Berkshire Music School Announces Merit Scholarship Winners

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PITTSFIELD, Mass. - Following the success of the recent Music Marathon, Berkshire Music School held their 2009 Merit Scholarship Competition. Judges included: Andrew Pincus, Berkshire Eagle music critic; Roger Claiborne, minister of music, Stockbridge Congregational Church; and Pamela Weeks, private piano instructor.

First Place: Gabriella Makuc, age 14, piano student of Jean Stackhouse and Elaina Pullano, age 16, voice student of Jack Brown. Second Place: Emily Chin, age 16, piano student of Yelena Levina and Hallie Novak, age 12, piano student of Amy Renak. Third Place: Alfred Brewer, age 15, trombone student of David Wampler; Sophia Cohen, age 10, piano student of Jean Stackhouse; Maddy Lanoue, age 15, guitar student of Suzi Higgins; and Rufus Paisley, age 17, doublebass student of Alice Spatz. Honorable mentions went to Ray Kim, age 17, piano student of Rahima Hohlstein and Erik Laurin, age 16, doublebass student of Alice Spatz.

Each student will be awarded a scholarship to continue their studies at BMS next year

According to BMS Executive Director Tracy Wilson:

“We have been inspiring young musicians for nearly 70 years, and the Merit Competition is the annual opportunity for aspiring students. The young people who competed in the Merits are our top ten students in a student body of nearly 450”
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Dalton Air Quality Report Links Dust to Digsite

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
DALTON, Mass. — For more than a year, neighbors of Berkshire Concrete's unauthorized dig site have complained that sand drifting into their neighborhood is affecting their air quality.
 
A five-month study is providing data that may support these claims.
 
Air Partners Collaborative of Needham monitored the air quality over five months — from October to April — using a network of monitoring sensors at strategic locations surrounding the site. 
 
Sensors were positioned west and southeast of the site at four locations: Raymond Drive, Off Prospect Street, Renee Drive, and the shooting range 80 meters northwest of the site to provide background measurements for the northwesterly winds. 
 
During the observation period, it was determined that Dalton is experiencing "extreme events of coarse particulate matter, with an aerodynamic diameter of 10 micrometers (PM10)
 
The National Ambient Air Quality Standards for PM10 is 150 micrograms per cubic meter within a 24-hour period, the report says. But Dalton is seeing concentrations reaching 1,000 to 10,000 micrograms per cubic meter during individual events. This is seven to 67 times the national standards.
 
The wind direction analysis indicates that 10 of the 12 exceedance events, or 83 percent, suggest the digsite may be contributing to the issue, but this cannot be proved with certainty.
 
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