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ROUNDUP
BASEBALL
Dylan Bausumer allowed just one hit over six innings of work, and Preston George, Evan Yakavonis, Tommy Crowley and Dan Joyce had two hits each as Whitman-Hanson (6-2) bested Pembroke 10-0 in Patriot League action. … Kevin O’Keefe hit a walkoff single and got the win on the mound, and RJ Thorpe finished 4-for-4 with two RBI for Silver Lake in a 6-5 victory over Hanover. … DC Brown was phenomenal on the mound (15 strikeouts, no-hitter) and at the plate (two home runs, three RBI, two runs) for Plymouth North (5-2) in a 6-0 win over Plymouth South.
Matty Taylor recorded 13 strikeouts and allowed four hits and one earned run over seven innings as Sandwich came back to beat Carver 5-4 in a South Shore League clash.
Billy Burris tossed a complete-game shutout, and Phil Lombardi, Matt Cooke and Cam Kingston had two hits each as Tewksbury (2-4) topped Methuen 9-0 in the Merrimack Valley Conference Small Division.
BOYS LACROSSE
Hunter Grafton scored seven goals and provided three assists as Abington defeated Rockland 14-7 in a South Shore League matchup.
Taylor Richardson struck for six goals and supplied three assists, while Alex Morin and Sean Willis finished with three goals and an assist each as St. John Paul II routed Falmouth Academy 16-3 in a Cape and Islands League contest.
John Droggitis’ first-quarter goal got the scoring started, and Jimmy Nardone netted three goals and dished an assist as St. John’s Prep (6-0) defeated St. John’s (Shrewsbury) 10-5 in the Catholic Conference.
Colin Willoe scored four goals and added two assists, while Tommy Farrell added three goals and three assists as North Andover (2-5) edged Central Catholic 10-9 in overtime in the Merrimack Valley Conference.
GIRLS LACROSSE
Charlise Cox (hat trick, three assists), Lexie Davos (hat trick, assist), Danielle Cox (two goals) and Jess Lee (two goals) paced the Norwell (4-2) offense in a 15-3 South Shore League win over Middleboro. … Kolbie and Kyla Darmon netted three goals and dished an assist each, while Quinn Anderson scored twice and supplied two assists and Avery Cobban had two goals as well for Sandwich (8-0) in a 16-3 win over Hull.
Avery Laundry, Coco Clopton and Cecilia Tripp scored three goals each as Swampscott rolled to a 15-2 win over Essex Tech.
Megan Doyle reached 400 career points for Weymouth in a 15-1 Bay State Conference win over Milton. … Callie Burchill scored five goals, while Norah Downey made nine saves as Braintree beat Needham, 10-8.
SOFTBALL
Jill Gesswell went 2-for-3 with three RBI, while Lily Grabowski and Maya Crawford finished 2-for-4 with an RBI each as South Shore Voke defeated Cape Cod Tech, 19-7.
Allyson Fagan struck out eight and gave up seven hits in a complete game for her first start, while Priya Bedard tripled, doubled and scored two runs as Medway (3-2) edged Dedham 3-2 in the Tri-Valley League.
Cam Cloonan (double, home run), Haleigh Kelly (two home runs) and Lucy Latour (home run) made noise at the plate, and Edy Latour struck out eight over seven innings pitched as Dighton-Rehoboth (7-1) downed Norton 9-4 in nonleague action.
SCORES
BASEBALL
Arlington 10, Stoneham 7
EMK 6, Boston Collegiate 4
Essex Tech 8, Amesbury 4
Excel 10, Madison Park 9
Georgetown 7, Lynnfield 6
Hamilton-Wenham 6, Newburyport 3
Hingham 9, Quincy 1
Lynn English 10, Malden 6
Marblehead 16, Danvers 1
Marshfield 5, Scituate 2
North Quincy 6, Duxbury 5
North Reading 12, Ipswich 6
Pentucket 4, Manchester Essex 0
Plymouth North 6, Plymouth South 0
Sandwich 5, Carver 4
Shawsheen 4, Dracut 0
Silver Lake 6, Hanover 5
Tech Boston 6, Brighton 5
Tewksbury 9, Methuen 0
Whitman-Hanson 10, Pembroke 0
GIRLS GOLF
Duxbury 6, Silver Lake 0
Hingham 8, Scituate 0
Wellesley 5, Bishop Feehan 1
BOYS LACROSSE
Abington 14, Rockland 7
AMSA 9, Tyngsboro 8
Attleboro 8, Stoughton 1
Chelmsford 10, Groton-Dunstable 7
Foxboro 14, Milford 7
Littleton 13, Hudson 4
Methuen 17, Tewksbury 10
Milton 15, Weymouth 5
Nantucket 7, Nauset 5
Needham 18, Braintree 1
Newburyport 15, Triton 4
North Andover 10, Central Catholic 9 (ot)
Norwood 17, Dedham 7
Pentucket 13, North Reading 5
St. John Paul II 16, Falmouth Academy 3
St. John’s Prep 10, St. John’s (S) 5
Scituate 20, Quincy/North Quincy 3
Swampscott 10, Essex Tech 9
GIRLS LACROSSE
Andover 12, Billerica 7
Braintree 10, Needham 8
Cardinal Spellman 11, East Bridgewater 4
Central Catholic 14, North Andover 10
Cohasset 21, Mashpee 2
Dracut 14, Lowell 9
Ipswich 14, Georgetown 2
Lincoln-Sudbury 6, Concord-Carlisle 5
Manchester Essex 14, Lynnfield 4
Methuen 15, Tewksbury 6
Monomoy 17, Sturgis West 3
Newburyport 17, Triton 1
Norwell 15, Middleboro 3
Sandwich 16, Hull 3
Swampscott 15, Essex Tech 2
Wayland 14, Bedford 6
Wellesley 16, Brookline 4
Weymouth 15, Milton 1
SOFTBALL
Bishop Fenwick 8, Malden Catholic 4
Boston Collegiate 34, Randolph 33
Carver 6, Sandwich 1
Cristo Rey Boston/Cathedral 18, Margarita Muniz 1
Dighton-Rehoboth 9, Norton 4
East Boston 24, Excel Charter 0
Latin Academy 13, O’Bryant 1
Marblehead 22, Winthrop 0 (5i)
Marshfield 15, Scituate 1
Medway 3, Dedham 2
Newburyport 5, Hamilton-Wenham 1
Pembroke 12, Whitman-Hanson 3
Quincy/North Quincy 18, Duxbury 11
Silver Lake 16, Hanover 0
South Shore Voke 19, Cape Cod Tech 7
Ursuline 19, Dover-Sherborn 5
Wareham 31, Dennis-Yarmouth 6
BOYS TENNIS
Andover 4, Haverhill 1
Apponequet 4, Dighton-Rehoboth 1
Bishop Feehan 4, Walpole 1
Bourne 3, West Bridgewater 2
Bridgewater-Raynham 5, Brockton 0
Dartmouth 5, Durfee 0
Foxboro 3, Attleboro 2
Hamilton-Wenham 3, Marblehead 2
Hingham 5, Quincy 0
Latin Academy 5, Medford 0
Lynn Classical 5, Everett 0
Mystic Valley 3, Ipswich 2
Newton South 4, Melrose 1
Plymouth South 4, Plymouth North 1
Wellesley 5, Natick 0
Weston 4, Hopkinton 1
Whitman-Hanson 5, Pembroke 0
GIRLS TENNIS
Apponequet 5, Dighton-Rehoboth 0
Archbishop Williams 3, Arlington Catholic 2
Bishop Feehan 5, Walpole 0
Bourne 4, West Bridgewater 1
Bridgewater-Raynham 5, Brockton 0
Bromfield 5, Groton-Dunstable 0
Central Catholic 5, Lawrence 0
Dover-Sherborn 3, Westwood 2
Hingham 4, Quincy 1
Manchester-Essex 4, Newburyport 1
Newton South 5, Andover 0
Pembroke 4, Whitman-Hanson 1
Swampscott 3, Gloucester 2
Wellesley 4, Natick 1
Westford Academy 5, North Andover 0
Winchester 5, Reading 0
BOYS TRACK & FIELD
Blue Hills 100, Holbrook 36
Blue Hills 92, Wareham 44
Burlington 123, Watertown 13
Dedham 93, Bellingham 42
Dover-Sherborn 116, Millis 19
GIRLS TRACK & FIELD
Dedham 89, Bellingham 47
Dover-Sherborn 91.5, Millis 44.5
Franklin 85, King Philip 51
Hopkinton 110, Ashland 28
BOYS VOLLEYBALL
Lincoln-Sudbury 3, Bellingham 0
Natick 3, Newton North 1
Needham 3, Brookline 0
St. John’s (S) 3, Catholic Memorial 0
Wellesley 3, Braintree 0
Winchester 3, Newton South 0
Coaches are encouraged to report their scores and highlights in a timely manner to hssports@bostonherald.com
This time, the people marched in resistance to the harsh treatment of immigrants by the Trump administration.
“We descend from Immigrants and Revolutionaries,” read a battle cry beamed onto the side of the brick meeting house Tuesday.
“The society that stops seeing the people at the grocery line or the people that ride the bus with us, as human beings with beating hearts, then it’s not far off before our society devolves into no society at all,” Gilberto Calderin, director of advocacy at the Massachusetts Immigrant and Refugee Advocacy Coalition said to the crowd of hundreds.
The protest was organized by activist groups Boston Indivisible and Mass 50501, and began at the Irish Famine Memorial Plaza, just steps from the meeting house.
The lively crowd held up signs, waved American flags, and chanted during the march along Milk Street and Congress Street to the harbor.
Janet England of Brighton held a sign that read, “Democracy Needs Courage.”
The protesters, she said are “true patriots because we want freedom and democracy.”
“Although protest is a long game, we can’t give up. If you think about women’s suffrage, gay rights, the civil rights movement, it took years, but we just can’t give up,” she said.
Gloria Krusemeyer, from Alrington, used a walker to join the march.
“I’m irritated that I haven’t done more, and I’m just lucky that I can walk fast enough to be doing this,” she said.
Rick Mueller, from Cambridge, was dressed as Uncle Sam and held a large sign that read, “Liberty and Justice For All.”
“We’re fighting for America, so I’m gonna be America,” he said of his costume.
He handed small American flags out to protesters who waved them enthusiastically.
Ice dumping duties was limited to volunteers and select people.
Among them was Sarah, a mother who brought her 4-year-old daughter, Fiona.
Sarah declined to share her last name for her daughter’s safety.
After throwing ice into the harbor, Fiona shyly said that she wanted to come to the protest to “help families stay together.”
Through tears, Sarah said her decision to bring along Fiona came from wanting to teach her daughter to care about people from all walks of life.
“Kindness and compassion are things we learn in kindergarten and she will be in kindergarten so it’s really important for her to be kind and compassionate,” Sarah said, kissing her daughter’s check.
Likewise, Sara Sievers, from Cambridge, brought her parents, sister, her nephews and niece to dump ice.
“I think this is one of the most brutal regimes we’ve had in this country, and I want my niece and nephew to remember that it’s important to protest, and that we in Boston are part of a proud tradition of dumping things into the harbor with which we disagree,” Sievers said.
The family wore costumes of historical figures including Abigail Adams, Thomas Jefferson, and King Charles.
As the protest came to a close, Martha Laposata, spokesperson for Boston Indivisible said she wanted protestors to walk away knowing their voices matter.
“We cannot stand down,” Laposata said. “When people rise up against an authoritarian government, if they stay consistent and they keep growing, ultimately an authoritarian government will stand down.”
Camille Bugayong can be reached at camille.bugayong@globe.com.
Crime
An MIT professor was shot and killed in Brookline on Monday night.
Brookline police responded a report of a man shot in his home on Gibbs Street, according to the Norfolk County District Attorney’s Office.
Nuno F.G. Loureiro, 47, was transported to a local hospital and was pronounced dead on Tuesday morning, the DA says.
Loureiro was the director of MIT’s Plasma Science and Fusion Center and a professor of nuclear science and engineering and physics. Originally from Portugal, the Portuguese Minister of Foreign Affairs announced his death in a regulatory hearing before the Committee on Foreign Affairs and Portuguese Communities on Tuesday, according to CNN.
“Sadly, I can confirm that Professor Nuno Loureiro, who died early this morning, was a current MIT faculty member in the departments of Nuclear Science & Engineering and Physics, as well as the Director of MIT’s Plasma Science and Fusion Center. Our deepest sympathies are with his family, students, colleagues, and all those who are grieving,” an MIT spokesperson wrote in a statement.
In January, Loureiro was honored as one of nearly 400 scientists and engineers with the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers from former president Joe Biden.
The investigation into the homicide remains ongoing. No further information was released.
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A man was hospitalized after being shot Monday night in Brookline, Massachusetts.
The shooting happened on Gibbs Street. There was a large police presence at the scene.
The victim was brought to Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston. His condition was not known.
Police said the victim was shot three times and grazed by another round.
Authorities did not say if any arrests had been made.
No further information was immediately available.
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