There was a meeting of boys’ lacrosse royalty in Hopkinton on Tuesday afternoon when Derryfield, which has won four straight Division II titles and been to seven straight finals, was in town to visit the three-time defending D-III champion Hawks.For.
High Schools: No slowing down for Bow girls’ lax
Bow’s Olivia Kehas, Olivia Selleck and Barrie Guertin and try to regain ball possession from MV’s Abby Forbes on Tuesday. MELISSA CURRAN photos / Monitor staff
Bow’s Jess Chamberlin, Olivia Selleck and Barrie Guertin battle Merrimack Valley High School’s Anya Dinger during Tuesday’s game at Bow High School. MELISSA CURRAN / Monitor staff
Bow s Addison Trefethen and Merrimack Valley High School s Caitlyn Fortier keep stride for stride during Tuesday s game at Bow High School. MELISSA CURRAN Monitor staff
Merrimack Valley’s Emily Koufos and Bow’s Alex Larrabee during Tuesday’s game at Bow High School.
David Paul, Unenrolled, Incumbent
Planning Board (1 year unexpired term, vote for 1)
Francis DeYoung, Unenrolled, Incumbent
Melissa Hayes, Democrat
QUESTION 1: Shall the Town of Hopkinton be allowed to exempt from the provisions of proposition two and one-half, so-called, the amounts required to pay for the bond issued in order to fund construction, reconstruction, renovation, alteration, and associated improvements of the Marathon School, including any planning, design, engineering, original equipment, or associated costs or expenses related thereto? [$4.9 Million]
Yes/No
QUESTION 2: Shall the Town of Hopkinton be allowed to exempt from the provisions of proposition two and one-half, so-called, the amounts required to pay for the bond issued in order to fund the installation of control systems for the Hopkinton Middle School HVAC Renewal and Digital Control Upgrade, including any planning, design, engineering, original equipment, or associated costs or expenses related there
The Milford Daily News
HOPKINTON Josh Fischer was nine years old when he was ranked the worst baseball player on his Little League team.
“I remember I had to rank all the kids on my nine-year-old team and he was ranked last,” said Fischer’s father, John, who was the head coach. “I remember that clearly. I still have the excel spreadsheet and I’ve kept it as inspiration for him because this is how far (he’s) come in the last 10 years.”
On Wednesday, Fischer signed his National Letter of Intent to play baseball at Fairfield University.
At a table set up inside the Hopkinton High gymnasium, the high school senior was joined by his father, his mother, Barb, his twin sister, Alyssa, and his older brother, Zachary. The left-handed pitcher put pen to paper – along with five other Hillers – to commit to play a college sport.