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DeCordova offers hands-on art sessions

January 2, 2019

The deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum is offering two sets of hands-on art sessions this winter: “Conversation and Crafts” and studio workshops.

In “Conversation and Crafts,” participants can bring their own craft projects or contribute to one of ours while hearing an artist speak about their community work. Sessions are free for deCordova members and $10 for nonmembers. Click on a title for more information and to register.

Conversation and Crafts with Virginia Johnson
Thursday, Jan. 10 from 5:30–7:30 p.m.
Join Virginia Johnson, owner of Cambridge-based stitch lounge gather here, in a craft making event and conversation about building communities for and through craft.

Conversation and Crafts with Matting Change
Wednesday, Jan. 30 from 5:30–7:30 p.m.
Join Audrey Lin, creator of Matting Change, to transform plastic grocery bags into crocheted sleeping mats for young adults experiencing homelessness. 

Conversation and Crafts with Adrienne Sloane
Thursday, Feb. 7 from 5:30–7:30 p.m.
From Madame Defarge in A Tale of Two Cities onward, knitters have been incorporating the political into their stitches. Come hear how knitting is being used by contemporary artists to address issues such as war, climate change, and species preservation. 

Conversation and Crafts with Cat Mazza
Thursday, March 7 from 5:30–7:30 p.m.
Join exhibiting artist and craftivist Cat Mazza for a talk about the deep roots of craft in New England labor history to its continuing role in contemporary activist causes.

Winter studio workshops

Interactions of Space: Sculpture Workshop with Michelle Lougee
Saturday, Jan. 12 from 10:30 a.m.–1 p.m.
Working with artist Michelle Lougee, make a freestanding or hanging sculpture that focuses on the interaction of spaces.

Weaving Memory Workshop with Jodi Colella
Saturday, Jan. 26 from 10:30 a.m.–1 p.m.
Work with artist Jodi Colella to create personal, abstract tapestries on looms that we will construct together in class.

Fiber Workshop with Woomin Kim
Wednesday, Feb. 6 from 6:30–9 p.m.
Learn how to process various fibers and fabrics to create string, and then incorporate personal or found objects to make art objects from everyday materials. 

Date Night with Clay
Saturday, Feb. 9 from 5–7 p.m.; Sunday, Feb. 10 from 4–6 p.m.; Tuesday, Feb. 13 from 6–8 p.m.; Wednesday, Feb. 14 from 6–8 p.m.
Work as a team on the wheel, decorating clay “hearts” or building your own signature romantic sculpture.

Category: arts

Corrections

January 1, 2019

  • The coffee with artist Don Alden that was listed in the December 27 Council on Aging activities in January has been rescheduled from January 22 to January 15.
  • A December 20 story headlined “New Minuteman High School on track for fall 2019 opening” incorrectly stated that Belmont was part of the Minuteman High School district. Belmont has also withdrawn from the district.
  • A December 16 News Acorn failed to give the location of the talks on the Roaring ’20s. They are in the Lincoln Public Library.

The original stories and listings have been updated online to reflect these corrections.

 

Category: history, schools, seniors

News acorns

December 30, 2018

“Wings of Desire” screening

The Lincoln Film Society presents Wim Wenders’ Wings of Desire (1987) on Thursday, Jan. 3 at 6:30 p.m. An angel tires of overseeing human activity and wishes to become human when he falls in love with a mortal. In German, English, and French with English subtitles.

Peter D’Elia in concert

Peter D’Elia

The Lincoln Public Library presents Lincoln native Peter D’Elia in concert on Sunday, Jan. 13 at 2 p.m. He plays guitar and banjo and sings original folk/country/bluegrass songs about being a musician, being a dog, being bald, being single and being in love. He now lives in Berlin and has been touring with The Beez in Germany and Australia since 2005.

Eric Kilburn at next LOMA

Eric Kilburn

Eric Kilburn, owner of Wellspring Studios in Acton, is the featured performer at the next LOMA (Lincoln Open-Mike Acoustic) night on Monday, Jan. 14 in the Lincoln Public Library’s Tarbell Room. The event runs from 7–10 p.m., and Kilburn will perform a half-hour set starting around 8:30. He has appeared alone and with his band, The Swing Café, and his songs have been covered by musicians including Arlo Guthrie, Sally Rogers, and Lucie Blue Tremblay.

LOMA is a monthly event. Admission is free and refreshments are provided. Performers can sign up at the event or email Rich Eilbert at loma3re@gmail.com for a slot. There is a sound system with mikes and instrumental pickups suitable for individuals or small groups.

Category: arts

Obituaries

December 30, 2018

Jane Langton

Jane Langton

Jane Langton, 95, a prolific mystery writer and illustrator, died in hospice care near her home in Lincoln on December 29. She received the Mystery Writers of America’s Grand Master Award in 2017 for her career, which include numerous books set in New England and specifically the Concord area. Click here for full obituary (New York Times).

Carol Seeckts

Carol “Lee” Seeckts

There will be visiting hours on Friday, Jan. 4 from 4–7 p.m. in the Dee Funeral Home (27 Bedford St., Concord) for Carol “Lee” Seeckts, a certified nursing assistant and mother of four who died of cancer on December 25. She graduated from Lincoln-Sudbury Regional High School in 1962 and lived most recently in Acton. A funeral service will take place at the Dee Funeral Home on Saturday, Jan. 5 at 11 a.m. followed immediately by an end-of-life celebration at the Pierce House in Lincoln. Click here for full obituary. 

John Ritsher

John Ritsher

Services will be held on Monday, Dec. 31 at 11 a.m. at First Parish Church, 24 River St., Norwell for John Ritsher, a Norwell resident and former Lincoln Board of Selectman member who died on December 10 at age 88. A former senior partner at Ropes & Gray, he and his family lived in a Lincoln home he designed with famed architect Henry Hoover. Click here for full obituary. 

 

Category: obits

Council on Aging activities in January

December 27, 2018

Tap your toes to trad jazz tunes
January 4 at 12:30 p.m.
Come join your fellow COA neighbors to tap your toes and bob your heads and sing to those tunes of yesteryear that we all know and love. Yes, the grandchildren can shake their heads and think we’re nuts, but we know where it’s at. Led by the Lincoln Traditional Jazz Band, we’re gonna have a good time — you might even say a ball — around the old Steinway upstairs at Bemis Hall on January 4.

Lincoln Academy with MaryBeth Wise: From source to tap — Lincoln’s water system
January 7 at 12:30 p.m.
Come to Bemis Hall on Monday, Jan. 7 at 12:30 when MaryBeth Wiser, Lincoln’s Superintendent of the Water discusses “From Source to Tap: Lincoln’s Water System.” How does water get from its source in nature to your tap and what happens to it in between? Find out where Lincoln gets its water, how it is treated, how it is tested, what it is tested for, how you know if there is ever a problem with your water, and how the Water Department makes sure that water will be available when you turn on the tap. The COA provides beverages and dessert. The lectures last about an hour, including a question and answer period. Participants are welcome to stay after the program to continue their discussion. All ages welcome

Free wellness clinics for all ages
January 8 at 10 a.m.
Meet with a nurse at 50 Wells Rd. in Lincoln Woods on Tuesday, Jan. 8 from 10 a.m.–noon or Bemis Hall on Tuesday, Jan. 15 from 9–11 a.m. Blood pressure, nutrition and fitness, medication management, chronic disease management, resources, and more. Services provided by Emerson Hospital Home Care. The Bemis Hall clinic is supported by the Pierce House.

Would you like to share writing memoirs with others?
January 9 at 10 a.m.
If you are interested in writing a memoir or just curious about what goes on in the memoir group, please come to the first winter meeting of the Memoir Group on Wednesday, Jan. 9 from 10 a.m.–noon at Bemis Hall and find out what we do. If you like what you hear and you want to continue, the cost of the ten-week term is $75. The dates for the term are January 9 and 23; February 6 and 20; March 6 and 20; April 3 and 17; and May 1 and 15. If you want more information, call Connie Lewis 781-259-9415 or email her at conlewis1000@gmail.com. [Read more…] about Council on Aging activities in January

Category: arts, educational, food, health and science, history, seniors

South Lincoln efforts continue with workshop for businesses

December 20, 2018

As part of a larger effort to revitalize the Lincoln Station area, the town is sponsoring a free workshop for Lincoln’s storefront business owners titled “Retail Best Practices: The Power of Presentation” on Wednesday, Jan. 9 from 8–9:30 a.m. at the Rural Land Foundation office at Lincoln Station (145 Lincoln Rd., second floor).

The session led by Christine Moynihan of Retail Visioning. Her program aims to help business owners improve the look and feel of their establishments as well as the customer experience and business planning and marketing in print and online. Attendees are also invited to participate in a private one-on-one free consultation with Moynihan in January or early February and could be eligible to receive a small grant to help implement recommendations made by the consultant.

For more information about the program or to register, contact Jennifer Burney, Director Planning and Land Use, at burneyj@lincolntown.org or 781-259-2684. Registration is not required but seating may be limited.

Funding for the workshop comes from a grant awarded to the South Lincoln Planning and Implementation Committee, which is steering several simultaneous projects aimed at revitalizing the area around Lincoln Station.

Other SLPIC projects

The MBTA subcommittee has recommended a list of improvements to the train station and commuter parking lots and expects to receive $500,000 from the state to pay for a study to design those improvements. The group is soliciting opinions as to whether the inbound and outbound train stops should be on the same side of the tracks, and whether non-Lincoln residents, or whether out-of-town commuters would be willing to pay for parking using a smartphone app. People can respond on the South Lincoln Revitalization Project website or by texting 781-702-3466.

Another SLPIC subcommittee is looking at zoning changes in South Lincoln that would encourage residential or mixed-use development in the area. The town hired Weston & Sampson more than a year ago to look at options for relocating and/or consolidating DPW operations on Lewis Street. Among the possibilities: moving the entire DPW to the transfer station, or co-locating some DPW functions on other land near Hanscom Field.

The study was expected to take only three months but is still not finished; the firm is expected to provide an update to SLPIC in January. “The work has taken longer due to the amount of parcels they had to review and apply the analysis to,” Burney said. “Unfortunately, projects often take longer than expected.”

Much of the study has consisted at examining and rating other possible DPW sites in town, as well as costs associated with any relocation. However, some North Lincoln residents have already voiced concerns about the idea of moving some or all of the DPW’s functions to the transfer station site.

With the help of grants, SLPIC’s Wayfinding Team has already installed wayfinding signs and a “pocket park” with a kiosk and bike repair station next to the railroad tracks. Among the items on the group’s to-do list for 2019: conducting a parking and sewer feasibility study, and seeking funds to spruce up the park-like area between Donelan’s and Lincoln Woods. A June 2017 report presented design ideas along with a cost estimate of $100,000.

Category: businesses, government, land use, news, South Lincoln/HCA*

New Minuteman High School on track for fall 2019 opening

December 20, 2018

Architect’s rendering of the new Minuteman High School (click to enlarge).

Construction on Minuteman High School in Lincoln is progressing smoothly and the new building will open its doors to students in September 2019.

The new building broke ground in June 2017 after years of effort, as Minuteman had to secure Town Meeting approvals from every town in the Minuteman school district before the project could be bonded. Faced with having to assume a portion of the school construction debt, seven of the 16 towns including Lincoln that sent very few students to Minuteman withdrew from the district. The other towns that withdrew are Belmont, Boxborough, Carlisle, Sudbury, Wayland, and Weston. The project cleared its last hurdle in September 2016 with a district-wide vote.

Before the withdrawal vote, a Lincoln working group determined that it would be cheaper to send Lincoln students to Minuteman or another vocational school as out-of-district students — even with an added capital fee and out-of-district tuition — than to remain in the district and pay a share of the debt. However, Lincoln has benefited from building permit fees of approximately $1 million from Minuteman — money that is being applied as the “free cash” portion of the budget for the Lincoln School project.

Students from Lincoln and other non-member towns are still eligible to enroll at Minuteman or other vocational school, but only if there are spaces available.

The Massachusetts School Building Authority is funding $44 million of the $145 million cost for the school, which is designed for 628 students. A repair-only option would have cost $105 million.

Before work began, Minuteman hired an archeological firm to check for any historical artifacts but didn’t find any. However, excavation uncovered a large rock that probably marked the site of gatherings for several Native American tribes including the Abenaki. Workers planned to remove it with explosives, but officials decided to move it aside temporarily and then install it in a place of honor once work is complete.

“It’s a significant piece of history we wanted to honor and maintain that [shows what] this land and this ground is about,” Director/Superintendent Edward Bouquillon said in this video about the rock. This page on the Minuteman project website has links to more videos, including a 3D virtual tour of the completed building as well as construction updates shot with drones (the most recent one was filmed on November 30).

The current high school building just over the town line in Lexington will be torn down and replaced with athletic fields and parking, which were formerly on the Lincoln portion of the property. The district plans to explore public/private partnerships to develop an athletic complex and other facilities for use by its students and the Minuteman School District members. Lexington has promised funding for synthetic turf so organizations from that town will have somewhat greater access, Bouquillon said. 

Category: land use, Minuteman HS project*, schools

Ruth Wales, 1927-2018

December 19, 2018

Ruth J. Wales

A public memorial service will be held at Pierce House in Lincoln on January 26, 2019 at 1 p.m. for Ruth Johnstone Wales. The former Christian Science Monitor page 1 editor and long-time Lincoln Historical District Commission chair passed away shortly before her 91st birthday, on December 2 in Belmont, with two of her daughters by her side.

Ruth was a purposeful planner, meticulous and particular, for whom making contributions to society was extremely important. She was independent and encouraged independence in her children. She had high expectations for herself and others, but was extremely supportive to family and friends.  She was politically liberal but personally conservative — frugal and self-sacrificing, while remaining generous to those she loved. 

Ruth, the daughter of Frederika Ammarell Johnstone and Robert Montgomery Johnstone, was born in Hollis, Queens in New York City on Christmas Day in 1927. Her father was a businessman and her mother was an artist. She was raised a Christian Scientist and remained faithful to her beliefs as a long-time member of the First Church of Christ Scientist in Concord.

After graduating from high school, Ruth won a scholarship to University of Chicago, where she received her bachelor’s degree. Her lifelong love of learning continuing through graduate school at Northeastern University, where she received her master’s degree in education, and after her working career was over, she was an avid participant in the Harvard University Institute for Learning in Retirement.

Ruth met R. Langdon Wales while working at the Christian Science Monitor in Boston after college and married him in Hollis, N.Y., on September 9, 1951. They enjoyed a loving relationship that produced four children: Roland, Rebecca and twins, Amy and Rachel.  Langdon was a mechanical engineer and inventor and his work took them to Reading, Mass., then briefly to East Aurora, N.Y., before settling in Lincoln, where they built their dream home — a mid-century Modern house designed by architects Hoover & Hill on two acres in the Brown’s Wood neighborhood. Amy and Rachel were born there shortly after the family moved there in 1959. For 57 years, Ruth continued living at 18 Moccasin Hill, nestled in the woods above Valley Pond, where she loved to swim, in the home where she and Lang had raised their family.

Ruth’s work life took hold after her younger daughters entered school and she taught grade school at nearby Hanscom Air Force Base. She then became a technical editor for Mitre Corp., making use of her love of words and attention to detail. From there she returned to the Christian Science Monitor as an editor, working her way up to editing the front page of the daily newspaper and later became editor of the international edition. Ruth considered her time at the Monitor to be her dream job and found it enormously exciting and fulfilling. She continued working there until 2001, retiring at age 74.

Ruth and Lang maintained an active social life, taking up Scottish country dancing with a Concord group that held weekly dances, a New Year’s Eve Hogmanay, regional balls in full regalia, weekend dancing retreats in New Hampshire — and even world travel with Scottish Dancing Tours. 

They took their young family on outdoor adventures, frequently canoeing, camping and hiking, climbing a majority of the peaks of New Hampshire’s White Mountains. As the children grew up and left the nest, Ruth began to travel internationally with Lang, which she loved. Taking advantage of Lang’s work in Italy, they also traveled to Germany, Russia, Sweden, England, and Scotland, and also to southern Africa to visit their daughter in the Peace Corps. 

Both made contributions to their community, with Lang active on the Planning Commission and Ruth active with the Lincoln League of Women Voters and representing Lincoln on the Minuteman Regional Vocational Technical High School Committee. Long after her term ended, she referred to “my school” and enjoyed taking her visitors on tours.

Both Ruth and Lang enjoyed early music, and Ruth learned to play the harpsichord that Lang started building in their Lincoln home (it was finished by Peter Watchhorn after Lang’s death). Her time with Lang was cut short in 1989 when he died unexpectedly at age 62. She continued on, working at the Monitor and following her interests with friends and family. She purchased a small condo in the Fenway area of Boston to be closer to the Monitor.

An avid appreciator of the arts, Ruth enjoyed listening to classical music at the nearby Boston Symphony and the Boston Ballet, and going to numerous theater performances with a friend or family member, as she had previously done with Lang. In retirement, she frequently used her condo as home base during the week while attending classes at Harvard.

She continued to travel throughout the United States, visiting her college roommate Sally Raisbeck in Hawaii and going on tours with groups to England, Scotland, Australia, and New Zealand and with her daughter Rebecca to Kenya, Tanzania, Belize, Turkey, Greece, and Italy.

An avid reader, Ruth favored classics, murder mysteries, female authors, biographies, and local history and encouraged all family members to attend college, helping nearly all of her grandchildren, in addition to her own children, earn a bachelor’s degree or greater.

She enhanced the native plants in her landscape and loved the woods of Lincoln. She frequently visited Lincoln Conservation lands as well as Great Meadows in Concord for walks and wildlife.  In addition to her swims at Valley Pond, she loved to eat outdoors in her screen house, rain or shine, temperature permitting.

Ruth with her good friend Lucretia Giese and others were passionate preservers of architectural heritage on the Lincoln Historical District and Lincoln Historical Commission. She and Lang were founding members and advocates for Brown’s Wood preservation, houses, and history.  Her commitment extended to carefully maintaining their home on Moccasin Hill and preserving its original design features with the help of artisan, woodworker, and carpenter Norman Levey, who ran his business out of Lang’s large garage shop for decades.

Ruth’s artistic talents included painting, hooked rugs, sewing, calligraphy, silkscreening, and sketch-booking. She was a collector of art produced by talented friends and acquaintances. An involuntary collector of owls that began with concrete “Howie” (who “lived” outside and looked in through a window next to a door of the house, and was named for Howland Owl of Pogo fame), Ruth found herself identified as a lover of owls. Howie inspired family and friends to search the world for owls to give her, and her collection of owls in all sizes and forms numbered in the hundreds.

Ruth was passionate about family and made a family genealogy book for each of her children with many details about five main branches of the family. She and Lang had traveled to Scotland to learn more family history and later to Schwabendorf, Germany for a 300th anniversary for all descendants. She loved family reunions and encouraged children and their kids to gather every five years in a new special place — Cape Cod cabins, Sturbridge Village, Saddleback Maine cottages, Blue Heron Maple Sugar Farm and Stump Sprouts cross-country ski lodge in Western Mass, Maho Bay Camps on St. John in the U.S. Virgin Islands, Wayside Inn in Sudbury, and, naturally, in Lincoln. Thanks to these family gatherings, her six grandchildren from three households are all close friends. A number of her children’s friends and partners looked up to her as a sort of second mom, including Peg Rawson Shealy, Camila Akerlund, and Terri Young, and eagerly befriended adult friends of her children and learned about their lives and welcomed their children.

Ruth is survived by her son Roland and his wife Donna; daughter Rebecca and her partner Chuck; daughter Amy; daughter Rachel; and grandchildren Marissa (with husband Amit), Benjamin, Fenic, Carin, Christopher, and Robert. Also surviving are Ruth’s nephews, children of brother Robert Johnstone and wife Peggy, now deceased: Doug (with wife Karen, son Brian with his wife Dariana, and grandson Avery), and Richard (with wife Kathy and children Danny and Sarah, with her husband Scott and children Cameron and Everett).

Ruth is also survived by lifelong friends, Phyllis Rappaport of Kalamazoo, Mich., and Marie Tegeler of Hingham, who first met because their three mothers were friendly. The three stayed in close touch over many years. Donations in lieu of flowers may be made to Massachusetts Audubon Society (click here to donate, or click here to leave remembrances and condolences.

Category: obits

News acorns

December 16, 2018

Give the Squirrel as a gift!

What do you get the Lincolnite who has everything? A one-year gift subscription to the Lincoln Squirrel for friends, neighbors, relatives, and business associates is the gift that keeps giving all year round, with fresh stories almost every weekday about our always-interesting town of Lincoln. Yearly subscriptions are usually $48, but act before December 24 and get one (or more) for just $39. Call 617-710-5542 or email lincolnsquirrelnews@gmail.com for details.

CCF’s Hashley profiled

Jennifer Hashley, Pete Lowy, and their son Abraham at Codman Community Farms.

Lincoln’s Jennifer Hashley, director for New Entry Sustainable Farming Project (a Tufts University initiative that works to strengthen local food systems by supporting new farmers) is one four women farmers profiled by Edible Boston in its winter issue (click here for story). She is also advisor to her husband Pete Lowy, the farm manager at Codman Community Farm, where they live with their son.

Library closings

The Lincoln Public Library will be closed for Christmas on Monday and Tuesday, Dec. 24 and 25. It will close at 5 p.m. on New Year’s Eve and will be closed all day on Tuesday, Jan. 1, 2019.

Lecture series on the 1920s

A six-part lecture series on “The Roaring ’20s: Ford, Flappers and Fitzgerald” with history professor Gary Hylander begins on Sunday, Jan. 6 at 1:30 p.m. at the Lincoln Public Library. The era was known for the booming popularity of movies and the automobile as well as women’s suffrage and Prohibition.

Hylander led an earlier series in Lincoln on FDR’s America last spring. He is a visiting professor at Framingham State University and Boston University School of Education and a frequent lecturer at library forums, historical societies, and professional organizations. The talks are free and open to all; no registration necessary. Subsequent dates are January 27; February 10, 17, and 24; and March 31.

Category: educational, history

Six-year-old thrilled to win Pierce House raffle

December 13, 2018

William Kaluzniacki sits proudly next to the Pierce House dollhouse he recently won in a raffle (click to enlarge).

William Kaluzniacki of Lincoln won the Pierce House dollhouse raffle, and he couldn’t be happier—fixing up dollhouses is his thing, even though he’s only six.

“This is perfect—he really loves carpentry, and he’s always creating small-scale furniture at home,” said his mother, Joanna Wills. Her son got interested in carpentry after his older brother took wood shop and made some furniture at Belmont Hill School, and he’s already working on a dollhouse project, His Lincoln School teacher, Siobhan Rooney, let him take her mother’s dollhouse home to make some minor repairs.

The Pierce House dollhouse was originally owned by Barbara Frentz Kurson, an interior designer and decorator who lived in Concord. She commissioned the Pierce House replica dollhouse and decorated it with furniture. After her death, her daughter, Robin Frentz Isaacs of Lincoln, donated it to the Pierce House. The proceeds from the raffle will help fund ongoing maintenance and repairs to the full-size version of the house, which was built in 1900.  

The dollhouse is in pretty good shape overall, and repairs will be a lot easier because it came with all the original documentation, paints and other materials. So far, William has replaced some of the tiny cedar shakes on the roof “and maybe a mullion or two,” and he even made a miniature table saw and ladder to sit outside the house to show it’s under construction. He might even install electric lighting inside, she said.

“It’s given him a little more of a creative outlet,” Wills said. “He looks forward to showing it to everyone who comes to the house.”

Category: charity/volunteer, kids

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