Jillian Jensen “Kickstarts” Debut Album

The former American Idol and X Factor contestant from Rochester is home, and in the middle of raising funds for her debut album – and if you donate $5,000 to her Kickstarter.com fundraiser, she promises she will tattoo your name on her body.

So far, 21 year-old Jensen is inching closer to her goal to raise $15,000 to help pay for the production and promotion of her first album she says she will start recording in August.

“It’s been great. We are ahead at $11,500,” said Jensen on April 21 during an interview. “But the thing is that I technically need more.

Kickstarter.com is an effective way for people to raise money for an array of artistic projects, but there is a catch – if you do not reach your goal by the 60-day deadline, you do not get any of the pledged funds. Jensen says she actually needs $27,000 to fully fund the album and the accompanying music video, but she figured $15,000 would be a safe number to start with.

As of press time, Jensen has gathered 169 “backers” for a total of $11,864 — and she still has 48 days left to reach her goal. Her highest pledges so far have come from two backers pledging $1,000 each, which entitles them both to a day in the recording studio with Jensen and a free download of the album.

Pledge $2,500 and you get your name listed under the special thank you section of her album, a signed album, an autographed photo, a personal letter, a personalized video of Jensen covering your favorite song, and a private live web stream of one of her recording sessions.

“Even if the whole amount isn’t raised, I’ve been saving my own money,” said Jensen. She said she really does not want to have to host a bunch of fundraisers, but she does have an organization called “The Magic of Music” that raises money to grant scholarships to aspiring musicians.

“I was thinking about doing one huge fundraiser for the two projects and put on a huge show.” She said half the proceeds could go to fund her album, and the other half to scholarships. “Car washes are always fun too,” laughed Jensen. “Why not?” She imagined calling in some fellow musicians and a few of her American Idol friends to help her wash cars. “I’m not going to resort to that, but it would be funny.”

Jensen said making this album means the world to her. She has been writing songs for it over the past five years, but mainly she has been writing songs this past year.

“The songs are all from a really reflective point,” said Jensen. “I fell into a sort of depression after the X Factor. I was a little in a dark place. I didn’t want the songs coming from a dark place.”

She wanted her songs to come from an emerging positive point in her life.

“I’m not a story,” said Jensen. I’m a human being. I’m a musician.” She said she knew she wanted to be a musician “literally, since I was born.” She was singing before she could even string together a sentence.

Her mother was a singing coach who used to sing to Jensen as a child. Jensen started writing songs when she was eight years old, strongly influenced by jazz singers like Ella Fitzgerald and Billie Holiday. Her father later turned her on to more rock and country singers, most notably Johnny Cash.

Jensen’s style of music, she said, is “very country-rock-blues.”

“I guess vocally – Amy Winehouse is what I hear the most,” said Jensen, who described her voice as sultry. “But I don’t really think I sound like her.” Jensen plays an impressive six instruments: guitar, piano, bass guitar, drums, saxophone, violin, and the ukulele.

Jensen is going to release a single in July and backers of her Kickstarter.com fundraiser will get a free download of the single as soon as it is available. The different levels of support for Jensen’s album range from $5, $10, and $25, up to $100, $250, and $500, all the way up to the big bucks.

“Every dollar, even the smallest donation would mean the world to me,” said Jensen.

As for the tattoo, Jensen said she is getting the tattoo as a symbol to mark this amazing, exiting time in her life.

“If someone’s willing to give me $5,000, they deserve to be a part of the history,” said Jensen. “I would love to have peoples’ names in my tattoo…and I’m serious about it, really.”

You can visit Jillian’s Kickstarter page at www.kickstarter.com/projects/983394009/help-jillian-jensen-make-her-debut-album.

By Jean Perry

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Rochester PD Facebook “Weekly Wanted”

Rochester Police made their first arrest resulting from “Weekly Wanted” postings on the departments Facebook page. Early this morning Rochester Police Officer Adam Brightman teamed up with detectives from New Bedford Police in and effort to arrest 23-year-old Tristian Botelho. The officers conducted surveillance on a residence on Chancery Street in New Bedford and observed Botelho exit the home around 7:30 am and leave in a vehicle. Police stopped the vehicle and took him into custody without incident.

Botelho was wanted in connection with a 2012 case where he was alleged to have stolen checks from a Rochester business and cashed them netting himself thousands of dollars. Police had filed charges for twelve counts of larceny by check over $250 and three counts of uttering a false check but Botelho defaulted on the case in September of 2013 and an arrest warrant issued. There were also three other warrants outstanding for Botelho, two for larceny from New Bedford and one from Freetown for possession of a class B drug.

The capture of Botelho was the direct result of a tip that came in through the departments Facebook page. Botelho was featured under the “Weekly Wanted” postings the department implemented in March of 2014 in an effort to track down individuals wanted on warrants by the Rochester Police. Botelho told arresting officers that he had seen the Facebook posting and has been looking over his shoulder for police ever since.

To visit the Rochester Police Facebook page and see other wanted persons, go to www.facebook.com/rochestermapd

Mattapoisett Election Meet and Greet

The League of Women voters is sponsoring a “Meet and Greet” the candidates running for office in Mattapoisett, as well as a warrant review on Sunday, May 4 from 1:00-3:00 pm at the town library meeting room.  We hope to see you there.

Marion Town-Wide Cleanup & Springfest

Litter and clutter beware! Streets will be cleaned and closets will be cleared as the Marion Tree and Parks Committee and Gifts to Give join forces for Marion’s 2014 Town-Wide Cleanup. To be held on Saturday, May 10 from 9 am until noon, the event is sponsored by the Tree and Parks Committee and the Sippican Lands Trust.

From the rallying point at Marion’s Music Hall, participants will be provided gloves and bags, and then directed to designated locations to clear the trash and other debris left in winter’s wake.  Families, students, Scouts and individual adults traditionally participate.   As a warm-up to the May 10th event, the students and faculty of Tabor Academy held a Community Service Day on April 9, with 100 students and faculty cleaning up areas along Rte. 105, County and Point Roads.  Litter collected on May 10 will be returned to the town’s bandstand to create the annual ‘trash mountain.’

In addition to the day’s focus on cleaning up our streets, cleaning out our closets will also be on the agenda, as New Bedford’s Gifts to Give organization collects gently used children’s items (clothes, books, toys, etc.) for distribution to deserving families throughout Southeastern Massachusetts. Items for donation can be brought that morning to Island Wharf Park, where a Gifts to Give collection truck will await their arrival.

Finally, to balance the morning’s hard work, the Sippican Lands Trust and Marion Tree & Parks Committee will host an afternoon of fun, family activities at Washburn Park, from noon to 4. The event has something for everyone, including: a performance by the Sippican School Band, Carabiners’ climbing wall (all 4 hrs!), Toe Jam Puppet Band playing from 12:30-1:15pm, Handi Mani Face painting, Farm Animal petting zoo, a craft table using recyclable materials, Touch a Truck (kids can climb on) and a SLT self guided story walk.  Through generous donations from area businesses and individuals, free food and drinks will be provided for the public.  A good time is guaranteed, and organizers hope community families will join in the fun, celebrate the arrival of spring and the beautiful town of Marion.

Tabor Teacher’s Journey Through Vietnam

He wasn’t sure what to expect when he got there. As a history teacher at Tabor Academy, Gary Sousa knows the history between the U.S. and Vietnam – as most of us do. But Gary is a historian, a traveler, photographer, and among other things, a diver, and he always wanted to visit Vietnam.

Sousa embarked on an informal study tour in 2007 with some fellow teachers from New England, and spent several weeks following Vietnam’s beaten path, its unbeaten path, and looking for the historical remnants along the way — while keeping his photographer’s eye open for something extraordinary to capture with his camera lens.

On April 15 at the Taber Library in Marion, Sousa shared his experience traveling through Vietnam with a few Marion residents, offering a lot of insight, humor, and artistic treasures to those who defied the wind and driving rain to come and listen.

“I enjoy photography,” said Sousa. “I almost only take photos when I’m on trips.” He went from Hanoi, up north to Sa Pa and acquainted himself with the Hmong of the mountains. He traveled south, to Hué, Ho Chi Minh City, and into Cambodia, too. He could have gone on all night with his seemingly hundreds of photos and fascinating tales of his encounters with Southeast Asian culture, but Sousa managed to restrain himself.

“I’m more of a modern historian than an ancient historian,” he said. He had already traveled to China, Japan, and Korea. “I’ve done the old ancient history stuff.”

Sousa, born in 1969, having grown up in “the shadow of the Vietnam War,” as he put it. The Vietnamese recall it as the American War.

“What are they going to think?” Sousa thought to himself about his arrival in Vietnam. “Am I gonna get spit on?” To his relief he found that, as an American, “you sort of get a free pass.” The Vietnamese, said Sousa, hate the French who colonized Vietnam long before the Americans came around. He wasn’t at all the “American pig” he was afraid of being called.

“I was not at all made to feel bad that I was an American,” said Sousa — to his relief.

Sousa started in Hanoi, visiting the touristy spots like the water puppets, likening the significance of visiting the place as “sort of like going to Plymouth Rock.” Hanoi, he said, is marked with cobblestone streets, countless people, and bursting with storefronts.

Sousa faced a little of the discomfort of anti-American propaganda while visiting the “Hanoi Hilton,” a prison where American prisoners of war were contained, including Senator John McCain. It is now a museum of the Vietnam War era, but even more so, a museum of the French colonialism era when the prison walls once witnessed the brutality of the French and the torture of the Vietnamese.

Throughout the museum, Sousa came across some unfavorable phrases such as “American aggressors and their puppets,” which is not what average Americans consider themselves. As Sousa pointed out, Americans tend to perceive themselves as the good guy, spreading good things around the world, like freedom and democracy.

Sousa encountered some significant cultural disparities throughout his travels as he headed south, visiting sites along the way and interacting with the people. He visited what he called a “crafts compound” where developmentally disabled people lived and worked making handicrafts and artwork, which was sold onsite. He said, although it might not be considered so to the Vietnamese, Sousa compared the place to some form of a sweatshop.

“We felt uncomfortable about it,” said Sousa. He thought it looked like a labor camp, but pointed out that in a socialist society, perhaps it is viewed as though “everyone’s got a job, everyone contributes.”

Perhaps one of the most disheartening moments of the trip was when Sousa and his group missed their train headed north to Sa Pa. That night they were packed into a small bus so tightly, that the only way for them all to fit was if someone lay flat on the floor beneath the seats during the sometimes terrifying ride, which Sousa volunteered to do.

“I don’t know how we got there alive,” said Sousa.

But the highlands of Sa Pa were beautiful, and Sousa spent time with the Red Hmong of the region, a people Sousa described as “lovely, fun, and friendly,” inviting him into their homes and allowing him to take their photo.

He photographed people boiling indigo, one of the main exports of the area, and dying fabric in large cauldrons brimming with blue liquid. “It doesn’t smell very good,” said Sousa.

Sousa explained what it is like to be a “responsible tourist,” being mindful of your impact on a small indigenous village possessing very little western resources.

“You are a walking gold mine,” said Sousa. “You could change the life of a village just by throwing out a couple of twenty-dollar bills.” Quite possibly, noted Sousa, to the detriment of that village’s social order.

Sousa said he takes pleasure in photographing “the things you never see,” but surely notice while wandering about Vietnam. Like two kegs of beer balancing on the back of a motorbike. Or another motorbike driving by with a bathtub strapped to the back of it.

“I took off after that,” said Sousa, intent of getting a photo of the bathtub. He also captured a photo of a pig hogtied to the back of a motorbike.

Making his way south, Sousa stopped in Hué, the ancient capital of Vietnam, visited the Citadel, took lessons on how to cook Vietnamese cuisine, and went scuba diving.

“I’m one of the only people I know who dove Vietnam.”

Sousa concluded his Vietnam portion of the trip in Ho Chi Minh City before jumping over to Cambodia, a story for another day. He found, however, that in many places, signs still hung with the city’s former name, Saigon. He noticed many Vietnamese still called the city Saigon, and used Ho Chi Minh City interchangeably.

“It hasn’t quite caught on yet,” said Sousa about the Vietnamese people’s take on the name change.

Saigon was “very very busy,” and “vehicles rule the world.” He said he learned how to cross the street while visiting the city. His description of the process was comical, to say the least.

“You just step out, like Moses parting the Red Sea,” he said, and he described the oncoming traffic as “a wall coming at you.”

“As long as you keep moving forward,” and keep eye contact with the drivers on scooters and motorbikes, “you are safe.” You do not stop, and you definitely do not back up. “That’s how you do it,” said Sousa. “It was a rush.”

He went to the Presidential Palace, which he said was “like looking at the Brady Bunch house – everything’s from the Fifties and Sixties.”

He found out the War Memorial Museum was really established for American tourists. He said, to the Vietnamese, the war with America was not really a big deal. It was just one blip in the tumultuous history of the country. “I didn’t see too many Vietnamese in the museum.”

As Sousa’s trip wound down, he snapped a photo of one of his last nights, a shot of his place setting at a table near the street, a moment in time when Sousa just sat, reflecting on his trip, a moment Sousa called peaceful.

“Wow,” Sousa thought to himself. “This is a beautiful, beautiful country. “I remember that time,” he said, like an “anchor” that pulls him back to that moment.

“Did you eat the tarantula?” asked a guest at the end of Sousa’s lecture. That was later on in Cambodia, Sousa replied.

“It’s like a hairy potato chip,” said Sousa. “It’s crispy and a little hairy.” Some food for thought to end the evening, someone said.

By Jean Perry

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“Mr. ORR” Dazzles Audience

Last Thursday, Old Rochester Regional High School’s junior and senior classes sponsored the entertaining “Mr. ORR” fundraiser. At the conclusion of the night, senior Talon Gomes was named Mr. ORR, winning $100. Senior Troy Rood was the runner up, winning $50. Freshman John Kvilhaug and senior Chad Santello tied for third place, each winning a bouquet of flowers.

Other participants included juniors Ian MacLellan and Isaiah Kidney, as well as seniors Zach Bowen, Michael Barrus, Tyler Zell, Kiernan Besse, and Chris Carando.

The night began with an opening dance number by the boys, choreographed by seniors Bridget Costa, Becca Myers, Alison Holmen, and junior Korryn Pinard. The casual wear segment followed, then the talent section. The boys’ unique talents included dancing, singing, light saber battling, juggling, fake juggling, and more.

After intermission, the boys returned to the stage for the formal wear segment. Escorted by either family members or friends, the boys looked dashing in tuxedos generously donated by Main Street Formals.

A couple boys decided to make their own fashion statement. Zell dressed as the Pope and Kvilhaug sported a traditional toga.

The most amusing escort had to be Mrs. Maureen Bowen, accompanying her son’s friend, Besse, while wearing a tall blonde wig, pink gown, and black boa.

The final section of Mr. ORR was the question and answer segment, where the night’s host, Paul Sardinha, asked questions such as, if you could be any crayon in the coloring box which would you be and why, and are you more of a hunter or a gatherer?

ORR is adopting uniforms next year, and Mr. ORR gets to decide the dress code. “What will it be?” asked Sardinha. “What is your best memory of ORR?” he also asked.

While some participants were stumped by the questions, others charmed their way to the top with clever answers. A panel of nine teachers from ORRHS sat as judges, eventually picking Talon Gomes as the night’s winner.

Senior Class Vice-President Callie Gomes spoke highly of the junior and senior class governments’ collaboration in planning

“When we all work together we can perform so much more efficiently and really come together as one,” said Gomes. “I believe we are improving school spirit by demonstrating these acts of leadership.”

This teamwork is especially significant since last year’s Mr. ORR was cancelled due to disagreements between the junior and senior classes.

“We collaborated together this year because, essentially, we want this leadership to spread throughout all the classes,” Ms. Gomes said. “I love the junior class officers. We have meetings together all the time.”

In the end, the hard work of both class governments paid off.

“We had to organize the whole event and we had trouble with the music on the night of the production,” said Gomes, “but everyone really pulled together and the participants did a great job, especially Paul Sardinha, who had very eccentric costumes.”

Sardinha, known for his great directing for ORR’s drama club, traditionally dresses in drag when he hosts Mr. ORR. This year, Sardinha wore a blonde wig and a purple dress for the first half of the night. For the second half, he wore the flamboyantly feathered costume of “Mayzie” from “Seussical the Musical.”

Overall, the night had a great turnout. Students are hopeful the hilarious fundraiser will continue as an annual event for years to come.

In other news, ORRHS hosted an engineering seminar during fourth period last Wednesday. Roughly 45 students took the opportunity to learn about six specific fields of engineering straight from professionals themselves.

Julia Nojeim, a junior at ORR and teacher’s assistant to Technology Teacher Thomas Norris, had been helping plan the event since February.

“[Norris] thought it would be a good idea to get students of ORR interested in engineering and more aware of the careers in engineering,” said Nojeim. “It was a lot of networking.”

The seminar consisted of six presentations by professional engineers. These engineers included Rick Charon, a civil engineer from Charon Associates; Gus Flaherty, an application and test design engineer from Nye Lubricants; Jamie Glydon, a packaging engineer from Ocean Spray; David Sauerbrey, a mechanical engineer from Titleist; Sandra Russell, a chemical engineer from Ocean Spray; and Dave Romano, a silicon engineer from Intel.

”I think everybody there got a lot out of it, about what opportunities there are in engineering that maybe they didn’t know of,” said Nojeim. “I know a lot of people hadn’t heard of a packaging engineer before, so I think it was great to kind of open up people’s eyes to careers in engineering [they] might not have heard about.”

The students definitely learned a lot about going into an engineering career. Aside from going into their specific area of work, the engineers informed the students about what classes to take in college.

”I learned that there’s a lot of physics and chemistry”, said Nojeim. “It was very interesting to see how you can have a packaging engineer and a chemical engineer, but how they still had to major in the same things and take the same classes.”

This information was especially helpful to seniors who may or may not have taken engineering classes during their time at ORR.

“We have a lot of electives in math and science, and we have an entire technology program that Mr. Norris runs. We have classes like Intro to Engineering, Principals of Engineering, Architecture, Multi-Media Design, Graphic Design,” explained Nojeim. “We have a bunch of classes structured in it, so ORR is definitely a very fostering place for science, technology, and engineering.” She pointed out, though, that scheduling could occasionally be a problem for aspiring engineers,

“Not everybody takes the engineering classes because they don’t fit in people’s schedules,” said Nojeim, “so [the seminar] was a great way to get anybody who could be interested involved in engineering.”

Nojeim is hopeful that the seminar will continue in future years.

“Every single one of them made me look at engineering in a different way, made me look at my surroundings a different way,” said Nojeim. “Whether it’s just the packaging of my water bottle or the design of my house.” She added, “I think to continue this on and every year give some people an opportunity to see what engineering is like, I think that’d be great.”

By Renae Reints

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Rodents, Hazards Found in Elderly Residence

Convening for an emergency meeting, selectmen on April 18 met with members of the Fire Department with concerns over the “deplorable” conditions of a home located at 3 Rose Cottage Lane.

Building Commissioner Scott Shippey, also an on-call firefighter, told selectmen about the condition of the interior of the house when firefighters responded to a possible house fire call at about 5:30 pm on April 17.

“Upon entry…I saw several hazards that would be considered health safety hazards and health issues, so to speak,” said Shippey, as selectmen passed around photos taken from the scene. He said he walked through the basement and the first floor, and said there was no need to visit the upstairs after witnessing the exposed, deteriorated electrical wires, and frayed light fixture wires dangling from the ceiling from the first floor. He said parts of the ceiling were caving in, and daylight was shining in from areas of the house that were “compromised.”

“And I was greeted by rodents,” said Shippey, reluctantly.

A representative from the Board of Health arrived to inspect the premises, and Council on Aging Director Susan Schwager assisted the two elderly occupants in getting them out of the house and into a hotel for the night. Schwager expressed to Town Administrator Paul Dawson her discomfort that members of the press were present and that the meeting was open to the public.

The building was deemed unsafe, and as of 12:00 pm that following day, the Town was lawfully granted the authority to either knock down the home, or board it up to restrict entry into the house — the option Shippey said he would be taking.

Dawson said the occupants will not be allowed to return to reside in the home until the entire house is brought back up to code; meanwhile, the utilities to the home have all been shut off.

Shippey told selectmen there was no actual fire that night, only a malfunction of the furnace that sent steam into the firebox.

The board ratified the building commissioner’s certification that the building is unsafe, and made the official order to have Shippey declare and post the building as condemned.

Selectman Jonathan Henry made the motion via telephone conference call, and Selectman Stephen Cushing gave the second.

“This is an unfortunate situation,” said Cushing. “I’m familiar with the people…they’re good people.

Dawson said the occupants have been residents of Marion for many years. “We’re going to work with them and get them back in a good place.”

By Jean Perry

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Uncertainty Over FEMA Flood Plain

Board members on April 22 voted to continue the public hearing to discuss an amendment to a section of the Town Flood Plain District By-Law pertaining to the process of granting special permits for proposed work within a flood zone.

Board member Ben Bailey has maintained that the new FEMA flood maps are arbitrary and incorrect, with his own property adversely affected by the new maps that now show the “blue line” running right through his house.

The section of the by-law that addresses special permits was inadvertently omitted from the by-law that Town Meeting rejected back in the Fall Town Meeting of 2013, and the Board of Selectmen have reintroduced the amendment in the form of an article on this May 19 Annual Town Meeting Warrant to reinstate the permitting language back into the by-law and get the by-law passed.

The problem is, Planning Board members are torn over whether to recommend the amendment to Town Meeting, to not recommend it, or recommend tabling the amendment, while trying to assess any ramifications from each of the options.

Bailey flat-out opposes adopting the amendment until the FEMA maps are certifiably correct, a process that appears complicated, and maybe even futile from where the board sits now.

Recent correspondence between the board and state officials have resulted in email exchanges Bailey deemed threatening, saying he interprets it as, “’If you don’t do what we tell you to do, then we’re going to punish you,’” stated Bailey referring to the email.

Board member Susan Teal wanted clarification, asking if adopting the bylaw meant adopting the FEMA map, even if the board knew there were inaccuracies.

“I’m not a hundred-percent up on this,” stated Chairman Arnold Johnson, despite having previously met with town counsel.

“My concern was, are there other ramifications than just…?” said Johnson trailing off. He used the analogy of a farmer eradicating a pest from the field, only to be replaced by another pest to express his concern.

One major issue is that, without a by-law with language pertaining to granting special permits to properties within the flood plain, no permits could be granted at all. Period.

Board member John DeMaggio said he viewed the email correspondence as threatening, even if the state did have fact on their side.

“I don’t see that as threatening,” said Johnson. “I see that as ‘cut to the chase.’”

But how does the Town go about getting the maps corrected?

“They can’t just take my word that it isn’t right,” said Bailey. He was irritated by the prospect of having to have his property elevation surveyed at a cost of roughly $1,000 in order to document the actual elevation. “They only way [the State will accept the corrections] is if FEMA blesses it,” said Bailey. Bailey stated that the FEMA maps now show the wetlands on his property to be 40 feet to the east of where they actually are.

But the inaccurate FEMA maps have already been accepted by Town Meeting, so what would the adoption of the Flood Plain District By-Law really mean in the scope of things?

The board could consider rescinding the 2012 vote to adopt the maps, or seek guidance from the Southeastern Regional Planning & Economic Development District (SRPEDD) on where to go from here.

The board voted to continue the public hearing to discuss the by-law amendment until May 13, so Conservation Agent Laurell Farinon could attend and provide further information, as well as Town Counsel Blair Bailey. The board also asked Town Planner Mary Crain to ask a representative from SRPEDD to attend and advise the Town on how to go about correcting the FEMA maps.

Not adopting the flood plain by-law could result in Rochester being suspended from the program, and FEMA’s inaction if Rochester were to suffer a catastrophic disaster in the future.

“As a town,” said Johnson, “we should see that the FEMA map gets amended properly and done.”

Also during the meeting, the board reorganized and reappointed Johnson as Chairman, Gary Florindo as vice-chairman, DeMaggio as clerk, and          Teal as associate clerk.

Hearings to rescind the Form C Subdivision Approval and Approval Not Required Application for Harris Real Estate Boston, LLC of King’s Highway was continued until May 13 at the applicant’s request.

By Jean Perry

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Adult Library Programs at the ETL

Technology Tuesdays at 11:00 am: Three more weeks left of technology workshops at the Elizabeth Taber Library, running through Tuesday, May 13th. Come learn all about the FREE library electronic resources!  Workshops will include:

April 29 at 11:00 am: Mango Languages: a free program for all Marion library cardholders to learn over 40 foreign languages.

May 6 at 11:00 am: Using the Goodreads website to answer that common question of, “What Do I Read Next?”

May 13 at 11:00 am: A snapshot of the Boston Public Library electronic resources (which are also all free to use from home!)

Drop in Tech Help – Thursdays from 4:00-5:00 pm through May: Do you need one-on-one help with a device you recently bought or acquired, or maybe you just have a basic technology question?  Then stop into the Elizabeth Taber Library any Thursday in April and May between 4:00-5:00 pm, and Libby O’Neill will walk you through it!  First come, first served.

If you cannot make this time, please call Libby O’Neill at 508-748-1252 to make a one-on-one appointment.

Saturday Workshops, 1:30-2:30 pm, led by Tabor Academy students: Tabor Academy students will be leading three workshops on Skype, Facebook and Twitter this May.  Join us at the Elizabeth Taber Library at 1:30 pm on May 3rd, May 10th, and May 17th to learn how to create an account, how to navigate through the sites, and what tips and tricks might be useful.  Tabor Academy students will walk participants through a brief demo and then be available for one-on-one assistance.  Please bring your iPad or laptop with you to get more hands on experience.  Sign up is encouraged, but not required.  Please call the Elizabeth Taber Library for more information at 508-748-1252.

Fiction Writing Workshop: This three-week writing workshop, led by Dr. Susan B. Iwanisziw, will be held at the Elizabeth Taber Library on Tuesday, May 6th, May 13th and May 20th from 6:30-7:30 pm.  These workshops are designed for both novice and experienced fiction writers in all genres (suspense, humor, mystery, literary, historical, paranormal, sci-fi, fantasy, etc.)  Whether you write short fiction or novels and aim for traditional publishing, self-publishing, or simple self-fulfillment, you will benefit from a review of the writing strategies demanded by a competitive marketplace. The essentials of good fiction writing, including pre-planning, the hook, point-of- view, dialogue, setting, action, and character, will be explained and defined. Additionally, the mechanics of writing for maximum clarity, effect and the “how-to” of critique and revision will all be addressed.  Registration is required.  Please call the Elizabeth Taber Library at 508-748-1252 to sign up.

Become a Global Family with AFS-USA

Old Rochester Regional High School residents — open your home to the world and make a global connection! Host an AFS Exchange Student!

Each year, AFS Intercultural Programs/USA, a leader in international high school student exchange for more than 65 years, welcomes 2,300 high school students from more than 90 countries into communities like our ORR area. These students are eager to attend a local high school, live with a host family, and discover what America is all about.

AFS-USA is always looking for supportive host families. By hosting an AFS Exchange Student, you and your family will help build bridges of intercultural understanding at home and abroad, while connecting with an outstanding young people.

“Hosting Martin was a life changing event for our family,” said host mother Dawn Fuchs. “His incentive to also share what he has learned with his own country and community has also had a transforming effect on us, his American family. We have also been given new eyes to see the world!  The gratitude (and love) goes both ways.”

Host families provide a bed and meals, share their daily lives with students, and help guide and support students as they would their own children. Families and their hosted students receive ongoing support from AFS Staff and experienced, local volunteers.

For more information about how to host a student, study abroad, or volunteer with AFS, call 800-AFS-INFO or visit www.afsusa.org.