St. Stanislaus School benefit, 9 to 4 in Kolbe Hall, Adams. Bake sale, snack bar, games, Chinese auctions, money raffle, crafts, and pierogi.
Blackinton Union Church, 1373 Massachusetts Ave., North Adams; 10 to 2. Crafts table, bake sale, Chinese auction, the Christmas table, and kid's grab bag. Lunch $4, $2 kids.
First Congregational Church, North Adams, 9-2.
Nov. 28 Becket Federated Church, Route 8, holiday bazaar from 9-3. Lunch, crafts, baked goods, holiday and other items. Information: Mary Peltier, Parish House, 413-623-5217.
Dec. 5
Holiday Fair at First Congregational Church, 25 Park Place, Lee, from 10 to 3; handcrafted items, raffles, children's shop, bake sale, cut Christmas trees and lunch from 11 to 1. Includes angel-themed goods from SERRV. Information, 413-243-1033 or www.ucc-lee.org.
Dec. 12-13
North Adams Country Club, crafts 9-4; food from That's a Wrap from 11-2. Information: Sheryl Morehouse at 413-822-3329.
Planning a bazaar this season? Submit information to info@iberkshires.com to have it listed here.
We're trying out blogs to offer shorter, easy-to-find news. Let us know what you think.
Send press releases and announcements to info@iberkshires.com. Need to contact someone at iBerkshires? Here's how.
Mammography Dispute The government's issued controversial new guidelines stating that women shouldn't get annual mammograms until age 50, rather than age 40.
iBerkshires will be meeting with local medical experts Monday. Have a question you'd like answered on this issue? Send it info@iberkshires.com with "mammogram" in the subject line.
Williams Students Encouraged to Do Something They Love
By Tammy Daniels iBerkshires Staff 05:25PM / Saturday, September 06, 2008
Williams President Morton O. Schapiro and Mayda Del Valle.View Slide Show
WILLIAMSTOWN — Mayda A. Del Valle wasn't going to attend Williams College. She'd never even heard of it.
She was going to Sarah Lawrence, where Alice Walker went, then to law school and then to change the world.
But it didn't quite work out that way.
"You might have a plan of what you're going to be, and you've got a vision, and it rarely turns out the way you see it in your head, right?" the slam poetry champion said to the class of 2012 at Williams College on Saturday as she described her own experiences in trying to find her way through college and life.
Del Valle, who graduated in 2000, tries not to worry about plans anymore. In fact, after days spent working on a nine-page speech for the college's convocation, the petite poet tossed it out.
"I figured I would just wing it, just like you're going to do over the next year," she said to laughter. She would, however, read all nine pages of "My Life Is Usually Untitled ..." later, if anyone wanted to hear it.
Some 500 seniors, faculty, staff, parents and others filled the (historically muggy) Chapin Hall on Saturday morning to formally start the new school year. The students in their long black gowns were lead by Berkshire County Sheriff Carmen C. Massimiano through the college campus in the traditional processional.
Del Valle recalled that her own years at Williams were not without trials and tribulations. She ended up in the Purple Valley because of a Williams connection she made in the South Side of Chicago, where she grew up. And Williams came through with full scholarships; attending first-choice Sarah Lawrence would have put her thousands in debt.
But Del Valle, the first in her family to go college, felt out of place at Williams and unsure what to do. "I tried everything." She left for six months to clear her head only to find the people and situations she'd fled hadn't changed.
"You can move past something but it's not the same as moving through something," she said. In a funk, Del Valle was considering giving up and leaving for good until she had an epiphany watching a mesmerizing spoken-word performance at Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art.
It was familiar, it was what she had been doing in high school and it gave her a voice that would explode upon the national stage in what college President Morton O. Schapiro described as "the wondrously raucous world" of slam poetry.
"The plan appeared the moment I decided to do something I loved," said Del Valle, who discovered, to her joy, that if the college didn't have a class you wanted, it let you create your own. So, instead of giving up, Del Valle said she "sucked it up. That's what you have to do."
Her independent study would lead to the creation of an hourlong one-woman show with experimental video. She also would create her first award-winning work, "Descendancy" (one of two works she performed as part of her address). "Everything just solved itself in ways I did not imagine it could."
She urged the students to listen to "the little voice inside you" and choose something you love to do. Don't base plans on security, that's "an excuse not to follow your dream ... be true to yourselves."
Del Valle also was one of six recipients of the college's Bicentennial Medals that are given to its outstanding alumni. Schapiro said the presentation of the medals was moved to convocation to give students role models. "These are people who literally sat where you are sitting right now," he told the freshmen.
The other recipients were Dickinson R. Debevoise, class of 1946, a veteran of the invasion of Normandy who became a civil rights activist and senior judge for the U.S. District Court of New Jersey; Eugene C. Latham, class of 1955, for his voluntary service with Our Little Brothers and Sisters, which has provided care for more than 25,000 orphans in South America; Dean Cycon, class of 1975, founder of socially and environmentally responsible Dean's Beans and leader of the fair-trade coffee movement; Ambassador Susan C. Schwab, class of 1976, a U.S. trade representative with a long history in forming trade policy; and Michael J. Govan, class of 1985, director of the Los Angeles Museum of Art who worked on the early plans for Mass MoCA and who is known for his creative endeavors in bringing people and art together.
Senior Alicia Y. Choi performed Bach's Sonata No. 1 in A minor from "Fuga" on the violin; the symphonic winds brass section played "America" and the college song "The Mountains." College Chaplain Richard E. Spalding gave the invocation and the Rev. Gary C. Caster the benediction.
The Grosvenor Memorial Cup was presented to senior Rachel Ko. The cup is given annually by the student body to the senior who has best served the college. Ko, who is involved in a wide range of activities and projects and has taken leadership roles on campus, was cited by one of her "admirers" as "a rare visionary. Truly a nonanxious presence among us."
Schapiro welcomed members of class of 2009, calling them "a really great class. There is a myth that I say that every year but they're wrong ... if you listen carefully."
(He would be called out on that statement by seniors and College Council co-Presidents Jeremy M.P. Goldstein and Peter S. Nurnberg, who noted that three years before he had said their class was "the most impressive and attractive class you had ever seen." Which prompted a great deal of cheering.)
Schapiro encouraged the students to take advantage of the cultural, recreational, athletic and academic opportunities at the college and in the surrounding area.
Also get to know the instructors, he told them. While some faculty might be a little "dorky" or shy, Shapiro said, "we love our students."
"Don't wait for us to call you. Call us. You'll be amazed at how friendly we are."
Convocation is a ceremony for seniors at Williams. As such, only members of the Class of 2009 were in attendance and all speeches were directed towards them in their last year at the school.
from: anon
on: 09-07-2008
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