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Daily DigestMeetings The Drury High School Council meets Tuesday, Jan 13, at 6:30 in the conference room. Agenda items include AYP, school grant, laptop initiative and PowerSchool updates. |
 Steve Decker cleans up in front of BankNorth on Wednesday.
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More Snow
The Berkshires received several inches of snow this morning, but not enough to close schools, unlike yesterday's sleety mess. Temperatures will drop into the 20s this afternoon. A few more snow showers are expected through the weekend.
We have reports that the roads are very slippery to take care in the evening commute. |
Duff'em If You've Got'em
North Adams Regional Hospital went smoke-free Monday — so did all its sister sites, from Sweet Brook to Northern Berkshire Family Practice to the Women's Exchange. No ashtrays, no smoking: No butts about it. |
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Like to Write?
iBerkshires accepts submissions about local events, news and opinion pieces. There are openings for freelance work, too, for qualified candidates. E-mail tdaniels@iberkshires.com to find out more. |
Wanted: Eagle Eyes
MassWildlife's annual eagle count runs Dec. 31 to Jan. 14. Anyone sighting one of the regal birds in Massachusetts is asked to participate.
Send date, time, location and town of eagle sightings, number of birds, whether juvenile or adult and observer's contact information to Mass.wildlife@state.ma.us. |
RegionWhat's PlayingSales FliersColumnists | Independent Investor
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Obama TransitionOther StuffMars Rovers Mark 5 Years
Spirit and Opportunity have been trekking the red planet for half a decade. Spirit hit the 5-year mark on Sunday; Opportunity will on Jan. 24. |
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Area students advance to regional Solar Sprint competition - June 03, 2008
More than 100 middle school students from across Berkshire County and their families gathered at Reid Middle School in Pittsfield on Saturday, May 31 to enter their model solar cars in the annual Berkshire Junior Solar Sprint (JSS). The JSS is a fun and educational competition for students in grades 6-8 who work in teams to build miniature vehicles powered by the sun and in the process learn firsthand about non-polluting transportation.
Student cars were judged in four categories—innovation (design), craftsmanship, technical merit, and performance (speed). The top three winners in each category—12 teams in all—are now eligible to compete in Northeast Junior Solar Sprint Championship on Sunday, June 8 at the Springfield Science Museum in Springfield, Massachusetts. Students from Maine to Maryland participate in the Springfield Championship.
“Each year the Junior Solar Sprint gets bigger and better. We are thrilled by the creativity and enthusiasm of so many students, and excited that several now have the opportunity to participate in the regional event,” said Nancy Nylen of CET. “It’s great to see students and teachers working together on projects, and then to see their family and friends cheer them on at the Solar Sprint event. We owe a big thanks to our generous sponsors for making this possible.”
This year, the threat of thunderstorms forced the event indoors where students replaced solar panels with batteries to power their vehicles. “It was a great event, despite the weather,” said coordinator Cynthia Grippaldi of CET. “The students had a lot of fun and learned firsthand that solar vehicles need battery back-up to run on cloudy days and at night.”
CET coordinated the event with support from Berkshire Bank, Berkshire Gas Company, Energy Federation, Inc., Western Massachusetts Electric Company, Northeast Sustainable Energy Association and the U.S. Department of Energy. Additional contributors were Guido’s Fresh Marketplace, South Street Servicenter, Bob’s Elm Street Service, Bartlett ’s Orchards, Morningside Bakery and Super Stop and Shop.
Students participating in the JSS came from BArT Charter Public School (Adams), Clarksburg Elementary School, Four Rivers Charter Public School (Greenfield), Gabriel Abbott Memorial School (Florida), Herberg Middle School and Reid Middle School (Pittsfield), Nessacus Middle School (Dalton), St. Agnes School (Dalton), and Richmond Consolidated School, as well as from two home-school teams.
Berkshire Junior Solar Sprint Results – 2008
Award Car #, School, Name of Car, Students
Innovation
1st place: #21 — Clarksburg Elementary School: “That Solar Car” – Caleb Roberts, Justin Cameron
2nd place: #23 – Clarksburg Elementary School: “Sierra” – Jillian Cyr, Sonya Merchant, Jackie Therrien
3rd place: #53 – Reid Middle School: “ Phoenix ” – Jon May, Michael Coelho, Bryan Tynan, Alex Hall
Craftsmanship
1st place: #71 – Richmond Consolidated School: “Lime-O-Zenes” – Mike Renton, Bill Reed, Roma Sabino
2nd place: #73 – Richmond Consolidated School: “The Big Mac” – Daniel Meandro, Thomas Randolph, Collin Goodrich
3rd place: #53 – Reid Middle School: “Phoenix” – Jon May, Michael Coelho, Bryan Tynan, Alex Hall
Technical Merit
1st place: #71 – Richmond Consolidated School: “Lime-O-Zenes” – Mike Renton, Bill Reed, Roma Sabino
2nd place: #80 – St. Agnes School: “Solar Kick” – Reagan Smith
3rd place: #110 – Berkshire Adventure Learners: “The Solar Schooner” – Cavanaugh Wolski, Jonah Carlson
Speed
1st place: #62 – Nessacus Middle School: “Flabbergasted” – Christian Pickwell, Kyle Miller, Nathan Sears, Ryan Parker
2nd place: #92 – Herberg Middle School: “Our Team” – Tim McCracken, Zach Rahilly
3rd place: #73 – Richmond Consolidated School: “The Big Mac” – Daniel Meandro, Thomas Randolph, Collin Goodrich
The Berkshire JSS is an annual event. For more information about the JSS or solar energy curriculum, contact Cynthia Grippaldi at CET, (413)-445-4556 ext. 25 or Nancy Nylen at nancyn@cetonline.org.
CET is a non-profit organization working in the fields of energy efficiency, renewable energy, waste management and environmental education. CET provides practical solutions that make sense for our community, economy and environment. CET is funded in part by the Massachusetts Cultural Council. |
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