Cushing Cemetery Corporation

The Cushing Cemetery Corporation will hold its Annual Meeting on Tuesday, November 17 at 6:00 pm in the downstairs meeting room in the Mattapoisett Free Public Library. At this meeting, the members will be electing officers for the coming year and discussing the future of the cemetery. By definition, anyone who owns a lot in the Cemetery is considered a member and is welcome to come. Cushing Cemetery Corporation’s main objective is the care and preservation of the cemetery. There has been a large turnover in leadership in recent years, and we are looking for some new people to get involved and share their ideas. Coffee and goodies will be served. Please consider joining us.

Football Scores 40 for 4th Consecutive Week

The postseason kicked off for the remaining Bulldogs’ sports teams this week, and there was plenty to cheer about. Chief among Bulldog triumphs were the Volleyball team’s Thursday win over Hingham, Boys’ Soccer’s 3-1 defeat of Bourne on Wednesday, and Football’s 44-22 victory over Case on Friday night.

Football: The Bulldogs rocked the Bourne Canalmen 44-8 last Friday, and they traveled to Case this week to begin a mini-road trip and continue their non-playoff post-season competition. For the 4th game in a row, the Bulldog offense lit up the scoreboard by capturing 40+ points in a 44-22 victory. The star was senior running back Darien Dumond who racked up 193 yards from scrimmage and three touchdowns (two running and one receiving). Most of Case’s scoring occurred later in the game, after victory was secured; for example, the Bulldogs led 38-7 at one juncture. Their other scoring came on a touchdown run from junior back Nathan Hall and two scores via the run by junior quarterback Cam Hamilton. Next Friday, the Bulldogs head to Rockland with hopes of extending their winning streak to five and getting back to a .500 winning percentage.

BoysSoccer: The Bulldogs started the MIAA State Tournament at Bourne on Wednesday. The team captured an emotional 3-1 win, thanks to some stellar defense from junior goalie Sam Henrie and senior midfielder Hunter Parker. The goals came from senior Alex Tavares, senior Shane Desousa, and junior Alex Sousa. The boys’ Round 2 opponent was Norton High School. Facing them on Friday night, the boys lost 4-0 to end their season. Norton was aggressive and had many shots on goal, and Henrie made several excellent saves to keep the Bulldogs in the game. Congratulations are in order to seniors Tavares, Parker, Desousa, Kyle Medeiros, and Brett Noone on an excellent season. Also, the work of Henrie and fellow junior Sousa cannot go unnoticed, as they were two of the team’s strongest players throughout the season and hope to return the squad to the playoffs next season.

            Girls’ Soccer: Away at Bishop Stang to begin the MIAA State Tournament on Thursday, the girls lost a close 2-1 game. Despite a late comeback attempt, the girls’ season unfortunately came to an end with a loss against the Spartans. The Lady Bulldogs’ lone goal was scored by sophomore Ava Ciffolillo off an assist from freshman Maddie Demanche. Although he received the usual fantastic play of seniors Amy Bichajian and Sarah Beaulieu, Coach Jeff Lombard was able to develop some solid young players to earn another winning season. Sophomores Caitlyn Kutash, Leah Przybyszewski, and Ciffolillo, as well as freshmen Demanche and Jillian Kutash, are inspiring a good deal of optimism for the future of the program.

            BoysCross Country: This week, the team’s non-varsity runners competed at the State Coaches’ Invitational meet in Wrentham. There were three different races for the Small Schools section of the meet: Junior/Senior; Sophomore; and Freshman. Among the standouts in their respective races were juniors Ryson Smith and Jacob Spevack, sophomore Evan Tilley, and freshman Patrick Janicki. Next week, the Varsity unit competes in the D-4 State Meet, which is also being hosted in Wrentham.

            Girls’ Cross Country: On the heels of last week’s victory in the SCC Championship, the Lady Bulldogs’ varsity runners earned a well-deserved rest day and the non-varsity runners got the chance to compete at the State Coaches’ invitational meet in Wrentham. As was mentioned in the Boys’ Cross Country write-up, Saturday’s races were split up by the runners’ grades. Some of the top runners on Saturday for the girls in their respective races were junior Avery Nugent, sophomore Samantha Ball, and seniors Haily Saccone, Nicole Mattson, and Rachel Scheub. The Girls’ Varsity team heads to Wrentham on Saturday, this time to run in the D-4 State meet.

            Volleyball: The girls opened up the week at home against non-conference Somerset-Berkeley on Monday. The girls captured a much-needed victory on four sets. The biggest contributors were a quartet of seniors: Zoe Smith (seven straight service points); Michaelah Nunes (a staggering 32 assists); Hayli Marshall (13 kills); and Olivia Bellefeuille (10 digs). On Thursday, they began the much-anticipated postseason tournament against Hingham. The Lady Bulldogs came out hitting as Nunes (10 service points), Smith (four kills), Bellefeuille (24 service points), and Marshall (six blocks) powered them to a victory on three consecutive sets. The scores were 25-18, 25-23, and 25-16. In the second round, the girls will face off against the well-regarded Notre Dame Academy on Monday.

            Field Hockey: The Lady Bulldogs started the week with a rare Sunday game against Falmouth High to close out their regular season. They lost that decision 1-0 despite playing competitively throughout the game. Up against Medway at home to begin the D-2 South section of the MIAA State Tournament on Tuesday, the girls lost a hard-fought 2-0 battle. Once again, sophomore goalie Riley Goulet played exceptional in goal, but the offense couldn’t get the job done. Despite losing 13 seniors from last year’s team, Field Hockey had a successful year thanks to a developing core of young stars. Among the players slated to make an impact in the future are Goulet, junior Sophia Church, sophomore Alexandra Hulsebosch, and sophomore Arissa Francis. The girls had a winning record this season, but expect even more as they hope to go deeper in the playoffs next year.

Below are the overall fall team records, followed by the conference records in wins, losses, and ties as of November 8.

Boys’ Cross Country: (6-1-0)(6-1-0); Girls’ Cross Country: (7-0-0)(7-0-0); Golf: (17-1-0)(16-0-0); Football: (4-5-0)(4-4-0); Volleyball: (13-10-0)(8-9-0); Field Hockey: (9-7-4)(8-2-4); Boys’ Soccer: (9-11-2)(8-8-2); Girls’ Soccer: (10-9-2)(9-6-1).

By Patrick Briand

Orr-Football-2013-9184

Making Thanksgiving Better, One Can At A Time

Halloween has come and gone, with Jack-o-lanterns and ghosts being replaced with orange and yellow leaves that crinkle beneath boots. Thanksgiving is right around the corner, and turkeys everywhere are as nervous as us humans are excited for the holiday.

And, although many families gather around tables of cranberry sauce and stuffing, there are many who go hungry, even in our own Tri-Town.

At Old Rochester Regional, the members of the Community Service Learning club (CSL) are collecting canned goods in order to give every family a Thanksgiving with a table full of food.

But first, who are the members of CSL, and what do they do?

As club advisor, Heidi Graser said, “It’s a group of students that are interested and willing to do various community service acts in the local community, as well as the national community. Students that want to give back.” The group meets every other Tuesday to discuss (and carry out) ways to help the community for the greater good.

The food drive, which ends Friday, November 20, is calling on the school community to donate items like stuffing and any other nonperishable food items. There is, of course, a greater need for traditional Thanksgiving foods at this time of year.

“We have a list of food items that has been posted on the school Facebook page,” said Graser, which is quite handy for those of us who aren’t really sure what a food pantry needs to supply Thanksgiving meals.

When walking through the school, students and staff are surrounded by posters painted in shades of yellow, orange and red, as well as top-notch hand turkeys, promoting the food drive. On top of the posters, there are orange donation boxes, which have been placed in homerooms.

“All food can be donated in students’ homerooms or the front office,” said Graser. This means that community members who might not have a child at Old Rochester can drop by the main office and support the food drive if they wish.

By Sienna Wurl

 

Governor Must Sponsor Annual TM Legislation

The state legislature told the Town of Rochester that in order to pass special legislation to accept the June 8, 2015 Annual Town Meeting, which was held without a quorum, Governor Charlie Baker must be the sponsor of the bill, not the Town of Rochester.

Selectmen authorized Town Counsel Blair Bailey and Town Administrator Michael McCue to draft and submit the special legislation to the House of Representatives on behalf of the Town to accept the results of the Annual Town Meeting. McCue told selectmen on November 1 that he planned to attend a meeting the following week with the Joint Committee on Municipalities and Regional Government to speak about the special legislation, but on November 5 McCue said he no longer needed to attend the meeting.

“We’ve been instructed by the House to go a different route in terms of seeking legislation,” McCue said on November 5 during a special morning meeting of the Rochester Board of Selectmen. “The route now is to petition the governor.”

The board voted, authorizing McCue to send the letter addressed to the governor to Representative Bill Straus’ office, which will then be forwarded to the governor’s office.

“This is the way we should’ve gone about this,” said Selectman Naida Parker. She cited other towns that have had to seek special legislation similar to Rochester’s situation. “So this isn’t breaking new ground.…”

Immediately after the meeting, McCue scanned a copy of the letter to send electronically to Straus’ office, and he said he would follow that with a hard copy of the letter in the mail.

Selectmen postponed the November 30 Special Fall Town Meeting last week until the Annual Town Meeting matter is resolved.

By Jean Perry

ROsel_111215

Thanksgiving Pies at the RWC

The Rochester Women’s Club is taking orders for their homemade Thanksgiving Pies. Please order your pies by November 20. Pick up will be November 24 between 3:00 and 5:00 pm at the club house. We are located at 37 Marion Road in Rochester.

Our members will be making apple, pumpkin and squash pies. The cost is $13 a pie. The profits from the pie sale go directly the Scholarship Fund. Call Marsha to order at 508-322-0998.

Come Celebrate our 50th Christmas Fair

The churches of St. Anthony, Mattapoisett and St. Rita, Marion invite all to attend our 50th annual Christmas Fair from 9:00 am to 2:00 pm on Saturday, December 5 at St. Anthony’s Church Hall, 22 Barstow Street, Mattapoisett. We’ll have malasadas for breakfast and a hot lunch, plus plenty of home-baked goodies to enjoy. Shop for wreaths and fresh holiday greens, hand-made ornaments and gifts, Silpada jewelry, kitchenware from Pampered Chef, and hand-crafted rosaries. New this year is Fresh LuLu Design, which offers unique, personalized and embroidered gifts for all ages. Our themed-basket raffle is celebrating local artisans and stores for our 50th year. Children of all ages will love our toy shop, craft workshop and visit with Santa. The fair honors all major credit cards. Parking is free and the hall is handicap accessible via the Barstow Street entrance.

Tabor Cup Fever Strikes Tabor

As a boarding school, Tabor students are always searching for new, fun ways to spend their weekends. In the past, there was an ongoing “dorm wars” competition in which different dorms were grouped and competed for prizes. This year, however, a new competition replaced this one – the Tabor Cup.

Dorms and day students are organized into eight teams, and students from each team have opportunities to win points for their team at various events throughout the week.

In some cases, points are awarded to teams just based on participation. These include attending games together or having team breakfasts. These are designed to bring students from different dorms together by having them work towards a common goal. These smaller scale events are also meant to boost school spirit, adding an extra incentive for students to go out and support each other by attending games in bigger groups.

Other events follow more traditionally competitive rules. They are judged either by parents’ and alumni votes or by the traditional finishing placement when a certain number of points are awarded to first, second, third place, etc.

The first big Tabor Cup event was the Lip Sync battle, in which groups from different dorm teams took to Hoyt stage to battle each other in their ability to memorize songs and pretend to sing them. Many teams even choreographed routines and practiced ahead of time to make sure they were perfect.

Other events included a Powder-puff Game, in which junior and senior girls play football, Trivia Night, basketball tournaments, cookie bake-offs, ultimate Frisbee tournaments, and more.

“I think the main point of the whole competition is to promote school spirit,” says senior Karen Morahan. “Everyone gets really into the different events. My team held rehearsals before the Lip Sync battle, and we all showed up for team breakfast. Everyone definitely wants to win Tabor Cup, but no matter what, it’s been really fun just competing.” As a proctor in her dorm, Morahan works with the other proctors on her Tabor Cup team to organize team gatherings and make sure everyone participates.

“Tabor Cup kicked off the year great for the senior class,” said senior Thomas Kelly. “It definitely showed the power of the senior class and demonstrated how much school spirit everyone had. It set a standard for how much effort we’re going to put into school events, and I think that the next rounds of Tabor Cup are going to be even more fun because everyone saw how into it people got, and they know how great it can be if everyone puts in the effort.”

The events of Tabor Cup are part of a surge in school spirit before Holderness Day on Saturday, November 14, when Tabor competes against its rival school, Holderness.

There will be two more rounds of Tabor Cup before the year is over, one during each sports season. With everyone excited from this first round, the next rounds promise to be even more exciting.

By Madeleine Gregory

Tabor_100815

Bike Path and Home Rule Articles Questioned

It didn’t take long for Town Meeting voters in Mattapoisett to routinely move money around from one account to another, or to appropriate funds for infrastructure work such as new water mains and roadways repairs. However, residents voiced their concerns when it came to forking out more money for the bike path and changing the voting structure when dealing with general bylaws.

Article 6 would have authorized the Board of Selectmen to file a Home Rule Petition that would change the way Mattapoisett’s General Bylaws are amended or altered, from a simple majority vote to a two-thirds majority vote.

Donald Fleming, a resident and practicing attorney asked, “Why would people want to give up their right? The board is suggesting limitations on every citizen in this town. Zoning needs a two-thirds vote because it deals with property.…”

Fleming felt that, by passing this article, residents would be more restricted in petitioning through the town meeting process.

Brad Hathaway spoke up, “Majority rule has served this town well for 60 years!”

Kevin Geraghty, resident and Finance Committee member, also voiced his concern saying, “I agree with what I’m hearing from the crowd. Why get a super majority? I haven’t heard any reason why we need to restrict people’s ideas. Two-thirds makes it harder for the average citizen.”

When the vote was counted, the article carried 52 in favor and 41 against. That brought Ray Andrews to his feet, asking Town Moderator Jack Eklund for a motion to reconsider.

“Move this to the Annual Town Meeting,” said Andrews. “The vote is too close.”

Eklund was not disposed to do so, however. He explained in detail that he had researched his responsibilities and authority to decline such a recall. In spite of Andrews, again asserting the vote was too close, Eklund dismissed the request and the meeting continued.

Article 18 pertained to the bike path and asked voters to approve another $30,000 for test borings required by the Massachusetts Department of Transportation. Presenting the article was Bike Path Committee member Robert Price.

Price explained that the test borings is a new requirement added since the birth of the bike path and its proposed traversing of sensitive wetlands. The DOT wants to ensure sufficient rock material for anchoring a bridge across Eel River and associated wetlands.

Residents stepped up to the microphone speaking both for and against spending these additional funds.

Bill Dumas said he had been sitting in the same location in the high school auditorium for town meetings since 1972 and since the l980s, he said, “We were told the bike path wouldn’t cost us anything. How much is the ‘it’s not going to cost us anything’ is it?”

Others expressing concern that costs might continue to ratchet upwards were Finance Committee member Elisabeth Pennington, Selectman Jordan Collyer, and resident Bill Sweeney.

Voters speaking on behalf of supporting approval of the article were Principal Assessor Kathleen Costello, and residents Randy Smith, Jim Dildine and Mike Botello.

Town Administrator Michael Gagne said that, to date, the town had ponied up $470,000 for engineering and design services.

In the end, the sentiment of the assembled was to approve the spending. The article carried 82 in favor, 7 against.

Highway Surveyor Barry Denham presented Article 13 pertaining to town bridge and culvert design. The article asked voters to support spending $25,000 of free cash to perform assessment of culverts throughout the town, with most along the beleaguered Acushnet Road. The article easily passed 93 to 0.

Regarding Article 15, Library Roof Repairs, Gagne explained that due to a product failure of the roof tiles installed less than ten years ago, the town was engaged in litigation against the manufacturer. In the meantime, the library roof needed a hefty $189,000 worth of repairs. The article carried 93 to 0.

Fifteen articles were easily put through with monies going towards much-needed water and sewer projects, roadway repairs, or the rescinding of borrowing authorizations previously granted.

Article 16, Replacement of Damaged Police Cruiser, was withdrawn by Chief Mary Lyons.

In a tender moment mid-way through the evening, Nick Nicholson was acknowledged by the selectmen for his many years of service to the town in his role as Water and Sewer Superintendent. He is scheduled to retire in December. Nicholson received a standing ovation from all in attendance.

By Marilou Newell

MTstm_111215

Honoring Our Veterans

A full house at Old Hammondtown School celebrated Mattapoisett veterans and all veterans on November 11, and with hundreds in attendance it was possibly the largest turnout ever for the annual event. Photos by Jean Perry

MTvets_6484 MTvets_6500 MTvets_6494 MTvets_6501 MTvets_6509 MTvets_6506 MTvets_6493 MTvets_6507 MTvets_6487 MTvets_6502 MTvets_6504 MTvets_6498

Alternative Gift Fair

On Saturday, November 14, the Mattapoisett Friends Meeting will hold its third annual Alternative Gift Fair. There will be several local and international non-profits represented, as well as fair-trade crafts, coffee, and chocolate. Participating organizations include: the Mattapoisett Land Trust, the Coalition for Buzzards Bay, Friends of the Mattapoisett Bicycle and Recreational Path, Society of St. Vincent de Paul, the Mattapoisett Historical Society, Heifer International, and Sanga Sangai (Nepal). Local Artist Charlotte Purrington will have a new print on sale in the form of greeting cards. The fair will run from 10:00 am to 1:00 pm. The meetinghouse is at 103 Marion Road (Route 6).