When Things Go Wrong
Accidents happen. During construction of a bridge in Peterborough, a Pile Driver flipped over. Thankfully there were no injuries.
Accidents happen. During construction of a bridge in Peterborough, a Pile Driver flipped over. Thankfully there were no injuries.
A pair of mittens, a basket, a tote bag are some of the crafts that Angelika Weber has shared on social media with the caption “Made It Monday”. She has decided to sell those items to raise funds for the Mascenic High School Scholarship Fund.
Raven fascinate me. Almost every day a see a few fly overhead and hear them croaking and clicking. I invite them down for some dog food but they never stop in. I decided to visit them in one of their popular habitats.
Every year in April, volunteers pick up trash on the streets and byways. Why do people throw trash from their cars? It is a mystery that I cannot understand.
Westminster — Edwin “Buster” R. Laetz, 80 of Westminster and North Port Fl, passed away peacefully Monday morning, April 26, 2021 with his loving family by his side.
Ed was born in Harrisburg, PA on December 30, 1940 a son of the late Vernon W. and Dorothy E. (McLeod) Laetz.
Edwin will be lovingly remembered by his wife, Barbara J. (Delorey) Laetz and their two children, Janice Swenor and her husband Clay of Westminster and Christine Laetz of Westford along with his brother, Robert Laetz and his wife Sandra of Suttons Bay, MI.
Ed was grandfather to, Kerri Lee Jones and her husband Jeff, Jessica Swenor, Olivia Battye, and Jillian Battye as well as his great-grandchildren, Addison Jones, Evelyn Jones, and Cameron Jones. Ed was brother-in-law and “dad” to Fred Delorey and is wife Karen and John Delorey and his wife Jayne as well as uncle to several nieces and nephews including Samantha Klindt, Heidi Brooks, John Delorey, Sarah Couturier, Kathy Laetz-Quotah, Allison Roberts, Alexander Delorey, and Douglas Delorey. Edwin was predeceased by one sister, Suzanne V. Laetz.
Woodworking was part of Ed’s life since middle school. He started his career as a Journeyman Carpenter and Millright with the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America. As his family and talents grew, he joined the faculty at Leominster High School in 1973 as the Housebuilding instructor at their trade school. During that time, he along with over 150 students, built homes for 10 families in Leominster. He was later promoted to Shop Coordinator and just prior to his retirement after 30 years, interim Director of the Center for Technical Education.
In addition to building homes, Ed was an artist and made music…one instrument at a time. He bought a book and built his first guitar in 1973, just to see if he could do it. That was the first of hundreds of stringed instruments made from exotic woods and inlays including guitars, mandolins, dulcimers, violins, and ukuleles.
Ed could be found on any given Friday night playing bluegrass at local “pickin’ parties” as well or at the Burren with the Scottish Fiddle Club in Boston. Ed was a member of the Guild of American Luthiers, Association of Stringed Instrument Artisans, New England Luthiers, and New England Woodcarvers. In his spare time, Buster carved caricatures and made furniture for his daughters. Never forgetting his years as a teacher, Ed also taught others woodcarving through the ALFA Program at Fitchburg State University and the Westminster Senior Center.
There are milestone birthdays. Your first, your sweet sixteen, your twenty-first, the day you become “over the hill”. But the big one is your 100th and my Mom had her 100th today.