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The Student-Run Newspaper of Williams College Since 1887

The Williams Record

The Student-Run Newspaper of Williams College Since 1887

The Williams Record

The Student-Run Newspaper of Williams College Since 1887

The Williams Record

Julia Goldberg, Senior Writer

Julia Goldberg ’25 is an English major from New York, N.Y. She is a senior writer. She served as the editor-in-chief in fall 2024, and before that, as an executive editor, section editor, and staff writer for the news section. She can be reached at [email protected]

All content by Julia Goldberg
Clark Art Institute receives ‘transformational’ donation of over 330 artworks, $45 million

Clark Art Institute receives ‘transformational’ donation of over 330 artworks, $45 million

Julia Goldberg and Emily Zas October 30, 2024
The Aso O. Tavitian Foundation donated 331 works of art — which date from the 15th through 19th centuries — to the Clark Art Institute, the museum announced in a press release on Monday. The foundation also gifted $45 million to support a dedicated curator position at the museum and the construction of a new Aso O. Tavitian Wing, which will host the donated collection. 
Rhiana Gunn-Wright, a climate activist, holds a lecture on the Green New Deal.

Town releases CARES report on residents’ sense of safety, wellbeing

Julia Goldberg October 25, 2023
The Williamstown Community Assessment Research (CARES) team published a qualitative report on Oct. 16 exploring Williamstown residents’ perceptions of their wellbeing and safety. The report sets forth concrete recommendations for the Town — though lead researchers expressed uncertainty that their initiatives would actually be implemented.
Students hang posters, painted copies of the Record following Oct. 18 op-ed

Students hang posters, painted copies of the Record following Oct. 18 op-ed

Julia Goldberg October 25, 2023
Copies of the Oct. 18 issue of the Record, covered in dark red painted handprints, and signs with statements about the war in Israel and Palestine were hung throughout all three floors of Paresky Center and outside its lawn on the night of Oct. 18. The handprints specifically covered the page that included Jonah Garnick’s ’23 op-ed, “What the ‘Free Palestine’ movement gets wrong.”
In a recent Record survey, longterm Dining Services employees described discontent with increased workload and stagnant pay. (Kiara Royer/The Williams Record)

Increased pay for new Dining Services employees alleviates staff shortage, frustrates longtime workers

Max Billick and Julia Goldberg September 20, 2023
The College raised salaries for incoming Dining Services employees this summer, filling almost all of the department’s vacancies and reaching the highest staffing levels since 2019. Nevertheless, longtime employees of Dining Services reported dissatisfaction in a Record survey, voicing frustration about overwhelming workloads and a lack of pay significantly higher than that of newer coworkers.
Dean of the College Gretchen Long forms ad hoc committee to study academic integrity

Dean of the College Gretchen Long forms ad hoc committee to study academic integrity

Luke Chinman and Julia Goldberg May 3, 2023
Dean of the College Gretchen Long has established a committee that will consider academic integrity at the College. The Ad Hoc Committee on Academic Integrity, which Long will chair, will comprise faculty members from every division. It will convene for the first time in the coming weeks and meet regularly for roughly a year, after which Long expects to share the committee’s findings with the community.
College reckons with declining interest in the humanities

College reckons with declining interest in the humanities

David Wignall and Julia Goldberg April 12, 2023
Across the country, institutions of higher education have struggled to adjust to sky-high demand for STEM courses and weakening interest in the humanities. Williams — with its $3.5 billion endowment and traditional focus on the liberal arts — has been relatively insulated. But the College is not immune, prompting academic departments on both sides of Route 2 to consider their circumstances and what the future might hold.
Town voters approve $22.5 million fire station

Town voters approve $22.5 million fire station

Julia Goldberg March 1, 2023
Williamstown residents passed a proposal to build a new fire station at 562-580 Main Street in a 509-32 vote during yesterday’s special Town Meeting at the Williamstown Elementary School. The building will replace the Town’s 73-year-old station, which falls short of numerous Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) and National Fire Protection Association standards.
Quinn Casey/The Williams Record

Students collect over $5,000, supplies for Turkey-Syria earthquake relief

Julia Goldberg February 15, 2023
The International Students Organization (ISA), Muslim Student Union (MSU), International Student Services (ISS), and the chaplain’s office have raised over $5,000 for Turkey-Syria earthquake relief through tabling that began on Feb. 8 and will end tomorrow, Feb. 16. The organizations are also collecting winter clothes, blankets, and supplies such as women’s hygiene products that Associate Dean of Students and Director of ISS Ninah Pretto will deliver to a Turkish cultural center in Albany.
Williamstown police officers unanimously support the use of body cameras.

WPD to implement body cameras

Julia Goldberg December 7, 2022
The Williamstown Police Department (WPD) will equip all of its officers with body-worn cameras after the Massachusetts Executive Office of Public Safety and Security awarded it an $18,941 grant.
At eight stations spread across the room, attendees could read about a specific topic from the Town’s Existing Conditions Report.

Town solicits residents’ input for upcoming comprehensive plan

Julia Goldberg October 19, 2022
Williamstown residents gathered at an interactive open house on Thursday to share thoughts and concerns that will inform Envisioning Williamstown 2035, a long-term comprehensive plan for the Town. The plan, to be released by May 2023, will serve as the Town’s “official blueprint” for action “related to land use, infrastructure, and community development” over the next 10 years, according to its website.
Antisemitic, racist flyers found in books in Sawyer

Antisemitic, racist flyers found in books in Sawyer

Bellamy Richardson and Julia Goldberg February 23, 2022
Copies of an antisemitic and racist flyer were found in history books in Sawyer Library on Feb. 15. After consulting the Libraries leadership team as well as Campus Safety Services (CSS) and the Office of Institutional Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (OIDEI), Director of Libraries Jonathan Miller posted a sign in the Sawyer Library entrance condemning the flyers, which were made to look like Confederate States of America currency, and asking members of the College community to bring them to the library’s Access Services Desk if found.
(DEVIKA GOEL/
THE WILLIAMS RECORD)
The group, founded this spring, has a roster of around 60 members.

Students form mental health advocacy club

Julia Goldberg February 16, 2022
Three students — Cooper Desmond ’24, Andrew Williams ’24, and Sam Riley ’23 — founded the Mental Wellness Advocacy Group this semester to communicate the state of student mental health to the College’s administration.
Rhiana Gunn-Wright, a climate activist, holds a lecture on the Green New Deal.

College receives 25 misconduct reports

Julia Goldberg February 9, 2022
The College received 25 reports of misconduct committed against members of the College community — 13 of sexual misconduct, four of relationship abuse, five of stalking, and three of verbal sexual harassment — over the past two academic years.
(Devika Goel/The Williams Record)

Students report difficulties accessing psychiatric medication

Julia Goldberg January 26, 2022
Students are struggling to access consistent and reliable psychiatric resources at the College, according to several student interviews with the Record. An increase in demand for mental health services this fall has contributed to a months-long waitlist to see the only psychiatrist currently at the College, Dr. Susan Mahler.
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