Sign-up and post on Iberkshires today.It's Free!
Already a member? Log In
43°  H- 81%
The Berkshires online guide to events, news and Berkshire County community information.           
Sunday November 22, 2009
 Make us your homepage!
 

What's Playing

Vampire Weekend

The Drury Drama Team presents "Dracula" on Thursday-Saturday, Nov. 19-21.

If you don't know who these guys are, just stay home. Holy batmania! "New Moon" surpasses "Dark Knight's" opening numbers.


'Pirate Radio': Good Movie Ahoy, Mateys
Movie schedules and times

Bazaars

Nov. 21

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.

Sales Fliers

 
 

Daily Digest

Hooray for Vermont's Sanders and his battle against credit card companies.
How Much is Heating Oil this Week?
It's breaking $2.50 but still cheaper than gas.
Clarksburg Crime Watch Signs



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.

Obituaries

Paul Sandler, 64
Robert J. Heideman, 73
Carol V. Vallieres, 75
More obituaries

Sports

11-21-09 Williams women's soccer: The College of New Jersey wins over Williams 1-0

More Photos to come.

Williams College Men's Basketball Season Outlook
MCLA Picked Last in Men's Preseason Coaches Poll
2009 MIAA Girls Soccer - State Division 2

11-21-09 Cardinal Spellman win over Wahconah 2-1 2OT

Media Partners

Berkshire News Network (WNAW;WUPE)
WJJW Charlie in the Morning

Election


Trying to remember who won what and why? All the information is right here.

 

 Search: 
 for    
Enter a long URL
to make tiny:


Related Stories

 
Printer Friendly Version
   Recommend this story to a friend

Williamstown Pupils Celebrate MLK Day with Art, Essays, Poems

By Tammy Daniels
iBerkshires Staff
01:02AM / Friday, January 23, 2009

WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — To fifth-grader Daniel Finnegan, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was "like a bird out of his cage" in his fight for civil rights.

He "fought with the power of speech," said classmate Matthew Wiseman. "Blacks and whites, equal rights, believing."

Sixth-grader Jose Verter imagined him as a doer of puzzles: "Dr. King would never divide puzzle pieces into separate piles ... he thought they were better off in one clump."

 "Honor him every day by being kind to others," urged sixth-grader Lucy Barrett, and "be friendly to people who don't have many friends."

For sixth-grader Sam Kobrin, the slain rights leader was like a cook, a cultural cook mixing up the nation's melting pot from its bland beginnings and filling the air with a freedom that smelled like spices.

With his "I Have Dream" speech, he added "two more ingredients: brotherhood and inspiration," said twin brother Jake Kobrin, reading Sam's essay at Williamstown Elementary School's annual Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration on Thursday afternoon.


Daniel Finnegan, left, Olivia Davis and Principal Stephen Johnson listen to Marcela Villada Peacock of Williams.
Fifth-grader Trainor Thompson was "riding on the spirit of Martin Luther King" while classmate Anya Sheldon imagined him "energized by injustice, constantly pounded by words and weapons, bombarded by hailstones of hatred" ... yet "planting seeds of serenity and properity praying for tranquility."  King had, she said, not just a dream but "a plan for freedom."

Poems, essays, posters and a really cool portrait, all the efforts of pupils studying King and the Civil Rights Movement, were on display.

The annual event brings together each year several grades to hear and see the selected works of their classmates and performances by Williams College students in celebration of holiday marking King's birthday. Fifth-graders write poems and sixth-grader essays, and fourth-graders make posters, which lined one wall of the auditorium. Third-graders joined the festivities this year by creating a portrait of King out of dominoes.

The event is organized in cooperation with Williams' Multicultural Center. Williams students help select the best of the works — five poems by fifth-graders and five essays by sixth-graders — to be read at the assembly. One of each are then chosen to be read at the annual MLK Community Dinner at the Williams Faculty House, held Thursday night for the fifth year.

The works to read were a poem by fifth-grader Olivia Davis ("a man with words so powerful they came true ...") and an essay by sixth-grader Emily Sabin, who imagined neighbors seeing King as a "normal child."

"Oh, there's Martin. Little did they know he would grow up to be one of the most admired men in U.S. history. ... Could that be you?" she asked her classmates.


 Peacock shows off her Obama duds
While great strides had been made, especially with the new President Obama, King's dream is still a work in progress, said Gail Bouknight-Davis, director of the Multicultural Center.
"I think we do recognize this is a new age," she said, referring to Barack Obama's election. "[This is] the fruit of the Civil Rights Movement you've been writing about."

She reminded them of Obama's mention in his inaugural speech of his Kenyan father, a man who just short decades ago would have been refused service in restaurants just miles from the White House he was about to move into.

Marcela Vilada Peacock, program coordinator for the center, and Barry Goldstein, a professor at Williams, had both traveled to Obama's inaugural with millions of others. It was amazing how pleasant and happy everyone was, said Peacock, dressed in a "I Love Obama" scarf and T-shirt.


Parent Colin Adams, a Williams professor, displays the domino King portrait.
Goldstein told the children how he was "pestering" people by photographing them and asking them why they were there, adding most gave typical answers along the line of it being a historic ocassion. He was seated on a shuttle headed to the National Mall when a woman he talked to earlier tugged at his sleeve and asked him if he wanted to know the real reason she was there.

The buses in Memphis, Tenn., where she has grown up were divided by a white line on the floor, she told him, and if you weren't white you had to stay behind line. And that's where she rode the bus - behind the line.

"I came today because I know no one will ever have to ride behind a white line again," Goldstein said she told him.

"Don't let anyone tell you you have to ride behind a white line," he said.



Your Comments
Post Comment
No Comments


Top Stories...
Recount Countdown in North Adams
NORTH ADAMS - Poll workers were steadily making their way through more than 5,000 ballots today to...
@theMarket: Taking Profits Is a Personal Choice
REGIONAL - I have often mentioned that fear and greed are two emotions that the astute investor must...
North Adams Mayor-Elect Seeking New Ideas
NORTH ADAMS - A new Web site went up this past week for residents to discuss possibilities ranging from...
Beacon Cinema Opens in Pittsfield
PITTSFIELD - "It is the crown jewel of the revitalization of downtown." — Mayor James M. Ruberto
New Moon Mania Hits Berkshire Mall
LANESBOROUGH - "The first 'Twilight' movie did very well so we were expecting good crowds not only...


iBerkshires.com Text Ads
www.countrysidelandscape.net
www.iberkshires.com
www.berkshireads.com
www.Nelanda.com
Advertise on iBerkshires.com



Essentials
Berkshire Nightlife
Berkshire Photos
Berkshire Wallpaper
Class Reunion Page
Columnists
Dannyoart.com
Get Lunch Specials
Home & Garden
Movie Times
Obituaries
Randy Trabold
Weddings

Enter your email address below to receive our FREE iBerkshires.com Newsletter

| Home | A & E | Automotive | Business | Community News | Dining | Lodging & Travel |
| Real Estate | Schools | Sports & Outdoors | Berkshires Weather | Berkshires Map |
Advertise | Recommend This Page | Help
Contact Us | Privacy Policy| User Agreement
Execution Time: 564 ms