Tuesday, April 23, 2024

Business + Money

Businesses can bring in the bicycling crowd, one $5 lifetime helmet sticker at a time

Those $5 Bicycle Benefits stickers are still around, and the number of Cambridge-Somerville area businesses accepting them is back on the rise.

Housing Authority plans 22 rooms in Baldwin, hits a snag in purchase from Lesley University

The Cambridge Housing Authority wants to buy a house now used as a Lesley dorm in a neighborhood with little low- and moderate-income housing.

Paid legal notices for Cambridge for April 18-25

Cambridge public notices for the Board of Zoning Appeal and Cambridge Historical Commission, Planning Board definitions for hotels and motels and for the Khalida Griffin-Sheperd zoning petition, and an ordinance about the Fresh Pond Golf Course Pro Shop Fund.

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.

News

Police seek information on fake home business where ‘chiropractor’ is accused of two assaults

A man running an unlicensed chiropractic business out of his home has been charged with sexually assaulting two women who fell for the ruse, officials said.

Benjamin Zander, conductor of transformation, prepares Friday’s once-in-a-lifetime symphony

The conductor, musical director and founder of the Boston Philharmonic Orchestra is preparing for the final concert of the year, honoring a composer he’s returned to many times – and for which he’s been given a medal of honor. Friday will be “a once-in-a-lifetime experience,” Benjamin Zander said.

Somerville fire union and city councilors express frustration over hires that ignore civil service list

The office of Somerville’s mayor plans to staff a new fire station coming to Assembly Square with “lateral” hires of firefighters from outside the city.

Somerville Media Center finds 5,000 square feet for permanent new home at Somernova campus

The Somerville Media Center is now a permanent resident of Somernova, a 7.4-acre business campus in Somerville’s Ward 2 neighborhood.

Chemicals from Rite-Way’s on-site dry cleaning have contaminated the ground and potential sale

Levels of contamination at the empty former Rite-Way Dry Cleaners are “high” and nearly unprecedented in their complexity in the experience of a 28-year environmental expert hired by the property owner.

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Features

Opening of pop-up neighborhood history center gets longtime residents and newcomers sharing

History Cambridge welcomed the public April 11 to the opening of a pop-up neighborhood history center for North Cambridge. There’s more to come.

Opinion

Cambridge School Committee must address ethical concerns of an external investigation

There is mounting evidence showing why the ongoing involvement of the superintendents and her subordinates in the investigation raises ethical concerns.

Fix our public parks right now

City management has to change its agenda from being wasteful, redundant and destructive to repairing and maintaining the parks that we have.

City staff aren’t requesting delays on bike lanes – bad politics are

There is no logistical need to delay bike lanes. There is only a political desire by some on the council, not supported by the public.

Read

Victor Lodato explores what it means to come home in ‘Honey’

In his third novel, Victor Lodato uses 82-year-old Honey, the daughter of a mobster, to reckon with the role biological and chosen families play in our lives.

Behold

‘Future Minded’ photographs at Harvard Art Museums

The Harvard Art Museums freshens up their collection in various mediums with “Future Minded,” but photography selections are particularly noteworthy. 

Wild Things

Millipedes are bizarre in a dozen different ways, but they don’t bite and curl up when threatened

Millipedes don’t have 1,000 legs – though biologists once found one with 1,306 legs hundreds of feet below ground – but if you are afraid of getting bitten, it’s centipedes that worry you, not these rather helpful nighttime dentrivores.

Theater

Joyous play about parenting a trans tween, ‘Mermaid Hour,’ near at Arrow Street Arts

“Mermaid Hour,” which flips a traditional coming-of-age narrative on its head by focusing on the parents, is coming to Arrow Street Arts.

Film

‘The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare’: Team fighting Nazis is true to life with a blast of Richie

Real-life derring-do from a ragtag team of World War II commandos trying to cripple the Nazi naval war machine – with the flash of Guy Ritchie.

Film

‘Challengers’: Triples tennis, lacking in rules

Luca Guadagnino’s latest is a fierce, fast passion play in the ranks of pro tennis with two former besties and the woman who’s literally between them.