Tri-Town Schools Hire New Business Administrator

The Old Rochester Regional School District welcomed its new business administrator on December 13 during the joint meeting of the ORR School District Committees.

Paul Kitchen will assume the position on January 7, 2019, replacing former business administrator Patrick Spencer, who passed away unexpectedly on October 1.

Spencer had been the school districts’ business administrator for over four years.

Kitchen is the current business administrator for the Greater New Bedford Vocational Technical High School and served as the business administrator for the Fairhaven Public School District for 11 years.

Superintendent Doug White introduced Kitchen, saying he had earned his Masters of Business Administration from Bryant College and has a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration from UMass Dartmouth. Kitchen, who resides in Fairhaven, also earned his Doctorate of Jurisprudence from the Southern New England School of Law.

“He brings a wealth of experience to the district, not only around budgets, but also buildings, state reporting, revenue production, facilities management, and service oversight,” said White.

Kitchen is also a certified Massachusetts Public Procurement Officer and Building Operator.

“His collaborative style will be greatly appreciated in the district as he works with all the stakeholders,” White said.

The committee voted unanimously to make Kitchen’s employment with the district official.

The next meeting of the joint Old Rochester Regional School District Committees is scheduled for March 7 at 6:30 pm in the ORR Junior High School media room.

Joint Old Rochester Regional School District Committees Meeting

By Jean Perry

Old Colony Continues to Power Apponequet Hockey

Although the co-op ice hockey program Apponequet/Bishop Connolly/Old Colony identifies as the Lakers, it’s the Old Colony Cougars that have powered the team early in the 2018-2019 season.

Most recently, the Lakers were once again crowned Prenda Cup Champions, retaining their title from 2017-2018, after knocking off Somerset Berkley 5-2. Carson McGrath, an Old Colony student, was crowned tournament MVP after capping things off with a 31-save performance in the win over Somerset Berkley. McGrath also had two fellow Old Colony students, Josh Schwalmand Matt Youlden, helping in defense in front of the net. Ethan Harrop, also an Old Colony student, scored what would be the game winner, breaking a 2-2 tie at 10:17 in the third period on a 5-on-3 power play.

The Lakers jumped out to a 2-0 start to 2018-2019, having defeated Diman in the first game of the season. Apponequet/Bishop Connolly/Old Colony graduated some significant pieces at the conclusion of last season. However, with six crucial pieces coming back from Old Colony, including co-captain Zach Lovendaleand sophomore Jacob Gauthier – who scored 17 goals as a freshman last year – the group should remain a competitive force within the South Coast Conference in 2018-2019.

            “While the team lost its linchpin defenseman Dylan Hanson, who was one of the more talented D-men in school history, as well as Jarod Stevenswho was the programs 2nd 100 pt scorer, they are looking poised to have a good year,” Apponequet/Bishop Connolly/Old Colony coach Craig Correia said. “Losing six seniors, of which Stevens and Noah Liolioswere in the top 4 in scoring on the team a year ago, there is plenty of playing time to be had.

            “We look to the captains Collin Barrosoand Lovendale to set the tone for our team this year, that being one of a high tempo unit that is sound in its defensive zone,” Correia continued. “If we can learn be extremely responsible and work as a unit in our defensive zone, we should be able to grow from there.”

            Savanna Hallecontinues to blossom as a high school basketball force within the region, opening the 2018-2019 campaign with a 27-point effort off of six three-pointers in Old Colony’s 42-26 win over St. John Paul II.

            “We just keep telling her that she’s going to have to keep improving if she wants to keep doing what she’s doing,” Old Colony coach Craig Lincoln said. “Because she’s not going to be able to hide forever.”

            Old Colony boys basketball started off the year with a win over St. John Paul II, as well, by a score of 61-55. Jake Jasonpicked up where he left off in 2017-2018, scoring 23 points in the win. Zach Soucylogged 21 points in the effort, while Hunter Soareschipped in 11, six points coming off of two fourth-quarter three-pointers.

Old Rochester Regional

Tucker Guardstarted things on the right foot for Old Rochester Regional High School boys indoor track. Guard won two individual events, the 55-meter hurdles in 8.5 seconds and the high jump with a 5-foot-7 leap in the Bulldogs’ 54-32 win over Apponequet to open the season. He also combined with Patrick Janicki, Geoffrey Noonan, and Chandler Goulartto win the 4×400 relay.

Noonan and Janicki each won individual events, as well. Noonan took first in the 2-mile run with a 10:49 finish. Janicki won the 1000 in 3:06.2.

Anthony Childsalso won two individual events in the Bulldogs’ win, taking first in the 55-meter dash with a 6.7-second sprint and in the 300 with a 38.8-second effort.

Tori Monteiro, Sydney Green, and Jill Langlaisopened up the season on the right foot, each winning an event for ORR girls indoor track in the first meet of the season. Unfortunately for the Bulldogs, those individual wins came in a 49-37 losing effort against Apponequet. Monteiro took first in the shot put with a 28-foot-5 ¾ throw. Green took first in the 55-meter hurdles with a 9.7-second finish. Langlais won the 600 with a 1:56.6 run.

Tabor Academy

Tabor Academy girls basketball is already off to a 7-0 start, with its most recent win being a 55-40 finish against Noble & Greenough School at the Nickerson Holiday Tournament. The 40 points the Seawolves surrendered in the win is, surprisingly, the highest total they’ve allowed all season. Opponents are averaging 26.3 points per game against Tabor in the early going, only accruing 184 points through seven games. Meanwhile, the Seawolves are averaging 64.9 points per game, totaling in at 454 to start 2018-2019.

 

High School Sports Update

By Nick Friar

Showstoppers to Offer One Last Holiday Concert

The Showstoppers community-service singing troupe is offering one last performance of their 2018 Christmas Concert on Sunday, December 30at 2:00 pm at the Knights of Columbus on Rte 6 in Mattapoisett. The show will include traditional and non-traditional selections performed by this talented troupe of local singers and special guests. The show is sure to please audience members of all ages! Admission is a suggested $5 donation to help cover the expenses of this all volunteer-run nonprofit organization. They will also be collecting non-perishable food items to help restock local food pantries that go bare after the holidays. The Showstoppers has been bringing live musical entertainment to nursing homes, senior centers, and healthcare facilities as well as providing entertainment at community fairs, fundraisers, and civic events throughout the area since 2002. For more information, call 508-758-4525 or email kzucco@comcast.net. Follow them on Facebook for regular updates on their activities: www.facebook.com/showstopppers.us/.

Sippican Historical Society

In 1998, the Sippican Historical Society commissioned an architectural survey of Marion’s historic homes and buildings. The survey was funded one-half by the Sippican Historical Society and one-half by the Massachusetts Historical Commission. Due to the limits of funding, not all of the historic buildings were surveyed, but over 100 were catalogued and photographed. The results of the survey are in digital form on the Massachusetts Historical Commission’s website and in four binders in the Sippican Historical Society’s office (and at the Marion Town Clerk’s office).

Marion (Old Rochester) is one of the oldest towns in the United States, and the Sippican Historical Society maintains an extensive collection of documentation on its historic buildings. The Sippican Historical Society will preview one building a week so that the residents of Marion can understand more about its unique historical architecture.

This installment features One Allen Street. Located at the northwest corner of Water and Allen Streets, the home at One Allen Street evolved from a small Queen Anne cottage that has been altered over the years. The dwelling was built in 1885 as the summer home for Rev. John Brooks, who was the rector of Christ Episcopal Church in Springfield. His brother, Rev. Phillips Brooks, was a frequent summer visitor. Rev. Phillips Brooks, the rector of Trinity Church in Boston, is well know for writing the Christmas hymn “O Little Town of Bethlehem.” Their mother was related to the Phillips family, founders of the two famous Phillips Academies in Andover and Exeter.

Edmond P Patnaude

Edmond P Patnaude, 70, of Rochester passed away on Friday December 14, 2018 at Charlton Memorial Hospital surrounded by his loving family and friends.  He was born in Fairhaven, son of the late Edmond and Mary (Murphy) Patnaude.

Ed leaves behind his wife Leith (Liebman) Patnaude with whom he celebrated over 44 years of marriage; his brother and sister in law, Kent & Jeannette Liebman of Meadow Vista, California and his beloved rescue cats Bo and Sparky.

Ed worked as an IT specialist designing and implementing computer programs at several banks and companies in the Northeast including UPS, Northeast Federal Credit Union and Hussey’s.  One of Ed’s passions was auto crossing and he won several events in Southern NH.

Ed loved being with nature and he and his wife Leith spend many hours watching and feeding the birds, deer and other assorted wild life that congregated in their yard.

His memorial service will be held at the Long Plain Baptist Church in Acushnet Mass at 1:00 pm on December 30th.  In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made to the Friends of Joseph H Plumb Memorial Library at 17 Constitution Way, P.O. Box 69, Rochester, MA  02770.

Nightmare Before Christmas – Brandt Point Village

The report came late in the evening’s agenda, the December 17 Mattapoisett Planning Board agenda, that is. The report in question was the peer review update from Ken Motta of Field Engineering regarding the oft times troubled Brandt Point Village subdivision.

The chapters in this construction project’s story could read like a Tim Burton movie – multi-layered, surprising twists and turns, at times dark, and with numerous characters. But the reality for the homeowners living in Phase 1 of the project is more troubling then fiction. After years of promises from owners and developers, there are still some 20 line items of incomplete to-dos on Phase 1.

Yet it was a very quiet update indeed, as no one was present representing the developer, Armand Cotelleso, or financier Marc Marcus of Omega Financial, the latest in a long line of prime movers who have carved through acres of woodlands attempting to build out a subdivision that would meet market expectations and the Town’s regulations.

On this night, the Planning Board members silently read Motta’s two-page report that noted a few items had been completed such as repair to broken concrete, while other more significant issues remained open-ended, like the condition of the community’s septic system.

In October 2018, a frustrated Planning Board called in the $1.5 million surety Marcus had put up in 2016 after the developer continually failed to complete work on Phase 1 as scheduled and failed to show up for informational meetings with the Planning Board.

Chairman Tom Tucker thought that action had “lit a fire under” them and inspired some of the work that they now noted as complete. But Tucker also mentioned the need to stay on top of the project, especially as Phase 2 build-out begins.

“Some of those homes look rather large,” Tucker said as he reminded the board members that the bedroom count for the entire project stood at 90, but that it appeared a “den” feature might be ultimately used as a third bedroom. He said again that the Planning Board would have to “keep an eye on the bedroom count.”

Present on an unrelated matter was a resident of Phase 1, Derek Tavares of 3 Nantucket Drive, who sought and received permission for a Form A Approval Not Required as he plans to purchase an adjoining vacant lot for the purpose of expanding his outdoor space. Tavares confirmed that homes in Phase 2 were being marketed at upwards of $450,000, a princely sum for a mere two-bedroom home.

The board members concurred that they did not expect much work to take place over the winter months, nor would Motta be providing another report until sometime in early 2019.

Earlier in the evening, Scott Snow, applicant for a new subdivision proposal named Eldridge Estates located off 8 Prospect Road, was represented by Richard Rheaume of Prime Engineering, who presented an update on the project. This meeting was an informal discussion followed by a request for a time extension since the project had evolved over the prior months and the original application was now drawing to a close.

Previously, Snow has proposed a two-lot subdivision that would also have included two existing structures. Now the project featured three new lots along with the two existing lots for a total of five residential lots.

Rheaume said that the homes would be serviced by public water and sewer, that sewer stubs were already in place, and that there would be a turn-around at the end of a private driveway in accordance with the requirements of emergency vehicles.

Tucker told Rheaume that when he returned to the Planning Board with a new plan of record, he must also have letters from the Police and Fire Departments that confirmed acceptance of the driveway configuration.

There was a rather long discussion about the timing of Snow’s return to the Planning Board with completed plans and other necessary documentation. With holiday closures and press deadlines, Rheaume was unsure if the timing would work for his client. In the end it was determined that an extension would be granted until February 4, at which time Rheaume would have to ask for a second extension until February 21.

There was also discussion about an appropriate water flow study procedure to utilize when calculating stormwater runoff. In the end it was determined that the Town’s peer review consultant would weigh in on that aspect of the project.

The request for a continuation until February 4 was granted.

Also coming before the Planning Board was Dave Andrews of The Bay Club with an update on roadwork within the massive subdivision as at least one roadway covenant was nearing its expiration date. The board was satisfied with the information, which included Andrews noting that one section of a newly created neighborhood would take four years for completion.

“We had thought it would be a 10-year project, but it’s nearer to 20,” Andrews chuckled.

Of the 189 homes allowed under the permit for the entire build-out, to date some 114 residences have been constructed, Andrews estimated.

Planning Board member Janice Robbins casually brought up the topic of marijuana bylaws, asking Planning Board Administrator Mary Crain if the board had authority to set permitting fees. Crain said she believed that to be the case, but would verify it with Town Counsel.

The next meeting of the Mattapoisett Planning Board is scheduled for January 7 at 7:00 pm in the Town Hall conference room.

Mattapoisett Planning Board

Marilou Newell

This Imperfect Christmas

Some people’s love of the holiday season is obvious. They put their tree up before Thanksgiving, smother their house in lights, and still send Christmas cards out to every person they’ve ever met. Their blatant love of Christmas hits you over the head with the hard density of a begrudgingly re-gifted fruitcake.

I too love Christmas, but in less obvious ways. I might not decorate my car with a Rudolph nose and antlers, ever bake cookies, or sport a different ugly Christmas sweater every day of December, but I love wrapping presents, burning balsam-scented candles, and singing Christmas songs in the car with my boy. I cherish carefully pulling out our artificial Christmas tree of ten years and greeting it like an old friend who’s come to visit and remembering past Christmases as I hang the ornaments. I love helping my son leave cookies and milk for Santa on Christmas Eve, and I especially enjoy driving him nuts Christmas morning as I make him wait for me to get up, brush my teeth, and make the coffee before allowing him into the living room to survey the splendor before him from Santa’s secret visit, dragging out the anticipation and excitement for as long as I can.

Which is why I still wonder how this year I’ve essentially canceled Christmas as I know and love it, and as these December days pass and the dark nights drag slowly on, I am increasingly aware of just how imperfect this holiday season has been for me this year.

I always aspire to make Christmas as magical and wondrous as possible for the boy, even pulling off some nearly impossible feats to keep Santa’s Christmas spirit alive for as long as I could, and I’ve gone to some extreme lengths to provide the most unconventional Christmas gifts ever requested by a child – even allowing Santa to drop off the one-ton church organ he found on Craigslist a day early because there was no way he was going to be able to fit it in his sleigh with all those millions of toys on Christmas Eve.

Yes, the boy may be 15, but Santa still comes to our house. Except this year he won’t be coming because the boy won’t be here. For the first time ever the boy won’t be home, and neither will I, as I will be in one corner of the globe and my boy will be in another.

While he lays his head to rest in a warm flat in Toronto with his father on Christmas Eve, I will be boarding an overnight flight to Scotland, landing on Christmas morning in Edinburgh. It’s an imperfect Christmas in every way, made even more imperfect by having to spend it aboard three connecting flights that just so happened to be the only affordable fare I could find. Instead of waking up on Christmas morning to the warm, familiar delights of a snuggly Christmas at home, I’ll just simply be still awake on the 25th after a night of no sleep, alone except for the other disappointed budget travelers around me, missing Christmas and missing my boy.

We didn’t even put up our tree this year.

Last year I decided I wasn’t going to host another all-out Christmas as I usually do for my son and his father and siblings who live in Canada. Nor was I about to relocate Christmas to Toronto and spend it in Canada under the circumstances of unavoidably awkward merriment. When I suggested to the boy that perhaps he was old enough to travel by plane to Toronto alone to spend the holidays with his dad and siblings, I don’t think I truly believed it at the time. But he reveled in the idea, and with some planning and the reassurance that Santa would be able to find him in Toronto, I sealed the fate of Christmas 2018 as being, probably, the crappiest Christmas I’ve ever had.

It might be white in Toronto and green for Christmas in Scotland, but it’ll be a bona fide blue Christmas from my airplane window seat, comforted only by the velvety warmth of some no-name red wine and the minimal support from the foam of my travel neck pillow, none of which is of any concern to the boy whose excitement over the adventure ahead is matched in intensity only by his anxiety that Santa might not get the message in time to forward his presents to his Toronto address – presents that I won’t be agonizing over this year trying to help Santa find – presents that consist of five very specific VHS tapes and one geography puzzle I’m beginning to doubt has ever even physically manifested into existence. (The boy was never really into toys. As a young Autistic individual, he had way more important interests to indulge in, like license plates, street signs, train crossings, 21stcentury Fox movie fanfare, dominos, organs, and VHS tapes.)

Which is why we recently found ourselves at a special mailbox in Rochester at the corner of Walnut Plain Road and High Street with an overnight express letter to the North Pole.

“Dear Santa, I will be going to Toronto to visit my father for Christmas… The address is… Thank you so much! Etcetera…”

I pondered what my own letter to Santa would say about how all I want this year is for my boy to have a wonderful Christmas full of fond new memories, personal growth, and a newfound sense of independence and accomplishment – gifts that, for a mom, are incredibly painful to give, but, without a doubt, all for the best for the boy.

I think I know how Santa would reply. He would say Scotland is a pretty nice place to find one’s self for an imminent blue Christmas, and I will indeed enjoy my time on holiday. True, this imperfect Christmas without my boy won’t be my best Christmas, but it could be, at least I hope it will be, a best-for-him Christmas for the boy.

This Imperfect Life

By Jean Perry

Peter Hodges Memorial Scholarship

The Mattapoisett Lions Club, a member of Lions International – the world’s largest service club organization consisting of 45,000 clubs and more than 1.3 million members world-wide, is pleased to announce the availability of two (2) -$ 2,500 scholarships to be awarded this year to a graduating high school senior or home-schooled student residing in Mattapoisett, Marion, or Rochester.

To qualify, a graduating student or home-schooled student shall be accepted to and intending to attend their first year of a recognized institution of higher education, must be a resident of the Tri-Town area, and have demonstrated service to the community.

To obtain an application, learn more about this Award, or to learn how to become a member of the Lions Club visit our website www.mattapoisettlionsclub.org Award applications are also available through the guidance department at your high school.

Applications must be received by March 23, 2019.

The funds for the Peter Hodges Memorial Scholarship are raised through fundraisers held by the Mattapoisett Lions Club throughout the year, including Harbor Days, an annual Arts and Craft Festival held in Shipyard Park, Mattapoisett every 3rd weekend of July.

The Lion’s Club motto is “We Serve”, as one of the largest charitable causes of Lion’s International includes raising funds for Eye Research in an effort to end preventable blindness throughout the world, eradicating measles world wide in partnership with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and here at home providing services for those in need in our communities.

BOS Considers Action Against Repeat Kennel Offender

Residents report that things had been quiet for well over two years now since their neighbor Liberal Teixeira’s kennel license was revoked by the Town, essentially putting an end to the incessant barking that prompted repeated complaints since 2013.

But that was then, and with a revival of dogs incessantly barking at the property, neighbors have lodged new complaints leading the Town to believe that Teixeira is back to breeding dogs, this time without a permit.

Several neighbors attended the Rochester Board of Selectmen meeting on December 17 to give sworn statements on what they have witnessed at Teixeira’s property, 368 North Avenue, but Teixeira did not. Town Counsel Blair Bailey, in communicating with police and animal control, concluded that Teixeira is breeding Vizsla puppies against the Board of Selectmen’s orders, which were upheld in court in 2015.

Three female dogs are licensed to the property, Town Clerk Naida Parker confirmed, which is allowed in the Town’s dog law. However, if Teixeira is keeping a kennel as the Town suspects, he would be in violation.

Neighbor Alan Boling says the noise is continuous. “The dogs bark day and night. It’s continuous, even up until this week,” Boling said. “You get up in the morning … it’s just a riot of dogs barking. They bark at night and it’s just frustrating. It seems like nothing can be done about it: it’s just constant.” It may not be every day, he later said, “But when it happens, it happens a lot. It’s just constant noise. It’s just not right.”

Neighbor Robert Lacroix said he lives across the street and “we know for a fact that he’s been breeding dogs.”

Donna Medeiros said there are at least three or four dogs, “and I’m sure there’s some in the house, some in the basement.”

Police Chief Robert Small said Teixeira allowed the animal control officer to inspect the property and that the number of dogs present and the ages of the dogs are not in compliance with the licensing guidelines.

Rosemary Boling said when the dogs were removed from the property back in 2015, the neighborhood was quiet. “This summer I could hear the dogs and I actually spoke to someone who was going into the house.“ She said she told them, “I hope you’re not raising dogs again because the noise is becoming unbearable.”

Boling recalled one morning this summer when a litter of puppies was running down North Avenue and someone stopped to collect the puppies and put them out back. A little while later, she testified, the puppies had again escaped and were running in the road.

A police officer responded and someone at the property explained that the lock on the gate had been broken.

“It’s a kennel again,” said Medeiros.

Bailey said it appears as though Teixeira is running a breeding operation with an address based in New Bedford, but tied to the North Avenue property, a violation of the prior order.

Board of Selectmen Chairman Greenwood “Woody” Hartley acknowledged that Teixeira had been notified of the dog hearing and chose not to attend that evening.

“He had the opportunity to come tonight,” sighed Hartley.

“It would appear as though Mr. Teixeira has pretty much ignored the court orders and the court upholding,” said Selectman Brad Morse.

“The concern we have is, we are going back to that point where we were before,” said Bailey.

Morse recommended the board close the public hearing, “and I think we should move forward with a course of action.”

The board closed the hearing to take the matter under advisement and will announce at its January 7 meeting whether it will take legal action against Teixeira.

In other business, the board decided to move forward in making the fire chief position a full-time position. According to Hartley, the responsibilities related to training, record keeping, and inspections is “growing exponentially,” and Hartley added, “It is really impossible for a part-time leader to keep up.”

The Town will follow the usual hiring procedure by updating the job description, posting the position in-house, and having a hiring committee consider the candidates.

“There is not a rush on this,” said Hartley. “It’s a big move for the Town: it’s a big community, a long-term commitment. I think it’s appropriate that we move ahead. … We have more than one person who could probably qualify.”

The board signed the municipal water agreement with Middleboro, which will extend a water main to the Annie Maxim House on North Avenue.

The board appointed Brad Correia and Daniel Hartley to the Agricultural Commission, bringing the total number of sitting members to three. There are still four vacancies left on the commission.

The next meeting of the Rochester Board of Selectmen is scheduled for January 7 at 6:00 pm at the Rochester Town Hall.

Rochester Board of Selectmen

By Jean Perry

Marion Art Center

Join the Marion Art Center (MAC) as we close out the season with the Putnam Murdock Trio on Saturday, December 22at 7:30. Putnam Murdock (guitar and vocals), Barry Gross (bass and vocals), and Colin Bradley (pedal steel) have been conducting experiments in sonic allure for three years. Creating soundscapes laced with lyric and story, they provide audiences with a unique experience of witnessing the creative process. Armed with relentless listening, these musicians improvise structure and arrangement to match the mood of the room. With music that is sensitive, powerful, dusty, and patient, this will take you on a journey of genuine Americana music. Tickets ($18 for current MAC members and $20 for non-members) can be purchased in person or by phone during regular hours (Tuesday-Friday from 1:00 pm – 5:00 pm and Saturday from 10:00 am – 2:00 pm) or online at www.marionartcenter.org/musicatthemac/.

Auditions – The Cherry Orchard by Anton Chekhov – The Marion Art Center has announced open auditions for all roles in the upcoming production of The Cherry Orchard by Anton Chekhov, a drama (dramedy) that examines and illustrates the prevailing class structure of Chekhov’s Russia. Ranevskaya struggles to deal with the realities of losing her family estate, her daughters Anya and Varya choose their own ways to deal with the big changes ahead of them. Meanwhile their neighbor, Lopakhin, tries to solve everyone’s problems with new money and new ideas.

Auditions will be held on Saturday, January 5at 10:00 am, and on Monday, January 7at 7:00 pm at the Marion Art Center, 80 Pleasant St. (the corner of Main and Pleasant Streets), in Marion. Performances will be Friday, March 15 through Sunday, March 17 and Thursday, March 21 through Saturday, March 23. The Sunday performance will start at 2:00 p.m. and all other performances will start at 7:30 pm.

Director Kate Fishman will be casting five females and ten males with several roles as guests and servants for anyone wanting to start in theater without a heavy responsibility. Actors should read ages near real age, between seventeen through fifties, with one male role who will read in his eighties.

Auditions will consist of a cold reading from the script, which can be accessed on www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/7986 .

No prior acting experience is necessary; both accomplished and aspiring actors are encouraged to audition. Participants can expect 2-3 rehearsals a week during January, February and early March. Rehearsal scheduling will be flexible and take actors needs into consideration.

Director Kate Fishman states, “I’m also looking for volunteers for stage manager, set builders, and other tech help, so please contact the Marion Art Center if you’d like to be part of this production. We’d love to hear from you!”

For more information, email mactheater1957@gmail.com. You will also find information by visiting our website www.marionartcenter.org.