Mount Greylock Announces Honor Roll

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WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — Mount Greylock Regional School District has announced its third quarter honor roll.

The total school enrollment is 572, of which 294 have made honor roll for the third quarter.

Grade 12: Richard Astle, Nicholas Bolognia, Miranda Bucky, Robert Buffis Jr., Alana Chesney, Alexander Cheung, Melodybelle Crowell-Morse, Raquel Crowell-Morse, Nicholas Dastoli, Meredith Dezieck, Nicholas DiSanti, Erin Dodig, Geff Fisher, Schuyler Fohrhaltz-Burbank, Taylor Fohrhaltz-Burbank,  Kendal Frye, Amanda Galib, Madeline Gaskill, Michelle Gingras, Celeste Gravel, Joseph Greenhalgh, Thomas Guettler, Kelsey Hebert, Kathy Ho, Emily Kaegi, Mookharin Khajornchaisak, Joshua Kissoon, Ryan Kuhn, Amalia Leamon, Sophia Leamon, Devon Lennon, Celestine Lockhart, Evelyn Mahon, Katelin Marchand, Jenna Markland, Rosemarie Mele, Tyra Nurmi, Steven O’Brien, Jenna Phelps, Caleb Raymond, Randi Rocca,  Emily Rudd, Mariza Sfakianaki, Melina Sfakianaki, Markell Shea,  Zavi Sheldon, Aaron St. Martin, Pearl Sutter, Nathan Taskin, Jenna Terio, Heather Tomkowicz, Tori Trybus, Julia Vlahopoulos, WilliamWalter, Derek Wood, Aaron Ziemer.

Grade 11: Samantha Adams, Kevin Alberti, Patrick Archibald, Hannah Backiel, Lucy Barrett, Jake Benzinger, Celia Bote, Benjamin Burdick, Taylor Carlough, Emma Culver, Katherine Davis, Miranda Dils, John Driver, Kylie Fields, Jake Foehl, Joseph Gais, Laura Galib, Alexander Harrington, Zachary Harrington, Eric Hirsch, Matthew Hogan, Cole Hughes, Jake Kobrin, Sam Kobrin, Amy Larabee, Samanatha MacWhinnie, David Majetich, Colby Masse, Michael McCormack, Stacey Neveu, William Nolan, Catherine, Nowlan, Grant Raphael, Andrew Rickus, Sara Rudd, Thomas Schoorlemmer, Nyein Soe, Carter Stripp, Michael Strizzi, Sadie Sylvester, Jacqueline Van Slycke, Miranda Voller, Rosalee Walter, Andrew Whitaker.


Grade 10: Samantha Betti, Michael Bryant, Lilly Crolius, Ian Culnane, Savannah Dufur, Bailee Duquette, James Ellingwood, Hannah Fein, Calvin Filson, Holly Fisher, Melany Francisco, Matthew Germanowski, Sophie Gerry, Adam Hall, Mollyann Haskins, Noah Howard, Joshua Jezouit, Nicole Jones, Graham Kaegi, Sofia Lopez, Bernhardur Magnusson McComish, Petrea Mannello, Cayman Mead, Lily Meisterling,  Maurice Nemtzow, Daniel Packer, Lucius Parks, Charlotte Rand, Haley Reinhard, Zachary Ronnow, Maggie Rorke, Jasper Rosenheim, Noah Savage, Greta Savitsky, Tara Shastri, Anya Sheldon, Megan Shulse, Grace Smith, Justin Sousa, Melissa Swann, Samuel Swoap, Adly Templeton, Emma Whitney, Julia Whitney, Eleanor Williams, Hope Willis,  Molly Wilson, Matthew Wiseman.

Grade 9: Dagny Albano, Kyle Alvarez, Zachary Armet, Thomas Astle, Elizabeth Bartlett, Kyle Bazonski, Jenna Benzinger, Emily Brown, Savanah Brown, Devin Buda, Caroline Carlough, Brianna Chilton, Serena Chow, Caleb Cimini, Jesse Cohen, Abigail Coleman, Zachary Condon, Niku Darafshi, Olivia DiNicola, Grace Dodig, Artem Dudko, Nicholas Dudley, Sally Gotlieb, Olivia Gravel, Mercer Greenwald, Hailey Guest, Sydney Gurek, Cameron Hadley, Mark Hayden, Manas Jain, Fiona Kelley, Aaron Kleiner, Matthew Kleiner, Lina Marcinczyk, Margaret Martin, Carly Munzer, Joshua Narey, Najla Nassar, Sean Nemtzow, Neel Patel, Daniel Schiek,  Timothy Schiek, Elias Sekkal, Darrien Smith, Sarah Stripp, Robert Sutter, Rachel Voller, Claire Whitaker.

Grade 8: Kristen Aliberti, Alexander Backiel, Angela Baumgartner, Katherine Bernardy, Isabelle Bote, Elizabeth Burris-Wells, Aleya Cappadona, Kayla Cerveira, Octavia Crowell, Samuel Culver, Samuel Dils, Richard Donati, Joshua Duncan, Emily Durant, Caroline Flynn, Brady Foehl, Josephine Gollin, Maia Hirsch, Taylor Hoffstedt, Lauren Howard, Justin Jennings, Quinn Johnstadt,  Cedar Keyes, Santana King,  Leah Majumder, Connor McClanan, Gabriella Orpin, Garret Ostheimer, DiMaggio Paris, Emma Polumbo, Miriam Pomerantz, Henry Rauscher, Kaitlyn Renzi, Jude Rorke, Ethan Schoorlemmer, Cole Seaman, Tenley Smith, Emma Stankiewicz, Michael Stevens, Emma Szalewicz, Talia Traversa, Hannah Trimarchi, Oriana Van Slycke, Madison VanDeurzen, Abigail Wiseman.

Grade 7: Maddison Albert, Hallie Anderson, Mitchell Bath, Rachel Bisson, Sage Bohl, Daniel Buell, Marley Buffis, Taylor Callahan, Giovanni Cavalli, Joshua Cheung, Adam Cohen,Connor Daley,  Josephine Dalsin, Autumn Delorey, Elizabeth Dudley, Aidan Duncan, John Ellingwood, David Falk, Jacob Fink, James Fisher, Parker Fortin, Benjamin Gilooly, Philip Guest, Caroline Hadley, Alison Howard, Chloe Hughes, Hannah Jones, Sophie Jones, Cole Kuster, Zeta Lenhart-Boyd, Karen Magnusdottirmccomish, Michael Maruk, Troy Massaconi, Brook Masse, Catherine McPartland, Alexandria Mercier, Jacob Newton, Isabella Nicastro, Walker Niemeyer,  Morgan Nottke, Elizabeth Paglier, Dominic Paris, Samuel Parks, Shelby Patterson, Avery Powers, William Reynolds, Shaelyn Roberts, Cameron Sabin, Theodore Sandstrom, Jesse Seid, Cassidy Shea, Evan Sheridan, Ethan Simo, Margo Smith, Josef Soza-Foias,  Broc Strong, Andrew Sutter, Luke Swann, Aubrey Tetlow, Samantha Trybus, Jared Whitman, Samantha Whittum, Katherine Wilson.

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Williamstown Charter Review Panel OKs Fix to Address 'Separation of Powers' Concern

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The Charter Review Committee on Wednesday voted unanimously to endorse an amended version of the compliance provision it drafted to be added to the Town Charter.
 
The committee accepted language designed to meet concerns raised by the Planning Board about separation of powers under the charter.
 
The committee's original compliance language — Article 32 on the annual town meeting warrant — would have made the Select Board responsible for determining a remedy if any other town board or committee violated the charter.
 
The Planning Board objected to that notion, pointing out that it would give one elected body in town some authority over another.
 
On Wednesday, Charter Review Committee co-Chairs Andrew Hogeland and Jeffrey Johnson, both members of the Select Board, brought their colleagues amended language that, in essence, gives authority to enforce charter compliance by a board to its appointing authority.
 
For example, the Select Board would have authority to determine a remedy if, say, the Community Preservation Committee somehow violated the charter. And the voters, who elect the Planning Board, would have ultimate say if that body violates the charter.
 
In reality, the charter says very little about what town boards and committees — other than the Select Board — can or cannot do, and the powers of bodies like the Planning Board are regulated by state law.
 
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