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Ice cream was just one of the treats available at the Community Night at Clarksburg School last month. The event was part of the the Northern Berkshire School Union's Summer Step Up Program.
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Community Night Brings Northern Berkshire School Union Together

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
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The summer camp and Community Night are supported by a United Way grant. 
CLARKSBURG, Mass. — The annual Community Night filled the school grounds recently with music, dancing, activities, and food.
 
The evening is something of a culmination of the Northern Berkshire School Union's five-week summer camp that's now in its third year.
 
The program was funded through a $134,400 grant from the United Way Summer Step Up Program, through the United Way of Massachusetts Bay and Merrimack Valley with the support of Northern Berkshire United Way.
 
Jordan Rennell, the district's director of summer programming, said some of the funding from the Summer Step Up Grant was used to support the family event.
 
"It's really big on community engagement and family engagement and bringing people together," she said. "So this is just an opportunity for families to see some of the activities that we do and all of our staff and it's all free."
 
But while the evening event had funding support, all the activities were facilitated by staff who built on last year's successful evening. 
 
"We have some things that we've repeated from last year that were a big hit. And then the staff really liked to be creative and do things," said Rennell. "So a lot of the stations were thought up by our [summer school] staff and the people who thought of them, are working them."
 
There were balloons and beading, face painting and fishing for winning tickets, ice cream and books. Along with a dunk tank, a musical dance duo and a hot dog dinner for all. 
 
Rendell said it brings families together but also parents and guardians get to see and speak with the staff in the summer camp location, which they can't really do during the camp's operating hours. "This opens our campus to them," she said. 
 
Superintendent John Franzoni said he'd seen families from the union's other schools in Florida, Rowe and Savoy.  
 
"Jordan does a wonderful job getting the community involved. We're really proud of how much the summer program has grown over the last three years," he said. "Partnership with United Way is great. It's just wonderful to see that word of mouth spread and this year has had even more students and families of our school union."
 
Franzoni said this was the third consecutive year that United Way has funded the summer program and that school union has received more than $500,000 to support the NBSU Summer Step Up Program.
 
Parent Jocelyn Lentine was attending the Community Night with her children Austin and Ryleigh.
 
"This is our first time doing it this year, this is awesome," she said. "It's like going to an actual like fair."
 
Her daughter was also attending the summer camp and Lentine, who said Rennell was her best friend, said, "she puts on a great thing for all the kids. My daughter comes home every day saying she's had the best day. Every day is something new." 
 
The summer camp focuses on academic and social emotional growth in the mornings from nine to noon, then switches to community engagement in the afternoon.
 
"So it's field trips and bringing people in and giving them experiences," said Rennell. "We go to the local lakes, we have magicians, we have musicians and we go to the museums and Ramblewild and anything that kind of is within a one hour bus ride."
 
She also looks for businesses or local people with which the children can immerse themselves. For example, area police who have brought K9 officers to the school, and the Clarksburg Fire Department and Public Works Department that brought equipment and gear to the school. 
 
The camp runs from 8:30 to 3:30 and the children get breakfast and lunch and two snacks. 
 
On Community Night, it was all fun and games as children tried to dunk each other in the dunk tank, had their faces painted as fearsome beasts and munch popcorn. 
 
"I'm very impressed with all of the planning and the hard work that everyone has put into this," said Principal Sandra Cote. "It truly is a great event that brings the community together." 

Tags: summer camp,   

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Veteran Spotlight: Army Sgt. John Magnarelli

By Wayne SoaresSpecial to iBerkshires
PLYMOUTH, Mass. — John Magnarelli served his country in the Army's 82nd Airborne Division and the 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment in Vietnam from May 4, 1969, to April 10, 1970, as a sergeant. 
 
He grew up in North Quincy and was drafted into the Army on Aug. 12, 1968. 
 
"I had been working in a factory, Mathewson Machine Works, as a drill press operator since I graduated high school. It was a solid job and I had fallen into a comfortable routine," he said. "That morning, I left home with my dad, who drove me to the South Boston Army Base, where all new recruits were processed into service. There was no big send off — he just dropped me off on his way to work. He shook my hand and said, 'good luck and stay safe.'"
 
He would do his basic training at Fort Jackson, S.C., which was built in 1917 and named after President Andrew Jackson. 
 
"It was like a city — 20,000 people, 2,500 buildings and 50 firing ranges on 82 square miles," he said. "I learned one thing very quickly, that you never refer to your rifle as a gun. That would earn you the ire of the drill sergeant and typically involve a great deal of running." 
 
He continued proudly, "after never having fired a gun in my life, I received my marksmanship badge at the expert level."
 
He was assigned to Fort Benning, Ga., for Combat Leadership School then sent to Vietnam.
 
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