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Patricia Mancuso rides by well-wishers with a rainbow in the background.
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PopCares, Line Dancers Hold Get Well Parade for Mancuso

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
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A large rainbow appeared about the same time Mancuso did. 
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — If you believe in signs, Patricia Mancuso had a beautiful one on Thursday. 
 
At least 70 friends and family had gathered in the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art parking lot behind Big Y with get-well signs, balloons and flowers to surprise Mancuso, who had recently been in the hospital. 
 
Shortly before the "Parade for Pat Mancuso," the cloudy sky decided to drop light rain on the crowd, bringing out the umbrellas. 
 
But just as Cindy Noel was driving Mancuso to the lot, a rainbow appeared in the sky to the east providing an arc of color across the gray sky. 
 
"Look, Patti, you brought a rainbow," several friends shouted to her. 
 
Besides family, the two largest groups were from Popcares and Berkshire County Line Dancers. Mancuso is a longtime member of the line dancers and a volunteer and committee member for PopCares.
 
The parking lot "parade" was held, like so many nowadays, because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Donna St. Cyr, who serves on the PopCares committee with Mancuso said they wanted to do something to cheer her up. 
 
"We were going to parade up her street, but it's a dead end. So it's trying to get a bunch of cars going up and turn around come back down so this was I plan B, and I think it worked well," she said. 
 
The Williams College retiree was presented with PopCares' Henry Bounds Spirit of Kindness Award at last year's chicken dinner fundraiser. She'd already beat cancer nearly 20 years ago but said last October she was going through chemotherapy again. 
 
"She is a smart, dedicated, strong woman that I admire very much," Tammy St. Pierre said at the time. "She is without a doubt one of the strongest, most caring, loving and toughest people that I know."
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Companion Corner: Weber at No Paws Left Behind

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — There's a young cat waiting for a family to play with him.
 
iBerkshire's Companion Corner is a weekly series spotlighting an animal in our local shelters that is ready to find a home.
 
Weber is a 10-month-old domestic shorthair. He has been at No Paws Left Behind since November.
 
Volunteer Claire Morin introduced us to him.
 
"He came in with an abundance of cats that were in a crowded situation in the home," she said. "Most of his brothers and sisters are gone, but Weber is still here."
 
Weber loves the attention and if you aren't giving him enough he will let you know.
 
"Weber is very, very sweet. As you can see, he's very needy for attention. He loves his treats, and he can get a little overstimulated. He's very attention seeking. And if you don't give him attention right away, he nips at you a little bit, not a bite, more like a tender here I am — pay attention to me," Morin said. "But he's very engaging, and he's a very, very sweet boy."
 
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