Williams College will celebrate the legacy of J. Hodge Markgraf

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J. Hodge Markgraf
WILLIAMSTOWN - Williams College will celebrate the legacy of longtime college and community member J. Hodge Markgraf by naming a professorship in his honor. It will go to a faculty member in any field who displays the "strikingly balanced skills of scholarly excellence and high citizenship that Hodge Markgraf did for almost 60 years."

"As an alumnus, teacher, scientist, mentor, and administrator, he was involved with much of the college's history since he arrived here as a freshman in 1948," Williams President Morton Owen Schapiro said on the occasion of Markgraf's death in 2007. He had also served the local community in many capacities, including as deacon of the First Congregational Church in Williamstown, treasurer of Northern Berkshire Health Systems Inc., and corporator of Williamstown Savings Bank.

He graduated from Williams in 1952 summa cum laude with highest honors in chemistry along with the highest honor for student citizenship. Among many other activities, he served as secretary of his fraternity, Beta Theta Pi. Ten years later Williams President John Sawyer appointed him, as a young professor, to the sensitive position of secretary to the trustee, faculty, alumni, and student committee that ultimately recommended Williams phase out its fraternity system, making it the first college in the country to do so.

After earning a Ph.D. in chemistry at Yale University in 1957, which included study as a Fulbright Fellow at the University of Munich, he worked as a research chemist at Procter & Gamble before joining the chemistry department at Williams in 1959. Students considered him a passionate and gifted teacher at all levels of the chemistry curriculum, and he helped introduce the practice, now widespread at Williams, of involving undergraduates in research.

He published frequently in chemistry journals about his research, which was supported by the National Science Foundation, American Chemical Society, Research Corporation, Pfizer, Inc., and Merck & Co.

In addition to his many years as department chair, he also served the broader college as provost, marshal, and vice president for alumni relations and development. In the last of these roles, President Schapiro said, Markgraf  "oversaw the college's Bicentennial Celebrations [in 1993] and led The Third Century Campaign, which raised the most money ever by a liberal arts college and helped establish the ground from which so much of the college's subsequent excellence has grown."

In 1999 he served as secretary to the college's Presidential Search Committee.

He held visiting professorships at Duke University and the University of California at Berkeley, and in the summer of 1960 he worked as a research associate at the Sprague Electric Co., in North Adams.

After officially retiring from Williams in 1998 he continued to teach there and, for a semester, at Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts. He also carried on with his lab research and participated in the Dreyfus Foundation's Senior Scientist Mentor Initiatives for retired faculty who continue to involve undergraduates in research.

"There is no question that Hodge set at Williams the most brilliant combined example of scholarship, teaching, and citizenship within the memory of anyone alive today," said Williams Trustee Paul Neely, Class of 1968, whose gift to the college established the J. Hodge Markgraf Professorship. "That is what should be honored."
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Williamstown Board Opts to Negotiate with College on Water St. Lot

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff

Newly elected board member Nate Budington, far left, participates in his first in-person meeting along with, from left, Matt Neely, Stephanie Boyd, Peter Beck, Shana Dixon and Town Manager Robert Menicocci.
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The Select Board on Monday decided to enter into negotiations with Williams College on the sale of the vacant town-owned lot at 59 Water St.
 
But the board members made it clear that the college's proposal to acquire the lot is a starting point, not a final deal that the elected officials would accept.
 
"For the sake of continued conversation, I'm in favor of [awarding Williams the site], but if this process wasn't continued with the opportunity for further negotiation, I wouldn't vote to continue this," Peter Beck said. "I think that next step is necessary for us to get to a yes on this."
 
"I think there's wide agreement on that," Matthew Neely said just before the 5-0 vote to enter talks with the college.
 
Williams was the sole respondent to a town-issued request for proposals to develop the former town garage site, currently a dirt lot.
 
The college's stated intent is to build a new Facilities office and create up to 170 parking spaces at 59 Water Street. That use will allow the college to redevelop the current Facilities building site and parking lot as part of a reconception of the school's indoor athletic and recreation facilities.
 
Under the terms of the RFP, the college's proposal was subjected to review by an ad hoc advisory committee to the town manager, who brought the question to the Select Board. That board will have the final say on any purchase and sales agreement.
 
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