03.12.2012 Views

September 20, 2012 pdf edition - Quaboag Current

September 20, 2012 pdf edition - Quaboag Current

September 20, 2012 pdf edition - Quaboag Current

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

The ONLY local coverage in Brookfield – West Brookfield – East Brookfield – North Brookfield – Warren – West Warren – New Braintree & Sturbridge<br />

Connect with us online<br />

<strong>Quaboag</strong> <strong>Current</strong><br />

Town Common<br />

Newspapers<br />

NEW BRAINTREE<br />

EQLT readies trail for fi rst<br />

Station Loop Ramble, p2<br />

WEST BROOKFIELD<br />

Local fi lmmaker<br />

rakes in awards, p6<br />

CURRENT<br />

EAST BROOKFIELD<br />

Connie Mack honored at<br />

weekend celebration, p11<br />

Calendar 2<br />

Editorial/Opinion 4<br />

Education 7/8<br />

Sports 12/13<br />

FREE<br />

Obituaries 14<br />

Police Logs 14<br />

Business 15<br />

Classifieds 19/22<br />

Volume 6, Number 5 – <strong>20</strong> Pages Thursday, <strong>September</strong> <strong>20</strong>, <strong>20</strong>12<br />

South Warren Cemetery gets new look<br />

TURLEY PUBLICATIONS PHOTO BY JENNIFER ROBERT<br />

Warren Historical Commissioners (pictured left to right) John Hathaway, Nora Cuddy, Dave Sexton, Clifford Fountain and Ted Buck stand with Jeffrey<br />

Michalski (pictured right) at the ceremony held to dedicate the new gates donated by funds from Micahlski’s <strong>20</strong>08 Eagle Scout service project.<br />

Town announces two<br />

new employees<br />

Williams moved to full-time fi refi ghter,<br />

Prokop hired as selectmen’s assistant<br />

- WARREN -<br />

By Jennifer Robert<br />

Reporter<br />

Tuesday night’s Board<br />

of Selectmen meeting<br />

brought the fulfi llment of<br />

two positions for the town.<br />

Interim Fire Department<br />

Chief Adam Lavoie was present<br />

with John Williams, a part-time<br />

Firefi ghter/EMT who Lavoie<br />

requested to make full-time on<br />

a temporary basis. Lavoie said<br />

that Williams is, “a tremendous<br />

-BROOKFIELD-<br />

By Jennifer Grybowski<br />

Turley Publications Reporter<br />

Stephanie Hurley’s passion<br />

for life will live on Saturday,<br />

Sept. 29 when the 2nd<br />

value to the department. Since<br />

he has been been on, he has<br />

taken a tremendous load...and<br />

is very skilled at what he does.”<br />

Lavoie also said that Williams<br />

has passed his EMT exam and<br />

is preparing for the fi refi ghter I<br />

and II exams. Promoting Williams<br />

to full-time, for a period to<br />

last until the permanent fi re chief<br />

is offi cially appointed, would be<br />

great for the department, said<br />

Lavoie. “Having him full-time,<br />

that would really allow us to not<br />

See EMPLOYEES I PAGE 10<br />

Annual Hurley’s Rockin’ Run to<br />

Remember is held at the Brookfi<br />

eld Rod & Gun Club at 55 Webber<br />

Rd., Brookfi eld.<br />

The two-mile walk begins at 10<br />

a.m. and the 5K run begins at 11<br />

a.m. After the races are over, there<br />

will be a chicken barbecue, with<br />

-NORTH BROOKFIELD-<br />

By Jennifer Grybowski<br />

Turley Publications Reporter<br />

Dan Kittredge is trying to<br />

change the way the world<br />

eats, and he’s starting<br />

right here in New England. The<br />

North Brookfi eld resident is the<br />

executive director of the Bionutrient<br />

Food Association, a 501(c)3<br />

whose mission is “Increasing<br />

Quality in the Food Supply.”<br />

Kittredge grew up on an organic<br />

farm in Barre and has been<br />

a professional organic farmer his<br />

whole life.<br />

Troop 142 Eagle Scout funds<br />

addition to historic site<br />

- WARREN -<br />

By Jennifer Robert<br />

Turley Publications Reporter<br />

In <strong>20</strong>08, Jeffery Michalski<br />

earned the rank of Eagle<br />

Scout with Troop 142 in Warren.<br />

Part of the trail to the distinguished<br />

award involves planning<br />

and completing a service project,<br />

including funding the project.<br />

Hosting a ham and bean supper,<br />

Michalski earned enough money<br />

to not only complete his project,<br />

which involved identifying, photographing<br />

and mapping the original<br />

granite markers of the town<br />

border, but also had excess funds<br />

which he generously donated to<br />

the Warren Historical Commission.<br />

Once the need for new gates<br />

at the South Warren Cemetery<br />

was established, completing the<br />

task was a rather long road. Dave<br />

Sexton, one of the commissioners<br />

of the Historical Commission,<br />

“When I got married, I realized<br />

I needed to do a better job or I’d<br />

be working all the time because<br />

my plants were not as healthy as<br />

they could be,” he said.<br />

So he accessed the best information<br />

he could fi nd by taking<br />

courses, reading books, doing research<br />

and taking advantage of his<br />

relationships with different nonprofi<br />

ts. He began to understand<br />

the biological systems and how to<br />

make his crops as healthy as possible.<br />

And he began sharing that<br />

knowledge with other farmers.<br />

“There are a series of best practices<br />

that are drawn from an understanding<br />

of what makes the<br />

soil/plant ecosystem work,” he said.<br />

“Basically what are the series of<br />

factors that are keeping plants from<br />

realizing their full potential?”<br />

Michalski ceremoniously opens the new gates<br />

for the fi rst time.<br />

searched for gates that would be<br />

appropriate for the period of the<br />

cemetery and within the budget.<br />

He was able to acquire the new<br />

Farmer stresses quality over quantity<br />

Bionutrient food<br />

movement growing<br />

chicken donated by Abair Farms,<br />

children’s games, pie eating contest,<br />

face painting, live music by<br />

‘The Big Guns’ and ‘Missing Faculties,’<br />

silent auction, raffl es and<br />

more at the club.<br />

2LT Stephanie M. Hurley, a<br />

Brookfi eld native and <strong>20</strong>03 graduate<br />

of Tantasqua Regional High<br />

School, passed away unexpect-<br />

edly on July 29, <strong>20</strong>08 at the age<br />

of 23 while stationed in Austin,<br />

Texas.<br />

From a young age, Stephanie<br />

always showed a vested interest<br />

in animals and horse-back riding,<br />

beginning riding at age 3 and later<br />

working for 4H. Stephanie developed<br />

an interest in the fi eld of<br />

criminal justice, which eventually<br />

He called these methods a<br />

“pretty basic primer” in how to<br />

grow crops. However Kittredge<br />

said many farmers just aren’t<br />

aware of these methods.<br />

“As someone who grew up on<br />

an organic farm and had close relationships<br />

with leaders in the organic<br />

movement, ignorance is the<br />

biggest issue,” he said. “It’s just<br />

sheer not knowing.”<br />

Part of that ignorance, he said,<br />

is the way farming is taught in agricultural<br />

school.<br />

“The analysis they present is<br />

pretty much chemistry model,” he<br />

said. “That’s just not how plants<br />

work in nature. The comprehensive<br />

perspective and understanding<br />

of living systems is where peo-<br />

Hurley’s Rockin’ Run to Remember to be held Sept. 29<br />

Proceeds to fund Tantasqua scholarships<br />

See CEMETERY I PAGE 10<br />

See BIONUTRIENT I PAGE <strong>20</strong><br />

led her to join the Army National<br />

Guard. At the beginning of her<br />

junior year she received a twoyear<br />

Guaranteed Reserve Forces<br />

Duty scholarship (GRFD) from<br />

the Army. Stephanie commissioned<br />

as a 2nd Lieutenant into<br />

the Army National Guard and as<br />

See RUN I PAGE 10


PAGE 2 A Turley Publication • www.turley.com I Thursday, <strong>September</strong> <strong>20</strong>, <strong>20</strong>12<br />

EQLT readies trail for fi rst Station Loop Ramble<br />

Trail improvements and maintenance worked by dedicated volunteers<br />

We Are Open Year Round! 9-5 In North Brookfield<br />

Brookfield Orchards<br />

Follow signs from Rts. 9, 31, 67 or 148<br />

HAPPY APPLE•<br />

By Jennifer Robert<br />

Turley Publications Reporter<br />

NEW BRAINTREE - Two miles of trail stretches<br />

from the former site of the New Braintree Train Station<br />

to Creamery Road in Hardwick, owned and maintained<br />

by the East Quabbin Land Trust. In <strong>20</strong>07, EQLT purchased<br />

a three point seven mile segment of trail, part of<br />

the Massachusetts Rail Trail, and has since been working<br />

diligently to make improvements to eventually allow<br />

the whole section to be open to the public. To raise<br />

awareness of this scenic and ecologically diverse segment<br />

of land and raise funds for its improvement and<br />

maintenance, the EQLT is preparing for its fi rst-ever<br />

Station Loop Ramble, a fi ve-mile foot race to be held<br />

Oct. 14 that combines rural countryside roads with the<br />

two miles of trail that is currently open for public enjoyment.<br />

The race will begin at the parking area where EQLT<br />

recently erected a kiosk a couple weeks back that offers<br />

information on the Trust and specifi cally, this trail area.<br />

The runner will head down West Road, take a Right<br />

onto Unitus, go over the hill onto Creamery Road in<br />

Hardwick, and then complete the last one point eight<br />

miles on the Rail Trail before crossing the fi nish line<br />

back at the parking area. Each mile of the race will<br />

be marked, and there will be a water stop at mid run.<br />

Entry fees are twenty dollars for adults, with a race Tshirt<br />

included, and ten dollars for children under thirteen.<br />

Young racers have the option of purchasing a shirt<br />

separately for fi ve dollars. While runners of any age<br />

may participate, children must be accompanied by an<br />

adult. There will be prizes awarded for the top overall<br />

fi nishers in both male and female categories, along with<br />

prizes for the top fi nisher in each category and one for<br />

the youngest participant.<br />

Along with the entry fee from racers, EQLT has<br />

sponsors who have contributed to the race including<br />

Rose 32 Bread, Country Bank, Hannaford Supermarket,<br />

Quabaug Corporation, R.N. Glidden Landscaping<br />

Services and Turley Publications. While there are some<br />

costs associated with having the race, any proceeds<br />

left over after these fees are covered will go to set up<br />

a Stewardship Fund for this land, assuring that money<br />

is available in the future for maintenance and improvements<br />

on the trail. “We need to put some more bedding<br />

in some spots on the trail, and there are general annual<br />

maintenance costs. Having resources for these things is<br />

very important,” said EQLT Executive Director Cynthia<br />

Henshaw.<br />

In order to gear up for the debut of this event, Henshaw<br />

and other volunteers spent Sept. 8 on the trail,<br />

making improvements. Opening the trail back up, widening<br />

it out and removing overhead debris that was<br />

APPLES<br />

Honey, Maple Syrup, Historic Maps,<br />

Cheddar Cheese, Recreation Area/Playground,<br />

Apple Pies & Dumplings (reg. & sweet ‘n low),<br />

Gifts, Antiques, Collectibles<br />

Sat., Sept. 22 & Sun., Sept. 23 Wibble & Friends 2-4<br />

Sat., Sept. 22 & Sun., Sept. 23 Happy Birthday North Brookfield<br />

<strong>20</strong>0th Anniversary 10-5 • Souvenirs will be sold<br />

Sat., Sept. 22 & Sun., Sept. 23 Grampa’s Kettle Korn 11-4<br />

Wagon Rides Sat. & Sun 1-4 (All Weather Permitting)<br />

SNACK BAR OPEN!!<br />

Hot Dogs • Chili • Cider • Baked Macaroni & Cheese<br />

Dumplings & Ice Cream<br />

508.867-6858 • 877.622.7555<br />

www.browsethebrookfields.com<br />

www.brookfieldorchardsonline.com<br />

Wales<br />

Irish Pub<br />

Music 8pm-12am<br />

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21ST • 8PM-12AM<br />

“MOOSE & THE HIGHTOPS”<br />

S UNDAY, SEPTEMBER 23RD • 3PM-7PM<br />

“COOPER JONES”<br />

CHECK US OUT ON FACEBOOK!<br />

413-245-9730<br />

16 Holland Road, Wales, MA<br />

John’s Barber Shop<br />

16 Central Street, North Brookfield<br />

508-867-2646<br />

HAIRSTYLING<br />

For Men<br />

JOHN & SANDY INGEMI<br />

TOM MILLIGAN<br />

Open Tues., Wed., Fri. 9:00-5:00<br />

Thurs. 9:00-7:00; Sat. 8:00-2:00<br />

Closed Mondays<br />

Stop By & See<br />

Our New Expansion<br />

TURLEY PUBLICATIONS PHOTO BY JENNIFER ROBERT<br />

Harry Webb removes low hanging branches to allow for safe passage on<br />

the trail.<br />

hanging low or in danger of breaking were the top priorities.<br />

The Ware River, that runs under the new bridge<br />

EQLT constructed, also was cleared of junk debris like<br />

the old bicycle and lawnmower that had nestled themselves<br />

in a downed oak tree. The bridge is a beautiful<br />

scenic spot along the trail. “Once you get to the bridge,<br />

you feel you are really far away from everything. You<br />

don’t realize how close you are to town there; it’s lovely,”<br />

said Caren Calijouw, EQLT member. Henshaw also set<br />

to work installing the remainder of the nuts and bolts to<br />

the curbing on the bridge. “The bridge has been done<br />

safely for foot traffi c,” she explained while seated on a<br />

lower trellis off the side of the bridge, “but there are<br />

some nuts and bolts that still need to go on the outside<br />

of the curbing. We want to be sure that there is ambulance<br />

access on the trail, and if an emergency vehicle<br />

comes over here, we want the curbing very secure. That<br />

is where their tires might bump and safety is very important,”<br />

she explained.<br />

Registration for the event will be held that morning<br />

from 8:30 to 9:30 a.m., or you can register by downloading<br />

an application from the website. For more information<br />

on this event or other upcoming EQLT events, visit<br />

www.eqlt.org.<br />

NOTICE<br />

ERRORS: Each advertiser is requested to check their advertisement<br />

the first time it appears. This paper will not be responsible for<br />

more than one corrected insertion, nor will be liable for any<br />

error in an advertisement to a greater extent than the cost of the<br />

Brookhaven Assisted Care<br />

19 West Main St, W. Brookfield, MA 01585<br />

Call Nancy B. 508-612-7525<br />

Nancy O. or Jen 508-867-3325<br />

Check out our website:<br />

brookhavenassistedcare.com<br />

YOUR LOCAL<br />

✓<br />

A weekly source to local happenings.<br />

Send all community calendar items to the editor<br />

at tkane@turley.com, or through regular mail at<br />

80 Main St., Ware, MA 01069. Final deadline for<br />

all calendar submissions is Friday at noon the week<br />

before intended publication.<br />

CURRENT EVENTS<br />

Compiled by Tim Kane<br />

tkane@turley.com<br />

THE WEEK AHEAD<br />

COME VISIT CAMP ROBINSON CRUSOE in Sturbridge on Thursday,<br />

Sept. <strong>20</strong> at 7 p.m. inside Joshua Hyde Library 306 Main St. Filmmaker<br />

Bruce Butcher with help from historian Bob Briere is creating<br />

a documentary about Camp Robinson Crusoe. He will give us a preview<br />

of his work. From 1932 until 1970, Camp Robinson Crusoe was<br />

a popular summer camp located on 400 acres here in Sturbridge.<br />

The Camp was extremely innovative for its time by being coed, noncompetitive<br />

and allowing a lot of freedom of choice. Come fi nd out<br />

more about a piece of Sturbridge history. Sponsored by the Friends<br />

of the Joshua Hyde Library. Refreshments will be served.<br />

QUABOAG COUNTRY CLUB IN MONSON is the site of a Golf fundraiser<br />

that will benefi t local and international projects of The Zonta<br />

Club of <strong>Quaboag</strong> Valley. The 18th annual event will be held on<br />

Saturday, Sept. 22, <strong>20</strong>12 with a 1 p.m. shotgun start, followed by<br />

picnic-style dinner. Men and women players of all levels are welcome<br />

at this fun event. Winners of the scramble will get valuable<br />

gifts, but every player will get to pick from an array of certifi cates<br />

and prizes donated by members, sponsors and local businesses.<br />

The cost of $60/person ($43 for QCC members) inlcudes greens<br />

fee, cart, food, prizes and a day of fun for a worthy cause! Registration<br />

forms are available online at zontaqv.org or by contacting<br />

Deb Wood: 413 323-5775 or DebWood197@charter.net.<br />

S.L.A.M. (STURBRIDGE LYME AWARENESS OF MA) will host its<br />

monthly “TICK TALK” on Saturday, Sept. 22 at 2 p.m. Informational<br />

meetings take place in the basement meeting room of the Joshua Hyde<br />

Library on Main Street. A negative Lyme test doesn’t mean you don’t<br />

have Lyme disease or another tick borne illness, learn the facts.<br />

FLEA MARKET AT STURBRIDGE WORSHIP CENTER 9 Mashapaug<br />

Road, Sturbridge on Saturday, Sept. 22 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.<br />

ROAST TURKEY DINNER (with all the fi xings) on Saturday, Sept.<br />

22at 6 p.m. inside George Whitefi eld United Methodist Church, 33<br />

West Main St., West Brookfi eld. Reservations, call 508-867-3002.<br />

Cost is $10 pp.<br />

THE <strong>20</strong>0TH NORTH BROOKFIELD ANNIVERSARY COMMITTEE<br />

will be out on Saturday and Sunday, Sept. 22 and 23 for the Brookfi<br />

eld Orchards’ “Pick-Your-Own” Days from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Afternoon<br />

Music, food and soft drinks will be available for purchase.<br />

Get Your <strong>20</strong>0th Anniversary Souvenirs before they are all gone.<br />

THE WEST BROOKFIELD COUNCIL ON AGING is welcoming the<br />

onset of the Fall Season with a Fall Fest celebration on Tuesday,<br />

Sept. 25, beginning at 10 a.m. featuring a Cookie Bake Sale, Lunch<br />

Social, Game Show conducted by a Game Master, Apple Dessert<br />

Contest and a few vendor tables. If that isn’t enough a Ham Dinner<br />

($10) will follow at 5 p.m. with vocalist Dave Colucci entertaining.<br />

Call now at (508) 867-1407 or stop by the West Brookfi eld Senior<br />

Center at 73 Central St., West Brookfi eld.<br />

space occupied by the item in the advertisement. See CALENDAR I PAGE 5<br />

AMHERST/OAKHAM<br />

AUTO RECYCLING, INC.<br />

USED AUTO PARTS<br />

*91 Day Guarantee*<br />

] Junk Car Removal r<br />

Free Parts, Locating Service<br />

i SAVE BIG! q<br />

SAVE 50% OVER RETAIL<br />

at<br />

Coldbrook Road<br />

Off 122 In Oakham<br />

882-5241 1-800-992-0441<br />

Over 45 years of service.<br />

24 hour care, medical<br />

management, RN on staff,<br />

assistance<br />

with activities of daily living,<br />

activity program and a<br />

well trained, compassionate<br />

and caring staff.<br />

Available in-house:<br />

Physician’s services,<br />

Pharmacy services, Podiatry<br />

services, VNA Nursing<br />

services, Hospice,<br />

Physical Therapy, X-ray,<br />

Lab, EKG, Geriatric-Psych<br />

services, Transportation<br />

available, Hairdresser/Barber<br />

PHONE<br />

413.967.3505<br />

Fax: 413.967.6009<br />

EMAIL<br />

Advertising Sales<br />

Jack Haesaert<br />

jhaesaert@turley.com<br />

Tim Mara<br />

tmara@turley.com<br />

Office Manager<br />

Pam Moen<br />

pmoen@turley.com<br />

Editor<br />

Tim Kane<br />

tkane@turley.com<br />

WEB<br />

www.quaboagcurrent.com<br />

www.tantasquatowncommon.com<br />

@<strong>Quaboag</strong><strong>Current</strong><br />

TownCommonNewspapers<br />

The <strong>Quaboag</strong> <strong>Current</strong> and Town Common<br />

newspapers are published by<br />

Turley Publications, Inc. • www.turley.com


Brookfi eld Board of Selectmen Notebook<br />

���������������������������<br />

-BROOKFIELD-<br />

By Jennifer Grybowski<br />

Turley Publications Reporter<br />

Burner Booster<br />

Crowley Fuel Owner Bob Lafl amme<br />

and Mark Brassard, territory sales manager<br />

with Nelson & Small, approached<br />

the board with a presentation about a<br />

burner booster for town furnaces.<br />

They presented a proposal for installing<br />

a new type of burner attachment in<br />

the town hall and in the EMT building<br />

using technology that has been around<br />

for about fi ve years. The burner can burn<br />

petroleum, but also biofuel or any combination<br />

thereof if such fuels become available<br />

and affordable in the future.<br />

“These burner boosters have been<br />

put into many commercial buildings and<br />

has given municipalities and large commercial<br />

entities a considerable savings,”<br />

Lafl amme said.<br />

Brassard said entities using these<br />

burner boosters typically see a 25 to 35<br />

percent reduction in consumption.<br />

“At $3-something per gallon, the savings<br />

could be signifi cant,” he said.<br />

A 15 percent reduction in oil costs<br />

are guaranteed by the company. They<br />

showed several examples of commonwealth<br />

departments using the technology<br />

and saving an average of 30 percent on<br />

their oil usage.<br />

Lafl amme said units would cost around<br />

$21,000 for both.<br />

“We’re calculating 30 percent savings<br />

which I think this town can achieve,” he<br />

said. “We calculate that within four years<br />

you’ll get your money back.”<br />

The booster is a modifi ed oil burner,<br />

ultra-high-pressure nozzle and pump.<br />

The way it works is it pre-heats oil so it<br />

is at a low viscosity. The device injects<br />

oil into the combustion chamber while<br />

elevating pressure turning the oil into<br />

more of a vapor or gas, rather than a mist,<br />

creating an environment that allows for a<br />

more complete burn of the oil. Installation<br />

takes under four hours. “These are<br />

plug and play,” Lafl amme said.<br />

The booster won’t replace the current<br />

burner – it uses the existing equipment.<br />

Other features Brassard pointed out<br />

are: The device helps to extend the life of<br />

the current equipment by reducing wear<br />

and tear; is portable and can be easily<br />

moved; reduces pollution by allowing for<br />

a more complete burn.<br />

Selectman Nicholas Thomo asked<br />

about maintenance of the device.<br />

Lafl amme said the maintenance would be<br />

the same as any burner – likely a yearly<br />

cleaning – and if there is a problem with<br />

the pump it can be changed out.<br />

Selectman Stephen Comtois and<br />

Thomo were both in favor of the project<br />

�������������������<br />

���������������<br />

���������������<br />

���������������<br />

���������������<br />

�������� �������� �������� ���������<br />

��������������������<br />

����������������������<br />

���������������������������<br />

���������������������������<br />

���������������������������������������������������<br />

���������������������������<br />

����������������������������������������������<br />

upon fi rst presentation. (Selectman Rudy<br />

Heller was not present at the meeting.)<br />

“I don’t think anyone can argue the<br />

return on investment isn’t there,” Comtois<br />

said.<br />

Selectmen decided to take the information<br />

under advisement and consider it<br />

when they get the report from the Municipal<br />

Facilities Planning Committee in<br />

a few short weeks.<br />

Appointments<br />

Donald Faugno was appointed to<br />

serve as moderator until the next election.<br />

<strong>Current</strong> Moderator William Frangiamore<br />

resigned because he is moving<br />

out of town. The town is in need of a<br />

constable and a water commissioner. For<br />

more information, contact Administrative<br />

Assistant Donna Neylon at 508-867-<br />

2930 X 10 or<br />

In other news<br />

Comtois announced that after a favorable<br />

vote on the Quabuag River Bridge<br />

project, the next step is for the state to go<br />

out to bid on the project. The town will be<br />

presented with 50 percent plans, and then<br />

75 percent plans, with public hearings attached<br />

to each presentation.<br />

Selectmen decided to change the<br />

date of the fall Special Town Meeting to<br />

Thursday, Nov. 1 at 7 p.m. at Brookfi eld<br />

Elementary School.<br />

Selectmen made a plan to meet with<br />

the town’s fi nancial team to discuss the<br />

town’s draft audit report. Comtois reported<br />

that the Offi ce of Dam Safety has authorized<br />

the town to waive Phase II of the<br />

Saw Mill Pond Dam project, effectively<br />

saving the town $10,000. Selectmen will<br />

meet with the project’s engineer next<br />

week to discuss what is next.<br />

Comtois reported that after a discussion<br />

with Tantasqua Regional Vocational/Technical<br />

High School Principal Mark<br />

Wood, the carpentry students will be unable<br />

to put a new roof on the fi re department.<br />

Comtois said he hoped they could<br />

do it in the spring instead.<br />

Comtois reported that the town received<br />

a letter in regards to an Open<br />

Meeting Law complaint fi led against the<br />

town by James Correia for a July 9 meeting<br />

at MassDOT offi ces. The letter, sent<br />

by the state Attorney’s General’s offi ce<br />

Division of Open Government, states “a<br />

complaint is ripe for review by our offi<br />

ce when the complainant fi les a copy of<br />

the initial complaint with the Division of<br />

Open Government, provided that at least<br />

30 days have passed since that complaint<br />

was fi led with the public body…Our<br />

offi ce currently has no record of a complaint<br />

fi led by you in this matter.” The<br />

letter goes on to say that the fi le will be<br />

closed unless a request for further review<br />

by the Correias is made by Oct. 31.<br />

New Braintree Library Friends Group set to meet<br />

NEW BRAINTREE - The Friends’<br />

Group of the New Braintree Library<br />

cordially invites the public to attend<br />

their next upcoming monthly meeting<br />

on Thursday, Sept. <strong>20</strong>, (changed from<br />

Thursday, Sept. 13), at 7 p.m. at the library.<br />

Attendance is strongly encouraged<br />

as the upcoming season and events<br />

will be discussed and planned. As this<br />

group becomes reenergized, they wel-<br />

come involvement and participation<br />

from anyone who cares about their local<br />

library.<br />

Meetings are once a month and posted<br />

in the local area publications. Residents<br />

of other towns are more than welcome to<br />

attend and become a part of this rejuvenated,<br />

worthwhile group. For more information,<br />

call Michele Salvadore at salvadorejme@aol.com<br />

or 508-867-3985.<br />

����������������� �������������<br />

A Turley Publication • www.turley.com I Thursday, <strong>September</strong> <strong>20</strong>, <strong>20</strong>12 PAGE 3<br />

AMERICAN LEGION REMEMBERS 9/11<br />

TURLEY PUBLICATIONS PHOTO BY JENNIFER ROBERT<br />

WEST BROOKFIELD - The fi ring squad, in the background of the soldier shadow, reminds us of those who<br />

fi ght to protect our freedoms, during the American Legion of West Brookfi eld Post 244 9/11 remembrance<br />

ceremony, under Commander Joe Messier. In attendance were emergency personnel from West Brookfi eld,<br />

the American Legion Firing Squad, the American Legion Auxiliary, Boy Scout Troop 118 of West Brookfi eld,<br />

State offi cials, Chaplains and residents of and local to the town.<br />

See more photos and story on our Facebook page this week.<br />

Classical vocalist, musician<br />

to perform at St. Anne’s<br />

STURBRIDGE - A Recital of Songs<br />

and Arias featuring the works of Mozart,<br />

Berlioz, Barber, Ravel, and Mahler performed<br />

by Cindy M. Vredeveld Mezzo-<br />

Soprano and Virginia Bailey on piano<br />

will be held Sept 30 at 3 p.m. inside St<br />

Joachim chapel at St. Anne/St. Patrick<br />

Parish. 16 Church Street, Fiskdale.<br />

Vredeveld has performed with several<br />

choral groups in the Boston area,<br />

including the New World Chorale and<br />

the Tanglewood Festival Chorus. She<br />

toured Europe in <strong>20</strong>01 and <strong>20</strong>07 with<br />

the Tanglewood Festival Chorus and<br />

the Boston Symphony Orchestra, and<br />

performed with the Chorus for the<br />

Opening Ceremonies of the 1998 Winter<br />

Olympics. In <strong>20</strong>02, she performed in<br />

Benjamin Britten’s opera Peter Grimes<br />

at the Saito Kinen Festival in Matsumoto,<br />

Japan.<br />

Since joining the Tanglewood Festival<br />

Chorus in 1995, Vredeveld has performed<br />

several solos with the Boston<br />

Symphony Orchestra and the Boston<br />

Pops Orchestra. These solo performances<br />

include Beethoven’s Choral Fantasy,<br />

Falla’s La Vida Breve, world premier<br />

performances of Bolcom’s Eighth Symphony<br />

(at Symphony Hall in Boston<br />

and Carnegie Hall in New York City),<br />

and most recently, Wagner’s Die Meistersinger<br />

von Nürnberg. She was the<br />

mezzo-soprano soloist for Copland’s In<br />

the Beginning, in performances with the<br />

Tanglewood Festival Chorus, at Tanglewood,<br />

and at the Schlesswig-Holstein<br />

Festival in Lübeck, Germany. Other<br />

FOR RENT<br />

Quabbin<br />

Estates<br />

41 Church Lane<br />

Wheelwright, MA 01094<br />

Accepting applications for<br />

immediate openings.<br />

Handicap accessible unit<br />

available.The apartment<br />

features - w/w carpeting,<br />

kitchen appliances, maintenance<br />

coverage, laundry<br />

facilities. We specialize in<br />

Senior Housing and “Barrier<br />

Free” accessible units.<br />

Rent is $615/mo. or 30% of<br />

adjusted income, whichever<br />

is greater. RD regulations.<br />

CALL FOR AN<br />

APPOINTMENT<br />

413-477-6496<br />

TDD (800)439-2379<br />

solo appearances include Haydn’s Creation,<br />

Handel’s Messiah, Mendelssohn’s<br />

Elijah, Beethoven’s 9th Symphony and<br />

Mass in C, Vivaldi’s Gloria and Mozart’s<br />

Requiem .<br />

Bailey is the director of instrumental<br />

music at Auburn High School. She<br />

received her Bachelor of Music degree<br />

from UMass Amherst in Music Education<br />

with concentrations in piano,<br />

French horn, and voice and her Master<br />

of Music degree from UConn Storrs in<br />

Music Education. An active freelance<br />

musician, Bailey is in demand as an accompanist<br />

for several regional theater,<br />

school, and choral groups as well as for<br />

various churches and the Central MA<br />

District choral festivals. She is also a<br />

member of the Tanglewood Festival<br />

Chorus, the chorus in residency with<br />

the Boston Symphony Orchestra and<br />

Boston Pops.<br />

With the TFC she has performed with<br />

such prestigious conductors as James<br />

Levine, John Oliver, Rafael Frühbeck<br />

de Burgos, Christoph von Dohnányi,<br />

Sir Colin Davis, and Keith Lockhart<br />

at venues including Symphony Hall in<br />

Boston, Tanglewood in Lenox MA, and<br />

Carnegie Hall in New York City. Bailey<br />

also continues her horn performance<br />

with the Brookfi eld Brass Quintet, various<br />

orchestras and wind ensembles, and<br />

for regional pit ensembles. She studies<br />

voice with Rochelle Bard and has studied<br />

horn with Jean Rife and conducting<br />

with James Patrick Miller, Steven Bodner,<br />

Charles Peltz, and Glen Adsit.<br />

Country Auto Body<br />

& Tire Center<br />

Featuring:<br />

Cooper, Hankook,<br />

Starfire &<br />

Runway Tires<br />

Hundreds in Stock<br />

Retail & Wholesale<br />

Full Auto Body<br />

Mechanical & Towing Service<br />

We Fill Propane<br />

www.countryautotirecenter.com<br />

69 Donovan Road, North Brookfield<br />

508-867-9736


PAGE 4 A Turley Publication • www.turley.com I Thursday, <strong>September</strong> <strong>20</strong>, <strong>20</strong>12<br />

- opinion -<br />

editorial<br />

The watershed<br />

belongs to all of us<br />

It’s important to note that as the <strong>Quaboag</strong><br />

Quacumquasit Lake Association moves forward<br />

with its welcomed campaign to reduce point-source<br />

pollution on North and South ponds by targeting Spencer’s<br />

Waste Water Treatment Plant, all of us will still<br />

have to play an important role in improving the quality<br />

of this critical Seven Mile River Watershed.<br />

It is well documented that effl uent fl owing into<br />

North Pond is the direct result of Spencer’s plant not<br />

being able to handle the incoming load during some<br />

storm events. Thus, plant runoff nutrient fl ows are<br />

negatively affecting both water bodies by feeding<br />

the creation of algae blooms and invasive species of<br />

plants and weeds. North Pond has been considered<br />

endangered for almost 10 years now by the state. On<br />

the surface level, the simple fact is the Department of<br />

Environmental Protection and federal Environmental<br />

Protection Agency absolutely need to set more<br />

stringent discharge requirements for Spencer’s plant,<br />

which is thankfully in the works.<br />

While we understand that upgrades to the plant<br />

could amount to millions of dollars, Spencer could potentially<br />

fi nd alternative solutions like Ware with its<br />

major commercial and industrial employers in town.<br />

Ware voters recently approved a measure to upgrade<br />

its aging sewerage plant by partnering with the town’s<br />

largest employer and major wastewater discharger,<br />

Kanzaki Specialty Papers, which kicked in millions of<br />

its own to help that effort.<br />

Beyond the Spencer plant’s own needs to upgrade<br />

and come in to compliance with a forthcoming new<br />

DEP permit review process, we need to recognize that<br />

nutrients come from other places as well, including the<br />

impact of boaters on these at-risk water bodies. Both<br />

North and South ponds are well-used fi shing and boating<br />

hot spots. And the summer cottages that line their<br />

shorelines are mostly on private septic systems, which<br />

can and do fail from time to time. You also have to<br />

factor in other non-point source pollution areas such<br />

as local and state road runoff, abutting farms rich in<br />

fi eld nutrients, and even the chemicals people dump<br />

on their lawns.<br />

All of this adds up to a process known as eutrophication,<br />

the most pervasive of water quality problems in<br />

ponds and lakes. Not surprisingly, we are directly responsible<br />

for two additional stresses on lakes: overuse<br />

and invasive species.<br />

Quabbin Reservoir did itself a huge favor a few<br />

years ago in limiting boating activity in critically sensitive<br />

areas and requiring licensed fi sherman to clean<br />

the bottom of their watercrafts before fl oating on the<br />

reservoir. The reservoir also now rents boats that are<br />

clean to avoid the threat of introducing invasive species.<br />

Many invasive plants, such as watermilfoil, spread<br />

by attaching to boat motors and trailers.<br />

Neither North nor South ponds have the resources<br />

to institute a boat monitoring system or bring every<br />

failed private septic system into compliance. However,<br />

it’s no secret that motorboats operating in shallow<br />

water stir up bottom sediments. This resuspends sediments,<br />

and releases nutrients back into the water. So<br />

boats and jet skis are external factors infl uencing the<br />

end game of the upstream nutrient release problem at<br />

the plant.<br />

If Spencer is going to have to upgrade its plant discharge<br />

protocols - and it absolutely should - we all need<br />

to upgrade our thinking about what impacts our local<br />

ponds in terms of recreational and living conditions.<br />

It’s all connected, but the watershed’s major source<br />

of lake pollution at the Spencer plant must be solved<br />

before the in-lake problems can even be addressed<br />

through possible dredging and chemical treatments.<br />

Letter to the Editor<br />

With heartfelt gratitude<br />

TO THE EDITOR:<br />

Again and again Hannaford Supermarket proves<br />

their commitment to the community; this summer they<br />

sponsored the 3rd annual Hearts for Heat Cookout to<br />

benefi t North Brookfi eld’s emergency fuel assistance<br />

program. Under the direction of store manager Dianne<br />

Lincoln, several staff donated their time to set up the<br />

tent, cook the dogs, and help make the fundraiser a huge<br />

success. Hannaford’s also provided a $50 gift basket of<br />

Inspiration products for the popular raffl e.<br />

The store’s contribution goes a long way in helping<br />

Things that gardeners can do to reduce mosquito exposure<br />

By Roberta McQuaid<br />

Columnist<br />

I<br />

spent some time this past week completing a research<br />

project on mosquitoes: their life cycles, habits<br />

and most importantly, their ability to transmit<br />

disease. Most of what I gleaned was incredibly interesting,<br />

and pertinent to those of us who enjoy outdoor activities,<br />

especially gardening. Let’s read on to learn what<br />

we can do to reduce our exposure to these potentially<br />

dangerous pests.<br />

In an effort to avoid the heat of the sun, I prefer to<br />

garden at dawn or dusk. Unfortunately, many mosquito<br />

species are on the prowl then. Researchers report that a<br />

good portion of them are drawn to dark colors. For that<br />

reason wear light-colored, loose-fi tting clothes when<br />

working in the garden. Long sleeves and long pants are<br />

a must. Use DEET or other repellents registered for<br />

mosquitos sparingly on all exposed areas of the body,<br />

avoiding the eyes and mouth, wounds and skin irritations.<br />

Follow the directions on the can especially when<br />

using on children. Women that are pregnant or nursing<br />

should avoid the product altogether. Also note how long<br />

protection will last based on the concentration you have<br />

chosen. Wash off the repellent once you come indoors.<br />

Over the years there have been many claims regarding<br />

certain scents or products that when used either<br />

cause us to be more or less attractive to mosquitoes.<br />

Garlic may repel vampires, but as far as mosquitoes go,<br />

the proof was not there. Folks that consumed alcohol,<br />

on the other hand, were indeed more appealing - as were<br />

those that ate limburger cheese. Mosquitoes are naturally<br />

drawn to fl oral scents - they consume plant nectar<br />

for food, but it is unproven whether scented shampoos<br />

or aftershaves and the like will cause you to be bitten<br />

more than your unscented counterpart.<br />

We can reduce mosquito populations in our home<br />

landscape quite easily by simply getting rid of anything<br />

that pools water for more than a few days. Why? Because<br />

the mosquito is dependent on water for its various<br />

life stages. After reading this, I assessed my own yard.<br />

The old galvanized wash tub that was never used as a<br />

planter had several inches of water in it, and some mosquito<br />

larvae to boot. I dumped it out. The over-turned<br />

kid’s pool had also accumulated water. It’s time to defl<br />

ate it and put it away for the season. What does your<br />

fi ll an all important fuel disbursement during the cold<br />

winter months. 100% of the proceeds from this event<br />

will be used to provide heat (oil, natural gas, propane,<br />

pellets, cordwood, or electricity) to qualifi ed North<br />

Brookfi eld residents during the <strong>20</strong>13 heating season.<br />

Hearts for Heat cannot thank Hannaford enough.<br />

Without their assistance with most every endeavor, our<br />

organization would be unable to help as many families.<br />

With heartfelt gratitude.<br />

Sue Lewandowski<br />

NB Hearts for Heat Founder and President<br />

yard contain? Buckets, tarps, plant saucers, neglected<br />

bird baths or other garden accents can all trap water.<br />

Double check your gutters, and clean them if necessary.<br />

Many of you will wonder: will my water garden breed<br />

mosquitoes? You will likely not have a problem if your<br />

water feature contains fi sh - they eat mosquito larvae.<br />

There is also some research that suggests small bodies of<br />

water draw dragonfl ies and damselfl ies. Both eat adult<br />

mosquitoes and dragonfl y larvae consume mosquito<br />

larvae as well. Bats and purple martins also have the<br />

reputation for eating large quantities of mosquitoes, but<br />

from my research I learned that in natural settings both<br />

are opportunistic feeders and all in all eat a variety of<br />

insects, a small percentage of them being mosquitoes.<br />

As homeowners, we should keep our lawns clipped to<br />

within 4 inches to remove resting grounds for mosquitoes,<br />

as well as reduce weedy vegetation from up against<br />

the house. Repair broken window screens as needed.<br />

Researchers are skeptical about bug zappers and ultrasonic<br />

devices; traps offer more hope, not as a sole means<br />

of control but for use in conjunction with other methods.<br />

For more information consult the American Mosquito<br />

Control Association at www.mosquito.org.<br />

This newspaper is published<br />

every Friday by Turley<br />

Publications, Inc., 24 Water<br />

St., Palmer, Mass. 01069.<br />

Telephone (413) 283-8393,<br />

Fax (413) 289-1977.<br />

PATRICK H. TURLEY<br />

Publisher<br />

KEITH TURLEY<br />

Executive Vice President<br />

DOUGLAS L. TURLEY<br />

Vice President of Publications<br />

EDITOR<br />

Tim Kane<br />

ADVERTISING SALES<br />

Jacky Haesaert, Tim Mara<br />

and Jeanne Bonsall<br />

SPORTS EDITOR<br />

Dave Forbes<br />

SOCIAL MEDIA<br />

@<strong>Quaboag</strong><strong>Current</strong><br />

TownCommonNewspapers<br />

WEB<br />

www.quaboagcurrent.com<br />

www.tantasquatowncommon.com<br />

www.turley.com<br />

Turley Publications, Inc. cannot<br />

assume liability for the loss of<br />

photographs or other materials<br />

submitted for publication.<br />

Materials will not be returned<br />

except upon specific request<br />

when submitted.<br />

OPINION PAGE/<br />

LETTERS<br />

POLICY<br />

Letters to the<br />

editor should<br />

be 250 words<br />

or less in length, and<br />

guest columns between<br />

500 and 800 words.<br />

No unsigned or anonymous<br />

opinions will be<br />

published. We require<br />

that the person submitting<br />

the opinion also<br />

include his or her town<br />

of residence and home<br />

telephone number. We<br />

authenticate authorship<br />

prior to publication.<br />

We reserve the<br />

right to edit or withhold<br />

any submissions<br />

deemed to be libelous,<br />

unsubstantiated allegations,<br />

personal attacks,<br />

or defamation of character.<br />

Send opinions to:<br />

Letters to the Editor,<br />

80 Main Street, Ware,<br />

MA 01082 OR e-mail<br />

to tkane@turley.com.<br />

Deadline for submission<br />

is Monday at<br />

noon for the following<br />

week’s <strong>edition</strong>.


Council On Aging Notebook<br />

Brookfi eld Council on Aging News<br />

BROOKFIELD - Brown Bag Lunch<br />

for Brookfi eld seniors are invited to a<br />

brown bag luncheon at the Brookfi eld<br />

Congregational Church Tuesday, October<br />

9 at 11:30 a.m. Cake will be served to<br />

celebrate October birthdays.<br />

The Medi Car service is available<br />

for a ride to Doctors appointments, call<br />

West Brookfi eld 508-867-1407. There is<br />

a need for drivers for this service, please<br />

call West Brookfi eld Senior Center if you<br />

are interested.<br />

Tai Chi still continues Tuesdays at<br />

8:30 a.m. in the Banquet Hall of the<br />

Brookfi eld Town Hall.<br />

If you wish to participate in the Foot<br />

Clinics with Dr. Quigley at the Brookfi<br />

eld Town Hall, please call Rikki La-<br />

Monda at 508-867-4578 for an appointment,<br />

please leave a message with your<br />

telephone number, she will get back to<br />

you. Due to the popularity of this service<br />

drop ins are not allowed.<br />

The Council on Aging has purchased<br />

a laptop, which is available at the Merrick<br />

Public Library and may be used by<br />

seniors on Wednesdays from 2- 4 p.m. if<br />

you desire to learn about a laptop.<br />

Medicare’s open enrollment period is<br />

October 15 to December 7. SHINE services<br />

are available at the West Brookfi eld<br />

Senior Center, call 508-867-1407 for an<br />

PUBLIC MEETINGS<br />

BROOKFIELD<br />

STURBRIDGE<br />

• No meetings posted online Tuesday, Sept. 25<br />

as of press time.<br />

• Cable Advisory Committee,<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

EAST BROOKFIELD<br />

Monday, Sept. 24<br />

• Board of Assessors, 6:30<br />

p.m.<br />

• Board of Selectmen, 7 p.m.<br />

• Historical Commission,<br />

7:15 p.m.<br />

Wednesday, Sept. 26<br />

• Council on Aging, 3:30<br />

p.m.<br />

• Sign Subcommittee, 4:30<br />

p.m.<br />

• Planning Board, 6:30 p.m.<br />

• Recreational Trail Master<br />

Plan Committee, 7 p.m.<br />

Wednesday, Sept. 26<br />

• Zoning Board of Appeals<br />

Work Session, 6:30 p.m.<br />

Thursday, Sept. 27<br />

• PLAC, 6:30 p.m.<br />

• Friday, Sept. 28<br />

NEW BRAINTREE<br />

Monday, Sept. 24<br />

• Meet the Selectmen, 9:30<br />

a.m.<br />

• Board of Selectmen, 7 p.m.<br />

Wednesday, Sept. 26<br />

• Library Trustees, 6 p.m.<br />

WARREN<br />

• No meetings posted online<br />

as of press time.<br />

NORTH BROOKFIELD<br />

Tuesday, Sept. 25<br />

• Board of Selectmen, 7 p.m.<br />

• Conservation Commission,<br />

7 p.m.<br />

CALENDAR I FROM PAGE 2<br />

THE BROOKFIELD GARDEN CLUB will be hosting Heather Bednarz<br />

from the Hardwick Farmers’ Coop on Sunday Sept. 23 for a program<br />

on bulbs. The program is everything you need to know about the<br />

“Care and Planting of Bulbs” and will be held at the Brookfi eld Congregational<br />

Church at 3 p.m. The program is open to the public free<br />

of charge. Please come and join us.<br />

THE WEST BROOKFIELD FARMERS MARKET will be hosting Rich<br />

Giordano, of All Hill farm, on Sept. 26 for a talk on seed-saving tips<br />

and strategies. The talk will begin at 3:30 p.m.<br />

NORTH BROOKFIELD GIRL SCOUT NIGHT Wednesday, Sept. 26 at<br />

North Brookfi eld Elementary School, 10 New School Drive, from 6-8<br />

p.m. For more info contact Dawn at dawnlewis867@verizon.net.<br />

HIKE MONUMENT MT. IN SEPTEMBER? Explore Herkimer Diamond<br />

Mine in October? Camp on the Brimfi eld Town Common to raise food<br />

in November? Go on a Sky Adventure at Camp Wansocksett, NH in<br />

December? Come join Girl Scout Troop 7 on Wednesday, Sept. 26 at<br />

the Brimfi eld Elementary School at 6:30 p.m. for an open house to<br />

learn more.<br />

UPCOMING<br />

WEST BROOKFIELD<br />

• No meetings posted online<br />

as of press time.<br />

BROOKFIELD RESIDENTS may bring Household Hazardous Waste/<br />

products to North Brookfi eld on Sept. 29 between 9 a.m. and 12<br />

p.m. This service is provided as a free service to Brookfi eld residents<br />

as part of Brookfi eld’s participation in the Regional Household<br />

Hazardous Waste Coalition made up of the Brookfi elds and Spencer.<br />

Brookfi eld BOH pays for this out of our budget every year. The more<br />

participation we get the lower the price to all the towns.<br />

THE HAYLOFT STEPPERS SQUARE DANCE CLUB is holding a “Getting<br />

Cooler” dance on Saturday, Sept. 29 from 8 to 10:30 p.m. (Early<br />

rounds at 7:30 p.m.). The caller is Evan Pauley and the cuer is Jo<br />

Yakimowski. Admission is $7 per person. The club is located at 232<br />

Podunk Road in Sturbridge. For information on our next beginner<br />

class, call Moe at (508) 867-8036 or Al at (413) 436-7849 or visit our<br />

website www.hayloftsteppers.org<br />

appointment.<br />

The next Council on Aging meeting<br />

will be Wednesday, Oct. 10 at 4 p.m. in<br />

the kitchen of the Brookfi eld Town Hall.<br />

All are invited to attend!<br />

Warren Senior Center Menu<br />

Monday, Sept. 24 Janik Keilbasa,<br />

Potato Casserole, Vegetables, Rye Bread<br />

Tuesday, Sept. 25 Garden Salad,<br />

American Chop Suey, Garlic bread<br />

Wednesday, Sept. 26 Chicken Soup,<br />

Chicken Patty w/ Rolls, Pasta Salad<br />

Thursday, Sept. 27 Birthday Party:<br />

Roast Beef, Mashed Potato, Vegetables,<br />

Rolls, Cake, Ice Cream. Only $6. Entertainment<br />

by Vic & Stick. Sign Up Required<br />

Friday, Sept. 28 Chef’s Surprise<br />

Thursday, Sept. 27<br />

11 a.m. Spencer Savings Bank and<br />

Police Chief Bruce Spiewakowski present<br />

“Avoiding Scams.” Birthday party<br />

will follow presentation.<br />

West Brookfi eld COA Menu<br />

Monday, Sept. 24 Beef & Cabbage<br />

Casserole, Spinach, Carrots, Mixed<br />

Fruit<br />

A Turley Publication • www.turley.com I Thursday, <strong>September</strong> <strong>20</strong>, <strong>20</strong>12 PAGE 5<br />

Buying a local home?<br />

Get a local mortgage.<br />

*For a limited time, we'll<br />

even cover up to $350<br />

Tuesday, Sept. 25 Salmon Boat w/<br />

Dill Sauce, Garlic Mashed Potatoes, Peas<br />

& Onions, Birthday Cake (plain cake)<br />

Wednesday, Sept. 26 Baked Chicken,<br />

Herb Broth Couscous, Winter Mix<br />

Vegetables, Cantaloupe<br />

Thursday, Sept. 27 Italian Braised<br />

Beef, Egg Noodles, Broccoli, Bread Pudding<br />

Friday, Sept. 28 Pork Stir Fry, Brown<br />

Rice, Brussels Sprouts, Peaches<br />

West Brookfi eld COA Calendar<br />

Monday, Sept. 24<br />

9:15 Cribbage<br />

11 a.m. Chair Exercise<br />

11:30 Lunch<br />

Tuesday, Sept. 25<br />

Beginning 10 a.m. Fall Fest – All Day<br />

Fun. Box Lunch sign-up (508) 867-1407.<br />

Suggested donation of $2 for Turkey Salad<br />

Sandwich, Soup de Jour, etc.<br />

12:30 p.m. Game Show Mania w/ host<br />

Brian Rutherford<br />

5 p.m. Ham Dinner w/ advance ticket<br />

only! $10 – Entertainment vocalist David<br />

Colucci<br />

Wednesday, Sept. 26<br />

11 a.m. Chair Exercise<br />

11:30 Lunch<br />

1 p.m. Silvertones<br />

buyers than a local mortgage banker. FamilyFirst Bank<br />

serves the local market, makes lending decisions right<br />

here and provides personal, face-to-face service.<br />

If you’re in the market for a home—and a mortgage—<br />

compare rates, compare all costs, then come in to<br />

FamilyFirst Bank.<br />

towards your appraisal fee.� No one knows more about the needs of local home<br />

Uncomplicated Banking, Uncommon Service.<br />

East Brookfield, 100 West Main Street 508.867.1322<br />

Ware, 40 Main Street 413.967.6271<br />

Three Rivers, <strong>20</strong>60 Main Street 413.283.5681<br />

FamilyFirstBank.com 800.881.3613<br />

Member SIF Member FDIC<br />

Thursday, Sept. 27<br />

8:30 a.m. Tai Chi<br />

10:30 a.m. Identity Theft Program w/<br />

Country Bank. Call Senior Center to reserve<br />

seat. (508) 867-1407<br />

11:30 Lunch<br />

12:30 p.m. Movie “Tootsie<br />

Friday, Sept. 28<br />

10:30 a.m. Blood Pressure Check<br />

11 a.m. Chair Exercise<br />

11:30 Lunch<br />

12:30 p.m. Bridge<br />

North Brookfi eld<br />

Senior Center Menu<br />

Monday, Sept. 24 Tri-Valley: Beef &<br />

Cabbage Casserole, Spinach, Carrots,<br />

Mixed Fruit<br />

Tuesday, Sept. 25 Helen’s Super<br />

Sweet & Sour Meatballs, Veggies, Salad,<br />

Rolls, Dessert<br />

Wednesday, Sept. 26 Pattie’s Terrifi c<br />

Turkey Noodle Bake, Veggies, Rolls,<br />

Dessert<br />

Thursday, Sept. 27 Tri-Valley (reserve<br />

by 9.25): Italian Braised Beef, Egg<br />

Noodles, Broccoli, Bread Pudding<br />

*Applies to appraisals of 1-4 family, owner-occupied dwellings.<br />

Fee credited at loan closing. Offer may be withdrawn at any time.


PAGE 6 A Turley Publication • www.turley.com I Thursday, <strong>September</strong> <strong>20</strong>, <strong>20</strong>12<br />

Local fi lmmaker rakes in awards<br />

WEST BROOKFIELD - West<br />

Brookfi eld resident and aspiring fi lmaker,<br />

Tina McKeown, took home seven<br />

awards including “Best Film” in the<br />

recent 48 Hour Film Project regional<br />

competition in New Haven, Conn.<br />

The awards were presented at the<br />

movie screening at the Whitney Humanities<br />

Center in New Haven on Saturday,<br />

Sept 8. Tina’s fi lm “Kitty Carlson<br />

& The Hunt for the West Brookfi eld<br />

Creeper” will now compete in the national<br />

fi lm competition Filmapalooza in<br />

Los Angeles in <strong>20</strong>13. Ten fi lms selected<br />

from Filmapalooza will then be shown<br />

at a special screening at the Cannes<br />

Film Festival in France later in <strong>20</strong>13.<br />

The 48 Hour Film Project is an international<br />

organization that runs fi lm competitions<br />

in cities throughout the world<br />

each year. The concept is that teams of<br />

fi lm makers are given 48 hours to write,<br />

shoot and edit a short fi lm (4-7 minutes<br />

in length) for the competition. At 7<br />

p.m. on Friday, July 27, all the competing<br />

teams had to meet in New Haven<br />

where they were assigned their fi lm<br />

genre and character info. No planning<br />

or script writing could begin until this<br />

point. Tina’s team, Password 123 Productions,<br />

was assigned “silent fi lm” as<br />

a genre, “Kitty Carlson the translator”<br />

as a character, “what am I supposed to<br />

do with this?” as a line of dialog, and a<br />

pitcher as a prop that must be used in<br />

the fi lm. The completed fi lms had to be<br />

submitted by 7 p.m. on Sunday, July 29<br />

in New Haven. Twenty teams submitted<br />

fi lms for the competition. Teams could<br />

be amateur or professional fi lmmakers.<br />

“Kitty Carlson and the Hunt for the<br />

West Brookfi eld Creeper” was fi lmed<br />

at locations in both West Brookfi eld<br />

and North Brookfi eld the weekend of<br />

July 28 and 29. The torrential rains<br />

that weekend created a challenge for<br />

the fi lmmakers, including having to re-<br />

CLUES ACROSS<br />

1. Bulla<br />

5. Former Egyptian<br />

Pres. Anwar<br />

10. Identical<br />

14. Military assistant<br />

15. True heath<br />

16. Indonesian<br />

phenomenon<br />

17. Japanese social<br />

networking<br />

18. Bring banquet<br />

food<br />

19. Front of the head<br />

<strong>20</strong>. Jean Paul __,<br />

author<br />

22. Movie settings<br />

24. Incline from<br />

vertical<br />

26. Bleats<br />

27. One who sings<br />

carols<br />

30. Any high<br />

mountain<br />

31. Mutual savings<br />

bank<br />

34. Tequila plant<br />

35. One point N of<br />

due E<br />

37. Not large<br />

39. Khoikhoin<br />

people<br />

40. Soccer player<br />

Hamm<br />

41. European owl<br />

genus<br />

42. Palio race city<br />

44. Hostelry<br />

45. Outer ear<br />

eminences<br />

46. Explosive<br />

47. Illuminated<br />

49. Musical pieces in<br />

slow tempo<br />

51. Not crazy<br />

52. Star Trek helm<br />

offi cer<br />

53. Gave the axe<br />

56. Make a mental<br />

connection<br />

60. City founded by<br />

Xenophanes<br />

61. Extremely angry<br />

65. Wild Eurasian<br />

mountain goat<br />

66. Voyage on water<br />

67. Comforts<br />

68. Otherwise<br />

69. Young herrings in<br />

Norway<br />

70. Weapon<br />

discharges<br />

71. Prepares a dining<br />

table<br />

TURLEY PUBLICATIONS COURTESY PHOTO<br />

Tina McKeown trying to stay dry between fi lming<br />

scenes on July 28th for the short fi lm “Kitty Carlson<br />

and the Hunt for the West Brookfi eld Creeper.”<br />

make the Creeper’s costume over several<br />

times. The fi lm was edited at Tina’s<br />

home on Sunday before racing it to New<br />

Haven for submission.<br />

The awards won by “Kitty Carlson<br />

and the Hunt for the West Brookfi eld<br />

Creeper” include: Best Film,<br />

Best Use of Genre, Best Sound, Best<br />

Music/Score, Best Choreography, Best<br />

Costumes and Audience Awards (audience<br />

favorite).<br />

Tina is a graduate of <strong>Quaboag</strong> Regional<br />

High School and is now a senior<br />

at the University of Rhode Island where<br />

she is studying television and fi lm. Her<br />

team “Password 123 Productions” also<br />

consisted of Jessica Comstock (also of<br />

West Brookfi eld), Marissa Troy, and<br />

Michele Troy (both from Newton).<br />

CLUES DOWN<br />

1. Shopping pouches<br />

2. Old Italian money<br />

3. Central German<br />

river<br />

4. Composer Ludwig<br />

van<br />

5. A way to withdraw<br />

6. Macaws<br />

7. Radiotelegraphic<br />

signal<br />

8. Highest card<br />

9. Any bone of the<br />

tarsus<br />

10. Places to store<br />

valuables<br />

11. Actor Ladd<br />

12. Nutmeg seed<br />

covering<br />

13. Vision organs<br />

21. Abnormal<br />

breathing<br />

23. Crownworks<br />

25. Religious recluse<br />

26. Fruits of the<br />

genus Musa<br />

27. Thou __ do it<br />

28. Repeatedly<br />

29. Plant of a clone<br />

31. African tribe<br />

32. No. Irish borough<br />

& bay<br />

ANSWERS APPEAR ON PAGE 14<br />

33. French Chateau<br />

Royal<br />

36. Bulk storage<br />

container<br />

38. “Good Wife”<br />

Actress Julianna<br />

43. Assoc. of<br />

Licensed Aircraft<br />

Engineers<br />

45. An account of<br />

events<br />

48. West __,<br />

archipelago<br />

50. Coercion<br />

51. Ancient Scand.<br />

bard<br />

53. Leaves of the<br />

hemp plant<br />

54. Jai __, sport<br />

55. Designer<br />

Chapman<br />

57. Having the skill to<br />

do something<br />

58. Exam<br />

59. Prior wives<br />

62. Bravo! Bravo!<br />

Bravo!<br />

63. Volcanic<br />

mountain in Japan<br />

64. Vietnamese<br />

offensive<br />

Merrick Public Library News<br />

BROOKFIELD - Board of Trustees<br />

meet the second Monday of each month,<br />

due to the holiday the next meeting is<br />

Monday, Oct. 15 at 6:30 p.m.<br />

Coming soon to this public library:<br />

CW/Mars cards and complete online ordering<br />

of books, audios, DVDs, e-books,<br />

etc. for our patrons with Evergreen! Ask<br />

for more information at the library.<br />

The K-8 Lego Club will meet the fi rst<br />

and third Thursday of each month beginning<br />

Oct.4 from 6 to 7 p.m. Free with no<br />

sign-up!<br />

We will host, for all ages, Chronicles<br />

of Narnia Read Aloud with Margaret<br />

Sullivan, member of the Board of Mission<br />

and Outreach, Brookfi eld Congregational<br />

Church. This free program will<br />

begin Tuesday, Oct. 9 from 6 to 7 p.m.<br />

Our goal is to read all seven volumes!<br />

Join the fun, Focus on the Family, every<br />

Tuesday.<br />

The Apple Country Fair RAPPLE<br />

quilt is currently on display at the library,<br />

the quilt is used as a fundraiser for the<br />

Brookfi eld Community Club. The Apple<br />

Country Fair will be held Saturday, October<br />

6 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. For more<br />

information, check out their website at<br />

www.applecountryfair.com.<br />

The Friends of the Library will hold<br />

their annual Book Sale at the library on<br />

Saturday, Oct. 6 from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.<br />

Donations for the sale are now being accepted<br />

during regular library hours. The<br />

book titled Brookfi eld by Brenda Metterville,<br />

Kate Simpson and Andrea Faugno<br />

will also be available for sale, $21.99.<br />

Banister Book Group<br />

Tuesday, Oct. 30, <strong>20</strong>12, 7 to 8 p.m.<br />

The Paris Wife by Paula McLain.<br />

Hadley Richardson, age 28, in 19<strong>20</strong><br />

Chicago marries Ernest Hemingway<br />

after a brief courtship. Then in a whirlwind<br />

they set sail for Paris and join what<br />

is referred to now as the Lost Generation<br />

in Paris. They join other expatriates including<br />

Gertrude Stein, Ezra Pound, and<br />

F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald.<br />

Tuesday, Nov. 27, <strong>20</strong>12, 7- 8 p.m. A<br />

Secret Gift: How One Man’s Kindness-<br />

-and a Trove of Letters--Revealed the<br />

Hidden History of the Great Depression<br />

by Ted Gupp.<br />

“Shortly before Christmas 1933 in<br />

Depression-scarred Canton, Ohio, a<br />

small newspaper ad offered $10, no<br />

strings attached, to 75 families in distress.<br />

Interested readers were asked to submit<br />

letters describing their hardships to a<br />

WEST BROOKFIELD - West<br />

Brookfi eld Cultural Council is currently<br />

accepting local grant applications for the<br />

FY’13 grant cycle. All applications must<br />

be postmarked by Oct. 15. Local council<br />

guidelines and newly revised applications<br />

can be found on-line at www.massculturalcouncil.org<br />

. Questions? Call Cindy at<br />

508-867-3610.<br />

***<br />

NORTH BROOKFIELD - Proposals<br />

for community-oriented arts, humanities,<br />

and science programs are due Monday,<br />

Oct. 15. The North Brookfi eld Cultural<br />

Council has set that deadline for organizations,<br />

schools and individuals to apply for<br />

grants that support cultural activities in<br />

the community.<br />

According to Council spokesperson Eva<br />

Brown, these grants can support a variety<br />

of artistic projects and activities in North<br />

Brookfi eld -- including exhibits, festivals,<br />

fi eld trips, short-term artist residencies or<br />

This dance card for “Social Dance given by Prof. Fortier’s<br />

Pupils, (displays the) Fortier’s Summer Home, Brookfi eld<br />

Mass. Where the Newton Family were murdered by Paul<br />

Muller, Jan. 7, 1898.” This photograph is taken before<br />

the hurricane of 1938, when the tree house and tree<br />

where badly damaged. Thank you to Mike Seery for another<br />

wonderful donation to our historic collection here<br />

at the library and is currently on display.<br />

benefactor calling himself Mr. B. Virdot.<br />

The author’s grandfather Sam Stone was<br />

inspired to place this ad and assist his fellow<br />

Cantonians as they prepared for the<br />

cruelest Christmas most of them would<br />

ever witness.” Amazon.com<br />

Ongoing programs:<br />

• Wednesdays at 11:30 a.m. Music<br />

Time with Ms. Renee Coro. All ages<br />

welcome to attend, no sign-up necessary,<br />

free snacks and juice served. This<br />

program is funded by the Friends of the<br />

Brookfi eld Library.<br />

• Wednesdays from 2:00 to 4:00 p.m.<br />

Adult computer time. The Council on<br />

Aging has provided a laptop computer<br />

for senior citizens to use.<br />

• Fridays at 3:00 p.m. Home Delivery<br />

service is sponsored by the Friends of the<br />

Library.<br />

REGULAR HOURS: Tuesday &<br />

Thursday 1 p.m. to 8 p.m., Wednesday<br />

& Friday 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., Saturday 10<br />

a.m. to 1 p.m. Closed Sunday and Monday.<br />

Cultural councils seek grant applicants<br />

Tornado victim grants available<br />

BOSTON – Rep. Todd M. Smola (R-<br />

Palmer) has announced the availability<br />

of energy loans and grants for tornado<br />

victims through the ReBuild Western<br />

Massachusetts program. Participants are<br />

eligible to apply if an insurance company,<br />

FEMA, or other supporting state, local,<br />

and federal agencies has documented<br />

damage to their home or business.<br />

performances in schools, workshops and<br />

lectures. The North Brookfi eld Cultural<br />

Council is part of a network of 329 Local<br />

Cultural Councils serving all 351 cities and<br />

towns in the Commonwealth. The LCC<br />

Program is the largest grassroots cultural<br />

funding network in the nation, supporting<br />

thousands of community-based projects<br />

in the arts, sciences and humanities every<br />

year. The state legislature provides an annual<br />

appropriation to the Massachusetts<br />

Cultural Council, a state agency, which<br />

then allocates funds to each community.<br />

For specifi c guidelines and complete<br />

information on the North Brookfi eld Cultural<br />

Council, contact Eva Brown at 508-<br />

867-2519 (evabrown@charter.net). Application<br />

forms and more information about<br />

the Local Cultural Council Program are<br />

available online at www.mass-culture.org/<br />

lcc_public.asp. Application forms are also<br />

available at the Haston Public Library,<br />

161 North Main St., North Brookfi eld,<br />

MA 01535.<br />

The ReBuild Western Massachusetts<br />

program, which is funded by the Massachusetts<br />

Department of Energy Resources<br />

and administered by the Massachusetts<br />

Clean Energy Center, has<br />

helped dozens of homeowners and businesses<br />

obtain grants and/or zero interest<br />

See GRANTS I PAGE 7


Tantasqua’s Cornerstone<br />

Café set for opening day<br />

STURBRIDGE - The Cornerstone Café at Tantasqua<br />

Senior High School, a student run restaurant,<br />

will open for business for the <strong>20</strong>12-<strong>20</strong>13 school year on<br />

Thursday, Sept. 27. Lunch will be served between the<br />

hours of 10:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. Beginning Oct. 4, the<br />

Cornerstone Café will be open to the public Wednesday<br />

and Thursday every week from 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.<br />

The Cornerstone Café menu offers a variety of options<br />

including sandwiches, a full salad bar, and delicious<br />

entrées. The menu changes on a weekly basis and you<br />

can view the most current offerings by going to www.<br />

tantasqua.org/technical/ and clicking on the Cornerstone<br />

Café link.<br />

The Tantasqua pastry display case will also be open<br />

during the Cornerstone Café hours and offers a full assortment<br />

of seasonal baked good for sale. If you need a<br />

cake or pastries for special occasions, please contact the<br />

Cornerstone to place your order. The bakery also takes<br />

orders for fresh baked breads. Eating at the Cornerstone<br />

is a wonderful experience and it also helps to support our<br />

Culinary students.<br />

Tantasqua Senior High School is located at 319<br />

Brookfi eld Road in Fiskdale, MA. If you have any questions<br />

about the restaurant, please contact TRSHS-Technical<br />

Division at 508-347-3045 ext. 0915.<br />

GRANTS I FROM PAGE 6<br />

loans to repair, renovate or rebuild using smart energy<br />

approaches. Eligible property owners in Hampden and<br />

Worcester Counties may apply for loans or grants to<br />

fund attic, wall, and basement insulation; high effi ciency<br />

heating and hot water systems; Energy Star® replacement<br />

windows and doors; and solar electric and solar<br />

hot water systems.<br />

Property owners who suffered storm damage have<br />

until October 1, <strong>20</strong>12 to contact the program and begin<br />

the application process. The building improvements<br />

need to be complete by December 31, <strong>20</strong>12 and fi nal<br />

completed application, receipts and invoices must be<br />

submitted no later than January 31, <strong>20</strong>13. Interested<br />

applicants should go to www.mass.gov/energy/rebuildwesternma<br />

or call 877-524-1325 to make an appointment<br />

with an application and technical advisor.<br />

Additional information can be obtained by visiting<br />

www.mass.gov/eea or by contacting Representative<br />

Smola’s offi ce at 617-722-2240.<br />

SKIN PROBLEM?<br />

Trust a Dermatologist!<br />

JOEL P. GORDON, M.D.<br />

Certified, American Board of Dermatology<br />

Dermatology &<br />

Dermatologic Surgery<br />

Skin Cancer, Moles and Other Skin<br />

Growths, Acne, Warts, Rashes<br />

85 South St., Ware • (413) 967-2246<br />

Public AuctioN<br />

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 2ND AT 11:00 A.M.<br />

MORTGAGEE’S SALE OF REAL ESTATE<br />

• HOLLAND •<br />

6 ROOM / 4 BEDROOM<br />

SINGLE-STORY VINYL SIDED<br />

RANCH STYLE HOME<br />

on ±1/3 ACRE of LAND<br />

“CLOSE PROXIMITY TO HAMILTON RESERVOIR”<br />

21 Dug Hill Road HOLLAND, MA<br />

To be sold on the Premises<br />

Features:<br />

• Single-Story Vinyl Sided Ranch Style Home • ±1/3 Acre of Land •<br />

• Total of (6) Rooms, w/ (4) Bedrooms & (1 1/2) Baths •<br />

• 1,445 S/F of Living Area • Electric Baseboard Heat •<br />

• Partially Finished Basement, w/ Walk-Out • Carpet & Hardwood Floors •<br />

• Private Well & Septic • Open Porch • Wood Deck •<br />

Sale Per Order of Mortgagee<br />

Attorney Alan J. Vanaria<br />

Gold & Vanaria P.C.<br />

12 Ingham Terrace, Springfield, MA<br />

Attorneys for Mortgagee<br />

Terms of Sale: $5,000.00 Deposit Cash or Certified Funds.<br />

Other Terms to be Announced at Time of Sale.<br />

Aaron Posnik<br />

AUCTIONEERS - APPRAISERS<br />

Springfield, MA • Philadelphia, PA<br />

413-733-5238 • 610-853-6655<br />

TOLL FREE 1-877-POSNIK-1 (767-6451)<br />

MA Auc. Lic. #161 • PA Auc. Lic. #AY000241L<br />

www.posnik.com • E-mail: info@posnik.com<br />

A Turley Publication • www.turley.com I Thursday, <strong>September</strong> <strong>20</strong>, <strong>20</strong>12 PAGE 7<br />

– education –<br />

QRSD AP program reaching new heights<br />

<strong>Quaboag</strong> students performing well above national average<br />

By Jennifer Robert<br />

Turley Publications Reporter<br />

WARREN - <strong>Quaboag</strong> Regional High School continues<br />

to see growth in its Advanced Placement program,<br />

and the efforts that have been made by Principal<br />

Greg Myers and the faculty and staff to offer an outstanding<br />

secondary education to the students is paying<br />

off, if the most recent AP scores are any indication of<br />

their success.<br />

Coming to the District three and a half years<br />

ago, Myers has seen the growth of the AP program<br />

throughout its entire tenure. Thanks to its partnership<br />

with MMSI, <strong>Quaboag</strong> was the recipient of a threeyear<br />

grant that helps develop AP courses of study, and<br />

now in the third year of that grant some remarkable<br />

changes have been seen and plans for the future continue<br />

to be made.<br />

Since the start of the MMSI grant, <strong>Quaboag</strong> has<br />

seen a doubling of the number of AP classes that are<br />

offered. Prior to the grant, US History, English Literature,<br />

English Language, Studio Art in 2D or 3D<br />

and Calculus were available. This year, that list is still<br />

available, but Psychology, Statistic, World History,<br />

Physics and Biology are all in the AP selection offerings<br />

as well. Next year, students will see the addition of<br />

AP Computer Programming, and in <strong>20</strong>14, AP Civics is<br />

planning to be added to the roster. Looking forward to<br />

<strong>20</strong>15, AP Economics will be available. The choices that<br />

a student has for AP enrollment is quite extensive given<br />

the size of the school and Myers said that almost all<br />

of the teachers are involved in AP in some capacity.<br />

Students that take an AP class are required to take<br />

the AP exam for that class. Three years ago, <strong>Quaboag</strong><br />

saw its fi rst AP Scholar, which means a student had to<br />

have received a score of 3, 4, or 5 on at least three AP<br />

exams. The following year, that number went to 10.<br />

The most recent AP scores that have been published<br />

have shown that <strong>Quaboag</strong> had 13 AP Scholars last<br />

year, which places them at almost twice the national<br />

average of AP Scholars per thousand students, and<br />

well above the state average as well. Even more impressive<br />

is QRSD gave 116 AP exams last years, and<br />

53 Brooks Pond Rd., North Brookfield, MA<br />

u ] 508.867.0400 t w<br />

Savers Bank can Meet Your Commercial<br />

Needs Anywhere in Southern New England.<br />

Holyoke, MA - Apartment and Retail: $3,000,000<br />

W. Springfield, MA - Hotel: $1,500,000<br />

Charlton, MA - Industrial: $2,000,000<br />

Worcester, MA - Elder Care Facility: $800,000<br />

Southbridge, MA - Apartment Complex: $3,<strong>20</strong>0,000<br />

Boston, MA - Office Building: $6,000,000<br />

Barnstable, MA - Hotel: $800,000<br />

Middletown, CT - Office and Retail: $2,600,000<br />

Contact our commercial services team today and we’ll help build your business.<br />

www.saversbank.com 1-800-649-3036<br />

Southbridge Uxbridge Auburn Grafton Charlton Sturbridge<br />

Member FDIC / Member SIF / Equal Housing Lender<br />

roughly 80 percent of those exams received a grade of<br />

3, 4 or 5.<br />

“We are giving kids the opportunity to take these<br />

classes, and they are making the most of it,” said Myers.<br />

“The benefi ts to taking AP courses in high school<br />

is enormous, even if a student doesn’t get a performing<br />

score on the exams. What I want to do is plant the<br />

seed here, with all the students, and as a school we are<br />

working to create a culture where it’s defi nitely cool to<br />

be an AP student.” The benefi ts that Meyers referred<br />

to are quite extensive. Students who take AP classes in<br />

high school show a direct correlation to their success<br />

in college. Regardless of their exam scores, the average<br />

AP student shows a large jump in GPA in college over<br />

their non-AP counterparts, and they are mentally more<br />

prepared for the heavy rigors of a college course load.<br />

The AP grant from MMSI does not come without<br />

extensive support for both the students and teachers.<br />

Saturday study sessions are provided for the students,<br />

with the sessions alternating between the schools in the<br />

pod; <strong>Quaboag</strong>, Palmer, Ware and Ludlow. When the<br />

sessions are held at a location besides <strong>Quaboag</strong>, the<br />

students still meet locally at the school and are bussed<br />

to the study location for the day. Lunch is provided,<br />

and MMSI offers incentives to raise attendance at<br />

these with raffl es for things such as iPods. There is also<br />

professional development for the AP teachers, with a<br />

week long Summer Institute, and refresher courses<br />

throughout the year. After the third year of the grant<br />

is past, which will be this year, MMSI offers less grant<br />

money fi guring that the start-up costs associated with<br />

the development of AP curriculum such as textbooks<br />

have been covered. They continue to offer support<br />

through the Saturday study sessions, however, and<br />

continuing education for teachers.<br />

<strong>Quaboag</strong> kicked off this year with an academic<br />

pep rally Sept. 13, outlining the benefi ts of enrolling<br />

in AP coursework and encouraging students to reach<br />

for success in college starting now. Myers is committed<br />

to providing a quality education for the students of<br />

<strong>Quaboag</strong>, but also feels that it is important to engage<br />

students by showing them that learning, even at an advanced<br />

level, can be fun.<br />

Fiddle Center<br />

SAND & GRAVEL CO FIDDLES, MANDOLINS,<br />

Washed & Double Washed<br />

GUITARS, BANJOS, DOBROS<br />

Crushed Stone (all sizes)<br />

Washed Sand • Stone Dust<br />

Natural Round Landscaping Stone<br />

Screened Loam • Crushed Gravel<br />

Lots of Lesson Times<br />

Available In<br />

Piano, Drum, Guitar,<br />

Fiddle, Mandolin,<br />

PLANT LOCATION<br />

Flute & Banjo<br />

Like Us On<br />

Facebook<br />

All<br />

Lessons<br />

$16.00/<br />

Half Hour<br />

300 Main Street, Route 9, East Brookfield<br />

508-867-6600 • www.fiddlecenter.com


PAGE 8 A Turley Publication • www.turley.com I Thursday, <strong>September</strong> <strong>20</strong>, <strong>20</strong>12<br />

– education –<br />

Full S.T.E.A.M. ahead<br />

WBES students engage in engineering<br />

activities as part of Innovation School status<br />

By Jennifer Robert<br />

Turley Publications Reporter<br />

WEST BROOKFIELD - As part of<br />

the new Innovation School program, students<br />

at the West Brookfi eld Elementary<br />

School are receiving instruction that has<br />

a strong focus on S.T.E.A.M.; science,<br />

technology, engineering, art and math<br />

are core curriculum subjects. As part of<br />

this innovative series of lesson plans, students<br />

are able to take part in some unique<br />

opportunities for study that are interesting<br />

and actively engaging.<br />

On Fridays, the Kindergarten and<br />

grade six classes will be pairing up to<br />

participate in engineering projects. The<br />

older children will be peer models and<br />

facilitators for the younger ones, and the<br />

time they spend will be devoted to using<br />

an engineering design for problem<br />

solving. This past Friday, the two grade<br />

levels combined for the fi rst time in a<br />

very successful morning. Kindergarten<br />

teacher Deborah Provencher and grade<br />

six teacher Billie Moberg combined their<br />

two classrooms, and gathered all the students<br />

together to brainstorm problems<br />

from the book, “Make Way For Ducklings,”<br />

by Robert McCloskey. After the<br />

students asked questions and found<br />

problems they could solve, they were<br />

broken up into groups that had a 1:1 ratio<br />

of Kindergarten student to grade six<br />

student. They then planned out the solution,<br />

created the solution, and in the end<br />

presented it to the rest of the class to explain<br />

what they did and why, and looked<br />

for possible ways to improve upon it if<br />

necessary.<br />

Moberg said that she was extremely<br />

pleased with how the engineering session<br />

went. “This was the fi rst time we tried<br />

this, and you look to see what could have<br />

been better, what we could change for<br />

next time, but we were both so pleased<br />

with this. It went great,” she remarked.<br />

The students seem to be extremely excited<br />

about this as well. Broken up into<br />

groups around the room, at every station<br />

older children could be heard providing<br />

encouraging words to the younger ones,<br />

and talking them through the steps with<br />

language that the younger kids could understand.<br />

Some of the solutions were quite<br />

elaborate. One group, solving the problem<br />

of how to keep duck eggs and newly<br />

hatched ducklings safe from predators<br />

and the environment, created a detailed<br />

fortress and incubator. Kindergartener<br />

Isacc presented it to the group, and explained<br />

all the parts of their creation.<br />

“This is the part that keeps them warm,<br />

and this is the swing for after they hatch,<br />

this is the button to turn it on, this is the<br />

code to get in, this is the ladder for the<br />

people to get to the code,” he explained,<br />

pointing to each part of their well thought<br />

out design.<br />

Grades Kindergarten and six were<br />

not the only ones with their engineer<br />

caps on that day. The grade 3 students<br />

in Sharon Shepardson’s class were also<br />

hard at work solving a problem. Armed<br />

with <strong>20</strong> sticks of spaghetti, some masking<br />

tape and a big marshmallow, their<br />

task was to create a freestanding structure<br />

that would support the weight of the<br />

marshmallow on it’s top. Colleen Mucha,<br />

TURLEY PUBLICATIONS PHOTOS BY JENNIFER ROBERT<br />

While creating solutions for the problems that they have brainstormed, students explore the contents of the creation<br />

station, a large tub of repurposed materials.<br />

Principal of WBES, explained that she<br />

had the teachers engage in this activity<br />

on the fi rst day, and that it is much more<br />

diffi cult than it sounds. “It was interesting<br />

also, I was doing some research on<br />

it online and found some videos of other<br />

people doing this activity. The people that<br />

do best with this, overall, are Kindergarteners;<br />

the people who do the worst are<br />

business professionals with advanced degrees.<br />

One video showed the facilitator<br />

who offered a reward, a prize, for anyone<br />

that could build this to certain specifi cations.<br />

You know, no one could. Once you<br />

attach a reward to it, no one can seem<br />

to do it,” she said. Shepardson told the<br />

students this was certainly a challenging<br />

project. When she herself did this, “some<br />

North Brookfi eld schools expand preschool offerings<br />

Editor’s note: This article is the second in an ongoing fall series<br />

about improvements to the North Brookfi eld School District.<br />

-NORTH BROOKFIELD-<br />

By Jennifer Grybowski<br />

Turley Publications Reporter<br />

In the North Brookfi eld Public School District, learning<br />

can’t begin too early.<br />

When Superintendent Dr. John A. Provost came<br />

to the district last year, he made an appraisal of the district<br />

and developed a mission moving forward. One way Provost<br />

plans to improve the district is by increasing enrollment<br />

from 565 to 695 students over the next fi ve years.<br />

Provost plans to increase enrollment through a series of<br />

initiatives – including expanded preschool offerings.<br />

The preschool program in general is new to North<br />

Brookfi eld. Previously, students requiring support services<br />

came to the school for services, but the services<br />

were given by private providers contracted out by the<br />

school district, not by North Brookfi eld Public Schools<br />

staff members.<br />

“There was adequate support for those students, but<br />

not the level we’d like to see,” said Carla Chioda, director<br />

of pupil services. “There was no district support for<br />

other students. That was a major challenge.”<br />

In addition, Choida said parents had been asking<br />

about a preschool program for some time.<br />

So in January <strong>20</strong>11, the district set up a pilot program,<br />

integrating those students needing special services<br />

with general education students. The program was<br />

fully funded with grants. It ran half-day, for three days<br />

a week and served 15 students.<br />

However, Chioda said, there were still a number of<br />

students on the waiting list for preschool. These students<br />

were either going to private preschool, or no preschool<br />

at all.<br />

“That is a real limitation,” Choida said. “There are<br />

real challenges to having no preschool. Not all students<br />

have the opportunity for social interaction, exposure to<br />

letters, sounds, colors and numbers to prepare for academic<br />

readiness.”<br />

Because of the success of the program, and the high<br />

number of waitlisted students, the program was expanded<br />

last year to now include 30 students, about one-third<br />

of them receiving special services. There are no more<br />

students on the waitlist. Some staffi ng adjustments were<br />

made in the staff to accommodate the new schedule.<br />

“Being able to provide that in district builds support<br />

and capacity within the district,” Chioda said.<br />

The expansion in the program added about $65,000<br />

in operating costs, according to Provost. Grants and<br />

other state aid helped to fund the program, but general<br />

education students are now required to pay an affordable<br />

tuition.<br />

“We wanted to make it accessible for students and<br />

families and wanted to make preschool as available as<br />

possible in this economy,” Choida said. “We want to<br />

make sure parents have value for their money and that<br />

students have as much instruction as we can reasonably<br />

fi t into the session.”<br />

Chioda said preschool is important for students because<br />

it helps to accommodate them to the expectations<br />

of group instruction: Circle time; sharing; making decisions<br />

about what activity to participate in and being<br />

able to persevere through that activity; social-emotional<br />

development; social play opportunities; and more.<br />

“A preschool education gives students a head start to<br />

success in school,” Provost said.<br />

Preschool teacher Eileen Kirwin agrees.<br />

“What preschool does is begin to lay the groundwork<br />

for skills kids are going to use later as elementary students,”<br />

Kirwin said. “Children get the opportunity to<br />

come in and become part of the building and learn something<br />

about the joys of learning and peer relationships.”<br />

Kirwin said the expanded program is also benefi cial<br />

for students needing services that would have attended<br />

anyway.<br />

“Preschool provides them with the opportunity to<br />

practice the skills they are learning in therapy with the<br />

support of teachers who understand what those skills<br />

are,” she said.<br />

Chioda said preschool breeds a comfort level to the<br />

school and helps to develop a love for learning.<br />

“They are all positives to take them through,” Chioda<br />

said. “The sooner we can develop and enhance a love of<br />

learning, the more successful they will be.”<br />

Kirwin agreed.<br />

“The more students in the community are able to participate,<br />

the better,” she said. “They can come in and be a<br />

part of North Brookfi eld Elementary School from age 3.”<br />

Choida said there is a hope to expand the program if<br />

the need is there, but currently, the goal is simply to meet<br />

the needs of students.<br />

stood, some fell. The team that I was on...<br />

crash! It’s not an easy project”<br />

Two of the grade 3 groups were able<br />

to make freestanding towers that could<br />

support the marshmallows. One measures<br />

19 inches in height, the other nine.<br />

When asked what they learned through<br />

this project, the students remarked that<br />

“a marshmallow defi nitely weighs more<br />

than a noodle! (Luke)”, “If you tie it to<br />

the desk it will stay better (Arwen)” and<br />

“a strong structure on the bottom, using<br />

more than one noodle, is better (Jacob).”<br />

WBES is excited about getting their<br />

students to think link engineers, and has<br />

an exciting year of new programming<br />

that ties in with their Innovation school<br />

status.<br />

TEACHER OF THE WEEK<br />

Meet Melissa Fijal<br />

WEST BROOKFIELD<br />

- Melissa began her career<br />

by obtaining her<br />

Bachelor’s in Elementary<br />

Education from<br />

Elms College. During<br />

the time she<br />

spent in the classroom<br />

during observation,<br />

she fell<br />

in love with Special<br />

Education, and returned<br />

to Elms to get<br />

her Master’s Degree in<br />

Special Education. She<br />

just passed her MTEL<br />

exam, and is currently<br />

back in the classroom herself,<br />

working towards her<br />

Education Specialist Degree<br />

and certifi cation as a<br />

Reading Specialist at Bay Path College.<br />

PHOTO BY JENNIFER ROBERT<br />

5th and 6th Grade Special Education<br />

Teacher at West Brookfi<br />

eld Elementary School.<br />

The <strong>20</strong>12-<strong>20</strong>13 school year is Melissa’s third year<br />

in the District, the fi rst spent in Warren before coming<br />

to West Brookfi eld during the <strong>20</strong>11-<strong>20</strong>12 school<br />

year. She previously spent one year at a private Catholic<br />

school.<br />

Melissa’s favorite part of her job is having the collaboration<br />

with other team members. “Working with<br />

kids is kind of like a puzzle, you have to fi gure out<br />

what each student needs to succeed, fi nd a way to get<br />

it to them, and then the pay out is when you get the<br />

opportunity to see them become independent in that<br />

skill,” she said. The collaboration of the many teachers<br />

involved in each student’s goal setting allows her a<br />

look at the situation through many sets of eyes.<br />

On that same note, Melissa fi nds that the most<br />

challenging part of her job is also centered around<br />

the teamwork involved in meeting the needs of each<br />

student. With the busy schedules of all the teachers,<br />

keeping the communication fl owing and things happening<br />

in the time frame they are supposed to requires<br />

everyone to be very dedicated, which Melissa says she<br />

has been fortunate to fi nd to be the case at WBES.<br />

See TEACHER I PAGE 15


WEST<br />

BROOKFIELD<br />

Traditional Classes:<br />

Acrobat, Ballet, Jazz, Tap,<br />

Hip-Hop, Lyrical, Modern<br />

Whiskey Hill Sports<br />

2<strong>20</strong> Ware Road<br />

West Warren<br />

413-436-5885<br />

Hours: Mon.-Sat. 9:00-4:00<br />

Sunday 10:00-?<br />

www.whiskeyhillsports.com<br />

WARREN<br />

W. WARREN<br />

Carole’s<br />

18 YEARS AT<br />

PRESENT ADDRESS!<br />

PROFESSIONAL DOG GROOMING<br />

AND BOARDING KENNEL<br />

GROOMING FOR ALL BREEDS<br />

BOARDING FOR CATS & DOGS<br />

BREEDER OF A.K.C. REG.<br />

COCKER SPANIELS<br />

195 FISKDALE RD. (RTE. 148)<br />

BROOKFIELD, MA 01506<br />

508-867-9734<br />

The The Dance Dance<br />

Factory Factory<br />

We Manufacture Smiles!<br />

Additional Classes:<br />

Irish Step, Zumba,<br />

Belly Dance, Adult classes<br />

Ages 2 - Adult / Recreational & Competitive<br />

Register Now!<br />

Only 10 Minutes from Palmer or Ware!<br />

Main Street - West Warren<br />

413-436-7886<br />

TURN YOUR UNWANTED OLD,<br />

USED GUNS INTO CASH<br />

BUYING SWORDS & MILITARIA<br />

I BUY GUNS<br />

Guns can be a problem if...<br />

• You no longer hunt.<br />

• You have inherited guns and have<br />

no interest in them!<br />

• You have guns but not the proper<br />

permits to own them.<br />

Licensed to Buy & Sell Guns<br />

In-Home Appraisals Free<br />

A Turley Publication • www.turley.com I Thursday, <strong>September</strong> <strong>20</strong>, <strong>20</strong>12 PAGE 9<br />

Your Local<br />

Hometown<br />

Businesses<br />

FOUNTAIN<br />

Fuel Services<br />

Fuel Oil • Kerosene<br />

• Excavation Services<br />

Septic Systems & Materials<br />

Site Work - Fill, Gravel, Loam<br />

Water & Sewer Lines<br />

New Home Construction!<br />

Licensed • Insured • Experienced!<br />

And Sons<br />

INCORPORATED<br />

Ask<br />

About Our<br />

50 Gallon<br />

Minimum<br />

Delivery!<br />

Accepting New Customers!<br />

Ask About Fuel Assistance!<br />

24<br />

Hour<br />

Service<br />

62 Comins Pond Road, Warren, MA • 413-436-7314<br />

Now Service 2 Locations<br />

SAME GREAT MENU & SERVICE!<br />

2162 Main Street<br />

New!<br />

WEST WARREN<br />

Tues-Fri 6-2, Sat & Sun 7-1<br />

413-436-8379<br />

8 East Main Street<br />

WEST BROOKFIELD<br />

Mon-Fri 7-2, Sat & Sun 7-1<br />

508-867-4700<br />

BAKED GOODS - DAILY BREAKFAST & LUNCH SPECIALS<br />

Catering & Gift Certifi cates Available<br />

WEDNESDAY IS SENIOR & VETERANS 10% DISCOUNT<br />

We’re looking for proud business owners in<br />

The Brookfields, Warren, West Warren and New Braintree<br />

to participate in the<br />

Established Edition<br />

of the <strong>Quaboag</strong> <strong>Current</strong><br />

SEPTEMBER 27<br />

Whether its been 100 years, 50 years or just 1 year, your business is a vital<br />

part of our community. Ads will run in order of the oldest to the youngest.<br />

Don’t miss out on this special issue.<br />

Ad deadline is here!<br />

Call Jacky Perrot at<br />

413-967-3505 or<br />

Tim Mara 978-355-4000<br />

www.turley.com


PAGE 10 A Turley Publication • www.turley.com I Thursday, <strong>September</strong> <strong>20</strong>, <strong>20</strong>12<br />

EMPLOYEES I FROM PAGE 1<br />

fall behind in the department.”<br />

The board approved his request, and<br />

congratulated Williams on his move to<br />

full-time status. They also commented<br />

on the recent situation that occurred<br />

at Williams’ home, the barn fi re that<br />

broke out a few weeks back where Williams<br />

and two of his children were in<br />

the structure when the blaze started.<br />

Selectmen Chair Bob Souza addressed<br />

Williams, saying that he is confi dent<br />

that his training and knowledge prevented<br />

the fi re from being a truly tragic<br />

event, and hopes that he and his family<br />

are doing well in the aftermath.<br />

The board also had an employment<br />

decision to make that was more personal.<br />

On Sept. 5, they held an executive<br />

session to interview, screen and consider<br />

applications for the role of selectmen’s<br />

assistant. The rules governing the board<br />

state that the fi nal interviews must be<br />

held in a public forum, and the fi nal two<br />

candidates were present at the meeting<br />

to be addressed by the board with any<br />

remaining questions. Souza expressed<br />

to both his sympathy for the process,<br />

and expressed that while it must be a<br />

very diffi cult situation to interview in<br />

a public meeting, both women interviewed<br />

remarkably well in his opinion.<br />

Starting with Prokop, Selectman<br />

Robert Downing said that he was very<br />

impressed with her fi rst interview and<br />

her resume. “You come across to me as<br />

a take-charge person, and a self-motivated<br />

person, which I consider the<br />

two most important per-requisites for<br />

this job,” he stated. Prokop agreed that<br />

these attributes described her well. Souza<br />

asked her to explain why she felt that<br />

she was the best candidate for this job.<br />

Citing herself as a professional with over<br />

25 years of experience, Prokop summed<br />

up the sort of work she previously did<br />

for Falcetti Music, and claimed, “I believe<br />

that I hold the skills that are necessary<br />

to accomplish the goals of this offi<br />

ce.” The only other question presented<br />

to Prokop during this process involved<br />

the recent high turnaround rate for the<br />

selectmen’s assistant position.<br />

Selectman David Delanski explained<br />

to Prokop the history of the assistant<br />

over the last couple years, and said that<br />

the board is “looking for someone who<br />

will not be leaving shortly.” Prokop re-<br />

FREE!<br />

PICK UP THE<br />

QUABOAG CURRENT<br />

EVERY THURSDAY<br />

Available at:<br />

West Warren – Traska’s Village Market<br />

Outside W. Warren Post Office<br />

Warren Senior Center<br />

Warren – Warren Town Hall • Cash Market<br />

Cakettes Café • Tebo’s • Xtra Mart<br />

Town Pizza • Warren Package Store<br />

Outside Old Town Hall/Police Station<br />

Brookfield – Cumberland Farms<br />

East Brookfield – EB Flatts • Trolley Stop<br />

Town Hall • Cumberland Farms • Klem’s<br />

North Brookfield – Hannaford’s<br />

New Braintree – Reed’s Country Store<br />

www.quaboagcurrent.com<br />

The <strong>Quaboag</strong> <strong>Current</strong> is a Turley Publication • www.turley.com<br />

sponded to this concern, stating that<br />

her “intentions are for the long term.<br />

My family is settled here, we love this<br />

community,” she said and expressed<br />

that she is looking to make this a career<br />

move, not simply a short-term role.<br />

“I believe that<br />

I hold the skills<br />

that are necessary<br />

to accomplish the<br />

goals of this offi ce.”<br />

Loretta Prokop<br />

CANDIDATE FOR<br />

SELECTMEN’S ASSISTANT<br />

Candidate Lillian Gordon was addressed<br />

by Downing, who claimed that<br />

he was very impressed with her response<br />

to the time it took her to answer questions<br />

in the initial interview, and that she<br />

struck him as having a high degree of<br />

confi dence. She agreed. The other two<br />

selectmen addressed the same questions<br />

to her as they did to the previous candidate.<br />

In regards to her being most suited<br />

for this positon, Gordon stated that she,<br />

“believes that my past performance is a<br />

good indicator of my future potential.”<br />

She also stated that she, “loves living<br />

here, and has been waiting to really be<br />

a part of this town. I believe that I have<br />

found the perfect position. I would not<br />

only have a job, but I would be working<br />

for the town that I live in.” In reference<br />

to the recent high turn-around of the<br />

position, Gordon said that she would be<br />

with the board for as long as they were<br />

willing to have her.<br />

After speaking with both candidates,<br />

the board took a short break to<br />

review the resume’s of both candidates<br />

and make any fi nal deliberations. Loretta<br />

Prokop was offered the position<br />

of selectmen’s assistant, and she gladly<br />

accepted the role. Her fi rst offi cial duty<br />

with the board will be during executive<br />

session scheduled to be held on Sept.<br />

25.<br />

RUN I FROM PAGE 1<br />

a fi nance offi cer for the Texas Army<br />

National Guard upon completion<br />

of her training. She hoped to one<br />

day become a part of the FBI. She<br />

graduated summa cum laude with a<br />

3.69 GPA from Norwich University<br />

in <strong>20</strong>07 and spent eight consecutive<br />

semesters on the Deans List<br />

and received the COL Conrad D.<br />

Whitney Award for military excellence.<br />

While attending Norwich, she<br />

dedicated much of her time to the<br />

Women’s Rugby team, of which she<br />

was captain during her junior and<br />

senior years, and helped her team to<br />

become fi rst in the North East and<br />

third in the country at the National<br />

Elite 8 Rugby fi nals in Florida. After<br />

her passing she was awarded three<br />

medals: The Meritorious Service<br />

Medal, The Army Commendation<br />

Medal and The Army Achievement<br />

Medal.<br />

In addition to keeping Hurley’s<br />

memory alive, the race allows her<br />

family to fund two $1,000 scholarships<br />

for deserving Tantasqua Regional<br />

High School students each<br />

year.<br />

“It feels really good to give,” said<br />

Hurley’s mother and race organizer<br />

Christine Hurley. “Steph was an<br />

average student in high school and<br />

when she went to college she just<br />

blossomed. It feels good to support<br />

students like that and it felt so good<br />

when we were at the school giving<br />

out the scholarships. It felt like we<br />

were doing this for the right reasons.”<br />

CEMETERY I FROM PAGE 1<br />

gates at a salvage yard in Connecticut,<br />

replacing a few of the bars and getting a<br />

blacksmith from the Village to clean the<br />

gates up a bit and make the pintels, the<br />

hardware used to mount the gates to the<br />

pillars. Camosse Granite, of Worcester,<br />

donated the granite hat became the pillars<br />

of the entrance. Sexton was pleased<br />

with the pieces, he said that he felt the<br />

look and cut of the pieces makes you feel<br />

the age of the cemetery. “You look at<br />

them and they look like something that<br />

you would have seen here two hundred<br />

years ago,” he said.<br />

On Saturday, Sept. 15 Silvia Buck,<br />

chair of the Warren Historic Commission,<br />

led a dedication ceremony for the<br />

new gates. The Commissioners were<br />

present, as was Michalski, along with<br />

his father and grandfather. Michalski’s<br />

grandfather, Bernard Drazek, served the<br />

town of Warren for 42 years taking care<br />

of the Pine Grove Cemetery, and was<br />

delighted to see this improvement for<br />

another local ceremony. Buck said that<br />

she was pleased to, “offi cially accept and<br />

dedicate these gates to this beautiful cemetery,”<br />

and gave Michalski the honor of<br />

opening the gates for the fi rst time. The<br />

Christine said she hoped more<br />

students from Tantasqua attend the<br />

race this year.<br />

“It would be really nice to see a<br />

real strong attendance from Tantasqua<br />

because the scholarship goes<br />

to one of those students,” she said.<br />

Volunteers are also very much<br />

needed for the event, and Christine<br />

pointed out volunteering at the run<br />

is a good way for students to earn<br />

community service hours.<br />

Christine said the family had<br />

done a number of fundraisers over<br />

the years to fund the scholarships<br />

in Stephanie’s memory, but that<br />

they decided the race was what they<br />

wanted to put their energy into.<br />

“Steph was captain of the rugby<br />

team at Norwich and because of that<br />

she became an avid runner,” Christine<br />

said. “She was always running.<br />

One of her best friends, Crystal<br />

Brenner, was a runner too and came<br />

up with the idea of having a run.”<br />

Christine said that besides enabling<br />

the family to give the scholarship,<br />

the race honors Stephanie by<br />

keeping her memory alive.<br />

“This race is all about just bringing<br />

people together, having good<br />

time and good food, lots of laughs<br />

and lots of people telling stories,” she<br />

said. “It keeps us going and gives us<br />

a reason. Stephanie was a free-spirited<br />

girl who lived life to the fullest.<br />

When she walked into a room, I’m<br />

telling you it was like the room was<br />

on fi re. The room was alive. When<br />

she came home she always brought<br />

college friends home with her. We<br />

just want to keep it running.”<br />

TURLEY PUBLICATIONS PHOTO BY JENNIFER ROBERT<br />

Syliva Buck, Warren Historical Commission chair, shakes Michalski’s hand and thanks him for the donation for the<br />

gates while offi cially accepting them on behalf of the Commission.<br />

town of Warren Highway Department<br />

installed the gates for the Commission,<br />

to which Buck stated that they are “extremely<br />

grateful to them,” for doing so.<br />

After the ceremony took place, Michalski<br />

recalled some of his memories<br />

of Scouting, and how earning his Eagle<br />

rank has served him as he transitioned<br />

into adulthood. During the application<br />

and interview process for jobs, he explained,<br />

many of the potential employers<br />

he met with asked him about his being an<br />

Eagle Scout. While Michalski is, rightfully<br />

so, proud of making that rank, he<br />

explained that being part of Scouting in<br />

any capacity is something that is a very<br />

good thing for boys. “It such makes a<br />

man out of you quick,” he chuckled. “If<br />

it’s cold, hot, wet, you gotta keep walking.<br />

I went on a 50-mile hike the fi rst<br />

year I was in the Troop, they told me I<br />

didn’t have to go but I wanted to. I think<br />

my pack weighed more than I did. It was<br />

hard. But you learn so many great things<br />

in Scouts, learn things that are important<br />

when you are older too and a lot of boys<br />

don’t realize how much of an impact what<br />

they learn in Scouting has on the rest of<br />

their lives. Even if you don’t ever make<br />

Eagle, just going through the program is<br />

great, and teaches you so much that is really<br />

important.”<br />

But this year’s run almost didn’t<br />

happen. The family was hit with<br />

another devastating blow when<br />

Stephanie’s grandfather, James M.<br />

Hurley, was tragically killed in an<br />

apartment fi re in August.<br />

“We were going to cancel,” Christine<br />

said. “It’s been a really hard time<br />

for us and there was so much work<br />

to be done. But we were like, ‘Let’s<br />

just do it,’ and everything has been<br />

falling into place so nicely. We are in<br />

essence we are doing this in honor<br />

this year of her grandfather.”<br />

The 5K begins at the maintenance<br />

parking lot of the Tantasqua<br />

High School, proceeds behind the<br />

school and fi eld house to Route 148,<br />

turns Left onto Route 148 and goes<br />

to the second entrance of Webber<br />

Road, ending at the Rod and Gun<br />

Club.<br />

The cost for individuals to walk<br />

is $<strong>20</strong>, run is $25; the cost of a family<br />

of four to walk or run is $50. Nonrunner<br />

BBQ meal tickets are $10<br />

are available at registration.<br />

Christine said the Rod & Gun<br />

club has been wonderful to her family<br />

over the years, letting them use<br />

the facility for free.<br />

“They’ve been such a huge<br />

supporter of the family and they<br />

are just awesome,” she said.<br />

More information and race registrations<br />

can be found at www.hurleysrockinrun.com<br />

or at www.facebook.com/HurleysRockinRun<br />

or by<br />

e-mailing hurleysrockinrun@gmail.<br />

com. Registration can also be done<br />

on race day.


A Turley Publication • www.turley.com I Thursday, <strong>September</strong> <strong>20</strong>, <strong>20</strong>12 PAGE 11<br />

The East Brookfi eld team, along with members of the Mack family. The North Brookfi eld team.<br />

Connie Connie Mack Mack<br />

(l to r) Connie Mack III, Connie Mack V, Connie Mack IV and Dennis McGillicuddy<br />

cut the birthday cake.<br />

Winners of the East Brookfi eld Elementary Connie Mack Essay Contest pose with<br />

Mack the Eagle. First place winner John Button read his essay for the crowd.<br />

RIGHT: Jim “The Mud Man” Bintliff muds up a baseball with Lena Blackburne<br />

Baseball Rubbing Mud.<br />

BELOW: Members of Boy Scout Pack 148 and Troop 238 get ready for the<br />

rededication ceremony.<br />

honored at weekend celebration<br />

EAST BROOKFIELD – Hundreds<br />

of people turned out to Connie<br />

Mack Drive on an absolutely<br />

gorgeous fall day Saturday for<br />

Connie Mack Day, a 150th birthday<br />

celebration for their hometown<br />

hero. A rededication of Connie<br />

Mack Field was held Saturday afternoon,<br />

attended by local politicians<br />

and dignitaries, followed by<br />

an exhibition game reenactment of<br />

Connie Mack’s fi rst championship<br />

game between East Brookfi eld and<br />

North Brookfi eld.<br />

Other activities on Saturday included<br />

a pancake breakfast, parade,<br />

classic car show, fairway booths,<br />

farmers’ markets, kiddie rides, fi eld<br />

games, art show, quilt show, a special<br />

exhibition by the East Brookfi<br />

eld Historical Society, live music,<br />

book signings by author Norman<br />

Macht and a chicken barbecue<br />

sponsored by the fi re department.<br />

Friday night featured presentations<br />

by Dick Rosen, chair of the Philadelphia<br />

Athletics Historical Society;<br />

Norman Macht, author of two biographical<br />

books about Mack; Dick<br />

Armstrong, one of the last living<br />

people that ever worked for Mack;<br />

and Brandon Avery, member of the<br />

North Brookfi eld Historical Commission.<br />

TURLEY PUBLICATIONS PHOTOS<br />

BY JENNIFER GRYBOWSKI<br />

ABOVE: The new sign is unveiled at the<br />

rededication.<br />

LEFT: Norman Macht signs a copy of one<br />

of his books for an enthusiastic fan in the<br />

library.<br />

CAPTURE<br />

the Moment<br />

Purchase these<br />

photos or any<br />

others you see in one of<br />

our Turley Publications<br />

by going to www.<br />

turley2.smugmug.com.<br />

QC<br />

Connie Mack III, Connie Mack IV and Connie Mack V all throw out the fi rst pitches for the game.


PAGE 12 A Turley Publication • www.turley.com I Thursday, <strong>September</strong> <strong>20</strong>, <strong>20</strong>12<br />

The deadline for submissions for<br />

Sports is the Monday 12 noon,<br />

prior to publication.<br />

Send information, to Sports Editor<br />

Dave Forbes, dforbes@turley.com or<br />

send it through the mail to:<br />

Turley Publications c/o Sports Editor<br />

Dave Forbes, 24 Water St., Palmer, MA 01069<br />

Sportswww.turleysports.com<br />

Leicester defense<br />

too much for<br />

rebuilding Cougar<br />

soccer program<br />

- WARREN -<br />

By Bob Schron<br />

Turley Publications<br />

Sports Correspondent<br />

Rejuvenated by the renewal<br />

of its JV program and<br />

increased numbers,<br />

<strong>Quaboag</strong>’s comeback trail has<br />

still yet to lead to a successful<br />

destination.<br />

The talent of Thomas<br />

Jankins, Ethan Lacaire and the<br />

promising goal play of Taylor<br />

Trzeciak has continued to be a<br />

positive force of the Cougars.<br />

But in arguably one of the<br />

best soccer leagues in Central<br />

Mass, the Southern Worcester<br />

County League, <strong>Quaboag</strong> has<br />

still been battling seemingly ageless<br />

demons.<br />

After taking an early lead,<br />

<strong>Quaboag</strong> (0-5) lost at Leicester,<br />

Monday afternoon, 2-1.<br />

Wolverines senior Jack Lajoie<br />

scored the game-winning goal<br />

and denied another strong<br />

<strong>Quaboag</strong> effort.<br />

Indians attack too<br />

much for Cougars<br />

TURLEY PUBLICATIONS STAFF PHOTO BY DAVE FORBES<br />

The <strong>Quaboag</strong> boys varsity football team prepares for the start of a recent game.<br />

- WARREN -<br />

By Bob Schron<br />

Turley Publications<br />

Sports Correspondent<br />

Bartlett has long been one<br />

of the best kept secrets<br />

among Division 5 football<br />

teams, a team with a history of<br />

being able to compete against<br />

larger schools.<br />

Still reeling from the seasonending<br />

loss of quarterback<br />

Jimmy Zalatores, <strong>Quaboag</strong> certainly<br />

wasn’t the team to expose<br />

the Indians at the high school<br />

Friday night.<br />

The result — a 45-6 Indians’<br />

win which gave the Cougars<br />

their second loss of the year.<br />

“We’re disappointed,” said<br />

coach Dave Shepherd. “It’s<br />

been a tough start after a strong<br />

preseason. We just haven’t been<br />

able to be focused enough to<br />

win. This is a sport that is all<br />

about blocking and tackling.<br />

We just haven’t played well<br />

enough in those areas.”<br />

<strong>Quaboag</strong> (0-2) was defeated<br />

by a similar score last week at<br />

Pathfinder. It was there that the<br />

Cougars lost Zalatores to an<br />

MCL and ACL injury; Zalatores<br />

has been the igniter of their<br />

offense for the last three years.<br />

“Tyler Wade played very well<br />

in jimmy’s absence,” said<br />

Shepherd. “He’s young, but he<br />

has a definite idea of what it<br />

takes to lead a team. For Tyler,<br />

it’s just a matter of getting experience.<br />

His play was certainly<br />

not the reason we lost that game.<br />

It’s about playing better fundamental<br />

football — blocking and<br />

tackling. Where we’ve had problems<br />

the past two years is in the<br />

areas I just talked about, fundamentals<br />

and in giving up the big<br />

play. We’ve been susceptible to<br />

that again so far this season.”<br />

However, Bartlett and<br />

Pathfinder were less than ideal<br />

opponents to begin this season,<br />

one that began with considerable<br />

optimism in the preseason.<br />

After the second defeat of the<br />

year in the home opener against<br />

Alex Given-Perry and Bartlett,<br />

coach Shepherd was sitting in<br />

the coaches’ office with his assistant<br />

coaches.<br />

“We were talking,” he said,<br />

“that it’s too bad we weren’t able<br />

to play some more winnable<br />

games at the start of our sched-<br />

See ATTACK | PAGE 13<br />

<strong>Quaboag</strong> forward Ethan Lacaire (10) controls the ball in the midfield area.<br />

Lacaire had scored to give the<br />

Cougars the early 1-0 lead. But<br />

Josh Limonis of the Wolverines<br />

forged a tie minutes later, setting<br />

the stage for the game-winner.<br />

“It was a tough loss for us,”<br />

said coach Norm St. Denis.<br />

“We’ve continued to play com-<br />

petitively against the teams in<br />

our league. But we’re always<br />

See REBUILDING | PAGE 13<br />

Cougars bounce back after first defeat<br />

- WARREN -<br />

By Bob Schron<br />

Turley Publications<br />

Sports Correspondent<br />

<strong>Quaboag</strong> does not take<br />

defeat lightly. During<br />

the last eight years,<br />

which has included a state<br />

championship in <strong>20</strong>07, <strong>Quaboag</strong><br />

has been defeated less than <strong>20</strong><br />

times in regular season play.<br />

This, for a team which has averaged<br />

over 15 wins a season and<br />

plays one of the most competitive<br />

non-league schedules in the<br />

sport.<br />

However, Auburn has been a<br />

foil. In a clash between the two<br />

top teams in Central Mass in<br />

early season play, the Lady<br />

Rockets reprised last season’s<br />

win over the Cougars last<br />

Wednesday, defeating <strong>Quaboag</strong><br />

2-0.<br />

Although <strong>Quaboag</strong>’s speed<br />

up front allowed the team<br />

numerous shot opportunities<br />

and chances in the offensive<br />

zone, Rockets’ superb goalie,<br />

Sarah Palace shut out the<br />

Cougars.<br />

Palace had eight saves in the<br />

win. After a scoreless first half,<br />

Paige Laperle scored the decisive<br />

goal with <strong>20</strong>:00 left.<br />

“We knew what to expect<br />

when we play teams like<br />

Auburn,” said coach John<br />

O’Neill. “But they are just the<br />

type of teams we want to play.<br />

We need to be challenged.”<br />

Auburn (4-0) has now won<br />

all four games by shutouts, with<br />

Jamie McNamara, who scored<br />

the second goal against the<br />

Cougars, their leading scorer.<br />

The Cougars however<br />

rebounded with a particular<br />

vengeance on Monday.<br />

Andrea Koslowski scored<br />

two goals and added a pair of<br />

See COUGARS | PAGE 13<br />

Tantasqua Pop Warner kickoff <strong>20</strong>12 season<br />

By Dave Carson<br />

TPW Board Member<br />

- STURBRIDGE -<br />

Jr Pee Wee and Pee Wee<br />

Teams win big in<br />

season opener<br />

Tantasqua football was in<br />

full swing this weekend<br />

starting with the<br />

Tantasqua High School<br />

Warriors thumping Southbridge<br />

Saturday morning 29-6. The<br />

game was rescheduled due to a<br />

Friday night thunder and lightning<br />

storm. Tantasqua’s football<br />

weekend of dominance would<br />

continue on Sunday as the Pop<br />

Warner Braves team’s hit the<br />

field.<br />

The Jr Pee Wee team started<br />

the morning off strong by controlling<br />

Chicopee on both sides<br />

of ball in a lopsided 25-0 victory.<br />

TPW began the game on<br />

Chicopee’s 47-yard line, punish-<br />

ing runs by Owen Stanton and<br />

Chase Freeland ignited the<br />

Braves high flying offense all the<br />

way to the Chicopee goal line.<br />

Sean Farland would finish the<br />

drive by scoring on a quarterback<br />

keeper for a 2-yard touchdown.<br />

Farland would add on an<br />

extra point with a completed<br />

pass to Kyle Rizy in the end<br />

zone.<br />

The TPW defense took the<br />

field after a Jared Spratt kick<br />

off to the Chicopee 45-yard line.<br />

Chicopee’s first offensive play<br />

ended with Sean Lauritsen and<br />

TURLEY PUBLICATIONS STAFF PHOTO BY DAVE FORBES<br />

Cosmo Casamassa making a<br />

joint tackle, for a 2-yard loss.<br />

Then on the next play Connor<br />

Cunningham wrapped things up<br />

by recovering a Chicopee fumble.<br />

The Braves offense went on<br />

to score, on a 42-yard scamper<br />

by Antonio Aviles with a fantastic<br />

lead block by Ryan Sears. A<br />

missed extra point attempt<br />

would leave the score 13-0<br />

through halftime.<br />

Tantasqua remained on<br />

point, starting the second half<br />

See WARNER | PAGE 13<br />

TURLEY PUBLICATIONS SUBMITTED PHOTO BY JASON SPRATT<br />

Jarod Spratt kicks off to Chicopee to start <strong>20</strong>12 season


just like the first. The defense held Chicopee on four<br />

straight plays, capped with an impressive backfield stop<br />

by Jared Spratt for an 8-yard loss. TPW took the ball<br />

over at the Chicopee 35 and later scored on an inside<br />

sprint for 33 yards by Chase Freeland. Leaving the score<br />

now 19-0. The Braves would recover a fumble on the<br />

ensuing kickoff to close out the third quarter.<br />

TPW would score its last touchdown in the forth on a<br />

spectacular run by Sean Farland which had him weaving<br />

and dodging tacklers. A timely block by Chase Freeland<br />

allowed Farland to coast right in for the score and<br />

increasing the Braves lead to 25-0. Tantasqua would later<br />

recover another fumble on the kickoff and then close the<br />

game out with several running plays by Jacob Belanger<br />

and Andrew Lafaille.<br />

“The kids played their hearts out. All of them executed<br />

great,” exclaimed coach Rick Farland.<br />

In the second game of the day the TPW Pee Wee<br />

team hosted Athol –Marhar Patriots. This ended in<br />

another strong performance for Tantasqua Pop Warner<br />

as they went on to win the game 32-0. Athol began the<br />

game receiving and started on their 42-yard line. The<br />

Braves defense of Bryce Iller, Colin Reindeau and<br />

Andrew Jensen pushed the Patriots backward on four<br />

consecutive plays, topped off by a <strong>20</strong>-yard loss on a fumbled<br />

punt and tackle by Troy Lee.<br />

Tantasqua took the ball over on the Athol 22 and<br />

immediately scored as Jon Reardon pounded the ball<br />

inside the 10 and Colin Reindeau finished the drive with<br />

a 7-yard touchdown. A missed extra point attempt left<br />

the score 6-0. The TPW defense remained stout as Nick<br />

Lawrence recovered another fumbled punt attempt on<br />

Athol’s 8-yard line. Reindeau would score his second<br />

touchdown of the quarter and Jon Reardon finished it<br />

off with an extra point run. Giving the Braves a 13-0 lead<br />

to end the first quarter.<br />

The Braves defense kept the Patriot off balance with a<br />

great backfield tackle by Nick Lawrence and a near<br />

interception by Jared Langevin. Langevin moments later<br />

returned a 30-yard punt back for a touchdown.<br />

However, an untimely roughing the kicker penalty would<br />

erase the score. The Braves would eventually score<br />

again before the half. An exciting 21-yard pass across the<br />

middle of the field from quarterback Colin Eliason to<br />

Langevin gave way to a Nick Lawrence touchdown. This<br />

left the halftime score at <strong>20</strong>-0 TPW.<br />

Athol was unable to recover as Tantasqua scored several<br />

more times while its defense kept the Patriots off the<br />

field. The game ended with a score of 32-0.<br />

The Unlimited Braves played the Winchendon<br />

A Turley Publication • www.turley.com I Thursday, <strong>September</strong> <strong>20</strong>, <strong>20</strong>12 PAGE 13<br />

– sports –<br />

Wolverine for the final game of the day. The Wolverine’s<br />

started the game with a 55-yard kickoff return and an<br />

extra point kick. Taking an early 8-0 lead with just seconds<br />

off the clock. The first quarter would end with both<br />

defenses holding each other to consecutive four downs<br />

and out. Winchendon powered by a supersize offensive<br />

line managed to score a touchdown on a run up the middle<br />

to start the second quarter.<br />

TPW would respond with a long sustaining drive as<br />

Michael Farland, Matthew Dumas and Cody Ridz<br />

marched the Braves down the field. Quarterback Joe<br />

Degnan would finish off the drive with a goal line dive<br />

into the end zone. A missed extra point attempt would<br />

close out the half with the score 15-6 Wolverine. The second<br />

half continued to be a tough hard fought match, as<br />

each team held its ground.<br />

Late in the third Winchendon would find their way to<br />

the end zone on a second touchdown run up the middle<br />

and end of the third quarter. The forth remained the<br />

same as no team gave up an inch. Defensive players<br />

Daimond Breckterfield, Stephan “Cook” Kowalewski<br />

fought to get the ball back to the Braves offense. The<br />

game would end 21-6 Winchendon.<br />

Other games<br />

Tiny Mite highlights<br />

First Half: Running backs Jamison Prouix and<br />

Xander Crowell helped setup a Patrick Welton scored on<br />

a 15-yard run. Welton would later score a second on a<br />

25-yard run to end the half.<br />

Andrew Haley and Ayden Blair were relentless on<br />

defense, teaming up on a quarterback sack.<br />

Second half: Welton scored on a fantastic run through<br />

several would be tacklers.<br />

Andrew Haley recovered a fumble off a Jace Hess<br />

tackle.<br />

Mitey Mite Highlights<br />

First half: Nathan Winco started the game with a<br />

great backfield tackle, while Jacob Provencher played<br />

solid defense all half.<br />

Booker Lester scored on a 35-yard touchdown run.<br />

Dillon Cournoyer ran a 22-yard run to setup Booker<br />

Lester’s second touchdown of the half.<br />

Second half: Quarterback Dante Reno had a 35-yard<br />

run to the Springfield goal line then finished it off with a<br />

5-yard touchdown.<br />

Dillon Cournoyer scored a second touchdown on a<br />

32-yard sweep play breaking though multiple tackles.<br />

Reno would get his second touchdown on a 40-yard<br />

run spearheaded from a great upfront block by Maverick<br />

Rizy.<br />

Next game Tantasqua will be home against rival<br />

Southbridge.<br />

WARNER | FROM PAGE 12 College Notes<br />

COUGARS | FROM PAGE 12<br />

assists and Paige Guzik and Ally Sweet each scored<br />

twice as <strong>Quaboag</strong> defeated upstart Leicester, 9-0 in<br />

Leicester. <strong>Quaboag</strong>’s Abbe Cote had the shutout for<br />

<strong>Quaboag</strong>.<br />

After last season’s semifinal exit at the hands of<br />

Oakmont, stronger and more physical <strong>Quaboag</strong> worked<br />

hard in the offseason to increase their fitness.<br />

“It showed us something,” said O’Neill. “But I liked<br />

what I saw in the way that the team came back. We saw<br />

what our strengths and weaknesses are.”<br />

Notwithstanding, <strong>Quaboag</strong> has been playing exceptional<br />

field hockey. Koslowski, Ally and Dani Sweet,<br />

Madison Messier, Becky McCann and Guzik were<br />

among the leading position players who played exten-<br />

Ethan<br />

Lacaire<br />

SCHOOL:<br />

Pathfinder<br />

Congratulations<br />

goes out to the<br />

Cougars boys<br />

soccer player.<br />

He scored a goal in<br />

a 4-2 loss to <strong>Quaboag</strong>.<br />

To nominate someone<br />

for Athlete of the<br />

Week, contact Sports Editor<br />

Dave Forbes at 413-283-8393<br />

ext. 237 or send an e-mail to<br />

dforbes@turley.com.<br />

sively in the offseason.<br />

McCann’s game took a quantum jump, said O’Neill.<br />

Coaching the Bay State Games this offseason, O’Neill<br />

had a further opportunity to coach Guzik who played<br />

there. During the offseason, O’Neill thought Guzik had<br />

improved immensely.<br />

The return of Shelby Jankins in the backfield has also<br />

improved the team’s defense.<br />

“We’re certainly feeling we’re going to continue playing<br />

well,” said O’Neill. “Losing only three seniors gave us<br />

a feeling of confidence going into the year. And I believe<br />

we’ve already seen glimpses of what we can do.”<br />

Bob Schron is a sports correspondent for Turley Publications.<br />

He can be reached at bschron@turley.com.<br />

ATTACK | FROM PAGE 12<br />

ule. Pathfinder has one of its best teams. Bartlett is<br />

always tough.”<br />

On Saturday he added, “But we have some players<br />

who know what it takes. Jon Janosz (105 yards) and<br />

Joey Zalatores (nine tackles) can definitely help Tyler<br />

Wade to pick up the slack.”<br />

In addition, the Cougars will get Eric McCormick<br />

back after an early season injury<br />

“But we’ll miss Victor Santiago.”<br />

Asked about Santiago’s status, Shepherd answered,<br />

“Victor left the team and it was a big disappointment.<br />

He didn’t want to play football anymore.”<br />

The Cougars went to the Wildcat occasionally with<br />

Janosz, still an exceptional player and the return as<br />

well of Steven Tabor has helped imperceptibly.<br />

“But we need to pick up the overall performance,”<br />

said the coach. “We get back to the league now; and<br />

we need to get something going. We play Blackstone<br />

Valley on Saturday. They’re not close to where they<br />

were last year.”<br />

Asked about the importance of this early season<br />

contest, the coach replied, “It’s very important. At<br />

worst, we need to play a very competitive game. We<br />

can’t afford to get blown out. It’s critical; we start the<br />

season against tough teams. But down the line, we<br />

have games that we can win against Keefe Tech,<br />

Monty Tech, Ware and Nashoba Tech.”<br />

Dolan scores first collegiate goal<br />

FITCHBURG - Keene State women’s field hockey<br />

freshman and West Brookfield resident Hayley Dolan<br />

scored her first career collegiate goal in a 5-0 win over<br />

Fitchburg State on Saturday, Sept. 15.<br />

Dolan scored what turned out to be the game-winning<br />

goal in the first half.<br />

Minchoff saves game for Brandeis<br />

WORCESTER - Brandeis men’s soccer goalie and<br />

Sturbridge resident Blake Minchoff came up with a<br />

game-saving stop when he deflected a shot just over the<br />

crossbar just before the final horn sounded to give<br />

Brandeis a 2-1 victory over WPI on Wednesday, Sept.<br />

12.<br />

Minchoff finished with five saves<br />

Quigley places fourth for Bison<br />

MIDDLEBURY, Vt. - Nichols men’s golf senior and<br />

Sturbridge resident Matthew Quiglry had the fourth<br />

best score for the Bison at the two-day Duke Nelson<br />

Invitational at Ralph Myhre Golf Course.<br />

Quigley shot an 81 on the first day and an 80 on the<br />

second to finish with an overall score of 161.<br />

Juszczyk makes two<br />

defensive saves<br />

RINDGE, N.H. - Franklin Pierce women’s field<br />

hockey defensive back and Warren resident Alyssa<br />

Juszczyk made two defensive saves in a 5-0 loss to<br />

fourth-ranked UMass-Lowell on Wednesday, Sept. 12.<br />

They were her second and third of the season.<br />

Sturbridge Youth<br />

Basketball signups<br />

STURBRIDGE - Sturbridge Youth Basketball<br />

is now accepting o-line registrations for grades 1-8<br />

until Nov. 2.<br />

Please go to sturbridgebasketball.com to register<br />

or request information.<br />

REBUILDING | FROM PAGE 12<br />

going to be fighting the battle of numbers. Coming into<br />

this game for example: I knew that last year when we<br />

played Leicester, they featured 10 seniors, whether as<br />

starters or key reserves. I thought we would match up<br />

with them, but at the game, I looked at their roster and<br />

they had 10 more seniors playing against us in this game.<br />

That’s the difficulty you face at a smaller school. Your<br />

opponents can retool because of their numbers. It’s harder<br />

for us.”<br />

The Cougars’ scoring totals are up from a year ago,<br />

with Lacaire and Jankins instrumental in a quicker<br />

attack. And Trzeciak played masterfully against Auburn<br />

in the Cougars’ 4-2 defeat at the hands of the Rockets.<br />

“We’re OK,” said the coach as the Cougars headed<br />

into a non-league Division 3 matchup with Ware earlier<br />

this week. Of course, we need a win. The kids on the<br />

team knew that we had a tough early season schedule<br />

(including games against Shepherd Hill, Tantasqua,<br />

Leicester, David Prouty). Other than a performance<br />

that I didn’t like against Shepherd Hill, we’ve been very<br />

competitive. Are they upset? I suspect they are. Maybe<br />

that’s a good thing. We’ll begin to play with a singleminded<br />

purpose. It will help us get (that first) win.”<br />

The program’s renaissance remains. For the first time<br />

since <strong>20</strong>07, the team has the aforementioned jayvee<br />

team.<br />

“We’ve competed,” said the coach. “When you see<br />

that, you feel better about your future. We graduate just<br />

three seniors, though they are outstanding, including<br />

Thomas Jankins. We graduated just two last season.<br />

For a school our size to lose just five players in two years<br />

gives you hopes.”<br />

After its game with the Indians, the Cougars play at<br />

Northbridge, another outstanding team, and then have<br />

eight days off before playing at Millbury.<br />

“We have to keep battling,” said St. Denis. “The<br />

schedule doesn’t get any easier. But the better we play<br />

the more clear the changes are that you need to make.<br />

We’ve made moves to make adjustments to our offense.<br />

But that’s diminished our dense. We’re still searching for<br />

a combination which can give us a better chance to win.”


PAGE 14 A Turley Publication • www.turley.com I Thursday, <strong>September</strong> <strong>20</strong>, <strong>20</strong>12<br />

- obituaries -<br />

Donald “Butch” Evans, 58<br />

BROOKFIELD - Donald “Butch” Evans, 58 died<br />

Friday, Sept. 14, <strong>20</strong>12 with his loving family by his side.<br />

Butch was born in Ware the son of the late Robert and<br />

Nancy (Mason) Evans of Brookfi eld; two daughters<br />

Sarabeth and her two children, Ian and Tyler, all of<br />

Brookfi eld; Casey Sutton of Holland; 3 brothers David<br />

of Florida , Bobby of Brookfi eld and Duncan and<br />

his wife Donna of Holland; his caregivers Dustin and<br />

his wife Missy and their children Thomas and Emily<br />

of Southbridge; many nieces and nehews; great nieces<br />

and nephews including Duncan Jr. and his son Gaige<br />

of Holland; John and Jeffrey of Brookfi eld and their<br />

children; and a host of others including his good ‘Buddies”<br />

Jessie, Tank, and Hak. He was predeceased by<br />

his brother Carroll in <strong>20</strong>10. Butch was a mechanic for<br />

many years retiring due to illness. There are no calling<br />

hours. Burial will be private for the family in Brookfi eld<br />

Cemetery. Please listen to the song “I’m a Simple Man”<br />

and you will think of Butch. R.I.P. Butch, you’re not in<br />

pain and you are reunited with Dad and Carroll. Till<br />

we meet again, we love you! Pillsbury Funeral Home,<br />

Old West Brookfi eld Road, Brookfi eld is directing arrangements.<br />

To offer a condolence or to share a memory<br />

please visit: Pillsburyfuneralhome.com<br />

Mary T. Flanders, 97<br />

NEW BRAINTREE - Mary T. Flanders, 97, passed<br />

away peacefully at home on Sept. 9, <strong>20</strong>12. She leaves<br />

her husband Luther C. Flanders, Jr.; a step son Wayne<br />

Flanders; 2 step daughters Lynne and Cynthia all of<br />

Arizona; a niece Kathy Trum-Searah of New Braintree<br />

and a great nephew Raymond Searah<br />

and his wife Lisa of New Braintree.<br />

Mary was born in Paxton, MA the daughter of John<br />

and Elizabeth (Ahearn)<br />

Trum. She graduated from Classical High School<br />

and Anna Maria College in Paxton. Mary worked for<br />

the Social Security Administration in Worcester for<br />

many years until she retired. She also worked at the<br />

family farm<br />

“Lyncynway Farm” in New Braintree.<br />

Friends and family are invited to attend a memorial<br />

service at 1p.m. on<br />

Oct. 7, <strong>20</strong>12 in the Tri-Parish Community Church,<br />

Oakham Road, New Braintree. Graveside services<br />

were private for the family on<br />

Sept. 14 in Mooreland Cemetery, Paxton, MA. Pillsbury<br />

Funeral Home, 44 Gilbert Street, North Brookfi eld is<br />

directing arrangements. To offer a condolence or share<br />

a memory, please visit Pillsburyfuneralhome.com<br />

Clare S. (Marshall) Stover, 81<br />

STURBRIDGE - Clare S. (Marshall)<br />

Stover, 81, passed away on Sept. 7, <strong>20</strong>12,<br />

after a period of failing health at Radius of<br />

Southbridge Healthcare. Her son, Jordan<br />

Homer Stover of<br />

Sturbridge, MA and daughter, Helen<br />

Stover Kennedy Mattson of Fitzwilliam,<br />

NH were at her side. Clare was born in New York, NY<br />

on Feb. 27, 1931, daughter of Nan<br />

(Chenault) Marshall and Gerard F. Marshall. Clare<br />

graduated from Staples High School, Westport, CT in<br />

1950, attended the University of Connecticut and graduated<br />

from the Latin American Institute in New York<br />

City. A language major and fl uent in Spanish, Clare was<br />

au pair for the Francour family in Westport during her<br />

High School years and traveled with them to Quito, Ecuador.<br />

Clare was married to Edward C. Stover on Sept.<br />

25, 1954 at the Christ & Holy Trinity Episcopal Church<br />

in Westport, CT. Clare and Edward (Ward) met in New<br />

York at the Lily Tulip Paper Company where she was<br />

a Spanish-English Transcriptionist and he was a Salesman.<br />

During 1961 and 1963, she helped at<br />

Berta Trese’s Kindergarten in Boxborough. Wanting<br />

to be closer to their two children, they moved from Cape<br />

Cod to Sturbridge, MA in 1995. Clare was a devoted<br />

wife and mother to her family. She was an avid gardener<br />

and bird watcher and was for many years a member<br />

of the Audubon Society. Self-taught, Clare built bird<br />

feeders and birdhouses, which she placed strategically<br />

around their property. She and her husband enjoyed<br />

the out-of-doors, camping, hiking and skiing. She loved<br />

animals and in her early years was a skilled horseback<br />

rider.<br />

In addition to her son and daughter, Clare is survived<br />

by her son-in-law, G. Tanton Mattson; her sister,<br />

The Reverend Nan M. Cushing of Durham, NC and<br />

two of her three grandchildren, Maura Kelly Kennedy<br />

of Melrose, MA, and Bevin Coane Kennedy of Washington,<br />

DC. Her grandson, Nathanial Holt Kennedy<br />

passed away in <strong>20</strong>09. Clare and Ward were married for<br />

56 years. Ward passed away in <strong>20</strong>10. Clare’s wishes are<br />

to be laid to rest at the Nassau Knolls Cemetery and<br />

Memorial Park, in Port Washington, LI, NY with her<br />

mother and father.<br />

A graveside service will be planned in early October.<br />

Details will be announced at a later date. In lieu of fl owers<br />

donations can be made to Mass Audubon Society,<br />

directed to Wellfl eet Bay Program or Drumlin Farm,<br />

<strong>20</strong>8 South Great Road, Lincoln, MA 01773 or Spencer<br />

Animal Control, 9 Main Street, Spencer, MA 01562.<br />

Pillsbury Funeral Home, Old West Brookfi eld Road,<br />

Brookfi eld is assisting the family. To offer a condolence<br />

or share a memory, please visit Pillsburyfuneralhome.<br />

com<br />

Gert “Butch” Wharton, 64<br />

BROOKFIELD - Gert “Butch”<br />

Wharton, 64, passed away Tuesday,<br />

Sept. 11, <strong>20</strong>12 at home following a<br />

brief illness. He is predeceased by his<br />

wife Carol (Lahair) Wharton who<br />

passed away in <strong>20</strong>04. He leaves his<br />

four sons, Scott Wharton of Worcester,<br />

Keith Wharton and his wife Bethany<br />

of Worcester, Shawn Wharton<br />

and Brian Wharton both of Brookfi eld, and a daughter<br />

in law Angie Wharton of North Brookfi eld. He also<br />

leaves his only sister Dorothy Chouinard and her husband<br />

Kenneth of Douglas; his mother in law Carol Lahair<br />

of Worcester; a sister in law Judith Kowaleski and<br />

her husband Richard of Shrewsbury. He will be lovingly<br />

missed by his 5 grandchildren, Michael, Erika, Jacob,<br />

Alexia and Emily, an aunt Rosemarie Mavrogeorge and<br />

2 nephews, Richard of Worcester and Daniel of Manchaug.<br />

Gert was born in Budigen, Germany Sept. 3, 1948<br />

son of David and Dorothea Wharton. He lived in Brookfi<br />

eld for many years. Gert was a longtime member of the<br />

Local 4 Operating Engineers. He enjoyed fi shing and<br />

carpentry work in his retirement years. Funeral services<br />

are private for the family. Pillsbury Funeral Home, Old<br />

West Brookfi eld Road, Brookfi eld is assisting the family<br />

with arrangements. In lieu of fl owers donations may<br />

be made to Overlook Visiting Nurse Association, Inc<br />

& Hospice Services, Attn: Donations P.O. Box 1000,<br />

Charlton, MA 01507. To offer a condolence or share a<br />

memory please visit: Pillsburyfuneralhome.com<br />

� OBITUARIES �<br />

Turley Publications will gladly print obituaries with<br />

a photo free of charge. Please contact Editor<br />

Tim Kane at tkane@turley.com<br />

or 413-967-3505 for more information.<br />

NOTICE<br />

ERRORS: Each advertiser<br />

is requested to check<br />

their advertisement the<br />

first time it appears.<br />

This paper will not be<br />

responsible for more<br />

than one corrected insertion,<br />

nor will be liable<br />

for any error in<br />

an advertisement to a<br />

greater extent than the<br />

cost of the space occupied<br />

by the item in the<br />

advertisement.<br />

SUPPORT<br />

COMMUNITY<br />

BUSINESSES<br />

- public safety -<br />

Brookfi eld Police Log<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

Arrest(s)<br />

<strong>September</strong> 14<br />

Jonathan P. Cancelliere, age 35, of 50 Wood Dr., Ashby, MA was arrested<br />

for OUI Drugs, negligent operation of a motor vehicle, failure<br />

to stop for a police offi cer, leaving the scene of property damage accident,<br />

marked lanes violation, injury to surface of way and possess<br />

Class A drug – heroin subsq. Offense.<br />

<strong>September</strong> 16<br />

Gustavo Adolfo Onofre, age 27, of 23 N. Quinsigamond Ave., Shrewsbury,<br />

MA was arrested for operating a motor vehicle with a suspended<br />

license, subsq. Offense.<br />

Monday, Sept. 10<br />

Phone Assist citizen, <strong>Quaboag</strong> St., services rendered<br />

Phone Found/lost property, Central St., services rendered<br />

Phone Animal call, Gay Rd., taken/referred to other agency<br />

911—Medical Emergency, Post Rd., transported to Mary Lane<br />

Tuesday, Sept. 11<br />

911—Medical Emergency, Pine Lane, transported to St. Vs.<br />

Phone Medical Emergency, <strong>Quaboag</strong> St., transported to Mary Lane<br />

Wednesday, Sept. 12<br />

Initiated Animal Call, Mechanic St., services rendered<br />

911—Medical Emergency, Lincoln St., transported to Harrington<br />

Radio Suspicious Activity, Central St., arrest(s) made<br />

911—Medical Emergency, Nanatomqua Dr., transported to Harrington<br />

Phone Missing person, S Maple St., call cancelled<br />

911—Medical Emergency, Long Hill Rd., transported to Mary Lane<br />

Thursday, Sept. 13<br />

911—Medical Emergency, Webber Rd., transported to Harrington<br />

Phone Assist citizen, Westward Way, spoken to<br />

911—Medical Emergency, Conestoga Trail, transported to St. Vs.<br />

Radio Suspicious activity, Molasses Hill Rd., checked/secured<br />

Friday, Sept. 14<br />

911—Complaint/MV operations, Route 9 Hwy., could not locate<br />

Saturday, Sept. 15<br />

911—Hazardous Incident, S Maple St., gone on arrival<br />

911—Disturbance, Kimball St., peace restored<br />

Cellular Complaint/MV operations, Rte. 148 Hwy., could not locate<br />

Phone Alarm, Main St., checked/secured<br />

Sunday, Sept. 16<br />

Cellular Complaint/MV operations, Rte. 9 Hwy., spoken to<br />

Monday, Sept. 17<br />

911—Medical Emergency, Fifth St., transported to St. Vs.<br />

New Braintree Police Log<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

Sept. 10<br />

Suspicious vehicle, Hardwick Road<br />

Sept. 11<br />

Hang glider crash, Tanner Hiller Airport<br />

Neighbor dispute, Igoe Road<br />

Juvenile complaint, Davis Road<br />

Juvenile complaint, Worcester Road<br />

Sept. 12<br />

Suspicious activity, West Brookfi eld Road<br />

Sept. 14<br />

Traffi c stop, Gilbertville Road<br />

Traffi c stop, Barre Road<br />

Traffi c stop, Barre Road<br />

Suspicious vehicle, Rutherford Road<br />

Traffi c stop, Barre Road<br />

Traffi c stop, Barre Road<br />

Trespassers, Mass Central Railroad tracks<br />

Assist North Brookfi eld Police, Medical emergency, Grove Street<br />

Sept. 15<br />

Traffi c stop, Worcester Road<br />

Motor vehicle accident, Barre Cut Off Road<br />

Suspicious vehicle, Utley Road<br />

North Brookfi eld Police Logs<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

•<br />

Monday, Sept. 10<br />

911 Hang-Up call, Brown Rd., transported to Wing<br />

Phone Assist citizen, Town of N Brookfi eld, spoken to<br />

Tuesday, Sept. 11<br />

911—Medical Emergency, Brown Rd., services rendered<br />

911—Medical Emergency, Brown Rd., transported to Wing<br />

Phone Animal call, Old West Brookfi eld Rd., taken to family/guardian<br />

Phone Complaint, N Main St. + Maple St., spoken to<br />

Thursday, Sept. 13<br />

Phone Complaint, N Main St., spoken to<br />

911—Disturbance, Walnut St., transported to UMass<br />

Phone Alarm, Bell St., spoken to<br />

911—Hang-Up Call, Gilbert St., spoken to<br />

911—Medical Emergency, Bigelow St., transported to St. Vs.<br />

911—Medical Emergency, Ward St., services rendered<br />

Initiated Serve summons, Bullard Rd., services rendered<br />

Friday, Sept. 14<br />

Phone Motor vehicle accident, School St. + Forest St., report taken<br />

Phone Animal call, Willow St. + St. Cohn St., taken/referred to other<br />

agency<br />

911—Medical Emergency, Oakham Rd., services rendered<br />

Phone Larceny/Theft/shoplifting, School St., report taken<br />

911—911/Abandoned Call, S Main St., spoken to<br />

Radio Disturbance, Green Rd., spoken to<br />

911—Medical Emergency, Grove St., transported to Mary Lane<br />

Saturday, Sept. 15<br />

911—Complaint/MV operations, E Brookfi eld Rd., services rendered<br />

911—Medical Emergency, Oakham Rd., transported to UMass<br />

Phone Fire Structure, Forest St., extinguished<br />

911—Animal Call, Prospect St., spoken to<br />

Phone Suspicious Activity, Prospect St., gone on arrival<br />

Phone Past hit and run, Forest St., investigated<br />

Initiated Hazardous incident, Grove St., services rendered<br />

911—Disturbance, Bigelow Rd., spoken to<br />

911—Complaint, Smith Hanson Rd., spoken to<br />

Sunday, Sept. 16<br />

Phone Complaint, Route 67 Hwy., false alarm<br />

Cellular Motor vehicle accident, Gilbert St. + Ward St., report taken


North Brookfi eld Savings Bank<br />

announces two promotions<br />

NORTH BROOKFIELD - North<br />

Brookfi eld Savings Bank recently hired<br />

two new members to add to its staff.<br />

Tammy M. Martin was hired as the<br />

branch manager for the branch of West<br />

Brookfi eld and Jonathon D. Kelley was<br />

hired as the assistant vice president, business<br />

development offi cer and commercial<br />

lender.<br />

Martin’s new responsibilities include<br />

creating and sustaining relationships with<br />

both existing and possible customers at<br />

the West Brookfi eld branch. She’ll be<br />

helping customers with personal banking<br />

needs along with taking care of daily operations.<br />

She is proud of the exceptional<br />

service she offers to every customer of<br />

hers along with her ten years of experience<br />

in the banking industry. A previous<br />

position of hers was working as the manager<br />

at the Rutland Offi ce of Spencer<br />

Savings Bank, and she graduated from<br />

Worcester State College (now University)<br />

with a bachelor’s degree. Martin said,<br />

“Being here at North Brookfi eld Savings<br />

Bank has been such a great experience.<br />

Working for a community bank that is<br />

so devoted to its customers’ needs makes<br />

every day enjoyable. The staff truly performs<br />

as a team and it is refreshing to<br />

come to work where everyone is always<br />

so happy.”<br />

Kelley new responsibilities include<br />

developing both recent and existing relationships<br />

that pertain to commercial<br />

lending, as well as assisting customers<br />

on available lending items and helping<br />

borrowers meet their fi nancial goals.<br />

Like Tammy, he has around ten years of<br />

experience in the banking industry and<br />

has held jobs at banks such as Sovereign<br />

Bank and Savers Bank. At Sovereign<br />

Bank Kelley was awarded Business<br />

Banker of the Year and received a number<br />

of other awards when it came to sales.<br />

His experience also includes serving as a<br />

board member for the Board of Directors<br />

for the Chamber of Central Mass South<br />

back in <strong>20</strong>11, serving as Vice President at<br />

Worcester Executive Association, as well<br />

as serving as Corporator at Children’s<br />

Friend Society of Worcester, MA. Jonathon<br />

said, “I am thrilled to join the team<br />

at North Brookfi eld Savings Bank. I’m<br />

eager to use my expertise to work with<br />

each customer and satisfy their banking<br />

needs.<br />

The president and CEO of North<br />

Brookfi eld Savings Bank said, “We are<br />

so honored to welcome these two skilled<br />

individuals to our team. The knowledge<br />

and experience that Tammy and Jonathon<br />

bring to North Brookfi eld Savings<br />

Bank will be essential to the continuing<br />

growth of our bank and the satisfaction<br />

of our customers.”<br />

Klimavich appointed to Hometown<br />

Bank communication position<br />

OXFORD<br />

- Hometown<br />

Bank has appointed<br />

Joseph<br />

J. Klimavich to<br />

the new position<br />

of vice president<br />

for communication,<br />

according<br />

to President and<br />

CEO Matthew<br />

S. Sosik.<br />

“Joe is no<br />

stranger to Hometown<br />

Bank,” said<br />

Sosik. “He’s been<br />

working with us<br />

TURLEY PUBLICATIONS<br />

COURTESY PHOTO<br />

Joe Klimavich, Hometown<br />

Bank’s vice president,<br />

communication.<br />

as an advertising and public relations<br />

consultant for more than 15 years. But<br />

Hometown Bank has doubled in branch<br />

size in the last 18 months, we’ve entered<br />

new markets and the need to communicate<br />

effectively with our customers has<br />

never been greater. This is an ideal time<br />

to welcome Joe as a full-fl edged member<br />

of our team.”<br />

STURBRIDGE - Pakachoag Music<br />

School is bringing its Theater Arts program<br />

to Sturbridge, starting in <strong>September</strong>,<br />

for children in grades 1 through 6.<br />

Fall <strong>20</strong>12 Theater Productions will be<br />

presented in December on stage at the<br />

Burgess Elementary School. Rehearsals<br />

are held weekly starting Tuesday, Sept.<br />

25 from 4-6 p.m. for all grade levels at<br />

the Federated Church of Sturbridge, 8<br />

Maple St., across from the town library.<br />

Mark LeBlanc Peterson directs the<br />

program.<br />

Grades 1, 2 & 3 will present “FLAKES!<br />

A Musical Celebration of Snow, Slush &<br />

Snirt (no, that’s not a typo) “<br />

Get ready to shiver, shimmy and<br />

shake! The North Wind is starting to<br />

blow and temps are dropping to 10 below...zero,<br />

that is! A blizzard is on the<br />

way as a cool bunch of jazzy, fi nger-snappin’<br />

snowfl akes take center stage. What a<br />

glistening sight! Uh oh! Here comes the<br />

Klimavich previously owned and operated<br />

Klimavich Communication, a fullservice<br />

advertising, public relations, web<br />

design and social media consultancy. He<br />

holds a master’s degree in professional<br />

communications from Clark University<br />

and is accredited by the Public Relations<br />

Society of America (PRSA). He is also<br />

an adjunct professor of communication<br />

at Worcester State University.<br />

Joe is a past president of the former<br />

AdClub of Greater Worcester and twice<br />

served as chairman of its Isaiah Thomas<br />

Award. He has also worked to advance<br />

Scouting in central Massachusetts. An<br />

Eagle Scout himself, he has served as<br />

Massasoit District Chairman and as the<br />

Mohegan Council executive committee’s<br />

vice president of marketing. He was recently<br />

recognized by the Council during<br />

its centennial year celebration as a Spotlight<br />

on Leadership honoree. He has also<br />

served as a selectman in his home community<br />

of Brookfi eld, where he resides<br />

with his wife, Barbara and their daughter,<br />

Alex.<br />

Theater arts non-profi t coming to Sturbridge<br />

snowplow! Join in the fun as the Flakes<br />

and Snirts help the Littlest Snowfl ake see<br />

how no two fl akes are alike and we are all<br />

special in our own special ways.<br />

Grades 4, 5 & 6 will present “School<br />

Daze”<br />

This rockin’ 35-minute musical presents<br />

the humerous side of school life.<br />

Song titles include The Concert Etiquette<br />

Rap; I’m In a Daze; Walk, Don’t Run; I<br />

Love my Locker; Cafeterial Confusion;<br />

In the Gym; Detention; and Cyberspace.<br />

Tuition for the fall season is $225.<br />

Music Together Classes resume again<br />

this fall also at the Sturbridge Federated<br />

Church on Wednesday mornings<br />

at 9:30 and 10:30 a.m. starting Sept. 26.<br />

Tuition for the 11 week Fall session is<br />

$195.<br />

For more information on school events<br />

and programs, visit www.pakmusic.org<br />

or call 508-<br />

791-8159.<br />

A Turley Publication • www.turley.com I Thursday, <strong>September</strong> <strong>20</strong>, <strong>20</strong>12 PAGE 15<br />

- business -<br />

North Brookfi eld Savings Bank donates<br />

artwork to Old Sturbridge Village<br />

NORTH BROOKFIELD – North<br />

Brookfi eld Savings Bank recently donated<br />

a limited <strong>edition</strong> print of the piece<br />

“Sturbridge Barn,” sketched by artist<br />

William R. Kleinedler, to Old Sturbridge<br />

Village (OSV). The piece will be<br />

auctioned off at the Old Sturbridge Village<br />

Gala “It Takes a Village” on Sept.15,<br />

<strong>20</strong>12 at the Oliver Wight Tavern.<br />

The piece was presented by Donna<br />

Boulanger, president and CEO of<br />

North Brookfi eld Savings Bank, to<br />

Gary Galonek, National Sales Manager<br />

for All Star Incentive Marketing in<br />

Fiskdale, MA. Galonek is an overseer at<br />

Old Sturbridge Village and also a member<br />

of the Gala Committee.<br />

This year is especially important for<br />

Old Sturbridge Village as President Jim<br />

Donahue and the Board of Trustees<br />

have actively been creating a fi ve-year<br />

strategic plan to increase attendance to<br />

the Village and strengthen its fi nancial<br />

core. A record-setting number of guests<br />

are expected to participate in this year’s<br />

Gala; proceeds will help support OSV’s<br />

long-term viability.<br />

Old Sturbridge Village is one of the<br />

largest and oldest living history museums<br />

in the country, and portrays early<br />

New England life from 1790 to 1840<br />

with antique buildings, water-powered<br />

mills, a working farm and historians in<br />

costume. The donated piece is a sketch<br />

Kleinedler made of a barn located at<br />

OSV.<br />

William R. Kleinedler is a United<br />

States Army veteran who served in Iraq.<br />

Prior to his military service, Kleinedler<br />

fostered a passion for capturing nature’s<br />

beauty through his artwork. After retir-<br />

Real Estate Transactions<br />

Brookfi eld<br />

$110,125 – 99 Webber Road – Federal<br />

National Mortgage Association to<br />

Marc D. Curtis<br />

East Brookfi eld<br />

$150,000 – 114 North Brookfi eld<br />

Road – Jean M. Bain, Executrix of the<br />

estate of Beatrice M. Ledoux, to James<br />

R. Bain and Heidi E. Bain.<br />

$131,250 – <strong>20</strong>8 Harrington Circle<br />

– Susan C. Hunter, trustee of the SCH<br />

Realty Trust, to Francis Gaumond<br />

Hardwick<br />

$105,699 – 210 Breen Road –<br />

Deutsche Bank National Trust Company<br />

to Katie M. Gauthier<br />

New Braintree<br />

$212,000 – 1<strong>20</strong> North Brookfi eld<br />

Road – Donald R. Friberg and Marilyn<br />

T. Friberg to Debest Investments, Llc.<br />

Sturbridge<br />

$450,000 – 18 Birch St. – Edward<br />

H. Moore and Sharon A. Adams to<br />

Benjamin Oifer<br />

$278,800 – 100 Cricket Drive –<br />

John R. Raczkowski and Paula J. Raczkowski<br />

to Gregory M. Porta and Els<br />

Weeg-Aerssens<br />

$226,000 – 126 Lane Ten – Rebecca<br />

B. Hawkins, Susan H. Hawkins<br />

and Jeremy Day Hawkins to F. Philip<br />

Goodwin and Sheila C. Goodwin<br />

$211,000 – 11 Summit Ave. – Robert<br />

P. Gilbert and Wiebke J. Gilbert<br />

to Daniel C. Roche and Anthony J.<br />

TEACHER I FROM PAGE 8<br />

The technological advances that<br />

came to WBES in the <strong>20</strong>11-<strong>20</strong>12 school<br />

year have been a blessing for Special<br />

Education teachers such as Melissa. “It<br />

is so much easier to engage the students,<br />

TURLEY PUBLICATIONS COURTESY PHOTO<br />

Donna Boulanger, president and CEO of North Brookfi<br />

eld Savings Bank, presented the piece “Sturbridge<br />

Barn” to Gary Galonek, National Sales Manager for All<br />

Star Incentive Marketing of Fiskdale.<br />

ing from the Army, Kleinedler regained<br />

his love of art and has created numerous<br />

inspirational pieces. One of his most impressive<br />

works is a 19-foot steel sculpture<br />

entitled “Hope” that he designed,<br />

which is displayed at the Warrior Family<br />

Support Center on Fort Sam Houston,<br />

Texas; the sculpture, meant to represent<br />

the struggle of life and the fl ow of peace,<br />

features 75 butterfl ies that swirl up toward<br />

a 30-foot cathedral ceiling. Today,<br />

Kleinedler continues to study art and<br />

prove to others the infl uence of hope.<br />

“We at North Brookfi eld Savings<br />

Bank are honored to not only make a<br />

donation to support Old Sturbridge Village,<br />

which is an important link to New<br />

England’s history, but to also support<br />

Mr. Kleinedler, who is such a model of<br />

bravery and hope,” said Donna Boulanger.<br />

“We are so humbled by his service<br />

to our country and his determination<br />

to pursue his dreams.”<br />

Roche<br />

$<strong>20</strong>8,000 – 38 Breakneck Road –<br />

Mathew R. Vejack and Melissa M. Scibelli-Vejack<br />

to Jeremy J. Jalbert and<br />

Jolene M. Jalbert<br />

$195,900 – <strong>20</strong>7 Podunk Road – Sharon<br />

Moshier to Jonathan Cohn and<br />

Mary Louise M. Cohn<br />

$178,000 – 110 Westwood Drive<br />

– Beatrice S. Dupuis to James M. Dandrea<br />

and Linda Dandrea<br />

Warren<br />

$35,000 – 21 Hitchcock Ave. – Federal<br />

Home Loan Mortgage Corp. to<br />

Thomas F. Rozzen and Holly Jean Rozzen<br />

$30,000 – 52 Crescent St. – Matthew<br />

B. Simmons, trustee of the Crescent<br />

Street Realty Trust, to Matthew B.<br />

Simmons<br />

West Brookfi eld<br />

$295,000 – 14 John Gilbert Road<br />

– John H. Burroughs and Mari T. Burroughs<br />

to Becky M. Adcock and Raphael<br />

D. Howard, III<br />

$186,000 – 179 Pierce Road – Keith<br />

A. Tytula and Jessica L. Tytula to<br />

Thomas M. Shenette and Catherine I.<br />

Dibara<br />

$175,000 – 355 New Braintree<br />

Road – Lisa G. Schnare to George T.<br />

Schnare<br />

$165,000 – 5 Char-Mil Drive – Emily<br />

B. Jeffrey to Jane Hayes and Elizabeth<br />

Fuller<br />

$92,000 – 135 Shea Road – Federal<br />

Home Loan Mortgage Corp. to Thomas<br />

Rozzen and Holly Rozzen<br />

the laptops allow typing for students<br />

who really have a lot of trouble with<br />

their writing, the spell check feature is<br />

available to them,” she explained. As<br />

the school year progresses, she is also<br />

looking to integrate using the smart<br />

board more for her classes.


PAGE 16 A Turley Publication • www.turley.com I Thursday, <strong>September</strong> <strong>20</strong>, <strong>20</strong>12<br />

For Sale<br />

A public service announcement<br />

presented by your community paper<br />

ALL NEW PLUSH top Queen<br />

mattress and box still in plastic.<br />

Was $599, Sell for $299.<br />

(413)885-3065. Rt. <strong>20</strong>, Palmer.<br />

ANTIQUE AND PERIOD chairs –<br />

Restored with new woven seats –<br />

Many styles and weaves available.<br />

Call (413)267-9680.<br />

CAMPER POP UP. <strong>20</strong>00<br />

Coleman Fairview. $2,000/BO.<br />

Sleeps 8. Attached screened<br />

room. Popout dinette. 413-566-<br />

3567<br />

QUEEN PILLOW TOP mattress<br />

set, brand NEW, Serta made $150<br />

call/text 413-282-8360<br />

RV 5TH WHEEL Montana 3 slide<br />

outs main and slide awnings<br />

double door refrigerator 3 burner<br />

stove with oven microwave roof<br />

A/C nearly new call 413-267-4486<br />

TRUCK RAMPS, ROLLAWAY<br />

bed, fitness equipment, cookware,<br />

wooden Rooken chair. Tel<br />

(413)967-4443 after 3 PM.<br />

Tag Sale<br />

64 HIGHERBROOK DRIVE, Off of<br />

Center, Ludlow. 9/14-9/16 & 9/21-<br />

9/23, 9-5, Rain Date following<br />

Weekend. Cool Stuff!<br />

85 CANEL DRIVE, Belchertown<br />

Sat & sun 9/22 & 9/23, 8-4. Home<br />

furnishings, electronics, new<br />

clothes, etc.<br />

BARN/ MOVING SALE- 116<br />

Mason St, Palmer Sat. Sept 22, 8-<br />

4. Antiques, new and old items,<br />

antique sleigh, furniture.<br />

NEIGHBORHOOD TAG SALE - 2<br />

Streets! Gamache Drive and Erin<br />

Lane (off Cady Street,) Ludlow.<br />

Saturday, <strong>September</strong> 22, 9am - 4<br />

pm. Something for Everyone,..<br />

Rain Date Saturday, <strong>September</strong><br />

29 PLEASE NO EARLY BIRDS.<br />

Firewood<br />

**FOUNTAIN FIREWOOD** 2<br />

YRS. SEASONED Red & White<br />

Oak, Mixed Hardwood $<strong>20</strong>0/cord.<br />

Same day deivery 1-4 cords. Cut,<br />

split, delivered. Monson (413)657-<br />

6143.<br />

2 YEAR SEASONED OAK &<br />

HARDWOODS. Cut, split,<br />

delivered. 2, 3 & 4 cord loads.<br />

R.T. Smart & Sons. 1-413-267-<br />

3827.<br />

ABSOLUTELY NO HIDDEN<br />

CHARGES<br />

128 cu. ft. of green hardwood<br />

(cut, split and delivered)<br />

$165/ cord<br />

Call (508)561-5306 OR<br />

(413)967-7518.<br />

ACT NOW QUALITY full seasoned<br />

hardwood c/s/d Fast<br />

response and delivery. S & K<br />

Firewood (413)267-3100 or 1-800-<br />

607-5296.<br />

ALL SEASONED HARDWOOD<br />

cut, split and delivered. Prompt<br />

delivery. MC/Visa Westview<br />

Farms 111 East Hill Road,<br />

Monson (413)267-9631.<br />

ALL SEASONED RED & WHITE<br />

OAK, over a cord guaranteed.<br />

Cut, split, prompt delivery. Call<br />

D & D Cordwood (413)348-4326.<br />

FIREWOOD<br />

Fresh cut & split $150.00.<br />

Seasoned cut & split $2<strong>20</strong>.00<br />

All hardwood.<br />

*Also have seasoned softwood for<br />

outdoor boilers (Cheap).<br />

Quality & volumes guaranteed!!<br />

New England Forest Products<br />

(413)477-0083.<br />

Buzzin’ Town Town<br />

from<br />

to<br />

Classifieds<br />

Turley Publications’ Community Marketplace ✦ www.turley.com ✦ Call us toll free at 1-800-824-6548<br />

Firewood<br />

BE READY FOR FALL<br />

BURNING SEASON<br />

Debarked Cut & Split Firewood<br />

Seasoned Firewood Special,<br />

$<strong>20</strong>0 PER CORD<br />

Green $180 per cord<br />

Delivery Available<br />

Rocky Mountain Wood Co.<br />

413-596-2348<br />

FOR RENT- 22 & 35 ton log<br />

splitters $50 per 24 hrs plus<br />

deposit Delivery available.<br />

CHAINS SHARPENED $7 and<br />

chainsaw repairs. Dave (413)477-<br />

8827.<br />

GREEN CORDWOOD $135/ cord<br />

delivered within <strong>20</strong> mile radius of<br />

Brimfield. Addtional cost for farther<br />

distances (413)668-6685.<br />

SEASONED FIREWOOD, (1.5-<br />

2yrs) stored off ground and<br />

covered. Cut, split, delivered<br />

(within <strong>20</strong> miles of Monson).<br />

$195.00 per cord. Call (413)267-<br />

3891.<br />

Hay For Sale<br />

CLEAN STRAW FOR sale.<br />

Westview Farms (413)267-9631<br />

Miscellaneous<br />

ACR METAL ROOFING/SIDING<br />

Dist. Quality products, low prices,<br />

metal roofing and trims. Complete<br />

garage & barn packages, lumber,<br />

trusses. Delivery available. Free<br />

literature. 1-800-325-1247,<br />

www.acrmetal.com<br />

AVIATION MAINTENANCE<br />

TRAINING Financial Aid if<br />

qualified. Job Placement<br />

Assistance. Call National Aviation<br />

Academy Today! FAA Approved.<br />

CLASSES STARTING SOON! 1-<br />

(800)292-3228 or NAA.edu<br />

PROMOTE YOUR PRODUCT,<br />

service or business to 1.7 million<br />

households throughout New<br />

England. Reach 4 million potential<br />

readers quickly and inexpensively<br />

with great results. Use the Buy<br />

New England Classified Ad<br />

Network by calling (413)283-8393,<br />

classifieds@turley.com. Do they<br />

work? You are reading one of our<br />

ads now!! Visit our website to see<br />

where your ads run<br />

communitypapersne.com<br />

Musical Instruments<br />

CLARINET/FLUTE/VIOLIN/TRUM<br />

PET/Trombone/Amplifier/Fender<br />

Guitar, $69 each. Cello/Upright<br />

Bass/Saxophone/French<br />

Horn/Drums, $185 ea.<br />

Tuba/Baritone Horn/Hammond<br />

Organ. Others 4 sale. 1-516-377-<br />

7907.<br />

Wanted<br />

OLD CARPENTER TOOLS<br />

wanted. Planes, chisels, saws,<br />

levels, etc. Call Ken 413-433-<br />

2195. Keep your vintage tools<br />

working and get MONEY.<br />

WANTED ANTIQUES & COL-<br />

LECTIBLES Furniture, Advertising<br />

signs, Toys, Dolls, Trains<br />

Crocks & Jugs, Musical<br />

Instruments, Sterling Silver &<br />

Gold, Coins, Jewelry, Books,<br />

Primitives, Vintage Clothing,<br />

Military items, Old Lamps.<br />

Anything old. Contents of attics,<br />

barns and homes. One item or<br />

complete estate. Call (413)267-<br />

3786 or (413)539-1472 Ask for<br />

Frank. WE PAY FAIR<br />

PRICES!!!<br />

Want it!<br />

Find it!<br />

Buy it!<br />

Sell it!<br />

Love it!<br />

Drive it!<br />

READ IT!!!<br />

15 Weekly Newspapers<br />

Serving 50 Local Communities<br />

Wanted To Buy<br />

GOLD BUYERZ<br />

CASH FOR GOLD SILVER<br />

OR PLATINUM<br />

Old, broken or unwanted.<br />

We pay more than pawn shops,<br />

brokers or jewelers.<br />

WE COME TO YOU<br />

NO STOLEN PROPERTY<br />

PHOTO ID REQUIRED<br />

MUST BE 18 OR OLDER<br />

Call to schedule a convenient time<br />

and place to meet.<br />

413 374-5917<br />

www.dwcbuysgoldtoday.com<br />

LEE’S COINS AND jewelry.<br />

Buying, selling gold and silver. 239<br />

West Main Street, East Brookfield<br />

9-6 Mon, Wed, Thurs, Fri, Sat<br />

(508)637-1236. (508)341-6355.<br />

NEW ENGLAND ESTATE<br />

PICKERS “in the Old Monson<br />

Bowling Alley” We are buying all<br />

types of Antiques and<br />

Collectibles!! Simply bring your<br />

items in for a Free Evaluation and/<br />

or Cash Offer!! All Gold and<br />

Silver Items to include; jewelry,<br />

costume and estate pcs., wrist/<br />

pocket watches, class ring, etc.,<br />

broken or not. Silverware sets,<br />

trays, trophies, etc., Coins of all<br />

sorts, Proof sets, Silver dollars<br />

and other coinage collections! All<br />

types of Old Advertising Signs,<br />

Military items to include Daggers,<br />

Swords, Bayonets, guns, medals,<br />

uniforms, etc. Old toys, train sets,<br />

dolls, metal trucks, old games,<br />

model car kits from the ‘60s, old<br />

bicycles, motorcycles, pedal<br />

cars, Matchbox, action figures,<br />

Pre-1970’s Baseball cards, comic<br />

books, etc.! Old picture frames,<br />

prints and oil paintings, old<br />

fishing equipment, lures, tackle<br />

boxes! Post Card albums, old<br />

coke machines, pinball, juke<br />

boxes, slot machines, musical<br />

instruments, guitars of all types,<br />

banjos, horns, accordions, etc.<br />

Old cameras, microscopes,<br />

telescopes, etc. This is a general<br />

list of some items that can be<br />

worth Real Money. Just like on<br />

T.V. We buy all things seen on<br />

“Pickers” and the “Pawn Shop”<br />

shows!! Call or Bring your items<br />

in to our 4,500 square foot store!!<br />

64 Main Street., Monson (“The<br />

Old Bowling Alley”) We are your<br />

Estate Specialists!! Over 30 yrs.<br />

in the Antique Business! Prompt<br />

Courteous Service! Open Daily<br />

10:00- 5:00 Sun. 12:00- 5:00<br />

(413)267-3729.<br />

WANTED: MUSICAL INSTRU-<br />

MENTS, Accordions and sound<br />

equipment in any condition. Cash<br />

Paid! Gordon Lasalle Music -<br />

Southbridge MA Call (508)765-<br />

9352<br />

Wanted To Buy<br />

WWI WWII MILITARY items.<br />

American, German, Japanese,<br />

medals, swords, uniforms,<br />

patches, helmets, photos,<br />

manuals, flight jackets, knives,<br />

bayonets. (413)885-2889.<br />

Services<br />

*****<br />

A CALL WE HAUL<br />

Fast Junk Removal<br />

WE TAKE IT ALL<br />

LOAD IT ALL<br />

Lowest Rates<br />

Closings, Free Estimates, Attics<br />

Cleanouts, Appl, Bsmnts.<br />

Expert demo services<br />

10% disc. All Major CC's accepted<br />

CALL NOW - 1-800-414-0239<br />

(413)283-5030<br />

WWW.ACALLWEHAUL.COM<br />

***A B HAULING AND<br />

REMOVAL SERVICE***<br />

Cellars, attics, garages cleaned,<br />

yard debris. Barns, sheds,<br />

demolished. Swimming pools<br />

removed. <strong>20</strong> yd. container, truck<br />

available. Cheaper than dumpster<br />

fees and we do all work. Lowest<br />

rates. (413)267-3353, cell<br />

(413)222-8868.<br />

***A A CALL – HAUL IT ALL***<br />

Cheaper than a dumpster. I do all<br />

the work, cleanouts, attics, cellars,<br />

barns, garages and appliance<br />

removal. 10% discount with this<br />

ad. Free Est. (413)596-7286,<br />

(866)517-4285.<br />

25 YEARS EXPERIENCE property<br />

maintenance. Painting, roofing,<br />

gutters, siding, porches, remodeling,<br />

decks, pressure washing,<br />

yard clean-ups, masonry. We<br />

do all types of work. (413)355-<br />

0643.<br />

QUALITY FOUNDATIONS<br />

EXCAVATION,<br />

poured concrete, foundations,<br />

floors, retaining walls.<br />

Free estimates.<br />

Fully licensed and insured.<br />

Paul T. Fox<br />

(508)353-9341, (508)248-7864,<br />

(413)967-8<strong>20</strong>0<br />

Services<br />

A and D<br />

Hauling<br />

A AND D HAULING. Affordable,<br />

Dependable Removal at its best!<br />

Real Estate closings our specialty.<br />

Will clean homes, attics, cellars<br />

and barns. *Demo work and metal<br />

removal at discounted rates. 10%<br />

discount with ad. Free estimates.<br />

413-477-0213 (business)<br />

413-575-7961 (cell)<br />

ABSOLUTE CHIMNEY SERV-<br />

ICES C.S.I.A. Certified and<br />

Insured. Sweeping chimneys year<br />

round. Thank you. 413-967-8002.<br />

ACE CHIMNEY SWEEPS. Cleanings,<br />

inspections, repairs, caps,<br />

liners, waterproofing, rebuilds.<br />

Gutterbrush Installations. Local<br />

family owned since 1986. HIC<br />

#118355. Fully insured. (413)547-<br />

8500.<br />

BRONZE STAR SERVICES, LLC<br />

bobcat work, retaining walls,<br />

patios, Fall clean-up, loaming,<br />

seeding. WEEKLY lawncare<br />

services. Insured. Call Fran<br />

(413)575-7573.<br />

CHAIR SEAT WEAVING &<br />

refinishing - cane, fiber rush &<br />

splint - Classroom instructor, <strong>20</strong> +<br />

years experience. Call Walt at<br />

(413)267-9680 for estimate.<br />

CHIMNEY SERVICES: CLEAN-<br />

INGS, caps, dampers, repairs<br />

including masonry and liners. The<br />

best for less!!! Worcester to<br />

Pittsfield. 508-245-1501, 413-650-<br />

0126<br />

Colonial Carpentry Innovations, Inc.<br />

Design & Build Team<br />

“New World Technology with Old World Quality”<br />

www.colonialinnovation.com<br />

Kitchens • Baths • Doors • Additions<br />

Renovations • Custom Designs • New Homes<br />

Lifetime Warranty on Craftsmanship<br />

Bob (413) 374-6175<br />

lic. & ins. or Jen (413) 244-5112<br />

DRIVEWAYS, OIL AND stone,<br />

durable but inexpensive. Choice of<br />

colors, also driveway repair and<br />

trucking available. Fill/ Loam/<br />

Gravel. Call J. Fillion Liquid<br />

Asphalt (413)668-6192.<br />

DRYWALL AND CEILINGS,<br />

plaster repair. Drywall hanging.<br />

Taping & complete finishing. All<br />

ceiling textures. Fully insured.<br />

Jason at Great Walls.<br />

(413)563-0487<br />

DRYWALL DRYWALL AND only<br />

drywall. Complete professional<br />

drywall service. 27 years in<br />

business. Additions to<br />

developments, fully insured.<br />

Finished basements our speciality.<br />

Call Randy 413-267-9876.<br />

EXPERT GLASS REPAIRS, Patio<br />

sliders, doors, windows. Existing<br />

screens custom duplicated. Glass<br />

repairs, Plexiglas, insulated glass.<br />

Replacement parts. Awnings,<br />

canopies, windows, doors. Gary<br />

(413)566-3095.<br />

FREE METAL PICKUP appliances,<br />

tractors, furnaces, a/c,<br />

swingsets, lawnmowers, water<br />

heaters, washers, dryers, wood<br />

stoves. Will pay for cars. Junk &<br />

rubbish removed for a fee.<br />

(508)867-2564.<br />

HANDYMAN, PAINTING, TILE<br />

work, carpentry, home improvements,<br />

repairs, new work. Call Gil<br />

for estimate. Fully licensed and<br />

insured (413)323-0923.<br />

HOME THEATER, AV Tech.<br />

(Cert. ISF/HAA). The only Cert.<br />

Installers in this area. Put in<br />

theater for you or install a Plasma<br />

the right way. Sales, service. 413-<br />

374-8000, 413-374-8300.<br />

www.a-v-tech.com<br />

Services<br />

Local drum set instructor<br />

accepting new students<br />

Working professional drum kit and<br />

snare drum instructor with more<br />

than 30 years of performance<br />

experience seeks additional<br />

beginner and intermediate level<br />

students living near Ware,<br />

Tantasqua, David Prouty and<br />

<strong>Quaboag</strong> school regions. Rates<br />

are very reasonable at $30 for a<br />

45-minute lesson. Lesson fees<br />

include costs for all charts, CDs<br />

and handouts, learning and<br />

improving how to sight-read notes,<br />

four-way limb control, dynamics,<br />

rudiments, and using your own<br />

ears with my play-along tracks for<br />

interpretive playing and soloing in<br />

jazz, rock, blues, and funk styles.<br />

Willing to travel to student’s home<br />

to offer weekly or twice monthly<br />

lessons in the evening or on the<br />

weekends. Professional school<br />

band director references, current<br />

student list, and full CORI check<br />

available upon request. Call 508-<br />

867-5985 for more details.<br />

MAKE A FREE WEBSITE!<br />

Shopping online?<br />

Help your fellow American. Great<br />

deals from over 80 known stores.<br />

Shop through<br />

www.AffiliatesQuickLinks.com\a<br />

ffiliates.html<br />

PAINT AND PAPER Over 25<br />

years experience. Free estimates.<br />

References. Lic #0862<strong>20</strong>. Please<br />

call Kevin 978-355-6864.<br />

PLUMBING JOBS DONE by fast<br />

and accurate master plumber.<br />

Small jobs welcome. Cheap hourly<br />

rate. LC9070 Paul 413-323-5897.<br />

EXCAVATING<br />

•Site work<br />

•Septic<br />

•Demo<br />

•Sewer<br />

•Drainage<br />

Trees/ Stumps<br />

•Grading<br />

•Lawn Renovations<br />

“For All Your<br />

Earth Moving Needs”<br />

Free Estimates & Fully Insured<br />

Brian<br />

413-244-7037<br />

WE RENOVATE, SELL &<br />

PURCHASE (any condition) horse<br />

drawn vehicles such as sleighs,<br />

carriages, surreys, wagons, dr’s<br />

buggies, driveable or lawn<br />

ornaments. Some furniture and<br />

other restoration services<br />

available. Reasonable prices.<br />

Quality workmanship. Call<br />

(413)213-0373 or (413)277-5404<br />

for estimate and information.<br />

Demers & Sons<br />

401 Mill Valley Road<br />

Rte. 181 (across from<br />

Mill Valley Golf Course)<br />

Belchertown<br />

Child Services<br />

*NEW STATE LAW. Anyone<br />

advertising caring of children must<br />

list a license number to do so if<br />

they offer this service in their own<br />

home.<br />

Find<br />

Childcare Here


Buzzin’ Town Town<br />

from<br />

A Turley Publication • www.turley.com I Thursday, <strong>September</strong> <strong>20</strong>, <strong>20</strong>12 PAGE 17<br />

to Classifieds<br />

Turley Publications’ Community Marketplace ✦ www.turley.com ✦ Call us toll free at 1-800-824-6548<br />

Cleaning Services<br />

& COMPLETE<br />

JANITORIAL<br />

SERVICE<br />

413-531-9393<br />

www.rogersrugs.com<br />

OFFICE<br />

CLEANING<br />

SERVICE<br />

Roger M. Driscoll<br />

Owner<br />

Fully Insured<br />

Free Estimates<br />

5<br />

$ Fill Out and Mail This Money Maker $<br />

1 2 3 4<br />

7 8<br />

9 10 11 12<br />

13<br />

CATEGORY:<br />

6<br />

14<br />

17 18 19 <strong>20</strong><br />

21 Base Price 22 Base Price 23 Base Price 24<br />

24.50<br />

25.00<br />

25.50<br />

Base Price<br />

26.50<br />

Base Price<br />

27.00<br />

25 26 27 28<br />

29 30 31 32<br />

Base Price<br />

28.50<br />

Base Price<br />

29.00<br />

33 34 35 36<br />

Base Price<br />

30.50<br />

Base Price<br />

32.50<br />

Computer Services<br />

COMPUTER WIZ<br />

For all your computing needs.<br />

Trouble shooting, virus<br />

removal, PC Tune up,<br />

Laptop Repair.<br />

Free Diagnostics.<br />

1605 N Main St., Palmer MA<br />

(413)283-7500.<br />

Electrician<br />

DEPENDABLE ELECTRICIAN,<br />

FRIENDLY service, installs<br />

deicing cables. Free estimates.<br />

Fully insured. Scott Winters<br />

electrician Lic. #13514-B Call<br />

(413)244-7096.<br />

EXCELLENT SERVICE PRO-<br />

VIDED Complete house wiring,<br />

service upgrades, generators, hot<br />

tubs/ pools, smoke/ CO detectors,<br />

installation of communication<br />

cables. WILL BEAT ANY PRICE<br />

BY 10%. Fully insured Lic<br />

#E38506<br />

Flynn Electric (413)323-9779,<br />

(413)348-0257<br />

LICENSED ELECTRICIAN.<br />

PROMPT, efficient, reasonable.<br />

Obligation–free estimates. Senior<br />

discounts. Will beat anyone’s<br />

price. Fully insured. Local. Walter<br />

Paul Partyka Lic.#11294B.<br />

c#(413)455-7353,<br />

h#(413)532-0503<br />

SERVICE CHANGES, ADDI-<br />

TIONS, Pools, Hot tubs,<br />

Generators, Outdoor lighting,<br />

Service with a smile. Lic, Fully<br />

insured, Senior Discounts Michael<br />

Champagne Electrician 413 210-<br />

9140<br />

Base Price<br />

31.00<br />

Base Price<br />

33.00<br />

37 38 39 40<br />

QUABBIN<br />

❑<br />

NAME<br />

ADDRESS<br />

PHONE<br />

TOWN STATE ZIP<br />

15<br />

SUBURBAN<br />

❑<br />

Excavating<br />

A&M EXCAVATING SEPTICS -<br />

drainage - stump removal - water<br />

lines - and more.(413)949-1903,<br />

(413)967-9897<br />

Heating & Air Cond.<br />

HEATING AND AIR conditioning-<br />

Furnaces, oil tanks, duct work,<br />

humidifiers, cleanings, tune-ups<br />

and new construction. Free<br />

estimates. Palmer Heating<br />

(413)283-7149<br />

Home Improvement<br />

<strong>20</strong>+ YEARS EXPERIENCE!<br />

Complete carpentry, drywall and<br />

painting services. For all your<br />

home improvement needs.<br />

Kitchens, baths, finished<br />

basements and more!<br />

Joe’s GC-License #CS093368.<br />

(413) 219-6951.<br />

C-D HOME IMPROVEMENT. 1<br />

Call for all your needs. Windows,<br />

siding, roofs, additions, decks,<br />

baths, hardwood floors, painting.<br />

All work 100% guaranteed.<br />

Licensed and insured. Call Bob<br />

(413)596-8807 Cell (860)301-8283<br />

CS Lic. #97110, HIC Lic #162905<br />

CERAMIC TILE INSTALLATION<br />

Kitchen, bath, foyers. Free<br />

estimates, references. Lic<br />

#0862<strong>20</strong>. Please call Kevin<br />

(978)355-6864.<br />

DRS PAINTING & HOME IM-<br />

PROVEMENTS Interior/ exterior<br />

painting, siding, windows, doors,<br />

roofing. Plowing. Lic #168118<br />

Insured. Free estimates. Credit<br />

cards accepted. (413)218-9042 or<br />

e-mail<br />

dsheldon4<strong>20</strong>67@gmail.com<br />

us<br />

Base Price<br />

27.50<br />

Base Price<br />

29.50<br />

Base Price<br />

31.50<br />

Base Price<br />

33.50<br />

Run my ad in the following Zones(s):<br />

THE DEADLINE IS FRIDAY AT NOON<br />

Send to Turley Publications, 24 Water St., Palmer MA 01069.<br />

Must include check.<br />

Or call 413-283-7084 to place your ad.<br />

16<br />

Home Improvement<br />

J.C. CONSTRUCTION QUALITY<br />

craftsmanship in all phases of<br />

construction. Remodeling,<br />

Additions, Garages. Decks. Also<br />

call for your roofing and siding<br />

needs. (413)314-1011<br />

Lic#160301<br />

OSHA Certified.<br />

justincoyer@yahoo.com<br />

JAMES ILES HOME Improvement.<br />

Specializing in carpet,<br />

tile, wood & interior/exterior<br />

painting. Free estimate. Fully<br />

insured 413-433-1824<br />

MARTIN MURPHY CARPENTRY<br />

Complete Home Improvement -<br />

additions, garages, Sheds, siding,<br />

windows, kitchens/baths, finished<br />

basements, and repair work call<br />

413-967-9897- license / registered<br />

/ insured- cell 413-949-1901<br />

REASONABLE RATES, DRY-<br />

WALL, Sheetrock, Taping,<br />

Textures, Knock downs, general<br />

renovations, repairs, painting, tile.<br />

Insured. Free estimates. 413-427-<br />

4662. Ma Reg #274556DA<br />

Instruction<br />

DON'T BE A STARVING<br />

ARTIST - learn how to teach<br />

painting with this special<br />

method to people of all ages<br />

and abilities and have your own<br />

business with a stable income.<br />

Fill the need for more art in<br />

healthcare facilities. Check it<br />

out at:<br />

www.artis4every1.com or call<br />

(508)882-3947<br />

Base Price<br />

24.00<br />

Base Price<br />

26.00<br />

Base Price<br />

28.00<br />

Base Price<br />

30.00<br />

Base Price<br />

32.00<br />

Base Price<br />

34.00<br />

Instruction<br />

GC/BUILDER’S LICENSE<br />

COURSE * * Register by Sept.<br />

21st. Class begins Sept. 24-27 for<br />

Ludlow, Worcester, Pittsfield,<br />

Northampton, Greenfield * *<br />

Call CCI 1-888-833-5<strong>20</strong>7 or<br />

www.statecertification.com<br />

TRUCK DRIVERS<br />

NEEDED<br />

A & B CDL CLASSES + BUS<br />

Chicopee, Ma (413)592-1500<br />

UNITED TRACTOR TRAILER<br />

SCHOOL<br />

Unitedcdl.com<br />

Landscaping<br />

**ALL SPRING, SUMMER,<br />

FALL** Specializing in shrub and<br />

tree trimming, (<strong>20</strong>11 storm repair<br />

and removal, arborvitae/<br />

hemlocks) grass cutting,<br />

landscape design, Spring and Fall<br />

cleanups and removal. Mulch,<br />

stone, loam deliveries, also small<br />

loader and backhoe service,<br />

snowplowing. Professional and<br />

fully insured. Please call Bob<br />

(413)538-7954, (413)537-5789.<br />

*A-1 RICK BERGERON LAWN*<br />

CARE<br />

Fall Clean-ups<br />

Overseeding<br />

Mowing & Landscaping<br />

Loader and Backhoe<br />

Trucking<br />

Wood Chipping<br />

Over 25 yrs. in business<br />

All Calls Returned<br />

413-283-3192<br />

A PERFECT LAWN<br />

Overseeding,<br />

Fall clean-ups<br />

Winter fertilzation,<br />

New installs<br />

413-283-lawn(5296)<br />

Quabbin Village Hills<br />

Circulation: 50,500<br />

Buy the Quabbin Village Hills or the Suburban<br />

Residential ZONE for $24.00 for <strong>20</strong> words plus<br />

50¢ for additional words. Add $5 for a second ZONE.<br />

First ZONE base price<br />

Add a second ZONE<br />

Subtotal<br />

x Number of Weeks<br />

TOTAL enclosed<br />

Suburban Residential<br />

Circulation: 59,000<br />

+ $ 5 00<br />

Did you remember to check your zone?<br />

Landscaping<br />

A1 QUALITY LOAM $18/ YARD<br />

delivered locally, 18 yard<br />

minimum. Call for pricing on lesser<br />

amounts (413)289-<strong>20</strong>26.<br />

ACM. HYDROSEEDING, LOAM,<br />

bobcat, fieldstone walls, retaining<br />

wall systems, pavers, trex decks,<br />

mulch and plantings. Waterfalls<br />

and ponds. ACMBUILDING.COM<br />

(413)348-9826.<br />

AERATION LAWN OVERSEED-<br />

ING Now’s the time to repair<br />

damage from summers drought,<br />

Fertilizing, Liming, Fall Cleanups,<br />

Mowing, Pruning, Plantings. 413-<br />

967-6751<br />

HYDROSEEDING AND LAND-<br />

SCAPE Construction. Retaining<br />

walls, walkways, patios, erosion<br />

control, skid steer work, fencing,<br />

plantings, loam, trenching, etc.<br />

Free estimates. Medeiros.<br />

(413)267-4050.<br />

TRACTOR FOR HIRE<br />

•Backhoe/ loader<br />

•Brushhogging and field mowing<br />

•Specializing in medium and small<br />

jobs<br />

•Low hourly rates- 7 days per<br />

week<br />

SCREENED LOAM<br />

•Special- Delivered and Spread<br />

$28/yd (15 yd minimum)<br />

Delivery only- call for price<br />

•Volume discounts<br />

(413)530-0256<br />

Lawn & Garden<br />

ROTOTILLER FOR HIRE $25<br />

minimum fee + <strong>20</strong>¢ a square ft. No<br />

job too small. Local areaweekends<br />

only. Call Bill (413)221-<br />

0421.<br />

includes additional words


PAGE 18 A Turley Publication • www.turley.com I Thursday, <strong>September</strong> <strong>20</strong>, <strong>20</strong>12<br />

Buzzin’ Town Town<br />

from<br />

to Classifieds<br />

Turley Publications’ Community Marketplace ✦ www.turley.com ✦ Call us toll free at 1-800-824-6548<br />

Cleaning Services<br />

& COMPLETE<br />

JANITORIAL<br />

SERVICE<br />

413-531-9393<br />

www.rogersrugs.com<br />

OFFICE<br />

CLEANING<br />

SERVICE<br />

Roger M. Driscoll<br />

Owner<br />

Fully Insured<br />

Free Estimates<br />

5<br />

$ Fill Out and Mail This Money Maker $<br />

1 2 3 4<br />

7 8<br />

9 10 11 12<br />

13<br />

CATEGORY:<br />

6<br />

14<br />

17 18 19 <strong>20</strong><br />

21 Base Price 22 Base Price 23 Base Price 24<br />

24.50<br />

25.00<br />

25.50<br />

Base Price<br />

26.50<br />

Base Price<br />

27.00<br />

25 26 27 28<br />

29 30 31 32<br />

Base Price<br />

28.50<br />

Base Price<br />

29.00<br />

33 34 35 36<br />

Base Price<br />

30.50<br />

Base Price<br />

32.50<br />

Computer Services<br />

COMPUTER WIZ<br />

For all your computing needs.<br />

Trouble shooting, virus<br />

removal, PC Tune up,<br />

Laptop Repair.<br />

Free Diagnostics.<br />

1605 N Main St., Palmer MA<br />

(413)283-7500.<br />

Electrician<br />

DEPENDABLE ELECTRICIAN,<br />

FRIENDLY service, installs<br />

deicing cables. Free estimates.<br />

Fully insured. Scott Winters<br />

electrician Lic. #13514-B Call<br />

(413)244-7096.<br />

EXCELLENT SERVICE PRO-<br />

VIDED Complete house wiring,<br />

service upgrades, generators, hot<br />

tubs/ pools, smoke/ CO detectors,<br />

installation of communication<br />

cables. WILL BEAT ANY PRICE<br />

BY 10%. Fully insured Lic<br />

#E38506<br />

Flynn Electric (413)323-9779,<br />

(413)348-0257<br />

LICENSED ELECTRICIAN.<br />

PROMPT, efficient, reasonable.<br />

Obligation–free estimates. Senior<br />

discounts. Will beat anyone’s<br />

price. Fully insured. Local. Walter<br />

Paul Partyka Lic.#11294B.<br />

c#(413)455-7353,<br />

h#(413)532-0503<br />

SERVICE CHANGES, ADDI-<br />

TIONS, Pools, Hot tubs,<br />

Generators, Outdoor lighting,<br />

Service with a smile. Lic, Fully<br />

insured, Senior Discounts Michael<br />

Champagne Electrician 413 210-<br />

9140<br />

Base Price<br />

31.00<br />

Base Price<br />

33.00<br />

37 38 39 40<br />

QUABBIN<br />

❑<br />

NAME<br />

ADDRESS<br />

PHONE<br />

TOWN STATE ZIP<br />

15<br />

SUBURBAN<br />

❑<br />

Excavating<br />

A&M EXCAVATING SEPTICS -<br />

drainage - stump removal - water<br />

lines - and more.(413)949-1903,<br />

(413)967-9897<br />

Heating & Air Cond.<br />

HEATING AND AIR conditioning-<br />

Furnaces, oil tanks, duct work,<br />

humidifiers, cleanings, tune-ups<br />

and new construction. Free<br />

estimates. Palmer Heating<br />

(413)283-7149<br />

Home Improvement<br />

<strong>20</strong>+ YEARS EXPERIENCE!<br />

Complete carpentry, drywall and<br />

painting services. For all your<br />

home improvement needs.<br />

Kitchens, baths, finished<br />

basements and more!<br />

Joe’s GC-License #CS093368.<br />

(413) 219-6951.<br />

C-D HOME IMPROVEMENT. 1<br />

Call for all your needs. Windows,<br />

siding, roofs, additions, decks,<br />

baths, hardwood floors, painting.<br />

All work 100% guaranteed.<br />

Licensed and insured. Call Bob<br />

(413)596-8807 Cell (860)301-8283<br />

CS Lic. #97110, HIC Lic #162905<br />

CERAMIC TILE INSTALLATION<br />

Kitchen, bath, foyers. Free<br />

estimates, references. Lic<br />

#0862<strong>20</strong>. Please call Kevin<br />

(978)355-6864.<br />

DRS PAINTING & HOME IM-<br />

PROVEMENTS Interior/ exterior<br />

painting, siding, windows, doors,<br />

roofing. Plowing. Lic #168118<br />

Insured. Free estimates. Credit<br />

cards accepted. (413)218-9042 or<br />

e-mail<br />

dsheldon4<strong>20</strong>67@gmail.com<br />

us<br />

Base Price<br />

27.50<br />

Base Price<br />

29.50<br />

Base Price<br />

31.50<br />

Base Price<br />

33.50<br />

Run my ad in the following Zones(s):<br />

THE DEADLINE IS FRIDAY AT NOON<br />

Send to Turley Publications, 24 Water St., Palmer MA 01069.<br />

Must include check.<br />

Or call 413-283-7084 to place your ad.<br />

16<br />

Home Improvement<br />

J.C. CONSTRUCTION QUALITY<br />

craftsmanship in all phases of<br />

construction. Remodeling,<br />

Additions, Garages. Decks. Also<br />

call for your roofing and siding<br />

needs. (413)314-1011<br />

Lic#160301<br />

OSHA Certified.<br />

justincoyer@yahoo.com<br />

JAMES ILES HOME Improvement.<br />

Specializing in carpet,<br />

tile, wood & interior/exterior<br />

painting. Free estimate. Fully<br />

insured 413-433-1824<br />

MARTIN MURPHY CARPENTRY<br />

Complete Home Improvement -<br />

additions, garages, Sheds, siding,<br />

windows, kitchens/baths, finished<br />

basements, and repair work call<br />

413-967-9897- license / registered<br />

/ insured- cell 413-949-1901<br />

REASONABLE RATES, DRY-<br />

WALL, Sheetrock, Taping,<br />

Textures, Knock downs, general<br />

renovations, repairs, painting, tile.<br />

Insured. Free estimates. 413-427-<br />

4662. Ma Reg #274556DA<br />

Instruction<br />

DON'T BE A STARVING<br />

ARTIST - learn how to teach<br />

painting with this special<br />

method to people of all ages<br />

and abilities and have your own<br />

business with a stable income.<br />

Fill the need for more art in<br />

healthcare facilities. Check it<br />

out at:<br />

www.artis4every1.com or call<br />

(508)882-3947<br />

Base Price<br />

24.00<br />

Base Price<br />

26.00<br />

Base Price<br />

28.00<br />

Base Price<br />

30.00<br />

Base Price<br />

32.00<br />

Base Price<br />

34.00<br />

Instruction<br />

GC/BUILDER’S LICENSE<br />

COURSE * * Register by Sept.<br />

21st. Class begins Sept. 24-27 for<br />

Ludlow, Worcester, Pittsfield,<br />

Northampton, Greenfield * *<br />

Call CCI 1-888-833-5<strong>20</strong>7 or<br />

www.statecertification.com<br />

TRUCK DRIVERS<br />

NEEDED<br />

A & B CDL CLASSES + BUS<br />

Chicopee, Ma (413)592-1500<br />

UNITED TRACTOR TRAILER<br />

SCHOOL<br />

Unitedcdl.com<br />

Landscaping<br />

**ALL SPRING, SUMMER,<br />

FALL** Specializing in shrub and<br />

tree trimming, (<strong>20</strong>11 storm repair<br />

and removal, arborvitae/<br />

hemlocks) grass cutting,<br />

landscape design, Spring and Fall<br />

cleanups and removal. Mulch,<br />

stone, loam deliveries, also small<br />

loader and backhoe service,<br />

snowplowing. Professional and<br />

fully insured. Please call Bob<br />

(413)538-7954, (413)537-5789.<br />

*A-1 RICK BERGERON LAWN*<br />

CARE<br />

Fall Clean-ups<br />

Overseeding<br />

Mowing & Landscaping<br />

Loader and Backhoe<br />

Trucking<br />

Wood Chipping<br />

Over 25 yrs. in business<br />

All Calls Returned<br />

413-283-3192<br />

A PERFECT LAWN<br />

Overseeding,<br />

Fall clean-ups<br />

Winter fertilzation,<br />

New installs<br />

413-283-lawn(5296)<br />

Quabbin Village Hills<br />

Circulation: 50,500<br />

Buy the Quabbin Village Hills or the Suburban<br />

Residential ZONE for $24.00 for <strong>20</strong> words plus<br />

50¢ for additional words. Add $5 for a second ZONE.<br />

First ZONE base price<br />

Add a second ZONE<br />

Subtotal<br />

x Number of Weeks<br />

TOTAL enclosed<br />

Suburban Residential<br />

Circulation: 59,000<br />

+ $ 5 00<br />

Did you remember to check your zone?<br />

Landscaping<br />

A1 QUALITY LOAM $18/ YARD<br />

delivered locally, 18 yard<br />

minimum. Call for pricing on lesser<br />

amounts (413)289-<strong>20</strong>26.<br />

ACM. HYDROSEEDING, LOAM,<br />

bobcat, fieldstone walls, retaining<br />

wall systems, pavers, trex decks,<br />

mulch and plantings. Waterfalls<br />

and ponds. ACMBUILDING.COM<br />

(413)348-9826.<br />

AERATION LAWN OVERSEED-<br />

ING Now’s the time to repair<br />

damage from summers drought,<br />

Fertilizing, Liming, Fall Cleanups,<br />

Mowing, Pruning, Plantings. 413-<br />

967-6751<br />

HYDROSEEDING AND LAND-<br />

SCAPE Construction. Retaining<br />

walls, walkways, patios, erosion<br />

control, skid steer work, fencing,<br />

plantings, loam, trenching, etc.<br />

Free estimates. Medeiros.<br />

(413)267-4050.<br />

TRACTOR FOR HIRE<br />

•Backhoe/ loader<br />

•Brushhogging and field mowing<br />

•Specializing in medium and small<br />

jobs<br />

•Low hourly rates- 7 days per<br />

week<br />

SCREENED LOAM<br />

•Special- Delivered and Spread<br />

$28/yd (15 yd minimum)<br />

Delivery only- call for price<br />

•Volume discounts<br />

(413)530-0256<br />

Lawn & Garden<br />

ROTOTILLER FOR HIRE $25<br />

minimum fee + <strong>20</strong>¢ a square ft. No<br />

job too small. Local areaweekends<br />

only. Call Bill (413)221-<br />

0421.<br />

includes additional words


Buzzin’ Town Town<br />

from<br />

A Turley Publication • www.turley.com I Thursday, <strong>September</strong> <strong>20</strong>, <strong>20</strong>12 PAGE 19<br />

to Classifieds<br />

Turley Publications’ Community Marketplace ✦ www.turley.com ✦ Call us toll free at 1-800-824-6548<br />

Cleaning Services<br />

& COMPLETE<br />

JANITORIAL<br />

SERVICE<br />

413-531-9393<br />

www.rogersrugs.com<br />

OFFICE<br />

CLEANING<br />

SERVICE<br />

Roger M. Driscoll<br />

Owner<br />

Fully Insured<br />

Free Estimates<br />

5<br />

$ Fill Out and Mail This Money Maker $<br />

1 2 3 4<br />

7 8<br />

9 10 11 12<br />

13<br />

CATEGORY:<br />

6<br />

14<br />

17 18 19 <strong>20</strong><br />

21 Base Price 22 Base Price 23 Base Price 24<br />

24.50<br />

25.00<br />

25.50<br />

Base Price<br />

26.50<br />

Base Price<br />

27.00<br />

25 26 27 28<br />

29 30 31 32<br />

Base Price<br />

28.50<br />

Base Price<br />

29.00<br />

33 34 35 36<br />

Base Price<br />

30.50<br />

Base Price<br />

32.50<br />

Computer Services<br />

COMPUTER WIZ<br />

For all your computing needs.<br />

Trouble shooting, virus<br />

removal, PC Tune up,<br />

Laptop Repair.<br />

Free Diagnostics.<br />

1605 N Main St., Palmer MA<br />

(413)283-7500.<br />

Electrician<br />

DEPENDABLE ELECTRICIAN,<br />

FRIENDLY service, installs<br />

deicing cables. Free estimates.<br />

Fully insured. Scott Winters<br />

electrician Lic. #13514-B Call<br />

(413)244-7096.<br />

EXCELLENT SERVICE PRO-<br />

VIDED Complete house wiring,<br />

service upgrades, generators, hot<br />

tubs/ pools, smoke/ CO detectors,<br />

installation of communication<br />

cables. WILL BEAT ANY PRICE<br />

BY 10%. Fully insured Lic<br />

#E38506<br />

Flynn Electric (413)323-9779,<br />

(413)348-0257<br />

LICENSED ELECTRICIAN.<br />

PROMPT, efficient, reasonable.<br />

Obligation–free estimates. Senior<br />

discounts. Will beat anyone’s<br />

price. Fully insured. Local. Walter<br />

Paul Partyka Lic.#11294B.<br />

c#(413)455-7353,<br />

h#(413)532-0503<br />

SERVICE CHANGES, ADDI-<br />

TIONS, Pools, Hot tubs,<br />

Generators, Outdoor lighting,<br />

Service with a smile. Lic, Fully<br />

insured, Senior Discounts Michael<br />

Champagne Electrician 413 210-<br />

9140<br />

Base Price<br />

31.00<br />

Base Price<br />

33.00<br />

37 38 39 40<br />

QUABBIN<br />

❑<br />

NAME<br />

ADDRESS<br />

PHONE<br />

TOWN STATE ZIP<br />

15<br />

SUBURBAN<br />

❑<br />

Excavating<br />

A&M EXCAVATING SEPTICS -<br />

drainage - stump removal - water<br />

lines - and more.(413)949-1903,<br />

(413)967-9897<br />

Heating & Air Cond.<br />

HEATING AND AIR conditioning-<br />

Furnaces, oil tanks, duct work,<br />

humidifiers, cleanings, tune-ups<br />

and new construction. Free<br />

estimates. Palmer Heating<br />

(413)283-7149<br />

Home Improvement<br />

<strong>20</strong>+ YEARS EXPERIENCE!<br />

Complete carpentry, drywall and<br />

painting services. For all your<br />

home improvement needs.<br />

Kitchens, baths, finished<br />

basements and more!<br />

Joe’s GC-License #CS093368.<br />

(413) 219-6951.<br />

C-D HOME IMPROVEMENT. 1<br />

Call for all your needs. Windows,<br />

siding, roofs, additions, decks,<br />

baths, hardwood floors, painting.<br />

All work 100% guaranteed.<br />

Licensed and insured. Call Bob<br />

(413)596-8807 Cell (860)301-8283<br />

CS Lic. #97110, HIC Lic #162905<br />

CERAMIC TILE INSTALLATION<br />

Kitchen, bath, foyers. Free<br />

estimates, references. Lic<br />

#0862<strong>20</strong>. Please call Kevin<br />

(978)355-6864.<br />

DRS PAINTING & HOME IM-<br />

PROVEMENTS Interior/ exterior<br />

painting, siding, windows, doors,<br />

roofing. Plowing. Lic #168118<br />

Insured. Free estimates. Credit<br />

cards accepted. (413)218-9042 or<br />

e-mail<br />

dsheldon4<strong>20</strong>67@gmail.com<br />

us<br />

Base Price<br />

27.50<br />

Base Price<br />

29.50<br />

Base Price<br />

31.50<br />

Base Price<br />

33.50<br />

Run my ad in the following Zones(s):<br />

THE DEADLINE IS FRIDAY AT NOON<br />

Send to Turley Publications, 24 Water St., Palmer MA 01069.<br />

Must include check.<br />

Or call 413-283-7084 to place your ad.<br />

16<br />

Home Improvement<br />

J.C. CONSTRUCTION QUALITY<br />

craftsmanship in all phases of<br />

construction. Remodeling,<br />

Additions, Garages. Decks. Also<br />

call for your roofing and siding<br />

needs. (413)314-1011<br />

Lic#160301<br />

OSHA Certified.<br />

justincoyer@yahoo.com<br />

JAMES ILES HOME Improvement.<br />

Specializing in carpet,<br />

tile, wood & interior/exterior<br />

painting. Free estimate. Fully<br />

insured 413-433-1824<br />

MARTIN MURPHY CARPENTRY<br />

Complete Home Improvement -<br />

additions, garages, Sheds, siding,<br />

windows, kitchens/baths, finished<br />

basements, and repair work call<br />

413-967-9897- license / registered<br />

/ insured- cell 413-949-1901<br />

REASONABLE RATES, DRY-<br />

WALL, Sheetrock, Taping,<br />

Textures, Knock downs, general<br />

renovations, repairs, painting, tile.<br />

Insured. Free estimates. 413-427-<br />

4662. Ma Reg #274556DA<br />

Instruction<br />

DON'T BE A STARVING<br />

ARTIST - learn how to teach<br />

painting with this special<br />

method to people of all ages<br />

and abilities and have your own<br />

business with a stable income.<br />

Fill the need for more art in<br />

healthcare facilities. Check it<br />

out at:<br />

www.artis4every1.com or call<br />

(508)882-3947<br />

Base Price<br />

24.00<br />

Base Price<br />

26.00<br />

Base Price<br />

28.00<br />

Base Price<br />

30.00<br />

Base Price<br />

32.00<br />

Base Price<br />

34.00<br />

Instruction<br />

GC/BUILDER’S LICENSE<br />

COURSE * * Register by Sept.<br />

21st. Class begins Sept. 24-27 for<br />

Ludlow, Worcester, Pittsfield,<br />

Northampton, Greenfield * *<br />

Call CCI 1-888-833-5<strong>20</strong>7 or<br />

www.statecertification.com<br />

TRUCK DRIVERS<br />

NEEDED<br />

A & B CDL CLASSES + BUS<br />

Chicopee, Ma (413)592-1500<br />

UNITED TRACTOR TRAILER<br />

SCHOOL<br />

Unitedcdl.com<br />

Landscaping<br />

**ALL SPRING, SUMMER,<br />

FALL** Specializing in shrub and<br />

tree trimming, (<strong>20</strong>11 storm repair<br />

and removal, arborvitae/<br />

hemlocks) grass cutting,<br />

landscape design, Spring and Fall<br />

cleanups and removal. Mulch,<br />

stone, loam deliveries, also small<br />

loader and backhoe service,<br />

snowplowing. Professional and<br />

fully insured. Please call Bob<br />

(413)538-7954, (413)537-5789.<br />

*A-1 RICK BERGERON LAWN*<br />

CARE<br />

Fall Clean-ups<br />

Overseeding<br />

Mowing & Landscaping<br />

Loader and Backhoe<br />

Trucking<br />

Wood Chipping<br />

Over 25 yrs. in business<br />

All Calls Returned<br />

413-283-3192<br />

A PERFECT LAWN<br />

Overseeding,<br />

Fall clean-ups<br />

Winter fertilzation,<br />

New installs<br />

413-283-lawn(5296)<br />

Quabbin Village Hills<br />

Circulation: 50,500<br />

Buy the Quabbin Village Hills or the Suburban<br />

Residential ZONE for $24.00 for <strong>20</strong> words plus<br />

50¢ for additional words. Add $5 for a second ZONE.<br />

First ZONE base price<br />

Add a second ZONE<br />

Subtotal<br />

x Number of Weeks<br />

TOTAL enclosed<br />

Suburban Residential<br />

Circulation: 59,000<br />

+ $ 5 00<br />

Did you remember to check your zone?<br />

Landscaping<br />

A1 QUALITY LOAM $18/ YARD<br />

delivered locally, 18 yard<br />

minimum. Call for pricing on lesser<br />

amounts (413)289-<strong>20</strong>26.<br />

ACM. HYDROSEEDING, LOAM,<br />

bobcat, fieldstone walls, retaining<br />

wall systems, pavers, trex decks,<br />

mulch and plantings. Waterfalls<br />

and ponds. ACMBUILDING.COM<br />

(413)348-9826.<br />

AERATION LAWN OVERSEED-<br />

ING Now’s the time to repair<br />

damage from summers drought,<br />

Fertilizing, Liming, Fall Cleanups,<br />

Mowing, Pruning, Plantings. 413-<br />

967-6751<br />

HYDROSEEDING AND LAND-<br />

SCAPE Construction. Retaining<br />

walls, walkways, patios, erosion<br />

control, skid steer work, fencing,<br />

plantings, loam, trenching, etc.<br />

Free estimates. Medeiros.<br />

(413)267-4050.<br />

TRACTOR FOR HIRE<br />

•Backhoe/ loader<br />

•Brushhogging and field mowing<br />

•Specializing in medium and small<br />

jobs<br />

•Low hourly rates- 7 days per<br />

week<br />

SCREENED LOAM<br />

•Special- Delivered and Spread<br />

$28/yd (15 yd minimum)<br />

Delivery only- call for price<br />

•Volume discounts<br />

(413)530-0256<br />

Lawn & Garden<br />

ROTOTILLER FOR HIRE $25<br />

minimum fee + <strong>20</strong>¢ a square ft. No<br />

job too small. Local areaweekends<br />

only. Call Bill (413)221-<br />

0421.<br />

includes additional words


PAGE <strong>20</strong> A Turley Publication • www.turley.com I Thursday, <strong>September</strong> <strong>20</strong>, <strong>20</strong>12<br />

TURLEY PUBLICATIONS COURTESY PHOTO<br />

Grief Support Group<br />

begins Sept. 24 at<br />

1st Cong’l Church<br />

of N. Brookfi eld<br />

NORTH BROOKFIELD - This<br />

Grief Support Group is a Seven-Week<br />

time of sharing, learning and supporting<br />

one another. Associate Pastor Ken<br />

Winters serves as group facilitator, using<br />

“A Passage Through Grief: A Recovery<br />

Guide” by Barbara Baumgardner<br />

as guide. This valuable resource<br />

stresses the importance of Journaling<br />

and the great comfort we can fi nd in<br />

our faith in times of loss. We will meet<br />

for an Eighth Week to view the Video<br />

“Going Home” featuring the music<br />

and testimonies of Bill Gaither and his<br />

musical friends and family. The group<br />

will meet at Pastor Winters’ house, 77<br />

Ward St., N. Brookfi eld. If you are interested,<br />

please call him at (774) 922-<br />

4144 or e-mail him at pastorken1@<br />

verizon.net.<br />

BIONUTRIENT I FROM PAGE 1<br />

ple need more support and information,<br />

with technical practices as well.”<br />

For Kittredge it’s not just organic<br />

farming that’s important: It’s farming in<br />

general.<br />

“Farming is important, and growing<br />

food is important, because we are what<br />

we eat,” he said. “Food quality has a lot<br />

to do with quality of health.”<br />

Kittredge pointed out studies show<br />

that for many systemic diseases we’re experiencing<br />

as a culture, such as cancer,<br />

heart disease, diabetes and other chronic<br />

diseases, there are very good correlations<br />

between mineral and nutrient defi ciencies<br />

and these diseases.<br />

“As a culture we are becoming fat and<br />

stupid because the food we are eating is<br />

not giving our bodies what we need to<br />

function,” he said. “If you don’t have the<br />

minerals in your brain it needs to work, it<br />

won’t work as well; if you don’t have the<br />

minerals in your DNA it needs to replicate,<br />

won’t replicate as well. I am trying<br />

to draw those connections to people in a<br />

practical way.”<br />

But oftentimes, people choose unhealthy<br />

foods over fresh fruits and vegetables<br />

because the taste in mass produced<br />

produce is oftentimes lacking. What else<br />

is lacking is nutrients: According to information<br />

based on the USDA National<br />

Nutrient Database, broccoli has 54 percent<br />

less calcium and 75 percent less Vitamin<br />

A today than it did in 1975; apples<br />

have 60 percent less iron and 40 percent<br />

less Vitamin A today than they did in<br />

1975.<br />

“Farmers are growing pounds and<br />

bushels, but not fl avor, aroma and nutrient<br />

levels,” he said. “Farmers have gone<br />

off track and are focusing on quantity and<br />

not quality. It’s not just about organic; it’s<br />

about food in general. It’s about fl avor,<br />

nutrition, health and vitality.”<br />

Kittredge’s main goal is to increase the<br />

quality of the food supply. But he realizes<br />

the economics involved and says his<br />

methods of farming actually support the<br />

farming industry.<br />

East Brookfi eld Senior Center bus trip set to roll<br />

EAST BROOKFIELD - The East<br />

Brookfi eld Senior Center is running a fall<br />

foliage bus trip to the New Hampshire<br />

Turkey Train on Friday, Oct. 12. You<br />

will depart from the town hall on Connie<br />

Mack Drive at 7:15 a.m. and travel<br />

to New Hampshire. You will be served<br />

a delicious full course luncheon featuring<br />

Hart’s Turkey Farm Roast Turkey with<br />

Where is it?<br />

“Do you know where this photo is?”<br />

Each week, a photograph of an<br />

object, landmark or<br />

other well-known local<br />

item (taken at close range)<br />

will run in the newspaper.<br />

Readers are invited to<br />

submit their answers to Tim<br />

Kane at telephone (413) 967-<br />

3505 or e-mail tkane@turley.<br />

com. All entries must include<br />

the respondent’s answer, his<br />

or her name, address and<br />

phone number. Remember, be<br />

as specific as possible! If it is<br />

a photo of a building, entries<br />

must include the name and<br />

location of the building. If it is a close-up of a<br />

sign, respondents must indicate where the sign<br />

is located and how it is used. Of course, if it is a<br />

photo of a random object, like an American flag,<br />

no additional information is necessary.<br />

The name of the person who provides the<br />

correct answer first will be featured in the<br />

newspaper.<br />

In order to qualify for the weekly “Where Is<br />

It?” contest, entries must be received by the end<br />

of the day on the Monday after publication. The<br />

winner’s name, along with the correct answer,<br />

will be published in the next <strong>edition</strong>.<br />

all the trimmings on the train and travel<br />

along the scenic woodsy setting. After<br />

the train returns, we will visit the famous<br />

Clydesdale Horses and tour the Anheuser<br />

Busch Brewery in Merrimac, New<br />

Hampshire. We will be arriving back<br />

home at approximately 5:30 pm. Cost is<br />

$64 per person. Contact Judy Shute at<br />

508-867-9224.<br />

TURLEY PUBLICATIONS PHOTO BY TIM KANE<br />

Last<br />

Week’s<br />

Photo<br />

No one<br />

correctly<br />

answered<br />

last week’s<br />

mystery<br />

photo so we<br />

will leave it<br />

as such.<br />

“When plants become healthier they<br />

yield better results, so it is easier to make<br />

a living farming,” he said. “Money talks,<br />

so if we can make you a more viable<br />

grower, that’s how we can get results.<br />

You don’t need chemicals, herbicides<br />

or fungicides, when you have healthy<br />

plants. This is making signifi cant waves<br />

across the northeast.”<br />

Kittredge has been giving lectures on<br />

these best practices of farming around<br />

New England for three years. He said<br />

about a third of the attendance are homesteaders,<br />

a third are professional farmers<br />

and a third are backyard gardeners.<br />

“It is a pretty mixed crowd that attends,”<br />

he said. “I’m just conveying basic<br />

principles, so this is applicable in backyard<br />

garden and farm scale. But it blows<br />

[backyard gardeners’] minds.”<br />

But for Kittredge, this is not just about<br />

the backyard farmer.<br />

“For me why this matters is I think we<br />

can systemically revitalize the planet,” he<br />

said. “If you look at the deserts, in Central<br />

Asia, Africa, there is a lot of land that<br />

is wearing out. Even in the Midwest, the<br />

soil is wearing out. We’ve been abusing<br />

it long enough it just doesn’t have what<br />

it needs to maintain vitality. I think that<br />

is something everyone should be worried<br />

about and I think we can systemically<br />

change that.”<br />

But it’s not just about the land: It’s<br />

about the people who live on the land.<br />

Kittredge said he has traveled around the<br />

world and has seen people that are really<br />

suffering because the land is wearing out<br />

and they can’t make a life living off the<br />

land anymore.<br />

“If we replenish the aquifer and build<br />

up the soil, we make the land usable for<br />

people so there is an opportunity for<br />

people to live a more simple, close-tothe-land<br />

lifestyle and be able to sustain<br />

themselves,” he said.<br />

“For me, it is a fairly radical, political<br />

act to work with soil. There are a lot<br />

of problems in the world and people get<br />

tired of it all and want to do something.<br />

This is something we can do. Take responsibility<br />

for your food and your family.”<br />

Through his lectures, Kittredge is already<br />

seeing incredible results.<br />

“I am feeling extremely hardened and<br />

like it’s all coming together beautifully,<br />

rapidly and on a large scale,” he said.<br />

“The pitch here is you can get ahead by<br />

doing the right thing; not just for your<br />

family or farm, but economically. What<br />

we’re seeing is people are starting to get<br />

results and to understand they can make<br />

a better living by doing the right thing.”<br />

In fact, some of the world’s largest<br />

farmers are beginning to apply some of<br />

these principles.<br />

“I feel like the reality of the fact is, we<br />

are going to be outcompeting conventional<br />

modalities on the marketplace,”<br />

he said. “We can actually produce more<br />

for less. We have to set up conditions<br />

where what we want to occur will occur<br />

and have to be realistic about what are<br />

the drivers to make that happen. It’s very<br />

exciting. This was fairly fringe fi ve years<br />

ago and it’s getting much more commonplace.<br />

It’s more of the cutting edge of<br />

the food movement; these are concepts<br />

people are discussing and applying. It’s<br />

really happening on a real level.”<br />

Kittredge’s next free local lecture is<br />

scheduled for Wednesday, Sept. 26 at<br />

6:30 p.m. at the New England Small<br />

Farm Institute, 275 Jackson St., Belchertown,<br />

MA 01007.<br />

Find out more about the Bionutrient<br />

Food Association at www.bionutrient.<br />

org; the complete schedule for the Bionutrient<br />

Rich Crop Production Workshop<br />

series can be found at www.bionutrient.<br />

org/events. Videos on the Bionutrient<br />

Food Association and Dan Kittredge can<br />

be found on YouTube.

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!