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Athletes and referee honored by the Berkshire County Board of High School Basketball Officials' banquet.

Basketball Officials Give Top Award to Drury Player

By Ryan HolmesiBerkshires Sports
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Cassie Lincoln, senior guard for the Blue Devils and coach John Franzoni, was presented the Oswald Tower Scholarship.
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The Berkshire County Board of High School Basketball Officials, Board 27, held its annual Sportsmanship Awards Banquet at Berkshire Hills Country Club on Sunday night.

The award winners are chosen from a pool of candidates provided by the county coaches, who each submit a player for consideration in the Sportsmanship Award category. Among the winners this year was Drury senior guard Cassie Lincoln, who brought home the prestigious Oswald Tower Scholarship.

Oswald Tower, a native of North Adams, served on the National Basketball Rules Committee from 1910-1960 and was an editor of the Official Basketball Guide and an official rules interpreter from 1915 to 1960. Tower was enshrined in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame as a contributor in 1959.

The Oswald Tower Scholarship is an application given to a senior basketball player from Berkshire County and is based on academic achievement, community service and leadership on the basketball floor. The board received close to 30 applications this year and determined Lincoln to be the winner based on those criteria in addition to the essay she submitted in her application.

Lincoln is a two-year captain, a three-year starter and a four-year member of the Drury girls' basketball program. This year, the scrappy senior was second on the team in both scoring and assists and played a big role in the Blue Devils going 14-8 and advancing to the Division 2 Western Mass. quarterfinals. In her final game of her career, Lincoln led Drury with a season-high 16 points in a 59-49 loss to county rival Wahconah.

Other sportsmanship winners from Sunday night included:


Pat Bruni Award given to the North Division boys' winner: John Lavinio of Wahconah

Boog Powell Award given to the North Division girls' winner: Tara Dooley of Lee

Ray Dotchin Award given to the South Division boys' winner: Kevin Carpenter of Lenox

South Division girls' winner: Sam Robinson of Hoosac Valley

Coach's Sportsmanship Award: Ed Ladley of Wahconah
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Housing Planned for Former St. Joe's High School

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Nearly a decade after the facility last operated as a high school, the former Saint Joseph's is staged for new life as housing. 

Last week, the Community Development Board determined that subdivision approval was not required for a plan of land the Roman Catholic Bishop of Springfield submitted for 22 Maplewood Ave.

CT Management Group is under contract to purchase the property for conversion into market-rate housing, developer David Carver confirmed on Monday when contacted by iBerkshires. The closing date and related matters are in process. 

In 2017, the then 120-year-old St. Joseph Central High School ceased operations. After the COVID-19 pandemic hit, it sheltered people without homes before The Pearl, a 40-bed downtown shelter, was finished a few years ago. 

Brian Koczela of BEK Associates, who submitted the plan on behalf of the diocese, explained to the board that the diocese is conveying out the former St. Joseph's High School. (The bishop is listed as owner on deeds on behalf of the church.)

The high school is comprised of four parcels with different owner in the middle, he said, and they need to be combined for the conveyance. This refers to the transfer and assignment of a property right or interest from one individual or entity to another. 

"At the very southerly end, at the back of the high school, there's a 66-foot-wide strip, I believe, and that strip goes all the way from North Street to Maplewood, and it includes a rectory," Koczela explained.  

"In essence, what we're really doing is just separating out that small parcel from the rectory."

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