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Letter to the editor: Mattes seeks support as Bemis trustee

March 13, 2016

letter

To the editor:

I am writing to ask the citizens of Lincoln for your support of my candidacy for the Bemis Trust at the polls on Monday, March 28. (This year, the election follows our Annual Town Meeting by one week.) In the 1990s, I was honored to serve as a Bemis trustee.

The Bemis Trust is an example of the generosity of one of Lincoln’s luminaries: George Bemis. In 1892, Mr. Bemis provided money for “a new Town Hall in which shall be a room of sufficient capacity and proper construction for public lectures… and to provide an annual course of public lectures in said Hall of an instructive and elevating character,” resulting in the Bemis Free Lecture Series. In 1982, another generous Lincolnite, John Todd, left a bequest to complement the Bemis endowment and expand the charge to provide “entertainment and recreation.”

The series has brought the town together to be entertained and to both listen to and discuss important topics of the day. I would hope, if honored with election this year, to work with fellow trustees to continue that tradition and to continue the tradition of collaboration with other town organizations, both public and private. In my past life as a trustee, we worked with the Lincoln Public Schools and the PTO to bring programs to the classroom and the lecture hall. Who can forget the wolves of “Mission: Wolf” walking around a circle of children seated on the floor of the Smith gym!

We also co-sponsored, with the Rural Land Foundation (RLF) and Lincoln Land Conservation Trust, a memorable evening with Warren Flint, Sr., who shared stories of Lincoln and how our innovative land conservation efforts came to be. Also, the Bemis Trust worked with the Planning Board and the RLF to bring a weekend of events, culminating in several hundred Lincolnites coming together in an all-day charrette to dream and reimagine the future for our commercial retail center—brought to reality as The Mall at Lincoln Station.

The Bemis Trust has brought us memorable events over the years, and the current trustees have some exciting event planned for this spring and fall. I would be honored and delighted to join them for future planning. I ask for your consideration and your vote on Monday, March 28.

Sincerely,

Sara Mattes
71 Conant Rd.


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: arts, government, letters to the editor

News acorns

March 13, 2016

musicmanMiddle schoolers perform “Music Man Jr.”

Come see “Music Man Jr.,” based on  the classic Broadway show and 1962 movie, in the Donaldson auditorium on Wednesday, March 16 at 3 p.m., and Thursday and Friday, March 17 and 18 at 7 p.m. The story follows the escapades of of a fast-talking salesman who masquerades as a traveling band leader and his plans to swindle the naive parents of a small Iowa town. Instead, he falls for the town’s librarian and risks everything to be with her. This production features a cast and crew of close to 70 students and has been supported by dozens of parent volunteers. Drama teacher Kristen Hall is the show’s director and producer. Musical direction is by music teacher Blake Siskavich and choreography by fifth-grade teacher Maurisa Davis. Tickets will be sold at the door: adults $10, students and seniors $5. Suitable for all ages.

Library/Aka Bistro discount

The Lincoln Public Library and AKA Bistro are offering a 10 percent food discount (drinks not included) for Lincoln residents with Lincoln Public Library cards. For more information, see the AKA Bistro website.

Environmental film festival from river group

OARS (a nonprofit group that works to protect, preserve, and enhance the natural and recreational features of the Assabet, Sudbury, and Concord Rivers and their watersheds) is hosting an evening of films from the largest environmental film festival in the nation on Wednesday, March 30 from 7-10 p.m. at Maynard’s Fine Arts Theatre Place (19 Summer St.) With the theme “A Change of Course,” these engaging films bring theater-goers close to magnificent wilderness, as well as to the people who work to protect their communities’ environment. Sixteen films ranging from 2 to 18 minutes will be shown. including “Denali,” “The Fable of the Wolf” and “The Accidental Environmentalist.” Tickets are $13 and may be purchased online, or contact OARS at 978-369-3956 or office@oars3rivers.org.

Category: arts, conservation, kids, nature

Holy Week services at Lincoln churches announced

March 13, 2016

easter1First Parish Church
  • Sunday, March 27 (Easter Sunday) – Ministerial intern Mandy Beal will lead an Easter sunrise service at 6:20 a.m. on Old Lexington Road at the top of the Flint fields. The Rev. Manish Mishra-Marzetti will preside over Easter Sunday services of reflection and worship at 9 a.m. and 11 a.m. in the sanctuary at 4 Bedford Road. All are welcome.
St. Anne’s-in-the-Fields
  • Sunday, March 20 (Palm Sunday) – Holy Eucharist, 8 a.m.; Holy Eucharist with choir, 10 a.m.
  • Thursday, March 24 (Maundy Thursday) – Maundy Thursday service with foot-washing and stripping of the altar, 7 p.m.
  • Friday, March 25 (Good Friday) – Good Friday service, 12 p.m.; Good Friday family service, 4 p.m.
  • Saturday, March 26 (Holy Saturday) – The Great Vigil, 7 p.m.
  • Sunday, March 27 (Easter Sunday) – Holy Eucharist with Choir at 8:30 a.m. and 11 a.m.
St. Joseph Church/St. Julia Church
  • Sunday, March 20 (Palm Sunday) – Masses at St. Joseph Church at 7:30 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Masses at St. Julia Church at 9 a.m., 11:15 a.m. and 5 p.m.
  • Thursday, March 24 (Holy Thursday) – Mass of the Lord’s Supper at 7:30 p.m. in St. Julia Church, followed by Eucharistic procession, prayer and adoration in the Parish Center until 9:30 p.m. No morning Masses.
  • Friday, March 25 (Good Friday) – Celebration of the Lord’s Passion (with Holy Communion)  at 7:30 p.m.  in St. Julia Church (no Mass on Good Friday). Stations of the Cross in St. Julia Church at 2 p.m. and St. Joseph Church at 3 p.m.
  • Saturday, March 26 (Holy Saturday) – Easter Vigil,  7:30 p.m.  in St. Julia Church (no morning Mass or 4 p.m. mass)
  • Sunday, March 27 (Easter Sunday) – Masses at St. Joseph Church at at 7:30 a.m., 9 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Masses at St. Julia Church at 9 a.m. and 11:15 a.m., in church and hall at both times. No 5 p.m. Mass. Note: parishioners are urged encouraged to attend the 9 a.m. Mass at St. Joseph Church. It is being added for Easter Sunday only and is likely to be less crowded and lessen the overflow at the 10:30 a.m. Mass.

Category: news

Letter to the editor: support gun law resolution at Town Meeting

March 10, 2016

letter

To the editor:

We have all been shocked at the horror of gun violence in America, shocked again at the refusal of Congress to enact responsible common sense gun safety regulations, and shocked a third time at the immoral resistance of the NRA leadership and the gun manufacturer’s lobby to any suggestion of more appropriate gun safety regulation even in the face of the horrific mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School.

Warrant article 36 (see pg. 69 in the warrant) at the March 19 Town Meeting, which seeks support for “A Petition to the U S. Congress to Adopt a Uniform National Gun Safety Law Applying Equally to All States,” encourages our federal elected officials to pursue uniform national regulations to finally establish a more humane standard for gun safety applying equally to all states.

[Read more…] about Letter to the editor: support gun law resolution at Town Meeting

Category: government, letters to the editor

Letter to the editor: Special-ed may not ‘make the cut’ at future Minuteman

March 9, 2016

letter

To the editor:

At the Special Town Meeting, Minuteman high School’s Dr. Ed Bouquillon presented a slide I initially thought was disingenuous and absurd. The slide showed Minuteman’s costs decreasing while costs at other voc/tec schools are rising. I later realized it may have been the most insightful slide presented that night.

We saw at the meeting that all three new vocational-technical (Chapter 74) schools in Massachusetts were undersubscribed before new construction and now have waiting lists. If the trend continues, and given this data on neighboring schools along with Gov. Baker’s commitment to vocational education, the new Minuteman school will soon be at capacity.

The new Minuteman High School is being built for 628 students, a significant decrease from the present number of 800. State regulation requires Chapter 74 schools to accept students based on a five-point evaluation process, with “in-district” students being given priority. Legally, schools cannot deny acceptance based on the student having an Individual Education Plan (IEP). However, given the smaller school size coupled with the increased demand, it is safe to say a large percentage of students with IEPs will be no longer make the cut. This is significant because as also noted at the meeting, Minuteman’s current student population includes 47 percent students with an IEP.

The decreasing percentage of students at Minuteman with IEPs will result in lower costs. This will start an interesting feedback loop: with a greater number of high-achieving students attending the school, more higher-achieving students will be attracted to the school, again reducing the number of students with special needs. Students with IEPs will either stay in their comprehensive high school or go to other Chapter 74 schools, increasing their costs while the top students are drawn to Minuteman.

It appears that the mid-2020s end game is Minuteman becoming an elite vocational-technical school focused on hands-on STEM education, attracting the top students while other voc-tech schools pick up the education and costs of students with a higher level of need—students who no longer make the cut at Minuteman. Lincoln students who have in the past benefited the most from attending Minuteman may no longer be eligible.

This brings us full circle to Dr. Bouquillon’s slide showing reduced costs at Minuteman and increasing costs at surrounding voc/tec schools. This is simple game theory (gentrification of vocational-technical education). How disappointing that no one, not even Minuteman, mentioned this likely outcome at the meeting. We in Lincoln will soon be left hosting an elite vocational-technical high school featuring hands-on STEM education and our children who traditionally had the most gain from attending Minuteman will not be able to participate.

Sincerely,

Bob Antia
165 South Great Rd.


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: government, schools

Mangini family thrilled with Mark’s Oscar for “Mad Max: Fury Road”

March 9, 2016

Mark A. Mangini (left) and David White backstage at the Oscars after winning their Best Sound Editing award for "Mad Max: Fury Road." Photo by Christopher Polk/Getty Images

Mark A. Mangini (left) and David White backstage at the Oscars after winning their Best Sound Editing award for “Mad Max: Fury Road.” Photo by Christopher Polk/Getty Images

By Alice Waugh

Lincoln’s Tim Mangini is very proud of his older brother these days. Mark Mangini, a 1974 graduate of Lincoln-Sudbury Regional High School, won an Academy Award with David White on February 28 for Best Sound Editing for the post-apocalyptic action film “Max Max: Fury Road.”

Mark and Tim—two of the six Sudbury Manginis who graduated from L-S between 1973 and 1981—have also collaorated on several occasions. In 1979, Tim worked with his brother at Hanna-Barbera Productions on the sound tracks of several Saturday morning cartoons. Several years later, he rejoined Mark as an apprentice sound editor and worked his way up to become a sound editor at Mark’s company. He is now senior director of production technology at WGBH and spent his first 18 years there as director of broadcast for “Frontline.”

This was the third Oscar nomination and first win for Mark, who has more than 125 films to his credit. He is renowned for recording and editing a new roar track for Leo the Lion, the MGM lion mascot, according to Wikipedia.

“All of us were rooting hard for Mark as we watched with good friends,” said Tim (L-S ’77), who met his wife Janey Winchell at L-S in the senior play (their daughter Amelia is currently a junior). “There was a collective roar when the award was announced, and every one of us in the family is immensely proud of what he has accomplished. Working with him in Los Angeles gave me some insight into his immense creativity and total dedication to his craft. Post-production can be a brutal business. Mark spent countless hours in dark rooms away from his family making the films he labored on better. It is so very rewarding for us to see him acknowledged for his work on ‘Mad Max’ and ultimately for his body of work.”

Once the post-Oscar hoopla died down a little, the Lincoln Squirrel interviewed Mark via email. He also kindly provided the Squirrel with photos from his Sudbury days.


mark1

When did you graduate from L-S, and what were your interests growing up?

I graduated in 1974. I was a hobbyist filmmaker as a kid as well as a guitarist. I played on the L-S varsity soccer team and continued playing club soccer here in Los Angeles until I was 55. Always loved movies but never understood there was a career in it.

What inspired you to get into sound editing, and how did you learn to do it? Were you an AV nerd as a kid? 🙂

In 1976, I decided that I wanted to work in movies in any capacity, though I had no training whatsoever. Rather than consider film school, which I didn’t, I bootstrapped the whole thing and moved to Los Angeles just hoping to find a job. My first gig was at Hanna-Barbera Studios, the company that was famous for Saturday morning cartoons like “The Flintstones” and “Scooby-Doo.” My first job in the film industry was editing sound for those cartoons for three years. I apprenticed for about a year and became quite good at it and was promoted quickly until I was running my own shows

mark3I had the good fortune of having some the great sound editors in the business working all around me, and they seemed to love a kid who was curious and willing to put in his own time to learn, which I did, a lot. I befriended Joe Hanna, one of the great animators of that era and owner of the company, and he gave me great advice on careers and success. I was not an AV nerd of any kind. I had no technical proclivities of any kind. I was a musician and and a soccer player when I left for Los Angeles.

What did it feel like when they called your and David’s names? How did the whole Oscar pageant compare to the other times you’ve been nominated?

The feeling is pretty hard to describe. I’d been nominated three times before and every time, I thought I was going to win. The anxiety is very crushing, and “The Revenant” had been on a roll recently, scooping up awards. But this one felt a little different. I was much more confident because I knew “Mad Max” was special. I also had been asking around the community what people thought about the nominated films and got lots of good feedback. Nonetheless, nothing prepares one for going up on stage in front of a billion people and speaking. If anyone was watching closely, my first words on stage were bleeped out because I used the “F” word. Just overcome with emotion and joy, really. Didn’t script that—just blurted it out.

mark2This Oscar pageant was very different because “Mad Max” had been nominated for 10 awards. It was, clearly, an exceptional film made more so by the very collegial and family-like atmosphere George Miller creates for the films he works on. Though all the nominees were from different disciplines, we bonded like a tribe that we called the “Mad Maxers” and were rooting for each other at every award announcement. It all made for a wonderful and exciting night that was made even more so by all the others winning.

I’ll tell you, though, that I’m still not fully sure I won. It’s so hard to watch that moment as they open the envelope (which they gave me as a gift). Everything goes into slow motion and you are very hyper-aware. Your mind is racing and wondering “what if it’s not me…what if it is… is it me… did I get passed over again?” It’s a bizarre self-indulgent moment that is hard to stomach. I’m still not believing they said my name—but glad they did.

What do you consider to be your specialty or greatest strength as a sound editor?

The ability to understand people’s needs. The ability to interpret what people say into what they really want. A massively profound work ethic. A desire to always do something new and creative. My love of good craft. My love of storytelling. My love of working communally.

Any anecdotes or general impressions about working on “Mad Max: Fury Road”?

I was sent to Sydney, Australia to begin my work on the film. We were working round the clock from 8 a.m. t0 midnight and the production was catering every meal at the studio. After about two weeks I was getting a little tired of the same food over and over again. One morning, as we were passing the catering team setting up, an associate asked me “What’s for lunch?” to which I replied with a scowl, “I bet it’s the lamb.” Suddenly the cook’s head popped up from behind the counter. I didn’t see her and knew she heard me. The next day I came down with food poisoning in the afternoon. I approached George Miller, our director, and explained my symptoms and asked his permission to go home and recover. He said “Lift up your shirt and lie down” and proceeded to remove all the items from our communal dining table. He probed my intestines for a short while then gave me a prescription and a diagnosis. For you see, before George Miller became a film director, he was a doctor.

Category: arts, features

News acorns

March 8, 2016

acornAntia invite residents to meet Planning Board candidate

Lincoln residents are invited to the home of Sharon and Bob Antia at 165 S. Great Rd. for coffee and conversation on Saturday, March 12 to meet Planning Board candidate Jennie Morris Gundy between 3:30 and 5:30 p.m. You are welcome, though not required, to let us know you are coming by calling 617-593-0141 or emailing Sharon.antia@gmail.com.

Self-defense class for teenage girls

High school and college-aged girls who are residents of Lincoln and Sudbury are invited to participate in RESIST (Realistic Escape Strategies and Instinct-based Self-defense Training), a course that teaches how to escape from an attacker by using instinct-based moves. The two-session class is taught by the Lincoln Police Department on Monday and Wednesday, March 14 and 16 from 3:30-6:30 p.m. at Lincoln-Sudbury Regional High School. The class is free, but participants must pre-register and the class limited to 16 students.

On Day 1, we will talk about general safety and dating safety before learning and then practicing physical self-defense moves like strikes, blocks and knee strikes. For Day 2, students and instructors will don protective gear and participants will be “attacked” using the learned moves to escape. This part of the course is intense but amazing and empowering. For questions and to register, please contact Jena Salon at jenasalon@gmail.com. This class is funded by the Ogden Codman Trust, the Domestic Violence Services Network, Inc., and the Lincoln Police Department.

Category: government, news

Obituaries

March 8, 2016

Clockwise from top left: Ray Tomlinson, Lorraine Chur Wang, Katherine Staples, xxx, Hazel MacInnis.

Clockwise from top left: Ray Tomlinson, Lorraine Chur Wang, Katherine Staples, Claire Daniels, Hazel MacInnis.

(Editor’s note: This article has been updated to remove an incorrect link in the Ray Tomlinson segment.)

Ray Tomlinson, 74 (March 5) — inventor of modern email who chose the “@” symbol to connect the username with the destination address. He and his partner Karen Seo raised miniature sheep in Lincoln. See obituaries by the Associated Press and the BBC.

Lorraine Chur Wang, 95 (March 1) — widow of An Wang, founder of Wang Laboratories, Inc.; helped establish Wang Center for the Performing Arts.

Hazel MacInnis, 93 (February 24) — former teacher’s aide in Lincoln.

Claire Daniels, 87 (February 6) — retired employee at the South Postal Annex.

Katherine Staples, 79 (February 2) — 35-year teaching career in Lincoln, Boston and Acton.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Category: news, obits

Governor’s Council debate features Lincoln’s Georgiou

March 7, 2016

donkeyLincoln attorney Peter Georgiou, a candidate for the Governor’s Council in the upcoming primary election in September, will be featured at a debate on Saturday, March 12 in Bemis Hall. The event, which is sponsored by the Lincoln Democratic Town Committee, will serve to introduced Georgiou and the other candidates and inform Lincoln voters of the role the Council plays. There will be a reception with coffee and refreshments starting at 9:30 a.m., and the debate will be held from 10 a.m. to noon.

The Massachusetts Governor’s Council, also known as the Executive Council, is composed of eight individuals elected from districts and the Lieutenant Governor, who serves ex officio. The eight councilors are elected from their respective districts every two years. The Council meets weekly to record advice and consent on warrants for the state treasury, pardons and commutations, and recording advice and consent to gubernatorial appointments such as judges, clerk-magistrates, public administrators, members of the Parole Board, Appellate Tax Board, Industrial Accident Board and Industrial Accident Reviewing Board, notaries, and justices of the peace.

Category: government

Residents invited to get greener with free home energy assessment

March 7, 2016

solarThe Green Energy Committee (GEC) and the town of Lincoln are sponsoring the Lincoln Energy Challenge, a new residential initiative to help reduce overall energy use and save money on energy costs. The ultimate goal is to decrease Lincoln’s residential energy use 10 percent by 2020.

Thanks to government incentives and advances in technology, many new energy-saving options have become available. Volunteers from the Green Energy Committee have examined these options, many in their own homes, and want to share this knowledge with other residents to:

  • Reduce home energy consumption
  • Increase use of “greener” sources of electricity, particularly solar and wind
  • Consider rooftop solar panels or community solar options

As a first step, the GEC and the Town of Lincoln have selected Next Step Living (NSL), the largest provider of home energy assessments in New England, to coordinate outreach to our residents and offer free assessments. The committee conducted a competitive bidding process to select NSL to implement the program. The goal is for 300 Lincoln residents to complete a no-cost home energy assessment by April 2017 and to implement home improvement projects like air sealing, insulation, and furnace, boiler or appliance upgrades with the help of state-incentivized rebates. While many homes may have had energy assessments, residents are encouraged to get a revised assessment if more than two years have passed.

A home energy assessment takes just a few hours and includes on-the-spot improvements such as no-cost energy-efficient LED light bulbs and water-saving devices for faucets and shower heads. Each measure identified in an assessment reduces the amount of energy used in a home. If Lincoln residents implement the recommended measures, NSL estimates that the total savings will exceed $28,000 per year.

To schedule a free Home Energy Assessment, call 800-769-2864 or visit www.LincolnEnergyChallenge.com. For questions email Lincoln Green Energy Committee member Sue Klem at susan.m.klem@gmail.com.

Category: conservation, government

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