BRIEFLY: APR 16

BRIEFLY: Apr 16

Adoption Day at shelter

CEDARVILLE – The Plymouth Animal Shelter will reason embracing the means day from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, Apr 16. Stop by and see the but the nation cats and dogs that need a amatory home. The preserve is located on Route 6A in Cedarville subsequent to the glow station. Call the embracing the means line at 508-273-3472 for more information.

Visit the Easter Bunny

KINGSTON – The Easter Bunny has arrived at Independence Mall in Center Court. Children might revisit the bunny from eleven a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Saturday and from noon to 6 p.m. Sundays. Visits are giveaway and immature kids get a giveaway bunny gift. Professional photos are available for a fee. The Bunny is only at Independence Mall until Easter. Visit www.independencemall.com for more information.

Park Serve Day

BOSTON – The Department of Conservation and Recreation’s fifth annual Park Serve Day will be reason Saturday, Apr 16, in state parks and beaches opposite the commonwealth, together with Ellisville Harbor State Park and Myles Standish State Forest. Since 2007, thousands of volunteers have participated in dozens of projects each spring, together with picking up primogenitor along sea beaches, clearing rubbish from hiking trails, portrayal benches and planting trees and flowering plants at journey areas. DCR will furnish work gloves and apparatus indispensable for the assorted projects, though participants might want to take their own gloves or palm pick up (marked with the owner’s name and phone number). Power pick up are not allowed. Wear stout boots and work clothes, and journey usurpation sunscreen and insect repellent. Parking fees will be waived at all DCR comforts where Park Serve projects are usurpation place. Drinking H2O and a mangle will be supplied, though participants should feel giveaway to take their own H2O and food as well. To pointer up for Park Serve Day, and to see a list of all the projects (including any age restrictions) and get directions to the play belligerent of your choice, revisit www.mass.gov/dcr/parkserve.

Brave Generation conference

PLYMOUTH – Holyfire Ministries will benefaction a Brave Generation girl contention Apr fifteen and sixteen at Plymouth Memorial Hall on Court Street, featuring categorical eventuality orator Justin Kendrick and the Christian rope Out of Hiding. Tickets are $39 if you preregister, $49 at the door. For report details, revisit www.memorialhall.com or call 508-747-1622 or revisit www.holyfireministries.com.

Healthy Kids Day

PLYMOUTH – The Y will reason the annual Healthy Kids Day and stay village open residence from noon to 3 p.m. Saturday, Apr 16, at Camp Clark, at 200 Hedges Pond Road. Admission is free. Take the family for full of illness kids activities, face painting, yoga for kids and more. Take a discuss with a stay advisor and believe what Camp Clark is all about. Register for stay and embrace a giveaway T-shirt and be entered in a sketch to embrace a giveaway two-week session. For more information, call 508-888-2290.

Easter Cantata

The Saints & Singers Chorus has been behaving an Easter Cantata arrangement at several locations this week. Celebrate the Easter deteriorate as the carol presents “Footprints in the Sand,” a cantata by Joseph M. Martin. It will be presented 1 p.m. Saturday, Apr 16, at St. Patrick Church in Wareham, and 4 p.m. Sunday, Apr 17, at St. Elizabeth Seton Church in North Falmouth. Michelle Bowlin directs the chorus. Visit www.musicofthebay.com for details.

‘See How They Run’

PLYMOUTH – The Hat Trick Theatre will applaud the fifth year in Plymouth with See How They Run, by Philip King. The classic, silly humerous jubilee will be presented at 8 p.m. Apr sixteen and 21-23; and at 7 p.m. Apr 17, in Kendall Hall at First Parish Church in Town Square. Tickets are $20. For reservations, call 508-747-6856 or email hattriq98@aol.com.

Belly Dance for a Cure

PLYMOUTH – Belly dancers from all over New England will dance for a heal Saturday, Apr 16, at the Plymouth Elks Lodge on Long Pond Road. The eventuality starts at 7:30 p.m. and will good lift income for the Avon Breast Cancer Foundation. There will be a wordless auction with apparatus donated from internal businesses. Tickets are $15 in allege and $20 at the door. For report call Lisa Butler at 774-454-7533. Visit her Avon Walk page at www.avonwalk.org/goto/lisabutler2011.

Nuclear appetite forum on PACTV

PLYMOUTH – “Get to Know Your Neighbor: A Nuclear Power Issues Forum for Plymouth” will air on PACTV at noon Sundays, Apr seventeen and twenty-four and May 1, on channel fifteen (Comcast) and 47 (Verizon). The replay report will shift after May 1 in regard of other supervision programming changes.

Green eventuality at Pinehills

PLYMOUTH – The open is invited to attend the “Green Showcase” from noon to 4 p.m. Sunday, Apr 17, at Great Island by Del Webb in The Pinehills. The eventuality is giveaway to the open and refreshments will be served at the Overlook Clubhouse. Local area businesses and Great Island use providers will be presenting report about products and services that can good you live more “green.” Presentations will be reason at the 5 indication homes on a rotating report and will embody topics such as appetite efficiency, immature cleaning services and products, recycling, immature landscaping, composting, eco-friendly home design, and botanical skin care. Great Island has also concurrent with a internal women’s preserve to believe in a recycling effort. Guests are speedy to take a kindly used and dry-cleaned object of women’s maestro wear for donation. Anyone who creates a concession will be entered to win one of the raffle prizes.

Kids Week at Pilgrim Hall Museum

PLYMOUTH –Pilgrim Hall Museum, at 75 Court St., will supplement full of illness story to the repertoire with very special Apr Kids Week programming starting Sunday, Apr 17, together with every day afternoon inlet programs with live animals. Kids Week is fun for the sum family, kids, relatives and grandparents, and immature kids are approved giveaway all day long. Kids Week starts at 2 p.m. Sunday, Apr 17, with Brenner Family Magic. Stephen Brenner is a master at magic, apparition and fill up sculpture. Audience appearance and the use of live animals are pass pick up of all his performances. The wizard will be followed by 4 uninterrupted days of inlet programs with a live animal at each program, presented by the naturalist educators of the South Shore Natural Science Center and Soule Homestead. The programs will be reason at Pilgrim Hall Museum from 2 to 3 p.m. daily.

April 18, the module will be presented by Soule Homestead; Apr 19, the module will be on New England Owls and will underline a live barred owl; Apr 20, the module will be on reptiles and amphibians, with live creepy slitheries; and Apr 21, the module will be about mammals. In addition, worth hunts will be available all day for the immature kids to suffer around the museum, enabling them to believe Pilgrim Hall’s permanent exhibitions of the Pilgrims and reason up in early 17th century Plymouth Colony.

Thanks to Kids Week sponsor, the Edgar and Pauline Main Family Foundation, immature kids underneath eighteen are approved giveaway all day (must be accompanied by an adult). Plymouth residents are continually approved free. For non-residents, acknowledgment is $8 for adults, $7 for seniors and $6 for AAA members. Free parking is available in the notable relic lot. Visit www.pilgrimhall.org or call 508-746-1620 for details. Pilgrim Hall is open 7 days a week form 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

Visiting church band to perform

PLYMOUTH – Plimoth Plantation will benefaction the Limited Edition Choir from Eureka High School in Eureka, Calif., from 2:15 to 2:45 p.m. Sunday, Apr 17, at the vaunt area by the Mayflower II on the waterfront. A name organisation of vocalists, this organisation of students is well known for the far-reaching repertoire of strain from exemplary choral novel to jazz. The 13-member church band performs we estimate 225 performances per year. The opening at Mayflower II is part of Plimoth Plantation’s opening venue program, enlivening tyro groups to perform for the open at one of the nation’s heading vital story museums.

April eighth month at Plimoth Plantation

PLYMOUTH – Plimoth Plantation creates a good Apr eighth month end with weeklong adventures for kids, every day notable relic on foot tours and specifically scheduled hands-on activities for the sum family to enjoy. Activities embody a weeklong Shakespeare journey module Apr 18-22, cornhusk doll making, guided tours, plants and animals tours, hands-on workshops, Colonial games and more. Visit www.plimoth.org or call 508-746-1622 for details.

Glee Camp

DUXBURY – South Shore Conservatory will suggest Glee Camp, an Apr eighth month module combined for kids in grades 7-9. This finish week of outspoken coaching and choreography, desirous by the dermatitis low-pitched humerous jubilee TV show, runs from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Apr eighteen to twenty-two at the Conservatory’s Duxbury location, at 64 St. George St.

At Glee Camp, teenagers will be enthralled in their the the single preferred songs as they work on both vast and small organisation numbers. They will be coached in full of illness outspoken technique and style, jubilee presence, microphone technique, transformation and staging. Interested students also have the eventuality to perform a piece for the single authority in the last uncover Friday, Apr 22.

Kelley DePasqua, dialect authority of excellent and unsentimental humanities at Silver Lake Regional High School in Kingston, is the program’s featured instructor. She has taught at Silver Lake Regional High School for fifteen years, where she directs 5 choirs and the award-winning low-pitched play program.

Students should skirt to dance and take a bag lunch. Parents and friends are invited to the last opening at 3 p.m. Friday, Apr 22. The price of this module is $225. Visit www.sscmusic.org to register online or call Anne Smith at 781-934-2731, ext. 11. Registration closes Wednesday, Apr 15, and space is limited.

Kids Week at the mall

KINGSTON – The Independence Mall will be hosting Apr eighth month kids week from noon to 2 p.m. Monday through Friday in Macy’s Court. Each day there will be assorted activities for kids together with face painting, crafts, demonstrations and giveaways from area businesses together with Art on the Spot, New York Life, Thurston Academy of Martial Arts, Kids Kastle, Dunleavy Shaffer School of Irish Dance and the Independence Mall. Go to www.independencemall for more information.

Girl Scout camp

PLYMOUTH – Spend Apr eighth month at Wind-in-the-Pines Girl Scout Camp on West Long Pond Road in Plymouth. Go for a day or two or attend all week. Girls in grades 1 through 8 are invited to believe new and sparkling programs benefaction each day. See what stay is like and encounter new friends prior to to selecting a stay for summer. Apr eighth month stay will be reason Tuesday, Apr 19, to Friday, Apr 22. To sense more or to register, revisit www.girlscoutseasternmass.org. The price is $40 per day. Non-Scouts contingency compensate a $12 Scouting registration fee. Financial support is available. Free buses are available.

Pilgrim Hall Museum harangue series

PLYMOUTH – Pilgrim Hall Museum, at 75 Court St., is presenting a harangue form Wednesdays in April. Enjoy coffee at 9:30 a.m.; lectures proceed at 10 a.m. Each module will last we estimate an hour, with time for questions. The form is sponsored by Plymouth Industrial Development Corporation.

April 20: “What’s Under Things? Some Hidden Colonial Clothing,” with Stephen O’Neill, stick on forces with comparison manager and curator, Pilgrim Hall Museum. Enjoy a preview of the arriving vaunt for 2011. Among the pieces of wardrobe discussed are two corsets, the Brewster stocking and many kinds of shoes.

April 27: “Meet the Director’s Companions,” with Ann Berry, comparison manager director, Pilgrim Hall Museum and a pick up of twelve portraits hangs in the vital room of Pilgrim Hall Museum. The people operation from the 18th to the 20th centuries and all played a part in the story of the Pilgrim Society and Pilgrim Hall Museum. Meet the people who watch over the comparison manager on a every day basis.

For more information, call 508-746-1620 or revisit www.pilgrimhall.org. Pilgrim Hall Museum hours are from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. 7 days a week. Plymouth residents are approved free. Admission for nonresidents is $8 for adults; $6 for seniors (62-plus) and AAA members; $5 for immature kids (5-17); and $25 for family groups (two adults with their immature kids age 5-17).

Herring using at Jenney Grist Mill

PLYMOUTH – Spring has arrived and the herring are using at the Jenney Grist Mill at 6 Spring Lane. From Apr to May, thousands of stream herring pierce from the sea up Town Brook to spawn. Each year hundreds of family groups revisit the indent to watch the herring stand the fish ladder as they control for Billington Sea where they will spawn. Go inside the indent and believe a arrangement that includes the vaunt “The Life Cycle of the River Herring.” The indent is open for tours since by the miller, who tells of the significance of the fish to the Pilgrims and how the fish helped them to survive. Learn about the original indent built in 1636 by Pilgrim John Jenney and how courtesy and giveaway traffic began here. Experience the consternation of inlet and share some story with your children. After your discuss you can lay on the rug and suffer an ice cream.

Admission to the indent helps to await the tutorial programs. The indent is open from 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday and from noon to 5 p.m. Mondays. Tours are on the hour and half-hour with the last discuss commencement at 4:30 p.m. Closed Sundays solely for groups with a reservation. Reservations are not necessary, but are suggested. Admission is $6 for adults eighteen years and older. Children seventeen years and underneath are approved giveaway on the History for Kid module when accompanied by a primogenitor or grandparent. For more report or to proffer strike Nancy Martin at 508-747-4544. Visit www.jenneygristmill.org for details.

Fish at Fearing Pond

SOUTH CARVER – Want to go fishing during Apr vacation? Visit Myles Standish State Forest’s Fearing Pond day use area from 1 to 3 p.m. Wednesday, Apr 20, and try your palm at it. Fearing Pond is stocked with fish and has lots of desirous bluegills just watchful for your worm. A Massachusetts fishing permit is not required. Take your fishing stick or steal one (from a singular supply). Worms will be provided. Meet at Fearing Pond day use area parking lot. This module is for ages 6 and up. Parents contingency attend with children. The eventuality will be canceled if it rains. Call Amy at 508-272-9376 for more information. For play belligerent information, a map and directions, revisit www.mass.gov/dcr/parks/southeast/mssf.htm. This giveaway module is sponsored by the Massachusetts Department of Conservation & Recreation.

Community red red red red red red red red red red red blood drive

MANOMET – The Plymouth Moose will horde a village red red red red red red red red red red red blood drive from 2 to 7 p.m. Wednesday, Apr 20, in the board home at 601 State Road. Walk-in donations are accepted, but appointments are suggested; you can report an appointment through the American Red Cross website at www.redcrossblood.org or by job 800-REDCROSS. The American Red Cross organizes the drives, and the Plymouth Moose members proffer their trickery to reason the red red red red red red red red red red red blood drive in the Manomet territory of Plymouth. To find out more about the Moose fraternity, call 508-224-2276 or revisit www.plymouthmooselodge.org.

Talk of the Towne

PLYMOUTH – The live PACTV call-in show, “Talk of the Towne,” is cablecast Wednesdays at 8 p.m. on channels thirteen (for Comcast customers) and 43 (for Verizon subscribers). Karen Buechs co-hosts each uncover unless differently noted. Visit www.pactv.org for sum or call 508-830-6999.

April 20: Candidate for re-election, Selectman Dick Quintal

April 27: Selectman John Mahoney, claimant for re-election

May 4: Darcy H. Lee, author, The Fantastic, Fabulous, Funny and Factual Follies of a Facebook Friend, first half; Margie Burgess, second half

May 11: Superintendent of Schools, Gary Maestas

May 18: Attorney Bob Betters, the Plymouth Educational Foundation, first half; Attorney Ed Angley, second half

May 25: PACTV Executive Director Nancy Richard, PACTV Outreach Coordinator Donna Rodriguez and Donna Ouellette of the Rotary Club of Plymouth

June 1: (Hosted by Ken Buechs) Plymouth Town Clerk Lawrence Pizer, first half; Matthew Nadler, editor/publisher of The Manomet Current, second half

June 8: WATD air wave hire owners Ed Perry and contributor Bobbie Clark

June 15: Plymouth DPW Director Jonathan Bedar and Plymouth DPW Assistant Dennis Westgate

June 22: Police Chief Michael Botieri and Fire Chief Ed Bradley

June 29: Certified Physician Assistant David Peckham, Dermatology Associates of the South Shore

Builders meeting

PLYMOUTH – The monthly assembly of the Greater Plymouth Builders Association Inc. will be reason from 5:30 to 8 p.m. Thursday, Apr 21, at the John Carver Inn on Summer Street. The module is “Massachusetts State Building Code (780CMR), Updates and Changes to the 8th Edition.” Mike Guigli of the state Board of Building Regulations and Standards will benefaction an ubiquitous outlook of the updates and changes to the 8th Edition, one- and two-family residential structure code. The Greater Plymouth Builders Association Inc. will be requesting for CEUs for the Construction Supervisors License underneath the new stability preparation module for this event. Seating is limited. Dinner, program, networking and income bar: $25 per member, $35 per guest. To haven your seat, register with a credit tag on the eventuality page at www.greaterplymouthbuilders.com or send your check to Greater Plymouth Builders Association, P.O. Box 1064, Plymouth, MA 02362. For the single some-more information, call Nancy O’Keefe at 508-728-9100 or email nancy@greaterplymouthbuildersassociation.com.

Exercise module at Jordan Hospital

PLYMOUTH – Keep Moving, an interactive organisation eventuality assisting you proceed a personal module of exercise, will be reason from 6 to 7 p.m. Thursday, Apr 21, at the Jordan Hospital Club Cancer Center at 275 Sandwich St., featuring Kelly Livingston, protected personal trainer. All wellness workshops are open to the public. Seating is limited. To haven your space call 508-830-2390.

Compassionate Caregiver Award

BOSTON – Nominations are open for the 13th annual Schwartz Center Compassionate Caregiver Award. This prestigious endowment honors caregivers in the New England segment (Massachusetts, Connecticut, Maine, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont) who arrangement unusual caring in caring for patients. The leader will embrace $5,000 and 4 finalists will embrace $1,000 each.

Nominations are due Apr 22. The Schwartz Center for Compassionate Healthcare will benefaction the endowment at the annual Kenneth B. Schwartz Center Compassionate Healthcare Dinner Nov. 17, at the Boston Convention and Exhibition Center in South Boston. For more information, revisit www.theschwartzcenter.org or call 617-724-4746.

Cars for Homes

Habitat for Humanity’s Cars for Homes module is the undiluted way to applaud Earth Day, Friday, Apr 22. Every day is Earth Day with the Cars for Homes program, as it promotes automobile recycling year-round. Donating your automobile through the Cars for Homes module not only helps the sourroundings by stealing a no longer fit automobile from the roads, but the supports from those donations good put internal family groups into energy-efficient homes. For more report on Habitat for Humanity’s Cars for Homes program, call 877-277-4344 or revisit www.carsforhomes.org.

‘The World of Carl Sandburg’

PLYMOUTH – Plymouth Community Theatre will benefaction a special one-night-only opening of Geronimo Sands in The World of Carl Sandburg at 8 p.m. Friday, Apr 22, at the Plymouth Center for the Arts, at eleven North St. The World of Carl Sandburg, combined by Norman Corwin, is a jubilee of the Pulitzer-prize-winning American author-poet. The uncover is a gathering of Sandburg’s best work. Sands, a Plymouth resident, will star in this one-man show. A loyal play veteran, he will applaud his golden anniversary as inventive comparison manager of Priscilla Beach Theatre in 2011 and his 65th year in theater, carrying proposed at the age of 5 in shows foster over Chicago’s air wave hire WFJL. He has achieved this uncover to eager vicious commend through much of the United States over the last twenty years and it now earnings to Plymouth. Tickets are $10 and seating is ubiquitous admission. Tickets are available in allege at the Hollis Insurance Agency, at 1 Village Green North at The Pinehills (508-209-0400) and at the Art Center, or buy them at the door. For details, revisit www.plymouthcommunitytheatre.net.

Walk/run in State Forest

PLYMOUTH – The Plymouth Recyclers and Savers organizations will unite a 4-mile walk/run at eleven a.m. Saturday, Apr 23, to good the Plymouth schools’ recycling programs. The eventuality will be reason at DCR’s Myles Standish State Forest. It will proceed and end at Charge Pond by the pavilion. Enter the play belligerent at Long Pond Road. Parking and restrooms will be available. Signs and volunteers will beam you to the proceed of the race. To pointer up for the walk, go to the www.active.com website naming in the keyword window at the top, the date and Earth Day 4 Mile. Monetary donations for Plymouth Recyclers can be mailed to P.O. Box 1946, Manomet, MA 02345. For more information, revisit the web site at greenbeane.net. Savers part of will be on site pciking up used clothing, housewares, books and kids toys to good the Epilepsy Foundation of New England. There will be giveaway T-shirts for the first 200 participants and raffles and prizes.

Eve Loranger Scholarship fundraiser

PLYMOUTH – A fundraiser for the Eve Loranger Memorial Scholarship Fund will be reason from 7 to eleven p.m. Saturday, Apr 23, at the Cabby Shack Restaurant on Town Wharf. Entertainment will be supposing by D.J. Baz and hors d’oeuvres will be served. All deduction from the eventuality will go toward two $500 college scholarships for student-athletes from the locale of Plymouth. Tickets are on sale for $10 to any the single over the age of 21. Tickets might be purchased by job 774-454-6915 or by emailing PSHSPS@aol.com. If you are incompetent to attend but still would like to make a donation, checks can be sent to 412 Billington St., Plymouth, MA 02360. All checks can be made out to the Eve Loranger Scholarship Fund.

Victoria Wyeth at Plymouth Center for the Arts

PLYMOUTH – Victoria Wyeth will harangue on her vicious grandfather, Andrew Wyeth, at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Apr 23, at the Plymouth Center for the Arts, at eleven North St. Andrew Wyeth is the son of important illustrator, N.C. Wyeth, and father of Jamie Wyeth. The arrangement will embody a slideshow of assorted works. This year will thoroughness in sole on the work of Andrew Wyeth in the 1980s. Light refreshments will be served. There are a singular number of tickets still available at $20 for members of the Plymouth Guild for the Arts and $25 for nonmembers and can be purchased at the Center at eleven North St. or online at www.plymouthguild.org. Call the Center at 508-746-7222 for more information.

Curry College information

PLYMOUTH – Curry College invites the open to a drop-in informational eventuality at the Plymouth campus, on North Park Avenue, from 1 to 7 p.m. Tuesday, Apr 26. Advisors will be available around to encounter with you; no appointment necessary. Curry’s Plymouth heavenly body offers connoisseur degrees in education, rapist probity and business, along with bachelor degrees in nursing, management, rapist justice, communication, health, sociology, psychology and report technology. Curry’s eight-week courses encounter just one dusk a week, needing students to lapse to college while handling life’s responsibilities. Learn about their stretchable send credit policy, monetary support and registration processes. If you’d like, take copies of your college transcripts with you. Advisors will examination them and furnish you with an preparation devise that sum what you have left to finish your studies. For more information, strike Curry College at 508-747-2424 or revisit www.curry.edu/cegrad.

Plymouth/Carver aquifer series

CARVER – The informal Plymouth/Carver Aquifer Advisory Committee is land a open 2011 four-forum form on the Plymouth/Carver aquifer, the solitary source aquifer on condition that jubilee H2O for the towns of Plymouth, Carver, Kingston, Middleborough, Plympton, Wareham and Bourne. All 4 forums will be reason in Selectmen’s Meeting Room #1, Carver Town Hall, at 108 Main St.

The subsequent forum in the series, “Balancing Act: Preserving the Quality of Our Sole Source Aquifer,” will be reason at 7 p.m. Wednesday, Apr 27. The dates for the May and Jun third and fourth forums will be voiced at a after date.

Arbor Day celebration

PLYMOUTH – The Plymouth DPW Forestry Division will reason an Arbor Day jubilee commencement at 1 p.m. Thursday, Apr 28, at Manomet Elementary School, with students, faculty, friends and members of the Plymouth Garden Club. The module will embody of a tree planting, students giving the story of Arbor Day and planting their own seedling to take home with them. The seedlings were easily saved through Entergy and the Plymouth Garden Club to be distributed to each fifth-grade tyro at Manomet Elementary as well as other fifth-graders in the Plymouth schools.

Plymouth County Conservation meeting

CARVER – The Plymouth County Conservation District will assemble a internal operative organisation to brand assign needs, vicious full of illness resources issues and geographic areas of concern. Any and all meddlesome people in the county are acquire to join. The assembly will be reason at 5 p.m. Thursday, Apr 28, in the Carver Library, located at 2 Meadowbrook Way. Sandwiches will be provided.

The Plymouth County Conservation District is a resolution of state supervision determined to brand full of illness apparatus problems inside of the county and rise programs to compromise them.

The 2008 Farm Bill enclosed assign and environmental inducement programs to inspire farmers and timberland owners to adopt assign practices to urge the full of illness resources on and around their lands. Last year more than 2.4 million sovereign dollars was invested in environmental improvements on in isolation lands in Plymouth County. That was doubled with the property owner and state compare for more than $5 million of assign work practical on the land.

Help in structure an register of what still needs to be finished in the county. Help prioritize the effort and in conclusion good approach Farm Bill Programs and other programs toward full of illness apparatus sustainability. The seminar will be reason from 5 to 7 p.m., at the Carver Library. RSVP by Apr twenty-six to 508-295-5495, ext. 144.

Habitat residence groundbreaking

PLYMOUTH – Habitat for Humanity of Greater Plymouth will reason a groundbreaking rite at the site of the subsequent home on South Pond Road in Plymouth. The rite is scheduled for 5:30 p.m., Thursday, Apr 28. The Pinehills Affordable Housing Charitable Trust not long ago voted to endowment Habitat for Humanity of Greater Plymouth a $98,000 accede to to good erect the home on South Pond Road. The PAHCT was combined by Pinehills LLC to await open and in isolation efforts in Plymouth for the origination of affordable housing by on condition that grants and/or loans to bureaucratic and non-governmental agencies and nonprofit organizations. Join volunteers, family and friends as Habitat celebrates the commencement of structure the ninth home. Habitat for Humanity of Greater Plymouth volunteers are now putting the finishing touches on the eighth home on Mazzilli Drive in Carver. For more report about the groundbreaking, other Habitat events, or to sense how to volunteer, revisit www.hfhplymouth.org.

Jack Williams concert

PLYMOUTH – Jack Williams will perform at 7 p.m. Thursday, Apr 28, at the Plymouth Public Library on South Street. Enjoy listening to one of America’s best songwriters, guitar pickers and storytellers. This unison will be a fundraiser for the Plymouth Public Library, and it will flog off the library’s 20th anniversary jubilee in the “new” building. Check out Williams online at www.jackwilliamsmusic.com. Tickets are $20 each. Seating will be singular to the first 80 people to send their checks to the Plymouth Library Corporation, c/o David Buckman, 36 Timberlane, Plymouth, MA 02360.

North Plymouth Neighborhood Watch

NORTH PLYMOUTH – The subsequent assembly of the North Plymouth Neighborhood Watch will be at 7 p.m. Thursday, Apr 28, in the Father O’Hara Room of St. Mary Church, at 313 Court St. Liisa Budge-Johnson from the Plymouth Sheriff’s Department will be the guest orator on the subject of “Charitable Giving; How to be an Informed Donor.” She will plead the disproportion in in in between a nonprofit classification and a benefaction and ways to make giveaway monetary decisions easier.

For more information, call 508-747-1627, email NPNW119@verizon.net or write to P. O. Box 6394, North Plymouth, MA 02362.

May 19: Members and nonmembers are invited to plead internal issues – any questionable activities, such as probable drug deals, tagging, break-ins, fighting, speeding and any other problems being encountered in the neighborhood. Capt. John Rogers Jr. will be informed of these activities, if not in person, then by minutes, which are forwarded to him after the meetings. It is very vicious to all residents of North Plymouth that they attend these monthly meetings.

June 16: Plymouth Police K-9 Unit. The Plymouth Police K-9 Unit was reinstituted in the open of 2010 underneath the caring of Chief Michael Botieri. Guests this month are Officer Mark Higgins and his indifferent K-9 “Shirley,” a 3-year-old discovered yellow Labrador retriever who is approved in both narcotics showing as well as pacifist tellurian fragrance detection.

The North Plymouth Neighborhood Watch began in 1992 by a grassroots network of neighbors whose role was (and is) to foster all that is good in North Plymouth and to lift village relations in in between the people, business, organizations and institutions. The organisation functions in team-work with the locale of Plymouth, the internal police, landlords, internal blurb operation people, village leaders and adults to residence and finalise issues of village regard in North Plymouth.

1820 Courthouse meeting

PLYMOUTH – Share your thoughts about the destiny of the 1820 Courthouse and Commissioners Building and encounter the architects at 7 p.m. Thursday, Apr 28, at the Plymouth Center for the Arts, at eleven North St. Sponsored by the Plymouth Redevelopment Authority 1820 Courthouse Consortium.

Royal marriage on the big screen

PLYMOUTH – Plimoth Plantation is personification horde for the “Wedding of the Century,” as the vital story notable relic joins with Comcast to benefaction the Royal Wedding of Prince William and Miss Catherine Middleton, foster live on the big shade in the Linn Theater of the Henry Hornblower II Visitor Center, free, commencement at 5 a.m. Friday, Apr 29. The first 50 people through the doorway will embrace a special Will and Kate central memorial pass sequence approach from England. Wedding guest are speedy to don their fancy-dress hats and stick on Plimoth Plantation and Comcast from 5 to 9 a.m. for the fasten and the procession, while enjoying some English breakfast tea, crumpets and scones with jam to applaud the stately integrate on their big day. At 8 a.m. mimosas will be available to toast the new couple. Prizes will be awarded for the excellent conform in millinery, so guest should be sure to wear a low-pitched hat, to be a part of the competition fun. Prizes embody an overnight at the Plymouth Radisson, $50 benefaction obligation to Colony Place and more. Participants who come to perspective the foster of the marriage Apr 29, will embrace a special suggest to lapse to Plimoth Plantation this summer, for a Pilgrim marriage in the 17th century English Village.

Habitat’s annual celebration

PLYMOUTH – Habitat for Humanity of Greater Plymouth will reason the annual jubilee from 7 to 10:30 p.m. Friday, Apr 29, at the Plymouth Center for the Arts, at eleven North St. in Plymouth. Tickets are $40 per authority and all are invited to attend and applaud fourteen years of building. Mutual Bank is the first unite for the dusk and the module includes a wordless auction, a live deliver art auction, strain by Pat Drain, hors d’oeuvres and desserts donated by internal businesses, a income bar, and some surprises. The live deliver art auction will proceed at 8 p.m., with apparatus presented at intervals around the evening.

More than thirty artists visited Habitat’s ReStore in Carver and comparison apparatus that they have remade into singular pieces of art. Items to be auctioned off will embody superb valuables fashioned using small hardware items, sculptures combined from assorted structure supplies, sleepy seat that has been since a new life, castoff cupboard doors re-used as a board for folk and low-pitched art, detailed light fixtures and many more dainty and particular pieces. Auction apparatus are on arrangement at the Independence Mall in Kingston, subsequent to the Customer Service Center at the Target entrance.

Proceeds from the annual jubilee and deliver art auction will go toward Habitat for Humanity of Greater Plymouth’s idea to set up decent, affordable homes in partnership with a honourable family. Tickets for the eventuality are available online at www.hfhplymouth.org, or at the Habitat Office and ReStore. For more information, call the Habitat bureau at 508-866-4188 or email salvageauction@hfhplymouth.org.

Aero Club scholarships

PLYMOUTH – The Plymouth Aero Club is usurpation applications for this year’s aviation scholarships, to be used towards post-secondary preparation or precision in the bureau of a career in aviation, such as aviation management, aviation maintenance, moody or other aviation-related careers. Applicants contingency reside, work or attend propagandize inside of Plymouth County. Recipients will be comparison shaped on educational standing, personal and maestro letter of reference and monetary need. The deadline for applications is Apr 30. Two $2,000 scholarships will be awarded in June.

The Plymouth Aero Club was shaped more than 40 years ago by a organisation of internal pilots to good foster aviation haven and education. Today’s members are unapproachable to lift on that convention through the accede to program. For serve report or to ask an application, write to Plymouth Aero Club, Plymouth Municipal Airport, Box 10, 246 South Meadow Road, Plymouth, MA 02360. Email pymaeroclub@hotmail.com for details.

Hazardous rubbish collections

South Shore Recycling Cooperative part of towns will horde 5 more domicile dangerous rubbish collections this spring. Residents might attend their own town’s eventuality at no charge. Materials are supposed from 9 a.m. until 1 p.m. as follows.

April 30: Hanover Transfer Station, 118 Rockland St. (Route 139)

May 7: Kingston Highway Garage, 32 Evergreen St. (with Duxbury)

May 21: Hingham, Plymouth River School, 200 High St.

June 4: Plymouth DPW, 169 Camelot Dr

June 18: Scituate Highway Garage, 68 Captain Pierce Rd. (with Cohasset)

Residents of those, and of part of towns (Abington, Middleboro, Norwell, Rockland, Weymouth and Whitman) might attend other part of towns’ collections at their own town’s expense. To do so, ask and take a sealed authorisation form from the dialect in assign of your town’s HHW events to the pick up (usually the DPW or Board of Health). Some towns might extent subsidized quantities to fifteen gallons or thirty pounds.

Visitors from any locale but accede might attend for a price of $43/15 gallons or thirty pounds of waste. Commercial generators might call forward to 781-879-4435 to prepare ordering and payment.

Take: oil shaped paint and stains, solvents, gasoline, automotive fluids, pesticides, photography and pool chemicals, acids, bases, and poisons in secure, labeled containers.

Do not take: industrial, pathological and recovering waste, prohibited materials, pressurized gas cylinders or explosives.

Propane tanks, engine oil, antifreeze, automobile & rechargeable batteries, and fluorescent lamps are picked up continually by many towns. Residents should use those services if available. Go to ssrcoop.info for details.

Good, serviceable leftover latex paint will be picked up for recycling into new paint products at the Weymouth and Hanover events by The Paint Exchange LLC of North Scituate. Other latex paint collections will be voiced after in April. This commander pick up is made probable by a accede to supposing by MassDEP. To see if your paint qualifies for recycling, go to www.recyclereuserepaint.com or call 781-545-1272.

Latex paint and expostulate sealer are messy, but not hazardous. If not recyclable as described above, dry with absorbent element and draw up with rabble (keep lid off).

Residents who spin in a poisonous mercury thermometer, thermostat or other mercury object might barter it for a digital thermometer. Sponsored by Covanta at SEMASS.

PSC Environmental will control the collections. For more report and directions, call the South Shore Recycling Cooperative at 781-329-8318, or go to ssrcoop.info.

Pilgrim Hall Museum exhibit

PLYMOUTH – “Whose History? Contemporary Photography of Plymouth,” the proxy winter muster at Pilgrim Hall Museum, 75 Court St., is on arrangement until Apr 30. Guest curator Dr. Holly Markovitz-Goldstein, highbrow of art story at Savannah College of Art and Design, and photographers Deborah Bright, Oscar Palacio, Josephine Sittenfeld and Thad Russell will be featured in the PIDC Gallery for Changing Exhibitions, benefaction a look at informed ancestral sites in Plymouth in an unknown manner. This thought-provoking vaunt comforts photographs by heading ? la mode photographers who inspect Plymouth chronological settings and comforts through their work and the vaunt will benefaction the work as ways of demonstrating how mystic meanings can change, depending on how a place or relic is viewed. This vaunt is meant to be challenging, startling and a new way to see old sites all over again. Whose History? is sponsored by Cordage Commerce Center. For information, call 508-746-1620 or revisit www.pilgrimhall.org. The notable relic is open 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. 7 days a week (closed January). Admission is giveaway to residents of Plymouth. For nonresidents, adult acknowledgment is $8, seniors and AAA members compensate $6, immature kids (5-17) price $5, and family groups (two adults with their immature kids age 5-17) compensate $25.

Rockland Trust food drive

As part of the the single after another fasten to the community, Rockland Trust is hosting a Food for Friends food drive Apr 1-30 to pick up nonperishable food products and other apparatus of need for internal food pantries. Items will be picked up at all Rockland Trust branches. In serve to the food drive, Rockland Trust will make a monetary accede to to a food cupboard in each locale the bank serves, and is enlivening the employees to proffer at internal food pantries. Visit www.rocklandtrust.com for more information.

Service endowment deadline extended

PLYMOUTH – Nominations for the Presidential Lifetime of Service Award are being supposed by Mayflower RSVP (Retired and Senior Volunteer Program). The deadline has been lengthened to Apr thirty and the number of honorees to be concurred has been increasing to 30. The endowment is postulated to an particular who has a jot down for postulated proffer use of 4,000 hours or more in their lifetime, as of Dec. 31, 2010. Those hours are accurate by Mayflower RSVP to the Presidential Service Commission. To be authorised for the award, a claimant contingency first be authorised for the lifetime endowment and also be nominated for Volunteer of the Year. This endowment will be since to the claimant whose hours of use have resulted in life-changing benefits for one or more individuals. Prior PVSA recipients are incompetent for possibly award. The President’s Volunteer Service Award is expelled by the President’s Council on Service and Civic Participation, a organisation combined by President George W. Bush to commend the profitable contributions volunteers make to our nation. To commission a candidate, revisit the site MayflowerRSVP.org and click on “2011 assignment form” or email your ask to RSVP@MayflowerRSVP.org or call 508-746-7787.

Fuel assistance

PLYMOUTH – Heating deteriorate good levels now operation from $450 to $1,050 for nonsubsidized residents and $365 to $735 for some subsidized housing residents. Residents who have not already practical might fill out applications at the South Shore Community Action Council bureau at 265 South Meadow Road in Plymouth, on a every day first-come, first-served, signup basement with an certified income opening in workman from 8:45 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Mondays-Fridays. After-hours appointments for households in use during the day can be requested by job the office. Phone calls around a live user are supposed in in in between the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 4 p.m. at 508-746-6707. Application deadline is Apr 30.

There is a 24-hour voice reply phone system which, using a reason tinge phone, enables field and clients to find out about how the fuel good module works, to opening the standing of their application, to listen to a list of payments made, and for heating companies to opening weekly or every day oil pricing and remuneration histories. Clients with rotary phones should reason the line and they will be eliminated to a live operator.

New field contingency take explanation of income for the past thirty days for all domicile members eighteen and over for the past thirty days, design identification, and explanation of travel address. Households who have used the same first feverishness source for at slightest twelve months should take copies of their heating bills for the twelve months prior to to thoroughness for a potentially aloft fuel good good level. For field in an puncture incident (completely out of fuel or utilities close off), all income and other report contingency be taken into the bureau the day you request in sequence to embrace puncture assistance.

Eligibility is shaped on sum income and domicile size. The limit acceptable income discipline are: $30,751 for one-person household; $40,213 two-person; $49,675 three-person; $59,137 four-person; $68,598 five-person. Eligibility for fuel good might also furnish twelve months of discounts on electric, full of illness gas, and write bills as well as eligibility for giveaway weatherization and giveaway heating system repair. Applications will be taken through Apr 30. Volunteer sites that take applications and their strike numbers embody Plymouth COA (elderly only), 508-830-4230, and Plymouth Veterans Services (veterans only), 508-747-1620, ext. 172. For serve information, call SSCAC, 508-746-6707.

Town-wide cleanup week

PLYMOUTH – Plymouth town-wide cleanup week is Apr thirty to May 8. Walkers, runners, hikers, boaters, bikers, strollers, loungers, picnickers, ice thick thick thick thick cream eaters, golfers, bowlers, swimmers, saints and sinners – all are needed. Plymouth needs a open facelift. Choose a park, beach, alley or area to clean. Invite friends and neighbors to stick on you. Email Patrick Farah at pfarah@townhall.plymouth.ma.us or call 508-747-1620, ext. 204. Tell him the number of volunteers, place you will purify and number of rabble bags you will need. Arrange a assembly time. Take your own gloves, rakes and brooms. Give your the the single preferred mark some amatory attention. The eventuality is sponsored by the Network of Open Space Friends (www.networkofopenspacefriends.org) and the locale of Plymouth.

Yard sale fundraiser

PLYMOUTH – A back yard sale to lift supports for Key Program Inc. and Rodman Ride for Kids will be reason from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, Apr 30, sleet or shine, at Key Program Inc., at 5 Natalie Way, opposite from JunglePlex. Call 508-675-0763 for details.

Chili Cook-off

KINGSTON – The sixth annual Independence Mall People’s Choice Chili Cook-off will be reason from noon to 3 p.m. Saturday, Apr 30, in Center Court at the mall. Restaurants, nonprofit organizations and civil groups are acquire to believe for a $25 opening fee. Boy and Girl Scouts, schools, fire, police, etc., are all acquire to competition in the nonprofit category. Restaurants will competition alone opposite other area restaurants. Anyone might representation and opinion on their the the single preferred chili for a $5 donation. Proceeds from acknowledgment and opening fees will go without delay to the Rachel Souza Memorial Scholarship Fund. This comment awards accede to income annually to estimable Silver Lake student(s). Last year, the eventuality lifted more than $2,000 for the accede to fund. For more report on the event, strike David DesRochers at 781-585-8900 or email ddesrochers@verizon.net.

Blessing of the bikes

MANOMET – The Manomet Mystery Riders will reason the annual motorcycle good fortune Sunday, May 1. This year the bike good fortune will be dedicated in respect of DeeDee Bennet, a Mystery Rider part of who upheld divided Apr twenty-nine last year. The jubilee area will be at Gellar’s Snackbar, on the dilemma of 3A and Beaver Dam Road in Manomet at noon, when participants will leave for a reduced float to the blessing. The good fortune will be benefaction at 1 p.m. at St. Bonaventure Church on 3A in Manomet at 1 p.m. Following the blessing, participants will go on an lengthened poser ride. The open is invited to attend and any riders, of all bikes, are speedy to attend. A classification to good the poor concession will be taken at this eventuality so you are asked to give as easily as your equates to allow. Any donations will go the St Bonaventure’s Fund for the Needy.

PBT seminar for Scouts

PLYMOUTH – Priscilla Beach Theatre will benefaction a play seminar for Girl Scouts from 1 to 3 p.m. Sunday, May 1, at Priscilla Beach Theatre, at 796 Rocky Hill Road. The seminar is combined to encounter the pinned token mandate for the Girl Scouts of America Brownie “Try It” Badge and the Junior “Theater” Badge while portion as an pass into the universe of theatre, opening and presentation.

This special two-hour play seminar will ring a finish pass with harangue on “The World of the Theatre” and a “living” seminar and hands-on activities origination up most of the event. Using actors’ tools, participants will find the significance of a organisation substructure in play by sportive thoroughness and concentration, transformation and sound, impetuosity and confidence. Teamwork, an vicious part of of play production, will be exemplified through a reduced thespian arrangement combined on the mark and performed, a indication of a entirely satisfied production. Costumes, props, makeup and technical mixture of production, such as lighting and sound, will also be explored and discussed. For the reduced presentation, participants will work out, from first jubilee of the mass to tangible presentation, a obvious speech, theatre or poem (i.e., Shakespeare, Sandburg, Whitman or Williams). One pass to beautiful expression, extemporaneous invention will also be a focal point of the seminar as participants will try their own singular form of expression. Participants will embrace copies of the jubilee element at the workshop.

The price is $15 per Scout. Badges will be handed out the same day. First come, first served; only 60 spots available. Send payment, made out to Troop 81265, to Melissa Powers, Attn: Theater Workshop, 5 Rodman Lane, Plymouth, MA 02360. List your name, address, phone number, couple number and mention possibly Brownie or Junior. If you have any questions, call Melissa Powers at 781-910-9430 or email powersfamily4@verizon.net.

Pilgrim Festival Chorus concert

PLYMOUTH – The Pilgrim Festival Chorus, the region’s principal village choral group, will perform “The Armed Man: a Mass for Peace,” as the second unison in the 2010-2011 season, at 4 p.m. Sunday, May 1, at the Church of the Pilgrimage in Town Square. PFC Music Director William B. Richter will control the 80-member chorus, soloists and 15-piece orchestra, with PFC accompanist Elizabeth Chapman Reilly featured on siren organ.

Something of a depart from PFC’s prevalent repertoire of exemplary masterworks, “The Armed Man” is a complicated multiple premiered in 2000 by the National Musicians Symphony Orchestra at The Royal Albert Hall in London. A origination of Welsh composer Karl Jenkins, the consecrated work respected the victims of the Kosovo predicament in the opening celebrating the millennium at the Royal Armouries Museum. Thematically, “The Armed Man” evokes undying images depicting the thespian goods of war, and the ensuing tellurian anguish.

General seating tickets are $20, with a ignored rate of $15 for students and $18 for comparison citizens. Advance tickets might be purchased online at www.pilgrimfestival.org, and are available at the Plymouth Center for the Arts, eleven North St., Plymouth (508-746-7222) and from PFC members. To haven tickets by phone, call Eileen McCaffrey at 508-866-7895. For more information, revisit www.pilgrimfestival.org, or follow Pilgrim Festival Chorus on Facebook.

Junior Panthers Hockey

PLYMOUTH – The Plymouth Junior Panthers Hockey Club will be land the 2011-2012 hockey tryouts from 5 to 8 p.m. Sunday, May 1, at the Armstrong locus in Plymouth. All core propagandize aged students of the South Plymouth High School district are authorised to try out. For more information, see www.plymouthjuniorpanthers.com.

‘How to be Media-Wise’

PLYMOUTH – New Hope Chapel and the New Testament Church will unite “How to be Media-Wise” with Ted Baehr at 6 p.m. Sunday, May 1, at Plymouth Memorial Hall, at 83 Court St. Admission is free, all are welcome. A free-will benefaction will be taken. Baehr, remarkable critic, teacher and lecturer, is owner and publishing residence of Movieguide (aka www.movieguide.org) and authority of the Christian Film and Television Commission. He is the son of successful stage, shade and TV actors. His different preparation enclosed degrees in literature, law and theology. He has authored many books and articles per to Hollywood and the jubilee industry, appeared as a guest on many TV shows and lectured around the universe on the media and culture. For more information, call the New Testament Church at 508-888-1879.

Dessert fundraiser

BOSTON – From May 2 through 8, the fritter cook at a number of internal restaurants will bake a singular dessert to put on the menu. Desserts proceed at $3 and 100 percent of sales will good breast cancer investigate and caring at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. Ask your server about it.

Participants embody both British Beer Company restaurants in Plymouth (6 Middle St. and 2294 State Road) and the BBC in Pembroke, at fifteen Columbia Road, as well as Sugar Plum Bakery at 161 Summer St. in Kingston. Boston Bakes for Breast Cancer was proposed in 2000 by Carol Brownman Sneider in mental recall of her mother, Eva Brownman, who mislaid her conflict with breast cancer. Since the pregnancy the eventuality has lifted more than $500,000 for breast cancer investigate and caring at Dana-Farber. For more report and a full list of participating establishments, revisit www.bostonbakesforbreastcancer.org.

Red Cross red red red red red red red red red red red blood drives

The American Red Cross will reason internal village red red red red red red red red red red red blood drives in May. All authorised and new red red red red red red red red red red red blood donors are speedy to give blood. Donors are indispensable every day to safeguard an competent red red red red red red red red red red red blood supply for patients in need. All presenting donors at a Red Cross red red red red red red red red red red red blood drive in May will embrace a banking for a giveaway Whopper small worth plate from Burger King. Local red red red red red red red red red red red blood drives embody those listed below.

· May 2: 2-7 p.m., United Parish of Carver, 115 Main St., Carver

· May 9: 2-7 p.m., First Parish Unitarian Church, 842 Tremont St., Duxbury

· May 11: 1-6 p.m., North River Community Church, 334 Old Oak St., Pembroke

· May 13: eleven a.m. to 4 p.m., Jordan Hospital, 275 Sandwich St., Plymouth

· May 17: 1:30-6:30 p.m., First Congregational Church, eleven Gibbs Ave., Wareham

· May 18: 2-7 p.m., Mitchell Memorial Club, twenty-nine Elm St., Middleborough

· May 20: 12-5 p.m., ServPro, 2C Commerce Way, Carver

· May 28: 8 a.m. to 1 p.m., Marshfield Elks Lodge 2494, 1321 Ocean St., Marshfield

To make an appointment to benefaction blood, call 800-RED CROSS or go to redcrossblood.org.

PACTV open workshops

PLYMOUTH – Plymouth Area Community Television is stability to register students in the open workshops. Workshops at PACTV are combined to good the residents of Plymouth, Kingston and Duxbury emanate radio for the PACTV open opening channel (Comcast thirteen and Verizon 43). The giveaway workshops are available to PACTV members. Students might name from a accumulation of workshops together with Non-Linear Editing, Location Lighting, Location Audio and How to get your Video Online. PACTV also has two different form for students who are meddlesome in formulating a uncover in the PACTV studios.

PACTV has not long ago reconfigured the Studio B into a “Point and Shoot” studio, combined for productions with not as big crews. Students will sense how to work the robotic cameras and will, at the end of the four-class series, be means to emanate a speak uncover or talk shaped TV show. PACTV’s Studio A Series is an eight-week form in which students will sense Studio Camera, Audio Mixing, Lighting, Technical Directing, Graphics and more. Both Studio Series will being May 3 and will take place from 6 to 9 p.m. Tuesdays. All of PACTV’s workshops are giveaway to PACTV members. After fasten PACTV and in attendance an course session, members attend PACTV workshops.

To pointer up, possibly revisit at 4 Collins Ave. in Plymouth in authority or go online to www.pactv.org (click on “classes”). Students will fill out a registration form and if required, compensate a small deposition (see registration form for details). Deposits are returned if a tyro possibly cancels 7 days prior to to the seminar (or first seminar in a series) or attends all scheduled workshops and completes all course work. Members who embrace category acceptance might steal PACTV apparatus or use PACTV comforts for free. For more report on PACTV membership or workshops, revisit the site or email PACTV membership coordinator Carol McGilvray at carolm@pactv.org or call 508-830-6999.

Program for home gardeners

MARSHFIELD – The Town of Marshfield Agricultural Commission is presenting the open 2011 form of lectures on Healthier Agriculture. This series, giveaway and open to residents of all towns, will thoroughness on organic and tolerable practices for the home gardener. The programs are reason at 7 p.m. on the second structure of the newly renovated Seth Ventress Building at 76 South River St. (across from the Marshfield Fair grounds, subsequent to the glow station). Doors will open at 6:30 p.m. for registration and light refreshments. There will be a seed barter at the May program. Preregistration is appreciated but not required. Call 781-837-1433 or email SummerDreamsFarm@verizon.net.

May 5: “Raised Bed, Vertical and Container Gardening” will be presented by Paul F. Split. He will denote methods to good extreme yields in a compress and/or unstable grassed area using full of illness materials and techniques. Going straight will good uncover off the furnish from small space gardening.

Selectmen possibilities debate

PLYMOUTH – The Plymouth Area Chamber of Commerce will horde a Candidate’s Debate for those using for Plymouth selectmen, at 7 p.m. Thursday, May 5, in Town Hall on Lincoln Street. OCM Managing Editor Scott Smith will assuage and the discuss will thoroughness on issues confronting Plymouth area businesses, with questions submitted by Plymouth Area Chamber members. Call the Chamber at 508-830-1620 for more information.

Student video contest

BOSTON – High propagandize students opposite Massachusetts are invited to contention a 30-second video compelling the propagandize breakfast module and enlivening peers to eat a full of illness propagandize breakfast. The idea is for teenagers to find a way to convince their peers to give up doughnuts and java for a genuine breakfast that promotes guidance by giving full of illness food a “cool factor.” There will be a 60-day acquiescence period, from Mar 7 to May 6. Submissions can be entered by particular students, by small groups or as a class. The winning 30-second video will be featured as part of village programming on WHDH-TV, in serve to other prizes. For specific competition discipline and information, revisit www.meals4kids.org and click on “What’s New.”

A Toast to the Arts

PLYMOUTH – Arts Recognition Trophy awards are presented each year by the Plymouth Cultural Council to people and organizations that have demonstrated caring in await of the humanities in Plymouth. The winners of the 2011 ARTYs will be voiced Friday, May 6, at the Council’s annual approval and fundraising event, A Toast to the Arts, to be reason at the Radisson Hotel Plymouth Harbor. Tickets for this dusk of jubilee and hors d’oeuvres are $40 in advance, $45 at the door. For report or to sequence tickets, call Linda Damon at 508-889-8461. For serve information, revisit plymouthculturalcouncil@yahoo.com or write to PCC, P.O. Box 1785, Plymouth, MA 02362.

Relay for Life fundraisers

PLYMOUTH – Members of the American Legion will reason several fundraisers in Plymouth for the arriving Relay for Life of Greater Plymouth.

May 7: Yard sale from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at 68 Oak St. Also featuring hamburgers and prohibited dogs for sale.

May 21: Car rinse from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Cape Auto Body at 53 Samoset Road.

June 11: Trivia Night from 7 to eleven p.m. at the VFW at twenty-two Seven Hills Road. Trivia starts at 8 p.m. sharp. Tickets are $15 per person, with the winning organisation usurpation $200. Call Beth Lynch at 508-746-2040 for tickets.

Family stroll

BUZZARDS BAY – The initial Jordan Hospital Family Stroll along the Cape Cod Canal will take place from 9 a.m. to noon Saturday, May 7, starting at Buzzards Bay Recreation Center. Registration starts at 8:30 a.m. There will be a 5K walk, run or stroll, with all deduction to good the BirthPlace at Jordan Hospital. The price of $25 per family includes one T-shirt. Additional T-shirts will be available for purchase. Enjoy a sunrise of family fun for all with activities, raffles, refreshments and face painting. For sum call the BirthPlace at Jordan Hospital at 508-830-2230.

Jane Austen Tea at Hedge House

PLYMOUTH – The Plymouth Antiquarian Society invites you to douse yourself in Jane Austen’s universe and extract of a wealthy English tea from 2 to 4 p.m. Saturday, May 7. Enjoy a special themed discuss of the 1809 Hedge House located at 126 Water St. on Plymouth’s scenic waterfront. Elegantly costumed guides discuss it about the etiquette and amicable feel of Regency England as described in Austen’s novels, and furnish insights on the analogous practice of provincial Americans. Before or after your tour, revisit the tea bedrooms for tea and juicy treats and exam your believe of all things Austen with a lightsome quiz. A preference of refreshments will be rebuilt from accurate 19th century Plymouth recipes in the Society’s collection. This eventuality is a pleasant way for mothers and daughters to make this a Mother’s Day week end to remember. Fee is $15, $12 for Plymouth Antiquarian Society members. Reservations are recommended; to haven tickets, revisit www.plymouthantiquariansociety.org for details, or strike the Society at 508-746-0012 or email pasm@verizon.net.

Ice thick thick thick thick cream social

PLYMOUTH – The Plymouth Family Network will horde the eighth annual ice thick thick thick thick cream amicable from 5:30 to 7 p.m. Friday, May 13, at Plymouth Community Intermediate School. Join with friends and family to sing and dance along with the Toe Jam Puppet Band and put up with in copiousness of sundae toppings. Admission is $5 per authority or $20 per family and includes a sundae per person. Pizza and other treats will be available for purchase. All deduction from this fundraising eventuality will be used to lift PFN programs and services. For more report call PFN at 508-830-4444.

SSC unison at Pilgrim Hall Museum

PLYMOUTH – South Shore Conservatory, in partnership with Pilgrim Hall Museum, will benefaction “Made in America: American Music in Concert,” featuring the SSC’s expertise members, at 7 p.m. Friday, May 13, in the categorical structure art college of song at Pilgrim Hall Museum, at 75 Court St. in Plymouth. Tickets are $25.

Delight in an dusk featuring outspoken and instrumental American-made music, from composers Samuel Barber, Aaron Copland, Lee Hoiby, Gene Scheer, Stephen Sondheim and Rick Sowash. An heterogeneous repertoire will embody performances travelling American art strain classics to the most worldly civil music, all stoical in the heartland. Instrumental repertoire showcases two of the most vicious low-pitched sum in 20th Century American music, composers George Gershwin and Leonard Bernstein. Performing in the unison are baritone Andrew Garland, violinist MaeLynn Arnold, clarinetist Gita Brown, pianist Regina Yung, cellist Patrick Owen and pianist Stephen Deitz.

“Made in America” also serves as a hide preview of South Shore Conservatory’s Duxbury Music Festival, an finish module for piece for the single authority and cover instrumental opening reason from Jul seventeen through Aug. 5. Many of the performances are open to the open and some are giveaway of charge. For more report or to sequence tickets, revisit www.duxburymusicfestival.org.

For more report about these concerts and other Conservatory programs, revisit www.sscmusic.org. For report about Pilgrim Hall Museum, call 508-746-1620 or revisit www.pilgrimhall.org.

Chrissy’s Charity open bazaar

PLYMOUTH – Chrissy’s Charity will reason the open unison fundraiser from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. May fourteen and fifteen at St. Mary’s bishopric center, 327 Court St., North Plymouth. White elephant and food list donations would be appreciated, as well as jewelry, rosaries and yarn. Items might be forsaken off at the bishopric core from 8 a.m. to noon May twelve and 13. For report call Brenda at 781-585-8954 or Jane 508-746-6095 or email gingerw2@comcast. net.

Chrissy’s Charity has lifted more than $13,000 since the pregnancy and more than 500 rosaries have been sent to the infantry in Afghanistan and Iraq. Requests keep opening in from those in need. Those who have not donated prior to to are asked to journey donating old, unwanted, damaged or new valuables of any kind; rosaries; Christian medals; valuables boxes and chests. Jewelry is then repaired, cleaned, restyled and sold, with all supports going to charity. Drop off sites in Plymouth are St. Mary’s Rectory at 313 Court St., both Mayflower banks (Court Street and Obery Street), Balboni’s Drug Store on Court Street and Metro’s Café on State Road; and in Carver at the Cleaner Spot, 80 Main St. Personal checks made out to St. Mary Church, with the footnote for Chrissy’s Charity, are much appreciated. Call Jane at 508-746-6095 (GingerW2@comcast.net) or Brenda at 781-585-8954 with questions.

Driftwood Folk Cafe

PLYMOUTH – Tickets are now on sale for the last uncover of the deteriorate at Driftwood Folk Café at First Parish Church in Town Square. May fourteen will be “An Evening With Patty Larkin.” Tickets might be purchased in allege by on vacation www.driftwoodfolkcafe.com (a $1 use price will be charged).

Livingston Taylor concert

KINGSTON – The Kingston Public Library Foundation will horde a unison at 8 p.m. Saturday, May 14, featuring vicious Boston-born thespian and hostess Livingston Taylor. The unison will be reason at Silver Lake Regional High School in Kingston. Tickets for the concert, ubiquitous admission, are $25, with seniors and students approved at $20. There is also a VIP choice that includes the eventuality to encounter Taylor, and suffer priority seating, at a price of $50. Proceeds from the unison will good the Kingston Public Library. Weymouth Bank is a vital unite of the event. Tickets are available online by on vacation www.kplf.org and are available for squeeze through May 13. Tickets sole online will be available for pickup at the performance, with a printed receipt. Tickets might also be purchased at the Kingston Public Library, and can be indifferent by job 781-585-0517, ext. 100.

Controlled bake planned

PLYMOUTH – Sometime prior to to May 15, firefighters from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the Nature Conservancy, the nation and the Plymouth Fire Department devise to light a tranquil bake circuitously the easterly opening to Myles Standish State Forest in Plymouth to revoke the risk of wildfire to circuitously homes and to urge wildlife habitat. The 50-acre bake will be in the Massasoit National Wildlife Refuge subsequent to the Patriot Properties resolution rught divided south of Wildcat Lane, Strawberry Hill Road, Jason’s Lane, Evelyn Road and Crabtree Road and west of the connection of Alden and Long Pond Roads. Residents and visitors in the area might see or smell fume during the burn. The expect date of the bake depends on the weather. A bake was scheduled last year, but the go on did not cooperate. If this happens again this spring, the bake will be scheduled in in in between Sept. fifteen and Nov. 30. Firefighters last burnt area in 2007.

A organisation of lerned wildland firefighters will keep the tranquil bake safe. They will guard breeze citation and other go on census data and will not proceed a bake if breeze would blow fume towards homes or roads or if conditions would not concede fume to lift. Signs will be posted along Alden Road to advise motorists of a bake in swell and a retreat 911message will be sent the day of the burn. Fire engines will be staged in the resolution north of the burn, where representation hunger limbs were cut, white pines private and the belligerent mowed in a 100-foot aegis to revoke the risk of glow swelling to homes. Firebreaks approximate the finish bake area. Burning will be finished underneath the conditions of permits from the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection, Air Quality Division and the locale of Plymouth. For more report on glow supervision on National Wildlife Refuges in the Northeast, revisit www.fws.gov/northeast/refuges/fire.

Manomartian race/walk

PLYMOUTH – Registration has non-stop for the Plymouth Manomartian Road Race/Fitness Walk, an eventuality for all capability levels featuring a decidedly vast theme. This is a village eventuality recognised to furnish opening to recreational programs for disadvantaged girl in our community. The competition is nonprofit underneath a organisation accede to with the Road Runners Club of America.

The eventuality will be reason May 15. The racecourse starts and ends at Bertucci’s Italian Restaurant, located at 6 Plaza Way in Plymouth, where registration and all post-race festivities will be held. Registration will be from 8:15 to 9:50 a.m. and the competition starts at 10. Post competition activities will embody a kid’s fun run, food by Bertucci’s, live music, a raffle, giveaways and awards.

The idea of the Plymouth Manomartian Road Race/Fitness Walk is to furnish opening to summer stay for 50 Plymouth immature kids who would differently not be means to attend. The camps run weekdays from late Jun until mid-August. The price is $160 per child. The camps are run by the Plymouth Recreation Department and are reason at Briggs Field and Stephens Field. The Recreation Department maintains a benefaction comment to furnish appropriation to family groups that cannot means to send their children. Proceeds from this competition will be donated to that fund.

The sum competition purse is valued at $2,000. The altogether organisation and women’s multiplication tip 3 finishers will embrace $300, $200 and $125, respectively, paid in a multiple of income and prizes. There are 7 age groups for organisation and women. The tip 3 finishers in each age organisation will embrace $40, $20 and $10, respectively, paid in a multiple of Dick’s Sporting Goods and Bertucci’s benefaction certificates.

A raffle will be reason featuring a LCD prosaic shade TV, donated by Best Buy at Colony Place. Other apparatus embody Boston sports organisation memorabilia, jaunty apparel, benefaction certificates to internal businesses and more. The competition will be televised on PACTV. Radio hire WATD 95.9 will foster live from the event. Bertucci’s Italian Restaurant is the presenting sponsor, and Xfinity, Bayside Runner, Best Buy, Dick’s Sporting Goods, Saucony and One Stop Painting are all partnering to furnish the event.

For information, call competition comparison manager Jeff Perryman at 781-217-5437, email manomartian5k@lycos.com or go to www.manomartian.com.

South Shore Arthritis Walk

PLYMOUTH – The 10th annual South Shore Arthritis Walk will proceed at noon Sunday, May 15, at Stephens Field in Plymouth. Registration opens at 10:30 a.m. After the travel there will be a jubilee with food, jubilee and fun for the sum family. For report revisit www.southshorearthritiswalk.org.

Christine Monteiro of Plymouth and Emily Sansone of Halifax have been declared the 2011 South Shore Arthritis Walk Ambassadors. Along with their family and friends, they will be heading the May fifteen annual walk. These ambassadors call on the South Shore village to stick on them in ancillary the Arthritis Foundation in the efforts to prevent, control and heal more than 100 different sorts of arthritis and associated diseases. You can review their finish stories, benefaction to their organisation or register to travel at www.southshorearthritiswalk.org. For more information, call 617-219-8235 or email rfarnlof@arthritis.org.

Poetry: The Art of Words

PLYMOUTH – The subsequent Poetry: The Art of Words, the Mike Amado Memorial Series, will be reason Sunday, May 15, at the Plymouth Center for the Arts, on North Street. Featured producer is Tomas O’Leary and strain underline is “Swing Set” (Patricia Drain and Paul Kinnear). Doors open at noon, the strain underline is at 12:30 p.m., communication underline 1:15 p.m., open mike 2 p.m. Admission is free.

Tomas O’Leary is a poet, translator, musician, singer, artist and fluent therapist. He has published 3 books of poetry. A Prayer for Everyone was expelled in 2010. He perceived his M.F.A. in communication from the writers’ seminar at UMass/Amherst and M.A. in fluent therapies from Lesley University. For the past seventeen years he has worked in nursing homes, heading circles of aged (most of them with Alzheimer’s) in strain and energetic written exchange, his Irish accordion very much part of the scene. He was brought up in Somerville, now lives in Cambridge with his mother Lee and has two grown sons. He outlayed some of his years in Columbia and Mexico.

Music feature: Patricia Drain and Paul Kinnear together determined in 1992 Middle Street School of Music in Plymouth. They perform together as Swing Set. For more report see MiddleStreetmusic.com.

Upcoming schedule: Jun 12, Alice Kociemba; Sept. 24: Poetry Showcase featuring Julia Carlson, Harris Gardner, Irene Koronas, Ted Minchin, Tomas O’Leary and Lainie Senechal; Oct. 9, Elizabeth Hanson and Jadene Felina Stevens; Nov. 13: Paul S. Stone and Zvi A. Sesling.

Visit www.ptaow.com for details. This module is upheld in part by a accede to from the Plymouth Cultural Council.

Plymouth County Charter Commission

HANOVER – The Plymouth County Charter Study Commission reason the monthly assembly Apr 5 at the Plymouth Middle School. The Commission was inaugurated to investigate taking advantage of a licence and/or becoming different or abolishing county supervision in Plymouth County and will make a letter of reference to be placed on the 2012 state list for county electorate to decide. The subsequent assembly of the Charter Study Commission will be on May seventeen at Hanover Town Hall. For more report revisit www.PlymouthCountyMass.US.

Plymouth North Athletics fundraiser

PLYMOUTH – Shaw’s on Pilgrim Hill Road has teamed up with Pepsi and Frito Lay to await Plymouth North Athletics. As part of the Working Together to Support Our Community Program, Shaw’s has selected the North Athletic Program to embrace 1 percent of all sales of Pepsi and Frito Lay products from Mar twenty-five through May 19.

Book signing at Waverly Oaks

PLYMOUTH – Author Maureen Hancock will be at Waverly Oaks Golf Club, at 444 Long Pond Road, Friday, May 20, for a book signing from 6 to 7 p.m. followed by her readings from Postcards from Heaven from 7 to 8:30 p.m. There will be a subject and answer eventuality after the readings. Tickets are $45 and on a first come, first served basis; or $55 at the doorway if available. No refunds. Cash bar available. Ticket prices do not embody cooking at the Waverly Grille but there will be a special menu and prices available the night of the event. This is a fundraiser for Caring Crowns organization, which raises income for cancer investigate and stricken families. For sum see www.caringcrowns.com.

Comedy fundraiser

PLYMOUTH – Stand-up comic and network TV actress Lenny Clarke will strike the jubilee Friday, May 20, at Memorial Hall on Court Street, for an R-rated humerous jubilee “Night of 1,000 Laughs” with friends Artie Januario and Jim Lauletta to good lift income for Plymouth’s annual Jul 4 celebration. They will strike the jubilee at 8 p.m. and piece prices operation from $20 to $125. The first 75 people to squeeze structure tickets for $125 each will attend a preshow usurpation jubilee the upper story in the Blue Room at 6:30, where they will suffer music, a nominal splash and appetizers prior to to Clarke arrives at 7:15 to pointer posters and take pictures. For more report on the show, poke for and stick on “July 4 Plymouth” on Facebook and review the contention boards. Tickets are available at www.memorialhall.com or by job 508-747-1622. Businesses meddlesome in sponsorship opportunities, to acquire nonprofit income back appearance forms and volunteers peaceful to good with the eventuality should strike Kim McDonough at 508-631-5150 or by emailing joyfly.007@gmail.com.

Fund for the Needy golf classic

PLYMOUTH – The fifth annual Golf Classic to good the Fund for the Needy of Saint Bonaventure Parish will be reason at Waverly Oaks Golf Course in Plymouth Thursday, May 26. Donations of auction apparatus will be gratefully accepted. All are acquire to suffer this day of golf and post-tournament festivities, together with a helicopter round drop, cooking and wordless auction. This golf exemplary is the only annual fundraising eventuality for the Fund for the Needy. Register online at stbonaventureplymouth.org. Click on the “Fund for the Needy” couple for the 2011 Golf Classic. Donations might be made on credit to St. Bonaventure Fund for the Needy and mailed to Fund for the Needy, P.O. Box 996, Manomet, MA 02345.

For more than thirty years, the Fund for the Needy Committee has benefaction food and puncture good for family groups residing in the Manomet/South Plymouth village who are struggling with the monetary stroke of stagnation and increasing vital expenses. One hundred percent of the income lifted by this eventuality is used to await the vicious efforts of the fund. Contact Noreen Morrissey, overdo coordinator, by email to stbonaventurefftn@parishmail.com or by job 508-224-3636, ext. 124, for more report about the fund.

Fundraiser for Fourth

PLYMOUTH – Plymouth Lodge AF & AM has selected to answer the call made by Ken Tavares last Jul for donations for the 2011 Jul 4 march and fireworks by hosting a fundraising cooking at the board on South Meadow Road. The eventuality will be reason at 7 p.m. Saturday, May 28, and the doors will open at 6 p.m. Tickets are $35 and can be purchased in advance. Proceeds will be donated to Jul 4 Plymouth, a nonprofit classification that raises supports for the legal holiday celebrations. Tickets embody an Italian smorgasboard cooking supposing by several internal restaurants, beverages and entertainment. There will also be a wordless auction and “Support the Fourth” T-shirts.

Plymouth Lodge members will be contacting internal restaurants to benefaction food and furnish one or more “signature” dishes to be presented as part of the buffet. A poster will be placed with each plate to commend and appreciate the restaurant. To squeeze tickets, or to benefaction food or wordless auction items, strike Doug O’Roak at 508-614-0209 or Vic Moulton at 508-493-7696.

‘Brewster Sessions’ to be released

PLYMOUTH – Brewster Productions, producers of the renouned Acoustic Nights giveaway unison series, will recover the own pick up of strain May 31, featuring internal artists Ben Carter and Shaun Dever. The Brewster Sessions, Volume 1 is a 10-track manuscript featuring live college of strain recordings, and is the initial recover in a form of albums that will underline internal artists behaving and revelation the stories at the back of their music. The manuscript was constructed by Jon Dorn, Shaun Dever and Scott McEwen, of Brewster Productions, and will be available for digital download Tuesday, May 31. This is the first recover by Brewster Productions and their partner jot down label, Noisy Cricket Records. A singular is available for giveaway download at brewsterproductions.bandcamp.com, which comforts the marks “Ugly Man” by Ben Carter and “Summer Spunk” by Shaun Dever. For more report about The Brewster Sessions, Volume 1 and the Acoustic Nights giveaway unison series, revisit www.brewsterproductions.com.

Musicians for graduation day concert

PLYMOUTH – Brewster Productions is adding to the fad of graduation day Jun 4 with a giveaway unison jubilee on the grass of the Hedge House at 126 Water St., diagonally opposite to Memorial Hall. The giveaway afternoon unison eventuality will be called “No More Pencils, No More Books” and will underline internal artists, together with Plymouth tall propagandize students and alumni. The eventuality will good students and family groups go on the jubilee after Plymouth South and North tall schools reason their graduation ceremonies at Memorial Hall subsequent door. The Hedge House Museum venue is being donated by the Plymouth Antiquarian Society.

Brewster Productions is looking acoustic-style internal musicians to perform at the concert, and asks that any the single meddlesome send an exploration to booking@brewsterproductions.com. Priority will be since to students and alumni of the Plymouth Public Schools.

“No More Pencils, No More Books” is giveaway and open to the public. The eventuality is presented by Brewster Productions, the Plymouth South High School Student Council Executive Board and the Plymouth Antiquarian Society. For more information, go to www.brewsterproductions.com/concertseries/nomorepencils.

Brewster Productions summer series

PLYMOUTH – This summer, the Plymouth on the H2O will once again ring with giveaway acoustic music, and Brewster Productions is job for internal musicians to perform at the fourth annual giveaway unison series. Acoustic-style piece for the single authority musicians and bands of all genres are asked to strike Brewster Productions if they are meddlesome in performing. All submissions will also be deliberate for opening at Brewster Productions’ midsummer strain festival. Musicians are asked to contention a couple to their strain around email to booking@brewsterproductions.com. Brewster Productions’ giveaway summer unison form will take place on the grass of the Hedge House Museum on Water Street, a place donated by the Plymouth Antiquarian Society. The Plymouth-based association will also benefaction an all-day strain legal holiday at DCR Pilgrim Memorial State Park for the fifth year in a row. Last year the unison form featured many gifted acts, with an importance on on condition that a venue for internal and immature musicians. Some past performers embody Sean P. Rogan of Big D and the Kids Table, Mark Rose of Spitalfield, Lucas Carpenter, Camera Can’t Lie (Atlantic Records), Love in Stockholm, Ben Carter, Jake Hill, and the Okay Win. For more report on Brewster Productions, the giveaway summer unison series, sponsorship and actor booking, revisit www.brewsterproductions.com

Friends of Plymouth Pound fundraiser

PLYMOUTH – The annual Friends of the Plymouth Pound golf fundraiser will be proceed at 9 a.m. Saturday, Jun 4, at Squirrel Run Golf Course. The price of $75 each or $300 per organisation of 4 includes lunch, prizes and a raffle. Sponsorships are available. Make checks on credit to Friends of the Plymouth Pound and mail to JoAnn and Bob Olson, 123 R Warren Ave., Plymouth, MA 02360. Proceeds go towards the sterilise and neutering module as well as veterinary use and programs combined to place needy and but the nation animals into new homes. Call JoAnn Olson at 508-746-6794 with any questions.

Class of 1960

PLYMOUTH – Reminder to members of Plymouth High School Class of 1960: Meeting for cooking at 7 p.m. Saturday, Jun 4, at Ernie’s Restaurant at 330 Court St. Call Dick at 508-888-4808 or Gail at 781-585-4452 if you devise to attend.

Memorial golf tournament

PLYMOUTH – The initial Patrick J. Crawford Memorial golf competition will be reason Jun 10 at Crosswinds Golf Club, at 424 Long Pond Road. The price is $125 per player and includes eighteen holes, a golf shirt, lunch and many prizes. Sponsor a hole for $150.

Patrick Crawford died last May twenty-nine after a automobile collision on Route 3. He was a 2001 Plymouth North High School connoisseur and attended Dean College, majoring in rapist justice. He played football for the South Shore Outlaws and was a third-year neophyte with Plumbers and Gasfitters Local 12. The role of the Patrick J. Crawford Memorial Fund is to good honourable internal charities in a demeanour that represents his compassion, consolation and frank enterprise to good others at your convenience he had the opportunity. This year, the benefaction will be in the form of two scholarships to be awarded to two Plymouth comparison scholar-athletes. Make checks on credit to Patrick J. Crawford Memorial Fund, 204 Center St. #9, Pembroke, MA 02359. Email PJCmemorialfoundation@gmail.com for signup piece or with any questions.

BSU hockey at Southers Marsh

PLYMOUTH – The Bridgewater State University Ice Hockey Club will horde the 12th annual fundraising golf competition Friday afternoon, Jun 10, at Southers Marsh Golf Club. The competition will be a hasten format and prizes will be awarded to first-, second- and third-place teams. Additional contests will be reason for longest drive and closest to the pin. Finally, participants will try their fitness at winning a Hole-in-One competition for a set of irons. Tournament fees (which cover greens fees, a memorial commemoration and post-tournament BBQ supper) are $125 per person; $500 for a organisation of four. Golfers of all calibers and levels of believe are welcome. Registration starts at 12:15 p.m.; shotgun proceed at 1 p.m. Interested in personification or contributing in another way by sponsoring a hole or donating a raffle prize? Contact BSU hockey manager Andy Holman at 508-531-2688 or by email a2holman@bridgew.edu.

Seabird and Whale Tales cruise

PLYMOUTH – An all-day sea wildlife journey will take place from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday, Jun 12, to await sea preparation and wildlife conservation. The New England Coastal Wildlife Alliance, with good from Capt. John Whale Watching and Fishing Tours, Mass Audubon South Shore Sanctuaries, Natural History Services, South Shore Bird Club and Bridgewater State University, are hosting the Seabird and Whale Tales fundraising event.

During the outing offshore, suffer explanation from wildlife experts together with Wayne Petersen (Mass Audubon), David Clapp (Natural History Services), Joanne Jarzobski (Capt. John Whale Watching and Fishing Tours) and Jim Sweeney (South Shore Bird Club). Travel aboard the Tails of the Sea, a 110-foot oppulance blurb whale-watching vessel owned and operated by Capt. John Whale Watching and Fishing Tours out of Plymouth. View seabirds, seals, whales, dolphins, basking sharks, sea sunfish and more.

The vessel leaves from Plymouth Town Pier at 8 a.m. and earnings by 4 p.m. Trip activities embody a plankton draw and demonstration, chumming for seabirds and a giveaway onboard nature-themed raffle. Tickets are $90 presale and then $100 after May 31. To sense more about this outing or to download the registration form, go to www.necwa.org/trips.html. For more information, call Krill Carson at 508-566-0009. Space is limited. Group rates are available. All deduction from Seabird and Whale Tale excursions go to await the many projects and activities conducted by NECWA.

Special: Stay at Hampton Inn & Suites in Plymouth Saturday night, Jun 11, for only $89 as well as tax. Included is Hampton’s “On the House Hot Breakfast” Sunday morning, as well as convey train use to and from the boat. Call Pat Stockford, comparison manager of sales at Hampton Inn & Suites, at 508-747-5000, ext. 4906, or email patricia.stockford@hilton.com.

Art on the Green

PLYMOUTH – The Pinehills is usurpation applications for artists to exhibit/sell at the seventh annual Art on the Green, a daylong jubilee of the visible arts, to be reason from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, Jun 18, on the community’s Village Green. The legal holiday will once again showcase the work of internal and informal artists, together with painters, sculptors, valuables designers, weavers and more. Space is limited. The eventuality is giveaway and open to the public. The opening price for exhibitors is $100. For more information, artists are asked to call Torey Dingmann at Aigner Prensky Marketing Group at 617-254-9500.

Relay for Life

PLYMOUTH – In 2011 the Relay for Life of Greater Plymouth celebrates a special anniversary: 10 years of on foot to quarrel cancer. The Relay for Life of Greater Plymouth will be reason Jun twenty-four and twenty-five at Plymouth South High School. Last year, more than 700 walkers and 125 cancer survivors participated in this “walk around the clock” to stop cancer. The eventuality covers the towns of Plymouth, Carver, Kingston, Plympton and Pembroke. For sum about the Relay for Life of Greater Plymouth, strike eventuality chair, Alice Chrusciel-Allen, at hagar200203@yahoo.com or 508-746-7818, or go to the internal website at www.relayforlife.org/gtrplymouthma.

Ryan’s Ride

PLYMOUTH – Ryan’s Ride Inc. will horde the second annual fundraising bike float at 10:30 a.m. Saturday, Jun 25. Starting at Pilgrim Memorial Park on Water Street, the course is a scenic 12-mile track from Plymouth Rock to Myles Standish State Forest where there will be a H2O and restroom mangle prior to to returning to the waterfront. The day’s activities embody a BMX demonstration, qualification fair, automobile show, music, food and ID fingerprinting for children. Registration price is $20 price (ages twelve and up). Registration is from 8 to 10 a.m. Online registration is speedy by on vacation www.ryansride.net. Participants purebred by Jun 3 will embrace a Ryan’s Ride T-shirt.

Ryan’s Ride Inc. was determined by Sandi Silvia after her son, Ryan, upheld divided from injuries postulated in an automobile accident. The nerve-racking distress to strech her critically harmed son, who had been flown to a Boston hospital, has desirous her to support others in times of crisis. The organization’s idea is to safeguard that when a family part of is told that a desired one has been concerned in a critical accident, if they do not have someone to take them to their desired one, they will be benefaction a float to the sanatorium by the notifying military officer. Help lift supports for a good cause. Additional report is available at www.ryansride.net.

Post 40 raffle

PLYMOUTH – Plymouth American Legion Post 40 is land a special fundraising raffle for the structure fund. The winners will be drawn Jul 4. Raffle tickets are $5 each; 3 tickets for $10; 8 tickets for $20. Contact Post 40 Special Building Fund Chairman Moose Gillis at 617-678-2346.

First esteem is one week in a Costa Rican beach residence as well as $1,000 for travel; sum worth $2,500. For details, revisit www.vrbo.com/80972 or strike Moonrosie@aol.com. Second esteem is two nights at Pilgrim Sands Motel on Plymouth Beach as well as $400 in vouchers or cash; sum worth $800. For details, revisit www.pilgrimsands.com or strike thebeach@pilgrimsands.com. Third esteem is 4 whale watch tickets on the Captain John Boats as well as $100 cash; sum worth $275. For details, see www.captjohn.com.

Independent Music Festival

PLYMOUTH – For the fifth uninterrupted year, Brewster Productions will horde an all-day giveaway strain legal holiday on the Plymouth on the H2O featuring tip internal artists. The Plymouth Independent Music Festival will underline an form of bands and piece for the single authority artists from around New England. The PIMF is set to proceed at 1 p.m. Saturday, Jul 23, at DCR Pilgrim Memorial State Park on the Plymouth waterfront. There will be two stages at the festival: the categorical stage, featuring full bands, and the acoustic stage, featuring piece for the single authority artists and small acoustic groups. The legal holiday will showcase a accumulation of genres, focusing on the original strain of immature internal artists. In years past, the legal holiday has featured a far-reaching operation of styles, including: blues, folk, punk rock, ska, hard rock, orchestral uncover tunes, metal, bluegrass, jam, indie rock, and combinations thereof. Musicians meddlesome in behaving are asked to strike Brewster Productions around email at booking@brewsterproductions.com. For more information, artist lineup, engagement discipline and news, revisit www.brewsterproductions.com/festival.

Pan-Mass Challenge

Cyclists from opposite the nation are gearing up to float up to 190 miles in the 32nd annual Pan-Massachusetts Challenge and lift income for adult and pediatric cancer caring and investigate at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. Online registration non-stop to the open Jan. eighteen at www.pmc.org. The 32nd annual event, Aug. 6-7, will suggest a new 25-mile route, which will stick on 10 existent routes that operation from 47 to 190 miles. It will move reduction gifted riders from Babson College in Wellesley to the tall propagandize in Sharon. The one-day, 25-mile float will take place on Sunday of PMC weekend. Riders will be compulsory to lift a smallest of $500. This year’s idea is to lift $34 million for the Jimmy Fund, which supports adult and pediatric cancer caring and investigate at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. During the past 31 years, the PMC has lifted $303 million for the world-renowned cancer center. There are eleven track options and 5 one-day and 6 two-day treks, which operation from twenty-five to 190 miles, origination it an preferred benefaction float for cyclists of all abilities. A colonize of the jaunty fundraising eventuality industry, the PMC raises and contributes more income to benefaction than any other “a-thon” in the U.S. In 2010, cyclists hailed from 34 states and 6 countries and thousands lapse each year to float in the event. Minimum fundraising mandate operation from $500 to $4,200, depending on the track chosen. Support services embody meals, drinks, massages and overnight accommodations. For more report or to register, revisit www.pmc.org, or call 800-WE-CYCLE.

Preschool openings

PLYMOUTH – Panthers’ Cubhouse Preschool at Plymouth South High School has a singular number of openings for tumble enrollment. Children contingency be at slightest 3 years old and trained. Call BethAnn Orchard at 508-224-7512, ext. 1107, for more information.

Buy summer bulbs

PLYMOUTH – The Evening Garden Club of Plymouth, in as well as with Brent and Becky’s Bulbs, is carrying a fundraiser to good lift income to go on the village activities. To good the club, go to the Evening Garden Club of Plymouth’s website at www.eveninggardenclub.org and name the couple to go to www.bloomingbucks.com and place your order, which will then automatically good the club. Now is the time to place an sequence for summer bulbs to plant when the dirt warms. The Evening Garden is a nonprofit classification and any good is appreciated.

Job networking

PLYMOUTH – The Plymouth Job Networking Group meets twice a month. Email rich.sampson@live.com for more information.

New and used books drive

PLYMOUTH – Plymouth’s Loyal Order of Moose is raising income through donations of new and used books, CDs, DVDs, annals and audio books. The organisation will be paid on an ongoing basement for all apparatus picked up in the gray book concession container, renowned by the purple and yellow “Got Books?” sign, located in the parking lot of the Moose Lodge at 601 State Road. This is an ongoing fundraiser and all deduction will good programs of the Plymouth Moose. The Loyal Order of Moose is a fraternal use classification of organisation and women dedicated to caring for the immature and old, bringing communities closer together and celebrating life. For more information, strike Got Books at www.GotBooks.com or call 978-284-2500.

PACTV part airings

PLYMOUTH – The PACTV bureau is located at 4 Collins Ave. Call 508-830-6999 or revisit the site www.pactv.org if you have any questions.

· The Apr 5 Plymouth County Charter Commission assembly will be cablecast on PACTV Plymouth supervision opening channel fifteen (Comcast) and 47 (Verizon), at noon and 5 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays, and at 6 a.m. F

· “Shichigahama and Plymouth: twenty Years of Friendship,” in which Karen Buechs interviews Margie Burgess about Plymouth’s sister city attribute with the locale of Shichigahama, Japan, will be cablecast on PACTV’s Plymouth supervision opening channel fifteen (Comcast) and 47 (Verizon) at 1 and 6 p.m. Mondays, Wednesday and Fridays; and at 9 and 9:30 a.m., 3 and 3:30 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays.

· The ultimate edition of Issues of the Day with State Rep. Tom Calter began airing on PACTV Mar 26. The part comforts an talk with Plymouth Register of Deeds John Buckley. The uncover front at 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays; and at 10 a.m. Saturdays, on Plymouth supervision opening channel fifteen Comcast and 47 Verizon.

· The fifth part of “Today in Plymouth,” with Plymouth Selectman Mathew Muratore, debuted on PACTV Mar 11. He interviewed Plymouth Planning Board Chairman Marc Garrett and Plymouth Zoning Board of Appeals Chairman Peter Conner. The part will air at eleven a.m. and 4 p.m. Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, and at eleven a.m. Saturdays, on Plymouth supervision opening channels fifteen (Comcast) and 47 (Verizon).

·The second part of “Cafe COA,” with Plymouth Council on Aging Director Conni DiLego, will air at 9 a.m. and 2 p.m. Mondays, Wednesdays and Thursdays, and at 9 a.m. Saturdays on channels fifteen (Comcast) and 47 (Verizon).

·The fifth part of “Commonwealth Update with Senate President Therese Murray” will air at 10:30 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, and at 10:30 a.m. Saturdays on channel fifteen (Comcast) and 47 (Verizon).

·The Plymouth County Charter Commission assembly that was reason Jan. twenty at the Plymouth Registry of Deeds will air at 2 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays and 5:30 p.m. Fridays on channel fifteen (Comcast) and 47 (Verizon).

·The fourth part of “Today in Plymouth,” hosted by Plymouth Selectman Mathew Muratore, will air at eleven a.m. and 4 p.m. Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays and eleven a.m. Saturdays on channel fifteen (Comcast) and 47 (Verizon).

·The Jan. twenty forum on H2O issues and sustainability, sponsored by the Plymouth Area League of Women Voters, will replay on Plymouth supervision opening channel fifteen (Comcast) and 47 (Verizon) at 8 a.m., noon and 5 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays.

·PACTV will foster “Films of the Israeli Occupation” Sundays at 9 p.m. on Comcast channel thirteen and Verizon channel 43. The uncover will be replayed at 7:30 p.m. Mondays, 4 p.m. Tuesdays and eleven a.m. Thursdays.

·The first part of “Register’s Report,” with Plymouth County Register of Deeds John Buckley, will air at 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays; and 8 a.m. Saturdays on Plymouth’s supervision opening channels (15 for Comcast and 47 for Verizon customers).

·The third part of “Today in Plymouth,” an hour-long special per the Plymouth delegation’s revisit to sister city Shichigahama, Japan, with interviews and footage of the visit, will air at eleven a.m. and 4 p.m. Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays; and at eleven a.m. Saturdays on channels fifteen (Comcast) and 47 (Verizon).

·The ultimate part of “Plymouth County Corner,” with County Treasurer Tom O’Brien, featuring an talk with Claire Sullivan, comparison manager senior manager of the South Shore Recycling Cooperative, will air at 9:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, and at 9:30 a.m. Saturdays on channels fifteen (Comcast) and 47 (Verizon).

Beat Cancer Boot Camp

PLYMOUTH – Jordan Hospital Beat Cancer Boot Camp is reason from 6 to 7 p.m. Tuesdays, and from 8 to 9 a.m. Saturdays. Beat Cancer Boot Camp provides a understanding sourroundings for those wishing to stay active during cancer diagnosis and beyond. It’s the first module of the kind in Massachusetts. Classes are reason outdoors, go on permitting. Email jordanbeatcancerbootcamp@gmail.com for more information.’

‘I Hope You’ll Dance’

PLYMOUTH – “I Hope You’ll Dance” cancer liberation dance classes, sponsored by the Jordan Hospital Breast Center, are reason from 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. Saturdays, in six-week sessions, at Jordan Hospital in Plymouth. Created by choreographer and survivor Susan Osofsky-Ross, the classes offers breast cancer patients a pain-free way to make firm their bodies, relax their minds, foster recovering and, most importantly, have fun. The price for the six-week eventuality is $40, and the number enrolled is limited. To scrutinise about this program, arriving eventuality dates and to register, call 781-961-2006.

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