On Thursday, October 5, BCC will be one of hundreds of colleges, universities and law schools that will carry a nine-hour simulcast of a 14-segment program entitled “A Prison Beyond the Law: How Should We Respond to the Problem of Guantanamo Bay†Easy-to-locate posters on campus will list panel subjects, times, and room schedules.
The Guantanamo Teach-In will bring together prominent journalists, scholars, human rights activists, military officers, lawyers for detainees and released detainees themselves, to engage in an unprecedented discussion on an issue of great national importance.
The Teach-In will document the history of Guantanamo, through a series of panel discussions hosted by Seton Hall University School of Law. Various issues, involving journalism, medicine, religion, and the constitutional division of powers, will be addressed during the event. This Teach-In will hopefully begin a national conversation about actions taken in Guantanamo.
Overall, the Teach-In will pose two important questions: can the institution of Guantanamo be reconciled with a democracy committed to the rule of law, and what should be done about this problem of Guantanamo?
The seven session Teach-In, with each session about one-hour in length, will start at 10am in Melville Hall, room 119, and close at 7pm in Hawthorne Hall, room 115.
All segments, held on the main campus of Berkshire Community College in Pittsfield, are free and open to the public. For further information, call Donald Lathrop 499-4660, Ext.351.
If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.
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Mill Town Closes on Site 9, Woodlawn Ave. Property
By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The first purchase of land at Site 9 in the William Stanley Business Park has gone through.
Mill Town Capital has closed on 4.7 acres on the overhauled GE site once described as looking like the face of the moon, as well as some land across the street for a residential building. The purchase price is $200,000.
"This is an exciting moment because Mill Town was at the table at the very, very beginning of the grant process for the cracking and crushing and greening of Site 9. They've stood by us every step of the way," board Chair Jonathan Denmark said to the Pittsfield Economic Development Authority last week.
"It's also a monumental occasion, because after 25-something years, this is the first land sale from the William Stanley Business Park, and we're all excited."
Mill Town in 2024 announced its intent to purchase acreage on Site 9 and land across the street at 100 Woodlawn Ave.
The 16-acre parcel at the corner of Woodlawn Avenue and Tyler Street Extension previously housed a General Electric factory and is the largest and most prominent section of the business park. Now, it is greened over with a loop of paved access road.
There was some reference to recent hesitancy about the estimate of high construction costs, but the investment firm reportedly chose to proceed because of its faith in this location.
Pittsfield's Business Development Manager Michael Coakley said Mill Town will need to make the numbers work and then find a tenant before breaking ground, and that it won't be right away. The closing had on the site had been the day prior.
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