Ernestine Keiser Memorial Scholarship

This scholarship fund was established in 2023 by friends and family of Ernestine “Ernie” Keiser. Ernie was a long-time Grange member in Virginia and a charter member of Beach Community Grange #958, VA, which was chartered in 1959. She was very supportive of the Youth program at the local, state, and national levels. Ernie was a firm believer in the importance of education, and her family and friends desired to continue her legacy by establishing this scholarship program. The value of the scholarship is $1,000.

Scholarship Requirements

  • Applicant must be a Grange member in good standing with a minimum of one year of membership.
  • Scholarship is available for graduating high school seniors or continuing two-year community college, four-year college/university, or postsecondary vocational school students attending an accredited school. Students pursuing graduate degrees or higher vocational certifications are also eligible to apply.
  • Scholarship is available to full-time or part-time students.
  • An applicant is eligible to apply for the scholarship each year; however, if selected, will only be eligible to receive it a maximum of two times.
  • Two (2) – Recommendation Letters are required. The writers of the letters of recommendation must be unrelated to the applicant.
  • One letter from a member of the applicant’s Community (local) Grange. It may be an officer or member of the Community Grange.
  • One letter from a teacher/guidance counselor/mentor. The letter should be on school letterhead or organizational letterhead, if applicable.
  • Essay – The applicant may use one of the prompts below for their essay. The limit is a maximum of 500 words, or the equivalent of two pages, typed and double-spaced.

How to apply

  • Paper applications must be typed, printed, and signed.
  • A checklist of the required application materials for a complete application is included.
  • Applications may be emailed to ngfb@grange.org and must be received by March 1.
  • Mailed applications must be received by March 1 and should be mailed to:

National Grange Foundation Board
Ernestine Keiser Memorial Scholarship Fund
c/o Joan Smith, Chair
39 Clubhouse Road
Rotonda West, FL 33947

The Patrons Chain 2-2-2024


Articles in this edition include:

  • The Presidential Perspective
  • Fellowship First Friday
  • Meet the National Grange Community Service Team
  • Grange Heirloom for February
  • Have you joined The Birthday Club?
  • Grant money still available for raising awareness about ACP
  • Grange Foundation’s Ernestine Keiser Memorial Scholarship
  • Last Chance: Register for National Grange/Rural Minds introduction to “Rural Mental Health Resilience” program
  • Rural Minds Receives National Advocacy Award
  • Register for the Virtual Legislative Fly-In
  • Making Mountaintop Removal Renewable
  • Grange Strong Fundraiser
  • Grange Supply Store: Seven-Sided Patch
  • Grange Member Benefit: Start Hearing

Click the button below to read and/or subscribe to the Patrons Chain!


Note that all recent issues are available on the National Grange Website. Occasionally, a weekly issue isn’t sent, so the fact that one hasn’t been posted on the MSG website doesn’t necessarily mean we skipped it! You can double-check using the link (Read the Current Issue) above. Effective 2024, we will only maintain one year of issues on the MSG website.

Mill Stream Grange Gives!

Mill Stream Grange Master Judy Dunn (r) presents the annual Christmas donation to the Food Bank. Accepting, on the left, is member Rosie Baker, who is a volunteer at the Mt. Vernon Area Food Bank.

Communication Shorts 02-01-2024

By Walter Boomsma,
MSG Communications Director
207 343-1842

Communication Shorts are brief (short) but important items posted for your information and use. Send us your ideas and thoughts!

February Bulletin Coming Soon!

The deadline for the February Bulletin is Valentine’s Day! Remember, the past few Bulletins are available for downloading and printing on the Program Books and Information Page. We also do occasionally accept “guest posts” on topics of interest to Grangers. See the guidelines!

National Grange Email Addresses

Please note there is no “general” email address for National Grange–you’ll need to decide who to address your concerns and questions to! There is a Directory of National Officers and a Directory of Paid Staff on the National Grange Website.

Don’t Forget This!

Do you have news to share about your Grange? A summary of a past event? Advertising of a future event? These are exciting and fun ways to attract new members. Submit the details for a website post and event calendar listing! This is not difficult, and you get lots of free publicity!

USDA Assistance for Severe Weather

If your farm suffers losses in this severe winter weather, you might qualify for USDA’s disaster assistance programs. Also, a reminder: if you have crop insurance, contact your agency within 72 hours if you suffer losses in this severe winter weather. (Compliments of UMaine Extension)

Online Directory of Granges

Yay! The online directory of Granges is updated! This round of updates was based on the most recent Roster. The contact person and information may be the master or the secretary. (It’s a long story.) Please check your Grange’s listing and email the webmaster if anything needs to be changed!

Ideas for Granges

Just because you’ve closed your hall for the winter, you don’t have to close your Grange! You can meet virtually, at someone’s home, or at a restaurant. It’s a great time of the year to “think spring” and plan some activities and events when the weather improves! Grange Month is two months away!

Thought for You…

The man who moves a mountain begins by moving small stones.

Confucius

Do You Love the Grange?

The world wants to hear about it! Fill out the simple I Love the Grange Form… it only takes a couple of minutes! Thanks to all who have shared so far!

Online Directories Available 24-7

  • The ODD Directory features all state officers, directors, and deputies with contact information.
  • The Directory of Granges features all Granges in the state with a contact person. Please make sure your listing is correct!

Do You Have FOMO?

“FOMO” is a Fear Of Missing Out. One strongly recommended treatment is to subscribe to the Maine State Grange Website. We’ll send you a daily summary whenever news and columns are posted, and we won’t share your email address with anyone!

Maine Primary Absentee Ballots

Maine citizens who are registered to vote may use the State’s free and secure service to request an absentee ballot for the presidential primary election on March 5, 2024.  Ballots must be received no later than 8:00 pm on Election Day. For more information, visit the Secretary of State’s Upcoming Elections page.  

207 Plus!

by John Lowry, Master/President of Porter Grange

MEGO Alert! [My Eyes Glazed Over] Our recent post regarding Maine’s 207 area code inspired John to share some additional information. Sure, there’s some technology involved–but isn’t technology involved in just about everything these days?

Tin can communication

It seems to be a point of pride for many communities and locations.  I remember when, in Massachusetts, 617 was split to include 508, and all the businesses that objected to having a 508 number and be assumed to be “in the sticks.”

Addressing is a thorny and sometimes fun issue that exists everywhere there is modern telecommunications.  Location is sometimes assumed and often desired but is not achievable.  It used to be possible with the telephone companies and pretty much had to be in order to mechanically route between switching centers. You knew if it had a prefix of abc that it had to go down the wire toward abc or toward some device that knew where abc was.  That’s not possible today, and you might be surprised to know that number portability has made the phone system very much like the Internet. 

In general, there is a mapping function from the phone number to an IPv6 address, just as there is for a phone number and an E911 address, which is maintained by the user. You can usually find the IPv6 address in your phone if you poke around in settings.

For cell phones, once the phone is connected to a tower, its POTS number (truly called that by engineers for “Plain Old Telephone System” is recorded in a database, but the phone is assigned an IPv6 address.  So when you make a call, the system looks up the POTS number you are trying to reach and then finds the associated IPv6 address and establishes a route to the remote system.  Some of this complexity, especially with the international calling schema, is what allows scammers to appear to call from someplace or someone you know.  (BTW: the phone companies know how to fix this, but it will cost some money, so we consumers lose.   The solution is called ingress filtering.

In any event, with number portability, you can keep your 207 number no matter where in the US/Canada you move to.  And if enough people do it, then a new area code will have to be assigned for Maine just to handle all the people who move to… Florida?

In Internet terms, blocks of IPv4 addresses are assigned and even bought and sold. They have nothing to do with the location of whoever is visiting your website except statistically in the same way that 207 usually means Maine.

This is irritatingly pleasant to those of us who want to limit our information exposure and who use a VPN or … Starlink.  (VPNs do work but are expensive and require some technical know-how).  Starlink, in this part of the world, enters the big Internet in an “Internet hotel” in NYC.  (An Internet hotel is basically a large building full of routers and connections to all the other big ISPs).  So when I go shopping at a large online retailer like Lowes, Costco, etc., they always want me to choose my “home store,” which is invariably in Queens.

My 978 number is routinely used by the Mass state government and politicos who want me to know about COVID-19 vaccine availability or political candidates.

In any event, I’m guessing that you’re bored now. If not, you might look at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IP_address and  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domain_Name_System.

The MSG website appreciates the opportunity to collaborate with talented writers and share diverse perspectives with our audience. Before submitting your article, please carefully read and adhere to our guest writer guidelines.

View from the Hill – January 2024

This monthly newsletter written by Burton Eller, National Grange Legislative Director, covers “what’s happening” in Washington on various topics of interest to Grangers.

Grange Strong T-shirt Available

This National Grange’s #GrangeStrong shirt fundraiser will run online only through February 23. Orders will be delivered in mid-March in time for Grange Month. These items and colors were the top choices in our recent survey available on social media and the Patrons Chain.

February Events

There’s no reason to get Cabin Fever–here are some Grange Events around the state for you.

  • February 1, 2024, Piscataquis Pomona Meeting at 7 pm at Valley Grange Hall. Contact Bill Bemis FMI.
  • February 2, 2024, Community Potluck Supper at Trenton Grange, 5:00 p.m. – 7:00 p.m., 1134 Bar Harbor Road in Trenton. For more information, see this post or visit the Trenton Grange Website.
  • February 3-4, 2024, Community Bazaar (crafts, farmers’ market, yard sale…) at Trenton Grange from 9 am until 2 pm both days. For more information, see this post or visit the Trenton Grange Website.
  • February 7, 2024, Join the National Grange and Rural Minds for an introduction to the Rural Mental Health Resilience Program. Register at http://grange.biz/RMHR
  • February 14, 2024, Deadline for the MSG Bulletin
  • February 17, 2024, Junior Grange Meeting at Danville Grange. Contact Director Betty Young for more information.

What’s your Grange doing? Don’t forget to submit your events!

“207” to Stay for Now

Note: This might count as trivia, but it could be the basis of a Lecturer’s Program!

Reprinted with permission from an e-newsletter produced by Maine State Senatory Stacey Gurin, District 4

The announcement by the Maine Public Utilities Commission (PUC) in mid-October that Maine would be able to retain its only area code may be welcome news to many who think of “207” as more than just Maine’s area code. The PUC said the North American Numbering Plan Administrator extended the time before a new area code would be needed in Maine from 2029 to 2032.

The reason some may feel 207 is more than just an area code may reside in the fact that the entire State of Maine was one of the original 86 Numbering Plan Areas when AT&T implemented the continent-wide area code system in 1947. Through the former Bell System, a network of regional telecommunications operators, 77 area codes were assigned across the U.S. that year for automated toll calling while the Canadian provinces were given nine.

Maine was one of 40 states and provinces to have a single area code when the original plan was established. Today, Maine is one of only 11 that have been able to hold onto that distinction, joining Alaska, Delaware, Hawaii, Montana, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Vermont and Wyoming. Idaho, which comes right after Maine with its 208 area code, was the last to lose that status when they added, or “overlaid,” area code 986 in 2017.

With its single area code, Maine residents have been able to keep using the standard seven-digit format. In states where additional area codes have been added, callers are required to use all 10 digits.

The fact that 207 has remained Maine’s only area code for 76 years is perhaps why it has become ubiquitous with the state. From appearing on t-shirts and hats to “207 Recipes,” the “Best of the 207” and even its own newscast brand, it has become synonymous with Maine’s identity and heritage.

That is, except for the small village of Estcourt Station in Big Twenty Township in Aroostook County, which is also the northernmost community in the U.S. east of the Great Lakes. They get their telephone service from Canada and are included in Quebec’s 418 area code.

It is estimated that North America will run out of area codes by 2051.