Buying and selling on eBay

Workshop Leader Ellen Pierce has been successfully buying and selling treasures on eBay for years.  Learn the tricks of how to maximize your profit and find great buys too! Sponsored by Friends of the Milton Public Library.

WHEN:    Wednesday, February 3, 2010; 7pm
WHERE:  Keys Community Room, Lower Level

Video of a Celtic Crossing

A Celtic Crossing is coming to Milton. Please see our post on the event
here
. NOTE: Get your tickets while you can. This event sold out last year.

Click on “Read more” to view the video.

Sisters have medical mission in Haiti

from The Patriot Ledger

At age 11, she was the oldest of four when her family left Haiti in 1982 for a new life in Massachusetts. Now Geimima Cassagnol Etienne is a 38-year-old nurse at Sherrill House, a skilled nursing and rehabilitation center in Jamaica Plain.

The Milton resident left Friday for Haiti, ready to roll up her sleeves amid the rubble. She packed bandages, aspirin, splints and peanut butter. (Read the full story here.)

Emma Drew named Boston Globe Player of the Week

The Boston Globe named Emma Drew of the MHS Girls Hockey squad a “Player of the Week.” The Milton junior stopped 29 shots on goal and posted a shut out against Norwood. Milton won 1-0. Nice job. You can view all the Players of the Week here.

Letter: Last night at Town Meeting

February 2, 2010

If I were a Town Meeting member I would vote FOR the Temple project, BUT not in it’s current form. I attended Town Meeting last evening. I listened with as open a mind as I could to all of the arguments. I will be there tonight. Here’s my takeaway.
The Temple, CVS, Harvest Foods, the Town of Milton and the Residents of Milton are knowingly harming a small number of Direct Abutters (DA) to the project. The gentlemen from Sweden or others may be an exception. My definition of a DA is an abutter who’s property physically touches the project.

Elected Town officials and zoning laws are to provide a measure of protection for individuals and the Town. As hard as it is, and my hat is off to everyone involved in this process and I congratulate all of you for your open-mindedness, dedication and hard work, a better solution can and must be found.

If I were a TM member I would vote FOR the project if the following were true:

* retain the same number of mature trees that exist on the property today
* be assured all construction & operation is green & energy efficient
* allow for a 50′ buffer on all 4 sides of the property
* remove the CVS drive-thru
* shorter hours of CVS & Harvest to a max of 12 hours per day

If the project is unable to compromise and allow for the above, except for the trees and green construction as these, in my opinion, should be a given of any project in Town going forward, the project must provide the DA with some form of financial compensation. This compensation is an acknowledgement by all beneficiaries of the project of the DA’s pain and suffering. This compensation insures that the DA will also benefit from the project’s success. Financial compensation to come from each of the following in an order of potential financial benefit:

* CVS in stock and/or goods and services
* Food from Harvest Foods
* Tax abatement from the Town
* Scholarship, Charity or Memorial, etc. in the individual abutters’ namefunded by the Temple

A YES voter on this amendment as it stands should be required to stand up and admit that they would not want to live in or purchase a DA home and that they understand, affirm and knowingly acknowledge that their YES vote is causing undue harm to the DA.
Or,
Every home-owning YES voter should be required to put the title to their home in a hat. Then the DA would be allowed to draw the title to their NEW home from that hat. The YES voter and the DA would be required to move into their NEW homes before clearing, blasting and construction begins. This scenario assures that every YES voter will have to confront the reality of powerlessness being thrust upon the DA by well intentioned people and organizations and removes the power from those with money and influence.
Respectively and most sincerely,

Daryl Warner

Whoa . . .what happened?

Well, it felt like it was time to change things up a bit. (Click “Read more” to take a poll.)

This new layout is an attempt to surface more content, more easily; provide an opportunity for advertising;  and, hopefully, give a little more emphasis to issues and events that deserve more prominence.There are some editorial issues that need to be ironed out. The content is all still here and will remain the same.

Dana Farber Benefit: A Celtic Crossing with Pauline Wells

Come enjoy a wonderful night of Irish music and dance and support a great cause – The Jimmy Fund. The Jimmy Fund is the oldest and largest supporter of the Dana Farber Cancer Institute.

The concert will feature Milton resident and standout singer Pauline Wells. She will be joined by the contemporary Irish band, DEVRI, led by Donegal natives Declan Houton and Kevin Doherty.

Tickets are $25 and may be obtained by calling 617-696-7172 or emailing pauline@paulinewells.com.

For more on Ms. Wells, please visit her web site here.

Update: Injured teen hockey players are making progress, slowly

from The Boston Globe

Two Norwood High School varsity hockey players who sustained serious injuries just days apart are making slow progress, with one teen released from Children’s Hospital Boston and the other’s condition upgraded, a school official said. (Read the full story here.)

MHS junior Olivia Beaulieu wins top track honor

from The Boston Globe

Milton junior Olivia Beaulieu was named the top female of the meet after placing fourth in the high jump with a jump of 5 feet and first in the 55-meter hurdles with a time of 8.91 seconds. (Read the full story here.)

It’s time to abolish the death penalty

Learn more about Senior Seminar Editorials here

A Senior Seminar Editorial by Maureen Walsh, MHS 2010

Editorial of the Death Penalty: January 7, 2010

Although the death penalty is banned in many countries around the world, the United States is one country that allows it to remain. Whether capital punishment should remain as a punishment for crimes has been debated for centuries.