High School Goalkeepers Prep Clinic at Valeo FC. Register here.
Author: Mia
-

Celebrate Newly Renovated Auburndale Cove!
Celebrate the newly renovated Auburndale Cove playground and fitness circuit! There is something for everyone!
- Nature activities.
- The new LifeTrail Advanced Wellness System
- Historic Games
- Ice Cream
- An outdoor workout for older active adults
- Tai Chi demonstrations
- Did we mention Ice Cream?
No pre-registration required. Transportation for Newton seniors available.
Bring a picnic and pick up a cone of Wally’s Wicked Good Ice Cream for dessert.
Part of the Newton Parks and Recreation summer series. At the Auburndale Cove, West Pine Street, Auburndale.
-

In-Home Hair Care Services
My name is Cory Thomas, founder of The Traveling Barbers “Hair Professionals For Persons With Disabilities”. We are a vast team of professional barbers and stylists who covers the entire U.S by going to the residences of those living with disabilities who may have difficulties with transportation, and provide them with in-home hair care services they are unable to seek out on their own in a barbershop or salon.
We simply wanted to let your organization know that our services are now available to all people of special-needs in the state of Massachusetts and that if any of the disabled members of your organization could use our in-home hair care services we would be greatly appreciative of your referrals. Thx.
FOR ANY QUESTIONS OR REQUESTS FOR APPOINTMENTS CALL OR EMAIL: (609) 775-7251…travelingbarbers@
hotmail.com…also visit our website at thetravelingbarbers.com -

Newton Public School Fees
Dear Parents and Guardians:
RE: Fees for the 2016-2017 School Year
Introduction
This letter will provide the list of all fees for the upcoming school year. Please note there is one change to fees in 2016-17 pertaining to school lunch, with new prices as follows: elementary school ($3.30), middle school ($3.60) and high school ($3.85). Important information on how to apply for a fee waiver is included, as is an explanation of the family caps and the overall fee limit for families, or supercap. Instructions for using the district’s online fee information are also provided.
List of All Fees for 2016-2017
The following is a summary of all School Committee approved fees and corresponding family caps for school year 2016-2017. Family cap refers to the maximum dollar amount a family pays for any one fee per school year. The supercap is the maximum amount a family pays for all fees per school year.
- Bus: Annual round trip $310 per student, family cap of $620. There is no fee for grades K-5. The fee is required for students in grades 6 residing less than 2.0 miles from their school and grades 7-12 regardless of distance.
- High School Athletics: $300 per sport per season except hockey and football, family cap of $900; $400 fee for hockey and football
- Middle School Athletics: $160 per sport per season, family cap of $480
- Middle School Student Activities: $60 per student per year if drama is not included, or $100 per student per year if drama is included
- High School Drama: $150 per participant per play, maximum of $450 per participant per year
- Elementary School Instrumental Music: $150 per student per year; Grade 4 has the option to pay $75 per semester
- All City Band, Chorus & Orchestra: $150 per student per year; students who pay the elementary school instrumental music fee are exempt from the All City music fee
- High School Parking: $310 per year, payable on a semester basis at $155
- Elementary School Early Morning Program: $12.00 per day with payment by semester
- School Lunch (Increased): $3.30 per elementary school student, $3.60 per middle school student, $3.85 per high school student
- Supercap: $1,200 maximum family cost per year for fees; the supercap does not apply to high school parking, the elementary school early morning program, and the school lunch program
The Waiver Process
As in prior years, it is the intention of the Newton Public Schools that no student should be excluded from fee-based activities due to inability to pay. Families may apply for a fee waiver based on financial hardship so that no student is denied participation in school-sponsored activities and bus transportation. Waivers are based on income and family size as well as special circumstances such as unforeseen medical problems, change in family status, change in employment status, other emergencies, or temporary hardships. All waiver applications are confidential. Financial waivers do not apply to high school parking. Waiver forms are available online and upon request.
How to Use the District’s Website for Information, Waivers and Online Payments
Newton families may access detailed fee information including financial waiver instructions and online payment options on the district’s website by visiting the following link. All school-related fees can be paid electronically via a secure and convenient online payment system or by check.
http://www3.newton.k12.ma.us/
feebasedprograms Please do not hesitate to contact my office if you have questions.
Sincerely,
Liam T. Hurley
Assistant Superintendent/Chief Financial and Administrative Officer
-

Musical, 1776, in Arlington!
MIT Gilbert & Sullivan Players are celebrating and making history with a genderblind production of 1776, the Tony Award-winning musical by Sherman Edwards and Peter Stone.
The show is directed by Emma Brown, with vocal direction by Johnnie Han and Tom Ostrowski, and Julie Henion and Liza Zahray at the baton. Edwards’ classic musical makes history come alive, giving us a humanizing look at our founding fathers that is at turns funny, terrifying, endearing, and always honest.
The year is 1776, and the legendary Continental Congress is in session in Philadelphia to decide what to do about the ongoing war with England. At the center of the action is John Adams of Massachusetts, a fiery but well-intentioned man who knows that the only way forward is for the colonies to declare independence, but convincing a skeptical congress seems like an uphill battle. When a proposal for independence comes from a more congenial colony, John sees the chance he’s been waiting for. The rest, as they say, is history.
What makes this production unique is director Emma Brown’s decision to cast it genderblind. Witness spirited performers of all genders and sexes bring these long beloved historical figures to stunning life.
Prominent among them are three talented artists from Arlington: Anna-Constantia Richardson as John Adams, Michael DeFillippi as Benjamin Franklin, and Sara Haugland as Thomas Jefferson.
1776 will be performed in Kresge Little Theatre, located at 43 Massachusetts Avenue on the MIT campus in Cambridge, MA.
Dates are August 12th, 13th, and 14th.
All performances are at 8:00 PM.
Tickets can be reserved on our website,gsp.mit.edu, or by e-mailing gsp-tickets@mit.edu.
-

Sam Durant: The Meeting House | Opens August 2016
The Meeting House, by renowned multimedia artist Sam Durant, will be open to the public on August 5th at The Old Manse in Concord, a National Historic Landmark in Massachusetts, through October 2016. The site-specific, participatory installation is part of a two-year outdoor art initiative—Art and The Landscape—presented by The Trustees and curated by guest curator Pedro Alonzo.
Constructed on the North Field of The Trustees’ Old Manse property, Durant’s project refers directly to the historical site through a structure based on the houses of the first emancipated African men and women in Concord. The pavilion features an open, transparent framework that is designed to function as a platform for the public to share and explore history, artwork, and issues of race, while reactivating The Old Manse as a setting for critical discussions.The Meeting House focuses on the African presence in colonial and post-revolutionary Concord and seeks to make the connection between our difficult past, slavery and segregation, and the fact that we are still today unable to create the just society that our revolution promised.
Beginning in August and running through October, The Meeting House will feature a series of public programs through which visitors may gain a deeper understanding of the background and challenges of African Americans in the region and explore and discuss many of the same issues faced today. When not in use for public programs, the pavilion welcomes Old Manse and the Minuteman Historical Park visitors to engage in contemplation and discussion through interpretive information built into the structure.
Another aspect of the project takes place inside the Old Manse itself. This interior exhibition, curated by Durant, is comprised of replicated post-colonial African artifacts as well as a reinterpretation of existing pieces through the lens of the enslaved people who may have impacted them. Items displayed include a manuscript written by Phillis Wheatley, the first published African American female poet; a warning poster from April 1851 directed at freed slaves; a slave ship plan view from Boston’s Museum of African American History; a pamphlet from the Concord Anti-Slavery Society, and more.
Programming will begin in August and includes workshops, readings, and discussions focused on African American writing, philosophy, music, food, and spirituality. Four core events—or “Lyceums”—in the spirit of 19th century gatherings, will enable dialogue about the issues in question. For a complete list of upcoming programs, please visit thetrustees.org/art.
Saturday, August 13: 12PM-2PM
The Picnic: Food on the table brings families and communities together. This event, in partnership with Haley House, deals with food culture as a means to start a willing dialogue of healing.Saturday, September 24 2PM-4PM
Poetry Reading: A select group of leading poets will be invited to compose new work specifically for a reading at The Meeting House. Featuring: Kevin Young, Danielle Legros Georges and Robin Coste-Lewis.Saturday, October 15 2PM-4PM
A New Framework for Dialogue: While explicitly racist policies and structures have been dismantled, systemic forms of racism and inequality remain. A panel discussion will be moderated by Tim Phillips and Beyond Conflict and will include artist Sam Durant. Panelists include Ebrahim Rasool, former South African Ambassador to the US, Penny Outlaw of the Royall House & Slave Quarters, and Adam Foss, Assistant District Attorney.Sunday, October 16 2PM-4PM
The Artist Listens: In the spirit of a town hall meeting, the public is invited to share their thoughts about The Meeting House. The artist and curator will be present for the discussion to listen and respond. This will be moderated by Mary Jane Jacob.ABOUT THE ARTIST: Sam Durant is a multimedia artist whose work takes a critical view of our social, political and cultural tropes and icons. Often referencing American history, his work explores the varying relationships between culture and politics, engaging subjects as diverse as the civil rights movement, southern rock music, and modernism. His work has been widely exhibited internationally and in the United States.ABOUT THE OLD MANSE: Although Durant has often referenced American history in his work, he has never been granted access to a historical site of such prominence as the Old Manse, a National Historic Landmark built in 1770 that served as the center of Concord’s political, literary, and social revolutions in the mid-19th Century. Leading Transcendentalists such as Ralph Waldo Emerson, Bronson Alcott, Henry David Thoreau, and Margaret Fuller discussed the issues of the day within its walls and author Nathaniel Hawthorne lived and wrote there for a time with his new wife Sophia. The Old Manse is located next to the Old North Bridge and Minuteman National Historical Park in Concord, where the first revolutionary battle was fought and draws two million combined visitors each year.ABOUT ART AND THE LANDSCAPE
As part of its yearlong 125th Anniversary celebration, The Trustees, Massachusetts’ largest conservation and preservation nonprofit, is featuring a multi-year, site-specific outdoor art initiative entitled Art and The Landscape. With the help of independent curator Pedro Alonzo, the new initiative is designed to present compelling contemporary art in a public landscape to create inspirational and meditative experiences for visitors at some of its most iconic and historic properties. The Meeting House, by renowned multimedia artist Sam Durant, is on display at The Old Manse in Concord, a National Historic Landmark, through October 2016. A site-specific installation, A New End, by Jeppe Hein, will be on view at World’s End in Hingham starting in August 2016.ABOUT THE TRUSTEES: Many of The Trustees’ statewide scenic, cultural, and historic properties have served as a dynamic inspiration for artists, thought leaders, and innovators throughout the organization’s 125-year history. Today, Trustees historic homesteads and gardens, farms, woodlands, beaches and trails are popular recreational and cultural destinations visited by more than 1.6 million people in 2015. The Trustees’ Art and The Landscape initiative is also part of a year-long celebration of The Trustees 125th Anniversarywhich will create new opportunities for visitors to explore and experience the organization’s landscapes and landmarks, some of the most important and iconic in Massachusetts.
If the installation inspires questions or comments for the artist, you can leave a message for Sam Durant via the phone numbers posted around the property: 857-244-0651.
-

Restaurant Find for Cold Korean Noodle Soup
A hot day in Boston calls for a summer Korean speciality, Naengmyeon, a cold beef noodle soup with water kimchi, thin slices of braised beef, and Asian pear.
You start by cutting up the noodles in the bowl, using scissors that the restaurant provides. Add Chinese yellow mustard and vinegar to taste.

Then eat with the side dishes.
Seoul Soulongtang is located in Allston and serves authentic Korean food. This dish was a good as I remember from Korean Town in Los Angeles!

Seoul Soulongtang
1245 Commonwealth Avenue
Allston, MA 02134

This is a casual Korean restaurant focusing classic beef broth soups.
-

Film Fundraiser About Vertex Pharmaceutical
*From Startup to Billion-Dollar Biotech: An Inside Look at Vertex*
*Cost *$25.00
*When*
Monday August 8, 2016 from 6:00 PM to 7:30 PM EDT
Add to Calendar*Where*
*Mass Innovation Labs*
675 West Kendall Street
Kendall Square
Cambridge, MA 02142*What was it really like when a team of dedicated researchers and
entrepreneurs launched the biotech revolution in Cambridge? *Find out first-hand from those who were there for a special panel featuring Rich Aldrich, former Chief Business Officer of Vertex and founding employee, Vicki Sato, Ph.D., the company’s former President and Chief Science Officer, and author Barry Werth!
Join us at this fundraiser to support indie filmmakers Yael Beals, Mark
Rennella, Jim Gallant who will bring the book *The Billion Dollar Molecule* to the big screen.Our panel includes:
– Barry Werth, author of the books *The Billion Dollar Molecule* and *The
Antidote*
– Vicki Sato, Ph.D., Professor of Management at Harvard Business School
– Rich Aldrich, co-founder and Partner of Longwood Fund
– Barret Bready, M.D., CEO of Nabsys, moderatorPhotos donated by Wally Gilbert, Ph.D., Nobel Laureate and Professor
Emeritus at Harvard University
will be displayed and auctioned too.Details:
– Q & A with Sato, Aldrich and Werth, on the birth of the biotech
industry as told in Werth’s book *The Billion Dollar Molecule*
– Filmmakers Yael Beals, Mark Rennella and Jim Gallant will discuss the making of *The Billion Dollar Molecule* into a major feature film
– Silent auction of select photos by Wally Gilbert
– All proceeds go to the funding of the film*Learn more about this event here.










