Drury Senior's Winning Essay Earns $1,000 Award

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Luke Grant
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Drury High School senior Luke Grant earned a $1,000 award for his production technology classroom after submitting an essay to Woodshop News.
 
The December issue of the woodworking magazine invited high school and college students to write about the products they would create with a Laguna Tools computer numerical control machine — a computerized woodworking machine. Grant wrote that he would use a CNC machine to create molds to shape fiberglass or carbon fiber into body panels for an entry in the Tour De Sol, a rally for solar power vehicles.
 
"The woodworking classes at Drury High School participate every year in community service learning projects. I'm told they'll use the award to fix some shop equipment that had been idled by lack of repair funds," Laguna Tools Vice President Catherine Helshoj said in a statement.
 
In addition, Grant also identified the need to update Drury's current CNC machine. Each year students in Keith Davis' computer-assisted drafting and woodworking classes participate in community service-learning projects using the machine. Such projects included building dressers, raised-bed community gardens, carnival games and sheds for the Habitat for Humanity.
 
One project — a sign for the Hoosic River Revival — was put on hold because of a lack of funds to repair the current machine. With the grant, this project will resume.
 
Grant's essay was chosen from several hundred entries.
 
"It shows you the power that you have over a situation where you can solve it by using your imagination and skills from class," Grant said.

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North Adams to Begin Study of Veterans Memorial Bridge Alternatives

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff

Mayor Jennifer Macksey says the requests for qualifications for the planning grant should be available this month. 
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Connecting the city's massive museum and its struggling downtown has been a challenge for 25 years. 
 
A major impediment, all agree, is the decades old Central Artery project that sent a four-lane highway through the heart of the city. 
 
Backed by a $750,000 federal grant for a planning study, North Adams and Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art are looking to undo some of that damage.
 
"As you know, the overpass was built in 1959 during a time when highways were being built, and it was expanded to accommodate more cars, which had little regard to the impacts of the people and the neighborhoods that it surrounded," said Mayor Jennifer Macksey on Friday. "It was named again and again over the last 30 years by Mass MoCA in their master plan and in the city in their vision 2030 plan ... as a barrier to connectivity."
 
The Reconnecting Communities grant was awarded a year ago and Macksey said a request for qualifications for will be available April 24.
 
She was joined in celebrating the grant at the Berkshire Innovation Center's office at Mass MoCA by museum Director Kristy Edmunds, state Highway Administrator Jonathan Gulliver, District 1 Director Francesca Hemming and Joi Singh, Massachusetts administrator for the Federal Highway Administration.
 
The speakers also thanked the efforts of the state's U.S. Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Edward Markey, U.S. Rep. Richie Neal, Gov. Maura Healey and state Sen Paul Mark and state Rep. John Barrett III, both of whom were in attendance. 
 
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