Mattapoisett Veterans Day Ceremony

The Florence Eastman Post 280 of the American Legion invites you to please join us in honoring our Veterans at our annual Veterans Day Ceremony on Friday, November 10 at 11:00 am at the Old Hammondtown School. (Please note the date is Friday.)

This year, we are honored to have Professor James E. “Jay “ Hickey, Ph.D., Associate Provost, and Retired Navy Commander as our guest speaker.

We are also thrilled to have Mattapoisett’s very own, and very talented, Jessica Zucco, Miss Massachusetts, to perform for us at the Ceremony.

The Mattapoisett Boy Scout Troop will retire flags at the Seahorse Land Trust immediately following the ceremony.

Please come and show your support of those who have proudly served our Country!

Uncommon Scents

The boy was already fast asleep in bed with his door closed, much to his benefit. But outside in the hallway and throughout the rest of the house, the night, as some nights inevitably are, was permeated with imperfectness – but this Friday night it was also permeated with the stench of a skunk’s arse.

Some smells are so pungent that they employ other senses to get their point across. The repugnant smell our cat Luna’s poor little face was emitting didn’t just stink … it provided a sensation inside the head of the smeller. A physical sensation like a tiny anarchist was inside my head rapidly firing elastic bands at the backs of my eyeballs.

This skunk smell didn’t smell like that familiar airy skunk scent that wafts in through an open, breezy window at night. This smell was more like Satan relieved himself of some brutally condensed flatulence in bed next to you and held your head trapped beneath the covers – and you can only hold your breath for so long.

This was my first encounter with a skunked pet. The scope of such an incident puts it higher on the panic meter than smelling dog poop on your shoe after having walked throughout the entire house already, and just below the magnitude of the house being engulfed in flames.

Meanwhile, the cat was making its way through every room in the house the moment my panic set in. A scan would have shown every section of my brain lit up with activity – those olfactory brain parts surmounting the smell with its corresponding elastic band eyeball sensation. The “What on Earth am I supposed to do?” section of the brain fully activated as the cat ran rabidly throughout the house trailing tang into every room.

I reeled where I stood with a fight or flight stimulus (Should I continue with this or just burn the house down?). My motor planning shut down (What do I do first, grab the cat or hit up the Internet for help?). And with my frontal lobes on fire, absolutely no executive function, and the parietal lobes failing to identify which of my senses is most affected by this moment, my temporal lobe ran off into the corner with my limbic lobe to cower together and cry.

In that second, just about the only instruction I could give was “Pause the Roku.”

With a recipe for de-skunking (one quart of hydrogen peroxide, ¼ cup of baking soda, and three teaspoons of dish soap), I looked at the cat circling and hissing at everything and said, “I better go put on something with long sleeves.” Off came the blouse and on came the ultra thick and relatively seldom worn hoodie I bought from my alma mater before finishing my undergrad.

In my absentmindedness while moving to capture the poor creature, I rolled up said sleeves, took a good determined look at the skunk oil-drenched pissed-off cat, and remembered what I was dealing with. I rolled said sleeves back down again before plunging the cat into the bathtub.

With the back of her neck grasped tightly in my right hand, I awkwardly washed off the rest of her body with my non-dominant hand, making the mitigating measures I was performing on the cat considerably more arduous.

When it’s your cat that’s been skunked and it’s your house at risk (the one you pay the mortgage on and clean yourself), when there’s no one else to which you can turn to manage the emergency, and no, Superman is not coming, one experiences that elusive feeling in life that only an adult can have – that ‘I’m actually the adult here’ realization. I’m the only one who can fix this. There’s no other option. It’s ‘fight,’ not ‘flight’ this time. There is no escape possible.

Dangling a cat over a bathtub is one of the most tedious, most terrifying, positions to find one’s self in. In an instant the cat contracts, contorts, and flings itself into a fury impossible to hold onto; something comparable to attempting to use a fully operating chainsaw with no handle.

There simply is no time to bestow mercy upon a beloved animal when its very nature is to tear into your flesh to get away from what it perceives as danger. This was no time for gentle or careful handling. No matter what, the act I was about to engage in had no cruelty-free alternative. The human brain has an interesting way of protecting itself from such trauma. The second I held that cat down in the tub and hastily spread the pasty potion all over it, kneading it into the foul-smelling fur, I could not play the loving cat mom. I was the adult in charge that had to handle this … (explicit excrement).

“OK, little girl. That’s it. OK, almost done,” I reassured her while devoid of emotion, her muscles still tense but waning in resistance. With her fur entirely covered, I let her go to freely roam the bathroom that was already a federally designated disaster area.

The Internet said to let the solution soak on the fur for five minutes. I followed it up with regular pet shampoo, dried her off, and freed her. As far I could tell, most of the smell was gone from her fur and the Internet skunk remedy was a success.

Mission. Accomplished.

My inner child cheered for the adult me that had just, in the child’s mind, saved the world. For a moment, the little kid in me regarded the grownup me as a hero and I allowed myself a moment of immodest celebration of my greatness.

I wonder what other critical feats I am actually capable of.

After everything settled down and the night was again calm, the skunk oil smell that lingered persisted. It acted as a stimulant of sorts during those hours after. I’m actually sitting on my sofa now at 4:43 am after an entire night of no sleep, and conscious of every inhale through my nose. The cat sits nearby under the same effects of the traumatizing tonic. She’s still quietly licking herself as she’s likely been doing non-stop for six hours and will likely do for most of tomorrow, too.

I thought about, ironically, the human experience, although the experience essentially began as one shared between a cat and a skunk. Still, I wondered, how equipped is the average person to handle a crisis? Just like that cat, dizzied and mad with stinging skunk gunk all in her eyes and nose, equally my own ‘advanced’ human mind was mad and dizzy.

It sounded like the trifling philosophical indulgence of an under-slept woman in the wee morning hours, given that it kind of was ‘just a skunking.’ But there’s just something about people and crisis.

We talk about ‘common sense’ all the time, but that concept is subjective. Is knowing what to do in a crisis and then executing the appropriate action/reaction included in that category of common sense?

I think not. Why else would we have emergency responders who are trained and paid to react to emergencies for us? And is there a de-skunking emergency responder out there to call when your cat gets skunked and you don’t know what to do? No!

I think that’s why I’m so overly self-satisfied with the outcome. Only I could take control of that domestic disaster. There was no opportunity for flight. I ran into the fight – and I have the scratch marks to prove it.

By Jean Perry

 

November Open Table – It’s Special

The next Open Table is set for Friday, November 10. We will be remembering our veterans and honoring those among us with a very special supper. Please invite a veteran whom you know who may not be familiar with Open Table, so he or she can enjoy a good meal and we can express our gratitude for their service.

Doors open at 4:30 pm and supper will be served at 5:00 pm. Hosted by the Mattapoisett Congregational Church, Open Table is open to all; everyone is welcome! There is no charge, although donations are gratefully accepted. We hope to see you there!

Gateway Youth Hockey

On Friday night, the Gladiators Midget Blue team faced off against the SWS Chiefs and came away with a 6-3 victory. Ethan Harrop started the scoring for the Gladiators early in the first period, taking the assist from Zack Lovendale. Jack Martins, assisted by Bryan Gallagher, scored less than a minute later, giving the Gladiators a 2-0 lead. The Chiefs scored the next two goals, tying the game at 2, until the Gladiators took the lead back when Gallagher stole a pass and snuck a shot by the Chiefs’ goaltender. The final goal of the period came when Quirino doCanto found an open Tyler Lovendale, who tapped home the goal. Z. Lovendale started the scoring less than thirty seconds into the second period, on an unassisted goal. Less than a minute later, the Chiefs scored again, making the score 5-3. The scored stayed that way until doCanto took a feed from Noah Reardon and trickled one past the goalie. The Gladiators’ goalies both played well in net, with Ethan Allegrini making seven saves and Alex DeMarco making 12 saves on the night.

The Gladiators Mite C team took on a very experienced Falmouth team this weekend, and couldn’t muster a lot of offense in the loss. The team is still moving forward each week, learning the ropes, early on in the season. Scoring the lone goal for the Gladiators was Will Manning. Keegan Hewak made his goal-tending debut, facing numerous shots and making plenty of saves in the defeat. The Gladiators will skate next weekend before a bye week.

The Gladiators Midget White team battled to a 6-6 tie against the Devils on Sunday afternoon. It was back and forth between both teams for a majority of the game. The Devils jumped out to a two-goal lead early in the first period, before the Gladiators made a comeback effort. Quirino doCanto got the Gladiators’ first goal, getting the pass from Zack Lovendale. Jack Martins scored the next two goals for the Gladiators, giving them the lead, with assists going to Ty Lovendale and Z. Lovendale, along with doCanto. The Devils then tied it up on a power play goal, but doCanto, who was serving the penalty, scored on his first shift after the penalty, unassisted. At the end of the first period, the score was 4-3, but the Devils came out early in the second period and scored again, tying the game. The Lovendale brothers each added a goal in the second period, with assists going to Cam DeMarco and Matt Youlden. The Gladiators just couldn’t tighten up the defense, and the Devils managed to tie the game up late in the game. The Gladiator goalies both played well, with Alex DeMarco making 12 saves and Steven Strachan making 19 saves.

First Congregational Church of Rochester

The First Congregational Church of Rochester warmly invites the Tri-Town community to join us at 5:00 pm on Sunday, November 12 for our casual, family-friendly evening service and a meal afterwards. We will enjoy chili, salad and cornbread. Bring a dessert to share. The service and dinner will be held in the Fellowship Hall at 11 Constitution Way. Please contact the church office at 508-763-4314 if you have any questions or would like more information. We look forward to seeing you there.

The Future is Now at Rochester Police

The Rochester Board of Selectmen turned its attention to the Rochester Police Department on October 30 and took two police votes – one to hire a new full-time officer and the other to get the ball rolling towards hiring a new police chief.

The board approved the Police Department’s recommendation to appoint Brendan Emberg as Rochester’s newest full-time police officer. Sergeant Robert Small introduced Emberg as having an Associate’s degree in Liberal Arts, as well as a Bachelor of Science degree from the University of New Hampshire, and he has been a part-time officer on the force since July 2015.       “He’s done an excellent job,” said Small. “He stated all along that it was his intention to work his way up to a full-time position.”

The selectmen also gave the nod to Town Administrator Suzanne Szyndlar to begin the hiring process of replacing Chief Paul Magee when he retires in September 2018.

Szyndlar expects a lengthy hiring process, and she recommended the Town begin by drafting an updated job description for chief of police.

“It’s a long process,” said Szyndlar, saying the first step is to work closely with the police chief and town counsel to put a job description together in anticipation of advertising for the position. When asked, Szyndlar said she would be able to assemble a rough timeline of the events to come as the Town searches for the next police chief.

In other matters, the board approved the request for several stop signs and two yield signs at intersections on High Street identified as in need of safety upgrades. The selectmen had delayed a vote until Chief Magee would sign off a second time on approving yield signs – as opposed to stop signs – at the intersections of Walnut Plain Road at High Street and County Road at High Street.

Szyndlar said Magee did some research and found that no accidents had been recorded between 2013 and 2017 at the intersections, with Magee commenting that he saw no need for stop signs; yield signs would suffice.

The safety upgrades are being paid for by a state grant awarded to the town after the state identified High Street as a roadway with a higher-than-average rate of vehicular accidents.

Szyndlar also reported to the board that the Town’s updated website would be fully implemented by November 20, as anticipated.

The next meeting of the Rochester Board of Selectmen is scheduled for November 13 at 6:30 pm at the Rochester Town Hall.

Rochester Board of Selectmen

By Jean Perry

 

Marion Natural History Museum

On Wednesday, the Marion Natural History Museum’s after school group created a soil profile for the museum and took an inventory of the creatures in different types of soils. The students also learned with the use of a rain-simulator that soil that is too well worked will compact, and water will run off the top instead of getting to the roots of plants. We had a lot of fun experimenting with soils and wish to thank Maggie Payne, soil scientist with the USDA Natural Resources Department, for sharing her expertise with us. Photo by Elizabeth Leidhold

 

Bay Colony Shakespeare Company

I would like to thank the local cultural councils of Mattapoisett, Rochester and Marion for their generous support in bringing the Bay Colony Shakespeare Company to the Old Rochester Regional High School on October 17.

Two shows were performed, back to back, of Macbeth, in the high school auditorium. The first show was for Freshmen and Sophomores and the second show was for the Juniors and Seniors. Macbeth is part of the junior year curriculum, so it was very pertinent for the students to be able to see this performed, whether they have already read it, are reading it now, or will be reading it in the near future.

The arts play a major part in education, and the members of the Friends of Old Rochester Drama, Inc. appreciate the support it receives from the local cultural councils as well as the Tri-Town citizens.

Sincerely,

Lisa Cardoza

President, Friends of Old Rochester Drama, Inc.

UCT Financial Aid for College

Planning on going to college in the 2018-2019 academic year? Then don’t miss FAFSA Day Massachusetts, a free event at which you can receive free help filing the FAFSA, the federally required form for all students seeking financial aid. At FAFSA Day, financial aid experts will help you and your family complete the FAFSA and answer questions about your specific circumstances. All seniors and their parents are encouraged to attend. The closest FAFSA Day site is at Upper Cape Cod Regional Technical School on Sunday, November 5 at 1:00 pm. Please visit www.FAFSADay.org to register and learn more.

MCAS 2.0 in Mattapoisett

As Old Rochester Regional School District Superintendent Doug White and Assistant Superintendent Elsie Frangos make their rounds through the Tri-Town local school committees, their message is one of encouragement and progress as all schools embrace the newest version of standards testing: Next-Gen MCAS.

After two years of working with another testing protocol known as PARCC, the state returned to the MCAS model; that is, an updated model that emphasizes math, science and English Language Arts to a higher level.

White said that while MCAS testing is primarily performed through computer-based technologies, some students will still be using ‘paper and pencils’ pending a complete roll-out. He said that by spring 2018 all aspects of the program would be completed using computers. White touched on the test materials themselves before asking Frangos to elaborate.

Frangos said MCAS 2.0 was a “more rigorous recalibrated test” that distinguishes itself by focusing on “real world applications” in math, science, and ELA. She said the updated test and associated scoring methodology would establish students’ ultimate readiness for either college or success in the workplace.

Parents will receive letters regarding changes that may have an impact on students’ scores, reiterating several times the “rigorous” nature of the testing.

Frangos said students would either be “crossing over the river,” of that 500 point midpoint in scoring, or that students, teachers, and parents would work together to ensure students could do so.

“Parents may find that students were close but not quite there,” Frangos stated when discussing the scoring rubric of the tests. She said, “Five hundred points is the middle,” but added that a number of students will most likely score just below that mark.

“There will be help for students and teachers to help them reach the goals,” Frangos assured the committee members.

Frangos congratulated Mattapoisett local schools saying, “Mattapoisett won the Pentathlon.” She said, “The hard work of the students and teachers, as well as administrators on implementing state-of-the-art curriculums all leads to incredible success.” MCAS scores will be mailed to parents beginning November 1.

On the theme of students successfully accomplishing course work, White said that the Commonwealth of Massachusetts has now adopted the Obama Administration’s tenets of the “Every Student Succeeds Act” that was rolled out in 2015 replacing No Child Left Behind that had debuted during the Bush years. He said ESSA would establish “levels of accountability,” while “supporting students where they are and building on those skills.”

Frangos shared that the five-year strategic plan that will begin in January 2018 will focus on social and emotional issues, looking at how the schools support each student’s needs and development, as well as celebrating diversity.

Mattapoisett schools’ Principal Rose Bowman said the recently held Title I Breakfast facilitated by educators Margaret DeMello and Linda Arurui had been a great success. She also discussed the “incredible” turn out and response from parents during the parent-teacher conferences that were held. She said there were discussions around the new standards-based reporting system and that report cards would be going out on December 6.

A Literacy Night with pizza and beverages is planned for November 8 that will include a book fair at the two schools, Bowman said, and on November 10 at 11:00 am in the Old Hammondtown auditorium, the Veteran’s Day Celebration will be held with music students from OHS performing.

Mattapoisett School Committee Chairman Rachel Westgate said that the Tri-Town Education Foundation would be receiving renewed focus with an unveiling of a new logo for the Lighthouse Foundation and slogan “Lighting the way for education…” She said that students would be taking home information on the grant-based program at Thanksgiving time and that she hoped community members would use this program during the holidays as a way to honor family and friends through a donation.

The next meeting of the Mattapoisett School Committee is scheduled for December 11 at 6:30 pm in the Center School cafeteria.

Mattapoisett School Committee

By Marilou Newell