Events Calendar

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Upcoming Events

Igor Lovchinsky Concert

Feb
5
3:00 pm

Come see Igor Lovchinsky perform on the piano at the Weston Public Library at 3 pm.


Teen Summer Program Expo

Feb
6
5:30 pm

Newton South High School will once again host the annual  Teen Summer Program Expo, for the eighth year in a row.  The Expo will be held Monday, February 6, 2012  5:30 PM to 8:00PM, in the cafeteria located at 140 Brandeis Road, Newton Center.  Admission is free, open to the public and handicapped accessible.

If you need an enriching and rewarding summer experience for a teenager (age 13-17) in your life, you don’t want to miss this great opportunity to meet directors of more than 80 of the best summer programs in both the U.S. and abroad.  There are a wide variety of programs located all over the world and at every budget level. Programs include academic enrichment, adventure travel, community service, environmental and ecology, internships, intensive sport instruction, language immersion, arts/theatre/music, and many Gap year programs.  The Expo can help you efficiently cut through the overwhelming amount of information online and make an informed decision about programming, safety, and supervision.  Bring the kids’ friends if you would like them to do a program together!  For more information contact Laura@CampSourceNetwork.com or call 617-244-3316.  Snow date will be Tuesday, February 7.


Waterstone at Wellesley Informational Sessions

Feb
7
1:30 pm
Feb
14
1:30 pm

Waterstone at Wellesley will host informational sessions about the new senior living community on  February 7 and February 14 at the Wellesley Free Library, 530 Washington St.  Sessions will be held at 1:30 p.m., and refreshments will be served.  

The sessions will cover details about Waterstone at Wellesley amenities, design, pricing, services, and other topics. The session on Feb. 7 will feature a presentation entitled, “Exploring Your Retirement Options.” The Feb. 14 session will include a presentation on Medicare and will feature a local Medicare expert. 

Waterstone at Wellesley, 27 Washington St., is scheduled to open in spring 2012. It includes 138 apartments for seniors 62 and older. It will feature independent and assisted living rental apartments, a fitness center, pool, theater, restaurant-style dining, designer kitchens, putting green, a riverfront walking trail and underground parking garage. Waterstone at Wellesley is a joint venture of Newton-based National Development, Waltham-based EPOCH Senior Living and Charles River Realty Investors.  

For more information, call 781-235-1614.


Help Your Elementary School Child Flourish: Learn How Food, Infections, Stress, and Toxins Can Affect Your Child’s Well-being

Feb
7
7:00 pm

The Wellesley Cancer Prevention Project invites the public to a forum at the Wellesley Free Library’s Wakelin Room, Tuesday February 7th, from 7:00 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. This free event, co-sponsored by the Wellesley Free Library, is open to the public and includes informational resources. Coffee and dessert will be served.  

Ashley Bade, RD, LDN, CNSD, a pediatric dietician at Newton Wellesley Hospital, will speak about how to develop a healthy eater. Ashley Bade specializes in many health-related areas including weight management, eating disorders, feeding behaviors and non-diet approach to life-long healthy eating.
 
Following Ashley Bade’s presentation, Dr. Martha Herbert will speak about developmental challenges and opportunities for the school-age child.  During the elementary school years, the child’s brain is learning to tackle increasingly complex challenges.  The child’s social and academic life will flourish when the brain is doing well, and suffer when the brain is not at its best.  And the health of the body can be a partner or an obstacle. 
 
Environmental influences such as food, toxins, infections and stress can make things better or worse.  This talk will cover optimal function, how to detect signs of problems across the dimensions of your child’s life, and how to improve the environment so your child can be resilient and flourish.
 
Dr. Herbert is a renowned pediatric neurologist and researcher, who is affiliated with Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School and directs the TRANSCEND Research Program, which uses brain imaging and a whole body approach to study autism spectrum disorders and other developmental conditions.  
 
Dr. Herbert is particularly interested in environmental influences on brain and body health and development, and things we can do to reduce health problems and improve function.  Her forthcoming book, The Autism Revolution: Whole Body Strategies for Making Life All It Can Be (Harvard Health Publications and Random House, publication date March 27, 2012) lays out a comprehensive, practical approach that is useful for autism and much more.
 
The Wellesley Cancer Prevention Project is a nonprofit, nonpartisan group that studies the relationship between cancer and the environment with the goal of reducing health risk factors for residents of Wellesley and surrounding communities.
 

Journaling Your Way Through Grief

Feb
11
9:30 am

On Saturday, February 11 from 9:30 to 11:30 am, Parmenter is offering Journaling Your Way Through Grief – a free bereavement support program.

The grief process following the loss of a loved one is often described as a journey with many twists and turns. Writing about your journey can be a powerful tool for healing. It allows you to give voice to your grief, reflect on the ups and downs, and identify patterns that may trigger both pain and moments of peace.

This 2 hour workshop is designed to facilitate the emotional healing process through journaling. There will be both didactic and experiential components to the program. All are welcome regardless of where you are in your grief journey. Materials provided.

To register or for more info, call Andrea Heinlein, LICSW at 508-358-3000, ex. 249. The workshop will be held at Parmenter’s office at 266 Cochituate Road in Wayland.


Wellesley Historical Society Presents “Harvard in the Civil War”

Feb
12
2:00 pm
Sunday 

February 12, 2012

2:00 pm

Wellesley Main Library

“Harvard in the Civil War” 

The 20th Massachusetts Regiment in the Civil War had so many Harvard graduates in its ranks that it was called the Harvard Regiment.  Richard Miller, the acclaimed author of “Harvard in the Civil War” and other books on Civil War history, will discuss the role of this distinguished regiment in the broader political and social context of mid-19th Century America.


Wellesley Symphony Orchestra: Valentine’s Love Fest

Feb
12
2:15 pm

Come see renowned tenor Brian Landry and wife, contralto Ana Maria Ugarte, sing beloved arias and duets from Tosca, Rigoletto, Carmen, plus Mendelssohn Midsummer Night’s Dream Suite Wagner Siegfried Idyll. There will be a pre-concert talk by Leslie M. Holmes, WSO President.

The event will be held at MassBay Community College – 50 Oakland Street, Wellesley Hills. Tickets may also be purchased in advance at the Eaton Apothecary (in Wellesley) and the Wellesley Booksmith or at the Box Office on the day of the concert. Tickets Adult – $25 Senior/Student – $20 Free admission for children under 12 with adult paid admission.

More info http://www.wellesleysymphony.org/


Wellesley College Newhouse Center Welcomes Six Internationally Acclaimed Authors for the Spring 2012 Distinguished Writers Series

Feb
2
4:30 pm
Feb
28
4:30 pm
Mar
13
4:30 pm
Apr
10
4:30 pm

 Wellesley College will welcome six award-winning writers and poets to the Boston area this spring as part of the Susan and Donald Newhouse Center for the Humanities Distinguished Writers Series.  Authors Pico Iyer (Feb. 2), Jennifer Egan (Feb. 28), Leah Hager Cohen and Jim Shepard (March 13), and Nikky Finney and Tom Sleigh (April 10) will each read from their work, then engage in an open dialogue with their audience. All readings occur at 4:30 PM on the dates indicated and are free and open to the public.  

“We are thrilled to announce a fabulous slate of writers for this spring’s Writers Series – including recent Pulitzer and National Book Award winners,” said Carol Dougherty, Professor of Classical Studies at Wellesley College and Director of The Susan and Donald Newhouse Center for the Humanities. “[The Series] is quickly becoming one of Wellesley College’s signature public programs.” 

The Distinguished Writers Series offers a great way to discover new books, talk to authors about their work and meet fellow booklovers in a setting like no other. Wellesley College’s picturesque campus is located just 12 miles from Boston and is accessible by public transit. For more information about the Series visit www.newhouse-center.org or call 781-283-2698. For driving and public transit directions to the campus, please visit www.web.wellesley.edu/web/AboutWellesley/.  

Pico Iyer

Thursday, Feb. 2 | 4:30 pm | Newhouse Center for the Humanities – 237 Green Hall


Pico Iyer is one of the most revered and respected travel writers alive today. He was born in England, raised in California, and educated at Eton, Oxford, and Harvard. At Wellesley, he will read from his newly released book, The Man Within My Head, (Knopf, January 2012). Iyer is the author of seven works of non-fiction, including Video Night in Kathmandu (cited on many lists of the best travel books), The Lady and the Monk (finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Award) and The Global Soul (subject of theatrical productions and websites around the globe). He has also written the novels Cuba and the Night and Abandon.  For a quarter of a century, he has been an essayist for Time magazine, written on literature for The New York Review of Books, on globalism for Harper’s, and on many other topics for The New York Times, Conde Nast Traveler, The New Yorker, National Geographic, and Salon.com, among others. His 2008 book, The Open Road, describing more than 30 years of talking and traveling with the fourteenth Dalai Lama was a bestseller in the United States.  Based for the past 20 years near Nara, in rural Japan, Iyer is still often to be found making stops everywhere from North Korea to Ethiopia, and from Bolivia to Easter Island. 

Jennifer Egan 

Tuesday, Feb. 28 | 4:30 pm | Newhouse Center for the Humanities – 237 Green Hall

Jennifer Egan is the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of A Visit From the Goon Squad (Knopf 2010) and the recipient of the 2011 National Book Critics Circle Award for Fiction. A Visit From the Goon Squad topped many “Best of 2010” lists (including The Washington Post, Time, Slate, Salon, and People). It was also nominated for the National Book Award for Fiction and for the Pen/Faulkner award, and was shortlisted for the Orange Prize for Fiction. It has been tapped by for series treatment. 

Egan’s other books include Emerald City and Other Stories, The Invisible Circus (which was made into a feature film starring Cameron Diaz in 2001), Look at Me (a finalist for the 2011 National Book Award), and the bestselling The Keep. Her short stories have appeared in The New Yorker, HarpersGranta, and McSweeney’s, among other magazines. She is a recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship, a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship in Fiction, and a Dorothy and Lewis B. Cullman Fellowship at the New York Public Library. Her nonfiction articles appear frequently in The New York Times magazine. A 2002 story on homeless children received the Carroll Kowal Journalism Award, and a recent article, ”The Bipolar Kid,” received a 2009 Outstanding Media Award for Science and Health Reporting from the National Alliance on Mental Illness. 

Leah Hager Cohen and Jim Shepard

Tuesday, March 13 | 4:30 pm | Newhouse Center for the Humanities – 237 Green Hall

Leah Hager Cohen is the author of four novels, most recently The Grief of Others, and four works of narrative nonfiction, which include Train Go Sorry and Glass, Paper, Beans. She serves as the Jenks Chair in Contemporary American Letters at the College of the Holy Cross and on the faculty of Lesley University’s low-residency M.F.A. in Creative Writing. After years of swearing she would never write criticism, she has also become a frequent contributor to the New York Times Book Review.


Jim Shepard is the author of six novels, including Project X, and four story collections, including Like You’d Understand, Anyway, winner of The Story Prize and a finalist for the National Book Award, and You Think That’s Bad. His novel, Project X, won the 2005 Library of Congress/Massachusetts Book Award for Fiction, and the ALEX Award from the American Library Association. Shepard’s short fiction has appeared in Harper’sMcSweeney’sThe Paris Review, The Atlantic Monthly, Esquire, Tin House, the New Yorker, Granta, Zoetrope: All-Story, and Playboy, and he was a columnist on film for the magazine The Believer. Four of his stories have been chosen for the Best American Short Stories, two for the PEN/O. Henry Prize Stories, and one for a Pushcart Prize. He also won an Artists’ Grant from the Massachusetts Cultural Council and a Guggenheim Fellowship. Shepard teaches at Williams College.  


Nikky Finney and Tom Sleigh

Tuesday, April 10 | 4:30 pm | Newhouse Center for the Humanities – 237 Green Hall
Nikky Finney is the winner of the 2011 National Book Award in Poetry for her recent work, Head Off & Split, an impassioned summation of African American history.  Finney has established herself as one of the most eloquent, urgent, fearless and necessary poets writing in America today.

 “As an artist and a daughter of the South, and as someone who honors my feelings as often as I can, I don’t have to acquiesce to the polite expectations of the moment,” Finney has said. “I have watched black people forgive and forget over and over again … I too forgive, but I don’t forget … My responsibility as a poet, as an artist is to not look away.” Finney is a professor of creative writing at the University of Kentucky, and is a member of the Affrilachian Poets group that also includes Frank X Walker and Kelly Norman Ellis. 

Tom Sleigh is the author of more than half a dozen volumes of poetry. Space Walk (2007) won the 2008 Kingsley Tufts Award and earned Sleigh considerable critical acclaim. Sleigh has also received the Shelley Award from the Poetry Society of America, an Individual Writer’s Award from the Lila Wallace-Reader’s Digest Fund, a Guggenheim grant, two National Endowment for the Arts grants, and an Academy Award from the Academy of American Poets.
As a dramatist, Sleigh has written several critically acclaimed plays, a multimedia opera, and a full-length translation of Euripides’ Herakles (2001). His prose collection Interview with a Ghost (2006) includes both literary and personal essays.  Sleigh has taught at Dartmouth College, the University of Iowa, UC Berkeley, Johns Hopkins University, New York University, and Hunter College.

 ABOUT THE NEWHOUSE CENTER

Founded in 2003 by a generous gift from Susan Marley Newhouse ’55 and Donald Newhouse, the Newhouse Center for the Humanities generates and supports innovative, world-class programming in the humanities and arts. The Newhouse Center’s mission is to create a dynamic and cosmopolitan intellectual community that extends from Wellesley College to the greater Boston-area community and beyond. For more information, visit www.newhouse-center.org or call 781-283-2698.  For driving and public transit directions to the campus, please visit web.wellesley.edu/web/AboutWellesley/.  

ABOUT WELLESLEY COLLEGE & THE ARTS

The Wellesley College arts curriculum and the highly acclaimed Davis Museum and Cultural Center are integral components of the college’s liberal arts education. For decades, various departments and programs from across the campus have enlivened the community with world-class programming — classical and popular music, visual arts, theater, dance, author readings, symposia and lectures by some of today’s leading artists and creative thinkers — most of which are free and open to the public.

Since 1875, Wellesley College has been a leader in providing an excellent liberal arts education for women who will make a difference in the world. Its 500-acre campus near Boston is home to 2,400 undergraduate students from 50 states and 75 countries.


 


Parmenter Bereavement Group

Feb
28
7:00 pm
Mar
6
7:00 pm
Mar
13
7:00 pm
Mar
20
7:00 pm
Mar
27
7:00 pm
Apr
3
7:00 pm
Apr
10
7:00 pm
Apr
17
7:00 pm

Parmenter’s Hospice is offering an 8-week bereavement support group on Tuesdays from 7:00-8:30pm from February 28 through April 17, 2012.

We recognize that everyone grieves in his or her own way, but no one needs to carry grief alone. This professionally facilitated group will provide an opportunity to learn about and share experiences of grieving in a relaxed and supportive environment.  There is no fee to attend, but registration is required.

For more information or to register for this support group, call Andrea Heinlein, LICSW at 508-358-3000, ext. 249. The group will be held at Parmenter’s office at 266 Cochituate Road in Wayland.


Agbekor Society Concert

Mar
4
3:00 pm

Come see the Agbekor Society, a group of African drummers, perform at the Weston Public Library at 3 pm.


Wellesley Symphony Orchestra: Family Concert

Mar
11
2:15 pm

Come early to see the pre-concert Show’n’tell and Instrument Petting Zoo! WSO President Leslie Holmes will narrate The Little Engine that Could and students from the Wellesley Middle School String Orchestra and Elizabeth Perry, Director of Performing Arts, Wellesley Public Schools host. The pre-concert Petting Zoo and Show’n'tell begins at 1:30pm

The event will be held at MassBay Community College – 50 Oakland Street, Wellesley Hills. Tickets may also be purchased in advance at the Eaton Apothecary (in Wellesley) and the Wellesley Booksmith or at the Box Office on the day of the concert. Tickets Adult – $25 Senior/Student – $20 Free admission for children under 12 with adult paid admission.

More info http://www.wellesleysymphony.org/


John Sakata & Jung Mi Lee Concert

Mar
18
3:00 pm

Come see John Sakata and Jung Mi Lee perform on the piano at the Weston Public Library at 3 pm.


Wellesley Historical Society Presents “Sam Adams and John Hancock: American Patriots”

Apr
12
7:00 pm
Thursday

April 12, 2012

7:00 pm

Wellesley Main Library

Just in time for Patriots’ Day, William Fowler, Professor of History at Northeastern University, will discuss the role of Sam Adams and John Hancock in the American Revolution.  Professor Fowler is the acclaimed author of a number of books on Colonial America, including biographies of both Adams and Hancock.

Wellesley Historical Society Presents “History of the Catholic Church in America”

May
10
7:00 pm
Thursday

May 10, 2012

7:00 pm

Wellesley Main Library

 

ANNUAL MEETING

 

As part of Wellesley’s celebration of its multi-cultural heritage, James O’Toole, Professor of History at Boston College, will discuss the history of the Catholic Church in America, with particular emphasis on the Boston area.  Professor O’Toole is the author of several books on the history of Catholicism in the United States (co-sponsored by World of Wellesley).