Mattapoisett Resident Running Boston Marathon

On April 15, Tammy Ferreira from Mattapoisett, will be running in the 117th Boston Marathon® to help conquer cancer as a member of the Dana-Farber Marathon Challenge team.

Ferreira, along with more than 550 Dana-Farber Marathon Challenge teammates from across the United States and around the world, will run Massachusetts’ historic marathon route from Hopkinton to Boston with a goal to raise $4.6 million for cancer research at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute.

One-hundred-percent of the funds raised benefit Dana-Farber’s Claudia Adams Barr Program in Innovative Basic Cancer Research, which supports cornerstone science research in its earliest stages, providing researchers with critical resources to test their leading-edge ideas. Findings from Barr program research can provide novel clinical insights as well as the results necessary to seek additional federal funding.

Since its inception in 1990, the Dana-Farber Marathon Challenge has raised more than $56 million for the Barr Program. Dana-Farber Trustees J. Wayne and Delores Barr Weaver founded the Barr Program in 1987 to honor Mrs. Weaver’s mother, Claudia Adams Barr, who lost her battle with cancer in 1957.

In 1990, Dana-Farber was among the first charity organizations to be recognized by the Boston Athletic Association (B.A.A), which organizes the Boston Marathon. The Dana-Farber Marathon Challenge team offers its members extensive fundraising support, training guidance from Jack Fultz, the 1976 Boston Marathon men’s champion, plus team training runs, and volunteer opportunities for non-runners. Dana-Farber Marathon Challenge runners who are not time-qualified for the Boston Marathon receive an invitational entry into the race.

Dana-Farber Marathon Challenge team members must meet one of the following fundraising commitments:

  • Invitational runners, runners who receive an entry from Dana-Farber have a fundraising commitment of $4,000.
  • Own entry runners, runners who have joined the DFMC after obtaining their own race entry have a fundraising commitment of $3,500.

To contribute to the Dana-Farber Marathon Challenge, go online to www.RunDFMC.org or contact the Dana-Farber Running Programs office at (617) 632-1970 or dfmc@dfci.harvard.edu. Follow the DFMC on Facebook: www.facebook/marathonchallenge.

The Dana-Farber Marathon Challenge is one of many ways runners can support the lifesaving mission of Dana-Farber Cancer Institute.  Participants can run on the official Dana-Farber team in the Boston Marathon, the Falmouth Road Race, and the B.A.A Half Marathon, or run in any race, of any distance, in any city, while raising funds for Dana-Farber and the Jimmy Fund.  For more information visit RunDanaFarber.org.

John F. McGrath

John F. McGrath, 60, of Mattapoisett, passed away at home on Wednesday, March 13th 2013. He was the husband of Alice (DiMascio), his wife of 32 years, and the beloved father of Alison McGrath.

John was born in Westwood and graduated from Westwood High School and Assumption College. John was a Real Estate broker with Page Realty in Norwood, a principal at F.B. Rogers Associates in Boston, and a consultant at the Office of Property Evaluation in Boston. He was a member of the Massachusetts Board of Real Estate Appraisers.

John and his family previously lived in Stoughton, Marina Bay in Quincy, and Milton. While in Quincy, he was an active parent who coached the Sacred Heart girl’s basketball teams on which his daughter, Alison, played.  John was an avid sports fan and seldom missed watching the Celtics, Patriots, and Red Sox.

Upon retiring in 2003, John and his family moved to their treasured cottage in Mattapoisett.  John’s lifelong love of the ocean frequently found him cruising the inner harbor or gunkholing around Buzzards Bay in one of his many boats.  John’s initial diagnosis of brain cancer never prevented him from taking daily walks on the beach with his daughter, Alison, and their favorite little man, Spencer.

In addition to his wife and daughter, John leaves his mother Ann Scanlon McGrath of Mattapoisett, his brother Louis Amoruso (Shirley) of Mansfield, his sister Susan Fine (Alan) of West Palm Beach, his brother-in-law Nicholas DiMascio (Regina) of Scituate, and his sister–in-law Viola Corbett (David) of Medway. He was the beloved uncle of Elizabeth and Matthew Lacasse, Michael and Rachael Amoruso, Joshua and Rebecca Fine, Kelly and Nicholas DiMascio, and Cassandra, Michael, and Andrew Corbett. He was the great uncle of Abigail and Ethan Lacasse and Joshua and Andrew Amoruso.

 

At John’s request, a Celebration of Life will be held on Saturday, March 23rd, 2013 at 4:00 PM at The Kittansett Club, 11 Point Road, Marion, MA. Family and friends are welcome to attend and share remembrances of John at this time. In lieu of flowers and Mass cards, donations may be made to the John F. McGrath Memorial Fund, P.O. Box 226, Mattapoisett, MA 02739.

Easter at Plumb Corner

Come celebrate Easter at Plumb Corner on Saturday, March 30 at 10am. No need to bring your own baskets, bags will be provided to decorate for the Easter egg hunt. Hayrides will be at 11am and there will be prizes, cookie decorating, and face painting.

Movie Night Fundraiser

St. Anthony’s Parish in Mattapoisett will host a “Pizza and Movie Night” on Saturday, March 23, from 6:00 to 8:30pm.  All proceeds will be used to offset costs for a group of tri-town fathers and their teenage children that will be volunteering at an orphanage in Diego Martin, Trinidad over the April School Vacation.  The night promises to be a great time as all are invited to watch the movie, “Brave”, in the newly renovated Parish Hall.  Pizza, popcorn, and soda will be served—with ice cream to top off the meal! Admission is $10/adult, $5/child, or $25/family. Tickets are available at the door or can be purchased, in advance, by contacting Erik Dyson 508-758-4717.

‘Fancy Pants’ & Summer Sports Gear Sale

The SouthCoast Children’s Chorus will host a “Fancy Pants” and Summer Sports Gear Sale on Saturday, April 6 at St. Gabriel’s Church, 142 Front Street in Marion. The clothing sale will feature gently worn dressy clothes for girls and boys, baseball, softball and lacrosse equipment and other summer sports gear, such as rollerblades, boogie boards and rash guards.  All items will be priced under $20. The sale will run from 10:00 a.m. – 2:00 p.m., alongside a bake sale. All proceeds will benefit the SouthCoast Children’s Chorus.

Afternoon of Poetry

The Friends of the Mattapoisett Library’s annual Afternoon of Poetry will be held on Saturday, April 27, from 2:00 to 4:00 at the Mattapoisett Free Public Library. Guests this year are Grey Held, Alexis Ivy and Margot Wizansky.

Grey Held holds a BS from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and an MFA from Temple University. He is a recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship in Creative Writing and has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize. His first book, Two-Star General, was published by Brick Road Poetry Press. His second book, Spilled Milk, is being published by Word Press. His poem “Vending Machine” was set to music by Paul Carey and has been performed by a cappella groups all over the country. He has led poetry writing workshops for prisoners in the Northeastern Correctional Center in Concord, has lectured in art and design at Ohio State University, and is currently director of client services at a research firm in Cambridge. He and his wife live in Newton, where they have raised two sons.

Alexis Ivy is a student of Literature at Harvard University’s Extension School and works at the family wallpaper business in the bookmaking department located on the South Shore.  Her recent work has appeared in Spare Change News, The Dos Passos Review, Tar River Poetry, Licking River Review, J Journal, among others. Her first book entitled Romance with Small-Time Crooks has just been published by BlazeVox Books and is literally hot off the press.

Margot Wizansky is an artist, poet and social worker. She and her husband founded a business developing and managing households for adults with disabilities. Her poems have appeared in many journals such as Poetry East, Lumina, Tar River Poetry, and in several anthologies, including Beyond Forgetting: Poetry and Prose about Alzheimer’s Disease. She has a poem forthcoming in the Cancer Poetry Project’s second anthology. She edited two anthologies: Mercy of Tides: Poems for a Beach House, 2003, and Rough Places Plain: Poems of the Mountains, 2006. In 2008, she won the Writers @ Work Poetry Fellowship competition, and in 2010, the Patricia Dobler Poetry Prize, to travel and write in Ireland with the Carlow University MFA program. She also transcribed an oral history: Don’t Look Them In The Eye: Love, Life, and Jim Crow, the story of Emerson Stamps, grandson of slaves, told in his prose and her poems.

Take some time to add some poetry to your life with the Friends. Books will be available for purchase and signing, and refreshments will be served.

Officials Meet With Tabor Head of School

During the February blizzard, Marion Town Administrator Paul Dawson faced a big problem: Fire, police, and other crews had been working for upward of 36 hours without food, and as conditions worsened to the point of near shutdown across the community, local restaurant options dwindled to zero. Then, he got an idea. He decided to call the recently installed Head of Schools at Tabor Academy, John Quirk.

“Since it’s a boarding school, they had students to feed, and John had offered a couple of times to help in case anything came up during the storm,” Dawson remembers. More than 75 percent of Tabor’s nearly 500 students live on campus. “So, I decided to take him up on it. I said, ‘Here’s my dilemma; is there anything you can do?’ He told us to bring everybody over during the students’ dinner hour for a hot meal, and he opened up the male and female locker rooms so that personnel could shower. It was just really good teamwork there.”

At last week’s first official meet-and-greet between the Marion Board of Selectmen and the new Tabor Head of School, who started his tenure in July of 2012, Dawson recalled this story as an example of “wide-open lines of communication,” which emerged as the dominant theme of the session.

“When in doubt, I want you to feel like you can pick up the phone any time,” Quirk said. “My family moved to Marion for Tabor, but we also moved to Marion to be a part of the town. I hope residents will see in me an investment in that partnership.”

Marion Selectmen Chair Stephen Cushing, Vice-Chair John Henry, and Clerk Jonathan Dickerson all expressed a desire for such meetings to take place on a recurring schedule.

“This can’t be done too often,” said Henry, who is up for re-election in May.

Dickerson agreed. “When you think of Tabor, you think of Marion, and when you think of Marion, you think of Tabor,” he said.

Officials referenced land-use litigation between Marion and Tabor as an example of a communications breakdown, which escalated in recent years when the school undertook construction on new athletic facilities even as the town denied zoning permits.

A judge in Boston ruled in June of 2012 that the school overreached when trying to build certain features of the facilities without permits, but was otherwise not subject to site plan review for the new field itself. The case remains in land court, but Dawson said that the parties hope for amicable resolution in the near future, with Tabor already having agreed to fund an engineering study on the potential impact of the track’s synthetic crumb-rubber surface on the Sippican Harbor.

Although Quirk was not involved in the most contentious stages of those proceedings, he said he does see several lessons in what has transpired between the entities.

“The better work and business go, the better you get to know people,” said Quirk, who succeeded Jay Stroud after the latter’s 24 years as Head of School. “I will be looking at growth and development in the context of how it fits into the town’s needs.

“I say this not in my capacity as a decision-maker, but in my capacity as an educator: Our focus will not be on getting bigger, but on getting better,” Quirk continued. “We need to think about our place on the water in terms of maintenance, aesthetics, and sustainability. There’s a lot to it. I like living in a town where people spend time thinking about the health, safety, environment, and aesthetics of a community. You want to live in a town where people are civically minded.”

By Shawn Badgley

From Left to right: Marion Selectmen Chair Stephen Cushing, Clerk Jonathan Dickerson, Vice-Chair John Henry, and Tabor Head of School John Quirk

To Be or Not to Be Prey

As horrifying and unbelievable as it may seem, break-ins during the day have increased over the years in and around Mattapoisett. I once heard a self-defense expert say that “you don’t hunt for deer in the city, meaning predators go where the prey is.” Mattapoisett homes have become prey to the bad guys. This past week, a police officer knocked on our door inquiring if we had seen or heard anything suspicious in our neighborhood. My reaction was, “Oh no, not another break-in!” Yes, a house across the street had been robbed. That makes three break-ins in less than a year less than an eighth of a mile from our front door; too close for comfort.

Our neighbors, the Booths, had been robbed. “I came home around 5:30 pm and noticed the slider door was ajar,” said Joseph Booth. He then went to find that his iPad was missing from the charger.

“I’m angry,” Booth declared. “How dare they come into my home, my sanctuary and take my belongings!” That sense of outrage will take some time to abate.

The neighbor contiguous to his property experienced a near miss last November. Cheryl Zeppenfeld told me, “I came home from work and there was a car in my driveway.” That car was waiting for a male who saw Zeppenfeld arrive and ran to the waiting car. The assailants got away before she could get a look at the registration number or get a description of the car. Although she reported the incident, there was little the police could do.

Most of these robberies are fueled by drugs and the need for cash. As sad as these individuals may be, their illegal activities leave behind a host of misery that spreads out, impacting surrounding families.

“I feel unsafe in a lovely neighborhood,” remarked Karen LaBonte.

“No matter what you do, you can never feel really safe,” stated Barbara Belanger. Belanger said security systems were alright, “but those can be breached, crooks know how to disarm [them].” And although both LaBonte and Belanger haven’t been directly impacted by crime, they have been affected by it. Their sense of wellbeing in this bucolic seaside village has been shaken.

They asked the same question I have: “What can we do?”

Captain Days of the Mattapoisett Police Department offered a few tips and insights when I spoke to him. First and foremost, “be aware.”

Days said, “People need to be more diligent if they suspect something. You shouldn’t be afraid to call the police if you think a person or car doesn’t belong in your neighborhood or in someone’s driveway. Don’t wait; call the police right away with as much detail as possible. Don’t approach the person or car yourself.”

He went on to say that getting a good description of a person’s clothing, gender, physical attributes, or a car’s plate number and description is critical to the police tracking down suspects.

“We want to look for the best in people so we may not think that a healthy well-groomed young person is really a criminal … Some of these people are new to drugs,” Days continued. “They may not appear hardened or sick from their addictions.” Male, female, teenage, middle-age, clean cut, average appearance, just plain ordinary-looking people may be criminals.

“They can work in pairs or groups,” Days shared. Armed with a cell phone and tools of the trade, the burglar gains entrance to the home, grabs small valuable items such as electronics, cash, jewelry, and yes, prescription drugs, then calls the gang members to get picked up. They are in and out of the neighborhood with stealth and speed.

“Don’t worry about being wrong. Don’t wait to call the police,” Days said. “It doesn’t do us much good if someone calls nine-one-one 30 minutes after seeing something that sets off their internal alarm.” Call immediately.

“It was the furthest thing from our minds,” said Charlotte Bellando. Living in a neighboring community, Bellando is a victim of a break-in. “We didn’t even realize we had been robbed until we went into the bedroom.” That was when her husband noticed a pillowcase was missing. “They used my pillowcase to carry my belongings out of my house!” she exclaimed. For the Bellandos, the ending was rather good. Most of their possessions were recovered when the criminals were apprehended. Many times, even when the perpetrators are caught, the stolen merchandise is long gone.

Days pointed out, “Some of these people have never been arrested before. Their fingerprints won’t be on file.” In the absence of useful fingerprint matches or witnesses, finding the burglars can be frustratingly difficult.

For the Belangers and the LaBontes, looking out for one another has now become part of the fabric of their lives. “I’ve always been careful to watch for people I don’t recognize being in our neighborhood,” LaBonte said. Now she’ll be even more proactive.

Belanger said, “Telling neighbors when you’ll be away is important. We can watch out for each other.”

Retired Fire Chief Paul Coderre believes, “A person could be totally innocent, or casing your house. Take nothing for granted.”

At the end of the day, no one wants to live in fear. But we all must take responsibility for being aware of our surroundings and the people therein. Days offered some final advice, “If someone stops you for directions, beware. Even the crooks have a GPS; they don’t need to get directions from you.”

Also, Days stressed that if someone breaks into your home while you are there, “get out of the house if you can and call nine-one-one.” If you can’t escape the house, hide with your phone and call nine-one-one. “Your address will show up in the station if you are calling from your land line.”

Simply being more aware and more diligent won’t stop the bad guys from invading our community. It will however, make us feel a bit more empowered and certainly will aid the police in their work protecting us and our homes. When stripped of a sense of confidence that you live in a place where nothing bad can happen, most of us will take empowerment over feeling like prey.

By Marilou Newell

Marion Community Garden Seeks Volunteers

Come get your hands dirty. That’s what Diane Cook would like you to do on Saturday, April 27 from 9:00 am until 3:00 pm at the Sippican School Community Garden.

The garden is located in the rear of the school, along the music wing, off of Park Street. Cook is looking for volunteers to help rebuild the garden beds damaged by a snowplow, help pull weeds, reseed a small lawn area, clean out and organize the tool shed, apply garden cloth, build two compost frames and remove two trees that are blocking needed sunlight.

Cook, a retired Sippican School teacher, has been working in the garden since its creation. Lisa Durr, Stacey Soucy-Perry and Cook came up with the idea to tie gardening into the school curriculum in 2005. Over time, many children, parents and community members have put time in to keep it flourishing. Local landscapers donate wood chips and a local hardware store donates lumber for the beds.

“Each year, we improve it … one year we built a tool shed and another year we put a fence around it,” said Cook. Other improvements include building garden beds, creating a compost area and putting a gutter system on the shed with a rain-barrel beneath to provide for watering. Salad waste from the cafeteria goes into the compost bin.

“The children at the school learn so much about bee pollination, how flowers and vegetables grow and where their food really comes from,” said Cook.

The garden is well-organized with an herb area, flowers, strawberry patch, pumpkin patch, blueberry bush and a butterfly garden. Vegetables grown include beets, carrots, tomatoes, Swiss chard, onions, potatoes, two kinds of squash, zucchini, cucumbers, corn, horseradish, green beans and peas. There is a small area for sunflowers. Herbs grown include basil, rosemary, marjoram, sage, thyme, mint and chives.

The garden is organic, with no chemicals or pesticides used. Compost donated from a Rochester organic farm helps keep the soil rich, and heirloom seeds are used when available.

In the summer, an eight-week course is offered in gardening and children spend a couple of hours a day in the garden harvesting, observing and learning. Field trips to local farms provide insight on how gardening and agriculture tie together.

“We welcome anyone to come and pull weeds, pick beans and help out in any way,” said Cook. For more information, contact Diane Cook, Garden Coordinator at 508-748-2779.

By Joan Hartnett-Barry

Honor Bowl at ORRHS

On Wednesday, March 6, the ORRHS Media Room held a triple meet Honor Bowl for Old Rochester, Fairhaven, and Greater New Bedford Regional Vocational Technical high schools. The Honor Bowl is an academic trivia competition where teams are asked a series of questions anywhere from literature to math to sizes of the planets.

The teams are made up of eight members from the respective schools’ National Honor Society. ORR’s team was comprised of Callum Mcloughlin, Nick Johnson, Luke Mattar, Joshua Bardwell, Fred Murolo, Edward Costa, Hannah Walsh, and Abby Robinson, with Rebecca Johnson the scorekeeper. Four members compete at a time over the course of the meet. When there is 15 minutes left in a meet, teams are allowed (but not required) to substitute in for fresh players.

Students were chosen for ORR’s team by having any students from Honor Society who were interested in competing write their name down. From that list, students were chosen at random.

Although only eight students could compete, all National Honor Society members were encouraged by Mrs. Morrell to look at the Honor Bowl as an in-school field trip. Members were allowed to go support the competitors over the course of the day. Some members came and went so as not to miss a quiz or important class while others stayed for all three meets. The meets ran from 10:00 am to around 12:45 pm, with a pizza lunch and student-run tours afterward.

The first meet of the day, Old Rochester/Fairhaven, saw ORR take an early lead. After about 20 minutes, Fairhaven pulled ahead for an 85-40 lead. At the subbing point, Old Rochester chose to swap out the entire team while Fairhaven substituted only one individual. At the end of the meet, ORR prevailed 120 to 85.

The second meet was Old Rochester/Greater New Bedford. Greater New Bedford took the early points. The two teams grappled for the lead with Greater New Bedford eventually taking the win 120 to 90. ORR swapped out their entire team while Greater New Bedford, like Fairhaven, only swapped out individuals.

The last meet of the day showcased Fairhaven/Greater New Bedford. Each swapped out minimal players with Greater New Bedford keeping the lead right up to the end, winning 230 to 90.

By Jessica Correia