What is Google Docs?

Technology integration in education has been a big topic for over a decade now.

School administrators are always looking for new ways to make schoolwork accessible to students via the Internet and to encourage Internet usage for the purpose of educational improvement.

Google Docs, along with its accompanying services like Google Drive and Google Slides, is one of the programs that Old Rochester Regional uses to get kids involved with online learning. Every ORR Junior High and High School student has an account, and a few high school students gave their opinions on the online service.

Senior Matthew Bourgeois has been using Google Docs for several years now and has a great understanding of the program. He had nothing but praise for the way Google Docs makes working online an easy task.

“Accessibility and instant saving are the best features of Google Docs,” said Bourgeois. “I use it anytime I have a project with partners, especially in my history-based electives.”

Bourgeois wishes that all teachers would use Google Docs, and he wishes that those who use it currently would utilize it even more.

“It’s easier for us to use most of the time. You can easily look up teachers’ assignment directions when you’re connected, so it takes guessing out of the equation,” he said.

Sophomore Ari Dias also thought the automatic saving was a good idea on Google Docs’ part; however, she wasn’t crazy about the program as a whole.

“[It’s] slow and kind of complicated. Sometimes seeing a real-life example (in place of what is seen on Google Docs) would help students more,” said Dias.

Dias and junior Jacob Lawrence agreed that English was the class where Google Docs is most commonly used. Lawrence added that he uses it for “every typed assignment.”

In contrast, junior Teagan Walsh said Math and Spanish were the classes she was most likely to use it in, even though her teachers seem to use the website sparingly.

Many students differ greatly on how many days they log in per week and how much time they spend on the website.

Usage time depends greatly on what classes are taken and what teachers a student has, as teachers range from never incorporating the program to making it a part of everyday class life.

For senior Luke Gauvin, it’s closer to the latter.

“I use it five days a week,” Gauvin said, mentioning that Google Docs was prominent in a multitude of his classes.

It’s safe to say Google Docs isn’t going anywhere anytime soon.

Since the service can apply to so many classes, many teachers feel it is a great tool to utilize. For many students, Google Docs has become part of an everyday educational regimen that also includes services like PowerSchool and other technology-based platforms designed for education.

By Patrick Briand

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The Big Love Your Library Book Sale

The Friends of the Mattapoisett Library’s Big Love Your Library Book Sale is on Saturday, February 14 from 10:00 am until 1:00 pm, downstairs at the library. It’s a two-for-one sale – buy one book, get one free; buy a bag of books, get a bag of books free. Coupled with the Junior Friends Bake Sale, browsing is almost mandatory. Show your love for the library by turning out for this great sale, sign up for a Friends membership, and pick up something sweet for your Valentine.

DaRosa Pier Appeal Upheld by DEP

It was soon clear why the Mattapoisett Conservation Commission did not let the blizzard stop its January 26 meeting from taking place.

Chairman Bob Rogers told the commission and the three people in attendance that the impetus for conducting the scheduled meeting was due to a Wednesday, January 28 deadline to appeal a Department of Environmental Protection upholding of the Daniel DaRosa appeal for the construction of a massive residential pier on Goodspeed Island.

Rogers and Conservation Agent Elizabeth Leidhold were both surprised at the speed in which the DEP announced their uploading of DaRosa’s appeal – a mere six weeks.

On Friday, January 23 the Town received the DEP’s verdict. The town has only until Wednesday, January 28 to respond with an appeal.

Saying that he felt ‘rushed’ during the last public hearing, Rogers said that by appealing, the commission could provide a better elaboration of their issues concerning the construction of the pier.

“This will give us an opportunity to expand upon our reasons for denying the application,” Rogers stated.

A vocal opponent to DaRosa’s personal pier, Michael Huguenin, also braved the elements to make his case to the commission that they should step forward.

“We have done research and raised money…. We will participate in an appeal,” Huguenin said.

He explained that a Town appeal and any appeal by private parties would be heard by the DEP’s Dispute Resolution Department, not the DEP staff in Lakeville.

Huguenin continued, “…the Town is an abutter to this project … we hope the Town will appeal this…”

He shared that in the beginning, the citizen group he had spearheaded had approximately 100 signatures against the DaRosa plan. That number now stands at 204. He said there is wide interest around town.

“People come up to me in the post office, in the grocery store. They want to know what is going on…” Huguenin was surprised at the amount of concern expressed to him about DaRosa’s plan even in “the dead of winter.”

He said that the citizen’s group has collected financial backing and more engineering information that will be used to mount a defense against the project moving forward.

Huguenin said that, had DaRosa been willing to sit down and discuss a more conservative private pier, something could have been worked out. In the absence of that type of compromise, he said, “We are willing to spend our own money.”

As for the Conservation Commission members, the board is split. Rogers and members Marylou Kelliher and Peter Newton have spoken to deny the project from the beginning, and on this night supported appealing the DEP’s upholding of the appeal in favor of DaRosa.

Commission member Tom Coops said he had questions and needed to abstain from voting.

“I felt it was a permittable project under the Wetlands Protection Act,” said ConCom member Michael King. “…It’s going to be appealed by private citizens … so it’s a waste of [the Town’s] time and money to appeal now.”

With Coops abstaining and King opposing, the commission moved to ask the selectmen to support an appeal of the DEP ruling and to fund legal counsel moving forward.

In other business, the commission approved a Notice of Intent filed by Robert Brack of 18 Water Street to construct a replacement residential pier.

Also approved with conditions was an application by Frank Linhares of 16 Holly Lane for the construction of a 28- foot by 32-foot barn, paved driveway, and in-ground pool on a 27-acre site that was formally a gravel pit. The new home was touted by King as “a nice improvement over the gravel pit.”

Also approved was an application by William Durbin, 21 Bay Road, for the construction of a stand-alone workshop on property that had previously suffered a severe fire.

Over the objections of abutters located at 20 Highland Avenue and 25 Bay Road (via letters read in part at the meeting), the commission felt the project was not in violation of the Wetlands Protection Act.

The next meeting of the Mattapoisett Conservation Commission will be held on February 9 at 6:30 pm in the Mattapoisett Town Hall meeting room.

By Marilou Newell

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David Van Dyke Musser

David Van Dyke Musser, 60, died at home in Fairhaven following a long illness. David was a long-time resident of Fairhaven, Mattapoisett and Marion. He leaves his daughter, Christina Jean Musser of Mattapoisett; father, John S. Musser of Mattapoisett; brother John S. Musser of Cambridge; sisters Laura Montgomery of New Durham, NH and Barbara Musser of Petaluma, CA; and several nieces and nephews.

Born in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, David was a graduate of Tabor Academy and Babson College. He loved to fish and lobster and proudly prepared and served many wonderful clambakes for family and friends. David was a free spirit and loved living on Buzzards Bay.

The family will plan a private memorial service in the spring.

Lori A. Reis

Lori A. Reis, 42, of Marion passed away Wednesday January 28, at Saint Luke’s Hospital. Lori was the daughter of Ichabod “Harry” and Annie (Chase) Nye Jr. of Marion. She was born in Wareham and attended ORR Jr. High School and Upper Cape Technical High School. She most recently worked for Cumberland Farms at the Marion Location.

Lori is survived by her children; Samuel M. Nye of Lexington, VA, Alyssa M. Reis of New Bedford and Jorge L. Reis III of Marion. She was the sister of Michael Nye of Berkley and Ronald Nye of New Bedford. Lori is also survived by many loving nieces, nephews, relatives and friends.

Visiting hours will be held on Tuesday February 3, from 5-7pm only in the Wareham Village Funeral Home 5 Center Street Wareham. Relatives and friends are cordially invited to attend. Cremation will follow with burial in Evergreen Cemetery Marion.

Valentine Cabaret At Marion Art Center

The Marion Art Center will start off its cabaret season with two nights of “A Love-ly Occasion” with musical entertainment by The Occasion Singers on Friday, February 13 and Saturday, February 14 at 7:30 pm. The Occasion Singers are an elegant a cappella vocal group directed by Cassandra Morgan with singers Christopher Saulnier, Rui Moniz, Michael Moniz, Pam Breton, Dan Guay, Jillian Zucco, Eric Bosworth, Melanie Hannack, Denise Bastos, and Caroline Blais. They will perform all your favorite love songs, classics such as “Someone to Watch Over Me” and “The Way You Look Tonight,” as well as the pop hits “So Much In Love,” “Falling In Love With Love,” “Hold On” and many, many more. As always, the pace is non-stop and the warm and lighthearted entertainment style will leave audience goers wanting more! Cassandra Morgan will accompany the group on piano. The group is known for its tight harmonies and velvety vocal interpretations. Your Valentine will cuddle right up!

Cabaret tables are available for reserved parties of four or more. Tickets for the Cabaret are $12.50 for MAC members and $15 for general admission. Guests are invited to bring their own refreshments.

Reservations are highly recommended: Call 508-748-1266 or email marionartcenter@verizon.net.

Marion Art Center is located at 80 Pleasant Street in Marion, MA 02738.

War and Peace

United States Coast Guard Band trombonist Musician First Class Karna Millen will join Music Director and Principal Conductor Philip Sanborn as the Tri-County Symphonic Band performs music of epic battles and historic truces entitled “War and Peace” on Sunday, February 1 at 3:00 pm at the Old Rochester Regional High School in Mattapoisett.

The first half of the program will start with John Philip Sousa’s “Bullets and Bayonets” march reflective of the trenches of World War I. From there, the band will perform the “Blue and the Gray,” a Civil War suite by American composer Clare Grundman. Music from the award-winning movie Saving Private Ryan is next with the somberly haunting “The Hymn to the Fallen” by John Williams. Concluding the first half of the concert is an arrangement of Jean Sibelius’ uplifting and joyful opus, “Finlandia.” “Toccata Marziale,” Ralph Vaughan Williams’ cornerstone of the English wind band repertoire, begins the second half of the program. Next, MU1 Karna Millen offers a virtuosic tour-de-force for trombone written by the romantic German composer Ferdinand David. David’s “Concertino” displays MU1 Millen’s rhapsodic vocal qualities on the instrument as well as her superb technical rapidity. The concert will conclude with the ever poignant and exhilarating “1812 Overture” by Russian composer Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky.

Musician 1st Class Karna Millen, trombone, joined the United States Coast Guard Band in 2009. Originally from Edina, Minnesota, her early trombone training came from her father, also a professional trombonist. Currently the second trombonist of the Albany Symphony, she is an active orchestral, chamber, and freelance musician throughout New England. In Boston, she has played with the Symphony, Pops, Esplanade, Ballet, and Opera Orchestras, and was a two-time Fellow at the Tanglewood Music Center. MU1 Millen is a graduate of the New England Conservatory of Music, and her principal teachers include Norman Bolter, Douglas Wright, and Ron Barron.

There will also be a celebration at intermission marking the 95th birthday of original member (joined in 1962), trumpet player Edith Pliskin.

Tickets are $15 for adults, $5 for students, and children 12 and under are admitted free of charge. Tickets may be purchased in advance 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 details.

Blue Book Deadline

Work is underway on the 2015-16 edition of The Blue Book, the popular telephone directory published by the Tri-Town League of Women Voters for the benefit of Marion, Mattapoisett and Rochester residents. To assure accuracy in the new edition, residents should check their current listing in the online version of the directory which can be found at lwvmmr.org/phonebook. The deadline for any changes in the residential listings is February 15.

Notify the League of any corrections, additions or deletions including name, address, P.O. Box number, and telephone number, whether landline or cell. Send the requests for change via email to lwvphonebook@comcast.net or by postal mail at LWV-MMR, P.O. Box 812, Marion, MA 02738. No changes? We will reprint your 2013-14 listing.

Advertising information will be mailed to previous advertisers during the last week of February. Others who would like the opportunity to promote their services with an ad should contact the League at lwvphonebook@comcast.net or by the postal address above. Please include the mailing address of your business.

The 2015-16 Blue Book will be mailed FREE to all Tri-Town postal patrons in late June and is a community service project of the League of Women Voters of Marion-Mattapoisett-Rochester.

A Snowy Groundhog Day

Even as the snow flies we can dream of an early spring but as we do there is one groundhog that predicts the opposite. Punxsutawney Phil emerged from his borrow this morning proclaiming that he did indeed see his shadow and that winter will last another six weeks. Sorry folks, it’s back to shoveling!

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Tabor Adds New Dorm

Tabor Academy has just begun construction on its newest building – a larger, greener dormitory for students. The dorm will be named Matsumura House, in honor of a family who has donated to the funding of the project.

Tabor has 19 dorms that are scattered throughout campus, the largest of which houses 32 students. The smallest dorm is home to five students. At least four faculty members are “dormparents” who supervise the students and plan activities. Some of these dormparents live in houses or apartments that are attached to the dormitories. There are 55 faculty houses on campus where dormparents and their families reside.

The new dorm is being constructed behind Baxter House – a girls’ dormitory located on Front Street – on the plot of land across from the Spring Street Fire Station. This location is accessible to students given its proximity to the main campus and is directly next to the Braitmayer Art Center and the Charles Hayden Library.

This dorm was designed by Saltonstall Architects and will be built with local materials, given Tabor’s emphasis on the importance of sustainability. The math and science wing of Tabor Academy, which was re-done in 2005, was also designed by Saltonstall Architects and was LEED Gold Certified by the U.S. Green Building Council.

Although all dorms vary in age and layout, this dorm will not necessarily follow the layout pattern of old dorms and is designed to feel more like a home.

The dorm is not meant to accommodate an expanding student body, but will relocate current Tabor students.

Three smaller dorms, which are less efficient than Matsumura House, will house a few students. This house will be home to over 20 male students and their dormparents.

Tabor believes that “dormitories form the foundation of [their] boarding community,” so the addition of an updated dorm will be a positive change to Tabor’s campus and community.

The project, which began this January, will hopefully be ready to house students by this coming school year.

The groundbreaking of this new dorm can be viewed in a short video at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TiKOfO90pxQ&feature=youtu.be.

By Julia O’Rourke

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