Elizabeth Taber Library Upcoming Programs

Afternoon Book Club: Please join us for a delightful afternoon book discussion on Tuesday, December 15 at 2:00 pm. We will discuss Being Mortal by Atul Gawande. Please stop into the Elizabeth Taber Library today to register and reserve a copy of the monthly book.

Story Time for Children: Join the three grandmothers for a story and a craft this December at the Elizabeth Taber Library! Thursday, December 10, at 10:30 am for ages 2-3, and Friday, December 11 at 10:30 am for ages 4-5. Registration is required. Please call the library at 508-748-1252 or email Libby O’Neill at eoneill@sailsinc.org.

Coloring for Adults: De-stress before the holidays. If you like coloring and chatting with others, then please join us on Wednesday, December 9 at 11:00 am for our Adult Coloring Session. Light refreshments will be served.

Holiday Cookie Swap: Come celebrate the holidays at the Elizabeth Taber Library with a cookie exchange on Thursday, December 17 at 4:00 pm! Bring at least a dozen homemade cookies (and the recipe!) with you to swap with others. To register, please call the library at 508-748-1252.

Filling Candy Canes With Holiday Spirit

All the turkey has been eaten and there’s no more pumpkin pie to be had. As families make their treks home, the student body at Old Rochester Regional High School is flung into the festive holiday spirit. With only about three weeks left until winter vacation, the Student Council is kicking off the holiday season with a fundraiser.

The Candy Cane Fundraiser aims to raise money for three to five families in need in the Tri-Town. School Nurse Kim Corazzini will hand-select the families who most need the financial assistance during the holiday season, ensuring the money will go where it is needed, while keeping all recipients anonymous.

During lunches, four jars will be set up, one for each grade: freshmen, sophomores, juniors, and seniors. Students are asked to put spare change into their respective jars, which will be set up from December 1 until December 18. What do candy canes have to do with raising money to help families in the community? Student Council E-Board Administrator Hannah Guard explains.

“Behind each jar is going to be a candy cane that we set up, and as each class brings in more and more money, the candy cane will fill up,” said Guard. “So, when a class raises $300, the entire candy cane will be filled up.”

When the fundraiser draws to a close, the Student Council will gather the money and purchase gift cards to multiple stores where the families can purchase anything they need for the holiday season.

“We’re not exactly sure which stores we will buy gift cards from just yet, because it’s all dependent on how much money we raise.” said Guard.

Student Council has a plan to get the student body to donate their spare change.

“To give people incentive to bring in money, each class needs to bring in at least $100 to participate in the ice cream social we are going to have right before Christmas vacation,” said Madison Barber, the E-board member in charge of public relations.

In addition to the ice cream social, the class that donates the most money has a little something extra to look forward to.

“The prize for the class that raises the most is a hot chocolate stand at the end of their hallway in the morning,” said Guard. Quite an appealing prize as the weather slowly dips into the thirties and below.

This is not the first experience Student Council has had with helping those in need in the community.

“For homecoming, we started something new this year, and if you brought in a canned good, you got a discount on your ticket,” said Guard, “and we ended up donating over 500 cans to St. Vincent de Paul.”

The Candy Cane Fundraiser is only one of the activities Student Council plans on having to spread the holiday joy. This Friday, December 4, the group plans to sing carols at the Sippican Nursing Home, and it then plans to continue spreading the holiday spirit by caroling again on a date that has yet to be determined. After that, there are some exciting surprises lined up for the Old Rochester community.

“Our main goal after Christmas vacation is going to be planning for a second homecoming,” Barber said.

By Sienna Wurl

 

Adult Learners Thrive at the Mattapoisett Library

Adults who need to improve their reading and writing or learn more technical skills can now take advantage of free tutoring at the Mattapoisett Free Public Library. As part of an adult literacy program called A.L.L. (Adults Learn at the Library), tutors have been trained to provide free educational support for English language learning, basic reading and writing, and preparation for the high school equivalency exam now called the HiSet.

The program has been funded with a generous grant from the Phyllis W. McGillicuddy Charitable Trust, and Deena Kinsky serves as its coordinator. Deena brings a great deal of experience to the position. She meets with and trains tutors and works with adult learners to understand their learning goals. Out-of-school youth over the age of 16 are also encouraged to get assistance at the library with taking the high school equivalency exam. The program isn’t intended to tutor students currently in school.

Tutors offer their expertise in a variety of areas, in addition to reading and writing. Support is available for studying for nursing and nursing assistance exams, learning Excel and Power Point, basic computer skills and finances, interviewing skills and resume writing, and much more. Tutors are also available to help with learning French and other languages, which is handy for those wishing to travel.

If you or someone you know would like to learn more about working with a tutor, please call the library at 508-758-4171 or email Deena at 2learn2read@gmail.com. All inquiries are confidential and the services are free to anyone. The library is located at 7 Barstow Street in Mattapoisett and is open Tuesday through Sunday. Visit www.MattapoisettLibrary.org for more information about the library.

FMCoA’s Annual Holiday Luncheon

Mark your calendar for the FMCoA’s Annual Holiday Luncheon. The party is hosted by the Friends of the Mattapoisett Council on Aging, Inc. and its members and is free for Mattapoisett seniors. It takes place on Thursday, December 10 at 12:00 noon at the Knights of Columbus Hall on Rt. 6.

Enjoy the special holiday festivities with a great luncheon, singing, and door prizes. Music is provided by Rick LeBlanc at the keyboard and Billy Couto at the mic. We expect to have Santa Claus, Andy Bobola, and his helper, Ali Carreiro, greet everyone and assist with the distribution of prizes.

You can pick up a Friends membership application at the Senior Center or at the door at the luncheon. Bring your $10 so you can renew your annual membership for 2016.

Free tickets can be picked up at the Mattapoisett Council on Aging’s Senior Center at the Center School, 17 Barstow Street. Transportation to the party is available through the Senior Center; call 508-758-4110.

Who Let the Dogs Out?

The third annual post-Thanksgiving “Hot-to-Trot” dog walk through the Sippican Lands Trust property known was White Eagle took place on November 29. And what a great turnout it was.

Approximately 20 dogs and at least twice as many humans met at the entrance to the SLT site where Yelena Sheynin, head steward, greeted everyone – both two-legged and four – as they arrived.

With wide shafts of bright sunlight penetrating the late fall forest, spirits were high as the walkers hit the trail. The exuberance demonstrated by the prancing pups and the kids of all ages, yes including the presumed adults, made the walk a lively one from beginning to end.

Sheynin said SLT selects the Sunday after Thanksgiving for this annual trek because even though it is hunting season, hunting is prohibited on Sundays in Massachusetts.

“It’s just to be on the safe side,” she said.

Dogs were given bright yellow and orange kerchiefs to wear around their necks as an added level of visibility in the darker areas of the wooded acreage.

The variety of dogs – from a tiny Havenesse to a massive Portuguese water breed – gave credence to mankind’s taming of the wolf into domesticated dogs of every conceivable shape, size, and color. There were also dogs whose bloodlines were mixed beyond anything a human could conjure up.

One dog also proved that life can go on in spite of illness. Eight-year old Tapper Crete, his sister Addie, 8, and mother Kellie brought along Farley, a 10-year old mixed breed. Farley is one brave dog. He is a cancer survivor. Now a three-legged animal, he never slowed down the entire hour of the walk along uneven terrain, wet slippery leaves, and thick patches of black mud. He was truly inspiring.

There was Skipper, Stella, Raven, Harry and many others whose pace through the stunning White Eagle property never slowed from beginning to end.

Robin Shields, executive director for the SLT, said that the property consists of 1,200 contiguous acres spanning an area roughly from The Bay Club in Mattapoisett to Front Street north of Route 6. Shields said that the former owner continues agricultural activities through a lease agreement. Presently, 24 acres of cranberry bogs are maintained within the White Eagle site.

There are massive bog reservoirs that host ducks, frogs, turtles, and other wildlife, while the breathtaking woods spanning an abandoned railroad bed is bird nirvana. The Town of Marion is proposing a bike path through part of the White Eagle property that would connect to Mattapoisett near its business park off North Street.

Sheynin said that one of the goals for hosting the annual post-Thanksgiving walk was to heighten residents’ awareness of the properties that are available for their enjoyment.

“We want to expose them to the properties,” she said. She also explained that the SLT locations are open to the public from sunrise to sunset seven days a week year round.

“It’s for them, their children, their grandchildren,” said Sheynin. “We are even planning an accessible boardwalk at the Peirson Woods property off Point Road.” She continued with great enthusiasm, “People in wheelchairs will be able to use the area.”

Sheynin also promoted the theme of outdoor safety when she announced very loudly and clearly, “Make sure to check yourself and your dogs for ticks!”

For more information on properties being conserved for public recreation in Marion, visit www.sippicanlandstrust.org.

By Marilou Newell

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Morning Bird Walk by Nasketucket Bay

Join the Buzzards Bay Coalition and the Paskamansett Bird Club for a morning walk on Sunday, December 13 at 8:00 am to look and listen for birds along Shaw Farm Trail, which connects the bike path with Nasketucket Bay State Reservation in Mattapoisett. We’ll walk along Shaw Farm Trail to the state reservation and back, roughly two miles total. Binoculars will be available or you can bring your own. Please dress warmly and wear sturdy shoes or boots.

The event is free but registration is required for all Bay Adventures. To RSVP online, visit www.savebuzzardsbay.org/bayadventures or contact the Buzzards Bay Coalition at bayadventures@savebuzzardsbay.org or 508-999-6363 ext. 219.

Football Finishes Fall Season with Victory

After a long and successful season, Bulldog Fall Sports are officially over, so it is a fitting time to briefly reflect on the major events of the fall season. The highlights included the Golf Team going undefeated in the SCC, and the development of a young core of athletes for the Field Hockey, Football, and Boys’ Cross Country teams, while the Volleyball and Boys’ and Girls’ Soccer teams rode a strong group of seniors to playoff berths. However, Girls’ Cross Country stood above the rest with their State Meet Championship title and 5th place finish in the All-State Meet. Congrats to all of ORR’s players and coaches on a great fall season.

This past week, the Football team played their much-anticipated rematch against Apponequet on Thanksgiving Day, winning 13-7, while the Girls’ Cross Country team and freshman Adam Sylvia of the boys’ team competed at the Nike Northeast Regionals Meet in Wappingers Falls, New York.

Football: The boys got an off week last week to prepare for the classic Thanksgiving game against the Apponequet Lakers. The seniors were especially determined to go the extra mile in their last high school football game. After a few weeks of heavy scoring by the Bulldog offense, the defense stepped up to make the biggest plays at Thursday’s game, and the ‘Dogs rolled to a 13-7 victory, defeating Apponequet after losing to them 20-15 earlier in the season. Senior Corey Dias threw a touchdown pass to usual quarterback Cam Hamilton on a sneak play in the 1st quarter, and then added an extra point kick. Hamilton also ran for a 6-yard touchdown in the 2nd quarter, giving the Bulldogs all the offense they needed. The junior quarterback was 4-8 for 98 yards, and found junior tight end Grant Reuter on three passes for 64 yards. Senior running back/defensive back Darien Dumond also had a strong game, intercepting a game-saving pass in the 4th quarter, running eight times for 33 yards, and catching Hamilton’s other completion for 34. Top-notch defense came from senior defensive linemen James Estudante and Jarrett Johnston. Congrats to the Bulldogs on a solid season in which they improved every game, and set themselves up well by developing some terrific offensive talent in the sophomore and junior classes.

            BoysCross Country: Freshman Adam Sylvia continued his season by competing as an individual at the Nike Northeast Regionals Meet in Wappingers Falls, New York on Saturday. Sylvia had an excellent regular season, his best time registering as a 17:29 5K at the SCC Championship on October 31 at Washburn Park. The course at Wappingers Falls was quite treacherous and featured a gigantic hill, so Sylvia’s 19:08 time marked a strong performance. Most runners find their time to be a minute and a half off of what their time would be on a neutral course, such as the one at Washburn Park. With the race, Sylvia capped off an extremely impressive freshman season, and he appears to be set to lead the Bulldogs for years to come.

            Girls’ Cross Country: The girls’ varsity team headed up to Wappingers Falls, NY to compete in the Nike Northeast Regional Meet, which marked a first for the program. Last week, the girls finished 5th at the All-State Meet at Stanley Park in Westfield, led by senior captain Nina Bourgeois’ personal-best 19:39, and sophomore Madisen Martin’s 19:50, another career best. The girls were primed for success coming into Saturday’s meet, and they ran well despite having to battle the notoriously difficult course at Wappingers Falls known for its hills. The Lady Bulldogs finished 20th overall, with senior Madeline Meyer (20:51), Bourgeois, (20:54), and Martin (21:13) leading the way. They were followed by juniors Avery Nugent (21:28) and Riley Shaughnessy (21:42) and sophomore Samantha Ball (23:01). Although their times were below the norm, the Wappingers Falls course usually throws off runners by a minute and a half, so the performances were still exceptional. It was ORR Cross Country’s first trip to the Nike Northeast Regionals Meet, and it marked the end of an incredible season, highlighted by the SCC title and the Division 5 State Championship victory. Runners like Nugent, Shaughnessy, and Ball give the Bulldogs the chance to be a force on both the conference and state level for years to come.

Below are the overall fall team records, followed by the conference records in wins, losses, and ties as of November 29.

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: (5-6-0)(5-4-0); Volleyball: (13-11-0)(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

 

A Lick and A Promise

Long ago when I was a mere youth dancing around doing household chores with a spring in my step and a song in my heart, learning how to clean house was a mandatory life lesson. I didn’t take it too seriously at that point, but as time went by, the importance of being a good housekeeper was a theme my mother returned to on a daily basis. It became a real bore.

Certainly, most people want and need a well-maintained home – one that is clean, orderly and presentable to any neighbor who might drop in unexpectedly. Thus, keeping one’s home clean at all times was drummed into my head.

And then there were those two yearly clean-outs: spring and fall housecleaning. These were major seasonal events that required all hands be on deck. If your family was financially able, then the lady of the house could hire help for a week of hard labor. If not, then the female children in the home would have to suffice. Enter yours truly.

Spring and fall housecleaning meant everything in the home had to be moved, cleaned around, up, over, and then washed if necessary to within a tiny thread of becoming dissolved forever in soapy water.

At an early age, I was introduced to these two cyclical events in our home. It would start with my mother noting the season. If it were advancing on Memorial Day, spring housecleaning had to be planned. If it were advancing on Halloween, fall housecleaning needed to begin. The pressure was immense for these week-long massive cleaning marathons that essentially determined the degree of a woman’s capabilities as a competent homemaker. Failure was not an option.

The cleaning would begin with the windows.

Window washing was a major undertaking in days when simple soap and water or ammonia and water were the cleaning agents available to the homemaker and her minions.

Curtains had to be removed, washed, hung outside to dry in the freshening air, then ironed and rehung or stored away. Oftentimes curtains became the flag flown to show all the world that this home was well managed for winter curtains would come down and the lighter summer version went up or vice versa. Signal flags of a homemaker for sure.

While the curtains and shades were removed and cleaned, the windows were washed to the point of seeming invisibility. If it were fall housecleaning, this included the washing and installation of storm windows.

And it wasn’t only the windows that were cleaned. It was the sills both inside and out and everything around them. Walls were dusted down; maybe a fresh coat of paint was required to finish off the room. No effort was spared.

Every item in every room was washed in warm water and soap, polished to a high luster, or dusted chasing away cobwebs, spider webs, and dust kitties to a waiting dust bin.

Furniture cushions were pounded outdoors to release dust mites or had vacuum attachments plunged into their nether-parts like urgent internal exams at a doctor’s office. You could almost hear the upholstered couches and side-chairs cry out in their outrage of being violated by zealous cleaners.

Floors were last, always last. First they were swept, and then they were washed with strong agents and heavy mops. After being allowed to thoroughly dry, waxes were applied and polishing followed. They glistened as the sun shone through the now crystal-clear windows.

In the kitchen, there were the appliances that required special and extra cleaning. All the dishes and tools stored on kitchen shelves were placed on the table and washed before returning to their allotted spots on the recently cleaned shelves now complete with new shelf paper.

The bedrooms, mattresses and pillows, closets and clothing all received specific types of fresh air treatments or old-fashioned cleaning.

In my mother’s world, these seasonal hazings were critical. To shirk one’s duty as a homemaker and forego spring and fall housecleaning meant you were incompetent, unworthy, and worse yet, dirty.

In her later years when she could no longer scrub, wash, polish, iron, fold, dust, sweep, or mop her home and the belongings therein, my mother sometimes wept. These talents had proven her worth as a human being, as a woman in full, as a master homemaker. Ma’s control over her universe was becoming less, and she grieved the passing of her strength.

Years later when she was confined to the nursing home barely able to leave her bed or wheelchair, she condemned the facility’s cleaners as ‘useless.’ She’d say, “They have no idea how to clean anything.” She’d observe a piece of paper or food particle for days as it lay unnoticed by the daily sweeping and mopping that passed for cleaning. “They only run that mop over the middle of the room. What good is that?” she’d declare with a note of disdain. She’d often bemoan, “They don’t even give this place an honest lick and a promise.”

I knew she was nearing the end when her complaints over the cleanliness of her surroundings became fewer and further between. At the very end when I’d visit her, sometimes I’d notice the same piece of dirt in the same corner week after week. It annoyed me to my core.

Recently as I was out walking in Mattapoisett village, I passed an acquaintance that was industriously employed washing her windows and putting up the storms. I complemented her on the hard work. She chuckled responded, “Oh, it’s just a lick and a promise.”

If you don’t know, “a lick and a promise” is an old-fashioned phrase meaning to do an inadequate job cleaning something, usually one’s home.

I must confess, my home receives just a lick and a promise from me most of the time. I’ve opted to spend more time enjoying the outdoors, visiting with friends, reading, napping, writing, gardening, cooking, or almost anything but cleaning. Yet, in homage to my mother, at least once a year I turn each room inside out, just not on a seasonal schedule. As I whisk a mop under a bed or chase a spider from a corner it called home for months, I think of my mother and know she’d have a comment regarding my lackadaisical housecleaning – it would be something like “that’s not even a lick and a promise.”

Postscript: After writing this, I felt tremendous guilt. Ma invested a great deal imparting her housekeeping talents to me and I have failed. So I cleaned until the beauty of this post-Thanksgiving got the better of me. Then I walked, sending quiet promises to Ma that I would do better when the weather turned cold and my entertainment options diminished to nothing more than cleaning out a closet.

By Marilou Newell

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Record Number of Committed Athletes

Next year, when the Class of 2016 heads off to college, 18 students will go on to compete in NCAA Division 1 sports. Three boys and 15 girls have decided to pursue their favorite sport at the Division 1 level, and on November 12, students, families, and coaches gathered around as these amazing athletes signed letters of intent to make their commitment official.

This is the largest group of student athletes committed to Division 1 sports ever, and coaches especially are incredibly proud.

“This is a truly special senior class,” said Girls’ Varsity Basketball Coach William Becker.

From Becker’s team, five seniors are committed to play D1, an impressive number.

“It is the biggest group to graduate from the team in one season and easily the most talented,” Becker said.

He and his co-coach, Christopher Conley, have worked with these girls for years, and they are very excited to see what more the girls will achieve in the future.

“Mr. Conley and I feel extremely fortunate to get to work with such a hard-working, talented, and good-natured group,” Becker said.

Of the five seniors playing Division 1 next year, Molly Bent, one of the team captains, is committed to play at the University of Connecticut next year, which has been the NCAA national champion for the past three years.

In addition to the amazing performance of the Girls’ Varsity Basketball Team, three members of the girls’ varsity crew team are also committed to Division 1 schools. Two, Lillian Blouin and Elizabeth Tarrant, are committed to Syracuse University. They are both ecstatic to continue being teammates through college.

“We have not only been teammates but really close friends and pair partners for four years,” said Tarrant. “To be able to go on to the next level with her is going to be so fun.”

Tarrant attributes much to her Tabor coaches, Michael Bentz and Emily Chandler. Chandler coached the girls’ crew team during Tarrant’s freshman and sophomore years, after which Bentz took over.

“They prepared me in the best way possible – they made me love the sport,” said Tarrant. “They gave a passion that has fueled my work ethic and desire to be the best I can be.”

This sentiment is shared among many of the committed athletes who claim that their coaches have been a major part of their success and growth as an athlete.

Athletes from many other programs, including soccer, baseball, ice hockey, field hockey, and lacrosse, are also committed to Division 1 colleges. Everyone – from coaches to teachers to the athletic directors to fellow students – is proud of the accomplishments of these 18 seniors and look forward to watching their continued success for the next four years.

List of Committed Athletes:

– Jeremiah Adams – University of Oklahoma – Baseball

– Maggie Ahearn – Providence College – Basketball

– Molly Bent – University of Connecticut – Basketball

– Lily Blouin – Syracuse University – Crew

– Araion Bradshaw – University of South Carolina – Basketball

– Hannah Dawicki – St. John’s University – Soccer

– Liz Dognazzi – High Point University – Soccer

– Abby Ellis – Union College – Ice Hockey

– Lauren Feeney – Northeastern University – Field Hockey

– Katie Goncalo – College of St. Rose – Basketball

– Woodard Hooper – College of William and Mary – Field Hockey

– Molly Little – University of Vermont – Lacrosse

– Rachel Moore – Boston College – Ice Hockey

– KK Price – George Washington University – Crew

– Mike Ryan – Union College – Ice Hockey

– Shannon Ryan – Boston College – Basketball

– Elizabeth Tarrant – Syracuse University – Crew

– Ben Taylor – Brown University – Ice Hockey

By Madeleine Gregory

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Mattapoisett Women’s Club Garden Group

The Garden Group division of the Mattapoisett Women’s Club took home two blue ribbons in competitions this fall.

The Rotch Jones Duff House “Celebrate the Season” Open House entry was a book theme this year. They chose The Call of the Wild by Jack London and in keeping with that theme and their assigned space, they decorated the boy’s bedroom in bear skins, ice fishing gear, antlers, animal pelts, and bark vases, along with flowers and greens and a very old, well-loved copy of the book on display.

They truly captured the heart of the story and took home a deserved third place ribbon. Sue Mitchell, Susan Perkins and Kathy McAuliffe were the members who competed.

The Garden Group, which has members who volunteer to decorate the Mansions for the Christmas Season in Newport, was invited to enter a Mantle Decorating Competition at Marble House in Newport. A team of three took home third place. The assigned mantle was in the bedroom of son, William; they chose a blue color scheme with gold and white packages and flowers that brought out the design on the beautiful mantle.

The center of the entry was a replica of the car driven by William. Photos on the wall show him in his car. Lauren Keene – the husband of Claire, a member of the team – helped build the car that was painted in the colors of the display.

Participating team members where Barbara Van Inwegen , Joan Halter and Claire Keene. Susan Perkins and Lauren Keene also helped on the committee. The hard work was awarded a blue ribbon.

The “Christmas at the Mansions” continues until January 3 with The Breakers, The Elms and Marble House all open and decorated beautifully. It is well worth the visit and a wonderful way to get in the spirit.