Lighthouse Fund Grants Available

Up to $5,000 in grants will be available through the Lighthouse Fund of the Old Rochester Tri-Town Education Foundation for the 2014-2015 school year.

Lighthouse Fund grants will have a maximum award of $1,250 for individual applicant or intra-school collaborative project; up to $2,500 for a collaborative inter-school project. A total of $5,000 in grants will be available.

Grant applications must address one of the following categories: Curriculum Enrichment; Faculty-Mentored Student Projects; or Professional Development. Proposals must include an Evaluation Plan and a Budget.

Eligible applicants include faculty-mentored students, faculty and administration of the Old Rochester Regional School District. Grant award will for the 2014-2015 Academic Year.

The deadline for the 2014 Lighthouse Fund Grant Application is March 16, 2014.

Grants awarded for the 2013-2014 school year included: OHS Courtyard Garden Edible Schoolyard Project – $634; Responsive Classroom II Training – $1,934; A Look Inside the ORR School District – $3,000; ORR Visual Arts in the 21st Century – Multiple Platforms for Installation and Inspiration – $3,500.

For more information on the Lighthouse Fund grant process, go to http://www.oldrochester.org and the link is on the front page.

Winners will be announced in May 2014, with funds available after July 1, 2014.

The Lighthouse Fund is an endowed fund of the Old Rochester Educational Foundation Inc., developed through private philanthropy to support our public schools in Marion, Mattapoisett and Rochester. Its vision is to enrich the educational, cultural and civic experience for all students; enhance each student’s success in school, in our communities and in life; and encourage academic excellence, innovation and creative thinking in our schools.

Tabor Public Skating Days

It seemed a little ironic, putting on hats and gloves to go inside a building rather than to go outside, but that is what many people did in Marion on the last Sunday afternoon of 2013.

Skaters of all ages and abilities spent some quality time on December 29 skating circles around Tabor Academy’s Travis Roy Rink during one of the “family time ice skating” open public skate events, sponsored by the Marion Recreation Department.

From young novices pushing milk crates for balance to steady skaters and experts showing off their stunts, all enjoyed the afternoon, sporting their winter hats and gloves to endure the chilly air inside the arena while leaving behind the almost spring-like weather outside.

The fun will continue until late February, with several more dates scheduled for open skating. The cost is $5 at the door, and skating hours are between 12:00 noon and 2:00 pm. So bring your skates and don’t forget your hats and gloves – not only is it frigid inside, but the sign posted by the door says they are required.

More public skating sessions are scheduled for January 12, 19, 20, and 26, and February 2, 9, 16, 20 and 23. All of the proceeds from the public skating days benefit Marion Recreation Programs.

For further information about the open skating events and other Marion Recreation Programs, contact the Marion Recreation Department at 774-217-8355 or by email at info@marionrecreation.com.

By Jean Perry

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Kenneth Oldham “Buzz” Clarke, Jr.

Kenneth Oldham “Buzz” Clarke, Jr., age 83, of Marion, MA, passed away peacefully after a short illness on Friday, December 27, 2013, in Wareham, MA. He was born in Plymouth on December 14, 1930 and grew up in Kingston and Plymouth.

Buzz attended Plymouth High School where he played football and baseball. He worked for Plymouth Gas before starting his own heating and air conditioning business, Clarke Co. in the mid 1960’s.

Buzz and Nancy Ann “Dolly” (Zora) Clarke were married in November 1954 and resided in Marion for 59 years. He is survived by four children, Debra Louise Clarke McCarthy and her partner James V. Kovar of Princeton, WV; Brenda Ann Clarke Fatula and her husband Michael; Kenneth O. “Bub” Clarke III of Mattapoisett, and his wife, Nancy; and Zora Ann “Punkin” Clarke St. Don and her husband, Paul. He is also survived by his grandchildren, Jake O. Clarke, Derek W. Clarke and Jackson Clarke St. Don; by his sister, Louise Clarke Price of Brookline, NH, and his brother, George H. Clarke and his wife, Charlotte, of Plymouth; and several nieces and nephews.

Buzz was preceded in death by his parents Kenneth O. Clarke, Sr. and Frances (Deans) Clarke.

Buzz liked living in Marion close to the water where he had a lifetime appointment as Wharfinger.  Early on, he served on the volunteer fire department for the Town of Marion.  He was a 25-year member in the U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary. An avid saltwater fisherman, he enjoyed many hours on his boat, The DBK.

Arrangements are private. The family thanks the nursing and hospice staffs at Kindred Transitional Care and Rehabilitation – Forestview, in Wareham.

2013 a Year in Pictures

The elves at The Wanderer have been busy putting together a very special presentation of all the photographs from 2013 editions. The 170 page publication is available to view on your favorite iPad, iPhone, or laptop.

If you haven’t already you can download the Wanderer app for free on your iPad or iPhone by visiting: https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/wanderer/

You can also view 2013 a Year in Pictures in Flash format at: www.wanderer.com/editions/flash/01012014/

And in PDF format at: www.wanderer.com/editions/archive/WAND010214screen.pdf

Thank you for being a part of The Wanderer in 2013 and we look forward to bringing you the news in 2014.

2013yearinpics

Marion Republican Town Committee

The Marion Republican Town Committee will hold a meeting to select delegates to the March 2014 State Republican Party Convention on Tuesday, January 14, 2014 at 7:00 pm at the Marion Town House (conference room), 2 Spring Street, Marion, MA. In the event of bad weather, the caucus will be held on Tuesday, January 28 at 7:00 pm at 122 Converse Road, Marion. Town Republicans and the public are invited to attend.

Travel Team Crowned Champions

Travelling-BBall

The Old Rochester Bulldogs 7th Grade Travel Team were recently crowned Champions at the Old Rochester Basketball Holiday Tournament hosted by Tabor Academy  The boys went 4-0 beating Lakeville twice and Middleboro once with a final win against Bridgewater. The team from left to right includes: Assistant Coach Bob Mourao, Matthew Brogioli, Jake Mourao, Nate King, Bob Ross, Dillan Villa, Adam Breault, Noah Massad, Isaiah Ostiguy, Adam Sylvia, Noah McIntyre, Cole McIntyre, Head Coach Ken Ross and Joe Robinson. Photo courtesy Lynn Mourao

Appreciation

By Tom J. Shire, Jr.

Fortunate. Yes indeed. We are fortunate.

Fortunate to live where we do.

And fortunate to live when we do.

And fortunate to live how we do.

 

Fortunate to have one another.

To have our parents.

To have our children.

To have our grandchildren as we do.

 

Fortunate to learn from one another.

Fortunate to accept one another.

To accept our qualities and our failings.

To accept all that we are.

 

Too soon, we part from one another.

Too soon, we leave.

Leave with our memories.

Leaving our love to be remembered.

 

Remembering our mother,

Who died on Thanksgiving.

Remembering our father,

Who died on Christmas.

 

Remembering all they gave us.

All they taught us.

All they shared with us and

All they showed us.

 

Showed us by their example.

Showed us by their actions.

Showed us by their caring and

Showed us by their Love.

 

Fortunate. Yes indeed. We are fortunate.

Fortunate to live where we do.

And fortunate to live when we do.

And fortunate to live how we do.

Girls’ Basketball, Ice Hockey Show Improvement

Here is a look at the third week of scheduled games for ORR winter athletics.

Girls’ Track: The undefeated Lady Bulldogs competed in only one meet this week, the SCC Annual Holiday Relays. The meet is a “fun” meet; it does not count toward the team record and only consists of multiple-person relay races. Still, the SCC gives out awards for the large and small school winners, and the ORR girls easily took first place in the large school category. Bailey Truesdale, Abby Adams, Zoe Smith, and Paige Santos won the shuttle hurdles in 29.4 seconds, while Emily Josephson, Sammie Barrett, Nicole Mattson, and Shannon O’Malley combined for a 14:35 to win the distance medley. Arden Goguen, Smith, Adams, and Mattson came together to win the 4×2 lap relay with a 3:35, and Smith went on to collaborate with Santos and Elexus Afonso to claim the high-jump relay victory, where they collectively jumped 14’6”. Finally, Morgan DaSilva, Barrett, Santos, and Truesdale won the 4×400 relay with a 4:30.

Boys’ Track: The boys’ track team also competed in the SCC Relays, where they placed second overall in the large school division. Ben Rounseville, Kevin Saccone, Chris Demers, and Colin Knapton won the 4×2 lap with a 2:56, while Saccone, Rounseville, and Demers collaborated with freshman Graham Poirier to claim the shuttle hurdles title in 28.2 seconds. The other Bulldog victory came in the shot put relay, where Jesse Noonan, Ryan Plunkett, and Richie Phillips combined for a total 112’5”. The boys’ and girls’ track teams have a nice rest until their next meet on January 9, but many of the freshmen and sophomores on the team will be traveling to the Reggie Lewis Center in Boston on January 5 to compete in the Red Auerbach Freshmen-Sophomore Meet.

Ice Hockey: After a loss to out-of-conference Whitman-Hanson, the ORR/Fairhaven Bulldogs looked to gain a conference win over league rival Wareham/Carver. The Bulldogs are a very young team, but they still managed to handily defeat the Vikings with a score of 5-1. Thanks to goals from Shane Matthews, Cam Silvia, Connor Severino, Jake Durocher, and Mike Lyrgen, the Bulldogs took the lead in the first period and never looked back. Freshman Chase Cunningham played a phenomenal game, only allowing one goal and making 22 saves.

Girls’ Basketball: Like the ice hockey team, the Lady Bulldogs showed great improvement this week. After three blowout losses to New Bedford, Apponequet, and GNB Voc-Tech, the girls played SCC powerhouse Wareham High School, and even though they lost 51-42, they showed incredible improvement and stuck with the Vikings until the fourth quarter. The Lady Bulldogs were tied with the Lady Vikings 24-24 at the half, and at the close of the third quarter, they trailed Wareham by only one point. Unfortunately, the Lady Vikings outscored ORR 12-5 in the fourth quarter, clinching the win for Wareham. Seniors Michaela Bouvette (14 points) and Isabelle Riley (12 points) led the Lady Bulldogs in scoring for the night.

Boys’ Basketball: This week, the boys’ basketball team faced their toughest competitor of the season in Wareham High School. The two teams are expected to battle it out for the SCC Championship for the 2013-2014 season. After a hard fought game, the Bulldogs lost 61-42 to give Wareham the upper hand on the SCC title. Raekwon Phillips was the leading scorer for the Bulldogs with 15 points. Senior Paul Graves, who was rigorously defended by Wareham, still managed to score 11 points in the loss. Jeremy Bare provided key rebounds for the Bulldogs, who suffered their first loss of the season. The boys will reface Wareham at home later in the season, where they will hopefully even the score against the SCC powerhouse.

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

Boys’ Basketball: (3-1-0) (2-1-0); Girls’ Basketball: (0-3-0) (0-2-0); Boys’ Track (4-0-0) (3-0-0); Girls’ Track (4-0-0) (3-0-0); Swimming: (0-0-0) (0-0-0); Hockey: (2-2-0) (1-0-0).

By Michael Kassabian

BBC Leads Beach Treasure Hunt

The children teetered and tottered across the shoreline, over the smooth, scattered stones off the Planting Island causeway on Saturday.

They looked under cold, wet rocks, beneath seaweed, and in the crevasses of the rocks for shells, crabs, starfish, and other treasures under the watchful eyes of the adults who were more concerned with the cold than were the children.

Most people in the Tri-Town region stepped outside that morning, pleased with the unseasonable mildness of the late December air, and perhaps decided to leave their gloves and scarves at home that morning. However, most of the participants of the Buzzard’s Bay Coalition-sponsored event were taken by surprise when they arrived at the Planting Island causeway in Marion and were met by a driving, relentless ocean wind that brought a chill that was almost overwhelming to the senses.

After the six participating children were bundled up a bit more warmly, the two BBC volunteers, Colleen Hamilton and Gracie Mullen-Thompson, handed them paper necklaces made of different shapes as a three-dimensional list of sorts to guide the children through the scavenger hunt.

The search for objects shaped like squares, triangles, circles, and stars was hastened by the biting cold wind, with parents and guardians ushering the kids along the beach a little faster than anticipated, unsettled by the cold, which seemed to be of little concern to the kids who were engrossed in their hunt for treasures.

The treasure hunters gathered up conch shells, pebbles, and small bits of seashells – to be made later into an ocean-themed mobile in the comfort of their warm homes – and dropped them into wind-blown plastic bags.

The wind proved to be an obstacle, but the children were determined to accomplish what they had set out to do, and the smiles on their red-cheeked faces were proof that no one was discouraged.

The adults shivered and continued remarking on the shocking cold while the kids shouted out, “Look what I found!” and “Ooh, look at that one!”

Claire Barn, age 10, found everything on the scavenger hunt list and headed back to the parking area to retrieve her kit, complete with twine and bamboo sticks, to make her mobile when she went home.

“It was really, really cool,” said Claire about the treasure hunt, no pun intended.

The December 28 event was one of two ‘Family Discovery Days’ offered by the BBC as part of their Bay Discovery programs which are “designed for explorers of all ages to get outside and discover Buzzards Bay.”

More information about upcoming Coalition events can be found at their website www.savebuzzardsbay.org/BayAdventures.

By Jean Perry

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2013 In The Rearview Mirror

Well folks, 2013 was a really great year for me. I retired from a corporate job where for two decades, I had the pleasure of working with some really wonderful men and women in the electrical industry while slogging it out with mandates from headquarters that frankly were hard to fathom, never mind put in practice. And then – TADA – I found my way to The Wanderer. A whole new world of experiences and people has populated my days and many evenings, while educating me on the small town democratic process. I’ve met some incredibly dedicated, community-oriented people whose passion for Mattapoisett, its health, and wellbeing are part of their everyday existence.

Our highway and sewer departments work hard for us. Our schoolteachers are some of the best in the state. We have boards and commissions charged with protection of wetlands, property owners’ rights, financial well-being, history, agriculture, our senior citizens, our veterans, and even our pets, and they do so with a clear eye on what is best for all concerned!

We have a governmental infrastructure built from the inside out by good people wanting to do good things for the good of the community. Can I get a witness? Yes, this past year I’ve watched with increasing interest and appreciation how our town works and honestly, it’s pretty smooth overall. Remember that gold star we achieved for fiduciary competence! Three cheers for us and our Triple A bond rating.

As I was chatting with a lady recently, she said she equates living in Mattapoisett to being in a bubble. Not in a bad way mind you, but for her, living in this town means a safe, clean, beautiful environment – something she feels very lucky and happy about. She said that when she and her husband travel to other places, they are always happy to return to the ‘Bubble’. I understand where she is coming from – I rather feel that way myself.

Keeping life inside the Bubble comfortable and harmonious takes a lot of hard work. From all the good people working at town hall, who we depend upon to keep our fiscal life and licenses in order, to the fire and police personnel whose jobs protect our homes, businesses, our very lives –  it is not be to taken for granted. As retired police Officer F. Mitch Suzan said, “Mattapoisett is a small town that still has big city problems.” That we can go through our days basically feeling safe and protected while such issues ebb and flow around us is a measure of the security we enjoy, dare I say, inside the Bubble?

It’s not that we aren’t impacted by the world outside, on the contrary. This town and its residents are fully aware of trouble(s) and work hard to maintain a social fabric and community on a high note to keep everyone in town as safe as possible, while enjoying a pleasant lifestyle. There is nothing wrong with that. But we aren’t immune, and we do understand darkness can befall us at any time.

Next year our kids and the school systems will be learning new tactics for personal safety through the ALICE protocol. From sheltering in place to looking for opportunities to flee, our young people under the guidance of trained leaders will learn new ways to feel empowered during emergency situations.

There will be financial challenges ahead as well. State cutbacks in education funds will impact our schools. Administrators will be tasked with finding ways to continue to serve our children to the best of their abilities, but with less cash flow. While this is happening, our educators will also be following state orders to participate in a pilot program for new baseline testing. That, coupled with ongoing use of MCAS, can only make the day in the life of a teacher harder than ever. Who knows what the state will eventually decide to do in terms of measuring and monitoring the educational achievements and needs of our children. I hate to think it might come down to a conversation on a golf course somewhere, but it wouldn’t surprise me. Whatever happens, our schools will have to adhere and our teachers and the administrators will do their best to lead our students towards excellence.

Buzzards Bay Coalition, in partnership with Mattapoisett and surrounding towns, will continue their work protecting our waterways and aquifer that are absolutely vital to our continued existence as we know it today. They made great strides towards acquiring more land adjacent to the Nasketucket Bay State Reservation in 2013. A round of applause, please.

Open Space Committee members will be watching and working on ways to also keep lands critical to our seaside lifestyle clean and free from commercial development that might otherwise damage what we love so much about Mattapoisett. As residents, we readily vote at town meeting for measures that work in concert with these organizations. While Mattapoisett struggles to find ways to increase revenue through some development projects, these groups will be working to insure such projects won’t destabilize the peaceful environmental harmony. Light commercial development should be a good thing for the town and provide the residents with easy access to goods and services. I hope that is reasonable and acceptable to all the influencers involved with decisions impacting development.

The cleanliness of our sidewalks and streets was a big issue in 2013. In spite of the public’s consensus that Mattapoisett is Special (as in Bubble-like), sidestepping and skipping was sometimes needed while taking a walk. Dog owners felt the heat for being less than hygienic by leaving behind what came out of their dogs’ behinds. The conversation did increase awareness, and for the short term, things did get better. The town even funded several new doggie rest stations with bags and trash receptacles. Wonderful. I am sad to report, however, that since we are now well into winter darkness there has been a modest increase in uncollected piles. So if you walk after dark, make sure your flashlight doesn’t leave the ground immediately in front of you. Consider yourself warned. My observation is that we can’t blame the day-tripper or summer visitor for allowing their dogs to foul our byways. The enemy is most likely within.

The Bike Path and all those who have worked so hard to link to other communities via this safe passage made good progress this year. There were concerns around intersections with roads and conversations about best ways to increase bike riders’ understanding and adherence to rules, while also making motorists approaching these tender spots more aware. That work goes on. But the YMCA camp property transfer was a big leap forward for the project. Once all is said and done, we can stand tall that, in spite of what at times seemed like insurmountable problems, the Bike Path devotees achieved quite a great deal. Now if the issue of parking can be resolved along Brandt Island and Mattapoisett Neck Roads, our bike path will be a favored place to go.

The Recreation Department, with the help of the Community Preservation Committee, was finally able to get the tennis courts fixed. In the new year, work at the site near Center School will be completed. It’s good to see our tax dollars at work fixing a spot that had been an eye sore for much too long. I’m looking forward to learning how to play shuffle ball and bocce ball and glad for those choices given that tennis is way too vigorous a sport for yours truly.

Alternative energy was a big story in 2013 and will continue to be so in 2014. With two solar projects now approved along the entrance to the landfill and planned to encompass many acres of woodlands near Shady Oak Road/Drive, we don’t have a bylaw for these types of projects.  Wind turbines such as those in Fairhaven might never find their way into Mattapoisett, but you never know. Considering that many believe that the way of the future and the needs of the town require the use of non-fossil funded energy sources, we may wish to consider some zoning laws while we can.

There were the light and lively moments around our fair town with Harbor Days, vintage car gatherings, movies in Shipyard Park, 4th of July road race, a triathlon, boat races and parades. There was also the very sad event of saying goodbye to a fallen solider, Lance Corporal Matthew Rodriguez. Residents came out in force to wait along Route 6, flags in hand, expressing collective grief and support to his family and gratitude for his service.

None of us can see into the future, but we can all work together to make 2014 a good one. Here’s to remembering the fallen, thanking the people who keep things running along on course, contributing where and when we can, and taking the time to enjoy this special place – Mattapoisett.

By Marilou Newell