Old Colony Students Participate in State Competition

Sam Morse of Rochester and Brendon Senior of Carver have already cleared a major hurdle on their path to professional excellence. On January 16, they successfully completed the written portion of the National Automotive Technicians Education Foundation’s annual competition. Having pulled through those riggers, they advanced to the hands-on second half where they tested their ability to handle stress while employing their technical skills as partners.

On February 6, these students, along with students from nine other vocational high schools, met to compete at Massachusetts Bay Community College in Ashland. The second and final part of the competition required identifying the problems, solving the problems, and fixing them. No small feat indeed when one considers all the variables.

Morse and Senior are seniors at Old Colony Regional Vocational Technical High School in Rochester. On many levels, these young men are already professionals in the field of automotive repair. Both have participated in cooperative programs that allow students to work outside the school walls in their chosen field of study.

Morse and Senior have both been employed by a Toyota dealership. But moreover, critical thinking skills along with practical application of those skills have been honed by the curriculum at OCRVTHS bringing these two students to the heights of achievement in automotive repair.

“Critical thinking starts in the freshmen year,” explains Jackie Machamer, assistant principal. She said vocational schools have changed over the years and are now recognized for the importance placed not only on vocational skills but also on academic studies. “Today, if a student wants to pursue a four-year college placement, we can do that,” Machamer said.

Whether the student wants to matriculate directly into the workplace after graduating from school or wants to continue their education in other settings, Machamer was clear that, with a vocational school program, all things are possible.

Twenty-two year instructional veteran Dennis Frates said Morse and Senior have been continuously performing at a high level since their freshmen year. He explained that OCRVTHS is a small school with small classes, but it sets high standards at every level.

Both Machamer and Frates, along with John Mare, 16-year automotive instructor, stressed the importance of ensuring that the students receive a well-rounded educational experience at OCRVTHS. The trio also expressed that their students are assisted every step of the way to reach their individual goals.

As for Morse and Senior, they exuded cool, calm demeanors on the eve of the competition. Senior shared that he hoped for the best on Saturday, while Morse said, “This is nothing new to us.”

Yup, just another day of troubleshooting car problems, fixing them, and moving on to the next challenge.

The students’ education requires that they not only understand the complexities of vehicles loaded with electronics, mini-computers and the like but also the sophisticated diagnostic tools employed in the process of repairing automobiles. Add to that the pressure of a competition, and it’s easy to see how some might not be up to the challenge. For Morse and Senior, however, their ability to handle it all has been fostered in an environment geared towards proficiency at every stage of learning.

Old Colony has never won first place in this competition, but it has succeeded in participating in the Massachusetts regional event for the last 25 years earning several respectable second place standings. And, although Old Colony didn’t walk away with the coveted prizes this time, the experience of participating and the memory of the effort necessary to get them as far as they did will remain with Morse and Senior for the rest of their lives.

“We may not have won, but it was an honor to participate in the competition to that degree,” Morse said.

By Marilou Newell

Old-Colony

GYH Public Skate and Registration Day

Gateway Youth Hockey will hold registration for the 2016-17 season during Public Skating at Tabor Academy on Sunday, February 21. The cost to participate in public skating is $5, with half of the door sales going to Gateway Youth Hockey. The deposit for the 2016-17 will be $200 and will ensure your child a spot on a Gateway Gladiators team. The 2016-17 season will includes 30+ practices and 20+ games. Total cost of $1000 for Mites-Bantams, $500 for Midgets, $650 for Goalies; 25% discount for playing on multiple teams or multiple siblings.

GYH is comprised of the following teams: Mites – Birth Years ’08 & younger; Squirts – Birth Years ‘06 & ‘07; Pee Wees – Birth Years ‘04 & ’05; Bantams – Birth Years ‘02 & ‘03; Midgets – Birth Years ’98 – ‘01; Middle School – Grades 6-8.

Tryout will be held at Hetland Rink in New Bedford on the following dates: Mites – Monday, March 23 at 7:00 pm; Squirts – Friday, March 25 at 7:00 pm; Pee Wees – Monday, March 28 at 6:30 pm; Bantams – Monday, March 28 at 7:30 pm; Middle School – Wednesday, March 30 at 7:00 pm; Midgets – Friday, April 1 at 7:00 pm.

Delayed Starts

Every other Thursday, the students of Old Rochester Regional High School walk into school with a more awake outlook on the school day in front of them. Armed with an extra hour of sleep, students feel more prepared to face the day ahead. Why? ‘Delayed starts’ – a time when students are invited to come in an hour later and enjoy the extra time for homework or much needed sleep.

A delayed start day runs very similar to any other school day, with the only real influence being on the first two classes. Busses run at the regular time for the students who can’t get a ride to the school. Students who come in early are split up by grade, with every class assigned to a different room in the school (an example being the auditorium). There, students are invited to work on any classwork they need to complete before the school day begins.

Students who can get themselves to school late must arrive by 8:30 am. From there, the school day carries on as normal, with only the first two classes being shortened to about an hour from their usual 90 minutes.

The idea for delayed starts began in order to allow teachers more time to plan their curriculum together for each subject area. As Vice-Principal Michael Parker explained, “It came out of the idea of trying to find more time for the teachers to meet with each other and talk about curriculum and things like that to improve their craft, to improve their teaching.”

Parker continued, “It’s very hard to do during the day because there’s no time. Teachers’ contracts are very structured, and there’s only about one meeting a month, so it’s very difficult to do it during the school day, or even after school.”

Another thing, said Parker, studies have shown that high school kids perform much better starting later in the day.

Every year, Principal Michael Devoll must present the plan for the delayed starts before the school committee and receive its approval. The delayed starts have been in effect since last year, and Parker said they plan to continue for the 2016-2017 school year.

As for teachers, they reap all the benefits possible from the delayed starts.

“I think it’s valuable,” said English teacher Michael Beson. “Especially on days where we kind of have a little bit more freedom to talk about what we want to talk about. With a lot of our other staff meetings … we don’t have much time to talk about … our curriculum, so that hour, even though it’s not too often throughout the year, it’s time that I think is beneficial for us.”

Planning around shortened classes may seem to be a challenge, but it’s not as horrible as one might be led to believe, explained Beson.

“I think it’s just something that we just need to remember when it goes into planning, that we’re either going to try and get through things a little bit quicker or shorten some activities for that day, or just push things back to another day,” said Beson.

For the students of Old Rochester, there is seldom a bad thing to be said about the late starts, as it provides an opportunity to begin the day in a more relaxed environment. Student Emma Cadieux explained, “I know a lot of students are peppier on delayed start days. I hear a lot of them go out to breakfast before coming to school, and most get a better night’s sleep with that extra hour.”

“I know personally, I always get ready for school more quickly on delayed start days,” continued Cadieux.

The general consensus of the student body appears to be one of gratefulness for the opportunity to either sleep in or do homework, and although it may seem unnecessary to shorten classes for the sake of planning and sleep, Cadieux explained how the delayed starts are productive in their own way.

“Students don’t need to come out of every hour of their day with pages of work to show for it. I wouldn’t say it’s productive in the way teachers and educators think of the word productive, but it’s necessary and it’s helpful,” said Cadieux.

Every student seemed to agree that late starts provide a relaxing start to their day, as explained by student Brooke Santos.

“I feel that delayed starts are helpful because it gives kids time to sleep in for once and it lets them rest and you can go out to breakfast,” said Santos. “And you have time to get out all your energy and talking before you go to school, and then when you’re there, you’re more focused.”

Despite the reduced class time, students don’t generally feel the reduced time impedes their education in a noticeable way.

Student Ryson Smith said, “For the AP classes, losing half an hour might mess up scheduling. But for other classes, it usually doesn’t affect much.”

For students, the lost hour is a price they’re willing to pay in order to improve their mental health.

“I feel like the pros, which are more sleep, for me, outweigh the cons because we’re already stressed and sleeping in helps alleviate some of that stress,” said student James Goulart.

Student Celeste Hartley had this to say, “Students are happier. The teachers first and second block aren’t as happy, because the shortened blocks can sometimes mess up their scheduling.”

Since the beginning of the late starts, many students have realized the benefits of beginning school at a later time, as Smith explained.

“I do feel that I notice a change in students during late start days, but I support changing the school day to a later start in general,” Smith said.

Delayed starts have allowed Old Rochester students to decompress and enjoy time to themselves – an infrequent occurrence in the ever-busy life of a high-schooler. Delayed Starts are here, and for the sake of staff and students, hopefully they’re here to stay.

By Sienna Wurl

 

Plumb Library Celebrates ‘Library Awareness’

The trip to the library was the highlight of my week as a kid, well before I was able to read on my own. I loved walking up the concrete wheelchair ramp, my fingers lightly skidding up the iron black cold handrail to the door that pushed open. In the vestibule, a long corrugated clear vinyl mat delighted me with the sound it made as I shuffled my feet across it, dragging my toes behind each step.

That scent of bound paper and ink, woodwork, potted plant, and must is a smell I still clearly recall as an adult. The children’s department was to the left, where my mom would leave me to choose my up-to-eight books while she browsed the adult fiction section for the two books she would devote her time to over the next seven days.

My mother loved to read books. She mostly checked them out from the library, but she had a small bookcase of her own that I would sometimes “play library” with at home, pretending to be the librarian who got to use that groovy machine that would stamp the card with the date and due date when pushed into the metal slot. “Ca-chunk.”

It was a place where people said “hush” and had to be quiet. It felt sort of sacred, like in a church.

Books and the library were such a vital part of my growing-up experience. In the libraries of the 21st Century, there is a little bit less of the old “shushing” going on. Libraries now offer so much more than books, with children’s events and activities, computer access, and still the good old-fashioned book club.

Part of the reason for all these fun activities, says Plumb Library Children’s Librarian Lisa Fuller, is to get people into those library doors so they can actually see what is in store for them at their local public library. “Library awareness,” Fuller called it.

On Saturday, February 6, the Plumb Library participated in a national tradition now in its fifth year: Take Your Child to the Library Day.

Held on the first Saturday of February, the Plumb Library hosted its third such event, giving itself the opportunity to show patrons and community members that the library is more than just a building full of books.

“We’re sort of a community center in some ways, and we would love to see some new faces,” said Fuller. “Our struggle is that we feel we have a decent-size community and we feel that people forget that the library isn’t just a place to check out a book.”

For Take Your Child to the Library Day, Fuller said she chose a number of performers for the purpose of showing patrons just that, having them link their performances in some way, shape, or form, with the library books.

Children were treated to a story read by Alice of Alice in Wonderland, a performer from Encore Entertainment of Mattapoisett. Library patron “Professor Trelawney” of Hogwarts School read fortunes for the kids, and Mr. Vinnie from Toe Jam Puppet Band put on a puppet show created just for the Plumb Library’s event.

Library staff also gave demonstrations on other offerings at the library, such as their online services that offer e-books and intensive research applications for older students. The library showed off its video game and movie collection, magazines, and introduced its children’s activities such as storytime hours, Lego club, and junior friends club.

“We tried to give the people a feel for what’s in-house and what’s available online,” said Fuller. “There’s just so much that’s available and, importantly, at no cost.”

Fuller said the Plumb Library website is new and improved for 2016, making it easier to navigate and find information more efficiently. With the help of a local computer-savvy library patron, Fuller said, the website is now up and fully running.

“We’re trying to make connections. Bring people in. We’d like to see some new people.”

It is no wonder that the results of a survey of patrons over and over turned up one consistent key phrase: “wonderful staff.”

The library staff is constantly coming up with new ways to entice young would-be patrons of the library to come inside, said Fuller, and is devoted to making the library a part of the lives of community children. For more information, visit www.plumblibrary.org.

By Jean Perry

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ORRJHS Students of the Month

Kevin T. Brogioli, Principal of Old Rochester Regional Jr. High School, announces the following Students of the Month for January 2016:

Green Team: Toni Ciffolillo & Ryu Huynh-Aoyama

Orange Team: Katherine Kirby & Jack Gerard

Blue Team: Morgan Ducharme & Isaiah Andrade

Red Team: Maeve Geraghty & Liam Downey

Purple Team: Sydney DaSilva & Maxwell Brulport

Special Areas: Jessica Vance & Colin Kulak

Sippican Woman’s Club

The Sippican Woman’s Club of Marion has extended an invitation to the Mattapoisett and Rochester Women’s Clubs to join us on Friday, February 12 at 12:30 pm for finger foods followed by a short business meeting and program by Don & Donna Lasko – named the “Ultimate & Romantic Tea Couple” by the Tea Association of America – who will serve their very own “Courtship Tea” and speak about their extensive display and knowledge of tea and associated customs and valentine memorabilia. The program will be at St. Gabriel’s Parish Hall, corner of Front & South Streets, Marion. RSVP by February 9 to Info@SippicanWomansClub.org or call 508-295-5842. The Sippican Woman’s Club welcomes guests. For membership information, contact Jeanne Lake at 508-748-0619 or visit the above website.

Tri-County Symphonic Band

As a musical equivalent of sending cards, flowers, chocolates and other gifts on Valentine’s Day, the Tri-County Symphonic Band, under the direction of Philip Sanborn, invites everyone to enjoy a concert of music called “Love is in the Winds.” The concert is at 3:00 pm on Sunday, February 14 (Valentine’s Day), at Dartmouth High School, 555 Bakerville Road, South Dartmouth.

The program begins with Serge Prokofiev’s March from “The Love for Three Oranges.” The satirical opera “Love for Three Oranges” is based on a witch’s curse that compels the Prince to be obsessed with love for three oranges. The opera is infrequently performed, but the march is one of Prokofiev’s more popular works.

No truer love can be found than that of Lohengrin and Elsa from Richard Wagner’s “Lohengrin.” The band will play a wonderful transcription of Elsa’s Procession to the Cathedral. This is the music that precedes the well-known bridal chorus and represents the joy as well as the uncertainty Elsa has as she is about to wed a man whose true identity is unknown to her.

With love, families come together. In the case of the Montagues and the Capulets, the families could not be more polarized. Prokofiev’s musical depiction of these battling families from his ballet “Romeo and Juliet” is raucous and then sweet and then raucous again. Prokofiev uses broad strokes with the brass and offsets the brutality with expressive woodwind passages.

The twisted love triangle that was revealed in the novel “The Phantom of the Opera” was vaulted into popularity with the 1986 West End musical production with music by Andrew Lloyd Webber. The Tri-County Symphonic Band will do a medley of selections from the musical including “Think of Me,” “Angel of Music,” “All I Ask of You,” “The Point of No Return,” and “The Music of the Night.”

The concert will conclude with the Violin Concerto in D Major by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky with Jesse Holstein, violin. The piece was written in Clarens, a Swiss resort on the shores of Lake Geneva, where Tchaikovsky had gone to recover from the depression brought on by his disastrous marriage to Antonina Miliukova. He was joined there by his composition pupil, the violinist Iosif Kotek. The two played works for violin and piano together. Since Tchaikovsky was not a violinist, he sought the advice of Kotek on the completion of the solo part. “How lovingly he’s busying himself with my concerto!” Tchaikovsky wrote. “It goes without saying that I would have been able to do nothing without him. He plays it marvelously.” The first performance of the concerto was eventually given by Adolph Brodsky on December 4, 1881 in Vienna. The work is regarded as one of the most beautiful and, at the same time, one of the most incredibly difficult violin concertos ever written.

Tickets for the concert are $15 for adults and $5 for students. Children 12 and under are admitted free. Tickets can be purchased at the Symphony Music Shop in Dartmouth and The Bookstall in Marion. Any remaining tickets will be sold at the door. Please visit http://tricountysymphonicband.org/ for more information.

Lesley Johnson

Lesley Johnson passed away on Monday, 2/8/16 at her home in Moosup, CT. She had suffered with asthma, COPD and atrial fibrillation. Her father was Mel Johnson of Harbor Beach, Mattapoisett. Her mother was Hellen Martin of Plainfield, CT. She is survived by a brother, Douglas Johnson of Arkansas and two daughters; Angel Clerici of Vermont and Sherry Fletcher of Canterbury, CT. Lesley attended Willett School in Attleboro and then Center School in Mattapoisett. She also attended Fairhaven and Old Rochester High Schools, and graduated from Mansfield High School in 1962.

Catherine T. “Kay” (DeTerra) Messier

Catherine T. “Kay” (DeTerra) Messier, 89, of Mattapoisett passed away peacefully surrounded by her loving family on February 9, 2016.

She was the wife of the late Bernard L. Messier.

Born in New Bedford, the daughter of the late Joseph and Margaret (Rose) DeTerra, she moved to Mattapoisett in 1974. She was a graduate of New Bedford High School in 1944 and a proud graduate of St. Luke’s Hospital School of Nursing as a Registered Nurse in 1948.

Throughout her life, Kay embodied the true spirit of a nurse always prepared, ready to heal and all done with a caring heart. Kay found great joy in watching the Patriots, tending to her home, and spending time with loved ones.

She was a communicant of St. Anthony’s Church in Mattapoisett.

She was employed as a registered nurse for St. Luke’s Hospital and for Dr. Franklin Berry.

Mrs. Messier was a member of St. Luke’s Hospital School of Nursing Alumni, AARP, and D.A.V. Auxiliary.

Survivors include her close friends the Mazzuca family and Jeanne St. Jean; as well as several cousins, nieces, and nephews.

She was the sister of the late Joseph S. DeTerra.

Her Funeral Service will be held on Saturday, February 13th at 10 AM in the Saunders-Dwyer Mattapoisett Home For Funerals, 50 County Rd. (Rt. 6) Mattapoisett. Her family will receive guests on Saturday morning from 9 – 10 AM prior to her service. In lieu of flowers, remembrances may be made to the Mattapoisett Police Department Ambulance Fund 64 County Rd., P.O. Box 436 Mattapoisett, MA 02739. For directions and guestbook, please visit www.saundersdwyer.com.

Waterway Fee Increases Approved

With summer fast approaching and with a plan to try and inject cash flow into the Waterfront Enterprise Fund, the Mattapoisett Board of Selectmen on February 9 voted on a new rate structure that will affect boat owners, marinas, and boat yards effective immediately. But those changes didn’t sail along smoothly with residents.

Dana Barrows of Leisure Shores felt that implementing such a large increase in one season was unfair to the boating community.

There had been some confusion on the part of Selectman Jordan Collyer on rate increases for commercial moorings, which, after considerable discussion, was cleared up. But Barrows said, “How are you going to implement this when you’re not even sure?”

Barbara Gaspar, assistant town clerk, voiced her concern that people would be in an uproar saying, “As the person standing behind the counter, we’re going to take the blame.”

Board of Selectmen Chairman Paul Silva said it was the responsibility of Town Administrator Michael Gagne to work out the clerical kinks. Gagne assured Gaspar and the selectmen that he had held conversations with the treasurer, and was confident that appropriate accounting methodology would be employed.

But the biggest change being challenged on this night wasn’t really about the impact on boaters – it was about how commercial moorings will be billed and paid for.

The Marine Advisory Board along with the Board of Selectmen had determined that commercial moorings – those assigned to marinas and boatyards – would be paid for up-front by those businesses that, in turn, would be reimbursed by their customers.

Gagne backed off that a bit, indicating that for those commercial moorings committed to return customers, the town would bill the customers directly for the 2016 season. Any moorings that remained unused would be billed directly to the marinas.

Gagne said both the Mattapoisett Boat Yard and Leisure Shores Marina had improved their reporting processes over the last couple of years, but by placing the total fee structure for commercial moorings on an invoice to them, it would aid the town in getting revenue that for decades had merely floated out of the harbor uncollected.

In the end, the selectmen voted to approve the following: sticker fee per foot for residents $2, non-residents $5, and senior residents $1; mooring fee $60; all-inclusive commercial mooring and sticker fee $200; commercial mooring unused $70; all-inclusive commercial dock/float/sticker fee $210; town slip and timber pier fee all-inclusive $50 per foot; skiff fee $150, seniors $75; small boat fee $50.

Another topic that seemed to bring a stink into the meeting room was the issue of dog waste pollution.

Silva said he had received a telephone call recently from a concerned citizen who was horrified to see more than forty piles of dog excrement littering the bike path between Mattapoisett Neck Road and Brandt Island Beach Road.

“I checked myself, and they were there!” he said.

Gagne said that two years ago, dog waste stations had been installed throughout the town including at the bike path, but Animal Control Officer Kathleen Massey said, “No one uses those.” She went on to say, “I don’t know how to uphold the law.” Fines are posted at the stations but, she said, “Some people just don’t care.”

Silva said the amount of waste represented an environmental hazard in sensitive wetlands areas and expressed concern that something had to be done now to control the issue before the new portion of the bike path was completed.

Massey said that anyone who sees a person leave dog waste on the ground should take a picture of the offending human and send it to her.

Gagne said sometimes it takes other dog owners to get people to do the right thing. He said people could also contact him and Town Hall would take care of it.

Silva asked Gagne to pull together a committee of six people to explore ideas and ways to get dog owners to comply. Anyone interested in participating on this committee or wishing to report a problem should contact Michael Gagne at mgagne@mattapoisett.net, 508-758-4100, ext. 4 or Kathleen Massey at kmassey@mattapoisett.net, 508-400-8910.

Earlier in the evening, the selectmen recognized Police Officers Lenira DaCruz and Brett Ostekowski for their outstanding service during an incident on Christmas morning 2015.

The pair had responded to a call reporting a water leak, but when they reached the scene, they heard an alarm sounding and went to investigate.

What they found was a family asleep in a home filled with carbon monoxide. The officers were able to evacuate the family from the building and away from possible lethal consequences.

Collyer lauded the police officers saying, “The amount of carbon monoxide could have resulted in a bad Christmas morning. Once again, police have gone over and above the call of duty.”

The selectmen also voted to approve an application for a grant from the Federal Land and Water Conservation Fund to help purchase land near Wellhead No. 3 currently held by the Tinkham family. The property is part of the Mattapoisett River Valley watershed area and snakes along the Mattapoisett River. This land acquisition is in partnership with the Buzzards Bay Coalition and will be held by the Mattapoisett Water and Sewer Department as town properties under their control.

The next meeting of the Mattapoisett Board of Selectmen is scheduled for February 23 at 7:00 pm in the Mattapoisett Town Hall conference room.

By Marilou Newell

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