MCLA Honors Local High School Seniors Achievement

By Jack GuerinoiBerkshires Staff
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Adams Scholars from Berkshire County high schools pose with state Rep. Gailanne Cariddi and state Sen. Benjamin B. Downing. See more photos here.

NORTH ADAMS, Mass. —  Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts on Monday acknowledged Berkshire County seniors who received state scholarships.

Some 45 students were expected to attend from Drury, McCann, Berkshire Arts and Technology, Lee, Mount Greylock, Pittsfield High, Taconic, and Wahconah. They and family members filled the Feigenbaum Center for Science and Innovation on Monday night to be recognized for qualifying for a John and Abigail Adams Scholarship.

The scholarship is awarded to students who scored in the top 25 percent of their district on their 10th grade Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System tests. It provides free tuition to any state school in the commonwealth.

Executive Vice President of MCLA Denise Richardello said the reception has continued to expand.

"We are really happy to expand the reception and have more students, some who may enroll at MCLA, attend," Richardello said. "It exposes them to opportunities in public education especially with some of the kids who are teetering and not sure if they want to go to college yet."

Joshua Mendel, associate director of admission, said this year marks the first class that participated in the "sixth grade goes to college" program. He said the Berkshire Compact initiative goal is to get students to see education as a 16-year cluster, not just 12.

"We are really proud of the fact … that after those sixth-grade visits, here you are going to college and taking that next step," Mendel said. "We are very proud of your academic success."

Interim President Cynthia Brown told the students and their parents that she hopes all of the nearly 330 Berkshire County seniors who received the award attend college because of its importance.

"You may have heard that there is some chat in popular culture about the worth of college," Brown said. "Let me assure you every study that has been done shows that the investment that you make in college and the investment that you make in yourself pays off year after year."

State Sen. Benjamin Downing also congratulated the students and said he was excited about their bright futures.

"Oftentimes people say a community is either a 'glass half full community' or a 'glass half empty community.' Sometimes in the Berkshires, I think we are a 'somebody drank our water and threw the glass back at us community', but … you are all part of the 330 reasons this year that we have to be hopeful."

Recent Drury graduate Allison Meehan also spoke to the students. Meehan is an MCLA student who also received the scholarship.

Meehan said senior year of high school is an "emotional rollercoaster." She also said after being waitlisted and put off by other colleges costs, she was at first hesitant to apply to MCLA because it was in her hometown.

She said MCLA had every program she wanted and she is glad she chose it.

"In the end, the school I desperately wanted to avoid became one of the happiest places I have ever been," Meehan said. "I am so glad that I am here and since I have been here I have made some absolutely amazing friends."

After the reception, students were given a tour of the science center.


Tags: adams scholars,   MCLA,   recognition event,   

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MassDOT Warns of Toll-fee Smishing Scam

BOSTON — The Massachusetts Department of Transportation was alerted that a text message-based scam, also known as smishing, is fraudulently claiming to represent tolling agencies from across the country. The scammers are claiming to represent the tolling agency and requesting payment for unpaid tolls.

The targeted phone numbers seem to be chosen at random and are not uniquely associated with an account or usage of toll roads.

Customers who receive an unsolicited text, email, or similar message suggesting it is from EZDriveMA or another toll agency should not click on the link.

EZDriveMA customers can verify a valid text notification in several ways:

  • EZDriveMA will never request payment by text
  • All links associated with EZDriveMA will include www.EZDriveMA.com

The FBI says it has received more than 2,000 complaints related to toll smishing scams since early March and recommends individuals who receive fraudulent messages do the following:

1. File a complaint with the  Internet Crime Complaint Center at www.ic3.gov; be sure to include:

The phone number from where the text originated.
The website listed within the text

2. Check your account using the toll service's legitimate website.

3. Contact the toll service's customer service phone number.

4. Delete any smishing texts received.

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