Event Spotlight: b.good Burger and Music Festival in SoWa
Find out more about an upcoming event in the South End. South End Patch News
The Week Ahead in the South End: Lots of Live Music
Here's a look at what's coming up in the South End this week. Don't see an event listed? No problem! Add it to the South End events calendar to share it with your ne South End Patch News
The Week Ahead in the South End: Lots of Live Music
Here's a look at what's coming up in the South End this week. Don't see an event listed? No problem! Add it to the South End events calendar to share it with your ne South End Patch News
South End Weekends: Art, Music, and Book Signing
Every weekend, the South End has a lot of different events to offer. Here are a few of your best bests for this weekend. Do you have something going on? Post it to our South End Patch News
South End Weekends: Art, Music, and Book Signing
Every weekend, the South End has a lot of different events to offer. Here are a few of your best bests for this weekend. Do you have something going on? Post it to our South End Patch News
The Week Ahead in the South End: Art and Music
Here's a look at what's coming up in the South End this week. Don't see an event listed? No problem! Add it to the South End events calendar to share it with your ne South End Patch News
Things to Know in the South End Today, May 15: Yoga for Toddlers at Community Music Center
1. Weather: The National Weather Service is predicting an increasingly cloudy day, with a high near 67 degrees, and a 30 percent chance of showers. 2. Yoga for Kids: The Community Music Center of Boston (34 Warren Ave.) is hosting musical yoga classes for toddlers ages 1-3 years old on Wednesdays at 5 p.m. Classes incorporate sitting, standing, and floor poses that the caregiver performs with baby and toddler as well as poses caregiver can do for the child to help develop sensory skills and digestion. Classes are $ 15 at a drop-in rate, or $ 130 for ten classes. See here for more information. 3. South End Resident Elected: Gerard Doherty, MD, chief of Surgery at Boston Medical Center (BMC) chair of the Department of Surgery at Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM) and a South End resident, has been elected as President of the American Association of Endocrine Surgeons (AAES). He will serve as President-Elect through 2014 and as President through 2015. Read more here. 4. Downtown Schools: Learn more about options for downtown schools tonight at “Meet the Schools Night” at Kingsley Montessori School (26 Exeter St.) tonight from 6-7:30 p.m. Representatives from The Advent School, Beacon Hill Nursery School, The Boston Children’s School, John Winthrop School, The Learning Project, Montessori Parent Child Center, Old South Preschool, Park Street School, Pine Village, Spruce Street Nursery School, and the Torit Language Center will be available. See here for more information. 5. Art Show Announced: The South End Community Health Center (1601 Washington St.) is opening a new art exhibition on June 15th at its facility to raise awareness about its mission and its impact in the South End. The artists on display have committed to donate back at least 20 percent of the sale proceeds made during the show to the nonprofit. This year’s artists include: Susan Jane Belton, James Alan Edwards, Cathy England, Nancy Johnson, Evelyn Berde, Jennifer Ellwood, Betty Canick, Chandra Dieppa Ortiz and Vaughn Sills. See here for more information. Things you can do every day on South End Patch: Share your news with the rest of the community. Click here to add an announcement. Add your events to our events calendar. Click here to sign up for breaking news updates. Want up-to-the-minute news? Click here to follow us on Facebook or Twitter. Share your thoughts on your community in a blog. Click here to get started. South End Patch
Boston Faith Leaders Share Music, Words of Peace at Marathon Vigil
Religious leaders from Boston’s Back Bay area offered words of peace, faith and strength for those struggling to cope in the aftermath of the Boston Marathon bombing during an interdenominational service and candlelight vigil held Tuesday at Arlington Street Church in downtown Boston. Held just two blocks from where two explosions Monday afternoon left three dead and around 146 people injured, the church vigil drew a crowd of several hundred who filled pews and balcony seats to hear music, poetry and prayer. The Rev. Kim Crawford Harvie, Arlington Street Church’s senior minister, welcomed the crowd and asked anyone who had run the marathon or been involved in the race to stand and be recognized with a long round of applause. “Yesterday our city was terrorized. Today we gather, heartbroken and angry and afraid,” Harvie said. “But one must not give in to the varying emotions at the root of terrorism. With our presence here at the heart of our heartbroken city we are saying that love is bigger than anger, love is bigger than hate. Love wins.” Harvie prayed “for all those suffering, for peace in our city and for peace in our hearts.” The Rev. Sue Phillips, district executive for the Unitarian Universalist Association of Congregations, spoke of the horror of the prior day’s events in a prayer. “We are on our knees in awe and supplication for we have remembered the incomprehensible value of every human life,” she said. “We have heard the thrum of helicopter blades and wail of sirens. We have smelled the ash and smoke. We have seen the blood-splattered sidewalks and the ravaged bodies of your children. We cannot unsee. Help us, dear God.” The service included several musical selections including “Imagine,” “You’ll Never Walk Alone,” “Amazing Grace” and the hymn “Breathe In, Breathe Out”—written in response to the 9/11 terrorist attacks. The Rev. Rosemary Lloyd, associate minister of First Church in Boston, read Wendell Berry’s poem, “The Peace of Wild Things.” Others who spoke included Catie Scudera, interim minister at Arlington Street Church, and several members of the congregation; the Rev. Rob Mark, pastor of the Church of the Covenant on Newbury Street; Rabbi Howard Berman of the Central Reform Temple on Newbury Street; the Rev. Stephen Kendrick, pastor of First Church in Boston; and the Rev. Father Alex Oneto, pastor of St. Frances Cabrini Old Catholic Mission. Berman read from the diary of Anne Frank: “It’s difficult in times like these: ideals, dreams and cherished hopes rise within us, only to be crushed by grim reality. It’s a wonder I haven’t abandoned all my ideals. They seem so absurd and possible to carry […]
Fun and The Shins Headlining Boston Calling Music Festival at City Hall Plaza
Get your tickets now for the Boston Calling Music Festival because they will be selling out! Popular groups like Fun, The Shins, Of Monsters and Men, for a total of 18 music acts that your grandma has never heard of – will hit the Boston City Hall Plaza stage on the weekend of May 25-26. The full lineup includes several acts scheduled to perform at the Boston Calling Music Festival. The festival is a two-day, two-stage event with access to both stages, food, services and more. All ages are welcome and children younger than 10 are free. Boston Calling is a rain or shine event, so only in the event of a state wide emergency that forces Boston Calling to be canceled, will all tickets purchased in advance be refunded. Ticket sales start Friday, March 8 and be purchased here with prices varying from single days passes for $ 75, weekend passes for $ 130, and VIP tickets for $ 185 for a single day or $ 350 for the weekend. South End Patch
Things to Know in the South End Today, Feb. 27: Live Music at Darryl’s
1. Weather: The National Weather Service is predicting a pretty gross day. It will start out with rain and snow and turn into all rain after 8 a.m. High temperatures will be around 39 degrees. 2. Bass Guitarist at Darryl’s: Bass guitarist Chris Faison, of Soul Fuzion, will perform tonight at 7 p.m. at Darryl’s Corner Bar & Kitchen (604 Columbus Ave.) Faison will be playing different blends of music ranging from Top 40 to Old School. See here for more information. 3. For Middle Schoolers: An “Art Journaling for Fifth-graders and Up” workshop will be held Thursday, February 28 at the South End branch library between 4 and 5 p.m. It’s free and materials will be provided. See here for more information. 4. International Women’s Day: Boston area women are invited to attend the city’s International Women’s Day Celebration on Friday, March 8 at Simmons College (300 The Fenway). A suggested donation of $ 6 per person includes a light continental breakfast and an informative discussion on the issue of women and hunger. RSVP by Monday, March 4 at http://iwd2013.eventbrite.com. 5. Boston-Based Reality Show Premieres Tonight: TNT’s new reality show, “Boston’s Finest,” premieres tonight at 9 p.m. The unscripted show, which is executive produced by Donnie Wahlberg, follows the men and women of the Boston Police Department, promising “an up-close and very personal look at what it takes to protect and serve one of America’s greatest and most distinctive cities.” See here fore information. Things you can do every day on South End Patch: Share your news with the rest of the community. Click here to add an announcement. Add your events to our events calendar. Click here to sign up for breaking news updates. Want up-to-the-minute news? Click here to follow us on Facebook or Twitter. Share your thoughts on your community in a blog. Click here to get started. South End Patch