Williams Ice Hockey Players Finalists for Humanitarian Award

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WILLIAMSTOWN - Two Williams College athletes are finalists for the Hockey Humanitarian Award, presented by BNY Mellon Wealth Management of Minneapolis, Minn.

The company said a record eight finalists from 22 NCAA college hockey players have been nominated for the 2008 award. The award is given annually and seeks to recognize college hockey players, Division I or Division III, male or female, who give back to their community.

Two Williams seniors are among the eight finalists – William Bruce and Caralyn Quan.

Bruce, of Nashville, Tenn., recently received the Wooden Cup from Athletes for a Better World as the nation's top role model among college athletes. He has previously been honored by Williams with the Grosvenor Cup, Campus Life Dedication to Service Award and in the community by the Northern Berkshire Community Coalition for his involvement with 17 different community service organizations he has created or is directly involved in.

Quan, of Toronto, has volunteered at Williamstown Elementary School as a reading buddy and a teaching assistant, as a coach in the goal-setting program at Pownal (Vt.) Elementary School, participates in Best Buddies, was a peer health adviser on campus, worked on two Habitat for Humanity trips to New Orleans and this year is organizing a group of Williams students for a Habitat trip to New Orleans over spring break. She also coordinates visits by Williams students to Sweet Brook Care Center to visit with the elderly.

The other six finalists, listed in alphabetical order, are:

Ryan Adler, junior, Hobart College

Ethan Cox, sophomore, Colgate University

Jeff DeFrancesca, senior, University of Wisconsin at Stout

Missy Elumba, junior, Northeastern University

Jody Heywood, junior, Ohio State University

Ashley King, senior, Wayne State University

Members of the selection committe will interview each of the finalists. Additional information will be released in late February.

The 13th recipient of the Hockey Humanitarian Award will be selected from the group of finalists and named in a ceremony held in conjunction with the NCAA Skills Competition and Hobey Baker Award on Friday, April 11, at the Pepsi Center in Denver during the 2008 NCAA Frozen Four.

More information on the history of the award, the 2008 schedule of events and a list of past nominees, finalists and recipients can be found at www.hockeyhumanitarian.org.

BNY Mellon Wealth Management is among the nation's leading wealth managers, with more than two centuries of experience in providing investment management, wealth and estate planning, and private banking and finance services to financially successful individuals and families, their family offices and business enterprises, charitable gift programs, and endowments and foundations.
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Dalton Counter Sues Berkshire Concrete

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
DALTON, Mass. — The dispute between Berkshire Concrete and the town has taken another turn as the town pursues a countersuit against the excavation company.
 
On April 13, Berkshire Concrete Corp., a subsidiary of Petricca Industries, launched legal action against the town, seeking damages, the overturning of the Planning Board's denial of its special permit, and additional proposed orders of a court. 
 
The town has responded with a countersuit of its own, seeking a preliminary injunction requiring Berkshire Concrete to fully restore Lot 105-16 and a permanent injunction mandating an effective dust mitigation plan. 
 
The suit also requests that Berkshire Concrete pay all fines assessed against them, along with the town’s legal costs and attorney's fees, and other relief deemed by the court. 
 
The claim explains the timeline of events dating back to 2024 when Berkshire Concrete started mining without town approval on parcel 105-16, clearing trees and vegetation that abuttors claimed acted as a natural barrier. 
 
The removal of this vegetation resulted in the creation of a corridor for wind to carry dust from the lot and onto residential properties in the abutting neighborhood, the suit claims. 
 
Almost a year ago, both the Select Board and Planning Board expressed that they wanted parcel No. 105-16 fully mitigated to abide by the town's bylaws.
 
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