Williams Men's Basketball Improves to 9-0

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WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. -- Nate Karren led four players in double figures Saturday as the Williams College men's basketball team beat Springfield College, 72-53.
 
Karren scored 15 points, grabbed seven rebounds and passed out four assists.
 
Wahconah's Brandon Roughley scored eight points and tied for the team-high with seven boards.
 
Williams finishes the semester with a 9-0 record and is off until Dec. 29 when it goes to Clark University.
 
Women's Basketball
MIDDLETOWN, Conn. -- Maddy Mandyck scored 17 points, and Mia Holtze had a double-double to lead Williams to a 72-54 win over Wesleyan.
 
Holtze finished with 10 points and 11 rebounds. Mandyck just missed a double-double with nine boards.
 
Williams (6-4) goes to Daytona Beach, Fla., to play Hood College on Dec. 20.
 
Women's Hockey
GENEVA, N.Y. -- Paige Galle had three assists to lead Williams to a 4-1 win over William Smith.
 
Williams scored three goals in the first period to take control of the game.
 
Erin Pye had 21 saves for Williams (4-4), which plays William Smith again on Sunday afternoon.
 
Men's Hockey
CLINTON, N.Y. -- Alex Danis scored a pair of goals to lead Hamilton to a 4-2 win over Williams.
 
David Veiten and Mac Carso each scored for Williams (3-5, 2-4), which is off until Dec. 30 when it plays Adrian College in the Pathfinder Tournament in Oswego, N.Y.
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Williamstown Planners Talk Interplay of Proposal with Existing Zoning

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The Planning Board last week discussed a number of proposals it hopes to bring forward to town meeting and acknowledged that at least one likely won't be ready in time for this May's annual meeting.
 
The latest in a series of Planning Board initiatives to allow a greater variety of housing options in town has them looking at an Open Space Residential Development bylaw.
 
Kenneth Kuttner, who is taking the lead on studying an OSRD proposal along with Roger Lawrence, told the board that initial concepts they pitched in the summer need to be considered in the context of the town's existing Major Residential Development bylaw, found in Section 7 of the town's zoning bylaw.
 
"Roger and I met with [Community Development Director Andrew Groff] last week to discuss the interaction between our thoughts on OSRD and the existing bylaw," Kuttner said. "There's a lot of overlap and, potentially, redundancy. If we do a whole new OSRD, we should think about how to rationalize Section 7.
 
"Roger and I need to work on two tracks: extend the Open Space Residential Development idea and figure out how to modify the existing Section 7 or transform the existing Section 7."
 
Not for the first time, Groff noted at last Tuesday's meeting that the Major Residential Development bylaw has not been used by a developer in town since he started at Town Hall nearly 18 years ago.
 
"The Major Residential Development Bylaw seems to have done its job by preventing more rural sprawl in rural parts of town but not doing its job in that it's not letting parts of town develop that are infill and could be developed," Groff said.
 
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