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Pupils at Morris Elementary get doused with water from the Fire Department's hose at Friday's field day.
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Morris Elementary School Celebrates Student Success With Field Day

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
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The day included lots of games and activities. See more photos here.
LENOX, Mass. — As the school year winds down, the sun was shining high as Morris Elementary School and the community celebrated student success with a splash. 
 
The elementary school held its annual Field Day on Friday, inviting the community to join in the fun. 
 
About 50 parent/volunteers, along with members of the Police Department, helped students shake off the stress of the school year with a variety of games, activities, and popsicles.
 
With temperatures reaching the low 80s, students welcomed the heat by taking part in several water games and cooling off under the Fire Department's ladder truck, which showered them with water from above.
 
The event demonstrates the welcoming, supportive, kind, and encouraging atmosphere of the community, said Maureen Kennedy, the physical education teacher, who spearheaded the planning of the event. 
 
"The whole community steps up. This could not happen without our parent volunteers, all of our teachers, both classroom teachers and support staff. It's just everyone. It takes a village, and this is the best village to be a part of," she said. 
 
The day featured a variety of activities and festivities, including hamburgers and hot dogs served by the Fire Department, a Rubik's Cube relay, Hungry Hungry Hippos, an inflatable obstacle course, a bounce house, and the annual faculty-versus-fifth-grade kickball game.
 
"They worked really hard to have fun, because I like how often you get the fire truck to spray water on you," fifth-grader Sammi Simonelli said. 
 
"We were really nervous [during testing] and this just completely erases the nervous feelings." 
 
After working hard on assignments throughout the year and taking the Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System test, field day was a refreshing conclusion to the year, students said. 
 
"I'm really thankful for our School Committee, and how lucky we are to have this school. It’s really good, and have a bunch of fun things," fifth-grader Grace Allen said. 
 
"It's not just like work, be quiet, work be quiet — it's better than that." 
 
By the end of the year the progress the students have made is visible, from the youngest students learning foundational skills to the older grades completing research projects and exploring coding and technology, Principal Brenda Kelley said. 
 
"It's just them celebrating everybody's hard work and perseverance throughout the school year," she said. 
 
These young learners have many years ahead of them but elementary school faculty hope days like this will serve as a lasting memory. 
 
This hope is a reality for some of the district's seniors, a few of whom returned to their alma mater as part of the Kindness Crew, to concluded their local educational journey with the district where they began. 
 
"They're done with their classes, and this is a great way to loop back around to how they started in the Lenox Public Schools, and really [remembering that] feeling of joy that they had while at Morris," Assistant Principal Holly Soules said. 
 
Many members of the Kindness Crew said they have fond memories of participating in Field Day as elementary school students, Kelley said. 
 
The event gives the Fire Department the opportunity to interact with the next generation while giving staff a break from the normal routine, Fire Chief Robert Casucci said. 
 
It also introduces the students to the department in the hopes they will one day choose to volunteer, he said. 

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WWII Veteran Reflects on D-Day at VFW Post Induction

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

The members in the picture are Bret Miller, Coast Guard, Desert Storm; Hank Morris, Army, Vietnam; Brad Havill, Navy, Global War on Terror; VFW Post 448 Vice Cmdr. Mark Pompi, Army, Global War on Terrorism, Afghanistan; Post Cmdr. Arnold Perras, Korea; Joe Difillipo, Army, Vietnam; Teri Billington, Navy, Desert Storm; and Carmen Ostrander, Air Force, Afghanistan.

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Anthony Salatino Jr. says his memory is getting a little foggy about his time in the Army. 

But he remembers how terrible D-Day was, and feeling lucky he wasn't among those in the initial invasion force 82 years ago. 
 
"One of the most horrible things was in Normandy. We went shortly after D-Day. I got lucky, very lucky on D-Day. We went to a staging area the night before … and at the very end, somebody called, I was in headquarters, they called all the headquarters personnel at the center," the 103-year-old said. "We did not go. There's about 30 of us. The rest of the battalion was gone, and the reason for that was because there was another battalion coming from the States, and they had no headquarters. 
 
"We stayed back, but we did go to Normandy shortly after that, and when we went to Normandy, it was all over."
 
Salatino was attending an induction ceremony on Thursday at the Lt. John N. Truden VFW Post 448. Joseph Texidor, who served in the Army for 17 years with tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, was sworn in as the post's newest member. 
 
Salatino served in the Medical Corps and wanted to follow in the footsteps of his father, a World War I veteran wounded at Verdun. Salatino was in the Army for about three years.
 
"The whole memory is what I just told you, very, very alive to me," he said. "That is, I can never forget, never forget that."
 
D-Day on June 6, 1944, was the start of Operation Overlord, and the largest invading force to cross the English Channel since 1066. Their goal: to liberate Europe from Nazi Germany. 
 
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