Drury Alumni Tourney Raising Funds For Students

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
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NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — A golfing tournament started to benefit Drury High School students may be the key to bringing alumni from years past together to help current students.

The Drury High School Alumni Golf Tournament Fund is seeking 501(c)3 status to expand its donation base and create a more "user-friendly" access to monies raised by the annual event.

Superintendent James Montepare told the School Committee on Tuesday night that it provides supplemental funds for teachers to use for students. He said the organizers have been in discussion with administration on how to better utilize the money raised.

"We've been working very hard to make this a more efficient way for educators to have some additional funding," said Nancy Bullett, fund committee member and City Council liason to the School Committee.

Bullett said idea for the golf tournament sprang from the 35th reunion of her class of 1973. The first tourney raised $1,000, which was used to purchase a mimeo board for students. The now annual event has become the primary fundraiser and a grant request form has been developed so educators can apply for up to $500 for additional learning tools.

Tax-deductible donations can be made to the fund: Send checks to DHS Alumni Golf Tournament Fund, c/o Susan Rowe, 9 Summer St., Adams MA 01220.
The committee is seeking to involve more alumni beyond just the class of 1973 and is looking at ways disseminate information to former Drury students. The all-day event needs volunteers as well as participation in the tourney and dinner and entertainment afterward.

"The golf tournament certainly has grown but we expect it to grow even more," Bullett said. "We are hoping we can see more participation from the school with regard to some of the educators perhaps supporting our efforts and coming to the tounament that day."

This year's tournament will be held Saturday, Sept. 22,  at Stamford (Vt.) Valley Golf Course; a barbecue chicken dinner and entertainment will follow. (Note: Greens fees and dinner costs are not tax-deductible.)

Montepare suggested that the fund could spark the development of an alumni association. He said he'd put some effort into creating a database of alumni but the association had not panned out.

"We've always wanted to solidify an alumni base for the North Adams Public Schools," he said to Bullett. "Maybe we should have a conversation about it."

Bullett said she envisioned the possibility of an alumni weekend reaching across classes and tapping into the large number of Drury graduates still in the area. In the meantime, she encouraged School Committee members to help spread the word.

"We all have a desire to give back to the school we graduated from," said Bullett. "Just imagine, just imagine what we could do."

In other business, Mayor Richard Alcombright read an email he received complimenting the superintendent for his work on the city's after-school programs.

In the communication forwarded from Noella Carlow, she quotes Karyl Resnick of the state's 21st Century learning grant program as saying "Jim Montepare is probably the one superintendent in all of Massachusetts who has great vision for the youth of this city."

Carlow, who was attending a grant writing workshop by the Department of Education, also said the city had received a grant for a six-week, full-day summer science camp.

Tags: fundraiser,   golf,   

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Amphibious Toads Procreate in Perplexing Amplexus

By Tor HanseniBerkshires columnist
 

Toads lay their eggs in the spring along the edges of waterways. Photos by Tor Hansen.
My first impressions of toads came about when my father Len Hansen rented a seaside house high on a sand dune in North Truro, Cape Cod back in 1954. 
 
With Cape Cod Bay stretching out to the west, and Twinefield so abundant in wildflowers to the east, North Truro became a naturalist's dream, where I could search for sea shells at the seashore, or chase beetles and butterflies with my trusty green butterfly net. 
 
Twinefield was a treasure trove for wildlife — a vast glacial rolling sandplain shaped by successive glaciers, its sandy soil rich in silicon, thus able to stimulate growth for a diverse biota. A place where in successive years I would expand my insect collection to fill cigar boxes with every order of insects abounding in beach plum, ox-eye daisy and milkweed. During our brief summer vacation there, we boys would exclaim in our excitement, "Oh here is another hoppy toad," one of many Fowler's toads (Bufo woodhousei fowleri ) that inhabited the moist surroundings, at home in the Ammophyla beach grass, thickets of beach plum, bayberry, and black cherry bushes. 
 
They sparkled in rich colors of green amber on beige and reddish tinted warts. Most anurans have those glistening eyes, gold on black irises so beguiling around the dark pupils. Today I reflect on a favorite analogy, the riveting eye suggests a solar eclipse in pictorial aura.
 
In the distinct toad majority in the Outer Cape, Fowler's toads turned up in the most unusual of places. When we Hansens first moved in to rent Riding Lights, we would wash the sand and salt from our feet in the outdoor shower where toads would be drinking and basking in the moisture near my feet. As dusk fades into darkness, the happy surprise would gather under the night lights where moths were fluttering about the front door and the toads would snatch bugs with outstretched tongue.
 
In later years, mother Eleanor added much needed color and variety to Grace's original garden. Our smallest and perhaps most acrobatic butterflies are the skippers, flitting and somersaulting to alight and drink heartily the nectar abounding at yellow sickle-leaved coreopsis and succulent pink live forever sedums of autumn. These hearty late bloomers signaled oases for many fall migrants including painted ladies, red admirals and of course monarchs on there odyssey to over-winter in Mexico. 
 
Our newly found next-door neighbors, the Bergmarks, added a lot to share our zeal for this undiscovered country, and while still in our teens, Billy Atwood, who today is a nuclear physicist in California, suggested we should include the Baltimore checkerspot in our survey, as he too had a keen interest in insects. Still unfamiliar to me then, in later years I would come across a thriving colony in Twinefield, that yielded a rare phenotype checkerspot (Euphydryas phaeton p. superba) that I wrote about featured in The Cape Naturalist ( Museum of Natural History, Brewster Cape Cod 1991). 
 
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