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Williamstown Museum Benefit Features Cabaret, Auction

By Phyllis McGuireSpecial to iBerkshires
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Martha Williamson
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The Williamstown Historical Museum's 2012 fundraiser will bring twofold pleasure: a cabaret and a silent auction.
 
The "Moon Over the Mountains" event will be held on Sunday, March 11, from 5 to 8, at the '6 House Pub on Cold Spring Road.
 
"The House Tour in 2011 was very successful, and we hope this will do as well," said Rita Watson, vice president of the museum and program chairman.
 
It is the first time the museum, formerly the Williamstown House of Local History, is hosting an auction. Nonetheless, it has secured donations of a wide variety of desirable items that organizers hope will encourage attendees to open their wallets.

Williams College alumna Martha Williamson, best known as head writer and executive producer of the nine-time Emmy-nominated television series "Touched By an Angel," is putting together a tribute to perform in the cabaret. Wilson said organizers were overwhelmed by Williamson's generosity. "It is Martha's gift to us," she said.
 
Williamson has been honored many times in her 25 years in the entertainment industry, receiving the Producers Guild of America Nova Award, the Freedom Works Award from Congress, and the Edward R. Murrow Responsibility in Television Award, to name a few.

"I started with Carol Burnett doing music and special material for variety shows," Williamson said via phone from Southern California, where she lives with her husband, their two children and three dogs. "Now, I'm having great fun writing a special tribute to Williamstown ... There will be singing, some backstage stories, and maybe even a little inspiration to take home along with those auction items!"
 
As a member of the Williams class of 1977, (the very appropriately named) Williamson is no stranger to Williamstown. When she returned for her class's 30th reunion five years ago, her one-woman show at Adams Memorial Theatre was a hit. "I was shocked," she said. "They were turning people away at the door and I was touched by such wonderful support from the community."


Some material from "Martha At Risk" will be included in the performance at the '6 House Pub, something of a homecoming for Williamson as a founder of the Williams College Cabaret.

"Our first performance was at the 1896 House in 1975," she said. "I have remained friends with so many of the performers from that cabaret, and some of those talented people are coming from New York, Boston and elsewhere to lend a hand, sing a song, and support the Williamstown Historical Museum."

The evening will celebrate Williamstown and highlight some great memories of the original Williams Cabaret. "It gives me joy to be able to give back a little," said Williamson.
 
The silent auction runs from 5 to 6:45 for items ranging in value from $30 to $1,400. Bidders can vie for tickets to Red Sox games, the Glimmerglass Opera in Cooperstown, N.Y., and a James Taylor performance at Tanglewood. History buffs may prefer to bid on a night's stay at historic River Bend Farm; a history hike; a behind-the-scenes tour of Hancock Shaker Village, or mahogany side chairs from the old Greylock Hotel.
 
Also among the more than 50 items offered are cocktails and dinner for as many as eight people; artwork, including a watercolor by Hugh McKenzie and a painting by Peter Trabold of "The Old Mill." Trabold, a noted photographer who also painted landscapes, was the father of Randy Trabold, longtime photographer for the North Adams Transcript. 
 
Tickets at $45 for museum members and $50 for others entitle attendees to two beverages and hors d'oeuvres. Tickets are available from the museum at the Milne Public Library and the '6 House Pub.
 
Proceeds will benefit the museum, a non-profit organization founded in 1941 to conserve and protect historic items connected to Williamstown's past.

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Williamstown Fin Comm Hears from Police Department, Library

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — Police Chief Michael Ziemba last week explained to the Finance Committee why an additional full-time officer needs to be added to the fiscal year 2027 budget.
 
The 13 officers in the Williamstown Police Department are insufficient to maintain the department's minimal threshold of two officers on patrol per shift without employing overtime and relying on the chief and the WPD's one detective to cover patrol shifts if an officer is sick or using personal time, Ziemba explained.
 
Some of that coverage was provided in the past by part-time officers, but that option was taken away by the commonwealth's 2020 police reform act.
 
"We lost two part-timers a couple of years ago," Ziemba told the Fin Comm. "They were part-time officers, but they also worked the desk. So between the desk and the cruiser shifts, they were working 40 hours a week, the two of them. We lost them to police reform.
 
"We have seen that we're struggling to cover shifts voluntarily now. We're starting to order people to cover time-off requests. … We don't have the flexibility when somebody goes out for a surgery or sickness or maternity leave to cover that without overtime. An additional position, I believe, would alleviate that."
 
Ziemba bolstered his case by benchmarking the force against like-sized communities in Berkshire County.
 
Adams, for example, has 19 full-time officers and handled 9,241 calls last year with a population just less than 8,000 and a coverage area of 23 square miles, Ziemba said. By comparison, Williamstown has 13 officers, handled 15,000 calls for service, has a population of about 8,000 (including staff and students at Williams College) and covers 46.9 square miles.
 
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