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A lacrosse champion five times over, from Dover-Sherborn to Middlebury, Hope Shue reflects on a legacy of winning
A lacrosse champion five times over, from Dover-Sherborn to Middlebury, Hope Shue reflects on a legacy of winning

Boston Globe

time28-06-2025

  • Sport
  • Boston Globe

A lacrosse champion five times over, from Dover-Sherborn to Middlebury, Hope Shue reflects on a legacy of winning

Related : A two-time NESCAC Player of the Year and three-time IWLCA First Team All-American, she earned NCAA Tournament Most Outstanding Player honors for the third time this year. Middlebury coach Kate Livesay called Shue a once-in-a-lifetime player. 'She brings an incredible work ethic and intensity to everything she does,' she said. 'She chases greatness with a competitive spirit and deep love for her teammates.' Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up Added fellow Middlebury senior Maggie Coughlin, a Notre Dame (Hingham) graduate from Hanover, 'As a teammate, Hope is able to balance competitive fire with positivity and fun.' Advertisement She joined NFL quarterback, and North Dakota State alum Carson Wentz, as the only NCAA student-athletes to win at least four national championships and three Elite 90 awards — given to the athlete with the top GPA at each of the NCAA's final championship sites. We chatted with Shue to learn about her lacrosse journey. How did you first discover lacrosse, and what drew you to the sport? I think I started lacrosse around fourth grade, maybe a little bit earlier in the backyard. A lot of my family played lacrosse. My older sister played, my mom played. It was just something I felt like I was going to try. I think lacrosse is particularly difficult for young girls to get into, especially back then, because it's so hard to catch and throw with the sticks back then and the eye-hand coordination of a 9-year-old. I was initially more Advertisement Hope Shue initially hoped to play Division 1 women's lacrosse, but it all worked out with four national championships at Middlebury. Courtesy Sideline Media How did your experience at Dover-Sherborn prepare you for college, and what are some of your favorite memories? It was a really epic run at D-S. My coach, Erin Massimi, was my club coach all through middle school. I was really excited when she got the job when I was going into ninth grade. We really were kind of a Cinderella story over the course of the four years. We got pretty beat up by a lot of teams the first year. We only had a 13-person roster, so we had basically one sub on the sidelines . . . By our senior year, we were one of the strongest teams in the entire state, regardless of division, and had a really amazing run to a state championship. Some of my fondest memories in sports are that spring season, playing with my best friends for the town that you were born in and grew up in. In 2021, Hope Shue (left) won a Division 2 girls' lacrosse championship with fellow senior captains Amelia Novitch (center) and Lily Thompson. Trevor Hass What was your recruiting experience like, and what led you to Middlebury? I was really gunning for Division 1. I played on one of the top club teams in the country on Mass Elite. Most of the other girls on my team were committing to Division 1 schools, and I felt like that was the path I wanted to take. But I was a really small player (5 feet, 4 inches) and, quite frankly, not one of the best people on my club team. Because of that, I definitely wasn't getting the Division 1 looks that I wanted . . . I started talking to Middlebury around November of my junior year and went up for a clinic in January. I started to realize that all of the things I thought about, Middlebury could offer. By July 1, when I committed, I was really excited about the opportunity to play at the best Division 3 program in the country. At the same time, I didn't know much about it, so I feel really lucky that it worked out the way it did. But it definitely wasn't where I intended to be when I was an eighth or ninth-grader starting the recruiting process. Related : Advertisement What's some adversity you've overcome that people may not know about? It definitely has been difficult over the years not placing too much expectation on yourself. I personally like being in an underdog position. I think most people would. It's been difficult to frame each season and each game so that I don't feel the expectations. Then the academic side, my GPA became pretty public by sophomore year. So just trying to tune out the awards, the expectations, and really focus on not striving for perfection. Hope Shue won a national championship in all four of her seasons at Middlebury, after winning a Division 2 title at Dover-Sherborn. Courtesy Sideline Media Winning four straight national championships is insane. Can you speak to the consistency of the group and how you were able to do that? Advertisement I think it speaks volumes to the culture that goes top-down from my coaches. They set such a high bar for us, because they really believe that we're capable of that. Then bottom-up, with all the players on our team really committing to coming to practice every day ready to compete at that level. We don't speak too much about national championships, conference championships, or even our record at all . . . I think the secret ingredient for the past four years is that we're really a different team by the end of the season. It's been really fun to see that transformation four years in a row. Related : You have a job lined up at a small biotech financial advisory firm. How do you think lacrosse will translate to the real world? It's a small financial advisory firm called Related : You've embraced the underdog role since you were young. What would 10-year-old you say if she could see you now? I would definitely be incredibly proud of myself. I really put a lot of work in along the way, from being 10 years old, and just hitting a ball against the bounce-back every day, over and over again, the repetition every day throughout the years. I definitely never imagined that this would be where I was after four years at Middlebury. I'm just incredibly grateful for everything that Middlebury's given me. I definitely still feel like the underdog entering the real world here. I'm back to the bottom of the totem pole. Advertisement Hope Shue won a national championship in all four of her seasons at Middlebury, after winning a Division 2 title at Dover-Sherborn. Courtesy Sideline Media Trevor Hass can be reached at

Why the US opened its doors to Chinese students, and why Trump is closing them
Why the US opened its doors to Chinese students, and why Trump is closing them

Boston Globe

time31-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Boston Globe

Why the US opened its doors to Chinese students, and why Trump is closing them

That era of academic exchange between China and the United States, beginning in the 1970s under President Carter as a form of soft power diplomacy, now stands in sharp contrast to the Trump administration's recent stance toward the country. The administration announced this week that it would Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up Those policies promise to reduce the number of students from China coming to the United States, who have been a fixture on American university campuses for decades. In 2024, there were roughly 277,000 students. Advertisement The Trump administration says China exploits US universities to bolster its military and technological capabilities. And Trump officials argue that some Chinese students may pose risks of espionage and technology theft. 'We are using every tool at our disposal to know who wants to enter this country and whether they should be allowed in,' Tammy Bruce, a State Department spokesperson, said. 'Every visa adjudication is a national security decision.' Advertisement To Shue, 64, now president of United Chinese Americans, a Washington D.C.-based civic group, the policy change stirs profound disappointment. His journey to the United States in the late 1980s was emblematic of a period of increasing friendliness between the two superpowers. Shue recalled the generosity of Americans. David Scott, a wealthy businessperson with ties to the Reagan administration, funded his education through a foundation. That period, Shue remembered, was characterized by the bipartisan embrace of Chinese students, culminating in the Chinese Student Protection Act of 1992, which granted legal residency to thousands of Chinese students in the wake of the Tiananmen Square massacre. 'It was overwhelming support and care and concern,' said Shue, who helped push for the legislation and has long advocated easing China's authoritarian rule and increased freedom within the country. Shue expressed dismay at the Trump administration's actions, viewing them as a betrayal of the image of the United States as a 'beacon for humanity.' Related : The history of Chinese students in America is long and complex, dating back to the 1850s, when Yung Wing of Yale College became the first Chinese student to graduate from an American university. As Robert Kapp, a retired historian of China and former president of the US-China Business Council, explained, early students sought Western knowledge to modernize China. The normalization of US-China relations in the 1970s under President Nixon and China's premier, Zhou Enlai, ushered in a new era of academic exchange. Later, China agreed to send thousands of students to the United States, a number that later swelled to hundreds of thousands annually. Advertisement For China, it was a crucial step in the country's modernization. For the United States, welcoming China's students was a form of soft power. The 1980s and 1990s witnessed a surge of talented Chinese students, many of whom have made significant contributions to American academia, business, science, and technology. And the makeup of the Chinese student population at American universities shifted as well, from primarily graduate students in the 1980s to a growing number of undergraduates today. 'Opening up education was important for establishing ties, for building bridges,' said professor David Bachman, an international relations specialist at the University of Washington. But now, he said, 'I can imagine that there'll be very few Chinese students here in 10 years,' he said. And vice versa. As geopolitical tension between the United States and China ramped up during the COVID pandemic, the number of American scholars studying in China fell to fewer than 1,000 in 2024 from about 11,000 in 2019, said Rosie Levine, executive director of the US-China Education Trust. President Trump's latest move, Levine said, may lead Beijing to retaliate, too, further limiting the number of American students in China — and with it, she said, the United States' overall understanding of a critical global power. While acknowledging the need to address security threats, she said that US policies need nuance. 'These policies are so broad,' she said, 'that they don't give US officers the ability to effectively distinguish between individuals who pose security risks and those who are just genuinely seeking educational opportunities.' Related : Levine said she believed that the administration's focus on ties to the Chinese Communist Party also raised questions about the new vetting procedures. Advertisement 'There's 99 million CCP members in China,' she said. 'Working for the Communist Party or being a member of the Communist Party is a really poor determinant of someone's intentions.' For Shue, the moment is personal. After the Trump administration's announcement, he found himself unable to sleep, mulling the contrast between the United States of four decades ago and the nation he lives in today. 'It's something I can barely wrap my head around,' he continued. 'How did we deteriorate to this point where foreign students, especially those from China, are viewed as a potential liability rather than assets?' This article originally appeared in .

Why the US opened its doors to Chinese students, and why Trump is closing them
Why the US opened its doors to Chinese students, and why Trump is closing them

Straits Times

time30-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Straits Times

Why the US opened its doors to Chinese students, and why Trump is closing them

President Trump's policies promise to reduce the number of students from China coming to the United States PHOTO: REUTERS Why the US opened its doors to Chinese students, and why Trump is closing them WASHINGTON - In 1987, when Haipei Shue arrived in the United States as a student, he recalls receiving the warmest of welcomes. He was a graduate student in sociology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. 'People were curious about us, inviting us to their homes, wanting to be friends,' Mr Shue said on May 29, describing an openness that defined his early years in a country then seen by many in China as a beacon of opportunity. 'It was an extraordinary time,' he said. That era of academic exchange between China and the United States, beginning in the 1970s under President Jimmy Carter as a form of soft power diplomacy, now stands in sharp contrast to the Trump administration's recent stance toward the country. The administration announced this week that it would aggressively revoke visas for Chinese students with ties to the Chinese Communist Party or for those studying in broadly defined 'critical fields'. The administration also plans to enhance vetting of future applicants for student visas, including looking at social media posts. Those policies promise to reduce the number of students from China coming to the United States, who have been a fixture on American university campuses for decades. In 2024, there were roughly 277,000 students. The Trump administration says China exploits US universities to bolster its military and technological capabilities. And Trump officials argue that some Chinese students may pose risks of espionage and technology theft. 'We are using every tool at our disposal to know who wants to enter this country and whether they should be allowed in,' Ms Tammy Bruce, a State Department spokesperson, said. 'Every visa adjudication is a national security decision.' Mr To Shue, 64, now president of United Chinese Americans, a Washington DC-based civic group, the policy change stirs profound disappointment. His journey to the United States in the late 1980s was emblematic of a period of increasing friendliness between the two superpowers. Mr Shue recalled the generosity of Americans. Mr David Scott, a wealthy businessperson with ties to the Reagan administration, funded his education through a foundation. That period, Mr Shue remembered, was characterised by the bipartisan embrace of Chinese students, culminating in the Chinese Student Protection Act of 1992, which granted legal residency to thousands of Chinese students in the wake of the Tiananmen Square massacre. 'It was overwhelming support and care and concern,' said Mr Shue, who helped push for the legislation and has long advocated easing China's authoritarian rule and increased freedom within the country. Mr Shue expressed dismay at the Trump administration's actions, viewing them as a betrayal of the US's image as a 'beacon for humanity'. The history of Chinese students in America is long and complex, dating back to the 1850s, when Yung Wing of Yale College became the first Chinese student to graduate from an American university. As Mr Robert Kapp, a retired historian of China and former president of the US-China Business Council, explained, early students sought Western knowledge to modernise China. The normalisation of US-China relations in the 1970s under President Richard Nixon and China's premier Zhou Enlai, ushered in a new era of academic exchange. Later, China agreed to send thousands of students to the US, a number that later swelled to hundreds of thousands annually. Mr Carter, Mr Kapp recalled, 'said, 'Why don't you send some students to the United States?'' And, he said, Mr Deng Xiaoping, the Chinese leader, responded, ''Well, how about 10,000?' – it went from there.' For China, it was a crucial step in the country's modernisation. For the US, welcoming China's students was a form of soft power. The 1980s and 1990s witnessed a surge of talented Chinese students, many of whom have made significant contributions to American academia, business, science and technology. And the makeup of the Chinese student population at American universities shifted as well, from primarily graduate students in the 1980s to a growing number of undergraduates today. 'Opening up education was important for establishing ties, for building bridges,' said professor David Bachman, an international relations expert at the University of Washington. But now, he said, 'I can imagine that there'll be very few Chinese students here in 10 years,' he said. And vice versa. As geopolitical tension between the US and China ramped up during the Covid pandemic, the number of American scholars studying in China fell to fewer than 1,000 in 2024 from about 11,000 in 2019, said Ms Rosie Levine, executive director of the US-China Education Trust. President Donald Trump's latest move, Ms Levine said, may lead Beijing to retaliate, too, further limiting the number of American students in China – and with it, she said, the United States' overall understanding of a critical global power. While acknowledging the need to address security threats, she said that US policies need nuance. 'These policies are so broad,' she said, 'that they don't give US officers the ability to effectively distinguish between individuals who pose security risks and those who are just genuinely seeking educational opportunities.' Ms Levine said she believed that the administration's focus on ties to the Chinese Communist Party also raised questions about the new vetting procedures. 'There's 99 million CCP members in China,' she said. 'Working for the Communist Party or being a member of the Communist Party is a really poor determinant of someone's intentions.' For Mr Shue, the moment is personal. After the Trump administration's announcement, he found himself unable to sleep, mulling the contrast between the United States of four decades ago and the nation he lives in today. 'It's something I can barely wrap my head around,' he continued. 'How did we deteriorate to this point where foreign students, especially those from China, are viewed as a potential liability rather than assets?' NYTIMES Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Group sues Cabarrus County commissioners over alleged unlawful board member appointment
Group sues Cabarrus County commissioners over alleged unlawful board member appointment

Yahoo

time15-04-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Group sues Cabarrus County commissioners over alleged unlawful board member appointment

CONCORD, N.C. (QUEEN CITY NEWS) — Fifteen individuals from a government watchdog group is suing Cabarrus County commissioners and the county for an alleged unlawful appointment of a new board member when the seat was not 'vacant.' The Cabarrus Citizens for Government Integrity is a group of residents that works to protect the fairness, transparency, and integrity of the county government. The conflict began on March 26, when Republican State Sen. Paul Newton resigned from his position in the General Assembly. His vacancy was to be filled by the recommendation of the Executive Committee of the county's Republican Party. Last week, the committee selected Chairman Christopher Measmer to fill Newton's spot. The following day, Measmer notified the board of the recommendation. Since Measmer cannot serve as a county commissioner and a member of the NC Senate at the same time, the remaining board members would have to vote to fill his role, or it would be left up to the Cabarrus County Clerk of Superior Court. Measmer issued a notice for a special board meeting for April 10 at 8:15 a.m., titled Filing of Anticipated Vacancy on the Board of Commissioners. The lawsuit alleges that the timing of the special meeting was 'no coincidence.' The complaint says that Commissioner Lynn Shue's dialysis treatments did not end in time for him to attend the meeting. The group alleges that Measmer knew Shue would not be there and intentionally scheduled the meeting so Shue could not vote on Measmer's replacement. MORE | At the time of the meeting, Shue and Commissioner Kenneth Wortman were not in attendance, but Vice-Chair Laura Lindsey and Commissioner Larry Pittman were. Also during the meeting, Measmer presided as board chair even though he had already been appointed to the state Senate. According to NC General Statue 153A-27, county commissioners may only vote to fill a vacancy on the board once that vacancy 'occurs.' Further, only the 'remaining members' are allowed to vote to fill the vacancy. Measmer issued, called and presided over the meeting. He also participated in the 3-0 vote to nominate Lamarie Austin-Stripling as his replacement, He was appointed to the Senate by Gov. Josh Stein two days prior, according to his NCGA profile. The lawsuit says that Measmer, Lindsey and Pittman knew or reasonably should have known that it was a violation to do so, especially since this very issue was addressed by the board two years prior. The association is seeking a temporary injunction on Austin-Stripling from taking the position of commissioner or voting on matters before the board. 'While this is no personal attack against Ms. Austin-Stripling, Plaintiffs and other residents and taxpayers in the County will suffer immediate and irreparable harm if Ms. Austin-Stripling is allowed to take possession of the office of Commissioner and thereby participate andvote on matters of County business,' the complaint reads. Measmer has yet to be sworn into the Senate as of Monday night. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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