Town annual reports of the officers of Southbridge for the year ending 1962-1966, Part 55

Author: Southbridge (Mass.)
Publication date: 1962
Publisher: The Town
Number of Pages: 1494


USA > Massachusetts > Worcester County > Southbridge > Town annual reports of the officers of Southbridge for the year ending 1962-1966 > Part 55


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An active physical education program with Mr. Anthony Santilli is already paying dividends in the physical skills and exercises our young people are capable of performing. This phase of our school program is another indication of the interest our Southbridge citizens have in our schools. Not all elementary schools in the Commonwealth enjoy a physical education program as we do.


Under the supervision of the school nurses, Mrs. Edward Boucher and Mrs. George Paige, the children's health needs are carefully checked for any remedial or corrective measures neces- sary. A continuous record of each child's immunization is filed and kept up-to-date from year to year.


Approximately fifty fifth graders are actively participating in the instrumental music program. Practice sessions find young people enjoying the study of the saxophone, trumpet, flute, and drum. This is a good beginning for young musicians-to-be in the Junior High and Senior School bands.


Enjoyment and appreciation of music is fostered in all grades by Mrs. Vincent Rubenstein and Mrs. Harding Jenkins in weekly periods.


However important these tangibles in education may be, they are only as good as the teaching involved in the various areas of learning. As in other professional fields, there is always room for improvement and study. New trends and changes in education are continually taking place, and with this in mind elementary teachers and administrators are each year enrolled in graduate courses at various colleges and universities in the area.


We should like to thank our Superintendent of Schools Mr. Robert L. Fox and the Southbridge School Committee for their guidance and encouragement in 1964. To our parents, the various


22


P.T.A.'s and other agencies in Southbridge who have contributed their time and effort on our behalf, a sincere thank you.


CONSTANCE M. L'ECUYER PATRICIA CALLAHAN CAMELLA M. DINTINI VINCENT J. PURACCHIO Elementary Principals


ART


Due to the continual growth of our school system, the art program now starts at the sixth grade level in Junior High School, where the art supervisor spends half of her allotted time. The rest of the school day is given to Southbride High School.


All of the elementary schools are thus deprived of art super- vision, and the classroom teachers themselves must plan their art programs and teach too.


Our High School has a spacious and modern art room, the newest in equipment and materials, but art is taught only on a part-time basis. There should be a full-time art teacher in the high school alone, and another art teacher assigned to elementary and Junior High School. Southbridge High School now has an electri- cally-operated potters wheel; this makes it possible for students to experiment not only in clay forming but also in clay throwing. High school students, in our area, have shown a great deal of serious interest and ability in oil painting, and we were very proud of the work which was on display during education week.


All of Southbridge is unusally interested in the arts. Adult classes in sketching and painting were held evenings in Southbridge High School this year and we hope that, in the near future, it will be possible to expand both the day classes and the evening program to their full potentialities.


CLAIRE J. BIRTZ


REPORT OF GUIDANCE AND PLACEMENT DEPARTMENT Dr. Lewis A. Kyrios, Director


The history of education reveals an increasing awareness of the necessity for understanding students as individuals. This understanding can come only by appraising students through


23


use of a variety of techniques. Our guidance and pupil personnel service have been especially designed to meet this challenge. In- structional staff co-ordination with the guidance services is emphasis in the attempt to meet this need.


Our guidance services provide an inventory of the individual, counseling, educational and job placement, and follow-up.


Inventory Service: This phase of guidance is the collection of information that will identify each individual pupil as a unique individual. It is based on objective information, behavior pat- terns, and identifying information.


Testing is an important factor in the inventory service. Our testing program consists of the following:


1. Achievement tests


2. Intelligence tests


3. Mechanical and clerical aptitude tests


4. Interest tests


5. Cooperative tests


These tests are administered to pupils on different levels and in various areas of our school system.


Couseling: The Guidance Department provides individual counseling to assist students to discover and pursue those courses of study which offer them the greatest opportunities. Solution of personal problems is likewise an objective of this service. Spe- cialists are also consulted in this counseling process.


Educational and Job Placement: It is the policy of the Director of Guidance, with the educational devise of couseling, to stimulate and motivate the college students to seek advance admission to their selected colleges.


Information about colleges and future occupations is readily available in the Guidance Office. Applications to college, local or college scholarship information, college board examinations, and bulletins of information are all in the realm of the guidance services.


Follow-up: In conducting a follow-up study of the 1964 graduates, the following information is submitted :


Total Number of Students 155


Academic Division 130


24


Trade Division Post-Secondary Education Academic Division Trade Division Total


25


74 of 130 = app. 57% 3 of 25 77 of 155 = App. 49 +


COMPOSITE PROFILE OF 1964 GRATUATES Academic - (June 14, 1964)


Colleges & Universities (4 yr Degree


Boys


Girls


Total


Granting)


30


17


47


Junior Colleges


5


6


11


Nursing Schools (R.N. & L.P.N.)


8


8


Business Schools


3


2


5


Private Preparatory & Post-Graduate Secondary Schools


Trade, Technical & Vocational Schools (Non-Degree Granting)


5


1


6


Total Continuing in Post-Secondary Education


43


34


77


*Employment


28


19


47


Unemployment, Undecided & Waiting


3


22


25


Service


6


6


-


Total


80


75


155


The above information is the status of the Post-Secondary activities of the 1964 Graduating Class.


*Some of the graduates who have entered the labor market are continuing their education by attending Evening College Classes.


REPORT OF THE SCHOOL MUSIC DEPARTMENT


Arnold M. Reppucci, High School Music Director


The Music Department at the High School has continued, during this past year, to give every student who desires, the opportunity to participate in musical organizations.


THE SCARLET TROUBADOURS have continued their schedule of three rehearsals a week with the Southbridge High


25


-


School Chorus meeting twice a week and the band rehearsing, as last year, five times a week. All of these groups offered credit toward graduation.


Eleven Southbridge High School students passed the audi- tions for Central District Chorus and Band. Eight students from Southbridge High participated last year. Nine of our District students have been invited to audition for the All-State Chorus and Band. Two students participated last year.


The band and SCARLET TROUBADOURS' choral group traveled to Bennington, Vermont, this past spring and presented a concert in the high school which was well received. The Benning- ton groups visited Southbridge High School two weeks later and presented an assembly and a concert at our school.


The band also performed at all Southbridge High School football games, both home and away, in several school assemblies and in two parades. Both the band and choral groups performed in the annual Christmas and Spring Concerts at the high school.


The Music Department continued to participate in the WESO "Festival of Music," radio program, and prepared a special Christmas broadcast in December.


The annual TALENT SHOW was presented to a "standing room only" audience for the benefit of the James M. Robertson Scholarship Fund.


Projected plans for the future include a continuation of the concentrated program to build the size of the high school band. Our high school music program is expected to reach the apex of its development to date this spring, when our high school band and SCARLET TROUBADOURS travel to New York to perform in the Special Events Program of the New York State Pavilion at the World's Fair. We feel very proud to have been invited to perform at the Fair, and will certainly endeavor, through this performance, to bring honor to our Department, our school, and our community.


In conclusion, may I say that none of our endeavors could be successful without the cooperation of many people. I wish to thank the Superintendent of Schools, the School Committee, and particularly our high school principal Mr. Edward J. Desroches, for recognizing and understanding what we are trying to accomp- lish, and working with us to this end.


26


ANNUAL REPORT OF THE SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS FOR 1964


To the School Committee and Citizens of Southbridge :


I hereby submit my eleventh annual report as Superintendent of the Southbridge Public Schools. This is the seventy-third in a series of such reports.


INTRODUCTION


We are passing through an era in the history of our country when investigations, surveys and evaluations are being applied to all phases of American life. There are investigations of organiza- tions, of government officials, of federal and state commissions and of a host of other individuals and groups. Surveys are being conducted by municipal, state and federal agencies to determine the need for more and better highways, the demands for more adequate housing and the feasability of building new schools of all types from kindergarten through graduate school. Teams of evaluators are constantly rating the facilities now available to determine whether or not improvement can be attained. If from all of these probings there will finally be a measureable betterment in our way of life, the time and money thus spent will have been an excellent investment.


EVALUATION OF THE PUBLIC EDUCATIONAL SYSTEM OF MASSACHUSETTS


On May 31, 1962 the resolution to provide an investigation and study by an unpaid commission relative to improving and extending educational facilities in the Commonwealth was passed by the General Court of Massachusetts. The commission which resulted from this act consisted of three members of the Senate, seven members of the House of Representatives and eleven persons to be appointed by the Governor. These appointees were, accord- primary grades through college. One of the most important duties ing to the law, to consider the entire educational system from primary grades through college one of the most important duties assigned to this commission was the direction to appoint a person outstanding in the field of education, to act as its secretary and


27


to correlate the findings, and the commission also had the author- ity to establish the salary of the secretary. The man finally selected for the position of secretary was Dr. Benjamin C. Willis, Superintendent of Schools in Chicago, Illinois.


The report which is now complete indicates an exhaustive for instance, in Southbridge? How many we implement those parts interest to all of the people of Massachusetts but especially to those in whose hands rest the responsibility for educational pro- grams at the local level. How will the recommendations affect us, for instance, in Southbridge? How may we implement thos parts of the report which seem to point towards desirable changes. At least there should be pointed out in this report to a limited degree the impact that would be felt if the recommendations relating to pupils and personnel were put into effect.


It is proposed that the school year consist of at least 185 days instead of 180 days which is the present requirement. There has long been a feeling among some educators that the length of the school year should be extended both to better educate those of school age and to use to a greater extent the schools which are so expensive to build but which are without educational activities for a large section of the year. The addition of five days would be but a start but even these few days a year would add one-third of a year to the twelve year course


There is a proposal that all school districts provide Kinder- gartens, attendance at which would be permissive. In Southbridge, if this proposal were adopted, it would mean the addition of at least four teachers to the staff.


A change from the present maximum age requirement of sixteen to eighteen would certainly solve the school drop-out prob- lem because the large majority of high school students are not eighteen years old until the latter part of the twelfth year. It might in some communities add to the high school population suf- ficiently to necessitate reconsideration of the problems of space.


The following is a direct quotation from the report:


"Minimum ratio of teaching and non-classroom professional personnel should be developed to assure within a stipulated, reason- ably short time, the ratio of forty teachers and ten non-classroom


28


professional personnel per thousand pupils in self-contained ele- mentary school grades sixty teachers and fifteen non-classroom professional personnel in the secondary grades."


If these suggested ratios were applied to Southbridge many more teachers and specials would have to be employed. In the elementary grades, for example, we would require a staff of seventy-five instead of our present staff of sixty-five. In the high school the application of the formula would result in a need for forty-four instead of our present staff of thirty-four.


I have written briefly about a small part of the report be- cause I think that during the next two years a great deal of public attention will be focused upon it and I think that we all have a stake in the situation because, since the commission was appointed by legislative action, some parts of the report may become law.


CUSTODIAL STAFF


Armand St. Germain-1963 Head Custodian


Gerald Lippe-1964 Maintenance Man


Telesphore Beauregard-1957 Mary E. Wells Jr. High


Anatole Bombardier-1957 Cole Trade High School Roger Demers-1961 Southbridge High School


Wilfred P. Gauthier-1952 West Street School


Adelard Lavallee-1952 Southbridge High School John Lynch-1962 Mary E. Wells Jr. High Pleasant Street School


George St. Martin-1953


Charlton Street School


Lucas Tenczar-1963 Southbridge High School


Alexis Vandal-1964 Eastford Road School


RESIGNED :


Joseph L. Brouillard-October Head Custodian Guerino DiBonaventura-September Eastford Road School


DRESSER STREET FIELD


MAINTENANCE STAFF:


Arthur Girouard-1963


29


FINANCIAL STATEMENT


Appro- priations


Expenditures


Reimburse- ments


Balance on hand Dec. 31 1964


Salaries .


$


780,666.00


$ 779,049.36


$ 1,616.64


Other Expenses


177,656.00


171,197.60


6,458.40


Contingency


10,056.00


8,756.01


1,299.99


Audio-Visual Aids


3,675.00


3,649.25


25.75


Library


6,500.00


4,228.67


2,271.33


Music


6,557.00


6,411.74


145.26


Physical Education


2,270.00


2,270.00


Playgrounds .


4,500.00


4,416.07


83.93


Dresser Street Field


10,500.00


10,128.03


371.97


Federal Lunch Program


4,000.00


4,000.00


Athletic fund .


7,370.00


7,370.00


Smith-Hughes Fund


1,953.00


1,953.00


1,953.00


New Boilers - Mary E. Wells Jr. High


31,000.00


24,751.46


6,248.54


Central Youth Guidance Center . .


1,910.00


1,910.00


.


.


.


30


.


·


.


·


·


State Aid for Schools (Chapter 70)


All School Transportation (Chapter 71)


$127,263.97 2,502.00


31


Vocational School, State Grant


Vocational School Day and Evening Tuition . . Refunds .


50,420.43 5,499.34 57.69


Rental, School Auditoriums, Gym, Dresser Street Field . .


200.00


Reimbursment-Vocation Tuition and Transportation .


2,424.08


TOTALS


.


.$ 1,048,613.00 $1,030,091.19


$190,320.51


$18,521.81


IN BRIEF


Total Expenditures . $1,030,091.19


Total Receipts to Town Treasurer 190,320.51


NET COST TO TOWN $ 839,770.68


A detailed financial statement will be found in the Town Account's Report.


REPORT OF RECREATION COMMITTEE


January 10, 1965 Board of Selectmen Southbridge, Mass. Subject : 1964 report for town report


Gentlemen :


The 1964 program for mentally and physically handicapped children of Southbridge ran from July 5 to August 6. The pro- gram was directed by Mr. William Johnson of Leominster, Mass., assisted by Margery Devine and volunteers, Betty Benjamin, Michele Hurley, and Pauline Trahan.


Activities ran from 10:00 A.M. to 3:00 P.M. Monday through Friday, and were held at the Center of Hope School on Walnut Street. Activities included opening exercises, group sing- ing and rhythmic activities, group athletics, arts and crafts, hikes, nature study, swimming, and closing exercises.


Respectfully submitted,


Committee for Mentally and Physically Handicapped Children of Southbridge.


ARTHUR ROY ROLAND LANGEVIN JOHN LaFOUNTAIN Recreation Committee


REGIONAL VOCATIONAL-TECHNICAL SCHOOL


A survey of the need for a regional vocational and technical school which would include as participants in the project the towns of Southbridge, Charlton, Webster, Dudley and Spencer has been completed by the State Department of Vocational Education. It, too, is a thick volume of information which cannot be condensed without omission of many important aspects of the proposal. The reasons for supporting plans for such a school are contained in last year's report. If anything, the Superintendent of Schools in Southbridge and the entire membership of the Southbridge School


32


Committee feel even more strongly that progress in the area re- quired the inclusion of a plan to build a six year vocational-techni- cal school for both boys and girls.


An article in the warrant for the 1965 annual Town Meeting requests that a committee of three, one a member of the School Committee, be appointed by the Moderator to join with men and women of other communities to form a regional school committee. This is the first step on what may be a long road to insure the training of personnel for the plants in this highly industrialized area.


CONCLUSION


We conclude with a word of gratitude to all who have helped in any way to make the past year another successful one for the Southbridge School System.


Respectfully submitted, ROBERT L. FOX Superintendent of Schools


-


IN MEMORIAM MISS LAURENDA BOYER 1931 - 1964


Her integrity of character, steadfastness of purpose and conscientious devotion to duty earned for her the respect of the people of Southbridge and endeared her to a generation of students.


IN MEMORIAM MR. PAUL SWEET 1950 - 1964


He was a loyal friend to his fellow workers and his pupils. His passing left a feeling of bereavement to all of his associates.


33


Annual Reports


OF THE


TOWN OFFICERS


AND


FINANCIAL STATEMENT


BRIDGE


MA


FEB.15.


AATEO


S


5


THE


NWEALTH


EYE OF


IMONV


CO


THE


TOWN OF SOUTHBRIDGE


YEAR ENDING


December 31, 1965


Annual Reports


OF THE


TOWN OFFICERS


AND


FINANCIAL STATEMENT


RIDGE


MA.


. FLO. IS.


ORATE


S


S


INCOAS


THE EYE


NWEALTH


of


THE


COM


TOWN OF SOUTHBRIDGE


YEAR ENDING


December 31, 1965


INDEX


Page


3


Town Officers for 1965


Page


9


Jury List


Page


16


Selectman's Report


Page 17 Departments Report (all departments)


Page 50 Police Department Report


Page 53 Library Report


Page 60 Town Clerk Report


Page 68 Tax Collectors Report


Page 72 Town Treasurer Report


Page 74 Annual Election March 5, 1965


Page 87 Annual Town Meeting March 15, 1965


Page 123 Special Town Meeting Sept. 13, 1965


Page 141 Special Town Meeting Dec. 13, 1965


Page 148 Wire Inspector Report


Page 149 Warrant for Annual Town Meeting


Page 161 Town Accountant Report


Last Section School Committee Report


TOWN OFFICERS FOR 1965 ELECTED TOWN OFFICERS


Selectmen


Armand O. Bellerive, Chairman


1965-1968


S. Anthony Caprera, Clerk 1964-1967


Armand O. DeGrenier .


1963-1966


Town Clerk


Clare P. Boyer (Tenure of Office)


Board of Public Welfare


John M. Beaudry


1962-1965


Hermas Lippe 1963-1966 .


Raymond L. Boucher (deceased 1965) 1964-1967


Lilian G. Proulx, Director of Public Assistance (Civil Service)


Assessors


Charles Normandin


1962-1965


Rosario Arpin 1964-1967 0 0


Ernest Farland


1963-1966 E


0 209 3 n


Board of Health


Dr. Raymond Haling


1962-1965


Dr. Armand DeGrenier


1963-1966


Henry Demers . 1964-1967 0 02


Ernest Tetreault, Agent


Rachel Jolicoeur, Nurse


School Committee


Raymond Pervier


1963-1966


Raymond A. Brodeur


1963-1966


Lawrence L. Proulx


1965-1968


Lorenzo Beaupre


1963-1966


Ralph Racicot


0 1964-1967 0


Albert Langevin


1964-1967


Frederick R. Morin


1965-1968


Tax Collector


Elizabeth M. Duhamel


1963-1966


Planning Board


H. Albani Bousquet


1964-1969


Hormidas Beaudry


1963-1966 .


Edmond Ryan


1963-1968


Arthur R. Syriac


1965-1970


Robert Para, Secretary ..... ... 0


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Moderator


Williard R. Stark 1965-1968


Cemetery Committee


Stavre Yanka, Chairman


1965-1968


Lectance Landry


1963-1966


Willard Stark 1964-1967


Constables


Wilfred Gauthier 1964-1967


Anthony Trifone


1963-1966


Charles Montigny


1965-1968


Commissioners of Trust Fund


Vincent T. Walsh 1964-1967


Paul R. LaRochelle


1965-1968


Richard H. Genereux (resigned)


1964-1968


Sewer Commissioners


Edgar McCann, Chairman


1964-1967


Leo LeBoeuf 1963-1966


Alfred J. Goudreau


1965-1968


Park Commissioners


Albert Gendron


1965-1968


Roland Langevin


1963-1966


Roger LeBoeuf


1964-1967


Southbridge Housing Authority


Alfred J. Dumas 1963-1968


Vincent T. Walsh 1965-1970


Alphonse V. Renna


1961-1966


August Kowalski, appointed by the State


1961-1966


Southbridge Redevelopment Authority


Richard J. Ciesla, Chairman 1963-1967


Lionel H. Duval 1963-1968


John Rossi 1965-1970


Christopher G. Thomas 1964-1969


Vincent Rubenstein, appointed by the State


1962-1965


Tree Warden


Chester J. Maska


1965-1966


World War Memorial Trustees


S. Anthony Caprera, Chairman


1964-1965


Henry Peloquin


1963-1966


Stavre B. Yanka


1963-1966


Albert J. Tremblay


1965-1968


Hormidas Beaudry


1965-1968


Joseph V. Langevin 1964-1967


4


Appointed Town Officers


Town Accountant


Richard H. Genereux 1965-1968


Assistant Clerk to Selectmen


1965-1966


Walter R. Snyder, Jr. Town Engineer


Henry Raciot


1965-1966


Building Inspector


A. Raymond Dartt


1965-1966


Plumbing Inspector


Arthur Ballard Gas, Milk and Food Inspector


(Civil Service)


Arthur Ballard


1965-1966


Wire Inspector


Philbert J. Tiberii 1965-1966


Superintendent of Streets


Joseph E. Benoit


1965-1966


Superintendent of Schools Robert L. Fox


Veterans Agent and Director of Veterans Services J. Archie Champagne (Civil Service)


Finance Committee


Louis J. Ciprari, Chairman 1963-1966


Richard M. Harwood 1963-1966


Rosario Pariseau 1963-1966


Steve Simonelli 1963-1966


George D. Dumas 1964-1966


Leopold Poirier, Secretary


1965-1968


Louis H. Van Dernoot 1965-1968


Armand L. Gabree


1965-1968


Louis J. Morin


1965-1968


Arnold Goodwin 1965-1968


Thaddeus Kwarciak 1964-1967


Raymond Brousseau 1964-1967


Albert J. DiGregorio 1964-1967


Albert E. Bouvier 1964-1967


Walter S. Ciukaj 1964-1967


5


Irene Gabree


Town Counsel


1965-1966


Recreation Committee


Edward S. White Louis Brunell


Alexander Lesniewski Edgar Bourgeois


Arthur Roy


Arthur Bachard


Lorenzo Beaupre


Rene Tremblay


Raymond Brodeur Frederick Morin Henry Racicot Raymond Dartt Albert Gendron Roger LeBoeuf Roland Langevin


Keeper of Lock-up


Ovide Desrosiers


1965-1966


Albert S. Lamoureux, Assistant 1965-1966


Registrars of Voters


Ferdinand Lemoine


1964-1967


Albert Maramo


1963-1966


Alberic Petit


1965-1968


Clare P. Boyer, Ex-Officio


Fire Department


Alva J. Gregoire, Chief 1965-1966


Daniel Daniels, Assistant Chief


Moth Superintendent


Chester J. Maska


1965-1966


Animal Inspector


Alcide Fournier


1965-1966


Sealer of Weignts and Measures


Roland A. Varin (Civil Service)


Custodian of Town Hall


Emil Leduc


1965-1966


Measurers of Wood and Bark


Thomas I .. Hughes


1965-1966


Arthur Gendron 1965-1966 6


Royce Fitzpatrick .


1965-1966


Jacob Edwards 1965-1966 . = . .


Clifford Mckinstry


1965-1966


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Public Weighers


Jacob Edwards Clifford Mckinstry William Cox


Irene Hughes Thomas Hughes Henry Remian Doris DiGregorio


Argentine Damian Arthur Gendron Emile Corriveau Yvonne Lataille Pauline Ayotte Royce Fitzpatrick


Airport Committee


Edgar Lewis


1964-1969


Louis Stevens 0


1965-1970


Lewis Kyrios


C


0 0 0 0


C


C


0


1963-1968


Albert DiGregorio 0


1961-1966


Roland Desmarais 000


1962-1967


Board of Review


Irving Pulsifer, Chairman


1963-1966


Kenneth Harwood


1963-1966


Robert Bergman


1964-1967


Vincent B. Boniface


1964-1967


Ronald DiGregorio


1965-1968


By-Laws Committee


Harold C. Peterson, Jr. 00 00 U


1965-1966


Charles Venie


1965-1966 .


Raymond Dartt


1965-1966


Rosario Pariseau


1965-1966


Henry Racicot


1965-1966


Robert Niedermeyer €


. 1965-1966


Committee for Mentally and Physically Handicapped Children of Southbridge


Arthur Roy


Roland Langevin


John LaFountain


Library Trustees


Edgar Lewis


1965-1968


Henry Madore


1963-1966


Dr. Nerio Pioppi


1964-1967


Retirement Board


Richard H. Genereux


1965-1968


Signe E. Braman


1962-1965


Vincent Walsh


1963-1966


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