Massachusetts
Six takeaways from some hot action on a cold Wednesday night of high school sports – The Boston Globe
With a 3-pointer in the first quarter, Monomoy senior Jackson Rocco became the first player in program history to score 1,000 points. The 6-foot-1-inch three-sport star came into the night needing 8 points and finished with 22 in a 56-52 double-overtime loss to Dennis-Yarmouth.
Lawrence Academy junior Alexander Egbuonu also reached the 1,000-point threshold. The 6-foot-6-inch forward from Nashua, N.H., who has eight Division 1 offers and recently visited Marquette, reached the mark in a 70-63 win over Tabor Academy.
In boys’ hockey, Tewksbury’s Tyler Bourgea and Natick’s Sam Hubbard both recorded their 100th points, with Hubbard’s coming as part of a four-goal, one-assist performance in a 6-1 win over Brookline.
Concord-Carlisle 157-pound wrestler Miles Mattaliano secured his 100th win during a 59-18 dual-meet victory over Lincoln-Sudbury.
Falmouth’s Gavin Powderly matched Hubbard’s four-goal day, dominating a 5-1 win over Martha’s Vineyard. Hat trick were harder to come by than most busy hockey nights, but Falmouth girls’ hockey had a pair of them as Casey Roth and Maeve Turner both finished with three goals in a 6-3 win over Nauset/Monomoy. Bedford senior James Nichol also had a hat trick in a 9-0 win over Cambridge, and Beverly’s Logan Bowen notched three goals in a 4-2 win over Peabody.
A lack of hat tricks means it was no surprise several goalies were impenetrable, led by Michael Bulkin, who made 34 saves for No. 10 Xaverian in a 3-0 win over No. 6 Catholic Memorial. Reading’s Owen Holland stopped a penalty shot among his saves as he recorded his fourth shutout, a 4-0 blanking of Watertown/Wayland.
Bishop Stang’s Carter Vane made 28 stops for his fourth shutout, a 6-0 win over Apponequet/Old Colony and Concord-Carlisle’s Sam Griswold posted a 24-save shutout in a 2-0 win over Acton-Boxborough. Westwood’s Naomi Sherman (6-0 vs. Canton), Bishop Feehan’s Logan Petrucci (6-0 vs. North Attleborough), and St. John Paul II’s Kelin MacAleese (2-0 vs. Dennis-Yarmouth) recorded shutouts, and Dedham’s Lily Zahka eclipsed the 1,000-save mark in a 2-1 win over Mansfield/Oliver Ames/Foxborough.
The night’s sudden-death winners belonged to Giovanna Gulinello, Nayli Thayer, and Liam Guilderson. Gulinello’s winner gave Billerica/Chelmsford a 3-2 win over Lincoln-Sudbury, Thayer’s put Milton past Marshfield, 3-2, and Guilderson’s OT winner lifted Belmont, 4-3, past Burlington.
3. Basketball leaderboard
The top performance of the day came from Lowell Catholic senior Brady Lynde, who dropped 33 in a 73-69 victory against Bedford.
But the most dominant performance belonged to Orlando sisters of Notre Dame (Hingham), who combined for 55 points in an 83-41 win over Arlington Catholic. Elle dropped 30, while Ava added 25.
Cole Rodgers scored 27 for Sandwich in an 81-56 win over Cape Cod Academy and Reading’s Jamal Palmer hit a go-ahead 3-pointer with six seconds left in a 67-64 win vs. Lynnfield.
RIP to the Voice of the Vikings, the incomparable Jim Lederman, a proud and driven supporter of all things Winthrop, his hometown. Lederman (Class of 1961) died Tuesday morning, at age 81, after recent health issues.
“He was unique, and very loyal,” said St. Mary’s football coach Sean Driscoll, a fellow Viking (‘86) who coached at his alma mater for 12 seasons and is the Park & Rec director in Winthrop. “You knew you were at Miller Field when you heard his voice [on the PA]. It was a special place to him. He always promoted Winthrop athletes, for awards, etc., he wrote letters to colleges for the kids . . . disappointing.”
Lederman’s passionate calls to the Globe’s high school desk, prominently during the fall and winter seasons, providing a score update, or saluting a young athlete’s “tremendous” performance, will be missed.
— High school editor Craig Larson
Scituate wrestling captured its first Patriot League title since 2012 by beating Hanover, 41-33 . . . Sophia Vital, the Cambridge resident who starred at Tabor, hit the winning layup for Rhode Island in a 60-58 win over UMass. Former Norwood star Megan Olbrys had tied the game with 16.3 seconds remaining.
Pat Lamb, who coached 19 years at Cardinal Spellman and now is in his seventh season with the Plymouth North girls, picked up his 400th career win with a 46-26 victory over Scituate on Tuesday.
Also Tuesday, Wilmington senior Eva Boudrea scored her 1,000th point on a free throw during a 69-52 loss to Belmont. Her father, Tim, was the first 1,000-point scorer at Tewksbury.
Brendan Kurie can be reached at brendan.kurie@globe.com. Follow him on X @BrendanKurie.
Massachusetts
Thousands join Walk for Hunger in Boston: ‘Critical response to rising food insecurity’
Thousands joined Project Bread’s 58th annual Walk for Hunger on Sunday to combat what organizers called a critical and rising problem of food insecurity in Massachusetts.
“There is no reason any person in Massachusetts should not be able to put food on the table,” said Project Bread President and CEO Erin McAleer. “And yet, more people are struggling now than ever. Every one of us has a role to play in making a difference, and the Walk for Hunger is the perfect opportunity to do just that.”
The walk — representing the nation’s oldest continually running pledge walk, according to Project Bread — raised the targeted $1 million in funds to fight hunger in the state as participants made their way around the family-friendly and accessible 3-mile loop around Boston Common.
Project Bread, which organizes the fundraiser along with over 600-member Make Hunger History Coalition, noted that the walk is an “immediate opportunity” for people to take action as food insecurity rises in Massachusetts.
In Massachusetts, 40% of households are experiencing food insecurity, the organization said, and “rising food prices and potential changes to federal nutrition programs, including SNAP, threaten to deepen the challenge.” Local organizations in Greater Boston are continuing to prepare for additional strain, they added.
Project Bread joined food aid organizations and public officials to meet an “impossible task” as the government shutdown temporarily cut off SNAP benefits last November, at the same time as an estimated 3.5 million have lost SNAP benefits nationwide due to policy changes under the Trump administration last July.
The 3,500 participants Sunday represented 216 towns across Massachusetts, while additional walkers from 23 states and five countries participated virtually, organizers said. The event featured live music, food vendors, games, a cooking demonstration, and remarks from local leaders on the Common.
The funds raised support Project Bread’s “comprehensive approach to food security,” tackling areas like policy advocacy, prevention strategies and more, as well as supporting the work of 68 anti-hunger organizations who participate in the event and keep 60% of the funds they generate.
The walk highlights “how families across the Commonwealth—particularly in Black, Brown, and immigrant communities—continue to face difficult tradeoffs between food and other basic needs,” Project Bread said. At the same time, the organization called the state “uniquely positioned to lead the nation in ending hunger through coordinated policy, healthcare integration, and community-led solutions.”
“It’s a great day and more importantly, a powerful one because the strength of our community coming together can drive real change for those who need it most,” McAleer said.
Project Bread offers a toll-free Food Source Hotline at 1-800-645-8333 for those experiencing food insecurity, providing confidential assistance to connect with food resources in 180 languages and for the hearing impaired, as well as more information on projectbread.org/get-help.

Massachusetts
Why backyard beekeeping in Massachusetts is so important
A science-based, mission-driven beekeeping company dedicated to improving pollinator health, Best Bees installs and manages professionally maintained hives for homes, businesses, and institutions.
Host Rachel Holt visits with their team to learn how urban beekeeping is helping strengthen biodiversity.
Massachusetts
Pols & Politics: Hundreds more layoffs announced by Massachusetts businesses
Four Massachusetts companies have announced hundreds of layoffs as residents and businesses flee the state due to what critics describe as soaring energy costs, high taxes, and costly climate mandates.
According to the state’s Worker’s Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN) tracker, a total of 283 Massachusetts workers are set to lose their jobs by the end of the fiscal year.
That includes 70 planned layoffs at Innovative Care Partners, which has locations in Northampton, West Springfield and Pittsfield, by June 30; 78 layoffs at Community Health Link at its Webster, Worcester and Lincoln locations, also by June 30; 83 layoffs at Compass Group USA in Boston by July 1; and 52 layoffs at Community Counseling of Bristol County at locations in Attleboro, Brockton, Fall River, New Bedford and Taunton between June 30 and July 13.
These latest notices come as several businesses have been moving out of Massachusetts over the past several months, including some that had been staples of the state’s economy.
In January, the reigning Massachusetts “Manufacturer of the Year,” Curia Global, shut down operations at its Burlington facility. Other notable departures include Thermo Fisher Scientific, Panera Bread, Cape Cod Potato Chips, Zipcar, SynQor, Analogic Corp. and more. Most recently, in April, Takeda Pharmaceuticals announced the elimination of 247 jobs from its Cambridge location.
The Massachusetts Fiscal Alliance told the Herald upon Curia Global’s exit that the Bay State has become an increasingly inhospitable business environment.
“The taxes here are high, the climate regulations are pretty extensive and we also have people in positions of power who don’t seem that interested in growing business here,” Executive Director Paul Craney said.
Healey denounces President Trump’s cap on student loans for health care and social workers
Gov. Maura Healey is responding to the Trump administration implementing a rule limiting access to federal student loans for graduate degrees in the nursing, physical therapy, physician assistants, occupational therapy, education and social work fields.
“At a time when people are already struggling with costs, President Trump is making higher education more expensive and harder to access. This rule is going to push students into more expensive private loans, and it blocks pathways into critical careers in the health care and education spaces,” Healey said in a written statement. “As the daughter of a school nurse, I know firsthand how important these jobs are to our communities.”
Healey spoke in opposition to this new rule back in March and continues to warn that it will increase costs and limit career opportunities. She launched a $15 million state loan repayment program for early education and care professionals along with loan repayments for health and human service workers through the MA Repay Program.
The new rule, implemented by the U.S. Department of Education, caps federal graduate student loan borrowing at $20,500 per year for the listed programs the administration deems not “professional.” The Healey-Driscoll Administration estimates that approximately 13,000 Massachusetts graduate students will be impacted.
Meanwhile, the Trump administration calls it a “common sense” regulation that will help control the ever-increasing costs for higher education.
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