Williams Men's Hockey Wins in OT in League Semi-Final

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AMHERST, Mass. -- Ziv Deener-Chodrirker scored in the seventh minute of overtime Saturday to give the Williams men's hockey team a 1-0 win over Amherst in the semi-finals of the New England Small College Athletic Conference tournament.
 
Evan Ruschill made 33 saves to earn the shutout in goal for Williams (9-15-2) , which plays Bowdoin Sunday at Amherst's Orr Rink for the conference title.
 
Men's Basketball
HARTFORD, Conn. -- Ryan O'Neill scored 21 points to lead St. Joseph (Conn.) to a 75-54 win over Williams in the second round of the NCAA Division III tournament.
 
Nate Karren scored 15 points to lead Williams (23-5).
 
Men's Lacrosse
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. -- Calvin Caputo had three goals and three assists to lead Williams to a 16-6 win over Trinity in the season opener.
 
Cade Schuckman also had a hat trick, and Matthew Freitas made 14 saves for Williams, which goes to Union on Wednesday.
 
Women's Lacrosse
HARTFORD, Conn. -- Trinity's Molly McGuckin and Caroline Lampert each had a hat trick in an 11-10 win over Williams.
 
Elsa Dean-Muncie and Claudia Russell each scored three goals for Williams (0-1), which hosts Smith on Sunday.
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Williamstown Select Board OKs Cannabis, Cable Deals

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The Select Board on Monday voted to update its host community agreement with the one cannabis dealer in town and signed on to a new 10-year agreement with Spectrum to provide cable television service to residents.
 
The three-year HCA with Silver Therapeutics, which opened its doors in the Williamstown Shopping Plaza in 2019, lapsed some time ago, Town Manager Robert Menicocci told the board, but the town and the retailer were waiting for new guidance from the state's Cannabis Control Commission.
 
"We were a little concerned with putting together host agreements kind of mid-air while [the CCC was] telegraphing changes they were going to make in terms of impact fees and the nature of what our host agreement needs to be like," Menicocci said. "We have been waiting and waiting on them for some time to draft what was promised to us of a model host agreement.
 
"And we wanted to give ourselves a little more time to digest that model host agreement, because there were some concerns municipalities had raised in general around what the commission had put forward."
 
Menicocci said that when early adopters, like Williamstown, formed the first HCAs in the wake of 2016's state referendum decriminalizing pot, there was more autonomy for municipalities. Now the CCC is attempting to create a structured regulatory environment similar to that in place for alcohol licenses.
 
Silver Therapeutics needs to renew its state license in December, prompting the town to renew the local agreement that retailers need to have in place, Menicocci said.
 
"We feel it's reasonable to move ahead with the host agreement at this point — continue to work with [Josh Silver], continue to work with our Legislature around the refinements that will come out of the control commission," Menicocci said.
 
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