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Laliberte Parent/Teacher Organization hosted a great movie night this past December with a showing of Minions.  112 students attended.  Thank you to our volunteers (especially, Michelle Mello!) for helping out and making this Movie Night run so smoothly.  Next Movie Night will be Friday, January 22nd.

Save and send in your Box Tops!  Box Tops for Education are a great way to get our school much needed equipment and supplies and they are on many regularly purchased foods.  Look for them & send them in!  We are still selling tickets to the January 29th Providence Bruins. Reminder flyers have been sent home. 

The LPO hosted a Holiday Teacher and Staff Appreciation Breakfast on Dec. 22, 2015.  A huge "thank you" to Michelle Mello and Alison Blake D'Espinosa for setting up!  It looked amazing!  And "thank you" to Michelle and her husband, Aaron, for donating a Dunkin' Donuts breakfast, and to Alison, Donna Miguel, Monique Bousquin, Sandra Raposo Holland, Laura Conrad Laberinto, Dana Nasiff-Smith, Heather Doten and Susan Liatsos Kashmanian for donating juice, yogurt, fruit, cake pops and poinsettias!  You ladies rock!


For up-to-date notes on the Laliberte Parent Organization, check out their Facebook Page. 


Be sure to get your Buzz Around every week!
Happy New Year

January 3, 2016

A BIG "THANK YOU" to our Community Volunteers!

"Thank you to GFWC Taunton Junior Woman's Club member Cheryl Carlos for being such an invaluable volunteer at the Matthew 25  Homeless Mission in Taunton." ~ Nancy Brown

In addition to the Shout- Out, each person we have mentioned has been entered into a random drawing January 2, 2016 to receive any one of the following:  a $50 Gift Certificate to Grant's Rental; an hour-long massage from Melissa Goldmann Massage Therapy; a $25 gift certificate to Johnnie  Macaroni's; or a 7-day Shakology jump start- health kit w/shaker cup & a variety of flavors - value $35 from Ruggiero Fitness Concepts. 

We were too Buzzy to play this week. 

You should play
our Historical Tidbit Trivia Game at the bottom 
of this column; 
you could win a 1.5-hr self-defense class for winner and 9 friends at Mata Karate in 
East Bridgewater.




Send in your stories & pix!        

Historical Tidbit: 
Yule Tidings for the Twelve Days of Christmas
 
The English word "Yuletide" is the twelve-day period between December 25 (Christmas) and January 6 (Epiphany*).  It goes by many names in many cultures.  It is known as Christmastide, Twelvetide, Candlemas, The Days of Fate, The Twelve Quiet Days, The Nights of Mystery, Smoke Nights, Christmas Festival of Days and the more popular Twelve Days of Christmas. 
 
The first of the Twelve Days is the day after Christmas, which would be Dec. 26 on our modern calendar.  Until medieval times, the twelve days started on Dec. 25 at sundown because the new day began at nightfall, not midnight.  Time has not only changed the calendar, but also the way we view the Twelve Days of Christmas.  Once a 12-day mid-winter festival ending with great public fanfare, now a time all but forgotten as modern life returns to usual on Jan. 2.

Winter celebrations have long been a part of our world history.  In ancient Rome, Saturnalia marked the onset of the winter solstice.  Brumalia was a Greek winter holiday associated with Dionysus and wine.  In Norse mythology, a boar was presented to the Vanir god Freyr at the solstice.  Historically, the Hindu Sankranti takes place on the solstice, although the date is Jan. 14, again showing how time has elapsed and calendars have changed over the centuries.
 
From its earliest days in England, the Twelve Days' festival involved masked dancers and actors, known as mummers, roaming the streets begging for holiday treats and drink.  They were tolerated because the newly faithful were mocking the old Roman gods.  In the 9th century King Alfred the Great of England mandated the observance of the Twelve Days by outlawing all work and fighting during this time.  King Haakon the Good established the Christian observance of the festival in Norway in the 10th century.  In the 14th century King Richard II of England held a Christmas tournament drawing knights from all over Europe that provided feasting and jousting for nearly two weeks.  It is thought that Shakespeare's play, Twelfth Night, took its name from the Twelfth Night celebrations about 1601/1602 when it was first performed, although it wasn't published until 1623.  By the late Renaissance, it was a tradition to light a ceremonial Yule log where family and friends would gather around the hearth fire throughout the festival of days.  Over the centuries, Yuletide activities included horse racing, fox hunting, nine-pins, and entertainments including jesters, fiddlers and singing.  A popular game was Snapdragon, where you picked dried fruit out of a flaming tray of brandy!
 
Twelfth Night is the last night of festivities and is always observed on Jan. 5, also known as Epiphany Eve.   George Washington and his wife Martha  were even married on Twelfth Night in 1759 in Williamsburg.  All Christmas decorations should be removed following Twelfth Night to avoid bringing bad luck upon the home. 
 
By the mid-1800s American society broke out of the twelve-day Yuletide tradition, but people in the UK still celebrate Twelfth Night today with pub crawling or socializing.  Women's Little Christmas (Nollaig na mBan), celebrated on Jan. 6 in Ireland and Newfoundland, is a long standing tradition, where women are celebrated after catering to everyone during the busy holiday season.  The women get together to enjoy a day or night out on the town, while the men look after the home and children.  This is a wonderful day, as it reminds us of the strength of women throughout history as well as today.  For this reason, Jan. 6,  is a great day to appreciate the women in your life.
 
Respectfully submitted by Jill Silvia.
 

Monday, January 4
COA Meeting - 9:30a - Council on Aging (COA)
Singing - 11a - COA
Bridge - 1p - COA
Beginner line dancing - 1p - COA
Free Style Dancing - 2p - COA
Nomination Papers available today at town hall.
Tuesday, January 5
Canasta/hand foot - 9a - COA
Chair Yoga - 10a - COA
Whist - 12:30 - COA
Intermediate line dancing - 1p - COA 
Pokeno - 1p - COA
Parks & Recreation - 6p - Rec Bldg
Board of Selectmen - 7p - Town Hall
Wednesday, January 6
Exercise - 9a - COA
Story Time - 10:30a - Library
Tai chi - 11a - COA
Cribbage - 12:30p - COA
Mah Jongg - 1p - COA
First Wednesday Book Club - 1p - Library
Interview Techniques - 6p - Library
Thursday, January 7
Wii bowling - 9a - COA
Canasta/hand foot - 9a - COA
Busy Babies - 10:30a - Library
Device Advice - 11a - Library
Planning Board - 6p - Town Hall
Friday, January 8
Exercise - 9a - COA
Preschool Picassos - 10:30a - Library
Quilting/Knitting - 11:30a - COA
Painting - 1p - COA
Saturday, January 9
St. Ann's - 4p - Service
Sunday, January 10
Agape Chapel - 10:30a
First Baptist Church - Worship 10:45a, Sunday school 9:30a
First Congregational Church of UCC - 9:30a   
Lutheran Church of The Way - 8a, 11a Worship, 9a coffee hour, 
9:30a Sunday school
St. Ann's - 8a, 9:30a, 11a and 5p  
 
* Information compiled in this issue from Town web sites
Honey Tree Nursery School 
Taking enrollment now 
for Sept. 2016
Caring & customized developmentally appropriate preschool education
9am- noon
2-day & 4-day programs 
lunch bunch optional

36 years' experience
Honey Tree Nursery School
645 Locust Street, Raynham, MA
 First Wednesday Book Club
Wednesday, January 6, at 1pm
Raynham Public Library

Please join us for our monthly book discussion group.  New members are always welcome.
Copies of this month's book are available at the circulation desk.

Painting Class
Tuesdays, beginning January 12 at 2pm
Raynham COA 

We're pleased to announce, due to the requests of many people for an additional painting class because there in no room in the current Friday afternoon class, painting instructor Mara Castle will be offering a second class on Tuesdays from 2 to 3:30 p.m. starting on January 12.  The class is $5 per session.  Please speak to Mara first to learn what kind of supplies to purchase.

Free Blood Pressure Clinic
Wed January 13, at 10am 
Raynham COA

Nurses from Longmeadow of Taunton will be on hand to take blood pressure readings.  This free program is open to all. Light refreshments.

Genealogy Workshop
Wednesday, January 13th, 6:30 PM
Raynham Public Library
Got a genealogy brick wall?  Join genealogist Marian Pierre-Louis to learn tips for tackling brick walls and strategies for extending your family research.  Please click here to register for this special program.

Bridgewater Square Chiropractic


Wishes you Happy  Happy New Year!
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 63 Main Street       Bridgewater      
(508) 697-0050
The Bridgewater-Raynham Special Education Parents Advisory Council (BR-SEPAC) and 
The Bridge Center
 present
  How Difficult Can This Be?  F.A.T. City Workshop:  Understanding Learning Disabilities. 
Tuesday, January 12th, at 6 pm

Through striking simulations emulating daily experiences of children with learning disabilities, Richard Lavoie's video lets viewers experience their frustration, anxiety, and tension.  After watching the video, Deb Westell, Principal of Merrill Elementary School, will reflect with the audience on how to change our approach with children who have these challenges.  The presentation will be held at The Bridge Center, 470 Pine St., Bridgewater, MA.  

 Please register online in advance for free childcare at:  www.thebrigectr.org

The BR-SEPAC is made up of parents who represent about 850 children with special needs within the Bridgewater-Raynham School district.  The BR-SEPAC works collaboratively with the Bridgewater-Raynham Public Schools and Bridgewater-Raynham School Committee to provide support and information for parents, school personnel, and the community about disabilities and the special education process.  The Bridgewater-Raynham SEPAC accomplishes this through regular meetings, workshops, presentations, and special events.  The meeting is free and open to all.  For more information, visit our website:  brsepac.org or email kwaskiel@hotmail.com.

BRIDGEWATER FARM SUPPLY
  

Why does popcorn pop? 
Read our blog.

Like us on Facebook      1000 Plymouth St 
 (Rt 104) 
Bridgewater
                 (508) 697-0357 
 
 10 Essential Health Tips For Seniors
senior-man-gym.jpg
From baby boomers to senior boomers: 10 tips to keep you healthy and fit.
The first wave of baby boomers are turning 65 years old this year and becoming "senior boomers" and Medicare-eligible.  In fact, more than 10,000 baby boomers a day are now turning 65-that's one every eight seconds, a pattern expected to continue for the next 19 years.
Happily, aging is different now than it was for our parents and grandparents.  Today, there are more people living longer than at any other time in history.  In fact, boomers will number 78 million by 2030.  "This generation, associated with social change including the civil rights and anti-war movements in the 1960s, has another important cause-staying healthy," says soon-to-be 65-year-old Arthur Hayward, MD, a geriatrician and clinical lead physician for Kaiser Permanente.  "We need to become activists in promoting healthful behaviors and try our best to remain active and healthy the rest of our lives."
How to do it?  Dr. Hayward recommends these 10 easy health tips for seniors to help baby boomers live longer and thrive:
  1. Quit smoking.  Take this critical step to improve your health and combat aging.  Smoking kills by causing cancer, strokes and heart failure.  Smoking leads to erectile dysfunction in men due to atherosclerosis and to excessive wrinkling by attacking skin elasticity.  Many resources are available to help you quit.
  2. Keep active.  Do something to keep fit each day-something you enjoy that maintains strength, balance and flexibility and promotes cardiovascular health. Physical activity helps you stay at a healthy weight, prevent or control illness, sleep better, reduce stress, avoid falls and look and feel better, too.
  3. Eat well.  Combined with physical activity, eating nutritious foods in the right amounts can help keep you healthy.  Many illnesses, such as heart disease, obesity, high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes, and osteoporosis, can be prevented or controlled with dietary changes and exercise.  Calcium and vitamin D supplements can help women prevent osteoporosis.
  4. Maintain a healthy weight.  Extra weight increases your risk for heart disease, diabetes and high blood pressure. Use the Kaiser Permanente BMI (body mass index) calculator to find out what you should weigh for your height.  Get to your healthy weight and stay there by eating right and keeping active.  Replace sugary drinks with water-water is calorie free!
  5. Prevent falls.  We become vulnerable to falls as we age. Prevent falls and injury by removing loose carpet or throw rugs.  Keep paths clear of electrical cords and clutter, and use night-lights in hallways and bathrooms.  Did you know that people who walk barefoot fall more frequently? Wear shoes with good support to reduce the risk of falling.
  6. Stay up-to-date on immunizations and other health screenings.  By age 50, women should begin mammography screening for breast cancer. Men can be checked for prostate cancer.  Many preventative screenings are available.  Those who are new to Medicare are entitled to a "Welcome to Medicare" visit and all Medicare members to an annual wellness visit. Use these visits to discuss which preventative screenings and vaccinations are due.
  7. Prevent skin cancer.  As we age, our skin grows thinner; it becomes drier and less elastic.  Wrinkles appear, and cuts and bruises take longer to heal.  Be sure to protect your skin from the sun.  Too much sun and ultraviolet rays can cause skin cancer.
  8. Get regular dental, vision and hearing checkups.  Your teeth and gums will last a lifetime if you care for them properly - that means daily brushing and flossing and getting regular dental checkups.  By age 50, most people notice changes to their vision, including a gradual decline in the ability to see small print or focus on close objects. Common eye problems that can impair vision include cataracts and glaucoma.  Hearing loss occurs commonly with aging, often due to exposure to loud noise.
  9. Manage stress.  Try exercise or relaxation techniques -perhaps meditation or yoga - as a means of coping.  Make time for friends and social contacts and fun. Successful coping can affect our health and how we feel. Learn the role of positive thinking.
  10. Fan the flame.  When it comes to sexual intimacy and aging, age is no reason to limit your sexual enjoyment. Learn about physical changes that come with aging and get suggestions to help you adjust to them, if necessary.
www.parentgiving.com/elder-care
The GFWC Taunton Junior Woman's Club Installation of New Members 

At a recent meeting, membership chairman Joyce Clark installed the newest members to the club.  GFWC Jr. State Assistant Director Martha Casassa was in attendance to welcome them, and to congratulate all members on promoting the club, and its volunteer efforts, in such a way as to attract women 18 and older to the club.
Those installed were:  Melissa Lorina, MaryEllen Founds, Lauren Founds, Eileen Bencivengo, Anne Marie Barry, and Paula Malo.


Photo:  GFWC State Jr. Director Martha Casassa, Melissa Lorina, Maryellen Founds, Lauren Founds, Eileen Bencivengo, Anne Marie Barry, Paula Malo, and Membership Chairman Joyce Clark.
 
Congratulations to 2016 new GFWC Junior Women's Club officers The gavel was passed on to new President Lynne Jorge, as Cindy Leonard stepped down after a two-year term. 
Mrs. Jorge, along with her new board members, was installed by Denise Wheeler.  They were:  Vice President, Mary Barrett; Recording Secretary, Joyce Clark; Corresponding Secretary, Joanne Matthews;Treasurer, Vel  Bleau; Auditor, Nancy Martin; and Director, Cindy Leonard.  The installation took place Monday night at the Chateau Restaurant during the club's Holiday Party. Member Joanna Alden provided the entertainment for the evening playing Christmas carols as juniors sang along.
Disclaimer:  At the Buzz Around, we promote community and family.  Occasionally, there will be links to town committees and other non-profit groups, as a way of sharing local information.  Individual groups are responsible for how they represent themselves on their websites and in their promotional materials.  The Buzz Around is not responsible for their website content.  
Here's a toast to the time we have spent with our families: 

The bond that links your true family is not one of blood, but of respect and joy in each other's life." ~ Richard Bach

"You don't choose your family. They are God's gift to you, as you are to them."
 ~Desmond Tutu

"That's what people do who love you.  They put their arms around you and love you when you're not so lovable." 
 
Love, support, joy.
~ Jacquie

Town Building Locations:

 

Town Hall

558 South Main St. 

 508-824-2707

Mon-Thurs 8:30a-4:30p,

Fri 8:30a-12Noon
 Tues eve  6-8PM

 

Public Library

760 South Main St.

508-823-1344

Mon-Wed 10a-8p

Thurs 10a-6p, Fri 10a-5p,

Sat 10a-2p

 

Council on Aging

2215 King Philip Street 

508-824-2740

Mon-Fri 9a-3p 

 
Local Businesses Rock.  Show them your support!

NEW LOCATION:  
* 4 dance studios, * client area,  * dressing room, 
* student study area.

We are honored to host Joffrey Ballet's Summer Intensive Auditions,
 Sun., January 17th.  All DTNE and non-DTNE dancers ages 9-25 are welcome.  Don't miss this opportunity!
Dance Theater 
of New England
25 Scotland Blvd, BWater
(508) 697-5255

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Contact your
Mary Kay  Independent
Beauty Consultants

Cindy Guarino
508-245-1872

Jeanne A. Smith
508-208-0596
 Interview
 Techniques II
Wed., January 6, at 6pm
Raynham Public Library

Employment Consultant, Gary Gekow, returns on Tuesday, January 6, to continue sharing advice for job interviews.
In this program he concentrates on the really tough questions, such as, "Tell me about yourself."
Please register for this special event.


Ruggiero Fitness Concepts
The Total Health Solution
* Health & Wellness Coaching
* Clean Eating &
  Private Accountability  
Facebook Groups

*One-on-One Training

*Personalized gym & home workout programs


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Grant's Rental

From Tools for Home Improvement Projects to Indoor/Outdoor Parties
and Fundraisers...
We Rent It All.

Call Us Today to Discuss Your Rental Needs or to Make a Reservation.

10 Bedford Park
Bridgewater
508-279-0950


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Please remember to
mention you read about them in the Buzz Around!!!

Raynham Youth Lacrosse

 Believe it or not, we are already planning for the upcoming season.  Please register your player(s) on our website.
Register for the 2016 Raynham Youth Lacrosse Winter Clinic.  This Clinic will be for both new players and returning players.  The coaches will focus on the fundamentals and specific techniques that will develop their skills, while having some fun !!!!  The clinic will be every Thursday night at the ForeKicks facility in Taunton, starting on January 7th and continuing until February 25th, from 6:00 to 7:00 for all players and age groups.   

 Here is a list of all the museum passes available through all the SAILS network libraries:  Plan your excursions now!


Southeastern Massachusetts Festival Chorus
New Member Enrollment/Open Rehearsals
January 18 & 25, 2016, 7:00pm
 
The Southeastern Massachusetts Festival Chorus (SMFC) will begin its 2016 Spring Season with Open Rehearsals on January 18 & 25, 2016.  The 90-member SMFC will present its spring concert on May 14 & 15.  SMFC's 2016 program will include music from America's rich musical heritage, ranging from Spirituals, Pop, Broadway, country and more.  Also featured will be new and time-tested Patriotic selections honoring our great country, which are sure to inspire singers and audience alike. 
 
Enthusiastic singers are invited to Open Rehearsals, where they may learn about SMFC membership, meet other members of the group and preview our musical program. Following rehearsal, a brief audition will be held, using music drawn from rehearsal material., SMFC will be accepting new members in the Soprano 1, Alto 1, Tenor and Bass sections.
 
Open Rehearsals and all weekly rehearsals are held Mondays, 7:00 - 9:00pm, at the First Congregational (Stone) Church, 785 South Main Street, Raynham.  For more information, please call 
508-821-9571;
or visit www.smfconline.org

Scientific Illustration & Other Beasties

Maxwell Library - Bridgewater State University
 Now through Jan. 19, 2016
Free and Open To General Public

Scientific illustrations attempt to depict their subject without enhancement of interpretation; the more detailed the information that is included, the better it serves as a biological or botanical reference. The Guild of Natural Science Illustrators presents a variety of subjects and techniques to demonstrate how scientific illustrations illuminate the observation of the natural world with the intent to communicate an exactness of detail.  Paired with this is a select group of contemporary artists that use similar techniques as the scientific illustrator but with the intent to illustrate life as we do not know it.  
Healthy New Year's Resolutions
For Children of all ages from the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP).

I will clean up my toys after using them.
I will brush my teeth twice a day.
I will wash my hands after going to the bathroom and before eating. 

I will talk with my parent or a trusted adult when I need help or am scared.
 
I will try to find a sport (like basketball or soccer) or an activity (like playing tag, jumping rope, dancing or riding my bike) that I like and do it at least three times a week!
 
I'll be friendly to kids who have a hard time making friends & ask them to join activities such as sports or games.

I will try to eat two servings of fruit and two servings of vegetables every day, drink plenty of water and I will drink sodas only at special times.  

I will spend only one to two hours each day - at the most for video games and Internet use.

I will help out in my community - through giving some of my time to help others, working with community groups or by joining a group that helps people in need.

prize box  
WEEKLY TRIVIA GAME

Have fun with us
and beeee entered to win a 1.5-hour self-defense class for winner and 9 friends at MATA Karate Rt. 18, 
East Bridgewater
 
Historical Tidbit Question: 
Where is Women's Little Christmas celebrated?
  
Email us your answer at: 
Please include your name, 
phone number & town
with your answer.
 
By entering, you give us
permission to announce 
your name in next week's 
Buzz Around Raynham.
  
On January 6, 2016, we 
will randomly pick a winner
from the correct answers.

The Buzz was compiled

this week by Theresa McNulty, Sarah Primack, Stacy Rancourt, Jacquelyn Rose,  Jill Silvia & Betty Stirling.. 

  

Copyright 2015 Buzz Around Raynham.   You have our permission to share and copy this issue in its entirety as much as you like.  If you take it in part, please give credit:  ("Buzz Around Raynham 1/03/16")