Author: Mia
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Help wanted for Newton Community Ed August Art Classes
Teens:Help wanted for Newton Community Ed August art classes. Assist little ones with a variety of art projects. You must be free the weeks of August 11 and 18. Email lisa_rucinski@newton.k12.ma.us if you’re interested; please write about your background with kids and with art. Parents:Your kids are getting older and maybe they don’t need you that much any more. But we need you! Sign up to teach a class for younger kids through our afterschool program. We are particularly looking for teachers for chess and technology classes, but talk to us about your other ideas too. Submit your course proposal here, or email lisa_rucinski@newton.k12.ma.us. -

Pine Village Preschool Newton Spring Fling
Event: Pine Village Newton Spring FlingDate: Saturday, May 31stTime: 10amLocation: Pine Village Preschool 1326 Washington Street, Newton, MA 02465Description: Come and enjoy fun activities with your toddler and preschooler. Enjoy free face painting, gardening, arts and crafts, spring science fun and much more!You can also learn more about our Spanish immersion summer and preschool programs. To RSVP or if you have any questions, please contact us at enrollmentpvp@gmail.com.More information here. -

Newton 5th Happiest Suburb in America!
Newton makes Top 10 Happiest Suburbs in America in #5 spot tied with Apex, North Carolina!
Movato looked at the largest suburbs of the 50 largest cities in the nation. They were ranked based on stress factors, crime, personal income, married residents, and home ownership.
After determining the happiest mid-sized cities earlier this year, the Movoto Real Estate Blog decided the time was right to rank the 10 happiest suburbs in the nation—places that can be measured in smiles just as easily as miles. Once our happy task was complete, we concluded that these are the most content ‘burbs in the country:
1. Dublin, OH
2. Fishers, IN
3. Germantown, TN
4. Carmel, IN
5. Newton, MA (tie)
5. Apex, NC (tie)
7. Cupertino, CA (tie)
7. Westerville, OH (tie)
9. Papillion, NE
10. Cary, NC
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NNHS Alum Liesl Tommy Wins OBIE for Directing!
Congrats to Newton North High School’s own Liesl Tommy who won an OBIE for directing!
Liesl Tommy on Directing APPROPRIATE from Signature Theatre on Vimeo.
Liesl Tommy won a directing Obie for “Appropriate.”
The Obies, which honor work Off Broadway and Off Off Broadway, were presented by The Village Voice in a ceremony at Webster Hall. From the New York Times
Liesl Tommy ‘s recent credits include the world premieres of Party People by Universes (Oregon Shakespeare Festival),The White Man – A Complex Declaration of Love by Joan Rang(DanskDansk Theatre, Denmark), Peggy Picket Sees the Face of God by Roland Schimmelpfennig (Luminato Festival/Canadian Stage), Eclipsedby Danai Gurira (Yale Reperatory Theatre, Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company, and McCarter Theatre), The Good Negro by Tracey Scott Wilson (The Public Theater/NYSF and Dallas Theater Center), A History of Light by Eisa Davis (Contemporary American Theatre Festival), and Angela’s Mixtape by Eisa Davis (Synchronicity Performance Group, New Georges).
Other credits include Hamlet (California Shakespeare Theater), American Buffalo (Baltimore Centerstage), The Piano Lesson (Yale Repertory Theatre), Ruined (Oregon Shakespeare Festival, La Jolla Playhouse, and Berkeley Repertory Theatre), Stick Fly (Contemporary American Theatre Festival), A Cristmas Carol (Trinity Repertory Company), and Flight (City Theatre).
Her productions have won numerous awards for directing, acting, and design. She has taught master classes in acting, directing, and new play development internationally and has taught at The Juilliard School, Trinity Rep/Brown University, The Strasberg Institute, and New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts. Ms.
Tommy was awarded the NEA/TCG Directors Grant and is an artistic associate at Sundance Theatre Institute. She is a native of Cape Town, South Africa and a graduate of Newton North High School and Trinity Repertory Conservatory.
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New American Alligator Exhibit at Stone Zoo Opens Memorial Day
On Memorial Day weekend, a new American alligator exhibit will be opening at Stone Zoo!
The exhibit will feature three 5 to 7 foot alligators and will be a permanent seasonal exhibit at the zoo.
Also, to celebrate the opening of this new exhibit, Lyle the Crocodile, from the popular series of children’s books, will visit the Zoo on Saturday, May 24 and Sunday, May 25 for storytime, a meet and greet, and zookeeper encounters, giving visitors the chance to learn more about crocodiles, alligators, and their similarities and differences.
The American alligator exhibit is a permanent seasonal exhibit at Stone Zoo. Visitors will be able to see the alligators on exhibit into the early fall.

In addition to the large adult alligators, visitors will also be able to see “gators” up close with the three smaller animals, measuring 1 foot long each, that will be featured program animals utilized by the zoo’s Education department.
Adult American alligators are extremely strong and formidable predators. They use their long, muscular tails to propel through the water and their incredible bite power to catch and hold onto prey. These animals help to control populations of prey species and also create “alligator holes,” which are invaluable to other species in dry seasons and winter. Red-bellied turtles, for example, incubate their eggs in old alligator nests, which consist of piled vegetation.
Male alligators can measure nearly 15 feet long, while females can measure 10 feet long. They are the most vocal of all crocodilians, and communication begins before babies even hatch out of their eggs. When they are ready to hatch, the young make high-pitched whining noises. Alligators commonly bellow and roar at one another, and the loud bellow can be heard up to 165 yards away. During courting, alligators emit cough-like purrs.
In the wild, American alligators can be found in freshwater swamps, marshes, rivers and lakes in Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina and Texas. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service considers this species threatened as populations are not entirely stable throughout its range.
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Wellesley Books Fantasy Chapter Book Event
Get ready for an afternoon of fantasy and adventure when J.A. White and Paul Durham come to Wellesley Books on Wednesday, May 21st at 4:00pm.
These two debut middle-grade authors will talk about writing and share their new stories: the witchcraft and forbidden forest of White’s The Thickety and the secrets, magic, and monsters of Durham’s The Luck Uglies.
Paul Durham was raised in Massachusetts and at-tended college and law school in Boston. He now lives in New Hampshire with his wife, two daughters, and an enormous bushy creature the local animal shelter identified as a cat. He writes in an abandoned chicken coop at the edge of a swamp and keeps a tiny porcelain frog in his pocket for good luck.
Strange things are happening in Village Drowning, and a terrifying encounter has eleven-year-old Rye O’Chanter convinced that the monstrous, supposedly extinct Bog Noblins have returned. Now Rye’s only hope is an exiled secret society so notorious its name can’t be spoken aloud: the Luck Uglies. As Rye dives into Village Drowning’s maze of secrets, rules, and lies, she’ll discover the truth behind the village’s legends of outlaws and beasts . . . and that it may take a villain to save them from the monsters. .
J. A. White lives in New Jersey with his wife, three sons, and a hamster named Ophelia that doesn’t like him very much. When he’s not making up stories, he teaches a bunch of kids how to make up stories (along with math and science and other important stuff). He wishes dragons were real because it would be a much cooler way to get to work.
When Kara Westfall was six years old, her mother was convicted of the worst of all crimes: witchcraft. Years later, Kara and her little brother Taff are still shunned by the people of their village, who believe that nothing is more evil than magic…except, perhaps, the mysterious forest that covers nearly the entire island. It has many names, this place. Sometimes it is called the Dark Wood, or Sordyr’s Realm. But mostly it’s called the Thickety.
The villagers live in fear of the Thickety and the terrible creatures that live there. But when an unusual bird lures Kara into the forbidden forest, she discovers a strange book with unspeakable powers. A book that might have belonged to her mother.
And that is just the beginning of the story.
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Need Doctor in the House: Easy Gig for Boxing Match
Are you a doctor? You can be any kind of doctor.
Do you want an easy and fun gig?
My boxing gym, Nontanum Boxing Club, needs a doctor for an upcoming fight.
Saturday
May 24th (Memorial Day Weekend)
6:30 to 10 pm
Location: Boston
Duties:
- Weigh in fighters
- Check fighters before and after fight for signs of concussion
- Possible medical treatment of fighters during fight
- Compensation: $400
Interested? Please contact Marc Gargaro at marc@nonantumboxingclub.com or (617) 340-3700 ASAP.

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Valeo FC Summer Soccer Clinics
The Valeo Futbol Academy, Advanced Skills Clinic is a fun, yet intensive program designed specifically to improve a player’s individual skill, technique, and tactical awareness while fostering a love of the game.
It is a low-pressure environment that encourages creativity, attacking soccer and where players not only learn from professional coaches but also from each other.
Players will benefit from our progressive Academy training as we strive to build well-rounded players utilizing a technical, tactical, physical and mental training model approach. During each training session, athletes are guided through fun and challenging workouts that are combined with homework to maximize improvement and ultimately help them become more creative, efficient and effective players.
AGE GROUPS
Jr. Champs 5 – 8
Champions 8 – 12
Advanced Academy 12 – 14For the schedule, pricing and registration, go here.














