Mother’s Day 5K Photo Gallery

Check out these shots from the 6th Annual Tiara Mother’s Day 5K Road Race! Such a great turnout for the event!

Republican Town Committee

The next Rochester Republican Town Committee Meeting will be held Saturday, June 2, 2012 at 9:30an at the Underhill’s. Public welcome, for info call 508-763-5001

Singing Our Dreams

The SouthCoast Children’s Chorus presents its Spring Concert ~ Singing Our Dreams ~ on Sunday, May 20 at 4:00 pm at St. Gabriel’s Episcopal Church, 124 Front St. in Marion. Directed by Leslie Piper and accompanied by Joyce Jacobsen, the Chorus is comprised of 46 young singers from the communities of Westport, Dartmouth, Fairhaven, Rochester, Marion, Mattapoisett, New Bedford and Cuttyhunk Island. Informal auditions for our 2012-2013 season will be held immediately after the performance. For more information, contact the director at lesliepiper@msn.com.

Calling All Tri-Town Area Veterans

Members of the Rochester Women’s Club are calling all area veterans to a Meet and Greet event on Saturday, May 19th, Armed Forces Day, from 9 a.m. to noon at the clubhouse, 37 Marion Road, Rochester Center.

A continental breakfast will be served.  Prizes, based on a wide variety of criteria, will be awarded throughout the morning. Veterans are invited to drop in whenever it is convenient.   Uniforms are encouraged.  Let us salute you.  It is an honor and a privilege to do so.

Marion Residents Clean Up Town

On Saturday, May 12, the Marion Trees and Parks Committee held the annual Marion Town Clean-Up.  Residents met Music Hall, donned their “safety green” vests or neon pink t-shirts, and dispersed around town, picking up garbage and recyclable materials from the roadsides.

“We’ve been doing this for 15 years,” said Tinker Saltonstall, who is on the Trees and Parks Committee.  “It’s really wonderful. So many people in town sponsor the clean-up every year.  This time around, we managed to get child-sized safety vests for the younger ones who want to help,” she said.

Resident Jay Pateakos, who helps run Cub Scout Pack 32, encouraged his scouts to take part in the clean-up in order to accrue hours to earn their environmental merit badge.

“It’s important to see what litter does to a small town and I hope that they can get good habits out of it,” he said.

Students from Tabor Academy also jumped in to help.  Out on Point Road near Route 6, sophomores Nate Shapiro and Stephen Hall joined some of their classmates in the effort.

“I feel like it’s a good thing to do, to build a strong community,” said Shapiro, who is from Bolton, Mass.

“I don’t get why people throw trash out onto the road. I’d never do that,” said Hall, a Sandwich native.

The Clean-Up was co-sponsored by the Gifts to Give organization, which collected donations of clothes, shoes, toys, and books, to be distributed to needy families around the South Coast.

By Eric Tripoli 

Power Outage Update

NSTAR is reporting that on May 11 at  12:25pm a power cable failure in the area of Industrial Drive in Mattapoisett caused an outage for approximately 5,000 customers in Marion, Mattapoisett and Fairhaven. Within twenty minutes they were able to restore power to all but 500 customers by rerouting. The remaining customers are expected to have power back by 2:30pm.

Robert T. Grant

Robert T. Grant of Marion passed away on May 8, 2012 in Bourne, Massachusetts. He was born in Somerville, Massachusetts on January 24, 1930 to Edward Grant and Margaret V. (Conlon) Grant of Cambridge.

Bob was a graduate of Cambridge Rindge and Latin High School where he played goalie on the hockey team. After graduation he enlisted in the U.S. Army. He went through basic training and mountain training in Hawaii and was assigned to an armored division in Kentucky. He was proud of his military service and served for over thirty years in the Army Reserve before retiring with the rank of Lt. Colonel.

After graduating from Northeastern University he taught for a few years at Silver Lake Regional High School in Kingston, MA. It was at Silver Lake that he met his wife Doris Taber Grant. They were married in Bridgewater on October 20, 1960.

Bob took a teaching job at Melrose High School and he and Doris moved to Peabody to raise a family. He enjoyed his tenure at Melrose High School where he was head of the Mathematics Department. He dearly loved being the Melrose High School swim coach and put his heart and soul into helping build that program. He was a member of several state championship teams and was inducted into the high school coaches? Hall of Fame.

Kindness and patience were his hallmarks. Stories and jokes were his specialty. His life was one of devotion to his wife, children, and students. He was truly loved by all who knew him and will be missed beyond measure. If he were here today he would put his hand on our shoulder and say, “Keep the faith, the sun will rise tomorrow.”

He is survived by his wife Doris; his children Steven T. Grant, David R. Grant and his wife Kiyomi, and Laurie Grant Hurley and her husband Thomas; and his grandchildren, Katharine Tullis Grant, Ian H. Grant, Kai T. Grant, Mia H. Hurley, and Chloe M. Hurley.

A Funeral Mass will be held held on Monday May 14, 2012 at 10am at the St. Rita’s Church, Marion. Burial with military honors followed in Evergreen Cemetery. Arrangements were by the Saunders-Dwyer Mattapoisett Home for Funerals, 50 County Rd., Route 6, Mattapoisett.

Adult Soccer Team Forming in Rochester

There’s no doubting that some forms of exercise are painful, dreadful and just down right boring, especially with age. But there’s one local Rochester resident who is looking to show adults that exercising can be fun.

“I’ve been a member of a gym for years and years, and I cannot stand working out in an artificial environment,” said 45-year-old Colleen Campbell.

Campbell, a lifelong soccer player, is looking to start an adult-only soccer group for residents of all communities. The inaugural meeting will be held on Saturday, May 12 at 10:30 am at Dexter Field in Rochester.

If all goes well, the group will meet weekly on Saturday mornings from now through October.

“I’m trying to get various people together, both males and females, who want to play casual soccer,” said Campbell.  “Adults don’t get enough chances to exercise outside of the gym. Your body changes a lot when you’re 40, so you have to stay in shape.”

The focus of the team will not be on skill, but rather social interaction and exercise. The group is also free of charge.

“Soccer is much more enjoyable and you’re distracted from the agony of the exercise when there’s a social component to it.,” Campbell said.  “It’s going to be really easy going soccer. The real focus is to get adults back to having fun like when we were kids.”

For more information on the soccer team, contact Colleen Campbell at 508-269-1746.

By Katy Fitzpatrick

Mattapoisett Native Recognized for Service

She has worked in settings as diverse as the most state-of-the-art children’s hospitals in Boston to very poor clinics in South Africa. But whatever context she works in, Camille Adler’s dedication to helping children adjust to hospital life remains a constant.

Recently Adler – a Mattapoisett native on the verge of finishing her Bachelor’s degree – was recognized as a service leader at her school, Wheelock College.

Adler is graduating this weekend with a bachelor’s degree in Human Development with a focus in Children, Families and Culture and a professional major in Child Life, a new occupation developed over the past few decades to help “ease [families] into the experience of being in a hospital.”

“You basically work in a pediatric medical setting with families and help them adjust and prepare for procedures,” which entails programming activities for children to familiarize them with equipment and make the hospital experience more positive – she said.

For three months last summer, Adler served as a Child Life intern in the Red Cross War Memorial Children’s Hospital in Cape Town, South Africa. She worked directly with children as part of the pain management team and assisted in the burn unit dressing children’s wounds and engaging children in therapeutic play and coping techniques. She worked daily 7:00 am to 4:00 pm every day, except weekends.

“It was absolutely amazing and memorable,” Adler recalled.

Every other Tuesday, Adler traveled with doctors to townships, poorer and more remote areas in South Africa, where she volunteered setting up mobile clinics.

“You’d see shacks on top of each other. Certainly I hadn’t been anywhere like that before, but [being there] was one of my favorite parts,” she said. “You’d see people in their own element and their first impression of healthcare, and you’d see the first time some kids were getting healthcare.”

Adler said families with sick children would “go into a tiny room for hours and hours for hours to see a volunteer doctor.” Unlike hospitals in the United States, she said electronic communications was nonexistent and even basic record management was rare

Although she said she did not witness serious health complications, the doctors often would transport patients needing more extensive help in their own cars to the city hospital.

“You never knew who was going to come into room next,” she said.

Adler did say some of Cape Town’s hospitals were more technologically advanced, especially the surgical suites, and that the city attracts medical professionals for its renowned programs. However, resources still can fall short.

“Everybody is understaffed, underpaid, and under resourced. It puts a lot of stress on everybody,” Adler said.

In this environment, she said even the occasional language barrier or other restrictions did not hinder her ability to bond with the children.

“One of patients I had best relationship with was hard of hearing. We had the strongest relationship just playing,” she said, commenting that connecting with children often was easier than communicating with the adults. “It really showed the universal language of play.”

Coming back to the United States, Adler entered into a “very different” world where hospital resources are much more abundant. She interned at Boston Children’s Hospital in the oncology department.  In addition to her studies and internship, she also is actively involved in the Jumpstart program, a preschool reading program and with her social sciences honor society, Pi Gamma Mu.

Looking to the future, Adler is hoping to work and possibly take some graduate courses.

“I could see going into bereavement or child psychology,” she said of her future, but ultimately, “I want to do something I’m really passionate about.”

By Laura Fedak Pedulli

Marion Artist Featured in South Shore Exhibit

Nancy Dyer Mitton of Marion, MA is one of 38 painters and sculptors from across the USA in the exhibition “Galvanized Truth: A Tribute to George Nick” at the Art Complex Museum in Duxbury.  The opening reception will be held on Sunday, May 20, from 1:30 to 3:30 pm at 189 Alden St.

George Nick is nationally recognized as a leading realist painter. His work is included in the collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, the Hirshhorn Museum and the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington D.C., as well as many others.

Mr. Nick taught at the Massachusetts College of Art in Boston from 1969 to 1994. Over the years, George Nick has remained interested in his students’ progress. He will often attend their gallery openings or participate in shows they curate. His generosity, inspiration and spirit of giving is unmatched.

Guest curator, Kim Alemian, is a friend and former student of George Nick. Out of gratitude and love she began her search of Mr. Nick’s colleagues and former students that he has kept in touch with over the years, working artists who continue producing their art. Nancy Dyer Mitton of Marion, MA is one of the artists Kim Alemian contacted. The other participating artists are from throughout the USA and one from Israel.

“Galvanized Truth: A Tribute to George Nick” is at The Art Complex Museum located at 189 Alden Street, Duxbury, MA 02331. This exhibition continues through September 9. Hours are 1:00 to 4:00 pm, Wednesday through Sunday.

For more information contact Curator Kim Alemian at 781-383-9825 or cell: 617-250-2401 and visit www.artcomplex.org