Author: Mia

  • Blue Man Group Partners with Autism Speaks

    Blue Man Group Partners with Autism Speaks

    In honor of Autism Awareness Month (April), the world-renowned Blue Man Group unveils a yearlong partnership with Autism Speaks; the company pledges to give a $25,000 donation to the cause and will host at least one sensory-friendly show, suitable for children with autism spectrum disorders (ASD), in each of its markets.

    Blue Man Group Partners with Autism Speaks

    Throughout the month of April, Blue Man Group will take collections after each performance to be donated to local Autism Speaks programs in the following cities – Boston, Chicago and New York City. In Las Vegas, where there is no local Autism Speaks chapter, monies raised will go to Grant a Gift Autism Foundation. In addition, each production will offer sensory-friendly shows on select dates throughout the year, with a percentage of proceeds benefitting the cause.

    For the sensory-friendly shows, slight modifications will be made including reducing sound and light levels at various moments during the performance and making headphones available upon request. The Blue Men will limit the amount of “chair walking” and keep their approach to the audience more subdued. Blue Man Group will also create calming environments in each theater’s lobby for families seeking a break from the excitement.

    “We’ve heard from many families affected by autism that their children responded to the Blue Man character in a very moving way. We don’t know the exact reason. We can only speculate that it has to do with the Blue Men communicating in their own unique way — non-verbally, through visuals, touch and sound. Their message often resonates on a deeper, more sincere level,” said Phil Stanton, Blue Man Group Co-Founder. “Once we knew that we could be helpful or provide an outlet for those affected by autism, we felt it was important to do more. With our sensory-friendly shows, we want to create a safe and welcoming environment for individuals and families affected by this disorder, in the hopes that they can have an entertaining and joyful experience together.”

    The fastest growing developmental disorder in the U.S., ASD affects 1 in 68 children and 1 in 42 boys. Characteristics include social challenges, communication difficulties and repetitive behaviors. As a non-verbal, visually-stunning show, Blue Man Group serves as a great fit for all children and families.

    The sensory-friendly performance schedule can be found at blueman.com/autismspeaks. Fans can also keep up with Blue Man Group through Twitter, Facebook, Instagram or the hashtag #DareToLive.

  • Hiring In Back Bay Boston at Aquent

    Hiring In Back Bay Boston at Aquent

    We are hiring a Captain of First Impressions (aka receptionist) to work the front desk at the new office. The main things we’re looking for: someone with a great attitude who is friendly, professional and very customer-service focused. This person will greet visitors, answer the phone and keep the entrance clean and organized. Hours will be 8-5 daily, paid hourly with time off for lunch. This is a great opportunity for someone who doesn’t yet have an extensive resume to acquire experience wowing clients.

    Here’s the link.

    Know of someone you think would fit the bill? Please send your referrals to jbaran@aquent.com

    Aquent careers

    We also have the following open roles at HQ that are eligible for referrals:

  • If Paid Equally, What Could MA Women Afford?

    If Paid Equally, What Could MA Women Afford?

    For Equal Pay Day, New Analysis Reveals the Real Costs of the Wage Gap for Massachusetts’s Women, Families and Economy

    An analysis released for Equal Pay Day tomorrow shows just how much damage the gender-based wage gap is doing to Massachusetts’s families and economy. Women employed full time in Massachusetts are paid just 82 cents for every dollar paid to men, amounting to a yearly gap of $11,118. This means that, collectively, Massachusetts women lose nearly $10.9 billion every year that could pay for basic goods and services that strengthen the state’s economy and are essential for the more than 322,000 Massachusetts households headed by women.

    wage gap for women of color, If Paid Equally, What Could MA Women Afford?

    The analysis was conducted by the National Partnership for Women & Families when the U.S. Census Bureau released its most recent data. It is being released for the first time today. The full set of findings for Massachusetts, which has the 16th smallest cents-on-the-dollar gap among the states, can be found here. The National Partnership also found that Latinas in Massachusetts are paid just 50 cents for every dollar paid to white, non-Hispanic men.

    These state-based findings are included in a new national report also released today, An Unlevel Playing Field: America’s Gender-Based Wage Gap, Binds of Discrimination, And A Path Forward. The report features original analysis, never released before, about the country’s wage gap across states, among women of color, and by parental and marital status. It identifies a punishing and pervasive gap that disproportionately harms mothers, single mothers and mothers of color, who can suffer from double and triple binds of discrimination.

    “At a time when women’s wages are essential to families and our economy, the persistence of the gender-based wage gap is doing real and lasting damage to women, families, communities and to our nation. It defies common sense that lawmakers are not doing more to stop gender discrimination in wages,” said Debra L. Ness, president of the National Partnership for Women & Families. “This analysis shows that women and families are losing thousands of dollars in critical income each year that could pay for significant amounts of food, rent, gas and other basic necessities. The effects ripple throughout our economy.”

    According to the analysis of Massachusetts, if the gap between men’s and women’s wages were eliminated, a full-time working woman in Massachusetts could afford food for nearly two more years, mortgage and utilities for six more months, rent for more than 10 more months, or 3,200+ more gallons of gas. These basic necessities would be especially important for the 26 percent of Massachusetts’s women-headed households currently living below the poverty level.

    Nationally, women working full time, year round are paid 78 cents for every dollar paid to men, with significant disparities for women of color. African American women and Latinas are paid 64 cents and Latinas are paid 56 cents for every dollar paid to white, non-Hispanic men. The country’s wage gap has been closing at a rate of less than half a cent per year since passage of the Equal Pay Act in 1963. At that rate, experts say America’s women will not be paid equally to men for another 43 years.

    “It has been well documented that the wage gap spans geography, race, industry, education level and other factors, and that it is closing at a glacial pace,” Ness continued. “America’s women and families simply cannot afford to wait another four decades for fair pay. It is past time for fair and family friendly workplace policies that will level the playing field and give all women the fair shot they need to support themselves and their families while fully contributing to our economy.”

    An Unlevel Playing Field outlines several measures that would help close the wage gap, including fair and family friendly workplace policies. Members of Congress have reintroduced three of the proposals so far this year: the Paycheck Fairness Act, which would help break harmful patterns of pay discrimination and establish stronger workplace protections for women; the Healthy Families Act, which would establish a national paid sick days standard; and the Family And Medical Insurance Leave (FAMILY) Act, which would create a national paid family and medical leave insurance program. Other measures discussed in the report include an increase in the minimum wage and protections for pregnant workers.

    The National Partnership’s analysis of the wage gap was released the day before Equal Pay Day, which is April 14 this year. The day marks how far into the year women must work in order to catch up with what men were paid the year before. The state-by-state analysis uses data from the U.S. Census Bureau. The findings for each state, state rankings, analyses specific to women of color and An Unlevel Playing Field are all available here.

     

    The National Partnership for Women & Families is a nonprofit, nonpartisan advocacy group dedicated to promoting fairness in the workplace, access to quality health care, and policies that help women and men meet the dual demands of work and family. More information is available atwww.NationalPartnership.org

  • Former President of Finland to Speak in Newton

    Former President of Finland to Speak in Newton

    Sunday, April 26, 2015
    3:00 PM

    Former President of Finland to Speak in Newton

    Scandinavian Cultural Center
    West Newton

    Finlandia Foundation Boston presents President Tarja Halonen.  A reception will follow.Tickets Free, but reservations required. If there are no seats left, please send Christina Mealey an email to be added to a waiting list.

    President Tarja Halonen has an impressive and lengthy background in public service, having held a number of elected and appointed positions. Prior to her election as the first female President in Finnish history through which she served two terms (2000-2012), she served as Minister for Foreign Affairs (1995-2000); Minister of Justice (1990-91); Minister for Nordic Cooperation (1989-91); and Minister at the Ministry of Social Affairs and Health (1987-90). She also held a number of top committee positions while serving a member of the Finnish Parliament from 1979 to 2000.

    She is presently an Angelopoulos Global Public Leaders Fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School.

  • Free Show for Kids at Newton Free Library

    Free Show for Kids at Newton Free Library

    Thursday, April 23, 2015

    2:00 PM-3:00 PM

    Free Puppet Show at Newton Free Library

    Newton Free Library

    330 Homer St.

    Newton Centre

    Druker Auditorium

    The Hampstead Stage presents Pinocchio, recommended for grades K-8. Carlo Collodi’s Pinocchio is the timeless tale of an Italian woodcarver, Geppetto, who carves a son out of a block of pine.

    Join the wooden marionette on his journey to become a real boy! Through Pinocchio’s mischievous adventures, he discovers that to truly be human is to be good-hearted and brave. This is a story of self-discovery, transformation, and redemption.

    With this play, we hope to teach students the importance of honesty, education, and gratitude.

     

  • Otis Best Street in Greater Boston

    Otis Best Street in Greater Boston

    Boston Globe 2015 Top Spots to Live: The Best Streets in Greater Boston chose Otis Street in Newton! The Globe featured the largest, fanciest Victorians for their article, but there are also more modest yet lovely homes on Otis Street.

    Otis Best Street in Greater Boston

    OTIS STREET / NEWTON

    In less than a mile, Otis Street has two sections: one in commuter-friendly Newtonville, where 2014’s average list price was around $2.3 million, and the other between Walnut and Lowell streets. The latter, because it’s near Newton North High School, is busier and therefore a little less expensive. But with century-old Shingle Styles, Victorians, Colonials, and, rarely, new construction, the street is “nice overall, everywhere,” according to Mary Ann Figoni, director of sales at Centre Realty Group in Newton.

    Otis Best Street in Greater Boston

    And Newton itself has been getting plenty of national notice lately, being named first among Time magazine’s “5 Best Places for the Rich and Single” in 2012 and first of 247wallst.com’s “America’s 50 Best Cities to Live” last September. “Every time you turn around,” says Figoni, “we’re winning some kind of award.”

    Otis Best Street in Greater Boston

    Newton at a Glance

    Median single-family sales price: $971,500

    5-year change: +30.6%

    Median condo sales price: $572,000

    5-year change: +41.8%

  • Why Do People Get Plastic Surgery? It’s Complicated

    Why Do People Get Plastic Surgery? It’s Complicated

    Scan the Internet, magazines, and newspapers and you’ll find stories daily about plastic surgery or some other form of cosmetic enhancement such as BOTOX® injections. Harder to locate, however, are articles about why these procedures remain as popular as ever and what leads individuals to make these changes to their bodies.

    The number of cosmetic procedures performed in the U.S. climbed in 2014 to 15.6 million, according to statistics calculated by The American Society of Plastic Surgeons®. Breast augmentation remained the most popular cosmetic surgery, while BOTOX injections were the top minimally invasive procedure. Although women get about 90% of the procedures, the number of men visiting plastic surgeons’ offices continues to increase, the statistics show.

    What the statistics don’t show is what motivates people to get cosmetic procedures. Is it as simple as vanity, or bowing to cultural pressure?  Social media is fueling some of the interest, at least when it comes to aesthetic procedures for the face, according to some plastic surgeons. Patients concerned about the way they appear in selfies, or during teleconferences at work, spark interest in cosmetic enhancements.
    But the most likely motivation, according to studies and the personal stories written on sites such as RealSelf, a major online plastic surgery forum, enhancing one’s appearance results in greater self-confidence.

    Dr. Dax Guenther Plastic Surgeon Hingham MA

    “Self-confidence is the most attractive thing a person can wear,” Dr. Dax Guenther, a plastic surgeon in Boston says, “Any time I’m able to improve someone’s self-confidence it goes far beyond being only ‘skin deep.’”

    In general, the limited research exploring why people get plastic surgery finds that people who have undergone elective cosmetic procedures often report higher levels of self-esteem following the procedure. Improving self-confidence, rather than vanity, appears to be the primary motivation. As researchers wrote in a study published last November in the journal Clinical Psychological Science, the most frequent goal of individuals who get plastic surgery is to “feel better about/in one’s own body.”

    An earlier study published in the same journal found that most people who undergo plastic surgery have realistic goals. Only 12% of the subjects in the 2013 study, which at the time was the largest of its type ever conducted, believed cosmetic surgery would solve all of their problems or that they would be a “completely new person.”

    Those findings echo the opinion of David K. Wellisch, a professor of psychiatry at the David Geffen School of Medicine at the University of California, Los Angeles, who has authored a textbook chapter on the subject of why women consider breast enhancement surgery.

    Most women who get breast implants are realistic about the surgery, he Hsays. It’s a body image issue, he says: “They simply are not happy with their bodies and wish to improve them. They have realistic expectations that if this is done, they will look more satisfying to their own eye and to others.”

  • Newton Public Schools Buying Aquinas School

    Newton Public Schools Buying Aquinas School

    April 17, 2015

    Dear Newton Community,

    As many of you are aware, we are in an exciting time of facilities renovations and expansion within the Newton Public Schools.  The Angier School will be completed in December with Zervas and Cabot not far behind.

    I want to make you aware of some exciting news related to our facilities planning.  The Mayor has signed a letter of intent to acquire the Aquinas School and property on Jackson Street, subject to approval and a vote to fund the purchase from the Board of Aldermen.  I believe this would be an incredible asset for our system.  Aquinas is a property with a school building that, with some modifications, will be a terrific facility for our district.  There is also significant parking and land included in the acquisition.

    If this purchase is approved by the Board of Aldermen and School Committee, our plans for facilities renovations and expansion would be updated to include the following:

    • The Aquinas School would be renovated and include the addition of an elementary school sized gym.  When completed, Lincoln-Eliot will move to Aquinas.  We expect this to occur by September 2019.  After Lincoln-Eliot moves to Aquinas, the old Lincoln-Eliot would become the swing space for our system.
    • The Aquinas property can also accommodate a unified preschool program.  The preschool would likely be able to occupy Aquinas as early as September, although this would still need to be confirmed.
    • Horace Mann would move into the newly renovated Carr School in September 2019, which is the time that Cabot students will move from Carr into a newly renovated or rebuilt Cabot School.  The Horace Mann building would transition to become a community center and location for Parks & Recreation programming in 2019.

    Please understand that our Student Assignment Working Group will continue their work while being mindful of these planned changes.  We will keep you well informed on the work of that group as well as the progress and timeframe of the exciting changes resulting from the Aquinas purchase, if it is approved by the Board.

    I am grateful to Mayor Warren and his team for working with us to address our facilities and capacity issues.  Their support is most appreciated and will make a huge difference for generations of Newton students.

    I hope you have a wonderful vacation week.

    Sincerely,

    David Fleishman
    Superintendent of Schools

     

    Newton Public Schools Buying Aquinas School

  • How to Lower Odds of Dementia

    How to Lower Odds of Dementia

    Dr. Gary Small, director of the UCLA Longevity Center at the Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior and the Parlow-Solomon Professor on Aging at the David Geffen School of Medicine has these insights on how to stay mentally alert as we age (shared on the UCLA Magazine, April 2015, Mental Crossfit by Dan Gordon ’85):

    • Take Charge. Genetics account for approximately 1/3 of cognitive and physical well being in aging … which leaves ample room for what we can control.
    • Trim Belly Fat. Carry excess weight in middle age raises the risk of dementia down the road, as well as high cholesterol, hypertension and diabetes.
    • Work Up a Sweat. There is strong scientific evidence that cardiovascular conditioning helps to keep the brain healthy.
    • Sleep Well. The benefits of sleep also includes improving mood and reducing effects of depression.
    • Brain Food. Eat diet rich in omega-3 fats (fish, flaxseed, walnuts) and low in omega-6 fats (red meat, whole milk, butter).
    • Memory Training. Learning languages or other mental challenges helps to keep your brain mentally engaged.
    • Treat Depression. Those prone to depression have higher rates of Alzheimer’s disease.

    The good news is that it’s never too early to too late to start! Small says, “The brain is very resilient. We see remarkable results in older people.”

    sports ranked by cardio vascular difficulty

    For more information on programs that teach techniques for combating age-related memory decline, visit here.

    Dr. Gary Small

    Gary Small, MD, Professor of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences, is the Director of the UCLA Longevity Center and one of the world’s leading physician/scientists in the fields of memory and longevity. He has developed breakthrough brain-imaging technology that allows physicians to detect brain aging and Alzheimer’s disease years before patients show symptoms.

  • Newton South Ranks as Best High School

    Newton South Ranks as Best High School

    2015 Niche Rankings ranks high schools in Massachusetts. Niche ranked 14,431 high schools based on dozens of key statistics, as well as opinions from 280,000 parents and students.

    How do the high schools in Newton stack up?

    Newton North High School, NNHS

    Newton North High School clocks in at number 15.

    Newton South High School made the list at number 22.

    Here are the Top 10:

    1. Dover-Sherborn Regional High School

    2. Westwood High School

    3. Lexington High School

    4. Advanced Math & Science Academy Charter School (in Marlborough)

    5. Brookline High School

    6. Boston Latin School

    7. Weston High School

    8. Wellesley Senior High School

    9. Westford Academy

    10. Wayland High School