Stargazing Walk with BBC

Join the Astronomical Society of Southern New England and the Buzzards Bay Coalition for an evening stargazing walk at The Bogs, 138 Acushnet Road, Mattapoisett, on Friday, March 16 from 7:00 to 8:00 pm

Far away from the city lights, the 500-acre Mattapoisett River Reserve offers visitors a dark, expansive sky to view the stars. As you gaze through telescopes at the wonders of deep space, you’ll look for planets, constellations and galaxies.

Please dress warmly in multiple layers and bring a flashlight. Telescopes will be provided.

To RSVP for this free walk, visit http://www.savebuzzardsbay.org/events/stargazing-walk-at-the-bogs-mar-16-2018/ or contact the Buzzards Bay Coalition at 508-999-6363 ext. 219.

This walk is part of Discover Buzzards Bay, a resource to find unique and exciting ways to explore the outdoors, get some exercise, and connect with nature. Use Discover Buzzards Bay to get outside and discover woods, wetlands and waterways from Fall River to Falmouth. To learn more, visit savebuzzardsbay.org/discover.

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. Because of 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 266 Converse Road.

The late Georgian-style house at 266 Converse Road was built c. 1800 by the prominent salt industry pioneer, George Bonum Nye, who was a member of Marion’s industrious Nye family. The story of the Nye family in Massachusetts began in 1637 when Benjamin Nye emigrated from England. Marion’s Nyes are descended from Ichabod Nye of Middleboro, who settled in Marion in 1720. King George I granted a 1,100-acre tract in Marion to Ichabod Nye for 35 pounds. This tract encompassed much of the southern outskirts of Wharf Village as well as Charles Neck. In fact, Converse Road was originally called Nye Street, which probably evolved from a Native American trail.

King Says ConCom Trying To Keep Jurisdiction Local

Mattapoisett Conservation Commission Chairman Mike King has a message for the community: “This year, this commission is trying to condition as many projects as possible locally.”

King made this comment during the March 12 regular meeting of the commission in response to questions from resident Tom Gronski, who questioned King on the process used to evaluate applications.

“Do you say ‘no’ to people?” Gronski asked.

King responded, “We try not to say ‘no,’ but it’s fifty-fifty.”

King has expressed his desire to keep applications within the purview of the local authorities in other meetings as opposed to at the state level, believing that by doing so the Town’s interest are better served.

The applications in question were two Notice of Intent filings by Southeastern Building Corporation for a two-lot subdivision planned for Appaloosa Lane off River Road.

For several years, homeowners who had established homes on and near the lane complained to Town departments about inadequate stormwater drainage systems in the area. Developer Michael Salimando had been invited numerous times over the past several years to attend Planning Board meetings where abutters bitterly complained about the flooding issues brought on, they believed, by the lack of stormwater runoff.

Those issues were resolved when the Planning Board hired Field Engineering as a peer review consultant to oversee improvements in those systems before they would release the lots, being held as surety, to Salimando for sale.

On this night, King said Field Engineering, along with Highway Surveyor Barry Denham, had been working with Salimando regarding repairs and improvements to the drainage system.

Representing Salimando was Brian Grady of G.A.F. Engineering. Grady explained in detail the plans to collect stormwater runoff from roof surfaces and direct that water into underground chambers that would allow the liquid to re-charge into the ground versus pooling and running onto surrounding parcels.

Also expressing concern and questioning the plans were Daryl Fletcher and Patty and Andrew Apperson.

The Appersons questioned how the commission could enforce a proposed two-lot homeowners’ association covenant that would mandate maintenance of the in-ground drainage system. King pointed to pride of ownership and that most homeowners don’t want to lose their investment due to lack of maintenance.

The two NOI filings were approved and conditioned, but King advised the abutters that the Planning Board still had to approve the projects before construction would begin.

Also coming before the commission was William Fredericks, 30 Holly Woods Road, with a Notice of Intent filing for the alteration of 4,934 square feet of bordering vegetated wetlands for agricultural activities.

Represented by David Davignon of N. Douglas Schneider & Associates, Inc., the project would allow Williams a better layout for land use, Davignon explained, and would provide environmental mitigation for the changes made to jurisdictional areas.

The project was conditioned with some special conditions added for monitoring of the remediated areas over two growing seasons.

David Nicolosi, 0 Marion Road, filed a Request for A Determination of Applicability for verification of the wetland resource area line, which was confirmed by Conservation Agent Elizabeth Leidhold, and he received a negative determination (no NOI required) from the commission.

Special conditions were briefly discussed for a Notice of Intent filing by Dennis Arsenault for a two-lot subdivision at the end of Snow Fields Road. The commission unanimously approved the Order of Conditions submitted by Leidhold.

Joshua Pell, 0 Angelica Avenue, represented by Christian McCullough of South Coast Design and Construction, received conditions for his Notice of Intent filing for the construction of a new elevated single-family home in a grandfathered coastal lot.

The next meeting of the Mattapoisett Conservation Commission is scheduled for March 26 at 6:30 pm in the Town Hall conference room.

Mattapoisett Conservation Commission

By Marilou Newell

 

Storm Postpones Students’ Wednesday Walkout

All over the country, students were watching the clock on March 14. As part of a national movement, at 10:00 am on Wednesday morning students got out of their seats, left their classrooms, and exited the school in what is likely this country’s largest ever mass-organized student-led walkout. The students’ message: Congress must do more than send “thoughts and prayers” in response to gun violence at schools and neighborhoods.

The March 14 observance, as many at ORR are now referring to it, took place exactly one month after a former student took an AR-15 style semi-automatic rifle and killed 17 students and injured 17 more at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida.

At ORR, however, the walkout was postponed due to the storm, and will now take place one week later on March 21 – same time, same place, same message.

Women’s March Youth EMPOWER created the event, calling on students, educators, and parents to take part in a walkout at 10:00 am local time for 17 minutes, symbolizing one minute for each of the Parkland victims.

“Students and staff have the right to teach and learn in an environment free from the worry of being gunned down in their classrooms or on the way home from school,” reads the organization’s statement. “Parents have the right to send their kids to school in the mornings and see them home alive at the end of the day.”

At Old Rochester Regional, Tri-Town junior high and high school students will participate in the walkout under the supervision of school staff, and those wishing to not participate may remain inside the auditorium with school staff ensuring the safety of all students.

Principal Mike Devoll announced on March 13 that students would not be disciplined for participating in the demonstration, and safety is a top priority.

“The tragedy at Stoneman Douglas High School in Florida … and other losses of life on school campuses across the nation over several years have driven increased interest in student-led civic engagement efforts and actions, including the idea of school walkouts,” Devoll said in a notice to students and parents. “[ORR] supports students’ Constitutional rights to peaceful assembly and free expression.”

Devoll has thrice met with student leaders since the shooting, and students had expressed a need to participate in the walkout to honor those 17 who lost their lives.

“Our top priority at ORRHS is to support the academic and social/emotional needs of our students while maintaining a safe and orderly learning environment for all,” said Devoll. “We respect and support the right of our students to advocate for causes that are important to them and welcome the opportunity to work with any student or student group to discuss appropriate and creative ways to do so while at school.

Student Madeline Scheub was one of those students, along with Ellie Wiggin, Jenna Aruri, and Elle Gendreu, who organized ORR’s walkout, conveniently occurring during the school’s ‘Bulldog Block,’ when students are not in classes.

“We think it is important to not only memorialize the seventeen people that lost their lives, but also to take a united stand with students in schools across the country to protest to make sure both students and faculty feel safe in their schools,” Scheub. “This movement is important because it’s probably one of the biggest student organized walkouts in history and older people have always dominated voting turnouts in the past, so the younger Americans are showing their passion to fight for a change and influence in coming election years.”

Furthermore, says Scheub, every student wants to feel safe in school, and although the opinion on how to make that happen varies ranging from adjusting gun access laws to arming teachers, most Americans agree a change is needed.

“We as students feel the need to make a change and the opportunity is now,” said Scheub. “After the walkout, we will continue to fight for our cause and support victims and families of the Parkland shooting by writing letters to Congress, creating care packages and letters for families and students, and have discussions in student groups on what can be done to promote change.”

Devoll assured parents that local police would be at the school during the walkout to further ensure security and safety.

One Rochester resident, Christopher Gerrior, who is also on the Rochester Conservation Commission, emailed the school administration on March 8 and shared it with The Wanderer.

Gerrior asserted that the walkout would be “clearly and blatantly illegal and [sic] well as inappropriate.”

“Teachers are public employees and the very clear and stated reason for this walkout is to pressure Congress to enact more gun laws,” wrote Gerrior. “Labeling it a pause for safety does not change what it is. Supporting such a cause is political activity. Teachers are being paid to teach during this time, nothing else.”

Gerrior asked that the administration refrain from supporting the student-led walkout and to discipline any students who participate in the walkout.

In his email response to Gerrior, Superintendent Doug White wrote:

“As a school district, we have decided to provide a choice to students to decide whether or not to exercise their First Amendment Rights to participate in the walkout. The administrators of our secondary schools have been working on events that memorialize the victims that lost their lives on February 14, 2018, in Parkland, Florida. By guiding our students through this much-publicized event, we feel that we will create a learning environment that is safe for those wishing to participate as well as for those who do not. If any student creates a material disruption, the school will decide in accordance with the Student Handbook whether any consequences are warranted.”

White said although he respects Gerrior’s claim the district is violating the State Ethics Advisory 11-1, as Gerrior stated in his email, the staff would not be engaging in the activity, rather only supervising it to ensure safety.

“The events being coordinated by the district are not political in nature and the role of staff is to supervise the event to ensure the safe participation of all involved,” said White. “After careful consideration, the school district feels that working with all stakeholders to create a learning opportunity as well as a safe and secure environment for students can memorialize the loss of life … in Parkland, Florida is the appropriate and right thing to do.”

Scheub said that although the admin is not allowed to support the students’ cause, she was glad there would be no disciplinary response. “I do not think parents and community members should be concerned because every student at the school has the right to express their beliefs with freedom of speech,” Scheub said.

“We at ORRHS feel like this activity on Wednesday promotes student expression, minimizes disruption as it occurs during the Bulldog Block, and ensures safety,” said Devoll.

The League of Women Voters was asked to assist the school on Wednesday with voter registration for eligible students, including the early preregistration for students 16 years of age.

“We believe that this could be an empowering civics lesson to our students,” said Devoll, “and therefore we’ll be providing students with voter informational materials and assisting them to register on the Massachusetts online application during Wednesday’s Bulldog Block.”

This story will be updated on Thursday, March 22, on The Wanderer website following the walkout.

By Jean Perry

 

Richard J. Galvin

Richard J. Galvin, 81, of Marion, died March 13, 2018 at Sippican Healthcare Center in Marion. He was the husband of Randi J. (Clemishaw) Galvin.

Rich was the first born to Josephine and Frank Galvin in Boston, MA. He grew up in Arlington and moved to Marion when he was 16. After graduating from Fairhaven High School, Rich accepted a full scholarship to Boston University for theater/acting. With his fellow acting classmates in The Actors Company, Rich left BU to act full time and helped to form the Charles Street Playhouse on Charles St. in Boston. In his 20’s Rich moved to New York City where he kept acting, owned a bar, and lived his life out loud for 17 years.

Rich traveled, acted, and lived in California and Florida and eventually came home to Marion. After earning his certification for counseling in clinical social work, Rich dedicated the next 30 years of his life to helping the men and women struggling with addiction. Many of those years were at Gosnold Treatment Center in Falmouth. Rich generously helped many, many souls with his gift for healing the heart.

He is survived by his wife Randi of Marion; his daughter Marci Galvin Cosgrove; his son-in-law Martin Cosgrove, and his grandson Cole Cosgrove all of Cape Cod. His sisters, Sheila Chaberek, and Susan Renee of New Hampshire. Rich was predeceased by his brother the late Donald Galvin.

Relatives and friends are invited to visit at the Chapman, Cole & Gleason Funeral Home, 2599 Cranberry Highway (Rt. 28), Wareham on Mon., March 19, 2018 from 2 to 4 pm. A celebration of life service will follow at 4 pm at the funeral home.

March Programs at Plumb Library

An amazing magic teapot is the centerpiece of Magician Debbie O’Carroll’s Irish Fairy Grandmother’s Magic Show on Saturday, March 24 from 11:00 am to 12:00 pm at the Plumb Library, 17 Constitution Way, Rochester. Full of enchanting magic, silly comedy and loads of audience participation, the Irish fairy grandmother delights ages 3 to 8 with Irish fun, lore and laughter. Pre-registration is required. Register on the library’s Events Calendar on our website www.plumblibrary.com.

The COA Book Group will discuss Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Café by Fannie Flagg on Tuesday, March 20 at 10:15 am at the Rochester COA, 66 Dexter Lane, Rochester. An older woman’s memories help to strengthen the resolve of a younger friend who is suffering a mid-life crisis in the novel that inspired the feature film.

“Just the Facts” Nonfiction Book Group will discuss Killers of the Flower Moon: The Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI by David Gann on Thursday, March 15 at 6:30 pm. The best-selling author of The Lost City of Z presents a true account of the early 20th-century murders of dozens of wealthy Osage and law-enforcement officials, citing the contributions and missteps of a fledgling FBI that eventually uncovered one of the most chilling conspiracies in American history.

Café Parlez will discuss Five Quarters of the Orange by Joanne Harris on Thursday, March 29 at 6:30 pm. A stirring, sensual novel by the author of Chocolat follows a woman as she returns to the French village where she lived as a girl during the German occupation.

ORRAHOF Annual Hoops Classic

ORCTV will hold its Annual Meeting and Open House on Saturday, April 28 at noon at the ORCTV studios located at 135 Marion Road, Mattapoisett. The meeting will include the election of members to the Board of Directors. The slate of this year’s nominees is as follows:

– Marion Nominee: Jodie Dickerson, 2-year term

– Rochester Nominee: Linda Mederios, 2-year term

– Mattapoisett Nominee: Danny White, 2-year term

– Membership Seat: Elaine Botelho, 1-year term

Elizabeth Taber Library Artist of the Month

The Elizabeth Taber Library’s “Artist of the Month” is Corinna Raznikov. With over twenty years experience photographing around the world, she creates beautiful, meaningful images.

Corinna has a B.A. from the University of the Pacific and studied the history of photography at the University of Glasgow, Scotland. A permanent installation of her work, The Baby Project, was installed at the Brigham and Women’s Hospital. She was awarded Best of Boston Wedding Photographer by Boston Magazine in 2014.

The Artist of the Month series has been an ongoing display for over four years. The artist must live in Marion and have a body of artwork ready to hang along the eastern wall of the library. The exhibit changes every month. This is a celebration of the cultural community of Marion and a way for our local artists to share their talent with our patrons.

Storm Sends Another Blow to Tri-Town

We’ve got those snow-blowing blizzard-blasting no-lights hurry-up-Eversource stuck-inside bread-and-milk winter-weary enough-of-this-insanity blues again.

Spring in the Tri-Town couldn’t feel any farther away from us than it does right now. Residents in Marion, Mattapoisett, and Rochester have lost their power – again – and, without a doubt, their patience along with it.

Mother Nature has sided with the groundhog sending us not one, but three Nor’easters within two weeks. As tree limbs fall around us so do our dreams of an ending to winter; as wires come down, so do our spirits.

Again, the Tri-Town emergency dispatch radio chatter was constant with reports of trees blocking roads, power outages, and cars stuck in the snow—same situations, only the street names and dates have changed.

Rochester was first to open up an emergency warming station around mid-day Tuesday. By noon, most of Marion was again without power, and half of Mattapoisett and Marion were forced into power-saving mode on their smart phones and tablets. By dark, Marion and Mattapoisett in collaboration had opened an emergency shelter at ORR.

As of press time, 70 percent of Mattapoisett still sits in the dark, 54 percent of Marion is stuck with no Wi-Fi, and over in Rochester 47 percent are still walking into rooms flipping on light switches out of habit and then remembering that they have no electricity.

The storm was still in progress by the time we at The Wanderer ‘put this baby to bed’ Tuesday night, so we have no official wind gust strengths or snow totals to report to you for this week’s edition. But what we can tell you is this: next Tuesday, March 20, is the first day of spring. — just five days away from the release of this week’s print edition.

There are still some hurdles ahead of us next week with some nighttime temps dipping into the teens early on but, even as the snow still falls, Tri-Town is melting into spring. So hold tightly to the sides of this same boat we find each other in as we sail into spring and then into summer, and remember this in August while we’re complaining about the heat and the drought.

“Complain about summer? Not me!” say us all.

Got photos of the storm? Send them to us (along with photo credit information) at news@wanderer.com so we can print them in next week’s edition.

By Jean Perry

 

Tri-County Symphonic Band

The Tri-County Symphonic Band, under the direction of Philip Sanborn, will continue its 56th season with a program entitled “March Mania” on Sunday, March 18 at 3:00 pm in the Fireman Performing Arts Center at Hoyt Hall on the campus of Tabor Academy, 235 Front Street, Marion, Massachusetts. “March Mania” will be a vibrant collection of band repertoire that celebrates, accentuates and illuminates the month of March. The Resurgam Saxophone Quartet will be the soloists in a program that mixes new music with some venerable favorites.

The concert begins with “Chester” composed by William Schuman. “Chester” is based on the third movement of Schuman’s “New England Triptych,” considered to be his most famous work. Music from composer Frederick Delius will follow with his ode to the changing season, “On Hearing the First Cuckoo in Spring.” Performed for the third time ever, composer Ted King-Smith’s “Breaking Point” will electrify the audience with its new, unique and energizing soundscape for saxophone quartet as interpreted by The Resurgam Quartet.

The Resurgam Quartet formed in 2015 at the Hartt School in Hartford, CT. Its current members are Harrison Kliewe (soprano saxophone), Colette Hall (alto saxophone), Sean Tanguay (tenor saxophone), and Michael Raposo (baritone saxophone). Recently, the quartet was a semi-finalist at the international Fischoff Chamber Music Competition for the second time. The quartet also won the 2016 Paranov Concerto Competition at the Hartt School performing William Bolcom’s “Concerto Grosso.” Resurgam enjoys an active performing schedule. Dedicated to expanding the saxophone quartet repertoire, the quartets latest commission “Breaking Point” is set to be premiered in March, 2018 at the North American Saxophone Alliance’s Biennial Conference. The Quartet also presented a concert of new works at the Hartford New Music Festival and will continue to create new music for the saxophone quartet. Education is an important part of Resurgam’s mission, which has presented masterclasses and educational concerts in Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New York, and Indiana.

A Norwegian march closes out the first half of the program. Johannes Hanssen was one of Norway’s most active and influential bandmasters, composers, and teachers during the first part of the 20th century. He wrote the march “Valdres” as a tribute to the beautiful region in Norway between Oslo and Bergen.

The second half opens with a march for an unlikely group: “March of the Belgian Paratroopers.” It is a delicate, European-style march that is uniquely tuneful and is sure to delight. The next two pieces are a tribute to the Irish who will have celebrated St. Patrick’s Day the day before the concert. “Irish Tune from County Derry” is Percy Grainger’s masterful setting of the traditional folk song we know today as “Danny Boy.” The powerful “Ireland: Of Legend & Lore” is certain to set the Irish blood boiling as tin whistle and bodhran help the full band to portray castles and colorful characters from Irish history and folklore and put their legendary deeds to music.

The concert will close with the Resurgam Quartet joining the band for William Bolcom’s “Concerto Grosso for Saxophone Quartet and Band.” A student of Darius Milhaud, Bolcom taught composition at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor and served as chairman of the composition department from 1998 to 2003. Bolcom has been awarded the Pulitzer Prize, four Grammy Awards, and the National Medal of Arts. “Concerto Grosso” was written purely as a piece to be enjoyed by performers and listeners. The second movement, “Song without Words,” is a lyrical larghetto and the final Badinerie, a title borrowed from Bach, evokes bebop and rhythm-and-blues.

Since 1962 the Tri-County Symphonic Band has been part of the cultural life of Southeastern Massachusetts. The primary aim of the organization has been to make live performances of quality concert band repertoire available in the community and to give musicians a chance to share their love for the art of making music.

Tickets for the concert are $15 for adults, $5 for students, with children 12 and under admitted for free. Tickets can be purchased at the Symphony Music Shop in Dartmouth and The Bookstall in Marion. Tickets can also be purchased online at www.brownpapertickets.com. Any remaining tickets will be sold at the door.