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Wright Places 11th in High Jump; Suppa and Larson Qualify for 100 Hurdles Final

Story Links RESULTS GENEVA, Ohio – Three members of the Ithaca College women’s track & field team were in action on the second day of the NCAA Division III Outdoor Championships at SPIRE Institute in Geneva, Ohio. Madeleine Wright finished 11th in the high jump to earn USTFCCCA Second Team […]

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RESULTS

GENEVA, Ohio –

Three members of the Ithaca College women’s track & field team were in action on the second day of the NCAA Division III Outdoor Championships at SPIRE Institute in Geneva, Ohio.

Madeleine Wright finished 11th in the high jump to earn USTFCCCA Second Team All-American honors as she cleared 1.65 meters. Wright, now a two-time second team All-American, entered the competition at 1.60 meters and cleared the bar on her first attempt. She then moved past 1.65 meters on her second try before her championship ended at 1.68 meters.

Laura Suppa and Rachel Larson both qualified for the 100-meter hurdles final and will race again at 2 p.m. tomorrow. Suppa is now a four-time All-American, while Larson earns her second career honor.

Larson was up first in the initial heat of the prelim and finished second in the heat with a time of 14.12 seconds. Suppa was in the final heat and finished fourth in 14.11 seconds. They will be seeded eighth and ninth in tomorrow’s final.

 



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Rose Bowl Aquatics Center Makes a Big Splash With 35th Anniversary Bash – Pasadena Weekendr

The Rose Bowl Aquatics Center (RBAC) is marking its 35th year of service to the Pasadena community with special celebration events on June 16. The nonprofit has planned commemorative activities designed to engage community members and highlight the center’s long-standing commitment to aquatic programs. Community members can start the day with a special Anniversary Community […]

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The Rose Bowl Aquatics Center (RBAC) is marking its 35th year of service to the Pasadena community with special celebration events on June 16. The nonprofit has planned commemorative activities designed to engage community members and highlight the center’s long-standing commitment to aquatic programs.

Community members can start the day with a special Anniversary Community Coffee from 8:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. A free Anniversary Water Fitness class called “Cheers to 35 Years” will take place at 1:35 p.m. in the Recreation Pool deep end. Those interested in participating must register in advance through the center’s website.

The center recently announced extended weekend summer hours, with the facility now remaining open until 6 p.m. on Saturdays and Sundays starting June 7.

Visitors should note several upcoming facility closures related nearby Rose Bowl events. The center will be completely closed on Sunday, June 15, with early closures at 3 p.m. on June 17, 19, and 25. Additional modified hours include a 1 p.m. closure on June 21 and split hours on June 23 (5:30 a.m.-8 a.m. and 3:30 p.m.-9 p.m.).

In other RBAC news, the center recently hosted the swimming events for the 2025 Pasadena Senior Games.

The center is celebrating staff achievements as well, with Coach Mike Gonzales recently bringing home a Bronze Medal from the PanAm Aquatic Water Polo Championships with the USA Cadet boys team, including a big win against host Colombia.

Rose Bowl Aquatics Center, 360 N. Arroyo Blvd., Pasadena, CA 91103. www.rosebowlaquatics.org.

 


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ICE detains Massachusetts student, sparking high school walkouts

The 18-year-old was detained while on his way to volleyball practice. His Massachusetts community is demanding his release. Community rallies against ICE raids after high school student detained Communities in California and Massachusetts protested recent ICE raids that resulted in arrests of restaurant workers and a high school student. Federal immigration agents detained a Massachusetts […]

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The 18-year-old was detained while on his way to volleyball practice. His Massachusetts community is demanding his release.

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Federal immigration agents detained a Massachusetts high school student on his way to volleyball practice, mistaking him when he drove his father’s car.

The May 31 arrest of Marcelo Gomes Da Silva, 18, has triggered protests and walkouts at Milford High School, where he is an 11th-grade student, according to the Milford Daily News, part of the USA TODAY Network.

The school had its graduation a day after Immigration and Customs Enforcement detained Gomes Da Silva while he was heading with teammates to practice. The Brazilian teen was set to perform drums in the school’s band at the June 1 graduation ceremony.

Milford High School Principal Joshua Otlin said at the graduation ceremony that the community couldn’t pretend all was well.

“There is fear and anxiety, where there should be hope and confidence,” he said on the school’s turf field. “There is wrenching despair and righteous anger, where there should be gratitude and joy.”

Instead, graduation speakers admitted to making last-minute adjustments to address the arrest of their classmate. Class President Luke Benjamin Donis, a champion wrestler, urged his fellow graduates to “give whatever time they can” to join a large rally at Milford Town Hall after the high school ceremony.

Who is Marcelo Gomes Da Silva?

Gomes Da Silva arrived in the United States legally in 2012 on a visitor’s visa that later turned into a student visa, his lawyers said. It isn’t clear when that visa expired. He has no criminal history.

He was active in his high school marching band and church band, along with excelling in school and was involved in extracurricular and faith-based activities, his immigration lawyer Robin Nice said in a statement. 

Gomes Da Silva does not pose a danger to the community and isn’t a flight risk, Nice said.

He has an immigration court hearing scheduled for the afternoon of June 5, where Nice said they would request his release on bond. His lawyers planned to pursue an asylum claim for him in the United States. On June 1, federal Judge Richard Stearns of Massachusetts issued an emergency order banning ICE from transferring Gomes Da Silva out of the state for at least 72 hours.

On June 2, Milford High students staged a walkout protesting Gomes’ detention. Students left their campus wearing Brazilian flags, holding signs and a white banner reading “Free Marcelo.” Others donned white shirts inscribed with his name.

ICE: If anyone is here unlawfully ‘we’re going to arrest them’

ICE has said its agents were targeting Gomes Da Silva’s father, Joao Paulo Gomes-Pereira, who is in the country illegally from Brazil. Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons said agents targeted Gomes-Pereira with information from local enforcement due to reckless driving, speeding that topped 100 mph. But when they stopped Gomes-Pereira’s car, they arrested Gomes Da Silva.

On June 2, Patricia Hyde, acting field director for ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations’ in Boston, said they detained him because local agencies didn’t cooperate with ICE.

“When we go into the community and find others who are unlawfully here, we’re going to arrest them,” Hyde said. “He’s 18 years old and he’s illegally in this country. We had to go to Milford looking for someone else and if we come across someone else who is here illegally, we’re going to arrest them.”

Officials said Gomes Da Silva was detained as officials announced the results of “Operation Patriot,” which arrested 1,500 people across Massachusetts suspected of being in the country illegally. He will remain in ICE custody pending removal proceedings, according to the Department of Homeland Security.

Lyons said Gomes Da Silva’s father hasn’t turned himself in, although he knows he’s the target of the operation.

Reaction to the student’s detention

In a video posted to social media, U.S. Sen. Ed Markey, D-Massachusetts, said of the situation, “This isn’t about public safety. This is about cruelty and fear engendered by the Trump administration.”

Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey said the teenager’s arrest left her “outraged.”

“Yet again, local officials and law enforcement have been left in the dark with no heads-up and no answers to their questions,” she said in a statement. “I’m demanding that ICE provide immediate information about why he was arrested, where he is and how his due process is being protected.”

Nick Molinari, president of the Milford Teachers Association, said in a statement that ICE agents targeted a student in a “deliberate act of cruelty, traumatizing his family, friends and peers.”

“This is immoral, unnecessary and should be universally condemned,” he said. “We will not stand by while the rights and humanity of our students are violated.”



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TOP SPORTS STORIES: Volleyball completes senior night comeback

Kyle A. Pillar – Sports Editor ROCKINGHAM — Starting the “Top Sports Stories” series is a trip to Raider Gymnasium with the Richmond Senior High School volleyball team. In early October, the Lady Raiders were in the hunt to make the state playoffs and their match against Lee County High School proved to be a […]

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Kyle A. Pillar – Sports Editor

ROCKINGHAM — Starting the “Top Sports Stories” series is a trip to Raider Gymnasium with the Richmond Senior High School volleyball team.

In early October, the Lady Raiders were in the hunt to make the state playoffs and their match against Lee County High School proved to be a major helper in achieving that goal.

On senior night, the program recognized its three seniors ahead of the match — Ava Edmondson, Sharonda Henderson and Abby Wellman.

All of the pre-match excitement was only surpassed when the Lady Raiders dug in after losing the first two sets and rallied to earn a 3-2 victory.

Winning the final sets by scores of 25-19, 26-24 and 15-9, Richmond gave its senior players a night to remember while also avenging a 3-0 loss to the Lady Yellow Jackets earlier in the season.

Helping get the comeback started in the third set was sophomore libero Kenley Smith, who served nine straight points, including three aces, to give Richmond a big lead.

The Lady Raiders also overcame a 22-24 deficit in the fourth set. Getting those three points were a service error, a kill by sophomore Riley McDonald and a net violation.

Sophomores Kalynn McCormick (ace) and Madisen Jackson (block), along with junior J’Nasia Neal (kill), contributed to a 7-3 run to start the fifth set. 

A couple of more miscues by Lee County, paired with a kill from Jackson secured the win as the gym erupted in celebration. 

The victory was the final one of the regular season for Richmond, which was enough to get the Lady Raiders into the NCHSAA 4A East state playoffs.

Relive the exciting match by reading the complete article from Oct. 3, 2024, below:

SENIOR SENDOFF: Lady Raiders erase two-set deficit against Lee County

ROCKINGHAM — It wasn’t how the Richmond Senior High School volleyball team started Thursday’s Sandhills Athletic Conference match, but how it finished it instead that counted. 

With several players and head coach Ashleigh Larsen citing a supportive home crowd, the Lady Raiders erased a two-set deficit to defeat Lee County High School 3-2. 

Making the comeback victory even sweeter was celebrating the team’s three senior players on senior night — Ava Edmondson, Sharonda Henderson and Abby Wellman. 

PHOTOS: Click here to view photos of Richmond volleyball’s senior night.

After dropping the first two sets by close scores of 23-25 and 21-25, the Lady Raiders put the momentum in their favor to roll 25-19, 26-24 and 15-9. 

The win helped Richmond even the two-match season series with the Lady Yellow Jackets (11-7, 5-5 SAC).

https://x.com/rosports_/status/1842011591329399258?s=46&t=1vVTPe4-aEgr5Eh3OYPsHw

Late in the first set, a kill by Edmondson followed by an ace from junior J’Nasia Neal tied the score at 20 points. Edmondson and sophomore Madisen Jackson blocked a shot two volleys later to tie it again 21-21. 

Lee County closed on a 4-2 run to take a one-set lead despite a tip by sophomore Riley McDonald and an Edmondson ace. 

Trailing 11-15 in the second stanza, Larsen called a timeout. The pause in action helped some, seeing the two teams split the next 14 points evenly. 

But Richmond found itself down 2-0 when it couldn’t stop the Lady Yellow Jackets from winning three of the final five points. 

Raider Magic reared its head at the start of the third set as sophomore Kenley Smith served Richmond to a 9-0 lead. She had three aces in the first five points and junior Ka’mora Watkins tacked on a pair of kills. 

Two more kills from Watkins extended the lead to 12-2, but Lee County closed the deficit to a 14-11 Richmond lead, which led to a timeout. 

A pair of kills from Neal, a tip by Jackson and back-to-back aces from Smith contributed to a 20-14 advantage and a Lee County timeout. Down the stretch, several errors by the visitors and an Edmondson kill bolstered Richmond’s lead. 

With sophomore Kaylan Parsons at the service line, the Lady Raiders used a kill from Neal to keep the match alive. 

https://x.com/rosports_/status/1842018306091581865?s=46&t=1vVTPe4-aEgr5Eh3OYPsHw

The fourth stanza was a back-and-forth battle between both teams. An Edmondson ace and bump from Smith made it an early 3-1 lead. 

Neal later tied the set at 10 points with an attack from the outside spot, but Lee County used a small run to take a 13-10 lead. Larsen called a timeout. 

With quick hands, Edmondson made an athletic knock over the net while running the opposite direction. That point, coupled with a hitting error, pulled Richmond within a point 14-15 and forced a timeout. 

A block by Edmondson was later followed by a boomer from McDonald at the middle of the floor. On the next rally, the Lady Yellow Jackets went into the net to even the score 22-22. 

Down 22-24, the Lady Raiders used a service error, a McDonald kill and another net violation to win in extra points and force a decisive fifth set. 

Consecutive players in the net by Lee County on the first two sequences gave Richmond a 2-0 lead and set the tone. Kills from McDonald and Watkins later tied the score at three and four points, respectively. 

Two errors by the visitors and an ace from sophomore Kalynn McCormick put Richmond ahead 7-3. Later, a Neal kill and a big block by Jackson extended the advantage to 9-5 and resulted in Lee County’s second timeout of the set. 

Building momentum, another Neal kill and an ace from Parsons grew the lead to 12-6. Richmond captured its final three points on a net violation, a Jackson kill and a service error. 

https://x.com/rosports_/status/1841999628884992293?s=46&t=1vVTPe4-aEgr5Eh3OYPsHw





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Allen Bowman named Community Member of the Year by PRJUSD • Paso Robles Press

Dedicated volunteer and mentor recognized for unwavering support of Paso Robles High students and programs PASO ROBLES — The Paso Robles Joint Unified School District has announced that Allen Bowman has been named the 2025 Community Member of the Year, recognizing his outstanding dedication, volunteerism, and unwavering support for the students and programs of Paso Robles […]

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Dedicated volunteer and mentor recognized for unwavering support of Paso Robles High students and programs

PASO ROBLES — The Paso Robles Joint Unified School District has announced that Allen Bowman has been named the 2025 Community Member of the Year, recognizing his outstanding dedication, volunteerism, and unwavering support for the students and programs of Paso Robles High School (PRHS).

A passionate advocate for education and youth development, Bowman has become a fixture in the Bearcat community. From mentoring students to supporting athletics and writing the popular weekly Bearcat News Report, keeping the school community informed, connected, and engaged. His writing reflects his commitment to celebrating student successes and promoting a strong school spirit. Bowman embodies the true spirit of service and school pride.

“Allen Bowman is the kind of community member every school district hopes to have,” said Jennifer Loftus, superintendent of Paso Robles Joint Unified School District. “He gives his time selflessly, uplifts our students with his guidance, and shows up wherever help is needed — always with a positive attitude and genuine care.”

As an avid volunteer, Bowman has dedicated countless hours to mentoring students and actively supporting the Paso High sports program. Whether he’s cheering from the sidelines or offering support in other ways, his presence is a source of inspiration and encouragement. The Community Member of the Year award honors individuals who go above and beyond in service to the district, and Bowman exemplifies that standard in every way. His impact on PRHS is lasting and deeply appreciated.

Feature Image: Allen Bowman keeps the Paso Robles High School community informed, connected, and engaged, with his weekly Bearcat News Report. Contributed photo





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Milford volleyball team feels loss of player detained by ICE

“Just like that, the whole day changed. Everyone’s mood changed,” said Gustavo da Silva, a junior who has known Gomes since elementary school. Some said they wanted to throw up. Others cried. Members of the Milford volleyball team walked up the driveway to meet with a TV news crew who had come to interview them […]

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“Just like that, the whole day changed. Everyone’s mood changed,” said Gustavo da Silva, a junior who has known Gomes since elementary school.

Some said they wanted to throw up. Others cried.

Members of the Milford volleyball team walked up the driveway to meet with a TV news crew who had come to interview them at their team captain’s house where they had gathered to make shirts in support of their teammate Marcelo Gomes da Silva in Milford.Jessica Rinaldi/Globe Staff

“I was very angry that I ended up ripping my shirt,” said Elias Leite, a sophomore who has also known Gomes since he arrived in the United States at age 6. The team’s coach took Leite outside and they cried together.

On Monday, the Milford teens walked out of school to urge officials to “free Marcelo.” Ahead of a Tuesday night playoff game against Taunton High School, the volleyball team gathered Monday evening to make T-shirts sharing their message about wanting Gomes to come home. They plan to wear them during their game warmup.

The home game starts at 6 p.m. Tuesday and a crowd of community members are expected to show their support for the team, and for Gomes.

Federal immigration agents detained Gomes on Saturday as the teen was headed to volleyball practice at the high school. He remains at a detention center in Burlington, his lawyer said Monday. ICE officials on Monday said Gomes was not their intended target. Instead, officers were looking for the teen’s father, said Patricia Hyde, field director of ICE’s Enforcement and Removal Operations in Boston, on Monday at a news conference.

Hyde said Gomes was driving his father’s car and when agents didn’t find João Paulo Gomes Pereira, who they allege has driven recklessly in the community (something court records do not show), they detained Gomes instead.

Colin Greco, a senior and team captain, invited the players to his backyard to decorate white T-shirts with permanent markers and create their own designs. The teens sprawled the words “Free Marcelo” and “Free Marcie” across the white canvases they’ll sport tonight.

“Our goal is to share his story across the world,” Greco said. “He’s one of our brothers.”

The team is dedicating the game to Gomes and is hoping for a win.

Gomes is a player who has constant energy, Greco said.

“Lose a point, win a point, Marcelo is always on his toes. He’s always screaming, cheering, whether or not he’s on or off the court,” he said. “He’s the light of the team. Without him, it just kind of feels like a dark, empty room.”

The teens are trying to find justification for what happened to Gomes. On Tuesday afternoon, they watched a livestream of an ICE press conference.

“They were saying things that just weren’t related to Marcelo at all,” said Diego Santos, a junior who watched the livestream on his phone after he was done with school work.

Santos said he agrees people with serious criminal backgrounds should be arrested, but said that’s not the case for neither Gomes nor his father.

“He’s a good kid,” Santos said.

“Was his dad a murderer? Was his dad a drug dealer? Did he hurt people? No. No one hurt anybody. They’re good people. They have faith. They believe in God. They’re very religious people, and they always smile through everything,” he said.

Gustavo, the junior who has known Gomes since childhood, watched the livestream and didn’t like how officials talked about his friend.

“The guy referred to him as an alien,” he said. “He’s not an alien.”

For his teammates, Gomes is a good and loyal friend who is dedicated to athletics, church, and music.

“We’re missing such a core member of the crew,” said Jason Comisky, a senior. “He’s a really fun, upbeat guy. He’s always made my day.”


Marcela Rodrigues can be reached at marcela.rodrigues@globe.com.





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Blue Jays RHP Scherzer throws live BP, could pitch in minor league game this weekend

TORONTO (AP) — Blue Jays right-hander Max Scherzer threw 40 pitches of live batting practice Tuesday and could pitch in a minor league game this weekend, manager John Schneider said. 0

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Blue Jays RHP Scherzer throws live BP, could pitch in minor league game this weekend

TORONTO (AP) — Blue Jays right-hander Max Scherzer threw 40 pitches of live batting practice Tuesday and could pitch in a minor league game this weekend, manager John Schneider said.

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