PRST-STD U.S. Postage PAID Hopkinton, MA 01748 Permit No. 109 ECRWSS Postal Patron
HOPKINTON INDEPENDENT Vol. 20 | No. 18 | September 4, 2019
Enrollment a concern as students return HPS considers options to accommodate record turnout PHOTOS/JERRY SPAR
By Melissa Orff Contributing Writer
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t’s the most wonderful time of the year: back to school for students and teachers in the Hopkinton Public Schools! Students from kindergarten through high school packed up their backpacks and boarded the buses last week to begin the 2019-20 school year. In preparation, Hopkinton Public School teachers reported Aug. 26 for two days of professional development and to get ready to greet their new students. “It will be great to have the students back in the buildings,” superintendent Dr. Carol Cavanaugh said prior to the start of school. “The energy of the first few days back to school is unparalleled.” That energy will be coming from
Wave after wave The first day of school was Aug. 28, and there were happy looks from older students, such as Hopkinton High School seniors (from left) Megan White, Rebecca Mazur, Tara Pucci and Alyssa McIntire, as well as younger ones, like third-grader Jackson Balster, boarding his bus to Elmwood School.
Enrollment | 9
As Greyhound Friends seeks return, Coleman speaks out
Louise Coleman founded Greyhound Friends in 1983 and ran the kennel on Saddle Hill Road until its forced closing.
By Jerry Spar Managing Editor
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here is no middle ground with Louise Coleman. You are either with her or against her. Some revere her for the many years of work she did founding Greyhound Friends in 1983 and then running the Saddle Hill Road facility (which opened in 1987) for three decades, saving thousands of dogs, many of whom otherwise were certain to be condemned to death. Others chastise her for the kennel’s forced closing by the state and the attorney general accusing her of using the charity’s finances for personal spending and failing to account for other funds. (Coleman signed a deal with the AG’s office in which she did not admit to wrongdoing but agreed to pay $40,000 to another charity and accept a ban on taking a fiduciary role with any charity in the state.)
INSIDE VIEWPOINT
After saving life, Slaman encourages CPR training
FEATURES
Hopkinton opens doors for Senior Center Month
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SPORTS
Volleyball team aims for another TVL title
Greyhound Friends | 5
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