Gateway Babe Ruth League Scores

Regional League

Carver Cavaliers 9 – Carver Knights 8

Bourne Rangers 15 – Sandwich Storm 10

Sandwich Anglers 7 – Bourne Orioles 2

Orr Indians 19 – Carver Knights 2

Vineyard White Sox 19 – Mashpee Blue Falcons 13

Barnstable Navy 4 – Vineyard White Sox 2

Bourne Marlins 11 – Sandwich Storm 5

Vineyard Angels 13 – Dy White Dolphins 2

Lower Cape Black 15 – Barnstable Green 5

Mashpee Blue Falcons 15 – Barnstable Navy 2

Vineyard Angels 12 -Lower Cape Red 2

Orr Indians 14 – Carver Knights 4

Carver Knights 10 – Wareham Cubs 5

Dy White Dolphins 4 – Vineyard Brewers 3

Dy White Dolphins 8 – Vineyard Brewers 8

Mashpee Blue Falcons 5 – Barnstable Green 4

Lower Cape Black 6 – Lower Cape Red 1

Mashpee Blue Falcons 11 – Barnstable Navy 3

Orr Indians 13 – Carver Cavaliers 3

Sandwich Anglers 9 – Bourne Rangers 3

 

Varsity League

Orr Bulldogs 5 – Wareham Bears 4

Wareham Tigers 9 – Carver Crusaders 2

Sandwich Breakers 6 – Sandwich Tugboats 2

Bourne 7 – Mashpee 0

Carver Crusaders 8 – Sandwich Tugboats 6

Bourne 4 – Mashpee 2

Wareham Tigers 6 – Wareham Bears 3

Lower Cape 9 – Dy Black Dolphins 4

Dy Gray Dolphins 15 – Barnstable Red 9

Lower Cape 13 – Dy Green Dolphins 0

Orr Bulldogs 10 – Carver Crusaders 7

Dy Green Dolphins 12 – Dy Gray Dolphins 2

Dy Gray Dolphins 10 – Dy Black Dolphins 4

Barnstable Red 17 – Vineyard Astros 6

Vineyard Astros 12 – Barnstable Red 10

Lower Cape 6 – Wareham Tigers 4

Wareham Bears 19 – Dy Black Dolphins 0

Sandwich Breakers 6 – Mashpee Falcons 5

Bourne 3 – Sandwich Tugboats 0

Mattapoisett Free Public Library News

Old Rochester Regional High School Art Show: Self-portraits in color and charcoal, book art, landscapes and other mixed media by ORR juniors and seniors are now on exhibit on the upper floor in the Mattapoisett Library. Show your support for these artists by visiting and signing the guest book.

Fishing Equipment Available: Thinking of trying your hand at fishing but don’t have the equipment? Borrow a fishing rod and reel at the Mattapoisett Library. Grandchildren coming for the weekend? There are several poles available for fresh and saltwater fishing. Information is available about obtaining a fishing license and where to purchase tackle and bait. An adult library card is needed upon check out, and rods can be borrowed for one week at a time.

Friends’ Used Book Sale: Get ready to stock up on some great beach reading at the next Friends’ Used Book Sale, which will be held on June 8 from 10:00 am to 1:00 pm. Each month, there are hundreds of new selections for both children and adults. At the same time, the Junior Friends offer lots of homemade baked goods for purchase. Bring redeemable bottles and cans from 10:00 to 11:00 am to benefit the Junior Friends. All donations are greatly appreciated!

Learn to Play Chess: Beginning chess players of any age – youth and adult – are invited to learn the game from instructor Jim Kegle on the first Tuesday of each month from 6:30 to 7:30 pm. This is your opportunity to learn the pieces and their moves, their value, simple strategies, and attack moves. These free lessons are open to all. Please register by calling 508-758-4171.

Want to Take a Story Walk? Enjoy a picture book as you walk the grounds of the library. Each page of And Then It’s Spring by Julie Fogliano sits on a post (they are numbered) so you can read along with your child as you both get some exercise and fresh air. Rain or shine!

Museum Passes Available: Did you know that with your library card you can check out passes to museums all over Massachusetts and Rhode Island that will give you free or discounted admission? The library also has passes for discounted Paw Sox tickets, zoos, state parks, aquariums and more. The list of passes is available on the library’s website, www.mattapoisettlibrary.org. You can also reserve the passes online with your library card. There is currently a display about the pass program in the reading room. Please call the circulation desk if you need assistance reserving a pass at 508-758-4171.

Free Videos: Library videocassettes are looking for new homes that have VCRs so they can still be enjoyed. Stop in and help yourself to the selection on the main floor near the Friends’ Used Book Sale shelves.

Ereader Assistance Available: Still need help downloading ebooks and audiobooks from the library catalogue? Librarian Liz Sherry offers two free workshops each week to help patrons manage their ereaders, no matter what type they own. Stop in on Tuesday evenings at 6:30 pm or Fridays at 3:00 pm. These times don’t work? Give her a call and make an appointment to get assistance. If you don’t have an ereader, but you are curious about them, the library has several that you can try during the workshop.

Relay for Life of Tri-Town

The American Cancer Society’s Relay for Life of Tri-Town takes place on June 14 and 15 at Old Rochester Regional High School. The theme this year is Heroes for Hope, and the program of activities has something for everyone who comes to support friends and family members. For more information, contact Caryn Hodges at 508-989-7805, Pam Houston at 508-922-4024, or Odd Johannessan at 508-971-0176.

Tabor Academy Commencement

This weekend marks Tabor’s 135th Commencement, which will take place on Saturday, June 1, at 3:00 pm on Martin Field. The weekend begins with Baccalaureate in the Wickenden Chapel on Friday evening and culminates with the Commencement Exercises on Martin Field on Saturday afternoon.

Tri-Town Graduates in the Class of 2013

Marion

Zachary Gokavi Angelo, John Christian Michael Crosby, Molly Joyce Curley, Gia Lynn Doonan, Matthew Peter Hlady, Emily Marie Kistler, Kristen Elizabeth Knight, Kenneth William Lloyd. Kristen Nicole Mabie, Hunter James Patrick, Lindsey Reid Patrick, Celeste Anne Popitz, Oliver Holtby Stone, Louisa Anne Walker

Mattapoisett

Timothy Liam Burke, James Paul Gamach

Rochester

Rebecca Hope Adelstein, Nina Angela Resmini, Nathan Bradley Taber

Robert “Bob” Adams

Robert “Bob” Adams, Age 66, of Tamarac, Florida, formally of Mattapoisett, Massachusetts, passed away on May 26, 2013. He is survived by his loving wife, Carol (Manganelli), his daughter Janet her wife Lisa and his son James. He leaves four much-loved grandchildren.

Bob was born in New Bedford, Massachusetts. During the 1970’s and 80’s Bob was considered to be one of the most consistent scratch golfers in the area. Thirteen years ago he moved to Florida and ran his own business. He was an avid sports fan loving his Patriots and Red Sox and an active member of the Lauderdale Lakes Moose Lodge.

Memorial services will be held on Saturday, June 1st, 2013 at 3 PM at the Star of David Memorial Gardens and Funeral Chapel, 7701 Bailey Road, North Lauderdale, Florida 33068.

In lieu of flowers, donations can be made in Bob’s memory to the children of Mooseheart through the following website www.moosecharities.org.

Henry Elected SRPEDD Chair

Jonathan Henry, representing the Marion Board of Selectmen, has been elected Chairman of the Southeastern Regional Planning and Economic Development District (SRPEDD) for the 2013-2014 term. SRPEDD held its 57th annual meeting in New Bedford on May 22.

Other officers for the 2013-14 term elected at the meeting were: William Roth, Fairhaven, Vice Chairman; Joan Marchitto, North Attleborough, Secretary; Joseph Callahan, Berkley, Treasurer; George Hovorka, Swansea, Assistant Treasurer; and Randall Kunz, Mattapoisett, Past Chairman.

Kunz received the Distinguished Service Award. Kunz served as SRPEDD Chairman from 2010 to 2013.

SRPEDD is a regional agency serving 27 cities and towns in Bristol, Plymouth and Norfolk Counties. SRPEDD is governed by local officials representing Mayors, Selectmen and Planning Boards. It undertakes regional planning in transportation, economic development, environment and land use, and provides technical assistance to the cities and towns of the region. SRPEDD also serves as the fiduciary agent for the Southeast Region Advisory Council on Homeland Security. SRPEDD’s office is located in Taunton.

Health District Thank You

To the Editor:

On behalf of the Marion Rochester Regional Health District, I would like to extend my sincere thank you to the Rochester voters who supported us at Town Meeting. You overwhelmingly voted to support the Health District  125-2.

The collaboration of professional personnel and services through the Health District does go a long way to provide effective and efficient services to both towns.

Thank you, Rochester! You affirmed your vote of confidence in the services you are provided by the Marion Rochester Regional Health District.

Karen Walega

Health Director

 

The views expressed in the “Letters to the Editor” column are not necessarily those of The Wanderer, its staff or advertisers. The Wanderer will gladly accept any and all correspondence relating to timely and pertinent issues in the great Marion, Mattapoisett and Rochester area, provided they include the author’s name, address and phone number for verification. We cannot publish anonymous, unsigned or unconfirmed submissions. The Wanderer reserves the right to edit, condense and otherwise alter submissions for purposes of clarity and/or spacing considerations. The Wanderer may choose to not run letters that thank businesses, and The Wanderer has the right to edit letters to omit business names. The Wanderer also reserves the right to deny publication of any submitted correspondence.

Change is Happening

To the Editor:

People of Mattapoisett, be aware. Be very aware. Change is happening, as it well should and must. Executive Order #525 has been sent to all of the towns and cities and requires us to have a plan for the town that “has merit.” It doesn’t tell us how to zone our town or what to build and where to build it. It just requires that the plan have merit. Who defines “merit”?

The Planning Board recently met with Grant King of SPREDD to discuss possibilities for utilization of areas in the town. Karen Field asked a good question of “How do we maintain the village atmosphere of this town?” I agree. I know that we must have change, but I don’t want to see transformation of our town.

Now is the time to act and help design and protect this town to help keep it the place that we all love. Don’t let others do your work. Go to the meetings and give your input. Don’t look back 10 years from now and wonder why the town has gone in a direction that you didn’t want to see. Go to the meetings. Protect what you have.

Paul Osenkowski

Mattapoisett 

 

The views expressed in the “Letters to the Editor” column are not necessarily those of The Wanderer, its staff or advertisers. The Wanderer will gladly accept any and all correspondence relating to timely and pertinent issues in the great Marion, Mattapoisett and Rochester area, provided they include the author’s name, address and phone number for verification. We cannot publish anonymous, unsigned or unconfirmed submissions. The Wanderer reserves the right to edit, condense and otherwise alter submissions for purposes of clarity and/or spacing considerations. The Wanderer may choose to not run letters that thank businesses, and The Wanderer has the right to edit letters to omit business names. The Wanderer also reserves the right to deny publication of any submitted correspondence.

Proud Ghosts of Point Connett

Editors note: This story has been serialized into six parts which will appear weekly in The Wanderer 

By Rudd Wyman

Part I

Most folk call me Rudd. From 1994 to 2004, I wrote monthly tales for the Richmond Rooster, a small-town paper New Hampshire paper. For a few of these essays, I borrowed, examined, and expanded my youthful summer experiences on Point Connett. For others, I exaggerated or lied creatively, a characteristic my mom suggested that I do orally with a straight face. In the former scenario, I hope the reader will sniff a few salt breezes from beautiful Buzzards Bay, however at times the bay can be very angry.

As Yogi Berra said, “When I was young I could recall everything whether it happened or not.”

I was 9 years old when the 1938 hurricane slammed into the New England Coast. The single warning of a huge storm approaching Mattapoisett and Point Connett came from Oman Price, local constable. Packing prized possessions into Dad’s Studebaker, my family left shortly before devastating wind and waves buried Point Connett and surrounding areas.

Mother, Dad, and I returned from our winter home in Walpole to a Crescent Beach roadblock where an elderly fellow was being pulled alive from debris. It was a horror scene: homes off of foundations, boats in woods, scattered telephone poles, demolished cars, downed trees, and shell-shocked residents searching for belongings. Connett, Angelica, and Peases were destroyed, too, and Mattapoisett recorded nine deaths.

On the same location, Dad built a summer home with living quarters solidly supported by cedar stilts.

Only a short chip shot from Buzzards Bay, he used blocks, tackle, boards, and jacks to move huge boulders to form a protective sea wall.

“I hope that I live to see the results of another hurricane,” Dad said, “because this house will stand.”

In August of 1954, Hurricane Carol crashed through the basement without damage to living quarters. Hurricane Edna followed one month later with extensive Point Connett property damage. My dad smiled, and coastal builders copied his design. From age nine to my early teens, summer memories rattle my brain: toe-scratching for quahogs, mom’s chowder, our gang movies, and three-legged races on Labor Day, Fourth of July fireworks from the stone pier, Babe Ruth retiring, Lowell Thomas on my folks’ favorite radio news program, gulf hill ice cream and kite flying from Ned’s Point. Through Dad’s picture window, we could watch the New York steamboat, lit up with a couple of hundred entertained passengers, headed toward the canal to Boston.

Most summer reflections focus on teenage activities that I never confessed on my college resume. One professor did state that a few truths are more noteworthy than a library of fiction. However, I believe it is commendable to improvise or stretch the truth.

Margie, my wife, worked with Alzheimers residents at a New Hampshire nursing home. A 90-year-old lady had never met me. Lucy and I conversed knowledgeably and at length about people neither of us knew, prom night, the high school reunion, and Joe – who pumped gas at our favorite garage. Though my memory bank tends to overflow, it makes me happy that the spiritual challenge worked for Lucy.

Continued Next Week



No Touch Zone a Touchy Subject

It was long into the night with much work completed when hot buttons were pushed over the touching of a “no touch zone” on Goodspeed Island.

The request for an amended order of conditions filed by Daniel and Laurie DaRosa, 3 Goodspeed Island Lot #28, was denied after the board learned that the a previously stipulated special condition had been violated and that a DEP permit had been applied for. Originally on April 30, 2012, the permit required a special condition for a 10-foot-wide costal bank “no activity zone.” Then, in August, a request for coastal restoration work was denied but then applied for through the state’s DEP office. That office granted the permit.

Now coming before the board, DaRosa was requesting a certificate of compliance on the premise that the essence of what the board conditioned on the original permits had been complied with. The board did not see it that way.

Chair Peter Newton said, “It isn’t clear to me that the original order was to clear the entire bank.” He said he wasn’t in favor of approving the amended DEP permit, wondering if the owner created his own problems by going to the state and moving forward to clear the bank in spite of the town’s request not to do so.

Newton continued that the applicant had agreed to the “no touch zone.” DaRosa felt that by not granting the certificate he was being punished. In the absence of a certificate of compliance, the title to the property would be in encumbered.

“There are half dozen violations on this project,” Newton said. “I’m not in much of a mood to be granting a permit.”

Earlier in the day, the Conservation Commission office had received several phone calls from concerned citizens who witnessed construction activity on the beach and shoreline area at the property. There was a Bobcat removing stones and pushing sand changing the contour of the shoreline.

“We can’t grant a certificate because the no touch zone has been violated,” Newton said. “We were never informed that work would be taking place.”

“It was really disheartening to see the Bobcat going into the water,” added Board member Bob Rogers

Both Board Member Tom Copps and Newton agreed that by granting the certificate, a bad precedent would be set.

“It is just a willful disregard for the process … there is a state law,” Newton said. “We are a reasonable bunch of people, but not when people ignore the plans.”

“I didn’t know,” DaRosa said.

“It is your responsibility sir,” Newton responded.

Board Member Robert Rogers said he wanted to draft a letter to the DEP asking them who is overseeing the work they have permitted, which supersedes the local permit. Noting that he wasn’t sure what the next steps might be, Newton told DaRosa they’d be getting back to him.

Much earlier in the evening, numerous pieces of businesses were conducted.

Certificate of Compliance granted to Elizabeth and Randall Kunz, 45 Water St.

Certificate of Compliance granted to Barry and Audrey Saucier, 8 Howard Beach.

Partial Certificate of Compliance granted to Stephen and Betsy Downes off of Prospect Road.

Public hearings conducted included:

Request for Determination of Applicability by Elizabeth Sharp and James McKay, 7 Kestrel Ln., proposing to replace the floor boards and railings to the existing deck as well as extending a new 10-by-12 section with steps on the north side on the existing deck. Applicant was released to proceed with the project.

Request for Determination of Applicability filed by Buzzards Bay Coalition for Acushnet Road, lots #7, #4, #20, 21: changes would allow the public better access to the public lands for easier use and a clearer demarcation of entrance to the trailhead areas for a parking area, signage, and more. The work is proposed to begin sometime this summer depending on funding via grants.

Request for Determination of Applicability filed by Victor Vieira, 77 Long Plain Rd.; applicant proposes to install an aboveground pool within 50 feet on the bordering vegetated wetlands – approved as proposed.

Notice of Intent filed by William Morgan, 53 Cove St., to remove several unpermitted site improvements (stone pillars, wall extension, concrete AC unit pads, planters), and retain/permit other improvement; plan approved with special conditions.

Notice of Intent filed by Linda Pinto of CSN Engineering, regarding 53 Cove Beach, lots #1, #4, #18, #18A, #34, for beach-nourishment projects; approved with conditions.

Continuance of after-the-fact notice of intent filed by D & B Quality Construction, 15 Cedarcrest Ave. lot #21, applicant proposes an after the fact filing to allow an already constructed detached shed and outdoor shower, located partially within the bordering vegetated wetlands. Dennis Lavoe/D&B Construction presented the board with amended plans, which were accepted.

Request for determination of applicability filed by Dwight Smith, 6 Windward Way, to restore an eroded lawn area caused by Sandy and remove a storm-damaged tree was approved with no special conditions.

Notice of intent filed by Neal and Debra Sandford, 4 Seaconet Rd., to demolish the existing single family dwelling and detached garage for the purpose of constructing a new home in compliance with Mass Building Code and FEMA requirements for construction within a vegetated flood zone. Plans were approved with conditions.

By Marilou Newell