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The school graduated more than 100 students on Thursday.
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Clinical Medical Assistant Graduate Kinnie Taylor addressed her fellow graduates and discussed her educational journey.
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Chairwoman of the Mildred Elley Board Faith Takes presented a graduate with the Presidential Achievement Award.
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Mildred Elley Graduates Ready To Achieve

By Jack GuerinoiBerkshires Staff
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Jennifer Linscott has presented the presidential achievement award.
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — More than 100 students became Mildred Elley alumni after crossing the Barrington Stage during Thursday's graduation ceremony.
 
First to address the graduates was Pittsfield Campus President Annette Jeffes, who asked the graduates to reflect on their time at Mildred Elley.
 
"Graduation is one of the greatest times in our lives, and it gives you the opportunity to stop and celebrate the culmination of all of your efforts and to truly absorb your new status and start with a new chapter in your life," Jeffes said.
 
Students graduated with certificates in massage therapy, accounting systems specialist, paralegal studies, cosmetology, clinical medical assistant, medical office assistant, early childhood education, practical nursing and network administration and computer security.
 
Clinical Medical Assistant Graduate Kinnie Taylor then told her fellow graduates her story and walked them through her educational journey.  
 
Taylor said she was a high school drop out and young mother who continually worked dead-end jobs. After getting married she turned her focus to her family however after a divorce she found herself questioning her life. 
 
"After 23 years of marriage, I didn’t know how to do anything else…I applied for several jobs that I was not quite qualified for," she said. "I remember I was sitting in my car one day and I started crying because I had just been rejected again and I happened to look up and there was a bus that went by, and this is a true story, it said Mildred Elley on it."
 
Taylor said she went home and after some research applied and although she dropped out and moved south for a while, she eventually returned and reenrolled and is now employed at Berkshire Health Systems.
 
"We all have a story, some more difficult than others but we can’t allow that to dictate our futures," she said. "I am so excited not only for myself but every single graduate here tonight. It is time to start our careers at whatever level or age we are at."
 
Taylor’s presentation was followed by John McGrath, president of Mildred Elley College, who said true leaders possess courage, passion, inspiration and creativity and lauded the graduates’ determination.
 

John McGrath, president of Mildred Elley, said true leaders possess courage, passion, inspiration, and creativity.
"There is a simple rule for what determines leaders: if the front door is closed go to the back door. If the back door is closed you go through the window and if you have to you cut a hole in the damn roof," he said. "You have to be able to get into the house."
 
He congratulated the graduates and noted many of them faced numerous challenges and responsibilities during their time at Mildred Elley. 
 
"Many of you did this while juggling the competing demands of family, work and school," he said. "Despite all of the obstacles and times, it would have been easy to give up you said no, and you have earned this success today."
 
Before handing out the certificates to Chairwoman of the Mildred Elley Board Faith Takes presented graduate Jennifer Linscott with the Presidential Achievement Award.
 
She added that the graduates are her dream.
 
"I was a dreamer…and I am still dreamer today and I dreamt of all of you sitting here today in front of me at graduation having changed your lives and about to make such a difference in the lives of others," she said. 
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Freedom Fund Awards Speakers Highlight Importance of Unity

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff

Keith Beauchamp, producer of two documentaries on Emmet Till, speaks at the Berkshire NAACP Freedom Fund Awards at Berkshire Hills Country Club. 
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — It's not a coincidence that unity is at the end of the word community. This was especially made evident at the Berkshire NAACP Freedom Fund Awards on Saturday. 
 
More than 200 people turned out at the Berkshire Hills Country Club for the presentation of awards and to hear speakers, many of whom showcased the importance of unification and continuing the fight to maintain the freedom and opportunities their predecessors strived to obtain. 
 
"Tonight, I want to speak candidly about a deeply troubling trend that threatens the freedom and opportunities we have fought so hard to achieve — the freedom many in this room have sacrificed for, protested for, and worked tirelessly to protect," Berkshire County Branch NAACP President Dennis Powell said in his opening remarks. 
 
Powell highlighted the recent work that has been done and continues to be done in dismantling programs designed to advance diversity, equity, and inclusion. 
 
On Jan. 20, President Donald Trump signed an Executive Order, "Ending Radical And Wasteful Government [Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion] Programs And Preferencing." 
 
The order criticizes the policy implemented by the Biden administration, describing it as wasteful and discriminatory. 
 
Powell demonstrated how some of the corporations that community members frequently visit, including Target, Walmart, Meta, and McDonalds, have scaled back or dismantled their DEI initiatives meant to foster equity and inclusion in their workplace. 
 
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