, A/C, and the Director’s Choice leather interiors, big tires and wheels, very heavy-duty suspensions, and both sit high off the ground. The One of the exhibiting art- ($75). Dodge is powered by a large, 6.4 liter Hemi and power goes through a 6-speed transmission. The Ford has aists, Robin Radin, joins the twin turbo, high-performance V/6 engine via a 10-speed automatic.conversation. A photographer She walks in just in time The Power Wagon is and feels like a heavy-duty pickup; the Raptor is and feels lighter. The Power Wagonwith three pieces on display, to hear her name called to re- can tow heavier loads; both are equipped with a 4.10 axle ratio. The Power Wagon is equipped with a factoryshe took this idea a little fur- ceive an Honorary Mention installed Warn 12,000 pound tow winch. Both have unique bagging and wheels with tires designed for eachther, using the example of a hy- for “Before the Fast” right truck. The Power Wagon has a heated steering wheel, ventilated and heated 1o-way power driver’s and 6-waypothetical subject’s bedroom. before Mark “Red” Wylie re- power passenger’s front seats. Both have a 115-volt outlet, high power audio systems, and large center ceives his for “Safe Space.” touchscreens. Skid plates are also part of the under body and mechanical protection on both trucks. LED “If you compose that in a lighting is on both as well as remote engine startup systems.certain way, that could be a The Director’s Choice The Raptor seems to ride smoother and handles better on both smooth and rough roads. Driving downportrait of the person, minus goes to a sculpture of a balle- winding roads, the Raptor does not sway or slide over broken pavement. The Raptor also has multiple drivingtheir physical presence, but rina balanced on a warped bi- modes controlled from the steering wheel, including a sport mode that reconfigures everything about the truckhaving something about the cycle tire, the creation of West including steering feel, transmission shift points and firmness. EPA rating on the Raptor is 15 city, 18 highwayessence of who they are,” Roxbury’s Silvina Mizrahi MPG, EPA on the Power Wagon is not required because of its heavy-duty status, however, the mileage isRadin said. titled “Soul’s Breeze.” An- similar. Base MSRP on the Raptor is $48,325 (destination fee: $1,195); optional equipment is $14,300. The other one of her entries – fol- Power Wagon’s base is $51,695 (destination fee: $1,320); optional equipment is $11,400. On the opposite side of the lowing the same theme – is The bottom line is that both trucks have all the creature comforts for all seasons and all types of driving. Ifroom, we’re at face level with displayed close by. you need a heavy-duty pickup for a lot of heavy-duty pulling, the Power Wagon is for you. If you want a lighterone of her photographs: a natu- duty, fun to drive pickup that will tow the majority of items most people have (horse trailers, snow mobiles,rally lit, black and white photo Having trained as a balle- etc.) then the Raptor is your choice.of an old woman sitting in an rina herself, elements of hereasy chair, the sunlight pro- experience come through in Junior Damato has agreed to field auto repair questions from Bulletin & Record readers. Please forward yourjecting the frame of the unseen these two pieces. questions to [email protected] and we will do our best to get your questions answered.window next to her onto thewall behind her. Her hand is to “I think that the idea ofher chin, pensive. Her movement and dance, and theheadscarf looks Muslim. The personality of each ballerinatitle card below the photo came in some ways on thebrings that conclusion home: sculptures,” she said.“Before the Fast.” Using the ancient lost wax Radin described her gen- technique, Mizrahi sculpts ineral method of working. beeswax, after which a mould is made around her creation “I tend to use as much time and hot bronze is poured in, thus “losing” the melted wax and producing the final prod-
Page 12 The Bulletin FREE DROP-IN October 5, 2017 HOMEWORK HELPCalendar continued from page 8 and poor women, Rosie’s Place coming art exhibit, “Getting to Food Pantry, Roslindale Food Boston Public Library loca- know you through our cultures.”bulb pick-up instructions and Mayor’s Cup Soccer Tourna- Pantry and sends homeless and tions offer free after-school Reception is Thursday, Oct. 19dates. poor children to summer camp. homework help and mentorship 6:30-7:30 p.m. The art will also ment, please contact Woodley It will be held at the Irish Social provided by trained, high-achiev- be available as part of the Individuals, civic associa- Club, 119 Park St., West ing high school students. Home- Roslindale Open Studios on Sat-tions, church groups, sports Auguste at Roxbury. Gift certificates from work Help is available Monday, urday Oct. 22 until 2 p.m. http://leagues, scout troops, open some of your favorite local res- Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thurs- www.roslindaleopenstudios.org.space advocates, and parks [email protected] taurants and shops will be day afternoons between 3:30 and Exhibit runs from Oct. 9 throughfriends are just some examples raffled- off. Join the fun and con- 5:30 p.m., Sept. 18 through May Nov. 18. Located at 4246 Wash-of the volunteers the Parks De- or call (617) 961-3084. nect with your friends and neigh- 24. Open to students in grades ington Street, Roslindale, MApartment seeks to help in the bors over brunch while helping K-8. No registration is required. 02131.“Boston Blooms with Daffo- WEST ROXBURY out a beneficial cause. Admis-dils” effort. Last year over 100 ROSLINDALE sion is $20.00. You may pay at Program is not available on The cultures of Roslindalecommunity groups planted the the door, by check to WRFORP Boston Public School holidays, come from all over the world.Art-bulbs distributed by the City. BCYF OHRENBERGER c/o O’Brien, 643 West Roxbury early-release days, or long week- ist participants include: Dan Jay, COMMUNITY CENTER IN- Pkwy, West Roxbury, MA 02132 ends. Nina Lev, Dianne Zimbabwe, Anyone interested in as- VITES SENIORS TO CHECK or by credit card on our website Phyllis Bluhm, Greg Jundanian,sisting with planting can fill OUT THE FALL SCHEDULE westroxburyfriendsofrosiesplace.org. Homework Help mentor Catherine Jaggi, Michele Audetout a form online at OF ACTIVITIES If you need additional informa- trainings provided by Harvard and Lilly Harrison. More infowww.boston.gov/boston- tion, please call 617-469- 4199 University’s Public School Part- about Friends of the Roslindaleblooms which asks for con- Boston Centers for Youth & and be sure to check out our nerships Team, the developers of Library at http://tact information and identifi- Families (BCYF) is pleased to Facebook page and like us at SmartTalk, a program that uses www.friendsofroslindalelibrary.orgcation of the public space the announce that the BCYF h t t p s : / / w w w. f a c e b o o k . c o m / research-based tools, strategies,applicant is volunteering to Ohrenberger Senior Program is WRFriendsRosies/. and resources to support students PRESCHOOL OPENINGSplant. Groups and individuals beginning its fall activities with during homework time. Home- The BCYF Ohrenbergerare asked to use their own a breakfast and information ses- HOLY NAME CHRISTMAS work help takes place on Mon-tools. sion for seniors on Monday, Oct. BAZAAR day Oct. 2 at 3:30 p.m. at the Community Center Preschool has 2 at 9 a.m. West Roxbury Branch of the spaces available in our Tuesday For more information on On Saturday, Nov. 11 from 9 Boston Public Library on 1961 and Thursday program. The Pro-how to participate in Boston Senior activities will be held a.m. to 3 p.m. at 535 West Centre St. gram is offered from SeptemberBlooms with Daffodils, on Mondays, Tuesdays, and Roxbury Parkway, Parish Hall through June, 9 a.m.-1 p.m. for 3please call the Parks Depart- Wednesdays from 9 a.m. to 1 Get a jump start on your Christ- THE FRIENDS OF THE & 4-year-olds. The program is de-ment at (617) 961-3006. p.m. On Thursdays, there will be mas shopping while having WEST ROXBURY LIBRARY signed to promote emotional, social, open access/instruction in the fun with family and friends. IS HOSTING THEIR and physical development. The dailyREGISTRATION NOW Computer Lab from 10 a.m. to On Saturday, Nov. 11, Holy ANNUAL MEETING schedule includes time for group ac-OPEN FOR MAYOR’S noon. New programs scheduled Name Parish School will be tivities, stations, gym time, outdoorCUP SOCCER TOURNA- to be offered include senior ex- hosting its annual Christmas The Friends of the West play, story time in the school library,MENT ercise classes held every Tues- Bazaar featuring holiday shop- Roxbury Library is hosting their crafts, free play, baking and daily day from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 ping, photos with Santa Claus, Annual Meeting featuring Ben snacks. For more information con- Mayor Martin J. Walsh p.m. beginning on Tuesday, Oct. plenty of great food items, Mezrich, author of Woolly (The tact Grace at 617-635- 5183.and the Boston Parks and 17. Tai Chi begins on Wednes- raffle prize opportunities, fun True Story of the De-ExtinctionRecreation Department have day, Oct. 18 from noon to 1 p.m. children’s activities and of One of History’s Most Iconic ROSE’S BOUNTYannounced that registration is In January, a new workshop games, hair braiding, face Creatures) FOOD PANTRY IS OPENnow open for the 2017 called “A Matter of Balance” painting, our annual CakeMayor’s Cup Soccer Tourna- will teach seniors the importance Walk, Basket Raffles and Thursday, Oct. 19, Recep- On Oct. 14 from 2-4 p.m. andment. of keeping strong and active. more. You’ll also have the op- tion: 5:30 p.m., Author talk: 6:30 Oct.17from 11a.m.–1p.m. Rose’s Free Flu Shots are scheduled for portunity to purchase gifts p.m., Location: West Roxbury Bounty food pantry is open to local This year, the Mayor ’s Thursday, Oct. 19 at 11 a.m. from local businesses like Top Branch Library. residents in need. Please bring bagsCup Soccer Tournament will it Off and Fabutique, as well and ID.Anyone interested in donat-be held on the weekends of A Senior Advocate from the as many talented crafters offer- Science fiction becomes re- ing or volunteering can reach us atOct. 21 – 22 and Oct. 28 - 29 City of Boston Elderly Commis- ing unique, homemade items. ality in this Jurassic Park-like [email protected] Locatedat Moakley Park in South sion will be at the center the first Proceeds from the day’s event story of the genetic resurrection on Stratford Street United ChurchBoston. The Mayor’s Cup Monday of each month from 10 will go towards Holy Name of an extinct species—the woolly 77 Stratford St. (at Anawan Ave.)Soccer Tournament offers lo- a.m. to 2 p.m. to provide infor- Parish School. So bring the mammoth—by the bestselling West Roxburycal youth soccer programs mation and referral services to kids, tell a friend, drive a neigh- author of The Accidental Billion-the opportunity to compete seniors. Taxi Coupons will be bor, stop by for an hour or join aires and The 37th Parallel. BCYF DRAPER POOL WILLagainst each other for the available at that time. us for the entire day – it’s sure to BEGIN SATURDAYright to be called the best be a fun-filled event. This wild and wondrous tale OPERATING HOURSsoccer team in Boston. Re- Find out more about what’s intertwines the looming threat offlecting changes imple- planned by coming to Monday’s WBZ’S DAN REA WILL BE global warming, miraculous new The BCYF Draper Pool, 5279mented by US Youth Soccer, breakfast or call the center at SPEAKING AT THE WEST advances in science and technol- Washington St. in West Roxbury,divisions are now grouped by 617-635-5183 and ask for Lorna ROXBURY HISTORICAL ogy, heroic fossil hunters who now making the pool available tograde and age. or Patty. Support for these senior SOCIETY battle polar bears and extreme swimmers six days a week from programs is provided by the City conditions, and the brave new 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. For the complete This year ’s age/grade of Boston, Ethos, Boston Elderly WBZ’S Dan Rea will be world that arrives with schedule of swim programminggroupings are: Grades 3/4 Services, Boston Public Health speaking at the West Roxbury mankind’s newfound ability to at the pool, visit Boston.Gov/(U10), Grades 5 /6 (U12), Commission, the Foundation for Historical Society on Oct. 14 at control the genetic code of ev- BCYFand Grades 7/8 (U14) with BCYF, Osco Drug, and the 1 p.m. The event will take place ery living creature.boys and girls divisions for BCYF Ohrenberger Community at the West Roxbury Branch Li- Conserve our resources.each age/grade grouping. Center Council. brary. The topic is Boston Base- ART EXHIBIT: “GETTING RecycleCoaches may register their ball! TO KNOW YOU THROUGHteams online at: http:// WRFORP OUR CULTURES” this newspaper.tinyurl.com/ HARVEST BRUNCH2017MayorsCupSoccer. As part of the Friends of theRegistration is open now The West Roxbury Friend’s Roslindale Library race and in-through Friday, Oct. 13. For of Rosie’s Place invite you to its clusion programming, themore information about the 25th Annual Harvest Brunch and Roslindale Branch of the Boston Raffle on Nov. 5 from 10 a.m. to Public Library announces an up- noon. This worthwhile fundraiser supports homeless*UTQBXTJUJWFMZ'3&& \"EEZPVSUIPVHIUTUPBOZ BSUJDMFUISPVHIPOMJOF5PTFFBMMUIFMBUFTU DPNNFOUDBQBCJMJUZ t/FXT t4QPSUT 3FBEZPVSGBWPSJUF t$PNNVOJUZ DPMVNOJTUTOPXPOMJOF &WFOUT 4VCNJUOFXTUJQTDBMFOEBS JUFNTCJSUIBOEXFEEJOH BOOPVODFNFOUT 1MBDFZPVSDMBTTJmFEBETBOE QSBZFSOPUJDFTPOMJOF t1IPUPT ¢śÈś± ÌÈśÈ± sÝ(PUPXXXCVMMFUJOOFXTQBQFSTDPN \"%7&35*4&34UPQMBDFZPVSXFCTJUFBEDPOUBDU 4VTBO:BOEFMMBUTZBOEFMM!CVMMFUJOOFXTQBQFSTDPN
October 5, 2017 The Bulletin Page 13 Making Strides Yard 5 continued from page 1 continued from page 3 ing to be using that for is... hood is for it, as well,” plaints regarding increased Maguire said. “We will make air traffic flying over theto have a bilateral mastectomy as a preventative measure. By the for pipe, good clean fill to sure that we address all of neighborhood. Maguire an-end of October 2013, I had the bilateral mastectomy, and I was the issues covered tonight, nounced that Councilortold after surgery that they did not find any cancer. I knew I had put back in the hole, and and notify you guys, as McCarthy has been workingmade the right decision. One week later I received a phone call well.” to solve this problem and isfrom the doctor’s office with the pathology report. They had whatever other items they scheduled to meet with thefound a tumor in my right breast.” Speaking further on the Massachusetts delegation in need to do a street project, topic, which first came up in Washington, D.C. to speak She said she underwent chemo again for an entire year, but 2014, Garibaldi considered about the issue.she said she came out on top and that this past August, her on- but not for contaminated its changes over time.cologist office called to tell her she would not have to come in “He is diligently workingagain for the foreseeable future. DiFlaminies said she has won dirt,” Garibaldi said. “It will “In 2014, this was a low on this because he knows it’sagainst cancer herself twice, but has had to fight it for the ben- impact situation,” he said. a big issue, not only forefit of her son Chuck in 1998 as well. She said her victories and not be trucked in or stored “Now we have two other ma- Readville, but for all of Dis-those of her family and others are proof of her convictions. jor projects they’re going to trict 5,” Maguire said. there, according to this let- put in there: the Sprague “Chuck turned 31 last week, and has been cancer-free for 20 Street development by the There were also com-years. I thank my friends, family members and God for standing ter.” bridge and the Father Hart plaints for the police regard-beside me and helping me along the way with this difficult jour- development, so... now we ing scooters and quads speed-ney,” she said. “Without them, I would never have been able to There were a number of have to look at it again dif- ing up and down West Miltonface this disease three times or beat it on my own, there was no ferently... but it might not be and Chesterfield streets.way it was going to happen... Never, ever give up the fight.” questions from the group as serious as everybody thinks it is.” In a sign that fall is here, Executive Director for the Eastern New England Cancer So- about this, particularly about according a vandalism inci-ciety Holly Grant was one of the main organizers of the event, Later on, Garibaldi did dent in the police report, $120and she said this year’s participation was amazing. the fact that the National share his opinion on First worth of pumpkins were de- Highland’s plans to sync the stroyed in a dispute between “We had a great turnout, we’ve had a beautiful day and some Grid yard will be a 24-hour traffic lights in Wolcott two tenants over a parkingreally passionate supporters,” she said. “We’ve got a lot of people Square with the proposed spot.who started with us 25 years ago who are still walking with us. operation, which elicited traffic lights at the FatherIt’s just incredibly powerful, it’s one of my favorite days of the Hart Bridge. The next Readville Neigh-year, truly. I got involved with the ACS because of breast cancer some murmuring from the borhood Watch meeting willin my family, a lot of us have been diagnosed, and this is just “All that does is create a be on Thursday, Oct. 20.such a celebration of so many people who survived the disease group. gridlock situation, becauseand we celebrate them and we remember those who have been people will be blowing Novena to St. Clairelost as well. When Lisa Consalvo, who through the red lights,” Garibaldi said. Ask St. Claire for three favors, “The money that’s been raised today provides critical sup- is concerned at this develop- 1 business, 2 impossible. Sayport our cancer research program, we have $11 million currently In additional business, nine Hail Marys for nineinvested right now for breast cancer research here in Massachu- ment, brought up that she Ann Cushing, representing days, with lighted candle.setts, we have $62 million nationwide, and the funds also sup- State Sen. Mike Rush, made Pray whether you believe orport our patients services programs.” would like to clarify exactly the general announcement not. Publish on the ninth that the commuter rail would day. Powerful novena. Say Debbie Morrison came out with her daughters and friends what would be going in and be installing fiber optic “May the Sacred Heart ofElsie Lisle and Renee Palmer from Dorchester for the 13th year cables to the tracks during Jesus be praised, adored,this year, and Morrison said it’s been a great time. Morrison out of the site during these weekends. A commuter rail glorified, now and forever,herself has been in remission for that time. representative is being sched- throughout the whole world. hours, Garibaldi responded. uled to make a more detailed Amen.” Your request will be Verizon continued from page 1 presentation regarding this granted, no matter how “That would probably go work at the next meeting. impossible it may seem. through Councilor In new business, there —P.L.D. have been increasing com- McCarthy’s office, because this letter was directed to- ward your office,” he said. Additionally, the letter in question also stated that dug up asphalt will be stored in the National Grid yard, lead- ing Garibaldi to send another question McCarthy’s way via Steve Maguire, again regard- ing contamination. Maguire, in response to Readville Yard 5’s change in plans and to the number of questions requiring further research, responded broadly. “This is a significant change, so we will take it The increased connectivity families and businesses.” slowly and make sure thatis also aimed at helping mu- Verizon itself stated that itnicipal buildings and school everything is done correctly,buildings. According to the has through this expansion in-city, the increased amount of creased the digital offerings and make sure the neighbor-fiber-optics will go to the city for the city.to schools, support the deliv- /&8-*45*/( 4065)453&&56/*5ery of City services, and en- “Since we introduced /&813*$& 304-*/%\"-&hance public safety communi- FiOS in Boston late last year 40-%cations systems. The Boston we’ve almost doubled avail- $POEPo3PPNT#3T#\"TFiber Optic Network able data speed, and now of-(BoNET) was originally set fer our Fios Gigabit Connec- 3BSFPQQPSUVOJUZUPPXOBMBSHFCFECBUI7JDUPup in 2008 to connect 130 city tion service. Our teams are SJBODPOEPMPBEFEXJUIDIBSNEFUBJMTJOUIFIJHIMZoffice through 10 hubs. Since outside TPVHIUBGUFSi%PDUPST3PXw+VTUJNBHJOFMJWJOHTUFQTthen, the city has used the net- everyday transforming UP 'BMMPO 'JFME BOE UIF \"SOPME \"SCPSFUVN ZFU TUJMMwork to connect more than 50 Boston’s technology founda- DMPTFUP8FTU3PYCVSZ$FOUFSBOE3PTMJOEBMF7JMMBHFTmore buildings and Wi-Fi tion,” said New England Re- WJCSBOU TIPQT SFTUBVSBOUT BOE FOUFSUBJONFOU 1PThotspots since then. gion President, Donna TJCJMJUJFT GPS HSPXUI XJUI BO BEEJUJPOBM EFFEFE Cupelo. TRVBSFGFFUBSFBKVTUCFMPXXIJDIJTDVSSFOUMZVTFEBT The new fiber-optic infra- TUPSBHF#FBVUJGVMMZNBOJDVSFEZBSEXJUIUXPQPSDIFTstructure from Verizon is pur- Roslindale Village Main POFPGUIFNQSJWBUF$BMMGPSEFUBJMT,ported to add to the 26 schools Streets Executive Directorand 38 libraries already in- Alia Hamada Forrest said if it 413*/(453&&5cluded in the BoNET. can help local businesses 8&45309#63: compete, the added connectiv- “This agreement brings in- ity will be welcomed. $POEPo3PPNT#3T#\"creased competition andchoice for broadband and en- \"Having a dependable .PWFSJHIUJOUPUIJTOFXMZSFOPWBUFEUPQDPSOFSVOJUtertainment services in Bos- internet connection during the 3FOPWBUJPOT JODMVEF LJUDIFO XJUI TUBJOMFTT TUFFM BQton,” said Chief of Informa- holiday shopping season is QMJBODFT DBCJOFUT DPVOUFSUPQT BOE NBSCMF CSFBLtion and Technology, Jascha extremely important for busi- GBTUEJOOFSCBS$PNQMFUFMZSFOPWBUFECBUI5XPMBSHFFranklin-Hodge. “Providing nesses in Roslindale,\" she CFESPPNT XJUI )BSWFZ XJOEPXT BOE EPVCMF DMPTFUTmore constituents with said. \"I’ve heard stories of the JO .BTUFS /FX nPPSJOH JOXBMM \"$ VOJU VQHSBEFEinternet options will help the internet being down dur- FMFDUSJD BOE EFFEFE QBSLJOH $POWFOJFOUMZ MPDBUFElower costs and make internet ing December, and if Fios can TFDPOETUPTIPQTSFTUBVSBOUTBOEUIFDPNNVUFSUSBJOaccess affordable to more help make that never happen UP #PTUPO PUIFS NBKPS SPVUFT $BMM GPS ZPVS QSJWBUF again — then yes, it’d be a TIPXJOH, major help.\" #*--*/(4453&&5 8&45309#63: 4JOHMF'BNJMZo3PPNT#3T#\"T #FBVUJGVMHBSSJTPODPMPOJBMXJUIPQFOnPPSQMBOQSP WJEFTGPSFBTZFOUFSUBJOJOH\"TQBDJPVTFBUJOLJUDIFO XJMM QMFBTF UIF GBNJMZ DIFG XJUI BMM BQQMJBODFT MFTT UIBOZFBSTPME5IFMBVOESZJTPOUIFmSTUnPPSXJUI BOFXXBTIFSBOEESZFS0UIFSGFBUVSFTJODMVEFGPVS CFESPPNT UISFF BOE B IBMG CBUISPPNT EFMJHIUGVM UISFF TFBTPO SPPN DFOUSBM BJS DPOEJUJPOJOH DFOUSBM WBD BMBSN TZTUFN GSFTIMZ QBJOUFE JOUFSJPS BOE mO JTIFE CBTFNFOU XJUI GVMM CBUI GPS B IPNF PöDF PS HVFTUTVJUFTo advertise, call (617) 361-8400 $&/53&453&&58&45309#63:.\"XXXKBDLDPOXBZDPN
Page 14 The Bulletin October 5, 2017 Legals Galeota continued from page 4 Letters Commonwealth of Massachusetts tol but not to 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. One recently made continued from page 4 it to the West Wing for a week or so, Anthony Scaramucci. The Trial Court – Probate and Family Court Department Before I worked at Northeast- A writer for the Globe, Joan Vennochi, made the point ern, I had a job as a medicalSUFFOLK Division Docket No. SU17C0375CA after the Scaramucci debacle several months ago that politi- assistant in Brighton. I left be- cal correctness would have inhibited comics and news writ- cause I was paid differentlyNOTICE OF PETITION FOR Suffolk Probate and Family Court ers from poking fun of him and his nationality if he were of and treated differently as aCHANGE OF NAME 24 New Chardon St. another heritage. She might be correct. Puerto Rican woman because Boston, MA 02114 my English wasn’t as good asIn the Matter of: Atif A Khojah 617-788-8300 This is not to say that many of us Italians (I’m half Irish, my co-workers. I now work atOf: Boston, MA with four grandparents from Kerry and Calabria) do not laugh Northeastern full-time, but I just as heartily at Godfather impersonations or speech pat- still live in low-income hous-To all person interested in petition described: terns mimicking Italians attempting to master English. ing. I am on the Mass Health A petition has been presented by Atif A Khojah requesting that: Connector. I pay for insurance Atif A Khojah be allowed to change his/her/their name as follows: It’s too bad that Scaramucci was given the bum’s rush - that provides me with less cov- David A Hojah but deservedly so - from the West Wing. Very, very few Ital- erage than I need because I IF YOU DESIRE TO OBJECT THERETO, YOU OR YOUR ATTORNEY MUST ians (are there any others?) have ever received mail there. cannot afford anything more than that.FILE A WRITTEN APPEARANCE IN SAID COURT AT: Boston Perhaps someday there will be an Italian in the West Wing ON OR BEFORE TEN O’CLOCK IN THE MORNING (10:00 AM) ON: as a mover/shaker for some president, higher than Minority I am sharing my story, but 11/02/2017 Leader of the House Nancy Pelosi, or even in the oval office my story echoes the lives of WITNESS, Hon. Brian J. Dunn, First Justice of this Court itself. many food service workers on Date: October 3, 2017 campus that cannot live on a But until that time we Italians and even those of us who Northeastern salary. HundredsFelix D. Arroyo, Register of Probate are part Italian take some pride in recalling the local politi- of food service workers who Boston Bulletin, 10/05/2017 cal accomplishments of Menino, Cellucci, and Volpe. feed Northeastern’s students need public assistance like Commonwealth of Massachusetts TO ADVERTISE, CALL THE BULLETIN AT low-income housing, Mass The Trial Court Probate and Family Court Health and food stamps to get 617.361.8400 by.CITATION ON PETITION FOR DOCKET No.SU17P2086EAFORMAL ADJUDICATION Last year, Harvard food ser- vice workers fought and wonEstate of: Yaffe Frances Suffolk Probate and Family Court big. They have helped inspireDate of Death: 02/24/2011 24 New Chardon St. us at Northeastern to fight for Boston, MA 02114 more. We know our work and 617-788-8300 our lives have value. We are asking for a guaranteed salaryTo all interested persons: Cl assif ieds of $35,000 a year for full-timeA Petition for Formal Probate of Will with Appointment of Personal Representative work, the median income inhas been filed by: LANDLORDS: Boston. We put genuine care If you have an apartment, condo or house rent, call me for full into the food we make and the Melissa A. Bogdanow of Hyde Park, MA rental services. Louis Maloof. Greater Boston Realty. (617) 327- service we provide. I’m proudrequesting that the Court enter a formal Decree and Order and for such other relief as 0560. to work at Northeastern and Irequested in the Petition. thank all the students and pro-The Petitioner requests that: FOR SALE fessors who have stood by us. CASH PAID For Houses, Condos or land Any Condition, Area, But, there is no pride in an in- Melissa A. Bogdanow of Hyde Park, MA Issue or Contents. No Commissions (617) 249-3961. stitution with millions keepingbe appointed as Personal Representative(s) of said estate to serve on the bond in an its workers stuck on public as-unsupervised administration. Legals sistance and trapped in poverty. IMPORTANT NOTICE Commonwealth of Massachusetts My mother raised my three You have the right to obtain a copy of the Petition from the Petitioner or at the sisters and me by herself. SheCourt. You have a right to object to this proceeding. To do so, you or your attorney The Trial Court – Probate and Family Court Department is now disabled and I help hermust file a written appearance and objection at this Court before: 10:00a.m. on with the bills whenever I can. Ithe return day of 11/09/2017. This is NOT a hearing date, but a deadline by SUFFOLK Division Docket No. SU17C0450CA want to buy a house for her. Iwhich you must file a written appearance and objection if you object to this want to give her a more stableproceeding. If you fail to file a timely written appearance and objection followed NOTICE OF PETITION FOR Suffolk Probate and Family Court life in our own place. I see Bos-by an Affidavit of Objections within thirty (30) days of the return day, action ton as my home. I don’t wantmay be taken without further notice to you. CHANGE OF NAME 24 New Chardon St. to start from zero somewhere else. UNSUPERVISED ADMINISTRATION UNDER THE Boston, MA 02114 MASSACHUSETTS UNIFORM PROBATE CODE (MUPC) We hope the city of Boston A Personal Representative appointed under the MUPC in an unsupervised will support us this fall as weadministration is not required to file an inventory or annual accounts with the ask Northeastern to changeCourt. Persons interested in the estate are entitled to notice regarding the Boston for the better. Our workadministration directly from the Personal Representative and may petition the and our lives matter to theCourt in any matter relating to the estate, including the distribution of assets Northeastern community andand expenses of administration. the city at large, and we are WITNESS, Hon. Joan P Armstrong, First Justice of this Court. prepared to prove it. Date: September 27, 2017Terri Klug Cafazzo, Register of Probate Hilda Ortiz Boston Hyde Park Bulletin, 10/05/2017 Tell ‘em 617-788-8300 what you think with a In the Matter of: Zyaire Hudson Letter To The Editor Of: Hyde Park, MA. PLEASE WRITE TO: Commonwealth of Massachusetts To all person interested in petition described: THE BULLETIN The Trial Court Probate and Family Court A petition has been presented by Zyaire Hudson by her mother and next of friend 661 WASHINGTON ST, SUITE 202CITATION ON PETITION FOR DOCKET No.SU17P1959EA Mishka Jackson requesting that:FORMAL ADJUDICATION NORWOOD, MA 02062 Zyaire Hudson be allowed to change his/her/their name as follows: TEL: (617) 361-8400 FAX: (617) 361-1933 Zyaire A. Jackson EMAIL:Estate of: Virginia M. Mahoney Suffolk Probate and Family Court IF YOU DESIRE TO OBJECT THERETO, YOU OR YOUR ATTORNEY MUST [email protected] Known as: 24 New Chardon St. Please include your name,Virginia Margurite Mahoney Boston, MA 02114 FILE A WRITTEN APPEARANCE IN SAID COURT AT: BostonDate of Death: 05/26/2017 617-788-8300 address & telephone number. ON OR BEFORE TEN O’CLOCK IN THE MORNING (10:00 AM) ON: Unsigned letters will not be published. 10/19/2017To all interested persons: WITNESS, Hon. Joan P. Armstrong, First Justice of this CourtA Petition for Formal Probate of Will with Appointment of Personal Representativehas been filed by: Date: September 15, 2017 Patrick J. Mahoney of Florence, MA Terri Klug Cafazzo, Register of Probaterequesting that the Court enter a formal Decree and Order and for such other relief asrequested in the Petition. West Roxbury/Roslindale Bulletin, 10/05/2017The Petitioner requests that: Commonwealth of Massachusetts Patrick J. Mahoney of Florence, MA The Trial Court Probate and Family Courtbe appointed as Personal Representative(s) of said estate to serve Without Surety onthe bond in an unsupervised administration. TRUST CITATION DOCKET No.SU17P1063P0 IMPORTANT NOTICE In the matter of: Jared Realty Trust Suffolk Probate & Family CourtYou have the right to obtain a copy of the Petition from the Petitioner or at the To all interested persons: 24 New Chardon St.Court. You have a right to object to this proceeding. To do so, you or your attorney Boston, MA 02114must file a written appearance and objection at this Court before: 10:00a.m. on 617-788-8300the return day of 10/26/2017. This is NOT a hearing date, but a deadline bywhich you must file a written appearance and objection if you object to this A Petition has been filed by:proceeding. If you fail to file a timely written appearance and objection followed Jean-Pierre Sanchez of Boston, MA and Judith Sanchez of Boston, MAby an Affidavit of Objections within thirty (30) days of the return day, actionmay be taken without further notice to you. Requesting Appointment of a Successor Trustee You have the right to obtain a copy of the Petition from the Petitioner or at the UNSUPERVISED ADMINISTRATION UNDER THE MASSACHUSETTS UNIFORM PROBATE CODE (MUPC) Court. You have the right to object to this proceeding. To do so, you or your A Personal Representative appointed under the MUPC in an unsupervised attorney must file a written appearance and objection at this Court before: 10:00administration is not required to file an inventory or annual accounts with the a.m. on 10/27/2017. This is NOT a hearing date, but a deadline by which youCourt. Persons interested in the estate are entitled to notice regarding the must file a written appearance and objection if you object to this proceeding. Ifadministration directly from the Personal Representative and may petition the you fail to file a timely written appearance and objection followed by an AffidavitCourt in any matter relating to the estate, including the distribution of assets of Objections within thirty (30) days of the return date, action may be takenand expenses of administration. without further notice to you. WITNESS, Hon. Joan P Armstrong, First Justice of this Court. Date: September 21, 2017 WITNESS, Hon. Joan P Armstrong, First Justice of this Court.Terri Klug Cafazzo, Register of Probate Date: September 15, 2017. Terri Klug Cafazzo, Register of Probate West Roxbury/Roslindale Bulletin, 10/05/2017 Boston Bulletin, 10/05/2017
October 5, 2017 The Bulletin Page 15 &RPPXQLW\6HUYLFH'LUHFWRU\ '(02/,7,21',6326$/ $872,1685$1&( (/(&75,&,$1 (/(&75,&,$1 5)9(1785$',6326$/)NSURANCE
Page 16 The Bulletin October 5, 2017 LQVLJKW/ŶƐŝŐŚƚZĞĂůƚLJ'ƌŽƵƉϭϰϮϵĞŶƚƌĞ^ƚƌĞĞƚ͕tĞƐƚZŽdžďƵƌLJϲϭϳͲϯϮϯͲϮϯϬϬDŝĐŚĂĞůDĐ'ƵŝƌĞ <ƌŝƐDĂĐŽŶĂůĚ dƌƵĚLJDĐ'ƵŝƌĞ DĂƌLJĞǀůŝŶ DĂƌLJ&ŽƌĚĞ >ŝƐĂ^ƵůůŝǀĂŶ ^ƚĞǀĞŶDƵƐƚŽ ϲϭϳͲϴϯϵͲϴϵϰϰ ϲϭϳͲϵϱϯͲϵϬϵϵ ϲϭϳͲϰϯϴͲϵϬϮϮ ϳϴϭͲϰϬϱͲϬϵϯϮ ϲϭϳͲϴϮϯͲϯϭϰϲ ϲϭϳͲϴϯϴͲϳϯϲϭ ϲϭϳͲϴϵϮͲϱϴϴϴ ^ƵĞƌŝĚĞĂƵ :ĞŶŶĂDĂƌƚĞůů ůĞdžĞƐŬƌŽǁŶŝ dŝŵ,ĞĂƌŶ >ŝŶĚĂƵƌŶĞƩ ,ĞůĞŶ'ĂƵŐŚƌĂŶ ĂƌŽůDĞĞŚĂŶ ϲϭϳͲϮϴϱͲϱϵϮϰ ϲϭϳͲϴϯϱͲϴϵϭϭ ϴϱϳͲϴϵϭͲϳϴϱϵ ϲϭϳͲϴϯϵͲϰϯϵϱ ϲϭϳͲϯϯϱͲϮϴϮϰ ϲϭϳͲϳϳϴͲϯϭϬϰ ϲϭϳͲϴϭϲͲϳϲϵϯ'&\"563&%)0.&4 ϲϭEd^dZd t^dZKyhZz͵ Ψd ϮhE/d^ KWE,Kh^^͗^dhZzΘ^hEzϭϮ͗ϬϬdKϭ͗ϯϬ WD EĞǁŽŶǀĞƌƐŝŽŶ͊dǁŽƵŶŝƚƐƚŚĂƚŚĂǀĞďĞĞŶƌĞŶŽǀĂƚĞĚǁŝƚŚĂŵĂnjŝŶŐĮŶͲ ŝƐŚǁŽƌŬ͘ƵƐƚŽŵĐĂďŝŶĞƚŬŝƚĐŚĞŶƐƚŚĂƚĨĞĂƚƵƌĞƋƵĂƌƚnjĐŽƵŶƚĞƌƐ͕ŵŽƐĂŝĐ ďĂĐŬƐƉůĂƐŚ͕ĂŶĚďƌĞĂŬĨĂƐƚďĂƌ͘'ůĞĂŵŝŶŐŚĂƌĚǁŽŽĚŇŽŽƌƐĂŶĚĂďůĞŶĚŽĨ ŽƉĞŶĐŽŶĐĞƉƚĂŶĚƚƌĂĚŝƟŽŶĂůƐƉĂĐĞƐ͘hŶŝƚϭŝƐĂƚǁŽďĞĚƌŽŽŵǁŝƚŚƚǁŽ ďĂƚŚƌŽŽŵƐ͘hŶŝƚϮŝƐĂƚǁŽďĞĚƌŽŽŵǁŝƚŚƚŚƌĞĞĨƵůůďĂƚŚƌŽŽŵƐƚŚĂƚĂůƐŽ ŽīĞƌƐĂĚĚŝƟŽŶĂůďŽŶƵƐŽĨĂŶŽƚŚĞƌƚǁŽůĂƌŐĞƌŽŽŵƐŽŶƚŚĞƵƉƉĞƌůĞǀĞů͘ ^ŝƚƵĂƚĞĚũƵƐƚĂƐŚŽƌƚĚŝƐƚĂŶĐĞƚŽƚŚĞĐŽŵŵƵƚĞƌƌĂŝů͘ >ŝƐƚĞĚďLJDĂƌLJĞǀůŝŶϳϴϭͲϰϬϱͲϬϵϯϮ ϮϳdKW,/>>sEh ,D͵ Ψϰϲϱ͕ϬϬϬ ϯZ͕ϭ͘ϱ KWE,Kh^͗^dhZzϭϬ͗ϯϬ DdKϭϮ͗ϯϬ WD ^ƚĞƉƐƚŽŶĚŝĐŽƩŽŵŵƵƚĞƌZĂŝů͊>ŽŽŬŶŽĨƵƌƚŚĞƌ͊ŚĂƌŵŝŶŐĂŶĚďĞĂƵƟͲ ĨƵůůLJŵĂŝŶƚĂŝŶĞĚĂƉĞƐƚLJůĞŚŽŵĞŽŶĂŶŝĐĞůLJůĂŶĚƐĐĂƉĞĚĨĞŶĐĞĚLJĂƌĚǁŝƚŚ ĞdžƉĂŶĚĞĚĚƌŝǀĞǁĂLJ͕ŶĞǁĞƌǁĂůŬǁĂLJĂŶĚŐĂƌĂŐĞ͘dŚĞĐŽnjLJĨƌŽŶƚƉŽƌĐŚ ďĞĐŬŽŶƐLJŽƵŝŶƚŽĂƐƵŶŶLJ>ŝǀŝŶŐZŽŽŵǁŝƚŚĐƵƐƚŽŵƐŚĞůǀŝŶŐΘŐĂƐůŽŐĮƌĞͲ ƉůĂĐĞ͕ƐƉĂĐŝŽƵƐ<ŝƚĐŚĞŶĂŶĚϭƐƚŇŽŽƌDĂƐƚĞƌďĞĚƌŽŽŵ͘KƚŚĞƌŶŽƚĂďůĞĨĞĂͲ ƚƵƌĞƐŝŶĐůƵĚĞ͛ϬϭĐĂƚŚĞĚƌĂůĐĞŝůŝŶŐŝŶŝŶŐZŽŽŵͬ&Z͕ƐŬLJůŝŐŚƚƐ͕ƐůŝĚĞƌƐƚŽĂ ϯϲΖĚĞĐŬ͕ŶĞǁŐĂƐďŽŝůĞƌ͕ͬΘƌĞƉůĂĐĞŵĞŶƚǁŝŶĚŽǁƐ͘>ŽĐĂƚĞĚǁŝƚŚŝŶŵŝŶͲ ƵƚĞƐƚŽƚŚĞŚŝŐŚǁĂLJ͕>ĞŐĂĐLJWůĂĐĞ͕ƌĞƐƚĂƵƌĂŶƚƐΘƚƌĞŶĚLJĞĚŚĂŵ^ƋƵĂƌĞ͘ >ŝƐƚĞĚďLJ^ƵĞƌŝĚĞĂƵϲϭϳͲϮϴϱͲϱϵϮϰǁ ǁ ǁ͘ ŝ Ŷ Ɛ ŝ Ő Ś ƚ ƌ Ğ Ă ů ƚ LJ Ő ƌ Ž Ƶ Ɖ ͘ Đ Ž ŵ +BTPO#POBSSJHP 5HDFKRXWWRGD\IRUDIUHHPRUWJDJHFRQVXOWDWLRQ .BUUIFX\"UUBZB #SBODI.BOBHFS]/.-4 #SBODI.BOBHFS]/.-4 -JDFOTFEJO$5.\".&/)3* -JDFOTFEJO.\"/) $FMM $FMM +BTPO#POBSSJHP!3.4NPSUHBHFDPN .BUUIFX\"UUBZB!3.4NPSUHBHFDPN 'SBOLMJO4USFFU'JSTU'MPPS]#PTUPO.\" $FOUSF4USFFU]8FTU3PYCVSZ.\"/.-4&RVBM)PVTJOH0QQPSUVOJUZ$5.PSUHBHF-FOEFS-JDFOTF.-.\".PSUHBHF-FOEFSBOE#SPLFS-JDFOTF.$.&4VQFSWJTFE-FOEFS-JDFOTF4-./).PSUHBHF#BOLFS-JDFOTF.#3*-JDFOTFE-FOEFS--3*-JDFOTFE-PBO#SPLFS-#
Search
Read the Text Version
- 1 - 16
Pages: