Williams Men's Cross Country Fourth at NCAA Championships

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CARLISLE, Pa. -- John Lucey finished sixth Saturday to lead the Williams College men's cross country team to a fourth-place finish at the NCAA Division III Championship.
 
Pomona-Pitzer won the team competition with 158 points, one point ahead of Wisconsin-LaCrosse, whose Ethan Gregg won the men's title.
 
Williams' men finished with 212 points.
 
Genna Girard was the top finisher for the Williams women, placing 32nd in a 292-runner field. The Williams women placed sixth in a team competition won by Carleton.
 
Football
LEWISTON, Maine -- Owen McHugh threw for 245 yards and a pair of touchdowns to lead Williams to a 43-0 win over Bates.
 
McHugh also ran for 51 yards and a TD for Williams, which finishes the season with a record of 3-6.
 
Women's Hockey
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. -- Williams scored twice on the power play and scored a short-handed goal in a 5-2 win over Bowdoin.
 
Leah Rubeinshteyn scored the game-winner short-handed late in the third period to make it 3-2. The teams combined for four goals in the last three minutes of regulation.
 
Erin Pye made 40 saves for Williams (1-1), which goes to Connecticut College on Dec. 1.
 
Men's Hockey
WATERVILLE, Maine -- Andy Beran stopped 28 shots to backstop Colby to a 4-2 win over Williams.
 
Jonah Gold and Jacob Monroe each scored a goal for Williams (1-1), which goes to Babson on Saturday.
 
Women's Basketball
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. -- Arianna Gerig led Williams in points (17) and rebounds (eight) in a 77-50 win over Maine Maritime Academy.
 
Kate Keenan and Izzy Sullivan each scored 14 points for Williams (2-0), which hosts Rhode Island College on Sunday afternoon.
 
Men's Baseketball
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. -- Alex Lee scored 19 points to lead Williams to a 66-58 overtime win over St. Lawrence in the title game of the Purple and Gold Classic.
 
Dalton's Brandon Roughley had a double-double with 13 points and 12 rebounds for Williams (4-1), which hosts MCLA on Tuesday.
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Williams Grads Reminded of Community that Got Them to Graduation

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff

The graduates heard from two speakers  Phi Betta Kappa speaker Milo Chang and class speaker Jahnavi Nayar Kirtane. The keynote speaker, Lonnie Bunch, the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, was unable to attend and recorded his speech for playback. See more photos here.
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — Williams College said goodbye Sunday to its graduating seniors.
 
And a representative of the class of 2024 took the time to say goodbye to everyone in the community who made students' journey possible.
 
Milo Chang, the Phi Beta Kappa speaker for the class and one of two students to speak at Sunday's 235th commencement exercises, explained that the term "Williams community" applies to more than those who get to list the school on their resumes.
 
"It includes everyone who has shaped our experiences here, from loved ones back home to the dedicated staff members who make campus their second home," Chang told his classmates. "During my time at Williams, we've seen this community step up in remarkable ways to support us."
 
Chang talked about the faculty and staff who gave their time to operate the COVID-19 testing centers and who greeted students before they could take their first classroom tests in the fall of 2020, and the dining services personnel who kept the students fed and somehow understood their orders through the masks everyone was wearing when this class arrived on campus.
 
And he shared a personal story that brought the message home.
 
"We often underestimate the power of community until we experience a taste of its absence," Chang said. "I remember staying on campus after our first Thanksgiving at Williams, after most students went home to finish the semester remotely. I remember the long hours sitting in empty common rooms. I remember the days you could walk through campus without seeing another student.
 
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