Tri-Town Basketball Camp

The 2013 Tri-Town Basketball Camp, under the direction of Coach Rick Regan, will be held again this summer at the Old Rochester Regional High School gymnasium. The camp is for boys and girls in grades four through nine. This is the 17th year the Tri-Town Basketball Camp has been under the direction of Coach Regan. Over the last 20 years, he has coached at both Old Rochester Regional Senior and Junior High School, as well as AAU for different levels of boys and girls.

The first session is for boys and will be held from July 15 to July 18. Boys presently in grades four, five and six (school year 2012-13) will attend from 9:00 am to 12:00 pm. Boys presently in grades seven, eight and nine (school year 2012-13) will attend from 1:00 to 4:00 pm.

The second session is a combination of girls and boys in the morning session and all girls in the afternoon session. It will be held from July 22 to July 25. Girls and boys presently in grades four, five and six (school year 2012 – 13) will attend from 9:00 am to 12:00 pm. Girls (only) presently in grades seven, eight and nine (school year 2012-13) will attend from 1:00 to 4:00 pm.

The camp focuses on the fundamentals and development of shooting, passing, dribbling, ball handling, rebounding, post play, as well as individual and team defense. The camp counselors who assist Coach Regan will be former and current players from Old Rochester, as well as other local area coaches.

Registration forms were recently distributed to the local schools, but also can be obtained through Coach Regan’s camp website – http://schools.orr.mec.edu/jhs/regan. The cost of the camp is $120 per session. Space is available in all sessions at this time, but we are limited to 30 per session and the spots will fill quickly, especially in the boys’ sessions. Please send in your registration form and payment as soon as possible. For more information or questions, please email Coach Regan at coachregan3@gmail.com. Also, you may look at past pictures from camp on our website or like us on Facebook. We look forward to seeing our former and new campers this summer!

Making Memorial Day Plans

The Tri-Town’s schedule of Memorial Day festivities is jam-packed this year, with Mattapoisett and Rochester joining forces to celebrate the life and service of SPC Steven E. Gutowski, a Plymouth resident slain in Afghanistan on Sept. 28, 2011.

Known as “Guto” to his fellow soldiers and “Goot” to friends and family in Plymouth, where he worked for the Recreation Department, Gutowski was awarded the Bronze Star, the Purple Heart, the Afghanistan Campaign Medal and the Combat Action Badge.

The Florence Eastman American Legion Post 280’s events begin at 1:30 pm on Memorial Day, May 27, at the Mattapoisett Library Grounds. As part of the program, Gutowski’s mother, Joan, will deliver remarks as Principal Speaker.

Other highlights include a speech from Commander Michael Lamoureux, music from the Old Hammondtown Orchestra, an address from Rep. William M. Straus, a message from Veteran Agent Berry Denham, and a reading of the Gettysburg Address from Johanna Appleton of Old Rochester Regional Junior High School.

After the ceremony, members of the Legion will place wreaths on the War Memorials. Parade Marshall Lamoureux will assemble the marchers, who will proceed to the Town Wharf for a JROTC Firing Squad Salute to the veterans who lost their lives at sea, then to Cushing Cemetery to fire a salute to those who lost their lives on land, and ending at the Legion Hall.

Marion’s parade, meanwhile, will start at 9:00 am on Memorial Day at the Music Hall. After a rendition of the National Anthem from the Sippican School Band and short ceremony at the Civil War Monument, according to officials, the parade will proceed:

“South on Front Street to Main Street, west on Main Street, then north on to Spring Street, for a ceremony at the Marion Town Hall.

After the ceremony at the Marion Town Hall, the parade will continue north on Spring Street to Old Landing Cemetery for a ceremony at the graveside of Benjamin D. Cushing.

The parade will continue through Old Landing Cemetery, north on Mill Street to Ryders Lane, east on Ryders Lane to Old Landing Veterans Memorial Park for a ceremony at the

World War I, World War II, Korean, Vietnam, and Gulf War Monuments.”

On May 25 at 10:00 am, members of the Benjamin D. Cushing Post 2425 Veterans of Foreign Wars will place flowers on the graves of deceased veterans of all wars. The placement of flowers will start at Evergreen Cemetery and then proceed to three other cemeteries in Marion.

By Shawn Badgley

Marion PD Arrest Housebreak Suspect

On Friday, May 24, officers from the Marion Police Department, with assistance from members of the Plymouth Police Department and Plymouth County Sheriff’s Department, arrested the following subject on a warrant that was issued stemming from an ongoing investigation related to a housebreak that occurred at a residence on Blueberry Way in Marion: Richard T. Auld, age 26, 6 Wall Wind Dr., Plymouth.

Auld was charged with: 1) Breaking and Entering daytime for a felony, 2) Larceny from a building, 3) Malicious or Wanton Damage or Defacement, 4) Trespass, 5) use of a motor vehicle in a Felony/Larceny. He was booked at the Marion Police Department and transported to Wareham District Court for arraignment.

On May 9, officers had responded to a call for two suspicious males walking through the wood line in the Blueberry Way neighborhood. Upon arrival they located a residence that had apparent signs of a forced break. A suspicious vehicle was also noted as being parked in the nearby cemetery. The vehicle came back registered to a party in Plymouth.

After further investigation and surveillance, the vehicle was located and it was determined it was involved in the break. On May 10, numerous items were recovered in the vehicle. These items were connected to the break in Marion as well as other area housebreaks. A warrant was then issued for one of the suspects. The identity of the second suspect is still under investigation at this time.

Anyone with further information is asked to contact Det. Scott Smith at 508-748-1212.

Still a Busy Schedule for Seniors

After the seniors’ last day of class on May 21 earlier this week, there remain a few events before graduation that are mandatory for the Class of 2013 to attend. Unless you have an excused absence from the event, all seniors must attend, or they cannot walk at graduation.

This week is seniors’ finals week, with the finals having started on Wednesday, May 22. On Wednesday the final exams were Day 1 Block 4 and Day 1 Block 1. On Thursday, May 23, the finals schedule is Day 2 Block 4 and Day 2 Block 2.

Friday, May 24, the schedule starts off with Day 1 Block 2 and finishes with Day 1 Block 3. The next finals day is Tuesday, May 28, due to Memorial Day weekend. Finals will resume with Day 2 Block 1 and Day 2 Block 3.

The following day, Wednesday, May 29 there is a mandatory meeting in the auditorium at 10:30 am. Seniors will be receiving cap, gown, and graduation tickets during this meeting.

To request extra graduation tickets you must speak to Mrs. Durocher on senior sign-out day. Extra tickets are first come first serve, so if on senior sign-out day you did not request tickets, you should call the office and request them as soon as possible.

The following week is prom. Promenade starts at 4:15 pm on June 4. The Prom is located at Wequassett Resort in Harwich. Doors open at 6:30 pm and close at 10:30 pm.

On June 6, there will be a mandatory graduation rehearsal from 9:00 am to 12:00 pm. There is a meeting for Senior Assembly entertainers only in the gym at 1:00 to 2:00 pm. Senior Awards Night is also June 6, starting at 7:00 pm. If you cannot attend, you must have your absence cleared with the principal.

There will be a dress code for Senior Awards Night, Senior Assembly and Graduation. Jeans, sneakers and shorts are not allowed. Boys should be in collared shirt with ties and girls should have an appropriate dress and shoes.

On June 7, seniors should report to the auditorium no later than 8:30 am for Senior Assembly. Seniors must wear their gowns but no caps.

On June 8, seniors must report to the gym at 12:00 pm to pick up flowers and tassels before Graduation, which starts at 1:00 pm. Weather permitting, the ceremony will be held outside, where there is unlimited seating. Should the weather infringe on the ceremony, it will be held inside with limited seating. Should the weather be uncooperative, seniors should report to the library at 12:00 pm.

By Jessica Correia

Itty Bitty Bay Explorers

Get your little ones to discover the outdoors through the Buzzards Bay Coalition’s Itty Bitty Bay Explorers program, a series of four free outings on Wednesday mornings in May and June. Through fun games and hands-on activities, your whole family can learn about Buzzards Bay’s animals, plants and habitats.

There will be four sessions of Itty Bitty Bay Explorers. The Coalition encourages families to attend all four programs, but it is not required. All sessions will run from 10:30 to 11:30 am.

May 29: “Prepare for Exploration” at the Buzzards Bay Center’s Richard C. Wheeler Bay Learning Center (114 Front Street, New Bedford).

June 5: “Salt Marsh Exploration” at Little Bay Marsh (off Edgewater Street in Fairhaven).

June 12: “Forest Investigation” at Nasketucket Bay State Reservation (Brandt Island Road, Mattapoisett).

June 19: “Beach Discovery” at Fairhaven Town Beach (end of Fir Street on West Island).

Itty Bitty Bay Explorers is recommended for families with young children ages five and younger. The program is free; reservations are required. For more information and to RSVP, contact Cassie Lawson at lawson@savebuzzardsbay.org or 508-999-6363, ext. 230.

Itty Bitty Bay Explorers is part of the Coalition’s Bay Adventures series: programs designed for explorers of all ages to get outside and discover Buzzards Bay. To learn more about all of the Coalition’s Bay Adventures, visit www.savebuzzardsbay.org/BayAdventures.

Mattapoisett Passes and Permits

Parking Passes and Shellfish Permits are now available in the Treasurer/Collector’s Office. The traditional Parking Sticker for Mattapoisett residents and property owners is being replaced with a Parking Pass Placard to be hung on a vehicle’s rearview mirror. The placard should make it easier for the enforcing departments to identify vehicles that are not in compliance with the parking rules and regulations.

A Parking Pass, which costs $10, is required for parking at the following locations: Town Landing (off Mattapoisett Neck Road), Shining Tides Beach (End of Reservation Road), Hiller’s Cove Beach (off Aucoot Road), Town Beach (Water Street) and Town Wharf (Shipyard Park – Water Street). Proof of current vehicle registration is required for purchasing a Parking Pass. In addition, non-resident property owners must provide proof of property ownership; and year-round renters must provide a valid lease.

New for 2013 is the Guest Parking Pass, for use by family members and summer renters. The Guest Parking Pass must be displayed on the vehicle’s rearview mirror and is transferrable from vehicle to vehicle. Guest Parking Passes can be purchased by a property owner for $35, upon the purchase of at least one regular Parking Pass. Guest Passes are not replaceable and are not valid at the Town Wharf.

Shellfish Permits/Buttons are available for Mattapoisett residents and property owners for $25. For Rochester and Marion residents, the cost is $35, which includes a special Shellfishing Parking Pass Placard that must be displayed on the vehicle’s rearview mirror. Proof of residency or property ownership is required to purchase a Shellfish Permit. For all other non-residents, the cost is $135, which also includes the Shellfishing Parking Pass.

Short, but Not Sweet for Applicant

An exceptionally quick meeting for the Marion Zoning Board of Appeals on Thursday included just two action items.

In one, the Board continued a hearing with Tabor Academy regarding the school’s athletic field in Plan 13, Lot 44 under Residence C Zoning, long an issue between the entities. Tabor attorney Mark Bobrowski requested the first available date in September, which, for the Board, is Sept. 26.

In pending case No. 671, a request for a special permit from the Herons at 4 Aucoot Rd., the Board unanimously voted to reject the applicant because of the project’s dimensions, which would “exacerbate a pre-existing non-conformance,” Chair Eric Pierce said. “You cannot create a nonconformance.”

The Board did not enter Executive Session, and will next meet on June 6, when it will hear a request for a special permit from Kathleen Mahoney, seeking to demolish the dwelling at 40 Dexter Rd. and construct a new one.

By Shawn Badgley

Rochester Women’s Club Wraps Up Good Year

With its Annual Meeting on May 2 and the Scholarship Dance on May 4, the Rochester Women’s Club wrapped up an active and successful year. At the Annual Meeting, outgoing president Marsha Hartley recapped activities and events of the year including sponsoring the Rochester Girl Scout troop, hosting a brunch honoring local veterans on Armed Forces Day, joining with the Rochester Land Trust to clean up Rochester roads in celebration of Earth Day, helping out at the Plumb Corner Halloween celebration, sponsoring a Rochester family in need with gifts and food for the holidays. The club maintained its facility by putting on a new roof.

Fundraisers throughout the year were geared toward renewing the club’s Scholarship program after several years in hiatus. Those efforts included Thanksgiving pies, hand-decorated Christmas wreaths, a holiday bake sale, Soups for Scholarships and finally, the successful Scholarship Dance. This graduation season, two $500 scholarships will be awarded to Rochester students.

Nancy Boutin was elected as the club’s President for the coming two years. The Rochester Women’s Club thanks everyone who supported or participated in activities over the past year. Monthly meetings will resume in September. Meetings are held on the first Thursday of the month. All area women are welcome to attend.

ORR Yearbook Club Fundraiser

Join the ORR Yearbook Club for a carwash, raffle and bake sale on May 26, 1:00 to 4:00 pm, at the Mattapoisett Fire Station. The cost is $5. While you’re waiting, take a chance at our raffle table to win great prizes from our local businesses, or check out our bake sale for lots of yummy treats! Help support our Yearbook Club in raising funds to help publish the 2013 yearbook. Thank you!

The Magic of Therapy Dogs

It’s a little too soon to be certain, but I think everything’s going to work out just fine. It isn’t easy caring for a baby at this stage in life. Just the lack of sleep alone is draining. Not to mention the constant movement, the bending, lifting, walking, and reaching of it all. This is good fatigue, though. After decades of stress-related chronic fatigue and insomnia I now feel rested after a good night’s sleep, even though it might not be quite long enough. Babies – in this case, puppies – wake up early.

Harry the Havanese joined us on April 24. He was selected based on his breed’s gentle characteristics. This is critical for therapy work. The goal is that Harry and I will be trained to provide care to those in need.

Sure, the learning curve would be steep. But if I learned nothing else from the nearly 35 years I spent within the corporate halls of America displaying my core competencies, using my bandwidth, leveraging competitive knowledge, dripping sweat equity, having ah-hah moments, and then finally doing a brain dump for two new hires as my position was bifurcated … well, let me tell you, I learned I needed a therapy dog immediately.

As a child, owning a dog was something I could only dream of. My mother wasn’t fond of pets, especially ones that might drag dirt into her meticulously clean home. I grew up learning how to keep a home clean the way homemakers instructed in the 1950s. There certainly weren’t any Magic Erasers or multi-action “cleaning bubbles” back then. Washing a floor was done with two pails and rag mops. No pets for us.

So when I purchased my first home about the time my son was eight years old, we got a dog. Zeb was a beautiful German Shepard/Lab mix. He became the best friend a boy could have. Zeb pulled sleds in the winter and bikes in the summer, making it impossible to ever walk him on a leash. But they had fun! For an only child, having a dog to pal around with is essential, in my view. Not only did my son have a buddy to play with, he also had someone to blame whenever things were broken. “How did my vase get broken!?” “I don’t know, the dog must have knocked it over.”

Zeb was my best friend, too. He slept beside my bed at night, rode shotgun while I worked my territory, swam against the incoming tide at the Wareham River, and introduced me to the joys of trying to wash away funk of a non-specific origin that even bleach couldn’t remove. When I felt sad, he’d lay his head on my lap. He was my protector and confessor. That dog knew things. No dog will ever be what Zeb was to me.

But I digress.

Harry is a Havanese. The breed’s soft coat and temperament are perfect for providing humans in need with warmth and love. Of course, training is key. Harry could easily go down the wrong path and become a gangster stealing hearts while nipping at heels.

Enter the trainer. This professional recently proved to me that you can read as many books as is humanly possible to consume on long winter days while watching reruns of The Dog Whisperer With Cesar Milan, and still do things terribly wrong.

At four pounds, mostly hair and bones, Harry is learning but, moreover, I am. I am learning that every movement I make and every word I say is shaping Harry’s behavior. If I fail, he fails. Talk about a demanding performance matrix.

Harry’s future is very bright. I foresee him bringing joy to the people we visit in nursing homes and similar facilities. I’m hoping and therefore will be working toward Harry’s inclusion at reading programs or other types of intervention for kids in need. The calming influence a dog like Harry may impart can’t be measured on a corporate Pareto chart.

But for now, Harry is learning that the bathroom is outside, what “no” really means, and what is allowed to be chewed (which does not include the rugs). He is learning to walk along with our adult dog Max, and that Max is in charge of the play dates.

This pup will grow to about 15 pounds, of which 10 will probably still be hair and bones. The breed hails from Cuba, hence “Havanese.” I’m thinking Harry is a lover, not a fighter. Max, on the other hand, hails from Wales, where the breed (Cairn Terrier) was developed to be ratters, hunting down and killing rodents for farmers. Max is definitely not a lover. But Max is a leader and a darned good one; well, except for his massive barking hatred for the FedEx and UPS trucks, but otherwise … yeah, and the trash truck, but really that’s … oh, and I almost forgot motorcycles … he’s a good leader.

Max from the first day slept through the night, knew the toilet was outdoors, and demanded very little of us except constant exercise. At night, after a day of patrolling the yard for varmints, he’ll pop up on the sofa beside me giving me a soulful knowing look. I’ll scratch his favorite spots and whisper sweet nothings into his waiting ears. This is just between the two of us. But his temperament isn’t well suited for hours of lying around being patted and cooed over. He considers that nonsense. Bring in the lover.

Harry is a tiny package of “What are we going to do now folks?” Yet, when placed in the arms of my mother, whose life in the nursing home revolves around finding the bravery to face another day of confinement in that alternate universe, he melts into her and stays peacefully placid. “I could get used to you,” she told him the other day. I witnessed the magic a dog possesses. I witnessed the gift of joy a dog brings just by being present and allowing a human to stroke its coat. I witnessed my dream slowly coming true: using a dog, this dog, to bring comfort to others. The other dogs were mine exclusively; Harry is for everyone.

Each morning for the last two weeks when Harry awakens at 5:15 and announces “It’s time to go outside,” I’m reminded that I ain’t so young anymore. But I’m happy, tired and happy. Dog magic is working on me, too.

By Marilou Newell