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news

Police log

September 29, 2019

September 19

140 Concord Rd. (12:42 p.m.)
Suspicious person wearing a vest in the area of the caller’s residence. Person was a utility company contractor.

21 Deer Run Rd. (4:55 p.m.)
Caller received a suspicious phone call from an unknown person.

Donelan’s Supermarket (18:12)
Juveniles were reported on the roof. Police contacted the juveniles and their parents.

Lincoln Public Schools (4:09 p.m.)
Power failure at school; Eversource notified.

Lincoln Public Schools (4:18 p.m.)
Missing child under 12 — miscommunication between mother and daughter (daughter was at a play date). 

September 21

Sandy Pond Road at Five Corners (9:17 a.m.)
Bicycle violation — bicyclist was riding in and out of traffic.

September 22

57 Lincoln Rd. (12:07 a.m.)
Caller reported hearing loud music. Officers did not hear the music while checking the area.

342 Hemlock Circle (11:46 p.m.)
Caller reported receiving a suspicious e-mail and package. 

Trapelo Road (5:30 p.m.)
Waltham police reported multiple juveniles fishing at the reservoir; two juveniles moved along.

Airport Road (8:43 p.m.)
FedEx truck parked at the end of the road unoccupied. 

6 Short Hill Rd. (9:21 p.m.)
Caller thought she heard someone trying to open her door (she was awaiting the arrival of a family member).

53 Stonehedge Rd. (6:20 p.m.)
Resident spoke to an officer at the station about a civil matter. 

September 23

Lincoln Road (12:10 a.m.)
Officer checked on suspicious vehicle parked in the 3-S parking lot; party checked out OK. 

Concord Road at railroad crossing (12:35 a.m.)
Caller said workers on the tracks had a loud radio. Officer made contact and workers were advised of the complaint; they were cooperative.

Lincoln Police Station (5:03 p.m.)
Resident spoke to an officer about getting assistance for a family member.

Concord Road at S curve  (8:41 p.m.)
Jeiby Castro, 38, of 95 Calvary St. in Waltham was arrested on an outstanding warrant for motor vehicle offenses.

September 25

South Great Road near Weston town line (5:16 p.m.)
Motor vehicle crash — driver crossed center line and struck vehicle heading eastbound. Driver was cited; minor injuries.

September 26

32 Indian Camp Lane (3:51 p.m.)
Report of overdue child — child is home and all is well. 

15 Wells Rd. (8:40 p.m.)
Officer assisted person with information regarding a civil matter.

Category: news, police

Police log

September 22, 2019

September 18

145 Lincoln Rd. (7:49 a.m.) — Man with a Boston address (name withheld for medical privacy reasons) tripped and fell near the train tracks and the resident lot. Police were not sure if he was just wandering around or was awaiting the arrival of the train when he fell. After being seen by the Fire Department, he left via the train. 

145 Lincoln Rd. (2:06 p.m.) — Party reported her vehicle was struck sometime over the past few days (unknown where; possibly in Lincoln). Officer documented the damage.

Codman Community Farms (4:44 p.m.) — Resident reported that she believes her cane was taken from her car while parked in the lot at the corner of Codman and Lincoln Roads.

52 Stonehedge (4:59 p.m.) — Caller reported seeing a bobcat earlier in the area.

10 Garland Rd. (9:12 p.m.) — Caller reported seeing someone in the woods with a flashlight; it was found to be a neighbor.

September 17

90 Codman Rd. (10:24 a.m.) — Caller reported furniture had been moved from a storage pod into the house by someone unknown.

53 Wells Rd. (3:07 p.m.) — Person wanted to speak to a police officer in regards to ongoing family issue.

1 Harvest Circle  (3:47 p.m.) — Resident received a scam call claiming to be police with a arrest warrant if they didn’t pay money. No money was exchanged; resident was advised of ongoing scams.

South Great Road at Route 126 (6:16 p.m.) — Caller saw a deer near the roadway and was concerned for its wellbeing.

September 16

157 Bedford Rd (1:17 a.m.) — An area hospital notified Lincoln police of a dog bite. The information was passed along to the Animal Control Officer to handle.

Bruce Kirkcaldy, 66, of 75 Harrington Rd. in Waltham was stopped and arrested on Route 117  for OUI/liquor (second offense) and speeding.

82 Virginia Rd. (4:54 p.m.) — Caller reported a small brush fire in front of the residence.

September 15

Cambridge Turnpike eastbound (4:31 p.m.) — Samantha Bradford, 25, of 5 Roseville Square in Lynn was arrested as a passenger in a car for an outstanding warrant for larceny under $1,200.

September 14

Old Sudbury Road (3:18 p.m.) — Minor car crash, no injuries. Seventeen-year-old male was issued a citation for a passing violation and a marked-lane violation. 

September 13 

30 Silver Hill Rd. (2:45 p.m.) — Resident reported someone applied for a loan in his name and the loan application was denied.

Category: news, police

Police log

September 17, 2019

(Editor’s note: The Lincoln Squirrel will start publishing a selection from the daily logs of the Lincoln Police Department roughly once a week.)

September 12

Motor vehicle accident — Cambridge Turnpike eastbound (9 a.m.)
No injuries; one vehicle towed.

Road rage – Cambridge Turnpike eastbound (10:10 a.m.)
Incident involving two vehicles traveling eastbound when one driver threw their iced coffee at the other. The call was transferred to the State Police. 

September 11

Aid to public – 231 Aspen Circle (5:49 p.m.)
Police assisted a resident who wanted to report a missing family member who lives elsewhere. They were referred to the department where the person lives.  

Suspicious circumstances – Wells Road (12:26 a.m.)
A resident complained about teenagers in the Lincoln Woods community room after it closed. 

September 9

Noise complaint – 49 Wells Rd. (11:56 a.m)
Person was playing loud music; police told then to turn it down.

Suspicious circumstances – 168 Lincoln Rd. (1:33 a.m.)
Person reported an odd light flashing in the back of the house. It ended up being a vehicle from SavaTree that had its hazard lights flashing.

September 7

Suspicious circumstances – 241 Old Concord Rd. (1:52 p.m.)
Resident wanted a storage container off his property. He allowed an individual to store stuff in it but he now wants it gone. 

Suspicious person – Trapelo Road. (6:06 p.m.)
People were fishing.

September 6

Missing person over 21 – deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum (2:56 p.m.)
A woman got lost on the trails while hiking and police helped her get her back to the deCordova. She wasn’t injured and walked out of the woods on her own.

Warrant arrest – Hanscom law enforcement, 3 Robbins Rd., Bedford (9:03 am.)
Minaie Mohsen, 67, of 95 Webster St. in Needham was arrested on an outstanding warrant.

 

Category: news, police

Town seeks bids for road work this fall

September 8, 2019

Town officials hope to resurface or repair several roads in town this fall and have asked for bids to be submitted by September 30. If all goes well, contractors will be hired and the work completed by the end of October, though DPW Superintendent noted that paving contractors are very busy and the timetable will depend on their availability.

The areas targeted for work are:

  • Bedford Road (segment at the Five Corners intersection)
  • Bedford Lane (segment)
  • Sunnyside Lane (segment)
  • Route 117 (South Great Road) from railroad tracks east to #327, plus Tower Road apron
  • Lincoln Road northbound from Codman Road to first driveway (patch repair only)

Category: news

Correction

September 5, 2019

An incorrect date for the memorial gathering was given at the end of the September 3 article headlined “Sept. 17 gathering for Susan Isbell, 1945–2019.” The correct date is September 17 at 7 p.m. in Bemis Hall. The original article has been updated.

Category: news

Veteran teacher Gail Wild says goodbye to Magic Garden classroom

August 19, 2019

By Alice Waugh

Gail Wild and students outside Magic Garden.

Gail Wild came for the music but stayed for the Moonbeams.

Today is the last day as the Moonbeam Room teacher at the Magic Garden Children’s Center for Wild, 65, who’s retiring after a Lincoln career that began as a music specialist. She’s been teaching preschool in various locations since 1975, with the last decade or so in the room populated mostly by three- and four-year-olds. Wherever she was, music has always been a centerpiece of her approach.

“Whether you’re a [classroom] teacher or a music teacher for young children, the most important ingredient is to make it fun,” Wild said. “The younger they are, the more like sponges they are. If something’s fun, they gravitate to it. And music is such a huge umbrella.” She’s introduced her young charges to everything from jazz, blues and opera as well as lullabies and rhyming songs.

Music is an important way to unify children and get them on the same page, at least for a little while. “If you spend time around young children, it can get very loud, with 10 to 20 realities going on simultaneously — everyone wants attention and wants to be heard,” she said. “When we sit for music, we become one voice,” using music to express feelings, or focus on the natural world or being kind.

As a high school student about to go to Tufts University in the early 1970s, “I didn’t have a clue what I wanted to do, but knew I didn’t want to wear nylons or sit in an office behind a desk,” Wild said. Her older sister had studied early childhood education at Connecticut College and that sounded interesting, so she enrolled in the Eliot-Pearson Department of Child Study and Human Development at Tufts. Since most of the students there were women who many assumed were looking for husbands, the running joke was that “pre-med was on the hill and pre-wed was in child development,” she laughed.

In Wild’s first preschool job in Arlington, about half her students did not speak English at home, so songs like “Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star” and the alphabet song were easily shared experiences for the whole group. “It’s the idea of having a common voice,” she said.

Gail Wild in the Moonbeam Room.

Wild is not disappearing altogether from Magic Garden — she’ll go back to being a part-time music specialist while also spending more time doing massage therapy (she earned her degree in that field in 1984).

“I love doing healing work with people — it’s a wonderful way to connect that’s the exact opposite of working with children. You deal with grownups, stay in one place and don’t talk, for the most part, but you’re still retaining that connection, just doing it with your hands rather than your voice,” she said.

It hardly needs saying that what Wild will miss most at Magic Garden is the people, and not just the children. In the summer, the school hires interns, and some of them are college students who are also Magic Garden “alumni,” she said. “That’s pretty sweet to have someone come back and say ‘I remember when I was in Moonbeam!’”

“I’ll miss the amazing co-teachers I get to spend my days with, and I’ll miss a lot of laughing” —  and of course, her students, she added. “Pretty much on a daily basis, you walk in the door and you have some bright eyes ready to give you a hug and happy to see you. That’s a great benefit you don’t get in some other jobs.”

Just recently, Wild was reading aloud the classic book Corduroy and got to the part where the titular stuffed teddy bear goes upstairs in a department store to sleep on one of the beds in the furniture showroom. “And a kid says ‘But Gail, how can he go to bed there? There’s no toothbrush!’ I just love those moments that make you smile from ear to ear when you get into the world of a three-year-old,” she said.

Wild also looks askance at the increasing emphasis nationwide on education for younger and younger children. “Parents shouldn’t worry about academics at all at this age. It’s more about can your child play, do they have an imagination, can they socially interact with others?”

The most obvious change Wild has seen during her career has to do, not surprisingly, with technology, which has consumed not just children but the adults around them. “Kids have a lot more knowledge at their fingertips, and they’re probably more computer-savvy at three than I am now. It’s their second language. But I worry when I go to a restaurant and see parents checking out their phones rather than engaging eye to eye with their kids. A lot of them will grow up with that—not making eye contact when they’re talking to someone,” she said.

“What children want is [adults’] full attention, and I get that they don’t always have that attention to give when they’re running around trying to make dinner or something. But if your child is acting out or feels sad, you are the sun in their world, and they just want you shining on them—knowing that even if it’s just for 10 straight minutes, it’s about them.”

Category: features, kids, news

Girl Scouts hit benchmark for community success

July 4, 2019

Proudly showing off their colorful bench are (left to right) Girl Scouts Lucy Dwyer, Courtney Mitchell, Marielle Soluri, and Rebecca Lupkas.

Lincoln Girl Scout Troop 82742 has installed a pair of six-foot-long benches at the Lincoln Mall shopping area after building them as part of a Silver Award project. 

To earn the award, seventh-grade Girl Scouts Lucy Dwyer, Rebecca Lupkas, Courtney Mitchell, and Marielle Soluri adhered to a specific problem-solving regimen that includes identifying issues they care about, exploring the community to identify needs, finding areas where needs and cares overlap, and engaging stakeholders while developing a long term solution that is also sustainable. 

The benches, made of materials generously donated by Concord Lumber, meet a community need that gives students a place to eat without interfering with other shoppers. Over the course of nine months, the Girl Scouts interviewed students, shopkeepers, landlords, and town officials about problems, researched various solutions, reviewed alternatives with these audiences and responded to feedback

Lucy Dwyer and Courtney Mitchell work on building their Scout troop’s bench.

During the construction process, they learned how to choose materials and waterproofing treatment, transfer design specifications to materials, use a radial arm saw and drills, fasten materials, and apply finishes. The award requires the project to consume more than 50 hours of effort each, which was easily surpassed.

The troop installed the benches at Lincoln Station and are continuing to work with the Rural Land Foundation to add additional bins for trash, recycling, and possibly compost as well as signage for the bins, which was also an identified need.

— Submitted by Carolyn Dwyer and Tara Mitchell, leaders of Troop 82742

Category: features, kids, news

Letter to the editor: gratitude for Lincoln’s Pierce House

July 2, 2019

To the editor:

Sometimes, it is important to send a note of gratitude. Here is mine for today.

Many of us enjoy the generosity of those around us and those who came before. From time to time, that generosity should be publicly acknowledged. The Fourth of July approaches, we must thank all who have made this beloved Lincoln event possible. One aspect of our celebrations, our after-parade luncheon put on by the Boy Scouts, should remind of  the essential role its host, the Pierce House, plays in the life of our community.

In 1910, John H. Pierce, like several of his wealthy contemporaries, made a substantial gift to the town. He willed both his house on Weston Road and the surrounding 30 acres. Little could he have imagined  how well that gift would serve the town — how vibrant it would become and how essential to so much of our community life!

Since it was opened for public use decades ago,  it has welcomed us all to celebrate weddings, graduations, birthdays, and retirements, as well as to mourn passings. It also hosts many town events such as our First Day open house, where up to 500 of us have come together to welcome in the New Year in an all afternoon, all-ages event of food and music and conversation. The house also welcomes events for town organizations such as the Garden Club and others.

We have not only John Pierce and his family to thank for all this, but also the volunteer Pierce House Committees and professional house managers over the years. Many traditions of hospitality were introduced by Richard Silver and his wife Susan. And recently, Nancy Beach has continued and expanded on that legacy.

The house has thrived under their professional leadership, and the town has been the beneficiary.

It is especially remarkable  how well Pierce House has served the town, given it has done so on a shoestring budget.

While offerings to the community at low or no cost and community use has grown, the portion of the budget, financed by town funds, has not. And this, again, is due to the work of the Pierce House Committee and former manager Silver and current manager Beach. They have skillfully balanced the use of the house for non-resident events such as weddings, in such a way that those revenues offset much of the expense of running the house for our use. We are all beneficiaries of their efforts.

So, as we sit under the tent and enjoy our lunch this Fourth of July and look out over the beautiful grounds and park, think of John Pierce and all members of Pierce House Committee, past and present. And, we should also remember the work of house managers Richard Silver and Nancy Beach. If it were not for all of them, we would not have this gem, this wonderful asset serving us all in the heart of Lincoln. They all deserve a note of gratitude.

Sincerely,

Sara Mattes
71 Conant Rd., Lincoln


Letters to the editor must be signed with the writer’s name and street address and sent via email to lincolnsquirrelnews@gmail.com. Letters will be edited for punctuation, spelling, style, etc., and will be published at the discretion of the editor. Letters containing personal attacks, errors of fact or other inappropriate material will not be published.

Category: news

Obituaries

July 1, 2019

Dorothy Cannistraro

Dorothy Cannistraro

Dorothy Ann (Moore) Cannistraro died on Tuesday, June 11, peacefully in her sleep at St. Patrick’s Manor in Framingham, where she had resided for six years. Dottie lived with deep faithfulness, good humor, and a commitment to sharing kindness with others.

Born in Framingham in 1934 and raised in Millis, Dottie enjoyed the company of a large extended family, including her parents Harold and Dorothy Moore and younger brother Louis Moore. Her strong will and determination gave her strength to buck the system and get the education she deserved in spite of her cerebral palsy. Her fighting spirit, coupled with unparalleled determination, made her an inspiration to those who had an opportunity to know her. Indeed, when Dottie graduated from Millis High School in 1953, long before the Americans with Disabilities Act or anything like it, no one who knew Dottie was surprised she accomplished that unlikely feat.

As a young adult, Dottie worked as a clerk librarian at the Millis school library. In the summer of 1962 she had the opportunity to attend Camp Freedom (now called Camp Jabberwocky) on Martha’s Vineyard. It was a fortuitous trip because it was there that she met Domenic Cannistraro. Dom and Dottie married in 1970. Their marriage was one of mutual love, respect, and cooperation. They made their home in Lincoln, where the sparkle in Dottie’s eye and her nurturing spirit made Dottie a favorite among neighborhood children, many of whom she cared for in her home-based childcare.

Dom and Dottie were faithful members of St. Anne’s-in-the-Fields Episcopal Church in Lincoln for 34 years. A woman of deep faith, Dorothy was an active member of the Service League there. After moving to Framingham, Dom and Dottie joined St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church in 2004. Much to their surprise and delight their daughter, the Rev. Julie Carson, became rector of their congregation in 2007.

Dorothy glowed with pride at the accomplishments of Julie, her son-in-law Phillip Carson, and grandchildren Natalie and Thomason Carson, all of Framingham. She also leaves a brother, Louis Moore, sisters-in-law who were more like sisters, and many nieces and nephews. Known as “Honey” to her extended family, it was a fitting nickname for someone as sweet and generous as Dottie. Dottie was preceded in death by her parents and beloved husband Domenic.

A service of thanksgiving for Dottie’s life will be held at St. Anne’s in the Fields Episcopal Church, 147 Concord Road in Lincoln, on Saturday, June 22, 2019 at 11:00 AM with interment of ashes to follow in the church memorial garden.

In lieu of flowers the family requests memorial donations be made to Camp Jabberwocky, 200 Greenwood Ave., Vineyard Haven, MA 02568.

(Obituary courtesy Concord Funeral Home)

Ernest Fisher

Ernest Fisher of Westwood, formerly of Milton and Lincoln on Friday, June 14, 2019. Husband of the late Doris (Riman) Fisher. Loving father of Candace Gustafson, Margo Fisher-Martin, Peter Fisher, Hynda Kleinman and the late Douglas and Jody Beth Fisher. Adored grandfather of Adam Gustafson, Amanda Greuter, Ali Martin, Dana Kleinman, Ruth Duff, Tobias and Tina Fisher. Great grandfather of Nicholas Fisher, Stephanie Fisher Levesque, Alex Fisher Levesque, Layla, Marley and Nora Gustafson, and Calder and Ava Duff. He was an Army veteran of World War II and a graduate of Harvard University’s class of 1943.

Services were held at the Levine Chapels in Brookline on June 17; burial was at the Beth El Cemetery in West Roxbury. In lieu of flowers, remembrances may be made to Jody Beth Fisher Dean’s Discretionary Fund at Harvard College, c/o Alumni and Development Services, 124 Mt. Auburn Street, Cambridge, MA 02138 (please make check payable to Harvard College with “Jody Beth Fisher Dean’s Discretionary Fund” on the memo line).

(Obituary courtesy Levine Chapels)

Category: news, obits

News acorns

June 24, 2019

Great Walden BioBlitz at Minute Man NHP

Join the National Park Service, Walden Woods Project, and naturalist Peter Alden in a mega-bio-blitz on Saturday, July 6 from 2–4 p.m. at the Hartwell Tavern lot area, 106 North Great Rd., Lincoln. Observe and identify plants, birds, insects, amphibians, and other living organisms, and learn to use the iNaturalist app and contribute to our goal of recording 2,000 species in a day. Naturalist-led tours in the park depart at 2 p.m. from the Hartwell lot. For more information, visit www.waldenbioblitz.org.

Watch the GearTicks robot in action

The Lincoln GearTicks “Rover Ruckus” machine.

There’s now video available of the Lincoln GearTicks robot that recently competed at the FIRST World Championship in Detroit. Students from teams all over the world had to design robots that could deliver “minerals” (gold cubes and whiffle balls) from a “crater” into the “lander” (an elevated box with separate containers). Click here to watch on YouTube (the GearTicks segment begins at 1:23:00 and the GearTicks “Rover Ruckus” robot is labeled 6055), or click here to download a 30-second video. The original story has been updated to include these link.

Summer hours at the library

The Lincoln Public Library will be open on Saturdays during July from 10 a.m.—1 p.m. (weekday hours remain the same), and the library will be closed on Saturdays during August. Regular Saturday hours (10 a.m.—5 p.m.) will begin on September 7.

Mass Audubon photo contest under way

Picture This: Your Great Outdoors, the Lincoln-based Mass Audubon’s annual statewide photo contest, invites shutterbugs of all ages, backgrounds, and levels of experience to share the natural beauty of the Bay State through their photography. The competition, which continues through September 30, has two age divisions (18 and older, and under 18) and six subject areas: people in nature, birds, mammals, other animals, landscapes, and plants and fungi.

Contestants may submit up to 10 images apiece. Photographs must have been taken any time prior to or during the 2019 contest period, but must have been shot in Massachusetts or at Mass Audubon’s Wildwood Camp in Rindge, N.H. One Grand Prize winner will be awarded a $250 gift card and will be featured in Mass Audubon’s member newsletter, Explore. Eleven winners will receive $100 gift cards, and at least six honorable mentions will receive $50 gift cards. Additional honorable mentions may be awarded at the discretion of the judges. To enter and to review contest information, including rules and how to submit photos online, visit massaudubon.org/picturethis.

Category: arts, kids, nature, news

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