Category: Around Town

  • New LIFT 9 Bus Service in Framingham

    FRAMINGHAM, MA — Beginning Monday, August 28, the LIFT Public Transit System will begin providing new service along Rt. 9. The new LIFT 9 bus will provide direct service between the West Natick Commuter Rail station and the retail, residential, and employment hubs along Route 9 in Framingham, including Framingham State College, Shoppers World, the Natick Mall, Technology Park, and the 9/90 Corporate Center.

    New route covers from 9/90 Corporate Center to W. Natick Train Station

    “After months of planning, the Framingham LIFT Public Transit System is very pleased to be able to offer the new LIFT 9 bus service to MetroWest residents,” comments Kathleen B. Bartolini, Director of Planning & Economic Development for Framingham. “This new service will provide convenient access to jobs, schools, shopping, and entertainment.”

    LIFT 9 will operate between 6:10 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. With the addition of the LIFT 9 bus, some existing LIFT routes will see changes in service. LIFT 5 will no longer be servicing Framingham State College and will be increasing service in Hopkinton. Also the LIFT 5 route will be shortened from an 80 minute round trip to an hour. LIFT 6 will operate on a different time schedule, and LIFT 7 will have a slightly different route around Framingham State College.

    For more information on LIFT 9 and other service changes, please visit www.framinghamma.gov or call the LIFT at 508-532-5459.

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  • Tickets Now Available for “Salute to Framingham”

    FRAMINGHAM, MA – The 14th Annual Salute to Framingham will take place on March 15, 2006 at the Sheraton Tara Hotel in Framingham

    This year’s honorees are: Jim Carney, Margo Deane and Pam Hulme.

    To place an ad in the program book or buy to tickets go to www.Salutetoframingham.org or call (508) 879-4152.

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  • Collecting Hometown Memorabilia Talk on Sunday

    FRAMINGHAM, MA – Temple Beth Am Brotherhood continues its Sunday breakfast and speaker series on Sunday, January 22, from 9 – 10:30 a.m.

    This month’s featured speaker is Debbie Cleveland, who will speak on collecting hometown memorabilia, using examples from her collection of nostalgic MetroWest materials. Her talk will include a tabletop display plus a powerpoint presentation.

    Cleveland is a founding member of the Friends of Saxonville, a member of the Curatorial Committee of the Framingham Historical Society & Museum, co-author of Barbara Gray’s memoir: A Woman’s Ways & Means: 24 Wild Years in the Massachusetts House, and owner of framingham.com.

    The program is open to the public at a cost of $ 8.

    Reservations are required.

    For more info or to make reservations, contactl Howard Newell at 508-875-3151.

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  • Antiques Roadshow Premiers 10th Season on Monday Night

    FRAMINGHAM, MA – PBS’s Antiques Roadshow begins its tenth season on Monday night, January 9 with new host Mark L. Walberg. This show, which revolutionized the way TV viewers felt about antiques, history, and the experts who love them, had its beginnings in Concord, and Bolton, Massachusetts. It has made some local experts household names.

    In 1992, a pilot, loosely based upon the original Antiques Roadshow produced in England, was filmed at the Skinner auction gallery in Bolton, Mass. Monty Hall, well-known game show personality, and antiques collector, was the host, and ”The Great American Treasure Hunt” the working title. Over 700 people showed up. The pilot was shopped as a commercial program, but had no takers.

    Then WGBH-TV, Channel 2, Boston became interested in the program, a sponsor was found, and five top auction houses, including Skinner, Inc., committed to collaborating on the venture.

    On June 1, 1996, Concord again made history as the site of the inaugural filming of the first stop of the roadshow. Hundreds of New Englanders toting family heirlooms and what-its converged on the Concord Armory. Awaiting them inside was the unprecedented gathering of the top experts from the antiques world and a PBS TV crew to record the proceedings. The turnout was small enough that people were encouraged to run home and bring in more items. Not so small that several treasures were uncovered, as well as a lesson from the Keno brothers in how much the value decreases when you refinish an early piece of furniture.

    Since that day, many appraisers from Skinner, including ceramic and pottery expert Stuart Slavid, of Framingham, and doll specialist Dorothy McGonagle, of Sudbury, have been a part of the Antiques Roadshow phenomenon. Gary Sohmers, of Framingham’s WexRex pop culture fame, pops up frequently on the show and is featured on some of the web videos on the Antiques Roadshow section of the WGBH website.

    Check the Roadshow web pages for a timeline and highlights of the show’s ten year run as well as information about this year’s season and where the show will travel this summer.

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  • McAuliffe Branch Library Reopens

    FRAMINGHAM, MA – The Christa Corrigan McAuliffe Branch Library reopened at 9:00 a.m. on Friday, December 16th.

    The branch library closed Friday afternoon, December 9th to complete alterations necessary to improve access for those with disabilities.

    Due dates on materials were adjusted due to the closing.

    Main Library loses materials due to water damage!

    In the meantime, unfortunately the main library experienced leaks and flooding on the first floor and in the children’s room, causing damage to many hardcover books.

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  • 14th Annual Framingham Tree Lighting

    FRAMINGHAM, MA – The 14th annual tree lighting will be held Friday, Dec. 2nd at the Memorial Building, Concord St., Downtown Framingham.

    Festivities begin at 6:45 with the PAC Family Players – Holiday Revelry Selections.

    At 7 p.m. there is musical entertainment by the Framingham Girl Scouts.

    At 7:15 p.m. Santa Claus arrives at the Memorial Building courtesy of the Framingham Fire Department.

    At 7:30 the Framingham Public Schools Fifth Grade Band performs while there are photos with Santa, candy canes, cookies, and hot chocolate.

    WKOX’s Scott Gibbons will host. Visit the framingham.com table for a free raffle of a $ 100 gift certificate to InnSeason Resorts plus goodie bags and giveaways.

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  • Free Lift Bus this Friday & Saturday

    FRAMINGHAM, MA – Ride the LIFT Bus for free all day this Friday, Nov. 25th, and Saturday, Nov. 26 and avoid traffic and parking hassles.

    LIFT Bus stops include the Natick Mall, Sherwood Plaza, Shoppers World, and Solomon Pond Mall.

    For more information, call the LIFT Public Transit System at 508-620-4823 or 800-649-6096 or log on to www.framinghamma.gov

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  • Walking Tour on Saturday, Nov. 12

    FRAMINGHAM, MA – The Walk ’n Mass Volkssport Club invites you to walk in Framingham, the home of the nation’s first state teacher’s college. This walk explores Framingham’s history – past and present, has 6 and 10km, (3.8 and 6.2 miles), walk route options, is non-competitive, follows a marked route, and is accomplished at your own pace.

    Anyone may participate regardless of age or physical condition. Both walk route options are suitable for baby strollers. Wheelchairs would encounter difficulty due to lack of curb cuts on some of the walkways. Children under the age of twelve must be accompanied by an adult. Leashed pets are welcomed, and clean-up rules apply.

    START/FINISH: Dunkin’ Donuts, 444 Franklin Street,Framingham, MA 01702

    START TIME: Saturday, November 12, 2005 9 a.m. to Noon

    FINISH TIME: by 3 p.m.

    Don’t want to walk alone? Meet at the start at 9:30 a.m. to walk with other participants.

    REGISTRATION AND FEES: This event is FREE to those who wish to participate without receiving an award or IVV Credit. There is no pre-registration. Registration on the day of this walk is $4.00 to $5.00 for a “B” award and IVV Credit. A “B” award is an award that was used for a previous event. “B” events give you an opportunity to collect some terrific and unique awards from the past. Registration for IVV Credit only is $3.00.

    PROCEDURE:
    Each participant must register, sign an insurance waiver and receive an Event Card at the start. Cards are validated at checkpoints along the route, and must be turned in at the finish table.

    FACILITIES:
    Restrooms are located at the Start/Finish and along both walk routes.

    TRAIL DESCRIPTION:
    Named for Framlingham, England where Thomas Danforth, who owned much of the land that became Framingham, was born, the 10K Framingham walk route takes us to commercial, historical, educational and recreational areas important in the more than 300 years since the town was recognized in 1700 as the 74th Town in the Province of Massachusetts.

    We begin our walk near radio station WKOX, formed in 1947 by World War II Veterans. We pass the Mount Wayte area where in the late 1880s Methodists established a summer camp, which was taken over by the Chautauqua. This religious organization set up an outdoor auditorium for 4000 people and sponsored over 30 lectures and 8 concerts as well as sporting events and campfires each summer.

    On the grounds of Cushing Hospital, now part of Framingham’s Tercentennial Park, Cushing Chapel and a few of the 95 original buildings still stand. During WW II large numbers of injured veterans were treated here. The park includes several veterans’ memorials as well as a 9/11 Memorial.

    After passing Stearns Reservoir, a part of the Boston Water Supply system with an impressive gatehouse and stone bridge, we come to Framingham State College, the nation’s first public teachers college. Christa Corrigan McAuliffe, the first teacher-astronaut was a graduate of FSC. The McAuliffe Center was established to honor her commitment to education by providing exciting, standards-based programs in the pursuit of excellence. The Challenger Learning Center is the McAuliffe Center’s best-known program. A newly renovated memorial planetarium was recently rededicated.

    The final portion of the walk takes us to Revolutionary War and modern day times, existing side by side. After passing Framingham’s Minuteman Statue we visit the Old Burying Ground, site of the first meeting house in Framingham and where many Revolutionary soldiers and early settlers are buried. One of the more interesting plots has a common stone for Peter Parker and John Clayes who were killed by lightening while trading horses in June 1777. Peter Salem, a former slave and prominent in the Battle of Bunker Hill, is buried there.

    After leaving the burying ground, we return to more recent times, pass behind a shopping center and Rt. 9 and walk through more neighborhoods, past the office of the world famous Framingham Heart Study, to the finish.

    The 6km (3.8 miles) route visits most of the historic sites mentioned above. On mostly flat, paved walkways, both the 6 and 10km walk routes have an AVA rating of 1.5, suitable for strollers, but not wheelchairs.

    For information about other Massachusetts walks, visit the club’s pages at:  www.ava.org

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  • Weekend Halloween Fun in Framingham

    FRAMINGHAM, MA – Halloween fun things to do this weekend!

    Cameron Middle School, 215 Elm St., presents Halloween Haven, an afternoon of fun for children in grades K-5, from 4:30-6:30 p.m on Sat. Oct. 29. Students will be taken on haunted tours, play games, and collect candy and healthy snacks. Activities include: games, haunted house, fortune telling, coloring, and more. Admission and activities are free to everyone. Canned goods will be collected at the door to be donated to a local charity.

    The Learning Center for Deaf Children, 848 Central St., hosts its first annual Galloping Ghost Charity Chase on Saturday, Oct. 29 at 10 a.m. It is a four mile road race with prizes in four age groups for winners and best costumes. Register for $ 25 online at www.tlcdeaf.org or call 508-879-5110 and ask for Cyra Coady. At the same time, The Learning Center will be transformed into a treasure trail hunt for costumed youngsters and their families who can’t join the race. Admission is free to the Trick or Treat Trail open to children age 12 and under.

    It’s the last weekend for Hanson’s Farm Tom & Matt’s Excellent Adventure 4 Acre Corn Maze and Haunted Farm and Hayride. Visit the maze at 20 Nixon Rd. during the day from 9 to 6 and the Haunted Farm opens at 7 p.m. Admission is charged and you can save $1 using framingham.com online coupons. You can bring a picnic lunch during the day and enjoy the farm animals and farm stand. Refreshments available during the evening haunting.

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  • Jail and Bail at Friday’s Concert on the Green

    FRAMINGHAM, MA — Robinsons Ace Hardware, Pinefield Shopping Center, Saxonville, is planning a “Jail and Bail” fundraiser to benefit Muscular Dystrophy the weekend of August 19th-21st.

    Jeff Underwood, manager, will be jailed, as well as State Senator Karen Spilka and others, at the Friday night Concert on the Green, August 19th. Concert attendees will be invited to “Jail and Bail” their friends and family members during the concert. Jail a member of your family for $ 5 for 5 minutes, $ 10 for 10 minutes, etc. Or help them get back out by matching the amount donated to put them in.

    A raffle with great prizes is also in the works. Prizes include a barrel full of Ace products and a pair of passes to Six Flags over New England, courtesy of framingham.com

    Details will be available at Robinsons Ace Hardware in the Pinefield Shopping Center on Water St. the week of August 15th and at the concert.

    Please plan to bring cash or a check to the concert to help support this fundraiser. Every $ 5 donor will receive a free gift bag and a $5 coupon good at Robinsons Ace Hardware in Framingham. You may also donate at the store throughout this week and receive the coupon.

    For further information, call Jeff Underwood at 508-877-1888.

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