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January 4, 2010

Photo Finish From The January 4, 2010 Issue Of The WBJ

Photo/Courtesy Marlborough-based Saint Mary's Credit Union recently donated $5,000 to the Immaculate Conception School in Marlborough. Contributions to the school's annual fund support ongoing operations expenses, faculty enrichment programs and upgrading classroom technology. Pictured, from left to right, are: Jack Caulfield, president and CEO of St. Mary's Credit Union; Martha Cook, principal of Immaculate Conception School; and Rev. Michael W. MacEwen, pastor of Immaculate Conception Parish.
Photo/Courtesy The Verizon Charitable Foundation recently donated $7,500 to the Boys & Girls Clubs of MetroWest to support literacy and homework assistance programming at the nonprofit organization's Pearl Street Clubhouse in Framingham. The nonprofit serves more than 3,200 children. Pictured are: Rick Colon, regional director of external affairs at Verizon, and Tammi Pudlo, director of the Pearl Street Clubhouse, with some of the club's members.
Photo/Courtesy Dunkin' Donuts of Canton recently hosted a group of children from the Boys & Girls Club of Worcester at a Boston Bruins game. The kids enjoyed the game from the Dunkin' Donuts “KidZone,” an area of special seating where Dunkin' Donuts hosts 20 deserving kids at each Boston Bruins home game. Pictured are the Boys & Girls Club of Worcester members at the TD Garden in Boston.
Photo/Courtesy Through its recent “Checking for Charity” program, the Framingham Co-operative Bank raised $5,000, which it donated to the local office of the American Cancer Society and to the Natick-based Ovations for a Cure, an organization that benefits ovarian cancer research. Pictured, from left to right, are: Steven Sousa, senior vice president of Framingham Co-operative; American Cancer Society employees Nancy Prevost, Amanda Starkel and Kate Glynn; and Rachel Stewart, the assistance vice president of marketing at Framingham Co-operative.
Photo/Courtesy Southbridge Savings Bank recently teamed up with Old Sturbridge Village to promote the nonprofit's “History on the Road” program. The program sends Old Sturbridge Village historians to schools that can't afford field trips to the living history museum. To advertise the program, Southbridge Savings Bank incorporated advertisements on its new vehicles. Pictured, from left to right, are: Phillip Pettinelli, president of Southbridge Savings Bank, and Aaron McGarry of Old Sturbridge Village.

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