Tuesday, April 16, 2024

Business + Money

Neville Place assisted-living gets $5.7M loan from city despite unexplained lapses in terms

Cambridge is increasing a loan to its city-affiliated Neville Place assisted-living facility near Fresh Pond despite a failure to accept the original loan for undisclosed reasons. Neville Place did not carry out many requirements attached to the original.

Bagelsaurus acquires Cambridge Clogs storefront for May expansion – and that means more bagels

Bagelsaurus will add an additional 500 square feet to its store next month, which means more room for needed refrigerator units to prepare more bagels.

Dx Arcade is focused on games, games, games while readying May opening in Harvard Square

In its nearly 400-year history, Harvard Square has never seen race cars, Nerf blasters and dinosaurs under the same roof. That will soon change.

Paid legal notices for Cambridge for April 11-18

Cambridge public notices for the Board of Zoning Appeal agenda.

Somerville launches its guaranteed income pilot as positive results come in from Cambridge study

Cambridge’s basic-income program was shown to be very successful in a study by the University of Pennsylvania’s Center for Guaranteed Income Research.

News

Activists fight the loss of ‘beautiful experiment’ for repairs without a plan at Democracy Center

Soon-to-be displaced nonprofits and activist groups were again dangled the possibility of returning to The Democracy Center after renovations.

Work on reusing private parking lots has started; If it can delay bike-lane deadline yet to be decided

Before the city knows how a change in zoning for private parking lot use plays out, there’s something else at risk: a deadline for the installation of bike lanes.

Somerville schools plan could shrink Trum Field or risk waiting years for Brown building upgrade

Nearly a year after the Winter Hill Community Innovation School shut its doors indefinitely, Somerville Public Schools is moving toward a new building to house its prekindergarten-to-eighth-grade community and maybe another school. 

Affordable homes for Peter Valentine property draw discussion as fence begins to come down

The process of converting an outsider artist’s home into affordable housing begins this month with a community meeting, and a famous fence is coming down too.

Democracy Center tenants are being cleared out in favor of one nonprofit called Democracy House

Information promised about the closing of The Democracy Center was scant at a Thursday meeting where it was promised, but came in a statement provided Friday: Tenant organizations will be supplanted by another program.

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Features

Horse racing in North Cambridge’s Trotting Park had an 18-year run before its land became homes

A trotting racecourse spanned a full mile loop bounded by Rindge, Harvey, Clifton and Cedar streets. For nearly two decades it was the area’s premier racing ground.

Opinion

Somerville’s Climate Forward plan needs more, especially around schools, and sufficient funds

Somerville must show leadership in the climate crisis by reducing emissions by all means available and protecting the future of our youth. The children of Somerville deserve ambitious action. Please do not let them down.

Ethiopian community in Massachusetts celebrates the 128th Victory of Adwa

The Ethiopian community’s celebration of the 128th Adwa Victory in March recalled a beacon of pride and history for black people, including second-generation African.

Patriots’ Day Weekend: Help fix our parks and win prizes!

Now that winter is over, get out to a park this Patriot’s Day Weekend, have fun, help fix our parks and maybe win a cash prize from Cambridge4Trees.

Read

Veteran Cambridge and Boston educator reflects on No Child Left Behind in ‘Testing Education’

Kathy Greeley, who spent 37 years in schools, experienced the fundamental change inspired by the No Child Left Behind law and its ripple effects.

Behold

This spring, The Curated Fridge gets cinematic

The Curated Fridge may be our smallest art gallery: the front and one side of artist Yorgos Efthymiadis’ kitchen refrigerator in his home in East Somerville.

Arts + Culture

Master Blaster and local booster Charles Daniels still has thousands of images yet to be revealed

Legendary rock photographer Charles Daniels, who died Jan. 22, was honored Sunday at an Arts at the Armory memorial service. But his work isn’t done.

Wild Things

There are still things you don’t know about cats, from paw preference to the meaning of ‘catling’

There are 220 million pet cats worldwide and even more strays, but that doesn’t mean you know why, how they get into odd places or – brace yourself – the reason street urchins would bring cats to the doors of a Harvard lab in the 1890s.

Film

‘Housekeeping for Beginners’: Sometimes family is your gay husband, his lover and your dead girlfriend’s daughters

Amid the endless cigarettes and constant noise of Goran Stolevski’s “Housekeeping for Beginners,” something truly beautiful emerges.

Film

‘The Beast’: Meeting again for the first time, hopping from disaster to disaster via DNA

There’s dread and desire in every frame of this time-hopping tale that borrows lightly from Henry James and plenty of cinematic source material.

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