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Hoosac Valley Middle and High students collected more than 3,600 pounds of food in just a week.

Hoosac Cares A Ton Collects Over 3,600 Pounds of Food

By Jack GuerinoiBerkshires Staff
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An empty classroom was used as storage for the food drive.
CHESHIRE, Mass. — Hoosac Valley High School cares more than a ton.
 
Over the past week, Hoosac Valley students have brought in food for the schoolwide Hoosac Cares A Ton food drive to benefit the St. John Paul II Charity Center in Adams.
 
"It's amazing," Principal Jerimiah Ames said. "The students and their families really stepped up to the opportunity to give something back."
 
Ames said this is the first year the school took on the challenge and it was designed to work alongside the faculty United Way drive. He said they decided to aim high with a goal weight of 2,000 pounds but students surpassed this bringing in a total of 3,608.2 pounds of food.
 
"I am shocked, and at first I thought we were going to have to cheat," Ames said. "They started off kind of slow but as the week went on they got more and more competitive."
 
Students dropped off food in totes when they came to school in the morning. Ames said the Honors Society borrowed the nurse's scale every morning, weighed the food and announced the totals.
 
Food was literally piled into an unused classroom. Students brought in everything from canned goods to potatoes and even more than 20 turkeys. 
 
Ames said there was a competitive edge to the drive and the class that brought in the most pounds will get to watch a movie the half day before Thanksgiving break.
 
The sixth grade came out as the champions with 1,141 pounds of food. The eighth grade came in a close second with 1,058.2.
 
Twelfth-grader Noah Matrigali said they felt it was important to make sure those without still have a good thanksgiving.
 
"There are people less fortunate than us, and they deserve to have a good thanksgiving and be as thankful as we are," he said. "The least we can do is give back."
 
Eleventh grader Hanna Koczela agreed and said the donations show how close the Adams Cheshire community is.
 
"I think it shows when we are given something we try to accomplish it," she said. "We understand that it is for a good cause and we can all come together."

Tags: food drive,   good news,   Hoosac Valley,   

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Adams Free Library Pastel Painting Workshops

ADAMS, Mass. — Award-winning pastel artist Gregory Maichack will present three separate pastel painting workshops for adults and teens 16+, to be hosted by the Adams Free Library. 
 
Wednesday, April 24 The Sunflower; Wednesday, May 8 Jimson Weed; and Thursday, May 23 Calla Turned Away from 10:00 a.m. to noon.  
 
Registration is required for each event.  Library events are free and open to the public.
 
These programs are funded by a Festivals and Projects grant of the Massachusetts Cultural Council.
 
This workshop is designed for participants of all skill levels, from beginner to advanced. Attendees will create a personalized, original pastel painting based on Georgia O’Keefe’s beautiful pastel renditions of The Sunflower, Jimson Weed and Calla Turned Away. All materials will be supplied. Seating may fill quickly, so please call 413-743-8345 to register for these free classes.
 
Maichack is an award-winning portraitist and painter working primarily in pastels living in the Berkshires. He has taught as a member of the faculty of the Museum School in Springfield, as well as at Greenfield and Holyoke Community College, Westfield State, and the Boston Museum of Fine Arts.
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