2 MARCH 10, 2015 THE BEACON HILL TIMES PA G E 2 Neighborhood Round Up King’s Chapel Tuesday Recitals King’s Chapel, 58 Tremont St., presents its Tuesday Recitals. Admission is by suggested donation of $3 per person; the donations are given to the performing musicians. Programs begin at 12:15 p.m. and last approximately 35 minutes; for more information, call 617-227-2155. Programming includes Jacob Reed on the C.B. Fisk organ performing works by Bach and Brahms on March 10; guitarist Leonid Chindelevitch performing works by Albeniz Villa-Lobos and more on March 17; Rodger Vine on C.B. Fisk organ performing works by Bach, Handel, Brody and Weaver on March 24; and Handel & Haydn Society performing Beethoven: Sonato no. 10 in G Major on March 31. Lecture on gluten Black The Massachusetts General Hospital Paul S. Russell, MD Museum of Medical History and Innovation, located at 2 North Grove St., invites you to attend its next evening lecture entitled “Is There Still Room for Gluten?: Separating Science from Supposition” by Alessio Fasano, MD, director of the Center for Celiac Research, MassGeneral Hospital for Children, in the museum’s Putnam Gallery on Tuesday, March 10, from 6 to 8 p.m. Gluten-free refreshments will be served. Register via e-mail at [email protected]. ‘Irish Heritage Month Film Series’ at the West End Branch Library On Wednesdays in March, the Friends of the West End Branch Library, presents the “Irish Heritage Month Film Series” at the library, located at 151 Cambridge St. Programming includes “Good Vibrations” (2013, 103 minutes, not rated) on March 11 at 3 p.m.; “The Irish Pub” (2014, 72 minutes, not rated) on March 18 at 3 p.m.; and “Calvary” (2014, 101 minutes, Rated R) on March 25 at 3 p.m. West End Civic Association monthly meeting The West End Civic Association (WECA) will hold its monthly meeting at the Amy Lowell House community room on Thursday, March 12, at 7 p.m. The guest speaker is Jay Walsh, executive director of the Downtown North Association. City Councilor Zakim’s office hours City Councilor Josh Zakim will hold office hours at J. Pace & Sons, 75 Blossom Court, on Friday, March 13, and at Tatte Bakery and Cafe, 144 Charles St., on Friday, March 20, from 8 to 9:30 a.m. State Rep. Livingstone’s office hours State Rep. Jay Livingstone (D-Boston) will hold office hours in order to receive feedback, ideas, and suggestions on both local neighborhood issues and statewide policy priorities at Panificio Bistro and Bakery, 144 Charles St., on Wednesday, March 18, from 8:30 to 10 a.m., and at J. Pace & Son, 75 Blossom Court, on Thursday, March 26, from 8:30 to 10 a.m. Lecture on landscape architect Arthur Shurclifff The Massachusetts Historical Society, located at 1154 Boylston St., presents a lecture on landscape architect Arthur Shurclifff on Wednesday, March 18, from 5:30 to 7 p.m. Elizabeth Hope Cushing, Ph.D., author of a newly published book about Shurcliff based on her doctoral dissertation for the American and New England studies program at Boston University, will be the guest speaker. The cost of admission is $10 Period Property Restorations and Renovations “You’ll Adore What We Restore” & RESTORATION SPECIALISTS 781-929-6060 General Contractors/Construction Management www.precisionbuildersboston.com | [email protected] per person and free for members of the Massachusetts Historical Society, Friends of Mount Auburn Cemetery and the Nichols House Museum. Book Discussion Group meets at West End Branch Library The West End Branch of the Boston Public Library, located at 151 Cambridge St., welcomes the Book Discussion Group on Thursday, March 19, at 3 p.m. At this time, the group will discuss “Sweet Tooth” by Ian McEwan, copies of which are available at the library. Expert parenting-panel meets at Vilna Shul The Vilna Shul, located at 18 Phillips St., presents an expert parenting-panel with wine, chocolate and cheese on Thursday, March 19, at 7 p.m. At this time, a panel of experts will guide guests in a discussion on nutrition, mental health, mindfulness and links to Jewish roots for inspiration. Visit www.vilnashul.org for more information. French baroque sonatas preformed at West End Branch Library The West End Branch of the Boston Public Library, located at 151 Cambridge St., presents French baroque sonatas, including Janet Fink on recorder and Alastair Thompson on harpsichord, on Thursday, March 19, at 6:30 p.m. Refreshments will be provided. Kabbalat Shabbat Friday night services The Vilna Shul, located at 18 Phillips St., presents Havurah on the Hill’s “20s and 30s Shabbat” with author Rachel Kadish on Friday, March 20, at 6:30 p.m. Visit www.vilnashul.org for more information. Holy Week at the Church of the Advent No time is more sacred than Holy Week at the Church of the Advent, located at 30 Brimmer St. This year, the preacher for the Sacred Triduum (the services of Maundy Thursday, Good Friday and Holy Saturday) and Easter Day will be the Rev. Dr. William Henry Willimon, professor of the practice of Christian ministry at the Duke Divinity School. Author of numerous books, including the influential “Resident Aliens: Life in the Christian Colony,” Dr. Willimon was named one of the 12 best preachers in the English-speaking world by Baylor University. Holy Week 2015 schedule includes Palm Sunday masses at 8, 9 and 11:15 a.m.; Tenebrae on Wednesday at 7 p.m.; Maundy Thursday at 6:30 p.m.; Good Friday at 6:30 p.m.; Holy Saturday: The Great Vigil at 6:30 p.m.; and Easter Day masses at 8, 9 and 11:15 a.m. For a complete Holy Week schedule, visit http://theadventboston. org/, and for more information, call 617-523-2377. Emerald Necklace Conservancy’s annual meeting The Emerald Necklace Conservancy will hold its annual meeting at the African Meeting House, 46 Joy St., on Thursday, March 26, at 5:30 p.m. The meeting is followed by a reception at 6 p.m. and a lecture by Dr. Carolyn Finney on “Radical Presence: Black Faces, White Spaces and Stories of Possibility” at 6:45 p.m. before dessert and a book-signing. There is no cost for this event, but space is limited. Call 617-5222700 to reserve a space. ‘Children’s Day’ comes to Vilna Shul The Vilna Shul, located at 18 Phillips St., presents “Children’s Day” with local author Linda Marshall on Sunday, March 29, at 2 p.m. At this time, Marshall will read her award-winning book “The Passover Lamb,” and kosher snacks and Passover activities will round out the afternoon. Visit www.vilnashul.org for more information. Harvard’s Howard Gardner to speak at First Church Howard Gardner, Harvard professor and author of the groundbreaking book “Multiple Intelligences,” will speak at First Church in Boston, 66 Marlborough St., on Wednesday, April 1, at 7 p.m. In his talk on “The Good: ‘Framed’ and ‘Reframed’” he will discuss traditional virtue and its transformations in a world where moral relativism and the digital revolution alter our definition of what is “good.” ‘National Poetry Month Film Series’ at West End Branch Library On Wednesdays in April at 3 p.m., the Friends of the West End Branch Library, presents the “National Poetry Month Film Series” at the library, located at 151 Cambridge St. Programming includes “Dead Poets Society” (1998, 128 minutes, Rated PG) on April 1; “Wilde” (1997, 116 minutes, Rated R) on April 8; “Sylvia” (2003, 111 minutes, Rated R) on April 15; “Edge of Love” (2008, 111 minutes, Rated R) on April 22; and “Kill Your Darlings” (2013, 104 minutes, Rated R) on April 29. Lecture on talking to your kids about sex Kingsley Montessori School Community Speaker Series presents “What Your Kids Need to Hear from You About Sex” at 26 Exeter St. on Thursday, April 2, from 6:30 to 8 p.m. Parents, neighbors, colleagues and friends are welcome to this free event. R.S.V.P. to kdiamond@ kingsley.org or 617-226-4932. Friends of the Public Garden’s annual meeting scheduled Attend the Friends of the Public Garden 45th annual meeting at First Church in Boston, located at 66 Marlborough St., on Wednesday, April 8, at 5 p.m. to hear updates on the organization and its projects to enhance and preserve the Boston Common, Public Garden and Commonwealth Avenue Mall. The featured speaker for the event is Boston Parks Commissioner Chris Cook. R.S.V.P. by April 1 to [email protected] or 617723-8144. ‘National Poetry Month’ reading at West End Branch Library The Friends of the West End Branch Library welcomes Colin D. Halloran to the library at 151 Cambridge St. on Thursday, April 16, at 6:30 p.m. Halloran served with the U.S. Army in Afghanistan. After being medically evacuated, he became a teacher and earned an MFA from Fairfield University. “Shortly Thereafter,” a collection of poems on his war and redeployment experiences, was published in 2012. (Roundup Pg. 3) 3 MARCH 10, 2015 PA G E 3 THE BEACON HILL TIMES Neighborhood Round Up Author talk at the West End Branch Library The Friends of the West End Branch Library welcomes local author and foodie Rosana Wan, who will discuss her book “Culinary Lives of John & Abigail Adams: a Cookbook,” a collection of recipes used by this extraordinary couple, on Thursday, April 30, at 6:30 p.m. Easy-to-learn meditation at Toe2Heal ‘Guided Imagery Meditation’ at West End Branch Library The West End Branch of the Boston Public Library, 151 Cambridge St., offers “Guided Imagery Meditation with Polly Fletcher” every Friday from 12:15 to 1 p.m. Want more energy and focus? Join Polly Fletcher, “Get Your Vibe On” coach and occupational therapist, for “Guided Visualization Meditation.” Strengthen your mental focus and transform limiting thoughts to reduce stress and improve overall health. Volunteers needed for hot meal program The North End/West End Neighborhood Service Center (NE/WE NSC), located at 1 Michelangelo St., serves a hot, fresh, home-cooked lunch to seniors in the neighborhood Mondays and Fridays, and is looking for two volunteers to help with shopping, food preparation, cooking, serving and clean-up. The non-profit providing services and programs to low-income residents of the North End, West End and Beacon Hill is looking for volunteers who can assist with the whole meal from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. on a Monday and/or Friday, but can make arrangements to fit your schedule. Contact Maria Stella Gulla, director, at 617-523-8125, ext. 201, via e-mail at mariastella.gulla@ bostonabcd.org for more information. Compassionate Friends Introduction to laptops, group reaches out to eReaders and iPads at bereaved parents and the West End Library families The West End Branch of the Boston The Boston Chapter of The Compassionate Friends (TCF) meets at Trinity Church on the first Tuesday of each month from 6 to 7:30 p.m. TCF is a national self-help, mutual-assistance organization offering friendship, understanding and hope to bereaved parents and their families. Call 617-539-6424 or e-mail [email protected] for more information. West End Food Pantry seeking donations The West End Food Pantry needs help to continue serving its more than 120 clients per month. They welcome dona- Public Library, 151 Cambridge St., offers an introduction to laptops, eReaders and iPads by appointment only. Get the most out of your eReader or Laptop. Receive tips and guidance during these one-on-one sessions. Call Branch Librarian, Helen Bender at617523-3957 or e-mail hbender@bpl. org to set up an appointment. Volunteer at Spaulding Stay active, meet new people and be connected with your community by volunteering at Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital. Staff members will match your skills and interests to a volunteer opportunity. The hospital is currently recruiting volunteers, ages 18 and up, for two- to three-hour-a-week shifts for a minimum of six to 12 months commitment. Visit www. spauldingnetwork.org for more information. After-work tai chi group at the West End Branch Library chemotherapy and/or radiation treatments. Cosmetologists certified and trained by the American Cancer Society conduct the sessions, which are non-medical and do not promote any product line. Volunteers are needed to assist the cosmetologist conducting the session and are responsible for set-up, cleanup, and any other needs of the program. Programs are held from noon to 2 p.m., one Monday every other month. For more information or to volunteer, contact Nanyamka Hales at 781-314-2611 or via e-mail at [email protected], or visit cancer.org. ‘National Poetry Month’ reading at West End Branch Library The Friends of the West End Branch Library welcomes Paula Bonnell, who will give a reading from “Before the Alphabet” and other recently published poems, to the library at 151 Cambridge St. on Thursday, April 2, at 6:30 p.m. Her previous book, “Airs &Voices,” was awarded the John Ciardi Prize for Poetry. Yoga for seniors at the West End Branch Library The West End Branch of the Boston Public Library, 151 Cambridge St., presents yoga for seniors every Tuesday from 2:45 to 3:30 p.m. Classes are led by Tatiana Nekrasova, a certified yoga instructor. exhibits with historical themes at the adams gallery The West End Branch of the Boston Public Library, 151 Cambridge St., welcomes after-work tai chi group every Thursday from 5 to 5:45 p.m. Come and try this low impact energy exercise with yangstyle tai chi instructor Arthur SooHoo. Volunteers needed for American Cancer Society cosmetic sessions The American Cancer Society is currently seeking volunteers for the “Look Good…Feel Better” sessions held at Tufts Medical Center, 800 Washington St. “Look Good . . . Feel Better” is a free program that teaches cancer patients hands-on cosmetic techniques to help them cope with appearance-related side effects from david j. sargent hall, suffolk university 120 tremont street, boston featuring original materials or reproductions of importance in the chronology of Boston and New England gallery hours: 9am – 7pm daily 617.305.1782 www.suffolk.edu/adamsgallery Black Toe2Heal, located at 25 Myrtle St., offers meditation on Wednesdays and Fridays from 8 to 8:30 a.m. and on Sundays from 6 to 6:30 p.m. Walk away relaxed that can last days or even weeks. Connect to your true self, uplift your spirits and increase your energy levels. There is a suggested donation of $5 for person. R.S.V.P. to [email protected]. tions to replenish the supply of food that they give out to hungry residents in the neighborhood. The pantry is located in the West End Branch of the Boston Public Library and is staffed by volunteers from ABCD’s North End/ West End Neighborhood Service Center. Non-perishable (canned and boxed) items are being sought, including rice, pasta, canned tuna, canned chicken, chili, beans, vegetables, cereal, soups, cup of noodles, etc. Donations can be left at the library, 151 Cambridge St., on Monday through Wednesday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., Thursday from noon to 8 p.m. and Friday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. 4 MARCH 10, 2015 THE BEACON HILL TIMES PA G E 4 editorial Downtown View (from pg. 1) Black have been preserved. Shepley, Rutan and Coolidge, an architecture firm responsible for many handsome Boston and Cambridge structures of that era, designed the 1908 building for the Boston Safe Deposit and Trust Company. It cost $1.1 million to build, said Robert J. Roche, archivist and records manager for Shepley Bulfinch Richardson & Abbott, as the firm is now known. The City of Boston currently values 100 Franklin (or 201 Devonshire, as listed in official records) at more than $22 million. Its occupants have included the Boston Stock Exchange and the Vault, a group of business leaders who met there as they helped instigate Boston’s urban renewal in the 1950s and ’60s. Now one of its occupants is the building’s current owner, Synergy Investments, which maintains the building at a high level. It is 98.5 percent leased, according to the CoStar real estate database. A building such as 100 Franklin is desirable, said Kirstin Blount, senior vice president at the real estate firm Colliers International, even though it does not have the large floor plate of newer skyscrapers. It is ideal for smaller firms, she said. Many of these older buildings exist in Boston since high rises account for only 29 million square feet in the approximately 63 million square feet of office space located in Boston’s business districts. The rent in older buildings, even when they are in meticulous condition, can be half that of a high rise or a new building. The urban analyst Jane Jacobs loved older buildings, claiming they add variety in aspect, diversity in ownership and economic vitality. She believed that older buildings were required to keep streets vigorous. But such buildings can be vulnerable. The Shreve, Crump and Low building at the corner of Arlington and Boylston is slated for demolition to make way for the Druker Company’s new building as soon as the company signs an anchor tenant. While 100 Franklin Street looks as if its current profitability will enable it to last, it has no protection other than its owner’s good will. It is eligible for listing on the National Historic Register and is located in Boston’s Commercial Palace Historic District, designated by the National Historic Register. But those honors are not much protection, said Lynn Smiledge, chair of Boston’s Landmarks Commission. The state-sanctioned historic districts such as those of the Back Bay and Beacon Hill have serious protections for historic structures, but there are no such Massachusetts-designated districts in Boston’s central business district, she said. As for individual buildings, “the bar is high and the process lengthy,” Smiledge said about designating a structure as a landmark. “A building has to demonstrate significance beyond the local level or be the finest example of its style.” That wasn’t the case for the old Shreve, Crump and Low building, even though many preservationists objected to its demolition. Dozens of buildings in the financial district or Downtown Crossing are fine examples of the classical revival period, so 100 Franklin, for all its beauty, has company. Few older buildings demonstrate state-wide or national significance even though they may have interesting local histories. Unless a building is threatened with demolition or significant change, it typically sits on a “pending” list for a local landmark if it has any paperwork at all, said Smiledge. For now, such beautiful buildings as 100 Franklin Street serve proudly as contrasts to the high rises, most of which in Boston are made of lesser materials and possess little interesting detail. Perhaps the qualities of the older buildings could be the jumping off point for the design of some of the new high-rises in central Boston or the Seaport District’s mid-rises. We could do worse. Karen Cord Taylor is a newspaperwoman who now works from her home. Past columns are posted on www.bostoncolumn.com. You can reach Karen at [email protected] THE BEACON HILL TIMES President/Editor: Stephen Quigley Marketing Director: Debra DiGregorio ([email protected]) Art Director: Scott Yates Founding Publisher: Karen Cord Taylor © 2007 Independent Newspaper Group Phone: 617-523-9490 • Fax: 781-485-1403 Email: [email protected] • Web Site: www.beaconhilltimes.com B H A C The Beacon Hill Architectural Commission will hold a public hearing on Thursday, March 19 at 4:00 PM at Boston City Hall in Piemonte Room. After 5:30 p.m., enter and exit City Hall at the Dock Square entrance on Congress Street (across from Faneuil Hall). 4:00 PM Application 15.722 BH Applicant: 66 Charles Street (continued review) Persona Jewelry (tenant): Install fascia sign and blade sign 4:15 PM Application 15.859 BH Applicant: 28-30 Mount Vernon Street (continued review) Grassi Design Group (architect): Remove rear dormers and construct inset roof decks and doors (minimally visible from Joy and Walnut Streets); install intercom units at entry portico 4:30 PM Application 15.929 BH Applicant: 18 Phillips Street [Vilna Shul/Boston Center for Jewish Culture] Spencer & Vogt Group (architects): Replace concrete entry plaza and steps in kind; restore wrought iron fence and gates 4:50 PM Application 15.938 BH Applicant: 12 Joy Street Abigail Lash (owner): Paint entry vestibule cream, entry doors and stairs black; repaint window sash, frames, and storm windows black and install shutters 5:10 PM Application 15.940 BH Applicant: 98 Myrtle Street Mayer + Associates (architect): Modify primary and secondary entrances; install light fixtures; replace non- conforming 1/1 aluminum windows with 1/1 wood windows, etc. Administrative Review/Approval: In order to expedite the review process, the commission has delegated the approval of certain work items, such as those involving ordinary maintenance and repair, restoration or replacement, or which otherwise have a minimal impact on a building’s appearance, to the staff pending ratification at its monthly public hearing. Having been identified as meeting these eligibility criteria and all applicable guidelines, the following applications will be approved at this hearing: Applicants whose projects are listed under this heading NEED NOT APPEAR at the hearing. Following the hearing, please present a copy of this agenda at the Inspectional Services Department (1010 Massachusetts Avenue) when applying for permits. ISD personnel will send an electronic copy of your building-permit application to the Environment Department. (To avoid potential confusion, the text of your building-permit application should be consistent with the project description given below.) Commission staff will accordingly authorize the execution of the work, attaching any applicable provisos, reflecting the A G E N D A relevant guidelines and precedents. ► PLEASE NOTE THAT NO FURTHER CORRESPONDENCE WILL BE ISSUED for the applications listed below: the electronic building-permit application as annotated by commission staff will constitute your Certificate of Appropriateness; this will be valid for two years from the date of the hearing. The applicant is required to notify the commission of any project changes; failure to do so may affect the status of the approval. If you have any questions not addressed by the above information, please consult the staff at the telephone number above, or at [email protected]. Thank you. BH Application 15.899 34 1⁄2 Beacon Street: Install 4 storm windows BH Application 15.936 78 Beacon Street: Remove and reset granite entry steps BH Application 15.897 95 Beacon Street: Install 3 wood storm windows BH Application 15.934 88 Charles Street: Install hanging blade sign on existing bracket BH Application 15.935 10 Chestnut Street: Masonry and ironwork repairs; replace copper gutter, downspout, and dormer cladding; repair balcony; replace window box; replace shutters; install new light fixture; replace passageway door; replace window sash in kind, reusing existing historic glass, etc. BH Application 15.864 Hoyt Place (Beacon Hill Nursery School Playground): Replace existing stockade fence with wood plank fence  BH Application 15.937 33 Mount Vernon Street: Install wrought iron handrails at front steps BH Application 15.933 37 Mount Vernon Street: Replace 4 wood 6/6 windows in kind BH Application 15.865 39-41 Mount Vernon Street: Replace non-original entry door; infill light well on east wall, replace all wood windows in kind; modify windows on Joy Street elevation, removing infilled glass blocks, etc. BH Application 15.941 121 Mount Vernon Street: Install iron railing BH Application 15.939 77 Pinckney Street: Relocate mail slot to front door; repaint front door Essex Green BH Application 15.930 15 Revere Street: Repoint and repair masonry; repair and restore zinc cornice  BEACON HILL ARCHITECTURAL COMMISSION Joel Pierce (Chair), Annlinnea Terranova, Kenneth Taylor, P.T. Vineburgh, Vacancy Alternates: Thomas Hopkins, Susan KnackBrown, Mary Fichtner, Danielle Santos, Vacancy 5 MARCH 10, 2015 PA G E 5 THE BEACON HILL TIMES C A L E N D A R THE DEADLINE FOR LISTING EVENTS IS THE TUESDAY BEFORE PUBLICATION. CALL 617-523-9490 OR FAX 617-523-8668 OR EMAIL [email protected] TUESDAY, MARCH 10 RECITAL, Jacob Reed on the C.B. Fisk organ performing works by Bach and Brahms, King’s Chapel, 58 Tremont St., 12:15 p.m., suggested donation; $3, call 617-227-2155 LECTURE, “Is There Still Room for Gluten?: Separating Science from Supposition,” Massachusetts General Hospital Paul S. Russell, MD Museum of Medical History and Innovation, 2 North Grove St., Putnam Gallery, 6-8 p.m., register via e-mail at [email protected] WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11 FILM, “Good Vibrations” (2013, 103 minutes, not rated), West End Branch of the Boston Public Library, 151 Cambridge St., 3 p.m. THURSDAY, MARCH 12 MEETING, West End Civic Association, Amy Lowell House, community room, 7 p.m. FRIDAY, MARCH 13 OFFICE HOURS, City Councilor Josh Zakim, J. Pace & Sons, 75 Blossom Court, 8-9:30 a.m. LECTURE on Arthur Shurclifff, Massachusetts Historical Society, located at 1154 Boylston St., 5:30-7 p.m., admission: $10 per person; free for members of the Massachusetts Historical Society, Friends of Mount Auburn Cemetery and the Nichols House Museum OFFICE HOURS, State Rep. Jay Livingstone, Panificio Bistro and Bakery, 144 Charles St., 8:30-10 a.m. MEETING, Book Discussion Group, West End Branch of the Boston Public Library, 151 Cambridge St., 3 p.m. CONCERT, French baroque sonatas, West End Branch of the Boston Public Library, 151 Cambridge St., 6:30 p.m. ACTIVITY, expert parenting-panel with wine, chocolate and cheese, Vilna Shul, 18 Phillips St., 7 p.m., visit www.vilnashul.org for more information FRIDAY, MARCH 20 EVENT, Havurah on the Hill’s “20s and 30s Shabbat,” Vilna Shul, 18 Phillips St., admission: free, 6:30 p.m., visit www.vilnashul.org for more information OFFICE HOURS, City Councilor Josh Zakim, Tatte Bakery and Cafe, 144 Charles St., 144 Charles St., 8-9:30 a.m. TUESDAY, MARCH 24 OFFICE HOURS, State Rep. Jay Livingstone, J. Pace & Son, 75 Blossom Court, 8:30-10 a.m. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25 FILM, “Calvary” (2014, 101 minutes, Rated R), West End Branch of the Boston Public Library, 151 Cambridge St., 3 p.m. SUNDAY, MARCH 29 FAMILY ACTIVITY, “Children’s Day,” Vilna Shul, 18 Phillips St., 2 p.m., visit www.vilnashul.org for more information TUESDAY, MARCH 31 RECITAL, Handel & Haydn Society performing Beethoven: Sonato no. 10 in G Major, King’s Chapel, 58 Tremont St., 12:15 p.m., suggested donation; $3, call 617-227-2155 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1 LECTURE AND DISCUSSION, “The Good: ‘Framed’ and ‘Reframed’” with Howard Gardner, First Church in Boston 66 Marlborough St., 7 p.m., admission: free, call 617-267-6730 for more information FILM, “Dead Poets Society” (1998, 128 minutes, Rated PG), West End Branch of the Boston Public Library, 151 Cambridge St., 3 p.m. THURSDAY, APRIL 2 LECTURE, “What Your Kids Need to Hear from You About Sex,” Kingsley Montessori School, 26 Exeter St., 6:30-8 p.m., R.S.V.P. to kdiamond@ kingsley.org or 617-226-4932 POETRY READING, Paula Bonnell, West End Branch of the Boston Public Library, 151 Cambridge St., 6:30 p.m. Obituaries Anna McIntyre Former Hill resident Anna McIntyre, a longtime resident of Beacon Hill, passed away last month from complications due to pneumonia. She was almost 91. Born in Regina, Saskatchewan, Mrs. McIntyre was the youngest of eight siblings, all of whom predeceased her. She met and married her architect husband, a Louisiana transplant nicknamed Mac, in New York, and after moving to Boston in the early 1950s, the couple soon settled in on Pinckney Street. Mrs. McIntyre was active in the community; most important to her was her work with the Beacon Hill Garden Club. She is survived by her son Alexander, daughter-in-law City of Boston Credit Union’s Vacation Loan can help get you out of here! PHOTO CREDIT: Nick DeWolf Debbie and granddaughter Janna. Mrs. McIntyre will be remembered at the 9 a.m. Mass on Saturday, April 11, at the Church of the Advent on Brimmer Street in Boston. F I N D S U S O N L I N E W W W . B E A C O N H I L L T I M E S . C O M Apply Online— cityofbostoncu.com Now serving the community! * A.P.R. = Annual Percentage Rate. Must be a current City of Boston Credit Union member and must have consistent work experience equal to one year to apply. Only one Vacation Loan permitted per 12 month period. Other guidelines may apply. Maximum loan amount equals $5,000.00. Monthly payment equals $87.45 per thousand borrowed for maximum 12 month term and based on the 8.99% Annual Percentage Rate. All loans are subject to credit approval. A.P.R.s are subject to change without notice. Black RECITAL, Rodger Vine on C.B. Fisk organ performing works by Bach, Handel, Brody and Weaver, King’s Chapel, 58 Tremont St., 12:15 p.m., suggested donation; $3, call 617-227-2155 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 18 FILM, “The Irish Pub” (2014, 72 minutes, not rated), West End Branch of the Boston Public Library, 151 Cambridge St., 3 p.m. ANNUAL MEETING, Emerald Necklace Conservancy, African Meeting House, 46 Joy St., 5:30 p.m., admission: free, call 617-522-2700 to reserve a space THURSDAY, MARCH 19 TUESDAY, MARCH 17 RECITAL, guitarist Leonid Chindelevitch performing works by Albeniz VillaLobos and more, King’s Chapel, 58 Tremont St., 12:15 p.m., suggested donation; $3, call 617-227-2155 THURSDAY, MARCH 26 6 MARCH 10, 2015 THE BEACON HILL TIMES PA G E 6 Dinner at the Church of the Advent by Suzanne Besser Cyan Magenta Yellow Black At 4:30 p.m. last Tuesday all was surprisingly quiet at the Church of the Advent, given that about 100 people, give or take 50, were due for dinner at 6. Barbara, the first to arrive, began the food prep. In minutes, she’d arranged eighty pounds of chicken thighs on large baking sheets, dousing each with barbecue sauce, just as the guests liked it. One by one others, about 18 in total, streamed in to toss salads, mash potatoes, butter bread, plate desserts, serve guests, clear tables, clean pans or do whatever else might be asked of them. The guests, too, began arriving, browsing briefly through books laid out for their taking before establishing themselves in the warm dining room. They were quiet, but inside the kitchen the volume, excitement and aroma of culinary activities kept growing. At 5:45 pm, a few helpers began serving coffee, tea and milk while others heaped steaming mashed potatoes, green salad and buttered bread around spicy chicken pieces on what seemed like a countless number of plates. At 6:00 p.m., a parade of servers marched from the kitchen to set the dishes before the hungry guests, whom The Reverend Thomas Adams welcomed, led in grace and delivered last week’s oft-repeated advice: “Watch for falling ice when you leave.” Then the 81 people who came that night dug right in. By 7:00 p.m., after an evening of good food, companionship and warmth, the diners, some with bags of leftovers and loaves of unused bread, left the historic Gothic Revival building to spend the night on the streets, in homeless shelters or other subsidized housing. When the dishes were washed and counters scrubbed, the helpers hung up their aprons and left for their homes as nearby as Beacon Hill and as far away as Lynn and Wellesley. It was the Tuesday Night Community Supper, when Church members, neighbors and friends come together to prepare and serve a nourishing meal to the needy. They’ve been doing it every week for more than 30 years. “It is the longest running supper for the homeless in the city of While prepping for Tuesday’s supper, Lilly, M.J. and Roger, all of Beacon Hill, placed salad on dinner plates. Boston that has never skipped even one night, not even Christmas or Easter,” said Christopher from Beacon Hill, a volunteer who has helped since 1988. “We’ve never closed in 30 years.” The program is an important part of the outreach mission of the Church, an Anglo “Me on the Marquee” Call for photos! Catholic parish, which annually contributes $10,000 toward the estimated $25,000 cost to feed the homeless once a week. The rest of its funding comes from Project Bread, the Charles River Deanery of the Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts, and individual donations. B ost on running moves me How Does Boston Move You? Caroline, a young professional who recently joined the solid cadre of volunteers, is amazed at how smoothly the operation goes. “There is no sign up sheet,” she said. “It’s come when you can. Everyone does the job they’re (Continued on page 7) The sen se of p ride Be a part of the Convention Center’s new “Me on the Marquee” campaign and submit a photo that answers the question, “How does Boston move you?” Selected photos will be featured on the BCEC’s 79-foot-tall digital Marquee. How to apply Submit all photos and a brief entry description to [email protected] The sports! Submission Deadline Monday, March 23, 2015 by 11:59 pm Exhibition on the Marquee Tuesday April 14 through Tuesday April 21 Me on t he M arquee Rules All photo submissions must abide by the rules and regulations listed on Massconvention.com/community/community-art-program to qualify. The r ich hist B ost onians are so resil ie nt! or y /MassConvention @MassConvention MassConvention.com The strength of every athlete 7 MARCH 10, 2015 PA G E 7 THE BEACON HILL TIMES Volunteers (from pg. 6) ADVERTISE IN THE BEACON HILL TIMES. PLEASE CALL 781-485-0588 Buy • Consign • enjoy BOSTON jumps considerably as the month goes on. The dining room accommodates 116 individuals. When during the summer as many as 150 people come, the meal service is staggered. For the most part, the guests are a quiet, pleasant group, said Father Adams. If some become disruptive, fellow guests escort them out. After the dinner, they are encouraged to leave quickly and quietly to avoid disturbing neighbors. Like many of the volunteers who come from all over Boston, Barbara, who is modestly compensated for her work, has served the homeless for decades. “I thought I would give it a try in 1989,” she said. “And I have never left.” Two of the very few times she has missed serving the dinner occurred this winter during the MBTA shutdown. Beacon Hill families like Jack and Cassie and their daughters came to the rescue and managed to conjure up meals for the 25 guests who arrived. Many Beacon Hillers, like Astrid, Roger and their 16-yearold daughter Lilly, believe that serving and interacting with the guests, fellow volunteers and staff is a meaningful addition to their weekly routine and life. More volunteers are always needed, said Barbara, especially during school holidays and summer vacations when students, such as the regulars who come from Suffolk University, are unavailable. “Although I volunteer a lot less than I used to during the school year,” said Lilly, “I think it’s a really good experience for me to get outside of the “bubble” of my own life and spend my night not thinking about myself, my needs, my life, but instead not only helping feed people in need but also realizing how lucky I am.” Per their request, the last names of individuals mentioned in this story were omitted. Professional Clock Repair Paul S. Calantropo & Co. Serving Boston for over 36 years ~ Grandfather Clocks A Specialty ~ Pick up and delivery in Boston ~ *Free estimate & appraisal with this ad “Caretaker of the South Station Clock” SAVE THIS AD 333 Washington Street, Suite 204, Boston, MA 02108 (photos by Suzanne Besser) Caroline, also of Beacon Hill, readied a serving tray. 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And then, all of a sudden the dinner’s wrapped up and we’re on our way.” Barbara, who serves as the director, head cook and general cheerleader, plans the menus and orders the ingredients a few weeks ahead. On the day of the supper, fresh food is delivered to add to the staple foods stocked in the kitchen every month. The quantity of food required is daunting. To prepare the crowds’ favorite chili, for example, Barbara must order forty pounds of ground beef, ten pounds of minced onion, a pint jar of minced garlic in oil, four large cans of spaghetti sauce, four cans of dark kidney beans and four bottles of chili powder. On the day of the supper, Terry, considered the captain of the kitchen, bakes oversized peanut butter, chocolate chip or oatmeal cookies, brownies or Bundt cakes for dessert. “I am inspired by a cookbook called the Cake Mix Doctor that the Nichols House Museum gave us some time ago,” he said. “It takes ordinary cake mixes and doctors them up.” Moses, a sexton at the church, welcomes and counts the guests as they arrive. Rather than congregating outside the church door, he invites them in as soon as they arrive if a staff person is present. Like last week, the attendance is smaller on the first Tuesday of the month because the needy have just received monthly support checks but it 8 A R O U N D T H E Boston Flower Show It’s a sure sign of spring - The annual Boston Flower and Garden Show, “Season of Enchantment,” is at the Seaport World Trade Center, 200 Seaport Blvd., Boston, March 11-15. Hours are Wednesday, Thursday, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.; Friday, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Saturday, 9 a.m. to 9p.m.; Sunday, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. For tickets and more information, visit www.BostonFlowerShow.com. ‘Big Fish’ Black SpeakEasy Stage Company presents the New England premiere of Broadway musical, “Big Fish,” March 13 through April 11, in Boston Center for the Arts Virginia Wimberly Theatre, Stanford Calderwood Pavilion, 527 Tremont St., South End, Boston. SpeakEasy features an intimate version, re-imagined by book writer John August and composer-lyricist Andrew Lippa, with a smaller cast and six-piece bluegrass band, starring Boston stand-outs Will McGarrahan, Sam Simahk, Aimee Doherty and Aubin Wise. Performances: Wednesday, Thursday, at 7:30 p.m.; Friday, 8 p.m.; Saturday, 4,8 p.m.; Sunday, 3 p.m., also Thursday, April 9, at 2 p.m. Ticket start at $25.; student, senior, age 25-under discounts. Call 617-933-8600, visit www.SpeakEasyStage.com or www. BostonTheatreScene.com. ‘Katya Kabanova’ Boston Lyric Opera presents its first production of Leos Janacek’s one-act, 100-minute opera, “Katya Kabanova,” starring CubanAmerican soprano Elaine Alvarez, and tenor Raymond Very, March 13, 18,20, at 7:30 p.m., March 15, 22, at 3 p.m., at Boston’s Citi Performing Arts Center Shubert Theatre, 265 Tremont St., Boston. Check for related events. For tickets and more information, call 617542-6772, visit [email protected], blo.org; single tickets, visit blo.org/ buy-tickets or call 866-348-9738. ‘Lifers’ Happy Medium theatre and Argos Productions have joined together in presenting John Shea and Maureen Cornell’s play, “Lifers,” starring award-winning Boston favorites, March 20 through April 4, at Boston Playwrights Theatre, 949 Comm. Ave., Boston. The play is set in Boston, in 2004. Showtimes: March 20,21,27,28, April 3,4, at 8 p.m.; March 22,29, at 3 p.m.; March 25,26,April 1,2, at 7:30 p.m. Advance tickets, $20. Visit argosproductions.com or call 866811-4111. ‘The Taste of Sunrise’ Wheelock Family Theatre presents Suzan Zeder’s drama for young people, exploring the complexities of deafness, “The Taste of Sunrise,” MARCH 10, 2015 THE BEACON HILL TIMES PA G E 8 C I T Y post-performance session on Friday. Reserved seats, $40; World Music/ CRASHart members, $36. Visit www.WorldMusic.org or call 617876-4275. March 21, at 3 and 7 p.m. Tickets, $25, students with ID, $15. For tickets and more information, call the Box Office at 781-279-2200 or visit www.stonehamtheatre.org. Daniil Trifonov Irish Comedy Tour Celebrity Series of Boston presents renowned pianist Daniil Trifonov, performing music by Bach, Liszt and Beethoven, Friday, March 13, at 8 p.m. in New England Conservatory’s Jordan Hall, 30 Gainsborough St., Boston. Tickets are sold out, but patrons may be added to the wait list by calling the Box Office at 617-482-6661. Spectacle Management presents the Irish Comedy Tour, featuring Mike McCarthy, Derek Richards, Damon Leibert, Joey Carroll and Derrick Keane, Saturday, March 14, at 8 p.m.at the Larcom Theatre, 13 Wallis St., Downtown Beverly. Tickets, $35. Visit www.larcomtheatre.com or call 617-531-1257. The Grand Slambovians SpeakEasy Stage Company presents the New England premiere of Broadway musical, “Big Fish,” March 13 through April 11, in Boston Center for the Arts Virginia Wimberly Theatre, Stanford Calderwood Pavilion, 527 Tremont St., South End, Boston. SpeakEasy features an intimate version, re-imagined by book writer John August and composer-lyricist Andrew Lippa, with a smaller cast and six-piece bluegrass band, starring Boston stand-outs Will McGarrahan, Sam Simahk, Aimee Doherty and Aubin Wise. Performances: Wednesday, Thursday, at 7:30 p.m.; Friday, 8 p.m.; Saturday, 4,8 p.m.; Sunday, 3 p.m., also Thursday, April 9, at 2 p.m. Ticket start at $25.; student, senior, age 25-under discounts. Call 617-933-8600, visit www.SpeakEasyStage. com or www.BostonTheatreScene.com. part II of the Ware Trilogy, performed in spoken English and American sign language, March 13-22, at 180 The Riverway, Boston. Performed Friday at 7:30 p.m., Saturday and Sunday at 3 p.m., the play is recommended for adults, teen-agers and children over 9 years old. Tickets, $20,$25,$30; Teens Take-over Fridays, $15.Call 617-879-2300, visit [email protected] or the website at www. WheelockFamilyTheatre.org. ‘From the Deep’ Boston Public Works Theater Company presents the East Coast premiere of Cassie M. Seinuk’s “From the Deep,” a play about an Israeli prisoner of war and his captor, March 12-28, in the Boston Center for the Arts Black Box Theatre, 539 Tremont St., South End, Boston. Showtimes: Wednesday, Thursday, at 7:30 p.m.; Friday, Saturday, 8 p.m.; Sunday, 2 p.m. For more information, visit www.bostonpublicworks.org. Berklee Salutes! Berklee honors jazz’s longtime premier promoter Fred Taylor with the George Wein Impresario Award at concert, “Berklee Salutes Scullers,” Wednesday, March 11, at 8 p.m. at Scullers Jazz Club, Double Tree Suites by Hilton Boston-Cambridge, 400 Soldiers Field Road, Boston. Berklee provost Larry Simpson hosts the event, featuring a lineup of jazz standouts performing. Grammy Award-winning jazz critic Bob Blumenthal relates the story of Taylor’s storied career. Doors open at 7 p.m. Tickets, $25; dinner and show, $65. Call 617-562-4111 or visit www.scullersjazz.com. We Banjo 3 World Music CRASHarts presents Ireland’s own award-winning quartet, We Banjo 3, from Galway, making its Boston debut, Thursday, March 12, at 8 p.m., at Johnny D’s, 17 Holland St., Davis Square, Somerville. Guaranteed seating with dinner reservation, general admission for patrons 21+ years old, $25. Visit www.WorldMusic.org or call 617-876-4275. Dorrance Dance Tap choreographer Michelle Dorrance and her award-winning company perform the Boston premiere of The Blues Project, combining nine outstanding tap artists with musician-composer Toshi Reagon and her band, BIGLovely, on Friday, March 13, at 8 p.m.; Saturday, March 14, at 3 and 8 p.m., and Sunday, March 15, at 3 p.m. at the Institute of Contemporary Art (ICA), 100 Northern Ave., Boston. Dance critic Debra Cash delivers free, pre-performance talks, 30 minutes ahead, in the lobby, and the company holds a Q&A The Slambovian Circus of Dreams, a.k.a. The Grand Slambovians, will perform March 15 at 8 p.m. at Johnny D’s,17 Holland St., Davis Square, Somerville.Patrons 10 years old-up, accompanied by grownups, are admitted. Tickets,$22. Visit johnnyds.com or call 617-7762004. Cafe 939 Berklee’s Red Room at Cafe 939 (939 Boylston St., Boston), holds its free Berklee in the Round (BITR) performances monthly, on the second Tuesday, (March 10, at 7 p.m.). On Wednesday, March 11, at 8 p.m.. singer-songwriter-multi-instrumentalist Dylan Gardner, 18, and singer-songwriter Taylor Berrett perform (advance admission, $10, day of show, $12); Ireland’s singer-songwriter Orla Gartland, 19, and Olivia Millerschin, March 12, at 8 p.m. ($12/$14); and Louisiana’s Kristin Diable, with Anderson East, March 13, at 8 p.m. ($10/$12). All shows are for all ages. Visit www. cafe939.com, or call 617-747-6038. Mujeres La Galeria at Villa Victoria Center for the Arts celebrates women’s achievements and International Women’s Day with its exhibit, “Mujeres:Poetic Revelations of Our Lives,” featuring the works of painter Silvia Lopez Chavez and sculptor Nora Valdez, now through April 22, at 85 W. Newton St., South End, Boston. There’s an artist’s talk, Friday, March 27, 6-8 p.m. The gallery is open Tuesday-Friday, 3-6 p.m.; Saturday, 1-4 p.m., and by appointment. Call 617-927-1722. ‘Walking the Tightrope’ Stoneham Theatre at 395 Main St., Stoneham, welcomes superb, award-winning actor, Johnny Lee Davenport, starring in Mike Kenny’s play, “Walking the Tightrope,” with young company actors Maria Ferraguto and Caela Flanagan, while student Jakob Michaels provides the soundscape with director Caitlin Lowans, March 14-21. Performances, March 14, at 12 and 3 p.m.; March 20, at 7 p.m., and St. Patrick’s Day Celtic Sojourn WGBH’s A St. Patrick’s Day Celtic Sojourn with Brian O’Donovan returns to Boston and New Bedford, under the baton of music director Keith Murphy, featuring the Henry Girls from Malin County, Donegal, Ireland, accordionist Mick McCauley of Kilkenny, and Cape Breton ensemble, Coig, Friday, March 13, at 8 p.m. in New Bedford’s Zeiterion Theater; Saturday, March 14, at 8 p.m. and Sunday, March 15, at 3 p.m. at the Sanders Theatre, Harvard University, 45 Quincy St., Cambridge. Tickets, $20-$45. Visit wgbh.org/celtic. ‘Silent Rage’ ART/MXAT Institute for Advanced Theater Training presents Silent Rage, a double bill of plays “Heroin/e (Keep Us Quiet),” by Carson Kreitzer, and LeRoi Jones’ “Dutchman,” March 13-21, in Zero Church Performance Space, Church Street and Mass. Ave., Harvard Square, Cambridge. Performances: March 13-15, 19-21, at 7:30 p.m. Tickets,general admission, $20; members, subscribers, $15. Call 617-547-8300 or visit americanrepertorytheater.org/page/institute-201415-season. Yael Deckelbaum The Regattabar (at the Charles Hotel, One Bennett St., Harvard Square, Cambridge), presents Platinum Award winner artist Yael Deckelbaum, an Israeli-Canadian, performing March 18 at 8 p.m. Tickets, $20. Visit www.regattabarjazz.com She is also the opening act for Livingston Taylor at the Bull Run in Shirley, March 27. Paintings 2015 Georgetown artist Bonita LeFlore’s exhibition,” Paintings 2015,” is on display through March 29 at the Firehouse Art Gallery, Firehouse Center for the Arts, Market Square, Downtown Newburyport. The gallery is open Wednesday-Sunday, 12 noonto 5 p.m. and later on theater performance days. For more information call the Box Office at 978-462-7336 or visit www.firehouseorg. 9 MARCH 10, 2015 More ways to connect in March at BHWF During March the BHWF has planned two other opportunities for members to connect, inspire and enjoy each other. “Concealments and Revelations in the Self-Portraits of Female Painters”, a talk by Beacon Hill neighbor and art historian Liana Cheney, will focus on the nature of female’s self-por- PA G E 9 THE BEACON HILL TIMES traiture in painting since the 16th century and specifically compare American and European female self portraits in the 20th century. The talk will be held from 5:30-7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, March 18 at the Sloane Merrill Gallery, 75 Charles Street. Light refreshments will be served and donations will be accepted. No COUNCILOR LINEHAN HONORED reservations are necessary and BHWF members are welcome to bring guests. Members may also connect with each other at the monthly Feast with Friends, a $37 prixe fixe meal held at Panificio on Wednesday, March 19 beginning at 6 pm. Reservations must be made in advance at beaconhillwomensforum.com. FriendshipWorks seeks volunteers for program and isolated,” said Janet SeckelCerrotti, FriendshipWorks executive director. “The Medical Escort Program is an essential piece of our organization.” Mark Byrne, Medical Escort coordinator, said, “We are seeking volunteers who are retired and have the time and experience to navigate our elders to and from appointments, through hospital systems, offer support, and ultimately be a friend. It would be most helpful to the Medical Escort program to have volunteers who may be retired and have daytime availably during the work week.” FriendshipWorks also has an office in Jamaica Plain that is focused on assisting Spanishspeaking elders called La Cadena de Amistad. The medical escort service is a critical program for this population and also needs Spanish-speaking volunteers, according to Lillyana Hebbert, program director of La Cadena de Amistad. “The Medical Escort service for our Spanish-speaking elders plays a crucial role in their access to health care as language barriers may discourage them from seeking care,” Hebbert said. “We are looking for Spanish-speaking volunteers who may serve as translators and advocates, as well as friends, during what can be a vulnerable and intimidating time.” FriendshipWorks encourages potential volunteers those in Boston and Brookline to consider participating in the program, which is flexible and requires simply a friendly, caring attitude with some weekday availability. To become a Medical Escort, apply online at www.fw4elders. org/volunteer. On Wednesday night, Feb. 25, friends, colleagues and constituents gathered at the Seaport Hotel’s Lighthouse Ballroom in Boston to honor City Council President Bill Linehan at a reception hosted by Mayor Martin J. Walsh. Among the luminaries in attendance were City Councilors Michael Flaherty, Stephen J. Murphy and Frank Baker; Seaport developer John Drew; PR guru George K. Regan Jr.; Hampshire House Chairman and CEO Tom Kershaw of Beacon Hill; developer Joe Fallon; State Rep. Nick Collins (D-Boston); and Suffolk University Vice President of Government Affairs John Nucci and his wife, Peggy. Linehan and Kershaw are pictured. Livingstone (from pg. 1) Joint Committee on Environment, Natural Resources and Agriculture, which handles environmental matters, including the Charles River cleanup and adapting to climate change. He said the committee also handles the oversight of the Department of Conservation and Recreation, providing another opportunity to work closely with that state agency. Livingstone is also a new member of the Joint Committee on Community Development and Small Business, and in that role, he said he hopes to find ways to help businesses in his district thrive. Metro Credit Union's Make It Your Business networking reception set for March 31 Metro Credit Union is hosting its second annual Make It Your Business networking and business recognition reception on Tuesday, March 31, from 5:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m., at its branch office located at 1071 Massachusetts Ave., Boston. The event will benefit Casa Myrna, an organization that provides services to people affected by domestic violence through intervention, awareness, and prevention. Governor Charlie Baker will be delivering the keynote address at the reception. Three members of the business community will be honored with the Corporate Engagement Award of Excellence for their charitable contributions. Saritin Rizzuto, assistant vice president of community relations at Metro Credit Union, started organizing the event that brings together policy makers and members of the business community through a partnership with the Newmarket Business Association. A R O U N D Squeezebox Stompers Winthrop’s own Squeezebox Stompers will perform a benefit for music education in Winthrop, Music Matters Fundraiser, Friday, March 13, 7-11 p.m. at the Winthrop Yacht Club, 649 Shirley St., Winthrop. The group will perform beginning at 8:45 p.m. Advance tickets, $20; at the door, $25. For more information and T H E tickets call 302-468-7421. On Saturday, March 21, at 8 p.m., the group will perform at the Cabot Performing Arts Center, 286 Cabot St., Downtown Beverly. Tickets, $16. Call 978-927-3100. ‘Tristan and Yseult’ ArtsEmerson:the World on Stage welcomes Kneehigh of the United Kingdom and its celebrated performances of “Tristan & Yseult”, Mayor Martin J. Walsh was the keynote speaker at the inaugural reception that drew a tremendous crowd. Event sponsors include Eastern Minerals, La Mega Radio Station, RTN Credit Union, Massport, East Boston Neighborhood Health Center, ConRes. Tickets to the reception are $50 per person. For more information, please call Ashton Porter at 617521-0176. C I T Y through March 15, at Emerson/ Cutler Majestic Theatre, 221 Tremont St., Boston. The show blends comedy,live music, and amazing theatricality: March 10-12, at 7:30 p.m.; March 13, at 8 p.m.; March 14, at 2,8 p.m.; March 15, at 2 p.m. Tickets, $25-$89; group, senior, student discounts available. Call 617-824-8400 or visit www. artsemerson.org. Sue Sullivan, executive director of the Newmarket Business Association, Marlene Collins, branch manager at Metro Credit Union, Saritin Rizzuto, assistant vice president of community relations at Metro Credit Union, and Stephanie Brown, chief executive officer of Casa Myrna. Black FriendshipWorks - a network of trained volunteers that provide support and assistance to elders in Boston and Brookline - is seeking new volunteers to participate in the Medical Escort program to accompany elders to medical appointments, providing companionship and other support along the way. With an estimated 62,000 elders living in Boston, more than 22,000 currently live alone, making it difficult to get to and from medical appointments. FriendshipWorks is seeking potential volunteers who may be retired and are looking for the opportunity to be helpful to elders in need. “It has been an especially tough winter this year in Boston between the multiple storms and lack of MBTA services which has left many elders homebound 10 MARCH 10, 2015 THE BEACON HILL TIMES PA G E 1 0 Attention to Real Estate Transfers Detail By Penny Cherubino THIS WEEK'S ANSWER BUYER 1 BUYER 2 BACK BAY Assoc Of Boylston 425 LLC West Newton 154 LLC Schulz, Jens Schulz, Laura Murphy, Nathan J Murphy, Laurel K BEACON HILL Englert, John J Winthrop 168 LLC 2 Chestnut Street INT Lister-Oldfield, Jennifer Mcintosh, Margaret A Mcintosh, Margaret A BBR 32 Owner LLC Thorne, Nathan C Englert, Lee J Keliher, James E Oldfield, Anthony Thorne, Natalie C DOWNTOWN/WATERFRONT Lewis Wharf Realty LLC Xing, Yigong P Lu, Shan Gerlach, Nancy J Spriggs, David SELLER 1 SELLER 2 ADDRESS CITY PRICE Midland Partners LLC Ronges, Vlad Ronges, Victoria Frazer 165 Holdings LP 211 W Canton Street LLC 429-429A Boylston St Boston 105 Marlborough St #3 Boston 165 Newbury St Boston 211 W Canton St Boston $1,200,000 $1,200,000 $1,020,000 $2,642,000 Bramson, Robert Monahan, Charles F River Street RT 1 Chodes, Joanna W 96 Mount Vernon Street Dietrech, Alice R Benham, Elizabeth A Benham, Elizabeth A River Street RT 2 Chodes, Joanna W Origen Property Invest 4 65 Anderson St #GA 21 Beacon St #10E 2 Chestnut St 96 Mount Vernon St 1 Primus Ave #8&10 1 Primus Ave #9 32 River St 3 Winter Pl $675,000 $466,000 $4,360,000 $5,200,000 $949,000 $949,000 $2,121,000 $1,750,000 237 Lewis Wharf LLC Nolan, Brendan K Adams, Carl B 28-32 Atlantic Ave #237Boston 1 Nassau St #1709 Boston 151 Tremont St #26M Boston Boston Boston Boston Boston Boston Boston Boston Boston $600,000 $870,000 $563,601 SERVICE DIRECTORY RMF RUBBISH REMOVAL Old Window Restoration Black Free Estimates • Affordable Scrap Metal - Free Pick Up Clean-ups/Clean-outs No job too big or too small Call Santos Rivas Sach • cord copperchain • etc call Rez at 617-569-5687 www.moversinaction.net 6179473710 or email at [email protected]. Michael P. McCarthy Painting, Inc. Interior & Exterior Painting Historic Restoration Plaster & Drywall Repair Wallpaper Removal Last week’s clue was a frog’s eye view of the two story oriel window on 52 Pinckney Street. An oriel window is a bay that does not reach the ground. They were added to buildings to capture both light and fresh air. Do you have a favorite building or detail you would like featured? Send an email to [email protected] with your suggestion. THIS WEEK'S CLUE 617-930-6650 www.mpmpainter.com JOHN J. RECCA PAINTING Interior/Exterior Commercial/Residential Fully Insured Quality Work Reasonable Rates Free Estimates [email protected] 781-241-2454 P L E A S E R E C Y C L E T H I S N E W S PA P E R &Kitchen Bath 617-389-0252 FULLY LICENSED & INSURED • Painting, Plastering, Plumbing & Electrical • All Phases of Carpentry Including Doors, Moldings, Windows, Stairs • All Phases of Flooring Including Tile, Marble, Hardwood Sanding, Refinishing, Installing • Siding, Roofing Masonry FREE ESTIMATES Meeting all your mechanical needs 24/7 M9304 emergency service 617-723-3296 BE THE TALK OF THE TOWN! Send your engagement, wedding and birth announcements, photos of events, and news about new jobs, promotions and other achievements to: [email protected] 11 MARCH 10, 2015 PA G E 1 1 THE BEACON HILL TIMES City Paws Vaccinations and Dog Licenses a licensed veterinarian using a licensed vaccine ...” However, Massachusetts is one of the states that does allow medical exemptions to rabies vaccinations. There are very specific guidelines that begin with your veterinarian explaining to the licensing agency why your dog should not be vaccinated at this time. Refer to Chapter 93 Section 145B of Massachusetts laws for details. by Penny Cherubino March is the month when many dog guardians think about vaccinations. In order to comply with the Massachusetts law that requires all dogs be licensed with their city or town by April 1st of each year, you must have proof of a current rabies vaccination. I put a reminder on my calendar and have already applied for a Boston dog license online. (http://www.cityofboston.gov/ animals/doglicense/) My Poppy was already registered, so I typed in her current license number and all my information was filled in by the system. I uploaded a photo of her spay certificate and one of her current rabies record. Then I entered my credit card information and completed the transaction. The cost this year, including a one dollar processing fee, was $16. Rabies Vaccinations With rabies vaccinations, you do not have a choice since state law requires, “Each owner or keeper of a dog, cat or ferret that is 6 months of age or older shall cause such dog, cat or ferret to be vaccinated against rabies by Titer Testing Made Easier Even with core vaccinations (except rabies), I have always opted for titer testing to assure myself that my dogs still had immunity to each disease rather than automatic revaccination. Now, that is even easier to do. The tests do not have to be sent out to a lab. The USDA has approved new technology in the form a titer test (VacciCheck) that can be completed in your veterinarian’s office in just 21 minutes. This means blood can be drawn at the beginning of a visit with test results before you leave the office. When you schedule your dog’s next check-up, ask if the practice is using VacciCheck or a similar product. If not, ask if they can order it and use it for you. Or, you could call other animal hospitals and find someone who does use these tests. By the way, should you find yourself at the vets for another reason and your vet says they won’t give your animal an upcoming vaccination at that time, they may have good reason. If, for example, your dog is sick, on steroids, undergoing chemotherapy, or on antibiotics, the animal may not do well with the additional stress of a vaccination and some of these factors may compromise the effectiveness of the vaccine. Do you have a question or topic for City Paws. Send an email to [email protected] with your request. HILL BEAT From Boston Police Area A-1 COMMUNITY SERVICE OFFICE: 617-343-4627 • DRUG UNIT: 617-343-4879 • EMERGENCIES: 911 Larceny in a Building 02/28/15 – A Pinckney Street resident reported that she had prescription medication and a Swiss watch taken from a room she rents some time between 9 a.m. on Feb .27 and midnight on Feb. 28. LEAVE IT and LOSE IT! DON’T BE A VICTIM! You have been given this notification as a cautionary reminder. Boston Police Officers are reminding you of the following: Poppy is being a bit sassy because she expects to have her new dog license tag before many of her canine pals. Yes, she can be a brat. BEACON Pictured (left to right, front to back) are Joni Lee Rossi, president & CEO of the Back Bay Staffing Group; Christy Cashman, producer, actress, writer; Andrew Silver, filmmaker; and Mary Chiochios, former member of the Massachusetts Film Office and filmmaker. Oscar party to benefit Ellie Fund brings out Boston’s best More than 300 hundred guests gathered together for the Ellie Fund 19th Annual Red Carpet Gala on Sunday, Feb. 22, at the Fairmont Copley Plaza. Revelers dressed up in their finest to watch the 87th annual Academy Awards ceremony on a giant screen. The event raised funds for the Ellie Fund’s mission to help end breast cancer and support services for families dealing with the disease. Honored guest, WCVB’s President Bill Fine, joined many of his team, including weatherman Harvey Leonard, J.C. Monahan, Mary Saladna, Jim Lokay, Kelley Tuthill and Phil Lipof. Other VIPs spotted in the crowd included philanthropic, Joni Lee Rossi, president and CEO of the Back Bay Staffing Group; filmmaker Christy Cashman; filmmaker Mary Chiochios; the Improper Bostonian’s Jonathan Soroff; filmmaker Andrew Silver; the Boston Herald’s Erica Corsano; and comedian Dave Russo. DO NOT leave your vehicle unlocked. DO NOT leave your keys in the ignition. DO NOT leave your vehicle idling and unattended. ADVERTISE IN THE BEACON HILL TIMES. PLEASE CALL 781-485-0588 PLEASE REMOVE YOUR PERSONAL PROPERTY IN PLAIN VIEW! this includes: Cell phones GPS devices Laptop computers Loose Change Bags/Luggage TOGETHER WE CAN REDUCE CRIMES OF OPPORTUNITY BOSTON POLICE A-1 COMMUNITY SERVICE OFFICE 40 NEW SUDBURY ST. • 617-343-4627 Black Core & Elective Vaccinations Beyond rabies, your veterinarian will suggest routine vaccinations for a variety of preventable diseases. In 2011, the American Animal Hospital Association Canine Vaccination Task Force changed the previous annual protocol for core vaccines to every 3-years. For dogs, canine parvovirus, distemper, canine hepatitis, and rabies are considered core vaccines. The non-core or elective vaccines are for bordetella bronchiseptica, borrelia burgdorferi and leptospira bacteria. For cats, core vaccines are used to protect against panleukopenia (feline distemper), feline calicivirus, feline herpesvirus type I (rhinotracheitis), and rabies. The non-core or elective vaccines are for feline leukemia virus, bordetella, chlamydophila felis, and feline immunodeficiency virus. You should have a discussion with your veterinarian about risk assessment for non-core vaccines. Your lifestyle and that of your companion animals are important in making these decisions. 12 MARCH 10, 2015 THE BEACON HILL TIMES PA G E 1 2 Two Hill residents named to mayor’s ONEin3 Council By Dan Murphy Two Beacon Hill residents were named to Mayor Martin J. Walsh’s ONEin3 Council last week. Diana Brennan, a 32-year-old Phillips Street resident, and Lee Berman of Myrtle Street, age 26, are serving on the 37-member group that will spend the next 12 months working with the city to engage the 20- to 34-year-old age demographic, which accounts for about one third of Boston’s total population. With support from the Boston Redevelopment Authority, the council will work on projects related to housing pol- icy, professional development, economic development, and civic and neighborhood engagement, among other issues. Brennan, who was selected from among 320 applicants this year, said she wanted to join the council to help develop a plan for getting young adults involved in making Boston a better place to work and live. “Paying attention to this demographic is really important for the city,” Brennan said. “I think ONEin3 is a really significant initiative and one that’s going to fuel Boston for years.” Berman said he is excited to serve on a council who collectively live in 20 different neighborhoods citywide and together work in 20 unique industries, from education to construction. “It’s great to be in a room with people who are really positive and enthusiastic about making Boston a better place,” Berman said. “It’s also an opportunity for people our age to get involved with the city and stay involved in its future.” ONEin3 Manager Chloe Ryan said according to the 2010 census, 51 percent of Beacon Hill residents are between the ages of 20 and 34. “With so many Beacon Hill residents in this age demograph- Diana Brennan ic, we look forward to having Diana and Lee’s representation on the council and working with Lee Berman them to improve and enhance our city,” Ryan said. Young named chairman of the board of trustees of May Institute Cyan Magenta Yellow Black Stephen S. “Steve” Young, L.L.B., well-known trial lawyer and senior partner, inactive, in Holland & Knight’s Boston office, has been named chairman of the board of trustees of May Institute. Mr. He succeeds Don Ricciato, Ph.D., who retired as chairman in December. May Institute is an award-winning nonprofit organization that serves children and adults with autism spectrum disorder and other developmental disabilities, brain injury, mental illness and behavioral health needs. The Institute has annual revenues of more than $103 million and serves nearly 7,000 individuals and families in 14 states around the country. “Steve has been a highly respected member of our board for more than a decade,” said May Institute President and Chief Executive Office Lauren C. Solotar, Ph.D., ABPP. “The Institute has benefitted enormously from his guidance. We are delighted that Steve will play an even greater role in the organization’s strategic matters and business initiatives as we enter our 60th year of serving individuals with special needs.” Young said, “The May Institute is comprised of an extremely hard-working and dedicated staff, is run by a highly competent and committed management team, and provides the highest level of services available anywhere to the children and adults whom it serves. I am honored to be able to serve as chairman of the board of trustees of May Institute during and following this 60th-anniversary year of its founding.” Young was one of May Institute’s “founding riders” for the Rodman Ride for Kids in 2007, the first year the Institute participated in this fundraising event for children in Massachusetts with special needs. Since then, he has ridden 50 miles every year and raised approximately $25,000 in donations. Last year, he played a pivotal role in another philanthropic effort that helped raise $50,000 to improve technology at the organization’s school for children with brain injury. Young is joined at the leadership level by board of trustees Mary Lou Maloney, a professional advocate for individuals with disabilities and the new vice chairperson and assistant treasurer; and Neal Todrys, president and CEO of Todson, Inc., who serves as the board’s new secretary. May Institute benefits from the fiduciary oversight of a 13-member board of trustees. During his legal career, Young has represented clients in civil cases as both plaintiffs and defendants in federal and state trial and appellate courts. He has concentrated in the areas of business/commercial, copyright/trademark infringement, health care, and personal injury litigation, and alternative dispute resolution. Young is a certified mediator, conducts private mediations and arbitrations and sits as a mediator and arbitrator through the American Arbitration Association’s Commercial Panel. Young is a member of the American Bar Association, the Massachusetts Bar Association and the Boston Bar Association. When your family and friends need a great place to stay, try the The John Jeffries house A Bed and Breakfast Inn 617-367-1866 Reasonable Rates ($113 - $189 peR night) built in 1909, newly Renovated 14 david g. Mugar way (corner of Charles and Cambridge streets) www.johnjeffrieshouse.com He served as an elected member of the Boston Bar Association’s Governing Council, and as Chair of its Litigation Section and Tort Committee, and earned an AV Preeminent Peer Review rating from Martindale-Hubbell, an objective indicator of a lawyer’s high ethical standards and professional ability. Young has served for many years on the board of directors and as president and immediate past board chairman of the Beacon Hill Civic Association, and is presently a member of that board. He is a past president and current member of the board of directors of the Longwood Cricket Club. In addition, he has served on the Commonwealth’s Longfellow Bridge Rehabilitation Task Force, the City of Boston’s Bike Network Advisory Group and the Connect Historic Boston Citizens Advisory Group of the Boston Transportation Department and the National Park Service. He also Stephen S. Young served for more than 35 years on the board of directors of Greater Boston Legal Services (GBLS), and is a recipient of GBLS’ Dow-Gardiner-Landrum Award for outstanding commitment to providing free legal services to low-income individuals and families. Young received a bachelor’s degree from the University of Rochester, and an LL.B. degree from Boston University School of Law.
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