Category: Events

Events for adults, families and kids in Newton, MA.

  • Please Support the Newton Food Pantry

    Please Support the Newton Food Pantry

    Dear NFP Supporters,

    COVID-19 has brought about a challenging and uncertain time for many in our community, but we have had some amazing support from our community over the past week in the form of financial and in-kind donations and offers to volunteer. Thank you, Newton!

    Please help us to continue this support by donating HERE today!

    In the face of COVID-19, our top priority is to keep our clients and volunteers healthy and safe. Therefore, our pantry procedures have changed until further notice. We are open during the City Hall closure and providing food to Newton residents (including both NEW and EXISTING clients) during our regularly scheduled hours, but instead of running a “choice” pantry where it can be difficult to maintain safe distancing, we are providing pre-packaged bags of food to our clients. Important safety procedures that we have implemented during this crisis are summarized HERE.

    Newton Food Pantry

    Through the generosity of our community, we are able to now offer all Newton residents who need food the opportunity to pick up pre-packaged bags of groceries twice per month until this crisis subsides. Every client will receive the same pre-bagged food, but the amounts will vary based on family size.

    In addition to revamping our operations to change from a choice pantry to pre-bagged food, we have been working with numerous local businesses to expand our inventory. For example, Great Harvest Bread has been providing us with freshly baked bread offerings, and Johnny’s Luncheonette has been providing us with homemade soup offerings.

    Ethan Diamondstein Newton Food Pantry

    Another amazing example of how just one person can make a huge difference in our community is volunteer Ethan Diamondstein. Ethan, who is a Saturday volunteer, contributed donations to the NFP from his canceled bar mitzvah, where he was actually going to speak about the issue of hunger. He has also walked and raised money for the NFP’s Walk For Hunger team. Yay Ethan!

    We have also been expanding our delivery of groceries to individual households and providing bags of groceries in bulk to Senior Housing complexes. During this time when City Hall is closed, if you wish to contribute non-perishable goods, you can drop them off at 36 Metacomet Road or 61 Ballard Street. 
    Please support the Newton Food Pantry

    Anyone who wishes to volunteer and is between the ages of 18-60 and not in a high risk group for COVID-19, please email Regina Wu at volunteercoordinator@newtonfoodpantry.org.

    A huge thank you to all of you for remaining committed to NFP and we hope you all remain safe and healthy.

    With Gratitude,

    Tracie, Regina, Maria, Ron, Peter, and Carol

    Newton Food Pantry Board

  • Dawn Davis Yoga Classes Go Virtual and her free classes online

    Dawn Davis Yoga Classes Go Virtual and her free classes online

    From Dawn Davis:

    I was initially intimidated by Zoom. But, it is actually more accessible than I thought it would be. There are many beautiful aspects of the virtual yoga at home, including that you get to practice in your pajamas (!), and other family members can join in. Furthermore, we are donating 10% of all revenue to support the work of The Second Step. And the feeling of community is present, and unique in that we are actually all in your living room with you!

    Here’s how it works:
    1. Sign in to your Mindbody online account from www.dawndavis.com (if you haven’t done this before, please let me know and I’ll send you a password; If mindbody acts like you’re new—and if you’re getting this note, then you are not new–that means we need to get you a password in order for you to access your account. I can help, just email me).
    2. After you sign up for each class, Mindbody will send you an email with registration link to the class on Zoom.
    3. Download Zoom on the device you’ll be practicing on.
    4. Then click on the link from mindbody to register for the class
    5. Zoom sends an email that will drop you into the class!

    It’s definitely a few steps but hopefully will feel straightforward.

    If you want to have music, please bring that in the room with you as the vocals over zoom are good for voices, not great for music. Once class starts, I’ll mute everyone so we can each have our own jam and it won’t be heard by other yogis.

    You can access free yoga videos and meditations on Dawn Davis Yoga Channel.

    Dawn Davis Yoga

  • Artemis Yoga Offers 2 Free Yoga Classes Weekly via Zoom

    Artemis Yoga Offers 2 Free Yoga Classes Weekly via Zoom

    Yoga is good for so many reasons and the feedback this week has been wonderful.
    I realize that not everyone may be able to afford an online class right now and so we are offering two complimentary classes a week, free of charge.
    Please let others know about what our community is doing during this challenging period. If you have a specific need outside of these two classes, please reach out to me directly.
    These online classes are free and open to all.
    Please register in advance on Mindbody: https://www.artemisyoga.com/schedule/
    WEDNESDAY – 12:00NOON – FUNDAMENTALS WITH SUE – Free!
    SUNDAYS – 4:00PM – RESTORATIVE WITH LIZ R. – Free!
    Liz Padula
    Artemis Yoga
    639 Mt. Auburn Street
    Watertown, MA 02472
  • Please Donate: Dr. Ibokette’s  Scholarship Fund for Nigerian Children

    Please Donate: Dr. Ibokette’s Scholarship Fund for Nigerian Children

    These are trying times, and with the current state of uncertainty amid this pandemic, it is easy to get lost in the confusion and anxiety of the moment. It is easy to feel powerless and scared. But even as we remain sequestered in our homes, there are still actions we can take to make the world a better place.

    Dr. Ibokette's Scholarship Fund for Nigerian Children

    Dr. Ibokette’s Scholarship Fund for Nigerian Children

    For the last few years, Dr. Ibokette has organized a fundraiser to support his Scholarship Foundation. Launched in August 2017, the primary goal of this Foundation was to provide financial assistance to a group of indigent kindergarteners and first graders in Government School, Etinan (Akwa Ibom State, Nigeria). This assistance focused on the scholars’ basic school and medical needs throughout their elementary schooling that ends in sixth grade.

    The foundation was very successful in meeting these needs in the 2017/2018 & 2018/2019 school years. By the spring of last year, however, we had become more conscious of the tremendous challenges that these scholars face in their daily struggles for survival. Through his work, he supports his scholars in four main ways: the scholars’ medical (including dental) needs; nutrition; clothing; and school-based needs.

     

    By donating to his foundation you will be contributing to the following:

    • Medical (physical) and dental exams and treatments
    • Feeding program
    • A two-week Summer Enrichment Program
    • School uniform, other items of clothing, shoes, school supplies, toothbrushes and toothpastes
    • Shipment of donated supplies to Nigeria

     

    To donate, please visit this link: https://www.gofundme.com/f/1oe43ax8yo

     

    Additionally, we would welcome donations that support the needs of the children and can be shipped to Nigeria.

     

    These items include:

    • Lightly worn and/or new clothes and shoes for 7 to 10 year old boys and girls
    • Hygiene/Sanitation products (new and in wrapping) – toothbrush, toothpaste, bar of soap, comb
    • School supplies – crayons, markers, pencils, notebooks
    • Recreational sports equipment (will be deflated for shipping purposes) – soccer balls and footballs

     

    Due to coronavirus, students from the Leadership class have offered to pick up donations from individual houses.

    If you wish to donate, please fill out this google form: https://forms.gle/mqwumL1Tk5GN5Br67 and leave the donation in a waterproof bag (such as a trash bag) outside your house on the day you have chosen.

     

    Stay safe!

     

    NNHS Leadership class students

    Jeeval B., Van S., Serena J., Hallie Z.-J., Sophie W., Ben A.

  • Newtonville Books Needs Our Help

    Newtonville Books Needs Our Help

    Dear Member,

    First and foremost, I hope you and yours are remaining safe and sane during this very trying time.  It’s inspiring to see everyone try to work together during this crisis.

    As you know by now, the bookstore has temporarily closed as a precaution about our beloved community of readers becoming infected.  You can see our full statement about the Covid-19 pandemic on our website. And below find some links to recent press about the bookstore’s closing.

    Along with so many other small businesses, this interruption in business will cause substantial financial harm to Newtonville Books.  To blunt the damage, we’re asking members to consider purchasing a gift certificate as a pledge for a future purchase once we’re open again.

    Here is the link for gift certificates:

    https://www.newtonvillebooks.com/cms/gift-certificates/

    Or perhaps your membership has expired and you’d like to renew.  All memberships are frozen until we reopen so everyone can enjoy the full 12 months.

    Here is the link for memberships:

    https://www.newtonvillebooks.com/cms/become-a-member/

    Lastly, if you could forward this email to anyone in the community who might want to support independent bookselling, we’d be grateful.

    Best wishes to you and yours. We can’t wait to see you in the bookstore again.

    Mary Cotton
    Owner, Newtonville Books

    P.S.  A special THANK YOU to those of you who have already purchased a gift certificate!

    PUBLISHERS WEEKLY Article:

    https://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/industry-news/bookselling/article/82695-indie-bookstores-begin-temporary-closures.html

    BOSTON GLOBE Article:

    https://www.boston.com/news/business/2020/03/15/list-massachusetts-businesses-closed-coronavirus?s_campaign=bcom%3Asocialflow%3Afacebook

    Newtonville Books
  • Letter from MDs in our Boston community: please share

    Letter from MDs in our Boston community: please share

    From BostonDoctors Corona Virus

    Letter from MDs in our Boston community: please share

    coronavirus, covid-19

    “As there is so much confusion, misinformation, and denial on social media about the coronavirus we hope to explain, in plain language, why the experts see this as such an emergency. Many people are reading the claim online that this virus is a lot like the viruses that cause colds, and that if you get it, it will probably just seem like a bad cold and you are very unlikely to die. Depending on who you are, this may be true, but there is more to this story that is key to our outcome as a community.

    This is a coronavirus that is new to the human population. Although it is related to the viruses that cause colds and acts a lot like them in many ways, nobody has ever been exposed to this before, which means nobody has any immunity to it.

    The virus is now moving explosively through the human population, spreading through respiratory secretions and 10 times more contagious that the flu or cold. Although many people will recover, about 20% will wind up with a serious pneumonia that will require hospitalization. Some will be so ill from the pneumonia that they will die. We estimate this may be 2-3%, but it is higher in Italy’s experience, partially because the healthcare system was overwhelmed so rapidly. In those over age 70, the death rate is 8-20%. So if a child catches it on a playdate, they can easily transmit it to their grandmother as easily as touching the same doorknob or countertop.

    Scientists measure the spread of an epidemic by a number called R0, or “R naught.” That number is calculated this way: for every person who develops the illness, how many other people do they give it to before they are cured (or dead) and no longer infectious? The R0 for coronavirus appears to be a number close to 3 – an extremely frightening number for such a deadly disease.

    Suppose you catch the virus. You will give it to 3 other people, and they will each give it to three others, and so forth. Here is how the math works, where you, the “index case,” are the first line:

    1
    3
    9
    27
    81
    243
    729
    2,187
    6,561
    19,683
    59,046
    177,147
    531,441
    1,594,323
    4,782,969
    14,348,907

    So, in just 15 steps of transmission, the virus has gone from just one index case to 14.3 million other people. Those 15 steps might take only a few weeks. With school out and lots of playdates, maybe less. The first person may be young and healthy Brookline child, but many of those 14 million people will be old and sick, and they will likely die because they got a virus that started in one person’s throat.

    R0 is not fixed – it can be lowered by control measures. If we can get the number below 1, the epidemic will die out. This is the point of the quarantines and social distancing, but we are not doing it fast enough.

    In the US, we have to slow down the virus. American hospitals, Boston hospitals, have limited resources. We have a fixed number of ventilators and an impending calamity on our hands. Our Italian critical care colleagues have shared with us that they simply do not have enough resources (ventilators, physicians and nurse, critical care beds), and are forced to choose who lives and dies based on old tenets of wartime triage. Older patients do not even get a ventilator and die of their pneumonia. These are decisions nobody should have to face, and we are only 11 days behind Italy’s fate. Their hospitals are quite advanced, and we are no better in Boston. As doctors, we are desperately trying to prepare for the onslaught of patients in the coming weeks. It is already beginning. This is an opportunity for you as the district leadership the time to be aggressive and help us fight this by “Flattening the Curve”.

    We implore you, as a group of Boston’s doctors preparing to fight this, to help us. Please send a new email to ALL the Brookline school district families. Social distancing is painful. We know that kids have cabin fever, they are pleading to see their friends, they may have birthday parties coming up or special events they have been looking forward to. All of us need to work and childcare is a big worry. But we need to overcome these issues and boredom for the coming weeks so that we can survive this with as few deaths as possible. What does that mean?

    1) No playdates, not even 1:1.
    2) No small gatherings, no meetings between a couple families, even for birthday parties.
    3) Avoid trampoline parks, climbing gyms, restaurants, movie theaters, anything in an enclosed area. Many of these places are advertising increased cleaning and hygiene. This is not sufficient! Do not go.
    4) Cancel planned vacations for the next month. Avoid airline travel that is not an emergency. Many airlines and rental agencies are offering penalty free cancellations.
    5) Stay at home as much as possible. Work from home if you possibly can. You may have to go buy groceries and medicine, of course, but make the trips quick and purposeful.
    6) Wash your hands thoroughly after you have been in public places, for a full 20 seconds, soaping up thoroughly and being sure to get between the fingers.
    7) Please avoid disseminating social media claims that the situation is not serious or is being exaggerated. This is a national crisis and conveying misinformation to your friends and family may put their lives in danger.

    Thank you for taking the time to read this and stay safe and healthy in the coming weeks.”

    Respectfully,

    Erika Rangel, MD, Director of Surgical Critical Care, Brigham and Women’s Faulkner Hospital
    Shawn Rangel, MD, Pediatric Surgery, Children’s Hospital Boston
    Asaf Bitton, MD, Executive Director Ariadne Labs and Internal Medicine, BWH
    Daniel O’connor, MD, Pediatrics, Longwood Pediatrics and Children’s Hospital Boston
    Beth O’connor, MD, Pediatrics, Roslindale Pediatrics
    Vandana Madhavan, MD, Clinical Director of Pediatric Infectious Disease, MGH
    Parag Amin, MD, Pediatrics, Centre Pediatrics
    Christy Cummings, MD, Neonatology, Children’s Hospital Boston
    Eric Bluman, MD, Orthopedic Surgery, BWH
    Trimble Augur, MD, Internal Medicine, Hebrew Rehabilitation Center
    Dasha Weir, MD, Pediatric gastroenterology
    Amy Evenson Warren, Transplant Surgery, BIDMC
    William Oldham, MD, PhD, Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, BWH
    James Kryzanski, MD, Neurosurgery, Tufts Medical Center
    Ben Zendejas-Mummert, MD, Pediatric Surgery, Children’s Hospital Boston
    Johanna Iturrino Moreda, MD, Gastroenterology, BIDMC
    David Berg, MD, Cardiology and Cardiac Critical Care, BWH
    Jennifer Crombie, MD, Hematology Oncology, BWH
    Jenifer Lightdale, MD, Chief of Pediatric Gastroenterology, U Mass Memorial Hospital
    Wayne Tworetzky, MD, Pediatric Cardiology, Children’s Hospital Boston
    Elaine Yu, MD, Endocrinology
    Jonathan Li, Infectious Disease
    Nancy Cho, MD, Surgical Oncology, BWH
    Eric Sheu, MD, Minimally Invasive Surgery, BWH
    Reza Askari, MD, Director, Surgical Critical Care, BWH
    Cindy Lien, MD, Internal Medicine and Palliative Care, BIDMC
    Hannah Parker, MD, OB/GYN
    Alysa E. Doyle, PhD, Center for Genomic Medicine, MGH
    Christopher Smith, MD, Internal Medicine, Charles River Medical Associates, Wellesley, MA
    Maya Greer, NP, Children’s Hospital Boston
    Rusty Jennings, MD, Pediatric Surgery, Children’s Hospital Boston
    Emily Oken, MD, Professor of Population Medicine, BWH
    Chinwe Ukomadu, MD, Head of Clinical Hepatology, Novartis
    Jennifer Kaufman, MD, Internal Medicine, BWH
    Ann Poduri, MD, MPH, Pediatric Neurology
    Susan Yehle Ritter, MD, Rheumatology
    Diego Martinucci, MD Psychiatry, Atrius Health
    Shih-Ning Liaw, MD, Pediatric Palliative Care, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute/Boston Children’s Hospital
    Wolfram Goessling, MD, Gastroenterology and Oncology, MGH
    Paola Daza, Pediatrics, MGH
    Juan Matute, Neonatology, MGH
    John Ross, MD, Internal Medicine, BWH
    Megan Sandel, MD, Pediatrics, Boston Medical Center
    Kathy Calvillo, MD, Surgery, BWH
    Christine Greco, MD, Anesthesia, Children’s Hospital Boston
    Niteesh Choudhry, MD, PhD, Internal Medicine, BWH and Harvard T.H. Chand School of Public Health
    Chandru Krishnan,MD, Ophthalmology, Tufts Medical Center
    Amy Ship, MD, Internal Medicine, Associate Director of Medical Education, Atrius Health
    Yen-Lin Evelyn

  • New Salon: Dolce Vita Salon in Nonantum

    New Salon: Dolce Vita Salon in Nonantum

    My friend Julie wanted to let everyone know about a new hair salon in Newton. Dolce Vita Salon in Nonantum is started by a lovely young woman who used to work at La Bella in West Newton. She is a really good stylist and is now out on her own. Julie is trying to spread the word. Please check her salon out.

     

    Dolce Vita Salon

    235 Adams St

    Newton,Ma 02458

    617-467-5038

    dolce vita salon Newton

  • Bill McEvoy on the History of Rainsford Island in Boston Harbor

    Bill McEvoy on the History of Rainsford Island in Boston Harbor

    Local Author Talk–Tuesday, February 18th at 7 pm at the ACL
    Join us when author and longtime Auburndale resident Bill McEvoy leads us on an Eye Opening Journey Through the Interesting History of Rainsford Island in Boston Harbor on Tuesday, February 18th at 7 PM at the Auburndale Community Library in Newton.
    rainsford island.jpg

    Rainsford was occasionally a place of quarantine, as well as a summer resort for the wealthy. In 1854, while under the ownership of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the island’s use took a turn beginning sixty-six years as an off-shore repository for Boston’s unwanted. Its inmates were victims of: poverty, lack of health care, mental illness, senility, addiction, lack of proper housing, poor sanitary conditions, inability to pay a small fine, men unable to find work, incarcerated as paupers, and unwed pregnant women. Alice Lincoln and Louis Brandeis’ efforts resulted in the City ending Rainsford Island as a warehouse for the poor, the unwanted, and the mentally ill. Later Rainsford served for twenty-six years as the site of the Boys’ House of Reformation which led to further examples of inept management, cruelty, neglect, and death, of “Unfortunate” boys ages eight to eighteen. Sentences were for offenses that ranged from playing ball on Sundays to murder, and the boys were commingled on the 11 acre island.

    Bill McEvoy is a US Army Veteran (1968-1971). He earned a BA from Bentley University, an MBA from Suffolk University, and a MA in Political Science from Boston College. Bill is a retired Massachusetts District Court Magistrate, and he has volunteered with the No Veteran Dies Alone program at the Bedford Veterans Hospital, as well as performing pro bono work as a Magistrate. Bill has performed many large-scale cemetery research projects, several as a volunteer at Mount Auburn Cemetery (MAC). He has recently published a book about the cemetery, as well as the people buried there.

  • Train With Me || Alison Foley Soccer Training

    Train With Me || Alison Foley Soccer Training

    Train With Me || Alison Foley Soccer Training

    We are starting a new series of high-intensity soccer training drills that you can do at home.

    This first one improves your first touch, your technical speed, and your agility: Tap, Tap, Tap, Roll.

  • Second Church Nursery School has spots for next year!

    Second Church Nursery School has spots for next year!

    Second Church Nursery School, the #1-rated preschool in Newton, is still accepting applications for a limited number of spaces for the 2020-2021 school year. In the heart of West Newton, SCNS is dedicated to creating a nurturing, stimulating, and welcoming environment for children ages 3-5.
    Second Church Nursery Schoo
    Our classes are special places that emphasize learning through play in an environment designed to encourage discovery, social relationships, and independence.  Each day includes outdoor play in our large, tree-shaded playground, and the children enjoy special music and creative movement classes every week.
    Please call 617-527-4770 or email Director Susan Benes at secondchurchnursuryschool@comcast.net to arrange for a tour.Second Church Nursery School has spots for next year!