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Mount Greylock s Coach Gill Receives Final Frankie
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Quote The problem with winter sports is that â follow me closely here â they generally take place in winter. â Dave Barry
Itâs Christmas Week and weâre all looking for a bit of cheer in this winter season of our dismay. Yes, astronomical winter begins (or began, depending on when youâre reading this) at 5:02 a.m. on Monday, and that means our total daylight begins to lengthen, ever so gradually, at first in the afternoon.
But since the atmosphere takes time to enter the deep freeze â and to begin baking after the summer solstice around June 21 â the coldest stretch of meteorological winter in the Berkshires extends from Jan. 10 to Jan. 25, with a normal average high of 29 and an overnight low of 11.
A powerful norâeaster is likely to dump a foot or more of snow on the Berkshires, where the National Weather Service has hoisted a strongly worded winter storm warning, effective from 4 p.m. Wednesday until 1 p.m. Thursday.
Heavy snow is expected with total accumulations of 10 to 18 inches in some areas, according to the warning issued Tuesday afternoon. Winds gusting as high as 35 mph are expected to cause blowing and drifting.
âTravel could be very difficult to impossible,â the warning stated, with hazardous conditions impacting the Thursday morning commute.
The highest snowfall amounts are expected south and east of Pittsfield, with lower amounts in North County, depending on the final track of the storm.
When the pandemic closed Williams’ campus in the spring of 2020, Allie Campbell ’21 started tutoring elementary and middle school students remotely from her hometown in New Hampshire. She returned to Williams in the fall, eager to connect with young students in a practical, hands-on way. She signed on as a writing fellow with the Williams Center at Mount Greylock, a 10-year-old collaboration between the local high school and Williams’ Center for Learning in Action (CLiA).
In a typical year, 30 to 40 Williams students, through CLiA, visit classes in person several times per week, helping Mount Greylock students with assignments in all subjects, from writing to Latin to math. The Williams students share notetaking techniques, assist with locker organization or quietly do their own homework alongside a student, among other activities. But with the pandemic restricting travel off campus and Mount Greylock students alternating between remote and in-person learning the Williams
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