Rochester Country Fair Auction Fundraiser

Donated items for Live Auction wanted to benefit the Rochester Country Fair. Did you finish your spring-cleaning in time for summer? The Fair Committee is currently looking for donated items to be auctioned at the Rochester Country Fair. We hope to have approximately 100 items to auction off, so your help in reaching this goal is greatly appreciated!

This Good Old Country Auction Fundraiser will take place at the Rochester Country Fair on Sunday, August 20 at 1:00 pm under the big tent provided by Chase Canopy Company. You name it and we can sell it!

Antiques, Farm Implements, Livestock, Home Goods, Pies, Furniture, Tools, Automotive Parts & Accessories, Unique one-of-a-kind items and Odds & Ends.

Contact us via email at RochesterCountryFair@comcast.net, call Mike at 774-263-1146, or message us on Facebook if you would like to donate and help us reach our goal.

Additional Fair information can be obtained on our website www.rochesterma.com.

July Programs at Plumb Library

Children ages 1+, teens, and adults are invited to “Build a Better World” by participating in this year’s Summer Library Program. Register before July 15 at www.plumblibrary.com. Check the library’s Events Calendar for information on the full range of activities for all ages.

Thanks to the Rochester Lions Club, Mad Science is back for science fun on Wednesdays, July 19 and 26, from 4:50 – 5:30 pm. Children ages 5-12 can learn about Mighty Machines or Black and Blue Oceans. Visit the Plumb Library Events Calendar to register. Space is limited, so sign up soon!

On Monday, July 17 from 4:00 – 5:00 pm, DeeAnne ART will teach teens ages 12 and up how to draw manga. Kids can draw characters they know or create their own. Registration is required. Sign up at the Events Calendar.

On Tuesday, July 18 from 4:00 – 6:00 pm, father/son team Arthur and Peter Evans of Makerspace Workshop will guide us through a 3D adventure, learning about 3D printing and design. This program is best for ages 7 and up. Register on the Events Calendar. This program is sponsored by the Friends of Plumb Library.

Adults are invited to try Chair Yoga with Ms. Marcia of Studio 105 on Monday, July 17 from 11:30 am to 12:30 pm. Registration is required.

Standing Room Only for Solar Hearing

Rochester Planning Board Chairman Arnold Johnson was by turns indulgent and rebuking of the overflow crowd at the Rochester Town Hall Tuesday evening as he steered the board through the public hearings of two contentious projects proposed in town.

The first was a continued public hearing regarding the large-scale solar photovoltaic installation Special Permit application for a solar farm on Rounseville and Mendell Roads.

The applicant’s representative Steve Long presented updates to the standing room only crowd regarding the Electromagnetic Field (EMF) study, which suggested that the low levels outside the fence were insignificant and would not affect neighbors.

The 13-acre site would be cleared of vegetation, and residents expressed concern regarding the scenic quality of the existing trees on the site and along the roadway.

Long described to the board that the location of the solar panels was chosen to avoid any impact on the riverfront area of Doggett’s Brook, and saving trees along the road, he said, “…doesn’t save anything valuable.” Residents disagreed, stating that what’s valuable was saving the forest.

This tone continued throughout the discussion, with residents and Planning Board members taking aim at the project, but with board members expressing frustration with the state and its policy that favors solar farms.

Board member Ben Bailey pointed out that the legislature supports green energy sources, and as much as he doesn’t like the solar fields in town, he stated “[The state] suspended towns’ zoning regulations and made solar farms an exempted industrial use.”

Johnson asked for a show of hands of how many of those present attended the last Town Meeting. It was a poor showing, and Johnson said he was embarrassed that with 4,000 registered voters in town, that the quorum number was lowered from 100 to 75 at Town Meeting.

One resident said, “We are a small town; we’ve done our share,” and vowed to contact the State House to try to address the number of solar projects in town.

Another impassioned resident noted that the bylaw stated the board could take neighborhood character and social structure into account when siting a solar project.

Board member John DeMaggio briefly touched on this issue, saying that the wording was intentionally vague to give the board regulatory wiggle room.

The hearing was continued to Monday, August 7.

While many residents left at the close of the previous hearing, the room remained full to capacity as Johnson opened the public hearing for a Site Plan Review for a proposed farmer’s market in a 60-acre field on Route 105.

Bill Madden of G.A.F. Engineering, accompanied by applicant Craig Canning, presented the site plan, which includes two Morton style buildings 60 feet by 120 feet in size. The buildings and parking area would be located on 3.9 acres directly adjacent to Marion Road. The remaining acreage will continue to be used for cropland.

Canning noted that the location of the entrance to the site shown on the plan had been adjusted approximately 25 feet to the west to accommodate a neighbor’s concerns about its proximity to her driveway. The front building would be used for retail space, while processing, sorting, and cleaning produce would occur in the rear building, among other activities supporting the business of the retail space.

There are 50 parking spaces proposed, including handicapped spaces. The site is serviced by town water from Marion and will have its own septic system. There is a proposed seating area on the west side of the building, and a grassy area near the road for display of seasonal products such as mums, Christmas trees, and pumpkins. The road into the site and around the building will be paved, but the parking area will predominantly be gravel surfaced.

Madden noted that the applicant is seeking a waiver from the stormwater regulations, since the runoff can all be infiltrated on-site. There is minimal proposed lighting, except for the sign near the road and wall sconces on the building.

Canning informed the neighbors that truck traffic will be restricted to the early morning hours with fertilizer deliveries and trucks hauling produce from the farm. Residents of the nearby Hathaway Pond Circle expressed considerable concern about traffic and the potential for an increase in accidents. Johnson stated that the police chief had reviewed the site and was satisfied with the site lines for the entrance.

There was also a suggestion that Canning place the parking in the rear of the building to retain the “agricultural ambiance” of the area, to which Canning replied that the site was designed to maximize the use of the entire property and he did not think he could effectively use the site in any other configuration.

Madden noted that they will be requesting a variance for a commercial use in order to sell sandwiches and other items not produced on the farm. One resident reminded the crowd that there was a failed attempt to conserve this field, saying, “We all know what could have happened at this property. It was very gratifying to see [Canning’s] teenage son out there on the tractor on Sunday…. We will all benefit from this.”

The public hearing was continued to Tuesday, July 25.

The next meeting of the Rochester Planning Board is scheduled for July 25 at 7:00 pm at the Rochester Town Hall.

By Sarah French Storer

 

ORRHS Full of High Achievers

With graduation, the school and community tend to focus on the senior class and their achievements at that time. However, the underclassmen also have an opportunity in the same period to celebrate their accomplishments for the past year. At the ORRHS Underclassmen Awards Night, these hard-working students had their chance to be honored.

The American Legion Award recipients were brought up first to receive certificates demonstrating their acceptance into the Massachusetts Boys and Girls State Programs. These parallel programs are aimed at teaching students responsible citizenship and giving a more hands-on understanding of the American political process. The members of the Class of 2018 selected for this opportunity were Jacob Asiaf, Nicholas Claudio, Evan Costa, Sam Pasquill, Ainslee Bangs, and Rachel Demmer. These students attended the week-long sessions at Stonehill College in late June.

Participants in Project Contemporary Competitiveness, hosted at Stonehill College each summer, were also awarded with a certificate stating their participation in the classes. Sophomore Ryu Huynh-Aoyama received this award.

The Presidential Service Award is given to community members who perform and record specific amounts of volunteer service hours based on their age. For instance, a gold medal is awarded to ages 11-15 for over 100 hours of service, and to ages 16-25 for over 250 hours of service. ORR students Mackenzie Drew, Ryu Hyunh-Aoyama, Brianna Lynch, Mia Quinlan, and Victoria Quinlan received the Gold Service Award. Sara Campopiano and Joanna Caynon received the Silver Service Award. Brielle Correia, Evan Costa, Alisha Mackin, Claire Noble-Shriver, and Madeline Scheub received the Bronze Service Award.

The Bausch and Lomb Honorary Science Award is given annually to a junior student who is high achieving in the sciences and has strong math scores in the PSAT, SAT or ACT. This award gives a $7,500 per year scholarship to recipients towards the University of Rochester in Rochester, NY. This year’s recipient was rising senior Jahn Pothier.

The National Latin Exam is an annual 45-minute test consisting of 40 multiple choice questions. Students in any Latin class at ORR have the option to take the specific level test corresponding to their class year level (i.e. Latin 2). Depending on the amount of correct answers, a student can receive a cum laude (with praise) or magna cum laude (with great praise) award. In Latin 2, Mackenzie Riley received a Magna Cum Laude and Noah Maxwell earned a Cum Laude. In Latin 4, Evan Tilley received a Magna Cum Laude and Hannah Powers earned a Cum Laude.

The National Spanish Exam runs and awards similarly to the NLE, except students are awarded with gold, silver, bronze, or honorable mentions for their high scores. For Spanish 1, Madeline Hartley received a silver medal and Alexander Wurl earned an Honorable Mention. In Spanish 2, Rosemary Loer received a silver medal, Emma Gabriel earned a bronze medal, and Felicia Aguiar, Milo Bednarczyk, Bethany Cabral, Sara Campopiano, Lucas Costa, Gabriel Jacobsen, and Tyler Rose received Honorable Mentions. For Spanish 3, Michaela Mattson received a bronze medal and Brielle Correia and Lily Pearl Poirier earned Honorable Mentions. Finally, in Spanish 4, Emily Bock and Nicholas Claudio received Honorable Mentions.

The American Mathematics Competition 10/12 are two 25-question, 75-minute multiple choice exams aimed at testing the problem-solving skills of students. The AMC 12 is for seniors and below, and the AMC 10 is for sophomores and below. For the 2017 AMC, Tyler Rose received an Outstanding Achievement award.

Students who excel on a previous AMC exam are invited to take the USA Mathematical Olympiad. For the 2017 Olympiad Contest, Robert Sylvester earned the Outstanding Achievement award.

The Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Medal is awarded to “promising students who have distinguished themselves in mathematics and science.” This annual award is a merit scholarship for $25,000 a year for four years if the rising senior recipient applies, is accepted, and enrolls to Rensselaer. This year’s awardee was Hanil Kang.

The Harvard Prize Book Award is presented “in more than 2,000 high schools around the world to outstanding students in the next-to-graduating class who demonstrate excellence in scholarship and achievement in other nonacademic areas,” states the Harvard Alumni website. The Class of 2018 recipient of this award was Jahn Pothier.

The Cape Cod Tufts Club Book Award is presented to rising seniors in local high schools who demonstrate academic excellence. This year’s ORR recipient was Hanil Kang.

This is only the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the awards that the underclassmen students at ORRHS received this past year. The rest of the accolades handed out during Awards Night will be listed in a following article.

By Jo Caynon

 

Elizabeth Taber Library

Bike Lending Program: The Elizabeth Taber Library is very excited to again offer our bike lending program for adults this summer! Starting the week of July 10, we will allow library patrons (18 and over) to check out a bicycle and helmet for three days with your Marion library card. Patrons will need to provide their library card and license, as well as sign a waiver form before taking the bike out for a spin around Marion. For more information, please stop in or call us at 508-748-1252.

Bridge Benefit: The Elizabeth Taber Library’s Bridge Benefit Committee cordially invites you to participate in a duplicate bridge game with Director Alan Hudson on Friday, August 4 at the Marion Music Hall. The committee, which consists of C.C. Dyer, Kathy Feeney, Andy Kotsatos, Susan Mead, Libby O’Neill, Kathy Reed and Meg Steinberg, has been working diligently to organize this exciting event for the community.

The entry fee is $35. Space is limited, so make a reservation today by sending your check to the Elizabeth Taber Library. Doors will open at 1:30 pm, and tournament play will begin at 2:00 pm. There will be light refreshments offered, tournament prizes and a selection of great raffle prizes.

Please come support your local library with this enjoyable event. If you cannot attend our fundraiser, but would like to donate or purchase raffle tickets in advance, you may do so at the library. All proceeds raised will be used to enhance the programs and services offered by the Elizabeth Taber Library. This fundraiser is sponsored by Kinlin Grover Real Estate. For more information, please call the Library at 508-748-1252.

Mattapoisett Congregational Church Yard Sale

The Mattapoisett Congregational Church is now accepting items for our August 12 yard sale. Downsizing your house? Cleaning your closets? Whatever your reason may be, please consider donating to the Mattapoisett Congregational Church yard sale. Something for everyone: children’s table, jewelry table, fishing corner, household items, and furniture (tables, chairs, clothing, bureaus, end tables and desks).

Donating items for the sale is easy. We accept donations at the Mechanics Street door, Monday through Friday from 8:30 am – 12:00 pm. Need help unloading? The week of August 7-11 from 8:00 am – 12:00 pm and Tuesday, August 8 and Thursday, August 10 from 3:00 – 6:00 pm, there will be a member of the church to assist you unloading. Donations can also be left on the stage in Reynard Hall starting on Monday, July 17. We will not accept the following: luggage, electronics, upholstered furniture, textbooks or appliances.

Questions? Call or email the Mattapoisett Congregational Church at 508-758-2671 or mattcongchurch@gmail.com.

Tri-Town Profiles

Name: Will Huggins

Age: 45

Lives in: Mattapoisett

How he got here: His parents, both local natives, eloped to Idaho but returned home with young Will in tow after a short stint; he’s been here ever since.

Favorite Tri-Town place: Goodspeed Island / Eel Pond area, “But I have to ponder that one. There’s a lot of great spots.”

What he’d change if he were the President of Tri-Town: “I’d like to see more cultural diversity.”

 

By Jonathan Comey

When Will Huggins talks about old times, new adventures, events of the day, he’s animated, loud, laughing, and his eyes crinkle into amused slits.

But when he talks about matters of the human spirit, he gets quiet and still, and you have to lean in a bit – not just because his voice gets soft and slow, but because you want to hear what he has to say.

Having survived a series of cancer-related challenges over the last nine years, beating some fairly long odds in the process, Huggins feels he’s learned one wonderful lesson.

“I had no idea how good people could be,” he said. “I knew certain people, but I guess I didn’t know how good everyone really was. I was a little more pessimistic, I guess, but I think I learned how much good people have in them.”

At the height of his battle with cancer (which is in remission, not “cured”), Huggins said he was down, physically and spiritually. But the people of the community came through for him, in ways that he wasn’t comfortable with at first.

“It changed me,” he said. “It was hard for me to accept help. I’m a proud guy, I’ve earned everything I have, worked hard for this decent little life I have right now.”

From a $10 bill attached to a prayer in the mail from a stranger to a check for $15,000 to defray medical costs, he was astounded and embarrassed to be the center of attention. When a friend from high school he only knew on an acquaintance level came to his house with $2,000 from her cancer-fighting foundation, it really clicked.

“I told my wife, ‘I’m doing this,’” he said. “It changed me.”

The I WILL fund, originally started by friend Julie Sherman to help the Huggins family, has now shifted gears to help other families battling cancer. Every year, the I WILL polar plunge “Freezin’ for a Reason” on New Year’s Day raises over $10,000 – with all proceeds going directly to local people with cancer who could use the help.

“We just give them a check, no questions asked,” he said. “It’s a completely local effort, one hundred percent. I think that was one of the things for me, to justify taking the help, was to pay it forward. We take that seriously, my wife and I, and we try to instill that in our children.”

Will has a grown son, William, and lives with his wife Michelle and elementary school kids Cy and Olive. For Olive’s recent birthday, she requested that friends bring food for the needy instead of gifts; the family traveled to Wareham to donate the goods and ended up staying for a meal with the folks there.

In his younger days, Huggins might not have seen this future coming. Raised by a loving grandmother but with distant parents, “I was an angry kid, self abusive, drank myself into oblivion at times. I was sort of a yahoo crazy man at times in my life. I didn’t care about school, my health, anything. But that all changed, before I got sick even. Really, with the kids, no matter what, I was always a good dad.”

Huggins’ life is busy, running a successful building company and staying fit in mind and body, setting the tone for his family.

He doesn’t know what his future holds, health-wise, and doesn’t dwell on it. For him, it’s about the here and now – lessons learned the hard way.

“I guess I’ve got a heightened awareness of what matters,” he said. “And it’s relationships, it’s love, it’s your own soul, it’s doing the right thing. It’s being able to go to sleep at night with a good conscience.

“That’s what I think it’s all about.”

Town Investigates Landfill Solar

The Rochester Board of Selectmen on July 10 authorized Town Administrator Suzanne Szyndlar to research a solar energy generating facility option for the capped landfill on High Street.

“We’re very limited in our income,” noted Selectman Greenwood Hartley. “A lot of different communities have utilized spaces that they have, and nothing can happen on a landfill except for that.”

It would not be a large energy production facility like SEMASS, Hartley specified.

“There is a possibility it could help pay for some of our electric bills,” said Hartley. “We do use quite a bit of electricity.”

Hartley said he finds the landfill an ideal location for a solar, since the site is not visible to residents for the most part.

Hartley emphasized that there would be public hearings before any such project is approved.

The board agreed that allowing Szyndlar to research what other municipalities in Massachusetts have done with solar farms atop capped landfills would be a step in the right direction.

“[It could] generate a little income, at least more like reduce the cost of power usage,” said Hartley, “and perhaps some savings.”

Also during the meeting, selectmen approved Matthew Monteiro’s request to renew the Town’s status as a Tree City USA, and also granted Monteiro permission to plan an Arbor Day ceremony at the Dexter Lane Ball Fields by the Town’s newly acquired ginkgo biloba tree, the one donated to the town by former Town Administrator Michael McCue.

McCue donated the ginkgo, which is a seedling cultivated from the seed of a 250-year-old ginkgo that survived the 1945 bombing of Hiroshima.

The October 6 ceremony will also commemorate the bombing of Hiroshima, as well as Arbor Day. A time has yet to be announced.

“I thought that would be a nice day to have a small ceremony around the tree,” said Monteiro. “Not just to honor Arbor Day, but also to honor the death of so many people.”

Monteiro also received the board’s blessing to attend various educational courses to assist the Town in achieving a Tree City USA Growth Award, which recognizes a higher level of tree care within a Tree City USA-designated municipality.

Monteiro said his goal is to see the Town receive this award for a cumulative total of ten years, making Rochester a Sterling Tree City USA, of which currently there are only four in the state.

“It’s good that we’re involved in this and we educate people on how important it is,” said Selectman Naida Parker.

In other matters, Water Commissioner Fred Underhill approached the board with a proposal to allow the Town of Middleboro to extend its water supply main to the Annie Maxim House, an assisted living community for senior citizens located at 706 North Avenue in Rochester.

Underhill said he and Rochester’s former town administrator had attended meetings with Middleboro officials and trustees of the Annie Maxim House, saying, “They all seemed to be positive toward the the proposal.”

The Town of Rochester could benefit from the extension in the future as an ancillary source of public water should Middleboro ever be granted a permit from the state to increase its water withdrawal volume.

After those initial meetings, however, Underhill said Middleboro had seen several town administrators come and go, and a water superintendent turnover also led to a stall in the process.

“And the thing just kind of sat,” Underhill said.

Recently, though, the team met with Representative William Straus and managed to get the project running again.

“It appears positive at this point,” said Underhill.

Rochester would likely request a new fire hydrant be installed near the road, at a cost to the Town, but Rochester would not be contributing to the actual water main extension.

Middleboro and Rochester will formulate an inter-municipal agreement, and Middleboro Town Meeting voters would approve the extension.

“We think in the long run this is a plus for us,” said Underhill.

In other business, Szyndlar said municipalities in Massachusetts have requested from the state a cumulative $45 million in grant money, the same grant monies the Town of Rochester has applied for to cover the costs of regionalizing its 911 dispatch service.

The problem is, Szyndlar pointed out, there is only $12 million available in the pot.

Officials from the Duxbury regionalized 911 dispatch center have asked the Town to prioritize its roughly $2 million list of infrastructure upgrades and associated costs to the 911 regionalization transition the Town initially requested the state fund through a grant.

Szyndlar met with emergency response officials and decided to place a number of portable radios for the fire and police departments lower on the priority list – items that are wanted, but not required for the regionalization transition.

“Basically, we could still run without them, but we really need the stuff that we need to make this happen,” said Szyndlar. “If that doesn’t get approved with funding,” added Szyndlar, “I’m going to recommend to the Town adding that to the Capital Plan…”

The next meeting of the Rochester Board of Selectmen is scheduled for July 24 at 6:30 pm at the Rochester Town Hall.

By Jean Perry

 

The Compassionate Species

You’re in the zone – zooming down the highway, an endless conveyor belt of repetitive white stripes, inconspicuous mile marker signs, a steady green smudge of trees streaming by. Expressionless you appear through the windshield, the world of the commuter’s corridor as mundane and predictable as the sun-induced puddle mirage ahead that blurs into sky as you close in on it.

Suddenly, look though! It’s a red-tailed hawk soaring in, rising over a thermal updraft long enough to suspend itself until you approach. It breaks its overhead pause with a wing flap that sends it soaring right over you, almost like it waited there on purpose just for you to witness.

I know I am not alone in the driver seat with my excited reaction – a gasp, a flutter, an outstretched neck – because hearing Vinny Milone from the Mass Audubon Blue Hills Trailside Museum speak passionately about raptors, I sense he gets just as excited over such a sight.

For Milone, a teacher and naturalist, learning about and caring for animals is his calling. On July 7, Milone shared his particular fondness for the feathered species during the Birds of Prey event at the Marion Natural History Museum.

Belonging to the class of “birds of prey” are the hawks, eagles, falcons, owls, and osprey, to name a few.

Birds of prey are a specific class of birds knows as raptors. Raptors are predatory birds possessing particular physical characteristics that make them the highly specialized hunters that they are – sharp strong talons, keen telescopic eyes, wings tailored to pursue the type of prey they hunt, and sturdy curved beaks for tearing apart flesh.

Milone says the best way to learn about an animal – in this case a raptor – is to study these features, which help us learn the most about them, for each animal has its own individuality, its own thoughts, its own life, and as the “compassionate species,” we humans can observe our animal co-inhabitants of this planet and help them survive.

One of the major functions of the Blue Hills Trailside Museum is to rescue injured animals and those that, for whatever reason, cannot survive in the wild on their own. Sick or injured animals are nursed back to health and some become permanent residents of the museum. Just like the raptors Milone brought with him on Friday night, the animals become part of the community outreach educational programs at the museum, helping to cultivate an interest in the species, build knowledge, and spread awareness.

The first raptor introduced was a broad-winged hawk that was rescued as a baby after some humans began feeding it and then left the home, as well as the baby on the porch awaiting food that would never come. The hawk, as well as all the animals at the museum, has no human-designated name, “Just so we remember that they are from the wild,” said Milone. “Not that we don’t care about them.”

When Milone carefully withdrew the peregrine falcon from its carrier, the room let out a collective enraptured “aawww!”

“This is the fastest animal that we know of in the history of the Earth,” said Milone, impressing the audience. The highest recorded speed of a peregrine, in fact, was 242 miles per hour.

During the 1950s, the use of the pesticide DDT resulted in a rapid decline in peregrines, as well as pretty much all other raptors. Raptors, being higher up in the food chain, would consume rodents that consumed insects tainted with the deadly chemical. The raptor eggs in the nest would crush beneath the weight of their parents, the eggs’ structural integrity compromised by the chemical pesticide. By 1960, there were zero peregrine falcons left this side of the Mississippi River.

Naturalists like Milone essentially saved the species by pushing to ban the dangerous pesticide, and resettled pairs of peregrines into cities. The peregrine thrives in cliffside habitats, but peregrines could not yet reestablish their numbers in their natural habitat. Their main predator, the great horned owl, would repeatedly wipe out the transplanted residents, which had to be brought to the cities where they could still hunt from tall buildings but without the presence of predators.

There are currently 16 peregrine pairs in the State of Massachusetts, thanks to those like Milone.

Once it was time for the peregrine to return to its carrier box, out came the tiny, elusive, kill-you-with-cuteness eastern screech owl, no bigger than a pint of beer. His feathers a little ruffled, the tiny owl opened its eyes one at a time and greeted the audience with a facial expression that straddled a fine line between sleepiness and surprise.

Little masters of camouflage, the screech owl is virtually invisible in the wild, blending in perfectly with the bark design of the tree trunk in which it dwells, facing out from a hollow, watching all unnoticed from its perch. In fact, most of us, said Milone, probably pass at least one screech owl every day and never even realize it.

Most of the time, the only evidence of the presence of a screech owl is its spooky monotonic shrill and haunting, descending trill after dusk.

“I’ve been told,” Milone added, “that every time you see a robin there’s a screech owl around.”

There is so much we can learn from the animal world, Milone said. The best place to explore animals, and Milone’s favorite place to be, is outside in the woods in their natural habitat. There are simple skills one can acquire out of curiosity, even if we are no longer children.

“There’s still so many things to learn and ways to train our senses,” Milone said. “All it takes is a little practice.”

And because we have this ability to learn of them and from them, we have the ability to help them, the choice to help them.

Milone called the human species the “compassionate species.” Sometimes that can be a tough one to believe in, but who can really say for sure besides the person looking back at you from the mirror whether or not we are the compassionate species? And even then during times of doubt, we look to people like Milone for reassurance that we as a species do indeed deserve the designation.

By Jean Perry

Philip’s Episcopal Church

St. Philip’s Episcopal Church, next to the Town Beach in Mattapoisett, continues their long tradition of visiting clergy from Massachusetts and beyond.

Services using the 1928 Book of Common Prayer are conducted at 8:00 am and 10:00 am each Sunday through Labor Day weekend.

The Reverend Nathan Humphrey, Rector, St. John the Evangelist, Newport, RI officiates on Sunday, July 23.

Come visit our historic chapel by the sea in Mattapoisett! All are welcome.